New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 5, 1923, Page 6

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NEW RRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1928, Slobe" Qt‘niekc HUILT TO FNDURE Sectional Bookcases To the householder whose library is contained in Globe-Wernicke Sectional Bookcases, moving day has lost one of its greatest terrors, ‘Without disturbing the books the sections are moved one at a time and set up in their new location— no handling of books with soiled hands or damaging of bindings. Wh ou buy sectional bookcases thor.enllyn monlyohllzltlon assumed by The hullding program for this cityof congress, It was the 27th congress will result In an expenditure of n,,,.y'\‘\;hon adjournment was witnessed by $3,000,000 and the employment of|) r, Shuey, who is 78 years of age and began work at the senate in 1868, some 400 men, to say nothing of the |Senator Harrison, democrat, Mississ- athers who will be affectad indirectly, ipul, in the closing hours of the ses- Labor will be scarce soon and build. |#lon called the senate's attention to ing material will not decline in price, Mr, Shuey's record, Moreover this situation will not change for some time, and thoge plan- ning to build their own homes would do well to go to work now rather| than to wait until this big bullding program is completed, Needless to say the prospect is good for the city as a whole, even though the public bufld- ing activity may discourage individ- unls in their plans temporarily, B — New Bl’itaill Herald some reason” seomed “wrong some- how.," It7is not:right to start young ALD PUBLISHING COMPANY [ people out in life thinking that a cer- taln misrepresentation of nature, just Daily, Sunday Excepted) Bldg., 67 Church Street, because it has been pietured on paper H® (Tasued At Herald SURSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 & Year $2.00 Threa Months, 760 & Month, or eanvas, is “pretty | Many of us are lacking in a knowl- edge of what ts good art and what is not, But most of us are able to see | the heauty in simplicity and to see the grotesqueness of distorted art, Let's be falr with these young people and give them hooks and pietures that do not caricature art Entered at the Post Office at New WBritain | A% Socond Class Mall Matter, TELEPHON Rusiness OMea Fditorial Rooms CALLE: | . 925 926 | The only profitable advertising medium in| the City, Circulation hooks and pross | room always open to advertixers. RENALDINO CASE DECISION The denfal of the appeal of the con- vieted men in the Renaldino murder case was merely a holding by the Su- preme Court of Appeals that there was sufficlent evidence to support the On such an appeal the men are not tried over again. The appel- late court does not take the place of the fury at all. Tt has before it only the words of the witnesses as they appear in print, and if state- Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is axclusively entitlad to the use for re-public of all news credited to it or mot otherwiss credited in this paper'and also local news pubs lished herein, THE MORNING AI'TER New DBritain people are talking to- day of Harold Schwarm and his dip into atmosphere where the slogan ln:| “This is the life.”” Tor him this is “the morning after,” and the natural question “was it worth while,”” The aftermath for him may or may not BY IRVINE L. LENROOT U, 8, Senator From Wisconsin SMALIL. boy was brought by his father to Wash- ington and taken was much interested in the chaplain who al. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation | The A. B. C. Is & natlonal organization | which furnishies newspapers and adver- tisers with a strictly honest analvsis of eirculation. Our cireulation statistics are | based upon thig audit, This insures pro- | toction against 2d I newspyper dise | tribution figures to both national and lo cal advertise verdiet, Bz [ Her g such N IVENTH CONGR djournment picture SIXTY - With the a comes the immediate group of individuals, not an organized | body, each thinking of personal wel- | fare and paying little heed to a Kindiy president who waited until the last moment before presenting to that congress the one suggestion which, had it been made in time, might have marked his administration as one of note. All efforts to praise the achieve ments of the sixty-seventh congress must be inspired by partisan spirit and nothing els The debt-funding agreement with England be pointed to “with pride,” but its pas- sage was due to the fact that it w s0 obviously necessary that any other| action would have been a disgrace. The international conference for the limitation of armaments could not well have been escaped. On the sol- diers’ bonus matter the action that was taken by congress was the result of the knowledge that the president would veto any bill not carrying with it means of payment. The scandal in connection with this bill leaves all who were prominently identified with | it stamped with the taint of politics and insincerity. The three per cent immigration bill has satisfied few. Summing the situation up there standls out no one constructive meas- ure which had the whole-hearted sup- | port of congress except the one which | funds England’'s debt to us and, in regard to this, no other action was possible. He who praises the work of | the sixty the leadership of President Harding must indeed be a partisgn unable to see a majority split into of congress of a may venth congress and weakness in selfish units where team-work is es- sential, and lost opportunity in the action of an executive who has not dared to risk his future displaying the initiative to be expect- ed from was placed at| the head of the government by an overwhelming vote of the people. success by a man who CHURCH GAINS Many people who have taken pleas- ure in decrying the trend of the times| and in mourning the alleged tendency toward frivolity will be astonished to note that at nomination shows a greater gain in membership for the last year than in any previous year in the history that denomination. The best this denomination was 16 years ago. | Attntion is called to this fact for the purpose of again strengthening til belief that things are not as bad as | many would have us think and that, after all, there is some hope for the world. Membership in churches does not increase when people's thoughts are all turned in the wrong direction. There may be a growing tendency to discuss theology and to break away| from orthodox beliefs, but incrcases in church members suggest that people are giving serious thought to| things spiritual and are hglding fast to the conviction that, whatever theo- | logical difference may arise, neverthe- | less the church is an institution which must be encouraged. least one church de- of rin ip | that ments of witnesses are sufficient to support a verdict of gulilty, there will be no reversal of the judgment where the appeal was taken as being against the weight of evidence, Thre is a ‘mistaken belief that if the judges of the higher courts should difter from the members of the jury who heard the case when the defend- ants were put on trial, they will grant the appeal and send the case back for a new trial. The judges of the higher courts do not take this position. They disavow ability to judge on the facts of the case as well as the jurors could the latter having seen and heard the witnesses and having been in a posi- tion to make up their minds from the appearance, manner and words of witnesses as to who was telling the truth. Tf, then, there is in the record sufficient evidence to justify the find- ing on the facts by the jury, the ap- pellate court takes it for granted that those jurors came to the proper con- clusion and those judges will refuse to say to those jurors that, although they were a better position to Jjudge the facts than are the judges who merely the testimony, nevertheless those judges believe the durors erred. Unless then, some glar- ing error in the admission of some damning bit ted in the trial and atttention through “an exception” was taken to this error and it is called to the attention of the higher court, the decision of the jury in such a case will stand if it appears from the record that the jury had good reason for reaching its conclu- in read sion. Thus in every such case learned judges pay a sincere tribute, through the law, to the opinion of men who are not lawyers, in their declaration to the effect that “You, who heard the about this thing are better judges as to whether or not the accused were, in fact, guilty, than are we whose duty it is to pass not upon the facts but the law in this sort of case.” witnesses tell THINK OF SPRING We are “off” preachings, New | Year's resolutions, as such, and simi- effusions. every lar dictatorial, But just about this time year there comes the feeling that Spring certainly is not very far off and, after winter, levating" spring is “something else again.” Spring is not here by any means, but last Saturday, for instance, brought that would not be any harm in thinking about it a bit and wondering if we could not make it a more worth while sort of spring than any we have ever enjoyed. the conviction there Granting that in the spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts that have nothing to do with business; grant that in the spring a aged man's fancy perhaps, but turns, things not connected and granted that in older man's fanecy is middle- lightly, nevertheless, turns les to with business the spring an ot all on busi- ness—granted all these things, yet it is worth while to remind ourselves with a new season—especially spring—there comes a new deal. If the minis- The mest recent figures on number of persons entering the try surprised, as these church mem- bership Although | there is a constant appeal being made | for ‘more clergymen these figures| showed increasing figures surprise, of young men devoting their lives to this| sacred work. All of which is encour-| aging to those who believe in the fu- ture peace happiness the world. an number and of AWFUL PICTUR In behalf of the Burritt request is made for pictures for a Sunday school club room. kind of a picture that will serve as inspiration to the young men who at- tend the mission will be acceptable Pictures of Lincoln and Washington and pictures a sacred denominational, are mentioned. It is a proper request and of course it is to be hoped that the pictures and books, also, that are needed will be | given to the mission. Clubs of this| gort are most decidedly worth while | and should be encouraged. | But apropos of the pictures. Let's be fair with the members of the club and those who give time and thought | tojwork of this splendid nature. Let's not dump on them any of these awful| Mission a| uitable nature, non- ~ things called “pictures” by courlfs,\-[dhl not follow the suggestion find| ' which offend even the crude sense of the artistic. Don’t give this mission Bt picture that aes always, ‘“for | community we are lucky the old are put aside and winter clothes somecthing fresh takes their place. If we are courage- ous the old, winter thoughts—or the dismal ones at least—are put aside and fresh, energetic young thoughts, full of vitality, come to take their place, Now that is what happens when pring comes. It hasn't come yet, but we do want to be ready for it when it does come and the best way to get ready is to begin to think about it a bit and be all set to grab those new, courageous, fine thoughts when spring brings them to us. Let's go! BUILDING Babson frequently advised sonal investment in private build- Roger ing. He has often called attention to the development of the automobile in- | dustry and shown that with its growth there is bound to be greater suburban development. People at some distance will willingly live from work or business now that they have compara- tively inexpensive transportation at their disposal. More than a year paper emphasized this situation and advised the building of homes in this Today, with a great Luild ing program being planned, those who themselves in a position which prevent their building homes unless Lthey begin at once. a may their of evidence was commit- | ago this news- | be serious, 1t is too early to say dog- matically how great or how little was | the moral turpitude involyed. He and | those whom he involved have a chance now to think things oyer sanely, and we who look on have a chance to realize that his actions dif- fer from some of our own only in de- | aree, If accounts are true this man posed as something he was not and in this assumed role did things that seemed necessary under the circumstances. Many of us pose as something we are not, assume traits of character to which we have no claim and which, | when the test comes, we cast aside.| Viewed in this light there are few of us who have a right to sit in judg- ment upon him, while we may thor- oughly denounce the misrepresenta- tions he practiced as actions that are to be condemned whether carried to the extent he did, or whether charac-| teristic of people in general in a lesser | degree. We hold no briet for Harold | Schwarm—but we hold no brle{,: either, for the men and women who pretend to be something they are not. [ pl 1 Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN. The last words qf some of our famous men are too long delayed. } i | The boys down on the farm include | 4 those who control Wall street. | They call it the Dearborn Presiden- | tial boom, but no doubt they mean| still-born. | The smaller the town, the less is required to” produce a violent case of swell head. M Germany and France couldn't feel! more suspicious of one another if they were allies. The thing that impresses the lay- man is not the king in that Egyptian tomb, but the jack. H in ha shoes at night. P Next time the nations will know enough to require enlistments for the | duration of the peace. over children’s th H le Wi About the only thing that can be| raised in all agricultura] sections is| the interest rate, conscience that hurt So of course it | in St 0! | te It was Adam when he ate the apple. wagn't a green apple. The pulling of tecth is less barbar- ous now, hut the dentists show little sympathy when they pull your leg. Y g A man may be proof against all| other flattery, but his vanity wiggles with delight when you ask his advice, The world isn't really growing bet. H It just seems that way because i | | of |ai | | | | | |B Somehow, the Allied Premiers als with three straws, Surrounding one| ice cream soda, U An old-style diplomat equip the world with buck privates, |W After cight weeks the bride can de- i tect any lic except the one to the ef- | fect that his love hasn't grown less Progress is just a slow business of | | wiping out the debts and national| boundaries left by an earlier genera- | tion. H ackie Coogan may be the only | small boy who is greater than his | parents. But he isn’t the only one, hat feels greater. 1 — th te m 1 A ar e St | Correct this gentence: ““There 2,865,432 public servants in Americ none of whom has violated the Prohi- bition la Senate Shorthand Worker | | Washington, March 5.—A record for 1 teongressional serviee was by Theodore IF. 8huey, OWhleran and dean of the senate short-|heavy guard at the hand reporters, with the ml)uurnmvullm does the minister come in every day (and pray for Congress? |comes in every day, looks over Con- gress country " Such as land, brass kettles and cloth- We read of things in the Bible, The word “thing"” is the broadest of For it covers all things all over | Or it may be nothinz at all In our world there ?25 Years Ago Today} York. guest of her sister, Mrs, Thomas Me- |y Cabe of Main street. York York agement Shechan | year. people pronounce it “athale-|—advt. first ward this year, he has ~advt, Thursday at 12:15 o'clock. ways remind us offthree small boys, | —advt. is one who the afternoon will be Rev. thinks the stork's chief business is to|and Rev. A, 'WOULD-BE PEACEMAKER |gone to have Lnife wounds, On Job Since Back in 68 1ca1 and nec established |oye witr Ciyil war vet.|rested Canclli and placed him under| ways opened the sesslons with prayer. DBoth in the Senate and the House he had observed this pro- cedure, and final- iy he asked his father: “Papa, the makers to sell you always be obtained, "LENL O why “You've got it all wrong, son,"” re- ijed his father, ‘““The minister signs and styles—ask for then for the and prays CONTRIBUTED Something About Things, (Contributed.) was seeking a word to cover Quite a number of various things, ing, Tobacco and finger rings. examined our words all over, | Digested them through and through | | sec- tions when wanted. The stability of The Globe-Wernicke Co., the o:{(ln- ators and largest manufacturers of sec- tional hookeases in the world, is your guarantee that additional sections can To this guarantee add the suj of Globe-Wernicke constructi finish and you have the reason for three- fourths of all the sectional bookcases in use being Globe-Wernicke. Our catalog illustrates many period de- dditiol [T A e " AURDUQLME, B 4000 guguan, () i | fon and Display of = ; Gla‘l,n-W{micko t. and at last 1 reached the conciusion Brief News Dispatches From All Over the World That “things” was the best 1 could , do. LaFollette senate committee AR iy i | charges Standard Oil companies with Of the bee With its Dusy wi"€% | domination of industry in violation of | . onag ORI Ag L /1911 dissolution decree by United Yet ”xlti.:‘gf:flll is the chief of s“’f:ct! States supreme court. 3 Contested nomination of James G. | McNary, Texas and New Mexico bank- | |er, to be comptroller of currency, fails of confirmation. President Harding signs composite farm credits bill finally passed by sen- | all The numerous words known to man, As no other one word can. thing may be all in one's eye Or that which in fact one can see, |ate and house in closing hours of ses- sion, But that which might possibly be. —_— Ganna Walska and Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick, Harold F. McCormick's first wife, divide society honors in attending Chicago opera. is nothing but things, To things we persistently cling, any times in contempt or in pity Have called some human a thing. —James Shepard. Cardinal O'Connell of Boston urges | | Americans to unite in prayer for world peace and says nations’ rulers have failed their peoples. Lieut, Stanley Smith, Rantoul, Ill., dies of injuries when army airplane is forced down in Brookiyn. ! (Taken from Herald of that date) s o e - & Egyptian civilian is killed and sev- Frank J. Porter left today for New | | British soldiers reported wounded ek will stop at the Murra.ylhy bomb in Cairo. Miss Ma Russian exiles have abandoned pe of crushing Bolshevism, Basil| Makaloff, former ambassador to! Mrs#¥ Frederick W, Latham’' of New | ya, < < - has been a visitor with rrlnmwl,:.::",n":,t:&kerensw oty this city for the past few days. | Thomas O'Brien, the Church street| arber, is well established in his new! iop, next door to the “Herald" of-| ‘e, and is ready to welcome all his friends and customers and give em a first ¢ shave. Getorge Lynch's xylophone solos at anna’s rink last night were cxcel- ntly rendered. ‘I'h> young musician 5 twice encored. ohn E. Sheehan, the actor, is visit- | 2 at his home in this city. Mr, heehian's company woiund up the sea- He will remain her a New week's specialty en- Star theater. Mr, a very successful| v Windsor of Winsted is thl" Essen mobs loot food stores and scores of patrons at Cabaret are | robbed by bandits after night of ter- | ror. General Degoutte tells Reichsbank I that French refuse to return any part | of 12,000,000,000 marks secized at | Cologne. A burelegged boy of 12, Aristide Gromer, played the twelve best chess players in France yvesterday, lefeat- ed eleven and tied with the other in a notable match at the Palais Royale, n lit week. w days and will then go to to fulfil a at the reports Governor "Valter Pierce and Mayor Georga, 1. Baker of Portiand, Ore., were the guests and speakers last * night at a banquet given by the local Ku Klux Klan in honor of Ired I. Gifford, Grand Dragon of the Klan in | Oregon. The governor and the mayor spoke on the general subject of Amer- teanism. City items Open alleys at the Casino tonight. Clarence H. Maxon, superintendent| Suffocation, due to picces of a ecin- the Parker Shirt Co., wiil be a can- | namon bun lodging in his throat date for the common council in the| while he laughed heartily over a announc- | joke, caused the death yesterday | of William M. Pratt, 20, of Camden, Victrolas and Pianos, Henry Morans | N, J. Pratt was scated at the table and a v club will be held at|friend started to tell a joke, when club on Washington strect| pratt began laughing so heart he fell over in a faifit. Word was sent to Radio scts and supplies at Morans' | the office of a physician, but when the doctor arrived Pratt was dead. An The annual meeting of the W, C. T, . will be held at the Center church, 2 The speakers for|as serfous. I.. Davie! Mrs. Lucy Cannizzio, in whose home Refreshments | the fight occurred, was also taken to | the Bridgeport hospital, where several |euts she received when she attempted to separate the men, were dressed. Three hours after she was admitted {to the hos al she gave birth to a boy. Her condition was reported as “favorable.” A third man who also attempted orekecper is Stabbed to Death As He to separate the struggling men, was | severely beaten and cut. He was Fa- !brizzio Casso and was taken into cus- tody as a material witness. Policé {have been unable to discover the Bridgeport, March &.—Matteo )vn.ihounw of the original quarrel which mbo, 40 years old, a storekeeper of |resulted in the slaying although it ¢, was stabbed to death yes-|was reported that a minor dispute 1 a furious fight with another over a boy was the direct cause. i o e reee—— s s DENTIS The meeting of the ?\'r\\"‘ ritain B. Taylor. All be served. DIES I BRIDGEPORT FIGHT Attempts (o End Quarrel of Other Men. is ci rd 1 when he attempted to peacemaker” in a quarrel, . short time after the fight, police rrested Anthony Canelli, also 6f this A. B. Johnson D . D. S. ty, in a doctor's office where he had| hout his autopsy showed that a piece of the| bun had lodged in his windpipe. Gromer insists that he never took | a lesson in chess playing, but that a| strange, arithmetical instinct taughti him how to avoid difficulties. During | the last five years he has never lost a | match, 3 Sectional Bookcases B. C. PORTER SONS ==(Connecticut’s Best Furniture Store” Insanity will be the defense plea of ¥Fred Ellinger, alleged slayer of Mrs, Emma McKeown, mother of six chil- dren, it was reported last night. Ellinger, who is aceused of shooting Mrs. McKeown in Wildwood, N. J. last “riday after she is said to have spurned his protestations of love and refused to elope, will be defended by Charels A. Wolverine, formerly Pros- ecutor of Essex county, ' A BARGAIN 6 ROOM COTTAGE ON WOOSTER STREET Modern in every way. Garage, extra lot. Owner leaving town, must sell at once. Eee us. PARKER & DEMING 193 MAIN ST. EVERETT TRUE TEL. 2026 ESTERDAY L WATCHED YoU TAKE YOUR CAR' EROM THE CUREB WHERE T WAS_PARKED WITH OTHERS § Ji MOV BENT THE I FRONT FENDER OF 05, — THEeNn You BENT THE REAR FENDER OF ANOTHER — — AND THEN You DROVE iressed. On his iden- as j'alumbe’s slayer by an cus (o the tight, police ar.' ion National Bank Building New Britain, Conn. Bridgeport hos-| Gas and Oxygen Administercd tal where his condition was seportcd T. R. Johnson D. D. §. |

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