New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 6, 1924, Page 2

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NEW BRIT these iastitutions the pre- batien service the means or machinery to change the lives and re-cstablish the homes and to show men, wemen boys and girls coming to our atten: | tion, that nothing ean ltake the place of siple, honest, everyday goodness Marsay CRIME NOT STOPPED Liquid Corn | bY BIJNI—SHMENT Probation Olficer Connolly Makes Remedy Aunual Report ‘ A safe and reliable yem. ] Frobation Ofcer Edward C. Con- aid for his efforts in many in- nolly, in his annual report to Judge B |stances by the satisfaction and joy edy for the removal of hard and soft corns, | that ecomes in seelng the suceess 250 bottle shape of happiness and eontentment "Nothing out of the erdinary ha developed in the work during the year in New Britagin. | have endeavored te be faithful to my trust and the [werk affords an inspiration and help IQ those in his care and who 18 amply { W: Alling for the fiscal’ yeas "“"".'ll'lllt\u‘ in changed lives and homes, | June 80, 1924, presents an interesting “As in past years | am indebted to history of the prebation system, its|all these whe have given sueh hearty | methods, its results and what it has|eo.operation, to the police and detee- accomplished in New Britain, Accord. |tive foree in peneral and the social ing to Mr. Connolly's report the nholh‘nlrlu'lu of our eity for aid given and field of social service becomes better | courtesies shown, and to the mayer { understood as nothing more or less|and eommon ecouncil for the aute to than applied Christianity, Punishment | be used in the work, 1 am partieu- | of itself does not stop erime, he says|larly under obligation to the court in fact enly turns out mere eriminals | for the insight, patience and kindness to commit more crime, Probation, the | displayed in the conduet of the cases, | report states. is distinctly an Ameris Respeetfully submitted, "rln institution and s a scientific u'ny' EDWARD @, CONNOLLY, | of treating offenders a showing of the | Probation Officer, D C way, to protect and ald rather than rug Co. . 169-171 Main St. | to erush The raggrt in full follows Hon, Benlamin W, Allipg, Judgs, | City of Police Court THINKS AMERICA Ko i con. - 1§ A HUGE JOKE Agreeable to eustom in the eourt | over which Your Honor presides, | Trotzky Gomments on U. §, Paciticatory Imperialism submit herewith statistics and report | for the year ending June 30, 1024, Number of probationers carried | over from June 30, 1923, 81; Number of probatinners placed on probation during *'a year, 200, Total 281, , Made up as follows: 220 men, 10 women, 47 boys, 4 girls (over 16), |By The Asociated Prem, Number who observed terms and were | Moscow, Aug. 6-~The “Pacificatory” released: 137 men, 5 women, 40 ho_\‘l,‘ehluclor of the “American imperial- 2 girls, ’lN, Number "'("“’b‘"f"’ "’"I |1sm" formed the chief subject of a rested: 28 men, women 0, boys 1, girls lengthy address delivered by War 1, 30, Number who escaped from our jur- | Minister Trotzky recently on the pros- isdiction, 6, pects of International progress. The Remaining on probation June 30, aqdress, which was given before sev- 1024, 61, Total 281. eral thousand workers and commun- Amount of wages and monles col-| st gtudents Jast week on the tenth an- lected for support of wives, families | niversary of the outbreak. of the and children, $5,355.13. World War, Is published in the soviet Amount of figes and costs collected, newspapers today. $4,263.98, Trotzky said he considered it as the Number of cases turned over to offi- t puradox and one of history's cer by prosecuting attorney and others that “‘America, which is sup- for Investigation and possible settle- | ported by its industries and which helped to crush Germany in order to ment out of court, 94. Cash in bank received on unsettled [ keep out a molid competitor, emerged from it (the war) with a pacifist accounts, July 1, 1924, $674.88, reputation.” Twenty-one Years of Law. “It 18 now twenty-one years since | The United States, the war minis- the probation law went into effect in [ter said, now has definitely entered this state. On the whole very little |the pathway of active imperialistic adverse criticism has been made of |wcrld politicsa and, “while it has not this humane; intelligent and far-|:-‘ learned to realize its own great reaching method of dealing with pewer, it studies on FEurope's fiesh those unfortunate enough to have |and hones how to use it.' violated one or more of the muititu- ““The American capitalists,” he add-, dinous laws with which ®ur statute led, “cannot allow England, France books are filled. and Germany to regain their markets, “As time goes on and the whole a3 they themselves need them.” field of social service becomes bet- Referring to a speech made by ter understood as nothing more or | American Secretary of State Hughes less than applied Christianity, it 18 |during his recent visit to London, more generally realized among think- | Trotzky said: ing people that except in rare in- “America already dictates to Europe stances, punishment of itself does not | but its chief aim is to put capitalistic stop crime, in fact only turns out | Kurope on rations and to Balkanize it. more criminals to commit more |The United States ‘pacifist’ program crime, and that we, the men and |is full of grave consequences, as it women who comprise society, are re- | prepares the ground for new wars of sponsible for many of the conditions |stupendous character.” that exist in our eommunities which The soviet minister emphasized that are active breeders of criminals and | America's “attempt to put Europe on crime. rations” could not pass without na- The fudge of the municipal court, |tional and class resistance. He urged Milwaulkee, the Hon. A. C. Bachus, |the European proletariat to unit in says in an address entitled “Progress [order to combat this “imperialistic in Treating the .Offender,” delivered | Americanism.” last year at the national conference of Waterbury Autoist Held | probation officers: | “For many centuries it was the | On Manslaughter Count Waterbury, Aug. 6.—John Loy, 23, $11.95 GENUINE COWHIDL Suit Case Hand Bag The suit case is black and mahogany linen lined with skirt fold and two heavy straps. The &I bag is full leather lined, black and mahogany. A look will interest you in these values, HORSFALLS 93-99 Msylum Street Hartfor. *“It Pays To Buy Our Kind” CAPITOL — COMING JACKIE COOGAN in ! “Little Robinson Crusoe” REPORT DENIED No Truth to Story That Duke of | practice simply to inflict punishment York Wil A p | so that the law might be vindicated o Y pinc . i it L hnve] 2 de(errenl'. v, e«;;t :(Dfln of Wayland avenue, this city, charged don Story Says. | others in the community. e refor- | 9 lRUSHah . Whoht. Daphity ik mation or reclamation of the indivi- | Vith mansiaughter, epu London, Aug. 6.—A report that the | dual was entirely overlooked. | Coroner T. lEbl Cc’mv\uy‘hhemdec;t:: :; Duke of York was planning to accom-| "An eye for an eve, a tooth for a |8lly responsible {0;9 r)uf by of pany the Prince of Wales on his forth. | tooth, & limb for a limb, degradation, | Angelo Pogello, o eman s r:d coming trip to the United States and | Vhipping, branding, hanging, maim- | Who was Killed shortly after "’; i Canada, on which the Prince will sail | in8 chambers of torture, men's bodies | night July 21, on the Bet?mny road in Aug. 28, was characterized In authori- | Proken on wheels, suspension by arms | an autompobile accident walved exam- tative quarters today as without foun- |and 1egs with great weights attached, | ination in city court this morning and dation. It was announced only yes- |the flesh burned and seared by frons | was bound over to the next term of terday that the Duke and Duchess of | White hot, human bodies roasted over the superior court under bonds of $3,- York would sail for British Bast|Slow fires, buried alive, thrown to [ 500. Pogello was Instantly killed Africa In November on a three|Wild beasts, moiten lead poured into when the machine Loy gvas driving, months’ tour. . the ears, faces of men placed towards | In which two other men were also the flaming sun and their eyes blind- | riding, erashed through a state road ed, tied by the sea to be drowned by | fence and turned over in a gulley. the rising tide; all these have been tried and victims have given up their lives by the millions, yet so-called criminals did not become extinct. It |is an historical fact that erime in- |ereased with the imposition of these terrible penalties, “It is but in recent vears, however, that new {deas and a new thought and & new way of administering justice have been promulgated, so that men, { | women and children who have erred may he saved or reclaimed. Reform MANUFACTURER DEAD. Chicopee, Mass., Aug. 8, —Irving H. Page, 65, prominent manufacturer, died yesterday in Tolland, Mass., ac- cording to word received by relatives last night. Mr. Page had bee in poor health for sometime. He was presi- dent of the Stevens Arms and Tool company, Stevens-Duryea Automobile company, Page-Lewis Arms Company, Page Needle company, Page Paper Box company and the National Scape all of this city. If you come down to facts, it's always quality that wins the race. Baker's Oertified Flavoring Extracts have maintained their high standards for elmost half a century. Ask your gro- eer.—advt. Mr. Page IN DAILY HERALD,WE which brings it own reward in the | |noted surgeon, who w | schools, reformatories, juvenile courts, | eonrts of domestic relations, and spe- cial eriminal courts have been estab- | company, also was a director in several banks d other industries of {his section. EDNESDAY SureRelief FOR INDIG!STION uot water Sure Relief DR, DESPARI'S BODY GOING 70 WEST VA Physician Shot by Crazed Man Was Davis' Friend . Philadeiphia, August 6.-—Arrange. ments were being made today to take the body of Dr, Duncan L. Despard, shot to death in his office yester. by Alfonse Masi, to Clarksburg, W. Va, for inter. ment, Dr, Despard, who was a bache- lor and lived with his aged mother, was a native of Clarkaburg. He was a close personal friend of John W. Davis, democratic presidential nomi. nee, and Mrs, Davis was expected here today to accompany the family to West Virginia, After mortally wounding the doctor, under whose care he formerly had been, Masi turned the pistol on him- self, dying almost Instantly. A plumb- Ing contractor and servants in the house, attracted by the shots, found Dr, Despard unconsclous and sum- moned physiclans, Assisted by police they rushed him to the Polyclinic hospital, bleeding from a wound in the back, An operation was ordered at once and twenty volunteers, includ- ing many doctors, offered their blood for the necessary transfusion. Dr, Despard dled on the operation table with the man selected for the trans- fusion standing beside him. According to Mrs, Duella Masi, her husband was operated on by Dr, Des- pard for appendicitis, after which complications set in necessitating fur- ther treatment. Brooding over his health:and telling his friends that “the hospital doctors” were “killing” him, Masi, his wife said, got two dol- lars from her and with the money purchased a pistol and some cartridg- es. Dr. Despard was graduated from the Jefferson Medical college in 1901, He was visiting physician for the Jef- ferson hospital and assistant professor of surgéry for his Alma Marter., He was also on the surgical staffs of the Methodist and Abington Memorhl hospitals. GIVE UP 6AS IDEA Colorado Fugitives, Hiding in Mine, Must Be Brought Out in Other Way, Authorities Find Grand Junction, Col., Aug. 6.— Plans to force *poison gas into the Palisade mine near here, where three men suspected of participating in a $15,000 post office robbery last Satur- day are in hiding, were abandoned to- day by county authorities. It was learned that there are at least five miles of tunnels iA the pro- perty and the gas probably would bfi ineffective, it was said. A searching, party of four spent five hours in the mine yesterday searching for fhe fugitives. Two of the three were seen, but disappeared in distant tunnels when called upon to surren- der. Spotlights are directed constantly on the mine entrance and guards arm- ed with shotguns and rifles posted on a cliff above. the opening. It was learned today that the imprisoned men had found water in the mine, or obtained it from sources unknown, which indicates that the siege ma# be long drawn out. Whether the sus- pects took a supply of food is not known, Some FLOODS IN WISCONSIN, Milwaukee River Sweecping Away Bridge; Ten Pco'pla Stunned By Lightning. Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 6.—The most serious floods in years were sweeping away bridges and scores of summer cottages along the upper Milwaukee river last night. The rainfall, which reached the proportions of a cloudburst, was ac- companied by lightning which struck sons on a street car. in several places and stunned ten per- ’ AUGUST 6, 1924, FLIERS TO DELAY FOR SEVERAL DAY (Smith and Nelson Awaiting Favorable Conditions —_— The Asseciated Fress Reykiavik, leeland, Aug. 6.-~Lieu. tenant Lowell H. Smith and Erie Nelson, United States army world aviators, expect to remain here seve eral days after their stormy trip from Hoefm Hornafjord, on the eastern Teelandic coast yesterday, The fiie said they could start today on their Greenland flight except for the un. ertainty of the situation at Angmag- Ik, where the worst ice conditions in years are reported The airmen do not like the pros. peet of a 480.mile Aight over open water with no certainty of a proper landing place, The reports from Angmagsallk ars conflicting, there being no assurance as yet that the supply steamer Gertrud Rask, report. ed yesterday caught in the flce 16 miles off shore, had been able to de- liver her supplies for the airmen's next stop, Major Clarence E, Crumrine, of the United States army air service, who was awalting the fliera here when they arrived yesterday, is canvassing the situation but is uncertain as yet when it will be practical to continue the flight, Preparations were made early today to pull the planes ashore for miner repairs, This work will require less than a day's time. The machines came through their battle with the high wind on the flight here trom Hornafjord yesterday In®good shape despite the fact that the at times was 8o furlous that it earrled away part of the radio antennae of the cruiser Richmond, flagship of the patrol fleet, At one point the planes were forced to proceed sideways, the engines working at an 80-mile-an- hour rate but ‘making scarcely any progress. When the Chicage and New Or- leans arrived over Reykjavik they found the harbor crowded with ship- ping. It had been planned on this account for them to land outside the sea wall, but this was impracticable because of the rough water, The pliots were equal to the emergency, however, and made a beautiful land- Ing in the limited space in which they had to work inside the harbor. 10 GIVE AWAY EXPLOSIVES Farmers Will Be Given Fnough To Fill Freight Train Forty Miles in Length. Washington, Aug. 8.—Explosives enough to fill a freight train forty miles long are to be given away by the government to tarmers for clear- ing land and to the state governments for highway construction. Announcement was made today that 100,000,000 pounds of pyrotol, part of the vast supplies of explosives gath- ered by the government for the Werld Wz soon would be made available through state agencies, through the btircar of public lands. No distribution #direct to farmers will be made by the government but in each state where there is sufficient interest in agricultural explosives, some agency, probably the state agri- cultural colleg~;, will take orders, pool them in carload lots to minimize freight charges and handle distribu- tion. Recipients must stand the cost of preparation and shipment., The ex- plosive {s packed in boxes of fifty pounds, eontaining about 150 ecar- tridges, each of which is about equal in strength to a cartridge of twenty per cent dynamite, Exports to Canada During Last Year Total 6 Million ‘Washington, Aug. 6.-—Exports from the United States to Canada during the last fiscal year valued at $601,- 500,000, showed a decline of 9 per cent, From the previous year, an analysis by the department of com- merce showed today. The United States, during the same period, purchased $417,000,000 worth of goods from Canada, a one per cent increase over last year, leaving a fav- orable trade balance of $134,000,000 for the year, By BAKER IS LEADING Louis, Aug. 6. —Returns from 1757 precincts out of 3,987 in Mis. souri’s primary election yesterday, showed Sam A. Baker, former state superintendent of publie schools lead- ing his nearest opponent by 16,365 | votes, in the republican race for gov- St. Westinghouse and Diehl Electric Fans s AT s Reduced Prices ONLY A FEW LEFT SPRING & BUCKLEY ELECTRIC CO, 75-81 CHURCH ST. IRISH BOUNDARY ISSUE British Government Said to Have De. clared Extent to Which is Will Go in Present Iasue, Belfast, Aug. 6.—The special cor- respondent of the Belfast News let. ter learns froml & well Informed source, he telegraphs his paper, that when the conference at the Vice Regal lodge in Dublin yesterday had lasted some hours the British colonial sec- retary, J. H. Thomas, took command of the situation and stated finally the limits to which the British govern- ment prepared to go in order to meet the Free State's demand for im- mediate action on the Irish boundary question, The correspondent con- tinues: “My informant says the bill will be Introduced this week to establish the boundary commission, but it will not be put down for the ewtond reading until after the recess. Tf the posi- tion of Mr. Cosgrave (head of the Free Btate government) brcomes desperate, parliament will be called together at Westminster earlier than was Intended with a view to passing the bill. Meanwhile negotiations will be continued with the northern gov- ernment, and strong efforts made to No one can ever believe that onu koew me then and mefl me say I look fit ‘me; all scovered the and 1 mndl in about never or look secret better. cided to remain HOPE FOR y good di tm Freng small tablets bef a steady weight. you, but it acts our entire TEBD is the on) me after regained a pound On sale at Dickinson's, Clark & —I found out exactly duee, nlel{':ud easily lost 50 to hundreds of U, 18 :lelrl with l‘l:lil t‘:mh‘:l“ v]fl ffat that ]l .bm able all fat people thm s real n’y of A fore each ecrease take place N-GRI-NA worthless redueing Remember that with SANGRI of 0 pounds in twe menths, TEL. 2240 induce it to appoint a commissioner, “Mr, Thomas went so far as to ox- press confidence that those efforts would be successful, and Mr, Cos- grave agreesd to accept postponement on those conditions, The conference thus ended in agreement.” 1 Foot nnfi Mouth DTaense Costs 5 Million in Cal, Oakland, Cal, Aug. 6.~The foot and mouth di e in California hes cost about $5,000,000 and has made necessary the slaughter of 102,000 head of livestock, Dr, J. R. Mohler, chief of the bureau of animal Indu try of the United States department of agriculture said today. Dr, Mohler is directing the government end of the campaign against the disease. There are 208 men still ip the fleld in the eampalgn, although fourteen counties have been released from quarantine, Emergency raincoats of crepe pa- per have been devised. CAPITOL — COMING JACKIE COOGAN in “Little Robinson Crusoe” HOW FAT I WAS Aod How I Lost 50 Pownds in 8 Weeks With Marvelous New Parisian Discovery Which Causes Semsation in New York. Simple, Easy~Does Away With Exercises, Worthless Reduciag Creams and Garmests. I weighed over 180 Those whe 1years younger, 1 m' e eould get clothes my friends called FA‘n‘Y. and even my own family thou; )u I was a most unattractive woman. qu 1 suffered, until one dly in P real cause of excess fat what to do.to rew months.” I have ined oml,nund and never felt have given out m: "People who have e Nov3 THERE 1§ uffered so much for DI ot = eckize 3 s package o discovery. cafled SAN- the GRI-NA (remember the name), take two meal and watch in your not only reduces as_a general tonic—the moment you start taking it you will feel e flkd with Sten N-GRINA TS GUX \PSOLUTELY HARMLESS ing 1 ever \{ had tried diets, :‘;'e'nn:.'d'mm th creams and e k m I have never since, and my health is envied by everyone Brainerd’s or City Drug Stores lished by the state and government and the good results have been mar- | ! The bark of velled at even by their most ardent | | advocates. | “Probation, both juvenile and adult Just | bation is not a species of leniency as some seem to believe, nor is it a N- | greatest fteacher and social worker, “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy- howaver, that we ars yst ready to | dispensa with our reformatories, jails | is of quite recent adoption. It is dis- cense for first offenders to commit | selt,"—"As ye would that men should or prisons, but that we should make] ernor. tender young pines In the democratic contest, Dr. Ar- thur W. Nelson led hy 36,787 on the fs one of the favorite foods of por- cupines, | basts of returns from 2,902 precincts. urge ane‘ Crahs Fresh Caught Swordfish Eastern White Halibut Penobscot Salmon Rockport Cod Steak Boston Bluefish Steak Fresh Caught Block Island Mackerel Large Cape Butterfish Large Cape Porgies Large Native Eels Large Shore Haddock Live and Boiled Shrimp Live and Boiled Lobster Round and Long Clams Salt Cod ........ 18¢ Ih. 3 Ibs. for ... 50¢ Fancy Large Scallops MOORE BROS. Sanitary Fish Market 80 COMMERCIAL ST, Open until 9 p. m. Thursday Chcquot Club Ginger Ale! There’s a thrill for a dried up, tied up throat. Coolnessin every gleaming drop of if -—nest l.n the taste of ginger, “l e in if eopmg The remarkable growth of this schoal is an eut- standing romance in the history of professional educa- tion. It is the largest professional school of college grade in the world devoted exclusively to training men for commercial and public accounting practice. The following tabulation shows the number of day and evening students enrolled in each year, and does not include those enrolled in Saturday -classes for teachers and free courses for graduates: 1917-18 .. 320 1920-21 ..........2,042 191819 .......... 709 1921-22 ..........2,213 1919-20 ..........1,363 1922-23 ..........2275 1923-24 .... .2,292 This school specializes in training men ultimately to qualify for the duties of office manager, cost ac- countant, auditor, comptroller, treasurer, or public ac- countant. Send for catalogue of day or evening courses THE BENTLEY SCHOOL of ACCOUNTING ant FINANCE 921 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass, sparkling look, bubbles. Of all the host summer drinks, Clicquot/Club is leader. It leads by acclaim of millions of throats. They all like u—buu Order by the case from yous groces, druggist,or confeftionen, There’s nothing more The Clicuot Clsb o, Millis, Mass, U, & A’ Q\\c\\\o\ Cwo Ginger Ale tinctly an American institution. Every state {8 now using the aystem to a greater or less extent. Many Euro- pean countries and South Americah | states have provided for 1u\!nl!¢v courts and juvenils and adult proba- tion work, and nearly all of them | | have followed the American idea. | “Tt should be understood that pro- . e P Pep-0-mint crime. It is a sclentific method of | treating offenders, a showing of tha | way, to protect and aid rather than & | to crush | H Principles of Office, | MINTWITI “It has been and always {8 with | these thoughts and similar thoughts | |and ideals in mind that our rourt and probation officers have endeav- ored to carry on in New Britain, tr; ing to demonstrate the great princ ples lald down many years ago by the . refreshing do unto you, 8o do you to them like. | ‘“mo i Remembering also that we are ofttimes inexcusable In judging | o~ another, for in that we judge another, | 3 |we condemn ourselves for we who | | judge do the same thing, the differ. | | ence being only that of the degres of | transgression. | “This ehould not be taken to mean, | Always Good Taste

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