New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 24, 1925, Page 12

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NICHEL PLATE R . PLANS TAKEN UP P. U. Commission Meets to De- ¢ide Upon Examination June 24 (A tire membership of the commerce commission gathered here today to declde the examination of 0. for the Nickel Dlate Railroad e solidation Counsel Washingten The en- interstate upon Marquette, Hocking Valley that M Van Swer hint. tiie in its scope and asserted already gone too far afle Thomas F Gay, counsel for stock- holders argued that int rallroad and holding corporations had been incident to the Van Swerin- gen operations and that there might be full opport y for the New York Central raliroad company to indirectly control the new merger. Replying to questions from Com- missioners, he declared the law per- mitting consolidation of railroads provided for the maintenance of eompetition and for {' e r*q‘ table is- svance of securities, The Van Swer- ingen Interests and ownership in ground and approaches to the Cleve- land Union terminal, which is now under construction, he said, was a point at ssue since the new Nickel Plate company would be obliged to | pay part of the coests of operating the Cleveland establishment from which the Van Sweringen interests might be expected to derive profit, TAKE SPECIAL COURSE Religlous FEducators Prepare for New Movement fn Church Schools Next Fall, Ww. M. Blodgett, minister of re- ligious education at the First Con- | church, and Miss Cora who holds a similar position at Trinity Methodist church, are taking a course in weekday religious education, as ap- plied to the weekday church school, now being given at Wesleyan uni- versity by Professor Walter A. Squires. Professor Squires is di- rector of weekday religious instruc- tion for the Preshyterian board of Christian education. He'ts located in Philadelphia. Mr. Blodgett, Miss Graulich and Frederic L. Fay, who has charge of religious instruction at the South Congregational church, will have general supervision of the weekday religious instruction of the gregational B. Graulich, | Tune 26. 110:37 | tunch. the Stan. Joint | | churches mentioned and loy Memorlal church in & school next fall, TEMPLARS PARADE About 10,000 Take Part in Big Cele- bration in Worcester = Aleppo | Band Plays. Mass, June 4 (RPh— Kulghts Templars and Khode bruss bands, march- ¢ today in con- celebrution of the | entennlal anniversary of Worcester | County Commundery, Knights Tem- Worcester, About fromi Island, 0,000 Massachusetts with 4v ed in 4 parade he wwetlon with s Il parade was reviewed at City Al by Gov. Alvan T. Fuller and wiembers of s counell und Mayor Michael J. O'Hara and eity officials. | ing the purade, which was viewed by thousands, the Knights « fleld day at the fair grounds, was given by the Shrine drum corps { Boston, of 150 pieces There will be a banguet and re ception tonight to the ry by the 1lollow re w concert 0 Temple Grand Com- members of the ndery. STANLEY CHURCH PICNIC The annual Stanley Memorial church and Su y school picnic will be held at RRockwell park, Bris- . Saturday. The committce in charge of the plenic consists of Hamlin (chairman), Mrs. Jennie nderson, Mrs, Leon Dic inson, Mrs. John Kinder, Mrs. George Welr, John Huda, Oscar | Marsh and Albert Olsen, | Russes will leave the church for | Rockwell park at 9 o'clock. Din- | ner will be served at 5 p.om.| Oscar Marsh has been chosen chief cook and Albert Olsen and Jnhn! Huda assistants. Baseball and quoit | pitching contests will engage the at- tention of those who do not swim. City Items George V. Victrolas and planos at Morans'.— adv. Joseph P. Thomas of this c has | entered the New Britain (,"n"ml hospital for treatment. Home cooked luncheon, Crowell’s ‘ —advt, A county W. C. T. U. be held at Ellzabeth park picnic “UY Friday. l Members who are going by trolley will leave the center at o'clock and bring a basket Gulbransen player planos at Morans' | —advt. George K. Macauley granted a permit to bu family house on Daver Road at an estimated cost of 822,000, The photographs of the class of- | ficers at the Central Junior high school which were published in the Herald yesterday were from the studio of Johnson & Peterson. Try Muller's New Pony Quartet, 4 cigars In a pack for 25c.—adv. Members of 7niroy Rebekal lodge who have parts in the degree work will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock for rehearsal The Scandinavian W. €. T. 1", will hold a meeting at the home of Mrs. J. Barrett of 57 Foxon place tomor- | row afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. THURSDAY and FRIDAY Here FRESH NATIVE - MACKEREL lb 18c FRESH SHORE HADDOCK. FRESH STEAK coD. . FRESH SLICED BLUE. . OPEN LONG CLAMS.. ROUND CLAMS. .. pint quart FRES BCALLOPS ..pint FRESH BOILING PIECES. . b, FLOUNDERS FRESH NATIVE FRESH RED SALMON FASTERN WHI HALIBUT FRESH BUTTERFISH BEARDSLEY'S SHREDDED con ALASKA SALMON 2 cans UNDERWOOD'S CLAM CHOWDER. can READY-TO-FRY FISHCAKES . .can 2 pkgs. SPECIAL? NEW STUFFED OLIVES ..pint 35c on \ll\\l BREAD, NEW QUEEN OLIVES iat 25c CIRCUS DAY SPECIALL $1.00 — 17 Ibs. &\v SUGAR — $1.00 DOES YOUR PLUMBING GIVE YOU A PAIN? Call 2079 for Bill Fenn and His Plumbing Shop on Wheels. W. R. A service you swear by and never at FENN Dependabhle Plumbing—Heating—Tinning 139 HART ST. Finest Showroom in the City Visitors Always Welcome | the volce of a guilty NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1925. ETHEL: Seeing Is Believing! 14 HAY SHEPHERDLISTENS - TOSTATE'S PLEAS ; (Cotninued from First Page) | points were Billy's late hours and its effect upon the youth’s physical condition “was | conscience,” declared the assistant state's attor- | ney. “Why else should this old man sitting here be discussing such a subject with that demure, innocent young woman?" demanded Gorman. Chain of Evidence Other phases of the case Gorman | talked on, picking up pieces here and there that he heid before the jury as firm links in the unbreaka- ble chain of evidence he w“t(ed the case has forged. “Faiman came to realize that the game was not worth the $100,000 | | promised,” Gorman said concerning | the state's chlef witness and con- fessed accomplice of Shepherd, "It was his guilty conscience which | prompted him to change his denlals to an admission of the facts—that he had helpeq Shepherd. And Fai- man tells you he did give Shepherd those germs. Faiman's Part “If he did not why did he so testify?. 1 can understand why a friend would go on the witness stand and swear a lie to save a friend from the rope, but, why, if his story was not true, would Faiman come here and swear to a story he knew would end Shepherd to the gallows?” | ie prosccutor gathered together the evidence connecting Faiman with the case, and justified it as borne out by other links {n the cir- | cumstantial chain. “Faiman said he got the germs from the ecity health department, | em to Shepherd and taught | to kill Billy McClintock em, and he did it!"” shouted ssion, 1 ask you gent) the law in this cas an after nearly four hours ant has invented a urder in Tllinois till in the hearts cannot get away to the peo- the law, or ngeance of the law.’ an life is just about the thing we have in Chicago. murders cannot will throw germ he gunman s gun.” Defense Begins wart began the ment at noon, ring the immedi- prosecution of rucifixion. hat pushes the state's it into this case?" there is something ant you to use your walked into his 1 killed him. = been only another 4 the Crowe atates Bt charging to show you but it is nd walked with business talk he went out 1 plotted with A atiir he rricd it throug! for him plotted 1 enoug! t punishmen Vietim of Vile Plot f he didn't do it. then m of one of the vilest lic conspiracies ever con- one proporition fendant is either a dia- deserves the nalty yon can give, or a ances who de- ter who vou can do to right the that has heen “Our stand is that without done him Fal- m1r\ the state would not have had a leg to stand on, And you know | Faiman, [ say that a diploma from Faiman's school is a badge o( shame.” Stewart took the prosecution ask for failing to ask Shepherd r‘vr':fln questions, and then in Gor- | man’s argument asserting that the *undenied by Shep- herd who had an opportunity. | “What did the state have on Fai- | man?" asked Btewart. “If you don’t think they had anything on him, you are crazy."” | “Our suggestion is he is doing a| service to some interested persons who are interested in | to Prosecutor Crowe as he pounded | his fist into his hand a foot from | that official's nose. “Théy wanted the testimony of | Falman, and they had an agreement with him, else why is that quac doctor's diploma mill running just| as it was? “Why the state's attorney has not Dreaking a |commons today will,” Stewart shouted in reference | government has the Hong Kong sit- | well in hand and is able to |preserve law and urder there. Foreign leave for him to explain to his Cat) stituen | the court room to hear plea in behalf of her husband. Con- soled by the Rev. the family pastor, &he remained in| seclusion in the custodian’s across the lobby from the room. SECURITY PACT LINES LIMITED Chamberlain Explains Terms lor European Agresment court London, June 24 P—Foreign Sec- retary Austen Chamberlain today told the house of commons that Great Britain's obligations under the proposed Western European security pact “must be definitely limited to the frontier between Germany on the one side and France and Belgium on the other.” He added that “our guarantces of that frontier cannot be invoked by a doer to shield him in his of the British empire and sreat Dritain in particular from European affairs ad served and never would erve the interests of peace. Britain's &i of the lea patible with “Our safc Great nature to the coivenant 1e of nations was incom- isolation ty 1s not i fsolation.” he in a wise and prudent use of our fn- fluence and power to obtain peace and prevent war from breaking out again.” secking an npossible said, “but Mr. Chamberiain said the pact should not he unifateral, but must be a mutual pact among the nations whose past differences had pro Germany must cnter the ague of Nations, he declared “Nothing in the propose6 paet the secretary suld. shouid affect the Mghts and obligations attaching to membership in the league under the ovenant Great guarantees. he added effective only if in defiace of treaties of arbitration and the obligations of the ant the wrongdoer resorted to Mr. Chamberlam sald o treaty or dr a treaty exist- cnt. The house merely a pre iminary statement of what the dif- ferent countries would b take and ought they Britain's become ARUE conven- force there was feit it possible for them to in what direction they could make an advance It was impossible, said Mr berlain, to have a such as formerly was contemplated in the Anglo-American treaty of Guaranty, which lapsed when the United States declined to ratify it, or in the British pact of Guaranty, of Cannes, which lapsed owing to political episodes in another country. (Mr. Chamberlain here was refer- ring to erisls in France early In 1822 which resulted the fall of the Briand ministry Cham unilateral pact The Classified ads® han any other form of ad- have more 1eaders t vertising room | London, June 24 that the Secretary 3-PIECE FIBRE SUITE Consisting of Settee, Rocker and Chair, FORFIGN PONER IS . BLAMED FOR RIOTS England Claims Another Goyt. Causes China Trouble (B—Colonial | Secretary Amery told the house of | Chicopes, and his British Chamberlain was asked whether he had evidence x |that the disturbances in China have been fostered or |agents of another government replied affirmatively but | closed up that vile institution, 1 shall| SPeclfy the government to which he | Rechenberg: referred, . Chamberialn gave assurances | Mrs. Shepherd did not return to to the house that England fs Stewart's| &iving and will not give any support — directly or indirectly to any of C. A. Naumann, |rival factions in China. aggravated by |lodge, O. D. H. &, He | 1ast not | Arthur Smith; not | William Ramm, the Oranges require no cultivation in PUTNEY WILL LOSE ENFORCEMENT POST (Cotninued from First Page) the bootleggers, rum runners and others to profitably ply their trade much longer." “Pulls” Useless 'Tis Sald Washington, June 24 (P —State and local political influenczes are to be shoved aside in filng new ad- minlstrative posts in the prohibition enforcement organization, it was in- dicated today at the treasury where Assistant Secretary Andrews was busy on plans for the new regime | announced yesterday. It was freely predicted that the assistant secrétary would fill many of the 22 divislonal administrative posts in continental United States with men from districts other than those in which they will serve, Congressional influence In the past has welghed heavily in the selection of federal directors for states and |in the eelection of many other sub- | ordinate officlals, and the treasury has not been satisfied with all of the men thus named, Mr, Andrews sald today he would not retaln men whose integrity has | been questioned and who did not measure up as producers of results. The whole list of present officlals will be gone over before the new system goes into operation August 1 to determine how many of them will be asked to stay, Tn order to obtain the type of administrators he seeks, the assis- tant secretary has asked Comptrol- ler General McCarl for a ruling on the salary question. Tt 1s under. s100d he proposes to pay as high as l““ 000 annually for some of the | posts. Rt. Rev. W. J. Hafey Is Consecrated Bishop Raltimore, June 24 (#»—The Right Rev. Willlam J. Hafey was conse- (erated the first bishop of the newly ercated diocese of Raleigh, N. €., at the cathedral today. Michael J. Curley was the consecrat- | ing prelate with Bishop Thomas M. O'Leary of Springfield, Mass., and Bishop Michael J. Keyes of Sava nah, Ga., acting as co-consecrator Bishop Hafey is a native of the dio- cese of Springfield, He will assume | his new dutles July 1. Bishop Hafey's parents, Mr. ond Mrs, James J. Hafey of Chico™e, | Mass. his two sisters, the Misses rah A. and Rosa M. Hafey &f| two brothers, James . of Chicopee and Trancls | I, of Miami, Fla., were present. Arthur Smith Head of Eintracht Lodge 0. D. H Officers for the coming year were elected at a meeting of FEintracht whieh was held They are, President, vice-president, Fritz secretary. Louls Lehr: | firancial secretary, George Hagist: treasurer, Otto TLeupold; depu night. | wore Archbishop | | LUCCHINI-BUTOLI — Mario Lucchini and Miss Emma Butoh Are Married This Moming at St, Mary's Church, Marlo Lucchini and Miss Emma Butoll were married this morning at 8 o'clock in Bt. Mary's church, Rev. Walter Lyddy officlated at the cere- mony. They were attended by Na- poleon Lucchinl, brother of the groom, as best man, and Lena Savio, as bridesmald. The bride wore a gown of white | georgette trimmed with Spanish lace and covered with beads, Her vell was worn in Spanish style caught up on the sides with orange blossoms. She carried a bouquet of bridal roses and lilles of the valley. The bridesmald a dress of salmon colored goorgette and carried a bouquet of June buds. After the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the bride at which many guests were present, in- | cluding visitors from Merlden, New York and Providence, R. I. After the reception, the couple left on an ex- tended honeymoon trip to Niagara Falls and Atlantic City. Mrs. Lucchinl received a large number of beautiful presents. The gift of the bride to her attendant was a sllver mesh bag, and the groom gave his best man a palr of gold cuff links, HALBERG-AHLGREN Swen Halberg and #iss Thelma Ablgren to Be Married Today by Rev. Dr, Ahlquist, The wedding of Miss Thelma Ahl- gren, daughter of Mrs, Amanda Ahlgren of 450 Maln street, and Swen Halberg will take place this afternoon at 6:30 o'clock. Rev. Dr. A. A, Ahlquist of the First Luth« eran church will officlate. Miss Ger- trude Kahl will be bridesmald and David Ahlgren, brother of the bride, best man. Miss June Robertson will be the train bearer. Following the ceremony, Mr, and Mras. Halberg will leave on a camp- ing trip through the Adirondack mountains and Canada. On their re- turn they will reside in this eity. MISS PEARLMAN SHOWERED A miscellaneous shower Wwas given to Miss Betty Peariman at the home of Mrs. R. Robinson of Stan- ley street Sunday evening. About 100 guests were present and Miss Pearlman recelved a large varlety of useful gifts, The home was prettily decorated with flowers and colors, Miss Pearlman is to be- come the bride of Tsadore R. Rob- inson in August. 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