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- 'PASSING THE BUCK CRY IN.GITY HALL Dispate Over Assistant Building Tngpector Waxes Warm Officlal New Britain Is wondering just who is “passing the buck” in the matter of appointing a deputy building inspector, conversation about city hall today discloses. Last Wednesday, the common council named Councilman Arthur N. Rutherford as deputy, and the appointment, claiming the commit- tes had no right to select the official. Mayor A. M. Paonessa came out Saturday with a statement backing up the commission and advising the committee 1t had acted illegally. The mayor's letter brought from the committee a statement declaring it had merely followed the ‘execu- tive's dictates and the letter of his message to the common council re- questing appointment of a deputy. It was claimed that the committee was instructed to name the incumbent. The mayor's statement to the council, which is now on file in the city clerk's office, asks the common council to do one of two things, famely to authorize the building commission to select an aide for the #¥W BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JU as it 1s presented the question of the entire matter's legality may be rals- ed since it was an order to per- 'orm an act contrary to the charter, Mayor Paonessa declined to com- ment today. He does not regard the disagreement as of sufficient import- ance to enter into a controversy, he explains, In the meantime, Councllman Rutherford has been notified of his appointment as deputy but is not serving, awaiting developments, Alderman Dehm has announced that a second meeting of his com- mittee will be held this week., It is expected that the committee will ad- vise the building commission it is advisable to engage an assistant to the inspector. The commission will then, according to statements of its members, name Councilman Ruther- ford to the position on a part time basis and recommend a salary which must ba fixed by the common coun- cll. May Get New Theater ‘Also New Industry The possibility of a new theater RELIGIOUS HATRED LIGHTED AT TRIAL (Cotninued from First Page) some religlous thought would reach the children. I as a religious leader saw the urge of strengthening that phase of our Synagogue life—but no ono dreamed that there would ac- tually be passed a law such as was assed finlly in one of our sovereign states==(the law), “And the law having been passed —i{t was only a matter of a short perfod that American sense of Americanism would rebel and did rebel—and Sopes was charged with a misdemeanor. The trfal that followed apart from ifs dramatic and fantastic turns that it took and the character of the men that acted In the drama was a frregular In the run of justice —the law was violated and the fine was duly imposed—thers was no in New Britain, which 18 rumored |question but that justice was done from time to time, came to life |But what of the law? That is yet ta again last week when two theatri-|pe determined? Has the state the cal men from out of the city made |y ight to make such a law? The inquirles as to available sites, etc.!\j1s world of educators makes the Frequently the possibility of a new ! j.qjqeq answer, no. As for the con- theater crops out. The management | itytionality of it—I cannot see how of the Poll theaters this mMOrniNg |(i can ho constftutional, stated that his concern was not in- | wpys one thing that the trial terested in New Britain, Dayton made clear is that the The talk of a new theater brings at law LY 2%, one in heaven or on earth or under | the earth was able to open and read “Let ns so build onr social stric {therein. A great historlan has re-{ture, let us so prepare our youth {cently sald theso soven seals were |that they will place over our ago & | the seven great ignorances of man. [monument with the legend “(1)No one knew—says this his- lgeneration that expected and torlan—of man's physieal nature, [pared for our cor For it 15 with (2) the workings of his thoughts [the future thut we ; and desires, (3) of the world in| *“You have heard the st he | which he lives, (4) of how he has|Dian Burgon of fhe lust century | como about as & race, (5) of how he {who, in an argument with an evolu | devalops as an Individual from a [tionist, cried out: You leave my an- |tiny egg, (8) how deeply and per- | cestors in Parvadise 1 1 will lcave { manently he 18 affected by the often |vours h e R ) forgotten impressions of infancy and ! Naw ohviLus childhood, (7) how his ancestors R lived for hundreds of thousands of {our ancestors will inhahit fs whe vears in the dark ignorance of sav-lor no lagery. ) “It has taken labor and blood and |tiat fallows {anguish and war to break these seals | pese and now the attempt is made to| | closs and reseal this book. Now | {with the book open it should be our | |duty to help man to read therein |ter and we seek to shut out the great lvery g which they condemn triilw that are there found. For it |aome (o ald i this works ‘Tha new |is indeed truth alone that will et [commandment, Thou ot us free. This struggle that s re- |what 1 not or cannot do, opened in America—would have been laughed out of court by St ! Augustine who made clear the divid- ing line between natural laws and moral laws (400 A. D) Wesley the x; great founder of Methodlsm—an the up evolutionist. This attitude of the of ft. And it was a major prophet fundamentalists would have been who argned that the 11 spirit is |1aughed out of court by the deeply imore toler ink it 1 | religious scientists of all ages—New- | “A good Christian—Alice Thate 'ton and Thomson and Kelvin and | Post—has recently said in poetry | | Maxwell and above all the saintly |what my poor prose ean but ill ex- Pasteur who has inscribed on his whom he foresaw,' pres ry of ar in ardens. hat more sions ther turn to neration return to darks hestiality, whether us will Rut we shall yet higher and We not turn back « who so moral and Iy right will in the end, by the hi; r chall \rocess will The shall lare be shown for what it is worth. fwhipper will in the and t1 ures ns, 1 Fmerson as- 1t wes a good and Yan ark erse {s wider than our view » tyrant will, undane who 1 nt than we t! her 1925, RESERVE 1 ha whipped | § 'WHO CALLED IT GRIM WAR? IT’S GRIN WAR, OFFICERS AT CAMP DEVENS DECLARE stafts for the studying out of war problems .n the near Taven, units of the regular army on duty at tha eamp for the practical demonstration of problems atta defense, tan, work, sig- and communicatioons, engineere trench warfare, night attacks, Lectures are reduced to the minimum and the enrira emphasis of the training is put upon conditioning the offlcers and giving them practie cal instruction, introduces a sectarian creed upon | Reserves Officers the schools of Tennessea, In the first | place it assumes and accepts the | from the Nut. |F st Lieutenant J. H. McVelght of [commanders and plain: “Out of the depths T clomb, state ¢ ving the cool hreezes l\h”,.m.u”‘ The 304th ufficers are a human home ' 1 Eiblo o /\he bacis of knwiedge) b |lLolwehichile iz lobsaient—an idenl ofj| hroush Epawnand nese ANEIA L 18 T U AT e s red near the old base hLo<pital the author of the bill remarked “The |art and ideal of aclence, an fdeal of | Tp the long biologic stair, | A Tha heights overlook Rible is the foundation upon which | the fatherland, an ideal of the vir-! Fulfilling my Ma [r E el AT n e s imantiiE il |Liestotithe kosnElis Achieving the form of man Pond and the Nahua Rive the north and Mountains, The inspector, or to name a committee of the common council to {nvestigate the need for one, In the event the latter course was chosen, the mayor asked that the committee be given power “to act.” On the interpreta- tlon of the phrase “to act” is hung the dispute. The committee mem- bers interpreted the words to mean that they should make the appoint- ment. Others say the common counefl cannot delegate a committee to act in its stead and perform acts which the common council itself could not. Appointment of & deputy by the common council would be an infringement on the powers glven he building commission by charter and would be illegal. In view of that fact, the mayor believes the commit- tee, since it was acting for the com- mon council, could have no legal right to make the appointment. A third element has entered into the discussion, and while it is not rezarded as important in the situ- ation, it is considered as interesting. Alderman C. J. Dehm, chalrman of the special committee, made the mo- tion under which the group was named. City Clerk A. L. Thompson made note of the motion and after- wards wrote out the resolution which appears in the minutes today. His resolution specifies that the commit- tee shall investigate the need for a deputy “and appoint one.” If the city clerk has worded the resolution to light the fact that an out-of-town corporation, whose name the cham- ber of commerce refuses to divulge, {s inquiring about desirable sites for a factory here. tomb, “Happy is he who carries a God within him, an fdeal of brauty | Trnfantey woods and valleys land's most famons und largest eum- s in camp, | SeTVINE with vacation camp t of Ayer. The s Camyp Devens, offic are on Crar rs r. Of White almest | vists | < [l Lt n ¢ nostrils the breath “And again ‘The evolutionist who You shall know the truth and the Came into my nostrils t brea Fingerprints Left on ‘Auto Furnish Clue (Speclal to the Herald) Plainville, July 27—George Cooper, | George Tourtelotte, and Salvatore | Manziafico, all of Hartford, were ar- rested Saturday night by the Hart- ford police and charged with the robbery of Cook's garage on Fast Main street here last week., Th break was made early in the morn- Ing, the thicves making away with eight automobile tires and a quan- tity of accessories, the total value of the stolen goods being estimated $300. Fingerprints were left on the fender of an automobile near the |f window through which entrance was | gained, and these were photograph- ed by John F. Paulsen of the state police, who assisted State Policemat: J. A. Watrous in investigating. The pictures furnished the necessary clue and the Hartford city police rounded up the three suspects, who will be en to Plainville for trial later in week. ooper is a former Plainville, having lived rears, na ir ete. SOUTHINGTON N tain J kinnor of W i - 3 | Headed Girl, | 1unas playlet, Olda Staske- Anna Michaels and E | Dancing, fad and follk dance, mall girl playlet, Ella Lucas, Sophia Misses Mollle and Janette Light, Mae Caslowitz, Rose and Esther Wellins and Jeanette Gans are spending a week at Momauguin. everin and T.ouise Hanson have ferred their property on Line wood street to Andrew and Minnie 1t five arietor, Iancy The s0lo, Lonesome, Hickory Dick- | Three Bears, mne Carlson town : A dress rehearsal of the show was | held last week and the large crowd | ors who witnessed it, put | ump of approval on it. The | ounds have been furnishing with better athletes, bet- - citizens and better craftsmen now they enter the d v with the 804th Tafantry and | west are the I denies ths Bibla. story otioreation &s | Liui shallmake you free. It is ab- | Of life that outlives death oft to right, Captain J. W. training '8 oo el R todaltempt tofatom the tdejol Sk Iast Gotimads metmiole \rmer of Taconic, Sccond Lisuten- |entirely practical with the fes not be u,,.,}'m,_ 1t (evolution) goes human striving. And is surely un- I became a living soul.” nt J. A. Andrews of Putnam; Cap- {on the pistol and rifle ranges; divid- hand in hand with modernism makes American to attempt to foist a re- S, Mahoney of Manchester; |ed into provisional squads with Jesus Christ a fakir and undermine ligion of any sort upon American (i t Lieutenant Dwight S! rotating ecorporaleies for foot il : sy Britain; First Licutenant C. T.|and the manual of arms; serving as the foundation of our governmen | 1 2 Is it not clear that the law imposes But is this not a Christian coun- chard of New Britain; anl|company, regimental and brigade in the first place a religious docmnr.""';"“P;“h”“_b"' there v”“\' others |l .\ inty Detactive Edward! J. Hick- | — upon the schools but also the doc- |V Are ;‘U‘ and “:’l‘i‘::‘i;fm"; ev and a force of men ped down | trine of a particular sect — even |SHULIOn {0 guAratice A€ THES lon Southington lnst night azain an Smith Ground Children granting that this is a Christian | {rom interference o ) aided the Bdson Ho in Plants n . . bigotry of the majority, [k ) nEias To Provide Vaudeville country, There are all sorts of [igotry of the majority. | ville and seized about L auaqevy | Gnsistiane—I have heard preachers|| But further you will sk hasmot| ;o oy, e Smith Pla ind Dramatic.| v without mumber in pulpits and fn |the legislaturs elected by the people |5 o - ih under the direction of its di- | Srarkeln D als indliony ersition =hiva irendl| e rightitoNtelNitaem ploveeal thati| Ciie il P lielelta i naukts e Lo ress I MArlon N At EbCon KA BH| oy Dock nds of pages of literaurs and |What they want taught? = By il ot worked np a clever vaudeville pro- t fundagientalism is not the | means— the legislature can outline | oo 4 o surpri ram which will be presented to the |junas and Adela Wornot, an The sale was “handled religion in America. Is Mr. But- (the curriculum. - It can surely sa¥|p.anq nis cohorts wr s of the neighborhood Wed- ona and Lucille Nanghton. through the Carlson real estate of- Mr. Bryan the sole authority |that no blology be taught—that n0 |, qav night and a return visit v afternoon e P !as to the meaning of the Bible? i early a date was entirely unexpeete C' - ity ltems Daughters were horn at the New | Britain General hospital yesterday to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hornberger {of Plainville and Mr. and Mrs. Al- fred Carmody of Providence, R. L science be taught—but if they do | “Why not Mr. Fosdick or Holmes | put it in the curriculum then it must | or Potter—or the deans of the great | be tanght by scientists and not by seminaries of America or of Europe? | sectarians of any sort. In truth it Why not ask for example what the | ought to be the duty of educators— | ‘:ml]\ols of the Bible have to say of | experts to care for schools—we do lthe suhject. After all we Jews have | not call a lawyer to diagnose a case the honor of writing the Bible — |of illness—we do not call in a politi- there is a plan for collecting the |clan to determine the proper adjust- [or Angust on vacation ghts on ft—begun by a Chris- [ ment of scientific instruments—why {tamber 1, he will assun tic vou will not deny me that.|then should we permit legislators 10 ltgrate of the Sccond Cor And we Jews commented on the |tell us what ought to be taught and | church in Westfield, Mass, Bible long before there was & Chris- [ what ought not to be. be a larger field than an interpretation of these books. Ve have no holier posseesion | and his many friends wish him well We are told by the fundamental- |than the mind of the child and T|in his new undertaking. ist that the creation is told in the |count as criminal—nothing less—to | We are assured that God is|teach that child anything at all that At a meeting of ge of man, that and other | he may have to unlearn later on. I{town committea held Thu -1 Now I am not a Christian— | hold it a breach of faith to bind the |ning, it was voted to recommend but have read enough of Christian | mind of the child so that he will not |that James L. Degnan, now literature to know that that is not!kpow and understand. | enting attorney for the fown, he ap- so accepted by the clergy—the| «If we in America today do not|pointed judge to fill tha vacancy chools are not teaching it and the |take heed the most fantastically ab- [caused hy the resignation of Julze laity are not accepting if. And |surq thing of the age will become a | Hal D. Fitzpatrick on July 1. Afr. | tney have good ground. The rabbis |fact, For we have a weakness of all | Degnan asked that someone be ap of the first century have given us|ahsurdities. Therc are two classes | pointed to fill his place as prosecuf- clear notions of the symbolism of the | ¢hot eount fn America—the upper ing attorney and the committee Yool | Bible. The story/ of creation 18 not | orictocracy and the lowest posr and | @ vote on the question which rosult a single story. God, we are told by | Pavy pre Rev. Roy G favewell sermon as First Congregational church 3 Many members churches were in aftendance. Tic and Mrs. Pavy will spend the montt Ia Rebekah Sewing Cirele will | Mrs. H Coon, 144 | Arch street, Thursday afternoon. | born this morn- D ritain general hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Victor Werdelin of i ow T it e g JACOBSON—NOONAN The wedding of Miss Margaret | Helen Noonan, daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. James L. Noonan of 38 Cran= Andrews streef, and Mr. and Mrs. |ston Terrace, and Clarence E. Jacobe in Grobstein of 31 Amherst street. | son, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Marriage licenses have heen issued | Jacobson of 27 Wakefleld Court, will to Clarence E. Jacobson of 27 | fake place Wednesday morning at 9 Wakeficld court, and Miss Margaret | o'clock at §t. Mary's church. Mi H. Noonan of 38 Cranston terrace, | Gertrude M. Reilly will be maid of ind to Frank Fucini of Plainville, honor and Bert O. Jackson, best Tucas: |and Olympia Scagliola of 245 |man. The ushers will be Howard : The Red Cleveland street Butler and Ragner Norfeldt. wer resident of | on Maple 1 on Sep the program which will be pre- ented at the Smith grounds on Wednesday afternoon is as follows: playlet, Anna Ella Lucas and Anna She- lide and Slide girls, dance, : The Me and the Olda and Tt will Southington playlet, wslelunas, haels hY piano solo, Lilli prose- R | | led in nina votes being cast for War- Cold Cash in Your Pocket! There are two ways to take care of a tire injury. One way is to put a blowout patch in the tire and let it stay there. The other way—and the only good way—is to use the blowout patch only as a temporary repair. At the first opportunity the tire should be taken to a ;ompetent and able vulcanizer for permanent re- yair. This means saving thousands of miles of the tire's life. That’s cold cash in your pocket. We know how to repair your tires. We've had years of experience. We use the best materials available —Goodyear—and modern methods. Save money hy trying us the next time your tire aeed repairing. O’NEIL TIRE & BATTERY CO. 39 Washington St. o Station Two Phone 900 Park and Stanley Sts. Beneficial | = - joans T A (A True Story) 9 T ;7 @ HowBaby’sLife WasSaved Baby only weighed 215 pounds when he arrived His hold on life was very feeble. His mother and father borrowed the money to put him in an in- cubator and give him hospital treatment. Now . heis a fine, sturdy, little fellow in perfect health, 1f you need money for iliness, death in the family, or any other purpose; you can borrow it from us in 24 hours and on fair terms. We Lend UP TO $300 to Housckeepers Only Lowful Interest Call, write or "phone RENEFICIAL LOAN SOCIETY 87 W. Main St. Cor. Washington Room 104 Phone 1-9-4-3. Open 9 10 5.0 Saturdeys 9 01 Linensed by the State and Bonded to fbe Publio the rabbis, made worlds and destroy- ed them. God made Eve of a tib as symbol of modesty. The story of Ithe crcation varies in Genesis in Psalms and in Job. And are we to |accept the miracle: We Jews Whow {the Bible. We are not troubled by the antics of a whals or the speaking of an ass, We do not accept as lit- eral the plagues and the division of the Red Sea. We have never used the Jew has always been the man of #ithe book. The atheist if learned is {more acceptable than the high priest. Study and study is the cry {of the rabbis to this day. Well may he Bible cry—'Protect me from my nds.' The world as the scientist has shown it to us in a world governed not by caprice but by law. The dictum of Jesus that ‘whatsoever a man soweth that she he also reap’ is not only a biblical text—it has be- come a part of the consciousness of mankind *“The Brunps, the Galileos and the Jenn of history have fought the good fight to redeem man from ig- {norance to emaucipate him—yes, even the Darwins—to give him more lefsure m understanding. Som of you may remember the passage in Faust where Goethe likens his- tory to the book with the seven seals described in Revelations which no the Bible to suppress science — for | foreigner—the middle class follows | The great led by a demagogus—can [ make them see the need of certain | restrictive measures for the lower classs and they in turn are helpless hile the foreigner hecomes a | belligerent follower of all that is| accepted in the fear that he will not | be tolerated. | “And the law of the fundamental- |ist unless stopped by the | courts will become the law of the | Then there will arise again the fon in the educational life of this eountry. Parochial schools [of all sorts will spring up. There | | will he repeated the same mess that has taken place fn England and Wi Read the Leslie report as to these—some 12.000—schools in Eng- | land—the state of the education the state of the"buildings—the in- crease in partisanship. The report cannot of course give the spirtual | |1ass of this sort of division of | | cchools. Rut it is safe to say that| |the darkness and the dinginess of the huildings, the carelessness in the | choice of the teachers has in tha 25 | vears of the existence of the system | will |1and. Aaiv s, | bronght physical darkness and spirl- ibeen called for 1 {which 1al night. There is a tradition in Amerlca that must at all costs be | maintained. There is a monument |at the spot where Bruno was burned | at stake for his heresiss—with vhn:u] along to the generation Jmtifim'mn legend ‘erected by a |ernments will ren D. Chase for the seven for Harry €. Camp. Mr. Camp will be recommended for appoint ment as assistant prosecutor. position an The personnel of the conrt will b as follows James T, Deg nan; deput s 0. Sh ard; prosecuting atterney, Warren D. Chase: assistant 5 torney, Harry A referendum vote on the eansoli dation of the town and horough gov be taken on Aug a meantime 1 familiari provisions w charter. 3 and In t of tha town selves with the tained in the r as con- Miss Margaret ed to her duties Francis' hospital weeks' vacation Caba has v 15 1 follow Directors to Discuss Sale of Masonic La A meeting of the direc t nic Temple corpora this time the offer to pu West Main street property by ont town partles, will be discn the offer is accepted it will stockhold M o 5 "ITNSY B par WONDERFlll TO PE ARPAE TO WRITE O A TWPE- WRTER " (> ( TTLEL — I You BUSINESS NOTE 1SPOKE O You AS0LT— ETHEL: The Stenog’s Day Off TN — Pd OING: GIRIS MRS 2L/ 1< AND GLEVER WITR YOUR? ERPSN — TE YOU BUT A MOMENT™ o O NP AETTER. 0 IKHOW 1T WOLLON'T E WS FOR MEJ NGHT= ", £ nience, Safety and E% Industrial Certificates of Deposit are an ideal investment for funds temporarily idle ch you wish to keep available at short notice. 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