Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
|{one on the way to the banguet anc {bad been found and sent in. The [book hud a cellulold cover with the pleture of a bything beauty, Several T men, who had been posted provio Iy, claimed to have lost it, The HH tosatn r, | prder to prove vne Blames Pavents for Conditions & s, i, rder to provo owner ! Lo found Iyside the book + man had cngaged a stenographer, |who not only was treated to three | “We must have rivalry in religlon. 'successive increa in salary in ’; three weeks v ake ol ohe | frame tenements nd Without rivalry we would have no !l weeks but was taken to lunch- ! 2 5 theaters, and given flowers and |buildings in Brooklyn yesterd ¥ roliglon,” eald Mayur Angelo DL Ioobgu oiite lavishly, At the end of [s0ugLit today. Paonessa speaking to a jolnt ban-|(he necount were two items read-| Polico belteve the quet of the Blue and White armies |ing "33 of Bveryman's Bible class lust ev ning at the Y, M, C, A, The mayor sald each person should be loyal to his or her own -160 cents for advertising for male tenographer,” The man claiming the book, then disc and the toastmasf fire ther proceeded to “discover” the name of a prominent | 5: church and should beliove his or her [4yest on the fly leq o section and two othel own church Is the best, regardloss of |* Another was u “violonot” solo, Tt|& mile away. In most creed. “The Bible stands today Wwhere it was first put and it will stand thero until the cnd of i world," he added, “We must belleve in religion. 1| was glad when the school authorities | cooperated in the movement fo! teach religion to tho children., o should teach the children religlon | (yarison. from the very beginning, as well as | o ] ather forms of education. s A “I am only the chairman of the |, ol 1ha sle someone “accl- | hoard of directors of the city of New Igon, ' 20 (C000 FOTEOnS THeel Dritain. My offico is the clearing \\caiing Miss Berthn Howarth play- ’1‘()”5”1 for all the troubles and flls of | o" " oo P Tl een. the city, The biggest trouble that 7 act ¢ handling the bows and girls, 1 don't |20 RORRG BOOK 0TEE T8 €0 ‘ agreo that boys and girls are far 4 i h B reRontac worse today than they wors In our |lAtional anthem, e day. The trouble is we have forgot. | *1th @ box of artificial flov ten that we were boys and girls | ourselves years ago, i “Seventy-five per cent of the c: Involving hoys #nd girls reported to me are the fault of the mothers and | fathers, Too many people in this! city do not pay enough attention to | their own children, | 1 want to askc Evervman's Bivle | v ! class to help the government of the Baltimare Yan Gets 18 Vears | city of New Britain by helping these saltiniore Han Gets 18 Years lo T unfortunate familivs. We have many ild \omzan: &8 nalicme fathers in the city who do not care | Dealll 0[ Chll[l and was over at 7:33 for their own children, and T r A to eay there are plenty of mothers | ’ in the city who do not care for their | Baltimore, March 17 — Held re- children, ponsible for beating to dc “I am not afrald to he attacked hy | foster son Eldridge, 5 v politicians nor am I afraid of indi- | Ralph T. Coursey was found vidual criticlsm when T say these 0f murder in the second & things, but when I seo children being | terday by the thieo judg neglected it almost breaks my heart. | circult court at Towson and was sen What we want to do is to take caro |[ttnced to 18 years in the Maryland of the hoys and girls; give them re. | Debitentiary, (he maximum penalty. liglon, edncation and reereation. | __Prior to his convietion, Mrs. Iy “How happy I was last summoer y told triendsgho vlsitac after 14 years of cfiort to give son jail, that she we hoys and girls a chance to swimn. We PIOCe N Eer o N e want to make New ritaln the best Scparation and would ask for (b American city but we cannot do it {heiritvoichiidren without giving our ehildren the very yanasieonyitiol ltre st eliglon, cducation and rec. | (he testimony of his wife and on his reatior wnlatle The mayor told the story of the Sions In court, which the judges said | poned until littlo girl who died from neglect in | Showed “matice” toward Eldridge, | (ho fact t the New Britain general hospital a | ¥ho was the Hllegitimate son o his | available fo few weeks ago. “Oh, If we had only | WiT® time. Mana known this two or three weeks he- fore, we might have saved her life.” he added Tlimination of € “We are g ! from America or else holding Bible classes, Dr. Henry K.| Denlinger, professor of history at the Connecticut Agricultural col- followed that of | g the mayor's. Dr, Denlinger spoke on “The New 1" Speaking of | - individnal a pplied {o tho |8 theory of evolution, s Clurkson, orchestra leader, ! pent soma time in the jungles of | buth America and had succecded in | duplicating a *violonet" strument whereby he cou play co used as he pretended | =3 and 80 years old, w i r strains of Nearing the | efore the fires. 1pa b aces of ga w Haven, but apparent, his — old, | \Washington, March | er as re estimated The at no v of manslaughter in conr h the beating of aid "1 i} as hard to ex mad fish as it is to explain man's . What | @ do vou think of the story of H. G. |H Wells that, when the wate eded from the : | a fish decided to waik | § on land? §il “The one sln against the Holy | Ghost is the sin against individual- | § ity. The sin of America is that we | do thing 1o hecause we must be like other people. 1 don't mean that we should be Just for the T as othe ke of being different. at's something else, wppose the calla lily should suddenly decide it wanted to b o the rose. Suppose it took a and painted itself red like the The gardener would say ‘T both of a flower' and woul it ont “I hope the Amer become the conters of gr beauty and T hope New Bri 1 Become a ity as beautiful as Flo ence or To do these things ust have social organiz help: Knowls How am I goir body? You can't help unless you first find out what Py the p soni ¥ nt and then su ELECTRIC Over 200 Tn Attendanc : ) Cilothest advance s to take care | of 130 pe re than 200 at- | I tended and it was necessary to sct as er sveral tables the second time to | B < o the W crowd, | Washday troubles are ended in homes where the UNIVER- down on a stalled street crossing. was pre- SAL—the washer you can de- A with a modern Bible bear his name in gold letters on occo cover fly leaf 1: “I'rese Blue and W - 1 of his resourcefulness in vour work and save you lives on Februar, \ation was made L ai r- | B pend upon to give a lifetime s Oquist | of service—comes to lighten armies in hours for rest and recreation ivar n said a man’s hook, we are recog ing the fact th in time of emc gency you took 0 Spr presenting you the Stanley Rule ar vas presented to Dr. Den- toastmaster, Ernest R eral of the Blue army s in charge leader of | o L clasd ot orchestra | - The r March,” and \ March” by Sousa e THE CONNECTICUT e e platuor tid LIGHT & POWER COMPANY The ope Rev. T. A. Greene, chaplain of the Blue army. Features of the program included a recitation by Miss Effie Carlton, elub swinging by Charlts dden. and mdlod n sol 3 Fa T uded Several uats W much amusement ir whick a mess 00D RAGE TRACK veral Outbreaks In Nelghborhood Traced To Woman Seen Leave waun ing Buildings at E. B, C. Armies’ B;mque[ [vhich contained \iéms showing thit | New York, March | woman maniae, who Is belleved re- ponsible for starting fires Readville's famous track, a cente: I for “big line" light racing for more made in the | woman s a | than a quarter of a century, has|cxact or complete, 5 for fur cont for wifo and|resident of the fire-ridden | passed into the hands of the New have been crazed by reeent med ownership | Sisteen alarms were rung in be. 1 the hours of ten a. m. and » .y, for 14 fires in the Bronx. | railroad. The titlo has not yet been announced that Charles 1L |damage was reported slight but in one it was estimated at $75,000, The susplefon that the fires were ork of a demented young wom native in- [N was based on reports reaching | | I"ire Marshal Brophy and the police. net music on a violin. An fnstru- |0 at least (wo incidents mont with one atring.. mnde by AT 1, a woman, apparently between Into prominence as one of the | Will be distributed gratuitously by from tenement hall Most of tho fires were ¢ sh in the cellar, in the hallway the stairs leading to ments or in the main hall- oline or Iero- veral of the were found in s | downs, and it adds another chap- | ' QUAKE TS RECORDED IN MURDER TRIAL 3™ New Haven, March 17 (P) — To- earth tremor as recorded on cismggraph at Peabody Museum | of Yale university began at 7 a. m tensity at estimated at 1096 dircction was not | ‘1% 17 (A — An carthquake described as “very sev- 4 istered on the seismo- town university to- from Washington. ondorf of the ohservatory t the disturbance . m., until after § o'clock. st intensity from k from here wae uncertain. | el LR R | ing equipment. on BANQUET POSTPONED, The annual banquet of the Ori- to her and his admis- | oles baseball team has. been post ter date becaus the affair at the present T Abe Aronson stated last | yesterday that a date will be pi c- 14\\1' for the affair within the next fow EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1928, ) v o naok na veen-tox "5y vonc | CRAZED WOMAN THOUGHT PI‘EA Hm [;H"‘I]REN [ RESPONSIBLE FOR FIRES | e e e KORAN TRANSLATION lurkish Republic Undertakes to Translate it Into Their Own Lan- 1§ GONE FOREVER e o New furen Boad 10 Ut R, comtmteons, s o yville as Freight Yard ’Vulwn the first official translation of Readville, Mass., ) the Korun. This holy book of the | Moslems, written in Arable, is com- arch 17 () — | Prehensible only to the pricsts and 1olars of Turkey. Two unofficlul nslations into Turkish have been past, but neither s tr Two of the nation's most able % ! : scholars have been charged with the York, New Haven and Harlord| .y o (rauatation, wiich il e quire at least two years. The trans- passed, according to the announce- |lators, the poet Mehmed Ahklf, ment, but all arrangements with | WhO 4t present, becauso of his the present owner, C. W. Loonard, | POVErty is being supported in Cairo | wero safd to have been completed. | DY @n Egyptian prince, and the | The property is to bo used {o further | Priest Kutchuk Hamas, each will re- | lans for the development of tho | CtIVe for their work 1,600 liras, v Haven frelght yards here, W ALEEUL, Hardly a year after the track | When completed, coples of tho of- hullt in 1506, the track sprang | 1cial Turkish version of the Koran country’s fastest courses when Star | {he government among the peop Pointer paced around the mile oval ' BUIS tho new regime purposcs to 1:59 1-4. This was the first (e | ABSWer the charge of atheism latl milo had been negotiated by a | At Its doors by followers of the de- light harness horse fn less thap | POsed caliph. time. two minutes. The performance, | T0 STUDY DISEASES The sale draws to a close the long ago added to the t of broken track's long history of ups and American Collego of Surgeons Will records, created a ecnsation at the Aid in Prevention of Troplcal Afl- ter to fhe story of the decline of mile tracks in New England. Only oth 8 tro vhic! e onsfotherimllofirack fonwhionitha | AN S R Drl grand circuft has held its Taces | o akiln H. M tin of Ch! i now remains in New England, |~ ranklin H. Martin of Chicago, di- ments, Hartford, Conn. The famous old ||°8® Of Surgeons, announces that ar- circuit in Springfield, Maes, long | ANEements have bocx_1 concluded since passed out of the plcture, | with the Panama hospital. The track was bullt and main.| AUthorities for allocating tempor- tained for cars by the New |40% ‘Tbl"r'";""); srace 1:1 ";; 1'\(”'!'“"- ST oL iR A + | tional hospital to enabls the Gorgas ‘Ziflmmf’"\“"’-’ D R S EG i o Readville was noted for its high | S°2rch work in tropical diseases and purses and made many a record n | PV ONtive medicines. The laboratory RS | will be maintained pending o8 ok LU0k At o sooio) ]mo rection of a permanent labora- stallon race Ttun on the track in|'CTY for the Gorgas memorial. | that year. In 1909 there was run|. DF* Martin said that Protessor 50.000 trotting handicap, one of | Michard P. Strong, formerly of Har- vichest stakes ever offexed | VAT university, 4 ready to take 4t Hiieiicasl Al eri, charge immediately after completion | In its days of prosperity soma of arrangements. The agreement | of the most spectacular paces in history of the sport were writ- | here. Finally misfortunes came, In June, 1907, the great grand- TO PIAY WITH LEGION stands and bleachers wero wiped | gaoic polistier, coach and captain out by firo which also destroyed | or”he gantey Works basketball sulkies and quantities of otherrac: |taam in the Industrial league, has been signed by Coach Harry Gins- berg to play with the American Le- glon quintet during tho series for | That is the Charter Oak track at | J¢ctOr general of the American Col- | Martin had with President Chiari of b Panama. A great American derby was ex- | pected to win back prestige in | 1909, but it failed of the financiaj | succoss hoped for by the directors | mnd the track declined further. At!the two outfits, each team will e last, in 1925, racing was given up | allowed to carry & squad of eight for good, aithough the hope always | players. As the Leglon team had remained among horsemen that | only seven, Manager Clarence Lan- sometime the grand circult horses pher gave Coach Ginsberg his choico might return. of any player, Mr. and Mrs. Willlam H. Allen of Maplo Hill are sponding a few days |C\1E 810UE Stanley street late last torial under the caption “The Good Samaritan,” the Morning Post dis- | plays much concern over a report from Washington that the United State is preparing to present Great Britain a bill for damages to Ameri- can trade due to the British block- ade of Germany during the World War. Attributing the move to United States Senator Borah, the news. {Week in Atlantic City, N. J. taurant. When Teller meets Ander- was reached after an interview Dr. | the city title. Under the agreement | entered into by the managements of | son—~a real battle! Thursday night |in New Yark. lmgl-!. Arthur N, Rutherford, A report came into headquarters (Stanley street, reported the matter the Frederickson store on Arch son working in his store. [Or Naw Blogkade ,, Jetter Pletyro” Framing At's~advt, vestigating. gfiel= As ¢ Vacuum Electric = é}”/orlless Was/zda‘y_/ Thousands and thousands of Housewives everywhere know the joy of EASY Washday! See for yourself how easy, how effortless, washday will be with an “EASY." Your next washday, in your own home, with your own washing, let the “EASY” prove itself to you The trial demonstration is absolutely free—No obliga- tion. Telephone or write today, Don't delay! London, March 17 (P—1In an ed paper bids him beware lest other neutrals turn on Amerci ‘It 1s notorio says tho news- paper, “that the blockade only b come effective when the American navy got to work. The damage done to neutrals before the entry of America would certainly be balanced by the damage done after she be- came a belligerant, and, as we all know-—for the Americans have told us—It was really they who did everything when they came in “Therefore if the scnate 08 this question, the Americans them- ves may be faced with clajms of Sweden, Norway, Holland and Den- mark, which suffered severe restric- tions which the United States navy mainly imposed.” The Morning Post, however, has decided to treat the reported claim as a political joke until it is assurcd of its seriousness. Tt concludes by declaring that it a clalm {s made no | British government will entertain it kS = \ City Items v oo Barry & Bamforth of Hamilton street are spending a (Amazingly Easy Terms!) When Greek meets Greek—a res- | 19 Main Street Mail and Telephone i Ty Phone Line 1 ; Orders : Filled HARTFORD The New = How They 7 Keep that' Sunday Look on Monday The Washer ! with the 5-YEAR GUARANTEE S ter bound vary "ril, pre: | ONLY $5-OO DOWN Balance Payable In Small Monthly Amounts FREE A $15 TABLE LAMP GIVEN AWAY WITH EACH UNIVERSAL WASHER PURCHASED NOW ! NEW BRITAIN, CONN, TELEPHONE 3600 SPRING SILKS SMART, SUPPLE, LUSTROUS, GAYLY PRINTED QUALITY SILKS, MODERATELY PRICED = Silk Shop—Second Floor i Printed Crepes Beautiful designs in the newest colorings. Many exclusive designs from the House of “Mallinson” and “Cheney” and other well known man- ufacturers, $2.50 to $3.95 vd. Chinese Damask The most popular and the newest fabric for Spring and Summer wear. Three splendid qualities, imported and domestic. inches to 54 inches in width. $3.95, $4.95, $5.95 yd. Printed Georgettes A marvelous collection of floral and conventional designs in a riot of The rough weave pongees in all the color. A design and color for every latest Spring colo: Washable and purpose, dress or scarf. wearable. Ideal for sport wear. $2.50 and $3.50 yd. $1.95 and $2.50 yd. . 54-inch printed Border Effects Beautiful color combinations Rajah and Tussah In Exclusive Designs Willow inch Crepe de Chine | 54-inch Pus $5.95 $6.95 Crepe Broadcloth Printed Tussah Washable silk broadcloth of erepy A washable all silk tussah, in two- weave in multi-color and ombre tone prints of conventional designs. stripes. Also plain colors with striped An excellent wearing fabric that will border suitable for two-piece dresses. give good service, 36 inches in width. A splendid assortment of colors. Yd. Yard $2.95 | $1.50 Silk Shop—Second Floor DING AUTOS automoblles ra- that someone was prowling around |to Sergeant Michael J, Flynn, He the automobiles continued up street late last night, but Detective Kk street, going at least 40 milex Hears U.S. May Ask Da]flages Feeney found that it was Fredorick- [an hour, He gave the license num- ber of one of the cars as 73.988, Ohrn- | Detective Thomas J. Feeney s in- Phone 2504