New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 23, 1927, Page 11

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OFFICE BOY AND HIS BAND JAILED | they are not husband and wife. (Continued From First Page) 10’s case, adding that he would not make a recommendation for the others as he does not represent them. Judge Hungerford pointed out that a sentence of five years in state’'s prison, not in jail, can be given, and in taking jurisdiction he believes he is exercising great leniency. The theory of Attorney McDonough appears to be that a first offense should not be punished. Prosecuting Attorney Woods asked that no leniency be shown in any of the cases. If thieving by factory em- ployes is to go on unabated heavy dosses will be suffered by the manu- facturers, especially Landers, Frary & Clark, whose products are attrac- tive, he said. Those who steal and those who buy stolen goods should be punished, he declared. Dr. Paladino of New Britain Gen- eral hospital spoke for Brunetto, who, he said, is an orphan, and has never before been implicated in a violation of the law. He asked that leniency be shown. Sergeant McCue, who was called to the factory after Cook was appre- hended, testified to the details of the case and the recovery of the articles. He said Cook was truthful about the matter and aided him in tracing the goods. The other men involved were also quick to admit the extent of | their law violations, the sergeant said. Joseph Williams, aged 33, of 369 Main street, who was charged with burglary several weeks ago after having been found in a dentist's of- fice, and whose case was continued until today, was charged with being a common drunkard, and the original charge was nolled. Officer Thomas C. Dolan testified that he has knowledge that Williams has a nerve ailment and uses a drug to | combat it. Judge Hungerford sen- tenced Williams to the state farm for inebriates. . It Was Au Revoir, Not Good Bye Daniel Silva, aged 32, of Mill street, pleaded guilty and declined to make a statement when charged with neglecting to support his wife :nd three children. Judge Hunger- jord ordered him to pay $12 per week towards the support of his de- pendents and to furnish a bond of $250 or go to jail for three month: Mrs. Silva testified that her hus- band went away December 24, 1926, | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1927, Officer testified that a Kryzinski is on Stadler | plainant accompanied him and when | they knocked at the door, they were | HAL“ IS TAREET bade enter. On stepping into the | | kitchen, they looked into a bedroom | , |and saw the couple, who admitted F[]R SHAFTS T[“]AY daughter of Mrs. ; e guard outside the house soliciting. | yys s {The' woman's nusband docs not ive | MiDister Speaks of Modern Ten- with her, and conditions in the home | Belittle Great Men | cer Stadler found me, but all T want | There Is a tendency in these times |to ask the judge, Your Honor, is to | to pull great men down to the stan- | dismiss me’ from this case. That's | dards of 1926-27, removing the halo all” from thelr heads, according to Rev. | Mrs. Kryzinski sald there was a|G. H. Schneck, are “very bad.” Malon took the stand and when del]cy to asked if he wished to make a state- | ment, said: “It is true that Offi- who spoke to the wedding in the house a few days|Kiwanis club today on “George |ago .and some liquor was left over, | Washington.” so she and Malon were doing their| Rev. Mr. Schneck stated that | best to preclude its going to waste. | while a statement is true that Wash- She went into a bedroom and Malon | ington and other great men, did | followed her. | great things out of personal pride, In the ca Agostino, | altruistic deeds always are matters | t of Peter i aged 29, of 681 Arch strect, charged | Of self-respect. He quoted Edward | Bok in the statement “There is a | with failure to clear the snow and ice from his sidewalk, a nolle was|faW Way from egotism to self-re- |entered by *Prosecuting ,\uorn.«y‘sr’;{ct: Woods. | SV lows: | TFour great leaders in the most = | United States history were peculiar- | TOURNAMENT To STARle alike in their temperament; they | even represent as to temper two ex- tremes in two groups: Gencral New Britain to Be Host to Visitors | Washington and General Grant, two | | very grave and stern men, and Ben- Sorles for | jamin IFranklin and Abraham Lin-| | coln, these two men being inclined | | to lighten their burden and their task with a scnsible, well-fitting | | basketball contests between differ- [Joke. In the case of George Wash- | | ent districts of the Connecticut Light | ington historical research has taken | and Power Co. will be staged at the [&way that traditional, lifeless per-| | state armory this evening when the |fectionism also in regard to the| | New Britain team meets the Hart- |cause of the well known serious ex- ford team. The game will be|pression of his face. We have dis- | opened when the ball is tossed onto | carded the myth that Washington | | the floor by C. J. Allen of Hartford. | never laughed and seldom smiled [ Mr. Allen is executive assistant to|because of the greatness of his char- | [the secretary and treasurer of the |acter and cares of his office. True— | i Mr. Schneck spoke as fol-| in Opening Game of | * stiver cup. The opening game in a series of | company. he smiled but rarely in public, and The games will be played a|was noticeably nervous whenever he Istiver loving cup donated by J. had to speak in public—all on ac-| Henry Roraback, president of the|count of his facial defects about| |company. Teams competing are|\which he was very s and | from the New Britain, Merlden, | whjch embarrassed him. Even in Branford, ~ Waterbury, Norwalk, | pis vouth he had bad teeth and in Greenwich, New Milford and Hart-|j¢er years used a set of false teeth, | | ford districts. | made of ivory which he tried to HOSTESSES TO BEAUTY BRIGADE N I Mary Etta (left) and Essie Dee Collins, Galveston, Tex., debutante twins, will act as official hostesses to the scores of entrants from Mexico, Cuba and U. S. tional beauty contest to be held 1n Galveston in May. in the interna- Gal» veston girls aren’t eligible for championship honors, |Sahaiensct fish o Rpronais ,.,'h; | hide. 1In true modern business fash- | |the acquaintanceship and goodwill| among the different tow More | |than 60 Hartford people have ar- |ranged to attend the game tonight. Now Britain will be the host to- this embarrassment of the father of | our country in his advertisements. | At the same time George Washing- | ton had that instinctive, inarticulate | ship of a nation, But another more pertinent ques- paste is making a great deal out of |tion rises in view of this hero wor-| It is this: Will we | | ever understand the real factors in nistoric development if we sce pro-| guess created only by certain in-| leaders, we are not intercsted so much in ideas, but in men who em body ideas so we have not to thin them through oursclves, There are men like W. I, Calverton, geously claims: Our American fodern Quarterly” who very | birthday, the club members sang | patriotic songs. The attendan prize was awarded to Donald Leav- itt. It was announced that on Friday evening from § to $:30 o'clock the ‘Wennerberg chorus will broadcast from WTIC. Rev. A. A. Ahlquist, pastor of the First Lutheran church and leader of the chorus, is active in the Kiwanis club. Friday evening members of the club with their wives will attend the minstrel show given at the Boys' club for the swimming pool fund. LOOTING OF GITY ' OF SHANGHAI NOW FEAR OF NATIVES (Continued from First Page) | | Lin, that the northerners at least were taking real action against the However, those follow- tion assert that it re- mains to be seen whether the north- |erners will be immune to the dis senstons and disloyalties which here tofore have crippled all of Canton's | forces, | | 1500 Russians | Chang's army includes a Russlan | |brigade, so called by it con- ltains 1,500 white Ru | Movement of troops to Shanghal {by the powers to protect foreign lives and property continued to pro- | . One thou British n | with this city as their ultimat tination, arrived in Hongkon {morning from England. | The strike ation remains un- | changed. Last estimates placed the | |number of workers out at about 100,000, southerners, ing the si Miss Torell to Marry i Mr. Bergstrom March 5 | Mr. and Mrs. John Torell of keview avenue nounce e of their daughte to Harold 0 of Mr. and Mrs. Aug Bergstrom of 131 Adams street, on They will be married in Alabama. Miss Torell Britain | Mr. and the Polytecl tution Rensselae 26. He is employed by Lesse ~ Lelands Springtime Week of Bargains Continues Small size to 50 Special Group— and CREPES and GEORGETTES DRESSES Women’s Dept.—3rd Floor Dresses Q) 315 value Women’s Dept.—3rd Floor Ladies— teeling which e true leader has | gividuals as Washington or Lincoln | about the secret likes and dislikes of [or Roosevelt? The latest modern-| g the people he to lead and e lists in the philosophy of history are| fully rcalized that wit and humor|in fact very little interested in the were incompatible in the mind of value of indivduals for the develop m is a myth and this theory search Corporation of ndividuals making history” is and is at the present t an illusion, Illusion or no illusion in Birmingt —the fact is, we need leaders, path- night and dancing and refreshments three times since that time. In one |will follow the game. Vincent Ker- lette he told her where he was |non is captain and manager of the and what his plans were, conclud- |local team. and she heard from him by mail in all path- ing with a “good-bye forever” fare- | well. He gave her $12 before he | left and she has had no money l’rom‘ | him since. The children’s ages are Joseph Malon, Beaver street, and Mrs, ' Martha Kryzinski, aged 36, of the same ad- | dress, pleaded not gullty to thé charge of improper conduct and the | former was fined $10 and costs| = 2 while the woman was sent to jail motion to quash was merely a desire | for 15 days by a revocation of the |to inform the court on the exact suspension of a sentence Iimposed |state of affairs, “that the court had several months ago.for.vielation of |no desire, ever, to prosecute a ca the liquor laws Judge Hungerford |in which there was any irregularity \so imposed a mew sentence of 15 |Mr. Slade, announced "I think wr lays in jail, and suspended execu-|understand each other,” and walked tion. Mrs. Kryzinski still owes a!to his seat. fine imposed for liquor law violation, | while the court records were on having been allowed probation to|tncir way Mr. Danaher outlined the eyt Imanner in which such an error Ofticer John C. Stadler testified | piiong have arisen had it actually that he went to the Beaver strect | o oo home yesterday forenoon about 10|°°g Nty g ‘ :d the grand o'clock, to investigate the reported jurors on the fact that there ;:m“” theft of several articles of clothing | " . . 5 - - I never be less than 16 present,” he street house. The €om-| .15 but did not tell them that there |was any limit to the size of the jury. (A jury is limited, in such’ cir- | cumstances to 23. “Your honor just sent out a jury; in precisely the same manner the | former one was sent out. The court rests on its decision. (Continued from First Page) °I assumed the | contemporaries with wisdom, heroism and leadership. In this re- spect the first president of our coun. try has been repeatedly compared with our present president. In com- ing into the atmosphere of George | Washington we cannot quite escape | the impression which the great Eng- lishman Lord Bryce in his unlimit- | g ed admiration for our men and our | p; institutions words thus: “Washing- |ton stands alone and unapproach able, like a snow-peak rising above | its fellows.” here is a whole school of Amer- i writers of history who in this of realism exhibit the fathers the republic not any longer in romance fashion with halocs but men with failings and animated by motives not always such as older| | hi ans have credited them with. { This turning away from the fashion of hero worship is a matter to the average Americ: Americans have alw becn ested in their national heroes as in- dividuals, not only as parts of the whole or whecls in the machiner The interest in biography is still in- creasing. Our colleges create de- partments for biography. Ameri- cans especially do mnot like to see w ir heroes disfigured with human inter- ment of the cst phase of the philosophy of his- tory is the issue of the value of the races for the continuation and the future of whole. the conservative school the issue is stil issues, question as Karl Marx would have it or by great ideas as with ug Wood- row Wilson would have 1t? striking contrast to some of the la- ter European historians our Ameri- can men of historical research cling to the En.erson: the lengthened shadow of a man.” There is properly no hi biography Rome give me Caesar; volved the fate of an empire and the whole course of human destiny.” —a You will read this book with true joy!- If you are Hard of Hearing send for@ FREE copy 1t you aro handicapped by in1- palred hearing, you will derive much satisfaction and joy from reading a new booklet fust pub- lished . . .** Deafness—Can It Be Cured Or Arrested?" 1t is a sound and honest dis- cussion of defective hearing the causes and remedics . . . based on interviews with mora than two hundred of the coun- try's leading ear authoritics. Ttis a book that brings to you the counsel of men in whom you have the utmost confidence but to whom probably you cannot go for consultation. 1t is a helpful and a hopeful ook from which you will derive much beneflt. Send Coupon NOW A free copy will be mailed you ©on request. Merely fill out tho coupon below or write to Dept. 708 Acousticon Instituto for the Hard of Hearing, 220 West 420d Street, New York Kindly send a free copy of ** D Can It Be Cured or Arrested! " Rheumatism “Money Back.” Says Fair Drug Dept. It the First Bottle Allenrhu Fails To Do You More Good Than Anything You Ever Used. “It does not matter whether you are disabled with cursed rheun tism or have only occasional twinges.” Nine times out of ten Allenthu will ease the agony, do away with the gnawing pains and help to reduce the swollen joints.” Allenthu is no laggard; it starts right in at once; and by correcting faulty elimination, searches out the poisons and in two days starts to drive the concentrated impurities that may be the of rheuma- tism, out of the through th natural channels Druggists ~everywlere guarantee it as above In every instanc cause body lties. A young nation never | former to be legal.’ @ does, Then while the entire court room | craned forward including the law- | vers in other cases, who had hitherto {showed little interest the clerk read | out the jury list. There had been |answers from 80 men. One m |had been excused, “and I think one | |or two or three may have been dis- missed,” Mr. Pickett concluded. It | was an insufficient number, and | automatically made the indictment | |invalid. Mr. Danaher promptly | joined his request to that of the | counsel for the defense, in asking | that the plea of abatement be grant- |ed and that the motion to quash | | stand. | | The answer was forthcoming im- | mediately with a decision handed |down from the hench by Judge Thomas, declaring the indictment gainsj all the accused null and void. § Mr. Slade and Thomas J. Spellacy had one further matter to attend to | —the question of the subpoena of J. | | Edgar Pike, sccretary ‘of the Sol- | vents Recovery of Danbury, whence | | specially denatured alcohol was al- | |1eged to have come to the Connceti- | |cut Alcohol Distributors Company, | |Inc., in New Haven for illezal dis- | |tribution. As agreed between these | {lawyers and Mr. Danaher, for the | United States the books of the Dan- | bury concern are to be accessible to ! the government at any time and | Pike is not to be held beyond being | requested to produce them. | Those who were named in the in- | dictments were: The Solvents Recovery company of Danbury, the Connecticut Alcohol | ributors Company, Inc, of New Haven, Josef Adler, treasurer of the | Connecticut Alcohol Distributors | company and until a few wecks 2go la banker in New Haven, John A.| Morse, who has been in charge of | prohibition agents here, Merman I, Goldman, of Brooklyn, N. Y., J. Ed- | gar Pike, of Danbury sident of | the Solvents company, Charles W. | Stevens, former president of the une company; Harry Comen, of New Haven, president of the Distri- | butors company, Richard Stevens Monroe, of New Haven, Solomon Goldman, brother of Herman, of New York city; Nathan Florio and his brothers, Carl and Anthony, of the Floria Brothers' Trucking com- pany of New Haven. Much of the evidence given be- | fore the grand jury came, it was un- derstood, from Anthony Perrotti who is now st ing a term in state prison | for violation of the liquor laws. The grand jury eet for two days and had many witnesses before it, and the indictments it returned were long |and involved. | Eileen beauty. Alder has not spiri! A Beauty Offering }ronw“ AlBion one of the reasons why tho Britis In private life she is Alyne Picaud, assistant commissioner human race. The lat- the human But with the race historian of Who after all, makes history: it made by individuals or by the ses? Is it made by the economic by the bread and butter And in well-known dicta of Ralph ery institution is but ory, only Instead of a history of his life in- The other side of the issue is an- swered to the American quite s actorily by the result of res mass psychology: Masses without a leader can never and it they go on without a leader earch in create anything y work but destructively. Thus still are individualists in theory doctrinary individualism which saved us from the *herd- We are great in following —NEA, London Bureau stage is noted for and is a daughter of the for Canada. as a finders, inspirers, gui ways of life, we need them as in- dividuals and as a nation, L. ther of Our Countr surely reveals a sentiment of the people who call him thus. In one of the latest books about him, in W. E. Woodward’s “George Washington, the Image and the Man” he is called, nominator” with his good traits and in his weak points. According to Woodward the captain of industry is the closest modern counterpact to \Washington. Greater cnes than . he wave been depicted to us lately as born executiv But are the stand- rds of 1926 or 1927 inherentiy the right standards in judging men? Are we really doing the right thing in bringing the great down to our level of nking and doing things instead of going up to their level There are standards ecternal which are far above the ues of the first quarter of the 20th century. Ac cording to Woodward Washington thought in material terms, his mind was essentially a business mind, he was a born executive nd had a wonderful skill in selecting subor- dinates and co-workers and in get- ting results through them; he re- spected ideas only when they had the force of authority. He wa terly hon but his honest combined with shrewdness; tenacity, integrity, self-confidence, courage |were his; he was ecconomic and at |the same time magnanimous—in all this the man of American flesh and {blood, the prototype of the Ameri- can, the “Common Amer |nominator.” His very make up | character and temper and not only dear him to the people of the land. However it will do all of us good to see the true American with all I faults—and he has many—a |with all his fine traits—and many there are—in a man like George Washington. We all have still far iman for with all his thou- sands built on him and on his in- tegrity. And as President Coolidge { pointed out yesterday in his wonder- ful address about Washington—if | those in our circle of life can build {on our integrity and loyalty as | people could build on his in his tasks | we might fit better into the tasks and privileges of Amer n citizen- was Woodrow Wilson who summed up the motives of George Washington in this striking sentence: “His passion for freecdom was horn of personal prid This ¢ not fit entirely into order of altruistic ideal a moral He ¢ American Common De- | was | what he did for the great cause en- | to go until we reach him even as a | | Vickerman-Callender | Wedding on March 5 { ( He | New York, Feb. 3 — Charlet Vickerman of 82 Brinkerhoff a N. J street, 1 uin, a license to wed here today. couple announced they married here on March § at The | the Little Church Around the Corner. |@ Miss Callender was born in N‘“'i Britain and is the daughter of Wil- | liam and anor Wi s, A4 ) AMER TO ADDR larence Cramer, st American Legion, will be fucsday to address the| on meeting of the is is the first appear- | der Cramer before vic club. He was elected }to head Connecticut Le > convention, s Jackson of this SCOTT STILL CRITICAL John Scott, who was shot in the rnoon by Rich-| ard Shelton, is fightir at New Britain Genc 4 lly ill but is displaying great | stamina and this afternoon it was lieved there was a slight improve- | ment in his condition. 'When You Catch Cold Rub on Musterole Musterole is easy to works right cold from pneumonis work of plaster., sterole is a clean, white made of oil of mustard 1ple It > command- apply may into “flu does all the randmother’s mustard | com- | d nurses, ! for sore throat, cold |on the chest, rheumatism pleurisy, stiff neck, neuralgia, cor of the back sore muscle 1 fe bronch h- ion, pains and and joints, bruises, ch —colds of all sprains To Mothe Musterole s also | made in milder form for babies and small children, Ask for Children's Musterole. Jars & Tubes motive | wanted to be free and therefore he | wanted to live in a which enjoyed self-determination— not an aitruistic motive, to be sure. But a real man will have personal pride and will do the right thing out of self-respect. Call it pride, call it self-respect, call it the spirit of the Puritans, call it personal call it what you please—uwhatever prompts you and me in our actions, will reveal not only what of others, but also what we think of ourselv And George Washington certainl ad a right to himself a real man dward Bok said in defens friend Theodore Roosevelt wl was attacked as being led b motiv “Roosevelt was not an egot It is a long way from con- |fidence in one's seif and one's a tions to egotism. An egotist ways digs his own grave. Theodore | Roosevelt rearcd monument.” |And the fact that the monument |stands today proves that the men whom we call the founders of our republic and among them foremost |he, the “American Common De- |nominator”—this ct proves that of his n he | they were not egotists, men of self- | ish motives, but rather men with self-confidence and faith in a great idea and what is much more, men | of loyalty and love for a great com- mon cause. | In observance of Washington's we think | consider | Ifish | al- | community | Better than a mustard plaster MAKE NORE MONEY | Healthy, vigorous men land best prizes. Buoyant eyes, clear complexion an, ant vitality, denote a from impurities sons th whole sys aps encrgy, d s and cuts down bright exuber- system free poi- the confi- earning Constipation slows the Rid your constipation d its poisons. Dr. Edwards' ¢ bl emove them gently, tone up the system, clear the eyes and com- l]xlr‘ ion and bring back normal vig- or. 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