New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 3, 1927, Page 11

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I{EW DRITAIN DAILY HERALD, 8¢ MBER 8, 1927. Radical Chang For Plainville Recommended| Trade Course, Employment "' of School Nurse, Third | School Site, Favored by L. S. Mills. made to two-room men as was done for the be set along the south bou similay trees should be front lawn, but no trec thus shutting off 1 plan to Wants School Nurse viously pointed out, —_—_— also the printing for the town, and ET L es In Schools in adaition. outside orders” HE - - Goat Getters | casily be taken at reasonable pr ars the press will in t re than pay for itself, = he phy education work " 1ld become a part of the regular | A : Lo st e ol ® FJ DOECNT T GET YOUR GO — % duled for weekly work in the ring school hour: is for g ocial pri e each weck. sho b in Health i S ‘in May, there | ion of | ey oA the! high YOU “REFLECT i BINg | school grounds for the high schools, W LTTLE= I d one for the grades, at which 10 PEASE & WON |time various athletic contests and AT RIS AST- | physical exhibitions would be car- |ried on. There might be competi- !tion in this, to which selected pu- ils from surrounding towns might e invited. A thousand pupils prop- en- fully in hing |erly er d on the field, carrying tudy | o0 fOlk dances to the accompani- fectives, In | Ment of a band, would be a feature o 1 worth hing. From time to re films should be of these exercises for later ¥ before audiences. The radio possibilities of the school should be developed s soon as possible for daily educa- ional purposes and class use. i Projective appaartus s and educational of the regular to compete school. Have 1 ac- he cafeteria should also be it lous | Put into in connection with the done | cook ment, and | 1 and supervised | Provided as cost for those who re- ain d the lunch period, Alumni Fund to Help Students “22 As soon as the first ¢ from Plainville high should be a High imni association formed. on should start a fund of small amounts each these amounts placed in ngs Bunk, to ed as p loans for needy gradu- ish 10 go to college. It thus started, will but in 25 or 50 it should become large enough » of real value Each class graduating from hould be | / D HOW MUCH IT TRKES diate future as to w se ate toward incom of h d retion committea in helping those ; need finish their high hools of Bulstol, Hartford | *0 P L) s sl retain |y hew high school, like any SeL plaby ot joranptauiion p il < built up in a com- A S - Have anerei 1 lacks many t! such Bt G GLLE U] o es by noted nters, to nt on the part of lea rn the walls of the rooms and that any one of the | oy iqors, speakers’ desks and spe- lon IS 1.0} chairs for the stage, dainty cur- vs, and all 'y o adorn the doors of th cr than the §-3 plan | and many other imenta- be presented from time D e VCours | spend at least one day in the schools S ! h the muperintendent of schools. | | ©1927 BY NEA SERVI . ne- high school [W1 e, san Ranzan . :Mrasrmlnn C“;:l course| “37—When the next term of the REPOrts of American Ranger's Cap- | 9 s a ve ad trade scl urse | : ne ould be worked out between our |School opens, the janitor of the| ure Confirmed, Southern Pacific o U a5 Most of the old geography |pigh school and the State Trade [high school will need some assist- 73 | ooks in the grades have been re- |school in New Britain, for those ance Threatens to Discontinue servic ol wring the | poys is hav t high . o 3 Hana i e L R o G G B R S | Nogales, - s w—conse- Fild She Had to Travel on out, have (tjon, By reason of the close prox- ]8 fl[][] J“BLESS u‘n‘m:]nK o that Altred Quin : hooks y of the § lt‘fl(’f_:fl\’f fcl‘;“;"‘_o‘; 'y Mexico, had 1 2 school, except some of the _\“]':“Q, and rele a nal | simpler work with the soldering of l‘ . ment ot 5,00 d r tin, some of the simpler work with sl T electricity, as repairing washing ma- | patei "l cuina moiors. vacwum cleaner mo- | 16y Government Dismisses ot ors, some of the simpler ca : : work, as making frames for S, E w k : outlarvay | other things necded about the xtremist Workmen e 4 planned to dr\.‘l‘on\(fl of the pupils. As has been NS oni Imentioned, printing work should be : dits recently at hould be by jmentioned, printing Sydney, Australia, Sept. 3 (UP)— the Southern Pacif High school pupils should |Eighteen thousand union railway- | Mrs. W. C. Dunn, wi Ibuy their own notebooks and note- [men had been dismissed by the gov- her liv book material for the coming year.|ernment and not a wheel was turn- were a 26. A number of useful refer-|ing today on the 10,000 miles of out and. ence hooks should be purchased for | railway in the state of Queensland the high school library. In the past| The men were let out at noon, the | would we have had no place in which to |government announcing that Mon- s, —On orders partment the nan in- vestigation today ascertain Mrs. G. W. McCarter, the s. Cooper Hewitt, is a or non-resident. ie McCarters arrived on the Ma jestic last Tuesday. Mrs. McCarter was on the passenger list as Mrs. {Ceoper Hewitt and made out her declaration in the name as a non- resident, t having her personal |cifects passed free of duty. Her husband made a separate declaration s a resident. o ra y would disc ice in the bandit Sc & 1l Subjects at High School. 14, Domestic science, including should be be liool, also a free nical drawing ion with the com that take immedi; en in the anno| nd mee In o on W ment by army d his wife had to I ity business artth- {0 T books while in use. Itiday it would reengage any of the authorities that 4,0 troops were British passport, as by nd commereial i 1o that citizens of the toWn |men who were willing to abandon bheing moved into the i e to the Baron D'Er- ractice should be |y oo Teets of books which they are|what officials characterized as ex- | bandit country from 1d become a British sub- Low the course one |, opger using, and which books | tremist policies. S » d not yet regained her sou meet n requirements | oy 1q pe of exceeding value to PU-| - An effort to arbitrate the difficulty | Quimby was cz ptured in the vil- | - our punils for office | work. pils in the high school. One of OUT |patvean the men and the govern- citizens, S. P. Williams, has donated [ o ajleq today when union lea- | Ang to us a sct of Encyclopedia Brittan-| 4, " roiocted proposals which the [Ilorence Anderson, was fatal ica, and the late J. G. Ward rare |, o aiiona) authority sald were wounded recently in a bandit rens for the science dePart-|yinog a¢ the eclimination of the tack upon a ter train poneta, where the Los . Cal., school teacher, Miss ant Collector of the Port said he was investigating to jer Mrs. McCarter had 1er status as foreign resi- her marriage to McCarter o “In connection with the science biect of biology | 1 to our school the ety L men’s grievances. acks in th ¢ and nu- ew York instead of 4 eache: av n out 5 al n > hitherto, b e we Jacked X —Teachers “;m h“r’\u‘r)ni:\:rr of| Queensland was facing one of the merous att burn railway ahe wollld haye to make s new 1e room and the facilities with | of .\on‘nnl‘?\ hwoionlndo:u?nn.\”l' T oor | most serious situations in its stormy bridges have featured the bandit ac. feclaration and maf dute on sl of. rthwhile { years should a E er 8¢ industrial history. Stagnation of the tiv ects except that $100 worth that is lowed all residents. 1 so become familiar with modern o railways affected every other in Sl Iiethoce rganiz One of the worst | pri A - 1 surements | trial organization. ASKS PBEGAUTION ( Blzs s et oy features of the situation was that | u ‘ @ standard tests will help to esti- < v e 5 | ot cd at areason- | S0 ST e And standing of |the farmers were relying on th for this purpose) and the N4 Tl oeiout the town. This [rallways to transport feed into b Doctor Urges Street Department to ting done on this press, |y, o 115t previously —been done drouth areas. Of course, it is difficult to go “shopping” over the country for a suburban home, and it takes considerable time, so let’s turn to the Real Estate columns of the Classi- fied section now, for a splendid selection of desirable offerings. CLASSIFIED SECTION OF THE HERALD AT 0 ~{ D SIS | nrotsh 1ack of time, also through| Starving towns and stock in the — Be Prepared For Mishaps—One | [lack of suticiently large office (a|far west and north were likely to| o &0 ‘ | room in my home has been the offi- | be isolated and their supply of food | ) | Y U ! cial office of the schools of the town jendangered. The government Was| Griggeport, Conn., Sept. 3 (P- | | |for five years), and sufticient cleri- |endeavoring today to organize & In finding that the death of Wileon . . 5 cal work help. Now that the new huge fleet of motor trucks and It T, Burne. park deportment emploss, Mayol‘ Is Dellgmefl With Venice high school is completed the way is was hoped that some of the railway- | was accidental, Coroner Joh clear to proceed with ~measure- |men would agree to work MondaY. | Phelan advises greater caro in !ments, standard tests, and other ac- | Premter McCormick defined the ' tree removal work of the depart. ministration "ernment and mob rule. | Burns died at the Bridgeport ‘enice, Italy, Sept. 3 (P—Mayor Ask Coiperation of Committec | hospital August 30 folloiwng shock | Walker of New York expressed him- “20—All teachers and pricivals |} inqherah on Route from injuries received when at self today as gratified by the warmth should be responsible to the superin- . Washington park a limb sawed from |of his reception in Italy. tendent, and not to one or more To Salt Lake City . ‘ree ton upon him. Burns and | “Somehody warned me,” he said, members of the committee, and all| Laramie, Wyo. Sept. 8 (Pr— re other employ of the park “not to come to Italy because of the committee communications to teach- | Charles A. Lindbergh flew over Lar- department were at the time en Sacco-Vanzetti affair. Why, this is 4 cipals should be through i amie early this morning en route to |, m. e safest c rv T) H ers and principals s a early thi g ed in removing the limb. he safest country in Europe. They subm‘ban 10mes | the superintendent, rather than | gat Lake City from Cheyenne. He| rhe coroner in his finding de- | ed me in Berlin (in connection | a through various members of the|wag gighted in the east at 6:47 a. m. clared: “Although the method of 1 the dispute over the flag issue Sommalties: and after a few minutes circling 'tree limb removal and provision for between the German republicans nndJ are no longer suburban, except Z “30—All grade teachers should |above the city struck out in a west- | the safety of helpers employed ap- adherents of the old regime), and I in the delightful advantages % | meet with the superintendent as alerly direction. Swooping 10w over | peared to be substantially i com ed anti-American demonstra- they offer. The automobile and // | united group at the high ~school the business district he dropped an formity with custom and usage, 1|tions in Trafalgar Square, London, e b Ui | building for grade teachers' meet- | autographed message to the city of lam of the opinion however that |While here we have only demonstra- 2 ings each month for the future. Laramie explaining his inabi to0 | greater care in the locating of the tions of respect, and cheers “31—The Ohio State Teachers’ As- | stop on the way west and urging | pelpers and others on such occa-| “Undoubtedly, without entering sociation states, ‘We recognize that | cooperation in the project of com- gions from danger places should he into the politics of this country, | 3 ercial aviation. | concer! intcrested au- | Mussolini is the outstanding figure too great emphasis has ben placed | merc |of deep concern to intcrested au v on lge formal aspect of Junior High Lindbergh took off from Cheyenne | tyqrities hencefort) in the world today hools, as for example, complete |at 6:31 a. m. two hours ahead of | e ane i TN spending the da i) 45 ¥ his scheduled time. . z ng to rest. The d(‘purlmcnmhzatuon, i rl:::m:ld Submarine Reported neloren The that we do mot give our - e : t | . | q fresh breeze brought in the waves teduon !to ‘h: hoig,’;“' but to the | Ross Beats Satan “M“.é‘%:()ll(r:d m?fi»TIel\&s and made an attractive picture along p-f?zlf:ofi?;l events of the high In Klllamey Names Boats from Fort Crockett today the beach. Mr. Walker and his party schosl should ba planned in advance | Killarney, Irish Free State, Sept.|were cruising the coast to a point |mingled with the bathers and were i | 8 (P—Ths devil and the great about fifty miles above Corpus introduced to many persons. | 2 . Fit) for the coming year. . 5 + f | s afternoon he to come to | If it's for sale, of course it's i h be retained | O'Donoughue Ross, a fourteenth cen- | Christi, where it is reported a large | This afternoon to advertised first in [sdisetiletion ghiopld bo n tury Irish leader, seem to have di- |submarine is grounded. | Venice to visit St. Mark's Cathedral under the eontrol of the high school faculty, and be encouraged and pro- | mulgated in the high school, but |they should not become the —con- | trolling feature of the school vided Killarney between them. | The submarine is only a hulk and |square, and other show places of the Half the names of geographical |is a large boat with no identification |city. 5 Spots refer either to his Satanic to officials at Fort Crockett. |+ He expects to be received by Pope Majesty or to the great O'Donoug- . {Pius and Premier Mussolini next hue. In the final total O'Donoghue v PILLAR | Friday, in which case he will leave “—Parents’ Day should be held |, Lincoln, Sept. 3 (A— |for Paris the following Sunday. He more often, and the evening session | “rpe poyj) pas his “Punch Bowl” | A pillar which several centurics ago has not vet decided whether to stop | | |of the high school should be held lyoyong Mount Tork, near the town |served as a landmark for travelers at Florence on his way to Rome. = once a year as before; also evening|of Mangerton Mountain, an exe- |across Lincoln Heath and was known | — o ‘ sessions of Grades 4 to 8 should be|crescense 2,200 feet above the sea- [as Dunstan Pillar, was offered for | RAID BOMB MILL 3‘;\ “\\ {held at least once a year, in order \jevel, and his “Ladder” and his |sale here when the Metheringham | lLa Paz Bolivia, Sept. 3 (UP)— T \ that the parents may meet the teach- | «Chajr,” rock structures resembling |Heath estate was placed on auction, | Police discovered bomb factory d here last night and crs and become familiar with the |their names. O'Donoughue however, |and was withdrawn at §11 | daily school work of their children. |has his “Prison,” his “Libra ‘35—Evening schools for non-Eng- | “Pigeon House," his “Table,” and his |tern, was removed a hundred vears | ,000. | during a tinued and especlally emphasized. |names given to rocks in the famous |George IIT to commemorate the 50th | #gular place and a smaller one in | Walter Olse for use erchedien of 15 W Mack and Jen lowed by a whi CARDL ALWAYS WAS UNPOPULAR MIXER (ld Friends of his terperam lar fellow.’ and could hold beer fest or gaming ta eral type of Prus- sian officer he did not mix well. His sometimes capricious | disregard of certain rigid rules etiquette betrayed the eastern mind. Yet to one or two of his mates he unbosomed himselt vehemence on the serfdom ntry, backbone of yet with the | the int character. The nam carries considers army At the begir | pean the nick of time wife Philadelphia Mrs. Wreford said today that th pal object of the attempt A his associates was mericans that we on le can do something.” pilots were the first the Atlantic from west to east be the first from east to west," she predicted | her husband to “show the | this sic Anthony are 1t is stated t vessels Panama hed a new high record for the | The 543 vessels * his | Dunstan Pillar, which bore a lan- |confiscated a quantity of explosives. | month of August. ——— | which passed through the lish speaking students should be con- |“Charger,” all these being fanciful |ago to give way to a statuc of King | The eecl has two hearts, one in its | paid $2,274,000 in tolls, Personals | d1EEL CITY BlG Mr. and Mrs. City Items Hartford au- nt Feeney today no- Pawele respo: trolley ch str A meeting of the Catholic Wom- en’s Benevolent Legion Recall His Pecu- liarities m, Germany, Sept Old friends here of P: s then 22 was a illusions about the glamor of royalty. He was a prac- familiarity gues of the Bucharest court re insight into of Carol still weigh B ing of the recalled was then very German, but at Michendorf, s Potsdam, his automobile was stop- and Rome B | testations and couterment of modern school ad- |issue as between constitutional gov- ment. | — ey S B el oecuz| pants of a military car saved him in Again he was held up at Juterbog, some distance far- vy after this a Prus- |years his junior. slan general was detalled to sce him | Mr. F safely as far as the frontier. ics who took him for a | Ayres of Danvers, 95 years old and ¢ believed his pro- |the oldest living graduate of the E s about Aunes to See H“Sband. | entitled to a rest, but he still con- Take Off on Long Flight | tinues to oblige those who wish to Dublin, Treland, Sept. 3 (P—Mrs.{be married by him. One of his of Captain has arrived Paris to sece her husband and Cap- Macintosh and e off on their flight to| . Sept. 8 (P—Captain R. H. Macintosh and his fellow avi- ators, Captains MORT. SHIPS THROUGH CANAL Balboa, Canal Zone, Sept. Commercial 36—Each member of the comth]Klllarmy lakes, year of his reign. lits tail, which functions regularly. | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS ik prop nace w ere k of ord morning comfort- n General | s issued to- | therine Mar- op street Sroka and Bertha Sroka on East street| e Mack. | Wood 1l by ) 1d | precedented manner. Gary kept at § o'clock fol-|step, doubling its population in nce Carol of lieve that t can remain out picture for long. As a prospective heir to the Ru- | manian throne, Carol W his comrades of First Guards regiment when joined the unit as a first licuten- ant in the spring of 1914, for mili- | tary training. He w: carefully his own ble, | with | . MINISTER ACTIVE which the coun- general corruption ent prevalent and those atiano | Malden, Mass,, % to | United States, celebrated his 103rd pro- i birthday toda h of {in full possession of his faculties. to Wreford remaining here today, but expect to fly to Dub- lin tomorrow. is no chance of their hopping off for | against Frank Ginsburg. Constable America until Monday at the earli- | Clynes served the papers. at there passing Canal 1’ GARY MEMORIAL Late Rinancier Reared It Among the Sand Dunes : Sept. 3 (P—Steel built v is a perpetual me- man whose name Is 1 with the growth of the in- in America. nty-one ago this fall Elbert H. Gary, head of the organized Uniteg States tion, clambered down r over the side of a and watched a group of ke a site for a new he corporation veyed a scene of desolate On all sides was shifting |sand, with the pinnacles of wind- varying the flat ex- once white tents ing dejection. landscape ves of the man pped mustache. He saw a new world center of steel- at this foot of Lake Michi- with its avenue of water tn ore fields. He visioned he rise of a great city. Gary has a population of 100,000 | today. The sloughs and the sand have disappeared and broad boule- [ varas nave been reared over them. | And for soven miles along the lake front stretch the stacks of industry { employing 25,000 men. | "In its civie, business and réligious Gary the city bears the im- of Gary the man. Through the years of expansion of United Steel, the late industrial ader guided the growth of the v, helping with counsel ith money. deal of the land within city is owned by the industry around which it is bullt. The 3 States Steel Company opens subdivisions, sells the land and su- pervises the erection of homes. As steel has grown Gary has prospered. In 1920 the city had a population of 50,000. At that time a revolutionary step was taken in the steel industry-—the Pittsburgh | plus plan was abandoned—and the industry forged ahead in an un- | seven years. § Where early residents once | crossed a swamp over a crude foot- {bridge, a § 0,000 hotel is being {completed, and there will be a va- t ir at the dedicatory ban- t this fall in honor of Judge | Gary. The Gary “work-study-play” plan of education was developed here {and used as a model for hundreds of other cities. The Methodist Episcopal Church {has completed a $1.000,000 edifice | downtown. At the instance of {Judge Gary, the steel corporation !gave $500,000 towards the building. In a little uptown negro church a shaft in the vestibule {s dedicated to Judge Gary, who helped build it. The land for Gary's $3,000,000 civic center and municipal gateway |along Lake Michigan was donated by the steel corporation, through |Judge Gary's interests. A monu- ment will be erected to him in the center of the project. Gary's industries {include the largest single steel plant in the orld, a recently completed $20,- 000 plant of the Nationa! Tube Company, and the world's largest sheet mill and tin mills. In 1906 the land could be had al- most for the asking. The owners refused to pay taxes on it, declar- ,ing it worthless, AT AGE OF 10 Wins Footrace on Birthday; Rides in Auto ept. 3.—(P—The . Bdwin Stuart Best, probably oldest living clergyman in the | | ¥, still hale, hearty and A few days ago, the Rev. William Boston university theological schoel, called on him to challenge him to a foot race. “You win,” Best declared as he jgracefully deferred to the man eight st no longer preaches for he believes that after more than half a of active ministry in Metho- dist churches of New England he is pleasures late in life has been to re- ceive visits from children of those whom he has joined in marriage. He still continues to enjoy occa- sional automobile rides and to keep in touch with current events and re- iglous affairs. The aged clergyman was born in Ne Ireland, and was ordained to the mothodist ministry in Liverpool, | i England, 1848. He came to this country shortly afterward and joined the New England conference of which he had long been dean and which he appeared before in 1925. He was given an ovation on thi occasion and made a brief address. CIVIL SUITS RECORDED -« The Hayes Construction Co., b through William F. Mangan, has trought sult for $1,000 damages Charles Supper has brought suit for $500 Gamages against Charles Brown, through Harry Ginsburg. Constable Clynes served the papers. The New Britain Lumber Co., thorugh Kirkham, Cooper, Hunger- ford & Camp, has brought suit fer §200 damages against Mike amd Elizabeth Mickels. Constable Fred 18 ‘Winkle served the papers and at- [ tached property of the defendants F on Kelsey stroots N

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