New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 20, 1928, Page 12

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GRSTUN Y ing their efforts automatic; they .wrote as men and reveal all the frailties which we commonly re- gard as incidental to man-made it was not a divine devolution but a human evolution, not from the Apostles but chiefly from Paul who gmc Rfllfliflfl OI CMI‘M‘“-u never ordained but set aside by laymen. Not Bssential, Preacher Saps | ,,.cone, ™o eresmstoran: - o New York, Jan. 20 (UP) “@raanic reunion of the churches is not ouly unwise but impossible,” Rev. Dr. devour the other Protestant bodies. the! “The only unity eworth having is {arl Reiland, Liberal Epis- 'spiritual and it may come by way eopal inister told the United Press of getting together for some thrill- today in commenting upon the sev- |ing enterprise like the abolition ofl Alines in which unity of the Anglican and Roman s discussed. eral conferences ut Catholic churches w “The ouly thing essent tion unity.” lie went on, r, where we can forget our dif- rences and aim at a more self- respecting destiny.” to Chris-| Speaking specifically of the| s for the | Malines conversations Dr. Reiland various branches of the church to said they were in no eense authori- . recognize vuch other, their ministers, | tative, either from Rome or “beyond thei aorship and concede a mutual |a graceful gesture from the side of e | the English church.” 5100 bix i challenge for our. “There was no gesture whatever t it is the only one worth our | from this side of the Atlantic” he | said. “What took place there or 1 vector of St. George’s oisewhere since may be regarded as in modernistic thought interesting exhibitions of mistaken said he could not fail to respect the | oal but not as the authoritative “sinceritics responsible for the | gvertures of Protestant thought.” Malines conterence, the Lausanne . Clergymen of other Protestant Prn-Christian conference of faith and | gonominations also found absorbing ment. Nevertheless,” added, “Orthodox relizian is nervous | and distrustful about modernism, | hence the activity of Anglo-Catho- their and | lics and fundamentalism in quest for certainty, autherity unity. snd therefore static, beyond nd the recent papal pro- the publication of Malines dicus- sions. The Rev. Christian F. Relsner, prominent Methodist, said that the 'most helpful thing about the at- tempts at unity was the fact that linterest in religion was stimulated. he “igion 1s not ‘once delivered’| “But instead of wasting too much X the time on useless tasks we should realm of inquiry, evolution and re- make an effort to bring back re- statement,” he continued. “Against wnr-mn to the great cities,”” he said. he natural and spiritual phenomena “Everything has beem modernized B¢ incessant change and infinite but the church. waricty we find religion pro-onllng\ “It 18 not necessary to have one the ideals -of fixity instead of fleai- |church. Men of all creeds can co- ®ility, uniformity instead of variety, operate harmoniously.” Uteralism instead of lite, tradition instead of truth, reaction instead of | reality and auihority instead of JoKers Now Are Facing liberty. | Catholic or Anglican,” he added. | {“The Anglicans are not wise in | | whetting an ecclesiastical appetite to | i“Religion is not a Bible, a church or a creed. It is a life. Its unity is| Long Terms in Prison Los Angeles, Jan. 20 (P—Prison a'spiritual thing, not a sovereign terms of seven years to life were the theocracy Canterbury or Washington. All at- | tempts at unity are bound to fail be- | cause they are based upon unwar: flnf\"l assumptions that are not true #Bd cannot last. s ward authoritatively and then | tions of the evening of the burglary t them with a set of reasonable | were hazy and they believed they positions such as these: Jesus did | had perpetrated the theft as a joke. aking a radio set from a citizer “Notice the incidental claims put: home, with a throne at Rome or progpp(’l! of three men and a wom- |an who were convicted today of a burglary which they had considered merely a joke. They admitted NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1928 DRUGGIST AVIATOR SAVES THREE LIVES Texan Using His Plane to Deliver Medicine San Antonio, Tex., Jan. 20, UP— Willlam Ochse, druggist, now uses an airplane for emergency deliver- ies and already his new method is credited with the saving of there lives. Ochse, whose hobby is aviation, inaugurated free airplane delivery service because other transporta- tion in the sparsely settled region west and south of San Antonio s too slow when a life depends on application of a drug or serum. He bought a small bi-plane sev- eral months ago and dedicated it “for the servize of mankind.” The first errand of Mr. Ochse and his “mercy ship” was a good will flight to Mexico. The plane carried in- fantile paralysis serum to a strick- en boy in Matamoros, across the Rio Grande from Brownsville, Tex., 200 miles from here. Since then the plane has taken septicemia serum to Cuero and & drug to counteract poisoning from rattlesnake bite to Buckhoitz, Tex. SANDINO DEATH REPORT BELIEYED CAMOUFLAGE American Marines Guard Against Reports Likely to Load Forces Into Danger. Managua, Nic,, Jan. 20 UP—Amer- ican marines feared today that re- ports of the death of the rebel gen- eral, Augustino Sandino, might be a ruse. Around his mountain stronghold of El Chipote, the only evidence noted by marine aviators was that of death and desolation. Sandino, if alive, it was believed, could have fled through the jungles to Honduras or down the Coco river to the Caribbean. Since the Hon- duran government promised to allow no concentration of rebels on Hon- government telegraph operator Wt San Rafael, took his body there for burial. Aviators observed what ap- peared to be a funeral procession. Aviators who flew over Ei Chipote said doors of houses stood ajar or banged listlessly to and fro. No rebel were to be seen around the moun- tain. Roads leading to the north- ward toward Honduras showed signs ot recent heavy travel. Vultures— black symbols of death—flow over the deserted stronghold, 16TH ANENDHENT HOTLY DEBATED Norwalk Mayor Denomnced by Speaker on Same Platform Norwalk, Jan. 20 (P — Distin- guished ears burned last night in the'| auditorium of the EIks' hall as their owners listened to Dr. Albert Levitt, former law professor at Yale and F. G. R, Gordon, Boston attor- ney, debate on the question “Re- solved: That the 18th Amendment Should Be Repealed.” Mayor Anson F. Keeler, chairman of the debate heard himself publicly denounced by Dr. Levitt, who said, “If your mayor only lived in accordance with the oath he took, he would make it im- possible for you to drink.” The drys came in for their share, also, when Attorney Gordon made several un- complimentary statements about the Anti-Saloon league. Dr. Roacoe J. Vining, superintendent of the Con- necticut Anti-Saloon league and Dr. Ralph White, assistunt superintend- ent, were among the crowd who de- fled a sweeping rain to come ande pack the hall, Fach speaker was perfectly frank about his own stand on the ques- tion. Dr. Levitt declared he was a total abstainer and would never touch a drop as long as he lived. On the other hand Attorney Gordon as- serted that on one day, in Lewiston, Maine, he had visited 21 saloons, “and when the sun went down I was | sober,” he said. On the platorm with the speakers were several notable figures. Mrs. Levitt, known to her fellow Nor- walkers, as Miss Elsie Hill, listened | but explained their recolle NEW BRITAIN’S LEADING AND MOST duran soil, {t was believed that San- | cagerly to the arguments. A cou- 1 dino might be heading for the sea. | ple of times she lifted a lorgnette and | The marine garrison at San Rafael | looked at the audience to note the found & church; He taught a|The four, who will be sentenced | was ordered to investigatc immedi- | impressions registered by various why of life; the Scriptures were not | Jan. 24, are Cornelius Van Putten, let down.from Hcaven but were |his wife, Jane Patrick Sullivan and |th e —— written by man; God did not give the | Richard Deming; They were cob- | cd Sandino's death to marine head- | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS writers @ literary hypodermic, mak- | victed of first degree burglary. ately any burials of prominent men | startling statements. . 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