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civie circles, He was born in swierzeusowo, Poland, on February 20, 1568, and arrived in this country and took up his abode in Glaston- bary in 1SS, He is now nearing Broad and Gold streets and in April, PR, BOUNOWSHIT:= s . new church, the present granite ivdmce facing on Broad street. This j was completed and occupled eon! 3 February 28,-1904. | This was only the beginning of | [ a remarkable program of building Pastor of Sacred Heart GRureh | ,ua"hoe, "S5 hopmoweis | Obseryes Anmiy T 'Two parentless. waifs, brought to | ‘emry him for care after their mother had | died, inspired him with the idea of | < TS an orphanage. The father was _ Rev, Lucyan Bojnowski, pastor of ' o rning g5 4 week and he could not | the Eacred Heart Is 33 years &.,4orq 1o keep .hem in an instity- | Catholic priest today and is obkerv=|yion In April, 1904, he purchased | ing the event quictly at the paro- ., tcnament house on Orange street | chial yesidence on Orange Streel.| ... the first shurch for $600 and His priestly carecr is considered one yii1teq his orphanage, which has of the most remarkable in the coun- ' grown yntil, in & new bullding. are | iry from a viewpoint of accomplish- | ;1o\ housed aboit 180 childre: ment and he is recognized as one of To solve the problem of having | the foremost Polish clergymen in the | carotykera for :he orphans, Father United States. He is the object t0- | Bojnowaki foumled the order of day of congratulations from people puns known as the Children of | in all walks of life und from all| Mary of the Immaculate Concep- | creeds in this city. tion. Several women joined the or- Arriving in thiy country as an eml- | der and of these original postulants | nt trom Polund with $25 in his | thre atill are tiving: Vietoria Prous. | pocket, V'ather Bojnowski followed | ha, Barbara Waltora and Zofia Mys. | his vocation over a rvoad studded |liwska. There are 78 nuna in the | h difficulty until he has attained | order today, which extenda to Ware, a high position in both rcligious and | Muss., Harrisan, N. J., Williamsburg | Bridge, N. Y., and Sunnyside, N. Y. | In 1906 Father Bojnowski pur. chased a six-iamily house on Gola | street for a parochial school a con- | vent and for an extended orphan. uge. In 1908, he founded a printing! plant and established a weekly paper | which is published today and known am “The Catholic Leader.”” The plant is located on Durritt street and cost | $20,000. Its equipment is worth $100,000. The paper has a circyla- | tion of over 20,000 and goes to all| parts of Kurope, Asia, Africa and Houth Amerjea. A. B. Andrulewics is the editor and Father Bojnowski the supervisor. i In 1910, a new parochial school, one of tha finest bulldings of ita kind in the state, was erected on Gold street. It is three storiea high and combinea 23 class rooms, & par. ish hall on the third fleor, & swim- ming pool in the basement and other (eatures. Its cost was §130,000. During all this time, Father Boj. nowski had also been acquiring ex. tensive property in the northwest REV. LUCYAN BOJNOWSKJI | section of the city, property a able for farm land and other uses. Ha bought this under the name of the order of the Children of Mary of |the Immaculate Conception. In area It includes 260 acres. He alno found- | ed a cemetery and in 1922 began Lis 60th birthday. |plans for the present handsome or- He secured a position as a farm | phanagge which was built at a cost of hand at a wago of $1.25 a day and.|$300,000. with his savings from this and| In 1925, he bullt St. Lueyan's| abput $600 received from his (alheri“o,,‘,. a placa for old people. This in Europe, he entered 8t. Mary's!institution houses about 40 men and Polish seminary in Detroil to pre-!women who are also cared for by pare for the priesthood. He fin-lthe members of the order of the ed his philosophy and theology |Children of Mary. | ot St. John's seminary in Brighton, ! Outside of local acttivities, he has| Mass.,, and was ordained by the luln‘prmmml a home for immigrant| Pishop Michael Tierney at 8t. Jo-|girls from foreign shores by the seph's Cathedral in Hartford onpurchase at ¢25-427 W. ¢4th street, Junuary 20, 1895. New York city, of an 80 room | He waa first assigned as a curate |building. Young wemen of any de- to St. Stanislaua church in Meriden nomination are welcomed thers un- in February, 1895 and in June of til they can get settled in this coun- the same year he was appointed |try. | acting pastor of Bt. John's church | The latest work {s the new paro-| in Bridgeport. On September, 10, (chial achool on Orange street at a| 1895, he recelved the appointment |cost of $250,000. About 1,800 chil- to come to this city to organize a|dren attend. A day nursery is also new parish. conducted on Orange street where After investigating the situation, |about 20 children are ecared for I'ather Bojnowsk| organized a con- |while thelr mothers are at work. airplane elopment in Mexico led not gregation numbering about 760 peo- Desiden all these accomplishments, ple and including Poles, Ruasians, | Father Bojnowsk! is contemplating Lithuapians, Slave and Ukrainians, |the erection of a public and a tuber. They rushed back te police court He celebrated mass in the basement ; culosis hospital. Although the plans | of the old St. Mary's church, then are tentative, Father Bojnowski | located on Myrtle atreet. hopes to bulld the institutions in lhofCliy police. he started work |near future. ! | In April, 1896, on the erection of a church on Orange stroet. The land was pure GOES VISITING } chased for $3,000 and the church| London Jan. 20 (UP) — Princess | built for $13,000. A school was set | Beatrice, youngest daughter = of up in the basement. In 1902, due Queen Victoria and mother of the to the Inereass in the number of [queen of Spain, left today on & visit | his parishioners, he purchased a|to Malaga that is cxpected to last large plot of land st the corner Q!ilfl'enl months. | | ETHEL YOUVE MAGYEREC Tk *OIMR-€0GE-" - PG RIS CH M -hild 5 OG- FAMSIST AGY AN «ALL-"ROUIND* GKATER~ DO NT I Gtl YOIR GOAT 91328, By Nea seAvICE mcy ‘Tnmplco by train where Angela will ol TO WAV GDME GWIET YOUNG THING—. [ PRUG YOI 0 M UKE W P DARROW BELIEVES FATE GOVERNS ALL (Continued from First Page) which 1 soon acquired an intense in- terest.” Mr. Darrow claims that men are what they are in nine cases out of ten through the influence of environ- ment and chance, or fate, He has always contended that eriminala; cunnot help being criminals. “Crime i3 really the expression or ' an ingrown disease, and yet soclety attempta to control it through fearn =-hy imprisonment and executiol he said. “That is wrong; men ean- not be frightened into virtue.” jdeas on Orime Wave When asked how he would eopu with the present crime wave, Dar- row replied: “For the selution 1 would turn to the modern system or education, Three-fourths of the children on whom the state spends fabulous suma of money in the at- tempt to educate them are mentally incapable of doing their work. The hundreds of thousinds of dollars spent on secondary education are’ wasted. The true need is in the lower classes who never go that far and should have dnstruetion in tradea. Tt is from the uneducated lower class that the country drawn its worat. eriminals. ! Views On Criminal “In practically every case enc finds that a criminal choeses his oc- cupation as a youth, and that the habitual criminal has no ability to make his living, {s from the poorer GETS SENTENCE . The picture shows Adolph Hotelling, of Owosso, Mich., as he received a sentence of life in rison, the maximum penalty for murder in Michigan. Judge Fred W. Brennan of Flint, Mich., in pronouncing sentence, expressed the regret that he could not mete out capital pun- class and without education. The |This picture of Adolph Hoteiiing shows the slayer of five-year- ishment to the man who killed five-year-old Dorothy Schneider of Mount Morris and eriminal, almest without exception, hus followed the 1ife of the streets, |01d Dorothy Schneider of Mount Morris, Mich., just after he had mutilated her body. In the foreground above stands Sheriff G. P. Lawcock of Shiawassee S0 we find our prisons filled with | Deen given a life sentence in the penitentiary at Marquette, samins—men whoe, had they known 2 trade, would not have erred." 'COLD WAVE SWEEPING (| Officers of Graduating Class ON FROM MIDDLE WEST at Central Junior High School (Continued from First Page) blocked with huge drifts. Twelve inches of snow fell in the vicinity of Tupper lake, which was piled up into drifts by high winds. Every snow plow avatiable in the Adirondack region was in operation today in an attempt te open the highways to traffic. Lumbering operations have b greatly handicapped this winter on aceount of lack of snow, which pre. vented the hauling of lumber from the foreaf Elopement in Air Foiled by Parents » Mexico City, Jan. 20 (M—~The first to the altar but to jail. Angela Meding, whose parentd did not approvh of her engagement to Jose Pastrans, decided to leave Tampico with him and fly to Mex- ico City. The couple hoped te ar. rive here and be married before J thelr absence was noted. RALPH HW. BENSON, JR. ‘Their plans went amisa, however, Prosident Angela’s parents arriving on the Tampico airfield just as the plane was disappearing in the distance. and had an order for their daugh- ter's arrest telegraphed to Mexico When the couple landed at Val. buena airfleld, Mexico City, thelr reception committes was @ detach. ment of police. They were marched off to jnil. They will be returned to be returned to her parenta READ HP]\ALD CLASSIFIED ADS Goat-Getters HELEN L. HORN Vice Prosident president; Helen L. Horn, vice pre: {dent; Marjorlie P. Leavitt, secr meet the mark scholaati their election to office is a gr honor now than it ever has been. Meriden Has Warrant he lives with his wife, W nesd companion of John Bo Dawies, alias Michael where Barnikow is employed. They escaped after one of them pointed a revolver at Barnikow and threat- ened to kill him if he persisted in preventing them from leaving with- out paying for the gasoline. Karasiewicz has retained Attorney Thomas F. McDonough and has denied the accusations of the police that he was connected with the theft of two automobiles in this city, and that he was with Bozck in the Meriden escapade. Chief Hart |said this aficrnoon thaf Karasicwicz {will be turned over to the Merid police unlesm there are develop- nents to jurtify holding him here. \ | At present the only charge azainst him lecally is breach of the peace. (Continued from First Page) jup our search. L A chance of finding her remains in the | hersel n |Neldn or streams in that vicinity §|The fact that the girl left no note |'NeM and threatened arrest. |would be glad to have you bring |Was admitted to be a factor against | this matter to the attention of the [the suicide supposition, but Daley| “However, 1 don't way to distruct from the work you [she left the college grounds made ™ \qor y five minute atdience with doing in the search for Mr, |&ny other conclusion difficult. |Smith’s daughter.” Alfred F. Foote, commiasioner of public safety, |rived here today to participate in ithe efforts being made (o solve the { for the Cosgrave party. He went into conference | ol The commonwealth of the mon- want in any b state | | en train for Chicago ea ar- | inoon. Two private ca [attached 1o a regular express train at once with State Detective Joseph V. Daley, who has been directing search for the girl, and with | Macedonia, has no female popula- |Mr. and Mrs. 8t. John Smith Daley was nen-committal when | people of Ireland, not for me to pre- whether he thought ithat the increase in the reward of-| The blonde, diminutive head of | !fered by Mr. 8mith for his daugh-}the I'ree Btate, known as a great| iter's return to $10,000 meant that |eredence was being given to the |shoulder toward an exit during the| have been |interview. His obvious desire to end | kidnaped and held for ransom. He [the rapid fire of queations was eir- | |Intimated that while there was a ! possibility of kidnapping. he did not 'answered. |place much faith in the theory. No New Clues Despite the fact |theory that she might John |ffashing in the sun. The echo of a Smith, father of Miss Smith, had |19-Eun salute from the army post |increased to $10,000 his offer of re- {ward for information leading to her discovery no new clue of importanec | was evallable, State, city and private detectives baffled by their |€FNOr Smith today or whether failure to find a single authentic | (lead on which to work. {since the 19 year old Smith college | ' freshman walked out of her room in Dewey hall, she has been report- ! led from a hundred points and de- | tectives have scrutinized score of photostatic copies of hotcl | o iy L oer| | registers without avall. Bim ih Chicses?" be way ashed. 1) Mrs. 8mith, whe has been under \a physician's care since her arrival | here to assist in the search for her | daughter, last night iasued through | the press a pathetic appeal to the {missing girl. Mother's Message *“We long for the happiness of having you back and we need you | and miss you #0,” Mya. Bmith wrote, | o Hope in what ioudin likely clue in Pittsburgh, Pa., Was yne AMacon to a waiting automobile | * Dlasted when a girl who had been [nrough solid lines of bluecoats. | [thought to resemble Miss &mith at |There was scattered clapping of | 4 I'revious 1o 'a hetel there was proven to be u |hands from the crowd of about 1,- | cntering Central Junior High school Toronte fewelry buyer. two years ngo she was a | 6 ! Nor(hend school. EDWARD J. BATOGOWSKI —Photes by Johnsen & Peterson |elementary sehools In electing Ralph H. Benson, ir. provious to ccming to this eity. Helen Lois Horn, daughter of Mr. Max Horn of frect s active in severa school's erganizations. seemed to be tary, and Fdward J. Batogowski, treasurer, the Central Junior Migh achool mid-year graduation class Investigators likewise pinned 1ittle gyrbance. The procession . xtarted Opp. the Strand faith in the belief of John H. Price, |along Broadway with the fire depart. | night attendant at a Kingston, Pa., oil station, that the girl was ona of | The progress to city hall was made | a party of four who stopped at his [through packed lanes of pedestrians, | Northend school and has been \-eryL“"‘" Wednesday morning for ‘""‘1"‘" sidewalk crowds being enor- vopular with the faculty as well as ~ALD CADEY | has chosen four popular pupils. 1AL, *10L-HOP* Besides attaining helghts of popn- & GNP MING— - [1arity, the officers of the class musi davghter of M avitt of 207 Maple street. She was fellow student of lly and Ralph Hamilton Beuson is the son of Chamber of Commerece Sec- retary Ralph H. Benson of 103 Har- rison street. He has been a pupil in the school a comparatively short time, but in that time he has won many friends. He was educated in casurer Fdward John Batogow:. ski, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Bato- gowekl of 167 Hart street, ‘Camp school pupil previous to enters ing Central Junior High. v.hich was preferred to a for investigating. “Stupid Error” Makes Irish Visitors Laugh 20 (- As Presi- . the Irish Free was being taken r day one member of | his party was seen to look closely at the gold hadges worn hy the recep- tion committee, whisy leagues, and join in a general burst | Issued for Karasiewicz Detective Sergeant W. P. McCuc was notified today that the Meriden | authorities have a warrant for | Bronislaw Karaslewicz who is held | in default of $10,000 bonds follow- ing his arrest in Hartford, whers y evening. He was identificd by Ed- ward Barnikow of Meriden, as the altas John aplan, when gasoline for their automobile was obtained at a Meriden filling station | New York, Jan r to his col- | . Dress Values A new shipment of AER smart Felt and Straw combinations — the $ s.m newest note in mil- ] linery. + and GROUP 8 All colors and head- sizes. Inspection of the 1 | that the Trish presidont's been spelled Corgrove in rained lef When this misspeliing Specially priced. IWarion Hat Shop Callahan—Lagosh 95 West Main St. Grover Whalen, welcome committice, “What a stupid error!” he remarked: FACTORY TO SHUT DOWN The Dwight Manufacturing Co. post- «~d notices in its mifls here today. an- neuncing a fwo week shat dow ! of poor husiness conditions In textile industry, employs about 800 men and women. The company SIFIED ADS | D HERALD ( county, who obtained the man’s confession, while the arrow points to Hotelling. lne. {mously swelled by the noentime RBEI I ANXI ”S Price described the girl s about crowds pouring out of the eky- |20 years old and said she redembled |scrapers. Ticked tape floated from high win- Miss Smith. They attempted to ‘r!lch Harrisburg by telephone but dows in the city's traditionsl wel- |the garage man was unable to hcu('—'omfi but the watching crowds were the conversation. quiet. There was little cheering and Btate Detective Joseph V., Daley, ‘cnlr isolated instances of any sort {in charge of {nvestigation here, |Of disturbance. {clings to hia originally expremed | Atone point several women shout- It there ia any |theory that Miss Bmith drowned |ed derogatory remarks, but subsid- the Connecticut nvn."d when policemen elosed about At city hall there was the largest crowd, scveral thousand peopls being | kept from over-running thic plaza by {meveral hundred police and two com- panles of infantry. declares that the complete absence of any tangible clue from the time the cardinal, Mr. Cosgrave and his arty left for his hot He will this after- had been artic republics of Mount Athos, (Continued from First Page) tion. diet.” | |Ustener, glanced frequently over his | cumvented until the last query was| Outside the cabin the welcoming cascading streams of firchoats were on Governor's Island hoomed across the bay and the sirens of harbor | craft shrieked their greeting. “l don't know whether I'll. be given a chance to see your Gov- | must walt until we come back from | Washington.” he sald, adding that | he had met the governor's daugh- | ter, Catherine, in Ireland two years | Legs of Genuine Spring Sl to Tiave Cops Mr. Cosgrave didn't know much | 35¢ Ib. about Mayor “Big Bill” Thompson | of Chicago. “Are you going to meet | (suppose w0, he answered, after | | conferring with one of his party. i “Once, back home’” he volun-| teered, “somebody asked me if Ire., land was considering a ban on the exportation of cops. I didn’t know |then what the word meant. But | when 1 found out, T told my ques. | tioner that I thought any sueh act| as that would he considered wun. Tel. 285 Free Delivery President Cosgrave walked from | 300, but ne cheering and no dis- | 164 MAIN ST. | ment band playing. SPECIAL SELLING For Saturday To Close Our January Clearance SALE With These Outstanding | | $7 .95 STLK and SPORT Dresses In dark and light shadese These formerly =old at $18 and higher, and are wen- derful for scheol, after- noon and street wear. Telephone 3683