New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 11, 1928, Page 14

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ZONING LAW MUST BE ALTERED AGAIN xceptions Necessary fo Permit New Church Buildings the zoning the veral sxceptions to law must be granted Lefore £400.000 gronp of parish buildings may be erected by the First Conzre. gationa! church soniery We: Main and Lexington strests This declaration was made fhis atterncon by Clerk Thomas Linder of the board of adjustment. fellow- ing examination of the plans and maps submitted for approtal befor: work 1s gotten under wav. In all mafor points the buiidings meet the ome law reguirements. Mr, Linder cavs. but the topography of the land has occasioned some conflict with set-backs The apphication for approval of the plans, reads “The First Church of Chr pacts to sell 1ts property in the cen- ter of the city and erect a new church and accessory buildings on land which 1t ox corner of West Main and Lexingron streefs The buillding committ which has been entrusted with the prepar- ation of the plans, has reached a pont in ats work where further progress requires it to know that its Plans as projectsd have the approval of your beard The building com- mittee wants to fesl secure at a later date against finding its plans At Vartance with the ey zoming ordi ances with the aftendant loszs of e and money which such a dis- At} agreement would involve | “The project is a sizeable one, for a group of buildings that will cost about $400.000. T'p to the present time a substantial amount has been spent on the preparation of prelimi- nary plans, elevations and perspec- fives. These preliminary plans clear- ly set forth anv particulars which might be at variance with the zon- ing ordinances. Such of these plans as are of intersst are submitted herewith and conshtute part of this petition. The t step for the building committee ¥s to authorize its architect to prepare working drawings and specifications. This involves a edmmitment of ten to fif- teen thousand dollars which the church canmot engage to do without certainty as to its position “The building committee is frank- 1y unable to say in what respec if any, the plans as submitted e at variance with a literal interpre- tation of the zoning ordinance The problem is complicated primarily by the irregular shape of the plot but “also by the fact that it falls within two zones, residence C and residence A. Approach to the problem is a choice among several Should we regard West Main street or Lexington street as the front of the lot? Should we regard the church as the the other sirmctures thereto? Such as accessory restrictions as t ordinances prescribe in these zones have in mind primarily residential construction and are not too well suited to a group of church build- ings, notwithstanding specific provi- cion for church property in these zones. “The building committee wishes to call the atiention of the board to the following consideration: That the buildings as planned occupy only about 43 per cent of the area of the property; that the most valuable portion of the land has been de- voted to open =pace to become in a sense a beantiful and sightly small park: and that the group of build- 1ngs is notably more pleasing and creditable to the community than an apartment building erected on this plot in the strictest conformity with the zoning ordinances “The board is required by the zoning ordinances to Mmake no ex- ception without due consideration to conserving the publhic health, safety and welfare and property values, Your petitioners think that each of these considerations is not onl rved but is enhanced by plans. “The hoard 1= empowered to au-| thorize variance from the terms of | the zoning ordinances, if not con- trary to the public inferest, where, owing to special rconsiderations A | eral enforcement of the provi-| cions of the ordinance will result in unnecessary hardship, so that the “pirit of the ordinance shall be ob- served and enbstantiaal done “The plan presented is the resnlt of 2 vear's ctu sri00s commit tees of th n consultation with expert h planning and g and a oard finds canse ma onteuration o Your pett Polish Summer School Will Teach Language , oy Rev. Father Tia huey for the past fes I paring a large clags o first communion, whi ¥ : next Sunday, June 17 1o appro 325 voungsters. It his been ord ¢ 1« most of the childre Vad firtle o no preparatory 245 Pias Piagkon:=l: has heen accomplished nele ring efforts the task cfforts the tar alternatives. | main building with | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1928, H. §. BASEBALL CAPTAIN Elected on Second Ballot After Being Tied With Joseph Potts | (Continued from Fust Page) For Honor | rather angular woman, her cloth William Mangan, son of Mr and e the imprescion of eomforting Mrs. Lawrence P. Mangan, was to custom and the statntes, and she lected captain of next year's high 1S notable m spite of them ha hool baseball team on th sht dark eves fashing in her ballot at lection held 1 pe school this morming. On the frer ke Rapidiy 1 and Joseph Port vapidly, with the en. h H and Mre Pott 4 tal persomalty o 4 at 1 [wo members of the svstem 1= to squad arred i time tor the second 15 Lack ballot and their votes decided the or metaphon claction In tator of ) | en. the farm Larn Mangan father of the arty with such w captain, was the captain of first that thev zrasp baseball team at the school where he lea plaved on the football and basehal has con- teams durmg the early part of (i ¢ are the most in- centr 1e around; that the P Y A e i e e orite 1€ the best man, and Hior laos A D (s e S G kL ALTEAY L works from a A e it | pr althongh there are calcher . His hret ‘ainletis atartinas s reasoning of Mark With the Ameriean Legion team of ter 15 her persen- Ritchihelois aiee) fantains Y which canr c1ght RERR e R e i D ) lstant attorney general is Sarnits that rave phenomenon, a natural TS sl net tram The G O P P and leading M ter He js 2 member of the Delta for ) conergssmen at-laree e init | Ulineis, com a1 abil- Lith roval ¢ Farmer's Danghter y Mre Willebrandt 1s the daughter ) . of & farmer He was once a post 4 naster 1n the then ploneer town of l gradnated from law school. When ——— she achieved her LL she opened 5 her shop and chients, He (Continued from Tirst Page) op and waited for Her WS —WOUEN GAERALS (HERE ARE THE MARBLE CHAMPIONS LEANG BATTLE| WITH CARTELLI, KING OF THEM ALL | ' ool champien { marhie <hoeters and some of the ooters at Willow Rrook park on Qaturday at the fime of the f | chanipe are wearmg th | medats | Readirz from photo 1eft to nght front ron Casmiera Coseina, cham plon of Camp schaol; Fnzo Argazz champion of Burnit seheal, Sam Mancarella, champion Nathan Hale e ———————————— e e e — Reports Theft of §175 e e From West Street Home | A {lord, and it is suspected fhat he en- The home of Felix Maciora of 116 | tered the Maciora tenement. The West street was entered and $175|money was in $20, $10 and $5 bills and a Christmas club bank book and was on a chiffonier in the din- taken this forenoon, according to re- | ing room. Mrs. Maciora was not at port to the police. Sergeant P. J.|home at the time. O'Mara reported that Mrs. Miller. {who lives in another tenement at | They have a va army of uzers | the. same address, was visited by a | Herald Classified A | | et el st . ~ /TN AND 0N ~ | | S feme Ll s “Ce ANYONE /Bur ol ~ PEMR HEART —AG LONG—, | | | | i i Jr. Hizh - school: Frank Massey. |sear: Bolrslaw Grneta. chaupion of chammon of Rockwell school, Wil-|tha Washin school: John Rera- lam Moore, champion of . Jo-|vell, champion of the Northend cepi's school, Leonard Rouher, [school, Edward Saladin. champion | champion of R 1. Vance school; ef St Mary's school. Joseph Cima- Teanard ¢arlsen, champion of Cen- |ton. champion of the Eenamm tral Junior High school and runner- | Frankhn scheol. Wilham Cormier. | [np for ety fitle. Dominie Cartelly, [chammon of the Lancoln school. and | champion of €mallay school and ity | Engene Terselle, champion of the & ich champion for the third snce Stanley school | FoPoonS T BOOK MOTOR CARS — MEANT” A LIFETiME- delights of the TELEVISION T0 BE |first was Mrs Florence Collins Por- N ter, organizer of the uthern Cah- = 3 % 3 to Texas while he was a child and |tornia Federation of Republican | Coming Convention lived for ahort periods in §an An- |\women. one of fhe early women | i J : exico, but later voung Carranza | | J Kansas City. Mo, June 11. (UP) :':dlfld e e eRe A 1.;‘.H‘;\,,‘M,‘:::‘r..\?.nnl.:m 4; f“m,:mi ‘: A western repubhican cen nan | CMERE Wil MEVER B hen coming back to his homelan. campargn s . e H H H " 4 has bet a prominent New York NYONS E ! VERR- e roming bark 1o meometand (15 AN (o wine: Bring (he Libraries Right to Will Be in Every Radio Home it o "% Nk o o D ctered the Mexican army aif |y anat has not had the political ed- | X | 5 | Hoover can mot rarrv Nem York A oAy — Sonora where Yaqui Indians were |PORENt: oF, indeed, any of the leaser i ' lare nommated ) on the warpath. From fime to time /EN!S 8he tock a not-pari1 ‘a"‘; s | = he has been similarly engage important part in the conventions of chington June 11 (Fi—Library| Chicsgo, June —Waves of | called rebellion has heen strongest, |P2iEned in n home town er Servier. the n. S o SR et s Sl (UL L SR IR He was at the “front~ during the |her own state. Her valuable leader. | educational defer s exmnna e i e [hoRnts Bt e sl eently Gomez-Serrano revolutionary at. |Ship today apparently is a gft, not|japidly in rural sections as e |y upieis i radie development. A Sl B sl tempt although there were only a |20 achiesement tarming populatic Jantage |romention of the tadio frades |l Tttt NI T s fow days of fighting, and that local Mrs. MeCormick, on the other | o v, iies ply disposal. hrought some [ Visitors to ) Ly on oy od e ized in a small mountain region of {hand, Jistened inon her Tather's | =y, 0w serviee is £0INE o fari- | study exhi of radio equipment IS e R L Vera Cruz state where the federals |CONferences from the time €he Was | . ypiough state extension libra- apparatus and furniturs said to TR crushed the few followers still re. [# Small child. She went 10 work 5| joq yemiberohis Jibrar A e e e ) 7 | | maining with Gomez. his secretary when he was in the | i) nool-district, township. | Demonsirations of television at-| The comvention will be op ved | Tried Once Before. |senate, and no matter how late &he | oniumity and county: hbravies. |fracted the greatest interest and ©2¢! withia prg Dresiding Tn the summer of 1926 Carranza |Might dance the might before. ehe |, g hooks are made easily | brought predictions that this latest|at these services will be Bishop §.C. | attempted to fly with stops from |had fo be on hand to open the of- |, ot by of the mail and ey pnt wonld be in every Partridge, ipscopalian, — Bishop Chicago to Mexico City, using a|fice in the morning | automobiles Many of the county | american home that has a radio set | Thomas T Lillis, Catholic. Rabbi small plane. He had bad luck. A Was Potent Influcnce [ librarics are making use of the hin the de Herman Coicn, and Bashon F 1L | forced landing in a storm near Ok-| AS the wife of the late Senator | yook automor which has re- | | Waldor, Mathodist, all of this cify | IohoraiOity darigsd the ol ine g | ML MobioTinicl e wak a motenk || (555s diis ala) dinrsa-auaivn hoolt | b on e manutactycete & o) - ) 4 put Carranss in a hospital for about |Infuence in Milinofs politics. A lead- | Luzoin firgt used in Washington | 12¥e ielned o rear radio in =ight t every delegate may bel il six “,hr‘(! Recovered and the plane |er in the suffrage movement. she |, qunty, M. in Lo joatry tha [ et STOTL R ST AR R tefaTs oro s wS (;O(J repaired he continted to Mexico but |had been credited with taking the | corvice direct to the farm homes Jtis anandaicren o S =0\ Hlexnan R e e : J was forced down mgain near Mon- |heard of suffrage forces at the last | e & Naso }. tants asridferasuiitallinconalile Cotiseajizing ’V’n‘fi‘l" ; \’n‘\‘l"l’:‘ Ll b o K‘E‘ {\OYQL"'/ i terey with the plane so damaged |moment and, seenring the enfran- | cyjural cconomist of the depart- iaenostlilesRofiel o iaton S g i Sl CRiAE AT 1 that he had to abandon the flight. |chisement of her sey ment of agriculture, in a new bul Bty o rmmn BB i e 3 i l He ' was married in Sonora about| She worked side by side with her |jotin on this educational phase of P | e | | threa months ago. |husband against the League Of |yyural life, describes the hook auto- | It is not foo much to say now 1 :. :’-’-E o anne] e ‘ It was revealed today that Col- Nations. { mobile as “an important adjunct of [that within a decade television may |”” o R Mgw cnel Tintbiareh Bimsele contributed | Mrs, Willebrandt and Msi Mo-11ibrary! darvics (o riral eommuni: |b8 inieverychome in the Ajnited |\ARE SHER AT 500 pesos (ahout $1,200) to finance | Cormick bhoth are putting politics | ies, capecially in connection with States thit now possises a radio set, : = |the flight which was made by pop- | before domesticity for the moment. county hbrari s mdithas ttlsnen esliant wihichiper {ular subscription The colonel asked |The former has one adopted child, | =Ji is fNeansotisiransponting (MU s gocalledilistaner, 1o g 7 that the contribulion be kept secret, |Dorothy, awaiting her in Washing- | books from the central brary fo Vie'ws of (he artist, or some great| but the bankers handling the fund, fon: and the latter has fhres eager- | Lranches, stations, schools and in. Spectacle, may be no more expeisie vevealed it this mobning. v watching the outcome of the dividual tarm familics, and a means | then the present day receiving ap Carranza’'s farewell me was: | convention of their return. It also transports paratus” “Best regards of the Mexiean press | Both ‘Charmi the central libravian in her \isits _— and people 1o the press and pople | Thy women arc simiar w that fo fhe s Many comnty 1 May Start Boom for of the United States has oth - hane. o (nalr aiffarent |Drsries hts very good coun R . There had been some fear that he |tastion that indefinable thing called |1y bool FotEh e anil Wearing Brown Derbics would have difficulty in taKing off | ciarm, and hoth are distinetly fem- | and by methods of transpor | Asbury Park, N. J., June 11 (®-—| with his heavy load of gasoline be-| o There nothing of the |tation, but the hook automobils bro=n derby strength of Gov- cause of Mexico City's high altitude, | e 50yt Mitner of them, | Makes possi 1ove equal. com- | ernor Al Smith of New York is in- | {but the plane took the air Without || i work as men | plete and re service lo country | creasing | difficulty The masculine heads of the |People” Harry A. Borden, & democrat who | |Hoover campaign wait patiently | AS an exan he cites the Los (wants to \mit Governor A. Harry | The Great Insurrection led by |upon Mrs. Willebrandt, and the Angeles county librar vhich op- [Moore 2t his summer home soon, | Bimilio Agiinalae ek e Shillp rials opponents of fhe secratary ot | STALE nof autoinsbiles thut avetifound the thought impossible withs pine insurrection sgainst tha United |commerce take. their orders from |28 100 miles a‘lyfbetasonle IS dery mo e inte Goserion Dlis Maiteston pesi el o e the central cstablishiient and more | gmith as follow than 300 branches in conpmunitios ‘1 would considgr it an honor fo Suifele ey Sl | and schools to serve about 409000 [wear one of your old oncs even if | i 2 s |IAiduIS The Turiington county had to stuif ol newspapers info it Blmd Lay Preacher May Be Presndents Bbrary in New dersey sends ont[to make it it 1 cannot buy one in | not only booka, but pictures, filins | this town." | {and phonogranh records for distri- | Today he received a felegram bution among 1 birane M from a manufacturer of brown der- Istores, mranzc halls and farm | bies. 1t read Lomes, About 610 hoe e dis- | cOpder for Lrown derby same as | tributed datly to varions branches Governor Smith wea veceived | [in Coahoma county, issi through governor's seeretary. George which has a population of only 41, Graves, Same will have immedi- | e attention and will be shipped. “naturally 2 sty OVEICIAL, WELCOME | cieney and 1y . | An official welcome will be ac. notes of ful farming of st e I e M to Arthur H. Parker, contly | [ ierps taimet e ing: | Elected Most Puissant Grand Maste bRt e ed Lot Royal and Select Masters, and his Jans |l fiocal appointees. Harry 1. Scheuy. Eesiaitly e 1 ng steward and P R A God- farming, and perbar 4 product ""’H'fm,"\‘\””;‘,r“‘\;']"";"" it of it. should zo a contented farm |ient b ;",'\Wm‘ eddide I neaple and a ving tarm e The de for financial reward n e i ica” i i - ‘.”M oL hmf Fhilip Livingsion was one of the 1elegates and visitors to the “Heart of Ameri ca during the Republican national conveéntion and contentmont can maintain it Enere of the Declaration of Tnde- | Will find the city in full bloom of flags, bunting, electric signs, orramental displays and stream- ' : is an fmportant fae. | PRdeNCE for the state of New York. | ing banners, proclaiming its hospitality and feeling of honor on the occasion. or in e ney o cduca i i on farmers can make themer 7 o = i G = ) adeanata to fhe solving of tha per- | A . 3 H R el | rena Where the Republican Delegates Will Select Nominee If President and Mrs. Coolidge, vacationing this summer at Cedar Tsland Lodge, Wiseonsin, attend the nearest houge of wor- ship. (rozsroads church (below) at Brule, they will listen to a blind preacher. He is John Tavler. a lav pastor in northern Wisconsin, for 35 of his almost 70 years. | ETRNTAIE HICH NOTY turned to hiz dutie at that institn ness and operation of tonal Dz b | The ninth 2z | tumier High i weekly e ieazne meeting | The 0 meet {afternann i the Al ! | The Red team was th ‘ CONVENTION NFWS 2Y AR | | Members of Lion " have the opporiunity io 1t noon | the proceedings of the republies convention which “tarts tomorrow | in Kansas City. dning their regular | The troadeast =il 1 ble the “n of the | wsh| thronzh WTIC | The el | up and conventionsthrough a set installed in the dining room Burritt hotel Lol be to zet the down®” of which Convention Hall, Kansas City, after the platform haa heen built and the seats for delegates and alternates placed in order, In front of the speaker's stand is a smaller platform upon which the press will =it and on each side of the central fan-like ar~ rangement of seats is a separate block for aliernates. Two tiers of seats rise above the space provided for the balloting group. el ‘ i i q ! | | | 4 | i ! Lk { 2 A'!> IR . "y ) o J¢ i' o i [ v f L] . !’ 1 o b i/ . g i I . 1 L] ok | L] [ S—

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