New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 22, 1930, Page 10

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mfin for Marriage, Speaker Says at Ed Education Sessicn BIGAMY CHARGE Eaw Comes to Aid of Gallahanil in Love Affair * Intricacics of the law, both Massachusetts and Connecticut, | made it impossible for Robert J. Cattahan, 26, of this city to charged with bigamy, although he has two wives living. ation was brought to t when Callahan came up for a hearing on a char of deserting his wife and child Springficld, It develops that u chusetts la lived with 1his city in guired. This the Massachu Dot brin in | der the Mas not proven authoritics could charges against fiim. Likewi: impossible for The Connectict hold him on a bigamy rge 15 New Britain police have no evidence that wife No. 1 lived with him in Cofinecticut. Thus a man with two wives, each in different states, can- ot be tried on a bigamy complaint. Today it was learncd that her Ereat lo r Callahan will encour age Miss Percau to wait until he able to becoms parated 1 from his f ind han are livir y now but not togcther, They will continue in this way until such time as a divoree is granted. Bangor, Me., Steps have been take divorce. Callahan ha torney John O'Connor Falls, ) - 1y alla- of Chicopec field after bigamy charges were dropped he charged with non-support, but proved to the satisfaction of officials #hat only one dren was Jis. Another was born more than a wear after he deserted his wife in Kovember of lh wa claimed. week for the support of this child, a four year old boy. 1In his divorce suit he will ask for the custody of this boy he said. St. Elnior i;odgé Mc;n At District Meeting District Deputy Ha Witkin and & delegation of officers and members of St. Elmo lodge, Knights of Pyth- ias, have chartered a bus which will leave at § o'clock tonight from Castle hall to attend a district mcet- ing in Southinzton. prominent speaker will deliver an address on Pythianism. An claborate entertain- ment has been arranged and refresh- x’nm\(*; will be served Tomorrow night St. Elmo lodge l\lll hold a regular meeting in Castle hall at § o'clock as a report will be gendered by the special committee e lodge. The enter- tainment committee will report pro- Eress on an affair to be held in the nedr future. Begin Selecting Jury $ In Case of ‘Governor | = Sheboygan, Wis.,, April 22 (UP)— Men whose lives have been attuncd to the hum of industr t the Husge Manufacturing plant nearby owned by Gov. Walter J. Kohler, puzzled over questions of attorneys in court today as to whether they could sit impartially in his trial on charges of €excessive campaign expenditure Selection of the jury which wiil ‘have power to effect the removal of Gov. Kohler from office should it vote for conviction began today and three jurors had been tentatively scated before noon. Governor Kohler was not presert opened today. The tended the funeral of sister, Mrs. Paul T. Krez, wife of the Sheboysan county eourt judge, HELD ON CHECK Boston, April 22 —Geor: Strong, law) who was a here ten days ago as a fugitive from Jjustice at the request of Washington, | . C. police was arraigned before nited States Commissioner &. Jenny today. He was held in $500 #nd his case continued for one week. Strong is charged with hay passed worthl hecks in Washing ton. T.ocal police informed the c missioner he was wanted here in Hartford, Conn. on similar cha es. Husband Had to Do Her Work “When my baby was a month old, I took a heavy cold he | . | give NEW BRITAIN DAILY TIERAT D, TULSDAY APRIL 22, 1930. That educators must train chil-, dren for marriage by teaching thosc things which will make the marriage state most congenial was the con- tention of Dr. I'red D. Wish, super- intendent of Hartford schools in an ddress before the school superin- |tendents of the state at the New Britain Normal school this morning. | In his address he pointed out that considerable unhappiness was caused voung people because education had not fitted them for life together 0 produce happy worke e “the school must help the pu- pil choose that voeation in which he will have > longest working life We must to start our boys and oit other than the The ‘ol more 10 ms discontended than the nda of the Communi, be considered as wage carners. 1'am- ss on the part of the man shows itself in decreased effi- ciency in his work. We must train these young people so that they can gain their recreation from things other than the theater, which is a purchased pleasure, and a non-par- ticipating affair requiring small ef- fort on their part.” ining for Concerning the relationship of the chool and industry he said. “In in- dustry with corporate absentee own- cership we are likely to have great difticulty unless the school, quite arly in life, inculeates in the em- ployer and the cmploye of the fu- mutual tolerance and r s e failed to place their sty nh nts whe their specia abili- ties will be of use to them. Can't we a pupil for such abolities in which will mean something in the confidence of employ- he school should be abls to the emplover finite idea of the abilities and acter of the }n reon he is hirin “Too many teachers have too little conception of the life of the com- munity in which they live. Shouldn't English teachers have some idea of the demands in this line of the bus ness offices in her town? Tsn't it possible that a summer spent in a husiness office will be of more use to a business teacher than a course at a summer school 2" In conclusion Doctor Wish said: “If we can give our pupils a basis of | good' health, a correct occupational start by placement, an understanding of some of the economic problems re- lated to the home; if we can watch and guide the through wise use of natural or cr ited school life situations; and final- Iy, i we can have teachers with a more comprehensive and clea knowle of life in all its aspect: including the industrial, we may con- | tinue to improve the adjustment of | youth to a happy occupational life. Dr. Irank 1. Spaulding of Yale university discussed in detail an out- lined plan of “Pubc Education as Adjustment of Youth said, try on prop “Girls must wives as well 7 ily unhappin Work ect. L way ind orc the morning s Camyp Junior high school Glee ¢ In the afternoon the Normal school Glee club sang | Mcredith Speaks The third annual Connceticut’s school with present at the normal the school dining by a busin over by Trederick S. Camp. supe visor of clementary education for | the state of Connecticut The meeting proper got bout § o'clock. Mr. ¢ duced the speaker, Dr. Meredith, retiring ctate of ecducation. conference of superintendents opened last night ool. A dinner in | room was foll cssion p. der way | mp intro- | Albert B, comm er GULDENS . ‘ Mustard . | Movement |the subject needs were for nce in guidance and | formation of attitudes | t it Meredith took as his subject: | Contemporary ducational | ' His development of was characterized b) nk E. Spaulding of Yale uni- who followed Dr. Meredith Meredith's most outstanding discou on cducational matters.” | The speaker opened his lecture by | ing that his talk would be rela- | tive to a certain few cnterprises | looking toward a better type of edu- | cational moyements. ¥ The first he outlined as the stand | of the federal government on m ters of cducation saying that vernment, through its department gought to act ther than an mization. He de- |t ¢ of the subject by 1 pointing out that the various acts ! concerning cducation, and the nu-|! merous rches adapted to its|t the purpose of uni- | ving and coordinating thought on| the subject. He further the federal government alone had | | within a short time spent more than 5§ million dollars on . cducational cnterprises although it had no n, {tional policy on cducation, but ther a summation of the 48 1)Ol|ci«.s of the states. The entire interest of the govern ment was characterized as a move- ment whose sole business was the development of a more - intelligent and more enterprising citizenry. e the advancement of cducation was caid by Dr. Meredith to be embodied in the governmental policy of study- ing the secondary educational or post clementary problems. With this end | view congress has appropriated | ,000 which is to be used at ”‘hi rate of $75,000 a year in seccking, | through r: rch, information “on | matters pertaining to secondary edu- | He intimated that three | may see many changes| |Wwrought in teaching systems because of facts th.t be disclosed through this agency, ‘and if this| condition was not brought about all |may at least hope for a. much broader conception in the minds of national and state cducators as a ult of the work of this agency The third and final great move- | ment looking toward the betterment |of the educational system was point- | ed out to be work being done by the | | American ~ Council on T:ducation. | { This body is being sponsored and | | supported by more than 200 Ameri- can colleges and industrial organi- tions. Its aim is to cncourage and foster a far reaching study of the | clements which tend to malke up the RIVETS MAKE STEEL 'FURNACE GAS-TIGHT | Lennox Torrid Zone Has Rev- olutionized Warm Air Heat- ing in Thousands of Homes Dr. Some Dr. Fr versity, as Dr. t the & \ interior. crvic ceney. 1 ministrative or: veloped this phase rese t The manufacturers of this un- | usual warm air furnace have taken a lesson from the builders of loco- | motive boilers, tank cars and sub- | marines. The Lennox Torrid Zone is made of boiler-plate steel. Tt | is hot-riveted and cold-calked for safety and permanence. No gas, dust or smoke can escape into the rooms of your home.. | But safety and cleanliness are | not the only improvements the | Torrid Zone brings. It furnishes | the vital humidity lacking in so | many homes during the heating season. The Torrid Zone humidifier has twice the evaporating area of ordinary water pans right inside the casing and is over the firing doors for rapid evaporation. It can eliminate in your home that Liln- dried atmosphere which causes sore throats and colds and makes furni- ture crack and loosen at the joints. 'Burn your favorite fuel in the Lennox Torrid Zone—hard or soft | coal, coke, lignite, wood, gas or oil — and save money. Plans and estimates quickly furnished for all types of buildings. Factory engi- reering service for special prob- lems. Made by the Lennox Furnace | Company, Syracuse, N. Y.—Mar- | shalltown, Jowa—Toronto, Canada. u\(‘l I Titzpatrick & Street, New Britain, 38 W, Torrid Zon insta :H rs. Coy=2 Conn., tel, Standard Code izenship this future Rockville s ah ad- | ¢ a Canadian royal commission. { ated that | Hopes Abandoned Today | hopes of finding Major Ttobert | with rescue his brother, app ceived word from MecDonald broth- ters, his former employers in Boston. sccond great movement for | ploy. - I * ALLEGED BY COH ion to the develonn and to clim ion of thought so p; ay’s systems. body will cducators ¢ of cdu which 1 ship.” g evalent short the work o | to find how the N Dbest corrclat ion with the In be matter for “good cftiz Meredith's lecture ived and at its close ted with spontaneous husiastic applause he asons well | ea| | HMartford. | he and Apr (P—A pet tive Leaves “atananzi of New Britain has \ iled by Assistant United States On Canadian Commission |(rict Attorney George H. Cohen Truro, N. 8, April 22 (UP)— |the clerk of the rederick W. Swindells, an American native of Itockville, Conn., president of the American Doston, is home in summer mon rge farm, DLrinceport, oday for New York to sail for Eng and to investigate the fruit market- ng business of the old country for he Nova Scolia government. He is he st American cver appointed te itizon, nd vics Vool Company, The man was ship April 20, 1929 ed to include in hi: he had returned to I government contend were procurcd fraudulently legally He since . Because he i okl application 1t his left I1so failed his last to mention The man has a wife and t children now residing there. CURLEY DRIVES RIVET Boston, A 22 James - M. Curley of Boston ti drove the first rivet in the su structure of the new Boston He Of Finding Maj. Read | Dayton, 0., April 22 (UP)—All| | Read, who broke oft his engagement | Mabel Mchafiic, stock actress of this ity through the wild tale of | Traveler newspaper building. death flight from Northern Can-| The ceremony marked official ada, where he said he had gone to |ication of the structure under rently 4 [ struction. 1t is expected the ss Mehaffio re- | {in two menths. his morning when M at Read was no longer in the em- | SIFIED ——— —215 MAIN NSHIP FRAUD woucation Ney Britain Resident Accused by Assistant U. 5. Attorney to cancel the citizenship of Antonio (o United States court. No date has been set for the hear-| admitted to citizen- | visit abroad another daughter had been born to him. (CP) ' — )m_\or’ work will have been completed with- P e P AR Barricaded Wife Sued In Divorce Case Today Reno, Nev., April 22 (P—Mrs. Lucy H. K. Lamar, New York, artist, is defendant in a divorce suit filed in the district court here by H. K. Lamar, widely known portrait painter. Several days ago Mrs. Lamar applied to the New York su- preme court for a restraining der to prevent her being forced out of the Lamar apartment in the National Arts club in New York. Lamar, in the complaint, said his wife is of an extremely jeal- ous nature and that she interfer- cd with his work as a portrait painter. ile also charged that she opened his mail and teok therefrom checks which she en- lorsed in his nam EN ition | been Dis- with fail- that ly in 1921 the | that his papers and iI-| Stock Bonuses Helped Acquire New Concerns Washington, April 22 (UP)—The Fleetric Bond and Share Company acquired much of its interest in sub- sidiaries through stock bonuses voted | the Holding Company, A. R. Colbert, utility expert, told the federal trads commission today. Colbert said the company ébtained in this manner 53.6 per cent of its common stock in American Power and Light; 17.9 per cent of its inter- |est in Elcetric Power and Light; per cent in Lehigh Power Se- curities Corporation, and 36.8 per cent in National Power and Light. that hree oday iper- rald- ded- con- steel | SNOW IN NEW HAMPSHIRE Ttochester, N. H., April 22 (P—A pest-season snow storm spread a ADS | pretty thick blanket of white over ST.— AFTER EASTER CLEARANCE Drastic Price Reductions on Everything in the Store COATS § These are marvelous coat values. The year’s choicest styles, colors and materials and furs. Sizes for women and misses. Shop tomorrow and get first choice. 'DRESSES The new Silhouettes—all high type dresses and wonderful values at their original prices. All sizes . . SHOP EARLY 1350 Regular $29.50 Value For Big Savings During the Last Four Days of Cur I’l QUOT SHEETS 81389 $1 39. LONG SCRIM CURTAINS Good Quality Neg. the countryside “here .today. The storm, which -started. ‘early this morning, Wwas on i'the” increase at breakfast time and the snow was beginning to pile up in good shape. The last post-season snow storm listed here was April 28, 1928, when four inches fell. AUTO KNOCKS MAN DOWN Victor Gryguc of- 569 Burritt street notified Captain Kelly-at po- lice headquarters. this, forenoon that street, sustaining bruises to the right arm arid left les. : He was attendell, by Dr. John"J. Tokarczyk. ;] KING TAKES CANTER ‘Windsor, England, April 22 (UP) — King George went horseback rid- ing over the grounds of Windsor Castle today and met his grand- daughter, Princess Elizabeth, riding the black pony she received .yester- day-as a present on her, fourth birth- day. | he was driving south on Booth street and John Brzewski, 45, of 73 Booth street, stepped«in front of his car and was knocked down near Orange The princess was progressing “ex- cellently” with her riding lessons. USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS PARAMOUNT MILLINERY CO. " OUR After Easter MILLINERY SALE _NOW GOING ON TOMORROW. ONLY Wednesday A most remarkable selling of New Spring HATS REDUCED TO .00 Greatly Below Usuai Price | FOR THE MISS .. . . FOR THE MATRON ALSO CHILDREN’S HATS Money Saving Reductions On All Other Hats During This Sale PARAMOUN MILLINERY CO. .M. C. A. BLDG. New Britain PROHIBITION DESERVE TO SUCCEED 2 ROHIBITION, in the words of President Hoover, is a “Noble Experiment” which he wishes to see succeed. There are many who agree with him . . . many who are undecided . . . many deubtful. To all, The Christian Science Monitor will address its special series on Prohibition and all will receive a hearing. The series will bring together in a friend- ly, persuasive way the henefits of ten years of prohibition . . . up-to-date arguments for it from. every standpoint . well- authenticated refutations of many false statements. " The aificles will appear in twenty issues, starting May. 5 and ending June 14. Sub- scriptions for . this six weeks’' period are offered for $1 (4s. 2d.) CASH SALE Our Entire Stock Has Been Marked Down Again to $1.69 980 pair and after that I felt miserable. Could not lift anything. My husband had to help me with THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR 107 Jalmouth Strect Bostor, Massachusetts sure Quick Action! the housework. I was so weak I could not do a washing. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound advertised in the Kittaning paper and I gaveit a good trial. Before I had taken half a bottle, I found the differ- ence. I do, all my own work fnow and I have told others dicinehelped Ms. Alice Bassett, Cad- Pinkkam Med. Co . Lynn, Mass 9-1 BLIACHED and 15 inch PEQUOT PILLOW TUBING Never Come—Hurry BED SHEETS 79¢ DISH 'I'O\\ ELING Before It's Too Late. INDIAN HEAD LINEN 36 inches wide, 21c JAPANESE SILK PONGEE cptionally good. vara 34 € Yard You'll Never Regret It! ] SILK BED SPREADS Full size. Must be se realize value. Ttegular DRESS PRINTS j5 inch Washable. witiful spring de rara 19€ SILK. DAMASK wide. Suitable for md Drapes. It 1 98¢ \ e T 50 in. T CREPE nd Plain Tub Regular 95c. | a1 69 € FLAT or- | Trintcd DRESS GOODS SHOP 400 Main St. The cnclosed remittance ($1.00) is to cover a subscription to the Monitor for the Prohibition Series of Articles, Name Street Address City . | I I | | | ! The Christian Science Monitor Published By CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING Boston, Massachusetts THE SOCIETY

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