New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 17, 1924, Page 3

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LITTLE GIRL USED “AS LIQUOR CARRIER Grange Street Man Said to Have . Olfered Bribe to Feeney : “Don’t take it, Feeney, I'll give you $10 if you'll be a good fellow ahd leave it with me,” was the alleged statement of William Ewatlecki to | Policeman Thomas J. Feeney when he erized a half pint bottle of moonshine in the store at 30 Orange street,” con- ducted by Swatlecki. Feeney prefer- red to take the liquor Swatlecki under arrest for violating the liquor laws. He was found guil and fined $200, . . According to the story told the court, the police have been watching thastore for a long time, placing him under arrest for violating the liquor low early in January. He was dis- charged at the time, beihg given the henefit of the doubt, but was warned to keep liguor out of his store in the future. The store is stocked with a &mall supply of canned goods covered with dust, according to the police, and is visited by 'a’large number of men of drinking habits Policeman Feeney went to the store Baturday afternoon and found two men in the place. One of them was drunk. Soon after Feeney entered, a little girl came to the door and was about to enter when Swatlecki mo. tioned to her to go away. The police- man called her in. . &he had a lunch for the proprietor of the store and in a2 bag she was carrying. a half pint bottle of moonshine wag found. Swat lecki said that his boarding mistress &ent {t to him for dinner, Beats Wife With Stick Etephen Korchee of 73 Grove street pleaded gullty to drunkenness and not gnilty to breach of the peace He was arrested on complaint of his wife whom he beat with a stick from NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1924, |care of her. Asked by Judge Alling |money was in a box on the table| |if he thought he was taking good care jand one of the-men closed the box |of her by beating har with a stick, he |and attempted to hide it under the said she was all better now, and helmlfle but it was picked np by, the, had planhed to go back to work today. | police, Hig wife told the court that he gets | seized |drunk often and beats her. She has| A1l the men pleaded guilty when [ had him arrested on several occagions | arraigned in court this morning with for the same offense. The court sen- | the exception of Charles Morehead, {tenced him to jail for 30 days, suUS- who told the court that he went there pended on condition that he assign his| (o interview a2 man and was ipay over to the probation officer, Ed- | “shooting.” He was discharged. | |ward C. Conpelly . Rufus Morehead, the proprietor of { ' Jacoh Jebula of 73 Booth street had | the p) was fined $25 and |a few drinks last night and decided he others $5 without 5. would go home and make his wife|were fined $5 w tell him where she had put some! John Baker, Wilfred Buck, Fred | His wife was in bed so he got in with | MeGowan | her and started to kick her and beat| After the court sessien, ope of the | | her with his hande {O'Mara went to the houge. He asked | he answered {the man if he had been drinking and | they Jebula answered "W :vm; didn't pay for.it? {ed under arre tenness and hreach of the peace. The them. |case was continued until April 5 un-| The rald was conducted |der the care of the prabation officer. complaint had been necejved Brushed Flbows, Then Fists = |tive Sergeant Wil - A few drinks made Andrew Serit- Lcemen Thomas J. Feeney, Willlam 8, won't catech me again He was plac- | get the dice back.” He was referred | after Two palr of the ivories were | Sickness is Reported Steadily on | are starving; sicknes: the ! increasing an unemployment s reach- | Those who;(n‘ almost “unbelievable heights,” the ‘ William Taylor, | federal council of churches declared | i y 55 o 1l ,Loda.y in a statement urging support | money in the house two weeks ago. | Brown, Fugene Freeland and Cephas| for the relief campaign on charges of drunk- [to the chief, who refused to return meat was one ounce a day and now |4s even less, while only A twentieth to one.eighth of the pre- Detec- | war milk supply is available and tu- n P. McCue, Po- | herculosis among school children has | increased tenfold with a 14 per cent | ot e manle stny momme. and. ke | onone ot ‘the “paot wavies - 1ne| WO AND HALF MILLION | CHILDREN ARE STARVING| crease Throughout German Nation, Washington, March 17.—Twe and | not | cne-half million children in Germany | is still steadily | being con- | ducted in the United States. From 59 to 70 per cent of the chil- His wife com- | policemen asked ont of the men if|dren in cities and industrial districts ' hnd placed | plained to the police and Policeman he was going to shoot any more and ig.ra undernourished, says the sta “You can bet your 1ife ment and “rickets, blindness, seurvy, By the | gpinal curvature, anemia and pellagra t do you care, way officer, Who do I have tb see to|are prevalent.” In 1923 the per capita allotment ot | from one- | | | ski- of 78 “Wilcox street and Fugene Strolls, and Liebler took part in the | advance in the death rdte from this Bisson extremely touchy go that when {they brushed elbows on Main street | about 11 o'clock lats night, they were | both offended and a fight ansued Patrolman Michael J. Cosgrove inter- Jpon fered and arrested the two on charges OVer to the superior court under $300 of dronkenness and breach of peace When arraigned in court this morn. ot Speina Ts Bound Over William Spiena of able eause in his case under 81,000 bonds, but rai cafise over the 1922 figure An increase of 21 per cent 1n infant | 23 Farmington | mertality was reported last vear, and | avenue, charged with indecent assault | as a reésult, publication a 14 vear old girl, was bound |gtatistics has been stopped of mortality | More, than 5,000,000 unempioyed the bonds after Judge Alling found prob- | workmen and their families are re. Speina wfui ceiving government dole, and a prop- after erty tax to ralse $1,250,000 has been lg,,: both men placed the blame for ! hearing the evidence in the case, the |levied to feed 500,000 children for five reduced the bond the start of the fight on the other, | court but Tudge Alling told them that his opinion, both of them were walk. |ing with ehips on their shoulders as (a result af a few drinks and fined them 85 on each count Break Up “African Golf" Game gan, who appeared for the defendant Downham Found Not Guilty Maurice Downham of 186 Green- |wood street was discharged on a |charge of reckless driving. growing “Come on you seben,” “Let’s ha out of an accident on FEast Main them bones,” and such phrases were Street Saturdav afternoon He told |heard by the police as they waited |the court that he was driving down {outgide of the entrance to the pool|Fast Main street when a to 3300 at months while an additional in | the request of Judgs William ¥. Man- | children are being fed For l‘.re_gl_(y_ Joints 190,000 Just rub on the new application machine | called Joint-Ease {f vou want to know iroom at 88 Arch street vesterday af.|)ust ahead of him turned suddenly tn“ what real joint comfort is | ternoon, waiting for an epportunity | the 1eft without giving him any signal Tt's for stiff, swollan, or pain-ter. [to enter the establishment, the deor To aveid a serious aceident he turned |tyured joints whether caused by rheu- ¢ he disco =~ of coal O one knows who discovered coal —nor how the discovery came about. But we can fancy the astonishment of that worthy individual when he saw the ledge of black rock on which he had built a fire, begin to glow red—to crackle and burn with intense heat! Probably he fled in terror from what he thought was a superatural phenomenon —a dreadful thing contrived to frighten him out of his wits, Fyen after London was an esfablished town, braziers ‘of burning coal were exhibited in the streets as a fearful curiosity—one of the “signs of the times” that foretold the end of the world its promised destruction by fire—which every- body expected in the year 1000 A. D which a long nail proetruded, and with | of which wae locked After they|to the left and hit the bumper of the | matism or not which he had inflicted a two 1“"]\4v\'ert outside a while one of the men other machine, barely bending it.| A few seconds’ rubbing and it gach on the woman's head that was|came out and after he disa_pp(arhd‘j‘rh“ police testified that there was lf,clu right in through skin and flesh about one-fourth of an inch deep, ac- ! the police went up and knocked .t}mark on the pavement 99 feet 1ong | right down to ligament and bone cording to the testimony of Dr. Ar.|the door A man came to the door|Showing where Downham's wheel had | 14 oils up and limbers up the foints thur J. S8avard, who treated the wom- |and asked who was there, and they|dragged after the brakes were ap-|sybdues the inflammation and reduces an following the assault | gave the name of the man who had | Plied [the swelling. Jont-Ease is the one Korchec told the court that he did | just lett The door was opened and | | great remedy for all joint troubles rot know anything about the s i1t | they ‘entered and eight colored mm\‘ All the United States navy vards and all live druggists are dispensing as he was drunk. He hasn't worked | were arrested on gambling :‘hn,rg@slnrs arsenals | it daily—a tube for 69 cents Javidson & Leventhal TNE HOUSE OF QUALITY, SERVIOE AND AW ORTAN, CONML Make it a point 18 always have Buckwheat coal on hand for bank- mg. [t's cheaper and better A far cry from those forgotten davs (o our own time, when hard, pure Old Company coal keeps your house ¢osy and summer-like in the bleakest winter weather The Citizens Coal Co. Yord and Main Offien Berlin Yord opp._Berlin station Tel. 26%5.5, Tptown Offics 104 Arch St 3268 esnrenTe casveianrEe ANNOUNCE THEIR Spring Fashion-Fabric Show and Special Demonstration of MCCALL WHAT ABOUT YOUR FUTURE 7 % ANDSAFETY 7% AND SAFETY ? Have You a Scientific Plan of Accumulation? The following word pictures urge a man to ask himself, “What am 1 doing to pre- PRINTED PATTERNS; pare for the ynexpected?”-~that warrant the wife's asking her husband, “Are we reserv. ing enough to'protect us, in case things go wrong?"—that even might justify the little child’s question, “Daddy, will there be enough so I can wait until I grow up bhefore It have to go to work?"” BLEAK PICTURES THE MIDDLE-AGED MAN who never built up an, invested surplus, who has reached the summit of his slender earning power, forced to explain o his children why their education, not yet finished, can never he completed. THE YOUNG MARRIED MAN who laughed at thrift plans and who now, like so many others, has lost his position—~moodily tramping the streets in search not of something to keep his mind occupied but of the very means of subsistence for the little family that was to have been so happy. THE WIDOW, who as a wife, insisted that her husband spend all his means upon luxuries and diversion, and who is now suffering bitter consequences of her folly. Forced, not merely fo cut down her living expenses, but to actu- ally go out into the world, untrained and inexperienced, to earn enough for food and shelter. THE LITTLE CHILD, whose future was not provided for, hrought up in comfort and seclusion, suddenly comp:lled to give over his youth, if not his health, in return for the means of keeping body and soul together, Looking from the opposite viewpoint,—how can you huild an income that will stand you in good stead in future years: that will give you the comforts of life you deserve; that will make possible, healthy, happy, well-educated children who can fight life’s battles with confidence and success: that will enable you to build 2 home, par off a mortgage, own a nice car, travel if you want toin short enjoy a higher standard of living, ease, leisure and independence in old age? A Style Event of First Importance Begins Today MISS ESTA KROEGER of the McCall Company, New York smart new spring clothes with the help of the Printed Pattern. Never mind if you have not sewed before With the Printed Pattern you can do so easily. The margin ensures abgolute accuracy Directions printed on every piece of the pattern make it the simplest in the world to use. The demonstrations are held ALL THIS CAN BE ACCOMPLISHED-—<AND WE CAN HELP YOU ACCOMPLISH 1T— THROUGH SYSTEMATIC MONTHLY INVESTING. A Bank acting as TRUSTEE for the STATE of W. VIRGINIA holds approved security for s week of the famoue McCall Printed Pat. e i e Db dedenp tems. She will explain the laying out and cut ting of a garment and with the aid of a living model will show the proper way to drape it. Every woman in the city will be interested in our splendid collection of beautiful spring fabries, and will be eager to see how these materials can be made into Daily at 3 P. M, at our Pattern Department TEACHERS—Are invited to make arrangemeMts for special pattern demonstrations for their rewing classer Miss Esta Kroeger at this store. PRINTED MC CA LL PATTERNS - . - We pay 77 interest on amounts of $10 or more paid us regularly each month. The American Mortgage & Discount Corp. Resources over $2,000,000 AUSTIN & KRON 407 Booth's Block Phone 3045 Azentc ‘g For Quick .Retam: Use Hearld Classified Adots. PO SEIPRIEI——

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