New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 21, 1924, Page 3

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machine to come into town to get a shave. As he approached the traffic post at the square, the policeman ga\e the signal for vehicles to stop and he | | drew up in the rear of another ma-\ chine. Dart then gave the signal !or traffic to move out of Franklin gqu. and the machine ahead of him nro— ceeded and he followed, and was held | up by Dart. He told the court that he did not know that each driver had |to wait for an individual signal or he | | would have done so as he was driv- |ing without a license and for that |reason was very careful to obey the ‘trnfrlc regulations. He produced the registration for the machine in court. | Martin Is Discharged Daniel Martin of 225 Park street, Hartford, arraigned on a charge of | breach of the peace alleged to have been committed on a trolley car trav- eling between New Britaln and Hart- [ford yesterday, was discharged when {it was learned that the alleged offense was committed in Newington and not 'hl New Britain, Martin was arrested | on complaint of Deputy Sheriff Joseph Delucco of Hartford, Policeman | Delbert Veley. Used Knife on Neighhor Alex Kanabricki of 18 West Pear! street, charged with assault with a dangerous weapon, had his case con- tinued until tomorrow morning. Kan- labricki is alleged to have committed |an assault on a neighhor with a knife, inflicting several wounds on the man's legs. The assault is alleged to have Leen committed on Aprfl 8. Drove “Under Influence” Adam Okula of 69 Miller street, charged with driving an automobile {while under the influenec of liquor, had his case continued until Thursday, RAIBINS AND SUGAR MAYBE SOME WATER Woman Who Sold Wine Denies It But Is Fined v In spite of her claim that she was £iving Henry Woods a drink of water | With raising and sugar in it, Mrs. Joseph Amento of 213 Lafayette street was fined $200 and given a suspend- ed jail sentence of 15 days when she was arralgned in police court this morning before Judge Benjamin W. Alling on a charge of violating the liquor law, She took an appeal and | bonds were set at $400, Policemen Thomas J. Feeney and Willlam O'Mara testified that they visited the woman's house Saturday morning and when they entered they found Woods there drinking a giass of wine. They questioned Woods and he admitted in the prr‘scmvo of the woman that he had paid 25 cents for | the glass of wine. He alsc told the police that he had gone to the house ©on numerous other occasions and pur- chased both wine and liquor from her, paying the same price for the moon- shine, The police searched the premises and found a pint bottle of the moon- shine in the pantry and a Jug with about two quarts of wine, A search of the cellar revealed two barrels of | wine which contained about 90 gal- |Okula was arrested on Broad street lons. The police removed all the [YeSterday by Policeman Willlam contraband to the police station, {O'Mara and Michael O'Brien when he Both policemen had received com- | 4rove past the corner of Broad and plaints from neighbors of the woman | Washington streets at an excessive about men going in and out of the (Fate Of speed, according to the police. house and they testified that they had | Too Drunk For Trial warned Mrs, Amento on several oc- | Thomas Mangus of §1 Franklin casions that she weuld have to stop street was so drunk this morning that selling the wine. She paid no atten. |{1® Ppolice told Judge Alling that he tion to their warnings, according to {Wa# not in condition to appear in (6 patlac: . court to answer a charge of assault- Mrs. Amento festified that the |\PF his wife. Mangus was arrested liquor the police found was some that ““‘" RSt nignt attes Hin wife hay en: o e e s s o4 | o igging and Joseoh Golash Bt ol SUNer, Watie aud nidtas ;r:vlra‘rlrd ':umyfllo ’rra.p An»hnn'(mg |.n and did not contain any alcohol, ahe :")‘,‘,’y“‘:‘r:d':";‘r_”;‘:,m’;'-f"::“m:,,(,“,',} claimed, . - ' which was suspended, The two Judge Alling examined the wine m"“;mr!!“,,l., A riiea i and liquor and then told the woman |1 "Soie s trolls who investigat. that she would do' better to tell the'|gy'y complaint that there was a crap truth, 8he sald that Woods had come game in progress in the cemetery to her housc Saturday morning and |yeuil T BFORIE D BT the nsked for a glass of wine, 8he told | oo t1e voungaters apotted him and him that she didn’t have any but Ne |, a0t (Tl ol ver the fence, but !aw the jug and asked for a glass of (00 141 fellow was too small to make Whatever was in that. ‘8he told him 4pe olimb befors he was grabbed by that it was only water but if he want- [giiois, e was questioned and ro- ed some of it he could have it, ac- vealed the names of the othoars who cording to her testimony. Bhe denied |wore playing, Higging and that he had paid 25 cents for the |wara over 18 drink, |other two players were under age and Phdn’'t Kknow What License Was will be arraigned in juvenile court. Joseph Bondruck of 93 Arch street | pojjeaman Strolls produced the pot 10ld the court that he did not know 'tor which the boys were playing and | what an operator’s license was, but [it was turned over to the police relief that he thought he would get one ryund, It consisted of two dimes, two | sometime’ when he was arraigned on | pickels and five pennies. A charge of operating a motor vehicle Police Gey Other “Shooters” without an operator's license, Judge Another session of “African Golf"” Alling #aid “Maybe” and fined him |jjayers wers interrupted by the police $10, on the Sheffield street side of the Bondruck was arrested yesterday | Smith school yesterday noon and a afternoon at the corncr of Booth and [ljvely chase by the police after the Myrtle when an automobile operated 'players who scattered in all directions, by him eoliided with a machine [petted three arrests, John FEvans, owned and driven by Joseph Groel- [Casimir Zimjowski and Michael Gozi- inska of 88 Lasalle #treet, Doth ma- |ta recelved suspended judgment when ehines were slightly damaged but no- [arraigncd on gambling eharges, All body was hurt, three denied that they were playing, Poltceman A, 1, and Evans denied that he was even ed the accident and | watehing the game, Bondruck for his lleense, he was told The rail on the game was the re. that he did not have any, Tondruck 'sult of numerous complaints that have #aid that a friend of his was teach- [been made to the police about the ing him to drive, but as the friend (games that are held there every Sun. was ot of town yestarday, he thought The police did not secure the he would take the machine out him- self. When asked in court this morning it he knew what an operater's license was, Bondrick said that he didn't. He | said that he had bought the machine about four months ago, but has not |Of reckless driving, had his case con- heen driving it until A week ago when |tinned until Thursday. He was ar- he started to take lessons in drivings rexted on West Main street yesterday Another Without Tdeense afternoon by Policeman Clarence Robert Kalen of Brunswick, N, J., | Lanpher, who claimed that Maier was was fined $10 for operating without a Ariving his machine about 0 miles an licenwe, and judgment was suspended | HOuUr. on charges of failing to obey the sig- nal of a traffic officer and driving | without a registration, Kalen was arrested Eaturday afternoon by Traf- fie Officer Hanford Dart at Franklin | square when he is alleged by the po- | liseman to have failed to stop when ! signalled. Kalen was unable to pro- Afwater investigat- when he asked . dice or the money, 1. Feeney telling the court that he had given chase to the “stake holder,” but |he managed to give him the slip, Sakd e Was Driving Past CGieorge Ralar arraigned on a charge PLAN MOORING MASTS, One Like That at Takchurst to Be Bullt at Camp Lewis, April Washington with the Shenandeah’s permanent Auce an operator's leonws of the reg. |MOOFINE mast at Lakehurst, N. J., f<tration for the automobile he was has demonstrated, in the fv;wmmfl of driving. navy depariment experts, the success Kalen told the court that he is and economy of this means of an- Ing choring rigid ajrships Paster holidays and he borrowsd the | The navy is-te erect | mast soon at Camp —'_ Tacoma, Wash., to mserve as a AND LOOK YOUNG |being butit in Germany for the Tl When You Darken {United States Success of the midst is pointed Vaded Hair With Sage Tea {out, has indicated the ge of the visit 1is hrdther in Kensington over the brdther in Kensington over A temporary Lewin, near west val device as compared with expensive terminal hangars, in future commer- |cial use of the lighter-than-air craft. The hangar is practically eliminated because facilities for placing fuel, hair beautl- [supplies and men aboard the air- provided from a platform throngh a trap door Nobody Can Gray. Grandmother kept her tully darkened, and attractive |ships are with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur, |on the mast Whenever her hair took on that dull, |near the bow, while the great bag, faded or streaked appearance, this|moored to a moveable anchorage simple mixture was applied with won- | Swings with the wind like a whather derfu! effect. By asking at any drug. | vane store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur | Compound,” you will get a largg bot- | 11a of this old-time recipe, improved by the addition of other ipgredients 8l ready to uee, at very little cost This simple mixture can be depended upnn atural color and beauty to the hair A well-known downtown fayn everybody Wyeth's and Sulphur Compound now bacause it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has Deen applied— 1'% 80 sany to uee You simpiy Aampen A comb or 8oft brush :;,,, President and Mra, Coolidge draw it through your hair, taking one | P1anned to join the children for a wtrand st a time, By morning the | *hI1e and the marine band was or- gray hair disappears; after another |927ed by the president to play dur- application or two, it is restrode to jts (108 the afternoon. natural color and 'voks glossy soft 2nd beautiful. ’ glossy " CHILDREN'S DAY TODAY. Roys and Girls Having Their Annual Frolic at White House. Washington, April This children's day at the white druggist | From early morning until evenini Sage |KTOUNdSs of the executive mansion were given over to the boys and girls {of the capitol, bent on participating in the old Baster Monday custom of roliing Easter egmn. was house. to restore the to0. STRIKES IN HAVANAL Havana, April 21. — Strest car services here was stopped today when motormen and conductors quit work in support of the striking dock work- ers, but the 5,000 or more taxi drivers did mot join in the general strike. Printers of several Spanish papers went out but the strike did not prove to be general at the start as jce and milk and siher aecessitics were be- ing delivered. Golash | years of age, hut the Polieeman Thomas | — Experience NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL BOB HAIRED BANDIT | FINALLY CAPTURED (Continued from First Page) was well out of sight. During the first | few weeks of her activities the bandit | on several occasions left taunting | notes for the police; she robbed one | place twice within about a week. | Most of the time she would carry out her holdup while a man com- | panion waited outside at the wheel of | a motor car. ‘While bobed haired bandits’ activi- ! ties were reported from Brooklyn and | then from Manhattan and the Bronx, police arrested several young women on suspicion but were unable to es- tablish that any one of them was the | actual Brooklyn short haired cele brity. 1 Get First Clue The clue which resulted the capture of Mrs. Cooney, aged and her husband, Edward, Aged who is believed to have been the bandit girl's working companion, was n . obtained after the two used their pis- | tols in an unsuccessful attempt to hold up the National Biscuit company offices in Pacific street, Brooklyn, April 1. Nathan Mezzia, an employe, was wounded by two bullets, Tracking down a labyrinth of clues, | police fixed upon the Cooneys as those gullty. By tracing a motor car used by | the persons who wounded Mezzia, po- | lice confirmed their suspicions and April 15 issued a general alarm for | the couple. 1 Child Died Saturday On information that Mrs. Cooney | was to become a mother, police order- ed hospitals and the maternity institu- tions watched. It was this precaution which led to the capture in Jackson- ville whera Mrs, Cooney gave birth ten days ago to a girl who died Sat- urday, The New York detectives were | enabled to make the arrest by the elue ! furnished by the infant's death, Police Inspector Coughlin confirmed | the capture of the Cooneys but refused to discuss the case. | Husband a War Vet Mrs, Cooney who is of German ex- traction, is 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighs 120 pounds, She was married | to Cooney in May, 1923 Her husband served in the navy during the war and is an automobile mechanie, LABOR EXTREMISTS ARE . STIRRED BY MACDONALD | British Premier Expects Considerable | Heckling By Those Who Oppose Measures 21,—Premier Saturday has | York, England, MacDonald's &pe April stirred the extremist elements of the | independent labor party, which opened its annual day, and it is likely that the fer, who was formerly the party's chairman, will meet some severe heckling when he faces today's ses- (ston. In his addr Saturday he ad- vocated taking the it into operation at onee, r. Macbonald did not attend Sun. day’'s meeting, at which his attitude regarding reparations was subjected to much adverse eriticism, and need for “gingering up” the .labor government was generally empha- sized, An antireparationist vote was only defeated by a “Increasingly bold use of power for wocialist measures #nd adminia- tration” was urged by the chalrman, Clifford Allen, who demanded “uppli- catign of soclalistie principleas to the reorganization of the nation's indus- tries and economie life.” i The party exceutive adopted a mo- tion in favor of one unified soclalist international, to include Moscow, LAl UATI\I- 1m‘ BASEBALL Chicago to \\uhlnxlm Kphere To Be Floated Down Hudwn River | Hudson, N. Y., April 21.—The big | baseball rolling from Chicago to Washington in the interest of the citi- zens training eamp movement, and whieh was pushed into the Hudson | river at Albany Saturday with the idea of floating it down to Governor's | 1sland, guided by Rou Scouts in a row- hoat ,was moored at a wharf here to day. The river, swollen by heavy raine. protved tos much for the voy agers and the sphere was tower into | port by the night boat Rensselaer, Hudson Boy Scouts planned to hau! the ball ashore and push it through the streets in a demonstration parade, Then it was expetced, the ball again would be put back inte the river, floated down to TPoughkeepsie and then to New York. TWO DEPUTIES ST \fllll n Irak Officials Pay Penalty For Fay- oring British Treaty Bagdad, April 21.—Twe deputies known te favor ratification of the treaty between Great Britain and the Kingdom of Irak were stabbed and seriously wounded while in the street yesterday. The political situation, intensified by the emotionalism connected with the Ramadan festival, is rapidly ap- proaching a crisis, The agitation against ratification of the treaty centers chiefly on the argu- ment that Great Britain in the pact fails to guarantice that the Vilayet of Moru! not surrendercd to | turkey will be NO CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE New Haven, April 21. carelessnoss rested on any one, Cor- oner Mix found today after an In- quest into the death of Robert K Griffith, 4, struck by the autemobile | of a A. . Ridenger of this city. The | child with its mother and twe other | ehildren had just alighted from a trolley car. The child in question ran around the end of the car and was struck by the fender of the automobile which was moving very slowly. —No criminal REPUBLICAN DEMONSTRATIONS Dublin, April 21.—Republican dem- onstrations commemorating the Eas- | ter rising of 1916 were hefd in Dllb~‘ lin and other parts of Ireland yester- day. A procession marched to Glas- | in eemetery, and placed wreaths on the graves & the republicans there, after which a meeting was held in O'Connell street. conference here | reparation ex- | perts’ report as a whole and putting the | narrow majority. | 21, 1924. Summer Furniture —FOR YOUR— Shore Cottage COTTAGE BEDROOM PIECES . We have some very practical and attractive Suites consisting of Full ier and Toilet Table, made of Oak and finished Silver Grey. Four pieces only Inexpensive Odd Pieces Such As Dressers at $19‘75, 525, $37.50 $8.75, $14, $24.00 Chiffoniers at §17 50), $21, $22.00 Beds at Then too we have you can pamt any color you desne. LIVING ROOM PIECES Willow: Reed and Fiber are very enjoyable in the Summer Living Room. Three-piece Willow Suite of Settee, Chair and Rocker, with Cretonne Cushions ..., $69 00 Three-picce Willow Suite of Davenport, Chair and Rocker with Spring Seats ...... $87 00 Tables, Chaise Longues, Ferneries and Lamps in Willow, Reed and Fiber. 0Odd Pieces such as Willow Chairs . ... $6 95 Wooden Magazine Rocks at .......... $4 50 Plant (an(ls as low as ..., 65C and $l 45 Size Bed, Dresser, Chiffon- Unfinished Pieces that FOR YOUR COTTA Attractive Breakfast Suites. in different color combinations. Suite of Dropleaf Table and $94 5() $53, 887, $155 \\ e have lhcm Unfinished to paint any color. IT l's NOT TOO LA\RLY TO BUY THE OF COTTAGE FURNITURE GOI 7 LOADS four Chairs Others with Server at . ONE OF THE RUGS For the Summer We have an unusual- Iy large assortment of attractive inexpensive Rugs. GE DINING ROOM Many styles FOR THE PORCH Old Hickory stands the weather better than any- thing else. Don’t forget vour Porch Shades and your Couch Hammocks. Grass, Fiber and Wool-Fiber Rugs Ad] in all colors and all ¢ in our big rug depart- ment on the third floor. E THINGS NOW. WE ALREADY HAVE TRUCK LOADS + TO MADISON AND SAYBROOK. MAY WE PUT YOUR ORDER ” BUY YOUR FURNITURE AT PORTER'S. THEY ARE ABSOLUTELY RELIABLE. 'B. C. Porter Sons McCRAY AGAIN ON TRIAL; GOVT. CHARGE THIS TIME n a 15 Accused of Using the Mails Scheme (o Defrand 175 Banks, Av Indianape! il 2 Governor V T. Me £ the mails in to \arge of usi of a sche o started be Judge in district court talesmen reported from which to me- lect a jury. Approximately 175 wit- nesses, mostly bankers, e been subpoenaed by the gove The indictment against or contain its that he matel where worthiess and as collateral mailing neia to obtain loans A second federal i ing violation of t laws 18 pending aga but no trial date petition of three A rome the or and charges stended to defraud approxi- 5 banks in Tndiana and else sending through the mai attle paper for discount for loana and by statements in order v dictment charg national banking nst the governor am been set. On Fort Wayne, Ind., banks a fedsral master in chancery recommended McCray b adjudged bankrupt. This report is still pend itg befors Judge Anderson. SPORTS WRITER DILS, Aprit 21 well Lambert 6 knawn sporting editor of the Motor Age and more recently sporting edi tor of the Chicago Herald and Exam- iner, died In Albuquerque, N, M., terday, according to word received here. Chicago. Sullivan, writer, formerly yes- W. R. C. Organizer Dies Tas Angeles, April 21.—Mra. Emma Sibley Peace, an organizer of the Women's Relicf Corps and former national secertary of that organization is dead here, They classified ad depariment. phone them to ihe Herald “CONNECTICUT'S BEST FURNITURE STORE.” Bottle of Shine Easy Furniture Polish to Every Adult Attending the Demon- r FREE“,.M;O“. FREE 15 Desirable Prizes Given al Our Graining Con- test. See Our Window. No Purchase Necessary COME TO OUR HOME DECORATION EXHIBITION AND DEMONSTRATION APRIL 21-22-23 A CHI-NAMEL Demonstrator will be at our store on the above dates to Demonstrate and show practical and inexpensive methods of beautifying Everything in the Home with CHI- NAMEL. At our Demonstration vou can see how to make the CHI- NAMEL Model Kitchen from anv old dingy room, walls and wood work made sanitary, beautiful and easy to clean with the new and novel Finishes, Come to our Demonstration and see the truly artistic “Ready to-Use” Graining System. THE (HENAMEL Patented Grainer does the work—you merely guide it. Try vour hand—leave a sample of your work—yon may win one of the many useful prizes to be given away locally and nationally. No charge or necessity of purchase on your parl. Your Auto will look like new with one coat of CHI-NAMEL Colored Auto Enamel. Dries over night—Easy to apply—Eco- nomical—Durable. The Art of Enameling and Stenciling old furniture made easy by the _(‘HI-.\':\MI'IL Process. THE ABBE HARDWARE CO. ¢ 279 MAIN ST.<Exdusive Chi-namel Agent TEL. 407 ]

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