New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 18, 1925, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i o e e o TUBERCULIN TEST FUNDS 10 BE AVAILABLE SOON At SYNCOPATION AND CLASSICS IN LT Former Creeps in at Concert of Musical Club Tmprovement Source of City's Milk Supply Expected By Supt. Pullen to Result, Money with which to carry on the state tuburculin tests by means of which this city's milk supply will be made 100 per cent pure, will be Lilts ot syncopbation invaded the avallable in about two weeks, Dr. concert of the New Britain Musical | pjenard W. Puilen, superintendent club in two numbers at the concert |of the departnvent of health has in Camp school auditorium last [ been advised. night. This does not mean that the Enforcement of the city's pure concerts have taken up with the [milk law has been hampered by lack mysteries of rag time or the blasts | of state funds with which to reim- of jazz, for the program was one | burse dairymen who! cattle is of the finest given by members of |killed after tuberculin tests. Twice the club for long time. But il | resolutions have come before the does mean it says, that the | common council asking for an ine sin of syncopation invaded the | yegtigation into the milk law en- realms of stald and solid, if 1ot ! ;oucoment and on both occasions it stolid, classics and nobody felt a8~ | ay axplained that the state has not grieved, : provided the necessary funds, and Dancing to the strains of synco- |\ "oien timo as the money 1§ pRtion s Suggested: |, jable the law cannot be enforced aa it SYICODA- | Ty o hance committee of the leg- tion, Anderson, ave ion violinist. | islature has made a speclal appro- rem projection of | priation suffic fent to complete tests “From the Canebrake,” by Gardner, |in New Dritain and other citles {where the work was started but and a saxophone zy manipulatio! a trap drummer and a little more 4 by a deficiency in funds, of the strains, would pro J an id jazz piece—if there can be any such—but there we¢ no such | functionaries present and the pieec | had to go down as plain and un- | adorned art, a concert-room version | of the kind of art th ol’ o down in be v strum on the | ban, he canebrake | 1t - DESPERATE DRIVE lly famous personage than M. Deb French impressionist extraordinaire, whose “Gollawog's » Walk" was given on the piano s Florence Tommasoni. i« thm was able to take the kinks | out of rheumatic legs-—or limbs— | was ternati (Continued from First Page.) | e has be in operation for a r of years and has extended n a mile and half from the mine numbe but Mr. Debussy took care not to |™MO overdo it permitted Golluwog |$haft. 1t was thought none of the 0 fall aslcen occasionally. the music |cutters were nearer than half a mile erks, |and most of them probably at a trollev |greater distance from the spot where explosion occurred. stopping and proceeding in like a Connecticut company car. For this reason it would be impossible to make a fa regard it as a fair even music also comes under the of regular art. and this It was a grand evening for gi mugic. A strin omposed 0 Herbert first violing How Raymond Ostm chauff air er | |the | Famble reported that the mine was badly damaged inside, and that | going through the shattered passage | waye. | Some Hope Held Out Some hope was held out for the ‘l!n n because of the quick work done by mechanics in repairing one of |the mine fans. This apparatus was drip with ous | ot seriously damaged and within a music. It can-|fow hours after the blast it was 1 quartet, Op. | gperating and forcing air down to mperor quar-lihe imprisoned men. Electric lights themes of which has been |ajso were soon working in the Aus lian national ! mine. At 9:10 o'clock the rescuers were adopt hymn. Then came the unique minuet by Boc , wnd finally the last movement from the Beethoven quartet, Op. 18, No. All numbers ave old, ancient | and honorable classics. But string quartet music is so comparatively littie played that they sound like ne music to most auditors. The players had a firm upon their intona- tion—the hardest part of quartet playin t is to say, nobody add- ed quarter and eighth tones, but kept t ic in conformity with the well-tempered clavichord pgin- ciple of whole and half tones. T was excellent music and a well tor the fu There ould more quartets played in this city, and entire q not meraly movements from t Anderson, who is regarded hts as the violin playing in t night: indecd, judging by plav was a star Wi »n W. Hart, m kevboard, as his accompanist, played one of the most in violin compositions heard here in ong t he G major sonata Grieg. This work cquals the noted 1 minor piano sam¢ city, had a big former, er of the he sonata by the writer and contains characteristic Greigian idioms. Mr. Anderson’s lus- cious tone and technique, coupled with Mr. Hart’s eympathetic accom P provided an ample por- raya masterpiece of vi lit- cratu Some of the artistically so- phisticated have been under the im- | pression that folk in like to listén to an entire sonata, as c old days, ight w was common in v dieliked it denced by the spirited applause. The fans acted as if they want- P to repeat the entire sonata. The sonata had b the in th announced, would not take and think the group and the group group was the Chop E flat, arranged by Sarz is nearly like the arran Wilhelmj ,the *“Mid »y Heuberger, brake Miss the D which was so that make sonata wa ta. T e fn which by ight ‘From t Tommasoni pussy cake walk, Romance by Silelius, a price Espagnole” by Moszkowski. It was a triumph for the pianist, the neral comment being t she purp efo dark moo 1 Ro- | man and the climax ment o a great story. The ehowy measures of the Moszkowski nu ere pre- bhandled, b technique and where there we nent of t rtunities The city's ser progressed to a command tion and admiration The voc: of the evening was | John Lindsay, baritone, who sang an Italian song by Caldna, “I Chide Thee Not” by Schumann, and the “Border Ballad” by Cowan. Mr. Lindeay sang alternate lower notes in the Schumann picce. The made its usuai strong appeal The audience was of fair prog tions and was exceptionally enthu- siastic, as befittew such an unusual- ly interesting program. other WAR ON PROFANITY Verona, Italy, March 18—The cen- tral committee of the Anti-Bl mous society has addressed a sage to saven million Ttali abroad urging them to fig ity. By so doing, says the the prestige of Ttaly will troughout the worid. st exponent of | resting | the chairg dis- | a group! the | the display of | | penetrating the wrecked headings | leading from the mine shaft, but no | bodies hud been reached although reports were expected momentarily. Newspaper men were barred from [the immediate vicinity and ft was ¥ lannounced that conferences would |be held with the newspaper workers | every hour. | At 9:45 o'clock rescue workers | had penstrated one mile into the | workings and no bodies had been ated. The work is progressing ‘f.'l\“r.lll\}' ording rescuers cmerging ¢ ming. Car No. 3 of the United | States Bureau of Mines at Pitts- burgh, arrived at the mine early ‘\hia morning, in charge of G. S. Mc- HE stant chief engineer. He was accom | W. Grove and R. S Thornburg. deral car, Red Cross To Aid Washington, March 18—Resources lof the American Red Cross were of- |fered today for emergency relief | work airmont, W. Va., where 33 miners are entombed as a result of an explosion. | Two Red Cross nu retary already are avai at the es and a sec- {ore if necessary. llndush;ial Efi;i;loyfilent | Washington, March 18.- trend, said a report by the employ !ment service of the labor depart- nt today, which explained that o there tion 1n une {over Janu provemen in February as an im- because of iploymen ry. there in condi nges or The burea iron and stes | dustry is in a strong condition, heading |rescue workers would find it hard | \ | i Senators pointed out [tion of anied by two experts, G. | provic On an Upward Trend |~ Indus- | this city at the | trial employment is on an upward | Mayor O. was little actual reduc- [ments in engineering was his work u re- | which JITNEY, MOV HEASURES UP Assembly Discusses Proposed Statute Changes State Capitol, Hartford, March 18, ~Mrs, Townshend of New Haven, made her first speech on the house floor today, defending a bill unfavs orably reported which provided for lequal pay for teachers regardiess of sex. Mrs, Lewls, of Stratford, chair- man of the committee on education, said that the committee favored the principle in the bill. Mrs, Town- shend sald she would id with the committee in its unfavorable report but belleved that action was on a technicality and not against the prineiple in it. The bill was rejected. Petitioners for a third voting pre- cinet in Waterford were given leave to withdraw. The bill to provide penalties for trespassing was unfavorably report- ed, was tabled after Mr. Hungerford of Watertown had protested against the assertion of Mr. Burke of Say- brook that the provisions of the bill are in the present law. The house received substantial re- ports on bills as follows: Authorizing Groton to fssue $50,- 000 in bonds: the East Hartford fire dlstrict to issue $500,000 in bonds for highway improvements; increasing salaries in East Hartford court; lim- iting enrollment of students in Con- necticut Agricultural college to 500 | at any time during any year, and giving preference to those taking full agricultural courses; appropriating $5,000 for heating, lighting and cquipment in Henry Whitefield house, Guilford The Movie Bill The bill to protect children who attend movie exhibitions and which was debated yesterday by the senate because it was pointed out that no child under 14 could go into a mu- | seum exhibit unless accompanied b an adult, was again the subject of | debate and went back on the calen- dar. Senator Robbins offered should not take more than 10 chi dren into a movie show at one time that the bill was ambiguous especially in its ref- erence to “dance halls” and “con- cert salons.” When the calendar in the house was resumed Miss Cheney of Man- chester had eight bills passed over without action because printed copies of them were not in the files. House Leader Alling pointed out that while he did not object to the delay now lie would remind Miss Cheney that later on it might necessary to adopt hills even if the had not been printed for the file Miss Cheney's point was supported by Dr. Higgins af Coventry. Jitney Bill In the senate the bill to give the Connecticut Co., the right to operate jitneys on routes now covered by trolley lines went hack to the calen- dar after Senator E. ¥. Hall, com- mittee chairman had offered an amendment to change a phrase in it. Some debate followed in which sev- eral senators sought further explana- the bill. For this reason action was delayed The judiciary committee reported a change in the workmen's compen- w increasing to 43 the figure : of a man eligible favorable on bills aterbury land rec- of week for compen ing that W A lords may be signed at the end of ap-|ghort time after the arrival of the |cach volume: in corporating the Law- representatives [rence and Memorial hospital at New t trip into the work- | London; fncorporating the New Haven community center: exempting property held by the Ansonia Y. M. . A, for taxation. Hazen ('hosex: to Study Shepaug Water Project Allen Hazen, consulting enginecr on the development of New Britain's ater system, is the selection of the able for duty {finance committee of the legislature ene and headquarters here | for a study of the possibilities in the red national funds to be used |Shepaug water project in Waterbury and upon his findings will depend whether or not that city will be em- owered to issue water bonds, Engineer H y 3,200,000 worth brought suggestion of ex- Curtis. He planned nd supervised the installments of the water development recently car- rled out. Among Hazen's achie a member of a committee of seven experts who prepared a plan or the Panama canal construetion was accepted by the govern- | aim st all plants in large stee ters on normal schedules, and fur- | ) {her improvement 18 antictpated, Ball Is to Be Razed ularly in New York, Pennsyl- | York. March 18.—The old Tiline Tadlaan: LT o | Brevoort mansion at Fifth avenue N AEati Baiid : Teq |and Ninth street, where New York's somewhat curtalled during the |first masked ball was held, is to be ha vehovt et biE bsie ced hy an apartment house. it dReg ounced following sale of the | LB o pr It was in 1840 that the =5 W = 1 erred to by the newspapers Fiaman’s School Will s tan 1 amusement,” drew Be;Thoroughly¢Probedfaccis! ficatetetpom, hosian, skt by Charles C. Faiman, head of the National University of Sciences - In the incestigation of the death of | W heeler Expects Sargent Wiillam McClntock, wealthy orphan To Enforce Dry Laws 1 today in action by state and Mat state authoritic s hegar | vestigation of institutions in C which diplomas indis- 'similar to Faiman's school, |awarded degres and criminately Postal inspectors planned to scr- tinize literature sent out by the school in connection with its corres- pondence courses and to question persons who paid tuition fecs. Retired Bnrfiei’l Well New T Russell, his home native of Ir when & young m years 1 d in th - Willlam Hed at Mr. and within a few where he > rear of his shog s when business w H r a= dull, red in 1912, | re | number of rifles 1000, The 1 18.—Wayne B. -Saloon League would disappoint relaxation on those ho law expect ny | enforcement “We have every reason to believe,” he said, “that the new attorney gen- ral will faithfully and vigorously en; froce all laws .including the eight eenth aemndment and the Volstead 1ot Known in N. London, Dies Rifle Company Leaders Have Bonds Lowere! New York, March 18.—The casr Russell, alof three members of the workers ame to this city | party arrested Friday by the bom! in a raid during which a were selzed, was continued in special sesison yeste day until Mar The original bail of $30.000 was reduce squad to $2.- men to have heen rehearsing for a spectacle which was |later staged in Madison Square Gar- | den. an | amendment providing that an adult | be to | Sportsmen Meet Tonight To Plan for Game Club Local fishermen and hunters will meet this evening in Jr, O, U, A, M. hall for the purpose of organizing a local assoclation for the promotion of the work of the state in raising fish and game. At a preliminary meeting last week it was voted to go ahead with the organization and committees were appointed to frame a suggested set of by-laws and nom- linate officers, It is expeoted that the organiza- tlon will be able to Improve the public fishing and hunting here- abouts by supervising the planting of game and fish and by impress- ing upon landowners that they are working for their benefit, The mem- bership is open to any lover of sport and is for the welfare of all, FATHER JAILED " BEAT YOONG S0N (Gets Six Months for Brutality o Child | New York, March 18.—His body covered with bruises where his fath- er had beaten him with a cat-o'- | nine-talls, Victor Worcenowicz, 9 years old, of 52 Pearsall stréet, Bliss- | Ville, L. 1., and six of his eight broth- | ers and sisters were in the Jamaica | children's court yesterday on tech- | nical charges of being without prop- | er_guardianship. | Michael Worcenowicz, the father, was sentenced to six months in the | workhouse by Magistrate Conway on | a charge of felonious assault, His wife, Veronica, said he beat Victor because the boy had been away from | home for several days. When she | hegged him to stop he turned on her, she said, and gave her a thrashing. | She called Patrolman Wesley Juber, who arrested Worcenowl The cat-o'-nine-tails, several of its straps knotted, was produced as evi- dence. Agents of the Queensboro §. " C., who examined Victor, said had more than 50 welts on his| | back and that his entire body was| discolored from the effects of the | beating. | " Mrs. Worcenowlcz aid her hus-| | band got a verdict of $7,000 for an| injury received in a railroad acci-| dent five years ago, and that he| spent half for the house in which the | mily lives and the rest for liquor. | She earns a living, she eald, by | working as a cleaner in the Sunny. side yards of the Long Island rail- | road for $20 a week. Justice Wilkin paroled the children until April 3. He Gets His Action on | The*Firecracker Bill | State Capitol, March 18.—Mr. Bell | ot Salisbury in the gencral assembly | |today reported on the bill for a “safe | and sane firecrackerless Fourth of | | July celebration,” saving that the bill | was “too idealistic.’ He said that many were old-fashioned enough to believe in firecrackers on the Fourth las a "sort of kindergarten of patriot- ism.” The jjudiciary committee who are “good fellows and over-grown | boys” had been quite aroused by the bill he said, and he hoped that re- jection would be with an “cxplosive aye.” The members responded to |the call so that the “aye” sounded out in the corridors like the detona- Mrs. Solomon, Reported Kidnapped, Denies It Hartford, March 18.—Mrs. Joseph mon, who was before her mar- viage Miss Julia Yasbeck of this 'y, agd who was said to have been Kid- napped from the home of her sist Mrs. Mary Yasbeck, of 70| antral street, Worcester, Mass, was located in this denies that she was| says that ghe came | willingly with the man who ap- | peared at her sister'’s home, when | she learned from him that her moth- er was very ill in Hartford She has not been living with her | husband for several years. She was married at the age of 14, she says She refused to give the name of the | man with whom she came to Hart- ford. Fast C | Saturday night, city today. She kidnapped and Kin of Bonaparte Drops $500,000 Suit Against Wife ew York, March I18.—Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte, great grand- | i nephew of the Emperor Napolcon, announces withdrawal of his suit against his wife for the recovery of property valued at $500,000. In his suit, filgd last week, Mr. Bonaparte charged that whi patient at a | sanitarfum in January, 1923, he | signed his property over to his wife to enable her to collect the income and that he later discovered the transfer, which believed to be temporar wus absolute MTs. Bonaparte then answered t 1he was voluntary on hus al P signment rt of her and. Guard Boy-Gunman as Lynching Fever Spreads Attantic City, March 15.—Sheriff George A. Redding of « May county, has deputized and armed ten men to guard the county jail at Cape May court house, following a report that 75 citizens of Tuckahoe, heavily armed, are advarcing on the | jail to lynch James Pettit. Pettit, 19 years old, is one of the boy-ban- dits who have confessed to the hold-up of the Tuckahoe National| bank last Friday, during which! Director Edwin L. Tomlin was fatally shot. ANTI- ONISTS PAIL Wionipeg, March 17.—Attempts of anti-unforiists in the Presbyterian church to amend the church union act passed recently by the Manitoba legisiature, failed when their bill was killed on second reading. RADIO INQUIRY POSTPONED New York, March 15.—The federal trade commission’s hearing charges cused « monoploy postponed today aiust eight companies ac- sh a attempting to estabi radio industry intil May 18. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MA‘RCH‘IS, 1925, ITHREE FINED FOR FURNITURE THEFT Judge Considers Guida Ring: leader of Storehouse Raiders Convinced that Joseph Guida of Portland, former shipping clerk af the John A. Andrews' furniture store was the one most to blame for the theft of several pleces of furniture from the place for which he and two others were arralgned this morning in police court, Judge Ben- jamin W. Alling fined him $100 and costs. Amasa Baldwin of Berlin, charged with recelving the stolen goods, was find $25 and Howard Thompson, charged with recelving a stolen rug valued at $12, was fined $15. The arraignment of the three men was the result of wholesale thefts from the furniture company which came to light early in the month, and rgsulted in the arrests of six men, three of whom were bound over to the superlor court by Judge Alling at yesterday's session of police | court. | The charges against the trio ar-| raigned this morning differed from the others, no question of burglary being involved, Guida was charged with the theft of two cedar chests valued at $44, a set of dishes valued | !at $10, and a rug valuel at $12, | Thompson was charged with recefv- |ing the rug and Baldwin with re- ceiving the other articles, Judge Willlam F., Mangan, ap-| pearing for Thompson, brought out | the fact.that his client took the rug after being told by Guida that he could have ft as an insurance com- pany had paid the store for it, thinking it had been burned in the i fire at the storehouse on Arch street | in January, Baldwin admitted that he had re- ceived the cedar chests and the | identified Chapman as the man, and | with oné exception, they were posi- ~ Judgoe Jennings sald that he did not think it necessary for the state's at- torney to argue, adding "I will deny the motion." Chapman Cannot Teave County Judge Jennings sald then that he would explain how he had arrived at his decision so the counsel for Chap- man would not think he had made it without giving it due thought, He sald that ho was made aware of the fact that the motion was to be made through the newspapers, 80 he im- mediately took up a study of the situation, Chapman is confined at Wethers- fleld state’s prison, and that is the only place that he can be legally kept, the judge sald, calling attention to the fact that it was he who ls- sued the writ of habeas corpus which glves the state the right to try Chapman. The conditions upon which the writ were issued provides for his transportation back and forth from the prison to the Hart- ford county court o answer the murder charge, and no mention was made of any other county. This fact, the judge sald, caused him to doubt whether Chapman could legal« ly be tried in any other county of the state. He agreed with Attorney Murphy that expenses entalled by such a move were not to be consid- ered at all when the question of a man's life 1s involved, He sald that he has read the his tory of the crime and of Chapman's MOORING MAST PLANS Government Intends to Erect Giant Landing Place for Big Dirigibles in Hawatlan Islands, Washington, March 18,—Plans for erection in the Hawailan Islands of a mooring mast at which lighter than-air ships such as the Bhenan- doah and Los Angeles could be se- cured on projected sits to the islands are awalting completion of negotiations for a lease on the land selected for the purpose, Material for the mast has been delivered at Pearl Harbor navy yard, The original tentative schedule of employment this year for the Shepandoah called for her partici- pation in the naval maneuvers in Hawallan waters. The plan was subject, however, to alterations in the ship to increase her crulsing radius and as yet no definite declsion has been made as to when this work will be undertaken. In the mean- time, a commercial ploneering trip to Honolulu by the air liner Los An- geles sometime this year is among projects discussed by navy air offi- clals, Naval officials have not yet con- sidered erection of a hangar in the Hawailan Islands of suficlent size to accommodate either the Shenan- |past record, but he failed to see doah or the Los Angeles. where counsel for .Chapman had even approached proof of thelr claim that Hartford county has con- victed Chapman already. IDENTIFY CHAPMAN DYING AN THLE INSHELLY MURDER (Continued from First Page) ing on the motion for the change of venue, Chapman Positively ldentified Witnesses who saw the murderer of Skelly on the morning of the érime were asked whether they Butler’s Testimony Heard in British Scandal Case London, March 18.—The evidence 0 08i- | of a dying man, a butler who for tive, Bernard Carlson, the Con-|ffty years served the © Waterhouse necticut company employ who met which 1s involved ISTOLDIN COURT dishes, saying that Guida had asked him if he! wanted them and hs told |t Mmirderer in inie alley thrcugh which he made his escape, was not them he did. Attorney David L.| oo in nis identification, saying Nair, represonting Baldwin and |,y regombled him very much Guida, told the court that Guida | ' ? but as he had obtained only a pass- ing glance at the man and had paid no particular heed to him at the time, he could not be certain. James White, proprietor of a Main street livery stable, was posi- admitted taking the articles from the store, claiming that at the time the defendant thought . that they were obsolete, having been included | in the stock purchased by the new | mEnsgemalRe NInoe; |tive in his identification, saying that Siduey Symon, manager of the |, ‘y,¢ gyre that Chapman was the family, in Lon- don's latest sensational trial was in- troduced today for the plaintiff in the suit Mrs, Muriel Waterhouse has brought agalnst Sir David Wilson- Barker, Lady Wilson-Barker and R. P. Sheldon to recover money which she avows that Lady Wilson-Barker extorted from her late husband. The evidence was that of William Thomas Mills, taken by a commis- sion ten days hefore his death. Mills said he frequently saw the SRGENT LIKELY 10 SHIFT THINGS \ Extensive Changes in Dept, ol Justice Are Expected Washington, March 18.=~An oxe | tensive realignment of key positions in the department of justice Is ex- pected to follow the inductidn into office of John G. Sargent of Vere mont, as attorney general, Sollcltor-General James M. Beck, who ranks next to the attorney-gens eral in the department, is undere stood to have prepared his resignae tlon, although he has not yet sube mitted it to the president. His re- tirement had been forecast some time ago. The next ranking .official, A: T, Seymour, who has the title of assist- ant to the attorney general, will leaye the government service within a few weeks to resumne the praetice of law in Ohlo. The names of two new assistant attorneys-general, Herman J. Gallo- way of Indlana, and Ira Letts of Rhode Island, were sent to the sen- ate Monday, - One of the remaining four officials holding that rank, Wil- liam 'J. Donovan of New York, was but recently appointed Warren I°. Martin, who served as secretary to Attorneys-General Daugherty and Stone, is to be given another assignment and probably soon will leave the department. Mrs. Mdbel Walker Willebrandt, assistant-attorney-general in charge | of prohibition cases, probably will remain at her present post although she recently had contemplated re- signing. Donovan Promoted William J. Donovan of New York, |now serving as assistant attorney general, was nominated today by President Coolidge to be assistant to the attorney general, a post of high- er rank now held by A. T. Seymour lof Onio, who has resigned. e———— Special Notice The Leading Star Lodge No. 23 Shepherds of Bethlehem wifl hold a masquerade and old fashioned dance Thursday March 19 at Junjor Mechanies hall. e Watch For storc, told the court that he was| .. "(h " oceeq him on Chestnut satisfied that the young men had| @ | made a blunder and were not of a | | criminal nature, adding that Bald- | | win was still ‘employed at the store | street as he was standing outside a blacksmith shop waiting to have a horse shod. White said that he was standing outside the shop when Uplaintift’s husband, the late Alfred | Francis Waterhouse, and Lady Wil- | son-Barker behaving like lovers and he gave a number of instances which | were said to bear out this deserip- | NORMA TALMADGE in “THE ONLY WOMAN” |and the other two could have lhelr’ | chance when he was arraigned on|partner on the evening | tion of McDonough was accepted by a man appeared before him hurry- positions back it they so destred. | f ool BRI IF et He sald Restitution for the articles taken |, * P8 IO Mt he took S , - | : A BlLho macess ”"‘h“f"""‘ "i the men | oy pjcular notice and identified rather than have them taken away,| cpapman sitting in the prisoners pen the court was fnformed. | yesterday as the man, Policeman Patrick J. O'Mara told |* oinor witnesses who told the the story of the affair to the court. | : state's attorney that they were cer- He iInvestigated the case and round- | tain of their identity of the noto- ed up the six men. rious criminal, were Miss Lillian Carroll's Last Chance { Knell, the waitress at the Old Col- Joseph Carroll of Broad street|ony ynn on the Meriden turnpike, pleaded with the court for one more j wjo served Walter J. Shean and his charges of drunkenness, breach of | (ho murder here; Adolph LaChance the peace and assault. Attorney | of Plainville, who was standing out- Thomas F. McDonough, representing | gige the door of the Davidson & him, told the court that Carroll had | Leventhal store when the murderer taken the pledge last night and in-|cmerged; Henry Helleher, who was ! tended to keep away from liquor in| standing near LaChance, and Pa- the future. The attorney asked the |{rolman Alfred Atwater, the police- | court to give Carroll a chance under | man who preceded Skelly into the a suspended sentence to the state siore and who was ordered to duck farm, saying that if he was brought | ag the murderer opencd fire with before the court again, he would not | his gun. ask for any leniency and would be| patrolmen Walter Malona, who perfectly willing to go to the farm | arrested Shean on Church sireet, 1o straighten up. The recommenda- | John Liebler, who assisted Malona, and Clarence Lampher, who fol- | lowed the murderer out of the store {and saw him disappear down the | Beaton & Cadwell alley, were also | called upon to tell their stories of Judge Alling who teld Carroll that it was absolutely hls last chance. Carroll was arrested in a lunch cart near the railroad crossing on Main street Saturday might by Pa-|the affair, trolmen William Doherty and Danlel | Shean and Alcorn Confer Cosgrove when he was found engag- Shean, partner in the burglary, ed in & fight with Stanley Juchni-|was also intervidwed by Alcorn to vitz of 62 Silver street and Aleck |clear up any vagueness or omis- Dzietak of 140 Grove street. Juchni- |sions that might exist in his con- vitz and Dzietak were arrested on |fession. There has been no indica- charges of drunkenness and breach |lion thus far as to what charge of the peace and were fined $5 and |Shean will be called upon to an- costs. swer after he has served in the role Fined for Mutual Assault of star witness for the state against R eeaiie1 At conts (wers |m_‘,lr‘lmpnmn. Jxr =npesre i be lnk‘on Se R 4 o for granted about the superior posed on Julius Rovinskl and Mike |\ Byt 'he will not be called to Daunczky when they were found |, ... ho charge of murder as an "F)"“‘»" of ""':’“k”"“:;" %’;:flc:vprjlncwuory before the fact on which 16 [DERCH AT 3 Y WeT®Ihe is now held without bail. That they | 1o was simply a tool employed by | Chapman is the prevailing opinion, |and it is possible that he will be called upon to plead only rrested Saturday night after ngaged in a fight in the housc at 16 Silver street. Rovinski was at home when the other defendant, who is a boarder, arrived home with | chargé of burglary in comnection a “slant” and a pint on his hip, An | \ith the break. argument quickly started and fists| The identity of the young woman began to fly. Dzunczyk finally run-|who was in constant company with ning down stairs and calling the |Shean during yesterday's proceed- police. Policeman Thomas J. Feeney |ings has become known. She was ted the two men, |revealed as Miss Herminia Gruend- ive Have Mixed Ale Party |{ler, Shean's sweetheart. She was A Saturday night drinking party |in the employ of Shean at his office was aired out before Judge William in Springficll and has steadfastly €. Hungerford and Louis Michaelow- | hept confidence in Shean, although was given a ten day sentence!vesterday was the first time she has for his part in it. Ie was charged |made an appearance at Hartford. ith drunkenness and breach of the| Chapman has a right to go to trial ace. The other defendants ar- before 12 men who are unawvare of gued on the same charges were Frank Iska, who was fined $5, Alek Cheliski, Mary Wisk and Mary Ju- naniska, the last three receiving suspended judgments. The quintet was arrested after the police had received & complaint that a drunk- en party was creating a disturbance in a Grove street house. Patrolman Frank Parker made the arrests. it is im- men in Murphy and such Attorney of being a criminal possible to get 12 Hartford county. nis motion for a change of venue late vesterday aftcrnoon. He said Hartford county "under a severs handicap as a result of newspaper accounts of the murdef, his &lleged connection with it, and his past record. Taking State's Attorney Al- corn's claim that the same condition STANLEY CHURCH SOCIAL On Friday evening of this week an entertainment and social will be held at the Stanley Memorial church under the auspices of the Men's ctuby, A directory of members of |the widespread interest in the case. another to trial under le county preceding to a the fact that he has the repétation | claimed in his closing argument on | that Chapman would go to trial in | exists in other countles because of Murphy sald that if by changing to Chapman could go : of a handicap, it | tion. Sir Herbert Waterhouse, surgeon and cousin of Francis Waterhouse, sald that Francis suffered from an aggravated type of rheumatoid arthritis and for many years was almost a hopeless cripple. Richard M. Sowton, a solicitor, testified that while Waterhouse orig- inally enjoyed an income of more than £1800 annually he died in- solvent, Opera Singer Defends Consul’s Wife in Divorce New York, March 18.—Leon Rothier, Metropolitan Opera basso, took the witness stand yesterday to defend Mrs. Ada Remer Maracchini from charges in a divorce suit brought by her husband, the French vice consul here, that she was gulity of a love affair with the singer. Rothier admitted that he had taken a room at a New York hotel with a woman under the regis- tration of Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Mason of Boston. When asked to name the woman, he refused, but said that she was not Mrs. Morac- chini. the church, recently completed, has 12 Il Uader 88 B8 8 RmE ant considerable talent among . }\4* 1S O T the nbers. Some of this talent ' " r . ttorney Murphy fook up over vill be heard #ad scen on Friday , ‘> y 3 i half an hour in his closing argu- evening. Among those taking part in the program will be the Misses Alice Anderson, Ruth Mycroft, Ar- line Backus, and Margaret Peterson The last named will read a selection ment, and when he had completed, E————————— ——— = Watch For entitled: “The Ballad of East and West.” There will be a surprise | NORMA TALMADGE re which will be enjoyed by ECT 7Y 2ll. During the evenlaz games will vV W, he people of the church and com CAPITOL THEATER munity have been fuvited. | Spring & COMPLETE WITH PHONES, TUBES and BATTERIES $25.75 Reg. Price $39.95 ELECTRIC CO. 75-81 CHURCH ST. Tel. 2240-2241 CAPITOL THEATER PREVENT | —_— |NFLUENZ A New Englanders have been warned of another epidemic, OW is the time to get on the safe side—ward Off grippe entirely or make an at- tack light and easily thrown off by keeping the bowels and body right by using DR. TRUE’S ELIXIR For INFLUENZA This laxative, famous for over I5 years, has in years past helped many in their fight against Influenza. Made of pure Terbs; mo harmful drugs—mild in action and & proper cleanser of the intestinal tract, which must be taken eare of if you want to guard against INFLUENZA or wrippe. HE Buckley hey Tug AT m tlo «u

Other pages from this issue: