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ling Flenke, had agreed to have the ilatter pay $5 weekly towards the support of ‘his wife and child, and GERMAN WAR BRIDE DEMANDS SUPPORT Has Ex-Soldier Husband Brought r-arriase, 3 wos s’ jail sentence in the event that bond is not posted. Holleron, ¢ street, rangement. He ordered a $200 bond posted. Prosecuting Attorney Woods said the couple are unable to live ! peaceably. Flenke has children by a former of Marital difficulties predomir in police court this morning, thr of the c having to do with the inability hushands and wives live in peace. Judge W. C. Hunger- ford was on thie benc nd I'rose- cuting Attorne; i. Woods pre- sented the state's cases Philip Cardinal aged 30, was on charges of Judge Hung is in J his responsi- support nd satint Mrs, testified 1 him heeank asked $8 per of their five present ade avenue, H Cardinal teft Monday Teiurn or s rereabo payir weekly t support of t child and he ford to pay £3, as his ¢ is d that when from her mot noon, her hus- with a flatirc it struck the Hollerol home terday g o door. er's week for the support year old chi Her ess is 115 Wethersfield riford. testified th afternoon id him word as s been band g which he wife Kknob ont He had pulle 1o disconnect i his d did not to 1 senses, sk P clined to 1ge u on offic Jecn mishi d on him th factory is slight. payin wif. ar ot heen paid for, 1 The couple Tesult of a war time dinal having become ¢ his wife while he was v of occupation in Ger Hungerford co January 27 : 1 to confer with Pro C. Connolly immediately after court. pleaded not Flenke's Troubles Aired ilty L of improper Charles Flenke, aged 39, of 5§ elus and Koz- Griswold street, pleaded nolo them about 1 tendre to the charge of non-support ning in a room at Prosecuting Attorney G. Woods told Judge Hungerford he and Pro- bation Officer T €. Connolly and ‘Attorney H. M. Ginsburg, represent- Kept busy dress his i ills, he said. this r said married as the romance, Car- ied with rmy was w prning has will not of his conduct. Ticer George Holleron about 5 p. m. efternoon on complaint. Trio Taken in Vice Mrs. Alice Karkiewic: Hurlburt street; He were Moffitt arrested yesterday Raid, ed that she went ion of Hen- rs to have a drink of co! \eir return from Holyvoke, was tired and felt that t would refresh her before tinued to her home. Her was wet from the rain and she robed while ishes having coif he deni S has two children, a after New York Physician Perfects Simple and Easy Method of Reducing Weight !'Ing. She an Tony tired about 9 o'clock and so Henry and the woman enry testitied that h woman to Holyoke about 4 p. m. He did not know si married. On returning to New DBrit- ain sald she was cold and they went to his room to have coffee. She testified that he re- Dr. R. Newman, a licensed prac- e time ticing physician, of 256 Fifth Ave- nue, New York, announces that he has perfected a treatment which has quickly rid fat people of excess weight. What is more remarkable is the Doctor’s statement that he has successfully treated thousands of patients for fat reduction without| became frightened when the police unnecessary change of diet or bur- entered, and tried to hide. densome exercise. He also says that| Officer Cabelus testified that the fat people who suffer from chronic woman who rents the room told him rheumatism, gout, asthma and high| Mrs. Karkiewicz was in the men blood pressure obtain great relief| room and had no right to be there. from the reduction of their super- Judge Hungerfo suspended fluous flesh. Realizing that this| judgment in the woman's case and sounds almost too good to be true,| fined each of the men $7 and costs. the Doctor has offered to send| Julius Laurctti of 317 Lincoln without charge, to anyone who will| street was fined §$3 for driving with- write him, a free trial treatment to out an operator’s license. ate Po- prove hig claims, as well as his liceman Ray C. James testified that “Pay-when-reduced” plan. If you | investigation of an accident in which want to rid yourself of superfiuous a car drven by Lauretti figured on fat, write him today, addressing Dr.|November 21, 1926, revealed that IR. Newman, 286 Fifth Avenue, New | Lauretti did not have his own li- York City, Dept. R. cense in his possession. rong do- | | Judge Hungerford approved the ar- | i pared to go_into court sentenced | and violation of | \CHAPLIN HAS MILLION NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1927. DOLLARS IN COLD CASH Therefore His Wife Looks Forward Anxlously to Her “Pay Day’— For Her First $4,000. Los Angeles, Jan. 20 (#—Lita Grey Chaplin looked forward to a pay day today as her attorneys pre- to collect from Charlie Chaplin temporary ali- mony awarded In divorce suit against the wealthy comedian, who, it was disclosed, has almost $1,00,- 000 in cold cash. Receivers of the Chaplin fortune appointed at the wife's instance yes- terday reported an examination of bank books found in the studio safes showed cash balances for ! aplin and his corporations total- ! almost $1,000,000 scattered banks in Hollywood. Los ing through | Angeles, New York, England, and | actor's personal account: | cover the present money instalme | ation: | and exclusive real estate. | ana | | | | i | funds v be attacke permit a continu- | funds may be attacked. | alimony. France. | in the approxi- E v $17,000 of which is in Cali- fornia banks and in the diction of thecourts. This is sufficient to sums due Mrs. Chaplin. Her attorneys, however, desire that pavment of future ali- ts be assured and it is upon this issue that corporation Of this amount $74,547 In addition to $013,372 in bank deposits of Chaplin and his corpor- | the receivers reported assets 065, all readily convertible The Char. ile Chaplin Film Con showed a bank balance of $340 gent Film Company, Inc the Chaplin Studios, 587. New York, Jan. 20 (UP)—In th libr of his attorney, Nathan Burkan, Charles Chaplin today im- | mersed himself in philosophical | works in an effort to maintain that composure of mind which made it | possible for him to recover from a mental collapse in less than a week. | It was Charles Chaplin's first day out of bed. since last Friday night, Ithongh {wice previously he had been up for an hour and an hour| and a half at a time, He was taking small quantities of hard food an gradually recovering his strengih, | which he will need for his return trip across the continent to face his legal battles. | Burkan thought that an interview with the press might be arranged for later in the day. The attorney was amazed at re- ports from Los Angeles that Judge | Gu had taken him to task for remarks which he said he had never | made. Burkan said he had not | criticized the court’s action in fixing | “What T said was that| Lita Grey Chaplin doesn’t want ali- | mony; she wants a million dollars, he commented. IMPORTANT Ottawa, nereases in the | catch on both the Atlantic and Pa- cific coasts boosted the value of Canadian sea fisheries nedrly 32,000,000 in the first nine months of 1926, a report issued by the de- partment of marine and fisheries | show. Value of the sea fish catch in the nine months ending Oct. 1, 1926, amounted to $21,781,995. | | that parents who { taining t | son whom the child is to visit. | preparations you But Rodents Are Being Killed Off By Sprinkling 'CATS PUT TO ROUT BY ADVANCING HORDES OF MICE IN CALIFORNIA......, Poisoned Grain in Their Path Bakersficld, Calif., Jan. The cats of Kern county’s .owland area are having experiences which rarely or never come into the feline | existence, They are retreating in fear and confusion before the tum- | bling herds of mice which have in- fested an area of 96 squaré miles around Taft, Maricopa, Fellows and Ford Cit Merced has thrown a small army of cats from its city pound into the area to reinforce the local felines. | The invading hordes were. reported diminishing today, but not from the efforts of the cats. Poisoned grain | sprinkled in newly-plowed furrows acres the path of the rodent migra- tion is killing them by the tens of thousand “The see a dr Sam Whitmore, s run away when they | ve of mice coming.” said | a resident of the 20 (— ;infested valley who is taking a part in putting down the mice. “The cats | The tab- | also refuse to eat them. | bies seem to be nauseated at the | sight of a mou: Poison barrages maintained constan His home is in th migration and one of the b has been to bury the rodents, by the tens of poisoned grain. of grain y by Whitmo: direct line of t Fach morning the first job is to | { clear the house and out buildings of dead mice, and then the yard and and the task is tre- | eclared the 3 fler eating one or two poisoned grains and then taken they After eat- | surroundings, mendons, he said. I mice become “playful’ as each gain following i stagger as if intoxicated. ing the sixth kernel they die. are jobs killed thousands with the PL |1eg. Lelow the sterday a LORD TRAINING HARD Britain General hospital. Battler Who Appears in . Hillside Creamery Butter, 51c Ib. ) 27, Approach- Mer{licn oniJAmuAcy 27, ARH 2 1bs. $1.00. Russell Bros.—advt ing Good Form. | ! Meriden, Jan. 20—Eddie Lord the | hard hitting Waterbury youngster, meets Jackie Pilkington the former Meriden boy in the feature bout of 10 rounds at the boxing carnival arranged by the New Meriden Ath- | letic club on the night of Thursday, January 27th, at the city hall audi- torium, is in strict training for thi important melee at the Casino | gymnasium, Meriden. The French- American junior lightweight has un- dergone a strenuous training session | for the past week having used the means of chopping down trees and tramping through the snow to bet- | { ter his condition. Denny McMahon the astute manager of Eddie, expects | him to give an exhibition in his | next start that will be a surprise to not only Plkington, but to the fans |2k Charley Ray the Philadelphia | youngster whom all of the leading | flyweights give a wide berth has waste—no wo NEW JOB FOR CONDUCTORS. German Railroad Men Must Chaper- one Children Traveling Alone. Berlin, Jan. 20 (P—German rail- | conductors are developing into veritable “kinderfrauleins” — nu girls, The public has been informed | must send their | ung children traveling without a perone may rest asdired the con- duetor will play nurse for ! provided certain formalities are ob- | Children thus “shipped” must car- ry on their person an envelope con- | » name and address of child, of the parents, and of the per- | The route of travel must also be deserib- ed in detail. A duplicate envelope, containing the railway ticket and Soft Corns Money Back Says Fair Drug Dept. if Moone’s Emerald Oil | Doesn’t Do Away With All Soreness and Pain in 24 Hours, Get a bottle of Moone's Emerald | 0il with the understanding that if | it does not put an end to the pain and soreness and do away with the | corn . ftself your money will be promptly returned, | Don't worry about how long you have had it or how many o have tried. This powerful penetrating oil is one pre- ation that will help to make your ainful aching feet so healthy and frec from corn and bunion troubles that you'll be able to go anywher and do anythihg in absolute feet comfort, So marvelously powerful is Moone's Emerald Oil that thousands have found it gives wonderful sults in the treatment of dangerous swollen or varicose veins, Fair Drug Dept. is selling lots of it. | ves re- | other details, must be handed to the | conductor. MORE WORK FOR FIREMEN, Boston Mayor Sugg! Do Some Traffic Duty. ests Boston, Jan. would become a plan recommen lcolm E fic I'he mayor suggested that fi be allowed to trolmen last vear, police still we unable to afford adequate to puplls, he said. Fresh Eggs, 59, advt. They Also | (UP)—Firemen officers under | here by Mayor | n traffic duty at street crossings used by school chil- dren. Despite an addition of 300 pa- protection Russell Bros.— | notified the promoters that he will rive here next Sunday afternoon | four days in advance of his impend- ing battle with the rugged Wee Wil- | lie Woods of Boston whom he meets !in the semi-final on the card. A large amount of interest is being manifest in the 8 round struggle be- tween Jzzy Kaplan and Sheik Leon- ard of Wallingford. Jimmy Clinch of New Britain will ye matched with an opponent for the { curtain raiser which will go six rounds. Jimmy was to have fought { “Baby Doll" of Waterb but the Brass City fighter is fighting Mon- day night and will not be allowed to fight the following Thursday. This will be Jimmy's second professional { fight. | | | 1 i { | Mrs. Rose Nicastro of 25 Meadow | street suffered a fracture of the right Plumbing Repairs We bring our Se ice Repair Truck to your door, a complete operative unit, with tools, dies, fittings, ete. Every thing there for any repair. Your repair bills will be lower when you deal with a firm prepared in every way to serve you. W.R. FENN “Serving the public since 191 Plumbing 139 HART STREET and Heating TELEPHONE 2079 236 MAI T. noon in a fall on a sidewalk on Lilac street. She is being treated at New AT 115 YEARS Beckl ; Betty Watson. aged 115 years, died here yesterday, death being due to the infirmities of age. ASSIFIED ADS, Always Succeeds* NO guesswork—nospoiled food—no —but perfect and : uniformresultsalwaysbecause Ram- Lo rous J fordis uniform,dependable,sure. Use J{[I[IX RUMFOR The Wholesome BAKING POWDER VOGUE SHOE SHOP OPP. MONUMENT Financial Statement OF The Fidelity Finance Corporation December 31, 1926 ASSETS Mortgage Loans and Notes . X ¥ Accounts Receivable — Stockholders Investments . . 5 5 . *Real Estate Purchased for Investment Valuation of Insurance Renewals : Office Equipment — Less Depreciation Accrued Interest on Loans and Notes Cash in Bank . 0 0 « Total Assets “Real estate appraised at $25,000 by local t rust company. LIABILITIES Notes Payable — Local Bank Insurance Accounts Payable Total Liabilities Capital Stock ! “Surplus and Undivided Profits Total Capital T'otal stock dividend of correct. | h_;m_‘ audited the hooks and records of The Fid Britain, Connecticut, as at the close of business to the best of my knowledge and belief, the foregoing financi $281,5: 29 *On December 14, 1926 the Surplus and Undivided Profits account was $57,095.43. J ! $34,480 was distributed to shareholders on December 15, 1926 re- ducing the Surplus and Undivided Profits to $22,615.43. 22,615.43 New Britain, Conn., January 10, 1927 elity Finance Corporation of New December 31, 1926, and certify that, al statement is true and $233,874.82 38,959.95 50,625.00 15,000.00 10.120.61 2,897.00 3,500.00 9,561.42 $364,538.80 $60,000.00 398.37 "~ $60,398.37 304,140.43 $364,538.80 A Financial Statement OF The Fidelity Industrial Bank December 31, 1926 Loans, Industrial Plan Loans, Other Plans Stocks and Securities Cash in Banks Total Assets Capital Stock Surplus LIABILITIES Undivided Profits . 5 S Notes Payable ) ; . ‘ Paid on Hypothecated InstAllment Cert. Installment Certificates . . ; Full Paid Certificates 5 g Total Liabilities $96,245.00 3,900.00 96,607.00 6,225.28 $202,977.28 $100,000.00 25,000.00 5,397.28 52,000.00 13,450.00 280.00 6,850.00 $202,977.28 New Britain, Conn., January 10, 1927 I have audited the hooks and records of The Fidelity Industrial Bank of New Britain, Connecticut, as at the close of business December 81, 1926, and certify that, to the best of my knowledge and belief, the foregoing financial statement is true and.correct. (Signed) M. E. LERNER, Certified Public Accountant. (Signed) M. E. LERNER, Certified Public Accountant.