New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 26, 1927, 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)

" JAIL SENTENGE FOR S ——— e the pool roo ver street, he arms and leg City time last night when a switch at | Haven, HGP Al.ms a“d Legs Officer William % | John Abbiatti collided on Glen infidelity, when arraigned before Meadow street has returned from Miss Adeline Ohman of New Jjail sentence of 30 days. Announcement was made today and q that her hus- | week will be held Thursday evening night, on his return from , 636 Main street of the death of his o elits. s that bundles of meat have been with a man. This '|r\ m and Tha Catholic Daughters “Kitchen : CRUELTY T“ WIFE Trolley traffic on the West Main _ the corner of Main and West Main streets was split by the rear car on Supernumerary Cronin reported that automobile Alex Karis, aged 32, of 245 Broad | groct Jast night, doing slight dam- street, attempted to justify an as-|age. : °"® | New Britain General hospital where Judge W. C. Hungerford in police | opo ypgerwent an operation for ap- court this morning, but after exam- on his wife had vesulted in| York city is visiting her parents, Karis' appearance court several|Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Ohman of 32| Officer John G n testified to that the monthly meeting of the meaking the arrest on complaint of | board of police commissioners band is jealous of her and frequent- | M h 3. ly accuses her of familiarity with a The police were ked this morn- he conducts op Bea- child at Hartford Isolation hospital. band twisted her police are investigating a u.vl he went home une stolen from the company’'s automo- bout 4 o'clock in the after- | bi on Glen street, about 9 a. m. when his day's work 1 he Revue” will hold a dress reheareal chastised her. at the T. A. B. building Sunday aft- street line was tied up for a short| Woman Says Husband Twisted |cre croney espress bouna tor xew | driven by Willlam Peichert an sault on his wife by accusing her of Mrs. Joseph Ferrara of 25 pendicitis. tning his record and noting that as- times, Judgo Hungerford imposed a | Harrison street, over the week-end. Mrs. Kar bout 12:45 this morning, | scheduled Monday evening next man who formerly boarded at their | ik 1o notity Stanley Walukeicz of n accused her | report by Miller & Olson, grocers, noon and found wife drinking the past three Saturdays. ofore court, J gerford ernoon at 1 of 65 Laurel stre and the latter's 15 year old son, relative to the tru- ancy of the latter and the charge of causing the boy's delinquency, on which the father was arraigned in NEW BRITAIN 'DAILY HERALD. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1927. ftems Normal School Dormitory Erection |HEAVY STORM HITS Made Part of $10,000,000 Budget NGRTHERN SECTION New England Partly Crippled by | 7, vater, completion of a system of Wolcott ate parks, larger facilities for the g Mansfield State Training school and Program of Capital EX- hospital, and a dormitory for the New Britaln Normal school. i Two or three smaller projects, al- so under consideration bring the to- | (Governor tal amount needed for the program to about $10,000,000, Senator Wal- ott says. Senator Walcott made it clear that the order in which he “Sound Jisted needed expenditures was not business judgment” dictates that the indication that they ranked in state, in order to grow normally, the same order in importance. His % y | statement does not suggest specific | should undertake capital expend- | amounts needed for any item. itures amounting to $10,000,000 &t| g oo et ctatement was this time, Senator Frederic C. Wal- made as an endorsement of the sug- cott, of Norfolk, chairman of the gestion by Governor Trumbull ear- finance committee, sald in a state- ljer in the week that the state ment issued with the “hearty approv- yight well, by action of the present al” of Governor Trumbull. ion of the general assembly, fi- Projects involving capital expen- nance necessary cap ependitures ditures, which seem urgent at the by issuing short term state obliga- present time to Senator Walcott, he tions. Senator Walcott seconded listed as follows: the financing plan advanced by the A state office building, & new In- governor as “sound policy” and de- sane hospital, purchase of inexpen- clared the time has come for the sive land for protection of lumber state to “act with courage and de- supply and conservation of fresh cision.” |though the two did not meet un- live but within a year the young Sen. Announces penditures Having Ap- proval of Hartford, Feb. 26 (# — | within a stone’s throw of her par- ental home in St. Petersburg, al- |bride returned alone and took George de Filosofoff Freed FTom 3" eest“soiy stect, New vork. up American Wie court yesterday. When the case was called, a continuance for 60 days was ordered The case of Dimitry Miasniak, PROBLEMS VIEWED Paris, Feb. 26 (A—A final decree of divorce has been granted to " WLEAN SUED FOR $10000 U. S. Senator From Connecticut De- sz 35, or Now miaven. was asain PrEt0n Dean Discusses Social Rspect of Students ged with non support. | The charge of violation of the city ordinance was nolled in the case of Prospero Francelino. Before court 3 of college training and efforts of col- keep his sidewalks clear of snow and | : 3 { e e {1eges to train students for a life they | DANCES DENOUNCED York, 26 (A—Emphas ence are producing nervous, | harassed type of college students, Dean Chri Gauss, of s | given a divorce George de Filosofoff from former Olga Chrapovitsky, granddaughter of | the late Col. Henry A. Taylor, New York and Milford, Conn. Mrs. Florence Mitchell Schea was | from Vincent F. chea. They were married in New York city July 17, 1921, fendant in Action Brought Over Fatal Accident in Washington, B H. MANNING ureau of the N. B. Herald) Washington, D. C,, I'eb. 26.—Sena- tor George P, McLean of Connecti- cut is being sued for $10,000 dam- s for the death of Alexander Brooks, colored, who was killed by he senator’s automobile on Jan, 21. The suit was filed in circuit court yesterday by Drooks' estate on be- BY Gi (Wash 1 Milford, Feb. 26 (P—The granting of a final decree of divorce in Paris to orge de Filosofoft from the former Olga Chrapovitsky marks the end of a romance which began chaos and unrest of modern exist- Catholic Clergy in Austria Threatens | Excommunication for Those \\'ho‘ Offend in This Respect. | Vienna, Feb. 26 (#—Modern ‘dances have been scored by the Cath- olic episcopacy of Austria, Wwith threats of excommunication for all Catholics who persist in ignoring the clergy's appeals for abstention. According to the church periodical | of the Vienna diocese, the Dbishops of Austria denounced all dances of “exotic origin, tending to | arouse the sense by the attitude nf‘. | the dancers, the dress of the wom-| en and the accompanying sensuous gro music.” Objectionable dances | mentioned were the fox-irot, tango, | one-step, shimmy and Charleston, | which were declared to be “incom- | patible with Christian doctrines | and morals, and therefore to be con- | sidered as sinful and a public nui-| sance.” | Meanwhile the dancing craze con- tinues in Vienna with unabated zest at private and public functions, | dance-loving Vienna jazzing away | nightly until the early hours of the morning. ! | Watchman on Boat Thinks He Killed Night Prowler Perth Amboy, N. J., Feb. 25 (UP) —William Casey, 45, night watch- | man on a schooner anchored in| Raritan Bay, “repelled boarders” | on his boat last night and today was | held by police here on his own state- | ment that he believed he killed a | man. The man rowed to the schooner | in a small boat and climbed over the | side of the ship despite his warnings, Casey sald. When the marauder refused to stop, Casey fired both barrels of a shotgun and the stranger fell over the side of the boat, leaving no_trace, the watch- | man asserted. Casey rowed ashore and gave himself up to the police. | says | Yor | by hard work. A Princeton university, in the New in New York shortly after the world Evening Post today. war while Countess Olga, her sister he college problem is a phase of | Mail, and their mother were devot- the problem of the whole country,” ing their time to Russian Red Cross he says. “If it is acute in the col- | work. leges it is because of the empha Countess Olga is a granddaughter the over-emphasis—on the colleges|of the late Colonel Henry A. Taylor, today. |who once owned Laurelton hall, “There are thousands of men in|jiiford, no'w exclusive girls' school, the colleges who have no place there land a daughter of the late Admiral and many of them know it. But they |Count Nicolal Chrapovitsky, a rela- are there because of the belief of |tive of the last Czar of Russia and their parents that It is a social ne- |a naval hero who went down with ity. {his skip in the Russo-Japanese war. That is a big part of the prob- [Her sister was married two years lem of the college student today.|ago to Hugh D. Auchincloss of Fair- These men are belween two Dres-|field and New York, a nephew of res, the pressure of their parents | Oliver Gould Jennings, of Fairfield. and the presure of the college which | The wedding of Countess Olga to is tryin gto mould them to a form it [the young Russian lieutenant was is impossible for them to fit. Add to |performed in Bridgeport, in the that sure as much more of the |Holy Ghost Russian Orthodox chaos and nnrest of modern life as|Catholic church on Labor da cannot be kept out of the universi- 1919, the ancient Russian marriage ties and it is evident that your col- ceremony for Romanoffs being lege man will be a nervously-strain- |used, including the coronation o ed ssed type.” |the bride and groom with the titu Novels of the so-called sophisti-|lar crowns of the groom’s family. cated type and modern Broadway | | The mother of the countess was plays which college students read, are “full of the modern o ad: | the ohlest of four children. She SR L unrest” et Lieutenant . Chrapovitsky in s . yselt” he says, | VeV York and later married him it n Ghsdtsabeq . mrey cort|in Paris, Eoine at once toiSt Pet- ot i B e a i than Suadenly |crsburg. Two children were born of leased from prep school, where [the union, Olga and Mail. Tha erything is done for him, into the Mother and the two girls came to comparative freedom of college life, | America at the outbreak of = the such books are bound to be un.|lusso-Japanese war, being inform- balancing. They are full of the ©d upon their arrival in New York modern unrest. That's the thing that the husband and father, who that has caused college suicides. ~ had risen to the rank of admiral, “The tall’about overwork is 1n.[had gone down with his ship. correct. College men aren’t killed | After a short visit the widow re- nan who comes to |turned to St. Petersburg and later college because he wants to be, say |married Gen Christopher Derselder, a chemist,’ will work night and day |adjutant to the late czar. He died to be one and never feel the strain. |just before the World war and fol- It's the men who havs no right in [lowing the war, the family return- college, who perhaps are pushed into [ed to America and took an apart- college by their parents and are ment in New York. snatched up in the present day un-| It was then that the countess rest, who kill themselves.” {met Lieutenant Filosofoft. It de- - veloped during their courtship READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS|that he had heen born and raised half of his widow, Hattig Brooks. The senator was not In the car when his chauffeur, Frank T. Pas- sini, struck Brooks. Police who held Passini after the accident tested the car brakes and found them in good condition, and after an investigatio freed the chauffeur and exonerated him of blame for the accident. | |John Starkweather of | Ansonia Dies in Hospital { Ansonfa, Feb. 26 () — John' Starkweather, prominently identi- | | fied with the Masonic fraternity, ! |died at the Griffin hospital at 6| o'clock this morning in his 1 |year. Mr. Starkweather was seiz jed with sudden attack of illness Thursday afternoon while at- tending a performance at a local theater and was removed to the] | Griffin hospital in an unconscious | conditio He was a native of New Haven and Is survived by a wife, two sons | and a daughter. | | Mr. Starkweather was a member | of New Haven Commandery, Knights | Templars, Pyramid Temple, Nobles | of the stic Shrine, a Scottish Rite | |Maseu, a past master of George | ashington lodge, . and A. M., a | |member of Mount Vernon chapter, {R. A. M, of this city and of Union| [Council, R. and S. M. He was for | years an accountant in the office of | the Farrel Foundry in this city and served as president of the state cer- |tified public accountants association. Hall to Explain Why { Tax Rate Is Higher | An explanation of taxation and the causes which resulted in an in- crease in the rate this year will be | |given by Chairman Edward ¥. Hall | of the board of finance and taxation, | tomorrow evening at a meeting of | |the Polish Republican cleb in F: {con's hall. The meeting will be he |at 7:30 o'clock. ETHEL: \ \ e TN T LAC K, AD The; an;:l“ Now | ported to have told a repres | could pretend they | interest in the Snow and Sleet Boston, Feb. nd sleet in various parts of New FAMOUS CIRCUS MIDGET 1§ VICTIM OF SUICIDE “Little Joe” Alpeunto, Aged 50, Dld} Not Dare to Face Serious Operation Rye, N. Y., Feb. 26 (UP)—"Little Joe' Alpeunto, once one of the most | | widely known of circus and vaude- 26 (P—=show, rain | ville midgets, committed suicide here | carly today because he didn't want gland today interrupted, telephone | t0 face a serious operation. service in many sections and caused a large amount of damage to wires, poles and orchards. Hundreds of poles were felled in Maine and tele. phone company officials estimated the damage in that state as close to a million dollars. In central Massachusetts there was an _eight-inch fall of snow. husetts and southern hire and Vermont were iard hit by snow and sleet. 5 Boston experienced a downpour of rain, interspersed with sleet during the night but today there were indi- cations of clearing and colder we: th E vhere a high casterly wind added to the damage. Fitchburg, Mass,, Feb. 26~(P—A sev and one-half inch ‘fall of hieavy snow early today did consid- ble damage to wires in Fitchburg nd vicinit, Public utility service was impaired, shade and fruit trees were damaged and motoring was hazardous. Worceester, The four over Wor of snow that fell county I night graph and telephone poles to such an’extent as to paralyze trolley and bus line service, and stop all tele- phone toll line service through Web- ster into Connecticut, through Clin- ton and Lowell to Portlund, Maine, and through Oakdale to Gardner and North Adams, FORMER STAMFORD WA 15 SUSPECTED Unnamed Ex-Official's Actions Being Inestigated Stamford, Conn., Feb. 26 (UP)— An investigation into certain irregu- larities in the accounts of a former city official whose name was not divulged was announced by Pro cuting Attorney Max Spelke here today. His statement mercly d that his attention had been cailed to the matter and that an investigation had been started. He said he could give no more information because it might defeat the ends of justice. Rumors that such a probe would be made have been heard in politi- cal quarters hero for several weeks. WENTLOFF GiRL 1S 0UT T0 AIDLOVER Won't Testhly Against Alward Unless Forced to, She Says Tliss Lillian O. Wenzloff of 1412 East street, who eloped with Harry Alward of Elmwood on January 2z, nd W ted in Washington, D. ., with rd, several days ago, has hopes of a happy culmination of the difficulty in which she and Alward find themselves, she is re- ntative of the federal department of jus- tice, who is in this city investigat- ing the case. Alward did not ma ry her, although she thought he would do so when she left New Britain with him, yet she believes in him and will not assist the gov- ernment to convict him for violat- ing the Mann act unless she is orced to testify, she is reported to ve told the federal agent. It is said Alward served tence of several months in Penn- ylvania for bigamy, having mar- ried a 17 year old girl with whom he had eloped, despite the fact that he was already married. His firse wife, who is the mother of thre children, is reported to have pressed the hope that he is j for life. She ch s him with r fusing to support her and children and otherwise failing to fulfill his duties as a husband. a sen- French Suffragists In Lively Campaign Paris, Feb, 26 (A—The advance the canse of won is making in France was s strikingly at a crowded meeting here last night organized by union for the woman's vote. It was pre- sided over by Maurice Hervey, one of the leaders of the ultra-conserva- tive section of the French senate, who was supported by an imposi array of deputies and senators, A feature of the proceedings was ech by Senator Francis Saint amnouncing b conversion to . After what women had lone during the war, he said, no one did not have the ualities necessary to take an active welfare of the nation. HELD TOR NON-SUPPORT Stanley Clicker was arrested this forenoon at the Corbin Serew divi- sion tfactory by Officer Thomas J. Feeney, on a warrant charging non- support. Mrs. Clicker, who is 20 years of age, complained to Prose cuting Attorney Woods $his morn- ing and the warant was The couple have one child. WEATHER OUTLOOK Weather outlook for the wee ginning Monday: North and middle Atlantic states A period of rains over and snows and rains over north portion about Tuesday and again during latter half; cold early part, with moderate temperatures ther ter until end when it will be colder, issued. K be- south estatement submitted | able to s their {that a thorny question Ii | | Alpeunto, 50 years old and four feet tall, had made a living by con- ducting a frankfurter stand at Ry beach in recent years. He had been | 1l for a long time, and recently un- derwent one operation, which failed to cure him, He was found by his wife, Eliza- Deth, also a midget, sitting in a chair holding in his mouth a tube connect- ed with an open gas jet. Alpeunto was born in New Or- ns and was of Mexican descent. His parents were of normal size. In his stage and circus career, “Little Joc™ jmpersonated a soman barcback rider and a baby. DEGLINES TO GIVE REPLY ONGE MORE Tnull Again Silent When Asked | About Funds Washington, Feb. 26 (UP)—Sam- uel Insull, traction multi-millionaire and gel” of the last Ilinois primary, told the senato election in- | ¢ vesti contriouted $172,925.19 to the sena- torial campaign and $65,000 to the Cook County campaign. Part of the money was taken from Commonwealth Edison Com- ny, an Insull corporation, and art of it was borrowed from other Insull said. made the assertions in a when he was called to the witness stand, flanked by Gilbe Torter, attorney. Porter interjected an objection at the first question the committee asked and Tnsull declined to answer. The question was: “Did you get any of the $65.000 sources, Tnsull NEW BRITAIN HAS OLDEST R, ACHIEVEMENT CLUB Club to Observe Its WEEKLY SURVEY OF LEGISLATURE |Honse Passes 14 Bills and ! Senate 22 “See-Mare” Sixth Anniversary This Month— Mrs. Connell Feted. | | New Britain may claim the oldest | Junior Achievement club in the | | world. The “See-More” club is six Hartford, Feb. 26 (P—The an-|years old this month and has been nouncement of Gov. Trumbull Mon- ! active continuously since its organ- day that the capital expenditures of | ization. Several of the original club | the state would have to be increased | members are now leaders of clubs ot {by the issuance of short term state | their own organization. Mrs. H. C. | obligations it major projects were to | Warner of 22 Eton Place, who is as- e carried out gave legislators food | sistant director of the foundation, | for thought this week. has been the leader. of the club since | Senator Walcott, chairman of the | the beginning. | finance committee last night gave| The Blue Bell club, led by Mrs. | added impetus to the short term ob- | Edwin E. Kjos of 181 South Main !ligations idea by declaring that |strect, has elected the following of- | “sound business judgment” dictates | ficers for the year 1927: President, |that the state, in order to gfow nor- | Margaret Routhier; vice-president, | mally, should undertake capital ex- [ Lucy Mercure; Secretary, Francis | penditures amounting to $10,000,000. | Crowley; treasurer, Rita Manning; | He proposes the $10,000,000 in serial | and reporter, Lucy Mercure. | notes be retired in 20 years at the| Mrs. T. J. Connell of Springfield, I rate of $500,000 a year. | the instructor in the opening sessions | Gov. Trumbull in his discussion of | of the local Junior Achievement In- [the matter mentioned between $5,- | Stitute, was tendered a reception at 1000,000 and $8,000,000 as the amount | the home of Mrs. J. M. Owsiak at | that it might be wise for the state | 101 Farmington avenue yesterday | to raise for major state projects, |{térnoon and was presented with | Senator Shaw, senate leader, is of | &1 electric percolator and other the opinion that any “sound finan- | Bifts. She has consented to return Icial policy” suggested by the gov- |a8ain in two weeks for an additlonal | ernor for the state will be accept. | lecture. Miss Mary Walker, also of BT ie e E | Springfield, will follow her with a Outstanding Events | course for local leaders In dress con- Two events other than the leglela- | Struction. tive business occupied the legislators during the week. One was the re ception of the Governor and Mrs. Trumbull in the state library which | 9 | was attended by virtually every | member of the legislature. Many of | ing committee today he had hem brought their wives, ‘The other event was the Hartford automobile show in the state armory. | Many of, the members “dropped” over to see the automobiles on dis- " SCORED BY JUDGE C. L. PIKE NEGLECTED 10 | play. (1 The nause ts n tor o ety ses- PIOVECE Wity Gourt Rules sfon Wednesday if the advance no- | e {tices_on an unfavorable reports on | . : % |three bills having to do With fown | _Jersey City, N. J, Feb. 26 (P— roads mean anything. The fight | Vice Chancellor John Bentley today over the measures was to come up | denied a divorce to Crozier L. Pike | Thursday, but at that time House|of Fast Orange from beautiful Doro- Leader Averill moved that the bills | thy Palmer Pike of “Gay Paree,” a |be made the order of the day for Broadway revue. Wednesday at noon. | Pike, who is in the export business Better Marriag and is a direct descendant of the Judge Epaphroditus Peck, Bristol man from whom Pike's Peak in you spent in the Cook County cam- |representative has had better luck | Colorado was named, married the paign from the Commonwealth Edi- | with a bill which he believes would | model secretly in December, 19 son Company?"” “I object,” s: “I decline to answ 0PPOSED T0 AUTOS Majori Porter. ¥ of Schools and Colleges Dis- approve of Students Having Ma- chines on Campus. Washington, Feb. “overwhelming aversion' toward the use of automobiles by male and fe- male students while at college has been found to exist among leading college and university faculty head and executives by the American mo- tovist, official publication of the American Automobile association. Educato says the motori which addressed a questionnaire to thirty-five leading men and women'’s colleges and coeducational institu- tions, indict the “speed-craft of academic youth ‘harge that it is a time-waster, a peril to safety and a menace to morals, and generally they are un- that it possibly can have particular utility anywhere near the halls of education.” Showered With Boiling Caustic, Two Men Burned Pawtucket, R. L, Feb. 26 (UP)— Showered with boiling caustic solu- tion, two men were burned, one perhaps fatally, here early today, while at work in the bleaching de- partment of the Acme Finishing company’s plant on Front street. The victims, Jacob Kucher of Central TFalls, and Peter- Hanna of Woonsocket, were taken to Memorial al, where it later was reported t Tucker might not live through day. Hanna probably saved his own life by jumping into a tub of ter. ometime in 1928 France May Get Around to Debts Paris, Feb. 26 (#—"Sometime in 1928" or later, after elections for a new chamber of deputies is the ear- liest date at which ratification of the debt agreement can be taken up, in the opinion of political circles, These commentators the political situ- ation at the present time 1s such 3 accord stands little chance of atten tion . - Parents-Teachers Philadelphia is the home f the new national presi- lent of the congress of par- >nts’ and teachers’ club. She 8 Mrs. A. H. Reeve.. 26 () — An | principally on the | the debt | | better marriages this session than | |last. The house has received a fav- | five-day interval between application | and issuance of a marriage license | | for residents as well as non-resi- | | dents. Judge Peck attacked three | bills which were rejected this session | {and which would have made drastic changes in the marriage laws. | The committees are inclined to| [look with disfavor upon bills whicn | do not materially change existing| circumstances or which would work hardships on some one. Proponents | | of such measures have had to with- stand sharp fire from members of | the committees as the latter tore ‘pet” bills apart. * [ “Sharp Remarks Passed § Not all of the sharp remarks are | | made by the committeemen, how- | t a hearing before the shell | s commitee some one d lared Senator Wheeler of Strat- ford an oyster cultivator, had 1o | business being on that committee. | ;Tl senator expressed the belief |that an oysterman had as much I Tight on a shell fisheries committee | |as a financier on a finance commit- | |tee or a farmer on an agricultural ’; committee. The eagle eye of some member of the legislature has corrected sev- eral errors in bills which have been passed either by one branch or by both. One bill had' been passed | without “teeth,” a clause providing for a penalty for the act which the law would prohibit. Another offered to benefit one rson had to be reconsidered when ! |it was discovered after passage, that it would have to be made retroac-| tive from date of becoming a law or| the person for whom it was design- ed to benefit would not do so. The senate led the house in adop- [ tion of bills, having passed 22 to t | house’s 14, The house rejected | nearly fitty bills, twice as many as | the senate. Less than 10 favorable | reports came into the scnate du |ing the week. The house received | more than 20. Both branches pas: | ea several judgeship resolutions and | ‘bills restoring forfeited rights. | | The governor sigded two bills. Gas Fumes Explode and | Fi he slamming of a door by the orce of a slight explosion of gas in a house in the rear of 58 Fur- view street, owned by C. Bann | resulted in an alarm from Box 22| |at o last night. A jet on the gas | | stove had been turned on for some | time, it seemed, and when a match | was struck the fumes exploded. There was no fire. | ROMAN | Comstock Once More Finds Himself Without a Sweetheart. New York, Ieb. 26 (UP) — The | | romance of Connie Almy, dancer, land Stanley C. Comstock, wealthy | Florida realty operator, apparently | has run its course. Miss Almy, who earned fume by being the one young woman who has won a man away from Peggy Joyce, has consulted a lawyer here, it was learned today, and a breach of prom- ise suit has been threatened. The | attorney, Francis C. Dale, head of counsel for Edward W. Browning, admitted Miss Almy has conferred | with him, but was reticent as to de- tails, | CE AGAIN ENDS HEARING POSTPONED Danbury, Feb. 26 (P-—No hearing | was held in the city court today in ease of Mrs. Rosie Svoriteh Ga- boza charged with the murder of | Frank Vanco here January 19. The | hearing was continued until next Saturday, March 5, in order that | tobert G. De Forest, public defend- | cr of Bridgeport might be here as attorney for the woman. Migrating frogs covered railroad | tracks for more than a mile between | Viadislovaka and Sarygol in the| | Crimea, halting a Moscow express | train recently for three hours. | which ) 200 e Department Is Called |, |# seen < when ,the hand Their happiness was short-lived. Deciding that Pike had proved said Insull. | orable report on his bill reqhiring a | tW0 instances of infidelity on the part of his wife, Vice Chancellor Bentley held that since the young man knew of his bride’s ante-nuptial incontinence, he contributed to her lapses by refusing to give her a | home, to allow her the use of hi name or to admit public she was his wife. Pike's contention was that the prestige of his wealthy family would have been lessened should his mar- riage become known, and that at the time not only would his ‘allowance have been discontiuued, but he might have been disinherited. “A sorrier excuse could hardly be given,” wrote Vice Chancellor Bent- ley in his opinion. * “Under the circumstances of this case a husband is under a pecul duty to protect his wife against her own weakn The defendant knew at the time of his marriage that his wife had been unable to resist temp- tation and had been the victim of se- duction. Not only did he fail to give her a home, but he never even gave he: his name. He never threw around her the protection that every husband _is supposed to give his wife, however in immoral she may be. He did not give her the com- fort of his society, as a man is sup- posed to do. She was left, under all these circumstances, with abundant opportunity to the solace of the companionship of others, and the inevitable came to p: ¢ seek Storm Breaks Atlantie Phone Service Today New York, Feb, 26 (#—Trans-At- lantic telephone service between the United States and Great Bri n was extended to last five remalning tes in the west at 8:30 o'clock this morning was reported broken" shortly after the first few Wls from California had been put through. The direct wire line from Houlton, Me., went down in the vio- lent snow storm raging over Maine, officials here said. BOY CAUGHT AFTER CHASE Patrolman Maurice Flynn caugit a 13 year old boy after a chase through Washington street about this morning, and later, the companion was brought in. The boys have been sleeping in a barn in the rear of 1 Grove street, according to their admissions to the police. Secret Gun ») Newest weapon adopted by Chicago gangsters can’t be is closed. The barrel fits be- tween twa fingers, with the trigger operated by pres. sure from the palm,

Other pages from this issue: