New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 19, 1927, Page 2

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o e None of them were on ratiroad busi- | ness, according to testimony of Rail- | DRIVERGANTWAIT :=72fias IR CORT BN Objects to Postponing Hearing | and Is Fined $10 Andrew Antelina, ager 23, of Prospect street, objected ‘o the rec- omniendation of Prosecuting Attor- ney J. G. Woods in polica court this morning for a continuance of his case until tomorrow morning so that he would be required to produce his automobile registration and opera- tor's license. He said he could not afford to lose time from | is work by coming to court, He would not ob- Ject to a postponement of the hear- ing until this afternoon, he said. Judge Hungerford fined him $10 and costs after hearing ais objection to continuance. Officer James M McCue testified that Aatelina was d ng a truck on m ttreet st evening about 9:30 o'clock, and a woman suddenly crossed in front of him, causing him to pull to one side and in so doing he drove the truck @gainst a hydrant, The officer asked Lim for his license and 1egistration and he was unable to produce them. Photo by The truck is owned by Albert Pag- guiti of North street. Found in Box Car. John Nuva, aged 23, of 14 Gold #treet, arrested at 4:10 tn's morning by, Officers William O'Day and Thomas Tierney in a box car in/E “The Pit” on Myrtle street and charged with vagrancy, was ordercd to go to the town farm for a week, and while there make plons to care for himself and obtain employment, He has no home and no money and g:’:;f;‘;';: ;’(;‘l’c';_“‘“ not keep him, |y iinin State Normal school in 1924. Atter her eraduation from the nor- Prosecuting Attorney Woods called | yya) school she was offered a posi- on Sergeant McAvay to tell the court | tion fn a Burlington school. She | of the man’s circumstances. The Ser- | taught there for the year previous geant said he escaped from the state o the dale of beginning service in | hespital at Middletown and was sent | {he New Britain schools. ! back. Judge Hungerforl was dis-| SIS posed to give him a chance to better| ARRAIGN TAX COLLECTOR | his circumstances and urdered him| \yorcester, Mass, May 19 (P — | to report next Thursday. {Albert E. Bennett, former tax col- | Krepitus Goes to Jail. lector of Hubbardston, was ar- Stanley Krepitus, aged 37, of 11 raigned in superior court here yes- Cak street, who has been arrested |terday on 30 counts alleging lar- | five times within one veur and has|ceny. He pleaded not guilly and served jail sentences, was charged |was held in $1,000 bonds, furnish- | with breach of the peace ¢nd drunk-|ed by Charles P. Wyman, chairman | enness by Supernumerary Officer of the hoard of selectmen of Hub- | John Nolan, who made the arrest bardston. about 8 o'clock last evening on com- plaint of Mrs, Krepitus. She testified COP EXONERATED that he does not work and she sup-| Portland, Me., May 19 (P — Pa- | ports him, yet he abuses and as- |trolman Richard S. Johnson was | saults her when he is intoxicated. In | exonerated last night by the civil | reply to Mr. Wqods, she said she service commission after a two day could get along very nicely without | hearing on a charge that he, with- her husband. Judge Hungerford im- |out justification, shot and killed a | posed a jail sentence of 20 days. !pedigreed Irish setter owned by ! 11 Motorists Fined $2. {Harold T. Libby in Deering's Oaks, | Eleven motorists were fined $2 and | May s. costs, fine remitted on payment of | _— costs, for parking automobiles on| READ HER_{‘,[) CLASSIFTED ADS | the railroad company grounds near | FOR YOUR WANTS I MISS MAY ASLOW! | Washington School Miss May M. Caslowitz of 418 Corbin avenue, teacher of the fifth grade at the Washington school, is | eting her ¢second year in the | itain public schools and her third year as a teacher. She was torn in Brooklyn, N. Y., | ned most of her education | schools of this city. She was | aduated from the New Britain | High school in 1322 and the New | wwoe B, C. PORTER SONS -~ - OFFICE FURNITURE AND EQUIPMENT The Up-to-Date Offices are equipped with Up-to-Date Furniture and Rugs. We furnish all kinds of offices including Manufacturers, Professional, Mercantile and Private. |among the exhibits. NEW BR lthe passenger station last Saturday. FLASHES OF UFE: YOUNG COOL[DGE SINGS COLLEGE By the Assoclated Press. 1 Amherst, Mass.—One of the best; warblers of that famous college song | “Lord Jeftrey Amherst,” is welcome | to the White House whenever he can call. John Coolidge received honorable mention in the annual interclass sing. | Ossining, N. Y.—Time will tell how much of a real blonde Mrs. Snyder is. Use of hair tonic is ta- oo in Sing Sing. New York—Omar may have bread but no wine. He is a black Per cat. His owner is Charles . tle, United States attorney, Perth, Australia—A cat can look | «t a king, but apparently the mascot | of H. M. S. Renown is tired of look- ing at the Duke of York. A Kkitten| went to sleep in some bunting, then got hauled up in the ajr during the| ccremony of dressing ship as the duke arrived. Formualities ceased till the Kitten was saved. The crowd cheered—the kitten, not the | duke. | New York—Two little boys in blue like to sleep in hallways. The| Rosenberger twins of Brooklyn, | aged 5, have run away from home| eleven times now. h time a cop has found them, their faces as like as their sailor sults, aslecp ir each other’s arms. i London—Lady Astor apparently is | content to let a man have the last word. She and Jack Jones, fiery| laborite, had an argument in par- liament during debate on the anti- strike bill. | He—Your dogs are belter fed than miners’ children. She—Shut up. He—You go back to America—/ Call yourself a lady. | Chicago — Matrimony improves | student scholarship. Deans of Iflinois | Wisconsin, Chicago and Northwest- | ern say university students have been oblaining better grades after marriage. | New York—Pottery is a soclety | fad. An exhibition reveals that many women of soclal prominence are making their own. A table set| made by Mrs. George Nicholas, | daughter of J. Pierpont Morgan, is| Johnson City, N. Y.—Henry Ford take note! The Endicott Johnson shoe corporation has discontinued its chain of grocery stores on the| ground that the small merchant is| necessary to community life and latge industries should not under ordinary conditions go outside their legitimate feld of operation. The| stories were established because of post-war high cost of living. Me.—Bishop Brewster, | Portland, considered our prices are the lowest. FLAT TOP DESKS Oak and Mahogany - - $22.00 $42.00 $32.00. $59.00 SIDE CHAIRS __ $9° $12" RUGS and LINOLEUMS For OFFICES Buy Your Furniture at ROLL TOP DESKS Oak and Mahogany $62.00 $77.00 $75.00 $88.00 SWIVEL ARM CHAIRS GLOBE-WERNICKE SAFE — FILES Sectional Bookcases A" | Jaughter of a | dren’s little ills, he did not hPIimOJ In Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin he | discovered a laxative which helps to | | establish natural bowel “regularity” ITAIN DAILY HERALD, plant pending condemnation appeal. | Deep River—Body of. womanl| 'SONGS VERY WELL‘:’o\ma in Connecticut river is iden- | tified as that of Miss Bernice C. | Marshaus, 27, Cromwell. 2 2 | I?plscop:ll., thinks a $1200 auto is a: Harttord—Laity 1n the Protestant rich man's car and he refused\to ac-| . L op0) giocese of Connecticut are cept such an expensive machine, ,ioq two steps nearer & prity from the diocesan convention. He | ith clerical order when convention agreed to take one costing not more | gives lay delegates equal standing than $450. with clergy in election of bishop and permit standing committee to Laferte-Bernard, France — The be composed equally of clergy and best performance in a gasoline econ- | luity. f omy campaign was 43 miles to a gallon of gas in a four passenger | automobile fully loaded. Litchfield—Fourth panel is drawn in trial of Angelo Camilll of Tor- rington, charged with first degree Budapest—There's danger in the murder. fashion of painted legs, Alice Posics, | city commissioner, acted blood poisoning and dicd. Waterbury—Aaron Simona, Tet- ryville merchant, injured in auto- mobile crash Monday, dies. Bridgeport — Eighteenth annual convention of the Connecticut de- partment of the Daughters of Union | Veterans opens. Rome—Signora Bruschi, aged 28, has four sets of twins. Recognizing “patriotic services” Mussolini has helped the family to find a home at a low rent. Bedford,| Long Hill—Caught in a shafting Westport, ' at a woolen mill factory, Leonard Pecar, 9, is fatally injure Norwalk—Ed . SO millionaire resident of gives $500,000 for Norwalk hospital addition, 5 AT DINNER Greenwich—Phillips Filay of Exe- Worcester, Ma: May 19 ®) — ter wins eastern interscholastic Adolph Sc! , choked to tournament from Eugene Romans yesterday when a piece of of Choate, 3 and 1. lodged in his throat while he eating dinner at his home New Haven—Connecticut Light Physicians were hurriedly sum- and Power company asks for order moned when Schulick's plight was permitting the company to go ahead noticed but he was dead when.they CHOKRE | with work on New Milford hydraulic |arrived. } Mother! It's Cruel to “Physic” g8 - Your Child DR. W. B. CALDWELL AT THE AGE OF 83 — To Dr. W. B. Caldwell, of Monti- |never gripes, sickens or upsets the cello, TlL., a practicing physician for | most delicate system. Desides, it 47 years, it scemed cruel that so absolutely harmless, and So plea many constipated infants and chil-|ant that even a cross, feverish, dren“had to be kept constantly | bilious, sick child gladly takes it. “stirred up” and half sick by taking| Buy a large 60-cent bottle at any cathartic pills, tablets, salts, calo- |storc that medicine or write mel and nasty oils. srup Pepsin” Monticello, Tllinoi While he knew that constipation | for a 'REE SAMPLE BOTTLE and was the cause of mearly all chil-| ju-t scc for yourself. that a sickening “purge” or “physic” | D C ]dweIIO was necessary. a. Ky even it the child is chronically con- stipated. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep-| sin not only causes a gentle, easy bowel movement but, best of al PEPSIN Quality TYPEWRITER'S DESKS 0Oak and Mahogany $50.00 $47.00 $58.00 $59.00 T SWIVEL SIDE CHAIRS THURSDAY, MAY 19, $ 7.75 $1 3.50 OFFICE TABLES To Match All Desks Wastebaskets Costumers B. C. Porter Sons and Be Perfectly Satisfied. 1927. o S - $650,000,000 Is Behind Every Gallon of B GASOLINE COA¢ b ‘oL’ BB Gasoline gives you every- thing you expect of a super- gasoline. Everyday results as well as un- biased chemical tests actually prove the superiority of BB Gasoline. BB is an improved fuel that in- sures—Faster Starting, Quick- er Pick-up, Greater Mileage, Easier Gear Shifting, and No Carbon. TEL. BB is a Super-Gasoline at an everyday price. For Sale at Three Stations in New Britain—More to Come! BERSON BROS. Coal - Fuel Oil - Gasoline HARVARD ST. He Soothes Nervous Faucets That Moan and Drip When you are embar- rassed and apologetic be- cause the plumbing in your home— - Chatters, moans and drips continually— You~ are learning the truth of the saying: His name'is -LEROUX— He is at your service “Never skimp on the vital point of your home — the plumbing” — Here, at Plumbing Head- quarters, every job is backed by a record of suc- cess, 30 years strong. Before your little troubles grow up Call Leroux— .. He is at your service.

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