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Goes on Spree When He Learns Addition to Family Is a Girl Wife Relates Tale of Woe to Judge, Saying Hus- band Bombarded Her With Dishes. Paul Kawski, aged 31, of 95 Wil- low street, who was arrested ahout 11:30 last night by Officer Louis E. per on the char the prace on con Kawcki, was accused by the in police court to negicctin werc nn'rl"\A about two and of going on his sorrow on leary ter instead of u so wife on May 24 the child was bor rowed 50 cents from a born to Lis turning to b neighbors for four o est being on liusband d to the gross was necess Welfare associs e a $3 or-| ar for groceries a few days ago to ave the family from starvation. Protects Babe From Assault Yesterday, according to Mrs. Kawski, her husband brought two | ien home a disturbance. Last night h d dishes and spilled milk on the floor, and but for found that obliged to ¢ iren, the young- nonths of age. Her 1 not t 0 glect that it s Beale of the eld sel have killed the old infant, he might child, so accurate | was his aim as he hurled heavy xlasses at her. He has repeatedly told her he would leave her, and she has replied that he must support the two small children, of whom he is the father, and she will take the three of whom her first husband, vho is deceased, was the father. He ioes not like children, she said. | Kawski, m his own defense, de- clared that he lived in New Britain 6 years and was not arrested, but | 13 n00n as he took a wife he plunged himself into troutle and has been arrested several times in two vears. | He admitted that he drank lome Lrew at the home of a friend in Kensington vesterday, but he was not fntoxicated, and the reason he threw articles about the kitchen last | s that his wife went out at | and did not return until 11. He admitted he was “mad” about it. imposed a fine of 815/ and costs, suspending execution of the penalty, and advised the couple 10 make a determined effort to cor- rect their differences and live with- out quarreling. Kawski interrupted 10 tell Judge Saxe Mrs. Kawski| “talked too much,” and Judge Sax replied that if Kawski did not give her reason to talk probably she would not do so. “Well, when she starts talking, T have to say some- thing but she can talk more than | restraint so that r in which she | g | pushed the Slomski boy, apybody,” Kawski insisted. Efects Family at 2 A. M. Bernard Carlson, aged 42, of 25 West Pearl street, was charged With breach of the peace on complaint of NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1928 FIRST PHOTOS OF THE ITALIA AT SPITZBERGEN his wife, who met Officer Peter Ca-|. iellus on Arch street about 2 o'clock | this morning and told him she and | her cight year old child had been v Carlson. Mrs. Carlson told xe her lusband often or- ders her out, especially when he is drinking, but Carlson, who was up-; resented by Judge W. I. Mangan, | t last night's trouble was | v his wife's refusal to serve | his return from | h her or order i, In $act he did not © had goue out until the po- came and took him out of admitted having had “: 1k but he was not drunk. | Louis 1. Harper was put! ness stand after whisper- the prosecuting attorney and £0 into | East and come | “What's | he sai | licemar red. F little dr Office on the w out at ) this morning. that got to do with this case?”’ Judge Mangan inquived, and referred 1o | the officer as “a volunteer witness.” Questi and a friend took & walk through Fast Main strect after midnight, the latter lived in that direction. Judge Saxe suspended judgment and advised Carlson and his wife to exercise a reasonable amount of | their differences ma not bring them into police court. He remarked that the trouble | did not strike him as serious and he | Delievgd that the principals could t along harmoniously if they tried. Many “Cook Moonshine'! John Machefski, aged 36, of 260 Grove street, was fined $15 and costs | for drunkenness and assaulting 12| vear old Henry Slomski of 23 Hor. | ace street last Sunday. He admitted that he was intoxicated, but small wonder, he said, as every house m‘ the vic Iml) of Horace and Bro‘nd‘ streets “cooks moonshine.” He was | as | trying to get home and go to bed | but boys on Horace street, secing his condition, followed him and kept up a chant “give us a nickel.” He cs- | timated that there were fully 200 boys surrounding him and others were running from all directions. He | who fell against a wire fence and sustained | a cut on the forehead. Officer An- | thony Ustach made the arrest, find- | ing Machefski hiding on the third floor of & house at Horace and Broad streets about $:45 p. m The boy's mother testified that she | would not have had Machefski ar-| rested hut for the language he used towards her when she remonstrated { with him for pushing the boy. Mach- efgkl is the man who locked himself in a cell at police headquarters last | Saturday afternoon and compelled | ! the police to use force to ecject him. Judge Saxe took into considera-| tion the that Machefski was in- toxicated when he pushed the boy. !He warned him that fn the future | he must not allow 200 nickels to ex- | | Bast strect, ! ehai miles from one of the world’s Nobile Arctic expedition was operating. cite him to the extent that he must resort to violence. Couple Arrested in Room Aura Schwiesithal, aged 23, of 69 | Church street, and Olen H. Parker, aged 31, of 1 Church street, plead- ed guilty to the charge of improper conduct and were fined $25 and costs each. Sergeant Stadler testi- fied that he and Officer John Riley and Supernumerary Officer Edward Muszynski made the arrests about 4:10 this morning in a rooming house at $1 Church street, on com- plaint. The woman is married and has a two year old son, while Park- er s unmurried. According to Ser- geant Stadler, Parker sent for her and on her arrival they went to live In the roomlng house as “Mr. and Mrs. Parker.” Parker was fntoxi- cated when arrested, according to the testimony. He and the woman claim New York as their home. Prosecuting Attorney Woods noll- ed the case of Walter Sokolskl, aged 20, of 36 Silver street, and Joseph Meska, aged 19, of 342 Iligh stroct, on payment of costs. Both wen charged with speeding on Clinton street, at the instance of Officer Harper. The case of John Hofmann of charged with violation of the dairy law, was continued until next Monday because of thr absence from the city of his coun- #el, Attorney Trving 1. Rachlin, The continued case of Harry Iar- rell, aged 34, of 4S Talcott street ed with non-support, was con- tinued until Sept. 30. Germany expects a business spurt “A Pledge of Genui ice”’ renuine Service M. D. HONEYMAN Having the “World’s Greatest Values”’ to sell, gives us enthusiasm to match those values in the character of service we render. We use genuine factory parts, which is a pledge of interest in Essex Models trom $735 up Hudson Models trom $1250 up Allprices {. 0. b. Detrots, Plus war excise tas your satisfaction. All work is performed by skilled me- chanics. Hudson-Essex owners may utilize our service with confidence. Whoever does your work insist on genuine factory GENUINE PARTS ONLY parts. SERVICE ned Ly Prosecuting Attorney | This extraordinary NEA Service photograph shows General Umberto Nobile’s airship Italia moored at the Kings Bay, § Woods, Carlson admitted tiat he, bergen, base from which it sailed toward the North Pole recently, perhaps never to be heard of again, farthest ouumsts the picture tells better than words the bleak conditions under which the The Italia made one successful trip from Kings Bay to Nova Zembla and St. Nicholas | Land. Then it flew to the Pole, ran into a storm on the way back, and was swallowed up with its crew of 16 in the Arctic silence. ‘)Berteu!t T. J, Feeney testified that | through loans, of which the Kwasnick was driving on Stanley | 000 obligation is the second. At street at the rate of 38 to 40 miles | the opening of the fiscal year, $400,» an hour Tuesday night. Kwasnick | 000 was borrowed on a note. denied the accuracy of the Ser- geant's estimate of the speed, bui‘ Marjorie Handmarsh, aged feur, of Preston, England, was killed when a stone cross fell from the top of a gravestone in North Shields cemetery, where she had gone te place flowers on her father's grave, Judge Saxe found him guilty. Joseph Wierbicki, aged 590, of 579 | North Rurritt street; charged with breach of the peace and drunken- | ness, had judgment suspended with a warning by Judge Saxe. Wier- | bicki's wife testified that he chased her out of the house Tuesday night, !and he accused her of extravagance. e N :City’s Note for $200,000 | Signed by Mayor Today | Mayer Paonessa today signed the | | city note in the amount of $200,000 | the money to be used in paying cur- | rent bills of the municipality which | will be payable before tax revenues | {are peccived in amounts large enough to meet the expenses of gov- ernment. The fiscal year opens three months in advance of the time | when taxes are due, and expenses | ;durlng this periol must be met Your husband will € this flavor in cooking . The lively littls -uclullnllyblmu rosdy ;g: you to use in your lulht (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service-London '!‘irnes)t itz- Brought thousands of will exclsim when he un- steak or chops season nofi: wlth Gulden's um-u. ateof all kinds LIGHT DOGHET IN HOLIDAY COURT Reckless Driver's Case Most Serious Listed Memorial Day docket in court was light, the most police serious | case being that 6f Michael §. Gia- | como, aged 17, of 192 South street, | Hartford, charged with reckless | driving and operating a car witlLout a llcense. The young man admitted | that he took & car owned by a friend and drove from the Paragon Inn on West Hartford road, in the direction of Hartford, “to get some air’’ About 1 &. m. he was retura. ing to the inn when he was blinded by the headlights of autos between Ibelle’s and Gillette's corners, with the result that he lost control of the car while going at the rate of 40| miles an hour. The car crashed through a fence, tearing it up for a | distance of several feet, and ripped | out a bridge ralling before coming to a stop, completely wrecked, partly over the 15 foot embankment above a brook and partly against a tree, Judge Saxe told the young man, | who i a Hartford high school stu dent, that he was extremely for- | © to live through his expericnce, ; A Demonstration Involves No Obligation THE HONEYMAN AUTO SALES CO. 200 East Main St. Telephone 2542 Wnulor ree Recipe Book les Gulden, Ine., Dopt C. 43 Elizabeth St -qculn & more sppetizing whtn spread with nkfnnbtoflxa; New York City. GULDENS MUBTARD eitasa seasoning in cookmg un imposed a fine of $50 and com!nrremd Tuesday night by Moetor. lon the first count and suspended [cycle Officer Clarence Kumm on udgment on the second count. Ser. (West Main street, and admitted that geant Stadler and Officer Harper ar- | he was driving at the rate of 4§ to rested Glacomo. |50 miles an hour. Wesley A. Martin, aged 23, of| Martin Kwasnick, aged 20, of 91 Southington, was fined $10 and costs | Putnam street was fined $10 and on the charge of speeding. He wn:icom on the charge of speedin, COAL VS. WHAT? There are other ways of heating a home—many others BUT There is none more economical There is none safer There is none cleaner There is none more dependnble You can figure it any way you like. 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