New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 27, 1929, Page 14

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14 DAY DEFEATS NEW —— Smallest Crowd of Season Sees .- Excellent Boxing Tourney TOGHICKENFARY IN WILCIMANTIC fore 1 Not Necessarily Ended ar “It does not nec this case Jackson ho county When asked Willimantir were to rer poultry t of his land Rice app after the re confinement a slight co thought and get a § WOMEN PAY FOR BEFF WHICH FALLS OFF TRUCK Woho was Found By One Divides Tt Among Friends But Driver Later Collects, ce of he 4 did reached Hartford that z miss it until he He was informed 195 North Burritt street had picked up the beef. and he notified the po- lice about it Accompanied by Walter Wagner went and found that the cut into eight picces housewives had shared in the div sion. Roucher accepted $2.50 from cach and let them keep the meat He explained that the price of the beef would have been taken out of his wages unless he could turn in the money for it. oman Toucher, to the ad been and as many Officer housc Deef HAVEN BOY | not NEW BRITAIN DALY DR, SMITH HEADS | MEDIGAL SOCIETY | S. W. VETERAN DEAD City ltems Applications for ore own clerk by the Str: 64 Takes Over Duties of Dz Kelly, 1o Daceased President | Julge Stanley Michacl Kyslowski Had Worked in and Was Plant F Years Collins of 414 idl of 9 Zineger of Hartford. J. Traceski police court tod oper | Mcmber ot Quarter Century Club. ukos of death 1 Kyslowski th norr ot Q nounced 1n sessions will standard time, at 7 effective Monday of M of Bostor is spending th cal so- ! ph John Can son Mrs. Fred Jo Camphell duties | formerly of thos city, 1oapired | nd with | Mrs. John Di Hermony Qu. ontily tin 1 b n oin the in ting w vis on of West strect me tak Nat Mong on a prog ¥ Hsition GERMANY OBJECTS 10 EXCLUSION OF TRAINED RESERVES Acoepting Friend's Challenge of $23 and H costs Man 18 York with w npering court omobi ¥ in poli John | Was! today Otticer DIL VINCENT L S MGTH o acting parked cars. E 4 passing car them Mungan ¢ in an a Possible Concessions running car from the i Crmission FoR e companions chal itio th ter the ar nd Charle with hin no per Worl ) - RING A WILL OF MRS, HOSE P T w t Eliz Hos+phian, fil 1 T ' that s AWArd pal Ba HASY ed to §ix at An- e guet of Ginds in Homi grandmother a the on Lake HERALD, riage licenses | made today at the office of the | following: Ignacy streat and st street Daly avenue and an- y ihat 30 eastern | v elub will hold its Action ¢ to mal Masonic clubs as- on ) pleaded 1id not Hizh Girl honor ot bot sy O Arack loonan to be all, and JIf to her son 1 July 17, 1925, T Boiix ety Jecse ot enene i Marino of nnner Olson on of the Wil automobile d at police 1 quarters this morning from that an the name Allen street of 469 trect of the to overate T of and <nspension in the 46 Queen eirest of case of Fr hine | had beer {tion in W | Officer W { notify the the Frs note followi POSTER CONTEST ENDS and ¢ spon N socioty Book Lucy Kolodzi T Lilii Dorothy r Bieb v The evening's cluded n sav contest A noster ¢ the 1 Relief vitention on Week, came with many 1 mane o to Tuberenlosis o ar: PEMOCRAT ON RADIO BOARD ay. Washington. April 27 (@ —Willi D. 8 Starbuck, a democrat of New Jersey, has b selected hy Presi E dent Hoover as a member of given hy m federal radio commission. succeeding the direction of lCOmmmsiOntr Caldwell of New York. jAlice Ralph anl Al to a close specimens of win make 3 h ' Ages will weeks. the mhers of i 3 awards within W 2249 High street Arch right Rritain Tuberen- | 'i dorni iata Teliof | t night SATunvAY, ITHREE MORE | ats for the and | g1 qimg in come T Decanse A D Lax RIL ENTER SPELLING CONTEST Tequesis Tor Reserved Seats at: Bee @Eflitor | 1 the appiications for reserved | ypor S0 o rettlors 16 made. at May 7. at found nec rs Magazine Agent Pays Dearly for 1 2ot the STARTS AUTO ON < to the or s the ool audito He ald’s fourth annual continue to pelling s rapidly will be few of the demand for reserv- ts for the contest, which takes Central Junior High jum on the evening of ) o'clock, acy to withhold further| after Tues- bee s they have been left. public unt on, permitting the ir familie pply O'BRIEN, will fi ¢ Talinsn rst, letters ressed envelopes it has been spell and friends to « editor, de thei should Tues- or No in or & Pet gt w Contesants to Pe Chosen sehool char 1 now excent h sct o It o i hool champions will b 9 for thr Everything big spelling comes to by ROLERIC n for the second with nt Tohneon & Peterson INN th wi question EHAN, ashington d, w banguets ving and fun? The ] t co t a $ ith a might com mplete outfit prize deposit for Just listen to what Anne Murphy [the 1928 New Britain ehampion has hout her trip to Washington 10 say last year. pelling Conte Britain Dear Siv “Our trip “ seving party W e 1\ isited w our stay May 1 never forget trip. first were taken on a tour of particularly we to Washington, an experience which 1 ¥ minute of was filled with seme H o Eve banquet Was! e on D. the; or scetion. to en- evening inner, and 4 | 27, 1929, | sional library, the bureau of engra ing and printing, the Pan-American Union, the Suiithsonian Institate, and 1 made a long tour through the capitol. “Probably the best part of the trip was our visit to Mount Vernoa. Washington's home, and Arlington cemetery where we saw the tomb of the unknown soldier. “We also were taken on board the president’s yacht, the Mayflower, und jallowed to inspect the gun shop “We were in the White House 2a4 had our pictures taken with the president. This opportunity of meet- ing our chief executive was one over which I waa very excited. We "ent to two theater paities and they both were splendid. “I hope that the boy or 3l who wins this year will enjoy it s much as I did and | encourage all con- testants to try hard, because the prize is certainly worth winning. “Very sincerely yours, “ANNE MURPHY." Girls Outnumber Boys As usual tnc number champions outnumbered the boys wbout two to one. With six other champions to be heard from there now are 14 girls and seven boys. If N | | (very other champion to be selected | the girls still will be in the The following group from maintains the is a bo; majority. Joseph's school average. Theresa Chiaravallot Theresa Chiaravalloti is the daughter of Mr. ana Mrs. Angelo hiaravalotti of 17 Wehster Hill. Her tather operates a truck and he tells her never to go after anything un iess she brings back. She is plan- \ing to go after the big prize. The- resa is 15 years old. Mary O'Brien Mary O'Brien says she is the ughter of a motorman and she's proud of it. If Michael O'Bricn, who handles the controller on the Fran- |cis stiect trolley ever heard the statement that his race has some of [ where the cops change their clothes. | gard to statements best looking girls in the wortu. | In the courtroom we saw where the | Beardsles in the case. pointing out i {1ie must feel a thrill of pride in his own daughter. Mary's pleasant smile, backed up with all the seri- lous purpose of her 14 years, indi- | cates that somehody’s going to have hard time keeping that 31,000 prize away from %8 Whiting street. ! Roderic Linnehan This talk about the girls winning prize is all the bunk, according tc Roderic Linnehan. “If a boy really goes after girls won't have & Chance. IUs just because the boys are too gentlemanly to take it away | from them that the girls have been winning.” But Roderic calls atten- tion to the tact that this is the age of cquality among sexes and he says the Lincoln memorial, the Congres-! of girl| — e T anyone bring in a palr of glasscs? jlost me glamses” \produced, the older the letter. The boys later related their ex- riences when they returned to the Herald office. "The licutenant read the letter. Then he laughed. ast us who wrote the letter. Then h: said we should sit down until a officer came in. | “Pretty soon in comes ‘Red’ Harp- The liew- ua er. the motoreycle cop. tenant says to him to show around the place. He showed us all over everywhere. We saw men In jail. One fellow told the cop he learned his lesson. We saw the boards where they haff to sleep on. {Me, I'm gonna go straight. Thev 'ain’t never gonna get me In that jail. Why ‘Red’ Harper put me in a cell and slammed the door and 1 couldn’t get out. Its a automatical- Iy lock. Then he showed us the padded room where they put the crazy men so they can't get hurt {when they bump their heads. Gee wall all your might and it don’t huit, you tried it?" that it didu't 'does it ‘Muggs “Mugesy” agreed ihurt. “Gee, they got a awful swell ma- chine gun there. [ bet they can shoot the crooks with that all right.” “Gosh, yes, 1 betcha they ain't no better machine guns than that in Chicago. “We seel chine. too. “Red Harper showed us all the police badges and everything. He didn't show us the women's head- {quarters. He said there was a wom- 'an there and she was cryin.” “Yah, Lut he took us upstairs.” | “Oh, yes. He took us up to the olice court. He showed us the coop where the people sit what | pinched.” | eh, and do you know what else |we saw? We saw a pitchure of Judge Roche on the wall. We saw n the finger print ma- judge sits and the little wooden | hammer, too.” Returning to the Herald offic {the three adventurers were decorat. ed with “Just Kids" safety buttons. ‘Now we gotta be careful” said luggsy.” “Yes" said Lefty, with the supe seniority, “but how are we gonna be safe if there's a fire?” The ques- {tion went ununswered. | Returning home, the quartet pass- led a group of men and boys. “There’s the kid what stole my {coupon fer safety button." i id, indicating a larger big stiff, T don't need No glasses belng boy presented He scemed to laugh the most when he vead about ‘Lefty, and *Muggsy.’ He three you can bang your head against the gets ior wisdom of two years POLICE CHECK UP WIFE'S STORY IN BEARDSI.EE DEATH (Continued from First Page) homestegd. This man was question- ea but was not held. In the absence of any statement from Chief Nichols or Prosecutor Baldwin as to any explanation th man may have given for the pre ence of his insurance ‘olicy in Beardslee’s home it was assumed that the policy was turned over to Beardslee as security for loans, Another youth who was question- ed was believed to be a chauffenr formerly employed by the Beards- lees. None of those questioned tere held. They gave their statements to Prosecutor Baldwin and were permitted to return to their homes, the conclusion being that all were able to show that they wgre not in the house at the time the shooting took place. Detalled information relative to developments in the case was with- | held today by Prosecutor Baldwin. “I do not intend to try this ease in the newspapers,” he said. He expressed anger over the fact [that the identity of James Cureio. the alleged bootlegger who drove Beardslee and his wife home from Bridgeport on the evening before | the shooting, and Curcio’s statement had been made public. Widow's Lawyers Talk | Attorneys for Mrs. Beardslee, on the other hand. have placed no oh- stacles in the way of newspapermen in sccuring information. w. D. Kilpatick gave out the salient points inre- made by Mrs. | Attorney that she has maintained from the start that Beardslee himself fired the fatal shot. Attorney Joseph H. Freedman of Hartford. who was associate coun- |82l in the Gerald Chapman case, as he is in the Heardslee cuse, unhes- |itatingly answered questions put to him by the reporters following the ir‘oronor'n inquest Friday. “Was Beardslee a sadist, judging | from what you have learned of him Kin your talks with Mrs. Beardslee | Freedman was asked. | “Certainly he was a sadist,” re- plied Freedman. | “Didn’t he repeatedly beat and here will be 1o guarter shown this the paper, I gotta button anyhow.”|abuse his wife. Look at that bruise i Ttoderic is a son of Mr. and Alrs Harry Linnehan and lives at §1-Win- rop street 'S THREE KIDS' VISIT THE *JAIL Ligntenant Bamiorth Entertains Trio at Headquarters Throe M ged 14, another fty”, aged d 10, wnd a third, who have at one time or made professional calls in eir own defense in juvenile court, «d the thrill of & lifetime last cvening and incdentally gave 4 paperman, Police Lisutenant Pamforth and Motoreycle man Louis Harper, a good laugh. | The three hoys were found wan- ing aimle hout the when they met a newspaperman out tor a stroll. Invited to go along. ted wspaperman, whose activi- ties on behalf of his juvenile friends in the past have included everything from camp trips and hospital opera- tions to Keeping them out of reform school, was fairly familiar with their recent performanc “What was the idea of smearing mud on the druggist’s window, right after he paid a window cleaner to wash it?* he demanded of one boy. “Aw, the druggist's a liar, it wasn't mud, it was some stuff 1 had on my fin- gers.” Thus was the druggist dis- | posed of. Knowing from experience some- thing many of their elders have never learned, that a newspaperman never violates anyone's confidence, the boys talled freely. They knew who robbed a grocery store in the neigh- horhood, who stole ®even chickens and a rooster, and the name of the i boy who killed a neighbor's cat. One of the hoys confessed to hav- ing heave was howling outside his bedroom window. The newspaperman re- marked that cats are a detriment and a nuisance in that neighborhood anyhow. “Well," confessed “Mugg- sy, “I don’t like them, they holler outside and I tink it's me kid | brudder. Passing a s0da shop they were in- vited in. Al immediately ordered banana splits. The older boy hesi- [tated: “Maybe they're too dear, we oughtta order somethin’ cheap,” he ! thought. | “Gee, looka what he's puttin ‘in |the dish. He's gotta a regular 'banana, a whole one, too.” Com- ments were interesting, “I ain’t never had ne banana split. Gosh two kindsa ice cream. [And nuts and pineapple juice “Yes, and look! Real fresh st berries. Hey Mister, what's {funny white stuff yer puttin® “Oh, whipped cream. 1 never no whipped cream. | “Naw. I don't want no water. Gimme seltzer, T wanta see what tastes like. Gee that's great stuff. | “Whattsa matter ‘Lefty,’ are you |still_catin? We're done long ago. {Looka that whopper of a lollypop. Gee, the hull family’d have to suck that fer about three days.” Then one boy had an inspiration To his newepaper friend “What are Chances of us goin’ over to see the ‘jail’ where they puts the guys whut |gets pinched? | The newspaperman guessed it could be fixed up. He gave them a letter of introduction to Lieutenant Ramforth, suggesting that th= ychological «ffect of a visit to po- e headquarters might not do any harm. The he; arters. men, *I 1 i I i aw- that on? et called at police head- uggsy” approachcd th the Washipgton monument |desk and the licutenant. “Hey. d Patrol- a brick at a cat which | ? ley; past presidents, Interference by the newspaper man prevented further trouble, “We was in the jail” proudly boasted “Mugg sy “Gee, they was in the jail, awed whispers of admiration follow. «d them down the street. “Don't you have a nickname was asked the older boy. “Sure he s, we call him ‘Monkey'," *Lefty" was the source of information “When I was at the American Le zion camp last summer, they called me Ambitious and Unconscious. but I don't know why" was the in formation volunteered. The boys parted from their older friend, each assuring the others that "he had had “a swell time.” WOMEN THANK MERCHANTS " FOR DISPLAY OF FLAGS Soms of Union Veterans Au Lapresscs Gratitude to Cham- ber of Commerce, streets | Iph H. Benson, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, has received a letter of thanks from Mrs. Nellic M. Dow, president of Auxiliary No. 1 to the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, thanking the mer- chants of New Britain for their c operation during the recent convention. | Mrs. Dow's letter is as follows: | “Dear Mr. Benson: Ausxiliary No. 1 to Loren D. Penfield Camp, No. 16, 8ons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, feels very grateful to you and your organization for your very Kind assistance at the time of t department convention in “Through you also we wish to .thank the merchants of our citv who so kindly cooperated with us in gisplaying the flag we all love o 0 Mr. Benson we are especially indebted for his courtesy and help. ,We feel the visiting delegates went home with a fine impression of our eit Very cordially yours, Lillian Pierce, 4 hairman souvenir committee.” T0 ASSEMBLE IN NORWICH Lovisy Moore Tent of This City 0 Be Represented By Five Delegates The 20th annual convention of {the Connecticut department, Daugh- |ters of Union Veterans of the Civil war will be held Monday and Tues |day in the ballroom of the Waure- (gan hotel, Norwich. Lovisy Moore tent will be repre- | sented by the following: Department color bearer No. 1. Miss Lois Wake field; president. Miss Helen Brom- | Mrs. Jennie | Wakefield and Mrs. Cora H. Eddy; | patriotic instructor, Mrs. Hattle | Landon. The regular meeting of the tent will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock in Odd Fellows hall. A social hour will follow. 8ix years ago Clarence and George | KKoerner, Dayton, Ohfo, newsboys began saving Indian head pennie They have made the first payment on a motor car with 40,000 of them PRIZE DANCE Waltz and Polka TABS’ HALL by the Holy Cross Seciety illary | stat: ' Nellie M. Dow, Auxiliary No. 1| WAR VETERANS' DAUGHTERS jover her eye. Any man that would {throw a flatiron at his wife'’s head s a sadist.” “Will Mrs. Beardslee enter a plea she acted in self-defense?” he asked. Says She Is Innocent If-defense? 1 should say not! She is innocent. She did not shoot {her husbana.” | _“But the medical examiner, Peters, has testified that it would have been a physical impossibility | for Beardslee to have fired the fatal shot,” a reporter suggested. “That’s one doctor's opinion. An- other doctor may express an entirely different opinion. The Dr. medical examiner’s testimony Beardslee could not have fired pretad today to leed 1o a char homicide weainst ais widow. The coroncrs inguest at which Metical kv v H. Lebaron Petors test ee could not have conunittid adjorn ned [untit “nese v without the [widow taking the stund. Prosecutor Liaymond Baldwin said | e probubly would Lave Mrs. Beards- lee arraigned 1n court on Monday. i Peters said lis conclusions were based on the lack of powder rurks, which indicatss that the had Leen fired frora und +lso on the course the oiict During the lot taken session of th- Mrs. Beards'ec, who was 20 years por husband’s funioe tisten:1 to the testimony vwith app: ent un- concern and later smoked a cigar- 18 she discussod the care with She was act panted in court by her mother | Geardsiec was founé with a bullat wound in his left teuple at his hore carly Thurséay morming ard totd I police who were called by his wife thai she lad sho: lim after a quarrel. short spfte” Says Widow | This Mrs. Beardslee denied and jasserted her husbanl uccused her thrcugh *spite.” | Shc said her huslband had fuendly ac- with Wil w19 eve- |cuscd her of being James 1t Curcio, a hootlegger often cailed at ther home and (had visited them thic previous | ni urcio admitted to the police terday that he hal called eardslce home ‘Wecresday and after Beardsle: Lad borrow a dollar from him, they had sevzral drinks together. tle denied any in- tinacy with Mrs. Beardslee and was uct held. The Beardslces were married thres years ago, shortly after he inherited $100,000. He was 48 ycars old a° trat time and had lived a rather se- cluded life. His wife was a former waitress and telephone operator. yeo- at the {REAL ESTATE SUIT JUDGMENT Judge E. M. Ycomans in superior | court has given julgment for the { plaintiff in the actios of Samuc! 1@ Edward Greenstein, Ida Berkowits and Nettle Rotstein against Sebas- |tiano and Santi Mazzotta of High street, which was Yard Tuesday. The action was to compe] the de- fendants to carry out an agreement to exchange property in Southington { for property o fthe plaintiffs at 186 {Elm street, this city. Attorney W. M. Greenstein was counsel for the plaintiffs and Attorney Cyrll F. Gaffney was counsel for the de- fedants. SAYS WIFE NEGLECTS HOME Stanley Kron of 17 Oak street complained last night to Officer Giuseppe Gigliotti that Mrs. Kron came home intoxicated and is neg- lectful of their six children, the | youngest being only five weeks old. {Officer Gigliotti and Officer James McCue found evidence of neglect in Ithe house. and Kron told them he cannot stop Lis wife from drinking and carousing READ HERAID CLASS) FOR BEST RESULTS

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