New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 16, 1921, Page 10

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’ — P of the dfpartment of English, nas fessor Spaulding has been miven June, has been graduftéd, but Ea- ' heen olficted professor of English, 1°AvVe of absence. ward Goode, who pitched his tcam | with 7 Professor Frank Lincoln Stevens, assignment o the gradvate | o0 ! to a victory over Holy Cross, was on ol. - Professor Tucker Brooke has appointed bishop museum fellow at | hand Yesterday. Edward Bigelow, ' at Yale sinco 1909, and is rec- Yale university for the next nniver- | ¢abtain of the hockey team, who 1§ a AN zed both in England and In this ity year. Dr. Oskar Baudisch, for- | left-hander, and Edward Hobbs may ‘ountry as one of the foremost 1WWing& nerly of the University of Zurich, | try out as pitchers this season. Shakespearian scholnrs. He 185 A \wug appointed rescarch associate in | 1an Russell of the 1920 second team graduate of the University of West (he university next on the rec- | Will probahly rank high this Spring. ) ot John Watson and Richard Field auc University of Illinois, has been Horace G. Pender. In - addition ' to single games with Yale, Harvard and Princeton, the Green is slated 1o ap- pear twico against Amherst, Brown, ! Weslevan, Columtin, Penn and Ver- Re uesl 0[ Virginia, and a Rhodes scholar who ommendation of the department i took first class honors at Oxford in O L aonraved by the honrd | members of Inst year's treshman | chemistry, £ and the bachelor of letters de- | “]r' ','.,f,,.',;.,‘..“, officers of the Grad- | team who are seeking varsity berths. Education ree in 1907, ilis published Work in- | yage xchool. Dr. Baudisch is a dis- [ George Owen, who has earned his ikespeare Apocryphi,” | (jnrujshed research scholar whe major letter in football-and hockey, rohi “The | Lublications include “The Assimila- | although only in his sophomore year, Works of Christopher Marlowe,” etc. | tjon of Inorganic Nitrogenous Com- | is considered a first-rate pitcher, but b. 16.——The Yale [ He has edited “Much Ado About ' ;ounds by Plants,”” “The Theory of | unless there is dire necessity for his Nothing," and “King Henry VL Part | (glor Lakes,” “Complex Iron Salts,” | presence on the slab, Coach Slattery I, for “The Yale Shakespeare.' et aims to try him out either at first Harold Hibbert, Ph.D, Sc.D., at Professor Charles Foster Kent has . baso or the outfield on account of his 0ld its summer nor- { present assistant professor in the uni- | hoen granted leave of absence for the batting strength and all-around abil- university trom | versity, was promoted to an assoch- | g term of the new university year. | Ity ast 13th. It wiso | #te professorship of anplied chemis- The catchers trying out are Austin 1= : try, and assigned to the graduite | parTERY M . S W | Blair, the New York boy, who han- penstve course for the | )01 and the =hefMeld Sciemific dled the position last year; Carl Still- f® for backward and | uchool Harvard Pltchers and Catchers le- | man, @ member of the hockey team, under the joint | Dean Cross was re-clected dean of = - e and Don Keegan of the 1920 vresh- port to Conch Slattery. e board of educa- | the Graduate school for the regular men. raity | portod ot five years, and Kan-lchi| Cambridge, Mass., F 16.—Nat- — ) hg Babbitt, who holds | Asnkawa was re-elected assistant | cory candidates for the Harvard tewm i I | iREE] S BIG SCHEDULE. neh Literaturo ot | professor of the history ot Japaneso (1 SOFECEER O8I0 UL T GREEN HAS BIG #ty. was appointed | civilization and curator of the Jap- E . r at Yalo for next| anese and Chinesa collections. baseball cage on Soldiers eld and | g oball Team Will Play 29 Gamcs— come to New Haven Mr. Josse B. Davis, of the state | %ere greeted by Coach John Slattery To Make Southern Trip. ook for the purpose | board of education, has been appoint- | and Captain Robert Emmons, Har- ) - tion In romance Ian- | ed to tako charge of Professor Spauld- | vard's solitary weakness the coming Hanover, N. H,. Feb. 16.—Twenty- put the first term ing’s work during the second ha'f of | xeason may bhe in pitching. Winslow | nine games aro included in Dart- lesnor Tucker Brooke, | tho present academic year, when FPro- Felton, who won both Yale games last | mouth’s 14 baseball schedule as meeting Suturday of the state board . Wanted Five Thousand Women Taxpayers TO ATTEND THE NEXT CITY MEETING This is the first time in the history of New Britain, that the women will have the right to vote on the tax rate that is to be adopted to meet the expenses of the City and the women should take an active part in deciding whether the taxpayers are to give the city the rate of 21.7 mills or a lesser rate. In our budget we expect to be able to revise the estimates con- tained in the budget prepared by the board of finance and taxation so as to reduce this rate to at least 18 mills. The City of New Britain would not have these tax difficulties if a certain selected class of taxpayers were assessed on an equal basis with the other taxpayers during the past five years. We can blame no one excepting the New Britain Manufacturers, who by ‘shrewd political manipulation have managed to keep in office certain favored officials, although the political aspect of the City has been changed several times in the past 25 years. If this selected class would only pay one quarter of what they justly owe the City we would not have to go to the City Meetings and make out new budgets. In our budget we will try to eliminate all unnecessary expense and still make adequate provision for the current expenses of the City. The tax difficulties we face may be with us a few years more, but matters will undoubtedly take a turn for the better since the manufacturers have discovered their mistake. The gentlemen in the Common Council should exercise a little more care in voting away the taxpayers’ money on higher salaries or to create new offices, which are not absolutely necessary, to make berths for their friends. We wonder if it was necessary for the Board of Public Works to squander the taxpayers’ money in removing snow and water from the City streets Friday, February 11th? The New Britain Taxpayers sotective Association mont. Penn and (~+u nbia have Leen given the junior prom weck dates, while Bermont will close Dartmouth's schedule at commencement time. The season starts early in April with a buthern trip of eight games. Coach Jeff Tesreau is expected to arrive in Hanover in the middle of Ma to take charge of the practice sions. Practice will be under the direction of Captain Frank Ross until that time. The schedule follows: April 1, University of Virginia at Charlottesville, V 2, Johns Hop- kins at Baltimore; 3, Georgetown at Washington; 5, Maryland Stata at College Park, Md.; 6, U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis: 7, Delaware college at Newark; 8, Swarthmore at Swarthmore, P 9, Lafavette at Easton, Pa.; 29, Amherst at Amherst; 30, Yale at New Haven. May 4, Boston University at Ha over; 6, Brown at Providence; 7, Ha vard at Boston: 11, Norwich at Han- over; 13, Columbia at Hanover; 14, Penn at Hanover; 17, Princeton at Princeton:; 18, Penn at Philadelphia; 19, Rutgers at New Brunswick, N. J 21, Wesleyan at Hanover; 28, Coium- bia at New York; 30, Holy Cross at Worcester. June 2, Springfield at Hanover; 4, Amherst at Hanover: 17, Williams af Williamstown; 18, Vermont at Bur- lington; 20, Vermont at Hanover. SKI JUMPERS SEEK TITLES. e — Many of Best Americans and Canad- ians in International Meet. Montreal, Feb. 16.—Many of tho best American and Canadian ski jumpers will compete in the first open ski-jumping championships to be held here next Saturday by the Canadian Amateur Ski association. The outstanding American entry is John T. Carleton of Dartmouth, a champion long-distance and acrobatic jumper. A team of six jumpers will represent the Fridjof Nansen Ski club of Berlin, N. H. TO RENEW $10,000 STAKE. Hartford. Conn., Feb. 16.—The Charter Oak Stake of $10,000 will be renwed for the 1921 Grand Circuit at Charter Oak park track by vote of the Fair Association, it was announced yesterday. The class as well as other stake events will be announced later. DOBIE TO REMAIN Cornell Football Mentor Signs an Ex- tended Contract - Ithaca, N. Y. Feb. 16.—-All doubts as to whether Gilmour Dobie would remain at Cornell University as head football coach were set at rest today when an announcement was made by Graduate Manager Romeyn Berry that | annodincéd " by “Te¥aaUNS - MEnnier F Doble’s present contract had been-ex-|Europe in - provi@iE-in- . resalatio tended three years, terminating in(to be .presented to. the Pennsylvani March, 1926. At the same time Wil- |legisiature now in session at Harris: liam S. Dodge, captain of the Cornell [burg. The resolution charges cer: eleven, issued a statement announcing [tain steamship companies, as well a the feam’s firm faith in Dobie as a [private and state banks with ques- conch The Cornell Sun, under- |[tionable transfer of funds. gradute newspaper, warmly endorsed ——— the act of the football committee. McGOWAN BEATS LAMY. TR i = ¢ Saranac Lake, N. Y., Feb. 16.—Ew WANTRTORKNOWSWHERE erett McGowan of St. Paul won two Mo IA WENT. |, of three of his match races wit Philadelphia, I'eb. 16.—Legislative | Bamund Lamy of Saranac Lake whog investigation to determine what has |,¢ peat the Saranac fiyer in the 228 become of thousands of dollars sent | yard and the one mile. Lamy got the by Philadelphians to relatives in Rus- [ decision in the three-quarter mile, sta and other war torn countries of |event. : The Foot Relief | Man Is Coming | Tomorrow @Y You will soon have the opportunity to get complete rclief from painful callouses, unsightly run-over heels, weak or broken arches and other foot troubles. A noted foot ex- pert from Boston, an expert in diagnosing and reliev.mg fo_ot trouble scientifically, positively and permanently, will be;in our store on Feb. 17th to 19th Inclusive LYNCO ' CUSHIONED FOOT APPLIANCES , All pains stop at once whfen il yncol e " foot a_p]:linneu roperly fitted by the expert foot relief man, go into your rl\oep:. You can walk or dance or work in perfect mfgfl. No more tired, aching feet for you. Come, let the visiting cxpert remove the cause of your foot trouble. No for examination and diagnosis. You do not need to remove your stockings. We invite you to come and talk to the ing expert on the above date at Furniture Prices HAVE REACHED ROCK BOTTOM —AT— C. C. FULLER COMPANY’S | STORE 40—56 FORD STREET, HARTFORD. During the balance of this month, while the February Sale is in progress, all purchases may be made on the Six Months Deferred Payment Plan With Full Sale Reductions. Many Bargains in Odd Pieces. Drop in and inspect them.

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