New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 22, 1923, Page 9

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e Speaking of Sports of the seasen Waterbury Peter the howling with the team: Harper Btokes Coughlin | son and Temple.. The locals: Veote, | Mers, Battier, Nhveum, Frisk and | Howard, No admission will be eharg ed elassie The State Bowling leugue closes | ¥riday night. Tonight Meriden howis the Travelers and two or three games will put the Sllver ity hoys ahead of & z New Hritain Bowling fans will he given a tre n’ at the Casino alleys this evening | The youngster whe fell inta the bathtub was the originator of the pool bawl, On Friday night the Charter Oaks come here to play the final mateh of the season, If the Travelers take all their remalning games from the M iden outAt and the Oaks again trounce Last night the New WRritui leaguers were humbled not thriee by the Charter Oak ford, hut " will win the cup, Jack Kearns says that a f(ight be. tween Harry Wills and Dempsey on Labor Day are “practically” decided, That “If" however looms up rather important, Johnny Dundee is to risk his junior Hghtweight crown on May 30 when he staeks up against Jack Bernstein in New York for 14 rounds, Onece again the color line has heen erased, But that “practically’ is mighty significant, Danny MeMahon of Meriden is to drop In on the New York boxing com- mission in a couple of days and de. posit $2,600 on behalf of Kid Kaplan for # bout with the winner of the Criqui-Kilbane bout, send 84 athletes to the the 1%, Yale will Intercolleglate track meet a of P, this Friday and Saturday, Philadelphia has gone baseball mad s again, The American leag cellnr champs are now “the berries’” with the home town folks Meoriden fight fans now are talking about a speeinl trailn to New York to the Kalbane-Criqui hont {f their {do! s given a place in the semi-finals, - | Old Tyrus Cobb was there with the | wallop yesterday, He hit Rommel's " only pitch for a single, winning the game, 1e hoxing lid has heen elamped on fairly tight in Chicago, Only army, navy or national guard units are o granted leenses now, At the same time, the Yanks con- tinued their winning streak, shutting out the White Sox. The Cubs have hurled down the Hartford has been one of the cities| Positive about it “Put up, or shut up,” named by the national tennis associa- | is the sense of thelr ultimatum, $ion to atd in the elimination tourna.| The Senators A, C. won thelr frth e game Sunday at 8t Mary's field when Ithey defeated the Sluggers -4, e 001 boys hi vul:v*l@ The High school boys have a hard| o400 6 jnsure publication of time trying to play that Meriden game. Already two games have heen |8pOrt ftems on the sports page, infor- cancelled because of one J. Pluvius, | Mation must be at the Herald office Iby 9:30 a. m. Also, only the briefest Reports have it that Lee Meadows, the famed Philly twirler, may vet be seen in a Giant uniform. are more than a day old. Ho hustle along boye and {f want vour games “written up," vour storfes in for the issue of very next day. you Jim Corbett, once heavyweight | get ehamp, has got the baseball bug. He's reported as angling for a zood slice of the stock of the Cincinnati Reds. The Rangers hate a few open dates Tomorrow evenimyg at 8 o'clock the |for games and would like to hear All-Stars of Waterbury will be at lhe)(rom all fast teams in the city. Ad- Casino alleys for the match game— |dress R. Abrahamson, 179 Jubilee for their wearing qualities style and soasy ASHLEY-BABCOCK CO. “MY-OWN" Makes the dirtiest hands clean—keeps the most tender skin soft and smooth. Smeary, grimy hands are now unnecessary. The soft, smooth, creamy lather of MIONE removes every particle of dirt—removes it from under the nails, out of the pores, away from every line—quickly and casily. MIONE makes hands softer, smoother, fresher than you've ever had them before. Real>—Justtry it! All druggists, grocers and dealers have MIONE in convenient ten-cent tins. MIONE MANUFACTURING Co. COLLINGDALE, PA. New Britaln, then the Hartford buneh | gauntlet to the Willows and are quite | mention will be glven to items that| NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY All members practice this street, or Phone 26723 urged to report for evening The Nutmeg A, €, of New Haven has matehed Frankle Genaro of New York, American fiywelght champion, for a 12 vound contest with Terry Martin of Providence at the new open (air Nutmeg stadium on June 1§, it was announced by Matehmaker An- theny Paelilie of the Nutmeg elub last night Here's a chance for the loeal dope- | sters 1o fAgure the comparative ! strength of the baseball teams of the two local sohools namely the High | schoeol and the Trade school, Middie- town High recently defeated Routl Manchester 1igh 6.5, New Rritain High defeated Fouth Manehester 7.4, and New Rritain Trade defeated Mid dletown High 7.2, Take your cholec [ Tn Andeen and Kania the local traders have two pltehers who would [ fit mieely with any “Prep” school In [the country, | tuterest in athleties at the local Trade sehool has reached the high- est point ever, A good basketnall seanor, &nd prospects for an o cep tlonally good baseball wseason hove ‘-lrn.‘ much to arouse school epirit, | AMERICAN LEAGUE | | (Continued From Preceding Page). Thurston, o 3 0 aElsh w1 L % 0 *Ratted for Johnson in &th. xBatted for Thurston in $th. ChICRgo cvvees vesns 00 New York . TR 7 000 0000 010 030 011~ Two base hits, olling, Mostil; sacrifice, Hoyt; double p Johnson to | Colline to Shealy; Pipp to Beott to Pipp; I1oft on hawes, New York 12, Chicago 11; | base on bails, off Thurston 4, off Hoyt 3;| struck ont, by Thurston 3, by Hoyt 3; um- pires, Conmolly and Ormshy; time, 2:05, | Senators 3, Browns 2. 8t. Louis, Mo.,, May 22,—Overcom-| ing an carly lead, Washington won| | the second gamo of the series with, &t Louls yesterday, 3 to 2. Wasnington. " = wemananand Rluege, | varrls, 2 | Rice, rt. . {Judge, 1h, W , I, e | Warmot | - | 2| . 0 0t 0 Tobin, 1 Gerber, se, Jarohson, Willinins, MeManu; Collins, « Robertson, b, . | Ezzen, ab. | 8chitebner, 1b, Vangilder, p. *Severeid ..... i, 0 0 0 [ 0 0 0 20 2 *Batted for Robertson in Washington ..... §t. Louls .. Two base hits, Jac rung, Vangilder; stolen bas Ghar- rity; sacrifives, Evans, G double plays, Bluege and Judge; Peckinpaugh, Hareis and Judge; Schielbner and MeMan- us; Kvans and Gharrity; left on bases, | Wasnington o, ouls 10; base on balls, oft Warmouth §, off Vangilder §; struck out, | by Warmouth 3, by Vangllder 8; wild piteh, Vangilder; ‘umpires, Evans and Holmes; time, 5 §th, 010 020 L 020 000 Tobin; Tobin, 0003 0003 home PLAYERS ARE CHASED | cobb Suspends Fraucis and Fines Him $300—~Donie of | Washington Team Also Suspended. Bush and Ruel | Detroit, May 22—Ray Irancis, | pitcher for the Detroit Americans has been fined $800 and suspended in- definitely for failure to observe train- ing rules, Manager Cobb announced | last night. Franeis was traded to De- | troit by Washington 1ast winter. St, Louis, May 22.--Donic Bush, manager of the Washington Ameri- can has been suspended indefinitely as the result of an argument with Um- pire Holmes in the game here Sun- day it was announced today. However he directed his team (o a § to 2 vie- tory over the Browns from the grand- stand yesterday. Catcher Rual was suspended with Bush. WRESTLERS T0 GRAPPLE | | Strangler Lewis and Old Mau Zbyszko Out of Mect Tonight—RBest I'wo | Three Will Decide, Minneapolis, May 24.—Ed “Strang- ler” Lewis, woild's heavywoight wrest- ling champion and Stanisiaus Zbyszko | trom whom he won the titi» will meet | |here tonight. The best two out of |three falls will decide except in the event there is no fall within 99 min- utes when one fall will decide. 1f at |the end of three hours neither man has been thrown i{he .«!.rmntn|-x~“ money will be refunded, e Home Made Family || Tonic For Spring || — ! The best Spring medicine you cap take to drive out the Winter impuri- | ties and put your liver and bowels in perfect condition costs but a trifle and can be brewed at home just llke ordinary tea. CELERY KING | is purely vegetable. Brew a family | supply tonight-—give the children a |eup. It's a gentle laxativi —-good for | sick headache, bad bresth and sallow, | pimply skin. 29 % 10 What’s Wrong With the Weather? Nothing, So D_o*n 't Worry About it By Harey B, Hunt NEA Service Writey well spotted that the |eld sun was pretty year. Therefore, many have said cold summer This sunspot W Washington, May 22.—Nemarkahle weather, thia spring, isn't 11* Very unusual! Like to know what's caus ear we are in a intmum. If we say the sun : spot maximum in 1816 caused the Ing 17 Well—- |eald of that year, and now say this “The temperature of the year 1 is due to a sunspot mini ponde upon the heat we receive from |ymym, wo are attributing exactly the the sun,” says Dr, Charles Greeley Ab: |gme repyit to exactly opposite eauses. bot, assistant secratary of the Bmith Long-Distance Forecasts | "My advice to the public—partieu larly to farmers and others whose activities are direetly affected hy the |weather-—is, don’t worry The sun 1sn't going to grow cald on us right away Neither are its spots or lack of spots likely to affect us seriously “Is It to be a hot or cold summer, I asked “No one knows, and there is no way 10 1611, Dr, Marvin replied “Rut,” T asked, “ean't you give definite forceast?" “Such a foreeast Is impossihle” hie {sald, *“There is positively no basis on earth de . ' n | | DR, CHAS. MARVIN Wgfitfl/ the i3 d ey weather/ sonian Institution and director of the Astrophysical observatory. “For several years the sun's heat had not fluctuated much until No- vember, 1921, when the monthly val- es began to decrease. By October, 1923, the values reached a level three per cent lower than before the de-| crease commenced. Since then they | have continued on this low level. | Since the earth's temperature, rainfall | and other phenomena depend upon the sun's heat, one would be apt to be reflected in the weather condi-| tions,"” ABBOT which to make long-distance forecasts, covering a year or even a season. It can't be done."” The cause of the cold weather? | Well, as T sum up the conversation, ohservations. “Is the sun cooling off? |eliminating the variation in solar ra- |1s that responsible for this freak |diation and the effect of sunspots and weather’ such, the only answer that seems to Marvin grinned and came back with |remain, as Dr. Marvin said, is: a question of his own: “The weather depends on “Is the weather due to the apparent |weather!" variation in solar radiation, or is the | A seeming variation in solar radiation | ) ] > due to the weathert” Further Inquiry Today ! “You tell me: youre the weather| , In Ward-Peters Slaying man,” I continued. | New York, May 22.—The scene of “Well,” Marvin continued, drawing |the state investigation of the slaying from his desk a bunch of intricate|of Clarence J. Peters of Haverhill, graphs and charts, “I am not yet| Mass, by Walter 8, Ward, shifted to- ready to accept the theory of varia- | day when Deputy Attorney General fion in solar radiation as a basls for Chambers was to question more wit- weather forccasting. Measuring the |nesses, Negro employes of a New sun's heat is a very difficult task, | York apartment house testified yes- Many atmospheric conditions, clouds, | terday at Albany that Ward lived dust, etc., tend to disturh the accu- | there three months without his family vacy of the measurements. But look [and that he constantly received at these charts—running back over |Visits and telephone calls from many years. They indicate that as| Women. A titian halred woman was the methods for measuring solar |the most regular caller, witnesses said. radiation have improved, and as bet. | The attorney general secks further ter equipment and hetter stations for knowledge regarding this woman, as observation have heen obtained, the he belleves she may throw light on the apparent varlability of the sun's heat | 8la¥ing. | has diminished. | aa That might indicate that the varia- | Captain Supposed Lost tion rm‘fndml was not due to any| With Shlp Found le‘ng change in the heat of the sun ftself, | ds 2 rbrtrs e 1t o, ertory in medsurement and to | 8t John, N, B, MAy S8 th B the influences of atmospheric condi- | SOVErY that Captain John Burns, said Hna Aactink t1ie! Intensity Sof. tha| b0 bave been-in-command OF L8 ill- y e fated schooner F. I5. Armstrong, lost with all hands on a voyage to the rays as they reach the carth's surface. Tffect of Eruption o Wy ¥ e West Indies five years ago is living at Following the eruption of Kataml| g, \q"Cove, N. §., has knocked a hole In the Aleutian Islands a few years| =00 070 0 00T oot sea muystery, ago, the variation in apparent nmnr‘sl"wy fon as to the “Armstrong" radiation was so great that readings | (PCEUEE S0 0T aoating tath n VoW BT o \ | 3 b & 5+ bt finally were discontinued. Voleanie [ [0 0 B 50 (e signed “Burns! dust mounted high Into the air—far| .4 nicked up in St. John harbor. above the level to which any MOISLUTe | yipping men now consider it to have ascends. Observations taken by the |’ “@mithsonian institution in Algerin showed the presence of the voleanic dust even there—half way round the carth. This volcanic dust sometim remaing in the upper atmosphere for two or three ysars, and, of course, is | olement in affecting the passage That Freak Weather “How about it?" I asked Dr. Charles . Marvin, chief of the United States eather hureau, citing Dr. Abbott's the been a hoax. CORNS . Saferelief inoneminute For that painful corn here's safe, speedy relief—Dr. Scholl's Zino- pads. They remove the cause— riction.pressure, and heal the irn- tation. Thus you avoid infection from cutting your corns or using corrostve acids. Thin; antiseptic; waretproof. Sizes' for corns, cal- louses, bunions. Get a box today at your druggist's or shoe dealer’s DrScholl’s Zino-pa Put oneon=the painisgone! “Maybe there is a real and actual variation in the heat of the sun. May- he that is influencing the weather. T'm open minded. RBut T'am eertain {hat a good part of the apparent var. | fation is atmospheric and earthly other words, while a change in radiation may be affecting the we or, I'm quite sure the weather tributes to the seeming change in sol ar radiation!" “Well,” we suggested. “how about | sunspots? Mavhe fhey're to hlame | for the weather, Mavhe they'll give | 18 another vear like 1816, when there were frosts all summe “AR-BR' eald Marvin, ccenting another nnvopuiar bugaboen, “Sunspots! sWell, in 1816 which is known as | the vear without A summer—we weve | in a period of maximum sunspots, The | | ron- apparently weather period of | Federal Reserve Board In Doubt on Cuban Basd; Washington, May 22.~The feden] reserve hoard's advisory counell ape | parently had re togday at its regular quarterly meet. ing as to whether a proper precede would be establishea in permitting the placing of a federal reserve bank agency In Cuba and wasg continuing discussion of the matter, ke plications of the Hoston and Atlanta yeserve banks to estublish agencies in Havana has raised the question which weeupled the attention of the counell at the first day of its meeting yess terday Harding, Taft and Harvey Opponents at Golf Today May Chief Justies hassador Harvey golf conclusions today with 90 Wash- | INELON NEWSPAPErINEN thelr nual spring tournament whieh mark the official opening the HReoek Creek park § inks The presis dent is playing in the last foursome to tee off which inciudes Chief Jus. tiee Taft, Speaker Gillett and Edgar Markham of Bt. Poul, president of the Washingto newspapermen's golf elub, Handieaps have been limited to a 24 point maxi Washingtor 22— Prysident Taft a®! Am- ready to try Harding were in an ¢ o e — . —— 0. e > o— 1 Nights - ing Days Nature's Fairy Playgrounds Varied and easily accessible are the diversions for the summer tourist in the Maritime Provinces, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. Hereonegetsthesalttang ofthesea aswellastheozone of Mountains, Moor and Lake. The climate is ideal. See Ottawa, the Dominion’s capital—Montreal and Quebec with old-world charm, A tour to Newfoundland, Labrador and the Miquelon Island, offers novel experiences. Stop at the Dominion’s Finest Hotels anlGarrK.Wmm -2,Man.; MacDonald, Edmonton,Alt: uw?lrkl.od&.]nmN.» tional Park,Alta.; Minaki Inn,Minaki,Ont.; Chateau Laurier, Ottawa, Ont.; Highland Ina, AlgonquinPark, Ont.; ThePrince Arthur, Pt Arthur, Ont. ; Prince Edward, Brandon, Man, For full information, write Wod. Gilkerson, 1 Washington St.. Boston, Canada W;‘Immu United Stal Mas s Tourists= d Hot Dishes Won’t Mar CARRY A FULL SUPPLY - 0f — JOHNSON’S PASTE, Liquid and Powdered \ If you polish your dining room table occasionally with Johnson's Wax you will have notrouble with hot dishes. The Wax forms a thin, protecting coat over the varnish, similar to the service given by plate glass over a desk or dresser top. Johnson's Liquid Wax is the ideal furniture polish. JOHNSON’S Pasre - Liouid - Powdered POLISHING WAX You can give every room in your home that delightful air of immaculate cleanliness by using Johnson's Polishing Wax occasionally on your furniture, floors, linoleum and wood- work. Johnson's Wax cleans, polishes, preserves and pro- tects—all in one operation. and we Highly Recommend It To the Trade Telephone 359 Headquarters for all Wood Finishing Products The John Boyle Go. — Paint Engineers — The City’s Leading Decorators Made in three forms. Paste —Ligquid and Powdered. § T There is no Substitute for Johnson’s Polishing Wax. For Sale at All Good Stores. 3-5 Franklin Square WEDNESDAY IS TROUSER DAY AT THIS STORE 2000 Pairs of Trousers in Blue, Brown, Grey, Stripes, Serges, Flanne]s Values up to $10.00—Divided in 4 lots . $2.89 $3.89 $4.89 $5.89 A Savings of $2 to $3 on Every Pair NEW YORK SAMPLE STORE 357 Main St., New Britain 135 Main St., Bristol Talk about big values! We have just caused something to “drop” in the trouser line that ought to set e very man that needs a pair of trous- ers to running our way. Bring your odd coat or vest and get a pair to match—it will save you buying a new suit. No matter what your size or your taste may be, we can pleasc you—if not satisfactory we will refund your money. dim Iazz Says— Hit the Trail and Save a ‘Ten Spot.

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