New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 5, 1924, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, officiate. Good Friday ,services will |men were gathering in large numbers " | be held at the First Baptist church, jon the wooded slopes of mountaing . SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1924. Rev. Dr. Georfe W. C. Hill will |surrounding the camp. 0 OBSERVE HOLY WEEK services | —_— JUDGE WEBB BETTER . | . : New Haven, April 5.—Judge James Kentucky Miners Consider |, N7 [1aweh, Apci bodudee Jan 4 Arbitration Suggestions |nis Hamden home, was holding his Pineville, Ky., April 5,—An invita. |OWn this morning, members of He had a good nigh Churches to hold union every evening but Saturday of week before Easter. The Protestant e¢hurches will ob- serve Holy Week with the following| “Wop" Manoleum, whe won tionable decision from Tracey .l‘?rl:;u\: son in Meriden on Thursday night, has been re-matchéd with the North- ford farmer boy and the two will have their third setto on April 14 in Fittsfield, This will go 10 roynds, In justice to the “Wop,” who went good against Ferguson for nine rounds, it might be explained that Thursday vight's fight was his first 12 round affair and the second that | he mixed it up in for more than eight rounds, He should have gained considerable experience and now know better how to plan his long distance campaigns, i | While on the subject of Thursday | night's bout 1t is interesting to no". in pussing, that while no sports writ- er has tried to take a bit of credif fram the Wop, the opinion is practi- cally unanimous that Ferguson, by his slashing work in the fina! rounds, was entitled to the decision. ¥or instance, the Meriden Record, the Hartford Courant, the New Haven | Journai-Courier, the Waterbury Re- publican, the Hartford Times New Haven Register 21l say that Tra- | cey earned the decision whigh Con- way gave to the Wop. Anant Manoleum, the Meriden Ree- ord mports writer says: “Though it | looked as if Yerguson won the deci- | #on thers is no occasion to helime’ that dark-haired youth from the nar- row streets of Boston, Wop Manoleum, The Wop came into the enemy’s ter- ritory and put up a fight that drew for him many friends, He was faster on hie feet than Ferguson and start- ed right away to pile up his points, In | addition he possessed a left hand that [ hurt when it landed properly. Barry, | in a letter a few days ago, called Manoleum a good fighter and he did | not underestimate his ability.” | | The state semi-pro league w'(uua-} ters meet this afternoon to start work | on a schedule and to select umpires. | | It is planned to open the league | scason May 14 with 50 games for the aix-club eircuit and a double-umplire system, TIn the playing of the games it has been practically decided on Sat. vrdays, Sundays and holldayse Bartley Madden and Harry Wills matched to fight in New York on | May 13, Grorge Wood, a star outfelder with | the Philadelphia Nationals from 1886 | to 1890, died yesterday at the age of | 66 years, Pittsburgh ldst night won the na- | tional :-m:w:vr hockey Mtle by defeats | ing Boston ¢ to 1, A | The Hartford Dixies last night trim- | wed Unionville 44 to 30, i Mnck Renault, the Canadian heavy- | wotght, 48 offered two fights in Lons don by Major Wilkon, the well known fight promoter of that country, One of them will be with Joe Goddard, tie lingitsi heavyweight, and the oth. | er with Arthur Townde, the English battler, in 20 round bouts at Albert | Hall in London. | Ad Stone, Paterson light heavy- | weight, scored a technical knockout | aver Tem RRoper, Chicago, in the eleve enth round of a scheduled 12-round Lout Thursday night s Paterson, per's seconds threw water on the Chi- cago battlcr as he was taking a count, Al the referee disqualified him, Stone weighed 176 apd Roper 183, Tommy Gibbons, 8. Paul challenger of Jack Dempsey, knoeked out Jack McFapland of Detroit in the second roumd of a scheduled eight-round bout | Thursday night. Bobby Garciasof Camp Holabird, Md., featherweight champion of the United States army, successfully de- tended his title Thureday night in the army championship tournament by knocking out Joe Alvarez of the 34th fotantry in the second round of a scheduled ten-round bout. Tiyan got the decision over in ten Paddy Freddy Lux of MeKeesport y night. WO SAILORS LOST Oloncester, Mage, April b.=Tos of two members of the erew of the sohosper Lilectric 1Magh, owned in Newfoundiand was reported whén the | vessol arrived here today with a cargo of Malt fish. The men were washed cverboard during a storm off Shel- tuepe, N. 8, on March 27 Two new and cthylens ogthesia without fort and wih Special Harness Sale for Ten Days 115-tmh Trace Double Neok Yoke Team Harncss—set $60 $65 $70 1%-mch Trace Double Neck Yuke Team Farmess. $69.75 Single 1arm Hamess can be “$30 $32.50 $35. C. H BRAZEL 1148 MAIN ST. Nartford. Conn. Harness and Horse Goods are gaid to induce an- eliminary discom- recovery afte A new all-American helicopter is nearing completion. It is the invention' of Henry A. Although great secrecy surrounds it in army service circles, it is | Berliner of Washington, D. C. believed to surpass anything of its kind ever built. | types has not been encountered in the new plane at all, it is said. ana | Lieut. Harold R. Harris of MeCook Field, Dayton, at College Park, near here, under Berliner's Their result has not been made public. But as yet none has been successful in developing supervisi service is endeavoring to produce a helicopter. on. Virtually a machine that could go any great distance. I Crashing The Pins e | Histellinc FRATERNITY ALLEYS Colling Terks Witz Clark Melntyre epp ebm Deahr Joy Rradiey Thompsen Storer Spanish War Vets, Maxw ell L Moody Tl Harnes . strickland Frost Kagan Androwe 1 Spanish War Vet 58 ang 4 4 Hariford 1 ROGLRS ANLEYS SPECIAL K & Massey Tobin Kelley Grise . Maynard o White Tack MeCue Gurein teeks Murphy MeCna Mungon Pagan Tajiar Tolosky Stawhly Tane £l Wartnes Davis ragan Unrlean ol MATCHES Toremen, 9% s Aberthaw Co . ) £ 0 1 5 283 07 K. & F. Foremen. L Aberthaw ©8, Got i W2 s 1 i Corbin Seren. " Lnivereal, ' 101 5o New Britain s 1 $ewe 18 I8 knee injury received in football dars [y 4. g0 st Ing ilTlv CORBIN SCREW FOREVEN LEAGLE Set Serens, |Yia Peuny Wood Serew, . Berg Holt Erickson LA " Baldwin Da . Dummy Drive Screw, 1 101 M 336 961 IMcGlone Injured, Is Out Of Harvard’s Lineup April d=Joe luled to 'start Harvard againdt reopened a Cambridge, Mass 1 MeGlone, who wi second bas ston University for today, practice here yester The tiold was heavy and one of MeGlone's spiked shoes caught in the mud and he fell to the ground, 1le has ve little chance to play on the spein recoss trip of the-team, which starts April 14, Harvard meets the Boston team on the freshimen diamond tod s the v field is unfit for play, Philip Spalding or K n both , will piteh, and Dolph Cheek cateh. Jack Hammond will take Me- Glone's place at seeond bate, There we United States 5 more 1,00 oolen mills, with $0,000 looms and more than 4,000,000 “u«mc spindies, the 1 har Fore! Jeer place 1o tee oft from, but Arthur J. Rank, son-in-law of ‘Lord Marst of FEngland s it at s Monte Carlo. Kind of rocky The oscillation so pronounced. in previous : WILL DIG DEEPER T0 . - HUNT FOR OLD TIMERS terans, Tests have been conducted by every nation that has its own Scientists Who Think Skeletons Found | Are 25,000 Years Ol Search For More, Angeles, April 5.—Wl eiterated their belief that the » hnman skeletons uncarthed near . date back to the i 3 years ago, supervis s county have finance further excavations which it is wroped will reveal relies of the race t roamed these shoves in glacial | sei- to hecome available immediately to the Los Angeles mu- seum of history, seirnce and art, Dr, W. A, Bryaun, director of the museum, | xpiained that excavations were made {not only in the immediate vieinity of the original discovery but iw other places also, | “We intend to dig below the bed of | micaccous elay in which the petrified were imbedded, in the belief that we may discover the gravel bed i which the elay probubly accumus said, *“That would aid in mining the nature of the forma- tlon where the bones come to light | henee wonld aid in estimating ir agproximate | In the light of po e eonnection | Letween sonthern California’s earliest linhabitants and the Cro-Magnon men Burope, scicntists are eager to re- | sume the excatations in the belief | thet implements, Weapons or orna- ments may be unearthed and link the The money is hones det | S—n;psllots of a Man Reading a SPLENDID POSITION | For the right girl, 20-30 years of age. State salary. Refer- 'ences must be definite, bearing | linvestigation. | Must be available at once. (ADDRESS BOX 1 HERALD) - “Helped My Boy” —a Mother Writes “Our eldest son, aged eleven. was troubled with persistent constipa- tion until we began giving him Dr.TruesElixir A very few doses righted him. His bowels became active and in a short time Robert became regular and his general health improved.”"—Mrs. O. A. Close, Waltham, Mass. Only one of many tributes to Dr. True's Elixir, The True Family Laxative and worm expeller. Made of pure herbs, pleasant to the taste and effective in correcting constipation in old and young. Large sized family bottle $1.20; other sizes 60c and 40c. Successfully used for over 13 years Ut £95 1Ll TAME & AN FOoR FARLS, FAMNCE. TONIGHT AND STRT BUNING Y u LOT™ FAONDAH - DAICONIT- | GO007 THEREL HOENT ) | GOT A ST 1D LieHT " OGARETTE. I&‘.‘ i | ." ',._ *al 19 A BEAUTIFUL COUNT, BUT THEREY HOT PWKH CHANCE. OF MAKING FALES ‘_;:“OAT voted $5,000 1o | serviees: church. W Monday, Apirl 14, Rev. G. | H, Schneck will preach at services to Ibe held at the Trinity Methodist Tuesday, South Congregational church, lliam Ross will preach. ay, services at the Swedish Bethany | ehurch at which Rev. {will preach. Thursday, a union com- | munion service will be held at the First Church of Christ, Ilev. G. J.|and wounding &nother. the Rev. Wednes- services at John L. Davis tion from Governor William J. Fields |family said. h to submit their diiferences to arbitra- |and seemed to be just a little better tion was before leaders of opposing |than yesterday. forces in the labor trouble mining camp of the Liberty Coal and | Coke Co., on straight Creek today. at- the New Machine Gun Washington — The Lewis machine The tense situation developed at the | gun, famous during the war, is being camp Thursday after riflemen hidden | eclipsed by the new model Browning, on a mountainside fired on non-union | which weighs less than 15 pounds, employes of the company, killing one | can be fired from the shoulder or the Reports were | hip, and fires 20 cartridges in less Pihl and Rev. Henry W. Maier “'illjcurront here last night that armed ’than two and one-half seconds. A Sport Car—a Six—*109§ Until you see it, you cannot ade- quatelypicture the distinctive beauty nor fully appreciate the mechanical goodness of this five-passenger Sport Touring. And the gratifying fact is that both its appearance and per- fermance—endure! 1ts finish —a striking Oakland Blue— cannot fade nor check because it is an entirely new substance—Duco. The Oakland engine and chassis, because of their correct design and advanced construction, are ideal for a real spost car because they assure snappy getaway, as well as sustained high speeds. And how necessary and desirable, in a fast Sport Car such as this, are Oakland’s safe and practical four- wheel brakes—and its large steering wheel on which are mounted the driving controls. Then, too, its equipment includes evervthingthatinsurescompleteness and full value. There is genuine satisfaction in own. ing a car as distinctive and able as this. Be sure to drive it before you buy any car this spring. A. G. HAWKER 52-54 Elm St. Roadster . . 995 Sport Roadster . 1095 Business Coupe 1195 C Maga BUL I™ ANYRODV'S il AFTER wOU W THET LIEHT, PLEASGE. WELL, | 9HOULD TN 50 — Coupe for Four 81345 Sedan . . . 1445 Enclowres—Touring dater $40. All b. factery i -DUCTOFCENERALN‘_ Ty HL UTTERS A THROATY GROWL HURLS M 75 MY MATH, &A\NT IT? 8 STRATIONS LOOK. RETTY G&OOD AND ME GUESSES . TAKE A CHANCE ONTT zine gt;ry By Gluyas Williams

Other pages from this issue: