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aeteentaItIINIItItIs st et s e sasseneey g Speaking of Sports i E e e e One for the Dixies, The popular “Hartford quintet last night took the first game in the state and Now Eng. land championship basketball pl from the Atlas of New Haven 23 to 20, . Tomorrow night the the Winsted Goldenrods, The Ambherst-Princeton game will be played at April 18, Atlas tackle baseball Springfield @ james Flaherty, a Hartford hoy, is one of the 125 candidates who ported yesterday for Rockne's Notre | Dame 1924 foothall Abrying out for fullback, Two homers ‘by aided the Yanks in defeating the Brookiyn club 20 to 12, Ten runs were scored in the ninth inning. team, He is Ruth yesterday gained undisput; lead in the chess tourney. $ Jim Jefir former heavyweig Fhampion of the world, is nov fight manag Jeff has taken one Richards, a heavyweight his wing and intends to de- velop Tim, Jeff insists the new-comer {i:¢ the stuff, W A nation-wiie lottery on the fucky Derby, to be run May 2""!" to light, 0 cents on any Kon- 17, has Tickets are selifag at combination of three X You happen to draw. You are 1010 $71,435 will be divided into 1 601 prizes, You are not fold WHERE BOU CAN COLLECT if you It you gre tired of buying oil fall for this one, however, ank Hunter, Wimbledon finalist, | and fifth ranking in the national ten i list, hus moved from New b Beckley, West Vieginia, where his purchased a newspaper. Hunter intonds to edit the paper himseli, but Wil continue in competive tennis, 3 Tris Speaker ang for the rirst time @nrse other ger was in 1 champion battle, losing by a dec you'l call it Speaker, “He holes in a uine-hole 1 suspeet was taking at that.” bhy Jones met in an Atlants golf a I rm and an interesting ut margin, 1 decent,” e rare suppose mented three com beat e ateh, end thing casy only he ‘HERMAN IS WORKING HARD FOR 125 BOUT Continued I'om Preceding P'age) Herman is on the Jist 3 vdod bo New York and heennce of this, he 1#0 under sugpengion hore, E period will run out two und then in ors in is lie suspenston within a will begin an 10, The “Herald” wiil turns on the fight 1 will earry @ compleic sattle baliun CHIROPRACTOR GUILTY month or he actives season this s have enrly mght aceount of fric of iduy for local s biattic New York Jury Finds Him Guilty of Man<"anghter Put Has Recommend - ¢ v Leniency, New York, April 9.~ Medical circles | today in the vaerdict | Suprome Conrt Jus. Hagarty which, after half s ueliberation, found ¥ t Meyer, a Brooklyn guilty of manslanghter in with the death Degemdy yeursold Caroline Germuth he jury found Meyer v guilty | of culpable negligence, bt 1 | mended merey, He be sentenced | A Monday Y Prosecution cssey 1ostificd although the child was suffering from | Aiphtheria from which she Jater died, | athe chiropractor did not call in medi- cal aid and that tardy adminietration | of anti-toxin contributed to the child's | death, In his own dcfons whon he was called ‘o child, he did not know sha had diph- theria. He said ha found s 1 of | her vertebras were out of order and | Sthat he made a of adjus- ments which in his opinion were nee- | camary, | ro interested jnry before an G, racto pr " | 1" ehir conn % 0 ion | vixe us wits . Meyer said that attend the number T | MANAGER | ® LARRY DOYIE ¥ Glens Falls, N. Y., April 9.—Larry Doyle, ex-captain of the New York Giants yesterday sien-d a contract to | manage the Glens !"ulis baseball team | € for the second successive season. { Great Britain has 580,000 hroadeast | ‘mrnrrn compared with only 30,000 a | ear ago. | Special Harness Sale for Ten Days 115-inch Trace Double Neck Yoke Team Harnegs—Set $60 $65 $70 1%;-inch Trace Double Nedk Yoke Team Harmess, $69.75 «x Single Farm Harness can be used double. $30 $32.50 $35 C. H. BRAZEL 1148 MAIN ST.. Hartford, Conn. Harness and Horse Goods NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 1924, an Enters Drug Store To Clerk—“Say what's good to take the sting | out after shaving?” Clerk—“The best way is et s not to be stung before .al\nxszjl?.rd;i\ll‘flrbx: v shaving, Buy Gem Bades.” Another Man ‘Happy! Marvelous New GEM Double-Life Blades Use GEM Safety Razors INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE North & Judd. son 5 108 100 Juseplison el Kenney Macon, Ga., April 9.— | Boston (N) | Washington (A) | Batteries—Bary Smith, 'O'Neil; and Ruel, 9 451 Stanley Rule. | Kansas City, Mo., April §.- Pittsburgh (N) .. Kansas City (AA) . Batteries—Kremer hupp and McCarthy. and Gooch; Memphis, Tenn., April 9. 1 { Boston (A) N 1 Memphis, (SA) et 1 (10 innings—darkie Batterles—Peary, Ruffing, Howe and Heving; Rogers, Merz and | Yaryan, Patrus urner Ross, 5 | Crashing The Pins i i FRATERNITY ALLEYS OWS LEAGUE Comstock, H St Louis (A) . 11 Fort Worth (T) . . . 4 10 1 Batteries—Wingard, Kolp and Col- lins; Wachtel, Cantrell and Bischoit, | | Fort Worth, Texas, April 9.- oDnD 1Y | Leupold Wells Low Kuoxville, Tenn., April 9.— neH 19 York (A) .. v (N) S e Peanoct, Pippgrass, Ol Schang, Hofm Grimes, Dickerman, 8 and 1 Tulsa, Okla, April 9.— Chicego (N) A TR ] Tulsa (W) .. Cisanyl A0S Batterice—Dusi, Blake and Mart nett, Churry; Wiltsie, Black, Stricky, Willlams and Crisby, Ca § e - “a 4 Tanders, Phenis, or . .. B0 Yos Tl “ Philadeiphia Philadeiphia fetterios— Romme il 8 1bor, Couch und Fie nn., (A Ny Bry wnd H Wilson, nline, Nashville, April 9.— n oK ANY ) (N . . ¥ W [H3 Andrer, 105 LI Stanley 18 14 2 Mas Sehalk, New Y Chicago Batteric nard and Sayder; Robertson Connelly, Crouse, itson, and TURKESTAN REVOLTING o SOUTH ENDS, . 103 tham 1" May 1 ", 5 Mise o ffman Py Man Enraged Over Anti-Religlous Pro- paganda and Led 15" Czavist, COMMERCIAL ALLEYS R R CYTIZENS, Ldons. 4 1 London, April Furkestan and sunding districts have revolts ol sgainst Bolshevist rale, according to the Laliian Teiegranh Agency, as uoted by the"aily Mail's Riga cor- respondent The remoltin, e reported to have captured party of Ferghana and to be ecity of K a The revolt 1ed Crarist offlcers, the p troops are mostly funatical Moham- K. medans and the rebellion {8 partly due the anti-religious propaganda shevists, the Ageney dispatch % Lhe soviet is said to be rush. Turkestan quotes a Caswell Leupold the sur o troops and populace the Provines of thireatening the ie by Inseph Uhimon Havana, April 9 mers at Pla ROGERS ALLE ribs and bits ¢ through ten feet of [all that federate blockade Laden with cotton port in 1863 the make Havana, but SPRCIAL MATCR Roger's Sash & Door Co, te 15 G | forces to Mail correspondent her of 1he soviet logation in 1 ing that 12 influence from WoR respons or the revolt runner LA, . DeMonts Leon Pedemont Blanche ton amat-ur has built a minfatnre crydal set small enough to place within a single radio headphone, | Carison He'll Flirt With | beached her rather than Maple : 9| and escaped into the interior, Death Again! ~ Bobby Leach is going over Niagara Falls again—this time in a huge rubber ball. being construeted for him now. In 1911 he went over over in a steel barrel. in this picture. from the upper steel arch bridge into the turbulent waters 200 feet below. OH 20y~ NOW FOR B DAY 1) || OFF 70 Loow 45 BURG OvER HENY B0 THYE. A ADE. ON ONE OF AMESE. DINKY TAOLLEY (PR 7 3 0 »2 | BONES OF A BLOCKADE RUNNER | ~Few of the swim. i e Marianno, Havana's | popular beach, know that the gaunt rusted iron they sce CAT waler are remain of the famous Con- Blanche. from a southern tried when the cordon | of Union warships closed in her crew surrender It’s here with him | He plans to do the stunt in June, And beforehand he'll make parachute jumps | | ' | animous approval.in the face of pub- \lic opinion shaken by so many pas- | 30 i | |sionate controversics and g0 many | | ! 94 GREAT-RELIEF T0 FINISH, SAYS DAWEY M. Barthou Pays Tribate to Ex- perts’ Thoroighness | conflicting Interests, but none can dise | |pute the techn®al value and moral | |authority of such important atudies | to which disinterested men; urged by | ino other desire than that of insuring peace through just observance of | {treaties, have with unshaken impar- | tiality given the whole of their perience, competence and devotion.” | . | Barthou Pays Tribite, CInn o mon | M. Barthou paid trbute to the ex- perts’ thoroughness and self-sacrifice have the and then said: “Nobody will be surprised if T pay snap of a | espectal homage to the American ex- crisp perts who have come from so far and winter day whose collaboration is an event whose | Look for the unusual importan while understood red by all, is one to which time alone will | package ex- !By The Aksociated Press. Paris, April 9 hool,” Dawes feel like a boy chuckled Brigadier- to the Associuted Press correspondent today after turn- the voluminous report of No. 1 to lgouis Barthou, ident of the reparation ‘commis- out of lGeneral ing over give full meaning. Your works have d a new era in the troubled his- of this unstable peace in which humanity seeks to recover Its balance. Iteferring to the task now before the reparation commission in consid- {ering the report, M. Barthou declared {the members were aware of the diffi- culties and responsibilities “before i them, and added: “But we shall approach them with the same good faith and good will as governcd your conclusions. We con- ,Stitute a court before which will ap- | pear not conquerors and conquered but creditors and debtors whose | rights and liabllitles are fixed by pub- | lic contract. “The reparation commission has to settle the terms and methods of ex- | ecuting that contract, We shall be | guided only by our consciences, in- spired like you by the most loyal de- sire to bring finally to the world the joint blessings of right and peace for which it long: | Despite a pouring rain a crowd of newspaper men and photographers {from all the countries of the world thronged the marrow lobby of the As- toria Hotel where the Kaiser planned a celebratory luncheon in the fait of 1914 after his victorious troops should | {have passed through the Arc de Tri-} omphe nearby, but that wag nearly ten years ago and now France's un- known Poilu lies under the Arch, General Dawes proudiy wore an exservice man's “victory buttan” at \the ceremony of handing over the re- | port, Owen D. Young, sccond American | member of the Dawes committee, was similarly relieved and cracked jokes s he pulled out his pipe and settled | |down in a comfortable arm chair. He I jrefused any commerit except to say “We have worried over the report |for three months, XNow let somebody else worry over i We have just left |a foundling baby on the doorstep.” Henry M. Lobingen, American member of the second eommittee pre- sented its report in the absence of the chairman, Reginal@ McKenna, |who had returned to London. Both Appreciative, Both General Dawes and Mr. Young | were appreciative of the treatment accorded them by the ¥rench, British and American press and said they | ere pleased to see that there had been no attempts to influence the sults of the committee’s labor by pri mature publications of half truths— no attempts to provie the public with interesting though inaccurate reading matter, | Sir John Bradbury, British member of the reparation commission, when asked it he thought Germany would ceept the experts’ recommendations, replied drily: “I don't know, but T think it might be well to show them a copy.” General Dawes' speech upon sub- mitting the report of his committes way characterized by military brebity, He said: “I have the honor te submit to you the report of vour committee of ex- perts, unanimously adopted, upon means of “balancing the budget of | |Germany and measures to be taken | Contrasting Shoes % [to stabllize her curreney, i Tondon-—0dd shoe “In view of the comments fn my one black, or any covering letter, which 1T am handing | match the gown of the wear {vou, I will not add anything except | fashion novelty now in London again to express our appreciafion n”‘!fi(khlxs vary with the shoes your confidence and the Kindness and deration with which you have | |treated u | Washing and P i Robinson i Brief, Repairing on Mr. Robinson's remarks in turning PHONE 205 over his document were even briefer, M. Barthou, whose short and stocky tarkie’s [form contrasted markedly with the atisfactory ervice : HARRY STARKIE plied somewhat at length, expressing | Automotive Service thg commission’s “sinecrest gratis | 287 VLM STREET tude/Sand saying that the experts 14 excesded ity hopes, ‘“hanks to the We reline your breaks by Llectrie Ma Delightful and Tingling ICE BOX For Sale New modern display refriger- ator for immediate sale, 6 1. by 8 ft., suitable for r ocery meat market or rest 5 would cost $800 to baild, Bargain for prompt bnyer, Apply to O’Neil Tire and Battery Co. WASHINGION 8T, The COMPORTABLE VISION Frank E. Goodwin Fyesight Specialist 827 MAIN ST, Phone 1905 unceasing labor to whieh the whole world, when aware of the difficulties and strains of your heavy task, can- not fail to do justice.” “Of course,” he continued, “one cannot expect your eonclusions, even though unanimous, to mest with un-' - to TRYING TO PICK. UP YOUR. CHANGE [N T'RONT" OF THE CHANGE BOCTH TO THE ACCOMPANIMENT OF MUTTERINGS TROM THE LINE BEHIND It is SHAA; \AluuASv to taste S Sore | Good Reason - 'VE ? MY MING MADE 60 10 ' COMPLETE" TODAY » OR BUST WHAT EE5 ZE MATTER? ZE STREET (AR HEES 7A95 NoU By T