New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 16, 1927, Page 12

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GIRLY BOWLING "Exivcs o Sure LEAGUEIS FORMED First Organization of Ifs Kin Has 12 Teams Entered Hartford, Feb, 16.—The first girls' bowling in the history of bowl- ing In Connecticut was brought into being at a meeting held Sunday aft- ernoon at the Charter Oak alleys in this city. Twelve teams, reprosenting eleven alleys in ten of the principal cities and towns of the State, comprise the membership of the new body, whi i« pattetned after league long in existence Phil Bibault of the Charter Oak alleys was chairman of the meet- held here ye! ay at which these officers were elected President—Phil Treasurer— Gec Britain. Secretary—A. B tord. Rules committee— “B Hartford; George Roge W ain; Arthur Rob Nlingford; Fred Teller, Meriden; Howard Mur- phy, South Manchester. McGinley, Hart- ud” Fisher, ew Brit- The alleys, league are: ( Hartford; Rogers' Ganlot's Recre Roberge's Casino, Rogers Recreation, Murphy's, South Manc Me 13 New Britain; Waterbury Wallingford Haven; ster; Center Recr Bristol; Elite, New Haven; Austin's, Terryville, All but the last three were repre- mented at the meeti Teams will be of five bowlers each and each of the alleys will enter one team with the exception of the Char- | ter Oak which will have two. A membership fee of $35 per team was voted. Cash prizes of the f lowing amounts were voted: First $100 Second 875 Third Fourth Fifth 2 Tt was voted to open the schedule Tuesday evening, March § and con- tinue eleven w ing each of the ot by and once abroad. Fach t allowed as many bowlers on the roster, but no bowled with one team, ed to roll on another team, except | with consent of the rules committee. Tuesday Thursday were the nights selected \y date may he changed by mutual consent of the team It officers attend matches on o at allowed and a longer time al- will be p ble for any on, such as an automob to a visiting clty midway on the was voted to have each of the one of the lea good rea bearing a team cealk down be foul-line bowl- m will ha se ne after taken vote to hold xt meetin day, March Starlight alleys in Meriden. Credit for the organization of this state girl's bowling league goes to| Phil Bibault of Hartford who has had the project in mind for more than a year. He interviewed the al- ley owners in the other cities, found the idea hit a responsive chord and called yesterday's meeting. Bowling is growing rapidly in pepularity with the fair sex ough- out Connecticut and there are hun- dreds of girl bowlers in every city. In Hartford there are several girls’ leagues. Bridgeport Auto Kills An Unidentified Man Bridgeport, Feb. 16 (A—An un- Adentified man, about 60 years of age was fatally injured yesterday when struck by a milk truck at Grand street and North Washington av- enue. He died in St. Vincent's hos- pital from a fractured skull regain- ing consciousness, Leonard R. Caron, drfver of the truck was arrested and held for further investigation under bong $1,000. PURE COD nie LIVER GIL Yer! Purecodliver oil. But new and delightfu B ryboc likes. Cc a dolicious chocolate Any physician w blood-reddening, ho wonders for those need you coax cl the form called cc rich and mellow chocolaty f Coco cod gives you the | oil, with a// the vitalizing it physicians agree vibrant health. Adults are faitly nated by coco cod. Children t —and love 1o takeit! You 0, and smack your lips! All druggists in this city now have coco cod. The Ced Liver Oil that Tastes Like Chocolate b Ve g ¢ csse the men's state | each team meet- | EARNINGS_NOW EXCEED HENRY FORD’S | New York—General Motors is now 4 jahead of Ford. Its net earnings last 'vear were $165,231,182. In the Ford | Motor Company’s best year, 1922, it | earned $115,797,000. | | Philadelphia—No young person | nowadays would think of bobbing her hair, if Miss Clara Mille tary of the Philadelphia H. ers' association, is correct. ppers are letting the tresses grow, she says, because mature women have | adopted the bob. Mexlco City—Nata is to be married to young government al, b priest. The ceremony will be Chapultepee palace Saturday. secre- | rdress- a Elias Calles | los Here a in | Tondon—Because the stre too dangerous, Harold Solomon has | sold his taxicab and begun studying | aviation. He purposes to run an air taxi. | | New York less, who prefe having returned from a short | Europe, s going right back to ob In her father's soup factory at Camden, N. J. is | Boston—Friends of . Princess| | Wontonekemuske, descendant of the | , are trying to have on doubled to 3600. vears old. Her friends zue that the state should do better y. her, since her ancestor, who be- friended the Pilgrims, was the ‘\luur of New England | New York — Johnny ‘Macy, liter- ateur, 1s regarded by some other { males as a very brave man. He de- ied his sex at a banquet against | heavy odds, being the only speaker n its behalf. The feministic cannon- ading on the subject “Men; What of m?" was heavy. Ruth Hale argued 1t man was slowly slipping like a glacier. Lorine Pruette said men better form a conservation league to | save themselves, | sa- | Toledo—No fat girls,need apply | ®r admission to a $50,000 home for | young women to be erected 50 years hence through a bequest from David | | Bourdette Burgert, bachelor. The | will makes such a restriction. Girls | between 16 and 28 “of small stature, | b tylish and good to | The will s a wish to gratify girls' love | for beautiful things. The testator's portrait will hang on the wall. s, who fis| h thinks | ssons to some of ws in the wrestling | oy could teach them | ved a lot from the | 6,000 matches, he is | just beg he could give these young fc game. He sure | thrift. Having | procceds of wealthy. | | New York—RBroadway can keep its yon castles so far as Conde De | 1l of Spain Is concerned. Return- | me after a brief visit the in- | ialist said he did not wish | to have skyscrapers— *“They | i they are more in pro- | portion to American life.” I Farmington — For putting four | ar old son outdoors naked at 7:30 | one morning, in near zero weather, | shutting five other children out and | n beating wife, Rhosario Rho iy | sentenced to 15 days in jail and will | be examined to determine his sanity, | | | Harttord — Grammarlans “driye| laway from a language every stu. | dent with a normal amount of joy | in life” Trinty gr. in radlo dia Manchester- nother “pu of this | city, state chairman of prohibition party and International secretary of | World's Federation of temperance | | societies. | 4 | | New Haven— Passenger carrying | stween New York and Boston and | ween Boston and Chicago and | New York and Montreal, in addition | to mail service between Boston and New York and Chicago planned by Colonial Air Transport company for 1927, according to Col. Leonard S. Horner. be | | New Haven—New Intercolleglate | | vehlcles voting | Caron, who is NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEERUARY 16, 1927, Reli BELLANS 40-yard swimming record set by William Sanford of Yale 'varsity against Brown, his time of 5:13 1-5 being almost four seconds faster than that set last year by Captain Hawkins of Princeton. Y ) "> 6 BELLANS =Y ’ | Hot water - Sure Relief BELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION 25¢ and 75¢ Pkgs.Sold Everywhere Waterbury—Two men be proprietors of lottery ticket scheme sald to have taken {n $1,250,- 000 in past few months are sought by police after Charlestown, Mass, man claims he could not collect $3,- | S 'WON'T OPEN BALDWIN SAPE FOR 50 YEAR Order of New Haven Probate Court alleged to Bridgeport—Steve Golas, 26, giv to elght years, xander | Borowy, 20, an indefinite term and Reider Svenberg one to three years in state’s prison when they plead v to 22, 13 and 9 counts of ary respectively. Is In Compliance With Judge's Request. New Haven, Feb. 16 (P—Locked and sealed, a steel confainer left by Hartford — Connecticut trians wiil probably not have to wear | tail lights, the eommittee on motor to recommend re- juotion of Dill to require this. pedes- | former governor of the state, lgeport — Unidentified man 50 years old fatally injured by milk truck driven by Leonard R. held under $1,000 Haven Colony Historical society with the stipulation that it may not be !opened for 50 years, it was announc- led yesterday by Judge of Probate John L. Gllson, who is president of ociety tter written by Judge Baldwin 1 to “my children and executors, that the contents of the drawer wene the journals of the judge, kept for near- ly 60 e A request that they be not read, because the jonrnals were of intimate nature, also was con- °d in the letter. container and journals are to bonds for investi Hartford—Windsor L have a new judge of its to before it can elect a republ gislature former Attorney General rank E. Healy tells members of judiclary committee of legislature iiming “whispering ¢ ign” urged democratic victories to prevent republican success turning out pres- ent incumbent and making a “wide tal open' town. descendant of Judge Baldwin after 50 years and if there Is no descend- ant, to the the fourth computed by civil law. In the event that no rela- tive survives, the drawer becomes the |property of the societ Bridgeport—Caught driving auto. mobile containing two barrels grain alcohol, Steve Lacquessa, known in pugitistic circles as “Pete August” is arrested as companion jumps from car and escapes. f ‘When in Morocco a traveler has the choice of camel, rail, motor or airplane as a mode of transportation. | READ HERALD CL TED ADS FOR YOUR WANTS 70% of Your Child’s School-work is in the Morning! Give The Breakfast that “Stands By” You Gave Her Advice Y., writes: “Having been troubled with indigestion caused by constipation for several months, my druggist advised me to try LITTLE LIVER PILLS, He sald they are good for a hundred different ailments, if people only knew the value of them. I can safely say that since I am taking them, and only one each night, I feel like myself again and can eat most anything.” Those who suffer from sick headache, indigestion, biliousness tired-out and achey feeling, when due to constipation, will find relief in taking CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS in red packages, Try them to-night—To-morrow refreshed—All dru 5. and 75¢. EGAD MDEAR, = \oU SHOULD Kiow —THAT I AM GOING -0 “TURN MY DEN i-fo A LABORATORV 1o WORK 2 out A MARVELOUG \DEATHAT | 1 HAVE CARRIED TOR QOME TIME! AND TAME WL \F GUccE2oTUL, WORLDWIDE, AND RICHES APLENT WILL BE OURZ !: ** OUR BOARDING HOUSE Now LIGTEN tue o TORNED \oUR DEN INT0 ONE OF -THOZE | ABORATORY AFFAIRS ~TEN VEAR AG0, TRVING-T0 PERFECT A MATCHLESS-CIGAR IDEA COF NOURG, v AND T NEARLY HADTHE TIRE DEPARTMENT HERE FOR ROOM AND BOARD!we (F (15 &T;TNG oN ~THAT ORDER AGAIN, 1 FEEL IN MIND we HM-M MY NAME L BE Nou'tL CARRY oUTVoUR IDEA [} 2910 A VACANT LoT! & 7z he turned over to the oldest living | ef SUZANNE CANCELS | the late Judge Simeon . Baldwin,|made up Mile, Lenglen's troupe in has her recently heen lodged in the care of the New tour. | the same terms that’ brought her | here last fa]l as a professional. Pickens sajd Mllge. Lenglen recejved a flat guarantee of $50,000 and 50 per cent of the gate receipts. She received a total of $100,000 for the tour, including royalties for commer- |cial use of her name, Pickens said. Pyle himself declared he would ‘resume tennis’ activities when an opportunity to " invélve profit is visualized,” Other members of his | professional cast, including Vincent | Richards, Harvey Snodgrass, and Mary K. Browne, had signed with him for the European invasion, he EUROPEAN JAUNT Disagreement Over Terms Canses Abandonment of Plans New York, Feh, 16.—(A—Euro- pean tennis centers, where Buzanne Lenglen gained world supremacy among women amateurs, will not see B —————————— ] said, but he had declined to “partici- "seekiug William T. Tilden's services pate In a bldding contest” to cum»}in the professional field at present plete the personnel. and had decided to forego profes- Although Suzanne expects to close | sional tennis “until the players negotlations for a tour with Eur realize they are not entitled to in- pean promoters, and probably creases in pay.” "L TTCHING RASHES French professional, and Howard C. Kinsey, of California, when she sails I quickly relieved and often cleared away by a few applications of for home Saturday. the remainder of Resinol Browne to enter business in Cleve- land Monday. Pyle said he had no intention of the French star in action as a pro- fessional under the banner of Charles C. Pyle, who won her from the amateur lists. Disagreement over terms for Su. zanne's services caused abandonment of the proposed European jaunt, | William C. Pickens, Pyle's represen- tative, announced yesterday. Plans had called for a swing through France, England, Germany and other countries thig spring with the same cast of supporting stars that IN Trade in completed American Suzanne's demands approximated MAAAAALMAAAAAAAAALAAALAL Proof You Can STOF Pain from Piles! . All kinds of hemorrhoids succumb to one, simple and safe suppository which relicves such distress she moment it is introduced. In other words, suffer- ing from piles in any form is necdless! 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