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YALE GRADUATION PROGRAN GONPLETE! ' i Pull Schel of Brnts Napped Ost lor Commencement | New Raven, Conni,'June 17 (P With the presentation of Shak: speare’s Coriolanus by the Yale Dru matic association in the University theater tonight festivities in obsery ance of the 226th commencement ot Yale university will begin offictally. The play will also be given tomor- row and Tuesday evenings. The cast is headed by Hannibal Hamlin, '27, ot New York city, who plays Corio-| lanus. | President James Rowland Angell | will make the address at the Bac-' calaureate service Sunday morning. ! In the afternoon Protessor Harry B. | Jepson, university organist, will give | & recital on.the Newberry organ. 1 One of the big events of the day | wlill be the dedication of the alumni war memorial in Hewitt quadrangle at 4:30 p. m. Yale in China will hold its annual meeting in the eve- ning. Events scheduled for Monday in-| clude the commencement meeting | of the alumni advisory board, dedi-| cation of a tablet in memory of| Charles A. Ferry, designer of the ! Yale Bowl, class day exercises of the Sheffield Sciemtific school and Yale| rollege, annual luncheon of the Yale | Law School Alumni association, luncheon of the Yale corporation, the annual meeting of the Associ- ation of Yale Men in Medicine, and a concert in the evening by the Glee and Banfo clubs. The day for the graduating class will be brought to a close with the promenade at the | New Haven Lawn club. Throughout Tuesday morning the polls will be open in Woodbridge] hall for the election of an alumni member of the Yale corporation. | Alfred L. Ripley, B. A, Hon. M. A. *S3 of Boston, is a candidate for re- election and the only nominee for the office. The most important event on Tuesday’s program is the gradu- atton exercises of Yale college and the Sheffield Scientific school. This year, for the second time, degrees will be conferred upon the imdergraduate candidates at special exercises §n Tuesday, and the gradu- ‘ate, professional and honorary de- grees on Wednesday. 0 In the afternoon the reunion classes will parade in costume to| Yale fleld for the Harvard-Yale bageball game. At the close of the commence- ‘ment exercises, the alumni will as-| semble in the university dining hall tor the alumni luncheon, at which | President Angell and others will The prpesident's reception for | graduate, their familles, and invited | guests will be held Wednesday after- noon. The boat races at New London on Friday between Harvard and Yale crews will conclude the 1927 com- mencement events. > g e | HARDWARE SALES GOOD { New York, June 17—Practically | all hardware markets continue to | Téport & very active sale of season- al hardware, particularly garden tools. Building activities average very good and employment is gen- erally satisfactory, Hardware Age will say tomorrow in its weekly hardware market summary. Con- sumers buying of spring lines just | about started two weeks ago when | the warmer weather came. Since that time it has been very active. Prices are firm with few rumors | ot changes and collections genenl-" ly show some improvement. Crop | prospects look. encouraging and ! rural district stores are optimistic | on the outlook for summer business. | seliof from pein. « ket g ] DeScholls Put one on—the o GUARANTEED MARKET’S BIG SPECIALS IN MEATS AND POULTRY | our scnoos VISHIP HELPLESS YHEN GAFTAINDIES *» Crazed Crew Huddle on Deck Helplessly - New York, June 17 UP—A weird ‘tale of the sea, rivaling in real life —Photo by Johnson & Peterson MISS SYLVIA J. ADLER Elihu Burritt School i Miss Sylvia J. Adler of 115 Smal- | ley street, who with Miss Neri and a few others were chosen by the teacher’s committee for places in e elementary schools following heir graduation from the New Britain State Normal schoc', is a| native of this city. H Miss Adler attended schools and in 1920 enrolled at New the public ito her graduation in 1924 after a four year course she held many | positions in her class and was | prominent at graduation. Miss Ad- | ler's present position is that of a teacher of the first grade at the Elihu Burirtt school. NOW YOU | Britain Serior High school. Previous & that of Coleridge's ‘“‘Ancient Mari- ner,” was told today by seven mem- bers of the crew of the schooner Eleanor Taylor, towed into port after drifting without a master for four days. The captain, Calvin W. Sprague, 55, of Gloucester, N. J., died Sun- day, 36 hours after the vessel left Boston. A heavy sea was running at the time and the skies indicated stormy weather, but the combined nautical knowledge of the crew was insufficlent to navigate the ship. The schooner drifted off its course | jupjor varsity will be pitted against | rounds. and the crew spent day and night sending up fruitless signals of dis- tress. The body of the captain was |carrying 24 varsity oarsmen east for |led with traps, including a bunker |j§ permitted to remain in the cabin and | {he national classic on the Hudson added especially for the 1927 tourna- | &' {the superstitious sailors gave it a, ! wide berth, Some argued the vessel would get anywhere with a dead man below the decks but no one volun. teered to preside at a sea burial. Fear soon followed superstition. At night the men huddled together lin the forepeak. They refused to go on deck, even to send up rockets. Rats emerged from the hold and rried across the deck. Sharks 2nd porpc ses followed in the wake of the craft. Disputes arose as to whose turn it was to take the whesl to keep the ship from wallowing in the ses. Early yesterday the coast guard cutter Seneca was sighted off Dela- ‘ware breakwater. Signals of dis- tress waved wildly by the crew at- tracted the cutter's cttention and the badly frighteued sailors were towed in their ship to port. COLLEGE CREWS RACE Four Eight-Oared Shells from Ual- versities of Washington and Wis- consin to Meet. Madison, Wis., June 17 (P—Four | eight-oarded shells flylnz the colors {of the universities of Washington {and Wisconsin, will race over a two- ! mile course on Lake Mendota to- I races are scheduled to start at 10 | o’clock provided weather conditions | are favorable. In addition to the race between | the varsity eights, the Washington | Wisconsin's freshmen. Coach | “Rusty” Callow of Washington is : June 26, but did not enter his year- |ting crew. For that reason the Car- vestern outfit. i oach Dad Vail, of Wisconsin, s little hope for victory over the pewerful huskies, but is encouraged by the return of Frank Orth to the { tirst string crew. Should Captain Birrus and his mates make a creditabl2 showing against Washington tomorrow, it is highly probable that Wisconsin may attempt a last minute cutry in the ’Pcushxeewe regatta. Gray’s Inn Ravens Are ing marts of London, haunt the pre- cin#ts of ancient Gray's Inn. They osdrets of destiny and the world de- NEW GOLF HOLES UPSET CHAMPIONS Filteonth and Sixtesath at Oak- mont Cause Trouble Oakmont, Pa., June 17 UP—Ih ‘r- construkting the 15th and 16th h -' of the Oakmont course td make' them more hasardous, W. C. Fownes, Jr., ; the club’s guiding spirit, succeeded ; far better than he ainred. These two | holes probably wrecked more nation- |al open chamy >nship hopes in the last three days than any others, ex- morrow in the second dual regattd (acting haavy toll from such aces as staged between the two schools. The | Bobby Jones, Walter Hagen, Gene Sarazen and Emmet French. Even Harry Cooper, who tied Tommy Ar- mour for first place, found the 15th | {a stumbling block, going one over | [par on it in each of his Tast two | | The 15th | vards long and dog-1eg) Well sprink- | ment to catch second shots. The llcm. par three and 234 yards loug, ||} never | inal frosh will be sent against the was entirely rebuilt for the event,. with 2 ncw bunker In the middle of the fairway and another to the left lof the elevated green. | The 621 yard 12th, ®ith punish- [} ing bunlers to the right and left of {the fairvay and a well-trapped | green, ran the other two a close sec- | ond for Waterioo effects. A disas- trous seven on this hole on his final round almost put Armour out of the title hunt, and did remove Mel! CIM Hllm and Pll'ill are called Mugan and Pugin, after London, June 17 UP—Two ravens, | the birds wnich, according to Scan- [ surroundings. An legend, perched on the|on whish they éften PArch, Wwas Ditng & strange Rote inte the elaag- | shoulders of Odin and told him the | brought to Xagiaad trom Virginia whose mbduraful “Nevermores” | dlnavian is a two shotter, 475 || ASK ONE FIVE ABOUT SPORTS _ The first five of the questions to- day deal with sports. 1—What basevall player is known as “Big Train.” 2—Who won the women's U. 8. tennis championship in 19262 3—Who is national open golt champion? 4—Waat college won the national track and field championship in 19262 5—What race horse is reputed to have had the highest winnings? 6—What cabinet members ap- pointed by Harding are still in the Coolidge cabinet? 7—In the human body, what is the function of the larnyx? 8§—What comet will soon be vis- ible in the sky? 9—What is coral? 10—What is the origin name of Nevada state? of the HOUSEWIVES WANT REST London, June 17 (UP)—DBecause I»hey claim, British housewives pre- fer Sunday joy-riding to the cook- ing of the traditional family roast, a number of enterprising butchers are trying to have Nottingham Cat- | tle Market day changed. Especially since the war, 1t is said that housewives in England object to spending their Sunday mornings in the kitchen, preparing the weekly feast of roast beef, veal or the popu- lar leg of mutton. Indeed it would appear that the quicker cooked chops and steaks with the usual boiled potatoes are fast taking the place of the more austere joints, thus enabling the “lady of the house” to be ready in time for the ‘joint” husband-and- wife's Sunday outing in the family automobile. According to statistics furnished by the London Central Markets, the heaviest purchases of meat are made on Thursdays or Fridays, a fair proof that the joimt is being ousted by the motorcar. TENDER FRICASSEE CHICKENS, bb. .. LEGS TENDER LAMBbb. ....... CHOICE NATIVE YOUNG FOWL,Ib. ........... 3% BROILERS and FRYING CHICKENS, bb. . .. LOIN PORK ROASTS, Ib. KED and FRESH PORK SHOULDERS, Ib .. 16¢ BONELESS POT ROASTS, Ib. ~FRESH CHOPPED BEEF, 2 Ibs. ~ CLOVERBLOOM PR BUTTER, b. . ... .. 49¢ The Guaranteed 10-20-30c Meat Shoh IS A CHAIN STORE “ ‘RED FRONT” STORE TEL. 483 — Markets in Four States —70 W. MAIN ST. Opp. Burritt Hotel W27 W . W, = /, g guaranteed movement; ad- BW‘ Justed to temperature; 17- Py jewel, winder timekeeper; !@‘ special tomorrow — on our { easy plan of purchase at [ [ SEE THE FAMOUS ILLINOIS WATCHES Frozen in Ice in Our Window on Saturday—and keeping perfect time. A most severe test and an absolute proof of temperature adjustment. EVERY ILLINOIS WATCH is guaranteed to stand this test! CHAIN AND KNIFE FREE with every Illinois Watch during this display—All models at their standard advertised prices and terms of as little as $1.00 A WEEK 354 MAIN STREET OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS A Prince A Real Fellow A Thoroughbred --- Your Dad! to wear - Fitch-Jones Co. nnouncement It is with pleasure and gratification that we announce that Mr. Leland T. Pierce, who for so many years, was so well and favorably known in the Musical and Business life of New Britain, has be- come associated with us inthe capacity of Sales Manager: His long association with the C. L Pierce & Co. in this city is too well knodh to need any comment from us — exceptrthat we are very happy to be able to consider him as a part of our or- ganization. To his legion of friends and acquaintances—in and about New Britain —his connection with us will be most gratifying as the field which has now been opened to him has been greatly enlarged. May we bespeak for him the same loyal patronage and the opportunity for serving the Music Lovers of New gritain in his new capacity as that which he en- joyed with the time-honored firm of C. L. Pierce & Co. whom we have the honor to succeed in business. INCORPORATED, by A. P. McCoy, President Hartford Waterbury New Britain Torrington yond. . There s a fitting antiquity in their old catalpa tree Father’s Day, June 19th' \, Make Dad happy — give him something