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N5 SECEDES “FRON RULES BoDY Wil Hare Own Athloic Restic tiows n Futme Declaring that it is his that high school athletics could be taken care of better by the school authorities than an outside organi- zation whose rules are not always adaptible to the needs of the school, Principal Louis P. Slade of the Senior high school declared today that Senior high achool athletices wil be conducted under school rules rather than headmasters’ rules in the tuture. 1n explaining his motive in with- drawing from the control of this organization to which all the large high schools in the state belong, the principal said that the Senior high is completely out of touch with the organization and that many of the rules of this organization do not fit well with the school's system of athletic control. Mr. Slade said the school rules would not differ greatly from those under which headmasters’ associa- tions work. He said a player will be allowed to play on an outside team if he recelves permission from the school principal. Those now obeying this rule will be subjected to the same punishment suffered by those who violated a similar head- masters' rule last winter when 16 players were barred from the bas- ketball team for taking part in un- authorized outside games, he said. The new ruling will go into ef- fect in September. No Captain For Bascball Murmers by members of the ‘two leading fraternities at High school that the candidate who was running for captaincy of next year's base- ball team on their ticket was cheat- ed out of the honor brought about a second election this morning and the.previous count of 13 to 10 was chagged to an 11 to 11 deadlock according to figures announced to- day by Coach George M. Cassidy. The coach declared that he will appoint & captain next year since the’boys, swayed by fraternal af- filiation, havo not been able to de- cide upon a candidate. The race was between Stanley Partyka, a freshman, who was back- cd by the non-fraternity element under the leadership of Marion Za- leski and Edward Hinchey who has the backing of both the Theta Sig- ma and Delta Xi fraternities. Par- tyka, according to a check on the ballots after the first election had 12 votem and was declared elected over Hinchey who had 10. Members of the fraternities were still conductton an investigation up to the close of school for the sum- mer vacation this morning but their efforts appear to be in vain. W. J. Dunlay Named as. Building Commissioner Wiifred J. Dunlay has been ap- pointed to the building commission | to succeed Thomas W. Hinchliffe, his term to expire June 1, 1929. active in politics herets associated in the electrie A large delegation @ bers of the :Massachu ute of - Technology Alumni organization which will will attend the annual | Presienit Stratton of { and . Professor Presscott, 1 of the Alumni association, will be present. Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, Norwalk and New - den clubs will attend the affafr. Dinger will be served at Boxwood Manor following an extensive sports program. . Pa Buzz fails to make ahomer” FLiEs —fichy, insects! Kill with Flit. | feeling ! OUR SCHOOLS ' —Photo by Johnson & Peterson MISS LEONE HOMAN. Bartlett School. Miss Leone Homah of 154 Cherry street will complete the rocond year of her teaching profession at the close of school tomorrow. Miss Ho- | man was born in this city and is prominent among the younger peo- ple. She was educated in the public schools here and was graduated fr New Britain High school in 1923 ané New Britain State Normal school 1h;1925. COLORED K. OF P. TO CONVENE HERE Grand Lodge Delegates to As- semble on June 28-29 The grand lodge ot Colored Knights of Pythias of the state of Connecticut and the Grand Court of Calanthe, will convene at Odd Fel- lows hall, Arch street, on Tuesday and Wednesday, June 28 and 29. This will be the third annual con- vention of the Colored Knights of Pythias to be held in the state. The supreme jurisdiction cover North America, South America, Europe, | Asia, Africa and Australia. The convention will be entertain- [ed by the local lodge, Eureka opening at 9 o'clock Tuesday morn- ing, June 28. A mass meeting Will | be held at the A. M. E. Zion church Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. The public is invited. Mayor Gardner C. Weld will be present and welcome the dclegates and representatives. On Wednesday evening, June 29, the grand lodge reception and dance will | be held at Odd Fellows hall. Nine tlodges of the state will participate. | John C. Baker of this city is the chairman of the general committee | which has charge of the event. MYSTERIOUSLY ASLEEP New Haven, June 24—Doctors at | New Haven hospital who had Wal- | ter Moara, 19, of East Hampton, as |a patient were unable to determine {the cause of his periods of sleep :whlch have lasted since last Friday |when he was found at homs fully |dressed in Deep slumber. It had |been thought his eondition was due b to sleeping powders. STABILIZING PLANS Washington, June 23 (A—A flex- ible arrangement whereby in times of business activity a working day might be increased to nine or ten hours was suggested today by a committee of leading railway execu- tives fn a report on means of sta- bilizing labor employment in the transportation industry. disease-bearing them at once, easy to use. Wil 3| NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1927. XRAY MARVEL 1 AID TO INDUSTRY Steel Rail Breakage May Be Solved by This French Lick, Ind., June 23 (A— X-rays are opening America’s eyes to new fields of invention and for- tune, Dr. George L. Clark, founder of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Industrial X-ray re- search laboratory, declared yester- day before the American society for testing materials conventien. “Industry’s newest tool, the X-ray, until recently only known in hos- pital and academic laboratories, al- ready is amazing its new employers,” said Dr. Clark. “Just recently X-rays showed that spiders and silkworms spin exactly the same kind of fiber and immedi- ately set American manufacturers to consider establishment of spider farms. “Prohibition agents in California are using X-rays to detect liquor in suspected packages. The British army uses the X-ray to examine wood in its airplanes for cracks, worm holes and knots. Boston stores have X-ray devices showing custom- ers how their feet fit into new shoes, and an Ohio dairy farm recently en- gaged to use X-rays to find size and location of holes in Swiss cheese. “One golf ball maker has in- creased sales 200 per cent by adver- tising the fact that X-Rays prove the symmetry of his golf ball centers.” Clark saiq that steel rail breakage, long & mystery, seems close to solu- tion through X-ray observation. Illuminum, new element recently discovered at the University of Illi- nois, was found because X-rays could reveal unknown substances, Clark reported. NAVAL CONFERENCE STILL DEADLOCKED; NOT DISCOURAGED (Continued from First Page) | 1sh proposals, especlally the one that | |seeks to reopen the Washington agreement regarding the size and life of ships. During the negotiations Tuesday | between Hugh Gibson, head of the | American delegation, and Admiral Saito, the newspaper remarks, Saito | expressea willingness to support the | American argument against discuss- |ing or changing the Washington pro- | visions for capital ships, providing that Japan was granted a 5-5-4 ratio for auxiliary craft, only total global | tonnage being fixed instead of thet |size and number of each category of ships as Britain proposes. It may be recalled that the Jap- anese yesterday intimated their in-, ability to accept a 5-5-3 ratio re- garding cruisers, destroyers and | submarines as opposed to battleships |and Lattle cruisers. The old Anglo-Japanese alliance died with the Washington naval |agreements, Great Britain cancelling it because she knew the United States had never liked it. As regards the possibility of an American-Japanese alliance, Ameri- can sources here are extremely skeptical, arguing that such an al- liance would scarcely aid either dis- armament or friendship after Great Britain had sacrificed her own long- standing alliance with Japan in or- der to remove American fears. TILDEN’S FUTURE DOUBTFUL ‘Wimbledon, June 23 (A—“Big Bill” Tilden has not intentions of turning professional for the present, but what his sentiments on the mat- ter will be a year from now he is unable to say, Tilden today told the Associated Press. NOW YOU ASK ONE Reversed English Today the intelligence test game is reversed. Bflow are ten answers. See if you ¢in give approximately the correct” questions. 1 Duce.” 2—"Halt Moon.” 3—Ryan and Bellanca. 4—King John of England, 1218. 5—Gutenberg. 6—Dec. 21, 1620. 7. osephine “Norge.” 8—In 1000 A. D. 9—Francis Scott Key. 10—Plutarco E. Calles. Personals Dudley Pomeroy Felt has been awarded the degree of Bachelor of Arts from Amherst college. Mr. Felt is a member of the Psi Upsilon fraternity, and was graduated from the Gunnery school in Washington. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam P. Felt of West End avenue. Mrs. Isaac D. Russell of Grove Hill and Mrs. Ira Hicks of West Main street have returned from a visit in Washington, Conn. Mrs. Pardon C. Rickey of Worth- ington Ridge, Berlin, gave a buffet supper party and dance last eve- ning for 45 in honor of her niece, Miss Frances Rickey, whose engage- ment to Willlam E. Heald of Methuen, Mass," was announced re- cently. s in Ford” WERE WELL ARMED. Stamford, Conn., June 23 (P— Harry Walles, 18, and John Dickle, 16, giving Malden, Mass., addresses ‘were stopped here today as they were driving through tha city, and two loaded revolvers, two boxes of pistol shells and a set of brass knuckles found on them. Dickie claimed the machine belonged to his father, and a registration paper in the car bore the name of Leander R. Dickle. YOURS for FRIDAY and SATURDAY For the convenience of those who are bent on out of town week-ends we offer our regular Saturday. Specials for both days. Buy your Food Stuffs here so you SUES FOR MONEY EARNED OVER TUB Mrs. Yarros Demands Account: ing in Sale of House Jerry Yarros of Plainville, was in city court before Judge Willlam C. Hungerford today to answer to the complaint of his wife that he sold and refused tq divide the return from their Plainville dwelling which, she claims, was purchased partly by the money produced by her with the ald of a scrubbing board and a washtub. Yarros, through Attorney Michael A. Sexton, denied having recelved any money from his wife other than what was justly due him. He told Judge Hungerford the house was built by him after his work in the factory and was paid for by his wages and those of his minor chil- dren, together with some income from roomers. Attorney L. J. Golon, representing Mrs. Yarros set up the claim that there was an implied trust when Yarros accepted the money earned through his wife's separate income, {and he also introduced evidence that |the defendant agreed to share the proceeds from the sale or build a new house in New Britain. For Iiching Skin Use Zemo, the Clean, Healing Liquid There is one safe dependable treatment for itching torture, that cleanses and soothes the skin. After the first application of Zemo, you will find that Pimples, Blackheads, Blotches, Ringworm and similar skin irritations begin to disappear. Zemo banishes most skin {rrita- tions, makes the skin soft, clear and | healthy. ;Easy to apply at any time. | At all druggists—60c and $1.00. POR _$KIN IRRITATIONS won’t have to pay exorbitant prices elsewhere. \ 9TO 11 A ROUND AND LOIN FRESH GROUND HAMBURG .. 2 Ibs. FRESH FRICASSCE . Ib. FOWL 3TOS5P. LEAN SMOKFED Pot Roasts BEEF ... Boneless ROLLS .. ..,16c! .m28¢‘w m e 22¢ | S n 28 | Hm LARGE FANCY and STRIOTLY FRESH £ SWIFT'S GOLDEN WEST FOWL . | HAMS ... Ib M 25 NEW RED LEAN FRESH SHOULDERS ..... b 15c. FACSTMILE BY RADI0 NOW SEEMS POSSIBLE Transmission of Pictures and Mes- sages by Wireless s Betng Tested Out. Montreal, June 23 (UP)—Fae- simile transmission of messages and photographs by radio has been brought within the range of poasi- bility through experiments con- ducted by B. M. Wright, research worker of the Marconi Herbert Bailey, London correspond- ent of the British United Press, sald in a cablegram today. J Messages have been gent a few miies already by Wright, the cable- gram continued, and the questipn'is now to extend their range so that it will be possible to send over long distance messages in the exact form in which they are recelved—or for aviators, in time of war, to transmit to army headquarters instantaneous, exact photographs of enemy coun- try. “The process” Bailey said, “is an adaption of that by which wireless photographs are being transmitted, and by this method it will be possi- ble for whole pages of newspapers to be filed at one end of the line and recelved in the form of facsimile photographs at the other. “The expense of operating the system naturally has not yet been worked out, but if costs permit the day is not far away when, for fin- stance, & newspaper in Montreal can photograph its whole edition, page by page, and telegraph it to Van- couver for reproduction there. Lon- don newspapers could produce Can- adian editions by simply wirelessing or cabling photographs of completed pages to printers in Canada, who by photo-engraving “Processes could speedily reproduce the pages there.” AUTOIST ARRESTED Bridgeport, June 23 (M—Coleman Staires, of this city, was arrested on a charge of reckless driving in West- | port today after his automobile bad | swerved from the post road on Turk- ey hill, Westport, and run down two highway construction workmen. An- thony Lucas, 32, of this city and Kenneth Banks, 24, of Fairfleld were taken to Norwalk hospital for treats ment for lacerations, bruises and Company, | shock. They do not appear to be ! seriously injured. TO1lAM STAR POTATOES .... Peck 62c. NEW BERMUDA ONIONS ...... 3 Ibs. 29c. M. .. . 25¢c. LEG! TR 28c s . ALL DAY SALE SUGAR .. ... 5 Ibs. 35c. GOLD MEDAL OR PILLSBURY'S SHOULDERS ....... b. 18c.|FLOLR .......... Bag $1.27 :?zr“... 1Y 80!““ PORK Ib. 20c. GENUINE SPRING LAMB Ib. 35c. Y 20c » 160 MEADOW BROOK CREAMERY Eges, 3 doz. 81c/|Butter 2 Ibs. 85¢ WILL POACH, BOIL OR FRY ‘v;nan ....n 18¢ m....nZSc m » 16¢ hoPs ... 30¢ AS FINE A BUTTER AS YOU WANT TO EAT Best White PURE LARD which eat holes. It will save your clothing, furs and rugs. Clean and 1l not stain. 2 Ibs 270 Gem Nut MARGARINE The 45¢ « b 3¢ | FATTED ROASTING CHICKENS . Mild Whole Milk CHEESE ......... Ib ceve. Ib 40c 29¢ MOHICAN BREAD— Fills the Bread Bill for Thousands of Families dafly— They know what Good Bread is and know what a Sav- ing they aro making — Full 1 Ib | loaf after baking— 7c Flit spray clears the house in a few minutes of disease - bearing flies, mosquitoes, bed bugs, roaches, ants and fleas, It searches out the cracks where insects hide and breed, destroying their eggs. Flit kills moths and their larvae DESTROYS Flit is the result of exhaustive laboratory research. It has re- placed old ineffective methods. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Recommended by Health Officials. Buy Flit and Flie sprayer today. For sale every- where. Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches Were NEVER BETTER and the QUALITY §s UN- EXCELLED no matter what you pay elsewhere. Round Cake 2ov | STRAWBERRY 5(: gl el Large Layer Cakes . 23c | FLUFF CAKE, ea. Soda Biscuit .... i PURE GRAPE JUICE .. pint bottle DINNER BLEND COFFEE ......... S ihs VANILLA OR LEMON EXTRACT 2 bottles FANCY ORANGE PEKOE TEA ........ Ib Sunbeam WHITE MEAT TUNA FISH 3 cans MOHICAN MAYONNAISE ....... 2 bottles DAVIS BAKING POWDER . large can FINEST PEA BEANS . 41bs 81bs 35¢c | PUFFED WHFAT ........ . 2 pkas. 8 cans 25c | OCTAGON SOAP OR POWDER .4 for SUNBRITE CLEANSFR ........ . 2 for bottle 35c LARGE RIPE TARGE RED RIFE Oranges Bananas Pineapples Tomatoes 3 for 25¢. 2 Ibs. 25¢. 2 Doz. 39¢.: Doz. 25¢. EXTRA LARCE COCOANUTS .. FRESH NATIVE PEAS LARGE SEALDSWFEKT GRAPEI'RU en. FRESH NATIVF REET GREENS . LARGE PINK MEAT XIEDD.NS . IT.. ea, NATIVE BEETS OR CARROTS . hunch OUR BAKERY PRODUCTS Assorted Cookies . 49¢c 69¢ SPLIT PEAS CAMPBELL'S BEANS HIRES GINGER ALE EXTRACT .. 10c 25¢ 23¢ 10c . each 3 qts. . peek 3 for 25¢ 10¢ 15 10c FRESH FRUIT'and VEGET ABLES L oo ommnee of the meat. Then nmfi-whm“wl::; GULDENE MUBTA Use it as a seasoning in cooki FOSTER IDEAL COIL SPRING The Most Comfortable Bedspring Made. TRY IT. i SLEEP ON IT FOR 30 NIGHTS. You REST RIGHT when you sleep on a Foster Ideal Spring. THE FOSTER IDEAL COIL SPRING with its one hundred and twenty extra tall highly tempered spiral springs, will give you more comfort than you ever thought a bedspring could give you. We would like to have you see tfiis splendid bed- spring. Why not stop in and let us show you today—or Sat- urday. Priced at $19.75 B. C. PORTER SONS Fur Storage that does more than keep Furs Safe HUDSON FUR SHOP VAULTS (on the premises) have a miraculous way of renewing the beauty and life of furs—if your furs are not already safely in our vaults, phone 770 or 4773 and we will call for them, Repairi We maintain a staff of expert furriers who repair the minutest rip oi‘ entirely remodel a coat into an advance fashion — this service is specially priced during summer. ] Hudson Fur Shop 13 FRANKLIN SQ. New Britain A. GEORGES, Prop. Phone 770—4778