New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 26, 1928, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1928 GUILFOYLE APPEAL WILL BE FILED LATE TODAY eo——————————————————— MUSIC FROM LIGHT DEAF WITNESS TESTIFIES Cambridge, Mass., April 26 P—| Newark, N. J., April 26 (UP)— Music produced by the effect of light | Mrs. Edward C. Thompson, deaf for on a photo-electric cell will be heard.| 18 years, testified in the trial of An- during the annual open house at|thony Boccardoro for the murder of Massachusetts Institute of Tech-|her husband by reading the lips of away from the British Isles and Miss Collett has u chance to write a new page in golfing history by making arrangements for the his- toric trophy to t the Tnited | States for the first time since the GLENNA COLLETT OFF FOR ENGLAND Decision to Enter British Title| Event Was Sudden New York, April 26 (P —Glenna | Collett, the girl who hits a golf ball like a man, is on her way to Eng-| land to try her luck in the British women's championship. She declared as she sailed that she would not be disappointed if she failed to win, but she must have had her fingers cross- ed when she said it, for she takes lier golf very seriously. Her decision to enter the British title event was sudden. Early Satur- day she had no thought of ventyr- ing so far afield. At nightfall she was packing. There is a golfing pre- cedent in sudden determinations to Lave a try at British titles. Bobby Jones last year almost literally at the eleventh hour decided to defend his open title abroad and barely made the boat. He won with a rec- ord breaking 285. Miss Collett did not have to jump from Atlanta to & New York pier to start her vovage. She was in New York and her ship sailed from Hoboken. Neither will | she need the equivalent of 255 to| win the championship. Just before the George Wa ton sailed Miss Collett 3 excited as a person of her meanor could be—but not about golf. She answered questions on th move as she sought trace of a miss- ing suitcase | Masn't Played Co “No I have ployed the stanton course,” she said, asked a steward of the mi had appeared. “I hear hard.” Her information is undoubt- edly correct. The amateur record for‘ Pile Sufferers | Can You Answer These Questions? Do you know why ointments do not give you quick and lasting re- lief? Why cutting does not remove the cause? Do you know the cause of piles is internal? That there is a stagnation of blood in the lower bowel? Do you know tlLat there is an in- ternal remedy discovered by Dr. leonhardt and known as HEM- ROID, sold by Fair Drug Dept. and all druggists with guarantee of money back i it fails? HEM-ROID banishes piles by re- moving the cause—stagnation of blood in the lower bowel, This sim- ple home treatment has an almost unbelievable record for sure, safe and lasting relief to thousands of pile sick sufferers, and saves the neédless pain and expense of an op- eration. Hun- she ot ® lspread ‘L'l«n'" which was sold for former expeditions in search of a'!De La Standing, left to right—Mrs. H. C. Warner, . H. F. Willametz, Leader Lindy Club. Seated on divan, left to right —Margaret MacLaghlin, Pascoe, Marion Sharp. Seated front row, left to right—Catherine Fitzgerald, Betty Holstein, Muriel Jacoby. Assistant Director Junior Achievement; Faith Barry, Myrtle Berry, Avis The Lindy Junior |club which is shown in panying picture made st in Act the accom- the bed llu phioto- 20 during mnnumv,\ Chest ceds donated to this club's drive, vement | The Lindy club has been organized | At the completion of the project about two years and previous to Lin- which took about 100 hours of the dy's epoch making flight was known club member's time the club was s the Iton club. It has beenan ac- 1t the home of tive organization, hwing particularly interested in charity having visited and made articles for the Crippled Children’s Home and the Day Nurs- | jery. Wso shown Warner at ner also was in farewell party fo Margaret lin who has removed riford. e nature of Mac- o the recent United ldrive and the pro the campaign fund contribution toward the the course at Norfolk, England, s [British title sald she had not done|play at 36 holes. Mile. Thion is now 75 and and no professional has done well. This statement would scem to|the British women's champion, and better than 74. leave room for argument. In 1925 at | if the golfing gods kind, “No, I'm not planning to play in |Troon she was defeated by Joyce|argument at V. may be re- the championship with the new | Wethered, one of the greatest wom- |sumed at Huns three years clubs” as she was asked about @ cn golfers any country has pro- | luter. complete set of shiny new woods and | duced, four up and three to play.| Mile. Thion came to the United irons with her baggage. “In the play | Miss Wethered was the champion at States to play in the national wom- at Hunstanton from May 14 to 19 if |the time and nothing came up after | en’s champlonship but did not mect 1 last that long, I'll stick to the good Miss Collett was eliminated from the | Miss Collett. Both the British and old standbys.” competition to change her status. French champion and the “I am hopeful of course of giving | Jrons Decided Match crowned American titlist fell before a good account of myself,” she con- | Glenna was hitting her long drive - W. G. Fraser. tinued, “and I am pleased with my |from the tee and saw the machine- | young French star was the game as it has responded during the |like Joyee only a few yards hehind | first foreign entry to take the cup last few months in the south, It )Ilh\[lmt she did not meet defeat on h-:l': ball fairly well on occasions” She | performances from the tec. The did not mention it, but one of the |deadly accuracy of the British cham- occasions was in the qualifying | pion's irons, long and short, finally {1t you or he round of the Florida t champion- | told the tale. The Collett score for ship at St. Augusti where she | the 15 holes played was only two scored 2 sensational T4, before going lover fours, hut the Wethered count | on to win the title four days later. |was even fours, No American woman golfer has bet-| Glenna went to Versailles lh" tered that figure, same year to win the French cl Miss Collett in plunflflp from Mle. Simone Thion | aume, three up and one to ave Epilopsy, Tits, Falling Slok : without fail bt fn many harmtul - drugs SIMESON C0., St,, Cleveland, S Attacks speaking of her % / /4 HUDSON Jicloria reati ngSensafiOnal Interest NEW UDSON PRICES 118-4nch Chrasdie Coupe $1265 (Rumble Seat $30 m Sedan $1325 127-tnch Ghaasls Standard Sedan Custom Landay Custom Victoris Custom 7-Pass. Sedap - - All pri plus war excise tas. Buyers can pay for cars owt of income @ Jowest available charge for interest, and insurance ndling 1.0.b Detrait, riding position and plenty of leg room, Every detail is of silenced construction, extending even to the insulated door construction of exclusive design. The Victoris is but one of the brilliant new models responsible for the definite leadership in mode which Hudson has set. In the beautifully designed and luxuriously finished bodies that festure sll new Hudson Super- Sixes, the same relation of values obtain ss made the Super- Six chassis famous. A single ride will revise your whole knowl- edge of automobile values. The Hudson Victoria has every- where met an eager acceptance thst stamps it one of the most ar models Hudson ever Coach 3129 190 fortable ever provided in this type of car. The driver’s sestand companion frout eest are high- backed, form-fitting snd deeply uphelstered. ‘The rear seat is ample for two, with exceptionally comfortable HUDSON Super-Six 1. 1660 1650 1950 THE HONEYMAN AUTO SALES CO. 200 East Main St. Telephone 2542 2 Eton Place. | the | twice | FREE Proof | | competition started 35 vears ago. { In Cheerful Spirits | Miss Collett was in cheerful spir- lits as shie started her third invasion of British zolt. Her missing baggage | had been found and all her pet clubs | were ready to answer her call. “Yes, I'll see at least a part of | the British open,” she said. So Wal- | ter Hagen, Tommy Armour, Gene | Sarazen, Jim Barnes and Bill Mehl- Ihorn will have the benefit of her | moral support at Sandwich a week ! before the women have their fling. Maureen Orcutt, rupner-up in the last national women’s championship, | {eheercd the challenger on her way ~“You'n win, Glenna,” she said. Miss Collett shook her head. “T have never been at my best over he said. reminded that this is an- {other year. If she repeat her St. Augustine 74, or even some of the 77's and 78's she compiled in other places on her southern golfing tour, she won't be very far away when th Ireturns are all in at Hunstanton. (DEATH OF BENNETT IS MOURNED IN GERMANY Newspapers | | | | Pay Who Gave Life to Aid Ger- man Aviators Berlin, April 26 (P—-The death of Fioyd Bennett has aroused pro- found sympathy throughout Ger- many and this found expression in tribute paid the flyer in the metro- politan papers today. Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung said “Bennett was deeply imbued with the spirit of chivalry and ever ready to help others. Devotion to duty | was his supreme law. We mourn { with America the loss llmml man, whose services to our |countrymen earned him a lasting memory in all German he: | Lokalanzeiger said: “In the cup of joy over the Bre- men's successful flight, there is now mixed sorrow. With the American people, Germany shares in the grief over the loss of this hero who left| life for his brothers.” | I Morgenpost called Bennett model of heroic comradeship. the SOCTE Washington, April 26 UP)-\I!‘F | William J. Boardman, for many years prominent in Washington s ciety, dicd here yesterday at the age Tribute to Man | his subject of ihis excep- | | two daughters, 16 grandchildren and Will Come Up at October Term— Meauwhile Prisoner Starts Life Sentence, Hartford, April 26 UP—Notice of |appeal from the verdict of murder [in the third degree returned against | Dr. Harold N. Guilfoyle, veterinar- !1an, by three judges, Tuesday after- noon, will be filed with the clerk,of !the superior court today. Samuel Rosenthal of defense coun- el said the case will come before ‘!he Connecticut supreme court of er- rors in the October term since it s | | too late to obtain a place on the| docket durlng the May term Which | begins in a few weeks, The veterinarian was taken to the | \smc prison at Wethersfield yester- | day following his conviction the pre- | | ceding afternoon for the murder of | frs. Clare C. Gaudet of New Haven. | Irs. Guilfoyle spent an hour with | | him at the county jail before he was | |taken to prison. The prisoner will | begin working in the shirt factory today while his lawyers prepare the | appeal. Lecture on Patriotism At P. O. S. of A, Meeting The semi-monthly meeting of Washington eamp No. % P. O. S. of A. will be neld in the Red Men's Main street tomorrow eve- As a special feature, O. A. chairman of the board of ctors of the United Week Day | Church schools, will address the | mecting. Mr. Marsh will take as| “Building Fences" The | talk will be on patriotism. It Is ex- | peeted that a delegation from Camp | 14, Hartford, as well as some of the | tate officers, will be present. Re- | treshments will be served following | th. meeting. | NORWICH MAN DIES Norwich, April 26 (M—Justin | Holden, 75, retired grocer for the | 1ast four vears, dled last night. He was prominent in Free Masonry, having been grand master of the Connecticut Grand Lodge in 1912 He leaves his widow, two sons and four great-grandchildren, DEATH TO MOSQUITOES Chicago, April 26 (UP)—A screen through which a current is sent, and | | which will electrocute mosquito alighting upon it, is the latest in- vention of E. A. Lindsley, who claims to have killed cight quarts of | insccts in one day. lsions—no matter how bad | ]odcty’s motors dema NEVER of fuel mile, more your motor SAFE before has your choice and lubricating oil been so important. More explosions per wear on moving parts, in modern high speed motors, put new demands on oil and gasoline. 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