New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 23, 1928, Page 4

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4 NEW BRITAL —_— the best that the colleges can iuce, he far west is sonding five eight- oared outfits to thie Hudson, with hington entcred in all three races and California i two, RECORD BREANG Issue Among Automobile Pilotg = et e s Front and Wheel Drives UP—Tt may 1o the or pro- The also is Just when Amer cxins 1o gt placent o the skill of rack and field talent some star Germany hobs give the olt | 180 Ted Mers ord for the 3 jered inpregna- but along lanky Dr. Otto | Itz 10 knock it out of the hooks he tumult over the shot-putting sxploits ©f John Knuck out on th west coust had hardly died down a 1z0 when the cables car- Karl Hir 18-poind hall ) to New York, May 2 Le of startling concern age motorist whether or not he a front or rear whe but this mechanical issuc lnm»» ns to be vital just now to a dozen or two specd| kings who will match their dare- deviltry and speed in the #vu-mi international swecpstakes at I dianapolis Memorial D The argument between camps is so hot that it likcly culminate in a record-breaking | drive cams ws that 1 the automobiles, ng in t was there wh dianapolis Fisher's en ard the e concentrates on tlie v relaxation two motors roar o AHEAD OF RECORD itis as dircetor G iapolis ra battle “The India Bahe Ruth is Coasting \ong Fight will be a gr ront and re says Steve, “The b + basis of which shows than on whicl vheel drive pilots will tear off th E r hus get the front positions in starting linc-up but th Loys are wageri e front before th completed. “I would not be the nile was set & 1825 by P of Ralph De that had a rear- \wh» 1 4!H (: Lockhart holds the record for the rastest lap, 120.51 miles per hour, nd that, too. may he busted next e this year, Games in Front of Hi~ Home Run Pace of Last Year. w York, May 2 ong » U will win s run record of 6 t cam- d into left field gr 1 spot " e ’ dly from Dhis prodizious 1 a machi No. 13 came in | Last year he hit | Sthin his 39t game on )Ia)‘ Sox 1t score. Rutl's smash travels th ndst Lon Gehrig, off to a slow ks I one of s own—nhis scventh of the season. Ie had nine to his| credit at this time last year, Tt may or may not turn out to be a good omen but Corncll, in rowing doldrums sin the days of old man Courtney, drawn the rabbit's foot lane No. for the varsity in the Poughkeepsic re- gatta this vear. Legend for years has favored the crews drawing this lane, although it is more a case o superstition than of fact. Pennsylvania had the in the varsity linished 80 watchers fe v lost or sunk. Columbia, the 14 winner, had the No. 6 o and this year has drown No. 7, out near th iniddle of the Hudson river, Nevertheless Cornellians may look n the draw as at least a good omen for the time being. The Big Red crews, under Jim Wray, are showing signs of a com-i Poughkerpsic, in the old days, was their main bat- tleground and the Ithacans have their hopes centered there again, The record entry of 20 crews In he Poughkeepsie June 19, testifies to the intense interest in rowing this year, with the Olympics ' an added incentive to bring on Seasonal Hardware Lines how (fleater Activity | New York, May z hard- | ware lines, particu and tools and supplies, e been | greatly stimulated during the l\u\l! week, Hardware Age will to- | morrow in its weekly market sum- mar Western reports indicate busicr wholesale sections in the east, where lhf\ weather has main retarding factor, ather will quickly stimulate avy tr in spring lines in all Stocks are generally in a hea condition, and prices are gener all markets, hardware say No. year far ed the rear that i 1 ihose unseasonal Iy fivmt in Staple is having ng sume improvenient PIANIST DIES New York, May 23.—() crnstein, prominent pianist, died of heart disease home in this city today, aged i, Bugene Russian air Like This |toddy stood at fifty-three, | the been the |of the victir Still better | 5l {the | svlvester {torney J. con | sistent call and collections are show- | | propert {extension and on Brooks street was at his | 'Winkle. HUNT FOR MISSING | FILES 85,000 SLANDER SUTT ‘Lack of Planes Halts Searcm A 35000 slander suit has been ‘Irnughl by Mrs. Agnes Makula, a in Maska | widow, of 21 Horace street against | Mre. Theodora Keiko. The writ SOl ates that Mrs Keiko falsely, rnlancs today threaten- |maliciously and unlawfully ascribed delay for possibly o week the [to Mrs, arch for aviators and {commit. It is further stated that the three passengers who long | plaintiff is & widow amd & mother overdue here from a proposcd round |of & large family and that her repu- trip to Point Barrow tation was greatly injured through A relief plane for Anchorage, |the slanderous remarks made by the south of was to have startcd |defendant, and that she was caused Wedn ¢ for the territory north imuch humiliation by the alleged of Wiseman but it is not ready 10 [statements. The defendant is said to e the hazardous flight to Ihave reflected on Noel Wein and R. which the plaintiff conducted her Mmisshgz pilots. rooming house. Planes ¢ e here trip May 23 (1 rw Lack of d 10 two were able of mak- cannot be nearly a o ot trip tor 15 said tors and {heir passengers, Virzil Hort, Jack Robertson and Charles G, Clarke, left Wiseman, 300 miles north of here and norther- nost radio station, 10 days ago and smia they would return to Fairbanks nest night. Nothing has been of them since that time Foreign Minister in China Has Resigned nghai, May 23.—(@—Hwang "1, forcign minister of the Nationale ist government, resigned toduy. ing prepare for |Golf Stars Gathering week I Wollaston, Mass, May 23 UP— | Golf stars from far and near were converging here today for the open- ing rounds of the annual state open golf championship tournament. While news that Johnny Farrdh had been forced to semain in New York and would not be on hand to defend the title hg won so decisively last year at Sandy Burr, was.dis- appointed, candidates for ‘the cham- pionship included such redoubtable players as Leo Diegel, Cyril. Walker, former nationat open champlon and now professional at the Stockbridge country club, Mike Brady, Henry Cuiel and Dike May, Lenox country club pro. The field for the third and fourth rounds toduy will undergo a drastic cut as only the first 60 scorers at the conclusion of the second round will be permitted to continue in the title Hwang Fu was acting minister of forcign affairs in the Peking govern- ment of 1 and later hecame mayor of Shanghai. When Dr. C. C. Wi, who is now in the United States, e us Nationalist foreign min- Hwang Iu succeeded to the ister DOsL. Alter the clash between Nation- alists and Japanese troops at Tsinan, Hwang Fu cabled Dr. Wu, who w: then in Europe, asking him to go to Washington and bring the Shantung situation .to the attention of the American government. Russian Ship Death Tolls Stands at 53 Moscow, May 28 UP—The' death toll of two Russian ship disasters A ste el sized at Temryuk. dre n were drowned. Nincteen persons died in o fire on |the steamer Leo Tolstoi which was tied to a dock in the Dnieper river near Petrovsk. The victims were first and second class passengers, third cfhss travellers managing Professor Stupin of the chnic Institute was one m launch on the river Ku- g eighly children, cap- Thirty-four chil- to escape. Kicff Poly LUMBER COMPANY SUES Suit for $750 was brought today by New Britain Lumber Co. against Naples, otherwise known as polotano, through At- H. Kirkham. The plaintift me that the sums of $300 and $374.52 were lent to the defendent on promissory notes, which the de- fendant failed to mect when the notes became due. Attachment on Jocated on Bassett street Sam tached today by Constable Fred 92% DAILY HERALD, Makula deeds she did not | the manner in | For Match in Mass. | WEDNESDAY, MAY IVENIZELOS MAY ' RETURN T0 POWER Athens, May 28 UM—The return to {power of Constantine Venizelos, strong man of Greece during the | %ar, was forecast today as the out- Grek Cabinet Resig Resigns and Par-| | liament Suspends Sessions | 23, 1928, ernment influenced by Venizelos, | who has long been regarded as the | power behind the scenes, was held | 10 be partly responsible for the pres- i ent erisis. | FRENCH TENNIS PLAY Argentine Pair of Davis Cap Stars Scheduled Match Tod: to Meet Veteran Roland Garros Stadium, Paris, May 23 (UP)—The feature match |of the French tennis championships |today brought together the Argen- come of the Greek political crisis. The cabinet has resigned and | parliament sessions were suspended | by President Koundourlotis. Boisterous scenes followed the | announcement of the suspension. Partisans of General John Metaxas, | minister of communications and leader of the free opinion party, a | wing of the former royalist party, protested s0 uproariously that the | speaker of the assembly left the floor. The vice president, who is a | member of the free opinion party took the chair - and the opposition held a short sitting from which sewspapermen were excluded. This | action brought about an address of protest from the press gallery by a newspaperman. i Minister Quits, { ‘The cabinet's resignation followed | the announcement of Finance Min- | ister George Kafandaris of his resig. nation from the cabinet and later | from the leadership of the liberal | party. Five other liberal ministers | then resigned and Premier Alexan- der Zaimis found 1t impossible to | reconstruct the ministry anfl offered | the resignation of his cabinet to the | president. | Should Venizelos return, the mod- | erate rovalists including the follow. ers of General Metaxas were regard- | ed as likely to stir up consderable {controversy. Refusal of General \(Muxas to collaborate with any gov- | his partner, the vetcran Australian, |a favorite to win the singl | Paired with Miss Penelope Anderson { have the power and emoothness of tine pair of Davis Cup stars, Body | and Robson, opposed to Francis T. | Hunter of New Rochelle, N. Y., and | Norman E. Brookes. Miss Helen Wills, American cham- pion, whose play here has made her | . had a hard doubles with on her hands. he California girl met Mlle. La urie and Mile. Deve, the strongest women's doubles combination in | France. | Until today, only one American, Mrs. Molla Mallory, had been elim- inated. The Norsewoman was badly off form and madec many errors. 10 DEVELOP CREW | Coach Ed Leader of Yale to Devote Time t0 Work With Four-Mile Boat Aggregation. Derby, Conn., May 23 (UP)—With the annual Harvard-Yale regetta at New London less than a month away Coach Ed Leader started today to dr velop a four-mile crew that would his sprinting boat. Over the short course, the Yale {varsity has heaten the hest in the in| written from the front and sketches | | made on the battlefields | cast. But more weight is needed in wnsist on Lux for their OWN The greatest group of experts ever consulted of the Department Store Buyers interviewed in ———— 3 the long grind. Thyee shifts were | Grace M. Schirmer, of New York. announuced by Leader this morning [ The medal of honor awarded Reed Satterthwaite went to stroke in|in 1595 for heroic action at Gettys- place of Tappen who is ill. Souther- | hurg, July 2, 1863, in saving the life land and Porter, both 190-pounders, | of hiS captaia, John Bigelow. also ook four and five in the varsity | has been turned overgto the library hell. | by Mrs. Schirmer. | Sketches by Reed illustrating the Civil War Sketches - ! fighting on that day at Peach Ore {chard are included in the collection. Are Given to Library | Washington, May 23 (P»—Lnu:rs BOOTH TO REST London, May 23.—U®—General Bramwell Booth, head of the Salva- tion army, has been ordered to take Reed, artist trumpeter in the ninth ja complete rest and relief from all Massachusetts battery recruited in public e gements temporarily, He 1562, have heen donated to the li- |15 72 years old Lrary of gongress' collection of the | war between the states by Mrs. Corns Perfect comfortin one minute One minute—that’s how quickly Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads end corn pain. ‘They remove, the cause—friction and pressure of shoes. You keep per- manently rid of corns this way if you apply Zino-pads at the first sign of irritation caused by tight shoes. Powerful liquidsor caustic plasters #gnore this principle—often making the toes sore from acid burn, Zino- pads won't harm the tenderest skin, Thin, protective, healing— guaran- teed safe and sure. Atall drug, shoe and dept. stores. Buy a package today — 35c, Dz Scholl’s Zino-pads Put one on—the # pain is gone! during the Civil war by the late Charles W. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS & Department Buyers for 112 Great Stores things 112 of the most important stores in America insist on Lux for their own precious things! Imagine what this means! These women are the buyers of women’sand children’sdresses, blouses, underthings, hosiery, gloves, for the great stores which do three-fourths of all the de- partment store business in the United States. Experts in Clothes They are paid huge salaries because of their sure knowledge of fabrics and styles. For the first time, hundreds of these experts in big cities from Bostonto Los Angeles have given their opinion about the best way to cleanse today's clothes and modern, sheer fabrics. Interviewed in their own de- partments of leading stores in 26 gities, they told just how their nigh unanimous! 92% of these experts in- sist on Lux! Knowing clothes and fabrics, and the importance of the right method of cleansing, these ex- perts will take no chances! Like women everywhere, the women who buy for America’s great stores—buy the charming clothes that the women of Amer- ica wear—overwhelmingly insist upon safe cleansing with Lux! Free From Dandruff Note the picture above. This woman’s hair looks clean, free from dandruff. Every woman’s hair should— and can — look the same way. Dandruff can be checked and often cured entirely by the frequent, sys atic use of Listerine. You simply douse it on the scalp full strength and massage vigorously. Keep the treatment up several days. Within two weeks you will be delighted to find dandruff gone. If you are one of the few who have an excessively dry scalp, use alittle castor or olive oil in conjunction with this treatment. Lambert Plnrm.u-al Company, t. Louis, Mo., U. DEPARTMENT STORES send their women buyers to New York and Paris to select smart clothes. The above pice ture, an actual scene in a New York showroom, illustrates how buyers select the clothes you see in the stores. BUSINGSS IN TRIED IT YET? New different LISTERIN A ING CREAM. Your wskin feels marvel- ously cool long after shaving. LISTERINE —the safe antiseptic ALL OVER THE UNITED STATES, from coast to coast, successful women buyers, heads of their own departments in the big stores of the 26 cities shown above, told frankly how they cared for their own things. For sheer stockings, delicate underthings,sweaters, charm- ing frocks, gloves, 92% of these clothes experts —92 out of every 100interviewed—insist on Lux! @ Like the department store buyers, women everywhere trust their nice things to LUX. For women have found, as the grest motion picture studios —the New York musical shows —have proved by test, that washing with Lux doubles the life of fabrics! @ Pure Lux has none of the harmful alksli found in many sosps, whether flakes, chips or cakes—nothing to weak- en delicate fibres, fade nice colors.

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