New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 23, 1928, Page 3

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. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1928 = honor. The other winners were ! [; MP given laurel wreaths. The cast of the tournament was as follow King .. Queen ball as the main theme and plot of [ New York debut as & ‘vaudevilic pimk chiffon with a pink velvet hat | hospital [ le | pink ¢ | today w begn ln Gl'and Opera PR“ F[]"TBALL FATE the play. When asked by a reporter | actor. and carried pink rosebuds. P ade mhate e whether he found it more difficuit — The coremony was largely attend. | Comined since the accident. Charivs s Y, - 9\ to face a iheater audience’ than Ao ed and a wedding breakfast followed | 1. Miller. driver of the car that 2 t play football before a large crowd. | L g he replied that the thrill is quite the 2 struck H i ! Henrietta Peyser At the Ehensburg Inn. Mr. and A ayducin and wha was S * |85 in city court on & charge of hav. Maty Savage ; S . Divhl teft on a tour of the New Fng-|iug gofuctive brakes, following the ey e skt same with the exception that the land states and upon their return |8, (TRCER rakes. ol o i spirit one finds on the football field il esid *a ted, on & 3 Black Knight .. Dorothea Hornkohl 5 e g € il kodte i et DY charge of cansing death through m P.ils fo Dam| spin‘s._ Lady in Waiting. . .Catherine Rand “Red” Gmnge Slys It Must e 1 | | Thebride is a graduitc of Johns: | carcless operation of & metor . ves Heralds ........... Caroline Lord i ghe Ereatest thrill be got in his town High school, class of 1923 and hicle. A warrant has heen issued. t Courtiers: Marjorie Wenzel, Frances i Thri" Lik 00“ G ireer s 2ol and lA[%mx‘n:-l' | The wedding of Miss Dorothy P 10 several months ago was office | 3onds of $1,000 will be asked. mmflm Homko ‘eatures Russell, Virginia Post. | (4 ege ame f:a“e;,c‘ic:rsw;:: l‘l’“;lu he ,l]r!.l taced L gmith danghter e M e e ‘L\, uv\ ”Hm;un)‘.‘.nlm hos- | e e s ' : cameras ollywood. he says, |y, Sk : pital, She als ended Beaver col- % : Snighte Winiired _Prait. Dorotiy i recaliing the st Luve of his work | ™y T Smith ot Sowthmon. v [ ARG BTN Minnesota Deluged With s stock, Constance Grant, Lila | The fut f 1 1 foot- the “lot" with pleasure, even | afe | AL T Decidedly wet weather had little | pUttr € oF g uture of professional foot-|ou the ith pleasure, even |z “priiin Diehl of this city. took | Mg Diehl is a graduate of the Unusually Heavy Rains dampening effect on the spirits of Cym;:; “.‘l'r‘::":’"M::;"[‘:"‘:;’““- lall rests with the managers of the |though the work was more difficult {00 Ty o1 University of Maine y Heavy the Girl Scouts at Camp Sprague, Portland, yesterday afternoon, nor did it detract from the charm of the water pageant which they pre- The pageant was directed by Miss Betty Sullivan, assisted by Miss Hel- en Carleton, while Miss Irene Koer- individual teams in making the|and more fatiguing than playing on game as thrilling and as interesting y as college football and with fthe| When asked whether e would re- standard being kept up. there is no the gridiron turn to the field of conquest which | chureh in ¥ port. was i Methodist Pa:, 18 The bride's father officiate Miss Margaret Borland of McKees and a member of the Delt on and a s Templars and Mta fraternity. | St Paul, Minn. Aug. 23 (P—A driving wind and rain storm swept portions of Minnesota, lowa. and South Dakota last night and carly idesmald and Raymond | Of Cyprus Temple, A: A. 0. N M. 5. ltoday. cans e sented. As one of the counsellors |ber had charge of the costumes and | question that it will be as importan( | made him famous, he replied that oy oo™ e 5 H.,.,]x : Eikar ]- of Albany, N. Y. He has hwen con ’”"’fi“mm"r::;'g“::f’r-}-l' “::""*‘ damage remarked, “This i8 & water pageant |decorations. a feature of American sport as pro- | he intended o appear in o feW Pro-| yaung was nehor. Mre Hilton 1t ed for several ye with the 4 Al persons: in more ways than one,” but scouts| The members of the Girl Scout fessional baseball. Such is the opin- [ fessional foothall games this cOMINE | Bowman, orzanist of the First rzh office of the Travelers | Austin. Minn. reported damage and spectators did not heed the |council %}m all captains and lieuten- | Harold “Red” Grange, known |season. after which he will €0 back | proshyterian ehirch, plaved 4 gronp ince Co. and was recently as- |10 Bomes ;‘Wh Were unprotected downpour. The pageant took place |ants wert invited, as were the neigh- ", terror to the many collcge [to Hollywood whers he will apDEAT |of appropriate nmieys during o o ed 1o Clearfield, Pa |following Monday’s tornade, which between two rafts in the inlet direct- | boring cottagers on Job's pond. football teams, which faced him dur- |in another picture |Gttt preazatae R slanpal DAL ondes A nknay ly in front of the camp. Visitors Those who attended, numbering mg his reign as king of players| He is a pleasing talker and Was|Katherine Stol (os mins Chdments My . . | Nearly five inches of rain fell at were duly carried back to the t8. |about 30 in all, were forced to re- among college men and equally as |interested in the size of New Brit- /v at Dawning” and “All For \::u.‘“ Victim Dies, Autoist Is . (Albert Lea, Minn., and Decorah, of King Arthur and his knights |main in their automobiles because terrorizing in professional football. |ain, which struck him as a busy and | The byide wos aftired in @ gown To Be Arrested Again !owa. Two persons were injured at when two smartly clad pages ap-|of the downpour, but they showed Grange is appearing at the | lively com.nunity W Britain S jof cream chiffon with a matching Br ort. Aug. 23 (®—John Yankton. 8. D.. when a tent show peared, with shields and trumpets, |their appreciation by frequent toot- Strand theater during the latter the third city in which Grange has | hat of cream lice. She carvied vel- Havduein, 64, who was struck by an Was blown down. to herald the arrival of members of |ings of their horns. Refreshments part of this week in an act called |appeared on the stage and in n\o‘mu roses and 1l of the valley. The il while riding his bieyele Wire communication was crippled the court. “Princess Elaine's Tour- |were served to all the guests in | “71," a musical sketch with foot- |or three weeks he will make his bridesmaid wore a gown of pale o ' died at St Vineent's in several localities. nament on Job's Pond” had begun. Immediately a small skiff poled by two oarsmen came into view around the point. In it were two standard bearers with scarlet-and- black banners, a haughty gilt-crown- ed king, and several ladies in bright- 1y colored robes. The boat reached the float nearer the shore, and king and queen were there enthroned in the midst of bay leaves while the attendants astood around. The first event of the tourney was announced by the pages as “The Tilt.” This was a race in which three rowboats were paddled in the manner of canoes until the sound of a whistle. At this signal the lodge at the conclusion of the pageant and the visitors expressed admiration fer the spacious new | porch on the lodge. The water pageant is a Camp| Sprague tradition which was start- | ed last year and will be continued. | A banquet tomorrow night will mark the conclusion of another suc- cessful camp season and leave many scouts looking eagerly forward to| the next one. | Among those present were several | tions. These included Mrs. Fred Gross, Miss Irene Haigis and Miss Elisabeth Fox. NEA Los 'Angeles Bureau local people with scouting affilia- |John Simcoe Smith, a Long Beach, spent all his spare | music, has just been given contracts tiale studying Friday and Saturday at . J BEST SELLER DAY—A Beaming Beacon to the Thrifty . BDONRELLY CO. —A BEST SELLER! —A BEST SELLER! Girls' Rayon Vest and Girls’ Lingette and Muslin Bloomer Sets Slips $1.49 —A BEST SELLER! Women’s Extra Size Rayon Panties —A BEST SELLER! —A BEST SELLER! Girls’ Windser Crepe Infants’ Child’s Muslin Bloomers Rubber Pants Gertrude $1.39 39¢ 19¢ 35¢ - - A BEST SELLER! Bargains 3 4 Read Galore Every ltem! BEST |=o SELLERS ve the TR Bl AR b ;:;n}hr:?l::":::::"mg;‘ze{:;‘;m °| DANE ADDRESSES ROTARY ‘.U'.hmlg o |‘h|slsfa.')ns Eiadjct o o their boats and paddled the remain- | John Barding, one of the visiting | */'P PO!N the Los Angeles and San | ing distance, Dorothea Hornkohl |Danish youths, was the guest of the | I'rancisco Grand Opera Associations. finished first, winning over Mary | Rotary club at the weekly luncheon | For professional reasons, Smith, a Clark and Dorothy Comstock by a |meeting held at Burritt hotel. The banlonv.fi\\lll be known as John narrow margin. youth is leaving Saturday on his way Simcoe on the stage. Next came “The Retreat.” This back to Copenhagen and in a few SRR Y o ] was a race from the outer float to|words thanked the Rotarians for the | Giant hunting grasshoppers nearly shore, the competing “knights” us- | privilege of being their guest and |five inches long, that prey on small ing the back crawl. Dorothea Horn- |said that he had an enjoyable time |animals such as mice and the young kohl again arrived first, with Vir-|in America, hoping to come back to of ground-nesting birds, are found ginia Post not far in the rear. In |resume the friendship. |in the Congo, “The Joust” the girls' were paired, —A BEST SELLER! and Chemises $1.95 —Tailored and fancy lace trimmed. All colors. —A BEST SELLER! Coty's Talcum Powder —Excellent qual.it.\'. White and flesh. —A BEST SELLER! Women’s Porto Rican Hand Embroidered wns $119 —In white and pastel shades. Sizes 16 to 17, one of each pair rununing along in tunate riders tumbled headlong over their “steeds.” Virginia Post 3 “Merlia's Magic Board,” read the ] L4 B neralds. and the visitors wers treat- o Ln onstipa th n ed to some amusing water stunts such as the see-saw, leg-rollin nd the water near shore with her com- * panlon sitting on her shoulders. octors ow vlse This event caused much merriment and many splashes as the less for- V bl " was the most successful in this egeta e lld uture competition, the porpoise. A subsequent diving | Pure, healthful vegetable extracts pleasant dose a:ted wildly yet thorough- contest was won by Dorothea Horn- | —now available in tempting form— [ 1¥: —With a jar of Cold Cream free, leansing out the food waste which caused him to feel *hoadach G all odors. kohl. “The Quest for the King's offer the most pleasant, quickest|\iised o {p focl thoatachy™ and mie Favor” caused much speculation (and safest way of ending constipa-!as directed and his intestines were saon ——A BEST SELLER! —A BEST SELLER! among the guests but finally turned |tion, according to experiences of |acting naturally every day without the ] . . . ) out to be surface diving for plates, [numbers of New Britain people. meedof turther treatmont. Tolay, the Pmted quue Prmted Dlmlty In lleu of the knight's search for| , =~ 0 5 T T Betore Buving Blsewhere Say T the Moly Grall, "The Prinosss™ |ues cbiaie mave 1t tenmrer o | ful ene PR D e ore Buying Elsewhere Say To Yourself & von proved . to be an overhand race'|lief but always left him more consti-| Aver ty are lospital certified AT oW LW . - ” al which was again won by Dorothea |Puicd than ever when we warsh purga: | oot 1o Doty G w ool 0 —tight ground with bright gay fisures Wonder What It Costs At H. J. Donnelly Co. 26 inches widn, Tast pretiy pattares, Horukohl. became constipated for at a time | for at any dn : 36 inches wide, for coats and dresses. fast colors. 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