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SOCIAL REGISTERS LIST BEAUTY WINNERS Prominent and Wealthy Women En- ANDY EXERCISES NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1929. WHO SEEK BONUS | current year after which it might be renewed. Several recommendations of sub- committees as outlined in last night's ON VISITING STAFF become an adviser-extraordinary to the Garden, are to confer in Bos- ton with the once loquacious sailor man and hope to convince him that | the $100,000 guarantee reported to have been made him is a trifle too much. If S8harkey accepts a cut the THE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Alphzbetieally Arranged for Quick and Ready Riterence . FORD PROPOSAL - Cairo, Egypt, Jan. .12, UP—The Egyptian government Was under stood today not to be prepared te consider Henry Ford's proposal that he build a road in exchange for free entry of his cars into Egypt. LIN® RATES tor CONSECUTIVE INSERTIONS Yearly Order Rates Upom Application |bout will go through as scheduled. | Herald were given approval by the | 1t he refuses the chances are it will board. The budget was the finance committee’s most important item and | on a motion of the committee, it was | oted to lay the proposition over for two weeks at which time a special HIMSELF ON SRATES Experience a Tongh Teacher, P | Ha Im | Palm Beach, Fla, Jan. 12 M—‘ paid now on Ford cars into Egypt. The newspaper recently sald Mr. Ford had pror posed that he construct at his own expense about 155 miles of road. ¥e of Sickness Mef Dy Re- it neretuses ¢ cruiting Larger FORGE 2 mmreTure e e e ey |indicated that the former title-hold- | Mrs. Mangan Calls Schol W Salary Committe¢ Unfair | Probably for the first time in his- |tory, American social registers to- day carried the names of bathing| |beauty contest winners. | About a dozen promnent women, ' members of this winter colony, | likes over to Stanley Quarter park |whose names are synonymous with o enjoy the outdoor sports. As a great wealth and social position, | scginner 1 had everything that goes |yesterday entered a contest held at vith it but the luck and wasn't on|the estate of Mr. and Mrs. Georgei he pond 5 minutes before I learns A. Dobyne, of Beverly Farms, Mass. | ome interesting facts about ice, Ice | Ater the judges had vieyed the | s water which has turned so cold it |parading beauties they decided that| Jccomes frozen so that you can|all were equally beautiful, and each 1k, slip, skid, skate and fall on it |was declared a winner. withont doing any damage (to the| Unique proccdure was observed in ice.) It starts you on little tours that the judges were locked in and as you go along you pick cages, and judges and spectators up such objects as bumps, Dbruises lalike had a copy of rules govern- | and more bumps. When sitting ing conduct. Ficld glasses were down suddenly it seems that the checked at the gates. only difference between ice and| No one except invited guests was concrete is that you can see through |permitted to enter the estate, and No matter how smooth it is details were meager. It was known, | always a little rough on a fella. |however, that the hostess, dressed in Anyways a fella tells me that for a bathing suit of the gay nineties, best results put one foot before the [fell in the pool when her dog trip- (Contributed) T)ear Mary Ann: | The other afternoon I fetched my ce skates down from the attic and other like you do when walking. T |2 question by Chairman P. F. King | meeting will be held and a vote The Visiting Nurses have averaged | Charges were made by Mrs. Laura | taken. It is the custom of the com- | r day P. Mangan, a member of the school |mittee to allow two weeks for |16 calls for nursing service committee yesterday afternoon, that 5“2’;8“:%:9;“;'.""12:‘ announced |ince Janusey 1, the "}.;;;:’cszi?;x;:::‘ the board's salary committce Was Ul | (nat e intends to call the meet- |yl $10 A0 NN o the nurs- fair in its atlitude toward (he Pro-|ing for Friday, January 25 The |y’ siiico overy call has been an- | posed $200 annual bonus for teach- (15 " aliy’ for expenditures of /IS SoIvice, every call has been an- ers with M. A. degrees. | $1.259.900. | necessary nursing care. | 12 prsscnting he pepo 08 e | “Four graduate registered nurses | matter Secretary Henry T. Burr, w IO‘SCIENTISTS m Aln Ve siiiea wenn el T auie | e moet the demand and it s likely that if it is necessary, the association will | | sequre other nurses in order to cover | |as adequately as possible the nursing | lieved that action on tha project was NEw YI]RK PM-IEE |uced of the city. not advisable at this time and after a conference with members of the| Whalen Tells of Plans for In-| struction and Research teachers' council it was announced that it would be impossible to get it | in this year's budget. In answer to | New York, Jan. 12 UP—Police | Commissioner Whalen plans to en- | list scientists to teach his detectives he said the committee felt unfavor- able toward the additional salary. {telegram addressed loes this, starting off as happy and | carefree as a young doctor who' just torn the ribbon off his dlploma and is on the way to practise on his ficst patient. I'd taken about a doz- un strokes when one skate falls off, icting as a brake, while the other Among the contestants were Mrs. { | ped her. ; Jr., | Leonard Beard, erson, better known as Anita| Mrs. John Charles Thomas | rt E. Warren, Mrs. Blaine | Webb, Mrs. Theodore Schaefer, M derick W. Proctor, Mrs. Leon | Mrs. John continues moving like its in a hurry and hadn't noticed it. A half circt is formed and completed only when T bumps into some guy kncelinz down to fix a skate strap and I goes over the top of his cranium, land- GLICK BEATEN BY “There's one advantage in landi"¢ | on your noble bean,” grins this la{ it saves wear and tear on the res. I s by Faoed Irish Boy Regains Skate and blaming him getting | P]'eslige L[}S[ Recel]{ly n my way I starts again and is do- ing well as could be expected un skates made the mistake of car e rying me awkwardly into the mid- ile of a hockey game. One skate blocks the tin can which used 1s a puck and in trying to kick it wside I goes down like the business ond of a steam shovel and what T ianded on was no bed of roses. T struggles to my wabbly legs only o find myself surrounded by action .and plenty of it. *In the excitement the players mis- {ook me for the goal tender, even though T wasn’t wearing the com- Dbination baseball, football and deep ‘sea diving outfit, and judging from ‘he way they manipulated thair hockeys must of thought I was try-| | Brion and Mrs. Howard Major. New York, Jan. 12 (P—Jimmy ~ MRS. LAURA P. MANGAN McLarnin, the baby faced Irish boy | progident King said the members who came out of the west a year ago benofit by the positions they receive and won the hearts of New York's and that additional pay comes with advancement. A After Mrs. Mangan had declared orite, Sid Terris, has come back 10 ‘it ynfair to the teachers, President his “lucky ring” in Madison Square King said he did not feel the school |Garden to regain the prestige 10st Loard should “pay for a label” or when he succombed to the fists of for training the teachers might have Ray Miller. In the first bout in the had. The pay, he said, was for ac- Garden since the death of Tex complishments. Rickard, McLarnin smashed his way | Mr. Burr expressed willingness to to a ten-round victory over another pay teachers when they proved ac- !Gotham favorite, Joe Glick, last complished, but he said he thought night. it unadvisible that the school board B athith ikt ey be sopstuing || Before the fmallhout, the Garden deBart Crom e Bl Selasy AOACT, One husky bimbo swings viciously | [FT,8 e Sried S04 WS SRR 15" hers should not be paid for and misses everythig but my shins. | o Z0 00 S of the great sports the ree but for thelr ability. T'm peeved and tells him that as & N onndad tape| Mis. Managan argued that these hockey player he's the original miss- |27 i o blaek: |teuachers should be given an oppor- ing link and couldn't hit the ground | T e promoter's empty black-|, . "0 show what they are cap- ; draped box and Jack Dempsey, irplane. Several | drap P ‘\\fo::e;:“s::mllcdflnt: ”;nck up my greeted by a ten-minute burst of G R n % i TS e Would be just as fair to give other skates, all of memmtl,s t:e 1;edwuh |cheering, stood in the ring while y ,.yerg who have not had the edu- 4 thud that could be heard down o s i 4 .{a .H"mph"es- veteran announcer. | cational opportunitics the opportu- at the high school and I'm telling |dclivered an eulogy to s his “best | ity to show their ability. ho bedtime stories when T say that | pal Rl otone e enii ot o isoun. I unconsciously Kept one side’s score | Although he has outgrown the ., jyqge M. D. Saxe brought up down by blocking a wicked drive lightweight class, McLarnin has not the point that teachers are allowed for a goal, |lost the speed or the paralyzing compensation while they are study- For a minute T saw stars, heard punch that carried him to the tob ing for their degrees during the (he last notes of a band concert,|in that division. Through seven summer. Areamt of angels, and imagined 1 rounds he outclassed the Brooklyn | 20 Years In Service was riding in one of those closed- |tailor, rated as a leader among the | The point was brought out during in affairs where the upholstery is lightweights, to earn the unanimous the discussion relative to an in- «oft and expensive and headed for|decision of the judges and referee. definite leave of absence for Mis the restricted district where no traf-| Only In the first round, when Ella A. Fallon that she will conclude fic cop hands you s ticket for park- Jimmy let him set the pace, and in service of 20 years at the close of ing overtime. Someone lifts me outa |the eighth and tenth when he threw |the present year. the daze and asks if T want a chunk |caution to the winds and slugged BY keeping her on the payroll and of ice to sooth the lumps which 1s|desperately. could Glick gain an ad- allowing her $600 a year for an in- sticking out all over me but T only|vantage. In the second and third |definite period during her illness she grins ruefully, removes my sKates, (rounds Mclarnin's two handed Will be cligible for a state pension of and answers that ice may be 500th-|punching had Glick in trouble and $800 annually which comes to teach- ing to a small lump but When ap-iit looked as If another knackout €' Who are in the service for 20 plied suddenly in large picces 10 |might be added to his list of Garden | Y& 3 vour whole person it has no more|onquests, |” She has not been able to take over soothing qualities than a Jersey @ | the dutles of supervisor of secondary Toward the end Glick raliled des- | SLaUDEr niax has beauty. verately. trading punches with seliools this geariandilor iplace tims the | been taken by Miss Mary A. Camp- i | hard hitting Celt ‘in the middle ?r‘bell, former principal of the hu the ring and landing a few sol'd |pyrritt school, whose sulary was in- smashes that sapoed JImmY'S creased to $2,800 in accordance with Skating Schedule |strength for a while. McLarnin Ler new duties. fight fans by knocking out their fav- | ‘!qnod off the rally to win the ninth | Secretary Burr spoke highly of [but in the final frame Glick again|Miss Fallon us a loyal and con- <hieged it out to win the round.|scientious worker and in answer to | MeTarnin was tired at the finish but = "JUST KIDS ANYWHERE | «tin able to trade punches up to the bell. AUNT HET BY CLAUDE CALLAN BY RORERT QUILLEN *“You can’t never tell what styles are goin’ to do, an’ T|! had my girls vaccinated about where I figured the ap- pendix scar would be any- way.” “When our son married we worried about whether he an’ his wife would go to our church or hers, but they don't get up early enough to go to either one.” (Copyright. 1 (Copyright. 1926, Publisers Syndicate) Fuoliemers Syndicate) MR sl i oty i i I e i I ‘ :h;:wmfllmmh’“"“‘ i g hl w Ideal Home New Cottage Facing North End Park itdedot e COMPANY INSURANCE REAL ESTATE Commercis! Trasm Camgeay Bulldiag how to prevent crime. Leading psychiatrists, ologists and psychologists are to he | called on, the commissioner said, to crimin- | conduct a research laboratory in an | anti-crime bureau to be established !at City College. ‘While the scientists are instruct- ing detectives and candidates for the | detective force in the causes and | methods of preventing crime, lead- |ing sleuths of the world will con- 'duct classes in the most modern methods of apprehending criminals. The commissioner sald he had in- vited some of the prominent scien- tists of the city to be instructors. They are to donate their services as a contribution to civic betterment. | The anti-crime bureau will study | the cases of first offenders and also | investigate the influence of all-night | pool rooms and other gathering | places on the crime situation. | ';May Li~hten Steamer | Held Fast on Rocks Panama, Jan. 12 UP—Efforts to pull the Dollar liner President Adams off a rcef at the Atlantic en- trance to the Panama Canal having failed, the possibility of lightening the vessel by removing the cargo was under discussion today. The vessel had 7,000 tons of cargo aboard. The 90 passengers were removed without injury when the ship | grounded. All mail was also remov- ed. Excellent weather prevailed and there appeared to be no immediate danger to the liner. The ship struck ow on but apparently the hull was not damaged since reports said that |no water had been shipped. Immediately after the grounding, Captain Morris of the vessel fell overboard while taking soundings. He swam ashore and returned to his ship in the port launch. (City Advertisement | The Board of Reliet of the City !of New Britain hereby gives notice |that it will meet in the Assessors' Oftice in City Hall— Jan. 14th—7:30 to 9 Jan, to Jan. to Jan to Jan. to Jan. to Jan. to | Jan. to 9 Jan. to | Jan. to | Jan. last day on which application for relief can be made from— :00 to 8 o'clock. :30 to 9 o'clock. LAWRENCE P. MANGAN, RICHARD B. VIETS, BURTON C. MOREY. | | o'clock. 19th—2 19th—17: 218t—T7 22nd—" SNOWED, T'DAY SHES RAINING AN captain’s | MISS MARIE McNERNEY 11 addition to the increased staff, many residents have offered to drive the nurses about in order to conserve their strength and make possible a greater number of visits to sick | people. Those who have been serv-| ing in this capacity are Mrs. A. J | Sloper, Mrs. William Hart, Mrs. Wal- |ter P Hart, Mrs. 1. G Platt, Mrs| Donald Gafiney, Mrs. Charles F Chase, and Miss Betty Kimball. The temporary nurses who have |Leen engaged by the association are Miss Marie McNerney, Miss Cather- ine Coffey, Miss Anna Ahern and | Miss Mildred Kane. BOXERS T0 TAKE SLASH IN'PRICE iSharkey Now Holds Key fo Bout With Young Stribling New York, Jan. 12 P — Jack | Sharkey secms to hold the key to| the tangled situation surrounding the proposed Sharkey-Stribling bout at Miami Beach next month. | Finding no trace of signed con- | Itracts for the bout, William I ! Carey, vice president and treasurer lof the Madison Square Garden cor- |poration, and his associates, have | decided to stage the match Tex Rickard planned dor February 2 | provided they can get the principals to agree to a revision in financial arrangements, | Young Stribling already T agreed to accept any terms Rick- ard’'s successors may offer, but |Sharkey may be rather less agree- {able. Nor is that to be wondered at | Stribling has yet to make his way to the forefront of the heavyweights secking the title Gene Tunney re- linquished last year. Sharkey ha been near the top for almost two years, At any rate the responsibility for {mf\hing or breaking the match ap- pears to have been thrust upon Bharkey’s shoulders. Carey and Jack Dempsey, who seems to have | ween, captain of Harvard's football | | director of athletics, make that an- | coming back oegan to be er would be in charge at Miami Beach if the bout goes through. Paul Block, newspaper owner and sportsman, has another solution for the puzzle. In the event that the Garden people decide they do mot | wish to go through with the bout. he proposes to finance it himself, with the provision that all profits and 25 per cent of the principals’ purse be handed over to charity. Mr. | Block’s offer was announced in a | to James L | Bush, a vice president of the Gar- den corporation. . HORWEEN AGAIN HARVARD COACH Announcement I Made at First Foothall Dinner Since 1923 (§IRL’S DAD SHOOTS 'ROADHOUSE KEEPER Count ¢ words to & line. 14 lines to an inch Minimum space 3 itnes. Minimum Book charge, 38 ceata Telephone $35. Ask for eis time rate The Herald will mot be responsible for errors after the first insertion. Closing time 12:30 p. m. daily; 9:30 a m. Baturday i ————————— ed more punch than any squad in years, The outlook for next year is gen- erally considered excellent. Hor- ween will have many veterans and an exceptionally good crop of re- serves. Horween who was married re- | cently returned only yestarday from | Bermuda with his bride, the for- mer Miss Marion Eisendrath of Chi- | cago. Boston, Jan. 12 (#—Arnold Hor- Believes That He Served Liquor, to School Children Camden, Ark., Jan. 12 UP—Wrath of the father of a 15 year old girl to whom liquor is alleged to have |been served along with about 75 lother students at a party held by| |Camden high school students at a | roadhouse near here last fall, cul- | minated yesterday in a shooting af- [fray in which the proprictor of the road house was wounded critically. Alex Hardin, 25, the proprietor, team in 1920 and head coach since 1926 is coming back to lead the| Crimson gridiron forces another | year. It was a joyous group of gradu- ates and undergraduates which heard William J. Bingham, Harvard | nouncement last night at the first Harvard football dinner since 1922. The dinner was staged in honor of the team which crushed Yale to climax one of the best seasons in recent years. There was present am well the undefeated freshman squad. Horween's return, matter of doubt since the close of the sca- son, was summed up by the coach | himself when he said: “The situation which was created by the question of whether I was painful hecause it scemed to be a question of whether I wanted to come back or not. There was never any ques- tion of that. It was simply a ques- tion of whether 1 could. “I never was more honored nor pleased than when Bill Bingham asked me to coach another year. The reason was the boys whom you see here tonight Members of Sullivan’s family said Arthur French, eaptain of the | that he knew nothing about the al- | victorious 1928 team, declared that |lesed drinking at the party until a Horween’s consent to coach again |fcw days ago when, after an under might be considered to mark a new |cover investigation lasting several era in Harvard football. “Now that |Wecks, Hardin was placed under $1,- Arnie has consented to come back, 000 bond for his appearance before I think the 1929 season will be the |the Ouachita county grand jury to greatest we have had in years,” he janswer charges of serving intoxicat- said. ing liguor to minors. At the same Horween came to Harvard at a|time Sullivan’s daughter and eix time when Crimson football for- |boys were placed under $110 boud tuns were at a decidedly low ebb |cach for their appearance as wit- and although his first two vears ef- | nesses against the road house keep-: forts were rewarded by only indif- |er. ferent success, the 1928 team show- | The investigation and subsequent | charges grew out of rumors that SEEEEEETEEESMSSESMEEMEE | liquor had been served to children of high school age at the road house. Practically all the students who at- |tended the party last fall were ques- {tioned by authoritiea. a wounds in his body and F. E. Sul- |livan, the girl's father, is charged with the shooting. Little | hope is held by hospital officlals for Hardin's recovery. The shooting occurred when Sul-| livan met Hardin in an alley. ul-| ivan, according to witnesses, shout- ed: “You can't ruin my daughter! {and opened fire with an automatic pistol. Immediately after the shoot- ing Sullivan surrendered to police. A PLAIN POSITIVE STATEMENT . ADDITIONAL ORDER OF NOTICE ANNIE H. HOPSON, widow of Branford, Connecticut, There is no case of imperfect eye- sight, capable of benefit by the use of glasses which we cannot correct to the fullest extent pos- sible. ‘We can prove its truth by a prac- tical demonstration and reference to satisfied patients, A. PINKUS Cptomet.i:t 300 Main St. Suite 201 New Britain, Conn. i Up one flight to better eyesight. | | e MORRIS RABINOWITZ, Administrator of the Estate of B LO, {of the Town of New Briluin, Coanty of | rd, State of Connecticut, et als Haven C Superior Court. New Haven, Conn.. January 4, 1929, Complalnt for Forrclosure of s, Mortgage on ieee of Land located at | Pond Point, Milford, Conn. Ordered, that additional notice of the pendency of the complaint in the above | entitled “camo be given by publishing this | order in the New Dritain Herald, a news- | paper published in sald Hartford County, [once a week for three wecks successively beginni or before tie 7th day of Junuary, 9. By the Court, GEORGE 5. McLAREN, Assistant Clerk. | FOR A small co in jajil AR way anywhere in Egypt and under- take its upkeep if the government would allow his automobiles to en- ter the country free of duty. L ANNOUNCEMENTS ' Rurial Lots. Monuments 1 NEW BRITAIN MONUMENTAl WORKE, 123 Oak 8t Moguments of all aizer and deseriptiona Reasonable Phone 2632. Florists s BOBTON FERNS. Very reasonable prices. BANDELLI'S GREENHOUSE. 318 Ok St__Telephone 2181-3 ger's, 234 LaSalle St. Telephone 4673-M, low and Foomd J BUNCH of 7 keys lost_on Maiy Bt. Ree turn_to barber shop, 328 East Main 8t. TOST Friday evening between Clark and Park Sts, pockethook containing sum of money. Reward for return to H. P. Jones, A. & P. Store, Park and Stanley Streets. LOST, red silk umbrella, whito pear] hane dle, on Arch Bt. jitney. Return to 68§ Arch_St. or phone 3993-R. LOST, LADY'S WRIST WATCH, white gold, n vicinity of John Bt Suitable reward. Please call 1756-W. | PATR OF GLASSES with case lost bee tween East Main and Main St. phone 842-J. Reward. POODLE, & months old, wh white feet, black body. name of “Waggy.” Please return to 8§ Smalley. Reward. Personals [ Wo repalr runs and enage in hoslery, The Expert Hosiery Repair Shop, Helen Cunningham, Prop., United Bldg., 303 Main 8t. HEADQUARTERS for 14 and 18 K wed- ding rings. Watch repairing. Himberg & WRR.A Telos y shoes rebuilt. Telephone 6328. The Mod- Hat_Shop, 38 Church St na t for cleaning right at Hall's Palnt Store 2606-3 |today is suffering from four bullet | 8P Fittings in_your 4 Rockwell A mall child to board. care. Address Classified Bos 32 J., Herald Office, Store Announcemen! 1 FEBRUARY graduation special. _ Photos graphs, $3.00 per dozen. Enlargements free. Arcado_Studio. Have You BABY CHICKS FOR SALE? Now is the time to Advertise. CALL 925 THE HERALD Classifled Ad Section THE WILL YOU PLEASE TELL NOW/ 1 HAWAIN, WY HAS HEAVENS KNOWS THE SAME DELIGHTFUL WEA V! EATHER, YEAR IN PERFECT ALIBI N THERE AN IF T DIDN'T EAT MY YT DOTHE PORE HAWAIIANS