New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 13, 1929, Page 4

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e i i i A IS 11TH ANNIVERSARY Former Marine and Eaglish War . Bride Married in 1018 Mr. and Nrs. Joseph Feingold of 38 Broeklawn stroet are today ob- serving the 11th snniversary of their wedding. They were married in Southampton, kngland, in 1918 white Mr. Feingold was a member of the United States Expeditionary forces. He served with the 67th company of the Fifth Mariaes, Socond Division until the' Semorable battles which took place in May and June betwecn the German troops driving on Paris and the United States Second Di- vision. One of the brigades in the division was made up of the Fifth and Sixth Marines. At the time, one of the greatest German offensives of the war was started down through Soissons and ! the Valley of the Marne, The hordes swept over the Chemin des Dames, took Soissons, swept down the Paris- Mets road and battered their way to | Chateau Thierry. Called into action, the Second Di- vision, Including the Ninth and ' ‘Twenty-Third Infantries, the Marine brigade, the Second Engineers and | the attending machine gun and ar- | tillery units, threaded its way through a throng of ficeing French | units shattered in the terrific battle until it rveached the tfown of Bourcsches and the Belleau Woods. Here strung out in battl® formation, firing as they leaped from the | camions, the Marines and doughboys hegan a defense of Paris that has gone down in history as one of the fiercest and most spectacular battles of the World war. The first clash took place on Me- morial Day, 1915, and the Dbattle lasted until July 6. In the con- tinuous fighting, Mr. Feingold was hit in the hip, shattering the bone and rendering him hors de combat. After the war, Mrs. Feingold came to this country on the 8. 8. Platts- burgh and with her husband took up her residence in this city. Later they moved to New Haven where Mr. Feingold was engaged in busi- ness at Savin Rock, They returned to New Britain about two and a halt years ago. Mr. Feingold is proprictor of a gasoline station on Arch strect. They are the parents of four chil- dren, Freida, eight years; Albert, six years; Edith, three years and Sidney, seven months. They plan to observe the anni- versary quietly at their home today snd tonight will attend a theater in Hartford. Italian Flag Floats N, 3. 1. 3. PUPIL PRAISED - AS ADYOCATE OF THRIFY Joscph Vetramo Recoguised for Leadership in Promoting/ides of School Savings Joscph Vetrano, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carmine D. Vetrano of 9 Russ- win road, was praised in the Ede. cation Thrift Gazette, a national magazine which deals, with thrift !snd banking, for his efforts in bullding the banking percentage cr' the Senior High achool. It was brought out in the article that the school has had the lowest percentage in banking in the entire which had 100 per cent. In January, 1928, Vetrano was elected assistant cashier of his room but when the cashier was not get- ting results he asked for a chance to become cashier. In two weeks' time the class was 100 per cent. Because of his efforts, the article continues, he was appointed as- sistant to Miss Antoinette White, who is bank adviser. She keeps & record of all the classes from week to week. Vetrano maintained close watch of each room and the rooms which were not doing so well were visited by him. He spoke to the group and then to the individuals. Among the points brought out in his speech was the fact that gradua- tion expenses are approximately $150, but if pupils saved their mon- ey they would not feel the burden of expenses. Besides making & name for him- sclf in the thrift campaign at the school he was also high in studies, a good art student and a member of the football and basketball teams. Schedule Is Changed In Ice Hockey League It has been found necessary to alter the Hockey league schedule for this week, thercfore Berlin will play the 8pads tonight and Thurs- day the Sachems will play the North Ends, Friday the Spads will play the Sachems in their second round match. The rest of the sched- ule is as follows: Saturday, Feb. 16, Swift & Upson vs. the Spads, Shut- tle Mcadow vs. North Ends. Sunday, Feb. 17, Swift & Upson vs. Shuttle Mcadow; Berlin vs. North Ends. Tuesday, Feb. 19, Berlin vs. Sachems. Thursday, Feb, 21, Shut- tle Meadow vs, Sachems. Saturday, Feb. 23, Berlin vs. the Spads; Bwift & Upson vs. North Ends. Sunday, Feb. 24, Sachems vs. North' Ends; the Spads vs. 8wift & Upson; Shut. tle Meadow vs. Berlin. This leaves four matches to be arranged at the next meeting of the league, Pershing’s Attack of Grippe Proves Slight Near Cross at Desio Desio, Italy, Feb. 13 (M—An ltalian tri-color waved today beside the cross of the principsl church in * this little Italign town, birthplace of Pope Pius XI. The town celcbrated when news came to the signing of the concordat between the Vatican and Italian gov- ernment. A man climbed a church spire and mounted an Italian flag beside the | cross there. The mayor sent a tclegram to Cardinal Gasparri containing warm Paris, Feb, 13 (M—General John J. Pershing will remain indoors-for a few days as & precaution against A relapse after a slight attack ef grip which kept him in his cabin jduring mast of his transatiantic trip 1 which ended yesterday. He then will begin his worl conncction ‘with the commission to provide battle monuntents in Fragce which' hé expects to keep him im France for some time. & On his arrival here yesterday the {former A. E. F. chief had thrown oft the unwelcome visitation suffi- | ciently to deal roundly with report- congratulations from the community 'crs who sought to draw from him and intimating the wish of the an expression regarding cruisers townspeople for a visit from their strength, reparationsand the like. He native son, who once was their pas- tor. du Pont ‘Organ to Have 10,400 Pipes Wilmington, Del., Feb. 13.—(M— Arrangements have been made by Pierre 8. du Pont for the manufac- | ture of a concert organ to replace one now in use at Longwood G: dens, Pa., his country estate. It will | be ane of the largest in the country. The present Longwopd organ will be rebuilt and transferred to the new auditerium given to the Univer- sity of Delaware by H. Rodney Sharp. The new organ will be €3 feet wide, 25 feet deep and 40 feet high and will consist of four keyboards, 161 speaking stops, 10,400 pipes, the larger of which will be 32 feet long weigh close to 1,000 pounds. REFUSED TO GO TO BED Walinty Sager, a boarder at 17 Albany avenue, was fined $5 and costs in police court today by Judge Morris D. Saxe. He was charged with being drunk and with breach | of the peace. The breach of peace charge was suspended and the fine was for drunkcnness. Sager was arrested when he refused to stay in bed after & couple of policemen had put him there twice. Dr. Caldwell’s iteld them they were wasting their |time as he never talked on current events, . SAND NOT SATISFIED Tos Angeles, Cal, Feb. 13 (M— Heinle S8and, third baseman, obtain- ed from the Philadeiphia Nationals and turned over to the Rochester club of the International league by the 8t. Louis Cardinals, is not satis- fled with terms offered by Rochester. His contract calls “or a cut in salary and he also having trouble over his transportation to Rochester and return here next fall, he said. SCHAAF VS, O'KELLY Boston, Feb. 13 (UP)—Ernie Schaat, former sailor heavyweight, has signed to meet Con O'Kelly of Treland in a 10-round bout at the Boston Garden Saturday night. Max Schmeling, German heavyweight, was to have been O'Kelly's opponent but decided to return to Germany before meeting the Irishman. DUNDEE WINS BOUT New York, Feb. 13 (UP)—Johnny Dundee of New York, veteran of 400 ring battles and former holder of |two championships, won the dect- !sion from Lou Moscowitz of the |Bronx in a 10-round bout at the Lenox Sporting club last night. Dun- dee weighed 128 1-2, Moscowitz 129 1-2. 3 Rules Keep You Healthy Dr, Caldwell watched the resuits of constipation for 47 yecars, and be- lieved that no matter how careful out a bowel movement. Do not sit and hope, but go to a druggist and !get one of the generous bottles of | Syrup Pepsin. Take the proper dose people arc of their health, diet and |that night and by morning you will exercise, constipation will occur from time to time regardless of how much one tries to avoid it. Of next importance. then, is how to treat it when it comes. Dr. Caldwell always feel like a different person. Get a bottle today, at any drug- store and obscrve these three rules of health: Keep the head cool, the feet warm, the bowels open. was in favor of getting as close to! nature as possible, hence his remedy for constipation, known as Dr. Cald- well's Syrup Pepsin, is a mild vege- table compound. It can not harm the most delicate system and is not a habit forming preparation. Syrup Pepsin is pleasant-tasting, ang youngsters love it. Tt does not gripe. Thousands of mothers have written us to that effect. Dr. Caldwell did not approve of drastic physies and purges. He did not believe they were good for hu- man beings to put into their systems. In a practice of 47 years he never saw any & medicine like Syrup Pepsin will empty the bowels just as promptly. more cleanly and gently, without griping and harm to the system. Keep free from constipation! Tt robs your strength, hardens your ar- teries and brings on premature 0id age. Do not let & day go by with- | SN A ason for their use whea ‘ _____a» ))J e o TENNIS STAR NOT READY T0 QU Nolla Mallory Ranked Low for First Time in Yours New York, Feb. -13 UP—Mrs. Molla Bjurstedt Mallory is not yet ready to sheath her once irresistible tennis racket, although the United States Lawn Tennis association last week ranked her lower than the first three for the first time since shy reached the heights 14 years city and there never was & room |age. Feor several weeks the eight-times champion has been working out reg- ularly on the Heights Casino indoor courts in Brooklyn and about the middle of May she expects to sail for Europe to play for the English championship at Wimbledon, June 2 24. ¢ Aside from the British claasic, Mrs. Mallory said she had no defl- nite plans for the season, but the odds are all in favor of her presence at the United States national chath- plonship at Forest Hills, August 19. Without Mrs. Mallory the tourna- ment would not be complete. She wop it first in 1915, three years be- fore Bill Tilden blossomed forth as a championship contender and five years befors he won the national title. A regular entrant ever since, this hard-hitting daughter of the North- land, first as Molla Bjurstedt of Nor- way and aince 1920 as Mrs. Franklin 1. Mallory of New York, amasmed a total of eight. championships over the period from 1915 to 1926, des- pite the rising of a younger star, Miss Helen Wills. Molla ranked first, second or third évery season until 1928, for which year she has been met down as fourth. It took Miss Helen Jacobs, who is ranked second only to Miss Wills, to put her out of last year's title chase. In the Wimbledon tourney of 1928 Mrs. Mallory was stopped by another member of the youthful sennis generation, Miss Louise Bick- erton of Australia. The rumor was abroad last sum- mer, and even found its way into print, that Mrs. Mallory would re- tire from tournaments in 1929. The reverses she suffered at the hands of younger opponents at Wimbledon and Forest Hills were supposed to have forced the veteran to ac- knowledge she had reached the end of the trail. But those who believed the story did not know the indomitable fight- ing spirit that has characterized Mrs. Mallory's play on a many furiously embattled court. shows— . NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, At her home in Park avenus when asked about her pians for the com- ing seasan, Mrs. Mallory was em- phatic on just one point. “I certainly do plan to reti=2," she said. “What's re, 1 expect to play some tennis for a long time yet, as long as 1 am able.” In her tuning-up drills at the Heights Casino Mrs. Mallory's good right arm has been dealing out fore- hands and backhands with appar- ently all her old violence. Her strokes still are almost masculine in force and if Mrs. Mallory is beaten this season it will be because she no longer is able to’ cover court effec- tively and not through any lack of abllity to wallop the ball. The British champlonship which is beckoning Molla to another inter- national quest has never fallen to her racket although in 1922 she was runner-up to Susanne Lenglen. Su- sanne i3 no longer an amateur, but there still is Mrs. Mallory's arch- nemesis, Queen Helen of “California, who happens /o hold that title as well as thé championships of the United States and France. TROOP 21 10 GET CUP Nathan Hale School Boy Scouts to Bo Preschted With Trophy for Winning Achievement Honors. The achievement cup won by Boy Scout Troop 21 during the 1928 court of honor contest will be awarded to that troop tomorrpw night by Col. W. W. Bullen, retired chairman of the court. The presen- tation will be a feature of a “Parent's Night” program conduct- ed by the troop, which meets at and is sponsored by the Nathan Hale Junior High school, and will be the high spot in the troop’s observance of “Anniversary Week.” Troop 21, under Scoutmaster .lob- ert 8. Quimby, was organized only a little more than a year ago, and in that short time it has grown to be one of the strongest troops in the New Britain council. It defeated the whole field in the achievement con- test by the council last year, yiling up more than 1,000 points and being well ahead of its closest rival. Murderous Farm Hand Is Declared Insane Canton, Ohio, Feb. 13 (A—A jury in common pleas court today re- turned a verdict of insanity in the case of Edward Kaltenbaugh, 21, of Grove City, Pa., farmhand who con- fessed killlng Mr, and Mrs. John Oser at their Canal Fulton dairy farm for possession of their new automobile. Plana for his prosecu- tion were dropped upon the jury's recommendation that he be sent to an asylum. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1 PROBLEN LOOHING Commission Must Seitle Ques- tions Goncerning Three Rivers Washington, Feb. 13 (M—Water has become a complicated and con- troversial subject “of international importance between the United States and its neighbors, Canada and Mexico. For the present the Can- adian controversy is somewhat in abeyance, but the situation with re- rd to Mexico 'is coming to the re with a meeting of the Mexican- American international water com- mission to be ‘held in th8 near fu- ture. = It will be concerned chiefly with problems. relating to use of the wa- ters of the lower Rio Grande, of the lower Colorado, and of the Tia Ju- ana rivers. The commission will en- deavor to reach an agreement upon which to base a treaty. The three rivers each present a different proposition, but it has been deemed advisable thav tne three he considered together as an easier means of reaching an aajustment. On the Rio Grande about two-thirds of the water is furnished by Mexico, on the Colorado all of the water s furnished by the United' States and on the Tia Juana the larger portion of the water .is furnished by the United States, - In the case of the Colorado river, which flows from the United States, and contributes all the water that has been used by Mexico, there ia the question of whether navigation rights apply and have been recogniz- ed. There is also the question of how far the United states is to rec- ognize existing uses in Mexico ns against later rights in the United States, and whether rights are lim- ited to the low-water flow of the river or to the flon as it will be regulated by storage. In this con- nection the Boulder Dam recently authorized by congress comes into the picture of the international wa- ter controversy. On the Rio Grande there appears to be opportunity for a large in- ternational reservoir along the river. On the lower reaches of the Rio Grande there has been a rapld growth of irrigation taking place both on the Mexican and American sideés of the rive A Part-Time River | The Tia Juana at times is a bed |of dry sand with no water flowing lon the surface. Its intermittent @is- charge is so valuable that Mexico is planning, and has begun, the con- struction of storage and diversion works which cost batween $14,000,- _Nferthe mest critical comparisons at theAutomobile Shows, Oldsmobile . now stands more than ever - - « IN THE SPOTLIGHT OF PUBLIC FAVOR With New Lower Prices Again the spotlight of public favor singled out . Oldsmobile at the great national automobile —not because of any radical changes in the 1929 Oldsmobile, but for a more vital and fundamental —because critical comparison with other cars in reau of reclamation of the degart- ment of the interior with W, B. An- derson and Genera! Lansing H. Beach as the other two commis- sioners, . £l SUES FOR FORECLOSURE OF $33,678 MORTGAGE Against Joscph Duicsck on High Strect Property A foreclosure action involving a mortgage for $23,673.60 on property at the corner of High and Lafayette streets has been instituted by the John Shechan estate ageinst Joseph Dziczek, owner of the Lyceum the- ater, through Judge Willlam F. Mangan, The property is subject to a prier mortgage of $23,000 held by the Bristol Savings bank. It has a front- age of 1456 feet on High street and 128 feet on Lafayette and consists of a brick mercantile and dwelling block, two frame blocks and a dwel- ling house, S According to the writ, the proper- ty was sold to Dziczek by John Shee- han io 1920 for $60,000, the original mortgage having been assigned to the heirs, who clal.a that the de- fendant has failed to make proper payments. The world is not perfectly round, actually being flatter at ‘the north and south poles. A ¥ ( aap SREATH! = pressure-lubricated—an enginéering feature heretofore characteristic of high-priced cars. Already distinctive in appearance, its smartness has been enhanced by new headlamps on chro- mium-plated mountings— by a new cadet-type visor—and by new, sparkling color combinations. And even greater luxury is revealed inside the its field reveals an overwhelming margin of value in favor of Oldsmobile. Not only have desirable improve- ments been added, but its price has been veduced. Already representative of the most progressive engineering, Oldsmobile’s big high-compression engine now develops 62 horse- power. Piston-pins are now LDS NEW LOWER PRICE TWO DOOR SEDAN s875 v o LANSING SPARE TIRE AND BUMPERS taocoucr o e EXTRA v CnE A car—by deeper, softer seat- cushions—by new, more costly- upholsteries—and by the won- derful new Fisher adjustable front scat that may be ingtantly regu- lated to suit the driver's con- venience. Sce and drive thisfiner Oldsmobile —and you'll immediately recog- nize why it is more than ever in the spotlight of public favor. ILE movenss DOMIJAN MOTOR CO. INC. Hotel Burritt Garage 136 Washington St. Telephone 4575 N T o~ Who_wts -*w o collar job, anyway? e HARTFORD 1,000 “Waverly” - SHIRTS '1.59 3 for $4.50 | Materials identical with those in $1.95 and $2.50 shirts. Only a special purchase makes it possible to offer these quality shirts at such a low price! Full cut, finely tailoved. In collar attached and neckband style as well as with collar to match. Sizes 14 to 17. Striped Madras White .Broadcloth . 4 Striped Dimities Silk Ties 69c Snappy new ties in attrac- tive designs, in the color com- binations that harmonize or contrast best with spring suits. Men’s Shop—Main Floor

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