New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 1, 1929, Page 3

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- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1923. : wflm_[]wm pumfi Soincd o el At et swtin AU Gonches 15 (he ot it DEMPSEY FIGHTING 050 vcher. Jack i oll i Tl @t S50 Yint Bouch vout | OURD NTRTRIAN SAVANY |éom, Prume het bum i AEM was being discussed at headquarters, |of a gun carriage would fit into comeback, but it I8 a question R Pirquet was an internationally one of his staff ventured to recall [them. Then the wily Orientals had | whether they will be suficient. the Madison Bquare Garden corpors MD WIFE DIE mE’"{BR known authority in diseases of chil- Napoleon's verdict. The gray haired | filled the trenches with the shrubs, A “I don’t know, honestly, what [|tion is resumed, he may figure that dren. He was vice president of the commander turned to this officer |and lo, they had a rallroad track will do” he said. “I've been turn.|this unespeciea venture opens up a| American Austrian soclety and was and said: along which a grn could be pulled ing things over in my mind, of|New as well as profitable field of Professor Pirquet and Helpmate|formerly connected with the reliet “Don‘'t quote Napoleon to me.|with comparative ease. The shrubs| ™ course. Tt's hard to keep away from | action. All things considered, it may i Dea Embra: administration of Herbert Hoover u fifid Bfi“sh b He’s been dead a long time.’ formed an indestructable mattress Adlllils He)d Lo" m T A .n“he game. It gets me. Every time ||@ppeal to him more than running Found th ce in Ausiria llllks ys y Because of his belief General|for the wheels. l'! sit at the ringside, T feel like climb- | the risk of possible infury in the After Taking Deadly Drug. . Murray finally moved the British| It was one of the most mnusual “s : hl 99 |ing up in. I cateh myself bobbing|Ting. After both Tunney bopts. |Committee Will Act Dl‘agglllg cflmfin 0‘0[ m defenses across the canal to the east | engineering feats in history, and it Bllt ls “0 pl‘lllgc ckell land shifting unconsclously as ||Dempsey was cut seriously and| Vienna. March 1 UP—Double sui- > side. There on the huge dunes,|was a stroke of genius. The Ger- | : | watch a fight. It's in my Dlood, 1|bruised about the eyes. He was un-|cide to escape the travail of illness On McGrath’s Salary | amidst sand so loose that one sank | nans got the credit for the idea. | guess. }der treatment of doctors for @ con-|and financial reverses was the po-| Councilman C. H. Maxzon of the By De Witt Mackenzie halfway to the knees at every step. Miami Beach, Fla., March 1 (®—/ “But you know, I'm no spring | Siderable time. lce explanation today of the death|Salary committee of the common (Copyright, 1929, Associated Press) | he established a “front line.” And|§ ] The main mystery in the boXing | cyicken any more. I'm not ,_‘:(;n‘ “When I get back to New York |yesterday of Prof. Clemens Pimuaz}councfl. has called a meeting Thurs- New York, March 1 (P—One of |3 miscrable, plazing hell it was. NS business, it not the success of the | any tuster or more roxged dong o |2nd have a chance to consider all |and his wife. day, March 1, at 7:30 o'clock, to the great mysteries of the World| Then, out of the blue, came the whole heavyweight Drogram for | mesmaters work. 1t in imercasingly |208les of the situation, I will let you| The bodies of the two were found |2Ct 9F the recommendation of the War. and one which all but escaped | attack. Fourteen thousand armed 11929, still revolves around the dy. | nard after lone abuences fram tny|know what I'm going to do—fight in 4 close embrace In & bed at their | P02Td Of public Works that the sal- solution, was Involved in that amaz- | men suddenly appeared and launch- | namic figure of the one.time mun | rins 1o regatn et cortiia 12| OF remain a business man,” Dempsey | home, There were evidences of nar. |21Y_Of Thomas F. McGrath, secre- ing battle in which the British de-|ed themselves against the British. |iins > one-time man | ring to regain fighting condition. Tt} ' "\ o o JECs DTl tary of the board, be set at $2204 Tt ’ i, o r, Jack Dempsey. will be two years this September | B { cotics, to indicate they had weighed 5 feated the Turks in Romani, just|This was astonishing enough, but ik Sl The fight A that s berelo | Nite, found it wants . per year. cast of the Suez canal, in August.|an almost unbeilevable thing was e TR Liome Shnt aA e St Neinoe tongkt unneyiihis st dimo ) o |life, found it wanting, and taken the| " George H. Johnson, McGrath's for the big show left apparently|In a total period of six years 1| TWO JOIN ORIOLE |deadly drug. lying down together to | 1914. that the enemy actually brought 0b \J R I ) P : 3 ! i S i} | f 4 SRR . | predecessor in the position, received Furtoen thousana Ottoman, with | oty (e enems, actually vrouent| (pego’s ReYolutionary PARty|more impressca ' whetver Dempe |have nod oniy thres bouts' — twa Clevelund. Mar. 1 (UP) — The die in ench others arms. 250 s et ek oY some German and Austrian cfficers, | seemed & Ree sey will fight again this year than | with Tunney and one with Sharkey.|ranks of the Cleveland Indians’'| Professor Pirquet, who developed {$2400 commencing April 1 under the swept across the well-night impass- | of p:,iibfl,;":f;,b"::"gri:ai Tean Gamrs for Que]‘vcm Conyent in what will happen nest o clther| “Even If it has meant a lot of holdouts were reduced by two last |2 serum skin test for tuberculosis|new salary schedule appproved by the able Sinai desert and made a flerce | scarcely believe their ears when {of the principals of the melodrama | money, a total of only 27 rounds of | night with the announcement that|now in world-wide use and who was | common council at the Jauuart assault on the British defenses|they heard the guns boom. o lof Miami Beach. {actual fighting in six years 13 hard- | Joe Shaute, southpaw pitcher, and {mentioned for the Austrian presi- | meeting. among the mountainous sand dunes. [ p oL ol B B0 B | Quervetaro, Mexico, March 1.—(®)| Dempsey would like to fight once|ly enough to enable me to say I|Dick Porter, outflelder, oblained | dency in succession to former Pres. The defeat of the Turks was catas. | 1o\ WOTT deacribe the batte at| _jioovy military guards of both | more: first, because he loves the (have kept In active trim. from the Baltimore Orioles, had|ident Hainisch, recently had lost a| Revenues of the Chinese mari- trophic. The battlefield was a charg(;d ped il liw b cavalry and infaniry were distributed c{l Ing game; _second. because it| Without exchanging a blow nnd‘uixned contracts. Shaute will ]ea\‘el‘snl! involving heavy financial obli-|time customs for all China during shambles, and few of the enemy es- | wyie the Tries hoy e o |about this city today for the opening | WOuld afford him a chance to re-|after dodging only one stray ho*.|tonight to foln his battery mates | gations to his brother-in-law. After|1925 totaled 82,332,000 halkwan caped death or capture. = | of the convention of the national | Vywi championship i Dempsey collects approximately | who left for New Orleans “ednes—firhat he had sent his papers and will | taels, an increase of 13,597,000 tae!s Gen. Sir Archibald Murray, com- g clitoary frar on and retire at least $500,- | $25,000 for his part in the promo |day. {to his lawyer for safe keepinz. Ma- | over 1927 revenues. mander-in-chief of the British Orders wera issued that delegates : . forces in Egypt, had invited me to| H 08 PO must surrender firearms as they en- visit him at his headquarters at}"S\ RRER 0 oo et of the | tered the convention hall. There, Ismailiya, on the Suez canal, and |4, ZFH 0 BARE 0 S o ks by | AUring the next five days, the party. T arrived there just after this bat- 3o o B0, B e cavalrymen, | Which claims the late General Alvaro tle had been fought. The sands|#PCRECR A0 SHEE B | Obregon as its father, will elect a ° ° ° ~ were still strewn with the hodies of | o0 402 O e CUUCE TG | eandidate for the presidency of N A l P t D innumerable Turks and' camels 403 simped their horsen down from the|Mexico, sublect to tie patianalisles: ew rrivais. rinte repe resses, y 18 rlnts donkeys. The great general and his : 1821 ions in November, Tan' wore kappy | in heir wietony dunes onto the enemy foot-soldiers. 4 ‘e been| The precautions, which included but they were cngrossed In trying | Moy ir ey T4 ! St BaYe BOch | b ringing of a large number of troops to solve a puzzle which had been |ty FPUTNE (0 Oy sipe | from Mexico City, 154 miles away, . constructed by a master mind. Tlicalot malen sva it 5 were taken to prevent disorders [POIR) Not]ce ! But if we are to start at the be-| " ) o0 Sy B RGO O or the| Which might grow out of the intense New Bl‘ltam $ N » . ginning we must go back a century | p i (18 PRE TR @R o | Tivalry between factions in the party. 0d4 Lot Solled to the time of Napoleon Bonaparte. | in "y’ accomplished the cross.| At present Aaron Saenz, governor LUNCHEON SETS fibe Little Corporal once declared |jne ~ung’ egpectally how they got|0f Nuevo Leon, and Pascual Ortiz Style Store 1-3 on that no European army could €ross|ypae anillery over. I was lucky| Rubio, former minister to Bratil, are 7 ~A)l slpen of Poibe i the Sinal desert, For a hundred|onoun™ o be in' on the solution, 1| pitted against each other in the race L“““‘"“_”"‘ Dap. years .\apnleons‘anemon had been strolled into the hut which served|for the party’s nomination. Both considered by military men as the| o peaqquarters for Gen. Sir Horbert | $%em to have arrayed behind them last word. Lawrence, commander of the north. | about the same amount of support, ! o It wasn't possible to move any|ern forces. The general was in his| With a shade the better of the situa- New Sprmg considerable number of troops with | shirt siceves and sweat was stream. | tion, possibly, for Saenz This bal- equipment across this tractless, Wa- | ing from every pore, but he was|ance of power, observers belleved, Arrivals terless waste of blazing sands, which | Jaughing as happily as a school boy. | may lead to injection of a third or \f shifted with every tiny breath of| “We've got it,” he said exultingly, | “dark horse” candidate. alr. The whitened bones of many|And then he unraveled the tangle ‘ S skein for me. § Durocher May Land ¢ i here was one man, however, who | Water, food and ammunition had Igiaiy ore 74 e did mot hold with Napolcon. He|been moved on camel back. The Shortstop Position = General Murray. The commander|troops had taken the desert in| St Petersburg, Fla, Mar. 1 (UP) A 7 | believed that it was not only pos-|forced marches at night, when ,t{—The left side of the infield is % X sible to accomplish thig feat, but|was cool and when the darkness|holding the attention of Manager 4 7 ) Xl . that the British sooner or later|shielded them from British a'r-|Miller Huggins as he sends the New / \ would have to send an army across | planes, 1 could understand ail that, | York Yanke through their daily | NG, fthe desert. Moreover, he thoughtibut T waited anxiously for the!workouts here. Koenig at third and | 2 \y X ithat the Turks could bring troops|denoucment in connection with the Lary at shortstop have been his| \Y 7 S [ ¥ ‘across. If they did they might suc- | big guns. Here it is: | choices thus far but Durocher is | 7, i fenses. There for hours the batt raged under a sun which was regls tering something like 175 degrecs ceed in blocking the all-important There grows 'n the desert a litile | candidate for the short field posi-| Suez—the allie¢’ sole direct water- | shrub, which 1a so wiry that it is tion and Robertson is trying for way to the east. almost like a mass of steel prings. f third. Twenty-eight players were on, General Murray’s obsession oc- | The Turks had scooped out small | hand as the workouts started to«luy." Smart Frocks telling the style story of Spring. 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