New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 4, 1929, Page 15

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T e T NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 4, 1929 Speaking of Sports State Athletic Commissioner Thomas E. Donohue has called a meeting of those interested in the amateur boxing situation for the New Haven Arena on Wednesday afternoon at 3 o'clock. SSLDEHEB 8 i Matchmaker C. F. Wagner of this eity plans to attend the meeting and discover.if posible, what the status of the fight situation in the state will he. He plans to conduct a show at the arena next Monday night either amateur or professional. It appears to be the concensus of opinion that the situation will results in a4 new class of semi-professional fizhters being instituted angd the former amatenr will all be required to enter this class. Dolan. who played forward on the Hudson, N. Y., baskethall team at the Stanley Arena Saturday night, is a member of the famous Dolan family team. Several years ago. this quintet, made up of the Hudson for- ward. his father and three brothers, was one of the ball combinations in the cast. Gilkerson who played guard on the Hudson team, appeared here last scason as a member of Lou Gehrig's Al Stars. He appeared to be one of the best on the floor Saturday night. New Britain battles Bristol in the first gamne of the state championship series in - Bristol Wednesday night. Yortified by the presence of Frank Dougherty, captain of the Fordham University quintet, the New Britain tewm should give the Bell Towners a real run for their money. Bristol, at present, is the favorite tn the first game although local fans are willing to back the local crew against the Bell Towners. Bristol won its game from the New Jersey quintet Saturday night and Meriden pinned the second de- feat of the scason on the Renais- sance crew, The opponents for New Britain tiis coming Saturday night are not definitely chosen as yvet. Manager Clared Anphier was planning to bring the Visitation Five here for a return game but this deal has not been closed. Albany and New jonship plavoff ritain start the chan ries in this city Thursday night. The battles in this series should be spectacular and among the best roller polo RAMeS n here in years. A record crowd of fans is expected out to watch the two teams in action Thursday night. Tn a close gan town yesterday, lockey played in Middle- LaPointe's All Star ety smbination defeated the Middietown All-Star aggregation U™ The Nutme de- fotend raxt 12nd Midgets Satur. |Veing the Sisler of old, when he any g #it the Boys' club gym W48 the American league’s leading by the score of 13 to 11, Skryzpek |PAUer and most valuable player. I Nuppin starred for the winners|Gowdy does not seem to have and C. Mingel was best for the los- |changed in 15 years. . The score: | AIl the five players Boston took Nuts {from Chicugo have shown good ¥4, 1 T, form in the spring werkout and NADDI T s 1 4 promise to help the club. Maguire, Rametta, If . 0 1 ] & sensational fielder, is established Gavin, ¢ 0 0 o At second ba Louis Legett will Mangan, ¢ " o &ect a chance to do plenty on catch- Dobeck, 1g 1 5 ing and Percy Jones, Bruce Cun-| Skryzpek, 1g o 4|ningham and Harry Seibold will fit | Sedor, 1§ ... 0 o |nicely into the pitching staff. Sei- = o _“lbold is not a youngster, but has 5 3 13 ripencd in the minors. Last End Midgets | Kent Greenfield, Bob Smith, Ed- J. Mogicllenski, rf 1 0 » ward Brandt and Arthur Delaney Zidnia leneieis 0 5 are veterans who will again be €. Mingel, ¢ o ] 1 5 available. Ben Cantwell and Bill C. Mogicllenski, rg 0 0 o ' Clarkson, who went from the Giants J. Mingeh, 1g 1 o 2 to the Braves, Henry Wertz, former i et -—|Brave, George Peery, Wichita re- 1 11 cruit and G. V. Leverctt former Score at half time 6-4, Nutmegs; | White Sox, trying to come back to | feferce, Parparian; timer, R, Nappi: | major league basclall, are in for a scorer, Lopez. {free for all. SoEE | > inficld will be made up of INTO FINALS | Sisler, Maguire and Bell on the The Kensington Boys' club basket- ball team won its way into the finals of the itnermediate division of the County Y tournament Saturday when ited the Fairfield County Ti. “am in Danbury by a 20 to 16 score. The summary Kensington T S Lewis, rf 2 0 4 Gotowala, 1f 1 5 Chotkowski, ¢ 8 3 b Grapiano, ¢ . ‘ 0 0 Clark, : 0 0 0 Tsaacson, Ig 1 0 2 De Paulo, 1g 0 0 0 8 4 2 Fairfield County Institute Calerico, rf ...... 0 0 0 kson, rf 1 2 4 I 0 0 0 McGont, If Megri, ¢ 3 ‘4 10 Taylor, ¢ 0 o 0 Lynch, rg .. 0 0 0 McMahon, rg 0 0 [ Lighty (g e [ 0 0 : 6 16 Score at half time, Kensington; referer, Bunce. New Members Arrive At Camp of Indians 1 Texas, March 4 P— Catcher Martin - Autry purchased from the Cle and Indians, has ar- rived at the Chicago White Sox camp simultancously with that of Black hard hitting outfielder. Manager Blackburne already s talking victory, and is anxious to get started oif on the right foct, even in the exhibition games. He has tentatively assigned Ed Walsh, Jr., to open the exhibition series for ths Lo The first game is to be pl Iriday against Dallas of the T league, ARRI Boston. March Chinese were placed and _police seized opium, lamps and pipes in three raids in Chinatown vesterday. All will be arraigned in municipal court tomorrow charged with being pres- ent where narcotics were found. 4.—(P—Twentv under arrest a quantity of best known basket- | : {Recruit Pitcher Makes 2 something.” pitched three innings of JUDGE FUGHS T0 MANAGE BRAVES Boston Team Owner (Ionthlctingi a Daring Experiment St. Petersburg, Fla., March ¢ (P —Judge Emil Fuchs, former New York judge, will sit this summer on a strange bench, and with him will |rest the hopes of the Boston Braves. “The Judge" as he is called by everyone in baseball, will find this open air court quite different from Ithe ones he knew in New York. He cannot issue a citation for |contempt of court against fans dis- lagreeing with his decisions and few. | [if any of the verdicts returned | against his club will be subject to appeal. The head of the Boston forces in the National league is conducting | one of the most daring experiments in bascball. He had stepped from the sheltered confines of his exccu- [tive office to the field itself, and al- though he has not donned a baseball ; uniform to replace the judicial robe of other days, he is no less the manager. | There have been other presidents who were manager, too, but almost | without exception they were like Wilbert Robinson of the Brooklyns, former major league players. Manager Fuchs' best baseball playing was done for the Orange {Athletic club. A combination of his arm and service in the Spanish- | American war thwarted his ambition to make baseball his profession. In ven vears' connection the Braves he has developed into a close student of the game as it is played by experts. A part of the [tinie he sat at the fect of a basehall |gamaliel, the immortal Christy | Mathewson, | AL first glance it wonld seem im- | possible for a club president to lay aside a pen and pick up & bat with any hope of success, but the mild {mannered Ifuchs, with a ready, | pleasant smile and sympathy for all | mankind, certainly has a chance to {get away with it. He has accom- . plished onc-third of his task alrcudy by selling himsell as a manager to "his players. Now he has to convince [the fans and opposition clubs, | He will be assisted by two stal- warts of the game, Johnny Lvers |and Hank Gowdy, co-heroes in the | 1914 four game world series tri- {umph of the Braves over the Ath- leties, but President Fuchs is Mana- ger Fuchs just the same. He pro. | poses to give his ideas a thorough {trial, and if he is wrong he says he | Will be the first to admit it. On the playing field will e found at least two meon who know a lot lof the game. The diminutive Rab- Ibit Maranville, anoth:r 1914 Braves' {star who since then has scen the {baseball world, and George Sisler, former maiager of the St. Louis | Browns, will be very active in car- rying out the instructions of “The Judge.”” Gowdy may join the play- ing forces for 50 games or so. { Sisler has rounded into Iform and gives every indication of superh | | bases with Maranville and Farrell at Ishort. The first Lance Richbourg is the only outfielder sure of his place. | Earl Clark and Al Moore may com- | plete the trio, leaving George Har- per, Heinie Mueller and Jack Smith to fight for the other places. Pat Collins, ex-Yankee, the veter- an Zach Taylor and Dick Smith, the | Notre Dame foothall star who caught Ifor Montreal last year may make up [the catching staff unless the ancient but nimble Gowdy, takes a hand. | The jury will begin its delibera- {tions in about six weeks Impression On Manager Avalon, Catalina Island, March 4 |(@—Berlyn Horne not such a big fel- {low, but a right hander ho “has | satisfactory baseball to the delight |of Manager McCarthy of the Cubs yesterday. He allowed two hits. The Cubs squad divided and went the regulation distance, the - Ava- lons, with Blake, Horne an Gabler as pitchers, setting down the Cata- linas 8 to 0. Nehf, Cvengros and Hansen were the pitchers for the losers, Cvengros being the least ef- fective, TO DEF D TITLE Boston, March 4 (UP)—"Dyna- circumstances including an injury to | - with | | Three mite” Gus Sonnenberg will defend | his world heavyweight wrestling championship against “Panther” | Joe Malcewicz of Utica. N. Y.. on | March 15 in th- Boston Garden ring | where he won the title from Ed “Strangler” Lewis recently. Bl ARD TOURNEY New York, March 4 UP—Johnny Layton, world's three cushion bil- liard champion, and Allan Hall of 8t. Louis begin their special twelve- block 600 point match here tonight. The match, played in afternoon a | evening blocks of 50 points cach, close Saturday night 15 FAVORITE 4 ge. Mass., March 4 (UP) Yale was picked (o defeat Ha Ivard in their basketball game her | tonight. Each team has won five gamcs in 10 starts this season. GLASTONBURY HOCKEY FIVE DEFEATS LOCALS ( Visiting Quintet Takes All-Stars Into Camp in Preliminary By 7-2 Score The Glastonbury roller hockey team swamped the New Britain All-8tar combination yesterday afternoon in the prelimin- ary to the New Britain-Fall River American league game at the Stan- ley Arena by the score of 7 to 2. Thez visiting combination showed plenty of stuft in winning over the Hardware City combination and after the first period in which each team scored a goal, the gained the lead and weren ever even threatened after that. Dickan and Connery did all the scoring for the visiting delegation while Gasparini caged New Britain's only counter: The scor All-American Linc-ups New Britain Gasparini ac st P W. Gillette . r Glastonhury 2. Dickan Counery Kaplan . cun e TREDYY A. Dickan RICA0) . 1ox+vs e B Ellen A. Glllette ......8 Hoff Piest Period Goals Scored by Caged by Time 1 New Rritain Gasparini 2:00 2 Glastonbury Connery 9:00 second Perlod 3 Glastonbury Dickan 2:00 4 Glastonbury E. Dickan 3:00 5 Glastonbury Connery 4:00 6 Glastonbury E. Dickan 6:10 Third Perlod 7 New Brituin Gasparini 4:00 S Glastonbury Connery 6:00 9 Glastonbury E. Dickan 2:00 Rushes, Gasparini 7. 1% Dickan 3. | Stops, Gillette 41, Hoff 34, YOUNGSTOWN YOUTH LEADS FIELD OF GOLF VETERANS my Ranklets Scores a Rrilllant in Florida West Coast winne:s | ROLLER HOCKEY SERIES STARTS THURSDAY NIGHT Post-Season Playoff to Decide Championship of Ameri- can League—Albany Plays in New Britain in First |they aiso Game—*“Red” Williams to Remain With Hardware City Quintet—Local Tcam to Appear at Home on Thursday and Monday Nine to Decide. ! With the conclusion of the regu- [lation playing schedule of the Amer- {and Albany and New Britain being Ithe teams in the first two pli the league standing, these two will clash in this city next Thursday night at the Stanley Arena in the first game of the post-season scrics | for the championship of the leaguc. According to the arangements |completed during the past week be- tween Manager Frank MeDonough of the New Britain club and Man- ager Arthur Ives of Albany. ams will play two home ch week until one or the other |wins five games. The series will go {to the hest five out of nine gumes. New Britain will play its home games on Thursday and Monday |nights while Albany will play its home games on Sunday afternoons and Wednesday nights. New Britain starts the series by playing host to | Albany next Thursday night while | Albany will entertain New Brit {in the New York state capital for the first time next Sunday after- {noon. “Red” Willinms, brother of “Kid™ { Williams, leading scorer of the American league and star of the New Britain team, will be retained as the second rush of the local club for the serics. “Kid” Williams will play first rush with Harry Thomp- son in center, Pete Gazzing will be {at halfback with Pete Welch in the |koul Albar | ¢ will retain up of karl Pierce at Pierce at sceond rush, center, Morrison at | Barnikow ip the goal. The New Britain team tice Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs- regular line- rst rush, Steve Lundeville at halfback and Tournament {day afternoon of this week in pre- | paration for the first gane. The con- Belleair, Fla., March 4 (P—A [test Thursday night will start at the youngster (rom Youngstown, Ohis has stepped into the limelight of golfdom. Tommy Ranklets, 23-year- old professional is the new ton notcher by virtue of a brilliant 278 score which won the Florida west coast open championship here yes- terday. Shooting steadily throughout the ‘ntire 72-h contest, Ranklots | ame some (wo strokes hehind par strokes behind him was his nearest rival. Billic Burke. the north and south open titleholder. Lonis Chiappetta of Hartford, Conn., third with & Far behind the vouthful winn-r trailed a long list of veteran stars including such masters as Sarazen, Johnuy Farrell. Leo Diegi 1 alter Hagen, of these, st the top with while the othi strewn behind in the nineties or higher, Ranklets joined the ranks of the professionals five years ago at the age of 18 and this is his first cham pionship victory. He took $1.000 first prize money. while Burke got Chiappetta $500 and Sarazen was nes 400 Other awards ranged down to $2i ORDERS DAY OF REST Manager Burt Shotton Gives Bat- | terymen a Layoff After a Sunday | Workout, Winter Haven. I'la., March 4 (#— Manager Burt Shotton ordered a day of rest today for the Phillies battery squad and as the majority of inficlders and outficlders have not vet reached camp there was little doing around the club's yard. The fact that there was a short drill yesterday, the first Sunday the Phil- lies ever practiced in IFlorida, re- sulted in today's layoff. “There's great danger of over doing spring training.” Shotton said “Spring training should never he rushed.” Don Hurst, hard hitt man. arrived yesterda to work. Lester Sweetland, pit been i1l at his home in Melhourne, Fla.. is expected tomorrow, and Bah McGraw. veteran right-hander wired that he was on his v from Cali- fornia. Several regulars are pected here by the end of the week. ng first ha cager to get r. who has HUPMOBILE Sixes and Eights + E. P. KINGSBURY Tel. 3811-W HIGH PRESSURE Gene | usual hour of 9 o'clock ' TROUBLE WITH HOLDOUTS Dazey Vance and Doug McWeeney Robertson From Keep March 4 (B— Manager Kobinson is having so mucch trouble trying to get Dazzy I'Vance and Doug McWeeney to sl on the dotted line that he hasn't much time to pay to the rest of the | Brooklyn Jobbins. Dazzy and Itobinson have had ane conference at which there were in {dications that the Strike-out ki | will be in the fold within a few + The McWeeney case, how- scems to present more diffi- Clearwater, Fla., | culties, | Doug arrived in camp yesterday land immediately broke down and admitted that he'd like to get a little more v | *I won 14 games last year and with better hreaks I would have had abot S MeWeeney said. 1 am [ here and it the club wants to sign {me up at something like 1 believe 1 [should get. all right. 1f not, that's all right with me also." | Digger and better conferences are seheduled between Robinson and his |two star right-handers this week. |Schang Starts 16th Year in Big Leagues Wast Palm Beach, 1Ma., March 4 (®— Wallie Schang, grizzled veteran of 16 prepar ‘S) Louis Brown. S-hang, who less ‘(h.uv a week - go &ned his 1929 ‘((‘H’l.h'. was a bit fat but appearel {to be in good condition otherwise | His ankle. which was broken last |summer, has mended except swelling which, he said may be manent, Manager Howley ers and outfielders but the pitchers fordered out ecarlic Showers Stop Cards ' in Practice Session Avon Park, I March 4 (®—A Icouple of showers drove Manager Southworth's 8t. Louis Cardinals off the 1d yesterday after the squad had been drilling les~ than an hour, in the first Sunday baseball .1aneuv- ers this town has ever s n. When the (ards’ training scason gets undor |way there will e 52 players in camp George Watkins, who played with Houston last year and is at prese signed to a Rochester contract, is understood to he the only rookie he- ing given serious consideration for a regular job. per- ave his infleld- rest y catehe usual. were PETE GREAT 5CoTT!!— | (ANT STaND TRIS MUCH LONGER = WE HAUGNT EATEN ok o DAY, AND TH' 15 WHAT W& CAUGHT WineEN LAST NIGHT— '™ ALL IN'! ONLY WATER WE'VE HAD To DRINK, (T RA&NED n Roller Hockey league yvslvrdu,\" | will prac- ars’ seevice, arrived today (0| for another campalgn as a | for a| Nights — Best Five Out of 'BOYS' CLUB TEANS T0 - CLASH AGAIN TONIGHT New Britain and Bristol Quintets to Meet in Second Game | at Local Gym. New Britain Bristol Parparian, nbrowski .. rf . Kerel jza 2l Gorfa, Rakutis .. ¢ Zetraskr S Compagnone .... rg Rao Grusha rison, W. Burns Paluch Ig Ca | smallpox, drink cocoanut milk, both fresh and fermented. Marquesan ‘flappers’ use | the oil to mzke their bodies shir and it is burnt in the islanders’ crude | lamps. ulin New York city tomorrow.| WALKS Natives are Vanish McAloon is a gredn of the| North Adums, Mass, March é.— “Captain Cook and other explorers Britain h school and has (P—Griffin Davis, 59, walked to his introduced fruits and vegetables and | been connected with e home office | deat p vesterday when he modern customs on Nuku {iva. but of the Connecticut Mutual irs in his home. He dled introduced European |surance ( Tartfor” for t fractured skull. diseases. When the first white man | set foot on the island. eannibalism was rampant and tribal warfare an important occupation mong the men-"| folk. ‘Long pig’ (human flesh) was necessary for the proper celebration of the pagan religions rites. If a member of an enemy tribe could not be hrought in, the priest ordered one | of the members of lis own tribe pre- | ed for the tribal feast. | “But with cannibalism and tribal | warfare the Marquesans held their own. The French put a stop to can- nibalism but epidemic after epidemic | of disease has placed the N sans among the vanishing race the South Seas. One epic introduced by plorers, killed more than tribesmen, i Taiohae, at the head of a bay by the same name. for 60 years was the | headquarters of the Irench ad- ministration in the Marquesas. S | ] rque s of | mic o rly ex- 5,000 he W Britain and| Bristol | the offices moved to Hiva Oa, | Boys' club basketball teams will [older village, sread out along the | meet again at the local club tonight |shore at the head of Taihae bay, is | with the home team sccking to \url\!;‘p”qq deserted except for a fow | the tables for a defeat inflicted by stores and a building or two where | the Bell City team over in Bristol|travelers are told they can get | on Iriday eveniug. The New Brit-|hotel accommodations. There is a | ain quintet went over to open the!story told on Nuku Hiva that the | new Boys' club gym and received | ‘nono,’ a sort of sand {ly, drove the the first beating in it, and it is out tonight to take away that sting. The team has not been going well during recent weeks. New life injected into it last Monday by th promotion of Zembrowski and Ra- kutis to the first team and these two young plavers have starred in subsequent games, as has Paluch. another sub, but the old “regular: have not been playing in their ac- customed form and the team has appeared stale. Coach Anderson has been working hard to bring his charges out of their slump and has hopes that they will come through tonizht and fake the measure of the invading quintet. tion which will include several of the players who went to Chicago with the state championship Bristol High school team of the last two ars. In the preliminary tha Boys' Cluh Reserves and Phantom Reserves will play the third and deciding game of their series. The Phantom outfit took the first and the club team the sccond. Dancing will follow games, HIGH WATERFALLS FOUND ON ISLAND Reparted fo Be Seven Times Steeper Than Niagara Washinzgton, D. C. March 4.—A waterfal). reported to be seven times bigher than the Niagara Falls has been discovered on Nuku land, “Nuku Hiva is the largest of the | beanty-tamed Marquesas islands, which lie cast of the Samoa says a bulletin from the Washington. ». C Geographic society An Island Garden Spot “Nuku Hiva is one of the island garden spots of the world. Numerous hays, walled in by lofty, forested cliffs, indent the coast, each com- | manding a magnificent view of a valley clad with tropical verdure, “At the head of Comptroller bay, one of the larger coastal indenta- |tions, is Taipi Vai valley, made da- mous hy Herman Melville as ‘Typee’ ku Hiva once teemed with Now small settlements and |numerous stone platforms upon which the natives built their huts. are the only remaining evidences of race which Robert Louis Stevenson described as the handsomest in the | world. | Cocoanut Palms Furnish Food | “A few cattle browse about the valleys, wild pigs or goats scamper through the jungle growth, and a few hirds nest in the upper valleys. But the villages are usually fqund near the head of the bays, with cocoanut plantations near fertile soil washed down from the mountains of Nuku Hiva's interior, the cocoanut palms bear fruit when they are only a few years old and but 10 to 15 feet high. “The cocoanut palm plays an all important part in the lives of the natives. Dried cocoanut pulp. called copra. is the chief article of com- merce and is wsed as money in bar- g4ining between natives and traders. The native’s hut is almost entirely constructed with branches, leaves and thongs from the cocoanut palm. The tribesmen eat cocoanut pulp and Bristol will bring a fast combina- | the | Hiva fs- | headquarters of the National | | | | | | n the | French from the island. In some parts of the island the minute in- secty attack human beings, gorge themselves with blood, then leave an itching spot which sometimes be- | comes an ulcerous sore when | scratched." | METAL MAN DEAD AT LOWELL Lowell, Mass, March 4 —#— | David Siskind, founder and head of | one of the largest scrap iron and | metal businesscs in New England | died at his home yesterday after a briet illness aged 51 years. He was one of the city's largest property | holders. 12 Replies For $1.26 Mrs. Lehan discovered that she had a library table, hook-case, and a lamp that she would be unable to us in her aew home. She ran a small ad in the Herald classified section, naming th articles she wished to and her ad brought her 12 results, It is needless to sav that her items were readily sold for CASH. RESUL such are reported dail fied users of the He sified ads. OUR BOARDING HOUSE HwEifder THIS GuY % EINSTEIN HAS TH’ MUMBLES, «wr OR MY HEAD IS A PREP- SCHooL FoR WOODPECKERS [ = s THERE MAY BE A LoT OF THREE oK THOUGHTS MIXED UP IN HIS THEORIES, w~ BUT To ME (TS JusT g A BOWL OF ALPHABET SouP /:mf,/ e AN SRS ©1929, 8Y WEA SEAVICE. INC. It Won't Be Long Now Y& 5003 'L~ WoNT A SHP EVER Pass?! IT SEend LKE WERE DOGMED To DIE HEME HANK— WHAT HAUE. WE. DoME To DESERVE. ALL DAY LONG GROW WERKER PASSED EROM TS AREYL EATE- (AST ON A LONELY ISLAND, To D& OF THIRST AND STARUATION?? (3 «hool for nurses \\\\\\\\ PSSR 10 Lt NURSE 1t Montefiori | Rent Your House Sell Your Car Hire An Employe - Sell Baby Chicks Sell Used Furniture Find Your Purse THE HERALD Classified Ad Section “Where Buyer and Seller get togethier with mutual profit.” By AHERN AH M'LAD,.. THE PoNDEROUS /1 \HoA !/ @ THOUGHTS AND CALCULATIONS' fl; THATS W ioT 8 EINSTEIN'S THEORIES, ARE /1 o HEAVY ) INCOMPREHENSIBLE To THE £ ieaSTER 4 AVERAGE MIND [ s NOW, ~- 75 ROLL AH, . HIS THEORY ON LIGKT,~ ' | ouep WEAK w LET ME ELUCIDATE ITS BRIDGEwoRK! ANALYSIS To YoU,w-ANEM - e NOW GIVE LIGHT 1S DWIDED INTo Two us W REALMS, wa « THE CONVEX MEANING AND THE CONCAVE, wanr OF Your " exPLANATION ! FoR INSTANCE, ~~ THE BASE A {// OF LIGHT 1S A HARMONIOUS VIBRATORY SERIES OF NEBULIUM EMANATIONS, WHEN ON DISSOLVING WITH THE ETHEREAL UNDULATIONS, 4 BECOMES AN EXPANSION X A OF DIRECT Foifi»] s 55 4 THEY WATCHED IN VAIN EaR A SHIP~ < TEADILY THEY AND WEAKER — ANGTHER DAY AND THEY Wikl HAUE_ THIS WoRLD 0 TRIALS AND TROUBLES PooR WANK — NO SHIP PASSES TEMoRAOW), WE WILL BE BEYOND ALL HELP Copyright, 1329, by Central Preas Amocistics, Inc. = i——— LOMi [three years. Several farwell parties Llizalith MeAloon of 1330 in her honor have been held in Harte strect will enter the train- ford and this city.

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