New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 28, 1929, Page 5

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SATH ANNIVERSARY OF ST, ELMO LODGE Banquet and Ball at Barritt Hotel Birthday Program Bt. Elmo lodge, Knights of Pyth- fas, held its 59th anniversary ban- quet and ball last evening at the Burritt hotel with about 150 per- sons in attendance. The cvent was said to be the most brilliant in the history of the organ- fzation and its success without par- 2llel since the formation of the lodge Rearly three score years ago. A roust chicken dinner was scrved at 9 o'clock. Between courses the SAMUEL KIRSHNIT Chancellor Commander guests sang popular songs and made use of the many favors, paper hats, horns, etc., at each place. Harry A. Witkin was toastmaster, calling on Alderman David L. Nair, Chancellor Commander Samuel Kir- schmit, Edward L. McEvoy for brief X tion to provide a fund to pay for vacations for underprivileged ch dren and urged the members to sup- port the project Music during the banquet and for dancing which followed was provid- ed by Emil Heimberger's orchestra. The committee which arranged the observance consisted of Al Slder- owf, chalrman; Edward L. Lyons and Ben Levin speeches. Mr. Japanese Emperor to Get Order of Garter | London, March 28 (®—The Duke of Gloucester, third son of King George, left for Japan today to pre- sent the order of the Garter to the Japanese emperor in behalf of King George The Prince of Wales and Prince George bade their brother farewell at Victoria station where the Japanese ambassador, represcntatives of the foreign office and the Japan society, were gathercd The Duke was accompanied by the Earl of Airlie, Rear Admiral Herbert Meade, Major-General Sir Hugh Llles, Captain Howard Kerr and Hugh Lloyd Thowas. NCING TITLE MATCHES New York, March 28.—(UP)— The national intercollegiate team end indivdual fencing champion- ships open this afternoon at the Hotel Astor. The Army and Navy | and Yale will have teams competing in all three divisions, while Colum- ' bia, Harvard and Cornell have entrics. Lyens and A. E. | hnit spoke of the lodge's inten- | KNIGHTS OF ROSE GROIX PREPARE PASCHAL FEAST Connecticut Members of Scottish | Rite Masoury Observe Maundy Thursday Obligations Today. New Haven, March 28 @— Maundy Thursday, a day of obliga- | tion to members of the 17th :md‘l {18th grades of Scottish rite Masonry and observed by the solemn cere- monial of the feast of the Paschal | Lamb, will be kept by all the chap- | ters of Rose Croix in Connecticut. | The Paschal feast observed by those | of the Christian religion commemor- ates the resurrection and Knights ot Rose Croix, wherever dispersed. are of obligation where two may meet, to partake of a meal in which are served herbs and roasted lamb, sym- bolic of the doctrine of the resurrcc- Waterbury, Bridgeport and | New Haven tonight, the ceremonial | will be observed with special music and impressive seryice. In this city | the feast will be oben to families of | members of_the chapter and it will [ be the first ceremonial of its kind ‘in the new temple. | All chapter rooms are draped in mourning and after extinguishment | | of candles which represent departed | {members of the yecar the chapte: | Will be closed, not to be reopned. {until Easter noon when candles are | relighted. {Boys on Joy Ride Kill Man on Foot | Boston, March 28 (UP)—An auto- mobile, in which five boys were on la joy ride, whisked into Keanex ! Square near North Station at a 50- | mile clip last night, crashed into a trolley car, killed one person and | injured seven others. | The dead man was Eugene J. | Bucklex, 54, of Charlestown, a | pedestrian. Those in the automo- | ile, all of whom were taken to a | hospital, included Angelo Christo- fore, 15; Michael De Leo,, 17; Frank | Sarno, 15; Joseph Pisano, 15; and | Joseph Raguvel, 15. | | * Others hurt were Miss Anna Cron- | in. 50, of Revere, and Isadore Isko- | | witz, 35, of Chelsea. | | Sixty passengers in the trolley car were shaken as the automobile crashed into it. HALIS MAY PLAY Phoenix, Ariz., March 25 (I When the Detroit Tigers open their | Iscason in Cleveland April 16 it fs | {likely that they will work under a | playi-, manager. Schuble has not {come up to expectations at short- stop and the inner defense has lack- cd leadership, so Manager Harrls virtually has decided to play second | base himself. Gehringer is to tried at short under the plan, quick action plus safety PERTUSSIN soothes coughs uickly because it removes the imme. | iale cause. It is safer because it is made by the Special Taeschner Process, and | without harmful drugs. It aids Nature to loosen the phlegm, and clear the air ssages. It is s0 less that it may taken freely, even by childrea, draggist r Ask any doctor or () Every gh Modernize Your Neighborhood With Concrete Streets Many well-built districts need up-to-date streets. The most modern and economical pavement is portland cement concrete. It is especially de- signed for motor vehicle traffic—permanently smooth, hard, and safe. Does your neighborhood need new pavements? There is you can do about it! Ask us for information. PORTLAND CEMENT XSSOCIATION 347 Madison Aveaue NEW YORK CITY A National Organisstion to Improve and Estend the Uses of Concrete STRAND BEGINS SUNDAY 33 C NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MARC nouncement Yhat spring dresses would drop four inches below the knee. That settled it, so far as the New York store buyers were con- cerned. They journeyed across the Atlantic and returned with an as- sortment of gowns that bore the or- thodox stamp of approval of the Pa- tous and the Poircts. But little did they reckon of the firc and spirit of American womanhood. They Didn't Stay Long EASTER PARALE HEM-LINE BATTLE Knee-Length Skirt Nears Ameri- can Woman Is Indepepdent “Oh, yes. we are selling the long- | 2k o s lor dresses” said a Fifth avenue New York Manch 3 (UPI==Pamie) o ot “hyt what Bappens 10 and New York propose to fight it|them when madame gets them home out on the hem-line if it takes all|remains to be seen. From remarks summer. made by cusomers we suspect that The opening skirmish comes Sun- | many are taking their frocks and day when Fifth avenue will be|having them shortened so that they choked with the Easter parade. barely cover the knee. We will know Then the American woman of fash- | when everyone turns out for a stroll ion will have her chance to revolt|after church Sunday. Of course, against the dictatorship of Patou, there is little doubt that the longer Poiret and the other Aladdins of dress does make 2 woman look old- Paris, who have wriggled their fin- [er and less sprightly.” gers and changed the color and tex-; As the sun sinks, so will the hem- ture of gowns from Zanzibar to the 'line, for American women apparent- Bering Straits. ly have accepted the Paris edict that Fashion scouts will be up early |the evening gown shall flap about | Sunday to get an eyeful of the hem- | the ankles. line. If the Easter dresses barely Style experts also confide that touch the knee, American women |shoes will be more gaudy, in some will have promulgated another dec- | cases made up of combinations of laration of independence; if lhc‘;hlack, white and blue leather. Hats Trem-line falls four inches below the knee, then viva la France, for Paris | face' the saying goes. That mere- is still in the saddle. Ily means they will be longer on one Recently the Patous and the side than they will be on the other. Poirets took counsel with !Iu-msol\'esl and issucd the world-shaking an-|READ HERALD CL. | THE HOUSE OF { ASHLEY . . . is where the prices start in these superb clothes by Langrock. Rich woolens, hand tailoring 5 the result? Clothes that look, feel, wear and really are worth at least $15 more than we ask. You'll never know what truly fine clothes are until you wear Langroek . and you can wear Langrocks inexpensively because Ashley - does “give the best buys in town.” COME IN— JUDGE FOR YOURSELF THOMPSON SHOES MANHATTAN SHIRTS . . . WILSON BROS. are going to be lop-sided or “off the | IFIED ADS | kAS HLEY ONE THIRTY-NINE MAIN STREET, NEW BRITAIN EASTER CLOTHES | | PINGHOT SAILS T0 | ROAM HIGH SEAS \Ten Months' Voyage Fullills, Dream of His Boyhood | New York, March 28 (®—The! Mary Pinchot, a three-masted top- | sail schooner sailed out of New York | harbor late today bearing Gifford Pinchot, former governor of Penn- | {sylvania, his wife, son and a group | |of scientists, on a 15.000 mile crulse {to the out-of-the-way places of the carth. | The cruise, which will fulfill a boy- {hood desire of ex-Governor Pin- |chot's to roam the high seas, was | planned originally as a vacation for {him and his family, but now prom- ises plenty of hard work. He hopes to bring to the National | Museum at Washington knowledge of plant, animal and marine life among the islands of the Caribbean and the South seas. | Tar Beyond Equator The 10 months' voyage will take the Mary Pinchot down to the Ca- | ribbean, through the Panama Canal and down the west coast of South | Awmerica, a thousand miles beyond the equator. ) ) iR 28, 192 Those making the trip besides the | which hc hopes to regain Lis siglir. Pinchots are Dr. Thomas Q. Otto, | Despite his misfortune, Tarking: ship's physician; Howurd Cleaves, still has his e of humor. motion picture expert; Stephen| “No man weuld bewo foollsh Stahlnecker, a friend of young Gif- |say that he would like to be blin ford Pinchot; Dr. A. K. Fisher, nat- | he said. “But 1 cannol say that uralist from the National Museum;|have minded it. It has been a great and Dr. Henry A. Pilsbury, curator|expericnce for me. I really can’ of the department of invertebrates | complain. Aside from the realization others | W at the Philadelphia Academy of|that I am depcndent upon Natural Sciences, who will go as far {and perhaps a burden, it has been a as Panama. | happy time. Dr."W. K. Fisher, head of the bio- | logical department of Leland Stan- [not been blind to realize ford University, will join the expe-|thrill it is not to have to sce any- dition there. ‘ Tarkington in Fight To Regain His Vision Atlantic City, March 28 (UP)— Within the next few days Booth ‘There are more students Tarkington, noted author, will un-'ministry in Chicago than in any dergo an optical operation tnrougi other city in the world. look at a lot of things and people |that you don’t want to see.” Tarkington recently underwent treatment at Baltimore. “It is hard for any one who has what a thing. It is really marvelous not to for the | ‘ YOU DESIRE If you rverwuigh, tie csuse may xat cnting of underezescice. 1. it in cutrtior, whici ich has diecoveted, And e TIOW COTTects, | od is emwodied ic Marmeola 3 g People kave weed s of boses of < people you er figutes, new Vieec:ty urge you io adopt thi; way. | The use of Marmola Zoes uat requive abnormal exercise or diet. In every ber. you will find the formu's, siso the res- sons for results. You will know just why your weight conies dowr: and why ever/ effect is helpful. Learn the facts, and do it now. Do so by asking your drug- gist today for a $1 box of h&rmh. | them for U0 yeers. | And mary of the envy th sl 1 and health—will The new 1929 Coodyears are here! See the lastest improved Goodyear Tires for 1929 before you lay down a nickel for any other make, Great as Goodyear’s 1928 tires were — (THEY TOPPLED OVER EVERY SALES RECORD IN THE HISTORY OF THE RUBBER INDUSTRY)— the 1929 Goodyears are still greater. Lower-priced in many cases—and life-time guar- anteed against defects. Producing millions more tires than any other com- pany, Myenr can manufacture at lowest costs. This enables Goodyear to give you the highest quality in tire history for no more—frequently less —than others must ask for ordinary quality. 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