New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 19, 1929, Page 10

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YALETEAM DRUBS * HARVARD CONBINE Blis Win First Game of Aonual Series by 16 to 1 Score Cambridge, Mass, June 19 (P— Harvard's baseball team faced the necessity of beating Yale here today if an otherwise successful secason was to be saved from disaster. The Elis yesterday gave the Crimson an unmerciful 16 to 1 drubbing before 10,000 Yale graduates and students at New Haven. : The presence of large delegations of graduates in Kilts, smocks nd strangely colored get-ups, and ac- companied by a dozen bands, has had a curious effect upon Yale and Harvard teams many times in the past so the partisan Harvard crow d day as it was done by in the camp of Eli yesterday. Five Harvard pitchers looked alike to the Yale batsmen at New ‘Haven. The Elis pounded out 20 hits end knocked Howie Whittmore, Harvard ace, out of the box in the fourth. Johnny Prior, regular first baseman, finally had to come to the rescue in the seventh, when Yale scored seven runs, and he finished the game. Meanwhile Jeff Sawver scattered Harvard's cleven hits so well that only one run was scored against him. “Butch” Loud, probably Yale's best pitcher this season, was due to tace “Red” Machale on the mound today, with the rest of the lineup on each side as it was yesterday. Machale and Warren Page, a south- paw, were poth held out of what moon became a hopeless cause at New Haven, They have done most of the pitching this year when Whit- more did not have the assignment. STOLEN AUTO GOES INTO * BROOK AND THIEF FLEES Wrecked Near Reservoir No. 4— ‘Witnesses Chase Man Who Leaps from Machine. ” ~ While Mary Frawley, 5) Hast Main street, was reporting the theft ot her touring car from the rear of Rer home late last evening, Joseph Thibault, 12 S8eymour street, walked into the police station and atated that he had seen the car wrecked in a muddy brook near Reservoir No, 4. ~ Thibault stated that he, with ny other New Britain people, d seen the car speeding up the road leading to the reservoir. At a concrete bridge it tipped into the stream. A man got out of the car | and ran across the flelds. Chase was o in the car owned by Joseph Karnasiewicz, 102 Lasalle street, but because the man gook short cuts Americanized Paris Awaits Throngs of Tourists; Table Telephones in Cafes Are Latest Device BY MINC SAUNDERS NEA Service Writer June 19—The whoopee in- dustry of Paris soon will be working to capacity and the combination of Just enough American luxury with just enough Parisian novelty is glad- dening the purses of touris In tamed Mantmartre, the lights cgin to tlare up shortly before mid- ight, as of old and outshine the sun for incrry-makers until after Lr Joe Zelli, with his sive smile at the “Royal Box,” holds iordly sway over [ still entertains more Americ ever descended from the original passengers of the Mayflower. But there's new machinery in Joe's joy factory this year that puts fit a jump ahead of anything his | guests have seen hack home. Tele- phones have been installed at each of the tables so that diners may con- verse with each other across the room. The big dollar-and-cents man from Indiana who never would dare walk over and ask the pretty blonde for a dance now can converse over a telephone with semi-privacy. It is great stitution for facilitating friendships. Real American Life The tourist doesn't miss many of |the comtorts of home. He is cating tained by Americun theatrical fol v policemen who speak his | own language—and everywhere | about secing American fa and | recognizing American practices, This season promises to eclipse all ‘records for tourist business here. Government propaganda, steamship | lines' publicity and the activity of | tourist agencies have been big fac- | tors, but aside from all that Paris| hearts and reducing the | good old ham-an'-cggs, being enter- | across the fields, he could not be cavght. visitors. Theaters play to the American ench do, though he won't get his American drink: In Paris, as in all large cities in | the world, there is enterprise to at- tract the gold of tourists. Conven- | tional tours of night life do not |amourt to much because the red- | sashed apaches exhibited are paid | by the hour for the purpose, and the “dark, mysterious dens” are under pertectly efficient police control. A recent dodge is to initiate the tourist into the private life of the |authentic artist. This is on the | square, and proving popular. Parties of four or five are taken to studios where sculptors and artists may be observed at work in their authertic and with models. But and the sculptors are of the type that like to eat and are unable to do so with their art unless they strike a bargain with the tour- ist agency for a percentage of the proceeds of these nocturnal visits. Visitors familiar with Paris fina night life little changed. The one- | time artistic Montparnasse quarter, which degenerated into a rather po- verty-stricken Greenwich Village, is trying hard to bring the “champagne price the I business” to the Left Bank, with all- night jazz and hectic dancing, but it | has a long fight yet to outshine | Montmarre. Such familiar cafes as | the Dome, the Rotonde, the Selec: | and others around the Boulevards | Montparnasse and Rashpail, still try to cling to old traditions. POISON SOURGE 1S SOUGHT BY POLICE: | announced RECOGNIZED 45 BANTAM CHAMP Panama Al Brown Decisively Deleats Gregorio of Spain New York, June 19 (®—The ban- tamweight division had a ruler to- day that the New York state athle- tic commission, at least, could rec- ognize—Panama Al Brown, Brown, whose 118 pounds is d tributed over a frame six feet high decisively outpointed Vidal Gregorio, of Spain, in a 15 round bout at the Queensboro Stadium last night and thereby won recognition by the state commission as ‘“defending bantamweight ~champion of the world.” The Panama negro, one of the rest boxers in the business, also claim to the National Boxing association's 118 pound champion- ship. Brown claims he was recog- nized as champion by Tom Dono- hue, Connecticut boxing commis- sioncr, when Donohue was president of the N. B. A. Donohue, however, later was deposed and the N. B. A. last night that it no longer recognized anyone as king of the 11§ pounders, Brown's decisive victory over Gregorio did have the effect of clearing up some part of the tangled situation in the division brought |about two years ago when Charley | Phil Rosenberg came in overweight | for a titular fight and forfeited his further punishment. o ca out refreshed in the 14th but that could not save him from taking considerable pun- ishment through this session and the 15th-as well. Both came in under the bantam limit of 118 pounds. Brown scaled 117 1-2 pounds, Gregorio 116 3-4. Kid Chocolate, clever Cuban featherweight, stopped Terry Roth of New York, in the third round of the ten round semi-final. Chocolate weighed 122 1-2; Roth 121, LOWELL GAS LEAK HILLS FIFTH HAN Sewer Department Employes Succumb Attempting to Repair Lowell, Mass, June 19 (A—Gas, which yesterday claimed the lives of four city sewer department em- ployes, today added another to its toll when Maurice Fitzgerald died at St. John's hospital. His brother Thomas was one of those who died yesterday. Three firemen who were overcome while attempting to rescue the man from a manhole were reported to te recovering today, The city sewer department as- signed the gas victims to investigate complaints that sewer gas was es- caping from the manhole, which is near a large tanning plant. Hugh Roark, first to enter the manhole, was immediately overcoma, Thomas Fitzgerald collapsed while attempting to carry Roark up the ladder to the street. Frank Dona- hue, James Keene and Maurice Fitzgerald each followed in turn into the gas-filled manhole in an attempt to save their companions, but they were also overcome. Maurice Fitzgerald, last to ent the manhole, was the only one alive when firemen brought the five mea to the street. Last night the city council author- ized the Municipal Employes’ Union to conduct a tag day next Saturday for the benefit of the dependents of the four dead men and the sewer department was ordered to suspend oprations on the day of the funeral of the four men. Plans were being forwarded today informally for special legislation to provide for the families of the gas victims, Gold Rush Expected Hartford, June 19 (UP)—Shades of the Klondike and California gold rushes were raised by an appeal to Attorney General Benjam 1 W. Al- ling by W. Wesley Miller of Ard- more, Pa. Claiming to have discovered gold in a Connecticut river, Miller has re- quested the attorney general for in- formation as to what steps are nec- |essary to register a claim, The problem never has faced Con- necticut officials before and Alling in To Connecticut Stream | MEXIGAN CATHOLIC AGREEMENT READY Basis ol Settlement Submitted to Yatican by Telegram Mexico City, June 19 (M—The Mexican government and emissaries of the Vatican have agreed upon a basis of settlement of the Mexican religious controversy. Today approv- al of the Pope was all that was needed to make the agreement ef- fective and permit an episcopate or- der returning the priests to Mexican churches. Broader Interpretation The settlement, arrived at by President Portes Gil and Monaignor Leopoldo Ruiz y Flores, archbishop of Michoacan, and Bishop Pascual Diaz of Tabasco, with United States Ambassador Morrow as intermedi- ary, does not involve constitutional changes, but is merely a broader in- terpretation of the religious laws and their constitutional background. The agreement is similar, if not, | indeed, identieal, to that reached laat year in negotiations between Presi- dent Calles, and Archbishop Ruiz, which had their beginning in a se- cret meeting in the old fortress at San Juan De Ulua, island in the harbor of Vera Cruz. Vatican ap- proval at that time was delayed, until in July the assassination of General Alvaro Obregon, president. elect, with ensuing charges of Ro- man Catholic participation, compli- cated the entire situation. Reached on Monday ‘The present settlement was reach- ed Monday afternoon in the course of conferences between Ambassador Morrow and President Portes Gil and Ambassador Morrow and the two Mexican bishops. Monday night a cablegram containing its terms was sent to Pope Pius at Vatican City, with expectation of sanction or disapproval by today or tomor- row. The ambsmsidor's part in the negotiations emerged fropn the seorat into the more or leas open during its final stages. with long confer- ences with the bishops and with the president Saturday Moanday, and finally yesterday, after the wide. spread popular belief in Mexico that he paved the way also for the Calles negotiations a year ago and the pre- liminary negotiations in the present case, Haste Hoped For A high suthoritative source here stated early today that unless the Vatican ratifies the present settle- ment, and acts quickly on it,®there is not much possibility that anything further will be accomplished to- ward settlement for some time to come. There have been reasons to believe the Vatican's delay in acting last year deeply offended the Mexi- can adminiatration, " Roman sanction of the agreement would be followed immediately, it was believed here today, by govern- mental announcement of the accord. Archbishop Ruix as Mexican pri- mate, would then instruct the bish- ops to order the Mexican clergy to return to the church, from which they have been absent since August 1926, when they were instructed by the episcopate to withdraw in pro- test at enforcement of the unsatis- factory religious laws. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS No More Gas .In Stomach and Bg_\z"els That empty, gmawing feeling &t the pit of the stomach will dimppear; that anxiows, nervous feeling with heart pal- pitation will vanish, and you will agais be able to take a deep bresth without ith the e, In_the yellew package, at any drug store, Price §1. Always on hand at CITY DRUG CO. NO DULL SUMMER DAYS for Holen “She has & besk!™ from the Lending Library = BEACON Beok and Gift Shep 85 Wost Maln 8¢, KEEP YOUR APPEARANCE UP Ladics’ and Gent's Suits § Men's Overcoats ll'.u Dry Cleaned and Pressed Dry Cleandd and Pressed Tadies' Coats Serge and Flanne] Drosses § 4 .35 Dry Cleaned and Pressed Cleaned and Pressed ' Ladies’ and Gent's Garments Repaired and Remodeled at ALL WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED STAR CLEANING CO. CLEANERS AND DYERS Oftice and Works: 384 North St.—Branch, 303 Main S¢. Tel. 1073 4 New Britain, Coan. $10.00 For Your OLD STOVE IF YOU BUY A LR | { Authorities Think Tech Student Bergeant P. A. McAvay and Mary | o0 o0 (hoir audiences, Restau- {crown, Frawley went to the scene of the ac- cident, where the car was found deep in the brook, almost a com- plete wreck. It is thought by the po- MNece that the machine was taken by someone going on a swimming party. ‘Builders Disporting At Lake Pocotopaug More than 100 contractors and ecity officials are at Lake Pocotopaug today attending the second annual outing of the New Britain Master Bullders’ association, which is being held at Pocotopaug lodge. An automobile caravan left Frank- * ln square at 1:15 o'clock, arriving | at the resort at 2 o'clock. Dinner, at 2:30 was followed by a short program of after dinner speaking, directed by Louis W. Vogel as toast- master. Mayor Paonessa and Alder- man Walter R. Falk. president pro tem. of the common council were numbered among the speakers. A program of athletics and an enter- tainment were the remaining items on the day's program. ; “Lovely Hands Due To Washing Dishes” Says Winner of Prize for Most Beautiful Hands Miss Helen Broderick, winner of & nation-wide contest for beauti- ful hands conducted by John Murray Anderson, noted pro- ducer, and of a $2,500 prize, has 2 unique method of keeping her bands smooth and white. Miss Broderick’s hands will be used as models by a great Italian sculptor, who searched Europe in ~ vain for hands lovely enough. .. “Honestly, the only ‘hands’ secret I have,” she said in a re- cent interview, “is washing my fine things, my dishes, with Lux. ‘The gorgeous Lux suds soothe the skin, leave it divinely smooth and white.” And not only Miss Broderick, but the beauty experts in 305 fa- mous beauty shops all over the eountry, advise using Lux for all soap and water tasks, in order to give the hands real beauty care. rants serve American dishes, In all’ of the big stores, and many small | glish speaking interpreters "are at hand. It has been the practice for such stores here to place a sign lin the window reading, “English | $poken,” but today one of the big gest stores on the Boulevard des Ca- pucinse has signs reading, “We all speak English.” These stores carry American goods, American food- stuffs, and appeal to American tastes. So great has been the change that M. Pierre Denoyer, writing in La Liberte, asks: “Is France acquiring American tastes?” He thinks so, and he says it is irresistible. He mentions the |zarowing popularity of American cocktails, American breakfast foods American plays and movies, and {even women's American stockings. | He thinks the change is taking pla unconsciously. : We're a Bit Attractive | “There are few persons in France who deliberately attend the Ameri- can school or who consider the American life and atmosphere su- perior,” he wrote. “But we feel, in spite of ourselves, the irresistible at- traction of the richest and most powerful nation of the modern world. “Too well aware of the gaps and the flaws in the American ‘civili- zation, we avoid admiring it, b quite unawares we wacquire tast and habits that we think are only the latest thing, but a matter of fact, essentially Ameri- can, Albeit we do not wish to Amer- jcanize ourselves, we are inevitably on the way to modernizing ourselves in the American manner.” his modernizing of Paris is what | makes American visitors feel more {at home thi r than ever before. tOld World philosophy and bac &round are mixing happily with World progress. The great galleries and museums here h; des who are required to speak English. lare the American bars, in several of which French is considered almost a { foreign tongue. Visitors drop in the | Ritz, or Harry’ New York Bar, | ¥'s i e du Port M at familiar good old cocktails a = BOOTH HAS HIGH RATING AS WHARTON YEAR ENDS So and revel in phere of the Paris 1sn't Cheap Now 1 1 tion prices tor to have a visitors Paris are any tor e low re on a pa and in some ¢ t it has a f ¢ it ¢ | Drinks ir from five Fat Iy as e American bars range up. i drink in Listro” and pay the same serican ¢ which are, as | May Have Taken Own Lile Boston. June 19 (UP)—Police | sought to trace to its source today | the poison which ended the life of | Dwight Underwood of Buffalo, N. Y. 24 year old Massachusetts Institute | | of Technology student, whose body | was found at his Back Bay lodging | house Sunday. Following a report from Associate Medical Ixaminer William Watters, telling of the discovery of poison in the dead youth's stomach, authori- ties favored a theory that he had | committed suicide. This was partly | substantiated by reports from rela- | tives that the student had been | despondent because he was not to | | graduate with his class. | Police pointed to the fact, how- {ever, that there was a possibility | that Underwood, who, they said, had been drinking, had swallowed the | poison by mistake. A quantity of the poison was found in a cham- | pagne bottle in his room, where in- | vestigators also discovered a bottle | filled with schampagne. 0. M. Underwood of Buffalo, a | brother, had arrived here today to | laim.the body. 'One of T. of P. Finance School's 50 Best Students Awarded Degree Today. Willard R. Booth of this city was awarded a degree of Bachelor of Science in Economdcs when com- mencement exercises marking the close of the 189th academic year of the University of Pennsylvania were | held on the Pennsylvania campus at 10:30 o'clock this morning. Booth, who was graduated from Wharton School of Finance and Commerce of the university, was | mong approximately 1800 students to a s at the exercises which were held in the huge Palsetra | of the university While in the receive Wharton school of the university, Booth distinguished himself in the field of scholarship, having heen one of the 50 best stu- dents of that department of the university to win recognition for itstanding scholastic achievement by being placed upon the Dea List of the school Rainbow Girls Hold Second Birthday Party Due probably to the warm her. few visitors attended the ond birthday anniversary of tha w Br Order of Rainhow for Masonic temple last evening. There were irls present at the dinner and s initiated later Pahcock first the assembly Rechester, N and told the girls was of the growth their organization and of the iple in which they hold their meet- ings. M Gladys Leavitt was | chairman of the supper committee ndidates w Mrs. Inz adviser of in mother now Xos re- siding present proud was how of fem- she The skinny negro outboxed the game Spaniard the whole way and floored him three times in the 13th | perplexed and Miller's request rests in the “to be answered” basket on his desk. round. Only in this frame, however, was Gregorio In danger of a knock- out. From start to finish he plow- ed forward, vainly trying to get out |of the way of the negro's long lort hand. Throughout fifteen rounds of fighting Gregorio landed scarcely a dozen effective blows. | In the 13th, Brown suddenly versed tactics. Instead of keeping |the Spaniard off with his left, the | negro waited for an opening and | shot across a right cross that stag- | gered Gregorio. sent the Spaniard to the floor for | a count of five, another dropped him for eight and still another for no count, the bell saving him from | Sage-All A series of rights| < white REM-OLAsalveissopleasant and easy to apply—does not soil cloth- ing. It heals—ask your druggist, or send for Free Sample Treatment—in a lain sealed wrapper. Just write Enm THAVER & 0., CAMBRIBSL, MASE, s bl s en & Co. INC. DIRECT WIRE 3005 HARTFORD Removal Sales In Several Departments Now In Full Swing! The new building will soon be finished. Already four departments are moving into new quarters. easily, quickly, hundreds of To move things you want have been sharply reduced for clearance. Sales are being held in the LINGERIE, following departments— SHOES, MISSES’ CLOTHES INFANTS And changes will shortly be store. tions! So watch the papers in the extra values! L ’ WEAR made in other sections of the All these changes mean clearances—drastic reduc- for news of them, and share CLARK RFID WHEKL JEWE], Gas Range NEW NOW! ONSTRUCTIO ENAMELED OVEN LINING! RUSY AND HEAT PROO This liberal allowance for your old stove will be made for a very short time. Don'’t delay—come in at once and see for yourself. —Our new Clark Jewel Red Wheel Gas Ranges are reasonably priced and our terms are very liberal. All enamel ranges in many pleasing color combin« otions—so easy to keep clean. Why worry through another hot summer with the old stove when you can enjoy real cooking comfort with a new modern Gas Range. Turn In The Old Stove Now! New Britain Gas Company City Hall Building

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