New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 26, 1930, Page 11

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Speaking of Sports Marian Bennett of this citv {5 proving by her play in the Wom- en’s mid-South golf tournament, that no mistake was made when she was sclected as a member of the select | group of women who will shortly zail for England on a golfing tour. | She is now standing in third pl in the medal play for the two days and she has an excellent chance of coming through among the leaders after today's play. She, her sister, Helen. and her mother are all three playing in the | fournament. The leading iwomen zolfers of the country are number- cd among thoge who are playing in the event making the affair a select | one for the women. Marian shot an 81 on Monday and came through, despife a rain-soaked course, to score an 80 yesterday. | T "This gives her 161 for the two day of plgy. The tournament is to %o | b4 héles and today will wind it up. Gus Sonnenberg, claimant to the world's heavyweight wrestling championship, will make his fir appearance in Connecticut at Hart- ford next Friday night. He will meet Harry Mamas, Greek cham- pion, in the hest two out of three| falls. Sennenberg has brought the | attention of the world to the ancient | mat game once again through the fame he has secured by his “fiying tackle.” There are a large number of mat fans from this city who will be in attendance at the show Friday night. == { Billy Darrow who has made 2| great name in athletics at the Con- necticut Agricultural college at Storrs, has turned out for the base- ball team. In the practice session staged yesterday, Billy was used at third base. He is an exceptionally &ood infielder and hg is hitting the | apple at a fast clip. TPrimo Carnera, the man moun- tain from Ttaly, meets George Traf- ton, ex-football player, in a bout to- night. This is_another in a long scries of set-ups put up before the siant carpenter, Trafton's only bid for boxing fame came when he de- feated Arthur (The Great) Shires in a four-round bout. At the end of the melee, Trafton was barely alle to stand, he was so exhausted. Until Carnera meets some fighter | who is a fighter no fooling, then the | fight fans of the country as a body. will fail to get all het up over the possibllity of him becoming the next heavyweight champion of the world. | Meeting setups like he has since he came to this country, does him no | good cither as a fighter or as a| drawing caed. Despite these things, he has been coining money since he started. When we were reviewing the In- dustrial basketball league season in these columns yesterday we forgot 1o mention a player who certainly deserves credit for his fighting qual- ities which were always in evidence whether or not his team was win- ning or losing. He is Emil XKar- bonic of the Russwin team. i While we are on the subject of | the Karbonic family we might ask what Jerome Karbonic will do now that the basketball season is com- ing to a close. Some weeks he would be at a basketball game every hight and Sunday afternocn. There are a great many Industrial league fans who are wondering just what they will do with their Tues- day and Friday nights. According to the league officials who were at the entrance every night more than a hundrcd fans did not mfss a single ame all season. TEN MORE TS REPORT IN PoLL Stamiord, Waterbury and Dan- bury Tend fo Repeal New York, March 26.—(UP)— Two Kansas cities voted dry and one barely managed fo get into the wet column, according to incomplete returns from 10 more cities in the Literary Digest's nationwide prohi- bition poll. The vote as reported by the maga- zine was: City Rirmingham Little Rock, Ark. . Rerkeley, Cal. ... San Dicgo, Cal. ... Stamford, Conn. .. Waterbury, Conn, . Danbury, Indepen lLawrence, Kan. Piltsburg, Kan. Enf. Modi. 424 401 060 269 411 246 300 14 234 roP! MES PACELLI Vatican City, March 26 (®—Pope Pius today appointed Cardinal Pacelli archpriest of St. Peter's Basilica, succeeding the late Cardi- nal Merry Del Val, | Rep. 501 Ala 317 300 586 1,482 904 954 400 ~UAILY— EXPRESS 32.50 ONE 33.15 l'fl?‘:Ju‘D ‘WAY Retarn ticket good 30 days Brand New Latest Type Parlor Car Coaches Comfortably Heated—Bonded—Insured We Guarantes Your Comfort Leave Crowell’s Drog Store 1 West \hln St 10:25 A. M., 5:30 1. Beginning March 18 Daily and Sundsy Phone 1051 Make Reservations Early YANKEE STAGES, Inc. WITH THE BUWLERS ROGERS ALLEYS MEN'S lhDLZTlflAl LEAGUE & F. Aowarth ns 91 118 111 103 W Happeney Clark 3 4 572 b3 Maciiine 107 115 139 105 131 Toote Pethigal Haines Carey Anderson Fafnir Dobrowoski Schenl Warner Murphy Valentine Linn Kerlonas Seledym Laganza Rassell k Erwin 3 120 2% 24 106 American laper Goods Johnson ... e Mattson Fagan Duplin Maguda, (3 Heinzman Molyneaux Quenk Walters | Tronosky . Vollhardt Kloss Fagan | Gacex H. Larson Berg Pauison Red Larson Low &core Jayes Pelietler Feineman Low Score Stohl Negrini Carison + Mozzali Linn Kogelman Cadratn FHumason Schenk UTILITY LEAGUE Hall Const. Urbanski B Johnaon Anderson | Seledyn Chester Williams Rund Brandt Moran Broft . 109 Low Score A 152 Eddy Awning F. Zotter Lo98 107 J. Henderson Dilorenzo B. ’lmnc]ndl Valenti e Y .85 430 Racklifre Knout . 83 Elliott Cunningham Jackson Mitchell 16— 16— 514—1524 INDUSTRIAL Landers GIRLS' LEAGUE . Sartinski 5 Russell & Erwin McGuire S nderson . Reckert, Larson Kuehn American Hosi Ankuda i Bodacis Tyboreki Tyborskl Broft 14 Corbin Screw Adams o Blanis McGraw M. Rymsa . Mancrella Valkonia 4 Stanley Worki Molchan Stingle r. & F. Corbin 9 Koerber Little .. Jukubowlez . Gorman ... 102 102 430 Corbin Cubinet . Ferry et .. 08 King Mycroft Warren Anderson Stanley Rule J. Brown g V. Ryiz s | Gulveston and New NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, Jarnot B. Schultz . Marley 100— 158 . Fresen Drawchik Sinkiewicz Farmer . Pershy TRAFFIC AT LOW Spring Will See Renewed Activ- ity, Donnelly Says York March 26.-—(/P)— | Donnelly, president of the Northern Pacific railroad, said yes- terday that traffic generally in the northwest is probably at the lowest | cbb in five years, but added. “in ths | spring things may be moving on our lines which have been held up dur- ing the winter months.” Nothing definite hag yet heen worked out in drafting the Northern Pacific's and Great Northern's an- swer to the interstate commerce commissions merger yoposal, he said. Although Ralph Budd, presi- dent of the Great Northern, and E. Williamson. president of the Burlington, will be in New York this week for the monthly Burling- ton directors mecting, it is not ex- pected formal conferences respecting the merzer will be held. Mr. Donnglly explained that the principal item discussed so far had been the I. C. C.'s proposal that the Northern give up control of the Burlington. Mr. Donnelly anticipat- ed little difficulty in meeting the commission’s wishes regarding ter- minal unification. VAN SWERINGENS vately Owned in World | New York, March 26.—(P—The { New York Times said today that by | recent deals O. P. and M. J. Van | Sweringen of Cleveland have round- | ed out a rallroad empire that is the argest privately owned one in the 000,000,000 network is cxceeded only western nemisphere by the 20,000 miles of the Canadian National Rail- ways and ‘elsewhere only by the 30,- 600 mjles of the German State Rail- ways. Tt cclipses those of such s tems associated with the names of | Gould, Vanderbilt, Hill and Harri- man, The railroad influence of the Van Sweringens extends from New York to Salt Lake City and from Chicago {and St Louis to Omaha, Bl Paso. Orleans. A line friendly interest the system to San F controlled connects cisco. | t E an- Bought Nickel Plate The brothers efitered the rallroad world in 1816 when they purchased the then broken-down Nickel Plate road from the New York Centra: for $2,000,000 in cash and $6,500,000 in note They had been in the real c. business and became interested in (ransportation from the desire to obtain a street car line from Cleve- 1and to « suburban real estate de- velopment Today they control directly the Chesapeake & Ohio. the Lrie and Nickel Plate, Through the Alleghany Corporation and by they control the Hocking Valley, the ette. the Wheeling & “hicago and Eastern Illinois, The 15,000 miles of road controlled by the Van Sweringens are capital- ized at $808.000,000 and the invest- ment in road and cquipment valued at $2.054,000,000. A comparison of the mileage with other leading roads of the country follows: Pennsylvania, 10,466 miles; New York Central, 6.911; Baltimore & Ohio, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, 12.353; Union Pacific, 9,.857; Southern T Great Northern, Pacific, 6,771, Buenos Aires, March 26 (#-—Tiw Argentine training ship, Presidest Sarmiento, will leave March 30 oa her 13th imdtruction tour, on which she will t 20,405 miles in 243 days of navigation. The itinerary includes T Toulon, Genoa, Naples, Venic lonika, Istanbul, Jafa, Alexandria Malta. Gibraltar and thence bek Lo Bucnos Aires GWINN T() B Nashville. Tenn., E. Gwinn. Memphis issued a formal announcement of h candidacy for the democratic Fuber natorial nomination in the August 7 primary. neri‘:, Sa- EBB INNORTHWEST LARGEST DWNERS * Railroad Empire Is Biggest Pri- 15.000-mile | in the| other meas | . the Missouri Pacific and | MARCH 26, 1930. Pictured above is the was under the guidance This team has won state armory floor e it play games. The only team that dc of Hartford which was latc Manager Zevin has out W laid claiw CLAIMANTS OF STATE TITLE A radio message from Marquis | Marconi congratulating Australia on | her strides in recent years in world- wide wireless communication also was picked up. | During the reading of the con- SENDS POWER INIT Marconi, in Genoese Harbor, i Sravey time, Acthe veauest of) Opens Distant Electrical Show sz ion, Marconi switched on the lights aggin at 8:02 p. m., the large repre tive which had gathered | terestedly tollowing the stroke of Genoa, Ttaly, March 26 (P—Short S | radio waves cutting across the At- lantic, America, and the Pacific to- day carried the voice of Marquis | Guglielmo ~ Marconi, inventor of | wireless, from his yacht Electra | here to Sydney, Australia, to open | the electrical exposition there Marconi’s assistant. Matthicu tested the short wave appara- 8 As soon as opera- jded oni H i TEXTILE DISPUTE STILL UNSETTLED Two Year Argument Far From Solntion in England London, March ute of two years | woolen and textile pears as far from lement as | ever, operatives in those industries having refused by a three to one vote to accept the wage reduction | proposals of the employers, Vascd | Great Forces at Great Distances | on the findings of Lord MacMillan's | The inve investigation. [ “It is Lord MacMillan recommended | that the most recent w3 nerease | be reduced from ten to five per cent | and urged reduction of the cost of living allowance, although he ad- man tus at 1 was won he M was clad vachtsr zold-b unifol ed cap ross 11.000 miles to director of the Elcctrical asso- Fish ding a message | ined what he intended | doing later in the xm\—tr:\nsmnllng‘ a small unit of power to Sydney in | order to close a circu there and ric lamps of the ex- He the polic of ciation, which industries a sition not more that cless to bring into operation at | carth. ulate Australia | made there during | worldwide wireless | | communicatio | s to the National Gu other end = | “I neartily ¢ on the rides recent years in of t _ CHICAGO DEALERS INGRAIN CHARGED Three Men Accused of M ation of Prices | anipu- to man compla Apr wer least summe higher [ they | curate effort wheat lower { | both rket inform all in a control prices Names of Men Given ion, he the | said to hay tary of { liam B { Phillip J | board of | The he | Putures Adminis | and misl and k He then handed the phone to &n- |- drue Berding, Associated Press staff | correspondent. who talked to Mr. and conveyed the greetings of | newspapermen assembled for coremony at Genoa. He ex- s with a| he re- | the erain arly o offi- | om pany re being You per- Whil out Marquis Marc hi$ cxperiment. his wife, | Marconi, lay ill in a cabin | better tomor- the inventor expects to sail the | to Tiumicino near Rome where Premier Mussolini will make of the apparatus and a long-distance radio- WAS Car- Leception Is Successful th Wales, March radio impulse Gugliclmo ctra in the har- 1bor at G today switched on | electric lamps lizhting the clectric | radio exhibition here The signals from the yacht were | { picked up at Dorchester and flas by beam radio from Grimsby Au whe they were p up at Victoria and conveyed by land | line to the town hall here. The im- | puise ther witeh 1 CUSTOMI mails and in int teleg othe comm Marconi's yacht wircless and cation, fals nowingl rning onditions ralia closed lamps liance By WILLIAMS REQ. U 8. PAT. — /Irw.—w OIDN' T PicH \ WHN SAME DOGGONE | REASON YOU DIDNT. \ AMIT TM NOT. MOMENTS WED LIKE TO LIVE NO GENTLEMEN. /WELL, T TST 'suRE 1 TS UP FER HER T /0T You wAs)|EASH e FER T VERY || A GENTLEMAN, /A u&nfnfiwauu ISALL. T |IF YOURE A SCRAPPER - A oM BECAUSE EVEYBODY| I ANT A (eu'de\ixggpms WOULD SANY 1 GOOD ANVFF | e MOUTH, WAS STUCK ( SCRAPPER SMAC ON HER —S155Y | 10 BE A p— T NN * el e OVER TR wWilliams ©1530 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. . is said to | cety | Faith | treed by 1 JLOINGD A e WHICH ADD PRIDE OF POSSESSION TO SATISFACTION OF WEARING Ti"lE pleasurc”of being well groomed is increased by the surpassing quality of our Spring Topcoats...the v; patterns lends ample opportunity to choose in 2 satis{ying manner Hlickey-Freeman 1 —— vised that the basis of the present wage structure be left intact. The national union of textile workers, the largest society in the trade, advised its members to accept the employers' offer saying: “The present is not an opportune time to resist these proposals.” The union executive took the view that labos was anxious to have favorable awards carried out and should be willing to adopt a sportsmanlike at- titude when the decision went against it The present vote of the workers embarrass their leaders. Alderman Ben Turner, M. P., minis- ter of mines and president of the textile workers, confesses surprise at the heaviness and decisiveness of the vote but expresses the hope that “some wise heads may get together even in this darkest hour to see if there is not a middle wa: Rome Gets Word That Missionaries Are Safe Nome, Mareh 26.—(#—The So- for the Propagation of the issionary organization of Catholic church, today received a cablegram from Shanghal report- ing that 11 American priests at Kanchow, Kansi, for whose safety there had been fears, had been g of a communist siege there. All the priests were well. Dispatches from Shanghal yester- day said the plight of the mis- sionaries was serious. It was feared the nationalist garrison would be removed, leaving the city open for sacking by the communists who sur- rounded it ariety of fabrics and ZED BY A S A A S I SRR (RN R AR R R O N e e B |SALESMAN SAM FOR, “THESE NEW rEERIGERATORS | HoP oM & TRAIN, Sath, AN GO OUT IN TH' COUNTRY AN’ SEE \E YA CaN GGT SOME OROERS ULLTBKE SOME BOOKLETS ALONG EER COLD FACTS! Should Know That HeLlo, WILBUR' You | HoPE NoT! BUT THAAISSUS GOIN' 't WaY ? SAYS |F | DON'T GIVE UP GOLE L WILL BE LIKE You'! GOLE AT FISHOOK — ALLKKIDOIN' ASIDE, SAM, UEA )| FISHOOK © WHERE W' GOIN' OUT TA SHOOT SOME. HECK (S THaT?

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