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MRS, TRAUT AGAIN ‘Y. W. PRESIDENT Re-elected at Annual Meeting— (ommitiees Named The Y. W. C. A. board of direc- tors met yesterday and elected the | following officers for the ensuing, year: President, Mrs. George W. Traut; first vice president, Mr Marcus White; second vice presi- dent, Mrs. Kenneth Searle; treasurer Mrs. W. S. Rowland; secretary, Mrs. Edward Christ. The new members of the board who were elected last week by the| members of the association were present. They are Mrs. W. L. Coho- lan, Mrs. Ralph Howe, Mrs. Donald McMillan, Miss Louise Noble and | Mrs. Harold Parsons. The presiden: announced the following committee appointments for the year: Mrs. R. H. Barlow, girl reserve— employed; Mrs. Robert Chapman, girl reserve; Mrs. W. L. Coholan, membership; Mrs. George Flanagan, nominating committee chairman, educational; Mrs. Jonathan Hart, educational; Mrs. R. N. Hemenway, educational, chairman; Mrs. Ralph Howe, finance; Mrs. W. H. Judd, cafeteria, chairman; Mrs. J. C. T.oomis, membership; Mrs. D. N Millan, girl reserve; Miss Louise Noble, girl reserve, chairman; Mrs. Harold Parsons, finance; Mrs. Her- bert Pease, health education, chair- man; Mrs. Maurice: Pease, member- ship, chairman; Miss Helen Phillips, maintenance and repair, chairma Mrs. Kenneth Searle, personnel, chairman; Mrs. Alexander Scott, girl | reserve; Mrs. Duncan Shaw, mem- | Dbership; Mrs. Philip Stanley, finance | chairman; Mrs. Elmer Stone, finance; Mrs. Marcus White, resi-| dence, chairman. | Miss Ruth Seymour, general sec- ! retary, and Miss Gertrude Fossett, health education director, were named as delegates to the national biennial convention at Detroit, Aprll} 25 to May 1. Miss Seymour and | Miss Fossett will leave the the week and will attend the na- | tional convention of employed offi- | cers, which opens Monday preceding | the biennial convention. Miss Ger trude Rogers will also attend the | national convention. Miss Rogers | was asked by the national board to | serve on “Resource” for the assem- | the great Beraini. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1930. service work by coloring eggs for the children of the day nursery. One club has adopted a family for Easter and is providing many sur- prises for them. The Tanglewood club will not meet on account of Good Friday services ROME OBSERVES HOLY THURSDAY 1§t Jon Lateran Bells Call Crowds to Mass Today Rome, April 17 (#—The bells of John “Mother Church of Christendom,” rang out in joyous peals this morning, answered b those of all Rome's 400 churches on the occasion of commemoration of Holy Thursday, feast of the In- St. Lateran, stitution of the Eucharist, recalling | the Last Supper of Christ with th: Apostles. What is believed to be the vecry table used at that epoch-makinz repast was brought forth from its repository in St. John Lateran and exposed for the veneration of the large congregation. Two skulls, ra- garded as thosc of Saints Peter ani Paul, also were on view, as well ss a reputed portion of the pillar to which Christ was bound whea scourged in the house of the high priest and a bit of the Holy spong2, mentioned jn St. Matthew's account of the crucifixion. Mass Sung By Cardinal The mass at the Lateran basilica was sung by Cardinal Pompili as- sisted by 12 prie seven deacon and seven sub-deacons, and a chant- ing choir. Just before the Lord's Prayer ia the service, the Cardinal blessed the Holy Oils to be used during the ferthcoming year in the administra- tion of the Last Sacrament. Throughout the afternoon the “Altars of Reposc” in Rome wer ited by throngs of the faithful that in the church of the Hol particularly artistic. There tha ament is contained in a richly decorated urn, the workmanship of Other splendidly ecorated altars were to be seen : Santa Maria Della Vittoria Mary of Victory): Trinta De 'Mont (Trinity of the Heights) which over- last of |Name of Mary, in Trajan’s forum, (Holy | GRIMES PLEASED Last Big Spitballer New York, April 17 (UP)—Y daunted by his transfer from tt | pennant contending Pittsburgh Pi |ates to the lowly Boston Brave: Burleigh Grim:s now ambitions—to be the last majol | 1eague spitball pitcher and to help a pennant | build the | contender. | *Judge Fuchs says he has no in tention of trading me Braves into Press today. “Perh to Boston was inte ment for holding {it a lucky break. “The Braves are in the pros {of re-building and my cxperien | should make me valuable to Ma | aps my ded ut but I conside transf helping to develop the | 'm good for fiv tive mound worl | the Brave: will have a tender. I'm only sorr in condition to grab off some eas spring victories but I'll be ready * work in two week, Tamed as Spi and by that tim baller ize his ambition o last major leaguc [ moist delivery existence in 1 becoming th spitballer. 'Th ) with the provisio. in the | rule leagues be exempt from th during the balance of thei wer, Doug €0 cxempted | Grimes, Bill Doak. [Ihil Dana Fillingham, Ray | vin Goodwin, Clarence Mite! Dick Rudolph in the League and Jack Qu | Rube Leonard, A. W. Avers, ldwell, Stan Coveleskie, sell, Urban Shocker and Sothoron in the American. | of the Quinn and | Quinu and Ra Alle Alla emain have catne: in ind thi th the majors. | torles against 9 de AT HIS TRANSFER |May Realize His Ambition fo Bel harbors two and 1 hop» | to complete my baseball career with |the Braves,” Grimes told the United as punisa- ager McKechnie as a pitcher and 11 youngsters. cars more cffec- flag con- that I'm not { Grimes appears destined to real- was legislated out of | | that bona fide spitball pitchers then Fisher, Ma- ell and | ational n, Red Faber, ¥y be their last for the Ath-| \AIRCRAFT HANGAR LOSS $25,000 IN BAD BLAZE | Building HEAVYWEIGHTS ARE " ALSD UNENPLOYED at Fairhaven )Jcetroycd. ‘Boxiug Industry ~ Experiences Curious Development Only Two Days Before the Dedication Exercises. | | Fairhaven, Mass, April 17 (UP) | —Less than two days before the air- | port of Sound Airways, Inc T |was to be formally dedicated, firc : | swept one building and greatly dam- | | aged another on the property last | night, causing loss of approximately | $25.000, [ r| Three biplanes in a han | destroyed and the wing of was scared. A six passcn | plane was salvaged - | building sheltering trucks, a tractor, and was levelled. Defective wiring was belicved th cause of the blaze By Frank Geuty. United Press Sports Editor. New York, April 17, (C. A. P.)— The last few days have witnessed | extraordinary drop in the price | beef as far as the fistic market concerned. Primo Carncra, heaviest of the sent crop of contenders for the cash is under somewhat be- vicion on the far e ts 1polo. who is taller, but smaller shoes, cannot get a| : and others among the bulkicst t cauliflower crop are the ranks of the unemployed, is a somewhat surprising de- velopment in the fight industry, in ew of the fact that a few months S0 it was practically impossible ' | E BARNES BELIEVES CONDITION BETTER icss he weighed close to 300 nd ate half dozen steaks at s le sitting. It is not that the fight fans are zrowing wiser, for events since John L. Sullivan's day all have tended to show that that is incredible, They Pr—J have swallowed too much to start| | Barnes, the chairman of President 2 diet. of & at this late date. e |Hoover's national business survey st be merely one of those curl- > | committ reported today t velopments of a decidedly employment throughout the { curious induatry. 11 has been relieved to a v Much At Stake gree by & repair the vast Venetian whose additions to bout With a negro boxer in tory, land. Calif., has aroused suspic- 3 r. s ittle reason to complain. He Comment with his act in 15 cities, tor in the stabilization of i< only natural that he should -in Mr. Ba d that called to account. However, there the carly part of the y¢ I to be said for Primo. He ly permits for ad too much at stake to risk s and repairs, rything for the sake of fixing 30 per cent. The stimulus given | unimportant hout. It would | activi ha 1ed appre- fpy. been ridiculous for Carnera | in relieving uncmployment.” |ang nis board of highly intelligent foresaw as the *next logics anagers to have jeopardized their resumption of home build- | s of cashing in to the tune of resumption of pruden dred thousand dollars by | 2 b activity in the ! an unknown negro boxer. ¢ ai Chevalier, the negro heavy- | to normal, t who claims he was ordered | a dive” for Primo in Oak- = really was approached by e ! r a boxer to obtain employment | Survey Head Says Repair Work Has Helped Employment y o | Washington, April 17 county d de- wor nera since the beginn n this * nes s vled 1| these ciably He p" res concluded Ke land, | fans enough to risk trying to fix a fight | in the city of Oakland. | Garden Loses As for \Vittorio Campolo, the| leaning tower from the Argentine, | he is having the utmost difficulty in | getting a match at all. The reason | is that Campolo has been guaran-| teed so much by Madison Square | Garden, which brought his contract | from the late (fistically speaking) Fugazy, that Tom Me-| Garden's match-maker, ure out a match in which Garden can break even. The are wise to Senor Compolo’s limitations, and if a bout is arranged the chan are it will not draw the amount guaranteed Vittorio by his contrac Other heavyweights are rapidly slipping into disrepute, Tuffy Grif- fiths, regarded until recently as per- haps the best of a bad lot. has been flattcned alm ond repair by fifth-rate Jack Gag- aving his 4 attracting such a small crowd to a recent bou the middlewest t his proposed op- 2ck Demave, walked out on the affair without striking a blow after onc quick glance over the house. It may 1 cannot the e a healthy sign times that the public which sup- ports prize fights is growing dis- custed with trumped up and inex- cusable heavyweight bouts. But it is more likely that the public is just catching its breath and waiting for the loud trumpeting of a better ad- vised ballyhoo before unloading the desired currency once again. | of the “I saw your ad in the Herald” is the tenor of many a business letter. | | and headlight on Gladden's car Wered damaged. the axle also being sprungs Gladden blamed the other dmvi and the latter blamed Gladden.| ‘ Finally Gladden went into a nearb | house to call the police by telepho 1and when he came out his car was |the only one in sight, the other | driver having taken advantage of | the opportunity to leave. Motorist Drives Away Without Leaving Clue Charles C. Gladden of 56 Gladden street became so angry in a dispute with another motorist following a collision about 11:20 o'clock last night at Stanley and Allen streets, he failed to note the registration number of the car and when Ser- gea Stadler started to in- | | iccident, he had nOih- | pRYS LSk STEIN SONG: i Doston, April 17 (UP)—The Stein Song was broadcast by station 'WNAC last night as the opening feature of a radio forum sponsored by the W. C. T. U. 1% on which to work. Gladden said he was driving south Stanley street and saw a car ming towards him. As the latter | swung into Allen street the colli- | sion occurred and the left fender | Dress Up Time— Easter April 20th Merchandise of Known Quality Accepted Style Authority GUARANTEED SATISFACTION Priced in a most Reasonable manner ONE THIRTY - NINE MAIN STREET bly on public questions. Mrs. Pat- rick McAvay of the membership committee will accompany Miss Ro- gers to Dectroit as a visiting dele- gate. The association rooms will be closed Good Friday. The girl re- e serves have been doing their Easter |USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | |looks Rome from the Pincian Hiil, | letics |and San Carlo Al Corso, the church|and lost the of the Milanese in Rome, where | White Sox. Pope Pius XI said his t mass as Grim a young priest more than 50 years|trio. ago. > Faber won 13 number for th 3 | . DERRLRA TO ARRIVE someone it is probable that Carnera ! New York., April 17 (UP) — Dr.|and his manager, Leon See, knew | Enrique Olaya Herrera. president-|nothing about it. The Carnera crowd clect of Colombia, and Mrs. Herrera |is in a fair way, what with movie ill arrive Sunday on a prolonged |contracts and the chance of one big ——— visit to this country before return-|outdoor shot next summer, to clean A Ciassified Ad in the Herald can |ing for Dr, Herrera's |up a quarter of a million dollars. inauguration | sure do wonde: in August. |They certainly are not stupid sanme RIVETS MAKE THE WATER- TANK WATER-TIGHT... Only Frigidaire can give you the better vegetables and salads made possible by the HYDRATOR TORRID ZONE STEEL FURNACE is gas-tight and dust-tight because it is riveted Lexvox Toauin ZoNg furnace for bard coal with outer casing re- moved. showing riveted construction. (A)— Extra-long smoke chamber, orradiator, squeezes’ maximum of heat from smoke be- fore it can escape up chimney. (B)—The specially designed fuel- saving fire-pot with locomotive grates and other features. You can see why this fur- nace is guarateed for 10 vears and why its average life, based on the service records of thousands of Torrid Zones, is 21 years. Years after you've installed a Torrid Zone you can bank the fire for the night with complete assurance that the air from the registers upstairs is as clean, as untainted by gas or dust, as the day the fureace was bought. the windows closed, and the furnace going. The Torrid Zone humidifier has twice the evaporat- ing area of ordinary water pans right inside the casing and because rapid evaporation is also important, it is positioned directly above the firing doors where it gets the most heat. Proper air circulation is guarenteed when an Tor just as the water-tank is sealed water- tight by hot-riveting and cold-calking . . . so the steel Torrid Zone is made gas, smoke and dust- tight. Gas, smoke and dust-tight to keep the woodwork gleaming, the walls and ceilings clean, the curtains bright . . authorized Lennos Furnace man installs your Torrid Zone according to the Standard Code. Come in and sce why this is the most efficient furnace that science has developed and why it makes 3 warm air system the most desirable. A free booklet describes it in detail. It is the only steel boiler plate furnace designed espe- cially for hard coal or coke or oil. We'll fur- nish plans and estimates for an installstion if vou like. Free engineering service is furnished from factory for special problems. Made by the Len~ox Frryace Company, Syracuse, New York—DMarshalltown, Jowa—Toronto, Canads. HE new Frigidaire Hydrator added features that —apowerunitthatis all Frigidaire cabinets combine the - i ST o beauty of porcelain with the strength brings you an added service—a dust-tight to shield the family from unpleasant service offered only by Frigidaire. ¥or Frigidaire alone has the Hy- drator. Celery kept in the Hydrator be- comes tender and brittle. Tomatoes retain their firmness and flavor. Letruce takes on added crispness. Frigidaire now offers. Every house- hold model is equipped with the famous “Cold Con- nside and out trol” which speeds The top of the the freezing of iceand desserts. And ~ Frigidaire cabinet is flat and usable. every model has a power unit that is extra-powerful yet incredibly quiet in the bottom of the and cven dangerous fumes. In tests the Torrid Zone delivers & temperature or it consumes 307 less fucl than cabinet—out of way. of steel. They are Porcelain-on« ° more Every cabinet steel inside and out: Porcelain-on-steel ordinary furnaces. That's something to your coal bin! The deep fire-pot uses less fuel and secures better combustion. The oversized radia- tor takes more of the heat from the smoke and gases before they go up the chimney. Humidity and ventilation become important health problems when the temperature is low, See a complete demonstration THE FAMOUS “FRIGIDAIRE COLD CONTROL” At your first opportunity call at the display room of the nearest dealer listed below. See the latest Frigidaires. See the Hydrator and the “Cold Control” demoanstrated: Find out about the low prices and liberal terms. Coanvince yourself that Frigidaire offers the greatest value in the field of electric refrig- eration todays Shelves are waist-high from the Even wilted vegetables are made fresh again by the Hydrator's moist Zzeviving cold. And Frigidaire has the “Cold Control” for faster freezing ‘The Hydrator is only cae of many floor and casy to reach. And today FRIGIDAIRE MORE THAN 1,300,000 IN USE CONNECTICUT LIGHT & POWER CO. R 82 West Main 3t. NEW BRITAIN 3600 LENNOX Torrid zane STEEL FURNACES The Standard Code for installing @ warm air heater, adopted by the National Warm dir Heating Association and written by its research enginsers, is our code, Thomas F. Fitzpatrick & Co. 215 Park St. Tel. 3638-W Only $20 down and 20 months to pay the balance TELEPHONE et New Britain, Conn. PLAINVILLE 560