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‘Y PHYSICAL DEPT., (OPENS ITS SEASON Schedule Lisls Classes for all Ages and Interests The Y. M. C. A. physical depart- ment season opened-today and many of the members donned their uni- forms for the first limbering up | process in the physical training| classes. There is an old saying that “the first hundred years are the hard- and so it always proves with the first class, when unused mus, cles, soft flabby ones are brought | into play. Many an individual will | think, “I am as young as I used to be,” and will proceed to do his| stuff under the illusion, but it re- | quires only one physical training | class to convince a man that to be | positively fit always one must set| aside certaih periods weekly for ex- | ercise. Classes in physical training | at the “Y” are conducted for | physical benefit of men and boys | and no one is required to take physical training beyond his own needs and physical strength. “Y” Uses Sound System_ Physical training the “¥” is| not to be confounded with the many | courses so brilliantly advertised in at Saturday ~pen pemod. Boys' Division Today, 4:15 p. m., Junior “A" class, 10 to 12 years; 7 p. m.e in- termediates class. b Tuesday~ 4:15 p. m., junior “B'™ class, 13 to 15 yeags; 7 p. m., em- ployed “B” class. Wednesday, 4:15 p. m., Junior “A” class, 10 to 12 years; 7 p. m., intermediate class. Thursday, 4:15 p. m., Junior “B” class, 13 to 15 years; 7 p. m., Em- ployed “B" class; 7:30 p. m., meet- ing of the managers of the junior church basketball teams; 8 p. m., intermediate gymnastic club. Friday, 4:15 p. m., Junfor “A" cl 10 to 12 years; 6:15 p. m church group; 7 p. m., intermediate class. Saturday, 9% a. m. life saving course, junior gymnastic corp, 10 ». m., life saving tests, Junior “B'Y class, 13 to 15 years; 11 a. m., swim- ming class, beginners; 7 p. m., em- — ployed “B” class. : L Flashes of Life ] S e L) New York—A knockout by Tun- ney! A thug was about to shoot at another policeman when Detective Thomas Tunney, brother of Gene, landed a very effective left. Montreal—Amid rejoicing perfection wiolation of golf etiquette has been forgotten in this instance. H. E. Walker, playing ig a singles |ing equalled by few if any of) the | —Brenta Summit, East Brenta Wall, | | moved quickly to another rock but | with great presence over | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1930. ALBERT SETS NEW ~(LIYBING RECORD Belgian King Scales Italian Peaks—Performs Heroic Feat | Trento, Italy, Oct. 6 4—Albert, | king of) the Belgians, has just left this dolomite district after veral weeks of Apline sportd, leaving be. hind him records of mountain climb- crowned heads in history. ! Albert, with his guides, brothers | Silvio, Mario, and Agostini, ascend- | €d six or more cloud piercing peaks | Lower Castle, Refuge Cross, Lower | Brenta, and Low Tower. During the climb of Brenta's Sum- mit, which is 11,000 feet high King Albert performed a heroic feat. As he stood on a rock jutting from a perpendicular side of the mountain one of his guides shouted to him that the rock was giving way. Albert of mind con- tinued to support the tumbling rock with his breast and hands, lest it should fall on the guides below. King Albert has been staying here incognito. two wounded as workers battle po-' lice. Stockholm — Hundred thousand line quay in rain as bodies of An-| aree, Strindberg and Frankel are | brought back from Arctic. | Mexico City — Calles denounces | “traitors” in speech at Monterey. Domestic Washington —DMoffett urges that United States make its helium avail- able for other nations’ airships. Boston Cardinal O'Connell urges Leglonnaires to guard religion and morals. St. Louls — Laura Ingalls lands | from New York in nine hours, 40 | minutes in attempted record flight | to Los Angeles. Boston — Annual report of exec- utive council of A. ¥. of L. urges | shorter hours, five day week in pro- gram to remedy unemployment Washington — Five new district court judges urged by senior circ court judges to relicve congestion. Aurora, Ill. — Eight hurt as Bur- lington express carrying Vanderbilt university football team, hits stock train. Chicago — Frankie Bell under | speclal guard against fellow prison- ers after accusing two companions in Lingle murder. Washington — Mrs. Louise Creecy dies of hatchet wounds. | St. Elmo, 1l — Lee Parish, Tulsa oil man, killed as car driven by bride runs into ditch. Sports St. Louis — Cardinals even series beating Athletics 3 to 1 in IO\]I‘Vh‘ game. Chicago — Cubs beat Sox in city | held by POLICE, FIRE AND PARK BOARDS MEET Public Works Board to Hear Petitions for Gas Stations Several committee meetings are scheduled Tonight the committee and printing will o'clock at the city cle the special committec the investigation into street extension matter 8 o'cléck at Roo Tomorrow evening commigsione and board this week on supplie ebt at 7:30 s office, and in charge of the Willow will meet at , city hall, the board of the board of and the board commissioners will meet, special committee looking possibility of obtaining ic light rates will also commissioners, police the the ele of and into lower d ittee Or will finance committee will monthl$ session to pa and hold s on the bills for action hy the council next week. | Two hearin; oline filling station permits s on petitions for g will be aid to be The Cities Servi Stations, plans to erect tion on the property on West Main he board of public works | tonight. with opposition to one sta- | ixnprwmmm. of they Women's Christian Temperance union Miss Scott came, very quietly, last week. National officers selected her sfort- ly after Mrs. Yost resigned. i Scott said today education ! had been h chief personal interest | for many years. She went to school 11n Kansas, she said, and so “grew | I up a dr ¢ Mi. Scott. taught in a New York high until four years ago when became editor of the | official organ of the past twa years tendent of the and arbitra- World's Wo mper: school sh n Signal, department tion for Christian of the n . Wise Smith, national of the W, J coun- the drink aid, “but we at liquor is carried in from religion of the natives ands total abstinence; but the ssionaries face the problem of im- That is why afives to [t in the old great we work here.” she continued. “to p our state units informed as to progress of national legislation > no change of policy— in work of the office is to anization inforn with FOURLOSELIVES " WHEN BOAT TURNS |Coast Guands Rescue Sole Sur- 1 vivor of Tragedy | | Ipswich, Mass. Oct. 6 (UP)—A | father and son and two other men were drowned and a fifth was res- cued in a shore here yesterday when a wave, breaking over the rboat, swamped the craft. wave washed two of the vic ims overboard but the other three managed. to cling to the overturned craft for a time. Then the rol got the best of them and they forced to relinquish their heavy sea w The drowned Devitt, 58, of Lowe ney, 44, of Ip Jr., 19; and William of Lowell, Hay: cued by were William M. i Joseph Gaff- G. Hayes, 62 Ernest was res- Coast Guards who put out in a power boat from the Bug Light | station, seven miles from the over. orned cabin cruiser. Young Hayes had d from tt Shortly before the Coast Guards ar- rived he had been forced to release Lis hold en his father. Just as the sea a mile off | stern of their | ng ! vich: his son, Joseph, | n the last to | motorboat. | determine the extent of his injuties - of the peddler’s truck, and nobody could be found who saw the acci- dent. WATCH TAKEN FROM POCKET While” Howard Williams, movie machine operator in the Strand theater, was directing the flickering rays onto the silver screen Saturday afternoon, somebody silently slipped nto the booth, extracted a gold watch from the pocket of his trous- ers hanging near the door, and went away as silently as he came. When Williams changed his trousers to go to supper he started to look at his watch to see if it had kept ticking, and discovered his loss. He reported to the police and Detective Sergeant T. J. Feeney was detailed to find the thief. S The boy could give no description b series 6 to 4 in fifth game, giving |street now occupied by the home of | Fred Beloin, where zoning rules them one game edge. | New England 4 | itly changed. Protests | Bostonl | Twentyithreer personai|iLote) AN I depby RrODEIMA OIS ST SOMS | e, it is said | meryidliedipln imotorgvehiclnd e nwr’mng will be on the! dents in Massachusetts last week e e magazines. This “Y" training does |match at the St. Margaret Country not promise to develop for a certain | club, holed his tee shot at the 161 sum of money a certain number of |yard eighth hole. Taking his ball | muscles in a certain number of (8leefully out of the cup before hi k sassaro, Oct. 6 (UP)—A motor bus days, muscles that bulge out like a |opponent had putted, he waved ex-|,,nning between Alghero and Giave Hercules or the biceps of a Sandow | Citedly at two players on the tee. S0 boat came within hailing | ce the son also lost hold and the churning water. He was fished out with a boathook. Italian Specials -] colds 5 \JICKS VaroRuUR star sank i were _rece Trying to Stop Horse Constanty Baranowski, 14, of 72 | Clinton street, w i to be hero Saturday af but t same o Knights of Columbus 3 |fell into the Temo river due to by means_of rubber pulleys or grad- | They thought it was an invitation to | uated iref weights. go through. W. E. Baldwin proceed- ed to hit right into the pair on the green, right intoythe cup in fact. New York—The steamship Stutt- gart has arrived from Germany with two women who made all the men aboard feel mighty small. ar Dora Syre, 8 feet 4, and Anna Haase 7 feet 9, vaudeville performers. Orange, puts sin in cinema. of 1750 Sunday movies in Orange are forbidden: in the joining town of Orange they legal. And so a theater ti strad- dles the horder was half empty yes- terday. But the screen was partly in ange. New York—Sidney Franklin bush toreador, who is due shortly from triumphs in Spain be urged by his mother to quit the bullring and became a commercial artist. The average intelligent indivilual wants none of these the “Y lives. He prefers the gradual sy metrical development, buoyant step, trical developement, buoyant step, | clear sparking eve, and mental poise | that only come by safe sane meth- | ods of training. Physical training in | the dim past seemed coupled with | scme mystie / science and secret | fermula and even to th | many disciples, promoted by a cer-| tair type of men whose natural tremendous development leads many | gullible individuals to “believe that | they also, despite of their physical | handicap, could also pack on moun- tains of hard firm healthy muscles | in a few wecks time through the| sistem advertised. ¢ Sixty vears ago men ‘walked up | and down stairs balancing iron| crowns weighing 100 pounds, and many a man with weak underpin- ning either became bow-legged or knock-kneed following this system all because some self-styled author- ity on physical education happened te-notice while traveling in Europe | women balancing heavy bags of | grain on their head Today the average man is not s gullible, but secures through golf, tennis, baseball, swimming, football, bask® ball volley ball, and hand ball, or light physical training ex- ercises the nece: activity to maintain mental and physical vigor. The physical department program for the week is as follows: Men’s Division Today, at 5:30 p. m., young men's physical training class. Tuesday, 10:30 a. m., men's morn- ing class, 5:30 p. m., qlder business- men's class; 8:30 p. m., tumbling class. Wednesday, 5:30 p. men's recreation period; 8 p. m, wrestling class advanced; §:30 p. m.. swimming class, beginners. Thursday, 5:30 p. m., older busi- ness men’s class; 8 p. m., organiza- tion of gymnastic club; §:30 p. m., tumbling class. Friday, 10:30 a. m., men’s morn- ing class; 5:30 p. m., young men's recreation period; 8:00 p. m., wres ling class, beginners; 8:30 p.” m. young men's physical training clas m., young East ad- Flat- home Vienna—Vanished is an organiza- |tion known as the World League for the Rights of Men, which proposed to save males from the wiles and economic cleverness of women. What was the league's headquarters is now a store that sells women's shoes st Orange, N. J.—Ten girls of | social prominence got jobs as sales- | women in a new store. The Y. W. C. deprived of jobs, urged that the so- ciety girls tutn over their salaries to charity. Now comes A. mund Williamson, secretary of the Cham- ber of Commerce: “Many girls so- oially prominent are werking today because their once wealthy parents are holding purses well nigh emptied by the stock market crash.” New York—Abbe Ernest Dimnet, French priest, philosopher and au- thor, has arrive to debate Clarence | Darrow on “Is Religion Necessary? Newark, N. J.—A $3,000 ash can! Radium lost at Beth Israel hospital was located in ashes by means of an electroscope. Three platinum con- tainers about as big as a pin got into a waste basket and went through the hospital incinerator. Chemical treat- ment will be necessary to recover the radium. An Tndian law provides for the reapportionment of legislative dis- tricts every six yvears. J.—An Orange blue law | Under a statute i operated is to | | the speed and efficiency with which | | carried out. in protest over poor girls being | tailure of brakes and a score of pas- sengers were endangered. Eleven were injured, four seriously. Ancona, Oct. 6 (UP)—Three sea- men of the Italian fishing boat Zenina were injured at the Port of Ragonizza, Jugoslavia, by a crowd which started an Anti-Italian demon- | stration. , | Milan, Oct. 6 (UP)—The courts | turday declared the private bank | by Prof. Mario Mig-| liorini bankrupt following complaints by many depositors. The extent of | liabilities was not known. Police were secking Migliorini. Melfi, Oct. 6 (UP)—Undersecre- tary Arpinati has completed his teur | of the earthquake area and expressed | gratification of the authorities for | ( the work of reconstruction has been Milgn, Oct. 6 (UP)—Former Min- | ister Volpi, testifying in the Farniac- ci-Belloni libel trial, said he has sug- gested but not ordered Belioni to conclude a loan with the Dillon, Reed & Co., of New York, because it was more advantageous than of- fers by other banks. Farinacci, in newspaper articles two years ago, charged Belloni with misuse of city funds at Milan. : l Overnight News ] By the Associated Press. Foreign Beauvais, France—R-101 disaster, costing 47 lives, laid to storm which forced airship down. Le Bourget, France —Radio log of dirigible shows there was smok- ing on board. London — Britain stunned by dis- aster as messages of sympathy pour in from all corners of the world. King expresses grief. Rio de Janeiro — Congress grants president $10,000,000 to crush re- volt. Montevideo, Uruguay — Brazilian rebels draft men aged 21 to 35 for drive against Sao Paulo. Bilbao, Spain — Striker killed, STRONGER — SAFER - More Profitable _ After 44 Successful Years A savings association formed in 1886 to promote thrift—to help men and women attain independ- ence and comfort. You can join now—a dollar a month or more if you choose. Every member has_the privilege of borrowing from the fund of over $600,000. ¢arnings belongs Your ' Money Every dollar of to the members. Earns 51.% Compounded Semi-Annually EW BRITAINCO(PERATIVE JAVINGSANDOANAISOCIATION 24 WASHINGTON ST. . TEL. 73 October Series Now Open Resources $600,000 * r =i——————— (2 YEARS) 5200 3400 3600 $800 $1000 32000 LONG TERM PLAN $1.00 per $2.00 per $3.00 per Shares $400 per shares $5.00 per Shares $10.00 per Etc., up to 50 month month month month month month shares 3 Shares SHORT TERM PLAN (1 YEARS) Share $2.00 per month $200 Shares $4.00 per month 3$400 Shares $6.00 per month 3600 Shares $8.00 per month 3300 Shares $10.00 per month $1000 Shares §20.00 per month $2000 Bte, up to 50 shares Single Payment Shares ......$160.00 which mature in 4% years at $200.00 Boston — Boston Central Labor Union votes to secure cooperation of State Federation of Labor to tour state in opposition to worker: republican committee. Provincetown, Mass.—Second for- | est fire in twe wee threatens Provincetown after sweeping three square miles of woodland. Ipswich, Mass—Four men drown and a fifth is rescued by Coast | Guardsmen when power boat cap- sized in Ipswich Bay. Springfield. Vt. Authorities search for Alvin S. Martin, cashier of the First National bank, who dis- appeared yesterday after notifying ofticials of a shortage in his ac- counts. Gloucester, Mas: Fishing schooner Bluenose arrives here from | Lunenberg, N. S. uhead of sched- | ule after leaving Canadian escort | behind. Texans have erected a monument | at the grave of James Collingsworth, ploneer statesman and soldler. . Telephone 3600 tery Co. for the mit for the station at Pleasant streets. FORMER TEACHER TAKES DRY POST Miss Isora Scott Becomes W. C. T. . Legislative Representative Stanley and ‘Washington. Oct. 6 (#—The pro- hibition activities which Mrs. Ellis A. Yost dropped to take the leader- ship of women for the repu national committee have been chouldered by Miss Isora Scott, who turned to temperance work four years ago, after long experience as a New York school te transfer of the per-! vertook him that overtakes to be heroes. He s ailed to accomplish his N wal when heard the running horse. H horse coming to- 5 | sound of a irned and ter picked | ta t New Britain hospital, leg was put in sprints horse was los nobody W vhose it nor ning loosc the up and General actured right in the where it nt why it was run- public highway sh w on MANUFACTURER KILLED Baltimore, Oct. 6 (P—Wilson K. Levering, president of the National Sash Weight company and widely known as a horse breeder, was kill- ed yesterday by a fall from his | horse while riding on his estate, HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS To Choose New D. G. K. A call for a meeting of Daly Coun- il, Knights of Colunibus, was issued | er the week-end, to be held Tues- ay night for t deputy > presen grand kni deputy, found that his pri irs were being interfered | ndered his resignation. | , 50 he t DRIVER SOUGHT The police made a diligent search Saturday afternoon and evening and Sunday for a peddler's wagon a boy named Mor- ey, son of James Morrissey of 227 South Main street, afternoon, but failed to find the ped- dler. According to Mr. the boy was crossing the street near his home when the peddler drove his truck along, knocking the boy down and went right along without irying to see whether the boy was injured. The boy complained of pains in his back, and an X-ray will be taken by a private physician to inside and out Connecticut e purpose of electing | Saturday | Morrissey, | The Beacon Recommends: “A NOTE IN music” By Rosamond Lehmann Last Week’s Recommendation “Years of Grace” 85 WEST MAIN ST. Telephone 6100 Both Books for sale or for rent. Porcelain-on-steel «..and yet this new Frigidaire with 4} square feet of food storage space sells for only . . « ’1 .50 7 CASH PRICE Installed in Your Home voo and you get the new, accessible, exterior “Cold Control.” A smooth, flat top. The convenience of elevated shelves. A mechanical unit that is extra-powerful, incredibly quiet and completely enclosed. The greatest value in Frigidaire history! 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