New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 12, 1922, Page 12

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P Fetrwnyws When Will There Be NEW BRITAIN D ATLY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, A Disarmament of Dining Tables? Suppose everybody would recognize the fact that there's no gain but much loss in keeping up hostilities with the stomach! Suppose the ancient aggrava- tion of improper food on indig- nant digestive organs should be settled with guarantees of sen- sible diet and tranquil digestion! The saving would be beyond all possibility of counting. Yet millions go on declaring war on the stomach and accept- ing war in return— loading up Grape-Nuts makes a friend of the taste and an ally of the stomach, There's a charm and satis- faction to this delicious food which prompts appetite to say, “There's a meal!” and digestion to answer, “Thank goodness, here's peace at last!” Grape-Nuts is the perfected nutriment of wheat and malted barley—sweet, crisp, and won- derfully nourishing. It digests quickly, and provides the neces- sary elements, including the vital mineral salts, for body, = e —————— SCHOONER MAGICA *STAUNGH OLD RELIC Was First American Cup Delender in Its Day Key West, Ila,, schooner Magic, which on August 8, 1870, in lower New York bay suc sfully defended the America's cup | against the British yacht Cambria, probably will have a final resting | place on the beach or a sand-bar in | [ the harbor here. Old, weather worn {and dismasted, the v I which once | represented in all her glory the ma- | vine hitecture and scamanship of | the Yankee against those of the Brit- isher, has heen condemned by her owher as useless after ending her ac- g as a pilot boat on the April 11,—The bar, First Cup Defender, The Magic in reality was the first | of the modern eup defenders for the | APRIL 12, ](’»)-r on starchy, heavy, unbalanced and highly-seasoned food at breakfast or lunch — and wonder- ing why comfort, hap- piness and efficiency are out of reach, Grape-Nuts —the Body Builder “There’s a Reason’ Made by Postum Cereal Co., Inc,, Battle Creek, Mich. America, which first won the interna- | tional trophy, did so on Augu | 1851, by defeating the British Auro and it was not until nineteen | years Jater that British yachtsmen |attempted to take it home, |in this contest that the Magic emerg- ed the victor, the first of nineteen vessels in the race to cross the finish, defeating her British challenger .hy thirty-nine m!nmu and twelve sec- onds, » Magic, then owned by FKranklin O%good, of New York, bested the America, Dauntles Rambler, Fleetwing, Alarm, \\l]gnnn. Silvia, Idler, Alice, Tidal Wave, Ga- | lypso, Madeline, Phanton and four other American yachts famous in their day, all of which were in the | S S Ry s race to outsail the Cambria, the Brit- | CHESS TOURNAMENT lish entry. At the finish the Cambria laims that last Dec- | London, April 1 ght countries | was eighth in actual time and tenth Haslun 162t et ‘are represented among the entries so |in order by time allowance. far approved for the Masters' Tour- | When Built. | nament of the London International The Magic was built in Philadel- Chess Cong which begins on July | phia by T. Byerly and Son in 1857 contingent to the con-|for Captain R. F. Loper, as a sloop heside world's fand upon launching was christened Cap, the Madgie. After her first season a Teresa Mora, Senorita |she was lengthened fifteen feet for- entty is only one recorded to|ward, the second season twelve feet date for the Womer Open Tourna-|aft, her rig at that time being chang- ment beginning August 7 |ed to that of a schooner, and during | her third season she w; lengthened fifteen feet amidship. Before meeting | the Cambria she was rebuilt at City Island, N. Y., and when she defeated a strong | the challenger sailed on about sev- the feat- | enty-nine feet waterline, twenty feet ‘ninfl inches beam, and six feet three inches dr. stered 92.2 tons. The vessel passed through various | nerve and brain. Order Grape-Nuts from your grocer today, and let a delighted taste pass a treaty of peace along to an enthusiastic digestion and " assimilation, wa" el T i ud Went Out With “Pegeylt I Mrs., Harlan K. ARLAN, ACTOR, " SUED FOR DIVORCE - in connection with Wile He as obliged to go on h later dis- tead vachting to Atlantic City anf and $1 with one movies, She Claims That Incorrigible | covered that i |trin, he had gone had nt May "R Brady Is Not in the Film. Her her huslt uspicions were aroused when sociated Press leased wire since 1901, Wichita has grown from i popula- 'H WILL BID IF'rench Ath- make per until his death in 1908. Diring|lisher, The will ot Alrs, busdoak lett most of the early history of The Eagle | the paper to a trust owned hy her | Roland I Murdock, a brother of Col- | three children, Vietor and Marcellus | tion of a few score fraders to i pop- onel Marsh, was a partner in the bus- | M. Murdock and Mrs. Pearl Murdock | ulation of about 80,000, and the eircu- iness. Upon the death of the eclder on. The ownership remains the |lation of the paper has more than Murdock the paper passed into nuv{,u:.mv today. | kept pace. ownership of his widow, Victoria Has A, P. Service, | Murdock, and for s ars, until her | The paper has had The Associafted | death, her name was carried as pub- | Press service since 1895, and The nd returned and told her of he had done I Paris, A letic bid for the ure event of the 1924 Olympic game: They are already ng particular | attention to developing their colon | IS 0. 5 runners. Colonel See, formerly in |ands before Mr. Osgood gained pos- irge of | the Joinville Military | S€SSion of her. She was sold by Ca 100l for Phy Culture, 18 now | Loper in 1564 to William J. McVick- | g Rt Al e ‘Ompm‘mnk;nr who became commodore of tho‘ $200 weekly served on Harlan through the mails| have alread i over the full|New York Yacht club in 1866, and| - was later sct e t 1327 Le Moyne street, Los Angeles, | marathon d in order to choose | McVicker who changed her| letters to her hushand u-mlumm anyl|Cal, and in it, M Harlan ask for|from the Arabs and other natives. rom Madgie to Ma offenses that might be proved in her |divorce, § ool alimany’ . and| Olympls candidates for the 26 miles |orillara pirchiasad the | kept it one year, then Buit. $3,000 cou L fee. | dis! | > | H. , Who rebuilt the craft before g of it to Osgood in May, | Tanks In Limerick’s Civil War Harlan, movie star, and the Kenneth D « former leading players in this city, |the wonde work and his description of the yachting scene sued injang g hat s v the picture peared. Resides r mother had visited hotel at Atlantic City rnatu ‘Mr. and Mrs. ister in what she husband’s hand- man of eum pril 12.-—The authorities will Marathon Race, s beir New York for divorce hy his wife Harlan The that is Library of the Bri h muscum gets 0,600 new hooks every year. Florence compl charges false in words It will be remembered that A Harlin brought suit for Jast October and she \\!n Anac Harlan incorrigible, | ‘ conduct. Mrs, wration rded | s well was her writing, The | \ " 8 positive | 1 summons and complaint were v The vessel was owned by many | other yachtsmen in later years, Mr. Osgood having her on two other oc- | casions after disposing of her to Les- | ter Wallack in 1871. Used As Pilot Boat. The Merril Stevens Shipbuilding and Drydock company, of Jackson- ville, , purchased the schooner some y ago from John . Clarke | 8 and Brother, of Pittsburgh, Pa., and | posed of her to Stephen Lowe, of West, who immediately put the )| on the bar as a pilot boat. The |J ¢ was dismasted and sunk in the | harbor here by a hurricane and Lowe raised the hulk. Ior many month® it has been anchored in the harbor near the railroad pier awaiting dis- position. Now Mr. Lowe has con- demned the craft. 1870, Complete Facts of Circulation Are Collected And Verified By the Ke Audit Bureau of Circulation —and by That Association Only AUTO DRIVER CONVICTED Budeny, Car Killed Sentenced for Manslaughter whose Girl, SUI’POP’I ED by the majority of reputable publishers in Ameri- ca, it has become, during the seven years of its existence, the recognized standard authority on circulation questions. Middletown, April 12.—Vincent Bu- deny of Deep River, who was charged | with hitting, and killing Miss I¥a Looby with hi automobile on ) October 17 last, found guilty of & manslaughter by Judge A. L. Brown . in superior court yesterday afternoon and sentenced ko one. YERR In Jatl; The A. B. C. is not a private institution. It is a mutual, non- profit-making association of advertisers, publishers and advertis- Irish Republican Army troops arrive in Limerick with armored trucks and tanks. The finding stated that Budeny was On the membership list are the names of the most pearance stopped Ilghu'n_u —for a brief interval. Their ap- intoxicated at the time his machine hit Miss Looby, who was walking be- side the road, and that he showed gross negligence. It bad been claimed for Budeny that he did not realize he had. hit anyone Budeny is 22 nm been married THE WIGHITA EAGLE HALF CENTURY OLD Newspaper Makes Only Briel Mention of Its Birthday April 12.—The | 5 50 years old mark is 5 Eagle, with ¢ brict editc mention of the snificance of the date, and A minia- | re reproduction of the first page of the paper that was printed half a century ago. Paper's History. Colone! Marsh Murdock unloaded a | and some type from a | what is now the corner of ing agents. prominent business houses in the United States and Canada. Their thorough belief in the service rendered by the Audit Bureau of Circulations is the hasis of its success. th has Fleischmann’s fresh yeast increases the action of the intestines of all newsp'apf;rs in the United States having a cir- of the A. B. C. Over 80% culation of more than 5,000 are members ‘An A. B. C. paper is a paper with Verified circulation. No other mark can have the same meaning as the “A. B. C. Sterling Mark of Circulation,” because no other organization checks completely, the data submitted by publishers. Wichita, K ‘ichita Daily The quietdy The HERALD has by far the largest circulation of any New Britain newspaper. UNDREDS of men and women have already found free= dom from Jaxatives by eating Fleischmann's fresh yeast. The familiar tin-for! package with the y Doctors are now agreed that proper elimination of waste matter hould be brought about by food. One doctor comes right out ey The HERALD is THE ONLY newspaper in New Britain whose form inwhichFleisch- ta mann’s Yeast s plainly that the indiscriminate use of cathartics is one is sold of the causes of constipation. Physicians all over the country are recommending Fleisch- s fresh yeast because it is a fresh food, rich in those ele- s which keep the intestines healthy. Try it out for yourself. Begin today by adding 2 or 3 cakes of Fleischmann's Yeast to your evci’yday diet. Keep it up and see how normally and regularly your intestines act. You can get Fleischmann’s Yeast fresh daily from your grocer. For Ouzck Returin is Uuu Herald Classified Adots. Main and Second streets, in the little | | outpost called Wichita, in April, 1872 ‘\7 once he went to work with lns“ type, and on the morning of the [/ twelfth he produced the first copy mi The Eagle, which was called, out of | | deference to the future greatness of | | Wichita, “The Wichita City i | The “City" was dropped when Wic nm | actually breame a town. Victor Murdoeck, afterwards con- | gressman from his district and at| present a member of the federal trade mission and editor-in-chief | of The Eugle, was a baby when the | | first copy of The Eagle was struck off, | | and Marcellus M. Murdock, his broth- | |er. the present publisher, was not | | born. cormr Changed to Daily. e continued as a “N‘kl)‘ when it appeared as a | ] The Ea nuntil 1884 circulation is audited. OVER 8,000 CIRCULATION DAILY DEMAND CIRCULATION AUDITS BEFORE BUYING SPACE daily. Marsh Murdock edited the pa-‘

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