New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 12, 1926, Page 3

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NOVEMBER 12, 1926. ment. is transforming most YALE SCIENTISTS GAIN NEW GOALS Metal Foils Less Than Millionth Inch Thick Made New Haven, Conn., Nov. 12.—A “SUIT” YOURSELF 'WINTER— | Comes but once a year—- thank goodness, now that your coal is in the cellar. It’s our turn to help keep } you warm. not o Tenements to rent ly in Herald Classified Ac .as Moras ranch does not stretch ¢ into the sunset it lid, because the 100,000 s dwindled down to 19.000. curtailed acreage produces re weaith than the original 100,- cause NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, | Elcetricity also ctrically. Otto Carlin uses to loperate it. They have installed al- |(3 H ¥ An investigation concerned with (;ATT[E RAN[;HIVfi {the cattle ranches. a shecp up with a buckskin | od6: traahanice] . (.reep. Che?se Disagrees | the time taken by an atom to re- | | The Chungze In 50 Years g harvest the wool with a |y vm operations. | With King, Says Queen organize itself in such a way as to Life moves with a swifter tempo |clumsy pair of shears, one clip at a | esedan e | Frome, Somers Zngland M emit Hight after it has received the on the land which Otto Carlin block- | (ime. Now the twinkling blades of | ? - Lt ok ERSlandgbion necessary stimulug da:being made by I ] cd out 50 years ago. Otto would |the shecp barbers can turn out 150 | 5aYS Noises of City R SR e L S, Jesse Vighegiold Heams, (oG bigly not know the place. bair cuts a day each. An exper Lower Life and Health | does 2Eos with ol | Plains, Kans., who holds a national — | Toitin R hand clipper working at top speed.| (o ia A 4 s L : vshi oliing up the valley of the C Rper Wor B At top. an | Chicago, Nov. 12 (—If the rat-| A a recc eese display the King |§ ;;::::‘;s nco“:";:g‘lln::”gf“T:‘a‘lpr.mol?r:‘i'M h I R [ 0‘d rado river from Austin, Te | can not do more than §0. tle, bang and roar of the city could | Was attracted by a large cheese, Shiiige aca fhe University of Wi | uch of homance of Oi Wes[ the summer of 1877, an ox rruin} Descendants of Otto Carlin’s dairy [be elimin the average life of |Streaked with nppetizing spots of ‘Gonsin vend TacelVed LIS PRE D at I" G | forded the clear stream of the Llano, | cows h raorl‘ cut by v[‘vrh\r‘ its residents would be prolonged |Ereen mOj:H As he walked away the University of Virgina. The times | S G0ne andd rawing up at a spot on the cnsilage cuiters, give their milk to ahout seven y declares Chi- |rather reluctantly, the King re- to be measured are about one San Saba river in Menard county, | r and s commissioner of health, Dr, jmarked: : | hundred millionth of a second, and, S5 | deposited &Icr;rgo”:‘f Slur?hr'fr m;mq c ,T orted by -'ul\ ;lpm'x\r' ::m |Herman N. Bundeson. Individual T’:-”; '[hl-‘ Nn? I hn[:»[goog and ¢ in spite of their small values, Dr.| Menard, Tex, Nov. 12 (P—Otto e pointed nails. L of these h drives away the flies. Mother land community efficiency would at |8reen a hirough. u ueen Than amimtoniying metal folls 1865 | Beams is able to determine them |Carlin lighted a new ofl lamp _drow Canlin bullt his ranch house in the [hens can play bar-yard bridge. | : : be matertally n. Mary elbowed the monarch away ness has been developed by the re- | with precision and to measure the |water with a pump, examined one o Do'ate Wame thy as N Wes ‘hr)t vkic ric n«;\\ ator n_ur'x.\ fERCT DL Back g i -“‘“.er C(J"? g search workers at the Sloane Phy. | differences between the times for jof the new iron nails which were | T¢Xas: t :"k o han ;{\ o rle | uxojse Iways a tax on the| "o 0% M_“’ e L sics Laboratory of Yale University, | i8ht of different colors. The ex- |rapldly displacing the old wooden | Reccntly the old house was|brooder raises them. Iorses are fjoryes, the commissloner swho |SFCT cheese docs not agree with you In confirming the report of this de- | Periment is one having important | pegs, and thought it was progress. |razed, and on its site, made out of | . by Plr‘c(rlcu irons and empting to lesson the |14 You cannot have it velopment, Dr. William F. G,|bearing upon the structure of the | But he kept a few of the old candles some of its own timbers, stands a by electrie clipp while of Chicago. Swann, professor of physics, and dl- | 210m- on hand and preserved the old oak- ranch house of a mnew type—a rons of a different type curl |5 Ten e rector o fthe Sloane Laboratory to- | D Ernest Orlando Lawrence, of That was 1877, | sprreading bungalow with wi maid's hair and iron the men's ot ani Sl day said that these foils are perfect. | Canton, South Dakota, a _graduate > was the famous 100,- |porches and spacious rooms, hard- ot Anily Warle ly uniform, and are almost com. | of the University of South Dakota Moras ranch. |wood floors and oak fittings. And G54 oAl aes el Dletely transparent. Joseph Eq. | 20d the University of Minnesota, 1ecs anddescendants | heside each polished dor is an elec- aceustomed to noises whic al monds Henderson, B. §. College of | Who recelved his Ph. D. at Yale in ress a button. Mag s | tric light switch. part of one's daily Iif unusual Wooster 1922, who holds a Sterling | 1923 is also working in the Sloanc | glow, meals cook, Roving “Barber” Shop {acres 1 land unnecessa nds to up- Fellowship, is perfecting the tech. | laboratory. He is attacking the |pumps draw wafer, saws cut wood.| A strange thing mounted But th HRP the menvealunaies Su ooty nique of making these foils, Profes. | Problem of the structure of the |sheep are clipped, rators re- |truck having long limber arms, |n enaiant. ko e S sor Swann said, and is using them | atom by shooting a beam of elec- | frigerate, grin grind and | comes along on Las Mor 1000 did. Ibrain in such a way as to in an investigation of the relative|trons through atoms of mercury {ywaffle frons waffle. They just push |thesc days. It is a moving “barber | Charles L. Martin owns the place, | dizziness, giddiness and nausea in ease with which electrons of differ- | VaPOr, thereby knocking certain of |4 button. |shop” cquipped to “bobb” sheep |and his four sons, college trained, |some porsons.” ont veloclties can pass through | the parts of tho atom into new | metals ,adn in certain problems per- | Positions. By measuring the m:, taining to soft X-rays. with which the various parts can be displaced, Dr. Lawrence, who has More than 25 separateInvestiga- | po1q 5 pational research —council |4 tions are in progress at the Sloane ! Laboratory by members of the Yale faculty, professors from other in- stitutions who have chosen| to devote thelr sabbatical leave to research work at Yale, research feljows, and graduate students. Two National Re- search Council Fellows, jand one senior and two junior Sterling fel- lows have been assigned to the laboratory and form the niicleus of a group of young men whe are de- voting the whole of their, time tu original investigations. Dr. Casimiro del Rogarlo, of Bantayan, Cebu, P. L, who) recelvea | the degrees of M. §. at Yalo|in 1924 and who is the holder of a |Sterli junior fellowship at Yale, has jusy completed an important injvestiga- tion on the electric felds ngcessars to tear away electrons from \mctaln. By improving the technique of high vacuum production, and of {the ac curate measurement of small cur- rents under very high voitages, he has been able to secure greater con sistency of measurement thagn h been possible heretofore, and he h eben able to show that, in a vacuun s0 high that the pressure ih it is only one ten thousand millionth o the atmospheric pressure, ore may subject electrons in metals td a pull of two million volts per centimeter, | without tearing them frogn the metal. These investigations have a direct bearing upon the mechanism | of the production of ¥s, particu- larly as exemplified in certain forms of X-ray tubes of modern deyelop- | TOMIKOWSKI & DAWSON 361 MAIN ST. OPP. MYRTLE able to reach important conclusions as to the structure they represent and has been able, moreover, to mold his results into a theory to many interesting conclusions. Another aspect of the problem of the atomic structure is engaging | the attention of Dr. Thomas Hope | Jonnson, of Syracuse, N. Y., a grad- | uate of Amherst, who received his | | Ph. D. at Yale last June. Many of | | the atoms are magnets, | Johnson is measuring the strengths magnets, considered by | of these ientists a very difficult feat when |¥ | it is realized that they are millions | of times weaker than an ordinary | magnet such as can be bought In a |@ \ toy shop. Yodeling Art Seems to Be Lost in Switzerland 12 (A—Yodling is a Shepherds askance at | | % ‘i Lucerne, Nov. lost art in Switzerland. and farm hands look {"American tourists who ask them to | g dle. A party of tourists visiting | Switzerland repcatedly asked natives | for a yodle or two. Noi.e responded. | They all looked puzzled. | Suddenly, just around a bend on [the main road, came the thrilling | notes of a perfect yodle and the visitors hurried to get a glimpse of | the performer. | He proved to be a lusty Ameri- lcan tourist. SUIT or OVERCOAT YOU BUY HERE Doesn’t Make Good WE WILL! SUITS $25 ., $45 KIRSCHBAUM CLOTHES !} 1009 Pure OVERCOATS $25 ., $65 I ! Virgin Wool Hand Tailored Throughout Offer you the utmost in value, the last word in style; they insure satisfaction. guarantee. They Must You have our absolute i Make Good, Or We Will. Stop in today and be convinced. OUR "URNISHING DEPARTMENT is well supplied with the season’s choicest offerings. K TOMIKOWSKI & DAWSON The Store for You. l fellowship for two yvears, has been |§ of | B phenomena which points the way | f and Dr. % | . ~ Quality - Jervice - Yalue - . —WINTER COAT Convince yourself. You will ap- preciate these excel- —come in. lent quality coats. All are neatly lined and warmly interlined. $28.00 $38,00 | [NATERIATS Su Dol de Cloths livias i Velours i Pile-like-Fabri Fur Collars Fur Cuffs Fur Borders Fur Panels fine Tuxedo and others, other Model EXTRA! For Tomorrow! 63 Sample COATS $58.00 —here is a remarkable value for the money, all the new leading Fall Fabrics, Styles and Colors. Just imagine! The smart coats of the season, coats that sold as Tomorrow they high as $85. while they la will this low price. Two Specials for the Ladies! Ladies’ Scarfs $2.98 made of Crepe De Chine of qual- ity up to the miute styles. Color- ings and styles for every occa sion. There's only 12 doz., S0 | you'll have to be very carly. Ladies’ Gloves $1.98 —just the kind you'll want for Gloves fea- turing all the new embroidered effects—they’re the genuine “Trefoussee,’ featuring all the wanted colors. the days to come. be offered. at § osion Store November Linen Sale! —visit our linen section to- morrow and save! ctraordinary Values! Porto Rican Bridge Sets $2.50 —all linen with heavy hand embroidery on Cloth Napkins. $2.50 Set. Table Damaszk $1.00 v.. —1009% for t pric: linen, 70 in s wide morrow at this low All Linen Luncheon Sets 2.49 —colored bords 54x54 inches, Napkins. I We are featuring a com- plete new line of Children's, Miss Boy’s and Ladies Underwear ses’, All specially priced quick sale tomorroyw. Only 100 Pair Ruffled Curtains $1.89 —21; yards long, full width , hemstitched Wosl Blankets $5 98 le bound, pretty yeautiful range of XH For Tomorrow! Water Bottles 73c less Moire Hot Water Made of heavy red All perfect, Special! ‘ ig) An exquisite =Y Castilel Daint- ily molded; hardmilled for longwear;lath- ers profusely. Soothing, It's new. You'll CASTILE likeit 3w 27c The very Lingerie at newest Women's Sale Prices! Ladies’ Slips $2.95 —radiunctte slips. Th rial will not cling and v good service. Flannelette Gowns $1.29 —heavy quality white nd blue stripes, nd full, about ha usual pr EXTRA! Ladies’ Come E GOWNS, CHEM STEP-INS, PAJA 98¢ Tlican hane several d Thrifty tomor: —Porto broidered, all sizes. will be here made is mat or pink ng It their EXTRA! arly ISE, MAS 1 em- lesigns, women And Other Saturday Opportunities Ladies’ Full Fashioned Silk Hose $1.45 -—with stop run top, al nd all the new Shop early while range is complete, the shades. [ “Pointex” ’ Silk Hose - $1.65 1 sizes | —chiffon and service weight in black gun metal and all popular shades. quality. color VALUES! For the Men Tomorrow Men’s Pajamas $1.29 —just about once a we able to offer such trimmed with silk f of heavy twilled fla vear are a value neatly s. Made Union Suits $1.4 fam known by durability, si¢ —the eves, ankle length 46. For tomorrow on Now This Store Presents Children’s Coats $5.98 to $22.98 —several styles, all colors, also for the kiddies. Combina- tion hat and coat to match. With the Thanksgiving holi- day close at hand, this sale is especially timely. Be sure and bring the children here tomor- row! Others §$22.50 to $49.50 You never bought a bet- | ter value than one of se fine warm over- | coats at our low price! Superior tailoring tells | the story—finest coatings | add weight to the bargain | Tubulars, Ulsters, Ulster- ettes, Chesterfields, great coats and raglans! New correct styles. Well made to give several | | seasons of satisfactory | service. All sizes. Others $22.50 to $39.50 Many with two pairs of trousers. The fabrics include serges, worsteds, herring- bones, tweeds and new mixtures. The cut of each suit is correct—fine tailoring as- that. Each suit is value at our prices. Use the 10 Pay Plan PAY PLAN Ten payments instead of one. Pay only 14 at the time of purchase and the balance in 10 equal week- | ly payments. 1 eepmaate: e gt NY SAMPLE SHOP 357 Main St., New Britain 135 Main St.,, Bristol

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