New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 13, 1928, Page 14

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FORMERLY WASTED ARE SAVED Modern Chemistry Turus Them Into Money East Pittsburgh, Pa., Jan. 13 (P— Modern chemistry is demonstrating that even odors can be turned into dallars and cents. Gasses that have polluted the at- mosphere are now being captured | and converted into the liquids from | co SRR U 4 seven hours to | which they originated, to the profit of both industry and the public. Experts of the Materials and Pro-| cess Engineering Department of the | Westinghouse Electric & Manufac- turing Co., decided that too many | smells were going up the chimney in the process of treating insulation with resinous materials. o they trapped the gusses vere generated, mixed water and then distilled this liquid, recovering from 80 to 99 per cent of the solvents used in the formula How far chemical engineers can go in climinating «nd using fume by liquifying them before they are lischarged into th ir has not yet heen determined, but experiments now under v suggest that far- caching T possible. The saving already d by the cap- ‘ure of used solvents arc said to be considerable. Chemists point ¢t however, that yecovery methods might be too well perfected, for it possible that some of the agents recovered from wases would themsclves be difficult to destroy SPECIAL TRAIN T0 em with TAKE CODLIDGES Sonthland Washington, 13 (- ¢4 a week of sunshine Jan L'romis- | weather, to the baliny bre! day with ever: to begin his journey «‘uba—the fourth chief executive to | nearby harbor which Mr. Coolidge | | helped I tive and a welcoming party. He wilt | P | during their 1 will remain in | sonville where | tour of the city has heen arranged !jdge and Machado will be hroadcast | mitters | KDKA. , has spoken to his people from for- and warm [ President Coolidge looked | es of the south to- | hing ready for hini | zutomobile accidents to Havana, | lrave American shores while in of- | One of the longest special trains in history of presidential travel wait ed in Union station for the etart | this afternoon of a trip which will take Mr. Coolidge accompanied by a |such deaths, 31 of which were from | with new | that month, | within the city limits and five from party of eight-five along the Atlantiz | seaboard through Virginia, the Caro- linas, Georgia and F miniature island of K he will board the battleship Texas for the crossing to the Cuban eapi- tal. Carrying a feeling from message of the people of v West, There | | | | | | friendly | the | United States the president will cpen | the sixth annual Pan-American con- gress in Havana Monday with an ad- | dress that will be heard by the representatives of nearly all of the countries of the western hemisphere compriging the international con- terence of American states. The president's spegch, and that of President Machado of Cuba, will be hroadcast. A group of high-ranking Ameri- cans had been invited by the presi- dent to make the trip with him. These included Secretary and Mrs Kellogg and Secrctary and Mrs, Wil- | Becretary Davis of the Labor bur. Department had business in Florida ahd was invited to ride with Mr '00lidge to Jacksonville. A part of the Ainerican delegation | 1o the Havana congress has already icparted but thosc remaining are iraveling with the president. suests include Charles Evans Hughes who heads the American delegates, :nd Mre, Hughes: Mr. rs. Mor- jan J. O'Brien, of These | {one deaths from Long One Ready for Trip lnto, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 1928, and Mrs. Ray Lyman Wilbur of Call- fornia; Ambassador and Mrs. Henry P. Fletcher, and Mr. and Mrs. James Brown Scott of Washington. Although a number of opernln: stops will be made en route w Key West, the only formal stop o! way south will be at Miami tomor- row afternoon where the president and his party will detrain to make a tour of the city and to visit the TEN MORE REBELS tinish some time ago by % pressing a button which released the | final blast of dynamite. From Miami| Washington, Jan. 13 (#—Marine the speefal train will push south-|corps aviators operating in con- ward over the bridge which connects | oSl g gorcen against i Samague e o) "“'h""mencrdl Sandino in Nicaragua have b arking Texas carly | Si#in ten more of the latter's forces SRy konaing l‘l»y aerial bombing, said dispatches 110 the navy department from rear | admiral sellers, commanding the ial service squadron in Nicara- guan waters, The message said the aviators on January 11 located a group of sundino’s followers at Latna Vista, near the point where they ambushed marines on January 1. The bomb- | ing attack followed another on ‘T'uesday, in which the aviators killed nine members of Sandino's army in the neighborhood of Quilali, as they attempted to concentrate, supposedly for an attack on the marines hold- | ing that village. Admiral Sellers repoited that a ! detachment of marines is moving from Quilall to San Albin. The marines are endeavoring to take over as many villages as possible to deprive Sandino of a base and cut lium off from supplies. CARBON HONONIDE. HAZARD REDUCED New Fuel Said to Be Much Safer Than 0l P—A fuel, on the the president wil be met there by the Cuban execu- | go directly to the national palace | where he and Mrs. Coolidge will live two day visit After ay and attending a honor in the evening, the p: delivering his address Mon- dinner in his the president ace overnight and begin his journey howmeward | the following morning. On the ~ay rorth a stop will be made at Ja another automobile The president will be back at his desk Thursday morning. The addresses of Presidents Cool- Natienal Broadeasting bined red and blue | & short wave trans- | ations ¢WGY, and threngh Company networl The broadeast will begin at about | 11:30 a. m., easern standard time, | and will be the first time that the people of the Tnited States have | heen addressed by the chief magis. ! trate of a forcign country speaking from his own capital, and the first time a president of the United States ign shores. Hartford’s Automobile Death Toll Reaches 47 Hartford, 13. r-(P\—Tmm\- | automobile a dents within the city limits of Hart- ford were reported to the burean of vital stafistics during 1927, as well | e 26 deaths in the city from a dents which occurred outside of the city limits, making the total of auto- | mobile fatailities for the year 47. Records compiled by M. B. Yaw of the bureau of vital statistics show that 44 deaths were attributed to in 1926, of due to accidents and 20 to mis- there were 53 New York, 13, high compression motor new de- Jan. Jan. duct and designed to reduce the car | ion-monoxide hazavd, is being de- ‘cloped by the American Research | Corporation. The fucl uted to o« ess and 1o combustibite « tors that yields nerformance is attrib- lieal cracking proc- influence of a new mpound, two fac ‘xpected to atford | from the original | which 24 were within the city lim haps outside. In 192 Low comprission suited for use higher Edward director in cars equipped ceidents within the city limits | tors, says November was the worst month in | technical 1927, Seven deaths were reported for | tion, two from accidents ¥. Chandler, of the corpora- the tendency of these inferior fuels to detonate, or knock,” he asserts, “and as a result the motorist, be- cause his car runs quietly, means of knowing that excessive those outside. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS SATURDAY SPECIALS AT THE NEW BRITAIN Lamb Fores, 1b. 3 Lamb for Stew, Ib. . Boneless Pot Roast, b, Lean Boiling Beef, Ib. High Grade Frankfurts, Fancy Reast’g Chickens, 'resh Pig's Hocks, Ih. \Ikt‘d lr(‘h Ham, 1. 1318 MAIN ST PHONE 2485 Potatoes, _p!(_ Short Lean Smoked Shoulders, Ib. 1 7C 50 e Limit 5 Cakes Roast Pork . A R | Fresh HBMS ......c.c..cco00iisassnnsass I 200 Legs of Veal . .. Ib. 22¢ Boneless Rib Roast ._lb. 39¢ Veal for Pot Pie, . 25¢ Veal for Stew, Ib. 15¢ MORNING SPECIALS, 7 TO 12:30 Best Maine Fresh Cut 35(! Hamburg, 2 Ib. 25c Best Pure , Lard, 2 lbs. Palmolive Soap, cake 4 to 6 1b. A\erlse F Faney FRESH SHOULDERS, Ib. 14 ALL DAY SPECIALS Legs Genuine Spring Lamb i Ib. 35¢ Roast Veal .. Ih. 24c Spare Ribs, Ib. 25¢ Fresh Pigs Feet, 3 18¢ Sauerkraut, 4 Ibs, . Ih, 18c Fresh Kilkd l'fl“l.“ b, 42¢ Irish Bacon, Ib. v Sugar Cured Bacon, 1. E\‘apm'ated Mllk Rl e e T T [ White Loaf Flour . ....... sack $1.05 Fancy Peaches—packed in heavy syrup—halves or i ....can 23¢c o 29¢ Park Corn, Peas, tring Beans, 2 cans box 3 r, 2 Ibs, 28¢ “Saltine Crackers, 2 Ib. 9 pes Maid Raisins, Seeded 2 pkgs. Seedliss or Pure Cocoa. Karo Syrup, 2 ¢ Tuna Fish. 2 cans Sugar Corn, 2 cans . .. Tomato Catsup, Ige. bot. Double Tip Matches, 6 box. - & G. Soap. 5 cakes \\ edgwood 2 I, 2 Royal Tunch Cra ger Snaps, 2 1bs. . Vig Bars, 2 Ibs, e Macaroon Snaps, 2 Ibs. Campbeli's Beans, 3 cans .. Confectionery Sugar, 3 Ibs. 23 BUTTER,.....Zlbs 97c Selected EGGS.........Zdoz.??)c First l'rlh Oleo, Gold Coin Ol 19 lm- Good Luck Oleo, NMucoa Nut Oleo, m. m. Th, 28 Calif. Sunkist ()rahges o Extra Heavy Grapefruit Sound Yellow Onions Yellow Globe Turnips, 6 1he, 1 Fancy Baldwin Apples, 3 qt. Solid Head Tettuce, 2 h Large Ripe Bananas, doz. Solid Head Cabba Kiln Dricd Sweets, Fancy Bleached Celery, Sweet Green Peppers, 2 29 qts. 25¢ KILLED BY BOMBS| U. §. Aviators Show Dudly Aim compression mo- | “Efforts have been made to stifle | has no ‘ carbon is forming in his cylinders and that an _unusual amount of car- | bon monoxide gas is being released in his exhaust. “On the other hand, the majority of cars now in use are nul,nd with low compression moters, 'and hence the low quality gasoline burns even less completely and with more poisoncus gases in the exhaust. “In short, while the automoblle has becn developed to & high state uf mechanical perfcction, gasoline, due to the efforts of the refirers to keep up with the demand, has be- come lower in quality and less suit- able as motor fuel. “Carbon-monoxide gas, generated in large quaniities when the gaso- iine is incompletely burned in the cylinders, can doubtless be held responsiole for the increase In | heart cases and the prevalence 'of throat and lung diceases. In fact, the gradual breaking down of the blood, due to breatling carbon mo- noxide, even in mainute traces, way | {account in a large measure fcr the numercus sutomobile accidems at- tributable to sudden dizziness and | retarded mental proceases. “We have Dbeen studying this problem for a considerable timec | and have conducted thousands of tests in the laboratery and under road conditions. We are convinced |that the answer lies in a moditied | gasoline product. We have made important studics to that end and have demonstrated that it is pos- [ ible to adjust the fuel to the mod- Esrn motor. Dr. Brown Appoin;d to Yale Divinity Chair New Haven, Jan. 13.—Dr. Walter Theodore Brown of Toronto Univer- sity was yesterday appointed pro- fessor of religion in the Yale college |or academie department, His selec- tion was a development of plans for the expansion of the religious life {of the undergraduates. He will join 'vhe faculty at the opening of the |next school year. Professor Brown is 45 years old, !and received the buchelor of arts |and master of arts degrees from | Toronto University. He was given the | scribed as a modified gasoline Pro-|qogree of doctor of philosophy by |chain that leads from the ica bor- Harvard in 1911, and, after telchln(‘ Bowdoin two years, became a member of the faculty of Victoria | college, Toronto university, us lecturer, and then assoclate profes- | sor, and finally as professor of | ethics and philosophy of religion. | |He was a member of the Ontario | Soldiers' Ald Commission during the | 1 World war and was responsible for (the rehabilitation of discharged fuels areMn. |service men. He is & member of the |len rivers that flowed out from un- | | editorial board of the Canadian Journal of Religious Thought. |strips denote the winter (LAY BANKS TELL OF LD GLACIR Retreat of Ice Mountain Gan Be Truced New York, Jan. 13.—UPM—Entries from .the world's oldest logbook— the geological journal of Mother Earth—are being transcribed at the American Museum of Natural His- tory as sclentists. trace the north- ward retreat of the last ice sheet, Dr. Chester A. Reeds, curator of invertebrate palaeontology, is as- sembling the ancient record in paragraphs of clay, so to speak, for he is following the glacler's retro- gremion year by year through the annual sbdil deposits laid down by the ice as it slowly receded from |its extreme southern frontier near New York. Working in clay pits ol the Hack- ensack river valley at Little Fer- ry, N. J., Dr. Reeds has been able to record the movement of the gla- cier during 2,550 years of its re- treat. At Haverstraw, N. Y., north of this city, he has found the story of another 750 years' recession. These accurate studies are possi- | ble because each annual glacial de- posit of sediment is clearly marked in shaded bands of clay. Dark accumu- lation, while intervening lighter colored bands represent the sum- mer deposit. Bwedish geologists, working with Baron Gerard de Geer, have learned from these bands that it took the ice 13,500 years to recede from central Scania, the southermost part of Sweden, to the present {small ice caps in the north central part of that country. Using similar methods in New England Ernst Antevs, another 8wedish acientist, counted back 4,100 years in the Connecticut valley and 7,300 years in Canada. Dr. Reeds’ work brings the total to 14,700 years, but there are still many links missing in !he4 der of 25,000 years ago to its pres- ent location in the subarctic. “The clays from which we are| oblaimn' this record are of glacial age,” says Dr. Reeds, “since each | layer had its origin in an annual retreat stage of the ice. 'l'heyl were developed as follow: As the | ice melted and receded slowly | northward during the warm sum- | mer months of each year the swol- der the fce mass picked up the fine | sand and clay particles and trans- {dained to preach by Central Metho- ported them to fresh-water wml which oocupied the lower portiens of the enclosed basins in froat of the glacler, “As the stream currents on en- tering the still waters of the lake | gradually lost their pewer to trans- port their load of sediment the fine sand and coarse clay particles set- tled down over the lake bottom to form the sandy summer layer. Dur- ing the cold winter months the ice- front became stationary, the en- glacial and sub-glacial stream courses ' either ran dry or com- gealed and little, if any, stdiments ‘were transported by the rivers into the lakes. “The surface of the lake also be- came encrusted with ice and snow, and the fine clay particles, which had been held in suspension in the milky water following the summer incursions, slowly settled to the bottom to form the bluish, reddish or dark winter layers composed of pure clay. Before the end of the winter season the lakes cleared, and a sharp line of demarcation was | established between the top of the | ‘winter’ layer and the base of the | succeeding ‘summer’ layer. This well-defined line is of value in separating the scasonal layers into varves of annual deposits. “These geologic events immediate- ly recede the present day, How far | back they go in time we can but estimate, yet the exploration and counting of the clay varves is af- fording a precise record of the an- nual retreat stages of the ice and the duration of the glacial lakes.” Former Connecticut Clergyman Passes New Bedbofrd. Mass, Jan, 13.— (M—Rev. Nathan Bailey, 63, veteran Baptist minister died yesterday morning in Pine Lawn sanitarium, | Acushnet, where he had been a p tient for a month. Born in Bolton, England, September 27, 1864 he en- { tered religious work before coming | to America. He was stationed at New London, Conn.; Cornwall, N. Y., Philadelphia; Lawrence, and Mar- blehead, Mass, with the Salvation army at different times and was or- dist Episcopal church, Norwich, |Conn., June 27, 1888. He became New England field secretary at the National ‘Pemperance society, in 1907. His last pastorate was at North Baptist church here, which he held for 14 vears. He leaves a. widow, Mrs. Hannah Ashworth Bailey; two sons, Norman D. Bailey, school superintendent at Wickford, R. I,' and Albert W. Bailey, of the Herald and Examiner, 'hicago; a sister, Mrs. Helena Houlden, Peabody, Mass., and a brother, Willis Bailey, in England, besides three step-chidlren here. G Fox & Co.Inc. Established 1847 Value to $50 FREE TELEPHONE SERVICE FROM NEW BRITAIN—CALL 3500 MEN! SATURDAY IS THE LAST DAY of the Sale of wo- T rouser Suits and Overcoats Here Are the Prices 75 24 529 34 75 75 NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS Men’s Shop—Fifth Floor PORK PRICES ARE LOWER i "ROASTS ... Beh, . FRESH HAMS . Zch. Lean PORK SHOULDERS Fresh Large, 16c Ib. — Small, 18 Ib. Fresh Tender Maryland Roasting TURKEYS | CHICKENS 350 and | 390 Ib. 45c . | 45c LEGS MILKFED VEAL ........ 2 5c lb, LEAN TENDER POT ROASTS . Home Made Honey Large SAUSAGE Smoked e [ HAMS LAMB } 32C Ih. 32c I, 30c b, Lean . SHOULDERS ....... 15cIb. Chaice CHICKENS .......... 28clb. We Carry a Full Line of Fruits and Vegetables TEL. 483 70 WEST MAIN ST. GUARANTEED MARKET Prices the Same at Our Bristol Store 25 West Main Street. Choice Young FOWL For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Ads. (et these Savings i cMachine Bookkeeping Ezlul/)mwzf Sec us for Shaw-Walker posting trays, cards and guides especially designed for use with all standard bookkeeping ma- chines. Thousands of successful concerns favor Shaw-Walker bookkeeping equip- ment because it stands’ up under long, active service and helps show utmost savings in time, in labor, in record- keeping cxpense. . Sold exclusively by ADKINS 66 Church Street New Britain, Conn. BRADLEY & SCOVILL CO. 67 Orange Strect Hartford, Conn. New Haven, Conn. . W FARGO CO, 1001 Broad Street Bridgeport, Conn. Co. 176 Pearl Strect

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