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X e LUNDARL FUNERAL SINDAY AFTERNOON Obsaquis for Bristol Mail O cial, Accidentally Killed (Bpecial to the Herald) Bristol, Feb. 24.—The funeral of Gustave T. Lundahl, superintendent of mails at the post office who was fatally whot yesterday morning when the Colt's pistol of Emory Davis, & fellow employs, was discharged after dropping on the pavement at the rear of the post office building, will be held at 2:30 o'clock Sunday aft- ernoon at his late home, ¢8 Wood- ing street. Rev. Henning L. John- son, pastor of the Swedish Lutheran GUSTAVE T. LUNDAHL church, will officiate and burial will be in West cemetery. The committal services at the grave will be in charge of Franklin Lodge, A. F. and A. M., of which Mr. Lundahl was a member. A special communication wiil be held in the lodge rooms at 1:45 and members will attend the funeral in a body. Members of the post office force in- 'YONAN WANTS RENEWAL OF ELECTRICIAN'S PERMIT Contractor Whose License Was Sus- pended Changes Work Found in Violation of Law. Joseph Yonan, electrical contract- jor whose license was revoked last week after the building commission had been informed of numerous vio- lations of the law on a job com- pleted under a permit issued to him, today made application for the re- turn of his permit to engage in bus- iness, At the time he was before the commissioners he was told he might have the privilege of applylng for return of the license provided he changed over the defective work to the satisfaction of Inspector Mason P. Andrews. This was done and Yonan, after receiving a certificate ot | approval, handed in his application | for reinstatement. Inspector Andrews will not offer |objection to returning the license | provided assurance is given that Yo- Inan will satisfactorily perform or | have performed the work undertaken {by him in the future, he said today. MAYOR WALKER 15 (GOING BACK HOME Pl ot e S, Wion- Salem, X, C. | Atlanta, Ga, Feb. 24 UP—Mayor Jimmy Walker of New York, after a typical and triumphant good will tour through the south, was beat- i"" a path back to his Broadway |today with only one short pause !intervening. That one stop, at Winston-Salem, N. C., provided for an address at luncheon to members of the Amer- ican Legion. | When the debonair chief execu- |tive of the nation's chief city climb- | led with his party aboard a north- bound train out of here at 7:30 last |night, ho had experienced another |typical Jimmy Walker day—much cluding officials, clerks end carriers pustie and informal pomp: many will also attend the services at the home and ‘ecemetery. The pall |laughs for himself and others and several hurried passages with his bearers will be selected from the |badinage. clerieal force at the post office. | From the time Bobby Jones, According to members of the poat |golfing champion and local lawyer, office staff, Lundah!, always good |with Mayor I. N. Ragsdale, of At- natured and laughing, appeared even | lanta, welcomed him at the train more jolly yesterday morning, joking which brought him here, until a i 0 A story of storms at sea, as graphic as fiction ever painted, £ | brought to London when the American barkentinc, E. R. Sterling (above), | docked with her crew (below), nine months out of Australia. Salls were torn away, three masts snanped off and two crew members killed in what | Capt. R. M. Sterling (right), called the worst weather lic ever saw. But the wind jammer made London, towed by a Dutch tug. | London, Yeb., 24—(P—Fiction|der full sail made the Sterling one | writers of the wildest imagination'of the most pleturesque vessels | never conceived a finer tale of a'afloat, three had been snapped off rough sea voyage than that of the near the deck like so many match { American barkentine E. R. Sterling sticks. of Seattle, nine months out from Roderick Mackenzle, chief officer, | Australia. was killed when the storms were at She 1s one of the famous wind-|their worst, and the ship was bat- with both clerks and carriers. He | delegation bade him farewell at the ‘was one of the most popular mem- (train which took him away, Mayor | bers of the local force and was well known to all patrons at the post office, Mrs. Lundahl was seriously af-|Atlanta Journal; ride 16 miles to| fected at her husband's untimely death and has since remained in the privacy of her own home attcnded by & few relatives. TABLET UNVEILED Venice, Feb. 24 (UP)—A tablet |friends he had acquired previously | To TEACHERS! was unveiled here today to com- memorate the famous Venetian dia- lect actor Ferrucclo Benini. Relief From Stabbing Pains of Rheumatism A remarkable discovery has come from France and the results are al- most as amazing as the benefits which Radium gives to cancer suf- ferers and Aspirin gives to headache sufferers. The new discovery is a formula for the relief of even stub- born cases of rheumatism. Rheumatism, in every case, s due to internal causes, which gives off poisens and are carried in the blood to the jolnts and muscles. The new |Walker managed to nap until 11 | |o'clock; lunch as the guest of Ma-| |jorsJohn 8. Cohen, publisher of the |Stone mountain and there partici- ipate in certain small ceremonies {that givided honors between him | land the monument; attend a re- |ception at the Atlanta Woman's lclub and still later, visit with in Atlanta, Matulis-Gans $3,500 Suit i Taken to Supreme Court An appeal to the supreme court for a reversal of judgment and a {new trial has been filed by William | Matulis of this city, who lost his suit |for $3,500 damages against George |Gans, also of this city, for personal injuries caused by an automobile. The question of agency is involved in {the action. The automobile was driven by Samuel Inturussi of this jcity on December 20, 1925, when it |struck Matulls, fracturing ribs, skull jand left leg. Older, Older & Older and Schwol- sky & Schwolsky represent Matulis. Gans is represented by David R. ‘Woodhouse and Day, Berry & Reyn- jammers of the world, known for her grace and beauty. But It was like a giant carrier pizeon with a crippled wing, seek- ing a haven in a storm, that the Sterling crept into the port of Lon- don the other day and delivered safely her cargo of wheat-just as | her owners gaid she would. Of the six great masts which un- | tered and racked as she ltmped in- |to the mouth of the Thames with inot a sail in sight. “Time and again I expected every stick to be blown out of her,” said Captain R. M. Sterling, who has reared a family at sea. The Sterling sailed from sAdelaide April 16, 1927, and ran fnto bad | cather almost as seon as she struck Come to Niagara Falls in July — don't wait for your ‘‘heney- moon" to see the Great Cataract. Children in public and parochial schools who write best essays on “Wheat" ocome with their teachers at our expense. The conditions are easy. & hundred fest bigh. the Falkland Islands{and Matagalpa, where Sandino was the hole like the boy Holland by plugging the dyke. He prevented the seas from flooding the ship. The spanker topmast was blown away, and the wireless aerial went into the sea. Life beat after life boat was torn from its fastening. Then the storm passed as quickly as it had come and the Sterling drifted for | days. Emergency salls were rigged up and eventually she made St. Thomas, in the West Indies. From there the terling was towed to London by a ug from Holland. The youpgest of the crew was the fadio operator, M. B. Ander- son, of Adelalde, 19, who was mak- ing his first sea voyage. When the storm was at its height he stuck to his post sending out SOS. signals, but non was ever answered. ACGOONT POR EIGHT Three Killed and Five Wounded by Americsh Marines in Nicaraguan Fighting. | Managua, Nie., Feb. 24 UP—Con- |tinuing thelr drive against scattered bands of rebels, American marines have killed three Insurgents and wounded five, There were no ma- rine casualties in the skirmish, General Jose was |Who has been nom the liberals, has already started an ne»i‘l'h- only thing the which occurred near Telepaneca, 20 miles southeast of Ocotal, The rebels were believed to be part of the scattered forces of Gen- eral Augustino Sandino. A marine patrol of 20 men under Lieutenant John G. Walraven and « similar force of Nicaraguan national guards under Lieutenant Donald McDonall participated in the encounter. There are 1,000 marines in ad- Junior high auditorium this Moncada, ted by the |the Reds have piled - Some women age so young cause of untold disease and suffering. And more’s the pity when it can be so0 surely munud.. Kellogg’s ALLBRAN is ‘ ‘o prevent it ever beginning its deadly wr{. 1t takes ALLBRAN fo be 1009, efective Kellc:l{- ALL-BRAN is rich in bulk—and it " that relieves constipation. It ab- sorbs moisture and carries it the ‘mentary canal. Gently distending the intes- tines—eweeping out poisons and wastes. In a part-bran product, there is seldom uw:g bulk to do this work effectively. That is Albert Steiger, nc. The Quality Sale of Mgin at Pratt Sty ™ Harttord . Phone : 24206 Silk Lingerie treatment known in America as Dr. | Beaupre's Treatment for Rheuma- tism, contains ingredients that are AT YALE intended to neutralize those poisons, | . 25 (M—General thus giving quick rellef from pains John J. Pershing, commander in in the jeints, muscles or nerves, If|chief of the American forces during you suffer from rheumatic pains—if|the world war, visited his son, I'. your joints or muscles rasp and tor- | W. Pershing at Yale university ye: ture you, try Dr. Beaupre's Treat-|terday. 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