New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 8, 1928, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

E—_——— HIGHWAY-BUILDING RECORD BY STATE 160 Miles of Roed 19 Be Cam 1 oo o fors s strnoted .n {ear W EL %011 KEEN T0 LY OVER SEA Chancs at Emo pea Trip Anxions T I 5 bridze canstrn complited ¢ |Gene Tunney Purchases Homc in Greenw l(‘h (& onn. Stamiord, March 8 (B | arned today that Will fri |Hmu= the state has ever kel St RY FILCHED department for ¢ Tl Mar puropriations and many of then tuking ady of Commissioner tacdonald’s offer of assistance i1 MG laE o ngineering and in the rental of tolen by two ord building mac oed v valued at 81 able heirlooms of the Stude. 3 = of Colonel MADGE BELLAMY'S ROMANCE « bandit les, March § (A-—Log: v s divorce complaint. fil m the here today was virtnally o diary o biding pl S 0ut of Debt and $250,000 in - NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MARCH _— PRAYER []FFEREI] FOR CHICAGOANS - their convention last ight tersburs Sight Tor November & b wation of . Longworth hie, Smith and | FORMER PRIEST GUILTY Comvicted of Murder in Calitornia— 1 M Lite in Prison Wil Be His Pun- | ishment, Nees Press as Only \leam to Stop \\al ) ; v 8 (UPB)—Te s D. H. promote BLEAD HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS F'OR BEST RESULTS Flaky —Light —Tender! Hot biscuits made with Rumford! ..for any meal! Always digestible when Rum- ford is used. Quick to make—only 20 minutes from start to finish! Serve them often—but always use RUMFORD ... Tite Wholesome Spoils BAKING POWDER ", Hot cabs—sudden draughts—muscular strain But no rheumatism for these 249 locomotive firemen and engineers NCE a railroad man—always a railroad man,” they say. There's a fascination rheumatism? How do they ward off colds, chest congestions, under the hardest work, to kiil the pain of overstrain or small injuries, to prevent colds 1928, "o Protestants Gather by Thousands 10 Ask Divine Aid 87 YEARS OLD TODAY supremc Court dustice Holmes Ol Washington DISASTROUS Yomen 13 with much orga which has ntion . of Jjobs of mselves, > in o incorpor- FIRE ABsolute elyFresh Says John Golden, Noted Theatrical Producer “When concentrating on the intricate work of anew production, a good smoke is both relaxation and a pleasure. 1 enjoy Lucky Strikes. They do not irri- tate the throat and their flavor is unsurpassed.” /,4” Forlden__ about the life that holds a man, once he's started on it. No easy berth either—whether you drive the engine or fire the boilers. It's a tax on the strongest muscles. and you're always in danger of catching a chill from the extremes of heat and cold going in and out of the cab. What do these hardy men do to keep their muscles strong and supple for their work? We went right to some locomotive firemen and engineers and asked them these questions. 249 whom we asked said, ** We use Sloan's.” The standby of workers everywhere Ask any group of active men or women these same questions and two out of three of them will give you the same answer. Sloan’s is the best thing you can use to keep muscles supple This locomotive engineer is one of 209 ruilroad men who told s of * the protection that Slean’s gives ageinsi t rhewmatism, colds, muscular pain and rheumatism. Read this letter from a fireman on the Union Pacific: “I am a fireman on Union Pacific R. R, 1 was taken sick in Maryville, Kansas, and I worked back to Kansas City with pains shoot- ing all over my back. As soon as I got to Kansas City I got a bottle of your wonderful liniment and started to put it on. It did mea whole lot of good. and, for me, I wouldn't be without a bottle at any time. I carry a bottle in my grip all the time on road. After each trip I put some Sloan's on.” C. R. Ellis, 3250 Gillham Road, Kansas City, Mo. . . . The minute you app!: you begin to get relief. And it doesn't just deaden the pain temporarily—it gets rid of jt. It stimulates the circulation, breaks up congestion, clears cut germs and poisons, and the pain stops be- cause the cause is removed. Get a bottle today and have it on hand. You never can tell when it may save you hours of agony—days of lost time. A bottle that lastsa long time is only 35 cents and you can get it at all druggists. Use it for: Lame muscles Stiff neck Lumbago Colds and Neuralgia congestions Sprains and bruises Rheumatism Sciatica Here's what the company doctor of ome of the big railvoads says of Slocw’s: ** People whose work es- poses them 1o straim or to damp and cold wswally suffer from a good deal of muscular sevemess. We find that Sloan’s gives them gwick, positive relief."”” “It’s toaste SLOAN Endorsed universally by those who do the world’s hard work No Throat Irritation~-No Cough. ©1928, The American Tobacco Co., Ine. Old tea is bad tea — the SALADA system assures that every package is fresh The Cream of the Tobacco Crop | “Few people, except leaf tobac- o men, realize that LUCKY STRIKE Cigarettes are made from the choice of the sweet- est, ripest tobaccos grown. I wish every smoker might see these tobaccos—they would then readily understand why LUCKY STRIKES are so mild and mellow.” 3 35tk

Other pages from this issue: