New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 16, 1928, Page 3

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1928. 3 |sive fisheries, and the largest wild hoth among the n | life reservation in the United States. rand it was a cou | Al this region has scarcely been |certain team and the horses, " Dritain husiness houses have Leen|number of periodicals of all descrip- | there has been a constant drop, but mon sight to find a | visited Ly men who were as different | tions published at the time was|the more progressive publishers be. MRS l'NI]BER[iH Is Avun wy m ’ Iy Litched on a|from the ‘popular conception of the | 1,323, with 522 German as com-|gan to print their papers tn. tne | o : studied. [certain day. all ready for a traveler | “drummer” of that age s day fs | pared with 796 German publications | English languaze, whieh proved o : ALASKAN Vfll‘[;AN['S‘ 150 Harbors in 600 Miles who visited the city on a regular|different from night. Quiet, unas. |in 1595, v«‘h‘en they reached the |great success amons the younger N“TEI] AS TEA[;HER | There are at least 45 active vol- | schedule. {suming, they did their business with | peak. America’s entry into the war | Jewish generation, ! A | €4noes in the chain. Along 650 miles| All that was nccessary for the little flourish and went their way,|on the side of the allles affected Only 500 Papers Now | 'o: ";"‘:‘foé‘“ ‘l'l‘“ net ""“":' , T—— of the Aleytian coast line there arc bove to do was te hold the reins|with nothing but their sample cases, the German newspapers with the| Since the post war period foreign | —— you muc ger, 1f you get & pack- {10 indicate their calling to the pas-[1esult that in 1920 the number |language newspapers declined tapid. jage of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. | einted aonn to i o o 5201 a0 v o 11 Cnting o7 | HEP WOPK i1 CheiStry Promi-| e skin shouia boen to cloar it P i 0 (h [s | responsibility for making the trip) e | from the high water mark of 189 {lhigration quotas and today there | H : olskin red jonly a beginning of the exploration, | from store to storc with the least | | Other publications, however, ex-|are hardly more than 500 foreign | ¢ nd 7 lC(lllg “ urs }und the mapping of interior and ! possible waste of fimne was .shoulvlyr.}l: REI N I-AN panded during the World War, and | language publications in this coun- | flefll] [lO Cleanse the blood, bowe's and live — T) { coasts, the latter work perhaps be- ed by the boys. esp when the the. number of periodicals print.d er with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, id ip|s°me 150 harbors, unmapped and|while the traveling g ade Dr. Jaggar Hopes (0 Rid i iivarica, ana onerotars byend | yhile the | traveling wan ma This summer's work will young:r generation, born in Washington, I. .. April 14.—Dr. | iD the most essentiul of all be- | “drummers” new to the terri- | in the Scandinavian, Italian and e will not read the paper Thomas A. Jaggar, the scientist who | C2usc, until it is done, no commer- jtory. Thus. the hoys not only earned Polish languages grew constantls | for the simple reason that the y ar for a quarter of a century has rush- | €ial vessel or passenger ship dare | considerable spending moncy hut | until they reached the peak in 1920, | better acquainted with ti English ed to volcanic cruptions as a fire- | s waters, they became proficient in the driving At that time the Scandinavian language and get the n the successful substitute for ealo- mel; there's no sickness or pain aft- linc Lodge Lindbergh, mother of | er taking them. 3 |Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh, is| Dr. Edwards' Oltve ‘Tablets do Iong the women workers in chem- | thet which calomel does, and just as effectively, but their action is gen- tle and safe instead of severe and | irritating. St. Lonis, April 15 P—Mrs. Evan. & much | man responds to an alarm, left| The expedition also will make ob- | of horses and kept themselves ocen. 2 | papers numbered 111 while the Ital- Washington recently after confer. | SéTvations of the people in the re- | pied mentally and physically whil Dmp me 1323 in 1917 [0 ian and Polish numbered 98 each, | papers can give ring with President Gilbert Gros- | £i0n; the north shore Eskimos and |lon vacation from school. (i sion- | i | many of these being dailies and a |« varicty of f venor and the Research Committee | e South shore Aleuts, who, with {ally, there would be a full day's m a[ Pmemm | few reaching a circulation of 100.- | papers don't of the National Geographic Society, | the Scandinavian fishermen and | work in the visit of traveling man, | ! 0 and more, The majority of thes 10 Icad fhe soriety’s cxpedition to| trAPPErS. and the emploves of Amer- ' but as a rule the calls were coni. | explore the Mount Pavlof scctor of | 13N canneries, make up the sparse ' plated it the forenoon and so did not | sooner t an the foreign language | jgiry me them, and they get ure storics that the ntioned in the report of the | women's service committes of the T America Chemical society. Mrs. rry. The older folks | Lindhergh is a chemistry teacher in i [although not acquainted well with |4 Derroir, high school. No one who takes Olive Tablets is were published in large cities and | the nglish langua prefer 1 The report, made public on the eve | €Ver cursed with a “dark brown » : ht the German perlodicals bore the | American newspapers and try to get | of the socicty's meeting here, dis- |taste’” a bad breath, a dull, listless, the Alaskan Peninsular and Aleutian | POPUlation of the island pathway |interfere greatly with the cnjoyment | The forvign language pressin thia| "o Now York, Chicage, Mil. | a5 much om of them as they cun. or [closed that women were becoming | N0 §00d” feeling, constipation, tor- Tlond veloanic it | which onee was the great migration | of the day, | countryiiscontrontelimithihe dues | waukee, St. Louls and Cleveland. | have their children give them the | ino asingly active in the science, | PId liver, bad disposition or plmply route of Russian adventurcrs who | Truc to tradition. the hoys of New | tion, Now to exist'in these tmes of | rpe maiority of Polish newspapers | latest Most of them arc engaged in colirge | f8Ce. made their way across bleak Siburia | Britain were quick 10 note that ther,.| Small immigration quotas “and the | ;a9 their conter in Chicago, the | v but few foreign | teaching or endowed research, New| OIf and then pushed onward into North | was a wide difference in the char. | €Onsequent loss, of subseriptlon. | ¢ undinavian n Minneapolis and | & newspapers whose cirenla- | York leads in the America in quest of new fur worlds {acteristics of the various *drum. | Forcign langnage newspapers in f poaio | | to conquer. ! " for whom they drove, and al-| this country have played quite a The region is as rich in animal | though every trave could fing | Part in Amecrican journalism for life as in grology. There arc to be |someone fto accom Nim. the | some time and catered to a mass of founAl the hrownliher inees and | People that could not be reached ptarmigan, fox, wolverin: By intensive study of this long-| est hattery of craters in the world it | is hoped to devise ways of predict ing volcanic eruptions and earth quake shocks and thus save millions of dollars worth of property ar thousands of human lives by the is- suance of timely warning. No More Earthquakes ¢ Tablets are a purely vege- nbet of women i table compound mixed with olive society, having 102 [oil; know them by their olive color. ond with 66, Massa-| Dr. Edwards spent years ameng ts third with 48, and Califor- | patients afflicted with liver and bow urth with 360, | ©! complaints and Olive Tablets are 108 circulation reaches e - — the immenscly effective result. Take high tide was reached in 1918, when | the 20.000 mark, all the rest ha VLY-TOX kills moths, roaches, nightly for a week. See how much 45 Yiddish and Hebrew publications | a circulation of a few thousand, and | bedbugs, vermin. Fragrant, stainless. | better you feel and look. 1se, 80c, were printed. Since then, however, | that is dwindling rapidly. —advt, ie. | | York. | tion runs ubove 50,000, among them memhers of th ‘The Yiddish press did not lave being the Geeman Staats-Zeitung, Illigois s s | its beginning until 1889, when six|the Itallan Tl Progresso Italo-Amer- | chus. | publications made their appeurance. | icano and the Polish Zgoda. Outside | piq ¢ | Their number increased until thaicf a few caribou, | hoys had their pr : 4 geese [never hesitated to put up a fight, ir | through American newspapers. Un- (along with various other shore and | necessary, 10 “get @ good guy.” One | Ul the World War immigrants from of this fact wus recalled re- | 4ll countries of Europe poured into v a local Lusiness man who | this country by the hundreds of or cruptions than there have been | lions and hair seals. in his boyhood traveling | thousands, They were people who in the past,” he s ar is not an alarmist. sca birds. On the nerth shore ig the are no more earthquakes!walrus, on the south shore are sca drove f id. “But morc| The relation between volcanoes [ men at least once o weok for several | €Ould not understand the English and more people are living in con- | and earthquakes is not yet deter- ars. He wantcd to drive a soap ! |@nguage and people for the most gested arcas where these disturb- | mined, but . Jaggar considers it | salceman who I 0 enviable repu- | Pttt 100 advanced in years to begiu ances inflict. disasters now where they would have passed unnoticed more than a ecoincidence that they | tation for joviality and gencrosity, |1farning the language of this coun- | occur in the same belts the world | but another boy. somewhat older|try. It was necessary therefore to! not so many years ago.” | over. This relation is one of the sci-and tallor than he, met the gales. | establish newspapers in thelr own | Dr. Jaggar will sail from Delling- | entific problems which the Nation- 1 at the passenger station and | Janguage in order to keep them in rried his bag to Finnegan’s stable, touch not only with the affairs of tion will go ashore at Squaw Har-| dition mav help solve, where the team was rente Not | the world but their own interests. bor, Unga Island. which will bhe the appoint either of ”“,iThr»pe had to be some medjum base of this summ: ! s explorations. § 9 boys, but being in need of but one| through which laws and privileges = Opposite Unga Island, on the tap- | l] M ER []NE helper, the salesman tossed a coin|Of the country of their adeption ering end of the Alaskan Peninsula. and the older boy won. In an instant ! could be taught to them. is Mt. Pavlof, object of particular |the rivals were hammering away aw‘ Prior to the Civil War there were study this summer, since 1t is the AluNfi WITH B”fifiv |cach other's heads with their little| Very few forelgn language newspa- 9 . = n ham, Washington, and the expedi-|al Geographic Socicty Pavlef expe- | ¢ - wishing to ft. Vesuviue” of the Alaskan-Alen- ! | fists while the salesman hastened to | Pers printed in America. Then peo- tian chain. Southwest of Pavlof is separate them. He was so touched | Ple began to pour into this country ¢ the gricf of the unsuccessiul bid- | S2cking better fortunes. Others seek- feet, named only last sun i 9 d4or that he Liad both lads pile into] N8 liberty and still others seeking | : FUIRE w00 VORA] ARG oo [ 1 Ror both gk e oy e b 400 . eibies nes g | being explored by Dr. Jaggar in his Wh flj D jronte. allowing them to divide the|haven of rest and peace from op- | A teconnaissance preliminary to this Eam M driving, and he paid each of them | Pre . | t t — fEopnnalsanoe o | 0 Y PO (deots st b g oohom ot dmempembin 0 ew Dritain CLares for Its Uwn Amazing Scenfe Wonderland T Some salesmen still t Back of Pavlof are the so-called | Entered to the credit—or charged to New Bri Pinnacle Mountains, with theit |1 the discredit, whichever the view- | spend bu the towering Mt. Dutton prak. picreing the clouds at nearly el hy tratn | Which grew into large settlements . necessary to give them = s ain, especially those who, and it w a fow hours in this city on Dews of the events in thelr com- . . . . : ; | - : ¢ of | Munity. Men of intelligence began Point—ot the antomobile, is the ab- | husiness calls, but the majority of | Munity g B ly W, h y h ]p lf h Wi ]far w k f ty ing in hot springs. A hot crater alsolsence of the great joy producer of |the “drummers® drive their own | 10 think of this seriously and started Ut on lt our elp. t (] € € OIK O t 1S Cl 18 has been repo But this region g decade ago, namely, the ride with {cars and consequently do not need|'® brint a four page sheet once a s wnexplored and uwnmapped. IS [ the “drummers” about the eity. bovs to ride with them. The auto-|Week. Tt proved a spccessful med) exploration, including mountain | Prohahly the traveling men, former- | mobiles are parked where the UM and as circulation grew, the and ihou snowy fky linc, successful in its accomplishments, to you belongs the credit. B i Tl B, e i G T For YOU support the Chest. and that organization merely Few Americans realize that in the | times the number of business calls|no time lost, for the trip to the next | of Which 621 were German, the first huge arc of vole America’s loftiest pealk, noes between North 1 they could make with horse and | stop is 2 matter of but a few min Mt MeKin- | “buggy,” may have r . ley, out to Attu, farthest flung of l1hey hrought to the the Aleutians, liss the greatest vol- | Britain, and again, it is entire] canic chain, onc of the most ama o 1 potice the necowity” of karping distributes its funds---your funds---in the manner most bene- boys mr‘A\?:‘\‘:; would formerly vequire an hous | A& oolonies of ther natiensiitios . . pos- cun be made in less than half that!Brew, more newspapers appeared on flClal tO all- i * [stands, with the German papers e some picturesque | K°2ping in the fo rummers” on local routes in th 1,323 Perlodic in 1917 by automobile, and the calls sible that they were too busy to]time. ing scenie wonderlands, and the {think of making life pleasant for the There v greatest geolos arca of its Kind | youngsters, but the faet is, one of the in the world. things for which boys lived wa lays, and their ndividuality mads | The number of foreign languag: Along this mighty ridge between lget a drummer.” cmomany friends among business | 1°WSPapers reuched its peak at the nd the Buring Sea lies | Dropping off a train from Hart- men and others with whom they|time the United States entered {he ¢ bacr: extraordinary ocean depths to th south and tha coastal plam shal- lows to the northw in prevail um tions, remar “to > of craters, with fford or Berlin. with & bag or two incame in coutact while making their | urepean contlict in 1917, The Pride in your city should move you to give now---to do your : e ) T e share of carrying the common responsibility for the sick, ~the 4. And there- on of the livery stables along Main | present city building, many gather-1{ . usual weather condi- i strect, followed by the boys who ings of traveling men produced be | f b, d f h h ]']tf " ] k f h l liue, " curions| Nive anslous ta pck up & abaries o1 vaudevie L e protaitnel| Fythisn Waim ot gm0, U A, 3. untortunate, and for those who ngnttully look to you for help. occan cirrents, glacial deposits. | half dollar n the easiest fashion |troupe could offer, for some of the|Hall. 19 Glen street, Tuesday eve \egetation types of hotanic intercst|known in that day. Frequently, the travelers were born actors and story | ning, April 17th, at 8:30 ocloek and future economic value, exten-|“drummers” 'had their favorites[tellers. On: the other hand, Ncw|Eight prizes. Admission 15c.—advt. | | The Community Chest provides the best known way of giv- ing wisely and well, that the organized Welfare Associations may not lack for needed funds. More money is spent to make charity unnecessary than to alleviate actual want. In short, to anking IS BuSineSS . prevent rather than to cure. —and it calls for the soundest sort of business judgment. The '(b:hCSt does not beg ---it OFFERS you a chance to contribute. : The operations of The New Britain National Bank are shaped by the seasoned judgment and broad experience . of these leaders in New Britain’s business life: ' Wil IO Tesp0 nd? A. ). SLOPER, Chairman of the Board E. N. STANLEY, President Savings Bank of New Britain H. S. WALTER, Stanley Rule & Level Co., Plant J. B. MINOR, Pres. and Treas., Minor & Corbin Box Co. F. S. CHAMBERLAIN, President A. F. CORBIN, President Union Mfg. Co. E. A. MOORE, Chairman of Board The Stanley Works ARTHUR G. KIMBALL, President Landers, Frary & Clark GEO. T. KIMBALL, Pres. American Hardware Corporation WALTER H. HART, Vice-President The Stanley Works F. M. HOLMES, President North & Judd Mfg. Co. GEORGE P. SPEAR, Vice-President Am. Hardware Corp, MAURICE STANLEY, President Fafnir Bearing Co. CHARLES F. CHASE Pesio B Consncon Ca ew Britain United Community Fund Checks may be made payable to Leon A. Sprague, Treasurer, care of the New Britain Trust Co. | New Britain National Bank - $77,000 To Do It Right New Britain Connecticut iy

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