New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 5, 1928, Page 5

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)

been forced down in open water NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1928. the Springfield i :.‘: e T T 7 man hauled from |injury. |rel made in England 10 years ago school where it is being preseated because of the fog and how he and within, smiling. One hundred thou- Saw Leach [An arm was the only part of his l this year for the first time. his two companiens had battled for sand or more people, lining the| “I got my first idea of going over body recovered To offset the curtalled program Y L hours to prevent the floating ice shores, cheered. His sister Madame ithe falls while working in machine | —_— | the local association plans 8 Bum- K bars from crushing the fragile sea- J. P. Cautierre, Sherbrooke, Que.,!shops at St. Catherine, Ont. at the | ‘ |ber of feature programs during the plane. kissed him. Many other women tried | time Bobby Leach went over in a c’ty ]t | ) vear, including one or twe presens Finally he was able to take off to likewise. Not a few succeeded barrel for the trip and the fact that 1 ems | tations of amateur theatricals. These again and returned to his mother ‘I have spent more than a vear I did not get injured as badly did | Returns After Forced Landing in ; Arctic Wastes Kings Bay, Spitzbergen, July 5.— (UP)—Three of the 24 men who have been trapped within the bit- terly cold Arctic wastes have come out alive while there were reports | ship without having sighted any of the missiag Polar explorers, Meanwhile reports drifted here that the Stockholm Dag Bladet had printed an interview with Captain H. Riiser-Larsen saying that the men on the ice encampment, started by General Umberto Nobile and now controlled by Lieutenant Viglieri, had traced Finn Malmgren and two aides as far as Foyn Island. Dares Niagara in Rubber Ball— Comes Out Alive Buffalo. N. Y., July 5 (®—Jean Albert Lussier, 34-year-old resident of Springfield, Mass, who realized an ambition of 20 years yesterday aad more than $7.000 on my ven- ture.”” Lussier have succeeded have demonstrated that my theory 1 could do 1t again I am { sure, but once ball was carried down stream in the rapids it was fump- is correct “As the ed about quite plunged over the falls I rec | when he went over Niagara Falls in | cx Russell Truslow of 425 West Main street reported the theft of a spare tire off his automobile in his yard. Moody Secretarial School S Session. July 9 to August 17 207 —advt explained today. “I and I am happy. I Policy of doors ier is of French descent and born at Concord, N. H, Octo- , 189 plu live fo t=ll of } ber Mrs st to was plenty for me. Edson Tayl n of 138 street complamed that a dog owned Ly a family named Arena of 165 Oak street bit him Lawlor r experier : made the trip in a 3 Bolhy 1w a Dit. Just before ed plans are not definitely settled, Al-’ though there are some who still pre- fer the outdoors program in the old Chautauqua tent, the differences in expenses is such that an indoor pre- gram is almost a foregone conclu- |sion unless New Britain people are so anxious for the return of the tent that they are wiling to pay the 1dditional costs. the visitors to the Chau. Having Programs Tn- May Be Gontinued Swarthmore the to four tting extra severe bump. It gave me & lca Edward Stankowitz of 69 Dudley r 12 program here Tuesday even. reaching here that three others—| These three men were landed with [a.rubber ball, was happy today in|nasty buise on my right temple. An- yea street complamed that J y ¢ was Dr. Paul M. Pearson of 2 missing since May 30—had been|the dirigible Italia. After the ice |having his theory vindicated. other on the right cheek and one mon¢ r her feat and | choki of 278 Oak street fired a bla P i z more, Pa., national director. seen, encampment had been built they Not Hurt on the left shoulder bled.” | n the Niagara cou alms cartridge pistol at him intentionally hoo D was Dr. Pearson's first visit te | The three men who came out were | started walking towards Foyn Is-| Except for bruises, Lussier was| T had really no sensation whon I house. Leach made derable and burned his forearm B I w Britain. He spoke briefly, i the Russian aviator Babushkin and |land to get rescue for their com- [uninjured. He is one of a few men|went over the falls. When I landed monev as a result of his plunge He| M. H.and H. V. Camp sold today sconri vointing out that a community has kis two aides. panions. Nothing has been heard [and women who have dared the|on the water at the hotton I got a two v 70 as a It of in- [through the Camp Real \ c ) rious wa of expressing {tself, Friday Babushkin started an-air-|from them since, despite that three | mighty cataract and come out alive. | zood jarring up The ball struck the ¥ n he slipped on a two-family house at 1 cipally ough its instutions. plane search for members of the|dog sleigh teams are searching for | Lussier said he was inspired to(water and hounced up and down six e on a vaude- | Glover Boulevard to Ni he m Tuesday evening in- * trew of the dirigible Italia. He wae | them now. |attempt the feat when as a boy he|times just like a ball being hounced tralia E ey Inga 4 the production of a comedy- working in connection with the Rus- | Captain Riiger-Larsen here said saw Bobby Leach go over the falls|on the sidewalk by a chuld 1 went | 15 Bristol.| The choir of the First Lu ma “Tommy." “ sian ice reaker Maligin. He soared |he could see no reason as yet why in a steel barrel. He later conceived |over the falls head first but straps n an attemp! irch held its annual ou _— sway in his specially equipped | Malmgren and his two companions the idea of a rubber ball covered|and piliows saved me from seri an oak bar- Lake Congamond yesterday High READ AERALD CLASSIFIED ADS polar plane and hours of silence fol- | should not be alive, provided they |with a light superstructure of steel lowed. | were able to fight off «xposure and | The occupant of the 758 pound Four days passed without a word | pf the Russian hero who had offer- ed his life in an attempt to aid the stranded ltalia men. His radio was of small range and signals were not picked up. A strong foz held over the territory. The Soviet government |any Polar animals. They had a tood supply that was capable of 40 days, | provided it was properly rationed, | the fiyer said Amundsen Seems Gone Meanwhile no word has come here of Roald Amundsen and lis fie | fabric was towed out into the upper river by motorboat, having aban- doned the announced plan of beings |dropped from an airplane. The ball | rolled and bounced through the up- per rapids and over the Horseshos falls. A weight had been placed at expressed the hope throughout that |aides who started to search for the | Lussier's feet to keep the occupant Babuehkin had landed because of crew of the dirigible, nor has there upright. but 1t became dislodged ¢ the fog and that as soon as the fog | been any word of the six men who (and Lussier went over the brink lifted he would rejoin his mother | drifted away in the envelope of the | headfirst. ship. great polar craft after it had made | its forced landing. Was Smiling A short time later the ball was reclaimed a short distance Dbelow the precipice, was ripped open and Flies Back R Yesterday Baushkin flew back to Y the Maligin. He tqld how he had | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS - * Protect your investment in your “As she sat there,alone, defenseless, unalil2 to answer the terrible charges hurled against her, it secmed 1} 2¢ her hurt, crushed heart could bearnomore. Wasthis ilie reward of true and loyal love? Were self-sacrifice and devotion, after all, only a hollow mockery?” (From “The No-Account Girl,” August True Story Magazine.) " MODEL T FORD Ford Motor Company is making a new ear, but it is still proud of the Model T. It wants evéry owner of one of these cars to run ’ i1 as long as possible at a minimum of expense. Because of this policy and because of the investment that millions of motorists have in Model T cars, the Ford Motor Company is devoting a large part of its factories to making parts, in order that owners may > enjoy uninterrupted service for many years to come. : More than eight million Model T Fords are still in active service, and many of them can be driven for two, three and five years and even longer at small cost. New fenders, for instance, cost from $3.50 to 85 each, with a labor charge of $1 to $2.50. Tuning up the motor and replacing commutator ease, brush and vibrator points costs only $1, with a small charge for material. Brake shoes can be installed and emergency brakes equalized & for a labor charge of only $1.25. A labor charge of $4 to 85 will cover the overhauling of the front axle, rebushing springs and spring perches, and straightening, aligning and adjusting wheels. The labor charge for overhauling the average rear axle runs from $5.75 to $7. Grinding valves and cleaning carbon can be done for <~ - 83 to 84. A set of four new pistons costs only $7 and an installation charge of $6. | For a labor charge of $20 to $25 you can have your motor and trans ; mission completely overhauled. Parts are extra. All of these prices are approximate, of course, because the cost of F materials needed will depend on the condition of each car. They show, however, the low cost of putting the Model T Ford in shape for thou- sands of miles of additional service. See the nearest Ford dealer, therefore, and have him estimate on the eost of reconditioning your Model T Ford. He will tell you, in advance, exactly how much the complete job will cost. FORD MOTOR COMPANY/ ; Detroit, Michigan Automotive Sales & Service Co.,nc. Ford Cars, Lincoln Cars, Trucks, Tractors PARTS 248 ELM ST. NEW BRITAIN SERVICE] Tel. 2700—2701 ey called her a sou! O you remember the sensational breach of promise suit instigated a few years ago by a humble flower-girl against her young millionaire lover and his wealthy mother? Because of the obscurity of the girl and the social prominence of mother and son, the trial attracted countrywide attention. Certainly no girl, cringing in piteous terror under the lash of cross-examination, ever strove more desperately to answer the ugly charges hurled at her by a merciless opposing counsel. “Gold-digger! Blackmailer!™ her persecutor shouted. “A woman withouta shred of honor! An unprincipled wanton who makes a mock of marriage—who knows only one kind of love— the love of money and the luxury money can buy!™ Money! They thought she wanted money! As if money could ever buy back the priceless Contents for August Men of My Heart Thrre Loves Shattered Souls I PMayed with Five My Sister’s Sin The No-Account Girl Forbidden Pleasures 1 Hared Women Until P've Kissed the Cross Her Double Betrayal —and several other stories True Story “On the Air” Be sure to listen in each Friday evening to True Story’s thrilling radio drama, with Music. Broadcast over Columbia Chain—Stations: WOR WEAN WADC KMOX WNAC WFEL WKRC WCAO WMAK WOWO WGHP KMBC WIAS WCAU WMAQ KOIL WAIU Consult Your Paper for Edsct Time AUGUST u Sto On Sale At All Newsstands happiness that had been snatched from her by cunning and trickery. Dimly, through a mist of tears, she saw be- fore her that proud, grim-lipped, haughty mother. There, too, she saw the white, set face of the son—the boy she had loved, and still loved, with every nerve and fiber of her body. And then her turn came. Ina voice broken by sobs, she told her pitiful story—the story of her poor little romance that now was dead. As the wretched details unfolded under her attorney’s gentle questioning, men hardened to sorrow wiped their eyes furtively—women in the court-room wept aloud. Then came that sudden and dramatic con- clusion. An unexpected witness appeared— ess “gold-digger" but_ and in ten words hurled into the tense silence of thecrowded court-rooma veritable bombshell. Most people, stunned by the unexpected outcome of the trial, dismissed the matter as finished when the principals in the tragedy vanished from the public eye. Even today few suspect the true history of events behind that tremendous drama of intrigue, suffering and deathless love. But now, for the first time, the entire story has been told by the girl who was the central figure in that amazing drama. Told in words that will bring tears to your eyes—tears of joy, of sorrow, of understandingand sympathy. Don't miss this throbbing narrative from life, “The No-Account Girl,” in August True Story Magazine. Straight-from-the-Heanrt Stories of Life OW ‘many stories lie hidden in the hearts of fiction can never do. Sometimes these revelations men and women—stories that ord! they startle with their frankness, but they never fail to do not tell! What a sensation they might create if carry a helpful message to readers everywhere. they were to reveal the secrets they oo Each month True Story Magazine guard o jealously. $24,000.00 prints from 14 to 16 of these absorbing 24,000. : in Prizes true-life narratives—faithful records of Sometimes, however, in their dezire to help others, they find the courage to disclose their experiences, hiding only their identities under fictitious names. These stories, told straight from the beart, fascinate, thrill, inspire, as mere these prize issue contains full particulars ry struggle, self-sacrifice, defeat and triumph that fairly throb with the dramatic power of reality. August True Story is a splendid ex- ample. Your newsdealer has it. Get your copy today. 4 Use the Coupon if No Newsstand Is Convenient —— — — ———— ———— MACFADDEN PUBLICATIONS, Inc., 64th Street and Broadway, New York City. I wish to become familiar with True Story Magasine. Please enter my name to receive the next five issues with the August number. [ am enclosing $1.00 in full payment. (If you prefer to examine the magazine before subscribing, simply mail us 35 cents, and we wll send you one copy of the August issue ot once.) Name.. Addres __ Seat: e THE LARGEST NEWSSTAND SALE IN THE WORLD~TWO MILLION MONTHLY :

Other pages from this issue: