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Worrying over probably made w Britain Heral ABRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY him gbsent-minded regarding the minor details of life, fesmed Daily (Bunday leading to the amazing tragedy that Ezcopted) Bidg., 61 Chwrch Strest At Hemld spelled his doom. = | fioa TIRETRIPTICN RATES \ Collapse of the Coral Gublew en- |try Was befor: 1 %4200 Turee Monthe l((‘rpri:e lcags 1o the question, Inkling of e & MoBtA | hut has becoms of thy famous Florida land boom” It scems to have Enteted at the Post Offics st New Bri- | out. Florlda us a state, however, has just as many advantuges us it ewr | had, cven before the boom | materialized. This boom was the | truit of a speculative ballyhoo and | JThe, caly profiable sdisrtising meSl® |\ hen the perlod of inflated values ~oom slways open to sdvertisers. ched a point beyond all the stage was beautifully set for bl e '::;' va. the inevitable crash. The tornado put ttiea to the by tor r--vu:‘ur:uu “."(hr- finishing touches upon an other- | ited to 1t of B o [ e T e tape: ‘and alse loca) | Wise critical condition. Coral Gables news yublished thereln. ollember Audit Burems oF Coreamwarion | Wishers of the great enterprise were .'n:’c‘u ::-{:T-:mx;%?: '.'.‘,‘:.,'.?."5 { reluctant to force a liquidation. Tt iy i cireulation. Our circulation etetistice sre | a pity that such tremendous enter. e DO e e in newspaper e, | PTise as this effort represented tributiou fgures to both Dational 84| should not meet with the suceess promised by the prometers. TELEPHONS CALLS Business Office ... ¥26 Editeria) Roome .... 930 | elrcumstances, indicating that well- iocal advertisers. The Herald ts on sale @ally (n_New nat Newsstand. Times 8quare; Newsstanda, Eatranes Grand Ceptral, ¢3ad Strest. e i — There are 461 unprotected grade crossings in Connecticut along Class Bvéhy siate of Bae in $he Unifeq |1 Wicav. rallroads; There were 10 | | sta to think it will be the | Sl eI ijured on them during 1927 accord- , ing to a compilation made by the tion, This at lcast i ! Road Builders’ News based on re- how close the politicians think the | | ports from the Interstate Commerce | Commission. % S : The situation in Connecticut looks It the “traffic survey” to be *‘";yheucr than In most other states ried out by the neighbering state 01 merely because of the smaliness of Maseachusetts is to be of practicall yy qaio The avcrage for the value a survey of the road &ign| . .. oier scems to be uniform. situation imght be included. It 18 casier for u motorist to be lost in any other town in | deciding state in the national elec- is evidence of | clection is going Lo be. grade crossings is Texas; the state Masgachusetts than in having had the most fatalities at New England eate. Ev the Bay State seems to believe it is| sufticiently Well known 1o the re- i o mainder ot the world uot to reyuire special highway markers nearby s but has more popul state, as Rhade Island, with 58 un- protected grade crossings, and Dela- ware, with 251, are as bad off, rela. | tively speaking, as the larger states. Elimination of certain grade crossings within New Britain, due to the insistence of the What we need is tresh air and exercise, the doctors tell us. How to get both i not so easy. To get & plenitude of exercise is easy for the | working man—he usually thinks he gets too much of it. But they don't, wplendid promise. always get an equal amount of | In the country as a whole there fresh air, especially in the Winter. are 206,533 unprotected grade Others, able to draught fresh ozone ! crossings, and unfortunately their almost at will, have difficulties in | “natyral increuse” is much faster obtaining a sufficiency of exercise. |than the Increased number of prod- OTce workers—and doctors them- tected grade crossings. The number selves—are in this class. of protected ‘crossings totals only e | 27,747, which includes those guarded by signals. During 1927 persons kill- | ¢d at grade crossings totaled 2,371, and the injured 6,613. What a rec. ord! mayor, is a Citizens who have been wondering whether “there would cver bc a summer this year,” and who felt in- clined to credit the etories that radio waves were interfering with the climate, at least have had their rest. The sizzling lwul: NEW ENGLAND POWER The other day we printed an edi- ought 10 tofial relating to the lyrge power saisfy the most As the gevelopment under way in Maine, heat belt extends throughout a | this under the acgis of the Insull in- large part of the west also it will be good for the crops, if rears set at of yesterday and today fastidious. intercsts of Chicago, who apparently that is any | hope that the Fernald law against solace. It is also a good thing 1o the exportation of electric power the ice cream and soft drink ' may be changed some time or vendors. | knocked out by a federal court. But that is not the only huge Mayor James J. Walker power development under York has been gallivanting around | New LEngland. In fact, the biggest the map in an effort to create good | hydfo development in the east, ex- will for bis metropolis. If sartorfal jnlu:no of Niagara TFalls, is being correctness can produce good Will broached. there is no doubt about the| The enormous quantities that will be en- | pany, gendered. But he usually is late 0 | trust, all appointments, and that helps to ! demund in of New o oW Englan @ vast Power com- supeg-power holding is reported as having spent 1,000,000 in surveys and the pur- create irritation, The chase of property along the falla be- New York that he return home and |tween Now Hampshire and Vermont, attend to business is justified, al-|The idea is to creatc a power de- though there is 1o guarantee te | [ velopment which will outstrip any- would attend to businces much even | thing known in New England so far. if he wer Before leaving | The total expenditure planned is 1pon his last trip he had an appoint- | given at $40,000,000, ment with Governor Smith for 11 a.| The big husincss of the 1utyre is to m. and showed up at 4:20 p. m. The be the hydro-electric power indum- governor was sore—who wouldn't | try. As between the state it is un- be? ;rm\lrollud. It is having in town everything its own way, and though the pub- It does not require a marvelous lic is bound to benefit from the de- memory to remember the day when | velopment of th stories appezred in the public prints it must not be o regarding the terrible state of John upon which D. Rockefeller's indigestion. The old | these greut deveiopments are based gentleman—he was then alrcady ave property and that the quite on in years—could eat scarcely public should have a say as to how thieker than power resources streams und resources public iy food crackers. Yet not to have interfered with the oil | The is now 89 tem o soup and |they are developed and the manner weak tummy seems lof control exercised. astounding propaganda sys- intercsts ,as investigation Trade Commission, king's general health. He the power vears of age and looks destined 'orlwouzm to light by the o contury mark or beyond. Had | of the Federul the elder Rockefeller been able to lindicates that the power mugnates devour and dizest anything his pal- much profit in sight which they ste craved L probably would have are bound to zet if the public can missed his present physical be made to t good n with an “iron plar ink fuvorably of their © system of state. Many a stomach,” able to t “almost any- educators to write tavorable text- thing” in almost unlimited quanti- books, pamplhlets and books sent 164, died comparatively young. to the schools of the country, the - | suppression of books from the school Captain Alfred | systems which Loewenstein fell from his airplane Tie theory that ve what the power men considered an unfair treatment while crossing the Enuglish Channel of the subject, the attempted in- is at least logical, The theory that fiuence exerted upon newspapers he jumped trom the plane is possible through propaganda articles—all but hardly Jogical. The theory that |these have been roundly condemmned. hie caused himself to disuppear, in-|An honest industry should not need tending to turn up later, is entircly [to apply such doubtful methods to illogical his strange end Stories hiave been told since to the cifect that | super-power development it will his financial re- | have to be alonz better lincs. So far quired a large loan in New York.!one of the deiclopments hag been which was not granted, but prontiecd | to foster suspicion to him later; that 12 lost $30.- = - 006,000 through financial deals that RLVIVING AN INDUSTRY turned out poor! Even o the Feduction of the postage rate on “richest man 1n Europe” had p]wb'l private mailing egrds—usualily condition recently left to keep the wolf from the deor. | “picture postal eards'—trem tve W A . finances, however, |cents to onc cent is certain to byild [um‘ forcign nationalities. Has Kel- or thoughtless ot what he was doing | veritable death blow when the post- | v Christmus a8 Gecond Clame Mall Matte died out or down, or is down and Chi reason !lhc picture postal | held out remarkably long under the | zen who had picture postal card col- | e e | section of the jybilee edition of the STATE'S GRADE CROSSINGS | Chattancoga Times on the occasion deaths and 23 persons seriously in- | Memerial Auditorium in The state with the most unprotected {of the world’s most noted orgunists, such crossings is Ohio, which has a |equipped with few thousand fcwer grade crossings | for public meetings of any character, tion to the square mile. Buch amali | ooked that the | in its end. If we're going to have | industry that was given @ logg. once dubbed * been 3 wonderworker? Until he uge rate was increased in 1935 in the [started his multilateral anti-war beliet it would yleld more returns treaty scheme his record had not to the postal department. We do not 'been amazingly propitious. It was know what the extent of this indys- | Kellogg whe sent q“,’...r..dm. pro- but can get 4n | noyncements to Mexico at a time what it cuan be by when rocking the beat was bad form. glimpsing the Departmient of Com- | Later, as regards Mexico, Mr. Mor- merce figures s to the extent of the |row went there and did more good postal card buginess, |in a few months than the state de- which last year totallcd $45.000,000. | partment had done in years. Kel- This country is 5o vast that even a logg's multilateral treaties being dis- comparatively minor industry like |cussed in Kurope, however, are making Christmas carde reaches an | epoch-making if they should happen amazing figure. to be acceptable. If they are, and By the way, wWhat has become of ia historic international achlevement card collectors? | comes to the credit of the Coolldge Years ago. when these cards were administration, it ia well to remem- first made, collectors began exchang- ber that Mr. Coolidge was ne re- with other collectors all nowned international schelar be- over the world and muny the citi- fore he cntercd the presidency. Vote for either Hoover or 8mith; lections running into the hundreds but den't let your mind be befud- of cards, thosc from the most out- dled over foreign relations. Too of-way and distant points being most many bright men have their hand valued \ in the ple of international relations to be forced to rely entirely upon A GREAT AUDITORIUM |the capacity of one man, though he One of the pages in the fllustrated be President. up an iervous Nelli ing them of Adolph §. Ochs’ b0th anniversary F t F * s vt o e |F'@Cl8 and Fancies tion of the Boldiers and Sailers’ that city, The final test of the cheerful loser Chattanooga is one of the cities |is to grin after losing a race with a which pregerred to honor its heroes | speed cop. with a great auditorium rather than | FRE a monument, thus at the mme time | Tortunately, all this talk about | various kinds of marriages comes causing the honor to the dead to be !trom people too old to marry. of practical use to the living. The | auditorium cost $793,000 yeats 5,500 | and an additional 500 on the stage |c/uding a he-man who says: “I hate —and is equipped with & monster | !0 90 it but no woman ean boss | ime.” pipe organ. Edwin H. Lemare, one Tt takes two to gew & beard, in. Still, the beach atill comes in has been engaged as the municipal handy for engaged couples. The organist. The auditoriumn byilding is |girl can see what ghe's getting, too. numerous facllities You can tell a good fundamental- ist. Say “thirdly” and nete the there being among other things 19 sleepy look in his eye: roems for small meetings, a large toom for exhibits, and four reoms seating 250 each for medium sized meetings. Some folks might wonder wheth-| The man who did mest to lighten er Chattanooga, which {s no more |the Inbog- of the modern farmers ! than twice the size of New Britain, | V48 the inventor of the selt starter. | can fill the auditorium for any pub- | e printing press has been ® { Mic gathering. It seems to be a busy | great factor in developing all med- place all winter, however, and the |ern interests, including sex. [ plenitude of seats insures low prices | 4\ i1 bo Tol in this campaign ito the public. 8o (ar as the regular |i¢ people practice religion as much |organ recitals are concerncd, they |as they talk it. |are free. The advantage of such an institu- tion in a city's lite in self-evident. {8ome day New Britain may be | simitarly blessed, but from the pres- | | ent outlook it will take somc time. | e e [CENSORING THE “TALKERs” Such states us maintain a board | |of censors for films have been con- fronted with a new problem through | et |the development of the talking| Doubtiess the height of the elc- movies. Has a board created to |[FAN comsists in crooking fhe little censor films the right to censor :::::r“"” EEERE tage accompanying | tion. The 12 not far to seck. The Alag! Few of the big jobs are held by men who were pointed out as 800d examples n thelr boyhood. Americanism: Feeling very high- ibrow because you have learned to !drag in the word “psychology.” Alas! for the lady flier. She no sooncr learns to take off than she {begins to put on. Western travelcrs whe are dry often see a beautiful mirage, hut it was the mirage that made Jim TReed dry, conversation imq films? That is the qu lanswer | boards, being of a bureaucratic na- {ture, are not hesitating long In \‘l:nrcl\ of the rights und privileges. | They will censor the talk as well asi {the films. | Which has led a commentator to Ten per cent is the usual tip: Ten |compute that the total of federal |per cent of the bill in a restaurant; and state boards bureaucrating |On & train. 10 per cent of what the M porter expects. things up for us total many hun- {dreds. Lvery state has an aseort- | Let us not regret the passing of | ment, doing work for the people that (h- old-fashioned large family. At once was done by the representa- oM & fitvver will hold only nine in tives of the people. The federal gov- eofivIont: 5 |ernment ulone possesses €0 eom-| One reason a man doesn’t cnjoy I missions, which costs the govern. [society is because the more faghion- {ment $500,000,000 @ year. :::e the luncheen the less there is to FOREIGN RELATIONS | After taking a mail course to de- It has been asked: What does Al |Velop your personality, try persuad- e gas or electric people to al- [E. smith know about forcign rela. {108 e B4 O €ECE Be re. one tions? da; late. A president. it is argued, shoyld not enly know al “Reading maketh a full man," as | ¥ know all about prohibition, |, ) "agree; but Mr. Tom |agricuiture, domestic prosperity and Heeney's opinion is that it doesnt’ {what is good for American citizens ‘maketh a he-man. gcnerally, but he should also possess an encyclopaedic knowledge of for- | eign relations, Maybe that is so and maybe it {1an’t. How much did President Coel- !mn know about foreign relations | before hc became vice presidént? | And then president? | Or, admitting that he had a good | working knowledge of foreign af- | fairs, what evidence fs there fhat his | A man charged with Leing drunk knowledge at tha i = . | denied this when he appeared in lodge at that tinie was any i ., . "ioqay. He sald he had had & superlor to the knowledge of the ' Loule of beer, a glass of whiskey, |same subject possessed by Al Smith |six glasses of wine, and a glass of today? gin. “And you were not drunk?” he There may be reasons for prefer. | %as asked. “No sir.” he replied. arsaee : . A short whilc ago at a hearing the ring Hoover to Smith, but thelr com- !y ;1 ielves as n faver of cinder parative knowlcdge of foreign rela- | residents of Clark street expressed | tions s not one of them. It is read- | walks. Last night there was a mec- ily sdmitted by everyone that ©nd hearing, and they changed their T “’d ¢ ox. |minds, deciding for flag walks. {Hoover has had a plenitude of €x- | " o the protest of the common { verience in dealing with foreign na- | council aguinst reduction of the size |tions while a private citizen and |of the fire companies, the fire board | while head of the Dupartment of jlast night voted to cut the number Commerce. His name is known and | of men in Noe. 2 3. and 4. Willium W g | Bullivan, who is chief, was appointed {revered abroad, while that of Bmith iy permanent member of the depart- |is not known abroad to any extent. |ment, making him = But Hoover as President would | chief in spite of the action of the Lot ot o Wlkbole council in twice turning down the |not possess carte blanche power 10 | . o0 or such an office. deal with foreign nations. Thie 18 10 | { nger instructions from the street |one-man government. “By and with | commissioner, Stephen McNamara {the consent of the Senate” still holds | today ordered the removal of a large number of trunks from the | 8004 in & multitude of international : i "'.' R isidewalk in frent of D. Miller's S e store on Main street. This being re- Then there is the ftate Depart- [fused. McNamara léaded some of nerve center of oyr fer- |them into a truck and drove away. eign relations. A good secretyry o,‘:;‘e!:h!\e ntur:ed' (:emr:‘n -re': | there #o he tool e on state t -q . ate 18 three-quarters of the battls sseond trip. The trunks were placed in any admintstration’s relations |yn gtorage. Correct this sentence: “Take your vacation,” said the boss, “but hur- ry back, for I'll be almost helpless without you.” (Cepyright 1928, Publishers’ Byndicate.) 25 Years Ago Today [ment. ¢ NEW BRITAIN DAILY BERALD, permanent ; We'd Draw 'Em in the Right Direction? Band concerts draw the crowds, we know, t Which makes us think that even a0 In Humors Park, fun concerts might Draw crowds to laugh from sheer delight! Don't Come Up for Air! Irwin: ¢ can you stay under water &0 long?" Donald: “Been In training, kissing girls” Rubber Tired! Their Alma Maters! Farrell: *“Did your two children graduate this year?” Simmons: “Yes. My boy got a sheepskin from Harvard College and my girl got a chamola-skin from the Beauty College! —Louise Cutler All About Jt! Aunt Mary Wallace, well past 80 but a vigorous church member, was the source of more than one bit of negro religious lore that went to make up “OI' Man Adam An’ His Chillun,” a lustily humorous book by Roark Bradford rccently pub- lished by Harper's. Many ticklish theological points were solved by her for him, and very few of th stories were written before her opinion was obtained of the version used. “Give THE FUN SHOP readers some little original anccdote of Aunt Mary’s that's not in the book,” we suggested to. Mr. Bradford. . He graciously responded! “When the question as to Cain's wife came up, writes Mr. Brad- ford, “I went straight to Aunt Mary Wallace. ‘The Book says’ 1 detailed, ‘that the Lord creatcd Adam and Eve. ‘Hit do now,’ she agreed. “‘And that they had two chil- dren, Cain and Abel’ QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Burean, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a pers sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- fidential.—Tiditor. Q. Is Frank White &till the treasurer of the United States, A. He resigned effective May 1, 1928, President Coolidge nominated Theodore Tate of Tennessee to fill the vacancy, and as he was not con- firmed by the Senate before ad- journment, he was given a recess appointment. Q. How muany deaths and in- juries result from the usc of fire crackers and other explosives in Fourth of July celebrations? A. The American Muscum of Safety has announced the following figures for the last three year: 1925—111 deaths and 1030 injuries; 1926—161 deaths and 2205 injurie 1927—195 deaths and 3179 injuries. Q. What ara truffles? A. Edible fungii that grow un- derground. Q. What term s applied to hatching and rearing of fish? A. Pisiculture, Q. When was the X-ray dis- covered? A, William announced the X-ray in 18 Konrad Roentgen discovery of the Q. Which is longer, the Sucz or Panama Cana A. The Suez Canal is approi- mately 100 miles in lengh and about 60 miles longer than the Panama Canal. Q. What city of Tibet are for- eigners forbidden to enter? A. Lhasa. Q. Can a cat see in absolute darkness? A. While a cal can see in light so0 dim that man is practically blind, it cannot see where there is com- plete absence of light, Q. How docs a porcupine shoot its quills when attacked? A. The animals do mnot shoot their quills, but when attacked the quills will pierce the flesh f the attacker and stay there. Q. How high is the Statue of | Liberty in New York harbor. A 160 feet. Q. What is the comparative weight of a gallon of water and a allon of gasoline? A. Water weighs 533 pounds per gallon and gasoline varies from about 6.5 to 6.9 pounds. Q. Where is Tibet and how large is it? A. Tt isa country in Central Asia stretching from the Western part of China to Kashmir with the Hima- layas on the south and the Kuen- lun mountains on the north; area 463,200 square miles. Q. Is there any differ the meaning of the words sity” and “college?” A. The words have been looscly used in the United States. Many in- stitutions that nomfnally are uni- versities have standards lower than others called colleges. There i8 o nee 1 univer “‘Yeah, and dat wuthless Cain up and kilt Abel! put in Aunt Ma ‘80, ] continued, ‘that just left Adam and Eve and Cain.’ 'Dat’'s right. Dc¢ ole man, de olc lady, an’ de no-count boy.’ *‘But the Book says that in got married.’ 1 insisted. “Whom did he marry?" *“*Humph." snorted the old wo- man, ‘He married de Virgin Mary. Dat's who he married, An’ ef'n you'd go to church an’ quit devilin’ me all de time you'd kmow some- thin' 'bout de Bible, too. Now git out'n dis kitchen an’ git to church befo' de devil gits you! Our Milkman's a Good Mixer! I've never secn a purple cow, I never hope to sée one; | But by the color of the milk we get I'm certain there must be one! —Brand Storm A Penny for His Thoughts! Mrs. Miller received for her birth- day Rodin's famous “Thinker” done in bronze as book ends. “I often wonder what he's think- ing about,” said one of her friends the other night, leoking at it soul- fully, uh,” answered Bob aged eight, “he’s been in swimmin’ and he's wonderin’ where he left his clothes.” M. Landis TRIED BY FIR! By Michael D, Hesse It was a great homor the com- mittce from the Ole Ghoul Ltd., conferred upon me, when they call- ed me and asked me to try fhe blindfold test. I had visions of get- tng fifty cents a word for my testimonial, instead of the usual one half of one per cent. Eyes tightly blindfolded, T smoked cigarette after cigarette until at last I came to one that was so mild and mellow—inhaling it was just like a breath of country air at early dawn. How sweet! I yelled to the Com- mittee, “Bureka, I have found it! The best smoke in the world,” jerk- ing the blindfold from my eyes. Imagine my surprise! The darn thing wasn’t I The Committee was indignant and refused to buy my testimonial. Therefore. T hereby offer it to the best and highest bidder! Some Mosquitoes! Friend: “Do you have any domestic pets?” Owner Summer Regor “Yes, a couple of eagles” Friend: “Fagles? What want with them®" Owner: “Oh, we keep tight the mosquitees!” —Helene Gilbert (Cépyright. 1928, Reproduetion Feorbidden) Hotel: de yeu them te general tendency to restrict the word “university” to institutions of- fering non-professional instruction beyond the bachelor's degree and having affiliated professional schools. Q. What is the difference be- tween a monoplane and a biplane A. A monoplane is an airplane having single wings and the biplane has two wings. Q. What movie actress oppositc John Gilbert in King"? A. Ruth Clifford Q. What was the played “Truxton result of the Battle of Bannockburn, Scetland? A, It was fought June 34, 1314 between the Scotch and the English and resulted in Bruce winning the Scottish crown. Q. How leng was the first Con. gress in seasion? A. The fivst session began March 4, 1789 and ended September 29, 1789, The second session began January 4, 1790, ended August 12— and the last session began Decem- ber 6, 1790 and ended March 3, 1791, Q. What ferm of government has Austria? A. It became a Republic Novem- ber 12, 1918, Observations On The Weather Washington, July 9.—orecast for Southern New England: Local thunder showers late tonight or Tuesday; not so warm Tuesday in west portion; moderate shifting winds becoming southeast and south. Torecast for Eastern New York: Local thunder showers tonight and uesday; not quite so warm Tues- day, gentle shifting winds becoming moderate south and southwest. Conditions: Pressure is high this morning over the southern states and the far north Atlantic districts. It is relatively low over the lake region and the Rock: Mountain states. The heat wave moved east- ward and its intensity is greatest this morning over the middle At- New lantic and England states. Many stations reported maximum temperatures yesterday above 90. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather followed by increasing cloudiness. Temperatures yesterday High Low . 70 66 Atlanta . Atlantic City Roston ... .. “hicago Cincinnati Denver .. Detroit .. {Duluth .. Hatteras . Jacksonville Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis Nantucket New Haven . New Orleans ES ZANES SIS a1 11 sial 3 3 B ) od e e aSanS ol New York .. 90 Norfolk 88 Northfield, Vt. 88 Pittsburgh .. 92 Portland, Me. . 54 St. Louis 90 Washington ... . 90 HAD GIVEN UP ALL HOPE —— Wife of Swedish Flyer Who Rescued Nobile Belleved Her Husband Was Lost on Arctic Ice. Eskilstuna, Sweden, July 9 (Copy- right 1928 by United Press)—*1 sad abandoned hope for him,” Mrs. Einar-Paal Lundborg, Swedish hero who rescyed Gen. Um- berto Nobile from his dirigible's i camp, said in an interview with the When vou turn your dial to tune the instrument in front of you is the could L invento has wade pussible modern radio. Ou magneti d from a Levden wend for 1t: 1522 New York Avenu, JPMENT, and enclo T want & copy of the hulletin ONE I W s I NAME STREET AND I cIry wife of the e | ons quickly. . STATE United Press today. Lundborg, after rescuing Nobile, had returned to the camp and crash. ed in his plane~—to become a pris- oner like others in the Itulia's crew who had heped he would rescue them. Lieut. Birger Schyberg. life-long triend of Lundborg and a co-pilot in the Swedish air force, flew to the camp last week and rescued Lund- borg. “I was informed by a Stockholm newspaper that Einar bad been sav- ed.” said Mrs. Lundborg. “Any wife will understand how T had felt since he fell on the ice at the camp. I was near to abandoning hope when T got the wonderful news of his res- cue. “Birger Schuberg is one of my husband's closest pals. ‘They both were foolhardy—too foolhardy as it turned out. But Y am happy that it was Birger, his friend, who got my Einar back. “We have been married only six months, 50 you can understand that 1 did net want to let him go on the desperate work of trving te rescue the Italia men. But he theught it and 1 could not keep hi# “SHALL TAMMANY RULE" IS THE VITAL QUESTION W. Good BRelleves It Wil Arouse Great James Interest in Coming Campaign Chicago. July 8 (UP)—James W. Good, western manager of the nae tional republican presidential cam. paign. believes that the question, “Shall Tammany Rule?” will arouss the most interest in his territory during the coming campalgn. Good has returned from Washing- ton and will open western headquar- ters for the campaign here soon. Ta- day he was to start organizing his forces so that campaign headquar- ters may he opened before the end of the month. The western campaign. he said, probably would be condycted by vol. unteer assistants, Good declined to comment on the part that prohibition will play in the campaign. The paramount issues of the campaign will he outlined by Herbert Hoover, he indicated. Per- sonally, however. he believes that the question of Temmany rule will be the chlef topic of discussion in the west. | Denmark was one of the first « the Europcan sonntries to start facs tory inspection Break Them Up Quickly b, Ending Toxic Poisons with New Aspirin Laxative Doctors say eolds, grippe, flue, fle.] are caused by toxic poisons, and they | ususlly prescribe aspirin to break them | up. But they aluays give o losative, i too! Now a well known specialist has perfected a marvelous formula: combining “flxm and a laxative,: called Asper-Lax. Instagtly relieves, suffering aod eliminates afl toxic pois-/ Guaranteed uliei!:a' 80 cost. Drug and department stores. A HUNDRED YEARS OF RADIO fu your radio wet, do you know that result of & hundred years of develop- ment? Tt was in 127 that Savary made the discovery that u steel needle Jar, and since that thme hundreds of wnd sclcntists have contributed a bit here and a bit there which r Washington Bureau has prepared a Lulletin of 6,000 words of condensed information shwoing the story of radiy development In the paet hundred years. Fill out the coupon below and CLIP CUUPON BERE RADIO EDITOR, Washingten Bureau, Daily New Britain Herald, hington, D. C. HUNDRED YEARS OF RADIO DE- herewith five cents in loose, uncancelled, U. Vostage etamps, or coin, to cover postage and handling costs:: l 1 am a reader of the Daily NEW BRITAIN HERALD, o e e u b el THE MAGANIFICENT BREAKPOWN ! A 416 TARUCK LoAPER WITA FINE WHITE SAND! T — (“Pomsina You. 1928, Thw Bet Synd (7) OP NN YOS T 2o e s PR ® o [ tt =»6 somam