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CORBIN DESCRIBES TRIP ROUND WORLD Mapulacturer Tells Rotarians of 34,000 Mile Journey ! There are vo flying fishes in Man-} dalay, peither does sun come out of China across t bay, but they have the crudest hotels in the world, according to A. F. Corbin, president of the Union Manutacturing Co., and past pre the Rotary club. Mr. s § trom a six world. He his trip to the mer today, but because was forced to ¢ erably. Mr. and Mrs distance ol which they trave traveled a during Corbin man coaches, | camels, ered motor ¢ modern oc liners, to donkeys : He told of how Great Britain o plishing | big thin; n the Orient, what the United is doing in Manila, and interesting si Rangoon. and Calcutta. He dwelt briefly on Hindu religious scrvices in India. He saw a slight earthquake in Japan, lost & bet to an Arab at the Pyramids of Egypt and had his pocket. puml in Rome. w in Japan, its in | has returned « | visit to Montr "Next Thursday Austin tate foresrer, will speak on con- servation of forests, 1 HART INSISTS N (. OF C. RETRACTION. (Continued from First Page) $1306 ard to the fact that the local | Chamber members have voted not to 1 advertise in any publication having less than 12 regular issues The police department issued a statement through P man Thomas C. Dolan, chairman of ‘ the program committee, to the effect that Mr. Benson previously had tentatively approved the prograni. Mr. Benson declined to discuss the matter for publication today. THAW RAPS ENGLAND Ashore Warning Under Sends Statement People They Live Laws Worse Than the “Georges.” Plymouth, Eng., July 12 (UP)— Harry Thaw, in a written state- nient he sent ashore as the liner K - Irance touched here on its way to York today, warned Eng- land’s population of 40,000,000 that they are living under laws “which would have made the Georges trem- ble.” Thaw, still sizzling with anger be- cause he was refused permission to land in England, had sailed from Cherbourg after a stay on the con- tinent. He handed his statement to news- paper men who boarded the liner | % here. After expressing his strong re- | sentment -at the refusal to let him land, Thaw announced that England was not a free country. HELD AS FUGITIVE York, July 12 () — Louis | alias Lupo, 30, today was held witnout for hearing as a fugitive from justice from Worces- ter, Mass, where he is wanted for | complicity in a robb: | He was arrested Friday night, | after he had 1 stabbed in a street fight, and has been in the prison ward at Bellevue hospital. New Luther, Cute in aBaby~ Awful atThtibeye ~and it's Dangerous- ) By Ruth Brittain Thurb baby, bLut the ng mit- wdboard cuffs, keep a bo ase of colic on stomache tion, loss of €l him to gat full | Broad street lust 20, | Wamgunbaug. Last night the .were unknown to A~ —— Personals I'rances Martin, Dorothy Paldino, Sophie heyd, Michael H William Tarrant, James n, Edward Dawson, and Wil- lum Doyle will be week-end guests of Mrs. John J. Tarrant at Sound View. Miss Martin will remain for the following week and Mr. Tarrant will spend the next two weeks at beach. Misses Frawley, Seline McCrann, Elsie . Miss Elizabeth ino, Henry and Willium Tarrant spent d View. will epend the at Clinton anan, Mary Berna- | Lloxolhy Shanahan, Smith, Ruth Mcaloon, Eli arrant, Helena Burke, Leona hton, ltuth : McEnroe, Virginia 1 Haunon, ret Coughlin, Irene beth Lawles Rand Miss Koplowitz of Strat- 4 from a last | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1928, |Road Signs For Air 1 Travelers BUY ik WILSOR & THE WOB1LDS CARGEMT TUBALO MARNET Mildred | Lake, M., | White Mountains. E. Hitchcock and daugh- of Stanley str , o are spending month at Chaulker Beach. Arthur Hickok of Stanley 1s spending the week at Saybrook. Davis of home 1, Can ek's Jonas Goldsmith, a merchant, Leen in Palestine for several weeks, is expected to return home on Aug- Miss Anna Goldsmith, his daughter, will remain in Palestine. Dugald McMillan will sail New York next Wednesday trip to Scotland. promment from for a Mr. and Mrs, Walter Meyer arc spending their vacation at Lakd visited by Miss John C. phier, Jr., Loomis and are attending t of the International Association of | | Financial Mich. Advertisers at Detroit, George A. Quigley the International Lions' at Des Moines, Ia OLD BANK BOOK FOUND is attending conference | Seymour Man Who Died Years Ago Left Unclaimed Deposits of More Than $13,000 in New Lomwn. New Haven, July 12 (®—Funds lon deposit in the New London Sav- ings Bank, the existence of which tors of the estate of Daniel L. Swan mour, have just been found, s revealed today in when application was made ¥ Texido of the Merchants' bank for an order of deposit. The total amount is §13,613.78. Swan was a well known resident of Seymour and he died years ago. 1¢c application to Judge Gilson that $1,000 be handed to the Cemetery association and §7, 8§ to the Hartford Connecticut lr\N compuny as administrator ot the estate of Sarah E. Manwarring and which is to go to the Manwar- {ring heirs. The court is also asked to deter- mine how the balance of the found, amounting to 0. 15 1o be dis- tributed. who has | were | the administra- | probate | City Items Hear the new T.tube Majestic radio at Henry Morans & Sons—advt. Unity Rebekah lodge will meet Friday evening in Odd Fellows’ hall. | Theron W. Hart has resumed teaching for the remainder of the summer. Piano and harmony. Hart Studio, 259 Main St. Tel. 2531. —advt. | returned to his home after an opera- tion for appendicitis at New Brit- jain General hospital. A son was born at New Br General hospital today to M [Mrs. David Robinson of 12 Trum- | bull street. Miss Mary Halloran of 1654 Stanley street who underwent an operation for appendicitis at New Britain General hospital Tuesday is resting comfortably. | Stop over the Commercial | market, the gword fish in our window, caught |off Block Island waters. Weight 738 Fish pounds, length of sword from tip to | he.d, eight feet.—advt. | Edward Stepeck of 45 Albany ave- | nue complained to the police today that his nephew, Bobby Katansky, sged § years, had been bitten on the ‘ right foot by a dog owned by a fam- strect | Like the automobile tourist, the air | veler now nas his own road mark- Ellis strect | ers for direction #nding. Here is the | These Patients Ave In Two Towns | first actual working installation of an airway marker at Wilson, N. C,, one of a chain that will connect the air-mail route between New York and Atlanta, Ga. The large arrow is 13 feet long and carries the name of the town toward which it is ! pointing. The marker is readable | at an altitude of 3 PRETENDED PRIES PRIEST GUILTY | | eRev. After New Haven Jury Had Boen Out But Ten Minutes. New Haven, July 12 (UP)—Atter | than ten minutes’ |a supcrior court jury today found “Reverend” John Budikoff, pretend- ed Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic priest, guilty on two counts of ob- taining money under false pretenses through a fantastic scheme involving the Russian crown jewel It was Dudikoff’s second Previously, a jury disagreed and was discharged. Attorneys for the convicted man tiled notice of an appeal to the su- preme court before sentence could be pronounced. The bearded defendant, dressed in Russian clerical garb, took the ver- | dict calmly. he has sat praying or telking in low tones with his attractive wife. . STICK IN CHILD'S THROAT Three Year Old Boy Not Expected to Suffer 1l Effects from Strange Experience. | Adam Davidian. aged, 3 years, or {47 East Main street, New Britain General hospital about | 9 o'clock last night and had a piec: of stick removed from his throat. The child was playing with the stick when it became lodged in the throat, and Dr. Moses Kupelian was led. No ill effects from the inci- dent are expected, it was sald at | the hospital today. Taft's Niece To Wed John Dudikoff is Convicied | deliberation, | trial. | Throughout the trial | was taken to | ily at 44 Albany avenue. Great savings on gifts, glassware, dinnerware at our temporary quai- ters, 26 Broad St. Burritt Art Shop. | —advt. FIVE HAVE BAD THROATS of State, Dr. Osborn Says, Com- menting On Health Situation. Hartford, July 12 (®—Five per- sons living in Connecticut are pres- ent suffering from septic gore throats contracted while the \’lL‘hnfl were visiting in Lee, Mass.,, Dr. Stan- ley H. Osborn, state commissioner of health, reported today. The cases jin Connecticut, Dr. Osborn said, were confined to two towns, but he was unwilling to give out the names of the towns. | {partment has received numerous calls during the past few days from people anxious to learn whether they could go to Lee, and other nearby places, where an epidemic of septic sore throats has been | caused by contaminated milk, Dr. Osborn reports that visits into that section of Mass, may now be madc without fear of infection, since th. edidemic there has been controlled and the contamination traced to its source. No milk from the farms in Mass- achusetts, now under suspicion is {5014 in Connecticut so that it will be unnecessary to place an embargo on milk_coming from Massachusetts, Dr. Osborn states. THREE TRAINMEN LILLED | Tragedy Occurs When Canadian Pa- cific Ratlway Locdmotive Ex; < ics Near Glacier, B. C. Glacter, Three here B. C. July 12 (UP)— trainmen were killed near |exploded and destroyed several ca The dead are: M. Rogers, engi eer; W. Stanbury, fireman, and W. ‘Lla) conductor. ! The cxplosion occurred while a| helper engine was pushing a freight |train up a hill into Glacier. Parts of the demolished boiler destroyed two cars and g caboose was ignited by the explosion. ‘Former Danish ‘\h]or s Son To Be Loomises’ Guest Johannes Schiorring of Copen- | hagen. son of u former major in the | Danish army, | Mr. and Mrs. George 1.. coming fwo months as a part of the | international good will ange of | boys between the United States and {Scandinavian countries. Young Schjorring Is 18 vears of age and {will enter college in another year. {Mis father is now a school teacher !in the Danish capital. | .He and the rest of the vyoung Scandinavians who are Lound for |this country will arrive in New York {city Monday morning and will be {met by the Loomises. There will be la banquet for the visitors and their |American hosts that night at the Hotel Commodore. Schjorring will be taken on a trip to West Point he- fore coming to this city. Eight young subjects of King Christian X will be guests of New Britain residents dur- ing the summer. READ HERALD CLAS! 1ED FOR BEST RESULTS i | | The | Samuel E. Mag of Glen street )\flh‘ and | Commercial street, to see | The offices of the state health de- | h today when the boiler of a| Canadian Pacific railway locomotive | ELKS ARE HAVING GLORIOUS PARTY Last Hours of Convention De- voted to Merrymaking Miami. Fla. July 12 (UP)—The last 36 hours of tire 64th annual the Benevolent and Elks will be! | given over largely to merry-making. The 1400 official delegates attend- ed a ness session of the grand |lodge this morning. Then King Rex of Mardi Gras—Miami style—will | rute. convention of | Protective Order of i 1 GRAND EXALTED RULER HULBERT Recontly Elected at Miami. convention completed fts | importunt business yesterday it approved a proposal to es- i national foundation fund 0 for charitable works. After a floracade today—an auto- mobile tour of gardens and estates {of Miumi—the grand parade of the convention will be held, starting at dnsi. A mussed band concert, vaude- ville and fircworks are on tonight's program, while tomorrow will come the annual reunion and official Murdi Gras day. i { Democratic Convention { Broadcast Cost $104,000 The | most | whe It cost the National Broadcasting Co. $104,000 to broadcast the demo- |cratic mational convention from | Houston, or $27,000 more than it lcost o broadeast the republican convention, according te announce- | ment today. Figured to a eent, it |cost the ,company $105 a second |for the 25 hours that was used up. The total expense of hroadecasting both conventions was $181,000. { i The world's lalgest floating dock is being towed from England | Painful Calluses Aching, Swollen Burning Feet entitic Remedy Instantly Ends All Pain and Brings Real Fout Comfort, Dock Starts 8,600 Mile Voyage New I whose of ac paintul cal- stinging bunlonsemtf every aten e is like walking through liquid ~if_your poor blisterad tortured fect out in a wil ho glad to ahout new scientifie foot Tmay {Hiat drawsout indsmatios and | soreness iike magi No fuss—ns bather zoes agony womun savs: “Am Stand on my feet burn and > tlat they Just rub i Eza clerk in a all day. Feet and Lunfons me mad me real | swell, |sting | Two’ | foot coi wonderul Ezo is, the one sure and specdy mi to the British naval base at Singapore, a distance of 8600 miles. \"' oz Tect and is lftean: Gy thing that vou have wever ried. Get a Here is the first section of the 50,000-ton dock at the start of ; v:! y St iia Fale Do, Sgre an the voyage, which will take five months. comfort. An ILLINOIS, HAMILTON, ELGIN, HOWARD or WALTHAM Railroad Watch is priced, boxed and registered at the factory. We sell that watch at the standard price, guar-~ antee your absolute satisfaction, and gladly ar- range for payments of as little as One Dollar a Week DIAMONDS are graded as to quality so that the average person can really judge values almost as well as the co-called expert. We know that our values are right and we INVITE ANY COMPARISON that you care to make; and we exchange your diamond at any time at its full purchase price. We will gladly tell you how you can GROW A DIAMOND on payments of One Dollar a Week ROGERS 1847 — HOLMES & EDWARDS — COMMUNITY and GORHAM Silverware are one price the world over. We feature thesc brands and carry a full line of patterns and pieces. See our stock—select your set—and make your payments out of money that you will never miss. Pay only will be the guest of | Loomis and | son Albert of Grove Hill during the | those. pains that Bayer Aspirin can end in g hurry! Physicians prescribe it, and approve its free use, for it does not affect the heart. Every drug- gist has it, but don't fail to ask the druggist for Bayer. And don't take any but the box that says Bayer, with the word genuine printed in red: Aspirin 18 the l\'l&l P'K o:' Bayer vufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylieacis Renier, Pickhardt & Dunn 127 MAIN ST. (Opp. Arch) K 27 PHONE 1409 Special for Friday and Saturday AT $1.98 SILK CREPE DRESS SKIRTS Regular price, $3.00 \'EW BATHING SUITS for women and children. SUN SUITS for the little ones. DON'T suffer headaches, or any of | New Haven, Kienzle and Sessions Clocks — Sheaffer Pens and Pencils — La Tausca Pearls —- Lohengrin Wedding Rings — Hopeweli China — all of these are nationally advertised and priced, and we sell them on payments of One Dollar a Week OUR OPTICAL DEPARTMENT offers the ser- vices of a competent REGISTERED OPTO- METRIST Wwhere EXAMINATION IS FREE and where we sell standard merchandise at standard prices — and where you can make pay- ments of ne Dollar a Week In view of these facts we again ask HY PAY CASH? Michaels JEWELERS OPTICIANS 354 MAIN STREET his food helps h his bon HANDSOME NEW WASH DRESSES for the little miss. “N€ | A romance that started in Cairo, Egypt, two years ago, will have | iable ang | its culmination when Anne Taft Ingalls, daughter of Albert S. - | Ingalls of Cleveland, Q.. vice president of the New York Central i ruilruad, marries Major Rupert Warburton, British army officer | Inow stationed in Palestine. Miss Ingalle is a grandniece of | < il ook 3 | Chief Justice William Howard Taft of the United States su- | Fletaher's - on the wrapper |Preme court. Her engagement was announced in Cleveland the | g0 you'll get the genuine. ] other day. ts purely teg esc—tha recipe is on the wra tane have preseribed it pet o7 o NEW HANDKERCHIEFS—new colors, signs. new de-