New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 13, 1928, Page 6

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| from which to view the impending | spectacle without being exposed to|ord in this office | federal artillery fire. They headeld!identity of the female (p: | for the cupola of a church near the|rebel unitorm) buried at G {town of Gettsyburg. Before they | and referred to in the {reached the limits of the town the | General Hays can be deter | artillery duel commenced and tk ‘ |carth ‘trembled under the road.| | Somewhere on their way they had Leen joined by a 12-year-old boy on | |horseback, and he was wi officers when they rode into a heavy cross-fire | “This urchin,” Colonel Fremantle 13 (@ |recorded, “took a diabolical interest | g e lin the bursting of the shells, and Bixty-five years have passed since | A it Uil wheo Ho e the battle of Gettysburg, but even |% schoolboys have in mind the mmn;““,lf‘h‘“"““' _"f{““’i_,v o = events of that decisive strugsle of [, ¥ l””f‘ o ““"”f di ”0{ ‘; ol the Civil war. the ard w th the same enth They know of Meade, thrust into |23 s thelr vou eEpRnIon, | command of a great army three 209 When two shrapnel shels burst} days before it was to be drawn into | i m““m s one of the outstanding battles of a s bora esatury; of Lee, the beloved, cheer- | ™y o0 they never saw agaln, nor 4 even by the wounded among his | oy <OY CIO¥ REVED SN SEE L TOT broken troops, despite failure and . Y s name lesting threatened disaster: Hancock, who shed his blood detending the ing ground he had reported a WOMAN SOLDIER N RANKS OF REBELS Sbe Was Unknown Heroine af Gettysburg Gettysburg, Pa., July Contines Sofia, July 13 (P)—Level as the T with no stone th ak ground Jerusalem, Longstreet's nost upon anoth dle Bul loosn worst car r, a wid Confederate 0 1za cine” of Gettyshury “Nothing has been found of rec- |doctors and nurses have been rush- | by which BULGARIA SHAKES OFF DUAKE RUINS Rebuilding of Desclated Places one of the| | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1928, FLYING FAN SEEMS TOGELATESTNOW Aviation Enthusiasm Develops New Sport Chicago, July 13 (®—The ranks of American fans have a new mem- ber—the enthusiast of flying. He is as rabid as a fight fan and as irrepressible as a football fol-{ lower. ; He watches distance and endur- the |e. to the middle section to begin | rivate in [the work of reconstruction. cttysburg | The morale of the homeless popu- report of |lations. For after the earthquake rmined.” [had shattered thelr homes other | tremors continued to be felt for sev- |eral days thereafter. The people believe that at any moment another biz quake may come to complete {whatever work the first one has left {undone. ] | Nevertheless they have set to | work, with the aid of workmen and jengineers, to clear away the debris. Iiven the funerals of the 30 victims | of the earthquake interrupted their labors for only a moment. The |strects have been cleared, and traf-| fic is again proceeding undisturbed. | Several foundations for new houses have already been started, and plans | 2d to the for hundreds of others have been ance flights with more than aca-| M ey, | demic interest and calls his favor- WARSHIP IS DAMAGED On port lines, i | anding If information isn't forthcoming he considers it very annoying and talks roughly to the telephone girl. | But, most of all, | of fan likes to watch airplanes come | and go. e of mid- } ing itself rian his- i | British Vessel Warspite Runs Onto sight-seeing plane its afternoon flight because of lack of customers the crowd took up a | fun-lunged | We want to see her 1 | Officlals firally gathered up stray | deadheads swung gracefully aloft. The went home—satisfied. SGOUTS ARE NOT T0WAR ON SMOKES tne mew tvne | EXECUEIYE Council Bans Cam- = —————————————————————— ] ling show. If the show isnt forth-| Scouts were urged to adopt as sn-’l!oy Scout movement that Boy {coming they make disappointment vor as a baseball crowd booing the women. | umpire their | other “daily good turn" the creation smolking by known {Scouts would approach women with as much fer-|of sentiment | smoking in public and ask them to | give up the habit.' against e. a recent Sunday the Chicago | was crowded to the guard and when a big tri-motored failed %o make | James E. West, chicf ecout exe- cutive, in a letter to Floyd A. Rowe, | president of the Cleveland council, took the latter organization to luskf for acting in a matter which is not | bec in the province of a local council |in and which involves “misunderstand- |G ing as to the real aims and purposes of the Boy Scout movement.” PRC ONALS London—Professional PIQUED magiciang ¢ resigned from the Magic club ause amateurs were given a part performance before King chant: nd¢ her up. PORTUGAL KEEPS TO RIGHT | Lisbon—Portugal, one of the few indeed ab-|countries with leftwise trafic, has ion should be | ged to the righthand rule as & venience to tourist: anadian FMwo e ship | To us here,” the letter said, “it is | crowd | MOst unfortunate, and {surd that a sugge | mad | and the Thuge tory. which were being cleared a h were rend ble are beir oust of type in the ofil garavorable with good tnoops; ¢ the war department is her epi- taciturn Longstrect; and more. But there were some who played miner parts in the pageant, with- out military status and with no I timate place in the picture, and als won their bit of fame. Among these was John Burns, 70- year-old Gettysburg constable, who shouldered a musket on the mem- | orable first day of July, 1863, and Jolned the skirmishes in the open field. He recelved three wounds, fighting with the Iron Brigade, and as taken prisoner, but he survived to be embraced by Abraham Lin- coln. Among the forcign visitors with the army of Northern g at Gettysburg was Lieut. Col. Freman- tle of the Goldstreamn Guards, old- est regiment in the British army. t Submerged Rock and Stoves Hoilc | cago ent nolis! 000 ntirc retuilt, ful- hich were dam- ired. One hun- ons were of tion by the earth- wnd 30 were killed. great has been the loss ing houses that sufficient imodations have not yet heen hose who were ren- dered homeless. Some persosn are still sieeping out in the public park Plovdiv, iddle Bulgaria. lic squares and commons covered with tents improvised m uli kinds of materials, from t¢ gingham, many | ‘porting, two days after the in Bottom. , the burial of 1,620 Feder “onfederate dead at Gettysburg, liam Hays concluded » female (private) iniform Who this girl or woman whenee she came, with what com | mana she fought, or hy what trick of fate she was swept finio (h [ rank 's army are unanswe:e: qu | | Tondon, July 13 (P Ity announced today such re uncharted obstruction Lieht ofi the Ts W s red as slight. Three double hotiomed compart- were flooded. The vessel probably will return (o Malta for docl thos in § cr0; amage was Wi was, of o0od tions. 3 The woman may have followad where Armistead led the Virginians, | carrying his hat on the point of his sword, or the may have witneased the m of color-bearers Archer's Bridzade. b there is nothing like this to be cer | tain about. An inquiry addressed to the war About noon on July 3, Fremantlc | department regarding this solitary ctically every country in Europe, snd an Austrian visitor rode off in | woman brought this response fron: and also from erica search of a commanding poniflon‘me office of the adjutant general: inngmwrs architect: of It was completed in | and reconstructed in | construction included of the anti-afreraft The vessel 1s 600 feet | beam of 90 1-2 feet. has poured a not only from o the doubling parts of iria, but from armament. long ard Workmen, |1t s an oil burner with a radius of as action o/ about 4,400 miles. Just wait until you laste them! as well £ The flavor of Malt Syrup and Honey now makes corn flakes a real delight You have a real treat in store when you eat the first bowlful of Post’s Corn Flakes. You may have tasted corn flakes, but you never tasted corn flakes like these before. When milk or cream is added the combins. tion is complete. The moment your teeth crunch on that crisp goodness you realize how delicious Post’s Corn Flakes really are. In the first delicious spoonful you get the combined flavor of milk, malt syrup, honey and toasted corn. And the children—we don’t have to tell you how much they love that flavor. After their first experience they'll hover about the pack- Doesn’t the very thought of it fairly make 33¢ like bees about a clover field. your mouth water ig anticipation? Your grocer will tell you he has never known But no words can convey to you how good these corn flakes really are. You will never know that until you try them. a cercal to become so popular overnight. Everybody wants Post’s Corn Flakes with the new flavor. Order two or three pack- We toast malt syrup and honcy into the crisp, ~ ages today and give your whole family a golden flakes, bringing out all the delicate flavor of the natural corn. treat. Postum Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Michigan. POSTS Corn Flake Jlavored with MALT SYRUP AND HONEY in ditional a > country's ials of the Chicago ficld. rga since the mounting inter- aviation crowds at the Chi- municipal (creased to such an extent that :w!- policing on pri of and alwa there on days when the weather 5| advertisements tending | paign to Stop Women Smoking New York, July 18.—(#—TUse of m&l’t Boy Scouts in a campaign to hait| smoking by women, as proposed by | = e enetina siont comen, e, LVERLASTING SATISFACTION been repudiated by the executive port is a veritable Loard of the Boy Scouts of America. AMERICA'S ONLY AMERICA'S FINEST IMPORTED DOMESTIC the air, and men, | The Cleveland council recently $1.50 children who flock |adopted & resolution condemning $1.00 MINER, READ & TULLOCK airport have in- is necessary, and tion is general at the ncipal airports, say : to induce are assured of a thril- | women to smoke cigarcttes, and the AT coming ... here. .. GONE! You scarcely have time to spot a TypoL-driven car coming . . . when you're watching it . . . going! That’s how fast it flies by. It’s this boundless pep and pick-up of TypoL which makes it the ideal gas for today’s traffic conditions. It takes a car through a traffic jam like a rabbit scurrying through a cornfield. Because TYDOL means: [1] faster starting (2] quicker pick-up [3] more power 4] less gear - shifting [5) reduced knocking. What more can you ask from a gas? TheNew TRAFFIC Made by the makers of the NEw VEEDOL MoTOR OiL « « « the tougher, heavier-bodied oil for the modern motors This soal, on the intabe dipe of every TYDOL CASOLINE There's GET-UP and GET-AWAY in every dmf ‘ of it

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