New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 17, 1928, Page 5

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RAILS SUBJECT T0 ' YOUTHFUL ADYOCATES RADIO FEATURES WHITE PEOPLE NEED NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1928. POTATO ROT AND ] explains that the high temperature hundling of the past evidence that ately warm conditions before stor. |influences the wound-healing process producers understand how to control | ing if the temperature in the stor. OF PEACE MEETING NOT FEEL ANY ALARM in the potato and that atter a few the common 1ot. |age house: is below 50 degrees, ! [days’ exposure the fubers may be| Terminal warket inspections show | “At that femperature it takes | 2 | ST[]P IT moved into storage dry and to a ium causes an annual loss about a week for suberization In the e | B Xm—mm:_ et large measure - proof against out 4 per cent fo potators in | Rural New Yorker variety to an exe . | ‘ 1 | Fusarium infection. Particularly in the s tent that protects wounds against Cur el Be Dot D] "™ | bing O § Progams] " N N L T Ml f e S g e T A L i, it 2 : neticlal practice, carc must be the los ix believed 10 rin from 5 10| er in 1his varicty fhan in any other, e Begiouing ‘ Aot o A | Patbologists Learn Method Of|Suorccea S ominare crom the stors | 16 e cont o s i ooy | ot s ariey than i a0y ather : A 4 ; s { 3 age place the more decply cut and A up 1o 25 per cen g Damage Is Done _Eerde. Holland, Aug. 17 (P— Will Be Increased | e e A Savmg Cmps | brused potatoes. The healing process o e | Youthful advocates of peace from —White people have no cause for 3 ave been ¢ L s s D oN Yourn . L may not have been complete, and in vidual growers (he losses sometines b ON TO STONE ) |all the giobe have assembled here alarm at ihe rate of increase if the | —— the low temperature of storage the have amounted to half or more of | Sveduln, Swod, 17— (U Washington, Aug. 17 (P—The |for the first world youth peace con-| Washington, Aug 17.—(R—Be- | colored race, Professor I D. Me-| \waghington, Aug. 17.—(Ph_fy | iNiuries may offer entrance fo spores the crop 3 e pttar rrine s W (R Sleaming network of rails which |EFS5 ever held. 1t started today. | ginning October 1, three now feature | Kenzie, University of Washington, | Varmrerors A8 B he fungus. “It is necossary. to' prevent Infec- | head fon 25, yeure. Hans Nisaots covers the country and has contrib. | , 1€, United States has sent 80 | programs for farmers will be broad- |said in an address before the Insti | SIMPIY abandoning freshly dug pota- | : b0e | ioter from Nemn R SEEe uted incalculably to the development of modern civilization is subject to & number of ills, and the most in- sidious of these is the transverse fissure. This fault. which has been called | “rail cancer” and can seldom be | detected until the damage is done, was first identified nearly 17 years ago after a wreck on the Lehigh | Valley railroad at Manchester, N. | Y. in which a number of lives were | lost. Since then it has been recog- | nized as the cause of a number of | derailments. i “The transverse fissure,” says W. | P. Borland, director of the Bureau | of Safety ot the Interstate Com- | merce Commission, “is a very prom- | organized it picked students and young workers, Nations Feder: ternational Bure ion, couts In- u (as an observer only). Jewish World Youth organi- zation, Socialist Youth In ternational and the Communist Youth Interna- tional The congress 15 unique that young men and themselves women in the fact have and have cast by stations cooperating with the | novation will be a regionalization of | {the programs, says Mor chief of the service. major farming zone sp ally adapted progi The “Farm Forum’ wi meeting of a radio club for the dis- cussion of farming problems, with weekly periods devoted to subjects Aisbury, Lach ot five will have be a daily tute of Politics today s no basis in fact.” Disc ing the Denial of Justice authoritics, chard, Yale another group of institute 10 aliens by lo. Prof. E. M. Bor university, ad cxplained the difficulty of determin ing whether suc denial place. Is eventually will outbreed him | ssing members, to the end that i diplomatoc | | toes to the hot rays of & late summe 1estion of the | e in harvesting and handlin tion fn order 1o prevent rot in stor- laborer from Ag: P in the south- Dr. Weiss suys, is readily apparent, age,” Dr. Weiss declures. “Infection | ern Swedish procinon of So {and other countrics of Europe and |radio service of the department of “If there is an rising tide of | sun federal pathologists inasmuch as mechanical m,“‘.,.\ : .f”' 1 : "m\:‘:w”)‘ by ’,,'.1,,.1:‘”, “m" .H\‘, :\ B TRLaE e, of Zanola, S Asia will be equally well represent- | agriculture. color,” Prof. McKenais suid, “it i8] covered @ way to check materially |the source of KFusarium rot about |mininum all forms of handiae tn | Wiy cved of his trouble, ed. | The new programs are the “Ra- | that of the white r. The white! the Fusasium rots that in some in- twice as often as any other factor S i s A Al International organizations repre- | dio FFarm Forum,” “Outdoors With | population of the world during the | stances have caused a 25 per cent tact. he believes, that farm PR Gl (",",'!,’" nd seceived 4 ssape oht sented are the World Student Chris. | the Secientist,” and “Farm Science past 100 years has inereased much | loss in the fall crop. are using harvesters that dig deeper | possible aflar Iy are. oot of Lhe | had sty o foajier the Wound tion Jederation, International Stu- ots’ Five of the features faster than all the colored peoples| Dr. Freeman Weiss, who made the (and turn more carth with the pota- Eround wnd by Allowing a suitanm ealed. a sweling remained, the dent Service, World's Alliance of Y. t for the past five years will | put together, and the fear on the | investigations with the assistance of [toes and by other improvements tine for mechanienl (e to oen (o4 marble. Recently the old M. C. A's, World's Y. W. C. A, In- | be continued, with some changes. part of the white man that the Or- | J. I. Lauritzen and Philip Brierly, | protect the wbers from the rough heal unde 0 . ”va 1ot hsanta Lises ani plil cliey ternational University gue of | Probably the most important in- ien 5 : o SRSy e small finely polished stone, STORE OPEN TONIGHT CLOSED SATURDAY EVENING inent cause of wrecks generally bad wrecks [ cal reasons for their displa explainable.” 1t is essentially a but is unlike and they are The physi- “fatigue frac- | ture of interior origin,” he explains, the ordinary mani- come 1o it of their own volition, not being sent by adults. A total atten-' |dance of 500 representatives is ex-| From the weather bureau and the | Dr. Ofto Hoetzsch, | pected before the meeting adjourns. | hureau of entomology and biolog- The delegates will discuss in sep- |jcal survey the weekly “Outdoors ate committee the main aspects of | With the Scientist” will offer stories the problem of peace and wa —eco- [of plant animal and insect life as such as livestock, crops, dairying and poultry. - interposition on behalf of the injured might be seem history at the University of Berlin, lared | TOOTH PASTE FACE CREAM FACE POWDER Each BUTTONS PINS “3CHET SILKS Each festations of rail fatigue in that it | gives no warning of its growth by means of cracks or other visible evidence until 1t has actually reach- | ed the outer surface, The nearest | approach to development of a de-| nomic, political, ious, moral and racial. The British Federation of Youth, | 50,000 members, been acting as the international se |tratariat. It has prepared study out- |scientific agricultural research. representing educational, relig- has | well as of the | teorology. weather and me rm Science Snapsho a weekly digest of vital the field of will carry announcements in . ot t be- |lines and bibliographies on the var-| Old favorites on the program will ploe e alnE |lous asjects of peace. in readin€ss | be Housekeepers' Chats, Farm fore ths mpr‘.”.‘ B ade by l:,-"l' for the opening of the congress. | Flashes, the Primer toy Town Farm- N i lers, the Agricultaral Situation ventor, Mr. Borland says. but it has | DEMOCRATS SCORE NE | 2nd torm Plasters not yet proved satisfactory under | although it has | service conditions, proved effective in laboratory tests. Dr. James E. Howard, engineer-| physicist of the bureau, whose pro- fessional record covering about half a century of scientific investigation ehows that he has made more ex- act tests on the physical properties | of materials than any other living man, has been studying the trans- | verse fissures since the Manchester | wreek. They occur, he has learned, |this Ea0pA in new as well as old rails of all| The democratic national commit- | promised to direct his energies to the of thim presented any ey [tee in a publicity statement today | very laudable endeavor of restoring parent threat © s Starting from a nuclens inside | the rail head, he has found that| they are glmost invariably on the side where the wheels impinge and | “are caused by the introduction of | internal strains in the head of the | rail set up by the action of the wheel pressure on the running sur- | tace of the head.” | “The internal strains directly in- troduced are strains gion.” he explains. “To resist these strains of compression the metal | next below is put into a state of | tension. Transverse fissures are formed in that zone of metal which is put into a state of tension.” Investigators have been unable | to find any metallurgical reason for ! the origin of the fissyres, nor have | they been able to agree on whether | conditions or defects in the milling processes the work is piroceeding at various | places under the direction of Dr. Howard, S SISTERS ABROAD Aug. 17 (P—Gene Tunney's | two sisters, Rose and Agnes, evaded | the glare of their brother's reflected | glory all the way across the Atlan- | tic only to find photographers wait- | ing for them when they got off the steamship President Harding at Cherbourg yesterday They kept their names off hoat's passenger list and after they had dodged photographers they ot | to Paris incognito but were spotted as soon as they arrived at their hotel Paris, ( For August ONLY | *145 A smaller model of the famous Gold Medal Glenwood “Hail, Hail" Slogan of Republicans | Proves Comic Jeffersonian Interpretation. Boomerang Under | Well, gentlemen and ladies, the [next few months will decide whether | [we are io have a Democratic, or a New York, Aug. 17 (UP) — Re- | Republican government for the next cently republican lea “Hail, Hail. the C ng's All ders announced | four yes and 1 shall for vote Here" | Alfred Smith. Not on account of any would be the official campaign song {of the side lines to his announced this year. recalled the song w rates of Penzance’ real words: Hail. hail, the gang's al Truce to navigation, Take another station; Let's vary piracee With a little burglaree. and from the gave the | wants it his glass of beer 1 here N w Bedford, v Bedford of tompres. |Japanese Students Are TR Haven joined today in welcomjng a group of Japanese students day's visit to Haven. The Fair Haven gramage to the vistt enducate in this the New York boat and t. sightseeing tour which grave of they are ultimats results of service | William H. Whitefield, who helped | “1id you notice my E country Manjiro |I'm proud of him, he was the only |Pr. Peter B ¥ho arrived |this morning from New York for a the town of Fair is a pi- Captain Progress toward a solu- (Nakahama a leader in the opening | tion has been made, however, and |of Japan to western civilization. The | visitors were officially welcomed at | aken on a incluigd the grave of (‘aptain Whitfield and wound up with a clambake this |been one of these newspapers that | ¥ith an automobile owned and oper- noon. The students will spend to- | explained what that fee is ated by the plaitiff. The car of | hight 10 Balt Hevent and @0 on 4o |11 do Kknew that hate n carrots | [he plaintiff was damaged consider- | loston tomorrow. July 6 and They sail Aom Seat ATHLF loft Japan tle Angust WELCOMED Muan, Aug. 17 (UP)—The Italian demonstrations at Como stations along the route. and other ‘ This month and this month only we can offer you a most attractive saving on two { of our finest Glenwood ranges. You can buy a 36-inch Gold Medal Range for $145 and save every cent of $35 ‘ on the year-round price of this standard Glenwood combination range. This news, narrow model also saves a { good two feet of valuable kitchen space as compared with one of the old-fashioned Glenwood Ra MAKE COOKING J. M. CURTIN & CO., New Britain | | | the ier here | policy, but for the fact that he has to the worker, and everybody who and liquor |that is necessary to him in his pur- {suit or indulgence of health. wealth | and happiness. All other questions in [the election sink into entire by the side of this one. There are some people who will | vote against Mr. Suuth because he is la Catholic. 1 am quite sure that all ‘the preachers of all the churches in routine the way to get to Heaven {difference does it make to | branch of religion Mr. Smith be. longs, so long as he re-establishes | sanity in this country. \ You have probably heard the joke | of the old lady So what what who had a son in! regiment had | her neighbor | after the said army, passed by, she one in step” and that is where we stand among the th to 1 have read innumerable news articles about un equalization fee for but nations of the the farmers, there never has tied in a bunch costs us 10 cent while 25 years 2go a bushel cost 35 cents. and potatoes a bushel for the present price of a peck, and a farm- | was one of the richest men | in the state, woman rifle shot the world has ever known. | { tions. 1daho, to der control a forest fire ravaged liaze in the pied the Bremerton, reported « v reported they had un 7.300 acres, another Pacific northwest oc efforts of 250 Wash from Minor blaz sections ol ldaho, bu ap Flames in holdings of Cormick Lumber company from RBremerton, about 1,500 ac since Wednesday noon and were be ginning to make their way L0 square mile stand of virgin tim ber. A slight fighting difticult The 1 Orofino, the M had burned ove north wind aho glaze, traveled along an hefore it fires in was checked the Clearwater Nationa forest which several hundred men have been fighting were under control. reportec . O 31,00 (Bpecial to the Herai Meri oo b v osuit for 31 boy. by gosh|000 damages has been brought by | Brown of against Alexander Bollerer of Alfred B. Aubrey. aftermath of an automobile accident on April 17, by the when a New Britain ms ably, and as a result Dr. Brown fered minor injuries. suf- Bunions the [athletes from the Olympic games at Yours truly, = Quick ralief from pain }/fl Amsterdam were warmly welecined IAnE Prevent ehoe pressure Ko on their arrival here today. The e train was considerably delayed by| Annie Oakley was the greatost | DzScholis Putoreon-the Zino~pads > ) ) ) ) ) For August ONLY had taken | to professor of in a lecture last night on the po- litical partivs of Germany, dec the German people would do all in their power to overcome the diffi cuties now confronting them in or der o meet the reparation obliga - e, While Some Are Under Control, | | Fresh Ones Break Out in the Far | | J Novthwest Districts, | COMMUNICATED suline s Dt | —_— | Scattle, Wash, Aug 17 (@ — | A\an i While fighters on Johnnagan creck coal stoves with a gas section attached. The Model “IN” is a moderate sized coal range that is good Glenwood way through. Our special price of $69.50 on the Model “N” saves you much of the cost of the coal you’ll need to buy this winter. We have many other Glenwood models in stock to show you also. 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