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Ancient People And to Make it Easy $10 pown DELIVERS ONE TO YOUR HOME Beautiful in Style. quality and the utmost in T e the extreme of ressimism. Thenear the northern border, desert|inhabitants no longer carry their|of sand of the desert are encoun.| *Tn. bep. . g | s des - e mammals seem to have: ‘ A"NING Is EIVEN A SER IJBYAN []ESERT IS southern extremity of the desert|hardships begin. Blinding sand- | rifles on their shoulders while cul. | tered day by Ao selectal . eenptn ;‘ lmc [ w tet M of their power in- the desert region. | cay to near freezing at night, cou- |be hired than most poets Pueblo, Colo., A 4 (0] SOYeI'y 0 atetr ay they repel aftempts of strangers|pled with the plague of mala “With iy CTata el annned EaR h: 0. :‘~ n‘ P)— London, Aug. 24. (®—The Field of Mammalogiets by Dr. Marcus| special agent for police offikrs whe Phoid fever may occur at any time : reading in stone and flint the story |(he world's most arid areas, may Birds Migrate | were frequently raided and oases|is one of the favorite heverages of sion of mammals of the U8 Nation | Miss Johnston started fren 1o the United States Pub e ; Eioa) Bater S BAbLE BBl o ien Stroiien s sinnine e s e many | consists of five oascs, one of whichi | mud houses built on the high p the corcoction is bitter sweet and loccur would lack a great deal in | haunts as her natural self in search | direct infection with flies. Among The archeologists believe that |ceive the report with a question- | shaded spots are tfour hundred | are now seldom attacked and 'hvix\!wn the hot plains and mountains poct ma . of. }m live on during hery journey so far. there was much more water in the | agricultural development.” says a|palms now and then which form | Well-cooked food er properly pas- the present desert. map-minded person might | I'or ten days at a time not a blade | Ing plants which grow in and de- | respect to the disposal of the body °rt were the gazelle, | fertile Nile valley lends the Libyan | miles in the Libyan desert without | Unsur ass d V l f O doubtfdl purity, will remove all| p e a ues or ur Iy in the Bible and s believed to |Sahara, of which the Libyan desert | frequently testify. emphasized at this period of the | ticularly necessary today when so munity is about three years took a toll of more than 50,000 lives MISS LOGAN FACES | ‘ ASemaeesd g1 9% 50 B $10s 4208 $3q8 $500 Bl - LY 50 T.os Angeles, Aug. 24 (P—An un- | Hardly had the news of her mar- district attorney, said the actr cree of divorce from Ralph Gillespie | 1f Miss Logan and Mr. Winston | he said. five months after obtaining an in- When he and Miss Rambova sep- | penetrates a short distance over the | storms impede progress of the trav- | tivating their olive and date groves, | PR continents x s S e anc hix z00- ' m PREH[STORIG TIHES border of Darfur state, Anglo-Egyp- | eler and cause such deviations from | “Jalo Oasis in Cyrenaica, one of 70 Kinds of Bird {always accurate.” i : IN F[]R fll[i B[]“M tian Sudan. routes that Bedouin guides, who the desert’s chief comme cen- | nds 0 rds T ‘,, Expedition in Syrian Desert Brings Libya 15 largely peopled by the | depend upon fheir shadows for |fers on the route fo Knfra, is an| Mentioned by Kipling SLEEPS IN Jans 27 camels and erhaps | Bea Gl'mfl 0&5]5' {tbans ey tioscentE et | ot el el g Swamns cin the i RO LSl to 70 species are cited in a mmwrr‘;’:ndl?:x‘xse?qn ty, makipg l'k;:; Museum-Syrian Desert expedition from Chicago has returned from [ fully watched and a traveler with a Outfitting Point {gouts’ milk hutter, skins of Ward Lyo, soologist, bacteriologist | wers kind enoutls 1o agne par e during the year, but it is most| o lundered b, a - . of prehistoric man. bloom forth in colorful gardens,| “Kufra, one of the most import- | Plundered by marauding tribes of |the Bedouin on a 1onotonous dee. i e, ason @ revalent in th nited States in| ; X 2 3 S o 4l museyn) home to California " vi : g init tho au.| Under the direction of Henry|productive grain fields and or.|ant cases and headquarters of the | desert nomads. At Siwa and Kréralert journey. It is a black lrew & n i epmslee T to “get away Service said. historic implements, that in anc es of water in re hitt | has a Mohar dan ‘university.” A [and the mud walls surrounding | all but palatable t n i} 3 lof Typhoid fever germs are taken C S, that in ancient |sources of water in regions hi \».r\o‘ as a ) nmedan ‘u ity. L ing | a ut unpa le to the stranger, vividness without them. Every one | of information needed, badly by of- fooie ofhes han ilih b e usands of people were able to{mark for there are many other un- [miles from the nearest point on the likely to be exposed to infection desert than now. One of the sug- |bulletin from _the Washingion, D. welcome stopping places for parch- teurized or boiled milk are safe|ScSUONS to explain the disappear- |C. headquarters of the National|ed caravans. | from the danger of conveying the The expedition covered thousands | describe the Libyan desert as ‘the | of grass or other evidence of life their nourishment from the|°f ™1eS Of wilderness making topo- [largest blank arca on the map ef | is scen save, perhaps, a snake, mouse body, the report continued, and,| man, and photographing and plan- It is shut off from the |grating seuson birds alight on the| ning ruins which had not before | Mediterranean by a narrow popu- | shoulders of Dodouins and after a wastes. “The pasteurization, or the boil- akes and deadly scor- | owners moral support by showing | water. But neither journeys through | pions. | what might be done with their|the air nor overland are always danger from typhoid fever and other water-borne diseases,” the have been held in superstitious ven- | is really a part, swings the pendy:| “Once on the southern edge of | eration by the Jews. {lum of sentiment from optimism to | Siwa, the oldest of the Libyan o year. It is especially important that | e m ova a e many people go on antomobile trips | through the country, often visiting | out-of-the-way s where due precautions in regar infection are neglected.” ° | We Have What You Want established fact that a person can be rendered comparatively safe th | Control of typhoid fever durir the past 20 years has shown marked annually in the United States now causes something less than 10,000 | Ul | SIZES iy v | 2 to 6 years welcome wedding present has been | offered Miss Jacquelin Logan, film | riage yesterday in Tijuanu, Lower | California, to Harry Winston, Los | would face charges of bigamy if he | returned here and lived with her here last March, Murray said, which docs not become final until March, return to Los Angeles county to re- | side as man and wife, the distriet | The authorities cited the case of the late Rudolph Valentino, who tevlocutory decree of divorce from | his first wife, Jean Acker. Valentino arated after a honeymoon at Palm Springs, the charges were dropped. | " 1 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1928 Senussi sect. a sort of reformi ele- | compasses, sometimes are lost. Vary important starting point for cara.| Washington, Aug. 24 (P Kipl 2 starting o <l hington, Aug. 2 pling | Gy P Out Interesting Facts About lnent of Mohammedaniem. Jeilous|ing tempecratures from 110 in thelvans. Here camels and meu may |apparently knows Taore abent mam. | Alds Pmnm. and (diew, e imain only for predatory purposes. |neighborhond of many of the oases. munication to the American Saciety | Even unknown Moslems are care-|are also difficultics to overcome. |tation; and with dates, rice [in the meantime by serwice 38 ‘a Washington, Aug. 24 (UP)—Ty- cashing . sl S s Sl i S ot S months in the heart of the desert | oonington, D. C. Aug. 24— surveying instrument is regarded as| oo pane geot 30 carsyans| s 2 U slienincoessilios 11 pathologist of South Bend, Ind.. | place to sleep in the jailp. Parts of the Libyan desert, one of |a spy in an enemiy’s fortress: ¥ caravans start for the interior former assistant curator of the divi-| An orphan practically &l her life, the late summer and during the au- | ;. < tumn wonths, a warning issued by mmr‘]afi&n!mrhlv‘ (:’Lhrpo\edvr of | chards gf lu:scm\ s‘_mm,, dr‘(o‘ldmg‘ S nussl ‘u, has 1 «‘u \Iclh(z' )]x,\v'm“ o “‘v”v“l dpv‘r?'r !h’ thrilling m:x) ° of a hAnI,u]vr‘v( tea an 1 a ! ‘name” he says, “but even | Using the jails as her hotel, she sity, the expedition [ to reports from Egypt that recent|only a few white men. It really sert raids by thelike amount of sugar. Affer beiling {at that {he verses in which they |eften has goms fath, ndcee days men lived in the center of |believed dry. salt lake two miles square in area|them o repel enemies. While the [but it imbues the drinker switl B < . = into the body through the mouth . eved dry. | sa i 1 | arei . s inker with re- is appropriately placed. Many of |ficers. 1In return foq her espionage With 00d or Hrints o by means of | NS ROW barely habitable dosert, tudents of geography will re- |is also an interesting feature. Thesc | desert still has its thicves, the oases markable vitality which s needed (henr e the ordinary | she has been given money enough exist in the Syrian desert in an- |developed dry spots on the map | Medite . Between is naked and liable to convey typhoid fever | C°7! tiies because in those days|which appear less impregnable to| desert ave for a grove of | are those eaten raw or uncoo: d ance of the water was the depopu- Geographic Society. “The journey to Kufra is a su- disease, it was said lation of trees in many sections of Travelers Welcome preme test of physical endurance. The germs are living, reproduc- graphical notes on the country, col- [north Africa with a cartographer’s| jackal or fox which may scurrs therefore, typhoid fever w-maxnm»“«"““s flint implements chipped by lest marks indicating a few|across the hot sands. In the mi- RADIOS depends upon insanitary methods in = been scientitically recorded. lated strip which itself sizzles in the | drink and friendly pat, fly off again. | Amorg the animals observed ar |hot African sun. On the east the | Birds have heen known to fly 250 | ing for a few minutes, of milk and the boiling of water when it is of — = and-swept land, but on the west, | successful as dried wings of birds The number 40 occurs frequent- |the arid expanse of the great |and the whitened bones of camels bureau stated. * e necessity of in- oculation ag typhoid should be | vacation period begins. This 15 par- | from the disease by inoculation and that the 'duration of such im- | . Th w d l N $ > e Wonderful New Consoles improvement, it was said. The as tever which only a few years ago ] Pictured, [ . @ r oer Si r a eStlc deaths each year. and e Oul‘lge 1 Ste i i ! 7 to 10 years | Per : For Film Act t0 203 o . " ] erfect in Performance. LM AGITESS, ust Remarri ) YOUNGER > au Good style, serviceable ; Is in Trouble $5 A Powerful Instrument. «J Down actress, by the Los Angeles county | district attorney's office. { Angeles broker, been received here when Forrest Murray. chief deputy husband. She obtained an interlocutory de- | | attorney's office will be duty bound to take action against Miss Logan,” married Natacha Rambova in 1922 at Mexicali, Lower California, only was arrested on a charge of big- | amy They were married again in Indiana several months later. Soroptimists Extend Invitation to Turkey Constantinople, Aug. 24 (A—Plans are underway for the creation of the first busin:ss d professional women's club in Turkey now that Madame Husscin Bey ha received an invitation from the Soroptimists of America to establish a branch of | that organization in the City of the Golden Horn | Madame Hussein Bey was one of | the first Turkish women to nurse | soliders during the Balkan wa She rececived a medal for her serv- ices from the British Red Cross fln«l‘ afterwards worked with th Ger- man Red Cross at the Dardanelles during the World war. fhe now is active in three Turkish societie: the Red Crescent, which corre- | gponds to the Red Cross of Chris- tian countries; the Green Crescent, an anti-alcoholic socicty, a rep- resentative of which she visited the United - States last year, and the | Society fer the Protection of Chil- | dren. She also is a director of Turkey's first school of nursing. The Soroptimist club which she s planning to establish will not lack for members, as there are now in _Constantinople many Turkish women doctors, dentists, teachers, lawyers, chemists. stenographers, | government clerks, painters, seulp- tors, authors, journalists and busi- ress women. NEW DENOMINATION RISES ‘Washington, Aug. 24 (UP)—Ap- parently a new church denomina- | tion has spread over the country | since 1916, according to a report issued today by the Department of Commerce in connection with its census of religious bodies. There are now 730 churches of the Church of God in Christ whereas on 1916 none were reported. This denomi- nation has a reported membership of 30,221, MISSES' SIZES A4 N\ 10 to 14 years \ ) I value, in this new assort- ment of School Girl Dresses. Printed Washable Fabrics French Sun Jerseys Rich Velveteens Wool Crepes Combination of Silk and Velvet Fancy Rich Grade Tweeds In fact about every new style and fabric now in demand is here, at the right price. [ $2 Weekly Other models priced very low. Specials Victor Records | 2 for$] | Rolls 3 for ¢ We are offering wonderful values for our Removal Sale In a few weeks our new home will be ready. NOow Every piece of merchandise in stock now will be sold at Big Reductions EXTRAORDINARY VALUE! Wonderful New Pianos Regular Price $575 e, e e At this low price vou can easily af- ford one. You have three years to pay. [ ————— $l 0 places one of these wonderful instru- ments in your home. A Celebrated Nationally Known Instrument. Used Player 175 " Guaranteed for 10 Years, Complete $ 1 0 Deposit $9 7 Balance Small 3 3 Weekly Payments. I ) \P::]‘J: ATWATER KE Electrified 365 MAIN STREET