New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 29, 1928, Page 3

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1928. £ day. He' expects to return to Albany underworld activities. try says Johnson,” and “Shall our|statement and turned to more re-|Viewpoint and Vital Issues,” “Man. Thursday night and spend a quiet TEN MILL"] IS Considerable mystery .surrounds H|RAM J"HNS“N |S boys police Europe Johnson says is sponsive skins zement's Problem and the One Way - . week-end, but may go in for a lufle the manner in which the big bank big issue,” and so a dinfinitum, ! _— | Out” and “Spiritual Aspects of Ip+ golf, as he did here yesterday with deposits were discovered. It was re- But what Washinston! remembers BUSINESS HUMANITY strial Reiations,” delegates 'will AIR‘m; friend William F. Kenny. Cam- ported they were revealed before the Senator Johnson most kindly for is G ] car speeches by prominent indus- paign duties are to be forgotten— ‘gmnd jury and also that they were something a great deal more recent. Eleventh Annual M. C. A Con. trial ieaders. . . S ——— as far as the public is concerned. uncovered by detectives working It was his covert dig at his senate fercnce at Lake George, Some of the speakers on the pro. N wi“ Be Ms T . [A Reiterating his determination m‘ (;utslde under the district attorney's colleagues whose armbitions are gen-| [ae George, N. Y., Aug. 23 (UP) |&ram are William J. Graham, vies avoid speaking out of doors as much Tm Y l De I D direction. F' i G m i G‘ v erally clothed in phrases which lead i R csident o 4 Assur- g Jracase Tonight AS| xioic speukine ouc o doorsse much § is Yearly Deposit of Dozen, (Fighting Galifornian Given Votes|cron sioined im mhresee wieh 1oao onual soutespes on | Rtilet of 1 e llal s 3 . State Execm”e s;\‘u\& a.round Vlhe cour.my. Gov. BO ',l Amerlcan Patrol Pll(s , [ P to the point. ier the auspices f’,, the Riley M. Little, chief of the bureau . 0 Smith yesterday told newspapermen 0 egge[s | Forty Rebels to Flight | 0 a]'[y % am the only man in'ih i Nation. | ©f rehabilitation of the New Yerk b —_— that the only reason he broke this | y ght | e 0 s e e iove Aon doet e v o <tate department; Professor Michael g New York, Aug. 29 (P—Atter a|Tule Monday night at Newark was | Managua, Nie, Aug. 29 P—Forty “who is not stung by the president; G Pupin of Columbia university, and week of arduous attention to his|PeC2use a large crowd had waited Philadelphia, Aug. 29 (P—Detec- Sandinistas commanded by Miguel \\‘ashmgmy}. Aug. 29 (P—The pee." P Whitwell Wilson, publicist, former P\ reaponsibilitics a5’ demoesratic presi- | Several hours to see and cheer him. |tives working with District Attorney | Angel Ortiz have been put to flight |slant that Washington gets on the| That potent bee had done its work nd World Prot nember of the British parliament, v PR i e & Smllh:He has adopted the principle !h.'ll‘lohn Monaghan and the grand jury | by a patrol of American marines in ‘nommauon of Hiram Johnson 18| persistently at times, however the Handi today stepped back into his role as|'t 49¢S nol pay in the game of [today sought to learn the identity of | the Western part of Nueva Segovia|that it serves to emphasize the ca- | finally gave up its stingine upon © Lab - governor of New York, and will| POlItics to disappoint crowds such|a dozen or more big bootleggers who | Province |reer of one of the hardest fighting r i “play the part, unless something un- | that which gave him a noisy are said to have deposited $10,000,-| The rebels were routed in an en- |statesmen in the country, 2. Q1% forescen tocurs in the mesntime, |5eRd-0F in Newaric | 000 in Philadelphia banks in the last | 828ement near Macuelizo, more than | When he started out in politics he . ST B ‘hreel “Its disappointing to a crowd to vear [ 100 miles from the district of the |was fighting graft and corruption in y : rough drafi of his speaking ftiner.| MY {Rem Walting around for ou | Information furnished the grand | SO0 Tiver where recent skirmisher |San Franciaca | Eier since he hat Don’t fool yourself 5 e e |for several hours” he says, “and | jury by federal prohibition agents|°CCUrred Many shots were fired but |been fighting in one way or another. & ith i r i bt tars [then to tell them only how much |and others, it was said, gave an . | NeFe Wre no casualties among the |and so it is not surprising to his Riner alitone par s the on his mind, the governor u think of them. They don't fall {sight into the financial side of the ;?L\“flr"‘f‘r"‘lé“;‘l’w pone - ”; aae| friendy 19\ 400 Rim stillinitling hia victim, you simply cannot know when you b packed up to go to Syracuse, where | [OF {hat sort of talk. There is noth- | yum racket and sent investigators | ® A 5 L 5ta Tank. stride although at the end of an- ve it, tonight he had an engagement to| "5 %0 €adly for all concerned as ot on a mew track In the effort fo |, AMISSLY llas been granted to Col- fother term, should he be elected, he s T e s A EREERal R aving nothine Tha ipachle simnly before the jurors the complcte 00! Guadalupe Rivera, one of |will no longer be a young man, ' R DT L e e e e of Gamland's activitics and | AUS1S!in0 Sandino’s supply chiefs| As his friends look upon his ca- { lisher of the Syracuse Post.Stand. |C0Uld do better than that. " S s |and forragers who surrendered to |reer, Senator Johnson always had a {th {the marines at Jinotega His sur- |faculty of picking something lively, |render s believed to have been even spectacular, to fight for or caused by recent rebel defeats along |against. Once he fought for the vice the Coco river and the capture of APresidency, two or three times for | Bis brother by a marine patrol. [the pesidency, against the League of ard. Tomorrow he will make his/| vearly visit to the New York state| Activity Continues ) fair at Syracuse and if weather | eonditions are favorable he will make a brief non-political talk in Existence of fortunes made 1n the [liquor traffic under the protection of | sawed-off shotguns and pistols be- ln Hald“ are Bus"‘ess came known to the authorities dur- New York, Aug 29 — The acti f | ris e e ey ine the present investigation it was Al [Nations, then the world court and| e open air. | 2 8 ha e € hard- 1. incidental to the probe into - astly that mu ebat . He also planned to say a few|\are frade during the past several|gane murders and what wp.\ behind |Forged Labels Lead to ’I.:»‘tl;rr’xzrso}\‘;:;or‘ rl:ar:n d.n"?filchiii words at the Barnum dinncr, but| “¢eks 18 still evident, according €0 (now. The money 15 reported to| Conspirator’s Undoing ado river. not along national political lines. | '€POrts from important market ce: |have been deposited in nearly a| Montreal, Que. Aug. 29 —The| And not least among his fights! In cmphasizing his reason for this, |17 Hardware Ago will sav tomor- | oora of institutions, many of them | collapse of a eonspiracy fo furnish T G E i e el AURR e B U e ‘m in its weekly market summary | e 2dgre |1egitimate financial houses, | titious names but fic- | bootleggers in the ed States with '1g ch cosf S e R hos s in the United States with '1916 which cost | beginning to quicken the szle of Charles Hughes the presidency. Svans date likes | o refer to last year's ex- and addresses were | forged labels and documents of the | perfence when, ha saysthere were | B R EET, L08 SR8 ob B d by the depositors. Some of Quebee liguor commission found | To fully appreciate the character | only two democrats present and e a1 qisposition is toward emall bug | the addresses given were found to be | four men in jail today of his fight on Woodrow Wilson and | was one of them. | requent orders. The total volume|'acant lots, unoccupied buildings,| Bathelmy Caron, Emile Giroux, |the League of Nations, his friends Indications today were that Gov averages well, howeve stables and cemeteries Georze Crozier and T. Renolds, |merely re-read old newspaper head- Bmith would have something definit: | prices again show & few down. ‘ Prohibition officials who have | found guilty of the conspiracy, were |lines of the day to say regarding his proposed “Johnson opens fight on President stumping of the country by the end ©f next week at the latest, or prob- ward revisions but they are in the | becn before the grand jury also fur- | s main steady and firm. Collections | Nished the district atforney with in entenced to from 15 days to seven months fn jail, Wilson in Chicago,” says one, and are reported fair and improvement |formation he considers important.| Evidence against the men was ob- \ome” “Johnson says Wilson is abu- ably by Labor day. He has not|is noted in some sections, et- | He declined to comment today hut |tained by two detectives posing as 'sive” and “Johnson hits back at planned for that holiday, nor has|ing of crops will, it is expected \\flr\mnm'xtfld it would not be long he- | Chicago bootleggers who negotiated |Wilson,” and “Senator Johnson calls he made any engagements between|a good effect upon collections and |fore the public would be given an with the men for the forged labels league patchwork.” and “League or his Syracuse dates and next Mon-|consumer buying in general |inkling of the many ramifications of | and documents America is alternative before coun- alitosis makes you unpopular If you are not as popular as you wish to be, look for the cause. Possibly it is halitosis (unpleasant Every pneumatic tire bearing these familiar names —the roll-call of a great industry—is guaranteed others; Listerine immediately checks halitosis because it is a powerful against defects in material and workmanship, breath)—the unpardonable social offense. It is impossible for you to tell deodorant. Even vigorous odors like that of onion and fish yield toits Keep a bottle handy in home MEN . . . . . when you have halitosis. It never and office. Use it every day, It 1¢s a treat! Wlthout llmlt as to mlleage or tlme. announces itself to you. puts you on the polite, populsr The pew Listerine The one way to and profitable side. SHAVING CREAM be sure of not having RE‘]AD THE FACTS | pambert Pharmacal keepsskin coollong gk 3 14 had halitosis . after shaving, it is to rinse the 68 liirdressers eate Company, St. Louis, mouth systemati- | DO e ot ey | Mo, U5, A = emarng cally every day with Listerine—especial- ly before meeting from the wealthy classes, is halitoxic. Who should know better than they? Face to face evidencs " Director Generalof THE RUBBER INSTITUTE, Ine. —an association of manufacturers inized “to promote in the industry 8 mutual confidence and high standard of business ethics; to eliminate trade abuses; to promote sound economic business customs and practices; to :::3.: Ajax Falls Badger Federal s T il END IT Wit Belmore Fidelity Hood L I S T E R l N E Brunswick Firestone India Michelin Raecine The safe antiseptic Columbus Fisk Kelly-Springfield Miller Revere Cooper G. & J. Lambert Mohawk Samson Corduroy General Lee Monarch Seiberling ’ Denman Giant Leviathan Murray Standard Four | Diamond Goodrich Mansfield Northern United States The Twentleth Centu F s Dunlop Goodyear Marathon Norwalk Vietor Net Accompllshm I Empire Hartford McClaren Overman Viking p ;% .M of ; or Cars | mummmuuofmmmmmv T:m announcement, issued simultaneously in afl parts of the. I A product crammed wlth value withont a llnxlt compromises l | country on August 16, met with an instant response from car owners. and tire merchants alike. Standard Warranty fi Preumatic Cumgi aml Tnbes R Motors wlllcllmakelng‘h compreuion and !remdom powed practical for the average owner and driver, * . . 1 Axles which have twenty years of experience to guarantee thel) i duty to quick and powerlul motou. Chassis assembly whicb uhlevel a sweet eomolldaflon of the separate qualities of :Il its pum Bodydesignwiththe mh and lmttrm atrength of the century’s finest bridges. . . . Finished in tailored metal, inall detall.l, throu]bout. Value far above and beyond its prlu. s This is the 'l‘wenfleth Century's net accomplishment in motor No man who reads this will have failed to see similar announce- ments in the windows of tire stores—copies of the warranty dis- played on dealers’ walls—newspaper advertisements by individual manufacturers and by dealers confirming the policy. : For it is the voice of the industry, representing the producers of over 959, of the tires made in America. It is the acceptance of full responsibility for the merit of their product by manufacturers who have learned that real quality means more to their customers than definite mileage guarantees. Years ago these standard manufacturers discontinued the out- worn practice of guaranteeing a definite number of miles in order to sell their tires. cars. . . . As a selling inducement the so-called “mileage guarantee” was inevitably pushed beyond all reasonable bounds. It resulted in g‘:‘t‘::ywh“ Jou ac:unlly Lot % in the S.lx or Eight ot the unjustified allowances to the unscrupulous driver who abused his tires and misrepresented his mileage, thus penalizing the careful driver who took care of his tires and was honest in his claims. 42 body and equipment combinations, standard and custom, on each line. Six of the Century, $1345 to $1645. Century Eight $1825 to $2125. All prices {. 0. b. Detroit. With its passing, all tire users felt the benefit at once in lower tire costs. Today you pay less for tires than ever before in histery. i Few, if any commodities, show so steady a reduction in prices. NEW 1929 HUPMOBILE CENTURY SIX & EIGHT Mhfl'mdwhd“fimm WIDESPREAD LOCAL SERVICE ‘THE HUNDRED THOUSAND DEALERS widespread throughout the eountry who handle the standard tires named above and who display this i wrarrenty, edd o further value to your purchase in the services they reader locally for your immedists convenience The art of tire building has improved as well, until the casing and tube you buy today can be counted on to carry you more miles than was thought possible even so short a time as five years ago. The unlimited guarantee of quality is the natural outcome; thei warranty against defects for the life of the tire is a final expression: -nnum:c‘-bhn proper sise and type of the manufacturer’s confidence in his product— Th C. S " St ti l —checking wheel aligument — a guarantee broader in its protection to the € lty ervice .Jtation Inc., —melntsining repeir service individual yet fairer in its operation to cll than anything ever offered to the car-owning public. A. M. PAONESSA, Pres. 238 HARTFORD AVENUE ; By evailing thomsslves of these expert facilities, car owners have secured meximum milesge from their tires. The workmanship of the tire-builder .@nd the services of the tire desler are thus l--ked together in support of the manufacturer’s warraaty. y . . N 8 ¢ J ” - o e o s B — S o — s, S g o~ o i din o s

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