New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 30, 1928, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

b —— % —— (. 0. P. OFFIGES IN CAPITAL SPACIOUS .. Great Library Room Washington, Aug. 30 cious. high-ceilmged rooms [ (P —spa- ed in the most elaborate French style is what Mr. Hoover found when he inspected his new personal campaign headguarters on Massa- chusetts avenue. A vast library will be his office a gilded ballroom will harbor wait- ing politicians, and a long-windowed sun room, the secretarial staff. The library of "The Chict,” s associates call him, is the only dark room in the big grey chusetts avenue house. Its huge, arched windows open to the north, letting in only a cool, gray light on the dull-grey-green papercd walls and dark mahogany wood- work, The plain mahogany busine: niture emphasizes the austerity the general styles of the room. Im mediately in front of the wide fir place, above which hangs a hug mirror, is Hoover's own desk, with bronze lamp, and writ fixtures. Ranged along the side under the broad windows are mahogany benches and at the far end of the room a mahogany table which Hoover and his advis sit in the innumerable conference s fur- of of a great political organization. In sharp contrast date’s office are the other wide aresmeared and stained 'with a greasy, grimy coat of oil, soot, dust and dirt, tub on a little ~SKAT- _Ti.c Best Hand Soap Known and see how quiekly they’re clean and soft again. SKAT is made to do what ordinary hard #oaps can’t do. Gets into the pores and loosens all the dirt w0 it simply rinses off. Pure, effec- tual and bemeficial to the skin, TheSKAT CO. . NARTFORD, CONN. why Pan-A usual care. Hoover's Own Headquarters in. decorat- his rooms on the second floor, all don |in white and gold and flooded with |the western sun. | The central ballroom, carpeted in say aubusson and hung with heavy, old-g0ld velvet and taffeta draperd has zroups of parro ed window light pa . White-curtain- to gild the rows of ifrough which the sun. | 50900 VISITORS THRONG SYDNEY (Arrive in Australia for Euchar- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1928 ANNIVERSARY OF | NEW TEACHER French Cities Plan Fetes for lightly starched linen, instead of the silk mousseline which had previou ly been worn, but once starched, its general form required no changing. In fact, it was nothing more than the semi-soft collar of today—with appreciable difference in proportions. Incurred Many Debts It was in 1816 that “Beau” Brum- FAMOUS DANDY he must hold as the directing head | 1o the candi-| Only paraffin-base crudes are used in refining Pan-Am motor oil. No other type of petroleum can pro- ‘dure motor oil so tough . , . so long-wearing . . . so safe. That is driving conditions. Moreover, Pan-Am motor oil is refined with un- flimsy French gold chairs, decorouse meil almost at the end of his re- Iy expeetant of guests to a Washing. | e sources, took up his residence at ton musicale and all too frail for the | istic Coflgmss Bean Brummell Calais. He spent his remaining 1,000 impressive figures of r‘.uhhmn; s pounds in !urnishing’a lvuxurim]:s‘ chicttains soon to mount the curv- apartment, and then lived largely ng white stone stairway from the | Sydn Australia, Aug. 30 (P— at the expense of friends. He in- : hall below. Nearly 50,000 visitors are :)(w-—le”for Paria, Ang. 30~—(UPF)=Honer 1 curro: dents e:ery:vhere, but always the ci-devant ballroom and | the Eucharistic Congress opening 1o be pald in Hrance fhis year 10(;.onivas ta find sucans of paying the llarly gold hung corner re- September 6. Hotel and boarding | [ the memory of the man who wasy .- cption room, with its circle of |house facilitics already are at a| e inventer’ of the wemistaccted (= b ts O e e was an unded windows, which will house |premium and restaurant resources eollar, : pointed British Consul ‘at Caen, and Hoover's ry, are ceilinged in strained. P Both Calals s and \Gaen, where |y o aray of e diy mie fllod white, with rococco flutings and fili- | Twenty special trains are due to Georke Bryan Brummell, befterd e NI L L herneand st every cornice. Both lend a arrive from Mclbourne alone Satur- kuow 4a history @8 Wemn BPRDEHE rve Soct i i Moo te D i of festivity 1o the house | his last years, are preparing a pro- | 4., FO R having been thrown quite in keeping with the claborate all the overseas chur | gram ot receptions and haberdash- |, it prison for debt, but friends in French style of its exterior. Only the | dignataries who are to attend th jooy exhiblie de eotbmemonate e | pyggona hincd o aibeorintion o pet © sanctum of the nominee re- have arrived. i {130h amuiversary of “Bedl” Brwi: | pin goee taiws the plain simplicity that has ' s being broadcast by Aus- mell's birth in London. Then came the debacle! The daen ollowed him since his Quaker boy- | trulian stations, ‘the specches de- | Precosious b o dandy fom e | oquinte wes sugpressed aud livered during the congress will be e op 18 yours, Bowmensll 908 he st Beapiatie irishds M ough Mr. Hoover commented | picked up at Eindhoven, Holand and | | frlendship of the them Prince of | oq 'y mian the Duke of Welling- warmth of the sunny, gl rebroadeast. Wales, later King George 1V., but a |, . "0 S0t 0 oire o appoint- d room where business-like | Cardinal Bonaventura Cerretti, misunderstanding banned him frem |, 0, ", | S0 LT o styles and typewriters and imeograph ma- delegate, in an interview today | S ESTHER FLOOD the royal table. His fortune of 30,-| o oo & friend of the King, turned a chines are now established, it is an ed amazement at the changes 000 pounds sterling had been vil deaf ear to all entreaties for an- ry. plasint room, - and the high (hat have taken phce in Australia [ The Moody Secretarial School has | tually wiped out, and he turned to| 1030 Poik, RA Bl ceilings all over the house malke it since 1916 when he was apostolic | increased its faculty for the fall|the creation of a national costume maat penulless became insane and far cooler than most Washington |qelegate to the commonwealth, He |term by the engagement of Miss | to retrieve his fortunes. 2 = e o homes, had special words of pr isther Flood of Wallingford, Con- s cared for until his death by the First the colors for male clothing cyclone swept this ancient eity and its environs last night, Nine persons were and 40 seriously injured, seven of them probably fatally. Nearly 100 were injured slightly. One of the six spires surmounting the famous Gothic cathedral was | toppled to the ground. Chimneys and ment since Tsinan, Official dispatches said troops oc- cupied the American and English mission buildings. A letter received by the Methodist Episcopal mission here said the Tainan-Fu missions were occupied last week by Nationalist troops but the Japanese occupled the three American mission workers |smokestacks were blown over, there were not disturbed. buildings unroofed and trees up- The American legation has receiv- | rooted. ed no reports in regard to the move- ment. The weasel whose white winter coat forms the ermir® of commerce, is found in various forms from the Arctics to the Tropics. CYCLONE IN ITALY Monza, Italy, Aug. $0.—(UP)—A Millions of Users Do you know why? A trial package will answer the question. 10c at your grocers "SALADA® e |provements made in § jrauot ,\His Flood has becn tak- |were decided upon. Then the form f";‘r‘;: o i":r"c;h Al His. "”‘:; Sl R onator Oee cathedral which recently was en. | ing a special course in Methods of | fitting trousers of the last days of | WOTdS: in March, 1540, d iButlsh Secretary pfl cathearal which, recently | Tyvewriting Tnstruction at the | e 15th centary were ereated: as | 4% TeSeE been sa havpy in my lte | On Trip for His Health &d ond beantiied. Summer Scssions o¢ Simmons Col- |a protest against the negligence ROEm | London, Aug. 30 (P)—Sir Austen | (e lege, Doston, Mass., this summer |which grew out of the French revo- [chanibertain, secretary of stato for| Chilean Press Doubts and will come directly here to su- | lution, Anti-Foreign Military affairs, left at $:30 a. m., Kellogg Pact of Use|pervise the typewriting work at the | British styles having deteriorated M t On in Chi for Liverpool where he will | gantiago, Chile, Aug. 30 (P—|Moody school. For the past two|owing to the effort of even the bet- ovement Un in ina s on the steamship Orcoma | Recalling violation in 1914 of the |¥ear Miss Flood has been instruc- |ter class of English gentlemen to| Peking, Aug. 80.—(P)—An anti- rmuda. | pact guaranteeing Belgian neutral- | tor of stenography and typewriting |affect the ‘kerchief-neckwear of the | foreign milita 'y movement led by AMr. Chamberlain looked pale and |ty g1 Mercurio expressed skepti- | in South Norwalk, Connecticut. French revolutionaries, “Beau” | Communists was reported today m j drawn from the effcets of his recent | pisin as the real value of the Kel- Brummell deelded to devise a new | from Tainan-Fu, seat of the Shan- |liness. His vacation trip will take |jooe prona® T B niation »A 210 BETTER collar, 1t was & folded plece of |tung province provisional govern. {him eventually to California. | = Gardone, Italian Riviera, Aug. 30 rady Chamberlain and their sons o condemn war is a noble decla- | P—Gabrille D'Annunzio, ill with Joseph and Lawrence and Diane, are accompanying on the trip. He managed the long walk to the platform with difficulty, leaning on Joseph’s arm. | Sir Austen’s left arm was in a and it was necessary almost to lift him into the train where he was presented with a bouquet of flowe aughter sling | the train began to move he rose froni his seat and waved fare- [well to friends on the platform, |then sank back into the cudions to [ rest. | | S | icnna, Aug. 30 (A—A physician may be next president of Austria. Pro dren’s specialist, has been nominat- ed to succeed President Michael | Hainisch, whose term expires No- [ vember 30. Refined from Paraffin-base Austen | essor Clemens Pirquet, & chil- | fact that they }mflnn which nobody n refuse to | ratify,” the paper says, “but we | must be pardoned if we are skepti- |cal as to the real worth of the treaty signed in Paris.” History has demonstrated that such pacts are not -always respected, |it points out, referring not only to the Belgian neutrality violation but to disregard of various conventions |signed at the Hagu n a period of peace and idealism From the humane standpotnt, Mr. Kellogg deserves the gratitude of | the world, it adds, opining however that there is no -real necessity for Sauth American nations to sign the treaty owing to peace pacts already fce all Crudes m motor oil protects your engine under all manE 1007 FROMBY Its specifica= PARAEFIN BASE O o &/ tions are similar in all respects to those set up by the leading automotive engineers as the ideal lubricant for modern motors. Fill up, today, at the first Pan-Am station you see. Every (NN dealer has a scientifi oF protect your car. Fair-dealing You can expect reli- able, courteousserv- Am dealer. They are prepared chart showing just the right grade of this safe motor oil to pharyngitis, will leave his bed with- in a few days but must then take a complete rest, his Fhysician an- nounced. The poet contracted the malady while serving in the Italian air force during the war. T T—y———y————— Easy Way to Clean and Whiten Marble Housewives say that 8ylpho-Na- thol is one of the best things to clean and whiten marble, bathroom porcelain and to clean mirrors and windows. They use a tablespoonful of Sylpho-Nathol to a gallon of wa- existing among them and to the [ter. Removes stains, gives wonder- have no grave dis- |ful polish. Fine for general clean- Dutes. ing, too. Destroys germs, banishes I all odors, makes house hygienically Venus 18 almost exactly the same [clean. Get Sylpho-Nathel at all size as the earth. dealers. from any Pan- sclected men, cally Mexican Petroleum (orporation Also distributors of KIP insecticide, SEMDAG axto polish and SUPERLA cendias STUDEBAKER President Eight 30,000 miles 26,326 minutes! Greatest endurance record in history of transportation BETVEEN July 21 and August 9, four Stude- baker President Eights—all fully equipped, regular factory production cars—triumphed over the severest test ever given any automobile. This 30,000 mile run—a record distance achieved in record time—was conducted under the close and constant supervision of the American Automo- bile Association which certified each car to be a strictly stock model. In fact, all four motors and chassis were selected, not by Studebaker, but by A. A. A. officials who picked them at random from the assembly line at the Stude- baker factory. If not chosen for this test, these regular factory Presidents would have gone out to dealers and you might have bought one of them at any Studebaker showroom. 2 Average 68 miles per hour All four Studebakers—two President Eight road- sters and two President Eight sedans—com- pleted 30,000 miles each at better than mile-a- minute speed. Both roadsters completed 30,000 miles in less than 27,000 minutes, averaging better than 68 mifes per hour for 19 days and 18 nights of con- tinuous driving. The two sedans averaged 63.99 and 64.15 miles per hour respectively for this tremendous distance. The fastest thousand miles of each roadster was the thirtieth—71.67 and 69.65 miles per hour! Stude- baker Presidents improve with use. Engines sealed Of 6 seals placed on the engines of these roadsters 4835 to $2485. STUDEBAKER PRESIDENT EIGHT $1685 Other Studebeker-Erskine Models Jactory, by American Automobile Association officials, not a single seal was broken during the 60,000 miles of running. These official seals were placed on the manifold, engine head and carburetor of each car. Studebaker’s new and exclusive ball bearing spring shackles went through the entire 120,000 miles of running without a single adjustment, without the addition of any lubricant, and were functioning perfectly at the end of the run. What it proves The Studebaker President’s new record of 30,000 miles in 26,326 minutes is a feat unapproached in the history of transportation. It proves beyond doubt or question that The President Eight is an expression of engineering genius without peer in the automotive world. It is evidence of the inexhaustible resources of Stude~ baker performance—of high quality materials, precision manufacture, skilled workmanshipand rigid inspections, 3 Why be satisfied with less? You can pay more than Studebaker prices, but in no other car at any, price can you buy more stamina or more finely, balanced performance thanin Studebaker’s Pres- ident Eight. And back of every One-Profit Studes baker is 76 years of mane ufacturing integrity. Don’t wait until Noveme ber 6 to select your Presie dent—DO IT NOW! All prices f.0. b. ALBRO MOTOR SALES CO. i 25 Arch Street Tel. 260 known dead . e oy e & o -8 4 Memh Mor Syrs lyr1 prize it was 8Smith save t of the inee a anxiou| The the ai it llm] its att Ther ecrowd 28 men & path State| 8yracus clear of Alfred seemed aside The out of graphed brough! boited s tendant e

Other pages from this issue: