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they are still with him. The band has visited practically every city and town in Alabama, and plans tours during the coming year inte neighboring states. It has won numerous competitive contests with school bands. Former Carlina Chief Named to Hall of Fame Columbia, 8. C, Oct. 5 (A— Moets With Acclaim of Its Home Town Photographs of the acceptetd model of the statue of Wade Hampton, for- Bessemer, Ala, Oct. 5.—(—Be- mer governor and semator, which cause the youth of Bessemer, this | will be placed in the Hall of Fame steel-making city of 25.000 persons, |at Washington, have been forward- nestling in the ore producing moun- |ed to Governor Richards from the tains of north Alabama, fulfilled an | studio of F. W. Ruckstull, nation- undertaking in which the men of ally known sculptor. more mature years had failed, the | The statue shows Hampton stand- city government plans an official |ing erect besid: celebration Christmas day. At that time, the Bessemer Boys' lina flag. band, organized in January 1926, is | flag and his to celebrate its third anni seript so that the customary Yuletide f The statue will be delivered tivities may be incorporated into Washington by January 15, 1920, ceremonies. -~ - The band, whose MEl i range from 11 to 22 years, was the | Combourg, Fra Oct. 5 (A — outgrowth of an enterprise launched Workmen tearing down an old house by W. F. Bolin, bank clerk. Bolin, in this part of Brittany found an a lover of music, attempted to or- mon. ganize a man's band but failed be- he: cause he could not find sufficient performers. Refusing to be dis- couraged, Bolin canvassed the Sun- day schools and public school class- rooms. Boys responded by the score. The director selected the most promising 35 prospects and | BESSEMER BAND IS POPULAR IN CITY His left hand clasps the ght holds a manu- in members’ ages | carthenware the coins vot of silver. amped with the of Louis The house has served as a refuge to Knights Templars and it is presumed the coins were hid- den to aveid confiscation by King Philippe le Bel. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS A LD A AAADAAMAMAALAAALA palmetto stump | ,opial registers and records over which is draped a South Caro- | (picp hns‘bnen | | | | | | m BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1928. ANCESTRY RECORDS 10 BE PROTECTED Bill to-Be Pressated to Parli- meat by Church London, Oct. 5 (P—1In the future, Americans who seek to trace their family trees in the parish registers and records of old England are go- ing to have a much harder time of it. Such is the intention of the pa-| bill | the | will in laid before church assembly and if passed, be submittel to parliament Vovember. The bill is not directed against Americans, put concerns all per- | sons who put their noses within the | vellowing sheets of parish records. It lays down a penalty for persons teenth century, in the rveign of Henry VIIL Persons wishing to confirm onc of these events must apply to the parish records in order-to do £o. “Nearly all people who come here to search the parish records are money-seekers,’ 'a church offi- cial declared in an interview. “In my church I keep 3 special eye on these searchers, for there is no doubt that in the past, and even to- day in some parishes, entries are tampered with.” Scientists Testing Air Cooling Method Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 5.—UP— An idea of how much cold air may get through chinks and cracks is furnished by experiments at Massa- chusetts Intitute of Technology. The tests have nothing to do with cracks, but is applied to the air cooling of airplane engines, in the department of aeronautical engine research. The aim is to discover how close to each other the flat metal cool- HONGARIANS FEAR FOREIGN TROUBLE Statesman Asks for War Appro- priation of $1,000,000 Budapest, Oct. 5.—UP—Hungary's entire civillan population i to be provided with gas masks. Former | Premier Stephen Friedrich, who ad- ;are.sed parliament on the dangers | threatening Hungary as a march- |ing ground for foreign armies, asked | the war appropriations committee to | set aside $1,000,000 in the war office | estimates for the purchase of these defensive shields. Stressing the decisive part which | gas and chemicals will play in fu- iture wars, former Premier Fried- | rich, who is now a member of par- liament, said, “I believe inwar, be- se mankind has no law which who wilfully tamper with parish [ing fins may stand without reduc- | can check it. For hundreds of years registers. The bill is a recog-| nition of the fact that many per- sons In the past have altered or damaged parish records in order to benefit financially. Before about 1940 the parish registers were the only records of births, marriages and deaths. Church records in England date back to the early part of the six- ing the intervening air space 60 much that heat radiating across it destroys the cooling efficiency. Fins placed half an Inch apart, which was the old fashioned idea of the neces- sary space, were tested first. At present the research engineers have reduced the spacing to three-six- teenths of an inch®without having reached the minimum. PRICES, ~ for Men Enthusiastic Public Welcomes These Outstanding Clothes Values THE new P& Q policy made good over night! Seldom, if ever, has an announcement been accorded sucha hearty and welcome reception as that which greeted the new greater-value-policy of P&Q Clothes! Men who want the best at the lowest possible prices have been quick to appreciate the great values offered at our new low prices. Walk into the P&Q Shop! 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Sooner or later we shall be dragged into a war, and we must not leave our people unprotected.” | The brilliant Hungarian states- | man spoke with great vigor and elo- quence of the “invisible danger” from abroad and stated that not o T country's destiny |, only armies dre threatened with at- tack, but also non-combatants and the innocent civilian population, “It sald, “to be ready so that the danger can be met adequately.” There's LisTLESSLY he begins the day. But he has no grip on his jol His desk piles up with unfine ished wori As people help and pity him, he realizes that he might as well face the truth. He is through. ace is too much. Something RA: been stealing his energy —killing his ambition. He isn't sick — and yet, some- how, he never feels well. Thousands of menare fall- ing behind the crowd, all be- to serious discase. to relieve constipation safely. wvent it just as surely. plies bulk in generous q cause they fail to realize how deadly consti- pation is. 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