New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 19, 1928, Page 2

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of a German bursomelster, 8 werid NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1928 traveler and 8 transator of medical |ehusn. smonl or” the ary: Thos IR'[;H SC'EN’"HB ISENDS OBIT 70 PRESS; {included 53.500 rifles, 106 heavy ; MGS sm FRoH P[PE ;?ay:::e::llw writings, he was DISCOVERY MADE_, . . it i 1 e |field guns, some machine guns, six| RE RTS |tanks and five armered motor cars.| : 1He also arranged to have some rail- Seize Strongholds Overlooking Kabul—Await Reinlorcements New Delhi, India, Dec. 19 (F— Rebels were reported today to have seizged two forts overlooking Kabul capital of Afghanistan. They were awaiting reinforcements to press their attack. Plane Shot Down A British acroplane was shot through the radiator and make a toreed landing near Kabul. The companies.) The Daily Mail also sald that the |chief"hope of King Amanullah lay |in the approach of wintry weather |and heavy snows, since the revolting tribesmen have no equipment for |campaigning under such conditions. Fire Wood Expensive The position of Europeans in Afghanistan was understood to be causing considerable uneasiness, al- |though so far as could be learned |there was no feeling among the rebels against any forelgn legation. ‘.\ Lahore dispatch said the Euro- peans in Kabul were experiencing considerable discomfort because of |Galifornians Tell of Finds in New Mexico |roads built by French and German I Medical Writlags is Tired ! of Living. | | New York, Dec, 19 UP—Obituary | editors on New York newspapers, | - In Manila; Is { Manilla, Dec. 19 UM [ | newspapermen seeking te establish |his 1dentity, Eugone O'Nelll, Amer- ican playwright, today found in Ms nila but little of the rest and se- Berkeley, Cal, Dee. 19 P—Dis- | going through their daily grist of SOVERY o ap Apes sald %o contaln #a|imal) found £he lollaing notios: |Ci0R Be has bosh seeklng sinoe !full history of evolution™ and declared to be so valuable in fossils| «Tq my friends in New York, Chi- | 10 cago and elsewhere, greetings, and !scientista that they would not reveal ' ne giag tidings that 1 kicked the its location other than to say it 18 10 ket December 17, 1928. the wilds of New Mexico, was an- | “Cause: Taedium vitae, I got tired nounced here last night by two uni- | o¢ jife versity of California scientists. The men, who returned to Berke- j.o"Gin' my |ley with about a ton of fossls for plane had been attempting to estab- |s.vere winter weather, Fire wood is classification, said the earthbed con- tish communication with the British legation with a view to the evacua- always extremely expensive there |and the supply of canned provisions, tion of British and Indian Women |on which Europeans largely depond nd children if nec Whether the airplane’s occupants (vre safe was not learned here. Ef- jrts were being made by British ithorfties at Khyber pass an Murban te send assistance to fi ‘ut the exact locality of their land- ng was not known. Arms Seized Large quantities of arms and| nunition were rstood to be in e two forts reported seized. Intermittent communications were cing maintained with Kabul by the Quetta and Kandahar telegraph ofice and the British legation was not feasible. The question of the safety of the Rritish le; on was having the clos- est personal attention of the viceroy who was i constant touch with de- velopments. All Is Well An airplane which flew over Kabul this morning returned this afters noon with the news that all at the British legation in the Afghan capital ary. Fails to Pay Men Lendon, Dec. 15 (A—The trouble |is not large. The people of Tagao, near Kabul, | | were said to have joined in the in- at |surrection because of horror at the < king's decree 'should go unveiled and that their that their women girls should go to school. To Raise Levies An Exchange telegraph dispatch from Peshawar, India, asserted that the Afghan army had not been able fighting had extended to the capital. The king was sald to be endeavor- assert his authority. Doubts were ex- | pressed as to whether this would be | possible in the face of strong an- tagonism to the recent soclal re- forms, | 8ir Michael P. Dwyer, former lieutenant governor of the Punjab, said many persons in Afghanistan thought King Amanullah had no \s well | Tight to the throne and also that it appeared as if the Afghan people feared their religious practices would [be interfered with by such a pro- gressive ruler. that King Amanullah of Afghanis- | Hunt Youth Who Stole tan is having in suppressing revolts was sald in newspaper dispatches to- day to be due to his failure to pay' New Haven, lis army. A dispatch from Lahorebn, India, \sserted the army had not been paid tor some time p soldiers had deserted to join the rebels, who were arrayed against the king chiefly because of his intro- duction of western ideas, such as de- creeing that women should go un- velled, Insufficient Wages The Daily Mail printed a dispatch from Bombay saying the standing ing post office, found the car stolen | after returning from making a de- | .rmy of 35,000 was disaffected be- cause of insufficient pay. The king's ministers were trying to raise imercenary forces. i A Karachi dispatch to the Daily {ixpress quoted an unnamed mer- chant from Kabul, capital of Af- ghanistan, as saying it was generally | belicved in king used army funds to pay for \is many purchases of modern man- \facture in Europe during his tour | varly this vear. It was claimed that | he army had not been paid for| ree months and that the king's izh handed methods had antagon- 0 even members of hia staff, | (King Amanullah returning from “Make Our Battery Station Your Battery Station” CHOOSE YOUR BATTERY MAN WITH CARE WHEN YOU WANT YOUR Battery Recharged YOUR COMPLETE SATIS FACTION DEPENDS UPON YOUR SELECTION. - Rudy's Battery Service 186 EAST MAIN ST. “Let Us Service Your Battery Our Better Way” Telephone 708 Always Special Delivery Mail Dec. 19 (P—=8earch was being made last night by post office inspectors and police for a youth who stole an automobile con- the driver was believed delivering a package. Twenty pieces of mail, the value of which has not been deter- mined, was missing from the ma- chine, which was found abandoned in Hamden. Roy Clark, driver and owner of the machine used in the service of livery. Post office officials were no- tified and police in turn took up the search for the thlef which resuited in the finding of the automobile minus the mail. The Mauretania recently crossed York fn & days, 3 hours and 17 minutes, thus establishing a new world's record, MORE HEAT- 'tained specimens from every geo logic age from 75,000,000 years ago down to 7,000,000 years ago. Remote Section The discoverers are Prof. C. L. Camp, curator of amphibians | zoology, and V. L. Vanderhoff, mu- seum collector. They said their find ! was made in a remote section of the state, 80 remote that the natives leven' thresh their grain with hand | flails, and grind their own flour. Schools are 75 miles apart. The res- |to hold the rebels tn check so that|ident seldom speak English. They are deeply religious. The people |scourge themselves with whips and ‘mg to raise levies with which to re- wear cacti in their sandals by way | of penance for sins. | The university’s expedition found |there & place .where the continental | divide had pushed up and exposed |to view the many ancient strata con- taining the fossils. “These strata contain the fosailiz- ed bones of animals from most of |the important eras of the past, start- ing with the Permian period, more than 75,000,000 years ago, and con- tinuing to the comparatively recent ‘chene period, closing perhaps 7,- {000,000 years ago,” said the report, which the discoverers issued, | Reptiles Found | The report added that in one bed. | representatibe of the Triossic period, Ithe first age of reptiles, were to be | found remains of the reptiles which | began with the first amphibian n- | habitants of the earth. In another t and that some taining special delivery matl while |g ooy n " representatice of the Cre- {taceous period, when the reptiles {had overrun the earth, were found | fossils of dinosaurs, | rhinoceros and other more recent | specimens had appeared, also were ! represented. tory of evolution,” the report con- {cluded. The California men sald they { would reveal the location of the fos- sil area when they had collected all | the specimens necded for their work. | Until that time, they intend to keep it secret from a curious public which Afghanistan that the |yp. s¢jantic from Cherbourg to New might interfere with thelr collection ,work. The expedition was financed crocodiles and | {other ancient creatures. Later the | | Miocene, when the primitive horse, ! | “The strata represents a full his- and| reptiles in the museum of vertebrate | “My voluntary passing is in keep- philosophy and was planned long ago, | “Free was my life my death, | “Pity me not; T have | dream. } “I am at peace with God, the | world and myself—Goodbye! “George Panebaker.” Investigation by reporters at the East 121st Street rooming house, which Panebaker gave as his ad- dress, revealed his body hanging from a steam pipe in a shabblly furnished room filled with books in | German, French, Itatian and Eng- | lish. Neighbors said he was the son and free be had my to come And yet it need not be The Sign of @ - Westiaghouse Denler Flect {by Miss Annje M. Alexander, a pa- | | tron of the university. LESS ASHES FOR SALE BY Citizens Coal C. STRICTLY FRESH EGGS Daily deliveries in all parts of the city. FERNDALE FARM Kensington Tel. 3890 Tel. 675-23 MEN'S WEAR Practical But Not Commonplace Even the plain white Shirts or the simple linen Hand- kerchief here has a certain style, elegance and’ quality look which mark the man-of-fashion. If in search of the more elaborate gifts, we have them designed for us and confined to us. For Christmas . « » and for years his arrival in the Orient. O'Neill, who ecame here from Shanghai yesterday under an as- |sumed name, was positively identl. |fied today throuh his passport and correspondence and noteboeks bear- ing his name. Choosing to remain aboard the |steamer Coblens which brought him here, O'Neill spent a sleepless night {1ast night due to the heat and the {noise incidental to the loading of | cargo. He looked haggard this i morning. GOING TO ROME Boston, Dec. 19 (M—Willlam Cardinal O'Connell, archbishep of Boston, announced yesterday that {he would eait from New York for {Rome, on Jan. 10 to pay his respeets to Pope Pius, He will be accom- panied by Mgr. Micha:l J. Splain {‘ of Brookline. You can give a Westingbouse Percolater as you weuld sterling silver or fine table linen —not enly because it ls lovely in decign, bat because the loveliness is lasting. ve! The dealer nearest you has Westinghouss Percolators ss low as $1L.76. ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES Westinghduse nlication THE SPRING & BUCKLEY ELECTRIC CO. New Britain, Conn. BARRY & BAMFORTH .19 Main Street New Britain, Conn. RAYMOND ELECTRIC COMPANY 5 West Main Street Plainville, Conn. REED AUTO SUPPLY COMPANY 29 School Street, Bristol, Conn. LEAVE o~ 0 IT TO ASHLEY! 3 ‘“‘u'sh% ( "’c:.vw"’ THE HOUSE oF ' HLEY/ ONE THIRTY-NINE MAIN STREET New Britain Parker New Britain Gift Suggestions . Undergarments Negligees } Quilted Robes Gowns Pajamas Flannel Robes Hosiery For Every Occasion All articles packed in Larker boxes Elizabeth Arden Preparations- Dorsay and Corday Perfumes Priced From $1,00 to $25.00 ‘Gerri “Vanities PARkER AND PARKER The Packard Drug Co. Cor, Arch and Walnut Sts. MONROE PHARMACY Cor. Arch and Monroe Sts. New Britain, Conn, MAISON ANDRAE OFFERS A NEW WONDERFUL PERFUME Genuine French Narcissus AT THIS GREAT INTRODUCTORY SALE PRICE! SPECIAL THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY And We Will Give You Abgolutely .00 bex of Narcissws Do Luxe Ex Faco Powder. You save $4.03 this certificats,

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