New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 13, 1929, Page 20

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b CHURCH DELEGATES - AGREE DN MERGER Disciples of Christ May Join| Northern Baptists P the Seattle, Aug. 13 ward unification of Christ with noi was taken by the international confc mer denomination The convention adopted of his church ommending it bine the educ and missionary bodie Rev. Dr. Edward troit, who submitted clared that a joint denominatior 1 mental diff unity itio De Wit commission of t no fun Louisville, Ky Kleihauer vice preside NEW CITY MAY BE WORLD'S GREATEST Observers Foresee Unit of 13- 000,000 Pegple in Germany Berlin. Aug. jan indus! dozen each other, farming land yelopment of some and manuf phenomenal oniy by th can cities a Angeles. Recklir now they ,000 inhabita ment has been nounced in the Ruhr valley Bochum, alo miles long. scarce in stacks line to statisti ; sooner or later will r industrial unit, h; 000 inhabitants Many cities in this industrial s already have absorbed surroundi villages, whose nistration, ever has remained independent. | Now, in order to make administra- | tio. mors efficient, the government ‘has set up a plan for simplifying the whole urban system of the industrial area. Under this plan many inde- pendent towns will he incorporated | with cities with which they already are united. Barmen Prc The first action of be the merging into one town Elberfeld and B decades it has taken an expert say where Barmen ended and Elb: feld begun; yet both cities have clung to their independence. All tempts at uniting them were thwart- | ed by the resistance of the citizer of the two towns. Recently however diet voted a bill uniting 13 with Barmen, This event precipitat- | ed a local “revolution” in Barm It is true that no barricades built, nor were any windows b but the local branch of the ( Centrum party which is the est party in Barmen passcd lution condemming the dep the same party sitting who voted for the union ~ towns. The Prussian diet same time that the born, a manufacturing development has pri to the growth of the shall be incorporated The announcement ¢ burst of rag pits half masted Thyssen works even flag. Furthermore, th of the city stopped for s a protest against the ¢ electric current was work ceased in many Crowds gathered in the angry comments ment's plan we To judge hy nished by these of the nt v not, after z as the statistic be. particularly tween Duisbu a streteh of Green land is this region where the horizon. Accor whole T oly rout 15, About in fa stro center whose arily 1 e en worl 1, Hambc their fle on he events, of t1 Wallflowers two of the fashioned in America 2 1 profession na parish in NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1929. [ WHO IS HE? ) e/ s that | s doesn't | 4 during So m Ul - . in- r | | | | I he battle new St [ [bed at ‘em |shown he ed the let- | 19 Pearl | hep ollar | ship and hes Lions of |ing hoisted en- | center rig It there | protecting o n which nt in sil- arl take part in | lower right, | lon a scouti 1 of working the navy's now hard un- rdination plans, left, of submar a mothe right, s nall fighting plane big © A mimic 2 bomber about ial Dattl arting o a fast sub s cru zood ny ide vas not ss with cdfello er sn and i s, airplanes goes about out in the open. nder cover of Or a roar ks up r heard u ening's | “orphans,” ¢ Haffey | Dut “achiev now sufl sad of counte- im best the problem w ability to keep long cruise speed was iner 1 wa perating 2 the ume main Airplanes and Submarines Work In Cooperation Tactics Developed By Navy American s )0 tons, carries ¢ crew more ut ns are provided for accompany the fleet. carrier and battleship ks until called into than 7 0 men an wtleship. irplanes 1o ride on 1 cruiscr action. cruises Me 10y Recently ed ex what ate tc understood but th the hattle 1ents to ¢ flect conduct nine in just 1bs and planes can oper- ? ly. The r s 1o have n report is being kept e tory, et with he 5 is becomi A “mother” batt ywood of common She ship, sul olies of all sorts ca floc John's where he | neludir 1k His speak of jonic ers of the v das veser | Pregident’s 1's heart is is home-made the | lo Alto, st Lel have most widely | dent Hover of first Lyman Wilb who N HTAIN VSPAPER HERALD: who bers of versity m Main dear 1y folks. and I HERALD for sment in thes Il this man that ulation well it by tl has often ing in his d out of doesn't cially has ap- | terior, car columns. | nite leay of 18 bur's 1 Saw du Augt editor | o | tanford, W £ his b FORD ALUMMI Mma Mater Well Represented at Capital and ntal Dr. 1 sceretary of the - ranted an inder- wce as president ) governn: post prominence i 1y ur wi of abs nford to sit in the cabinet. wo exccutive assista ver and Northeutt ited from Stanford. Murr Wa Taher 1 nt to pro- ture at hington to | preach in the President’s church. W. F. Durand, of mechanical ¢ emeritus professor nzineerin ford, is a of the Boulder Dam commission. Ellwood P. Cub- berley, dean of the school of educa- tion is of the of 45 appoin to study rela o fthe federal government to s educati member v member commit nneth Mackintosh, the W court former tice ston a commis: Stanford Hoover, the Stanfo memb on, upreme or sraduated from President (cf Teague not a rd member of the s survey year as of ol Stan board is but is a national board. Vernon L. Kellog, fessor of entomology seeretary forme at he National ncil. He held the Hoover's elet pro- ford, is of search co posi- tion be [T tion Twenty-three 56 s the Declaration Inde were col accord bureau of cducation. of the of men s to the Stan- submarines tendency of both craft, making a 1 duties. can serve a or and is toward small one do mani The navy's pl t rvation ol nd as bombers. t units are the small and the hombers. manned by a sing the nes wo impor c planes The pilot who guides huge hombing plane, with i four, who navigate, drop nd defend it against attack omcther, irp and irines, one ating nearly out of ht in the sky, the other hiding be- th the formidable ns of obtainin ation and threat- of bombs the sub- sea, form a m striking 2 inforn back when danger BOY RIDER BUMPS BUMPER Thought first to he injured scriously when he was riding his bi- cycle @ tin street and bumped into the rear Robert Cole, 11, 174 East cd to Dr, Joscph T. arly last cvening by When the officer 1 the doctor's he injuries ¢ boy ot was Matteis' of went pecial Notice Annual will be AAD 31 adults, ickets must A 13 chartered., Rock siliary, E Tickets children T5c. All purchased by Tues- aay, Several have been Mrs. Julia Morn- |head, chairman, telepho A lar; crowd your excursion expected 50 get is tickets early number 5 is a good phone Herald Cla sified Ad memoriz | department outing planes and | fires his machine gun while protect- Main | to| Parachute Jumper Stage Struck, Loses Manuscript In Drift Down, Public—Radio Thrills Missing As Vast Silence Envelops Loud Speakers. New York, Aug. 13 (UP)—That| part of the radio audience which | o |is curious to know what a parachute | Henry Hirk, 132 Whiting jumper thinks about in the midst of | When Mrs. Kirk had called th e ¢ to be cynical | ficer into the house | toda: | nusband had assaulted he Mr. H. G. Bushmeyer, a parachute | jumper, when approached by the | National Broadcasting Company to tell of his sensations while jumping. jumped at the chance. And then he and the National Broadcasting!examined the bump. Finally | Company failed the public. It had | Kirk said that she did not wa [been faithfully' promised that Mr. |hnsband arrested but she | Bushmeyer would asgend 10,000 | like the probation office | teet in an airplane, descend 10,000 | to him. lteet in a parachute, chatting witn the radio audience all the while! over a portable broadcasting set strapped to his back. | Stage Fright two things marred the per- st because Kirk said that his wife was because he came home late, threw an alarm clock at him Kirk claimed that she had struck over the eye. The offi Mr Wwo! WHITE POODLE BITES GIRL Small white poodle dogs some | times are not as innocent scem. as Broadcasts Only Three Sentences |Sensation of Grand Drop Still Concealed From Panting r to speak they Last night Lieutenant Bam- | Beach, N. J. forth received a call from Mrs. F. Dankel, 45 Dwight street, in which she said ~that her three year old ughter had been bitten on the nd by a white poodle. The dog warden was notified. | | | Personals . James A. Dyson of street are on two weeks at Mount Herman, Mass. Miss Dora Tell of North street is ationing at Ocean Beach, New. London. 2 d0 RO ew stree Mr. 217 and M Fair: ggrald, Sr., are’ spending at brook Manor. s their gues over last . Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Green Hartford, and Mrs. C. Heisler and Irene and Helen 1 Bamforth and ney of the New tment have re- ies following their B Mrs, nt Saw homas I | police deps | sumed their du vacation: tain Papanis and daughter, left for Manasquan Mrs Adele, B 1. have formance. Mr. Bushmeyer did not | ascend 10,000 feet and he did not ‘hat. In fact, he got stage fright. And then the whole sordid plot came to light. Mr. Bushmeyer, it seems, decided | | before he ever went up what he was | | going to think about while coming down. | He cven went so far as to place | his thoughts on paper, and when he had finished he found he had 5,000 | | words worth of thoughts. He tucked | the manuscript in his pocket and | climbed into a plane. At the alti- | tude of 9,000 feet—1,000 fect short |of his promise—Mr. | desive to make a | overwhelming and he stepped into reaching nonchalantly for his ript. Then he had that sink- | feeling: the m: cript wa ALl 1. —the a bottle m | space, More! her . Bushmeyer drifted down 1,000 feet or so, thinking things that the | | radio audience probably would not | care to hear, but saying never a ‘\\old. At 7,000 feet he sought to | regain comamnd of the stiuation by | talking extemporancously. | Says Three Sentences “Well, now, folks,” said Mr. Bush- meyer in a limp voice, “here I am. | 'm in the air over Roosevelt Field and what I'm saying is being broad- National Broadcasting | waited breathlessly for [nim to ow that reminds me of the story of the traveling sales n,” but Mr. Bushmeyer suddenty | | was by stage fright. At 15,000 feet he was still silent; at 4.- | | 000 feet some of the National Broad- | casting officials on the ground sug- sted that Mr. Bushmeyer was loaf- | ing on the jol 2,000 feet it b ‘(dl”f‘ apparent that there was to be no more speaking and Mr. Bush- | | meyer was left to drift inglorio .l\'! into a tree top. From that \m'd.m\‘ perch he recovered his voice, indig- pantly denying he had been stricken | He explained the his antenna had his harness and saying | heecoma tang in that even had he shouted till his lungs burst the radio audience would | have heard nothing but gurgles. | Even Announcer Stumped | Meanwhile, an announcer who | was to have told pecple from coas: {0 coast how a parachute jumper in the midst of cerebral contortlons appeared while gliding earthwar? Iso met difficultics. He could nor deseribe Mr. Bushmeyer because th weather was too thick for Mr. Bus r o be visible. and, it develop the announcer had not been | | cratty enough to prepare a manus- | eript. | Everyone can't have cash on hand to meet every emergency that pops up! But how good it is to know you can get it here at any time you need itl \Late Husband Hit When | ‘ Wife Hurls Alarm Clo That his wife t 1 an clock at his head after he o home late last night was the com plaint made to Officer O'Kiefe by The only chargs Room 201, Kaphael Buildi | Open 8 alarm har ny JUST KIDS RULES OF SILHOUETTE CONTEST 15 Britain 1 t closes at 2 p. m. fal- insertion—Saturday mailed or the Herald y be to office for r i er atness. 1 da accordi iven ira for | | te EAD HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | FOR BEST RESULTS - CANT =~e) A DOUGHNUT AND THATS ALL THERE i) ARE U/N# N e WOULDJA 1 COME HOME WCUNDED GIMME A DOUGHNUT THEN?E L AIN'T MOM?HERE T IF MY APPLE DUMPLINGC CAME HOME FROM WAR I'M SURE THAT 10 BE SO HAPPY TO SEE HIM THAT D GIVE HIM ANYTHING THAT HE ASKED FOR THE WCRLD 1S kind you like healthful than heavy solid foods. New Britain's 433-435 Park St~ Phone 17 A bowl of fre: of pure, clean Seibert in warim Oldest Dairy s You'llbe pleasedto find our service so friendly and our repayment plan so convenient. Helping folks who need money quickly is our business, Loan Society Teleplione New Britain 1 T JUST MY LLCK- AM HUNGRY FER A DOUGHNUT AN’ ALL FULL OF PEACE! —_— p—— POOR PA BY CLAUDE CALLAN “May spent $50 hu herself clothes an’ fixin house to give that party charity, an’ she raised 1 ly $10 for the orphans.” fCopyright 1929, Publisners Byndicats) — — | — T HET ILLEN Al BY RORERT Qi Waiting for the “Ti ed” to Come In a quarrel, o days to be natural again get bein et over bein’ over hers cats) | CALMLY /| < WLE N 1 SUBGESTS THAT ) E KEEP CALM ¥ 1 GUESS YER P\GHT\ Aw. THEY'LL \ LIKELY SHOW | LIP HALE AN’ HEARTY PUTT SURE THEY wiLL WE| CANT KEEP TABS 1~/ ON THE HuLL FAMILY IN A FIVE STORY PALACE ) Y| LIKE"GRAYSTONE !

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