New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 21, 1930, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. FRID A new giant View of “Stor (left), German glider expert ower center) has none at all. Kronfeld orch” position, ays Nobhe tail, while the 1d rear propeller Junke y (right) shows Berlin, Mar = plane ns {o house the-homeless stu- dents. Since then student labor has crected several buildings. Blackburn is the only school where self-help extends to manage- ment and direction work," Hudson “Students buy food. cook it. serve it and hey operate a 200-acre farm. udent must work with his hands two and a half hours cach day.” elp school by broadcasting two ogal It den't college will take here. If you can Blackburn doesn't | you i Stude r dormitorie 200 all one needs for exponer room and tuition. ¥ long as and girls, the fragile craft er-thin wings, | \uant Jim v to register 's Kronfel other come you pas want l ~whip on s your way, explain d 1 cars says. Kro of s board cnroll- | When "main Pedro de Ponce, a Spanish Bene- ldictine monk, is the reputed inven- tor of the art of teaching the dumb to convers fire destroyed school's building yea ago. | um M. Hudson, Blackburn's nt, procured worn-out Pull- “WHATEVER 1 ATE SOURED IN MY STOMACH AND FORMED GAS” » “But Before I Had Finished the First Bottle of Bon- Tone, I Looked Forward to My Meals.” | headaches, and my back ached as it would break. I lost weight, and was so nervous that I was hard to get along with—cverything jar- red on me. ngers and Gaesirable Now, planes with the recentl the long 1 for exis contribute 1y wind-res speed and The "G tail-less giving the performed by th an entirely tail-Ic The tail-les | presic however, i ¥ hoilow -built |ie demon- | strates that the all- virplar | can fly with less power and land on | i s ! i 2% o TRl hanples et I" 44 neighbor of mine told my wifc ing contemporarics. | { about Bon-Tone and w The S-horsepower craf ) |done for members of astonishin 1t | family, s was almos in buoy- | was all she out it and then and low speed of landir some! Before 1'd finished the fir What strik Kronfeld | bottle, T began to get results—my strangest part of the trend towus {bowels began to be more reguls tail-less planes is that most peop'c land 1 really began to look forward Jook on a plane w a tail . |to mealtime. 1 have now taken four something startlingly In fact| e ‘l:o(ll(x of Bon-Tone, and have re- it is just the opposite. The |gained five pounds. I sleep nine »r gliders of the Wright brothers wer ten hours every night, and wake up to all intents and purposes tail-lc |rested and really hungry. I don't SELF'HE}JP SCHOOL BUNKS MR, HAROLD L. GILHOOLEY Eksl‘y)r‘v\v “; l‘;‘(’m‘f :";::il‘“{“h‘;mg:‘ ;‘h gsxz?d' STUDENTS IN PULLMANS | = | cannon fired at my back woull Blackburn Won't T it several her 1 Mr. Harold L. Gilhooley of No. make me jump. I can ea Riverside, Hartford, Conn., who is a|of food at any time and suffer of St. Anne's Catholic pains afterwards. 1 glad to recommend Bon-Tone, nd never miss a chance to tell my te|friends what a wonderful medicina it is. My wife and daughter are both taking Bon-Tone now.” The Bon-Tone Man is at Miller & I'd belch up gas, and A‘N:msol\. Drug Store, 30 Church substance would rise [street, New Britain, to tell you stomach. I had Mnbh\mox about this great tonic. no i, Pupils Who! about three from indigestion. |soured in my stomach and formed | I'd bloat up tight; and sharp. |burning pains would shoot all over March 21 (® — |my body. here has been|sour, wate an independent, | from my states {am vears I suffered | Whatever L ake Can Get Into Any Other School —Located in Tlinois, Carlinville, 111, Blackburn colleg converted into Albert Steiaer, Inc HARTFORD Bought Your New Spring Suit Yet ? It Need Not Be Expensive IT You Buy At Steige 525 e so moderate that you can wear a suit without feeling the least bit vagant. Double and single breasted, arkskin or covert cloth. On blue, n or gray, with nipped-waist and flared skirt. Vicu-Fox Scarfs, $19.75 American fur that is a real pointed fox that even with silver Steiger --- Fourth Floo nad | bottle—and it | al v kind | certainly | ‘which has crowned 11 ] }num turmo his life. \ His father, premier of several | small states, had rebuked a British THR“UEH[]UT IN[]I Homm.monpr in public. Apology 'xrrcs(od, But the apology never | was made. h ] Ge [ 0 i Both of his parcnts were devout | Mahatma Gandhi Is Center of .. | cult of Vishnu and Gandhi inherited much of their religious enthusiasm. “T used to be very shy and avoid- | London, March 21 (P—Onc man | pis autobiography. “I was ev stands as the crux of the whole |afraid lest someone poke fun at me.” | e | e tried to smoko cigarettes, stole | troubled situation in India—Gandhi. | With Indian nationalist demands | | ‘\\ demanded and Gandhi's father embers of the orthodox Hindu | Seething Situation {ed all company,” relates Gandhi in pennies to buy them and contem- | plated suicide because of what he felt was the enormity these | | ofenses At Hindu custom, gl his ringing in British cars, and 1930 the | | test year in modern Ind! politics, | -year of the y racter and achand impor- of after the! a pretty, stubborn | 1 age with whom he was | destined to ¢ rrel constantly until | h of their fourth son. Then, | their relationship and siste his and to com- University backward hard and westerner | Gandhi mary . or the the most in India to- Pictare him s cbel ag | fact remains that he | picturesque personality |day. | His followers have clothed him in | mystic saintlinc fostered the be- {1lief that through Gandhi only can | India achieve indcpendence, Gandhi is 60 now and remains | the only person in history who has ever been able partially to rally the | various castes, Hindus and Mo- | { hammedans under the single stan dard of nationalism He was literally born into the po- ‘ m s brot 50 he came (o Ln, his education at the of London. He was pupil. found Sanskrit stumbled with many over Euclid Tor a time he lived on 30 cents| day, cating vegetables and eschew- ng all meat, milk and cg Then caction sct in. He, whose wardrobe later was to me only a loin cloth, bought a silk hat, a Savile Row dress suit. father is dcath ple a a 25y “MUSCADINE” a new GHULDSIRIPE Stocking Shade —withaFrench habitof being very flattering, a mauve appeal that is irresistible, and an economical way of fit- ting into any occasion. In your favorite Gold Stripe stocking—with | Frenchor pointed heels. [SNENIET O | from $1.50 up e Shiseof Duibanalle Mlrerg, OUILET | | | AY, MARCH 21, 1930. —— That lasted about three months. Another violent reaction took him back to aceticism and he never again altempted to westernize him- self. His contemporary in London was a man named Lenin who after- wards was to change the history of Russia. One of the greatest forces in his life has been the “Sermon on the | Mount,” says Gandhi. “It went straight to my heart on the first reading.” he explains. I felt that it contained the truth that renunciation is the highest type of religion. “Although T chose a path my Christian friends had not intended, I remain forever indebted for the religious quest they awakened in me.” Gandhi studied the henceforth heecame an non-viclence, h A and of sermon apostle a PEARLS ol Hartfor p Steven while dining at the taurant yesterda: pearls of varying sizes. One was a | § seed pearl, another just trific | ¢ larger and the third was the size of | I a match-head. lie Mary hotel res- rec K. Gull found t 1771 MAIN STREE® Why Not a Hardware Style Show? Women's wear stores have style shows, so why shouldn't hardware stores also have style shows? —We Do— Right now we have the latest things in spring hardware on display in our store. PRUNING TOOLS Shears PrimersESiais Saws ROLLER SKATES Boys’ EMREY sooohotootonoass b S1.79 Plumbing & Heating Let us quote you on that Ixxtchcn sink or that new bathroom which vou intend to put in this spring. Come in--Look around--Ask us prices -We'll be glad to serve you C.A. (b ARCH ST. HARDWARE PHONE 106 PLUMBING ASSEMBLY BALKS & (Kentucky Legislators Override | stormy 60 day session of the demo- cratic-controlled Kentucky assembly came to a noisy close e teday, branches had passed a resolution of censure of the republican zoverno~ F appointments he had sent to the sea- enacted bills that the textbook commission, A M S o on the gross sales of retail stores, [eclared 1o be directed at chai: This measure the governor su.'m(l- Just legislature tory here re report a before adjournment th heard the state reformii- srred to in a committe the black hole of Ker- {ucky.” The committee said millioys of dollars are necded for the re- | havilitation of other penal and char- | itable establishments. Half of the sale tax proceeds avs | to go to tnis purpose. The censure resolution condemn- ed remarks laid to the governor the genc_\‘”night before, when he was quotel jxl¥ |as having referred at a republican rally to members of the court of ap- pe “six of the gloomiest litts men you ever saw” after a republi- can election victory in 19 GOV F. D. SAMPSON All Executive's Vetoes Frankfort, Ky., March 21 (P—A a few hours after lem D. Sampson, and the lat ad charged that the terms of two MILLION FISH SAVED March 21, (P—More sish 1 been saval ation fisheries men in last fow weeks from the backwa- ter sloughs of the Mississippi Tiver Over a veto it voted to accept the | on property of the Delta Fish —and 30,000 offer of former Senator i | Fur farm, a report to the conserva- oleman du Pont to buy Cumberlan.d | tion commission office sa lls and present it to the state for | fish, trapped in the slough park, and cnacted a graduated tax | been returned to the open river. HALF Madison than by 2| the te had been fra The legislatur ne of the dulently overrode governor's vetoes. put out commission Itered eve ani | of office and th 560,000 ve highway We Celebrate . . . Our 1st Anniversary as the “Largest Store of Its Kind in New Britain” Special Showing Spring SUIT and TOPCOATS It's the season when clothés mean so much to the man who wants to Jook his best. Suits are featured in one and two-button effects topeoats are in 3-bhutton boxed e fects. All garments embody the leading styles, quality fabrics, and unexcelled workmanship. Buy Direct From Norwood and SAVE! Every Norwood garment i in our own factory---under our own personal supervision--‘and you at the one and only price of $22.50. 3 No Charge For Alterations ! We make all alterations s made sold to free of charge so that every suit and top- coat is correct in every detail, 274 76 MA]N STREET NEW BRITAI

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