New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 19, 1930, Page 11

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e e Second Section - NEW BRITAIN HERALD Pages 11 to 18 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1930. ~ SAFEST SUBMARINE .~ READY FOR TRIALS Boat Provides Extra Lungs for Members of Crew New York, July 19 (UP) — The navy's safest submarine, V-3, will leave the Portsmout H., navy vard for trials Monday in charge of Lieut. Commander John H. Brown. The new undersea craft, 371 feet long, has three escape hatches and there is an extra “lung” for \every member of the crew in case it is necessary to abandon ship under water. The conning tower provides oné escape hatch and the others contain a series of compartments which can be filled with water or pumped dr After the compartment has been filled with water, members of the rew, wearing the “lungs 2 door and escape from the subma- The ship also is the most com- fortable submarine afloat, with plenty of space provided for seven ers and 80 members of the crew. e motive power is electricity, and the storage batteries are specially ventilated so that none of the gases can enter the crew's quarters. Other safety devices abound . After trials off Rockland, Me., th V-5 will join the Pacific submarine division No. 20 at San Diego, Calif. SHOE FACTORIE PLAN SPEED UP Recent Boston Shoe Fair Indi- cates Bright Business Outlook Boston, July 19.—(UP)—Shoe manufacturers plan to pro- duction immediately to care for gen- erally satisfactory business booked at rec Boston fair, ac- cording to Bradstreet's Weekly Re- view of Local Bu ss issues yester- day Sole leather markets | ter tone and some activi ported in certain lines,” the report said. “Opinion is expressed that there will be an increasing demand for leather from shoe centers. Upper Ie r e nerally experi- enc t although. no T g are reported. Patent ather is quiet but si calfskins are oe manu satisfacto recent Boston s shoe production ed for immediately to o ar be rather low Jewelry Takes Drop he general volume lesale jewelry busin per cent less than retail trade is 30 per c Collections are shoe a bet- is re- ve upper and demand. % report g »ooked e fair, and is being for said in be s cturers erally at the increased same. to the July ast year nt less fair to in o slow Dry goods jobbers report b ¥ but with ‘no incre Men's furninshings re- Men's clot also Suit and cloak manufacturers jobbers state business is quiet, sional demands for immediate ment store Specialty ness as quiet. “The wool market is dull in ali lines and is attributed to the usual onal dullness as July 1s regard- ed the dividing line between spring and fall goods. Little activity pected until after August. P SOVIETS PLANNING MILITARY DEFENSE Aviation and Chemical Warfare Given Special Emphasis is sale shops is irst of changed 19 (P—Soviet Rus- 17,006,000 of its some form of Moscow. July eia expects to have citizens engaged in military and aviation activity by October 1, 1933, under a five-year plan for aerial and chemical defense announced by the Volunteer Defense gocie Approximately 4,500,000 persons. the announcement continues, will receive military preparation and 2 000,000 will be given rifie drill. In all 6,000,000 persons will be in- struct in aerial and chemical de- fense There will be aged in research 000 scientists en- work in every ach of aerial and chemical war fare. Women will not be forgotten. About 5,500,000 laboring women will be given courses in elementary military science, gas warfare and nursing. It was estimated that rubles would be spent on these plans by the Volunteer Defense society which says that by 1933 it will have 43 aerial clubs, scores of schools of aviation, “hundreds of airplanes, thousands of gliders ‘and a great number of airdromes 1,000,000 DISSOLVES INJUNCTION Waterbury, July 19 — Judge Ar- thur F. Ells of superior court, ves- terday dissolved an injunction which restrained police and the prosecut- ing attorney of West Haven county from interfering with the of the Goff & Son store Rock. West Haven police had ar- rested three employes of the store on charges eof conducting an auc- tion without a permit last Sunday TOR BEST RESUL USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS can open | | — e | . [ Flashes of Life | Ne—— the Associated Press. | "New York—The crown princess of | tennis is heart whole and fancy free. Arriving from England, Miss Helen Jacobs was informed that Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, upon debarking had | gone to the W section to await her | baggage. Miss Jacobs said that such | 1 mistake was quite unlikely | case so far as she could see. Park, N. J—William K | Barrett, 18, and John Rau. 21, are contract bridge sharps. They won the state championship decided un- der the auspices of the American | Bridge league. Barrett says he ha: not been over successful in prep schools and is still_trving to qualify for college. Rau works for a wall street firm. York—Marshall turfman and yachtsman, is also an aviator. After 11 hours of instruc- |tion in a dual control plane he has made his first solo flight 1n his own biplane. He also owns an amphibian and some newspapers mote a report that he intends to make a hon moon tour of Europe with the pr Mrs. Dudley Coats, widow of a British army officer, after Mrs. Ficld who has been in Reno nearly three months, obtain a divorce. Newport, R. I—Midnight outdoors is society’s latest treat Moses Taylor was hostess at her country estate. In a natural amphi- theater professional players |formed Rostrand% travesty of * meo and Juliet | New York—A span of chestnu horses was long used by Mrs. Eliba- | beth W. Galwy in preference to mo- tor cars and, she has bequeathed $12,000 for fheir care with the pro- viso that they shall not be used for commercial purposes. She was the widow of a turfm Atlanta—For 1 of New York has t ally his pension of $240 to the onfederate Soldiers’ Home. He says he and the other boys in blue are well provided for and the money could be put better use by the boys in & New York- David Wa Producer and er for years, but d not even speak. Warfield brought them together. avilliams Lake, B. C. myster- ious enormo rrify h. known as an Ogopogo. is in the lake if Roderick MacKenzie, provincial leg- ator, ha ight. He says something elastic alive uncoiled and upset hfs sailboat and it might casily have been such a creature Legend is that an Ogopogo once a boatload of In at e spot and conveyed them to » Pacific ocean by a subterranean passage New York—Miss Josephine Riley e only woman allowed in one of =xclusive and highest clubs nd price) in world. s telephone operator of the Cloud club, 66 stories up in a sky- craper, and one of her du that no other woman gets in The club is a luncheon affair with Vanderbilts and the like in its mem- bership in her Asbury New Field, 3rd ent drama Mrs. vears A. H en sendir Wray an- to David Belasco and d togeth eed and did illness has tor ngs st the BRIAND RECEIVES ANSWERS TONOTE Great Britain Fears Move May Afiect League 19 will (UP) begin Paris. Ju Briand probably & the his question n economic Euro ration end, when vir conc answe replies this we 5 natiens !to have the foreign office. their coipt o m. Hungary d Bu s understood the would del erday or today Great Britain was the try among those v answered to indicate a Briand's federatio and that the League could do the work of removing barriers. The British government most courteous in its reply, but left no doubt that it believed the federation would be useless Defends league h an organization. the Jugosl ia had not only coun- hich already have that £sa1y of Nations rift was | British ague was An en that the 1 incompetent. six page note was devoted to out-| lining the accomplishments of the league, such as the V conference in 192 struction of Austria and H After pointing out those functions the note said Great Britain believ:d the suggestions contained in Briand's questionnaire should mere- [ 17 be inserted in the league hereby avoiding any possible | plication All the other a | ceived were favorab |although most of tr reservations in one form or and revealed diverse opinions as to organizations and matters for dis- cussion Most of the replies objected to a secretariat amd the league's syste of rotation of membership. observ- ing that if #he federation were be a fair representation of the Eu pean nations on economic questions, should be represented all the The various re clearly the pecu ographical locati | tries making them and Por- | tugal insisted, for example. that t | federation should constitute | threat toward South America, while | Switzerland was anxious for a guar- antee of neutrality, cady nota, ntaine 1 wother, | | ro- | jan indicated interests or the coun- vati iar ns of pain to| AGED TURK READY | " FORTOUR OF LS. Managers Say Trip Wil Be Dig- | nilied—Spurn Vaudeville New York, July 19 Agha rubbed the aged Turkish eyes this morning and | to show (OP)~ | sleep from started out America how | | spry ond can be at 156 if one really s to outdo Methuselah | zaro says he is 156 and has a birth certificate and a passport to corrobggate him. so that unless you | happened to be stopping Biltig, Asia Minor, on Feb. 16, /17 and knew for a fact that the health de- | partment did ‘not list his birth that | day, vou are in no position todis- pute his claim. The world's oldest resident toolk time off from his job as honorary | door keeper at Constantinople’s city Ihall to tour the United States in |crder to get a new set of false teeth and save up some money for | his old age | Zaro. a model Mosle touched a drop of liquor. he adr His managers, all threc of them clare his tour is going to be digni- |field. They say they have refused | offers from amusement cor and publicity seeking | but will let their protege before medical clinics so th country’s physicians may fi d information op how to live to ts out that be Has Twelfth Wife was brought to Assim Pedvan antiquities wife, the this imp coun- ter of had to of 66, 12 Zaro try by Turkish leave his behind No. 1 T offered another v er he had saved of Afghanistan when the latter was on a visit to Constantinople, and the o show ppreciation, sent of that country the life of the imir Moslems four come convinced o ugh, and he Arteries Hardened In his prime. at 143, Zaro weigh- ed 212 and was 6 feet tall. He shrunk sl n seems to be in good condition. Th immigration doctor who examined im found a slight hardening of arteries the only ahe of common de- age he possessed s never been a believer theory about “one crowded Kour of glorious life.” He has his into three centuries an< admits to taking part in 14 wars. During his military he says he fought Napoleon's forces in Syria nd opposed the Greek rebels whos: cause was espoused by Lord Byron. At 103, a little too old for he contented himself carrying pieces of ordn. His tour is expected D] 4RO, ncinnati, Detr Cleveland Buffalo and Louisville. on M Walker York a NAVY PURCHASES IS BEEF ABROAD Hosver Calls Conference to Con- sider Domestic Products me was sent the girl back. since spread days activ with to include Washington. Philadelphia, He will call| of New =The prob- tion 1 by other Amer- Washington ministrationn Jul, took on vesterday dus another to purcha and navy of an es at a time when ne from lo army food sup Pr special sident Hoover oint board of to investigate th consider the possibility these two governn fine their food pur can products. As a prelude to it the charge was made Tt d ving ies con- ri- | army and navy purchasers a ing yearly 6,500,000 pounds of heef t 3 | from foreign nations for use in the Chin pur Zea Hawaii and Chief foreign made in New and Argentine untries being « ierican foreign meat trade Assails Hoover Policy Meanwhile, the administration farm policies were assailed by ator Caraway, democrat, said the farmers’ “pitiful plig caused by the new tariff act. His | statement was simultanneous with | one from the labor department showing a 4 1-2 per cent decrease the price of farm products in Junc The chggges relative to purchase of forcign®heef brought from the navy xplanation that it was only abid regulations. Under th it wa ed, all beef eaten by navy men in the United States must be hought from Ameri firms. In outlying stations, however, regula- tions provide beef must be purch ed from the firm offering the lowe This policy often results in purchase of foreign beef, it was said. Due to a falling wheat marlget. the farm question has become a dominant political issue. The federai farm board, focal point of demo- atic attacks, is understood to have lecided to brave the storm of west- ern criticism rather than add to the 60,000,000 bushels of wheat already from the ilippines na hases cing Australia who * s prices. taken market Aggregate resources of 35 leading bank systems in the United es at the close of December ) 1929, was $8,505,255,969. ¢ First Lutheran Rev. Dr. S. G. Youngert, professor | ; in the Lutheran seminary at Rock | Bridgeport sland, L, will preach at an Eng- lish service tomorrow morning. He A M E has just returned from Palestine : ] and Egypt. _The service will be at | 10:30 o'clocf®® church schoo worship. Great Work.” Grace ¥ orship, ser A. M. hall, Glen |Je Pleasing God.” Harold Strathearn, who == isting in the pulpit sup- Stanley Memorial h Sunday morning at| Su 1115 2. m and in the evening at 10 Sunday school at 12:15 ses for An- nouncement wil ade the plan for a pic Wednesday 2 o women ro.U. A Friday even Junior 0. 1 street. Rev has been 2 ply will prea 10:45 o'clock 7 o'clock o'clock church sck m. mo all e ternoon 2:30 o'gjock, meet for prayer at M. hall | . 7:45 o'clock, reg- prayer t 1564 Emmanuel Gospel groups ar Stanley weekly service a People’s Church of Christ Sunday, 10:30 Y. m. prayer in| study; 10:45 a. m., sermon, Rev. § Raymond; 12:15 p. m. Sunday school: 7 p. m. sermon, Rev. S. W. Raymond Swedish Bethany 7:45, prayer meeting. The congregation expects to have Rev. H. S. Landis of Passaic, N. J., formerly pastor of the Emmanuel Gospel church in this city, here to 2 arge of the service Thursday Christian_Science v service, 11 a. “Life.* Su school, 9:43 ‘ednesday evenin, meetin t - . Nl ansaviexcaing Efatis LSpeaks at Camp Meetmg} e B Sivierioh ikl e uist) o'zlock St. Matthew's, Lutheran Service in English at e n at 10:45. Martin T. didate for the preach On and the subject a. m, 9 a. m., in Steege ministry, will Wednesday, 5 Thursday from will for to 7:30 p. m. 3 to 9 o'clock, meet rs at annot memt cment pastor Elim (Swedish) Baptist nday, 1 sermon by the Peterson; Ital- » school at 1 atiapm; 0. No eve- Axel 1 with Bit rmon Kings Daughters of Mrs. Oscar Thursday prayer service Salvation Army Saturday, open m Sunday. Sund Meeting in Walnut Hill par ring band rehearsal 6:30 Soldiers meeting 7:30 p tion meeting 8 p. m sesday, you p. m will be held air meeting, 7:30 P school 11 a. m 4pm p. m Salva- DR. WILLIAM L. STIDGER m people’s meeting a musical festival Rev. Axel Peterson will spea song by Robert Kling- berg and othe The band and string band® will Re- shments served 1orning prayer and sermon b rector, Friday, J 9550 Tania ey Highway Lighthouse of the Foursquare Gospel 33 Oak street Bible class at 11 2. m ice at 3 p. m. Rev. L. J son of Hartford in charge sirvice at Paradise park at Blsch sl d today to be Other Legion of Honor in 2 and Thursda g oeace American Woman Made Honor Legion Officer Tyl (Pnirs, (Ha Richard- Open air servic International Bible Students' Assn. Sunday. 9:30 a ce: § p. m. ¢ Matthes m. volunteer St. John's (German) Lutheran Sunday, 5:45 m. English ser 9:45 a. m nday school German Edge the A s among thos m service, suhject Intercessio VISIT AERIAL Trumbull Gov. Ernest E. Ro| of the governor's ed an ae 43rd division camp of Governor's Tuesday. Frie 8 p. m league mee dship EXHIBITION Memorial Baptist 9:30 a. m. church school 30 a. m. English worship; 11:45 2. m. German worship Thursday. & p. m. midweek - | or Sunday GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH JUNIOR 0. €. A, M. HALL, GLEN ST ““The Grace of our lLord, Jesus Christ, be with "vou all.” Bev. Harold Stratheamn, Secretary of the Interstate Evang Associz tion of Kochester. N. Y.. will preach in the morning at 10:45 o'clock and in the evening at 7 o'clock. He will deliver messages of interest. Sunday School at 12:15 o'clock. Classes for ll All services are held regularly thronghout the summer. istic e —— PEOPLE’S CH Services at 3\ RCH OF CHRIST the usual hours Rev. S. W. Raymond of Hartford will have charge of both services “Praise ye the Lord assembly 1 will praise the Lord with my of the upright, xnd in the congregetion.” whole heart. in the D — —_——————————————————— Object—To Bring Heaven 1o Earth. and Eventually Earth tc Heaven. COME TO OLD DOUGLAS CAMP MEETING 56th ‘Annual the Promotion of Mass 1830 D.D. L tionai Meeting for Dougla. JULY 18 Preachers—Rev. C. H. B W. Butl president o others . C. C. Rinebarger, n Quartet, of Ellet Good Board, $7 per week For Reservations and other Camp Meeting Secretary. 43 Hol N Ange Holiness 1sical director Ohio sing tooms ters, for two. 50 ¢ on write to Rev. N Bradford. Haver Colby Street COMPENSATION ACT mectns o FOTDS 107 ex-Servicemen at City e merin: 50 per conam | the director, not the result wn willful misconduct, which acquired in servi World War, or for ation not payable, d to receive a disabili at The o ovisions of under paragraph, person may receiv bilit compensation A lieu in in Nothing COPIES RECEIVED A person al Home Service Bureau i il sa was | cotind swbaslior manii ——— e Lol ducted from tnalaion . Miss Cora M. Bertini s paragraph service bureau nence prior to tk of this datory date of application therefor, plication as the dir of s of t 1ssage an form Provided ctor no disat LA | Highland Lake Shores $10 SALE Ten Dollars is Not a Down Payment—It is the Total Cost of one Lot. 25x100 foot lots. Free warranty deed, free membership in club house, free use of tennis court and right of way to beach. Special Sales Plan How often have vou said “Why did 1 not get in on that real estate boom in time? I would have cleaned up some real money,” or 1y did I not buy lots surrounding a lake so I would enjoy them with my family and at the same time enjoying in- sed valuation to my investment?” God only made a limited number of lakes in this country and everyone knows they are practically all sold out and have been selling at increasing prices, but W can now buy lots at well-established Highland Lake on a Special Sales Plan and vou can get two lots for practically the price of one. What an offer! Here is the plan: You pay the regular price of $119 for a 25x100 ft. lot on terms of $1 a week. That entitles you to buy another lot 25x100 ft. right next to it for only $10, also at 21 a week. In other words vou get two lots for just a little more. than the price of Watch these values grow; but better still own lots here and benefit by t g prices the law of supply and demand is eternally at wor Ten Reasons Why These Lots are the Best Real Estate Buy in Connecticut 6 Electricity 7 !'Fjafl\ ot g 9 crea hland Lake is the most already Lalke in the State. Becaus beat on prop- fine cottages are al- development way Good roads lead to it from all over buil Connecticut lot to Clubhouse is already bui Lake witt a road seven s circling Lake Andrew Carnegie made the state- it that 90% of all real big money de basis of real estate, and h Roads are already t blished to chamacter is already e development. Tennis ready being finished and on i 2 3 4 5 Come Out Sunday. It May Be Your Last Chance. These lots at the Special Sales Price, 155 for one, 3165 for two, are the greatest f all values eves offered in the State of Connecticut. Just imagine. These lots are ted in the Litchfield Hills a short distance from Lake which you can reach over vour own right of way on a La which alread) over 400 cottages. Connecticut people who find it inconvenient to go to Maine, find on these Hills which are 1,200 feet above sea level, pines and hemlocks which are an exact replica of Maine country loc: only a mile away and is well , department stores, in fact ever town of movies, Wi 1518 chain sto juipped with s thing right at your hes, ck elbow. buy. A $ Come out Sunday. No obligation on ct for you. Do not hesitate. posit will secure a cor our to part Follow Route From Farmington Through Unionville and New Hartford and You Will Arrive in Winsted. Highland Lake Sh Winsted, Conn. ores awa th then such of this onstrued to allo or in lows des ume i the

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