New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 30, 1930, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Latest acts fm Science: Mechanics analvention How Electrical - . 7 Bolts Brand ) ie mied curreni Human Bodies. Saxophone ranks That Lightning Plays | ™ e " 4 i T o ey STln Aot vid banl Floasy of Lizht g It I« Bohts Lik That Do Such Freak Stunts i iking a Man Bald. Told in the News paper Clipping Reproduced at the Left, nd Other Carions Ap s Described On This Page. When You Blow Your Own Horn, Pick ) Like This Giant Saxophone. Nearly ven Feet Long 1s Thirty-Four Pounds. i s N s s i A AP A A TIN5y w WaT Y — 0dd Markings Made On a Man's Skin T s R WY i s, 70 S amach vas found x pitrs of 8 ow Trees Are Now Used e — Stripped the Victim of His Clothes, Without Further Injury. 2 5 b A i if T @ N b PR R o<l oach log peng mooe : : to Jaul FISONErs in the United S 10k b % ) . rt e i ” : 7 4 -~ vear, according to the reco c 3 2 ) Weather Bureau, Two in threc cover. About three hundred and are killed. 8 1 of Lightning strokes t y rs, While at W ?:Skd‘}l:r i’ifl;{;v:fp:nl ». in Struck by Lightaing. 1 o 5 Dru;;s Z\iflaiC From ton tirey L il Hamds at T . * Venom of Toads hit y a “ [= U A T 1l b 1 1 £ - 1: smell, his head felt cold, an t t ¢ h tr nd t ¢ A Long-Range Motor Car Headligh i : | oot 1) © e ! | i i i s e ? i promsmnmn NEW automobile headlight which 1 T t are their owr designed to give wide side- G beam i as well as leng range with d is placed between the two norm t a car, has been p Ryan, director of t gineering labora Electric C This is Mr. Ryan’s tion to the giga headlight problem announced a new light for automob I A AN RN I I o % { % i % { { i \ AR BRI B VLI AR R B IR AT I BN P TR 0t lamps, operating fr bulb with a fixed focus, non-tilting and non-depr type. Once turned on th the road and require no attention the driver. But de t iniversal protest from driver: of cars have been own headligh T Perhaps it was because dr An Artificial Air for AVlatOFS £ LY Wy B the heart; bull 0! Fhis Photoprsph, Demonstvates Mo Carl § i of Blaisdell 3 BSTRACTION of carbon d , - ’ A i o et ! New Yorke HeineiNo JuiliAyalable Has IR Gpusriomwnr: i 5 L and the rare g from orc e o nary air mak it breathe. Yet a mixture of hel oxygen seems to be just as good for the purpo: as ordinary air and likewise ture of argon and ox gen. Argon, by the way the now used for Ailling electric t ; 5 : T t t S T it does not burn k. . : v s netrated \ Mu.d:-m: bulbs. Being inert, up the tungsten filament. ] ‘ g ‘ ‘ : iy : | \ zle Unit Lamy e 2 ; - : ! [ etween the Two ap ! ! . } Standard Headlights of Motor Car. Spreads the Light Evenly at a Wide Angle to'Both Sides of the Highway, as Well as Projecting a Strot Beam Far Ahead On the Road. He ere The helium-oxygen atmospi now being used by divers and ca workers, being much safer for t than ordinary air, gen of the latter has a y form bubbles in the blood, giving ri to the often fatal malady called the “bends.” It is thought that aeronauts seeking high altitudes may_carry this or some other prepared artificial air aloft with them, compressed in steel tanks Sailors also may use such atmospheres while cruising in submarine boats. R 1 AU A I B B 1 L A A O i

Other pages from this issue: