New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 11, 1930, Page 4

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- WAL DAUGHERTY IN DIFFICOLTIES ing the honor, made a hole in one. His chest was still expanding when Mrs. Jenny brushed him aside and teed up. The hole was halved. | New York—One of the most de- | 1ighttul things about the visit of | captain Wolfgang Von Gronau, transatlantic flier, to this country NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1930. R R SRS L T SULPHUR USED IN MAKING OF SDAP \Coal Gas Product Has Beneficial | cal countries and is used by the na- |tives for medicinal purposes. The | Johns Hopkins men analyzed the fish to see what chemicals he pos- cessed, finding among other things, three alcohols and some acids. DICTATCRS HOL Europe. But then Ggneral Beren- guer came to imitate the dead stat man and has remained firmly at the helm, despite predictions on all sides that he would not last loxg. In Poland, Pilsudski, the nation's “man of iron,” has come back again to power after a brief eclipse, and it is claimed that he is stronger than ever, with a leng future as DROUGHT INROADS DEVASTATE CROPS Government Predicts Lowest soybeans, sweet potatoes, grapes, cabbage and various other products. Pasturage conditions reflected the severity of the draught by declin- ing to a new low level on Septem- ber 1, and a reduction of 6.4 per cent from last year was noted In milk production per cow. Egg pro- duction per hen likewise turned downward sharply, averaging about A Dbil providing a fund of not more than $2,000,000 to help farm- ers install electrical devices on their farms has been passed by the Ontario legislature. STOPS FALLING HAIR proven ‘ n T1 | has been a visit to the Lindberghs. | LUCKY TIGER, 8 Leaving with his three comrades | carrects dandru Pormer U. §. Attorney General's Brother Goes Into Bankruptcy | —— | for Germany, the captain described | { Mrs. Lindbergh as ‘“charming” .anai Columbus, O., Sept. 11 (P—An in-"| Lo live o flowe voluntary petition in bankruptey | Saugerties, N. Y.—Poultney Bige- | Napoleonic ruler of the land. DRY LAW PADLOCK #ix per cent less on Septémber 1 germicide, ff and scalp {rrits- than a year ago. saller. Hons. World's — AN Money.- Guarantee, Safe P for sdite sad ehiidres. At Barbers and Druggists. Yield in Past 20 Years ‘Washington, Sept. 11 (A—Inroads £t the drought have forced the de. partment of agriculture to predict Result in Diseases Cincinnati, O., Sept. 11 (A—The sulphuric smell in coal gas has been converted into a mediciff soap at ] fifllw U flPE __ FOR BEST nssm:-rs J was drawn up today against Mal S. Daugherty, brother of Harry M. Daugherty, U. S. attorney general in | )., ¢ 00 "t tennis, to split a cord | the Harding cabinet Claims totaling $77,237.51 were listed in the petition prepared for filing in federal court today by At- torney General Gilbert Bettman of Ohio. Daughetry, according to the petition, has admitted his inability to pay his debts and consented to be adjudged a bankrupt The claims include promissory notes to the Ohio Bank, of which Daugherty form was president, and $25,000 for sim- ilar notes to the Peoles and Drovers Bank. Both banks failed last su mer. State Superintendent of Banks O C. Gray, in charge of the litigation of the defunct banks, and Glenn M Pine were the petitioning creditors. Pine claims Daugherty owes him $537.51. Attorney General Bettman said Daugherty owns 705 res of Ohio State Bank stock. making him sub- ject to double liability. Mal Daugherty came into promi- nence in 1924 when he was cited for contempt of the United States senate for refusing to let senate in- vestigators inspect the books of the Midland Bank which he was pre tigators had heard r funds from the leasings o pot Dome and Elk i might be on deposit in the ban The Midland Ban 2 solidated with the F: bank to form the Ohio § 52,000 for ette [.. ———ed By the Associated P Washington—In order to be equal to the average you should have $36.72. That was the per capith circulation on August 81, when the amount of United States money was $8,253,541,522, of which $4.534,471, 449 was in circulation and the rest in the treasury. New York—If business conditions were as good in England as in the United States, England would feel very optimistic, in the opinion of Lord Melchett, mining magnate. “I'll_bet,” he added on departure for England, “that in another Y or so you will not remember that so many of your people were talking about hard times.” Waldron, Sask.—R. L. Penny" version is that imitation is flattery sincerest form. Mrs. R. L. says the affair proves that the fe- male of the species is as deadly as the male. The Pennys were play- ing golf together. Mr. Penny, hav- V4 il Ridkes of Lite | Penny | |1ow, historian, who has just cele- brated his 75th birthday, challenges | Herbert Hoover to a mile run, to | of wood, to climb Pike's Peak or to swim the Hudson. Judges and sena- tors, he thinks, should be at least years old and Mr. Hoover should the joy the American big four toox ir. drinking the water of the Mead- ow Brook or whatever was in the Westchester cup at the ceremony right after the international polo scries ended. Beatrice, ridden by | Winston Guest, helped pull artillery | for the British army in France and | was awarded a gold medal. Dever- eux Milburn bought her. She is 16 | vears old | Chartlesville, Pa—The associa-| tion for the detection of horse thieves, founded 68 years ago, is to | disband. The $300 in the treasury | will be split up. The association | ad no work to do for a long | New Yor Zrnestine Schumann- who is to teach forty girls by herself to sing, believes that if children were taught the cor- rect principles of breathing at an| early age many great voices would be discovered and developed. FITCH HOME REQUESTS INCREASE FOR BUDGET Raise Forecast in Biennial Grant for Veterans' Home Following Finance Conference. Hartford, Sept. 11 — Following a hearing before the state board of finance and control budget commit- tee vesterday a considerable in- |Ohio State university. — Results of one year's experiments with this soap were reported to the medical section of the American society today by Dr. Emery R. Hay- hurst, professor of hygiene. He said the soap is made from a new kind of sulphur which was dis- covered a few years ago by the Kop- pers Research company while re- moving sulphur and other impurities from coal gas. This sulphur resembles moderately moist clay. It differs from other sul- phurs in being composed of finer parties, all of them under six ten- thousandths of an inch in diameter. | Tried On Family Twenty-five per cent of sulphur was mixed with Castile soap and per- fumed. At first it was tried on mem- bers of his own family and on those of a few scientists. No harmful effects appearing, it was then tried on a wide variety of persons, from a baby camp to ma- chanists. and on various comple; ions. Prof. Hayhurst said found free of damaging effects to scalp, hair or nails, and did not sen- sitize the skin except for causing slight chapping in a few instances. “Its effects were remarkable,” he reported, “in practically all cases en- countered of simpler chronic skin disease like eczerma, acne and facial blemishes.” Three manufacturers of plated materials“informed Prof. Hayhurst that the soap, appeared to cure plat- ers' rash and one concern reported that after a siege of machinists’ boils lasting about five years, the soap eradicated them within three months. Hay Fever Research Progress toward discovering in | pollens the mysterious substances | which cause hay fever was reported by Marjorie B. Moore and Edmond E. Moore of the Swan-Myers com- pany of Indianapolis. They have separated from extracts of ragweed and other pollens sub- Chemical | it was| General Carmona- of Portogal - Joins Pilsudski and Mussolini | Paris, Sept. 11 (UP)—The sway of the dictator in Europe, instead of declining, is spreading and growing {more powerful. v To confirm this, students of inter. national politics point to the an- \nouncement that Portugal may be considered to have stepped definitely into line with the other nations of the old world which afe governed by the iron rule of the individual, such as Mussolini. General Carmona, for years the |energetic, military-mindegepresident of Portugal, entered the ranks of the dictators when, through the agency of his president of council, De Oli- vera, he announced that a party of national union would be formulated to guard against the revolutionary plots which have so frequently shak- en Portugal. In other words, this will be & dictatorship supported by a political group with ideas largely resembling those of - neighboring |Spain, where ~one-mams._rule has |existed for nearly a decade already.” 18 Revolutlons, | Portugal has had 18 revolutions in as many vears and General Carmona, according to advices received in the chacellories here, is determined to |try and extend the period of com- ative calm which the country has enjoyed under his rule, and to do that it is necessary, in his view, to tighten the grip on the whole na- tional political organization. Ever sinde, two or three years ago, Car- mona quelled- the sudden revolt at Oporto, his prestige has increased among nationalists in his country and the present move was forgseen by international observers. When General Primo De Rivera, the s ng man of Spain, died in Paris about six months ago while on vacation, certain circles believe his passing would mark the first breach crease in the Veterans’ Home €OM- | innooq which they said appeared to |in the bulwarks of one-man rule in mission appropriation for the next biennium forecast because of the necessity of providing additional quarters and more funds for the support of Fitch's Home for Soldiers at Noroton After the meeting Commissioner of Finance Edward F. Hall admitjed that the need for quarters was evi- dent but that no decision had been reached on whether to expend more funds on the present site or to seek a new location for the home. The Long Lane Farm and the Mystic ‘Oral school also presented requests to the budget committee was Ttaly has banned the opening of new foodstuffs shops for the next five years in an effort to curb un. economical multiplicity of enter- prives. contain the essence of the irritant These substances composed mostly of nitrogen and solids, The Moores plan to subdivide the guilty substances still further in the hope of completely isolating the ir- 1i Their separations are made by picking out of droplets of the pol- len extracts thin films that are only about a millionth of an inch thick. This is done by absorption, the pro- | perty some elements have of attach- ing to their surfaces a layer of a {dlfffir(‘nl su\w\mtste only a few mole cules in thickness. | Analyze Queer Fish An analy of the castor oil fish was given by Warren M. Cox and E. Emmet Reid of Johns Hopkins. | The other name of this fish is ruvet- | tus pretiosus. S NE BIG BOTTLE holds enough for four players ai nd couple of on-lookers...six sparkling mel- low drinks of the two year aged Diamond GingerAle.The finest you can buy; yet it costs no more than you would pay for the other kind. SIX PEOPLE CAN DRINK FOR 20 CENTS The big bottle is filled with the finer flavored famou s Diamond Ginger Ale, dry or golden. Irs pure, healthful, made with two- year aged Jamaica ginger, fresh fra- grant fruit juices, an d bubbling spring water. DIAMOND IS THE ONLY GINGER ALE THAT IS AGED TWO YEARS. The ginger is aged= BUT THE ALE ITSELF 1S BLENDED AND BOTTLED AT THE ELEVENTH HOUR BEFORE IT 1 ‘YOUR DEALER. That's S SENT TO to give the extra sparkling bubbles Diamond excels in, the alivene: ss and tang you are so aware of ia taste and appearance. Every bottle, dry or golden, carries the Vintage Date Those who know how the better ale is made, look for the Vintage Date when they buy. The Vintage Date means finer flavor. BUY THE BIG THAT SERVES 20¢ BOTTLE SIX PEOPLE Treat youself to the best=it costs no more. Other popular big botdle drinks are Diamond Root Beer, mond Sarsaparilla, Diamond ‘White Birch and Diamond Fizz. Tune in on station WTIC every Thursday evening at 6:25 to 6:55 P. M. Diamond Dance Orchestra DIAMOND GINGER ALE CO. Waterbury, Conn. DIA GIN MORN GER ALE He comes from tropi- | 'Lumbago, Sciatica and similar comphlaints | yield quickly to the gentle, penetrating, healing effect of . Musclefone Big bottle $1.00, all drug stores For sale at Packard Drug Co. iS AGED FOR TWO YEARS ‘THE VINTAGE DATE PROVES THE AGE — n [ia¥ AGE P OVES THE FLAVOR > HARD ON LANDLORD Property Worth $1,309,000 In- 1volved in Nation’s Gapital Alone Sept. 11 (M —The government's efforts to enforce prohibition in the national capital have resulted in padlock proceed- ings, either pending or completed, ‘Washington, tion of $1,309,000. This total was shown in data prepared by local real estate inter- ests in cooperation with district authoflties, and was described as |not ‘a prohibition argument, but rather as a warning to property | owners to guard against such activi- ties of tenants for which they may against property with a tolu\ valua- | the lowest crop yield in twenty years, with the possible exception of 1921. The August report- issued yester- day ppinted to the continuation in August of the record-breaking dry wave, and its extension with injury to crops into states that had not previously suffered. | With the exception of potatoes. | sweet potatoes and a few other| crops, ‘food products shortage has| not become pronounced as yet but the corn crop, chief victim of the long dry spell, was forecast at only 1,983,000,000 bushels, the smallest since 1901. This indicated yield re- sult of the intense-heat in August. The actual corn shortage was esti- mated at more than 700,000,000 bushels. A different picture was presented by the department’s prediction of the wheat, oats and barley crops, | sufter. Eighteen pieces of property, val- |ued at $394,000 now are under | padlock, and proceedings have been | | instituted against forty others with la value of $915,000. | however, with the estimates for spring wheat increased since Aug- ust 1 by 17,000,000 bushels, oats by 75,000,000 17,000,000 bushels. Wheat production was estimated at 837,761,000 bushels, compared with 805,790,000 bushels last year. Of this 597,392,000 bushels is win- ter wheat. The oats crop was fore- Ast at 1,390,892,000 bushels with | the condition at §0.3 per cent. Prospects for potatoes fell off by 34,000,000 bushels, hay more than 1,000,000 tons and important re-| ductions were forecast for beans,| grain sorghums,” buckwheat, can- SAN MARINO MOURNS San Marino, Sept. 11 (P—Cap- tain-Regent Marino Lonferinini, one of the co-executives of this diminu- tive republic, situated inside of Italy overlooking the Adriatic, died here yesterday almost on the eve of the semi-annual election. Shops were closed yesterday in token of mourning. A state funeral will be bushels and barley by held Sunday. ] ]nln‘ vegetables, tobacco, flaxseed, | RADIO “» % (Golden The New Exclusive Quick-Vision DiaL Eaty to read as a clock. Entire kiloeycle scala always in sight. Stations evenly spaced—no bunching. Big figares, fully illuminated. MODEL 76 HighBloy with sliding doors. Finished in American wal- nut. Matched butt walnut doors and front penels. $145,less tubes. MODEL 75 Radio-Phono- graph Combina- tion. Finished in American wal- nut. 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