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L NEW BIéITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1930. T — - - This position would be east of | *| spitzpergen, and in line for where |and is cheaper than Paris,” e —————————————————— ~ | nen,” he said upon |an | nfs return. ey may be jealous, | *Mexico “moves faster than Reno! “I know w automobile and a gay time.” Del Toro says his Paris pffice is EUROPEAN NATIONS STAND BY LEAGUF Won't Desert It for Bnauds Proposed Union Geneva, Sept (P—The league of Nations is almost strutting with pride over the responses of govern- ments to the Irench proposal for the formation of a Kuropean fed- eration There Aristide 19 Forehodings h s at Geneva, Fenti telsm world with ur “The European scheme of must do no harm to I Nations!" Smiles Geneva. T at this union igue of placed agu for universality in cooperation. One sent efforts Ltions.” for staction eague's advocates Other grounds are found b, lud- is that all ed in the b seen here of universality tion. The nations of Lurope. the Briand scheme, had alt with the ove. it. The of gove in the federatio that the idea 1thy ono: whole- a ware, Distrist of Colum Kentuc! , North Caro- Minnesota , Vermont and Rhode Island, South Carolina, T Virginia. St | from airship, Italia,%ind the | Some Chance Thiat Astundsen May Be Alive 1 He Found Fesd Cache Left by Fiala In 1905 Northeast Land =4 7 2 . ANTHONY FIALA CACHE .ON RUDOLPH ISLAND v that ald Amundsen Umiber Hor (lower i (below) left on qi for on New Y Amu o live in the is bett 19 (P still most persons know Forgotten by there two-ton food far Spitzbe nea the most of world is a n expected to search for Umberto Nobile Amundsen knew its timately when he set out | Tromsoe, Norway, Ju on his Nobile The chance that he cache is almost f is one report inc last seen traveli Of all th missing in the nts in- plane 18; conte 1928, rescuc reached this but there quest astic ating that he was in that ¢ 144 explorer. Arctic, only 12 ch of ction. still of ik could because 1 th lin expedition nremb: now uld be well over 100 years old, and three members of the Duke of Abruzzi’s party in 1900 disappeared in sight of land. . The dozen are the six dragged aloft jn the broken Nobile X of Am- Rudolph Island (map) by men | (right) to Nobile centers in slight cha Hope for the seems absurd. this coincidenc not far from the according to the natur Arctic air, might be expected to travel in its di This cache lies on Rudolph Island, Jorthernmost of the Franz Josef rchipelago. It was left there b Anthony in 1905, in a com- modious building in which he and |the score of men composing iegler polar expedition from the wreeked ship America spent about three ye He says it has cven an electric light plant Coal for the plant is available on the s of the ground of a near- by 'd. Fiala left about tons of food comprising mostly canfied goods, pem an and bread. Much of it was from his own sup- plies, but part came from a cache nearly still earliier by the Duke ndsen’s par men they loose food cache, and his left of 1zzi. ¥ so left tools, clothing, one | rifie and one shotgun, with ammuni- tion for each. He left two English STILL CLEAN STILL CLEAR STILL GOLDEN that he Anthony Fiala expedition in 1005 two | may have found food cache W oats and one kiak. s now des in New York : he makes a business of out- fitting sportsmen and explor “I have always thought,” b “that there might be.a chance | Amundsen, knew all about this Ache. fov | disappearance @ith me here it Amundsen, aid, he spent an evening and we talked about discovered of the South Pole, rated as one of the most resourceful of all Arctic explorers, had lived in sceming comfort in places where even other scientists doubted it could be done. When he left Tromsoe he was supposed to be headed for one of the bays of Spitzenbergen, a flight of 600 miles over water, on a course not directly toward Nobile and the cache. He was never sighted defi- nitely anywhere. Two days after his start a Nor- | wegian sealer reported as sighting | what it took to be his plane, on an ice floc, “southeast of Northeast land. » {and for | | | | Nobile was féund and for the cache. | But it is about 300 miles from” la, however, says the eastward, | the cache. 17 |ice drift is rapidly ward the cache. If Amundsen islandy Iliala sa Rudolph not only ‘ned® he rea not be able to get away fog years. The two whaleboats are so heavy that even six men would have diffi- | culty dragging them over, the rough ice from lead to ledd in'the sum- mer ,and probably would find it im- possible to do so except in a favor- able scason. It Amundsen reached the island, Fiala says it would not be remark- able not yet to have heard from | him ‘CUPID'S ENEMY’ T0 BROADEN HIS FIELD Mexican Lawyer Will Extend Divorce-by-Mail Plan BY MINOTT SAUNDERS Parls, Sept. 19 — Troubled ' by aching hearts burdened by the bonds of matrimony, Senor Arturo Del Toro, proud parent of the Mexican | painless postal divorce, has resolved |to broaden his activity and establish | branches in several Eurapean coun: |tries. He has returned to his head- quarters in Paris after a “triumphal” | visit in London Where he found “any | | number of the best people” in dire | need of nis services. “I just want to make people happy,” he reiterated. “In every land there is a crying need for de- liverance from matrimony. The | best way out is the easiest way out, the laws of Sonora and Morelos best solve this problem.” Does Thriving Business These laws make pos | without residence and upon applica wise to- | might live there for years, but might | ible divorce | he said. without all lhlsl , which is an evil | but they get over it. Very few | | wives question a husband’s second \nnrnvlz under our M can divorc Del Toro is often confronted, he Fflaws once it has beén accomplished admits, by legal opinions to the| Del Toro has *his own theory cffect that his Mexican painless di- [about the increase in divorces vorces' would not be recognized in | throughout the world. certain states and countries. This| “The princigal causes” he sald, |is the general view in England, | “are the decréase in home life in | where he is opening an office and |the big cities and the change in so- |of St. David's Cath~dral which ene | finding a great deal to do. ~ But|clal conditions. Nowadays home |titles him to preach in the Cathas lme in large citles consists of a radio, | drat. | “Also it operates distressing pubcity influence.” loing a rushing business. and he | found so mueh cncouragement in London that he intends to branch |out and give other peoples the ad- vantage of his simple method. Strictly speaking, the king,of Eng land is not a layman. He holds.a clerical appointm=nt as Prebendary | this doesn’t worry him. PLAY TOM THUMB GOLF * Little Meadow Course / WEST MAIN ST. OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Special Prizes this week. Turn in your scores. pete in a play-off Monday Night, September 21st. Ladies starting at 7 P. M. and Gents at 7:30 P, M. Respective winners to receive order for $10.00 worth of merchan- | dise at PARKER & PARKER and' FITCH JONES CO. The twelve lowest scores will com- | Bloomberg’s Specialty Shop 328 MAIN STREET tion of intention of either party lo- | cally, regardless of whether the cther party is aware of the Incomputibility is usually the grounds. Del Toro says he has al- | ready secured over a thousand di- nonths before his | | vorce: “Everywhere 1 go [ hea |iament,” he said, fails it can only be repaired by di- vorce. “In America they call me an en- cmy of Cupid. On the contrary, T am his friend. 1 believe in giving him another chance. He {s like the rest of us and we all .make mis- takes. My mission is to aid people | to start out life again where other- wise, under the primitive legal-sys- | tems of hundreds of years' stand- | ing, they would be compelled to liv | unhappily for the rest of their lives. | "Del Toro does this for a fee which fluctuates according to the social position of his clients. ~ A soft-spoken, kindly appearing man, his benevolence is stirred for a con- sideration of $2,000—and up. 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