New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 25, 1930, Page 8

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NFW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBE 411 SHOULD OV “HOME, PREX THINKS Hoover Tells Building Confei- ence How to Aid Citizens Washington, Sept (r—Presi- dent Hoover yesterday told the ini- tial meetin planning com- mittee of nference on home building and home ownership that it “should be possible in our coun- fry for anybody of sound ¢ cter habits to provide lequate housing and 1y his own home 1d its first House. It tion of Mr problem of W to mak- izen for the age cit oust ident the financing of pecially through is “the most our whole credit it was casier to horrow on an automobile and aver told t ho “$5 per cent repay it on 1 to buy rally a rest a house req rate.” “I will say at once that we have a large proportion of adequate hous- ing than any country in the world, but we still lag far behind our na- tional ideals for homes for all our people,” the president said. “Sub- 1ces be made parts of the great sxperience h ind it has been the wish of many of these roups that therc should be a thor- ough national inquir view to a summation of this experience, ik mobilization of existing its and the possible it of a new ac tion." FRENCH PUT STOP have en country;: s been with Take Steps to Avoid Slump in Grain Market Paris, moved to prevent sian wheat y Sept (UP) — France an influx of Rus- ¥ when the gov- ernment ordered port officials to make sirict application of law rorbidding the import of foreign wheat except by nit correspond- ing to a similar unt of French wheat previously exported 1t was understood that officials desired to avoid a slump in wheat prices similar to that attributed to imports of Russian grain in England and the U ates. French millers the law obliging them to use 90 per cent Irench wheat in making flour. The millers would be allowed to import a maxi- mum of 7.000,000 tons of wheat most of it was expected to be from the Danube which but grain can be mar- | ketea in France cheaper than Rus- | | sian’ wheat | Irench millers recently imported 200 tons of Russian wheat and said | ihat 1t was of high quality. It is | understood that more has been or- | lered for progressive delivery dur- | ing the year. and quality and the Dan- ny French millers believe the United States, Argentina | and Canada arc likely to lose the bulk of their wheat exports I'rance within onc y to EMPRESS WOIZERO NEARS ASCENDANGY Kept in Private Lile During Lie of Zaoditou Addis Ababa, Abyssinia, P r the new Empress of Ethio- pia, Her Majesty Woizero Manen, the coronation of her hushand, Emperor Haile Sellassie I on November 2, will be a “coming out” party Until April when the Empress Za- oditou died, her husband ‘ruler of of king empress was alive functions rather awkward {o have two women of almost equal rank in the court. | | was co- the title social Consequently, the queen had to re- tire in favor of the empress. | s obscure life, which she has | put to the service of her six children and to the aid of orphans in the capital, will end on the coronation Wy she will take her place be- de the emperor. But she never will he able to do much more than direct the court and to look on. Her physical handicap, it, will deny her the pleas- ure of dancing and moving about sufficiently to be the “belle of the court.” This aftliction is hereditary in Ethiopian women. The Empre Zaoditou was unable to use her le excepting when supported by vants on cither side. She seldom stood on her feet. All travelling was done in a sumptuous limousine. Only 10 Years Old ajesty is but 40 ited immense much property Addis from her father, peror Menelik. Her brother, who was de- throned as emperor in 1917, is de- | prived of enjoying his heritage as he been held since his dethrone- within reach of the present | ernment 60 miles from the gibbi (palace) Her subjects have known Woizero as a woman with simple Since the death of the Em- ditou. she has entertained | in the gibbi both for the court and for Luropean women. She aiso h appeared at banquets with the em- | peror. But she continues to spend her time thinking about the welfare | of her children. The prince imperial | is but 16 y of age. Her oldest child, a girl, is married to the gov- | ernor of a rich coffee-growing | province. She founded and keeps up with her private funds a carpet factory whick gives work cnly to orphans. when overwei ser- in- cluding in 'USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | The Kitchen IsNoLonger a Work Shop In a wide sense it has become a real living room, into which are admitted freely and proudly yeur guests and intimate friends. The Modern Gas Range smart, celorful and decorative meets this new vogue for attractive hominess. New Britain Gas Co. 25 West Main Street GONE FIVE DAYS CHIEF REAPPEARS District Aftorney Says Police Ofiicial Will Be Witness Providence, R. 1., Sept. (GP) | ner Acting Police Chief Daniel | aly of Central Falls, yesterday appearcd in public for the first since his disappearance last ime ay. The missing official visited the office of Attorney General Benja- | min M. McLyman at Providence county courthouse and spent somc in conference with McLyman Afterward ‘neither Healy nor the | attorney general would comment on | the conference beyond McLyman's statement that Healy had come to give him certain information. The attor general announced that Healy would appear as a wit- ness before the grand jury next W in connection with the state investigation of corruption and brib- ry allegations involving the Central alls police department (030 BABIES GIVEN 35 YEARS TOLIVE Disease Control Bringing Race| Nearer to Biblical Span | Washington, Sept. 25 (® — To every child born in 1930 medical science, in the old fairy tale role f God Father, says: “You may cally cxpeet to have ten years more of living than the 1910 baby Expectation of life at birth has been increased from 48 to 58 years| in the last two decades. Older age | groups also have an extended life span. Such is today's good news from the United States Public/ Health Service. To the long campaign against in- fant mortality, and to increased public health activities throughout | the land, the public health service RELIEF FROM CURSE | OF CONSTIPATION A Battle Creek ph n says “Constipation is responsible for more misery than any other cause.” | But immediate relief has been | found. A tablet called Rexall Or-| derlies has been discovered. This | tablet attracts water from the s tem into the lazy, dry, evacuating bowel called the colon. The water loosens the dry waste and causes a gentle, thor- ough, natural movement without forming a habit or ever increasing the dose. Stop suffering from constipation. Chew a Rexall Orderlie at night. xt day bright. Get 24 for 25c to- day at the nearest Liggett or Rexall Drug Store. food | | | pox and be attributed the checring results of the latest life tablc figures. Life insurance and census bureau figures are the basis for the compu- tations. Specific death rates are computed for each ¢ from one year to 100 and beyond in arriving at what any baby may logically ex- pect in the way of living. The public health service pro- nounced these the principal discase- control triumphs of the twenty vears, chief factors in the longer life span: Can Use Anti-Toxin No child need now die of small pox or diphtheria, among the most deadly scourges of the past. Babies safely be vaccinated for small given anti-toxin for diphtheria. Scarlet fever has become so mild health authorities seldom recom- mend wholesale immunization, but it is possible to immunize. If one child fn a family has con- tracted measles, it is now often pos- sible to protect the remaining chil- dren by administration of immune serum Typhoid fever is well guarded against in most American cities by sanitary control of water and milk supplies, and typhold vaccination is excellent protection. Children bitten by mad dogs can aved by the Pasteur treatment. Yellow fever and bubonic plague may be readily controlled in pro- gressive communities by measures against the mosquito and rat res- pectively. “But a great wastage of health be and life still continues, duc to the | failure to apply existing knowledge,” |sald Dr. Hugh S. Cumming, chief of |the Public Health Service. He sald a better observance of health and hygicne rules would bring the life span much closer to | the Biblical “threc score and ten.” ‘CHINESE LINER RESCUES 3 STRANDED KANARAS Castawsys Had Lived On Raw Fish and Birds' Blood for Month. For more than a month 35 Kanakas, Bird Island an inhospitable outcrop of rock in the Banda Sea. Their |sole food was raw fish and their lonly drink was seabirds’ blood. The party had been crossing the | Banda sea when their big war canoe | was wrecked on the island upon which there is no grass and no liv- ing creatures except myriads of sea mews. The Kanakas, almost deranged by their terrible privations, were res- |cued by the China-Australian liner Taiping which had been blown out of her course. A German experimenter has built 2 Diese! engine that can be run with powdercd lignite, sawdust or rice husks. BEA Drisbane, Australia, Sept. 25 () — | men, women and children, lived on R 25, 1930. AUSTRALIAN DOPE RING BROKEN UP {Woman Leader Jailed for Year and Fined $17,300 Sydney, Australia, Sept. 25 (B — It is hoped here that the convietion |of Mrs. Katc Lee, so-called queen of the underworld and acknowledged |ruler of a desperate band of gun- men, will break the Australian nar- cotic ring which for years has di- rected this traffic in Australia. Police say that, bereft of its |brains, the narcotic ring must col- lapse. | Kate Lee and her beautiful daygh- |ter Eileen lived a life of ca nd |splendor. Their fleet of automobMes |rivalled that of the governor. Their |residence had been raided on num- |erous occasions by police but finally | Kate Lee was found in possession of |narcotics. She was sentenced to 12 months' imprisonment and fincd $17,500. Italian Specials Venice, Sept. 25 (UP)—King Vic- |tor Emmanuel visited the intern: tion art exhibit and numerous inst tutions organized under the Fascist UTIFUL regime here yesterday. Last night he was accompanied by the Duke ot Spoleto when a manifestation of loy- alty was held by citizens in* front of the royal palace. The king acknowledged the manifestation from a balcony. Capua, Sept. 25 (UP)—Sergeant Oreste Rabasco died in a hospital at Cascrata yesterday as the result of injuries received when an air- plane he was piloting crashed into a scout plane at the local airport. Salerno, Sept. 26 (UP) — Severe damage was inflicted upon olive groves at Sapri by a hurrlcane and thunderstorm yesterday. : Many houses were unroofed and several fishing and pleasure boats were sunk. Gardens along the beach were dam- aged by water spouts. There were no casualties. Genoa, Sept. 25 (UP)—Fifteen water spouts were sighted off Aren- zano yesterday. Three of them struck the beach and created great excitement but little damage, as their force had been spent before reaching land. Rome, Sept. 25 (UP)—King Fey- sal of Iraq visited Premier Musso- lini at his official residence, Venezia | palace, and held a cordial conversa- {tion with Il Duce. Rome, Sept. 25 (UP) — Premier Mussolini has been awarded the | great cordon of the Order of Salo- mon by Ras Taffari, who will soon | be crowned emperor of Ethiopla. NEW Bologna, Sept. 25 (UP) — Gend Valle, chief of staff of the air force, selected a larg> field near the Reno river yestecrday as the site for tho new tivil airport. It will be linked | to the city by motor bus and street car lines and wlll serve as a junc- tion for several civil air lines. | Aftter Many Failures He Discovered A Real Pile Remedy For years he sufféred with itching piles. Now and then he'd get a I tle relief from some salve or other —but nothing much to speak of. Finally someonc told him of Pe- terson’s Ointment—of its powerful healing qualities which had brought such swift, blessed relief to thou- sands of pile sufferers. Somewhat doubtful, he bought a box—the first application absolutely convinced him' that this was ths most marvelous Ointment in the world. ‘Why, man alive! That agonizing soreness went right out of thoso piles—the tortuous itching stopped —Dbetore he knew ‘it his piles wera gone. Every enterprising druggist in America knows of the mighty heal- ing power of. Peterson’s Ointment— he knows it ends piles—one 35c box will prove it. Sk T L b NOW ON DIS PLAY THE worps DE LUXE are a fitting description of the beautiful new body types now on display at the showrooms of Ford dealers. Everywhere they have met with distinguished favor because of their striking lines and colors and the quiet NEW FORD DE LUXE PHAETON DistiNGuisHED by its low, treatment. Onme wide door admits to front and rear seats. Driver's seat is adjustable. “Triplex shatter-proof glass fold flat. Cowl lights, side fleet lines, and attractive sport Upholstered in genuine leather. windshield and windshield wings fender-well, trunk rack and front and rear bumpers are standard equipment. FORD DE LUXE ROADSTER richness of the upholstery, trimming and appointments. These new de luxe bodies are offered in addition to the standard Ford line and include the De Luxe Roadster, De Luxe Phaeton, De Luxe Sedan, De Luxe Coupe, Town Seden and Convertible Cabriolet. The De Luxe Roadster and De Luxe Phaeton are upholstered in genuine Bed- ouin grain leather, in tan harmonizing with the swagger tops. The spare wheel is carried forward on the left. The new colors for these two types are Raven Black, Washington Blue, and Stone Brown. The wheels are finished in a complementary color. The De Luxe Sedan, De Luxe Coupe and Town Sedan are upholstered A sTRIKING sport car. Finished in Raven Black, Washington Dlue, and Stone Brown, with steelspoke wheels in a har- monizing color. Upholstery is genuine leather. Distinctive tan top has natural wood trunk rack, side fender-well for spare wheel, and front and rear bumpers are standard equipment. NEW FORD A TOPULAR FAMILY can because of its rellability, economy and iding comfort. Equipped, as are all the Ford cars, with four Houdaille hydraulic shock absorbers. Other fea- tures include quick acceleration, ease of control, 55 to 65 miles an hour, silent, fully enclosed four-wheel brakes, more than tweaty ball and roller bearings, and Rustless Steel. eas bows. Rumble seat, cowl lights, so TOWN SEDAN Chicle in soft luxurious mohair or Bedford cord, optional with the purchaser. Plan to see these new de luxe bodies this week and arrange for a demonstration. evident in every detail, NEW FORD DE LUXE COUPE Womzn will be quick to note the rich interior of this beau- tiful closed car. You may choose upholstery of brown mo- hair or Bedford cord. Hardware is of distinctive scroll design. Dome light and cowl lights are standard equipment. Selection In body colors includes Maroon, Kewanee Green, Drab and Black, Seat is adjustable, NEW FORD DE A sTukiNG xxAMrLE of the rich You will find much to admire in their sprightly appearance and the high quality LUXE SEDAN finish that characterizes all of these new Ford deluxe bodies. For upholstery you may choose either fashionable Bedford cord or luxurious mohair. Driver's seat is adjustable. Wide rear seat has s folding center arm and side arm rests. Cowl lights are standard equipment. There is a wide varicty of body colors,

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