New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 14, 1930, Page 8

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AMERICAN PILOTS T0 GARRY TREATY' Will Rush Japanse Emperor's| Document to New York Washington, Oct. 14 (A—A docu- | ment of paramount importance to | the powers of the world, bearing the | signature of an emperor, will speed | across the American continent this week by air, guarded only by two | officers of the American army. It is the Japanese ratification of the London treaty h must be * deposited in London before the pact between the Ur Britain and Japan may f come effective. Its trave €% cncd because the pow: treaty in full force, to Geneva 6, of the pre- % paratory disarmament comm hiv. the League of Nations. i At the request of the Japanese | & government the United States has IS detailed two army pursuit plane: L be piloted by ieutenants Irvin A |- Woodring, and William M. Campbell, " to rush the document from Vancou- ver, B. C, to New York. There it f = will be entrusted to Pierre de L. Boal, assistant chief of the western ™ Buropean division of the state de- & partment. He is sailing Saturday for | % London on the Leviathan and will turn the paper over to A\( L2 aira on his arriv in London will acc = he army fliers will receive the '3 document from American Consul = General Ely E. Palmer, who in turn Seawill obtain it from Jay Se. ~zconsul general as s it arrives on the Japane ‘e The ship is and the fliers immediately. ceed to Geneva nated an ac delegation at the sion's on WATER SHORTAGE CAUSES HARDSHIP THROUGH STATR Game American commis- Fish Threatened by Condi- tions Brought On by Shrinkage I Streams. soon become a been reported in the state. A dry summer, followed by sever- | al rainless weeks recently, have dried | wells and springs in many commu-| nities and country dwellers are be- | ing forced to carry their own water sometimes long distance The existence zame fish s . threatened by shrunken streams, ac cording to Superintendent John W dTitcomb of the state board of fisher- | ¥ des and game. i ¢ Brush fi got their first victim | Dlonday Brennan, a | LRENE IR RS R d in a hospital a fment, d near that city «ng a brush firc mvas found by ot ng overcome. Gllde ,‘u by monoxide He LY A Itali < Rome, % national cor : @rce of scientific methods in the | | examination and preservation of art in Julius| works opened yesterday Caesar hall in the capitol. Rome, Oct. 14 (UP)—Senator doardo Maragliano, a famous Ital- ian physician, yesterday delivered | address at the opening of the| | 36th congress of the Italian society | of internal medicine, under chair- manship of Prof. Vittorio Ascoli. Bari, Oct. 14 (UP)—Under-Secre- tary of Communications Riccardi representing Under-Secretary of Aviation Italo Balbo, attended the inauguration of a here Sunday. Novaro, Oct. 14 (UP)—Privates | Pierino Morlini and Gerardo Astor- ino of the 54th infantry were killed vesterday by the premature explo- ) a min road nec 14 (L ian middleweight given a bouquet s of the boxing association and numerous prize fight fans, ex- P)—-Micheld box Oct | pects to sail for New York Friday aboard the Augustus. : OCEANIC AVIATORS AIDED BY SCIENCE Weather Maps Play Vital Role in Atlantic Hops ton, Oct. 14 (UP) t Boyd and Navigator W their transatlantic mon- e Columbia out over thousands of miles of islandless ocean, in one nse re not as handicapped s a blindfolded man trying to walk Il gridiron in & Yet, to miss a )0 miles away by does not indicate a only, bad ‘When intelligently used, the com- of air navigati xcellent direction finders readily keep a pilot from falling into the blindfold habit of traveling in circles. E - d in by a thick aviator can hold to ction with a vari- 0 per cent to the light the out and re to one per cent His instruments are a bank and turn indicator, compass. pitch indicator and air speed indicator. en w d on & ions will the probable new airdrome | and | part in theory. Winds are the chief| |cause of' the transatlantic ruers worry. At flylng elevations it is no! unusual to encounter winds blo at 50 miles an hour. Such a Knle can quickly throw his _course. i One way of determining the urcczi of wind is with the smoke bomb in- | dicator. A smoke bomb is dropped, and as the plane flies away sights| are taken on its smoke to measure the angular difference between the |line of sight and the axis of the fuse~ {lage of the plane. Then the true course can be very closely held by | applying this angle as a correction. Or, if it is night, observations to find a plane's pasmon can be taken |on two fixed stars. perienced in using a | his position on the earth with- | 25 miles. It is more diffictilt to make accurate observations on the sun in the day. But suppose and stormy, or if cannot be scen use the drift indicator. wind will sweep the flier course. Not what he does then but | what hie has done before he hopped | ‘of{ will save him. He will not know | cat in the weather is dark at night the stars It is too foggy to| Then the | I off his| where he is going unless he has| studied weather maps carefully and plotted his course with corrections | [ t0 allow for the wind, and unless the | “enther behaves exactly as predict- Thls is the way all but the fool- hardy plan their long flights. When dbergh took off he had charted ‘a Coursc which took him where the | weather was most favorable. At those places along his route where he expected the wind to be from the north, he steered into the north just enough to compensate for the wind's to blow him south The weather doubtless behaved exactly as predicted and he properly applied the corrections. t City Court Judge Rules In Russian Church Case| Hartford, Oct. 14 — In a decision affecting the us of property of the Greek Catholic church on Broad treet, Judge Herbert A. Ross of the city court, finds that the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic All Saints’ church, a voluntary association, fail- ed to establish its right to the prop- erty and that the association's| claimed record title and claim to t of possession have not been sustained An appeal to the supreme court | will be taken. according to Roger | W. Davis, counsel for the plaintiff | | church. , tendency For Real Satisfaction "SALADA" TEA “Fresh from the Gardens” In Packets and Individual Tea-Bags aatens I] sEszEane It's so wise to keep warm the Read- ing Way. No paying out of consider- able sums for new heating equipment, much of which will wear out within a few short years. No hazards. Just use that better Pand R hard coal — and you have clean, smokeless, even, unfailing, safe heat at the lowest cost that truly brings summer into your home every hour of the winter. nor has man discovered, a finer fuel than Reading Anthracite. Your coal merchant has it or can get it. . ? Iits so cheap . ) Iits so easy . ) . it's so sensible to use 778 increased fire Nature never made, FADING designate 1f: public prayer. days. communities were suffering from a serted football | shortage of water and crops were|would have been | being endangered by the dry spell. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1930. But such a flight can be -ccom-{ plished only in still atmosphere, and H HT U ES still atmosphere exists for the mo!( an wir navigator of (oo Damage Also Looms in| Widespread Dry Spell New York, Oct. viewed The situation was were requested to No Rain in 18 Days Rain has not fallen to any appre- ciable extent in Philadelphia for 18 ' reservoir wa Pennsylvania been described as resembling a de- city | Throughout At Marlette, Lancaster County, a house to house_check of water leaks was ordered and posters were put| up asking residents to refrain from ‘uashmg clothes. In Berks County the Agricultural Extension Associa- tion was considering a request to the secretary of agriculture that it be| placed in the drought relicf area. Throughout New England mid- |summer temperatures prevailed, | While in rural sections of Connecti- | cut wells were dry and both resi- | dents and cattle faced a water fam- | 13 () — A pro- | ine. longed drought throughout the east today brought fears of a water fam- ine and serlous crop damage. In Boston the temperature reach- ed 87 degrees yesterday, the highest | for the day in the annals of In the | White Mountains of New Hampshire to cut paths the mountain roads. | The water famine extended into Maryland where at Annapolis the o low its sides have over stadium. The without water a | fortnight ago but for 200,000 gal- the | | with | weather bureau. The heat was gen- such alarm in Philadelphia that the | eral throughout the state and num- | Presbyterian Ministerial Association |erous prostrations occurred. urged prayers be offered for rain. Ministers [1ons arawn daily from the private | supply at the United States Naval Academy. Jersey Has Forest Fires | The prolonged dry spell in I\'ewl | Jersey has resulted in an outbreak of forest fires, 30 being reported in the state. In the two most serious. blazes, sixty bungalows were Pleasantville, while 11,550 acres of timber land have been burned over near Atsion. After a tour of state forests in New York, two state conservation officials said they would recommend closing the Northern Adirondack Forests to the public to relieve the fire hazard. | MARRIED 60 YEARS | Thompsonville, Oct. 14 — Mr. lead | the weather was slightly cooler, but |and Mrs. Franklin J. Sheldon of En- their congregations in asking for re- in marked contrast to October 13, lief and Mayor Makey was asked to 1925 when snow plows were needed xt Sunday as a day for field observed the 60th anniversar: of their wedding yesterday by hav- ing theit marriage reenacted in the Congregzational church in Mansfield | Center. Mrs. Sheldon wore the same | dress in which she was married and lier husband carried the high silk hat which he wore 60 years ago. Both are 84 years old. Because of | his interest in scout work, Mr. Shel- |don is known as Major Sheldon. de- | stroyed between Mays Landing and | CORNS INSTANT RELIEF 100% SAFE Keeping rid of corns is simply a matter of using the right method —Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads. Their soothing, healing mgeii- cation ends pain instant- ly. Their protective, cushioning feature re- moves the cause~friction and pressure of shoes. Once a corn is gone, it will never come back, if Zino-pads are used at the first sign of irritation from new or tight shoes, BeauTiFUL and cHARMING! It’s an added special quality that makes the beauty of a pretty girl. But she’s a natural favorite to begin with. And for the same reason Camels are favorites with the modern crowd. Scientific principles govern their manufacture; but the mildness, the fragrance, the delicate flavor are natural qualities of the tobacco. There’s enjoyment in the smoking of a Camel. Camels go with happy faces . . . a lift of spirits with the opening of every fresh, fragrant pack. For Camel’s delightful mildness holds all the natural goodness of choicest tobaccos. Don't confuse it with the flatness or insipidness of “over-treated” cigarettes. “EASY TO LISTEN TO"— Wednesday evenings on N. associated stations. CAMEL PLEASURE HOUR B. C., network, WJIZ and Consult your local radio time table, Cutting your corns is dangerous—invites blood poisoning. Harsh liquids or pl ters often cause acid burn. Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads are safe, sure. Doctors recom- mend them. Sizes also for' Callouses and Bunions. Sold everywhere—35c box. Dr.S'clzoII.'s~ Zino-pads is gonel © 1930, R. J. Reynolde Tobaceo Co., Winston-Salem, N. G

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