New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 18, 1930, Page 16

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)

Herald Cameramen Tell Their Story SAVED—Dr. Kaarlo Juho Stahl- berg, former president of Finland, who with his wife was abducted, is saved from deportation across the Russian frontier by an officer of the national defense corps. The abductors escaped. WIN ADVERTISING SUIT— Marcia Bacon, 12, left, and her brother Charles, 13, joint publish- ers of the tiny Douglaston, L. L, Weekly, have won a judgment of $182 for 14 page advertisements run for a company. i WHY HEAP BIG INDIAN LIVE _; LONG TIME — Chief Magpie, © snapped at Lawrence, Kas., said % to be the only Indian living who fought Custer, says he eats spar- B ingly, partakes of no sweets, never sleeps indoors or on a soft mattress and never shaves. NEW LEGION OFFICIALS IN WASHINGTOM hree new staff officers of the American Legion are photographed after calling on President Hoover in Washington. Left to right: Mrs. Gwendolyn W. MacDowell, of Indianapolis, national secretary of the women’s auxiliary; Major Ralph T. O'Neil, of Topeka, K: national com- mander, and Mrs. Robert L. Hoyal, of Douglas, Ariz., president of the women’s auxilia; £k : MO A CRUSADERS OPEN DRIVE—A three-year campaign to repeal the eighteenth amendment is begun | when Crusaders, national “prohibition reform” group, open National Crusaders’ week. This is view at Cleveland meeting. Left to right, front row: Dean M. Sclenberger, of Cleveland; Philip R. Mather, of Cleveland, general chairman; Frederic R. Coudert, organizer of lawyers’ committee, of New York; Laur- ence H. Norton, personnel chairman, of Cleveland, and Fred G. Clark, of Cleveland, national command- er-in-chief. Back row, the Rev. E. G. Mapes, Gerard J. Pilliod, battalion commander; Samuel Mather, John L. Severance, and Leonard G. Hanna, Jr., all of Cleveland. i — BETTER GIVE HIM THE PRIZE—Edgar Sickler, 18, who climbed into a tree at Lansing, Mich., on July 21, claims the world’s cham- pionship. Visitors bring him gifts ‘and for every advertisement osted on his tree, Edgar accepts a free-will offering of 50 cents, DAILY SUNBURN—An Austral- STARS OF COURT MEET SCREEN STAR—Douglas Fairbanks, movie star, and his director, Edmund ian momtor m the national zoo, Goulding, welcome noted golfers in Hollywood. Left to right, front row: Mrs. Stuart Hanley, Miss Glenna Collett, national woman’s champion; Fairbanks, Miss Bernice Wall. Rear: Mrs. Ruth Brown Park, Miss Virginia Van Wie, Leo Diegel, Goulding. GRACE!—Louise Allen, of Topeka, Kas., supports her partner, Dorothy Bradshaw, in a strong girl act that epitomizes grace. girls are co-eds of the University.of Kansas. Both SENATOR ATTENDS CHURCH FESTIVAL—Senator Reed Smoot of Utah is treated at a Mormon celebration in Salt Lake City to fruit punch and cakes by Irene Argyle, employe in the presiding bishop’s office of the Latter-Day Saints (Mormon) church. Washington, gets a daily sunbath, whether the sun \s shining or not, by means of violet ray treatment. . PITUITARY IN PEA CE — Brigadier Frank Percy Crozier, who fought for England on many fronts, comes to the United States to lecture on peace. —— e TOO FAT?—Los Angeles county comes to the aid of fat persons by maintaining a free clinic for those too stout. This picture shows a chart which clarifies the trouble for underweights as well as over- weights. A nurse is seen determining the amount of oxygen con- sumed by a patient. TYPICAL— Onstrud, 18, of Stoughton, Wis,, and Lyman FETED—This view of a portion of the speakers’ table shows not ital wl Davis, 16, of Madison, Tenn., are the selections of the National . Ui ehe Dl aral o exitaded their welcome to William Iiandolp_h Hearst, publisher, at a banquet given in Los Angeles on his return from Europe. Left to right: Louis B. Mayer, Joseph M. Schenck, William Randolph Hearst, Mary Pick- i ford, George Hearst and Douglas Fairbanks,

Other pages from this issue: