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4 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1930. HELDUNDERBOND - Rockland Deputy Harshal Held On Diy Law Charge e - U:lashes of Life | BEST RESULTS LD CLASSIFIED ADS said AUSTIN PALMER JUNIOR ® age 2 and a half @® and if your children hate cod-liver oil, here's good news for you THINK 0F 11! form that ch ed her to let her little Scott’s Emulsion how hard it is 1« take cod-liver oil. she ustin swallo 1 he smiled . . ke it, mummy. It's Pleasanter to take — but that isn't all Pale, thin, run-down children SCOTT’'S EMULSION Vlnnm-llgv: COD‘L|VER QIL Pleasanter to take—Easier to digest Watch cheek voungsters gain new weight pep. Your nearest druggist s d d health conte and 15 boys contested. The honors ! : vere announced last night after the | nts had been subjected New York Police Collect $5 Per Day From Men inch and his hei Walks to School 1 7 st 3 (UP) — A | THOHEALTHIEST CHOSEN BY CLUB Both Sieep Nine Hours Daily— Fat Many Vegeiables Fire “Under Control” for Third Time in Ri¢ Gets Highest Scorc Let Us Help You With GIFTS for “HER” dting vour inspection— HANDKERCHIEFS Jasy to Buy Sure to Please v,ialil\' hette of fine l from 25¢ to $] 'OOcat:}, ake vour selections now, w are fresh and clean. $1.59 7 Specially Priced at Hand-Made NIGHT GOWNS White and Colored Materials Wonderful Assortment of Styles 4 - SN (& e g - A Y - ona i Herrmannfl; wonars Japranes. soecamies L Italian Specials | “ hile the stocks AVERAGE AMERICAN BOY IMPROVEMENT| Youth of Decade Ago Louis, Mo., Dec. 5 (UP American boy of 1 © | reliey o d prolably uses more slang—in fact musi it to | be understood by his comrades. . and more poli opinion of R. K. Atkinson, - al director of the Boys' Club | icration of America. | Atkinson is one of several hun- “boy experts” attending the Boys' Work Council boy of today rcads because there more ed, but prefers articles al contrivances and in- | to Wild West hair raisers, he belicves. Some ‘of his other be- fs are that: Lindy His Idol modern boy hero is Lind- e Lindbergh embodics irous (raits as did t—the hero in his parents { picking them up “in the e collared job, a right and doesn't or a farmer. of clothes to one in 1910. He shines | the Reich 0 o hiafsnea mavalogten find keeps his | booklet containing texts of the 25 Respects Parents More Than e br for play and the let for his d that the Reichstag would care to He shows more sincere respect |assume responsibility for repealing for his parents, partly because they |the reform measures promulgated don't force him to. His parents are less dom y presidential decree Monday and e precipitating a political crisis. He dresses befter—has two suits| On the desk of cach member of toduy was an 86 page |laws which comprise the financial . Freadom | reform measures He isn't so inclined fo run away| Nationalist and fascist motions to mors | Tepeal the measures were among the first items listed on the Reichstag’'s agenda, but it was not believed they < if Tie lives | WOuld come to a vote before to- is loss Toom | MOFrOW or Friday, bo an out. | Bruening is known to desire a de- aVenture, _ |Clsion of confidence, or lack of con- e ch, bu o |fidence, in his government before el uch, but only 10 |y, cng of the week. nomy Budget The first measure on the agenda |was the 1931 budget, tige work of Hermanh Dietrich, finance who has ch cterized it ** ' first real cconomy budget.” sovernment is espected to use i m home, because he | rests and his parent ve him freedom. Ie has fewer chores to do He is more mature has fewer responsi s more sopl 1 hammer to drive home th eich’s | 1 He hus studigd boys REIEHSTA[i FA[;I:S irsentineed Solia Surosra m s of] | cconomy. y | Parties loyul to the German re- public were cxpected to support and kindred measures, rather than | to join with the fa a nation- alist opposition, which, if they are Chancellor Bruening Expected (o 25y i s bumern " 2o | ready for a court function, but found Ask v()[e 0[ Gonfidence prominent social democrat said: “Even an unpopular program of el economy is easicr to swallow an open dictatorship. o were prep to handle muni or s demon- trations outside Reichstag building. reforms Fossils of wor [time. So he BEER BOTILE PUT INKAISER'S CROWN Worker Sought Revenge Because Holiday Was Omitted Berlin, Dec. 3 (®)—There is a beer bottle inside the great golden im- Chancellor | perial crown of Germany in the iKmm‘r's former palace in Unter den Linden, says Vorwaerts, quoting the son of the man who put it therc 36 | Years ago. It is the son's story that Wilhelm, annoyed by the scant observance by | the populace of *“Busstag” (day of entance) which falls in November |issued a homily to his people en- » { J0ining them th il work should cease on that day, so that they could devole it to religious exer- cises. It so happened that the white marble hall of the palace was being renovated, and the four crowns of the house of Hohenzollern, the Mar- grave, the Brandenburg, the Prus- slan royal, and the imperial German crown, being fixed to the ceiling. The Kaiser was anxious to have the hall that if no work was done on “Buss- tag” it could not be completed in ed that in this particular inst the observance order should not apply. Vorwaerts, greatly daring. printed some ironical comment on the affair, | with the consequence that the issue in which it appeared was confiscated by the police. One of the palace this opposition came the Chicago area s members of the | years ago ha ning and his|placed in the t colleagues did not been The name of the sensational NEW MOTOR FUEL announced for the first time in vesterday’s newspapers is ATLANTIC WHI'TE FLLASH watch for it Saturday DRiVING CONDITIONS are radically dif- ferent from those of a few years ago. ‘There are three times as many auto- mobiles as in 1920 . . . thousands of traffic-lights and semgphores, with cars lined up in columns for the get- away . . . numerous stop-streets, at which you must come to a complete stop before crossing or entering. Auto- mobile engines have been redesigned —their fuel requirements changed. All of these things point to the need for a new and better motor fuel . . . one developed especially to meet modern driving conditions. Safety, for example, frequently de- pends upon the ability of your car to thread its way swiftly and surely through traffic. A “lazy” gas which does not respond instantly to your touch may easily get you into serious trouble. Comfort~— particularly in a closed car —requires a gasoline that will give off no foul odors. Economy is a factor worth careful consideration. Even for a small or medium-size car, you buy many gal. lons of fuel in the coursc of a year. You want a gasoline that will give you most mileage . . . and will not leave deposits of hard carbon, or corrode the vital parts of your motor. Satisfaction in your automobile re- quires that the gasoline you use give maximum performance under all con- ditions. Instant starting in the coldest weather. Quick pick-up on the straightaway. Power on hills without the power-robbing “ping,” or knock. A motor fuel meeting these require- ments has been developed, through literally years of research, by one of the oldest, most progressive refining companies in the world. Its name is Atiantic WHITE Frasu! Watch for further details in this newspaper to- morrow —and plan to buy your first tankful Saturday! workmen secreted a copy, put it in- ed and |side a beer bottle and embedded it Field Museum of |securely in plaster inside the crown, lieve | Natural History of that city. | 1t is still there, Vorwaerts asserts.