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m¢ The mc chwe hi t is ic PAGE TEN. Channel Trip Ils Made With Little Concern Americans Are Enthused Over Rapid Development Air Travel Has Made; Overhaul Planes at Hull By LOWELL THOMAS, une Newspapers Syndicate and the Mo Wwspapers Syndicate) Copyrizht, By the Chicago Clure } “The era of transport by air is not coming someday in the remote future. It is here,’’ says Lieut. Erik Nelson, pilot of the New Orleans. ‘Those who doubt it should have been with us at Le Bourget airdrome the morning we left Paris for London. Passenger planes were arriving from London, Brussels, Amsterdam, Lyons, Marseilles, or Vienna every tew minutes. Others were[country, 80 per cent of all the pas- ng out as punctually and with| sengers carried on the continent are o fuss as the departure of the as Twentieth Century’ from New York | Americans! So it's America that is the “Olympian supporting aviation in Europe Travelers were ha No Fog in London. punched for their “Much to the surprise of some of the boys London was not enveloped in fog. Several of them thought Amsterdam with to whisk them|that landing in London would be ss I I d to Great Neck,| ite coming down in the dark. But Pe ee ferry *°l eithout stopping to look at West minster Abbey, or to see if there were any soap box orators in Hyde Park, or to ascertain whether Lon- don bridge was still falling down, we landed immediately at Croydon ikland, ver having hannel before flown across the we decided planes that 1 Paris to Lon c z the airport of London, the G d At exactly to the! Central station of the air, wher: we ners left Le] planes leave every hour for all parts F 1086 they | of murope je Conqhero® &| “when we stepped out of our rch his’ forces to te! planes we were nearly mobbed by he French side of the} > te and adele ta ce tiated photographers, reporters, autograph collectors, and hosts of others. The crowd had broken through the po- lice. lines. But in 10 minutes the ‘Bobbles’ had the mob corraled, and one of the first to welcome and con- annel, effect a prepare his fleet landing in the British Isles, It took us just three hours and three minutes to fly over from Paris to London. And, as ev- nows, this is a daily, com- and then nes for /Sfatulate us was Mra. Stuart Mac t we were con-|L#ren, wife of the British world St eetnda flyer. In reply to her questions Lowell Smith told her how very é Service No Thrill. “The airdome at Le Bourget had been specially decorated in our honor, just as, say the union station sorry we had been when we missed her husband out in Burma. And they added that we were delighted to have had a chance of being of eee nvlon nt the passing | Some help to him, and that we were through of the presidential train, |! pulling for him. de Goys, chief of staff to the} “Maj. MacLaren had ~ reached for ation, Maj.| Japan by the time we had arrived in from the American] England. But we were flying| number of other|®round the world in opposite direc: ch and foreign of-| tions, and to complete the circuit » 40 see us off. Al|he still had to cross the Pacific, as ore ‘time depar-| North America, and the Atlantic. ‘ crew _ bal ng to| We only had the Atlantic and the do 1 back the doors} American continent to cross, so were a good many ahead of him. “A number of the principal of: ficials of the Royal Alr Force enter- tained us at luncheorm there at the airdrome, and then took us to the nd trundled our the open as non. as the brakemen on the might shunt a few cars We stepped into our cock warmed up our engines a bit thousand <iles 1 then Col, de Goys and the others | Royal Air Force club, a palatial in- sho’ 1 ‘€ {stitution on Piccadilly. That eve- >, not good-by; just au revotr,”| ning we were the guests of the we replie heads of the British Air Ministry. As the reguar Paris-to-London| They, of course, have a” special planes left the ground packed with | cabinet minister who devotes all of Comr Sn houted his time to aylation because the All right, boys, we're off.’ British have long realized that their voment later and we were in way to Trafalgar air ance, force {s of paramount import ron our es’ Arnold happened to be sit- ting next to a gentleman who wore cameraman was flyign s {n his own plane. He a monocle. When. the salad. was to grind off a few me-|bréught in ‘Les’ had considerable 1 as we crossed tho! tun with this distinguished official channel, Three French military | py facetiously remarking that there ba eh us for 40 miles were just two courses on every as an escort of honor. menu that he liked best, and that High Over Clouds the salad was both of them! This twas a rather hazy day, and be-| Mark Twain brand of humor evi: fore Paris had dropped out of sight dently went over the gentleman's y untered a great cloud| head. He looked at the salad_in cept climbing in order to All the rest of the way an altitude of about 7,000 an hour we were clouds that cut us It seem such amazement that his monocle slithered {nto ft. Screwing it back in his eys he gave ‘Les’ a quizzical look, and then wore a pained and puzzled expression all'the rest of the F near the world below ; 1 evening. ‘Les’ says he is sure the sd as though we were somewhere | gentleman ts still trying to figure out in space, sailing around alt out s strange to were a eor us as though whizzing from Off for Full and Work. ) "Next morning we drove back to Croydon, mingled for a Mttle while met Amer. atk eatin te h the aerial commuters, with ¢ 4 ; ss, baskets, umbrellas, and s ats s, on thelr way to : hing Amsterdam, and other lar stations on the Europe irways. T mn we taxied off and “ : flew north the famous seaport of : Hull, from whence so many ear . kept | aviga and explorers set rail a atl with. a| few hundred years ago. od d ‘flapperr in the] ‘Tt was a delightful day, #0 we } s plane as woe bound-| took a hurried glance at the Tower fr Jond peak to another. |of London, St. Paul's, the House of W itside London | Parllament, Buckingham Palace and wo dis all the passen-|a few other landmarks, crossed right gers on } 1 commercial} above the British Empire. Exhibi planes we } cd were Amerl-| tion at Wembly, and then flew on s 'T ‘ e a still more| north right through the heart of bie ca ar Although com-| England. On-the-way we frequent ercial aviati fa passe planes buzzing from one r ¥ pet E » another When MOTHER:~ Fletcher's Caste is a pleasant, harm- less Substitute for Castor Oil, aregoric, Teething Drops nd Soothing Syrups, espe- cially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages: avid imitations, always look for the signature of Cant Lelkens Proven directions on gach package, Physician everywhere recommend it :| did you ever taste Che Casper Daily Cribu CALIFORNIA WOMEN VOTERS IN COLLUSION TO ELECT GOVERNOR AND LEGISLATURE OF OWN SEX By L. C. OWEN. (Copyright, 1925, Consolidated Press Association) SACRAMENTO, Cal., Jan. 11. — constitute more than half of the Women voters of California, who state's voting atrength, hereafter are going to discard theory for practi | cability in politics, Having annou easy just to watch Mrs. Wallace. She lives up to the figurative happy vis- ion which her name “Pollyanna’’ in- spires. She is cheerful, she is come- and if she wasn’t such an efficient ly, her figure has a girlish contour politician her yotce is dulcet enough ithat she probably would be ‘a suc cessful singer. She has an “adorable led their design of imitating | husband” and two “even more ador- and Wyoming with a woman gover- | able” children. nor two years hence, they do not} s, far, Mrs. Wahace has confined propose that the male politicians} herself to saying nice things about shall spil anything over on them./the politicians under her scrutiny. Evidence of that fact is tHe Pres) “They are all so human and like ence here at the forty-sixth biennial | 11.1: che declares assembly “of the California. legisia-|°". - ture of Mrs. Pollyanna Wallace, the Of course some of them may chairman of the legislative commit-| Prove to be sadly misguided, poor tee of the California. League of Wo-| dears, but they are all splendid, nev- men Voters, who has beer nsmed| ertheless. ‘official observer” for that body dur-] As for the women voters’ plans of ing the present session entering practical politics, Mrs. Wal- Mrs. Wallace will camp on the ob-| lace is discreetly silent. servatoin body until the assembly and senate adjourn some three of four months hence. After that she will make a detailed\ report to the women voters on what slis has seen. ‘The implied threat in Mrs. Wal lace's presence 1s that in addition to, learning the ways of practical politi clans, the women voters may be planning to elect a women's legis- lature two years hence, as well as a woman governor. Wallace frankly “We are very much interested,” she says, but she won't forcast how far that interest will go. She pre- fers to talk about other things. Por instance: “A woman's chief object in life should be to keep her husband in- terested. The best way to do this | is to make one's self interesting, to | be able to talk about something be- sides home and family affairs. Poll- ties {s highly educational and is ways Interesting to men—including admits that ee Be fon here sate ps thenam Honteian wmakers, And incidentally, ° of the solons aliit that it is mighty| One of the results of the presence | a of the “women’s observer” has been to keep the assembly away from | jthey would fly up from a distance] horse play.” All that is necessary if | they would fly vp close, look us over! , member wants to sée the body get | jand wave an aerial ‘cheerio' and| gown to brass tacks, is to start. the then continue on thelr way. whispered message ‘Pollyanna is in | right over the heart of industrial] tne gan | England. - Below us were tho*great | | Manchester cotton mills and some of the woolen mills that supply such} BRISTOL, a large part of the world. It re-| Patrick, 27, minded us somewhat of flying over| at Pennsylvania between Pittsburg and Altoona, only more so. Great col umns of black smoke were curling up everywhere. Va., Jan. 1 held in the coun jail Marion on a charge of having dynamited the dam at Saltville on Christmas eve that cost the lives of property damage, reiterated his in-| “Then for a while we would slide}nocence. He maintained he will be across landscapes where there|able to prove an alibi, wasn't a mill or . facto of any|— kind, but where it looked as though professional landscape gardeners had laid out the tiny, perfectly groomed farms. | “After a flight of two hours and 10 minutes we descended on the atr- | drome of the Blackburn Airplane company, at Brough, near Hull, on the Humber river. Arrangements had been made for us to stop here} long enough to overhaul our planes and get ready for the Atlantic flight, the flight that was to cause us more grief n all the rest of our trip around the world, and the flight on which another of our or- iginal four world cruisers was des tined to be lost.” KNEE—Watch Your Finish Stiff, swollen, inflamed, rheumatic joints should be treated with a rem- edy made for just that purpose only, Remember the name of this new discovery is Joint-Hlase and it will take out the agony, reduce the swell- ing and limber up any troubled joint after ordinary curealls have miser- ably failed. Just rub it on—60c a tube at John Tripeny Co., and all druggists—ask for Joint-Hase. Always remember, when Jolnt- Ease gets in joint agony gets out— Ny —_——— ‘Tm askin*you~ | anything finer?” The vote is “yes”—no op- position — when they put Sweet’s Rodeo Bar to the test. Try it on your Eastern Friends—and watch their surprise at finding such candy in the West. j Selected walnuts; honest- to-goodness dairy cream; smooth, chewy caramel; fin- est milk-chocolate coating ! Fair warning : Once you try it you’re a customer for life. EVERY BITE'S A DELIGHT You Know It's Good Because It's Made By SWEET’S - SALT LAKE 19 persons and caused tremendous | B ne AVIATORS ARE FOUND WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—Walter Hinton and Captain A. W. Stevens, aviators; who had been missing in the wilds of the Amazon river in South America for about ten days, have returned safely in their hydro- plane to the advanced camp of the Rice expedition on the Parina river, ording to a radio messuge re- ceived here The n © was received by John ¥. Grinan, wireless operator of the Radio club of America. Their hydroplane disabled by land ing on rocks up the Parina in the wilderness, the aviators lived prin on fish until they met some Indians, according to the message. After long labor the Relieve HEAD COLDS with antiseptic MENTHOLATUM Apply to your nostrils tonight No. No. No. No. No. plane was repaired sufficiently to return to the camp. The radio dispatch was sent from the Rice expedition wireless base at Boa Vista, on the Rio Branco, and was dated yesterday. 12 Fatalities In Chicago W eek-End CHICAGO, Jan. 19—Twelye deaths: was the toll. of moonshine Mquor and motor car accidents here over Sunday. Two persons, suspected in criminal activities, were shot to death, one by police and the other by comrades. Twelve persons are in hospitals as the result of poison Hquor drink- Come to Denver See the Stock Show and Eat at Hoff-Schroeder’s “Denver’s Greatest Cafeteria” Our own farm foods delicious- ly cooked. Free check stand and rest rooms, Fine 6-piece 0 Lawson Heater. 10 Lawson Heater. 20 Lawson Heater. 30 Lawson Heater. orchestra, with soloist, 5.30 to 184 m. 1545-47 Welton St. Denver Just a few Doors from the Orpheum Theatre. | MY CREDITORS DEMAND MONEY The above four words tell my predicament forcibly—I based my buying for the present winter on the year previous and find that I greatly overbought—the goods are on hand and much remains unsold and now the bills are due and my creditors want their money. In order to satisfy their demands I am compelled to sacrifice my cwn profits and sell at factory cost and even below that point. If you are in need of a gas range or heater now or in the future, you will never again get them here or anywhere at prices quoted below.—E. P. BRENNAN. PRICES CUT TO THE QUICK---A Profitless Sale for Me—-Less than Cost to You! LAWSON HEATERS Regular price $ 6.25, during this sale___ Regular price $ 8.50, during this sale_____ ------- $6.40 Regular price $12.00, during this sale_______--___§9,00 Regular price $17.50, during this sale _---___-___-§18,10 104 Lawson Inclosed Heater. Regular price $9.00, during this sale_____$6.75 FLORENCE OPEN HEATERS Florence Heater. Regular price $9.00, during this sale________-_________$6.'75 Florence Heater. Regular price $11.00, during this sale________._________$8.95 Century Heater. Regular price $11.00, during this sale_________ ---------$8,25 PEERLESS “GAS FYRE” HEATERS 7 Radiants, for use in fireplaces or rooms. Regular $18.00, now_--_-_-_ $44.40 10 Radiants, for use in fireplaces or rooms. Regular $27.00, now---_-___ $91.60 14 Radiants, for use in fireplaces or rooms. Regular $58.50, now-_______ $46.80 BRILLIANT FIRE RADIANT HEATERS 10 Radiants. Regular price $32.50, during this sale__ 11 Log Heaters. Regular price $39.00, during this sale 10 Log Heaters. Regular price $36.00, during this sale 10 Welsbach Radiants. Regular price $21.50, during this sale _The Home of Real Good Candy UNUSUAL OFFER 31-piece set Decorated Dishes $4.50 42-piece set Decorated Dishes $6.75 All Paints and Varnishes at Greatly Reduced Prices---Buy Now for Spring and Save CONVENIENT TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED E.P. BRENWAN 144 SOUTH DURBIN STREET with having sold poison liquor to several youths, causing the death of ‘one. For results try a Tribune Class! fied Ad. tie LADS ONE GAS RANGES 6 Four-Hole Grey Enamel. Regular $42.00, specially priced at__________ $30.00 2 Four-Hole, Closed Top.. Regular $48.50, specially priced at_ 1_.____. $36.00 2 Cole Hot Blast with Regulator. Regular $92.00, specially priced at__-__$73.60 1 Steel Coral, Closed Top, Regulator and Lighter. Regular $92.50, now__$74.00 1 Acorn Range. Regular $62.00, specially priced at 1 Detroit Jewel. Regular $55.00, specially priced at 4 MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1928 A woman is held, charged WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—Mra. Cornelia B. Stone, of Galeston, Tex- as, former president General of the United Daughters of the Confeder- acy, died here last night. She was 84 years old. ————_—_ HOTEL ‘Casper’s Finest * Is offering 20 additional rooms at very low rates to the permanent guest. See BAG ag M. K, FLEMING, Manager ° ------$4.25 $49.50 $45.00 UNUSUAL OFFER Brillo Aluminum Cleaner, regular 25c package for__.....____ 15¢e Brillo Aluminum Cleaner, regular 10c package ret... oe Steel Wool, 15e¢ regular 25c for.