Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
R. 1. PILOTS ARE MISSING AT SEA No Word From Providence Duo | Since Sunday Night Providence, R. 1, May 10 (®— Captain Gus Bihan, 60, of this city, | and Captain George Addison Rose | ot Jamestown, R. I, have been miss- ing at sea since they left James- town at 8 o'clock Sunday evening o keep an appointment made by cable from Lisbon, Portugal, to meet the Fabre liner Providence at No Man’s Land buoy, south of Mar- iha's Vineyard, and pilot the steam- r to this city. They were to meet the Provi- | dence at six o'clock yesterday morn- ing but missed the steamer, which was brought into the state pier here | Pilot Clarence King. Coastguard Patrol boats from Brenton's Reef, Woods Hole, Cutty- hunk and Gayhead spent a futile night in the dense fog prevailing | from Nantucket to Block Island, | searching for the missing men. ¥riends of Rosc's took his launch, The Angelus, late ladt night, and sct sall for No Man's Land, hoping | to pick him up today if the fog | lifts. Radio descriptions of Dihan's hoat a 28 foot sca skiff capable of 24 knots an hour, have been broad- Bihan and Rose left with no and only a 15 hours fuel sup- by 1ot ply. Bihan is known as the wiliest and boldest pilot in Narragansett Bay, | where pilots are now engaged in an nce the came disrupted a few months ago. hes out to sea for unprecedent- | tances in order to he the fir to sight incoming occan kave become the practice among thepilots, and Binhan has distin- guished himself as one of the most | successful in these sorties. Sometime ago he travelled, with Rose, nearly to Nantucket in order | to pilot the steamer Roma, arriving | here from Mediterranean ports. | Later, with a young protege named Paul Bennett, Bihan outwitted a | whole fleet of pilots who had | “bottled him up” at Nagpragansett Pier and took in the steaffier Sinaia, arriving from M. les and the | Azores, while his rivals were chas- ing a freighter in a fog, under the impression he had given them that she was the " Bihan is 60 years old, and was born in Bordeaux, France, Rose is about 40, and is a native Rhode Islander. | Church Circus Permit Granted by License Com. The common council committee on licenses voted last evening to grant a permit to St. church committee to conduct an | open air circus, similar to that held last year on the parish grounds, 1his year's dates bring June 16 to 20, ‘Inasmuch as it is entirely a 1 venture, With no non-resident managers, it is not prohibited by the ordinance adopted by the common council in November, 1926. John Callahanfi representing the | sh committee, explained the ai- and there was no opposition. The committee also voted to grant | u to !} a permit to play in this ¢ lls-Tlato circus v June 13, an applica- tion having been received from E. [ 1. Maxwell, advance agent. | hicf W. C. Mart of the police department asked the committee to | bear in mind a proposition under conslderation by the board of police commi ners whereby the Bob | Morton circus would play in this city from June 27 to July 2, and the police pension fund would re- ceive 80 per cent of the profit. The clicf said he feels that the pension fund would benefit suificiently to | justify the venture, but there 1s also the possibility that the me chants of the city might through toss of trade during the time the cf would be here. The committee decided to consider the matter and make a decision later, in the event that the police commissioners decide to sanction | the holding of the cirens. sion fund should net cording to the representative of the circus, Chict Hart said. | ‘g Your Grandmother’s Choice in Laxatives Imagine the goodness back of when you consider it has been used for 76 years by millionsof sufferersfrom chronic constipation. “We, the Smiths, will always speak highly of Dr. True's Elisir not only because it helped us but because we have seen it work out so well with others.” E. L. Smith, Chelmsford St., Dorchester. The True Family Laxative Family size $1.20; other sizes 60c & 40c. is a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, dilious Fever and Malaria. | It kills the germs CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS Estimates Cheerfully Given oo | All Jobs — Tel 2018 | 267 Chapman Street NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1927. _— FLASHES OF LIFE: MANY AMERICANS WIN BETS ON FALSE NEWS REPORT| By the Assoclated Press. London—Doctor Bobby is on Nice—Most of the flush Ameri- | horseback. London’s mounted police cans on the Riviera thought Nun- |are now equipped with first-aid kits gesser - would make it and their |to render prompt service to victims money said so, when Itallans and |of traffic accidents. British thought otherwise the — Americans were pald off oh prema-| New York—Professor S. A.| ture news. Thousands of dollars | Mitchell of the University of Virgin- | changed hands. |1a shortly will have travelled a! = | total of 60,000 miles for the pur- London—It takes more than|pose of studying the sun an ac- chess to make aussies, as the Yanks | cumulated duration of 15 minutes. called 'em in France, lose eleep. [He is bound for Norway on his There was a radio chess match be- |Seventh journey to view a total | | Utalian tween M. P.'s. and Australian legis- lators at the opening of Canberra, new Australian capital. The Duke of York and Premier Baldwin made the first moves. Then came static and the match was called a draw because the Australians wanted to | g0 to bed. Atlantic City—Some men are us- | ing brown face powder to give the appearance of a coat of tan, if akers at the convention of the merican manufacturers of toilet articles have things straight. New York—Frank Mulinhill, 20, star pitcher of the sandlots of the Red Hook district of Brooklyn is | through with baseball forever be- Ca of a tragedy. Anthony positio, ruck Tony over the heart, He died hefore an ambulance arrived. Berlin—An ex-sailor who by theft accumulated $200,000 worth of spa toying with them rs in prison. is to spend two Herbert Sandow- that fired by | Robert Louis Stevenson's books, he sailed the South S in a futile hunt for buried trcasure, then re- sorted to burglary, sclling on enough of his loot, to live in style. Many of the pearl necklaces and jewelled combs found in his trea- sure are believed to belong to Americans. EASTERN MILLINERY CO. 133 Main Street 13 who aspired to inshoot kling gems for the pleasure of | | eclipse. Months of preparations will | culminate in work of a couple of | minutes on June 29. His expedi- tion, under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution, is aided by | John Armstrong Chaloner. Dublin—\irs. Beulah Croker seems to have been playing the races. She is being sued for $40,000 by Daniel O'Mahoney Leahy, Ire- {land’s biggest bookmaker. New York—There’'s something | wrong about the reputation of mes- | senger boys for slowness. Joseph Vassalo of Brooklyn was fined $25 | for hitting it up to 55 on a motor- cycle to deliver a telegram. London—Verse from a psalm by the Rev. Basil W. B. Matthews, vicar of Holy Trinity, about his par- ish problems: With young men | and maidens the parsons hath his | problems, for i from them he hold | aloof, they mislike him muca so that when to him they should turn | as to a friend in need with them he | cutteth no ice.” Portland, Mc.—Shot in the water at a public park by a policeman, | Aran Boyne Terry, Irish setter, whose ancestors were famous in | Ireland’s dog history, is dead. The | policeman is under suspension. He | insists the dog was chasing ducks; | witnesses say the setter was just | playing. New York—Having sung for the | Metropolitain Opera for 27 years, Antonio Scotti, Italian baritone, is to become a citizen. He says he | has long considered himself an American without papers. Norwalk—Commander de Pinedo, four-continent flyer forced down here by fog, continues trip to Philadelphia. | New Haven — Charge of assault with intent to kill filed against John d'Ausilio, who shot Pasquale de Cicco, Italian vice consul here, with sawed off shotgun some time ago. New Haven—After seizing assort- ment of choice liquors on his premises, formerly a saloon, police arrest George A. Voclger. Plainville—When gine strikes truck on which they are riding, Ernest Brown, 12, and Jack Green, truck driver, receive fn- juries regarded at hospital as criti- cal. switching Bridgeport — Oath of office as judge of Fairfleld county common W DICK —The Husband |which recently established a new world's record for sustained flight of | more than 51 hours. Lloyd W. Ber- HOP-OFF CLIMAXES | {taud as navigator and Clarence |Chamberlin as pilot had expected |to take off early this week, but spon- - pleas court administered to Samuel | C. Shaw, republican leader of 1927/ senate, Merided — Clubs from M Middletown, Wallingford, Manchester, Southington and Ne Britain form Central Connecticut Scmi-Professional Baseball league. |sors of the proposed flight announc- ed last night the fight would be de- llayed until the result of the Nun. gesser attempt is Kknown, and ‘f succesaful the Bellanca plane would ‘suhstitule some other long non-stop ‘Five Expeditions Had Plann D.a_n_llgll.'lp |flight in place of the Paris hop. Another expcdition that is near- New York, May 10 (/-—The hop ing completion for a take-oft is that |oft of the “White Bird,” biplane of |of Captain Winston W. Ehrgott, afr Captains Charles Nupgesser and |Mail pilot, which is being formed in ol A0 : e o7 lst. Louls. This plane expected to t who flees after |7 rancis Coll from Parls to New York, |,,y0 ot ghortly for New York as a climaxed months of keen anta Farino, 45, fs rivalry | Waterbury:- kni, par onstable Nick Lip- caretaker, arrested on ges of drunkenness, breach of and evading taxi bill after! el in which taxi driver takes fered a fractured wrist, and his pilot, Floyd Bennett, was seriously injured, The plane was slightly damaged. Captain Fonck, who was the first to actually take off in a New York to Paris flight, also is in this coun. try, preparing for a second attempt, which, however, he does not expect |to make before late summer, In his rst attempt from Mitchel fleld, last |vear, the plane crashed shortly af- iter its take-off and two of his crew were killed. While a $25,000 prize offered by {Raymond Orteig, New York and | Paris hotelman, for the first noa {stop filght from New York to Paris has been the means of attracting |attention to a flight between the ion, with 12 stitches 1 to closc wound. of being the stop flight America. first to m between France an —Slab from historic sycamore recently cut on Elm street reveals age of tree as 25 57 years, in this country to make the tran Atlantic flight which Captain Rene |his Tonck, French war ace, attempted |Wooster were killed. last year but whose attempt ended |plane, of Commander A surveyor hav n death, drift, just as they gether dur in Arizona reports 40 horses frozen to but standing erect in a snow- had huddled to- the storm. in tragedy. The American entry nearest among five expeditions for the honor ke a non-two other proposed expeditions. The Four expeditions had been formed Navy, hoped to make the trip, was | to in an accident which badly disrupt- taking off is the Bellanca monoplane [ed the expedition plans. Byrd suf- | world's largest bughouse. tlantic flight. the plans of nal step in its trans-A i United States and France, several of Accidents wrecke: serof the expeditions haye not regis- tered for the prize money. The | Nungesser plane, making its flight | from Paris to New York, is not eli- gible for the Orteig prize. nd | “American Legion” plane in which Commander Noel Davis, of the s- | wrecked in Virginia and Davis and | pilot, Licutenant Stanton H. Tho America | Richard E.| | Byrd of the U. 8. Navy, also figured | With a collection of 2,500,000 specimens, representing 118,000 species, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington qualifies as the | Love's Wreckagé The Tragic Story of a Woman’s Flaming Battle for Her Husband’s Love N her own estimation, Babs was the perfect wife. Her marriage to Dick had been the culmination of one of those sweet girl-and-boy romances where each was wrapped up in the other to the exclusion of everyone else. And so, when she became the mistress of her own little home, she was secure in the thought that nothing could ever rob her of her husband’s love and her own happiness. Was she not a devoted and faithful wife? Did she not run her house with economy and efficiency, never nagging and complaining when things went wrong? Was she not constantly thinking and planning the little things she could She half-realized that she was neglectful in matters of dress; in the care of her hands and skin; that she was get- ting old-womanish in thought and action; that she had lost intefest in the occasional “evening out” which Dick wanted and begged her to share with him. Babs had her baby, her home. She thought nothing else mattered—until that ghastly day when she discovered that Dick had given his love to another; that it was not a mo- mentary infatuation, but a true, sincere love for a woman who was as wise as she was beautiful and good. Joseph's | [ sufier | | K Regular Values $2.98 to $6.50 —Milans —Milan Hemps —Ajours —Fancy Straws —Crocheted Braids On Sale Wednesday Morning at9 Manufacturer’s N\ Surplus Stock At Less Than Wholesale Cost In Small, Medium and Large Head Sizes This attractive group of Hats at $1.49 is a genlrous value. The incredibly low price is made possible by a fortunate purchase. We guarantee this price of $1.49 to be actually lower than wholesale cos:. No Approvals. No C. 0.D.s All Sales Final. do to add to her husband's comfort and enjoyment of life? And when the baby came, bringing multiplied cares and worries, did she not sacrifice her own pleasures, and slave and save, that Dick might have freedom from annoyance and worry at home? That was the tragic situation that confronted Babs and made her see herself as she really was. Dazed, bewildered, dumb with anguish, poor Babs groped blindly, frantically, for a way out. Was Dick lost to her forever? Could she win him back again? Could she yet salvage a little happiness from the wreck she hergelf had made of love and home? Because she met all these wifely requirements without complaining, Babs thought she was doing all that any woman It never occurred to her that a man wants a woman to keep step with him and his interests, to guard her personal appearance, and improve herself mentally and could do. physically as the years go by. Driven to desperation, Babs made a decision that was “to plunge her into a raging battle of souls the like of which she had never dreamed. Don’t miss her story, “The Woman Who Lost Step,” which appears in True Story Magazine for June. Why Millions Read and Enjoy True Story Magazine Nineteen Big Features oL “The Love Pirate” “The Unwanted “Fate's Plaything” “The Mad Whirl” “Playing With cath” “What I Learned About Men “False Gods” in June True Story Magazine | I Ruined Two Men's Lives” “The Woman Who Lost Step”s “Out of the Under- world” “How Can You Tell Love™ “My Flapper Rival” “When the Truth Was Known' Congquer- ing Powcer “What is MarriageWorth" ZT JANET—The Other Woman 'l'r 0 e HE widespread, steadily- growing popularity of this great magazine is ample proof of our oft-repeated statement that life itself is always more dramatically thrilling than mere fiction can ever be. In its pages, human exper- ience is seen at its best and its worst. Its writers have lived — have scaled the heights of happi- ness and have plumbed the depths of despair. Most of all they have lecrned, throughtrial and error,the truth about life, and are willing to bare their souls for the benefit of others. Read in June True Story, for examples “The Mad Whirl”’— Since Jean and Terry had grown up to- gether, Jean's parents assumed that of course they would marry. The fact that Jean was not in love with her old playmate, and that her re- sponse to his caresses was of a most perfunctorysort,did not seem to enter into the matter. Jean, ~ theysaid, would do as she was told —and Terry agreed with them. But they were to learn to what desper- atelengthsagirl willgo whenstirred to revolt against such tyranny. “The Song of Satan”—Frax- cesca had all that any woman could desire to make her happy—a lov- ing husband, a comfortable home, an adorable child Then came ue Story The Greatest Newsstand Sale in the World Alfredo—who seemed to possess every attribute of emotional fire and physical beauty that her hus- band had not. And as they looked into each other’s eyes, as their hands touched, something hap- pened in Francesca’s soul. Her own story of the frightful struggle she made to resist the seductive lure of Alfredo’s matchless love- making, and its dramatic outcome, will grip your interest and tug at your heart-strings. “When a Woman Wills™- Jane was eighteen when she became private secretary to George Redden —old enough, it would seem, to know right from wrong. Actually she was pathetically ignorant of life and of men—and Redden was the most magnetic, mostfascinating, most fqrceful personality she had ever known. Soshebelieved him when he told her of his unhappy home life and ended by feeling terribly sorry for him. Too late she awakened to her own frightful peril. A startling true-life narrative. Theabove are typical of thenine- teen big features which make up the contents of June True Story Magazine. Your newsdealer now has it—price only a quarter. The newsstandedition isalwaysquickly exhausted. Avoid disappointment. Get your copy today. Use the Coupon if You Cannot Get True Story at Your Newsstand ----------—-—--—-—-—--——-——i o MACFADDEN PUBLICATIONS, Inc. 64th Street and Broadway, New York City 1 wish to become familiar with True Story Magazine. Please issues Degtaning o member | enoi S50 bl pormens b S o e T s e SR M e