New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 26, 1927, Page 9

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“HEN DEDUGTING FOR THEIR SUITS Englishman Taking Tip From Women of Gountry St. John's, N. F., May 26 (®— The hunt for Captains Charles Nun- gessor and Francols Coli, missing French trans-Atlantic flyers, went forwdrd today with new hope born of a report that a crash which may have been that of a falling plane had been heard by two workmen near Placentia Bay. The men, Henry Collins and his son of Paradise Sound, an inlet o the bay, declared that on 10 o'clock of Monday morning, May 9, the day on which the Paris to New York fiyers were due to pass over New- foundland, they had heard a falling object followed by an explosion. A “It is our finding that the death | ot the children and teachers caused | by the blowing up of the school, was | a deliberate and premeditated pl&n‘ formulated by Kehoe.” The investigation into the disaster | was conducted by Prosecuting Attor- | ney William C. Searl, of Clinton ! county, and C. E. Lamb, coroner.| More than 50 witnesses were called | to testify at the inquest which be- san Wednesday. The jury established the ‘time of the murder of Kehoe's wife as be- {tween May 16 and May 18. The find- ings revealed that Kehoe placed her | body on a hog chute, after he had committed the murder, and set fire to the chute along with the buildings and sheds on his farm. The closing of the inquest ended ' the series of events which brought to the village the sorrow of a heart- {rending disaster. CHURGH GOUNCIL preliminary investigation failed to disclose the cause of the sounds. Importance was attached to their story because previous reports from other persons at various points to the north and west near Conception Bay where the aviators might have been expected to have first sighted the mainland told of their having heard a plane on the same morning. At the same time hope in a new clue furnished by the crew of the Danish schooner Albert that an airship had been sighted 80 miles oft Cape Pine the same day considerably diminished when gov- ernment officials who examined the ship's log found nothg to substan- tiate the story. The Albert docked at Balleoram on the southern coast near St Pierre. Officlals in attempting to reconcile the conflicting reports de- clared that it the sounds heard by the Colling’ were from the Nungess- er plane, the trans-Atlantic fiyel must have been far oft their course | and perhaps headed inland. Airmen said the only plausible e planation of the reported sighting of the ship from so many points was that it had lost its bearings and | Nungesser and Coli were cireling about in an attempt to find their cours The many conflicting reports at least have served to establish a pos- sible course of flight coinciding with that which it has been assumed the Frenchmen might consistently have faken if they actually reached this side of the Atlantic. From Harbor Grace on Concep- tion Bay, where the White Bird was first reported to have been heard, to St. Lawrence on the southern tip of the Burin peninsula, the last place, is a fairly atraight line. Airmen pointed out that from the latter point a swerve west would have tak- en the airmen across the French Is- lands of St. Pierre, Miquelon and on to the Canadian mainland while a turn to the south would have brought them out over the water south of Cape Pine to where the Albert was supposed to have sighted the plane. | So far all clues have been un- availing but Dominton authorities have not abandoned hope and today were concentrating their energy on running down the latest report. MICHIGAN FIEND WAS NOT INSANE Goroner’s Jury Brands School Dynamiter as Deliberate Slayer Bath, Mich., May 26 (UP)—An drew P. Kehoe was same when he murdered his wife and exploded dy- namite which killed 38 children, five adults and himsglf, a coronel jury of six of his neighbors belleves. The verdict was reachad after six minutes of deliberation here las! night. The verdict officially closed th tragedy of a week ago Wednesday, when Kehoe, after killing his wif.. Nellle, and burning the buildings on his farm, dynamited the Bath Con solidated school. “We find that Andrew P. Keho was sane at all times, and so con- ducted himself and conccaled his operations that there was no cause for previous suspicion of any of acts,” the coroner’s jury said in its report. “We further find that the said An- drew Kehoe set the dynamite, and connected it with wires running to two hot shot batteries on the out- yide, and that he also had a time clock arranged to set off the explo- sive at 9:45 a. m., eastern standard time, on May 18. was| States on the fi HONORS DR: DAVIS \Former Local Minister. Moderz- i tor of Congregational Body | Omaha, Neb., May 26 () — Rev. | Dr. Ozora S. Davjs, president of the | Chicago Theological seminary, wa |elacted moderator of the Congrega- Itional churches of the United | ballot yesterd: |at the meeting of the nationa { council. Dr. Davls received 233 votes |against 138 cast for his nearest op | ponent, Rev. Charles 8. Mills of {New York. A third candidate was Rev. Dr. Charles F. Carter, pastor lof Immanuel church, Hartford | Conn. Former Governor Willlam E Sweet of Colorado was elected viee- moderator, succeeding Rev. Da | Freeman Bradley of Cleveland. Mr. Davis took over the gavel from ih: | retiring moderator, Frank J. Har- |wood of Appleton. Wi layman Contrary to expectations, no | nominations were presented on he- half of women members of the council. In church circles President Mary Emma Wooley of Mount Holyoke college and Mrs. Franklin H. Warner of New York city. vice- |president of the Toreign Mission |board. were mentioned as potentizl | candidates. | Roger Babson. nation: known business statistician. who is in at tendance at the council sessions, nominated C. H. Harvey of Boston. layman, for vice-moderator. Others {nominated for this office included |John H. Perry of New Britain, Conn. Rev. Dr. Davis was formerly pas- tor of the South Congrezationa! Ichureh in this eity. ‘Rin Tin Tin’s Owner | Loved But Dog, Wife Says Los Angeles, May 26 (®-—Mrs. Charlotte Anderson Duncan, Cali- | fornia horse woman, was given a di- | vorce from L. Duncan, !ewner of Ri dog actor, | here yesterd: when she testified | | her husband “didn’t love ecither me {or the horses. All he cared for was | Rin-Tin-Tin,” Although Rin-Tin-Tin ecarned $2,000 a week, Duncan contributed only $50 a week to the family budget, Mrs. Duncan declared. She also told the court that her husband treated her valuable horses though they were common stock.” “as The Danger that Lurks in an infant’s cry Few mothers are able to place the blame where it belongs WE know, of course, that i every normal baby must cry acertain amount. It’shisonly | form of exercise. Yet few mothers are able to distinguish between an infant’s healthy wail and one of actual physical pain. ‘The next time you hear your little one cry—listen carefully. More than haelf the time, physicians say, there is some real irritation that Baby is pleading with you to remove. Stop this irritation, and the child develops normally. Neg- lect it, and his whole disposition may be permanently altered. One Important Casese of Trouble Medical authorities now tell ua that at least 66% of all babies are allowed to suffer needlessly the torture of Urea irritation. Nor is frequent diaper- changing a remedy. The stinging acids in the urine crystallize almost immed;- Z.B.T, BABY TALCUM NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY,.MAY 26, 1927. French Practice—Women More Considerate Paris, May 26 (P—Large plctures appearing in tods newspapers hergh s getting used. to being kissed by gentlemen in the French manner \d accepts what the French call accolade with the best possible The Louis Bleriot, i sippl appeared o be getting better. IN I:uml]’s w ASTEW levees between Morgansea and. R line. night, the New Orleans association .—(M-—Al- ' southern Loulsiana into Texas, poen. tssuea by retit organtaation | MALE KISS DOESN'T ts to their homes today. to move as the waters began to en- ber already had been cut off as & Crea, estimated a8 being 2,000 feet miles early tod milion became alarmed over the pictures show streams which run thro: the low planting a fervent kiss on ern part of the state. jthe embarrassment displayved in his miles south of there and about 100 |ladies to embrace gentlemen and Irench of the army engineers to women who have met Lindbergh, cere and well meant, might em- [;llN[i Tfl HuMES Conditions on the lower Missis- {Large crews of men were at work | strengthening several weak spots in | New Orlea but the situation |seemed well in hand all along the POll]l co P . hP ] NO | Al automobile traffic on the old ] lll)ee TSt 00138 Wgsxmnnsh trail from Gibson to New Ma Be LOS[ Iberia had been discontinued last y of commerce reported. This cut oft AT |the last highway outlet through New Orleans, May 2 though confinucd warnings have | heads and levee engineers, residents | of Pointe Coupee parish still clung | EMBARRASS “THE KID" Many residents of the danger area | had either left or were preparing. pindhergh Becoming Accustomed to croach on their lands, but relief authorities feared that a great num- | result of their delay. | Waters from the crevasse at Me- ! wide late last night, were believed to have spread over 200 squa In the sout tral section of the state, residents along Bayou Ver- | rapid rise of the stream. Bayou Ver- | milion is one of the countless ‘ountry west of the Mississippi and | American's cheek, Lindbergh accept- sast of the highlands in the west- [ing with a smile and not a sign of Residents along the Vermilion 'first encounter with the accolade. cette at Abheville, 25 0 It is the custom in France for miles northwest of New Orleans, kiss them on both cheeks on all were warned yesterday by Captain great occasions, but the TFrench keep a close watch on the flood sit- «pparently realizing that the unae- uation and prepare for any emer- (ustomed compliment, however sin- harrass the hero, have contented themselves with wringing his hand. flood waters from the Teche » begun to flow through the smaller bayous and relief authori- | ties are anxiously watching the re- sults, d, already cut off by highw ‘om Lafayette by the igh waters of the Vermilion, be- came alarmed when backwaters reatened to isolate the town. Re- lief authorities however, said the ample preparation had been made to evacuate the residents in case of necessity. At the refugees Lafayette ad been camp, 17.540 regietered late vesterday. Your Grandmother’ ’ Choice in Laxatives Imagine the goodness back of Dr.TruesElixir 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 Elixir 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 Famlly size $1.20; other sizes 80 & 4c. fi/ easily and quickly 1.} teaspoon salt 1§ teaspoon pepper 1 teaspoon Karo, Red Label 1Egg beat in the Mazola, using with one| begun to thicken, add it convey the idea that Captain Lind- | I'rance’s noted aviation pioneer, im- | the | Mayonnaise in 10 minutes FOLLOW this recipe and convince yourself that delicious Mayonnaise is Church Union Being I | Opposed at Conference | San Francisco, May 26 (/—Union | jof the Reformed church in the |United States with the Presbyterian | |church in the United States of | | America is opposed at this time by ' the Department of Church Coopem-[ {tion and Unijon, which is to report | |to the Presbyterian general assem. | bly here tomorrow through its chair- | }mnn. Dr. J. Ross Stevenson of { Princeton, N, J. | “In response to an invitatien from | |the commission on closer relations | {of the Reformed church in the :(‘nlh'(l States,” the report will say, | "‘a sub-committee of the department |met with a similar committee of the |Reformed church in Baltimore, | March 1, 1927, After a full and| |frank discussion in which each| | member of the conterence took part, | |it was the consensus of opinion that | iit would be insdvisable to take steps !for the union of the two churches at present. If a third church be- longing to the Reformed family | could be brought into the negotia. ' tions, it would be desirable to pro- | ceed. Meanwhile, endeavors should ! be made to strengthen the purpose and service of the Western Sction ! of the Alliance of Reformed church- | ©s holding the Presbyterian system. LINDBERGH ACCEPTS | Worcester, Mass, May 26 (& — A\nnouncement was made last night by Karl G. Fredin of the Swedish National federation that Captain Charles A. Lindbergh had accepted the invitation to visit Worcester | and would come here at a date to he fixed after he returns from Eu- | rope. The invitation was cabled to | the Swadish embassy in France for personal presentation to the young iator soon after he reached | made and that the world affords no finer oil than Mazola for all salad dressings—regardless of price. 3 tablespoons vinegar 115 to 2 cups Mazola according to thick- ess desire Put the seasonings in a small deep bowl, beat in the egg, add the vinegar, stir until mixed and gradually a wheel egg bester. Start alf teaspoon oil—when the mayonnaise has a tablespoonful at a time. When done, beat in one tablespoon boiling-water. w ately into tiny, gritty particles—eo L small they are invisible, yet so harsh as to turn the sensitive skin into a raw, in- flamed surface. Town._... -—-!o:: Pe PACKARD The only positive preventive of Urea 1; irritation is to keep these tiny crystals | from contact with the body. i | | oA New Method of Relict A remarkable baby powder has now been perfected for exactly this type of irritation. Whereas ordinary talcum powders dust off almost as soon as ap- plied, Z.B.T. contains a special in- gredient which adheres so closely to the skin as to make it almost completely moisture-proof. Thus a delicate, pro- tective coating is formed against dan- gerous acids, irritation and chafing. Yet the powder does not cake, and allows the free, normal flow of perspiration. In addition, ZB.T. contains a mild antiseptic that counteracts the slightest infection and soothes the skin back to s healthy velvet-like texture. Get a can of Z.B.T. today. At all drug- gists—in three sizes: Junior, 10c; Nurs- ery size, 25¢; De Luze package with puff, $1.00. Made, under a physician's formula, by Crystal Chemical Co., New York, N. Y. Theft. Phone Us—We will PACKARD Send only I0C (stamps or coin) with this coupon and | 1 you will receive a copy of Ida Bailey Allen's wonderful new Book, attractively bound, containing 112 pages of unusual recipes. Write Products Refining Co. Corn. P.0.Box 171, New York City Trinity Station, FUR SHOP SAFE FUR STORAGE In Qur New Vault—Just Built Can Be Had At Very Low Cost of your own valuation insures you against loss by Fire, Moths and Call for Your Furs FUR SHOP SEEAQ TED ZELNER, Prop. & For & Years with Meshken 25 ARCH ST. Res. Phone 1796 Room 2 Office 2296 357 MAIN ST. NY SAELE SHOP- PAY PLAN TEN PAYMENTS INSTEAD OF ONE A Dignified Manner for Boys and Men To outfit themselves, with clothing of national reputation conveniently. You would buy a home or a car by the sante plan as employed here. No red tape, no delay, no embarrassment. You pay only one fourth at the time of purchase and the balance in 10 equal weekly payments. Use this dignified plan now. Bristol Store 135 Main Street 357 MAIN ST. . For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts Color Shoe Sale ALL OUR COLORED SHOES REDUCED INCLUDING RED CROSS, Red Cross Formerly $10.00 NOW SHERWOOD AND OTHER POPULAR MAKES REG.U.S 2EG. UL, rAT.OPP, “ Red Cross Formerly $11 and $12 These two patterns featured below come in Grey, Blonde, Rose Blush, Pastel Blonde, also various combinations in both straps and eyelet effects. ALL STYLES AND NE\\’EST_CREATIONS REDUCED Strap Effects, Step-In Pumps, Colonial, Opera Pumps, all in this Sale. SPORT SHOES $3.50 $5.00 IN THE HEART OF THE CITY Shoes formerly $7.00, $8.00, $9.00, $10.00 Oxfords, $4.85 $3.85 Spike, Spanish, Rubber soles. VOGUE SHOE SHOP 236 MAIN ST. Various Heels, such as Cuban, Military, in all styles. For Sport wear — all combinations Crepe and 4 Opp.

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