New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 6, 1927, Page 9

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AVERESCU'S FALL . CHEERS RUMANIA Prince Stirl-ley Sets Out at 0ncei to Form Cabinet Bucharest, Rumania, June 6 (P— Prince Barbu Stirbey, administrator Pt the royal domains, formed & ten- | tative national union cabinet today to succeed the Averescu ministry, which resigned yvesterday. This new | Tiinistry, while still in skeleton form, has been described as a ‘*symptom of real progress toward rehabilita- tion of the country.” Well informed political quarters comment on the fall of Premier Averescu with a widespread feeling | of relief. The newspaper Diminea- | ta says: “There is satisfaction from | the sovercign to the last citizen.” | Other newspapers credit Averescu with aspiring to a dictatorship. Averescu's resignation was not un- expected. A week ago King Ferdi- | nand signified a desire for a nation- | &l union ministry. Averescu tendered | his resignation, but the king gave | him an opportunity to form a na- tional union ministry. Failing in this he surrendered power, and the monarch then called Prince Stirbey, a trusted friend of Queen Marie, to gorm a cabinet. The tentative ministry of Stirbey follows: Premier, minister of interior, and md interim foreign minister and minister of finance—Prince Barbu Stirbey. Minister of domains and industry ~M. Argetoinau. Minister of justice—Stelian Pope- acu. Minister of public instruction and health-—Nicholas Lupu. Minister of cults and labor—Alex- ander Lapedatu. Minister of Angelescu. . Minister of communications and public works—DM. Dimitriu. Under-secretary of the ministry of interior—M. Capetaneneanu. ‘war—General Paul Bucharest advices given out in Vienna reported that General Avere- #scu's resignation was on the demand of King Ferdinand, saying that dur- ing cabinet meeting a representative of the monarch appeared, notifying the premier that the formation of & national government had been en- trusted to Prince Stirbey, a brother- in-law of former Premier Tonel Bra- tiano. M. Bratiano, who has been reported at odds with General Avere- scu for some time, and who is reput- ed to be hostile to former Crown Prince Carol, recently expressed the opinfon that a neutral statesman should preside over the new cabinet. Political observers in Paris, upon lecrning of the resignation of Pre- mier Averescu, declared that Carol's chances of regaining the Rumanian throne, which he renounced some time ago, seemed as hazy as ever. QUIET SUNDAY ON BOARD MEMPHIS Lindbergh Interested in Reports ; of Chamberlin U. 8. S. Memphis, by wireless tc' the Associated Press, June 7 (P— News that the Bellanca plane Co- lumbia had passed within 12 miles of the Memphis in its trans-Atlantic flight from New York to a European destination, was the big event of Sunday, not only for Captain, Lind- bergh but for the entire personnel of this cruiser which is taking the avi- ator back to America. Lindy rushed to the bridge as soon &3 the wireless report was heard that the S. S. Mauretania had sighted the plane. He scanned the horizon hop- ing to catch a glimpse of the Colum- bia, but although the Mauretania at that time was still in sight, nothing whatever was seen of the fliers by the Memphis. This probably was due to the heavy mist. On the whole Captain Lindbergh had the quietest day yesterday since he left home to start his epochal fiight. He did as he desired, read- ing American newspapers and letters. In the morning he attended divine service by the chaplain, Licuténant Earl M. Criger, and afterwards spent some time on the bridge with Ben- jamin Mahoney, of the firm that built his plane, the “Spirit of St. Louis.” He climbed to the crow's nest where he enjoyed watching the spray breaking over the bow of the Memphis while bucking a 36-mile One of New Britain’s old- est and most reliable jewelers offers a complete stock of diamond engage- ment rings and jewelry on the Budget Plan of payment. All sales strict- ly confidential. Address Box 32-8, N. Herald. head wind, which held the cruiser back more or less all day. Through the night the wind weakened and the Memphis waa endeavoring to make up for lost time in bringing Captain Lindbergh home for the great recep- tion that awaits him there. Glad to be free from the strenuous round of welcoming ceremonies and entertainments, Lindy is making the most of Vice-Admiral.Burrage's wel- coming greeting when he boarded the ship to feel completely at home and‘ “take no orders from anyone.” He has already had two good night's rest—nights when he could drop oft to sleep without thought of a seem- ingly unending found of introduc- tions, speeches and handshaking on the morrow. Saturday night, Lindy's first night aboard the war vessel, the admiral arranged an early dinner so that his that the vice-admiral was a man ‘“‘one great sleep.” In return for the admiral's solici- tude, Lindy probably will comply St. Louls” was crated for the journey home. Admiral Burrage wants to use the cases as a bungalow. YALE DIVINITY SCHOOL PROGRAM {03th Aumiversary Being Ob- scrved Today New Haven, June 6 (A—With special closing exercises the Yale Divinity school celebrated its 105th anniversary today. The 49 mem- ceive degrees at commencement ex- ercises of the university on June 22. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MO LINDBERGH BEGAN AVIATION IN 1221 | Enrolled as Student at Lincol Aircralt Gompany | By MORRIS DE HAVEN TRACY | (Cnited Fress Statt Correspondent) | (Copyright, 1927 by the United | Press) | | CHAPTER SIX | When Charles A. Lindbergh ar- rived at the Lincoln Aircraft Com. !guest could retire early, and again | pany’s offices in Lincoln, Nebraska, | himeelt in his drops. |last night the flier sought his quar- | late in 1921, and enrolled as an|patural to him. {ters at an early hour. He remarked |aviation student, they thought o lit- | tle of his chances of ever becoming 'after his own heart for suggesting|anything much in the way of an | aviator that no record was kept of the date of his arrival. Apparently the fmmedlate fmpres- |with his request that as a souvenir | gion wag of a sort of a “Merton of |and those |of the voyage he be given the two ' {yo Movies™ person who had dream- |huge cases inywhich the “SPpirlt of | od of flying and finally came with 1vnough money to pay for some in- struction, but who never would do much more. Ray Page, president of the com- pany described him as typically a | country lad, -green, gawky, tall, | gangling and bashful. “He blushed when he came to us in & way that would have done | credit to any high school girl,” said Page. | He was turned over to some in- structor, and no one knows just who it was, to be taught a bit about air- | planes, He was given the ground train-| | ing, which consisted of a study of afrplane construction and explana- tion of the theory and mechanics of | fiying. Was Very Quiet | “He was not talkative, was very I bers of the graduating class will re- quiet and unassuming, but when he | took a position as a poli got into the pilot’s nest, what a dif- ference there was,” saild Page tell- “The minister as a mystic, teach-|irg of this training period. * er, a leader, and a world citizen,”| *AS soon as he was permitted to was discussed respectively by Ed-| take a plane aloft, everyone began ward P. Sylvester of Baltimore, M. to rotice him. He was a changed D., George S. Terry of Richmond, man when he got his hands on the Va., William P. Warren of Wolfville,| controls. He wasn't bashtul or flying. “I had done some balloon work myself and had made parachute | drops,” Ellis sald. “He was making | 8reat progress in flying and wanted to drop. | “I thought he had plenty of nerve |although he didn't have much to say and didn't make any boasts. He | would get me talking about para- | chute jumping and would question me on every little point. He was get- ting all the information he could. “Pretty soon I learned he was go- |ing down to the Twenticth strect | | fiving fleld and dropping all over | | the place. | “He had, it seemed, got all the in- | | formation he could from me ahout | parachutes and then arranged to ilearn the business for himself. Soon | everyone was talking about the per- |tect manner in which he handled It was just Lindbergh tired of Lincoln and {finally gave up his air-taxi business | {there, got into his plane and flew back home to Little Falls, Minn. It | was in Little Falls dreamed of flyin who have dreamed in childhood may imagine how the day {in 1922 when Charlie Lindbergh |came flying in his o the old home town, was for him a thrill only surpassed by his arrival {in Paris on May 21. The townspeople were ately curious over th t, lad and his -alrship. v gath at its quickly built hangar to se {and Charlie began doing an air-taxi business at home once more. Not all of the townspeople would take a chance of riding with Charlie Lind- bergh but many of them had their | first ride through the skies in his old {army biplane. | HEWINGTON NEWS | Theodore C. Wallen of Robbins avenue, Maple Hill, who recently 1 writer | for the New York Herald-Tribunc, | has been appointed a special repre- | sentative of that paper to accom- | pany President and Mrs. Coolidge |and their party to the summer White House in South Dakota. Mrs. Wallen and younger daughter will [!0 #nil toinght on the also go with Mr. Wallen. The older | with | N. 8., and Dwight C. Smith ot Seat- tle, Wash.,, who were chosen to speak for the graduating class. Dean Charles R. Brown presided. The members of the graduating class were addressed by the Rev. Frank C. Porter who retires from the fac- ulty this year after 38 years of teaching. » The exercises were followed by an alumni luncheon in the president's room in Memorial hall. A recep- tion to members of the graduating class and alumni of the Divinity school was held in the Divinity school. It was followed by class re- union. Three students will receive their degrees Cum Laude. Corwin C. Roach of Cleveland, Ohio, will re- celve the degree of B. D., Summa Cum Laude, and George S. Tarmy, graduate of Randolph-Macon col lege, and Willlam P. Warren, Acadia university, will receive their of | | blushing any more, and he didn't |daughter, Virginia, will stay appear gawky. He made airplanes | Mrs. Wallen's parents, Mr. and Mrs. behave llke no beginner ever did |C. H. Thomas of New Britain. ! before, | Mr. and Mrs. Wallen will leave “He was never reckless, that boy, | Saturday for Washington where | but daringly courageous. | they will board the special train, | “Pretty soon everyone around the Monday, for the west. They will liv fleld was talking about the kid be- |near the summer White House. ing one of the few men born natur- | ally adapted to ‘flying. It took his| More than 100 of the children of | flight to Paris to convince the world | the Newington Home for Crippled that here was a remarkable flier but | Children spent one of the most en- | we knew it long before he finished |joyable days of their lives Saturda | his course at the flying school here.” | When they were guests of the em- | Lindbergh left the flying school | ployes of the Connecticut Co. office not when he had finished the com- |at Hartford. Kour large busses and he had learned all there was to be [sters to Forest park, Springfield, |learned there, just as he left college | when he felt he wasn't making any | progress. Up to the time he left the flying school he had not been permitted to fly alone. Immediately Lindbergh looked faround for an alrplane of his own. | doors, {the animals in the zoo. Several of | the children had not been out of the | home grounds for several years., A | luncheon was served to t | Connecticut Co. employes. | He picked up one at an army sale— |an elderly biplane—and took it to { Lincoln where he fixed it up and began running an air-taxi service. | He charged the farmers and visitors |to Lincoln so much per minute of ! flying. He made few acquaintances, and those who did know him in those | days recall him chiefly for two [ things, his quiet, reticent disposi- degrees Magna Cum Laude. The Day Fellowship, which pro- vides for two vear's graduate study has been awarded to Mr. Warren. The Two Brothers Fellowship, for Biblical study in Jerusalem, has been awarded Julius B. Robertson of Kansas City, Mo. Five members of the class of 1927 are going directly to foreign mission work, twenty-four will go into the : active ministry, thirteen are plan-|tion and his interest in aviatior. ning to remain at Yale for further| He shared a room at the Harry graduate study, and six are to be-|E. Peckham home in Lincoln with come directors of work in religious | another embryo aviator, named Ball. education. ‘When he flew to Paris Lincoln peo- plo searched so deeply for “Lind- bergh lore” that they finally un- earthed the place in the Sanitarium garage where Lindbergh had space | tor* his motorcycle, and it has be- come a sort of shrine. Harry Ellis of Lincoln, also inter- | ested in flying, was one of his closest friends there, and it was through Ellis that Lindbergh came to mix parachute jumping with his study of READ HERALD CLASSIFTIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS Every child likes root beer. Make it at home with Williams' Root Beer Extract. Pure, healthful, and in- vigorating. Refreshing on hot days. —advt. Drivers of the busses which take | the youngsters to Sunday school lin them and broached the subject of giving them a good time. The id was well received and soon a sum of money sufficlent for the purposc | was donated by the employes, which | was used to give these unfortunats | children a day of pleasure they will not soon forget. nue, Maple Hill, spent the w in New York city as the guest of Miss Frances Sorrow, also of Mapl: Hill, who is a student at Pratt In- stitute. Marian Rau of Robbins ave- A whist and pinochle party will he given at the Grange hall this eve- ning. Mrs. V. L. Eddy is In charg: Worcester, Mass.—The police herc keep two canaries and a number of goldfish, which they find invaluable |in comforting lost children. IFLIFRS' WIVES ARE that he had | during his youth ! own plane into | | plete course but when he felt that |several automobiles took the young-| | | | | where they enjoyed a day out-of-| playing games or watching | | i em by the! | every Sunday had become interested ! which | k-end ' | Mrs. Grace BOTH OVERJOYED (Give Yent to Enthusiasm as Re- ports Are Received New York, June 6 (P — The wives of Clarence W. Chamberlin and Charles A who could only stay home and hope while their husban: flying in dan- ger and to vent to their joy and relie N News was re- Levine, leeived of their safe arrival in Ger- many. Mrs, Wilda Chamberlin had tived at a New York hotel late night and had given orders not to be disturbed. When news of the landing of the planc was received, however, Ter friends disregard her instructions and awakencd her to tell her of the glad tidings. Mrs. Chamberlin expressed grati- tude that her prayers for the safe- ty of the airmen had been answer- ¢d, and her hushand’s ambition to ablish 2 new long distance rec- ord achieved. She added i that great eredit is due to G. M. Bellanca, designer of the plane, and Mr. Levine, owner, who, she said, made the flight pos- sible. “I am eclated heyond words,” said Levine, wife of the co- pilot and backer of the flight, “My surprise at my husband taking off has been converted to admiration. 1 realize now that my hopes and prayers have been granted,” said. “I anr very proud of my boy and his contribution to history, sald Tsaac Levine, father of the airman. The entire Levine family had mained aw throughout the night at their home in Battle Har- bor, Queens. at| she re- | DAY, JUNE 6, 1927. !(ho shock she received whn she |saw her husband without any pre- | vious notice leap into the plane for Hs trans-Atlantic flight, spent th: greater part of the day and night at her home fin Belle Harbor, Queens, where the entire Levinc clan had assembled to watch through news bulletins the progress of the Columbia. | When news that the plane |circled the Maurctania was |ceived, Mrs. Chamberlin's sparkled. “How I wish T was aboard that ship,” she said. “I can see him \leaning out waving % all those people. T know he is gafe now." I'rom an atlas she figured that Chamberlin had gone a little south of his intended course, “for some good reason.” “Clarence dgesn't do things In the air without a reason,” she explain- “He was probably going around 1 storm. Clarence knows what he is doing.” Mrs. Chamberlin has made numerous flights with her had re- eyes 1 flying husband. Realization of the dangers of the | Night caused her to worry, she said, and added she would still worry a little until he was safely on the | ground again. But Mrs. Chamberlin doesn’t ex- pect her husband to give up danger- | ous air featx. When the suggestion was made she laughed and said: “Not Clarence. I know Clarence, When this is done he will do some- thing else that has risk in it.” | " She sent her cable to her husband | just before retiring last night. “Hail Columbia and my wonderful boy and Mr. Levine.” it read. “Love and kisses. Will join you as soon las possible. Wilda.” Mrs. Cham. berlin said she never for a moment doubted her husband would succeed. Mra. Levine breathed a deep sigh of relief when news came that the planc had been sighted over | Plymouth, England. | “Thank God for that.” she said, “I'm so happy that they're safe an over land.” | She said she would not had “let him start” had she known her hus- Money-Saving Silk Sale Fashion’s Favorite Wash Silk b el tree & Guaranteed Washable »9%, 100% Pure Silk Specially Priced 40 inches wide $2.55 Regularly 7 Sold at $3.00 0*& Featuring the Smart Shades White Black Dark Navy Medium Navy Light Navy Sky Blue Hydrangea Blu Gobelin Blue ~N of the Season Queen Blue O Palmetto Mrs. Chamberlin had announced she would take passage on the Berengaria Tuesday, but an invita- tion later extended to both women band planned to make the flight, “I'm proud of him but I didnt think it was necessary for him to take the chance,” she sald. “Now that he's Hamburg- | qone it, T can breathe easier.” American liner Resolue may result | Then she announced she would in a chance in her plan. The offer | go to meet her husband as soon as ARILLYN Crepe is 100% pure silk, densely woven into a beautiful texture combining the chqracteristics of both a Flat Crepe and a Crepe de Chine. It hasa rich, shimmering lustre. Itis heavy enough to hold pleats yet soft and supple enough to was made on behalf of the German reception committee and the Ger- man government. Mrs. Chamberlin and Mrs, Levine spent part of the day together at the Brooklyn home of former State Senator Charles C. friend of the two fliers. Later Mrs. Chamberlin with Senator Lockwood made a tour of newspaper offices to obtain the latest news on progress of the planc. Mrs. Levine, her eyes | swollen and red from weeping over Lockwood, u | she received word from him that he had landed. ! Her cable to her husband was | sent in care of American Ambassa- |dor Jacob Gould Schurman in Berlin. “Following vour flight with prayer, love, pride and confidence, it sald. “Love from family. |Cable promptly. Will Leave to {meet you. Grace.” READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Women’s New Hygiene be drawn through a ring. Garments of Marillyn Crepe can be made of one color or a combination of contrasting colors—you can keep them always fresh and clean by simply washing them as you would frocks a pair of silk hose. We recommend Marillyn Crepe as the ideal silk for fashionable and gowns, lovely negligees, ex- quisite underthings and scarfs. We urge you to take advantage of the special sale price on this very su- perior wash silk. Ends disposal problem— Discards like tissue D By ELLEN J. BUCKLAND Registered Nurse Most stores have Kotex on counters wrapped in plain paper, ready to be picked up without even asking. Package contains 12. Be sure | you get the genuine Kotex, for only | Kotex itself is “like” Kotex. KOTE€X No laundry—discard like tissue HE old-time sanitary pad has been supplanted by a new and better'way called Kotex. 4 It ends the embarrassment of laundry and disposal. You dis- card Kotex as easily as tissue. It's five times as absorbent as or- dinary cotton pads, and thus pro- tects amazingly. You wear sheer gowns and gay frocks under the most trying conditions, Also deodorizes, and thus ends all fear of offending. 8 in 10 better-class women now use it. Great hospitals employ it. Doctors widely urge it. MODEL anp ELECTRICAL HOME 2. ; ] . z 5 : {Between Mason Drive and Corbin Ave.) 23 La_kev1ew Avenue (Between Mason Drive and Corbin Ave.) June 4th to 18th inclusive EVERYTHING OF INTEREST FOR AN UP-TO-DATE HOME WILL BE ON DISPLAY WITH CAPABLE DEMONSTRATORS IN ATTENDANCE RESIDENCE DESIGNED AND ELECTRICALLY * ARRANGED BY C. W. COWLES FOR HIS HOME THE SPRING & BUCKLEY ELECTRIC COMPANY and THE COWLES ELECTRIC Exhibition Sponsored by rd Equipment Supplied As Follows— RESIDENCE C. W. Cowles, owner LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS New Britain Lumber Co. ELECTRICAL WIRING Cowles Electric Co. HARDWARE P, & F. Corbin Div. SI B. C. 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