New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 22, 1927, Page 4

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MOTHER BELIEVES NUNGESSER LIVES Will Come to America to Lead Search for Him BY MINNOTT SAUNDERS NEA Service Correspondent Paris, July 22—Captain Charles | Nungesser has not gone down into the sea, and he is not dead, his gray- haircd mother believes. She bases her conviction on some presentiment she cannot explain, but in which she | has absolute faith. She does not de- | spair; she has no maternal tears la} irop down to her boy. e only waits. This stout-hearte woman, who bred one of the greates “These men have come to me out of great danger and they have filled me with comfort and reassur- ance that my own boy will likewise come,” she sald. The walls of the sitting room are covered with pictures of Captain Nungesser, photographs and water colors and oils. Besides the mothgr's tavorite picture of her son hangs an autographed photograph of Colonel Lindbergh. Showing these proudly to me, she picked up photographs of Commander Byrd and Chamberlain and held them together. “There,” she cried almost hys- terically, “look at these four, just four airmen to whom their exploits were all in a day's work. Men, real men, and yet great-hearted boys. I love Charles Lindbergh almost as much as I do my own Charles. Chamberlin is a splendid man, and Commander Byrd—what a kind- hearted gentleman! To these Ameri- s my heart goes out with all a ther's feeling. I can never forget 1t they have done for me, With- XEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1927, will not die without me. When they put me in my coffin and screw the |lid down, then Charles may be dead too, but not until. “Tell the good American people that a mother is coming to find her son. T often feel he Is waiting for me to come.” Chile Places Women In Position of Men Santiago, Chile (A—In keeping |with the Chilean government’s pro- gram of mordernization and econo- my, it has been announced that at- tree for more active forms of la- bor. Colonel Carlos Ibnez, president- elect of Chile, made the announce- {ment in a letter to a committee in | | . |charge of arranging an exposition |of women's work. | According to the | plan, women would be employed to of war aces and smilingly sent him |out them there would have been 1o | replace men througout the country tlight across rret apa , in the working on his waits in her little filled with flow class district s “I shall " birth- | day on November 1, and then if he | wonderful ind noble peop these brave have flown acr help me find m y of such gen where my fri anxiety, rarel and only re < ¢ ends. | But four t de has < ing crowd time was | when the f at Cap- | ains Nungesser and Coli had suc- | ceeded in their flight to New York, The others occurred when Lind- bergh, then Chamberlain, and final- | Iy Byrd came to pay their respects and express their sympathy. J Merchandising Scoop That’s the Biggest Suit News In This City »d, but here they are, three modest, great-souled airmen who have done so much to help me with the Amer- ican people.’ * Her Soul Tells Her why she felt so confident or son was still 1e Nungesser said: he was a babe in my arms Charles and my ame. When our letters. ined the same essions. Call it pathy if but 1, his 1other, and his g went through the trials and horrors ot {of the war with him, tell you that |patc and thelr black faces thronged with | he is alive. Perhaps he is 1ying in- |jiterally powdered white. jured with a tribe of Indians, cut off in Canada or Labrador, but he lives. My whole soul tells me that we shall see cach other again. “Look at me. Today I wear blue, tomorrow pink perhaps, any color, but never black. My active, | t friend, who | Charles, the | | most wonderful lad in all France, | the Atlantic, | one to help me until Charles return- |yn cqueational and the lighter forms |of industrial and commercial work. 0dd Styles Feature Weddings in Africa Boma, Belgian Congo, July | fashions of civilization. “The first converted native couples i ther Achille de | Munster, a missionary in the district for the past 20 years, “wore noth- ng but a loin cloth. But you should them now. Recently T married couples. They suits and the brides wore shoes and were ‘Some had on one white shoe and one black. They seemed to think that was the height of chic.” One bridegroom, Father Munster said, fainted from the heat and his costume of two pairs of trousers two shirts, two vests, two coats anc a tight collar. =% HREE months ago we began to prepare ior this event. We called upon three of the largest woolen mills in this country, and purchased the top-heavy portior: of their finest woolens &n a basis enabling us to offer suits at $20 that ordinarily you could not buy for $30 or $35. Only a powerful organization like the P&Q Shops —with unlimited resoutrces—operating 40 clothes shops—doing a tremendous business at Pre-War Prices—could possibly perform such an extra- ordinary feat of value-giving as this special group of suits represents. Even if you don’t need a suit for immediate use it will pay you to buy one and put it away until you need it. tempts will be made to substitute | women for men in certain classes | of work, leaving the country’s men | government'’s | 2 all sported white | HONTMARTRE COOK EXPERT IN LINE She Specializes in Preparing Chicken Dishes Parls, July 22 (#—Men of the sword and pen and all lovers of lob- ster and chicken reverently pre- pared know Niny of Montmarte. Niny refuses to divulge her sur- | name. Nearing 60, she still bustles | about among her brilliantly shined copper pots and pans in her little “Vieux Chalet” just off the Place du Tertre, the highest situated square in Peris. “This is not a restaurant,” Niny erts, her maseive fists clamped on her equally mas- 3 “It is a house where one comes to dine. Order the night be- fore if you want to be well served. 01d friends, however, can order their dinner by telephone—if they | call before ten in the morning.” | Niny, like all good French cooks, does her own marketing. If a radesman tried to pass off an emiz lobster on her let him stuff | his ears with cotton. For Niny's | language, when aroused, is strong. |~ The of Paris gourmets, has consec! | Niny queen oz chicken. ted, done in cream or hunter e, the barnyard biped become cr masterpiece. And Niny knows the proper wine to bring out its tlavor. If you disregard her ad- | vice on that subject it is better not | to come When joins th night | did their v likes her guests she at coffee and song A when Elsie Janis and Niny sister act in “What Ar- rives Mond is historic in the | annals ot * Chalet.” Niny was hostess to many Amer- Today! Men’s and Young Men’s Suifs Blues—Grays—Tans—Browns in Single and Double-Breasted Models, now than their wholesale worth—' OU MEN and YOUNG MEN who know our style and value-giving leadership every day in the week, here is the greatest single clothing value feature in this city. prompt men to buy 2 and 3 'suits — so absolutely compelling are the values! Hundred Club, aggregation |a ted | Roasted, | ican soldiers and war correspond- ents in 1918. She scorned food ra- tioning restrictions when hungry men in olive drab knocked at her door. Lucien Gaudin, champion fencer of France; the Merignacs, father and son, and other famous foils- men have “trained” at Niny's din- ing table. Swordsmen and knights {of the typewriter are her favorites, although she will condescend to serve mere bankers if they provide her with the big cigars she loves to puff once her kitchen work is done. BOTTLED SUGKR USED AS A-LURE This Is Ooe Way fo Catch Humming Birds McGregor, Iowa, July 22 (®— With an artificial flower and a bot- tle of sugar Miss Althea R. Sherman | ornithologist, has transformed the clusive ruby-throated humming bird into a constant and friendly flsl(ori to her garden. Her study of the bird las at- tracted the attention of European American ornithologists. She by attracting humming | artificial nasturtiums | , that the birds often 1y more than twice heir weight in sugar dissolved in |water and that they preferred the artificial nectar to that of flowers. More than a dozen humming birds came in quest of sweets where for- merly they called singly or in pairs. Miss | contains with nestboxes which is a year-around place for birds. Sherman’s country place an untamed acre filled and an old barn feeding selling at less An event which will To study chimney swifts she built a 20-foot ney at-the top and a box below it It the first pair moved into the nest. for nesting. before tower with a chim- |ed in the tower. three years of swifts She studied was tory, four other them by means of mirrors arrang- She has succeeded, the first time in ornithological his- in observing the nest life of hole-nesting species— the northern flicker, owl, for perhaps | western birds. FRUITED NUT CUSTARD! A Joury ] Ceres® <W _HAp, » NEW HAVEN DAIRY ICE CREAM RUITED Nut Custard! Doesn’t that sound good? And how it tastes! Oh, Boy, imagine it, full of delicious red - maraschino cherries, ripe juicy strawberries, in sugary syrup, pineapple with its tart sweet- ness—and fat English wal- nuts, whipped together with golden creamy custard, frozen into a smooth, rich Ice Cream! That's“Fruited NutCustard.” Buy some today. Our Ice Cream is pure and wholesome—made in modern plants under conditions of spic- and-span cleanliness. All in- gredients are regularly tested in our laboratory for purity and quality. As good as it is de- licious. At dependable dealers near you. “A perfect food for all the family” Division, Eastern Dairies, Inc. OWHERE on the Connecticut Shore can you find a spot more alluring or one that will so completely meet your ideals of a summer home than is offered by Knollwood at Old Saybrook. the sparrow hawk and house wren. during hatching season &pent 20 Hours a day watching the o . s uit s KNOLLWOOD has heen planned, improved, developed and restricted to meet the desires of the modern American family. 2 Knollwood differs in most essentials from the ordinary develop- $17.50 Value < Our Complete Stock of SUMMIEY Genuine Palm Beach and Mohair Suits 9']5 REDUCED! $15 Value ment. KNOLLWOOD WILL CHARM YOU Knollwood is a natural seashore cottage site of the higher type. Every- thing that goes to make life at the shore enjoyable is there. What nature has omitted, we have supplied. IT IS ALWAYS COOL AT KNOLLWOOD Prices and Terms at Knollwood Prices for extra large plots range from $490 to $1,000 with water fronts higher. A small down payment secures any plot and the balanlce may he paid in monthly payments as low as $10 per month. Unfavorable weather—a backward selling’season—compell us to take drastic steps to clear our stocks. We've cut, and cut deeply, to move these suits at once. Our complete stock to choose from. Come early! 306 MAIN ST. SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED BOOKLET SIMPSON & COSULICH OWNERS AND DEVELOPERS SAYBROOK, CONNECTICUT

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