New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 5, 1927, Page 3

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. [ h bubble sextant, an earth inductor Which a weather man will have not 1 4 nding” the navigation Tine () 4 “Qhi ” by Col. Charles A. Lindbergh on f instructions fr \ Dovan. It | (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) With Lawyer Husband Tul Y lN COM]NG AIRPLANE VOYAGE"”s N York-Paris flight; an v hat [ will he i ) the nose | Semr e e | Little Rock, Ark. Aug. 5 (P—If aperiodic con pass for use should w 1 all of the y point the direc- s o3 3 3 Ly oaha dittoia Savine D BY EXPERT Pheitia e I A i Paris Busness |un v vt s = e T | dicator, an alimeter and a drift perienes and we mp ted to zero. My | Starts With Necktie of Mr, and Moa WA DAl ! indicator. In calculations Miss | infto a squail, cing observation 1 et setting Paris, Aug. 5 P —Mle, Ginette tm-h! »‘dd» of lhuvhousfi lwill wared to argue points of law. Fashions in Fish as in EYC[‘Y' Meteorologist Tells How He Will Figure It On Honolulu Doran will aid” me. returdea 1 e thiat the plane | for Dis compa Gontler decided that the husy busi- | SPETER 0 SreRe Donts of Jm. 5 = s 2 , x This plucky little woman and | take advan f daile Good Chiance 1o Win ness men who frequent t cafes B - R0 fl]i Flight With Woman W h? Wants to Be First I will be sealed in the fus rated winds on the cd Other thing il 1 be- |around the Paris stock excha, go | ¥ 427 in Little Rock banks and g Else of Sex to Cross, the gas tanks separating | This flisht & not a plasure lieve we have a good chance | onght to wear better neckles, SLe | SUA¥Ing law by night. Mr. and Mrs. ’,\Yr. Pedlar, who will handle the | jaunt for a wr-old girl. Miss 1o win the Dole $2 ize for | found the best way to convert them | -Aumont have the distinction of p controls alone, On a gingle cush- | Doran flics, and flies well. I shall |being the first to fly fr o her belief was to bring the goods | “¢!N& the first married couple to re- London, Aug. 5 (B (B) —How does liorenitaant & shtan = cxliiie eoross | Binacls fiha i nbmost ok her Lelentad Saonit it Honoluitl Non b oh altbr] tat fier In thé cSioiurs morenis] & licenses from the Ar- l'ths fusilage we will face. the in-|dvring our day fogether in that | August T P i the little tables under the awn- AUTTSIp RUREE- Mo Awpl PRI e {strumont board when we take off. | Honolulu-hound plane, for [ re- 1l @5 el ot fee law in partn Vih“:m;th i There are fashions i s el , Miss Doran went to San Dicgo to gir the flight as onc of extreme safer a surer navigation tha S an a now flourishing by e Pt g ons in fish just as Vstiayi = y for the flight, | scientific interest. It will demon- | our meteorol; will help bring | necktie business. Mlle. Gontier KHC I Wa¥ aacting, there arc stvles in ladics' gowns, | . the better ideratand ‘our uayi- | atrate’ fo. what extent: 'aviationilio usi The fasteat Yol e Rat b sewing n working all | (NeY agree. “but never monotonous. ;A::dEo'nG.VN()Do”M‘:g: «||r..(-m||vr\c‘|f&t‘h">: ! ¥ = gational problems. must depend upon the weather not t Pacific | day long under direction mak- “ "'] “f”,“k" G‘lu ‘I]- ;m‘l questions to- London 7oo aquarium, dlscusses ; Once we leave land I shall rely | man, whom 1 believe to | Jane should terae Tranidl i into cravats the bits of silk | Sether helps us both. them in a book he has ' just pub | . . upon a bubble sextant, through | mos' important adunet to the fly \ S RIChIE et e Dt A Naturalist at the Dinner i 1 which T shall obscrve the stars scheme of thing 1 ! t v hus | rates on the sale counters WINS RIDING TITLE SRS e , : 4 : of high altitude. for reckoning. | huared gallons of gaso- | nor inm tuse Mait- at bargain rates in af e 1. 5 P — The title of f the restaurant Keepcr. Fish | : This is the oaly instrument mot |line will il o tanks before our d genbergcr, a ith | zround the Bourse , st ! 11 horsewoman of Paris of the wstaurant keepor. Fish| . | tixed to the board in the fusilage. | 223-horscpower Wrig ¢ b <treteh. | fTen years ago Ginette Gontier | was awarded to Olivier Barclay, an et nr:‘;nvl”‘;!(igl:‘-l‘t;ll:n::i';xx}:.‘ . . ‘ o use this properly T shall knecl | wind motor lifts e i t !learned English from British and | American, in a recent contest in Lo L ’ ~ | on the seat, ~projecting only my A This fuel will be located | five land piznes entercl. Ac- | American soldiers in her mother's | the Dois de Loulogne. Miss Bar- Sl b : ! o - ? $ | head (]!rou{:u (m-‘ canvas top, ¢en the pilot ind us, The | curate navigation will play an im- | cafe t Le Havre. She came to clay rode the old fashioned side R SO ; . Winds Can Help motoR is the best obtainable and | porfant part in the competition. to be her own hoss” when | saddle and wore a dark blue shirt, SE I S B o ; _This s the first flight of con-| the bl been built for | With Pedlar ont nu decided that the outlook for | mray coat, black bowlder, blac! e S f B . siderable di: or danger on | stre n of flight was not promising | hoots and white pique sto seahorses get mixed with pipefish, £prat and herrings in this fried mix- | ture of small fish, so the naturalist | says. In winter whitehait is chief- ly sprat and in summcr it is mostly | herrings. Boulenger says tinned crab is sometimes the tlesh of the octupus | dyed pink. Turbot honnefemme is often shark or dogfish and “ salmon” has no claim on the s mon tribe. It is often wolf fish. Sometimes it is angler fish. Fried sole is often ‘fried witch, or fricd megrim. the prawn manage to get into polite (I CNSSHEAE || = /| » o Dte = | 4 . m | A \\ L || Price in his path." His resulting mad adven- ture is grippingly told London, Aug. 5 (P — When it's | . : = ) ture i grippingly ol bedtime at Peshawar, on the north- i . e / B L AN M acied west frontier of India, thereds a na- . 4 Mg &2 / A T g s tive who goes to sleep with his ; . donkey. Yes, every nighi, not just ; e A W\ (% Wfim‘m\“ on the D. T. nights. P At least, so says Miss M. Clarke, - medical missionary at Peshawar, who has arrived in London to tell her experiences among the natives. | The native in question recently | went to a hospital. o o | “I know I'm very ill. and I know e “WHY DID YOU DO THIS?" he cried. Helen simply stared L oy . ac him, an expression of both fear and hate upon her face. I'Ye got tojcome info) the hospital, (Fram " Sisters in Scandal, September True Story Magasine.) the native said to Miss Clarke, “but ; i I'm not coming in unless my don- key can come, too. My donkey has slept with me for 15 years, and I'm not going to be separated from | BY M. R. LAWING, U. S N. |flights. Unel- Sum’s navy demands him now.” that naval fliers consult the weather Miss Clarke relates that the don- 4 Whose Bi- | man Lefore undertaking hazardous key did go to the hospital with his plane Will Ente Homo- | flizhts. We hope 0 go that one bet- master. August 12, | : : “When a native comes to be | Written ¢ ¥ for NEA Service | Can Yoretell Weather [ ] H_EN the aristocratic FOSF“ Dale broke treated at the hospital,” she related and The Herald. | Fardless of ) weather, since I his engagement to the beautiful and charm- further, “all the family insist on| Romance has not deparicd from as a meicorologist will under- ing Helen Bradford, the whispering tongues be- coming, too. A doctor not only |the skies. Neither has scic . conditions over ihe Pacific finds the patient in bed, but five or | achieved its fuli growth in lor T we should he able to speed : gan to wag. But the real shock came when, nixdo[ his family grl triends in the diatano fligtts When Miss B ely on to our goal. For mn_; without warning, he suddenly married Helen's bed with him. Often the nurses | Doran, I’ uggic Pedlah and 1| cight fays before the take-off \ ; cannot make out who are patients | (as navi 3 o off in our Tiuhl . «iall study weather maps and | . sister Margery. and who are friends. biplane from - Oakland, Calif., at|charts us reported hy meteorolo- £ S Pl ; “Freqently the natives insist on{noon Aug. 12 in the “race of the | sisis at S Franciseo. Thus I ean 4 b HeIenhdet;;‘arcefduqulmy for I\e\x: {?‘kg And during their- live stcck coming in With | century” to Honolulu we hope to | determine cenditions which will | 2 Y the months that fo owed, Margery’s life with FO%‘““'" them. The hospital at Peshawar | prove not only our ability to I pivaill duringtthel foloxing 24 | E a supremely happy one. They were very much in love. was once asked to take in a camei. | there, but also the fact that mcter- | hours, the maximum time re- Belom)—MY HEART BEAT & (Righo—"1 SCREAMED No cloud threatened the perfect serenity of their lives. and it is common for roosters and | clogy or airos v has arrived {quired for a California-Honolulu Romantic pic- YSTERICALLY—but he N AN Z Q) : hens to be put under the patient’s [ The et has come fo | tlizht. tures of a life of fove with & || dragded me back.” Laura = ' ; Then Helen returned—more beautiful, more cultured, o fairy prince had haunted her was content with a modest . N 3 i A more attractive than ever. Had Margery not been so bed, tied to the bedposts.” N the difference Dbetween suc- | For my navieation T shali de- until marriage and simple life, until sudden and fail in transoccanic [ pend upon six instruments — a disillusioned her. Then the || prosperity brought a craving completely absorbed in her own lazy, care-free existence, f i B 4 N 5 Sty Wit O Sios L she would have noticed the sudden new interest her hus- ¢ Crack Trains Run Race "ty Wit Rice.” “True Story Z {ogsSepteuiber;iieiLhaisiare band took in the lovely and accomplished Helen. Each Day to Chicago fas *Tne Girl Who || 1ing srory of |4 reckiess #irl z , Chicago, Aug. b (A —The Twenti- antedHappinsesSeptemely || Rwho aitainedihericesiren e’ A ; : Little did she realize that Foster’s renewed interest in A Bor Truo Story.) torriblo cost. ;‘"J:l Cs;’;:‘zyc"h"ig;g‘;c_;é;?d‘}‘ofi{ II',‘:;: ® e $ her sister was largely her own fault. She was blind to senger trains, run a race every day oml ows awson \ - » the fact that her own beauty was fading —indifferent to :rc}o]m‘ th;ird Chicago terminals to “The Store For You” = — Foster's interest in sports and social activities. Whiting, Ind. . A e 2 i . = = i ¢ So Margery permitted herself to remain blissfully un- ,I.JI‘EQ‘SZCKihf ;2;:;::{:?( S:;; 361 MAIN STREET OPP. MYRTLE ST. oy %3 e 1 aware of the growing intimacy that menaced her happi- roads run parallel along that leg of P— = i i I - ; ness. But when she awoke to the truth, there began an | amazing drama that was to end in chaos, wreckage and the run, diverging at Whiting. At | @' g ; Midsummer b st i . itter remorse for them all. 12:40 p. m. the Century pulls out + Clearance This wife's startling story, entitled “Sisters in Scandal,” of the LaSalle Street station and at MID%AD . k i N\ ¢ exactly the same minute the Broad- E@ e il i i L \ /) / . / is one of the most heart-gripping, most powerfully moving . | - J / / g 7 narratives of real life ever printed. It appears complete . | 17 L27 = with 15 other big features in September True Story. of = Z i 1 /4 < tion, fnst across the river. “The passengers the race,” says C. A. Jinn ductor on the Broadway Limited, “and thore is much speculation among them on the winner. Hon- ors are about even, with a good many dead heats.” way Limited leaves the Enion sta- The specialized blue serge suit Don't fail to get it at your newsstand today. . il | sk Ll The Most Gripping Stories " nd Talored ; NN 11 %Y Are Those of Real Life Memorial Fort Marks Clark’s Headquarters | Harrodsburg, Ky., Aug. 5 (@ —. wooden stockade, with three bloc houses and four cabins, now marks the site here when Gcorge Rogers | Clark planned his conquest of the Not.hwest. ! The replica of the old fort, which | was constructed by the Kentucky Pioneer Memorial association, also | 1s the state’s largest park. Among the structures in the 16 acre plot is the cabin in which Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks, parents of Abra- | ham Lincoln, were married. It was moved from Washington coun- | ty. Ky, to the park. 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