New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 1, 1929, Page 9

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1929. = ——— New York, experts now agree that|York" Costes said. “I supervised |[the mddle Russian peasants could UNITEI] [;HUREH IS he has contributed more to [h*:““ construction of three Breguet |never hold their own against Deni- v ~ o = - knowledge of Atlantic air travel than | planes for the trip. The first, was in- | nin's speedy cavalry: so through any other man who has succeeded ladequate. The second was not quile}l[u.vam he went, crying “Proletar- * 4 or failed. good enough, but with it we had no |ians, to horse Soon he had a regi- “I am convinced,” he says, “that |difficulty in flying the South Atlan-|ment of riders at his back; then he Women$ ond flying westward is ten times harder |tic. The third I believed was able to |had a brigade—desperate, —daring than flying from New York to Pa meet the supreme test. With favor- |riders, ready to follow him any- 1 Costes is an airman of recognized |able weather conditions I still be- ‘wjv . Others with equal cou e started | we were hopelessly informed. No |crushed Denikin's army almost over- 2 1 5 MAIN S he did and tried to overcome them. |ed to my knowledge could weather | beyond the borders. As rout | They have never been heard from |what we encountered and get |RIeW in size, whole battalions of Pen Mar, Pa., August 1.—(P—Im- [since. Costes found himselt up |through safely.” | Denikin's cavalry aeserted and came mediate and unconditional organic |against conditions that he was not| When Costes and his navigator, | OVer to Budenny. Military stores or omorrow an a r a p union of all branches of the Presby- | prepared for, so he came back and | Maurice Bellonte, decided in mid- |Were captured, and Budenny was e o 0 - terian church was urged today in an |is alive to work on the solution of Atlantic to turn back, the latter |4ble to give h soldiers uniforms address by Dr. William Chalmers |his problem. opened a boitle of champagne and |#nd ood weapons. The discouraged . Covert, Philadelphia, general secre- “We must know more: we must | they drank to their next attempt. | {ra&ments of the beaten Soviet army tary of the Presbyterian hoard of [learn more and we must make |They still hope for success and are |'allled around him—and presently q Christian Education, at a meeting of | further progress in aircraft develop- |studying to get around the difficul- |{he menace of Denikin was gone churchmen from hoth sides of the [ ment before we can hope to fly from | ties. ‘[!H‘>’\\v i ok 7 Mason and Dixon line, called to dis- | Paris to New Yqrk with any reason- hen came the nvasion from cuss church union S8 et G gt 29t Poland. Lenin took Budenny to his separated units of our great family ward are two entirely ifferent ‘ AL I e Rl RRa Day e e S S e o sitions. Flying this w Sl “Y,Mh,”"l‘} _“ s hu\»l heen \w; clear i e o e bergh did, but they are very likely fo | [ O e e jection that has heretofore risen to 8 i _ ly to [the new danger Budenny, now postpone and prevent this matural |be helpful from the point of view | ———— commanding a well pped army and inevitable oneness, has less |Of Progress. Ilying westward, any T el S of 100,000 men, swept up {o the weight with the thoughtful and de- | Miscalculation is liable to spcil dis- | (anapg] Budenny Has Saved ! rousn “rrontier. strusk “the Totish voted leaders in the church than at irmies at Poltava, Kovel and Lem- any time in a generation. Costes claims he was foiled by in- S i [ F F u l i berg and compl v and perma- Radical Situation Passed | formation he was given on weather 0VIEL FT0m rour Invasions nently ended the danger of nII'ollsh “The radical situation that once jconditions. Predictions were all _— invasion. justified or made congenial the |Wrons and instead of finding favora- | T.ondon, Aug. 1 (P—General Bf- | Back to the Crimea went Bu- separate grouping of our Presby- I"p‘\; ather he quickly ran into vio- | cenny, the soldier who will command {denny and his army—this time to | terians in the pioneer periods of our [lent storms and contrary winds that | (he armies of Soviet Russia if war |strike at Wrangel and his army of continent has entirely passed, be- |Made any attempt to reach the | with China becomes an actuality, 18 | “whites.” Wrangel's army went cause of the delusion of the old |NOFth American continent physically | out of place in this modern age of [the way of Denikin's. Budenny Rl ala ks A i Bumiversality |Lnosslble : headquarters-generals and elaborate |staved in the Black Sea region long And what Costes said about | army staffs. | #nough to crush Kelchak, last of and supremacy of a real American | weather predictions has heen con- o s ed “the grei ‘ossack | the breed of Presbyterians. T i n con He is-called reat ( ack | the The Psalms of David are no long- er an issue that keeps worshiping | hureau fizhting, and he has a holc the en pparent e i Presbyterians apart. The differences | LGN 0 m?]\n;:m‘mzn : nagid hu‘lixnth\ }1. nin, apparently, used to fing e e | e depa : 5 of ten like (hat | Budenny puzzing. Once he told a t "% [neither the money nor the equip- | exercised by such fiery personalities |1riend, “I can't understand him — found their solution with comrades of | = 5 Bl v e 5 ¢ A 5 b {ment to give reliahle reports except Stonewall Jackson and Nathan |bLut he fights,” which, it might be both the blue and the gray. la1 : Forrest | i Do A reees . (he |210N% the coast and o some extent | Forrest. {noted, was precisely what recom- 08 > {H"va S 1 fas far as the Azores,” General Del- [ Budenry is not like modern mili- | mended the sphinx-like Grant to confession of faith are considercd ‘ampre said. “At present the trans- | tary leaders. He would never dream | Lincoln, negligible. Presbyterian men A€ portation of passengers from kurope | cf sitling in house 50 miles he. Once, it is said, Lenin, despair- wearying of the burden of words; (5 America over this route, where |hind the lines to dircet a battle. of trying to teaeh Budenny the || worn with the spirit of controversy. |55 many gallant aviators have al-|He is not much of hand at using | inner iruth about communism, ask- | “Multitudes of Presbyterians are |ready met death. would he a foolish | maps. He does not like to write out |ed him plaintively, “Suppose | waiting for the oficial word from |and criminal enterprise those exiensive reports without | were I e invading generals — and then firmed hy General Delcambre, chief | of Bolshevism,” he insists on get- [ returned to Moscow (o tell Lenin and of the French official weather | ting personally into the thick of the | Trotzky that Russia was safe. vou ked what you were hting ecclesiastical courts to permit them | “An international organization | which most armies could hardly | for—what would you say? to break through the barriers for a|naving a capital of at least one mil- | €Xist “Comrade,” replied Budenny, “1 spiritual oneness that would haptize |lion dollars is needed hefore it will Wouldn't Write (o Trotzky would say that Lenin knows” the whole church of Christ With {be possible to give out adequate at-| Once it is said, Trotzky, then min- Many Myths About Him Pentecostal blessings |mospheric reports over the entire|ister of war, berated Budenny for| Wild tales have been fold about Would Appeal to Youth Atlantic to fliers Although we | failing to send in a written report of | Budenny—most of them, no doubt, “Unifying of all Presbyterians into [organize the hest service possible | ne of his battles. [the fabricated propaganda stories the Presbyterian Church of America [under present conditions, the means| But I won it,”" retorted Budenn aEleiachediiensatesiiofalin o) B would strike the fires of moral en- |are pitifully inadequate and if we | “HOW am I lo know that” askei | shevik leaders immediately after the | thusiasm in the hearts of all our [report conditions perfect when there | [TO1zKY, With the aggrieved feclings |war. It was said that he was un- youth, and would put new motive [are terrific storms in the middle of | Of @ war secretary whose chief gen |cducated, sullen, ferocious and much power into millions of our men and [the Atlantic it is because we do not | 2¥al fails to write to him | ElsnRlofarink S oxever JdEnon | women out of whose church life and |possess divine power kLo ot SaeR - [pexeailicen Genied that i can G| Present spiritual experience the urge | “In order to guaranfee accurate|'d Budenny. “When 1 go out (o iIn addition to his personal mag- | Eieunt epliftualiesy weather reports over the entire |l and fail to brinz my army [netism, his bravery and his impet. | “To meet successfully the mechan- |ocean it would he necessary to form | YaCK: you will know I have lost!” | yous dash, he has a sound knowledge | istic influences now undermining the |an international organization with | ' Lol S iof mllftal st g spiritual reality of the universe; the |floating islands. numerous ships and | S¢70Y i8i and that, perhaps, is one | Budenny's lit:: at his modest home | church had better unify her forces |dozens of coast stations. It will also | °F ! A i D T G o e for the attack. We m unify our |be necessary to perfect the Azores|cCR for years, the idol of the [ prove the stories abont his wild law- Prevent economic and human wast- [enormous investment and an inter- | It i s D e e e age in the administration of Christ’s [national company which would e i o o il I i s i R Gospel at home and abroad {the service at set prices. as practically Lrought up in the |y mn‘”!n‘f ::M"y‘h \;\"\” ‘.‘;.r;‘w”m‘ @byenvehing shasitogheN PRIARart o diaiiand when the: WoildeWar | iihe piana anal sings WESTWARD flEEAN EONERLRERT R CEMINIEEL S0 CHEETOE e e G 10 et Gl figngil er is going to send wir weather |} 5 S i g he should go into a cavalry regi- | ; ; e i i s B : & INTERSECTION COLLIS reports without remuneration. We |nont in the (zar's army, becoming | \yien N <” ll\ylfl\‘ il |ask for such reports for our fliers, (4 sergeant-majo 1 4 avitt, 20 Russwin |but we do not always receive them.” | ™ Non.commissioned officers did not | 2%, started to turn right from | “General Delcambre reported that | yise (o fame in the army of the| VASHINELON strect onto West Muin | during the war Lrance had 2,000 f(zar, and when the revolution came |StFect Wednesday afternoon 4:40 men observing the sky over a space |5 after waiting for the traffic light to plays Russia dropped out of the World G S H d w~ [1 M k of 500 miles, but today is forced to |\War, Budenny was still an unsung |© ge. his car was hit by the ma- | OSteS flys (il 100 Maxe depend on 600 men {o fell the weath- | sergeant-major. But his opportunity | Chine of another man, to his right. | v X er conditions of the entire world. As|\was not long in aoming * | While he does not know the ot |stated that he had one hoat and sev- |cf it in its infancy. First came the |damage done to his own car, he RTEG eral coa ions on which he was {army of Gen. Denikin, one of the |Offers to take the matter up with By MINOTT SAUNDERS forced to to advise Atlanti iite Russiars,” marching up from | his ins :o company if the other (NEA Service Writer) | fiers. the Black Sea, wresting the greal |man's caris damaged, he reports. | Paris. Aug. 1.—For aviators, the | Costes is now convinced that his wheat belt of southern Hussia away | e broad Atlantic is like a one-way |old friends, Nungesser and Coli, who | from the Bolshev and making CATHOLIC EDITOR DEAD | street, according to Maurice Prax, [took off with local weather condi- | Denikin's backers m the rest of lu-| West Palm Beach, Fla, Aug 1| writing in the Petit Parisien. Until [tions similar to those he flew under, rope belivve that the fall of the So. (P—Miss Carlotte O'Loan. author | the traffic conditions over the ocean ran into the same series of gales and |viets was at hand. Denikin seized |and for 25 years editor of the An- are more simplified the westward |hail storms. that their gsalis the fortress of O - called by |zelus, Catholic publication of De- journey by air must remain a great [out in the teeth of a fierce head ‘Frotzky ‘the Red Verdun—and pre- | troit. died at a local hospittal last | adventure, with the most perilous [wind. and that they plunged int « [pared for greater things ht after a brief illness Miss | possibilities. sea far from any possibility of help. Organized Cavalry ‘Troops O'l.oan wrote several hooks under | Although Diendonne Costes failed | “For a long time it has been my | Then appearcd Hudenn the nom de plume of Joseph F. | in his attempt to fly from Paris to [ambition to fly from Paris to New lon horseback, he quickly saw that Wynne. e DID YOU KNOW THERE'S A . ; NEW LAUNDRY SOAP THAT IT'S TRUE! THIS GRANULATED SOAP . 713 These dresses were made to SOAKS CLOTHES WHITER THAN WHY, MARY, SAVES SCRUBBING AND BOILING . . @ 3 . 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