New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 25, 1924, Page 12

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12 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1924. TEMPORARY, SAYS SAVANT cal Aspeet of Glands 15 Vastly : b dbctans, Regular Air Line Service Deweed iucrcace—reor. mume Parly Expects (o Climb fo Sum- 2o o it vt General Bruce stated s . I Rerkeley, Cal, April 25.—Rejuve. H H " tine work of the expedition wonld be is only temporary, in the opinion of % s copt that on this occasion i § : - . I'rofessor ett of the Uni- d nsity observatio . Washington, v ., Apri VIy- yersity of Calif ¢ lepartment of utta ’ 1 25—~ we don't oygpe s tter photogr. N rd. | | ing as a f sell relatively phy ¢ ) 0 3 t as keen as mustard to be | i new: win vay W se | it improvement follow- ot be S said, “for with all its hard- | i@ i and du i ands will re- ships there is fun in it i f temporary,” the professor ex- landed in utta as the heawd of the | these two countries b it ied e ama i n oA d, “until our knowledge of the ' new expedition to climb t . 8 | 3 dependent existence only ? ; usp f glands and | highest pi ) seldom feft fiter & DORE .md ’\lan l’opular : :‘ world war. Yet there is a 8 roair 4 tions is vast nereased. iy life, and i he other membe ln LOndOIl Dance Ha“ 3 s Dbetween | wlin i f ¥ glands, of the party appear to be in similar yougon, April 25.-A cordon of | J§ 3 g 8 g i e sl RS condition ndon oined nands and 4 \eBAaii o N conlt iy the secretions which atime ora o in aving (or ista AR Gl TWICE AS LONG gion's annual ball H-! HIL:’]‘l in At a Saving of Ten Dollars hat the scien- —— moi question of whet] at the ul or not will depend jyauoias | 1f the monsoon comes . our chances will by W queed. On the other hand, ght thirust old Sents ne who was a reeent air the two cities “A fow bumps,” “then our left wi mtn steey into the ground. A 1 G flashes under us, and what | todve huge rafts of wood upon its wi- ters logk like matches floating in a s from a too enthu They jump al rimente @ spoct r to protect the American movie stars from the admiring crowds. | medical | o until weil on in June, Outside the baliroom thousands ctacylar story. This | ap infinite amount of good. be had waited for hours to cateh a ! 1s its eifect on the public, | expect 1 excursion of this Kind glimpse of the popular Americans, v d un-{nyst inevitably depend upon fuck in and the polics a hority for say- ounded conclusio SUIt 08 | \arious forms. but Iy in the o party of American tourists lack of critical Judgment which 18} sape off propitious for a sight of European | ersential in the consideration of such The general plans are similar to Ities ever compared with the waucer, a complex subject, those of previous expeditions. The rness of the Londoners trying to Can See Benecath Sea = 7 start is to be made from Durjeeling. get a peep at Douglas and M H “Riga becomes a gray huddle be LONEL]EST OUTPOST Much care has been cxpended in the, The American Ambi v and Mrs, f d ¢ yond the green of trees and the selection of equipment, numerous im- Kellogg were present gt the ball, and | 3 tawny sand mas; Pine forests ap e e provements having been made on the [ Consul General Skinner attended. [ ; pear and seem | the. corn of our Wircless and Hydro-Meteorological ) [ ] mid-west seen through dark glasses, f /\B “Yellow sand blotches, blue-gruy | Station Has Been Fstablished at X 2 g iga tilts up ¢ s bent over, and steeples s Kknow epots of water, and gr forest masses scud by below. Rivers wind across the countryside like great sil- Leni ad, April 25.—What is said ] ver snakes; caught in their meander- 1, po ti most lonesome outpost in ings are cultivated fields with large ! ;0 world for human beings has been | g houm-_u. red tiled, and small ones, in- got yp at Karsk, on the Kara sca, an conspicuously thatched. arm of the Arctie, in the form of a *“We glide out over the sea; along | wireless and hydro-meteorological its shore every ripple of sand beneath gstation. The sea is blocked by | the brown-green water is disclosed to | jce the greater part of the year, being | | our vertical gaze. Tiny toy-like boats | passable for ships during only a few 3 steam along with Lilliputian wakes | weeks in sumimer. | behind them. Again we are over the! The Academy of Sciences in Lenin- | land, and now broken clouds stencil grad announced recently that four their patterns on green and gold of | smallor stations also had been estab- | forest and sand. Now and then little lished on the Kara sea by the Soviet towns glide beneath, all surrounded by | government each of these being com- crazy-quilt fields. | bined with a hydro-meteorological bu- | Farms Carved From Swamp | reau. The wireless statlon at Karsk | “Farther on are swamps. The whole | keeps in touch with vessels in Polar eoast line 1is evidently soggy, but waters and sends out weather (orp-\ there are fine ficlds Inside. Still farther | casts regularly, There are but two Inside are evergreen forests, and be- men at the station and, because of the | yond those more brown swamps. The ice and weather conditions, it I- pos- | plowed fields in this moist region are sible to send them supplies o marked out with crossed drainage | every year. Tha chief recre ditches like a tablet of chocolate, | the meteorologists and wireless op- “But all to be seen as one flies o er vrators is "““‘““H and "'m"l Tatvia does not smack of peaceful | | | pursuits. Below in a curve of the| PLAYS “WILLIAM TELL” | shore gun positions defended by | [ | trench lines are plainly visible, Now | = = —smema | | and then one catches sight of huge (. .0 Tries to Shoot HWat OF ot | J battlemented manor houses that mlght ¥; withstand a siege, Friend and Result is That Hcl it “Parnu, quite & town at the mouth | | Misses Target and Death Ensues. | | of a river, slips by below and we! ypapdin, Mont, Aprll 25.~—A “Wil-| realize that we have crossed the Es-|)am Tell” atunt, without the apple, thoniangfrontier, Here, too, are the yogyited recently in the death of Hen- chocolate squares drained by tinfell | Apendroth and the convietion of | ditehes: the brown swamp regions; the | \Wijjjam Cosgrove for manslaughter, lush green patches. | The two mun were employed on a Architecture Wasted on Alrmen | nearby ranch a8 cowpunchers. Abe ¢ ials i Spring s S, “Tallinn, our objective, showa up in ‘1”, b, holding out his hat, challenge All Wool materials in the S pring shade: thedistance, a smoky pancake beyond | Cosgrove to shoot a hole through it. Many of them with two pairs of pants. a ‘Lake Superior.’ Soon its steeples Cosgrove, reputedly an expert shot, | Others from $5~50 to $]9.50 are visible, But though airplanes are ! fired and missed, Abendroth then unequalled for a broad general view placed the hat on his head and told of a country, they plan tricks with Cosgrove to try to hit it in that po- FREE'—BASEBALL BAT architectured One thing is certain, sition, Cosgrove fired again and Aben- | . H Christopher Wren and the steaple | droth fell shot through the head. bullders wrougii i t for the airman Cosgrove wae sentenced to from one | but for the pedestrian. to two years in the penitentiary, but | “We head slowly down; we coast; the sentence was suspended and he we tip ‘ln a little and swing to Hv"\\:n released with an admonition, “ ITH ]‘“\(H BO‘ Hl I1 [,l R( H side. Watery trenches and a quarry e oD Hl‘;R]‘A seemn to reach for us. But there is the BRINGS SUIT FOR $1,000 | open landing field, A slight bump, P. 1. Riley, through Donald Gaffney, : and we are safe in another land.” | has hrought suit for $1,000 damages i e | against the Charles A, Schierer Co., of V. ¥ar. Karsk, on the Kara Sea, AND 342 0zher Suits at $19.50 to $39.50 | TOP COATS “ WE ARE PREPARED, AS NEVER BEFORE, TO SUPPLY JUST WHAT Will Give You a Fine Suit For Your Boy. , Ideal for school wear and dress up occas- YOU WANT IN A TOPCOAT. 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