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PARTY FORWED T0 " EAPLORE ROCKTE . Thive Nonhs Wil Be Spert n . Study o Comnty Jasper, Alta., June 16(—An ex- pedition into the last unexplored ice region of the Canadian Rockies will take the trail here on June 23. Three months will be spent in exploration, survey and mountain climbing inj this remote hinterland of the do-| minion. Alfred J. Ostheimer, Jr., prominent | geographer and alpinist of Philadel- phia, Pa, will head the party. Mr. Ostheimer has had experlence in ex- | ploration work, in the Rockies. He will be assisted by John de Laittre, of Minneapolis and W. R. MacLaren of Boston, Mass. Hans Fuhrer, Swiss gulde; Adam Joachim and| Kenneth Saladana, packers; and| | Sentence of Kowerda in No Way: Peaks over 10,200 feet high, the average o fthe range. Six days will be spent in an attempt on the Tsar, a difficult and nearly inaccessible peak well over 11,000 feet, at the south and of the Clemenceau fleld. This southern region is unmapped. It is possible that ascents will be made of the four 12,000 feet peaks of the range, a feat as yet unac- complished by any one in the history of Canadian mountaineering. OSCOW DEPLORES RESULT OF TRIAL Satistactory Moscow, June 16.—(UP)— Tre- | mendous indignation was evident here today over the result of Boris| Kowerda’s trial in Warsaw for the assassination of Plerre Voikoff, So- viet Russian minister to Poland. |soviet MME. BORODIN IS come. She talked with affectionate en- thusiasm of her husband, tears coming'to her eyes as she dwelt on when both were students in the their happy married life. She re- called their marriage 20 years ago United States. She declared she had helped her husband in hw But Soviet Leader’s Wile IS in[workc aadice: Quandary London, June 16 (A — Mme. Borodin, wife of Michael Borodin of Russia, adviser to the Chinese nationalist government at Hankow, i “My life has always been rich enough and full enough to leave his work alone. His work has re- mained a holy thing apart.” The correspondent say Mme. Borodin spoke English with an American accent. Mme. Borodin, arrested by the nformed the Peking correspondent |northern Chinese authorities early of the Daily Express in an inter-/in March, was taken to Peking on view' at the Peking central prison|May 3. that her detention was a great puz- |time that she did not conspiracy zle to her and that know when she would be tried. She told of her arrest on the steamer Pamiat Lenina by northern Chinese authorities, of her | Ramiat removal ashore, and of being en- tertained at dinner in Nanking by the *“amorous General Chang Chung Chang"” and other officials, she be- It was announced at the she would be tried for against the northern government on charges growing out of the alleged seizure of propa- ganda material aboard the steamer Lenina. Three Russian couriers were arrested with her. BOY ABSOLVED OF THEFT Detective Sergeant W. P. McCue ing the only woman present. She|said today that the boy who was WHEN YOU'VE ~BEEN SHOOTING CIVIL WAR GOLF ALL SEASON~ OUTIIN €1 AND BACK:IN 65 'AND THBN ONE DAY You <oME THRQUGH " WITH'A NIFTY 99 AND “oU DECIDE To CELEBRATE| ' THE, BIG EVENT BY SMOKING AN. QLD GOLD y Z e Dan Hoover, cook—all of Jasper, Alta—will accompany the expedi- tion. The main object of the expedi-| AND YoU SEARCH THRoUGH YouR POCKETS AND FIND You HAVEN'T AN O, G. LEFT OH-H-H BOY!! Ain'T o7 A GR-R-RAND AND. GLOR-R-Rioug FeeLN' T = The sentence passed, indetermi- jsaid that during the dinner Generai| thought by the police to have stol- nate imprisonment with a recom- |Chang whispered to her that she|en a $150 riog in a house at 30 mendation that the term be fixed at imight consider herself merely a|Griswold street, claims to have acci- 15 years hard labor, was in no way |detained guest. dentally knocked it off the wash- }‘f&i;&?i:‘:li‘; :‘;p:::agm::\?dl“‘?‘s"’°l°fl'» Discontent also was| “Life is not too disagrecable and |stand with a towel and did not rectly north of the vast Columbia | c¥ident regarding the type of courtimy cell fs not too uncomfortable,” |steal it, nor did he know what made ice field, the geographical apex of |aPpointed to hear the case and be- |Mme. Borodin continued. “I secc|the noise when the ring struck the the North American continent. From C3use the court had chosen to re- |lawyers and a few Russlan friends | floor. According to Sergeant McCue, this expanse of 110 square miles of | 82rd the assassination as an isolated |once a week: I have books and have | the police are satisfleld that the boy ice flow the Columbia river to the | incident rather than as a part of the | nothing to complain of in the prison | did not steal the ring, and when he Pacific, the North Saskatchewan | Monarchist —conspiracy against|treatment. The women in charge|lcarned it was not missing, he re- river, which eventually reaches the Russia.” The latter view is that tak- are a nice little group of truc|calied the towel incident with the Atlantic, and the Athabaska river to | €0 Py Moscow. Christian girls. They sing result that the ring was found Tovely | the Arctic ocean—a tri-oceanic di-| Authorities did not see in the sit- [jymps every night. The intolerable | When the flooring was ripped up. vide, uation today any danger of war be- | oy ye aiting day after day not| The expedition will ascend the|tween Russia and = Poland. Soviet |knowing when, it ever, the end will | READ IIERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Athabaska to its source, then cross Russia does not desire war despite i from Albsrta into British Columbia | the Stiff tone of its communications and from a forty day camp will |to Poland relative to the assassina- thoroughly cover the Clemenceau tion. ice fleld, still very little known. Then | Moscow was noticeably calmer to- the route will turn north over the day as recent wave of arrests intro- Athabaska Pass, which in most At-|duced by the execution of 20 alleged lases in fianked by Mounts Brown spies was greatly diminished if not| and Hooker, the legendary 16,000 | ended, foot giants of the continent. Tactories, however, were carefully The pass formed a route for the guarded against incendiarism or 7 A\ early fur traders and travelers as white terror manifestations. No s g LR . i g . 2 The Smoother and Better Cigarette ....not a cough in a carload THAT WAS A Nice | Thanys!. A GeeaT DRIVE You GOT ON |CIGARETTE.. NOT A THE A%’r»(«s...mwe covaH IN A BOY STRUCK BY AUTO Salvo Lombardo of 217 High = street brought Chester Kalinowski, s comedy aged 7, of 51 Olive street, to New Betty Buzz stars in screen Britain General Hospital yesterday ez 5 homie of libsiand mos- | atternoon and had him examined spray clears your hom mountaineering attempts made suc- | ; s > cesstully, but sclentific data is in- | {2F Possible injurles, ‘;\"‘:““’"‘f"““: F quitoes. It also kills bed bugs, roaches, ants, complete. The Albert-British Col-| (r'ven by Lombardo having strue and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to ; Lim. So far as could be observed, 8 : umbia boundary survey covered a mankind, Will not stain. Get Flit today. small strip along the continental di- | {he child was not hurt. | DOG BITES THREE /-(" 3 ) { ““route for the Northwest company | and the Hudson Bay company trans- | continental trade. The region has been entered by several other expeditions and some | of Boston and H. B. Dev. Schwab vide, 1917-1921. Henry S. Hall, Jr., | of New York spent part of two sum-| New Haven, June 16.—UP—Three mers in the area. | persons were bitten, one severely by Dr. J. Monroo Thorington, Phila. (& German police dog, which ran delphia, with Dr. M. M. Strumia and |2Muck on West Water street last Mr. Ostheimer made some climbs Night. A patrolman who was called (among them the first ascent of Mt. |did not dare shoot the dog because Hooker) in 1624, of the crowded streets, but finally | The other main object of the party | collared it and took it to the dog will be to ascend as many of the|pound, where it will be killed and peaks of the district as they can. | cxamined for rabies The region contains about 25 un- e climbed, many of them unnamed.|READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS used it for the east-west traverse Jrarlier. It constituted the chiet Prodact of P. Lorillsrd Co., Bat. 1760 “DESTROYS' Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches “The yellow con with ot Sioek bond® When you leave @ Pan-Am station you will know why thousands of motorists look for the cream-colored pumps. A friendly interest in your welfare counts, as well as bester gasoline. Gasoline of known merit . . .. from dealers of known reliability! There is a big difference in gasoline and in the people who sell it. Be on the safé side always. 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