New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 26, 1928, Page 12

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T the many invitations he has receiv- ed from varicus points in California and Oregon for receptions. He wants to lose his identity as a presidential candidate for a few days. only to find it contained three dinars —about three cents. ready has obtained the views of many party leaders on the other big issue—farm aid—and that section of his address is almost in complete form, although the nominee may make some revisions in this as well as other sections after the speech has been put into type. This was Mr. Hoover's last day for conferences and work for perhaps a week, as tomorrow he will go to San Francisco for the homecoming cele- bration at the city hall there and carly Saturday morning will start for | the “extreme northern ‘part of his home state and Oregon for fishing and recreation. He expects to be back home by next Wednesday or Thursday. On this outing the nominee will ot the nterios and Gra- Amundsen, Scott and [ham's Land, the western boundary Schuckleton are the only recorded |of Weddell Sea. He does not con- Three Expeditions to Antarctic ! glimpses of the continent's heart. 'lcmplale a hop to the pole. Give An'plane l[s Severest Tesp There Antarctica lies, surround- | Jeffery's effort will start from a ed and covered by ice—a huge|base on the west coast of Graham's white dome with the South Pole|Land. He plans to do his explor- New York, July 26. P—Down t¢ |gion on the globe. The vast the dead land that towers above the | polar continent, nearly as large as south { Bear lis oenter, ied on a pla-|ing eastward to Coat's Land, which teau nearly two s high, and |lics on the other side of Weddell bottom of the world three bands of the United and the main.|the remaind L 5,000,000 ¢ He may also try a trip to the explorers sail in the next few | land of is the 1““‘7'.‘1:{’,50 )H;Ci.*m!d pering 1o the u Sanfinect. eF months to pit the airplane against great geograph gl g the defense of Nature’s most ence. Guried u dian oce | W : sea at nearly a Jus L) formidable stronghold—Antarctica. | cap, it has giv SRS S A e Sl Offerstn Pay Damages Whether aircraft that can carry | interviews to ¢ o 3 : men across the oceans, across the teorologist, o celonble ice elitfs {rom whick But Won’t Show License Arctic wastes, even to the north tologist, Al bee Soyering '"1‘ Sergeant M. J. Flynn made an in- pole, will surmount the barriers of RoeAt th mountains and | vetigation last night into a_com- ale At ator Ho il ot v\.w..]_\v packed that hold shibs | y1aint by Francis Klos of 49 Beatty that have kept the south polar con- e I““‘ 3 £ ! {street that his car had been dam- tinent a land of mystery will soon ris of the coast are more A |,geq by another car and the driver be determined by Comm. R ‘(“\“”fl‘f;‘“:";‘u‘m‘;’\ (e IS 1My rused to show his license although 2 ';,;J‘,;“ Qu- Hubert \:;;' 1: ‘r: ‘(]‘:l\.~ “w‘wyn‘t AT A o T .‘ 1:: v\\m willing to pay for the dam. Itoyal Navy, re days saw a L Jiemen suass e B eenl el e Fasd : % ntations, Ifs — one, Ross e land; the oth | AP4TO 0f 106 Beaver street that the e from South |4¢cident happened as Klos was pull- s |ing up to the curb on Beaver street S between Broad and Beatty streets to launch their werisl assaults |@nd Aparo claimed to have signalled the interier trom Ross Sca, or |With his hand. The reason he did |the campaign immediately after his Ciiha i e barricr that |0t show Klos his license was that | nomination at Houston, but some of chokes more than half of that ocean |there was some excitement over the | Mr. Hoover's advisers say he has not arm. It was from this barrier that |incident and Klos drove away, he | yet made up his own mind as to that. Amundsen and Scott started on |said. Aparo told the sergeant he| As an index to what may be ex- {heir frins to the pole. Jeffery cx- |went to the police station to report | pected, however, they point to the peets fo attack from the shore of | the matter and the officer in charge | nomince’s own daclaration in his re- Weddell Sea, and will thercfore he |told him it was not necessary, as the | Ply to the questionnaire submitted to him by Senator Borah of Idaho dur- HOOVER OBTAINING VIEWS ON LIOUOR Holding Discussions With Wil- liam J. Donovan Stanford University, Cal., July 26 (—Turning his attention to the sec- | |ond of the two outstanding issues | thus far developed in the presiden- | | tial campaign—that of prohibition— Herbert Hoover is obtaining the | views of William J. Donovan, assist- ant United States attorney general, | and others on some phases of this| subject, Naturally there has been consid- | erable specuiations as to Jjust what | the republican presidential candidate is going to say on the question which Alfred E. Smith, the democratic nominee, thrust so prominently into The 16-inch guns on H. M. 8. Nel. son are 67 feet long and fire shells weighing 2,461 pounds. COLONY B —— TRACE OF LOS Elizabeth City, N. C—Two brass buckles and a copper button, be- lieved to have been worn by mem- bers of the John White colony | which vanished without a trace near here in 1387, were found in |the sands of a North Carolina | sound recently. Sea. pole and across the Ross Sea, ites ouq tavom 30 BoRouswatod asyiasend xtend th the o taking nd given good luck its repres s with the forthcom- | ing expeditions 1d see ogist and of the planet science is Pozarevatz, Serbia.—Ten gypsies | have been sentenced to 20 years im- | prisonment in irons for Killing| forget politics and political speeches | three watchmen in robbing a bank | and for that reason he has declined |here. They carried away the safe e e e white ice ns “Burow ay; syioos 2210 pis yuai pay - g yaus seusouiress Surerepioy B33 Snoparwue ‘9u3)00 i 21123 Farab 308 ok Se0enuansun pwso #ui “T%4 W3t 3005, 3 Linbiie 30 extead oo o 8n[ ‘@1asapay; jo spuws j0q Wodj Buryowpus; men of sled d learned in y Grorg: d, and i New “Paliddu sy 3j3uawom O 390wre L3a01u 3005 Josousy u “H1U02N Laasa sosoiiad Uorm suend un 8uigi008 snoaaew ® payoeg. ~3ad oAy meryur; 3 “Bupy wasj Aep 3oy10us Jeyus syl 190) o) 40 — 4 parties An Ivanhoe Salad every day-and your ' appetite won’t lag! VANHOE Mayonnaise (twice as many eggs—50% faster beating MINER, READ & TULLOCK Local Distributor across the continent from the other |damage to a fender on Klos h two leaders. | stignt. ing the pre-convention campaign, e zones of flight, as | and the pronouncement in the re- in advance, will hardly publican platform adopted at Kansas , it at all. Byrd plans to fly City by almost a unanimous vote. castward over what is called King 6 6 6 In the one Hoover described pro- Bdward VII Land; in addition, of hibition as a “noble experiment” and rse, he will attempt a flight to in the other the party as a whole uth Pole, which Amuudsen |Cures Malaria and quickly relieves | pledged itsell and the candidate to ott reached after laborious | Billousness, Headaches and Dizzl- |an honest effort at enforcement of journeys. | ness due to temporary Constipation. | both the 15th amendment and the Sir Hubert proposes an eastward | Alds in eliminuMng Toxins and s laws cnacted to carry it into force. Sold and recommended by good d | llight along the unmapped, unseen | highly esteemed for producing copl- | The republican standard bearer al- Fair Stor | Comm. Richard E. Byrd spective parties. Aviators great faith in the modern but they know that this task is th hardest ever assigned to it. Ant- arctic weather is the worst in the world. The Byrd expedition starts on its $500,000 venture about the middle of August. Most of the 55 mse and virtually all of the elabo equipment will travel to Dunedin, New Zealand, aboard the barken- tine Bamscn, although the com- mander himself plans to leave about a month later. ¥rom New Zealand the explorers will steam across the southern ocean to thi Bay of Whales, & threshold to Anarctica on the Ross Sea ice barrier, there to establish the base of operations. They hope to reach this point by Comm. Douglas George Jeffery efforts of explor- time of the tamous Captain Cook have gleaned such scant information about this frozen | |land that even today, sections of |its outline must be drawn Ly gues Parts of the c | diate hinte | plored ra | vielded val The persistent | ers since the have plane Our 16 Years of Furniture Selling and Onr Business in Thousands of Dollars Make It Eay For Us to Undersell New Britain in This AUGUST CLEARANCE Profits have been absolutely ignored. We must clear stocks in this Great August Clearance. It matters not what furniture you need — it's here, at the bargain prices of your life time. and have wble data, but the nar- Shop Here First for the Biggest Values in New Britain B 27774 (//(’.".S' ENERGY January 1, summertime in the Ant- arctic. The Wilkins expedition, smaller than Byrd's, plans to leave a Cali- fornia port in October, proceeding first to Panama, where it will board & whaler for the long voyage to the Ross Sea, where it, too, will start work. A whaling vessel will bring the little party north when its work is over, Jeffery, a veteran the last| Bhackleton _expedition to Antarc- | tica, sails south from New York in | of 11 piece Mohr Site September, expecting to rcigrn in | May. He is chartering a ship. | Bomething more than & spirit of adventure, more than a desire to give the airplane another strenu- ous workout, is sending these pio- neers Into the most inhospitable re- ' Thousands of years ¢ rovement. A salt ago salt was almost as scarce and as precious as gold. But science steadily reduced its price. And now science gives us still another im- that will never cake. nternational Salt! Guaranteed never to harden or become lumpy. Clean, pure and free-running. I For five cents. n 24-ounce cartons. t your grocer’s. $225 Regularly $ 1 49 Now Others From $98.00 Up 3 beautiful pieces offered at the most astonishing price of the season. 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