(Prepared by the National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C.) RITHJOF NANSEN LAND (for- merly Franz Josef Land) has, after a third of a century, given up the body of August Andree, believed to have been lost forever in the Arctic ice. The Swedish explorer disappeared mn his balloon in 1897, north of Spits- bergen close to the place at which Nobile’s dirigible later disappeared. Explorers were at first hopeful that he had drifted eastward to Franz Josef Land. Walter Wellman, assist- ed by the National Geographic society, led an expedition to Franz Josef Land the following year and thought it like- ly that he would find Andree at Cape Flora, on one of the southernmost of the islands which was known by An- dree to be a headquarters and a fre- quent point of call for explorers. An- dree was not at Cape Flora, however, and no trace of him or his balloon was ever found in Franz Josef Land until a few weeks ago. Pein Although the islands are desolate and ice-mantled and have never been {nhabited, it is possible for men to. exist there, even through the winter, as the history of Arctic exploration proves. The land was discovered ac- cidentally in 1878 by an Austro-Hun- garian expedition bent on finding the northeast passage. Their ship, caught in the ice, drifted to the southern ex- trémity of the island group, and the crew wintered in her fast in the ice. In 1881 a British party of 25, its ship crushed, wintered on shore, living partly on bear and walrus meat. Well- man and his companions spent the winter of 1898-09 on shore, and the Zeigler expedition wintered over in 1904-5. Group of Many Islands. Its Austro- Hungarian discoverer pamed the land “Franz Josef Land” under the impression that it was a Jarge land mass, perhaps even of con- tinental size. Later exploration dis- closed that it is a group of many is- lands. Thirty of these are ten miles or more in length and the remainder— gcores of them—are small. Several of the islands are as much as 50 miles long. The group lies slightly farther north than Spitsbergen, and its center is as far east of King's bay as New York Is east of Detroit. It is as far porth of the Murman coast of Russia and the northern coast of Norway as Chicago is north of New Orleans. It is about the same distance from the North pole. The land's name was recently changed to Frithjof Nansen Land by a vote of the Russian Association of Science. The island group's new nande is appropriate because the is- lands were the scene of one of the most dramatic episodes in the life of the late Frithjof Nansen. The land which has been named for him literal- ly sdved his life and preserved him for thé valuable humanifarian career that reached a climax when he, in co- operation with Herbert Hoover, saved the lives of millfons of famine-strick- en Russians. Nansen took a small party on board che specially constructed vessel Fram and entered the ice floes off northern Siberia in 1893 with the hope of drift- ing with the ice across the North pole. They drifted for 35 months, locked in the ieé, without sighting land and without a single contact with the world: Nansen and his crew were bélieved to be lost. When Nansen found that the Fram was not drifting toward the pole, he determined to dash, with a single com- panion, over the ice to the top of the world. Johansen was picked to go with him. They took three sledges, 22 dogs and two kayaks (Eskimo ca- noes). They did not attain their ob- jective, but they made a new “farthest north,” 86 degrees and 12 minutes, just 228 miles south of the pole. From their northernmost point the two men turned south and began one of the longest marches ever made over Arc- tye ice. Finally they were reduced to two dogs. - After many days they reachéd Eva island, one of the outlying islands o1 what is now Frithjof Nansen Land Building a stone hut, they lived on | the isolated isle through the winter, subsisting chiefly on bear meat. Next spring they started south for the main islands of the group. Nansen’s kayak was attacked by a huge walrus that drove its tusks through the fragile craft, but Nansen scrambled out on a cake of ice as the tiny boat filled with water, and they made their way to the southern islands. There they met, to their great jo, Frederick Jackson, leader of an Eng- lish expedition. Although Jackson had met Nansen years before, he failed, for the moment, to recognize in the bearded, black-skinned, sooty-haired wanderer the famous blond Norwegidn explorer. Nansen and Johansen came home on the English party's whaler; the Fram arrived a few days later. Nansen, who had been given up for dead, received a tremendous welcome. The sea between northern Spits- i { bergen and ‘northern Frithjof Nansen Land is usually packed with an almost . unbroken expanse of ice so that navi- gation: northward is seldom possible. Even the narrower channels between the Frithjof Nansen islands are eter- nally frozen, but the larger channels become ice free in summer. Between southern Spitsbergen and the southern islands there is often open water in summer. Farther south, however, the ice is usually packed, and this floating barrier must be traversed by ships steaming from Russia and Norway to Frithjof Nansen Land. Because of its far nerthern positios. and the greater distance the Arctic arm of the Gulf stream must flow te reach it, Frithjof Nansen Land is marked by Arctic conditions te a greater extent than Spitsbergen. It has been called the world’s “most characteristic polar land.” Most of the islands are plateaus fless than 1,000 feet high, covered with domes of ice. At some points the black | basalt crags that form the edges of the plateaus protrude from the white ! ice and snow. Coastal lowlands are of small extent save on twe or three of the westernmost islands. Vegetation and Animal Life. The vegetation of the few snow-free spots is scant, consisting only of lich- eng, mosses, and several grasses. The animal life, teo, is meager—for the most part, a few polar bears and few- er foxes om land; walruses and seals in the water. The bird life is the rich- est. Great flocks of little auks, dove- kies and other birds frequent the is- lands from March te September. There are ne reindeer or hares. One important item for castaways . thought and things. to keep from getting old it advised: ‘Never stop, look or listen at railroad’ crossings when driving a car; always race with locomotives to crossings, as it gives engineers a thrill; always pass the car ahead of you on a curve; or a hill; always drive as fast as you can on wet, slippery roads and be sure to lock your brakes when skid- ding, as you can often turn your car clean around; always drive fast out of alleys, for if you do it often enough you may have the good luck to run down a traffic policeman; al- ways speed, and demand half of the road, the middle half, just show the other fellow you know your rights and are ready to die for them; al- ways drive fast in traffic, If a new driver, as it is the easiest way to have an accident.” — Birmingham News. > World's Iodine Supply Gathered From the Sea The comercial supply of iodine 18 almost entifely obtainéd from sea- weeds. In some of the latter—par- ticularly the giant kelp, known to scl- ence as Maecrocystis, meaning “big bulb”—the concentration of fodine is extraordinary. That marine plant, enormous in size, anchored to the sea bottom by a stem hundreds of feet long, with a vast floating frond of leaves, contains over one-fourth of 1 per cent of iodine. Those giant seaweeds are ideal car- riers of iodine for human uses. Medi- cinal éxtracts made from them are already standardized, and have proved most valuable. But the kelps, vastly abundant, should yield valuable food products. They contain all the worth-while minerals that the ocean holds in solution, and may be re- garded as marine vegetables neglected through ignorance. Holding Old Age at Bay There is no other joy in life like mental and bodily activity, like keep- ing up a live interest in the world of Old age Is prac- | tically held at bay us long as one can ' keep the currents of his life moving. It seems as if one never could get to ! the end of all the delightful things is the existence of considerable quan- tities of driftwood along the shores of the inter-island channels. tic ocean by the great northward flow- ing rivers of Siberia such as the Obi and the Yenisel. Not only has former Franz Joseir Land become a memorial in its en- tirety. Because it is divided, and sub- divided, into numerous islands, large and small, with numerous channels and capes and headlands, it has de- manded innumerable names. The history of exploration in the is lands by men of various nationalities is in large part written on the map: British Channel, Alexandra Island, Harmsworth Straits, Cambridge Bay, This is | evidently wood cast out into the Arec- | Wilczek Island, Wayprecht Sea, Crown Prince Rudolf Land, Pierpont Morgan Strait, Vanderbilt Sound, Graham Bell Island, Whitney Sea. Austrians, Eng- lish, Americans, Norwegians and Ital- ians have had a hand in seeking out the secrets of this fey island group. One of the latest explorations fin Frithjof Nansen Land before the ex- pedition which found Andree's body this summer was in 1925 by a British party which carried into the region the first modern rau.o equipment. The party constantly checked its time by radio signals from the Eiffel tower, Paris, and listenéd to music and an- nounceients from London and other stations. i there are to know, and to observe, and to speculate about in the world. Nature is always young, and there is no greater felicity than to share in her youth. I still find each day too short for all the thoughts I want to think, all the walks I want to take, all the books I want to read, and all the friends I want to see.—John Bur- roughs in “The Summit of the Years” (above 70). Significant Number Forty is a number that has long been regarded as peculiarly significant. The idea may have originated with readers of the Bible, who noticed that Moses was 40 days on the mount, Elijah was fed 40 days by the ravens, the rain of the flood fell 40 days, an- other 40 days elapsed before Noah opened the window of the ark, 40 days was the period of embalming, Jonah gave Ninevah 40 days to repent, the Lord fasted 40 days, and He was seen 40 days after His resurrection. Old English law also featured many 40-day periods. Artistic Book Decoration The term “forage painting” used in book binding is a corruption of the words “fore edge,” used to describe the delicate painting or decoration ap- plied to the extreme front edges of the book. When the book was closed, only blotches or masses of colors showed, but when the leaves of the book were partially spread delicate tracery, artis- tie designs and sometimes elaborate pletures were revealed. Samuel Mearne, book binder to King Charles II of Eng- land, is credited with originating this form of decoration, reign of Theodosius the seven-day week came into use, and Rome imagined | that it was Egyptian, but~in truth it | came from the Jews, who believed that God made the world in six days and | rested on the seventh. | Christianity was just beginning to creep across the world in those days, but masses of people were still pagan, and they accepted the seven-day week as a moon week. Each day was dedi- cated to one of the planets, Sun day, Moon day, Mars day, Mercury day, Jove day, Venus day and Saturn day. The Anglo-Saxon forefathers refused to call the days after foreign gods and renamed them after their own divini- ties, Tiw, Woden, Thor, Frigga ané Seterne, The word “week” comes from the German “wikon,” meaning change or succession, and the length of this suc- cession of days is usually decided by the moon or the market. In places where a market is held every third day the week is three days long; in dis- tricts where a market is held every i | eight days there is an eight day week. Persia, Java, Celebes, Malaysia and New Guinea have five-day weeks. The Muyseas of South America have a three-day week. The Chibchas have & four-day week. African weeks vary from three to eight days. Why Dinner Jacket Is Known as Tuxedo Coat “Tuxedo” is derived from an Algon- quin Indian word for “wolf,” and means literally, in the Algonquin tongue, “he had a round foot.” The Algonquins gave the name to a branch of thelr tribe which lived in New Jersey. Some of this territory fell eventually into the possession of a group of wealthy New Yorkers and was developed as a residence district, which, in honor of the tribe, they named Tuxedo Park. Estates were established there and it became a center of fashion. The men adopted what is now known as the “tuxedo coat” as a dinner jacket, and the fashion spread to other communi- ties, the name “tuxedo” being used be- cause of its trade value. Why “Q” Is Superfiluous “Q,” always pronounced “k,” is nev- er used in regularly formed English words except when it is followed by “uw.” It is therefore a superfluous let- ter. This usage is a holdover from the ancient alphabets, We borrowed the combination from the Latin along with the letters. In the earliest Greek alphabets there was a letter corre- sponding to “q” and before it was dis- pensed with entirely it survived in combinations of “q” and “wu.” The Ro- mans borrowed it and in Latin *“q” was always followed by “uw.” There was no “gq” in Anglo-Saxon, the Nor- mans being responsible for its intro- duction into English. Most of the words containing “qu” are of Latin or French origin.—Pathfinder. Why Fur Farms Are Growing Fur farming is winning its way into the ranks of important businesses in this country. It is estimated that there are now more than 5,000 fur farms in the United States, with an aggregate investment of more than $20,000,600. This tremendous total is exclusive of the large areas of muskrat marshes, operated privately or by states, as fur farms, Federal officials are aiding in the establishment and development of these farms and making particular study of diseases of wild animals and proper diet and correlated questions, Why Coins Are. Milled The edges of coins are reeded ot corrugated to prevent fraudulent re- moval of metal and also to protect them from wear. Nickels and 1-cent pieces do not wear so rapidly and the metal in them has little intrinsic value. Therefore, only gold and silver coins are made with reeded edges. All coins, however, are milled; namely, they are made with a raised border to protect the face itself from wear.— Pathfinder Magazine. hen this advertisement appears, the election will be over. The country will again be saved, and our patrons may continue the old occupa- tion of trying to make a living. This Bank has lived through many elections, and has gone on its way unmindful of the result. We still are here to do business. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. o - CANEY - : a PE T —— a . > — mm Fis : fi rere eer POTTS ERT EE . : . MILE-A-MINUTE MARTY —by— Decker Chevrolet Co., Bellefonte, Pa W ere n AW/- HERE'S THE weg is My NAME-J ALL | WANT You ¥ Y'SEE- ITS THIS WAY:- ME AN MY GAL ARE |. PLACE / THEY MARTY MILES — Ml 70 DO IS HANG | GOING OUT FOR A LONG DRIVE IN THE E & ; OUGHTA \ WANTA THE BALLOT Box | SWELL USED CAR | BOUGHT AT 1 np | |=} sEF mp. 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NN t ly MALL L. %orel 1. meee S—— m— — —FT HOOKER i e 1 Birmingham Man Learns w ; % LM How to Avoid Old Age | Week Length Is Not Universal £6 Th T: if d : Crore lO) 2 QLiitke.). wy got fooled by a headline recent- Throughout World € umu t an ” ly,” said Banks Talmadge, “for im Where did man get his week and E looking over a magazine I saw ‘How | what decided its length? Like s0 many | ’ ’ 29 2 Ys ! : to Avoid Old Age,’ and while I am | things, says the San Francisco Chron-. t he hout mg Dies Wellman's Map, Showing Frithjof Nansen Land, Where Andree’s Body Was | pot yet worried over the matter, yet I| icle, it came from the Romans, but it Found. registered attention. Among other ways | did not originate in Rome. During the : othe $22.50 Suits are not startlingly new--we admit it-- but here is what Is New Suits that are tailored as these are, with fabrics such as these Suits are made of is something That Is New Not for fifteen years have you seen such Suits for $2250. 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