STORMS BALK ASCENT OF PEAK ———————— Mountaineers Make Daring At- tempt to Climp Giant of the Himalayas. Mount Kinchinjunga and Are Com- pelled to Stop by Bad Weather— Enceunter Difficulties. Manchester, England.—A Manches- ter Guardian correspondent at Calcut- ta remarks that great . interest Mount Kinchinjungd, one of the of the Himalayas. Harold Raeburn, editor talneering Art, and C. G. the Assam civil sevice, bers of the Alpine club, to be conducting preliminary of both were access to the summit. More than one skirmish vicinity of Kinchinjunga was though the rains at the time heavy and the ever-shifting in the mountains were likely down in terrific avalanches, making all climbing impossible without seri- ous risk to life. in ice along the course of the Talung which takes Its rise in the glacier. Here they crossed the bridges of which had away, and impenetrable ests, throug they had to their way several days. daunted by traveled almost ramionghi, 16,430 1 which is almost. immediately south of Kinchinjunga, and there tained a view of the tains. Encounter Great Difficulties. The party Darje J le their final preparatior nver, Talung passed zh which for the rainy straight wenther, north Giuchu Pass, Talung glaci across the eet, giorious moun- urned to and mad gaging coolies and large quantitie Combing Danzig’ s New Flag BE . and Superintendent INTERNATIONA chalrman of The that 2 that the get away. galils 1 raing, however, were so it was not until two explorers Traveling out they attach southwest ACCESS direction were by ced side the Kinchin and ex- to found Sin ridge, on the the by plored summit difficult, eventually 20,000 feet, Here more bad weather to fall increas glaclers, that WHS camped out at a level difficu was experiences and the igly hinzs foot was point the ati began xpedition be cnme this abandoned, was made 1hout 18.000 feet at first as became tions "Orav though occasional met higher up. was experienced SNOW Considerable difficulty when returning, ing to the depth of new snows on the which were probably due the the ow- im side, bad weather experienced in latter part of Se Finally mrty Darjeeling in the mid- f October, having been away Both the explorers Impressed by el nt that tember reached { mont! the pe fake given good weath- could be attained. Attempt Made in 1899, ntorextinge t nfters § O summit that a Douglas Freshfield oration recall mpt was made by Mr REN ulty of sha “7 Come 117 Is Now United States Anthem to the Tune of Two Billion Dollars. Treasury Officials Deeply Concerned Over Situation—May Make Gen. eral Appeal to Public Check Gambling. to C.- 00 changed of the estimated information heads channels. Treasury cerned over esuit gambling here on mein of government through official unofficial officials are deeply the situation, which cates, they say, that the United Sta is clinging to waste travagant habits that the armistice, The the attention ury Houston. Director Mather Lewis of the now is considering whether a general appeal to the public through ministers and clvie would be effective in checking gambling. Frenzy Seizes Nation. Lewis has just returned to Washing ton from a trip through the in which he gay attention study of the situation. “Gambling at racing has reached na fore equaled,” he “Thousands appear to be engaged In it in one form or another, either as betting commis sioners or bettors, “It is true that con indi {os ex since stil and up ul is grew brought of has been of Secretary situation to reas Willis divi im gnvings gion societies country © some fo a cards on never be and betting frenzy said. money Workman of Delaware: 0. Evoives Elaborate Hand.Carved Affair From Wainut, After “Be “rd Delaware, 0. ther's clock here, The clock, on display In a store window, is hand carved, It was made out of solid black walnut which formerly constituted part of a pulpit in the old William Street Methodist church here. All polishing, carving and fitting was done at odd moments by Mr, Cregmile, Standing eight feet six inches high, the clock Is beautifully earved on Is sides and face panels. All cutting Is original. No design was followed. Mr. Cregmile, although offered good money for the unique masterpiece, has offered to sell it for a relatively small sum to the William street church. The clock is built so that It will house cathedral tubular chimes, No Loss, But No Gain. £1.000 066) (XX) This ie ks, $15,000 000, At Ine lentes which alone every race meeti several mililon at the tracks cludes no estima: of stn listant the from tracks ting commissioners, EA AA Human Fly Helps Anchor Shabby Walls New York.—Aided man fly.” workmen assu hazardous task by a “hu mies] the of anchoring tot walls of the ninestory Strathmore apartment and store bullding at Broadwa?® Fifty- half of which col lapsed Wednesday, it believed, debris, While the steeple glare powerful sealed the walls tering and gecond street, is in burying, seven workmen inck the searchlights in of and at each tier made fast cables anchored In the center of the structure, a corps of firemen dug in tons of brick and plaster below search ing for bodies of victims, Bl ln fs fn fl A MM WA RAE tcc te ssf fet = v A AAA WAAR GREENLAND IS MOVING WEST Danish Scientists Figure It Has Trav. eled 875 Miles in 100,000 Years. Greenl is slowly FS in 1007 Myiius (roe ther west man expedi- was three in 1870. wl ywervations northern Therefore, inde astront same Liroen- in 3 intitude land Years, was four west 1.330 yards : moved ¢ ation of the longi 1823. in 1823 and usion yards to The first ohsery of Greenland made the was findings in the “wandered” year. That Greenland and Norway, 870 miles apart, were ration taking place years tude Comparing 1870 concl arrives at and one ten tends that Greet westerly every show that now about once the sepa 100,000 connected, HOLKO or ago, Father and Son Join Army. Loulsy Ky. ~After passing the army medical examination, Jacob Bar. nett, aged thirty nd his son Hurd eighteen, have gone to their home their affairs In They members of game unit, under to report Cal, for coast defense ile, five, a ley, to get will become are to San service, shape, the now orders Diego, Out by Commissioner. Increase of 34,387 for Last Ten Years Is Shown-Total Area of indian Lands 589,111 Acres. Green Bay, Wis—The Indian popu. lation of the United States, according to Cato Sells, commissioner of Indian affairs, is 836.837, as against 304.900 ten years ago, showing an increase of 81,887. The Oneida Indian reservation, near here, has a population of 2.6567, Com- missioner Sells’ annual report states. Although no figures for last year are available, he believes this year's total is a substantial increase over that of 1919. Population of other Indian reserva tions in this vicinity show: Keshenn school, 5,028, Including a large num- ber of students from the Oneida res ervation school, which was cased last yenr: Laona agency 364; Winnebago, Menominee, 1,700, lation of 10,318, reports, nnd whites total while those between seventy-elght, Indians in testants and 1,050 Catholics. The total area of Indian lands In the state is shown as 540.111 acres. Keshenn reservation is the largest, having 231,680 acres. Tuberculosis 18 still the “white plague” among the Indians, but the commissioner detalls the progress made in fighting It, a series of lessons in sanitation and correct living. Paper flywheels are coming Into quite general use, The tensile strength of paper 1s enormous, hence its advan. tage over iron for this purpose, CENTRE HALL, PA. § i {HT Ub FAT MOUSE’'S ESCAPE R. FAT MOUSE—his friends called him Fatty for short—de- cided one day that he would move frem the house where he lived in the pantry wall because there were SO many mice living In {he neighbor hood. “When I first came here” to himself one day when he thinking how hard it was for him keep fat and round, “there were only five mice living in the wall, and now I cannet count them, It is time for me to move, and I shall look about this very night for a new home.” S80 when all the other mice were busy running over the pantry shelves 10 ARO GND AND AROCND THE SENTRY A HE FLEW. K, Ny, sha, de Fatty under the found a get throu He ju a long Fatty of a far away. But Fatty Mouse the wall of this hide in the dayt! pails and had {ry run iz the where and he Mouse ran our of door kitchen hole large enough gh. mped into the y sink, ard and and then next night in the | time, fo un d in houge his new home had n pantry, an never dance y moocha dance anyway, sta ways do eet ee (eva mita vi a quake-—plenta gheever whole greats One guy me besta way dance da sheemmie ees standa straight up, no da or da head flen try shaka your shirt off. noe can shake off preety bum. Ees preety to do dat dance-—-no shake. Bat for fat soft. Alia fat one do for maka sheem- run leetle way and stop earth you yt you can dance style tellin mova feet heem you hard da gotia ones for skeeny ver mooch eR mie jueeck, Jusa between you for spreada round, 1 ting. I no lka dat good Eef you shaka eggs moocha muka rotten eggs. And eef you shaka too moocha for dance ees maka rotten dance, too. Mebbe 1 am right or wrong idee, 1 dunno— Wot you tink? ees and me and tella yon dance no yer {ton OLD CLBTHES AL pl But there was plenty to eat, and Fatty ate all night and slept all day, and he was sure he had found a pleas ant place to live in even if he had no companions, One day he while wis lifted the basket from the floor, poor Fatty Mouse had to run, Around and around the pantry he flew while some one chased him with and a dreadful chase as well, as Fatty was sure of the we shelf ran a broom, in the Just he ran he was lost up the side he open, flash Was the along to the and with kitchen which was in The outside went Fatty him. All dark a door wig open, Mouse, and no he rested, back BO found and when It the house long in one to where he lived “It here” when he wa afe in is much here, ny mice living fary to thought the wall, for there are that the other ught wher they hunt be so he may he sal as it "but over safer here may be ca “When I lived wns the only one life was not here they re after, worth a we and! my shall never gia ae long as I live, and move mice look alike to cats Ruby De Remer SS CR a de Remer, popular | “movie” actress has been crowned the “most beautiful woman in America® by Pau! Helleu, the famous French | artist. Miss de Remer was born In Colorade and makes her home in New York. ye VT EARLY WRINKLES 3 i : vl oe covers i hesssnnrd bsssonns | — More Than Temporary IU Health, them But, the some reg- something are stout, up the blood getting all can, perfe t for yourself before cream Jar, pet bullding tonle, and take it If you are thin, get oil in it, if you you go health riy. olive 3 the and Then, while you air and you are are sleep you exercising ruining while gystem smoothly HOW DO YOU SAY IT? By C. N. Lurie Common Errors in English and How to Avoid Them 3 a “LET YOU AND | DO IT" ESPITE all the teaching chools and in spite of of grammarians, it seems impossible to establ American people the the pronouns “I” and the incorrect and Meinstead in the ish among proper “me.” phrase of the tween you that establishing the they grammarians almost despair of proper usage. Un. cannot do it: all must “let yon and I go to the theater to night,” we hear, It is incorrect. The correct form Is “Let you and me go to the theater tonight” although this may sound queer. The explanation Is simple. “Let” is a transitive verb; that ls, it must have an ohjeet or ob- jects. And the objects in the sen tence quoted are “you and “me” (not “I"), They Toust, therefore, be In the objective case, (Copyriahs) iz a: EE d you cream. wish, ATiV~ SH otarted LOVING.CUP a — THE A LINE 0’ CHEER By John Kendrick Bangs. A WEALTHY MAN. i 1 have no bh holdings In the soil hold no shares of Rteel glocks, or Blandard Ol, coffers e'er reveal a first-class appetites, pays me well, fo seek atl night, and kindness dwell No home ove A cory Where I've now asd then On things 1 do To oi the burden of Who seeks the friend Indeed No enumy I know. My cares impair no jot my health, And Croesus’ self, for all his shares Can b greater wealth yright.) a bit to spend not need pe the friend Mist no {Cog HE'S ON Sister: When Jack offered you a nickel to keep out of the parior, why did you demand a quarter? Bobbie: On account of the high . This Rapid Age. Man's business requires haste. The average business and professional monn eats In a hurry and gets dyspepsia. He walks in a hurry and gets apoplexy. He talks in a barry and gets the lie, He does business ln a hurry and be comes a bankrupt. lle marries im a hurry and forgets it in a hurry. He makes his will in a hurry and leaves a legal contest. He dies in a hurry and gues to the devil—-and his tribe in creases. —Exchange,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers