The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 27, 1926, Image 2

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    in front of Bank
to salvage
?
of
tl
Lhe
divers trying
making a tour
NEWS REVIEW OF
CURR
nspection of
a
Britis
North Pole Reached
Twice by Air Route.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
REAT BRITAIN'S
came to an end
began. Nomir
won in the str
Union congress,
general strike
as suddenly as it
the government
1
uggle with the Trae
for i
was called off without
the organ of
that Tri
this action
clusion
+h
Lie
as
Con
that
gress wi
tions
ment temporar
that
be
gidy
showd
10D
posed
adopted by the Liberal party
proved by public opinion The
ernment realized that the public
not like the idea of a
and unofficially aided
between Sir Herbert
thur Pugh.
The firmness with which the govern
ment combated the general strike and
the way in which the British people
supported its measures lead to the pre-
diction that it will be a long time be
fore labor again tries this weapon In
the United Kingdom. Legal authori.
ties thera declared the general strike
was illegal and that those Inciting It
br participating In it were not pro-
tected by the laws regulating the
trades unions. One of the most effec-
tive steps taken by the government
was the stoppage of delivery of finan
celal contributions to the strikers from
other countries,
a plan of conciliation
fight to a fis
the
Samuel
negotiations
and Ar-
WICE last week the North pole
Tes reached by the air route,
First, Lieut. Commander Richard E
Byrd of the United States navy, with
Floyd Bennett as his mechanician, flew
from Kings Bay, Spitzbergen, to the
pole In a glant Fokker plane, He saw
no land near there and but one patch
of open water,
three times and returned to the start.
ing point without landing. That he
did reach the top of the world was
assured by his observations with espe-
cally devised apparatus. His achleve-
go he circled the pole
#
- -
Be
faut
, during the general
S-51 by means of pontoons,
rd at Charlestown, Mass,
Vestal and 25
Navy Wilbur
2-—Steamship
Secretary of the
The poli
iid not have eviden«
4, but the names
arnntes anda
ne of Judge Cl chief
numerous letters
plot. In the he ass,
ans,
former kalser were confis-
as well as the draft of a consti-
from the
+ 1
Fascist snceeeded in seizing control
| under protectién of martial law.
Meanwhile Chaneellor Luther was
| a personal defeat in the reichstag. A
motion of censure proposed by the
Democrats was adopted by a vote of
176 to 146. The Nationalists to the
number of 108 refrained from voting.
| The chancellor's resignation was ac
cepted but President von Hindenburg
| asked the rest of the cabinet to fune-
tion until a new government could be
formed, Luther's opponents accom-
plished his downfall by taking advan
tage of his insistence that the mer
chant flag, composed of the old mon-
flown be
German
should be
hig on
colors,
side republican
i Democrats, Socialists and Communists
| formed n combination him.
Hig friends blame the Nationalists for
| permitting his humiliating defeat,
agninst
| wm ROSPER POULLET'S eabinet In
i Belgium resigned and King Albert
asked M. Brunet, Socialist president of
the chamber of deputies, to form a
)
(XN) IXR)
THEN
HINA'S new pret
inaugurated
Wellington
This cabinet has the be
gz of Marshal Wu Pei-fu, but Marshal
Chang the Manchurian, wi
lent. in
barrassed when It was
Wu's troops had captured more than
10.000 rifles with ammunition, made in
and bearing of
imperial government with
It is thought the soviets
selling bought
States the
remains
China em.
learned that
Americans were
America the seal the
Ruasian
been
United
have
the
arms
from during
ECRETARY SAUNDERS announces
that President Coolidge will spend
in the Adiron-
Kansas City
The place 1s on Osgood lake
and includes a large lodge with mod-
ern conveniences, tennis courts, hoat-
INOR items In the week's news!
French and Spanish have made
progress in thelr cam:
paign against the Rifflans,
Loriga and Gallarza, Spanish avi
ators, completed thelr flight from Ma.
drid to Manila.
Cuban's big
considerable
rallway strike ended
umpire,
with a rebellion In the state of Guer
rero
Alton B. Parker, Democratic candi
date for the Presidency in 1004, died
in New York,
“How
returnees
Pundeses
the gel
other ™
heredity I
if
line of ancestors of
Ike
encing =a
come from a
rotund type, you're
enst a shadow of the same general
bulk. If you feel all right, and
eager to eat three square meals a day,
don't worry about your
Charles K. Taylor, director of edu
cational research at the Carteret
academy in Orange, N. J, after exam-
than 15000 children dur
Ing several years devotéd to their ed
ucation, and the relation between
mental and physical efficiency, is of
person's
more
are
weight
Mr. Tavior classifies children
main groups—slender,
and heavy--the type resulting
heredity and not from feeding. A
sound, strong body with a normal
in
medium
in greater mental and moral
he concludes,
Fatal Bi
atal Snake Bites
The average
American
more than
mortality from bites
venomous snakes is
10 per cent, but,
from the
are extremely low, Death
currence, One factor which accounts
for the rarity of accidents of this na-
ture in the United States is that our
citizens do not habitually go around
bare-legged Avother explanation for
build
Pounds ¢
the question, for a
it Is healthy, Mr
his opinion the
establish the
being by medical
doctor, not
whether or
fering from
Mr. Taylor's
step further
youngsters win
best of healt 1
velopment The
culature Is greater than gup-
It not only impels the posses
gor into beneficial exercise but
be a relationship
and mental
nd ounces do not enter into
child Is n
Taylor asserts
important thing
ginte
ormal if
In
i= to
well
examination. “A
weight, can
not the subject
malnutrition.”
work earried him
he discovered that many
soemed to in the
d poor muscular de
of a child's
ascertain
is suf
be
many
pose
there
between
efficiency.” he
seems to
physical
BAYR,
| Taylor worked out tables on a height.
welght basis—or on what might be
the searcliy of accidents is that rat
| tiers do not generally inhabit lands
| suitable for cuitivation, and, there
| fore, much frequented by man, The
| tendency of the rattlesnake to rattie
| whenever disturbed and to continue
| the rattling as long as the disturbing
influence is present also explains why
victims are not more numerous,
Says Uncle Fogy:
“Age,” phliogophically remarked
Uncle Fogy, “either ripens a man or
sours him. One recalls the knocks
His gyst combi mental
physical i learned
figo from Sandow
the playing of muscle against an
t effective was of
Mr in
exercises he advocates
the
One
other, is the mos
strengt}
explaining the
In the Carteret
Beard School
gaining Taylor said
academy and in
Orange-the former
attended the latter by
girls Mr recorded ‘a
steady rise in physical standards dur
ing the four years
with the two
The ideal type is reached at a se
of 120
Carteret
points |
of
is boys,
hy
Taylor has
of his association
institutions
OT
the
163
and
“It
Taylor,
A sixteen-yvearold lad in
academy hag achieved
he 18 an honor student
at the head
experiend he
of his class
my sald Mr
the charts show mount-
the teachers report a pro
improvement in mental
ability and in character stamina Ef
fective mentality seems, in.the Jong
BOOTES,
he has received, lays them to ill Inck,
and growls that he never had a fal
show : another, realizing that he was
a fool who fooled with foollshness and
got repaid with the rod that was or
dained for the fools back, profits hy
his folly, and comes out ripe and sen.
gible, as far as the Ittle wisdom
which is vouchsafed men goes
“Belng wise, he does not greatly
desire to live his life over again,
realizing his Hability to be a bigger
fool the second trip than he was the
first time."—Kansas City Star,