The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 30, 1926, Image 2

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    NEWS REVIEW OF
CURRENT EVENTS
Franco - Italian Relations
Strained by Attempt to
Kill Mussolini.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
HOUGH friendly relations between
Italy and France are strained
a result of
as
the latest attempt
Premier Mussolini,
be
The
sassinate
likely
ic rupture.
there will
threw
Are ¢
plotted
country
ganizations,
ilar
States Senator Rice W, Means,
secret or
direct-
head of the klan In Colorado, was
defeated for renomination by Charles
W. Waterman, Presi.
dent's oll conservation board, who was
supported by the anti-klan element.
In addition, all the candidates for
office who were sponsored by Senator
L. C. Phipps were by
supported by Clarence C, Hamlin and
ex-Governor Shoup, leaders of the an-
ti-klan faction in the party. The
Democrats nominated former Gov. W.
E. Sweet for senator,
In Maryland Senator Weller, Re
publican, defeated Congressman John
Philip Hill for the senatorial nomina-
tion to oppose M. E. Tydings,
1 »
ing
counsel of the
beaten those
Demo-
ed. Senators E. D. Smith of South
Carolina and Wesley Jones of Wash-
ington won renomination.
Michigan Republicans had an excit-
ing gubernatorial fight and Gov. Alex
Groesbeck was badly beaten by Fred
W. Green of Ionia, mainly because
has been exceedingly Hb
eral in the granting of prison paroles
and pardons. The Groesbeek-Green
contest was bitter that the Dem:
ocrats think It will result in a split
in the Republican party and the elec
tion of William J. Comstock, thelr un.
opposed gubernatorial candidate,
Senator Butler of Massachusetts,
chairman of the Republican national
cominittee, and Gov, Alvin T. Fuller
were renominated without opposition,
Groesheck
KO
and the Democrats of the state put up
David I. Walsh and
William Gaston to !
of Louisiana
Senator Edwin 8. Broussard,
former Jared Y.
race. Senator
unopposed for
former Senator
renominated
though
Sanders
Democrats
Gov,
him a close Dale of
¢
Vermont was renoml
nation,
tepublican
national leaders
80 nation,” following
in that
tepublicans with
of
goes, goes the
the election last week
It was won by the
and na jority
state.
about 20,
their
f Gov. Ralph O. Brew
CONEressIm
The Det
ittee
four were
office wooeratie
comn admittedly
r
» on ri
COoura
rains, the heaviest
September, swelled
and streams Middle
West Into roaring floods and immense
damage to crops and real property re-
sulted, Western Illinols was
hit by the rains, which descended on
of Ohlo, Indiana, Illinois,
Missourl, Kansas, Nebraska,
Dakota, Wisconsin and Michi
gan. The losses ranged from 835,000,
000 In Illinois to half a million In
lowa. About a score of persons lost
their lives. Most of the damage falls
on the corn crop.
of the
hardest
sections
Towa,
South
LECTION of non-permanent mem-
bers of the League of Nations
the cholee of Poland, Chile, and Ru-
mania for three-year tenure; Colum-
bia, Holland and China for two years,
and Belgium, Czechoslovakia and San
Salvador for one year. By a special
vote, Poland was declared re-eligible
for election at the expiration of her
three-year term, thereby becoming a
semi-permanent council member,
There are 18 candidates for the nine
gents, including the Irish Free State
and Uruguay whose representatives
were bitterly disappointed by the re
sult of the balloting.
August Zaleski, foreign minister of
Poland, on behalf of the delegation
from Poland, Sweden and Finland,
presented a petition asking that the
lengue enter the battle againgt alco
holism. He declared the evil of alco.
White Pine camp. 2—W, F.
hollsm was mae
action.
After the nations tory to the
treaties ha 5ited
league secretard
the pacts, Doctor Stresemann
demanded that the
be
alll
evacuated the
Locarns
should me
Paul
urged
Boucour,
that
lisarm w convoked at
the lest possible date The
in Huerta
that hire
¢ Obregon
bes
I' AND MRS
. household de-
White Pine
thelr vaca
dn SIDEN
and their summer
fr
Saturday from
Adirond
ncks,
a ' Ta
has profited greatly physi
hy the outdoor life in the moun
of energy and brown as a berry. He
found White House cleaned
and repaired, and also found his mec.
retary, Mr. Sanders, in good health
again after a sea voyage,
APT. RENE FONCK and his crew
KC selected for the transatiantic non-
stop flight all went to the fiving field
at Westbury, N. YX. early Thursday
morning prepared to jump off for
Paris in the huge Sikorsky plane,
which had been tested and approved
by Lieutenant Curtin, navigator and
alternate pilot. But when nearly
everything was ready for the start a
bad leak In the gasoline tank was
discovered, So the plane was put back
in the hangar for repairs and the
start was postponed. Perhaps before
this is read the flight will have been
made or have falled. On the other
hand, weather conditions may have
caused Indefinite delay.
ENATOR CARAWAY of Arkansas
has broken out In a new spot. He
says the graves of America’s war dead
in France have been desecrated with
abusive and vulgar writings on the
crosses, and urges that the bodies of
all soldiers buried there be brought
home. The War department says
nothing of this character has been re-
ported to it, and General Pershing,
chairman of the American battle mon.
uments commission, declared that dur.
ing his recent stay in Europe he had
heard nothing of such desecration.
the nll
%
Lo ‘
This photograph shows
d
s
5
|
ingion navy
Bhe Is the largest ship that
|
Fill Their Quotas Under
the New Law.
New York.
fiscal
under the 2 per cent quo
Immigration
year 1025.20,
a 14 or f
a slight in
Crease over
vious
but, partly
gration of
Year,
owing
glens
States,
halneg ©
IMIR <
tion
28.208 In 1024-25.
continue to
distinet
mic pres.
in Eu
to the
4
rope wince
ir
conference tation
While our gain In
people during the fiscal year 1024-25,
the
! act went into effect, was R367,
gain during the last year
| 9.041, again showing the rising
of the Influx of professional
noticeable since the war.
Canada and Mexico continue to fur
net professional
cent quota
net
was
trend
first after the 2 per It
our
1 —
fiscal
| being subject to quota restriction. Im-
migration fron Mexico appears to be
increasing, that from Canada declin-
ing.
Canada during 1925-28 contributed
i
i
i
|
NX CARE
fewer
ile Mexico
JUKE) more
of 01.000
sent
than the
Large Nonquota Immigration,
of National Fores
Ore A Census gan
Oregon
but Feed 48 Cats
Uedeiunnd
i
8
|
Scientists Expect to Determine When
Grasshopper.Filled lce Was
Laid Down.
Yellowstone Park, Wyo.—The mys
tery of Grasshopper glacier, just
across the Montana state line outside
the northeastern corner of Yellow-
stone park, may be unlocked by the
frozen body of a tiny animal no larger
than a mouse. The glacier has been
famous for many years for the im-
mense number of dead and frozen
grasshoppers with which {ts lce Is
filled and from which it derives its
name. The species of insects are mod.
ern, but no one has yet been able to
guess when thelr swarms were over
whelmed with cold and buried in snow
that eventually became ice. It might
have been hundreds of years ago or
it might have been thousands,
Now, for the first time, the body of
one of the higher animals has been
found among the Insects. It is of a
shrew, a tiny creature resembling a
mouse in general appearance, but not
closely related to the mice. It was
found by a tourist, R. E. Beiton of
Livingston, Mont. At the Park mu-
geum its mummified remains were ex-
amined by Park Naturalist E. J. Saw
yer and Vernon Balley, chief field nat-
uralist of the United States biological
survey.
Though quickly Identifying the
animal as a shrew, the two scientists
stated that because of the shriveled
condition of the body it would not be
possible to determine its exact spe
cles without careful dissection and
measurements, Once this is deter.
mined, however, It may be possible to
form some idea of the climatic con
ditions under which the grasshopper.
fliled ice wag iald down, because the
range of animals is strongly influ
enced by the temperature, moisture
and other conditions of their habitat.
Magic Healing Virtues
Laid to Jaffa Orange
Jaffa, Palestine. — The delicious
taste and unique fragrance of the
Jaffa orange has caused it to become
more and more popular in Europe, but
the belief that it Is possessed of al
most magic virtues as a preventive
against infectious diseases is held to
be mainly responsible for its ever
growing vogue.
The home of citrus fruit is south.
ern Asia, from the lower provinces
of China to the slopes of the Hima-
laya mountaing. Some 6000 years
ago travelers brought the “first gold
en apples” from India to Nippur in
lower Mesopotamia, and toward the
Sixth century the Jews returning
from the Babylonian captivity im-
ported them to Palestine.
Krim Waxes Fat
Fer. —Abdel-Grim, once the lean
desert hawk, is getting fat. His exe
ercise while awaiting exile to lonely
Reunion Island In the Indian ocean
consists of walks under guard in a
garden of roses and geraniums,