The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 25, 1926, Image 7

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    1.—Arrests of coast guardsmen at
of Wales inspecting St. Cyr Military
‘fire in the Texas oil field at Spindle
NEWS REVIEW OF |
URRENT EVENTS
Coolidge Address in Kansas
City Chief Event of
Armistice Day.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
ACING the east and standing |
lence, all America paid
o'clock on Armistice day,
of our World war
young
in France
country. Eleven thous:
the American Legion pm
fitting ceremonies, and the
pie generally joined in
emn observation of the ocean
remainder of the day
celebrations patriotic and joyful
Chief feature of the Arml
doings was the dedication of the
ly Liberty Memorial in Kansas City
he day
11
memory
7.000 men wh rave
lives or in the
this i
of
in
the sol
The
was marked by
stice day
state
chief because the speaker of
was President Coolidge. Five
years before he was there,
president, to lay the cornerstone,
week he returned,
Mrs, Coolidge, Everett
secretary, and Secretary of
Dwight F. Davis, who, as the
mer he r of the eabinet, did
there
as vice
accom
War
Missour
for his state sercises,
train arrived in Ka: Thur
jay morning and after the dedle:
the memorial the President
left In the afternoon for
turn trip to Washington.
In the course of his
President took occasion to discuss
the matter of American entry into
World court, and he served notl
the other nations that would not
ask the senate to modify its reserva
tions. To those who pretend to
spise Americans as a nation of dollar
newly rich and without
finement, he retorted that,
were true, there would be
for the progress of true ideals in
modern world even from a nation n
ly rich than there is ffom a nation
chronically poor. Honest poverty
one thing, but lack of
character is quite another.”
Mr. Coolidge asserted that as a na
tion we not only did not profit from
the war, but we suffered Immense
losses. He spoke for adequate pre
paredness for the sake of protection
without entering into competition with
others in the maintenance of armed
forces: and he reiterated his bellef
that wealth and all other material re
sources should be conscripted in time
of war.
at the e
sas City
Gi
of
party
furn
address the
the
ce On
he
de-
chasers, re
even if this
“more hope
industry
UEEN MARIE of Rumania spent
the week-end In Chlecago, where
she was fittingly entertained by both
the city officials and society, and
where there was the usual American
exhibition of social pushing and of
that inverted snobbery that advertises
its disrespect for royalty and all that
pertains to it. On the way east from
the Pacific coast the squabbles among
those who accompanied the queen con-
tinued, with the result that Lele Full.
er, Samuel Hill and some others quit
the party, leaving Col. J. H. Carroll,
manager of the tour, and Ma}. Stanley
Washburn, the queen's personal alde,
seemingly In supretne control. Marie
took no sides In the controversies but
insisted that there must he peace and
harmony on the rest of the tour. It
was announced that while the queen
was resting In Washington for four
days after the conclusion of the trip,
Prince Nicolas and Princess Ileana
would travel back to Chicago on a
special train to witness the Army-
Navy football game on November 27,
TOT the least Interesting news of
a the week was the announcement
that Princeton university had severed
athletic relations with Harvard, thus
breaking up the “Big Three” combl-
nation that has existed, with some in-
terruptions, for many years. Prince
toa’s board of athletic control decided
unanimously that “it Is at present im-
possible to expect In athletic compe
tition with Harvard that spirit of cor
dial good. will between the undergrad.
uate bodles of the two universities
which should characterize college
sports,” Harvard Lampoon has been
waking nasty attacks on Princeton,
on charges of dealing with
during his formal visit
Boston
for Lowell of Har
President Mil
Harvard
iil-feeling by
which President
vard apologized to
of Princet
SON
Crim
its ed-
nl the
AERTS
the re VLRO Prince
the real reason for rin
announced
itorials,
wis the nent of
in foot
Harvar
ame ol
ton’'s action
rd's proposed new policy
which
fixed
the conte
Princeton
under
ball m
would
atters,
have only
one
schedule
Yale, I
each
year
would pls
iy
tO propose le gis
#1 ep
I
Has eauect
suction
cent
poration me ome t
March, 1927
XAXpver will
per
ind cor
- iy
1 rates provide ol
proposed
estimated by
loss approsii
of which would
we prospective surplus of
was
would mean a of
all
drawn from tl
R250 O00 O00), be
the fiscal ends
July
year 1027, which on
1, next.
Y RoeNy MASSEY has been ap-
‘anada’s first minister to
by in council
the dominion cabinet, Mr.
nd with Premier
attending the Im-
The question now
the United
1
pointed (
Washington an order
’
i
Massey is in Engla
MacKenzie
con forend ©,
King
tal
LAA
whether
turally arises
tawa., Some of the leading Canadian
newspapers think other course is
open for Washington, and it Is fa
vored by some journals in states along
the border. It may be the matter will
be solved by the enlarging of the pow-
ers of the United States consul gen-
eral in Ottawa.
NCE more the United States pro-
O tests to Mexico against the oil
and land laws of that country. The
Intest in a long succession of notes on
this subject was handed to the Mexi-
can foreign office. by Charge d'Af-
Schoenfeld, and again was
stressed the necessity for fundamental
modifications In these two laws to
eliminate from them all possibility of
their retroactive application in viola-
tion of agreements entered Into be-
tween the two governments in 1023,
Late reports indicate that General
Obregon is not having an easy time in
carrying out his plan to destroy the
Yaqui Indians as a people and scat-
ter them through the country, The
Yaquis are fighting with all their old
time desperation, have gathered strong
forces and at last advices are threat-
ening the towns of Mazatlan and Las
Pastras, both of which have consider-
able American interests, The Cucu-
pah Indians, who have been penceful
for years, are showing signs of going
on the warpath with the Yaquis
no
m——
ORMER Secretary of the Interior
Albert B., Fall and Edward L. Do-
heny, oll magnate, appeared before the
District of Columbia Supreme court
and pleaded not gulity to charges of
conspiracy to defraud the government
in the naval oll reserve leases. The
trial was set for November 22 and
counsel for the defendants sald they
will be ready to proceed with the case
at that time. Both Fall and Doheny
are named with E. L. Doheny, Jr, In
another Indictment which charges
bribery in connection with young Do-
heny's delivery of $100,000 in “a black
satchel” to Fall during the negotia-
tions which resulted In the execution
of the Elk Hills reserve leases,
no Dr
TI Sens
ra * on IoC]
ok k he
EL ign
48
ui
runners and bootleggers. 2. —Prince
-8Seene durlng an eighteen-hour
1A T THE bldding of Premier Mus
solini
the Italian chamber
uties expelled 120 members of the so-
aulled Aventine
ground that they
selves ever slnee
from
Soclallst
lost
¥ Aor
Of dep
opposition on the
had
the
the
absented
protest
resulting murder
ott,
members
and
ed, but most
» precaution of |
he chamber
the death
the life of
deputy, Ti
their parii:
of them we
mentary
munity some
vit ‘
of 1
Ron
passed
penalty
Mussolin! or
eaving
glso
French consulates,
he also will be able
ation of the
‘atalan
the Perpignan
uprisin
REECE
week
Condouriotis called on
form a new cabinet
that former Premier
urn and accept the 1
eign aff
Wi the simple declaration tha
i light travels at ti rate of X
ret
Airs,
T90 kllometers per inde
H
| in Philadelphia,
of the U
inced the
research tl
for
ore the National Academy of Be
Dr. Albert A. Mich
niversity of Chicago
completion
upled most
The oid
used in cle
the
| son
iI Bot prac tical
wt has
forty
travel,
OL
| the 00
| of his time years.
i rate of light as
{ scientific research and given in all
| textbooks, had been
| 200.860 kilometers
kilometers more than that de
by Michelson.
ind physicists will
haul and
The Chicago scientist's latest
were worked out in California
flashing a beam of light from Mount
Wilson to Mount San Antonio and
back again, a distance of 44 miles,
This work was carried on all summer.
Re
established
per second, or
termi
Doctor Astronomer
now have to over
heir
sailor le
rr caicuis
reshape
results
UNDREDS of
H drowned and great property dam-
age was done by a typhoon that swept
over a section of the island of Luzon
in the Philippines. Many villages were
wiped out and the Inhabitants blown
into the sea to perish, It was esti
mated that the storm destroyed 5 per
cent of the world's coconut crop.
The town of La Plata, Md, was
struck by a tornado that wrecked a
schoolhouse and some houses and
killed about a score of persons, fours
teen of whom were school children.
MONG the deaths recorded during
the week was that of James K.
Hackett, one of America's best actors,
in Paris. He had spent much of his
time of late in France
ceedingly popular In that country.
C. (3. Sholes, who as a youth was
Sherman's personal telegraph oper.
ator on the march to the sea, passed
away in Chicago. Rev. D. D. For
syth, secretary of the Methodist board
of missions, died in a Chicago hospital,
J oriowikg the example of the
governments of Italy and Russia,
Marshal Pllsudski, dictator of Poland,
caused to be Issued a decree which
threatens with fines and prison sen-
tences ranging from three days to
three months whoever spreads wrong
information about government action
or government members or military
movements. If reports are spread by
the newspapers, they will be sup-
pressed and the owners, as well as
the men responsible for the news, will
be fined or Jalled. The important
reserves unto itself the right to ine
fore everybody In Poland Is living in
the uncertainty of the days of despots
ism,
|
|
i
Youth Is Served
New Fashions
———
Even Models for Mature
Women Reflect Season’s
Air of Youthfulness.
This is the season of youth In styles,
| everything in women's dress being dis
| played in the light. of girlhood,
in the fashions designed for women
are admittedly grown up. This
wis one of the outstanding
{llustrated at the exposition of arts
and industries in the recent dramatie
pageant of fashion, says a
writer in the New York Times. Many
examples dramatically
presented the sweep through the cen-
tury to the present season,
grace, lightness, simplicity
beauty of youth,
The busiest
and in every is the
mother of to be
fitted out for boarding school and col-
lege, The progress made In the art
of dress has been remarkable
the past four years that the younger
women, even girls in thelr teens, have
in for a large share of attention
the fashions for them at all
the nursery to graduating
fre the ende of the
Just anything so it Is
and not
answer to the
for the
day and
the vounger
in New York
town
fire
shopper
other big
daughters who
80
come
and
from
class
best
ages
the
given IVOrs
designers.
practical
not
simple, ton grown
up, Is
of a
misses
the question
wardrobe
of this
for
one of first
juniors and
age. The de-
set is con
and
on
gathered
partment
sidered nce,
the very
t th #
Do
imp oria
the desis gners
ater is
oval of th
best from
ides of the w
in for the appr
persons,
We YOune
I] youug
It is a jolly experience for
mother
season,
sense, propriety
been shown |
geasons
Wraps,
Young w
those
flect
tendency
much
latest autumn
conventional
least of
ful and «
styles are
Character of Materials,
first
recommendatio
y
n
ane charac
8mocking Is Done in Bright-Colored
Floss on Beige Crepe.
flimsy stuffs—the volles, crepes and
| chiffons—that were the fad for sev-
| eral seasons are quite out, and in-
| stead there are all the weaves of fine
| woolens, light in weight, supple in tex-
ture and more lovely in color this
year than ever before.
The latest suit is a compromise with
the regulation tailleur—a snappy little
outfit that is a winter version of the
Jumper suit that had such a long run
of popularity. The only difference ls
that the jumper In the fall sult is
really a Jacket to be worn over a silk
or Jersey blouse. This type of dress
Is adaptable for almost every age,
from the little school girl to the ecol-
{ lege graduate, Almost invariably the
skirt is plaited, either all the way
around the clusters of side or box
plaits, or the front is plaited and the
back is left plain. Many of these
little suits are of one material; others
are made with the coat of plain goods,
| the skirt of plaid or check or the cont
| figured and the skirt of plain woolen
| plaited.
These suits are having such vogue
| that they are being done in an pmaz-
ing variety of designs as to combi.
| nation of material and of color. The
| style of Introducing plald, check or
any patterned goods with the plain
suits and
the same
dress,
illustrated
general
Mustrated in
frocks misses In much
manner that In women's
Thais idea is conspicuously
in sports sults and clothes for
wWenr,
The model yet
the suit In which
leather are put together. A skirt of
gruy kasha klited designed to be
worn with a jacket of soft green kid
skin which is lined with the woolen
The coat is eut on straight
box lines with pockets and a narrow
In
for
an
material
shown 1s
kasha and
smartest
sports
in
little suit is of
green, with
n short coat of green suede, cut in the
style of a norfolk jacket, with narrow
of patent leather drawn throug
in the cloth underneath the box
plaits. The leather coats are severely
plain, with cuffs, outer pockets and
small, close lar that may left
neck show-
Another chorming
col he
ing the shirt or gulmpe.
A sport med for a girl of
sixteen is effective In green and tan—
suit de sig
Sport Suit Has Kiited Skirt; Coat Is
of Green Leather.
PI aids Are Po pul ar,
n
are especially this sea-
ks,
plaid
neck,
underdreas
rnates
d deep 01
» hrowns are
nnd
| of the
reds
» wine shades, garnet
as coral,
Brit
hige
such bright reds
anium and
1 blue
and
>
Ke
Yes mls
hive, ol
.
ac
and
queur.
Frenc}
beige, tan and }
green,
jun per
many charming
shades of
The plan Is suggested in |
the latest frocks for day wear,
a band or ripples about the hips gis-
ing the effect
Scarfs appear to have catnght
spirit of the fall season, despite the
fact that they are being shown in chil.
fon-—-usually treated as a summer fab
ic or for very formal evening use
Rustic leaves, autumn follage and
huge chrysanthemums are combined
or used singly In these large, flowing
scarfs, One especially attractive
"
“
Ld
*
of a two.plece costuine
beige surrounds its plain center with
a border of bunches of chrysanthe-
mums, ranging in color from pale yel-
low to deep rustic tones. Another
scarf of allover design is without
flowers and depends upon leaves and
branches for its design. The plume
furnishes the inspiration for other
scarfs that take In the bloe and gray
tones, Occasionally In these colors It
is introduced in a ribbon streamer fiut.
tering throughout the
a multicolored border,
Squares of large size,
for school, sports wear, to fill In with
a top coat, or to complete a sweater
outfit, show Chinese Inspiration In
color selection and design. The ma.
terial chosen, in fact, is pongee from
China. In piace of the conventional
squares with borders, or all-over de-
gigns after the French prints, these
of design, One scarf of red, gray and
tering on the gray section; on its red
out ;
the other colors In harmony.
lettering is used, mosily to fill out
corners and comnlete the color scheme,
at a distance, the effect Is remarkably
like a line of signal Nags
Friends Express
Wonder at Health
Trouble, Rheumalism,
Condition Helieved by
Stomach
Run-dowen
Tanlac,
The amazing re-
covery of Mrs. J.
R. Patterson, 1717
Grace Btreet,
Lynchburg, Vir-
ginia, has excited a
great deal of com-
ment among her
friends. Bhe says:
“Tanlac banished
my troubles and has
kept me in splendid
health. I used to have terrible swim-
ming epells in my head and sometimes
had to stay in bed a week at a time.
Was also troubled considerably with
rheumatism, very nervous and tired out
--N0 appetite.
“Now all the days of =
over and though I am 70 years o id 1 do
my housework and washing without
tiring. I have not been bothered with
rheumatic pains in a long time. My
stomach never bothers me. 1 can eat
everything without suffering and I give
Tanlac all the credit. Everyone should
take it, regularly.”
This tonic, made from roots, barks
and herbs, helps build up weak bodies,
put flesh on scrawny bones, relieves the
system of poison and drives out ca
of pai Let Tanlac give health.
Get nr Bat bo ttle from your druggist
—today ! Over 40 ® bottles sold.
FOR OVER
200 YEARS
haarlem oil has been a world-
for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
ur) bago and uric acid conditions.
OLD MED
pe HAARLEM “AL
int
flering are
1868
You
wide remedy
aay
correct ernal troubles, stimulate vital
™ 8 ox
Three sizes. All drug
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Eemoves Dandru® Stops Halr Falling
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray yo Faded Hair
#72] Hiscox Crom. Wis Patgus 3 Y
HINDERCORNS femores Com. oor
uses, otc. stops sll pala, ensures comiorn w the
fool, makes walking easy. be by mail or at Io
¢ista. Hiseax Chemical Works, Fai bogue, XN. ¥
Green’s
August Flower
is 4 mild lax
and bas been in use
relief of
i similar
xative,
ar 1
r the
At the first sneeze,
banish every sy:
tom of cold, chill
etc. wi th HAL E’ S
Relief n onoe ~~ Brosks
u cold positively.
3 cents at all druggists
OREHOUND & TAR
LYNN HAVEN, FLA.
On beautiful 8
drews Haj :
t ww
Undamaged by hur
islé and bhomescekers
A \ MBER OF { IMMERCE
Read ¥
Write OCH
CALE
BALSAM |
Ngati
Mutual
not home
“DANDELION BUTTER COLOR”
A harmless veg getable butter color
used by millions for 50 years. Drug
gtores and general stores sell bottles
of “Dandelion” for 35 cents.—Adv,
Has LO luce lor ah oc
i Who
needs a vacation.
the least
nost who have
CATARRY,
find grateful relief in the
exclusive menthol blend
in Luden's Menthol
s\
srl
STHMA REMEDY