The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 18, 1930, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE C
the chair. 2-
national Live Stock
of the short session
exposition In
of congress.
A. and M, which won the
Nicholas
college
Speaker
stock Judging mtest at the Inter.
wielding the the openin
NEWS REVIEW OF
CURRENT EVENTS
Hoover Asks Congress for
$150,000,000 to Provide
Work for Unemployed.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
C INGRESS, in its
asked by Pr
Tuesday to appropriate
000.000 to S150.000.(4%) for the
ation of pm
order to provide
out of work. It was asked
make this emergency fund distril
upon recommendation of a
committee approved by
With that amount avail
dent said it would be
pend a total of £650,7%00.000 up
struction of all kinds in the
months,
“Our immediate
message “is the
ment for the next
new plans which
fmmediate results, or which
commitments beyond this
not warranted.”
The President
propriation be
ment of Agriculture to he
farmers for the
seed and feed for animals
congress should
already started, in re
Rhoals, bus regu
gestion in the courts
of the border patrol in
smuggling, and law enforcement
District of Columbia. He
was need of revision of the
tion laws and that the deportation
laws should be strengthened
Surveying the finances of the coun
try. Mr. Hoover more than intim
the income tax reduction could not he
continued on 1930 incomes. The esti
mated treasury deficit for the present
fiscal year is about $180.000.000, and
he declarad that “most rigid economy
is necessary to avold
taxes"
t session, was
Hoover on
from S100.
aceeler-
works construction In
wioyment for men
alsa tn
sitable
cabinet
the President.
the Presi
possible to ex
able,
on con
next 12
problem,”
inc rease of
six months
do not produce such
period
also urged that an ap-
made to the Depart
loaned to
purpose
sesrrivil
comp
ination
prevention of
in the
sald there
immigra
1a teed
increase in
EXT day President
in his annual budget
which he warned congr
dertake any
Hoover sent
message, in
e588 not to un-
expansion of govern.
mental expenditures other than those
required under the proposed unem-
ployment ard drought relief programs
and sald he regretted he could not
recommend a continuance of the in-
come tax reduction. The budget he
submitted provides for total expend!
tures of $24.0545190.200 for the fiscal
year 1032, exclusive of postal expend!
tures pald from postal revenues, as
compared with estimated expend!
tures of £40149041.900 In the fiscal
year 1031 and actual expenditures of
$3.904,152487 In the fiscal year 1020,
To the senate the President sub
mitted the World court protocols, as
he had promised, together with a mes
sage urging American ratification,
There were Indications that the ques-
tion would not reach final settlement
this winter,
Nominations sent to the senate In-
cluded the name of William N. Doak
of Virginia to be secretary of labor
in place of James J. Davis: George
Otis Smith and Frank R. MeNinch
as members of the power commission,
and a long list of recess nominations
made during the summer,
Senator Nye, chairman of the eam-
paign fund Investigation committee,
believed he had uncovered large un-
reported expenditures in behalt of the
Davis-Brown ticket In Pennsylvania,
so he as:ed the senate to defer the
swearing in of Jim Davis as senator.
This would have meant that Joe Grun.
dy would continue to occupy the seat.
and ny senators don't like him, so
ry 68 to 27 to seat Davis. On
esday both Davis and Dwight
W. Morrow took the oath, and the sen.
ate was then complete, with 53 Repub.
Heans, 42 Democrats and 1 Farmer.
Laborite,
N HIS message on the state of the
Union the President sald nothing
about prohibition, but in the budget
message he made it clear the admin.
istration Intended to continue Its policy
of vigorous enforcement of the dry
aws. He recommended an in
of more than three million do "sin
the funds allotted to the prohi
and industrial bureaus,
This was highly pleasing to the
members of congress, u it
stirred the wets to
plans for att
latter decided
bureau »f prohibit
Director Wi
employing about tive hundred new en
bition
alcohol
dry
only
etic
more energ
ack on prohibition, These
out the
increase, which
to try to knock
'
odeock Intends to use in
forcement agents, The wet leaders
also resolved nake a fight on al
cohol peisoning and fi a vote on a
beer modifiention bill, Senato Bing-
ham and Re
Connecticut, alr
per cent bes
TASKER ODDIE of
as introdu a bill that
in con
SENATOR
~~ Nevada
will have consider:
f prod
the
VEIN "RODU(
reat
"TION
hotter relat!
Citing the pa
of wheat, the
sald producers of that
pect federal help only
he task of com
ut to needs,
Lower far
duction of 1020
previous year were
officer. He estimated
rate gross income from
it SOO50.000 000. or
omes from the pro
vith the
predicted by the
the
1050
about
He ar
agricul
overproduce
as compared
cabinet
AggTreg
crops at abot
16 per cent less than in 1020,
tributed the current slump in
tural prices to continued
tion and
pression,”
mand.
“the worldwide busi
resulting In
ness de
lessened de
MSTIMATES put out by the Ameri
can Federation of Labor set the
number of American laboring men ont
of work In November at 4.800000
President Willlam Green predicted
that at the present rate of Incrense
the jobless would number 7.000.000 by
February. Neither figure covered
office workers or farm laborers out of
employment,
It was announced In New York that
John DD. Rockefeller and John D.
Rockefeller, Jr., had made a joint con-
tribution of f£1.000000 to the local
emergency employment committee's
fund for the unemployed. This was
a handsome gift, but not anywhere
near so large, proportionately, as the
contribution of any one of many thon
sands of citizens to the same cause,
¢ JIMMY.” a little black Aberdeen
Angus bred by J. F. McKenny of
King City, Mo., was declared the grand
champion steer at the International
Live Stock show in Chicago. He was
sold at auction, bringing only 22.50 a
pound. Herman Trelle, bringing a
sample of hard red spring wheat which
he grew at Wembley, Alberta, 1.200
miles north of Chicago, was crowned
wheat champion; and Herbert . Wat.
son of Tipton, Ind, won the national
corn championship. Purdue. the Uni
versity of Illinois and lowa State col
lege took most of the blue ribbons for
sheep and swine. Collynie Clipper
Star, a Shorthorn bull owned by F.
W. Hubbell of Des Moines which has
been winning first prizes all his life,
took the senior and grand champion
ribbons in its class. Fourteen hun
dred boys and girls of the 4-H club
were guests of the exposition and spe
clal awards were given 432 of them
for their agricultural achievements, A
team from Oklahoma A. and M. col
lege won the trophy for the best live
stock Judging, outscoring twenty-two
other college teams, The intercol-
legiate meat judging contest was won
by a team of students from the Uni
versity of Missouri, undividual honors
Nebraska
SY FTLANIYS conl
on strike ag
1 MAN
to the Le
legged terroris
ities In Pol
tions made Foreign
ting are serious
and |
German government fr
an examin: of the
Leag
tion 1
attitud inasmuch ag the P
ernment is
aris
pledge 4 to defend the
tegrity of Po and with the =
termination as the Rhine
between Germany
and mi
and
French
ainst Germany
Learning that the German
were organizing a
resist “Polish
raided the castie of
Polish border. arrested 300
all fully armed and In un
seized three truck loads of arms
munit On neigh
were found large eaches of rifles. am
munition, barbed wire and other mate
rials of war.
action
ipso facto would draw
intervention i
aggression™
n baron near the
form
fons, ibhoring
IREMIER TARDIEU of France, whe
had resisted the attacks of his op
ponents for months,
feated Thursday when the
passed a vote of non-confidence,
to 130. Of course Tardieu and
cabinet resigned, and the result
described as the most serious
mental crisis In many years.
the chief factors In the downfall of
Tardien was the fact that several
members of his cabinet were Involved
in a huge financial gcandal, the failure
of Alfred Oustric. He also was ae
cused of trying to make himself a
dictator, »
finally was de.
147
his
wns
govern
One of
5
ISSING for several days and
given up for lost after she
started a flight from Havana to Miami,
Mrs. J. M. Keith-Miller of Australia
turned o» safe and sound on one of
the Andros islands of the Bahama
group. She had been driven far out of
her course by a gale and made a
forced landing on the islet when her
gas gave ont. A fishing boat took her
to Nassau. She planned to return for
her plane and fly it to Miami.
NE definite decision has been made
by the Indian round table confer.
ence In London. It is that Burma fs
to be separated from India and set up
as a dominion of the British empire at
the earliest possible date. Burma has
a population of about 13,250,000. Its
capital 1s Rangoon.
RS. MARY JONES, known as
Mother Jones, who had been the
militant friend and advocate of the
laboring man, died near Washington,
after an Illness of more than a year,
She wus 100 years old last May,
f@ by Western Newspaper Union.)
CENTRE HALL. PA
FOI RI A TAR
Make your
HE Golden Voice of the
Te Atwater Kent means
glorious, life-like, year-round
entertainment for the whole
family for years to come.
Perfected Tone Control lets
you make the most of every
program, emphasizing bass or
treble at will—shutting out dis-
turbing noises
The Quick-Vis
whisks in the progr
Dial
ams exactly
ion
as you want them—all the sta-
tions right in front of you, in
figures so big that grandmother
can read them from her arm-
chair,
Beauty of design helps t
make this the kind of radio 1
like to live with. Atwater Ke
ATWATER KENT }
dependability means long life
for the radio—trouble-free en-
joyment for you.
And youcan have thismodera
radio, with every up-to-the
minute feature, plus the vast
power of Screen-Grid, for either
all-electric or battery operation.
Rural families never have to
take a back seat in radio recep-
tion when they own the new
ter Kent,
1
nearest dealer v
Aswate
Twated
ill de-
Kent when-
C Of battery Operation.
act now, Many
VISION DIAL
ge of stations {in from?
I
on Rock by Fisherman |
Make Baby Comfortable
uee
Arrer his daily
some
Pure and medicated,
and comforts his
irritation.
ploded
i
“1 have won first prize with my
bread at the Adams County Fair
for two years in succession, using
GoldMedal‘Kitchen-tested’ Flour
on both occasions. But it prob-
ably will be harder to win next
year because more people will be
using Gold Medal Flour.”
A New-Type Flour that Elimi-
nates “Good Luck” and * Bad
Luck” from All Your Baking
DAY more women are using
GoLp MEDAL" Kitchen-tested™
Flour than any other brand.
Chiefly because they find this all-
purpose flour always gives uni-
form good results, whenever and
however they use it. It will bring
this same success in your baking.
Because all Goro MepaL Flour is
“Kitchen-tested” before it comes
to you. Breads, cakes, biscuits,
pastries are baked from every
batch--in a home oven just like
your own. And only the flour that
successfully passes this ** Kitchen-
test” is allowed to go out to you.
You get only the flour that has
been tested for baking success in
advance!
15 All-Star * Kitchen tested”
Recipes Given FREE Inside
Every Sack
12 of America’s most famous
Cooking Authorities have joined
with Betty Crocker in preparing
a new set of unusual recipes. You
find 15 of these interesting new
“Kitchen-tested’’ recipes inside
N. N. B. C. Stations WBAL-WRC-W,
every sack of GoLp MEDAL
“Kitchen-tested” Flour. And new
ones appear every 3 months.
You'll enjoy making these new
baking creations—cvery one has
been simplified and * Kilcken-
tested” for perfection. So ask for
Gop MEepaL * Kitchen-tested”
Flour today and get the full set of
recipes free. wore
WasusURN Crossy COMPANY
of
GanuRat, Mrurs, INC, MINNEAPOLIS, MDa
, Wednesdays and Fridays