The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 22, 1931, Image 2

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    —
“air ar-
conquered
ocean,
TALY'S
mada™
the Atlantic
but at the expense of
five lives, Of the four-
teen hig seaplanes
that started from
Rome for Brazil, ten
made the flight across
the sea successfully,
Two crashed immedi
\ ately after the take-
off at Dolama, Portu.
Gen. Balbo guese Guinea; one
man was killed in the fall of the first,
and the entire crew of four perished
when the second fell and burst Into
flames. The two replacement planes
that were in the squadron were or-
dered into flight after these mishaps,
and both of them were forced down
by mechanical trouble mot far from
the Brazilian penal island of Fernan
do do Noromha. Their were
picked up by ltaliam destroyers that
were patroling the route.
Crews
Of the ten planes that got across
safely, the first te land at Natal,
Brazil, was the one piloted by Gen.
Italo Balbo, Italian air min who
commanded the armada. The
was piloted by Colonel Maddalena,
holder of the world's distance and en
durance records. General Ba wns
highly elated by the
fight saying it was greater than he
had expected, despite the misfortunes
at Bolama. The aviators were given
f great welcome at Natal, and Inter
In the week, when they flew on to
Rio de Janeiro, were the recipients of
a wonderful ovation in that capital
city. The planes are all to be sold to
the Brazilian government, but mny
first be flown to Buenos Alres and
back. They are of the Savoia-Mareh-
etti “55" type adopted as bombing
planes by the Italian navy and on the
transatiantic flight each carried four
men and radio telephone and telegraph
gets.
ter
SET,
second
it
0
success of the
1 EARLY seven months of |
and by
and newspaper men has resulted in the
arrest of the man declared to
be the murderer of Alfred Lingle, a
reporter for the Chicago Tribune. The
law authorities in Chicago assert that
mysterious crime that
tire country Is now
accused man is Leo Br
man of St. Louis wh
police record. He wa
in Chicago on December 2
capture was kept hi
ficials completed
3rothers, waio In Chicago went un
der the name of Louis V. Ba an
swers the description of Lingle's assas
sin and Is said to have been positively
identified by witnasses to the murder
The officials declare he was hired to
slay Lingle, but refuse for the present
to tell who hired him or to name the
witnesses who identify him. Neither
would they reveal any of the proof
they say they have of his guilt,
ntensive
careful work detectives
who is
ited the en
The
2 gun
a long
arrested
but the
le the of
exo
cleared up.
others,
ere he has
8 quietly
kL
gecret whi
thei investigation
der,
ONGRESS no
sooner resumed
its session after the
holidays than the
opponents of the ad
ministration resumed
their troublesome tac.
tics. These centered
for the time being
largely about the ap-
propriation for
drought relief. The
house passed the bill
carrying $45,000,000
for this purpose, but the senate
promptly amended it by adding $15,
000,000 for the purpose of loans to
farmers for food, Senator Caraway
of Arkansas sponsored this move. He
declared he knew there was extreme
suffering in the courtry districts of
his state, and his assertions were
strengthened by the reports that hun.
dreds of farmers had rioted for food
at England, Ark, and were appeased
to some extent by gifts of food from
the Red Cross,
John Barton Payne, head
Red Cross, in testimony before the
committee on appropriations, denied
there was a riot at England and said
that 500 persons had been quietly fed
after “about forty men came In with
some excitement” and demanded food,
The administration does not think
congressional appropriations for food
fare necessary or wise. The radicals
and perhaps some other members of
congress more than intimate that
President Hoover and his advisers are
cold blooded and heartless in this mat-
ter.
Sen. Caraway
of the
IGHT United States marines were
ambushed and killed by Nicaragu.
an bandits on New Year's day, and as
a result the senate, on motion of Sen.
ator Johnson of California, called on
the State department for a compre
hensive report on the use of our ma
rines In the Central American repub-
He. Evidently the old question is to
be debated again In congress. How:
ever, Secretary of State Stimson sald
the administration plans to keep the
marines in Nicaragua at least until
after the 1082 elections. This will be
PICKARD
in accord with the
Nicaraguan government,
Jose Moncada stated he
it would be unwise to withdraw
the marines at this time: he
added that he would like to insure ad
ditional co-operation of Nicara
with the United States force
effort to stamp out banditry.
ernment. he said, Is trying to obtaln
a loan of $1,000,000, part of which
would be used to strengthen the
tional guard for this purpose,
wishes of the
President
believed
guans
in an
His gov:
na
BEST news of the week was that
many thousands of men were he-
ing put back to work, especially by
the railroads and the automobile man
ufacturers. The tension of the unem
ployment situation was appreciably
lessened. The Chicago & Northwestern
returned nearly 7.000 em
ployees to their jobs in the mechanical
and car departments vhich had been
closed since December 24. These
partments were on a
day a week Monon lines
back on a part
time basis, and the Santa Fe and the
Rock Island lines were preparing to
give at least temporary jobs to hun
dreds. Other thousands.
were returned to work by the
Central, the Norfolk & West
the Missourl Paelfic, New
Central and the Southern Pa
system
de
reopened three
basis. The
took nearly 800 men
mainly shop
men,
IHinols
ern,
York
the
In Detroit and Cleveland the auto
mobile factories were humming again
Twenty-two thousand men were re
called to the plants In the Detroit
Monday, and in the Ohlo city not
only the motor car makers hut many
other industries added to their pay
area
——
R ESFORDING to a
resolution of the
senate asking for in
formution on the sub
ject, Secretary of La
hor Willlam N. Doak
reported that approxi
mately HEI) pliens
ure now jllegally
siding in
States, and
3
this total,
M.W. Littieton or 100,000,
portahie
the
isions of the |
order to facilit ]
of deporting undesirabl es
legally residing
ions were made by
for changes in the present
one for
to the
“who are
izations which
a of the
States.”
proy
ite the fede
in the country, sev
Mr. Doak
law, among
the law
crest
glren ening
hem Ist
deportation of those
affiliated ith
advocate the
government of the
over.
Unit.
That last phrase, of course. means
chiefly the communists, and it is In-
teresting to note that a big anti-com-
munist mass meeting, presided over
by Martin W. Littleton, was held In
Carnegie hall, New York city, Friday.
at which a resolution calling for the
exclusion of those disturbers was
adopted. Representatives of the lead.
Ing civie, patriotic, Inbor and church
organizations of America took part In
the meeting, and Congressman Hamil
ton Fish told something of the findings
of his congressional committee of in-
vestigation into the activities of the
Reds,
REASURER JOSEPH R. NUTT of
the Republican national commit.
tee told Senator Nye's committee that
Robert H. Lucas exceeded his author.
ity and made a mistake of Judgment
in pledging the national committee's
special account to secure the $4.000
he borrowed to finance his anti-Norris
propaganda. But Mr. Nutt said he
didn’t blame Mr. Lucas for fighting
Norris and added that he had loaned
Lucas $3500 a few days ago to pay
off the bank loan. The committee's
special account, he said, was not a
slush fund but was created to help
out in certain congressional districts,
trouble for
Moze
the administra-
tion is brewing in the
matter of immediate
payment of the World
war veterans’ adjust
ed compensation cer.
tificates in cash. Rep.
resentative Patman of
Texas, sponsor of the
bill for such payment,
sald It was likely the
house would discharge
the ways and means
committee from fur
ther consideration of the measure so
that action could be obtained. He as-
serted a petition for this course had
been signed by members from many
states who belleve, with him, that
unfair tactics have been employed to
defeat the bill
Senator A. E. Vandenberg of Mich.
Igan, an administrator supporter, was
actively seeking to bring about some
sort of compromise, He favors legisla.
tion to permit veterans to borrow up
to 00 per cent of the ultimate value
of their certificates. But this doesn't
Senator A. MH,
Vandenberg.
satisfy Patman, “Our sation. * sald the
Texan, “is the wealthiest on earth. It
owes less In proportion to wealth than
any other country, It has given bil-
lions of dollars to other countries in
recent years and much of it was used
to pay their own veterans adjusted
pay and bonuses up to $7,000 each.
“We can pay the veterans In cash
now by selling bonds at the lowest in.
terest rate in the history of our na
tion and retire the last one of those
bonds in three or four years. By di-
verting payments from the publie
debt, which !s already overpaid up
to this time, no Increase in taxes will
be necessary now or later.”
JANAMA started
the New Year ofl
with a bang and add.
ed that country te
the list of Latin
American nations that
have set up new gov-
ernments by force,
This revolution, how-
ever, lasted less than
twenty-four hours nnd
was accompnunied with
very little bloodshed,
When it
Florencio H. Arosemena had given up
his office of president and was under
arrest at the of a who
was one of the revolutionists, the
ernment was in the hands of a junta
and Dr, Harmodio Arias was named
acting president,
Ricardo Alfaro
wns over
home cousin
gov-
The office of president was at once
offered hy to Ricardo Alfaro
Panama's minister to the United
States, asking if he accepted, to
return at from Washington. Al
faro took only four hours to ide,
und then accepted the call and began
to wind up his aff American
capital. He is a nnd
has been m for
nine the
cable
him,
once
le
airs in the
veteran liberal
Washington
believed
inister In
years. It
revolutionists
with
tend
ew
wns
that
American government
the recognition of the
President Hoover,
by
his close relations
the would
to
regime by
hasten
seemed
wool iid he
armed
likely
attacked
farmers
rict wh is the
For a
that Panama
by a army
from the Chepo dist
country seat of Vice ‘President Tomas
an adherent of Arosemensa
But the provisional government placed
machine guns on the lead
ing into the city, and the counter re
volt faded into
Secretary of
ferred President
matter of recognition,
state
day or two It
City
small of
ere
I que,
highways
fryer
noth.ngness,
State Stimson
on
and, while no
indica-
govern
con
with Hoover the
given out, the
Alfarn
would be recognized after some
ent was
ns were that the
nent
Vj ouinc ICATION of
sen decree
by Justice Jom
District of Cu
greatly loosens
posed the
on
complete
dependent
retail grocers”
NE day after flat
O ly denying the re
port that he was
about resign
George Akerson, sec
retary to President
Hopver. handed in his
signation—to the
a relief of
the Chief Executive's
supporters. As his suc
cessor prominent Re-
punblicans In Wash-
ington are urging
lepresentative Franklin Fort of New
Jersey
Mr. Fort will leave public life on
March 4. He was the unsuccessful
dry candidate for the Republican
nomination for the United States sen.
ate last spring, being defeated by
Dwight W. Morrow.
to
Franklin Fort
RANCE I1aid the Lion of the Marne
at rest with all possible honor, and
the name of Joseph Joffre, marshal of
the republic, is now added to those
of the other famed leaders In the
World war who have passed on. Clad
in the black tunic and red breeches he
wore in 1014, Joffre lay in state for
two days in the chapel of the war col
lege, On his breast was only one dec
oration, the Medaille Militaire which
is granted only to army commanders
and privates. Tuesday night the body
was taken on a gun ccisson, escorted
by cavalry holding torches, under the
Arc de Triomphe to the Cathedral of
Notre Dame, Wednesday morning in
the cathedral the services were con
ducted by Cardinal Verdier, archhish
op of Paris. The remains were then
placed in a vault in the chapel of the
Invalides besides the blers of Na
poleon, Foch and other national
heroes. They will remain there for
several weeks and will then be buried
at the Joffre country home at Lou
veciennes, not far from Paris,
When the news of the marshal's
death was given to the world, mes
sages of sympathy poured In on_ the
family and the French governmen:
from all countries. German war com
manders and the German press were
as lavish In thelr pralse of the dead
man as were those of the allied na
tions. One of the warmest tributes
came from Gen, Hermann von Kuh!
the man whom Joffre defeated at the
Marne. All of which was highly grat
fying to the marshal's mourning fel
low countrymen.
1 1931, Western Newspaoer nies.)
C mmunity.
a
¢ "Building
Benign Influence of
Old Family Homestead |
The preservation of family home.
steads throughout the country will do
more than any other effort to continue
the home-owning iden through the next
generation, says Herbert U. Nelson,
executive secretary of the National As.
ition of Real Estate Boards.
“An old family homestend, mellow
with beauty of age, bck
street, perhaps in a flower garden,
exert a tremendous influence In
lives of children nnd
into the world,” says Mr. Nelson
begin with, the continuance of
family homestead ean hold the family
together. If the still there,
and one or both of the parents are liv.
ing in It, the members of the family
will revisit it. They will together
on Christmas and holidays, for vaca
tions and visits with the old folks
“They won't have a chance to forget
the that perhaps made
home possible. Pride and ambition
and sacrifice and thrift were known
In the home during thelr childhood
days. Something of these
qualities still lurks within its walls
boy or girl returning often to the old
home will get to thinking that
the best way to li and will begin to
save for homes of their own.
“There are today many of these old
structures where parents live on after
the have grown and gone
awny can see these houses in
every nnd I hope that
some will be preserved as
They stand with dig
of newer
tural styles. nre beantiful as
old people are beantiful, and all the
fine princi; behind home owner
sh Ip still live on behind thelr doors. ™
IP ———————
Material Benefits of
Home-Beauty Contests
Improvement of the home grounds is
one of the growing needs In
community. Mi in be accomplished
in the way of beautification suys A O.
Rasmussen, hort
of the Pennsylv; State col
In a few
owns and villages
improvemer ns Incren
and bounds Where 1}
wire lea
of home
wed
cnn
grown gone out
home is
get
fdenls
ve,
children
You
community,
of them
long ns possible,
nity in midst architec
They
the
es
every
ich ¢
ornamental
more progressive
Interest in such
sed
ere
by
nre live
ders a we reanized system
+ expected
id eran
ers In
he losers
If You Lose
t t those who ive entered such con
d
testing, even they d vin a prize
benefited
and
shrubs
resulted
or p
by 1)
bounteous
ren materially
SAards, an
su]
¢ fine premises
IWers,
es which
from their endeavors,
ply of fl
trees and vegetabl
Study Regional Planning
It is of the states, cities ana
towns and of commercial
a duty
organizations to put the «fforts repre
rented by the national conference on
safety Into actual
each 10 recognize the
economic value that rests in it for
them—treating human life from =
business standpoint
street
being
and highway
and for
social
important factor in
economics Involved, because
economics nre an
every community,
Regional planning and zoning mus
be taken into consideration in reach
ng an effective and lasting solution
The problem divides itself into fac
tors that involve immediate relief and
factors that involve permanent relief.
It must be studied and svlved in both
of these aspects. — Washington Star,
Covirnment Aids Home Buyer
The government of the United
States has put itself actively and pow
erfully behind the widening of home
ownership. In a way which has never
been done It Is undertaking to bring
practical assistance to make it possi
ble for its citizens to own the physical
structures that shelter their family
life. It Is setting up a machinery new
to American life for this specific pur
pose. It is planning to draw from the
various great business groups con
cerned with home buying whatever
facts und ideas they can suggest that
will open home ownership as widely
us possible to its people,
This is the meaning of the meeting
In Washington of the planning com
mittee for the conference on home
building and home ownership,
Errors Billed to Future
The next few generations will have
0 pay for municipal mistakes made
now, although they will be the chief
beneficiaries of sen sible, far-reaching
city and regional plans through which
many of the costs and penalties of un.
planned and undirected growth may
be eliminated. George McAneny,
Double Good in Move
With a view of relieving unemploy-
mat and repairing the city at the
same time the Knoxville (Tenn)
Chamber of Commerce made July “re
palr month” to business houses and
citizens In general,
World Ever . on Lookout
for Ideas Worth While
Cason J. Calloway of La Grange,
Ga., “took an idea to market” and
found it profitable,
He has kept up a constant search
for new ideas to use in his business
ever gince. And the practice still
continues a successful one,
cotton left after the
tire fabrics and
It had been selling as waste, C
Calloway planned to grade it,
mand higher prices than a wi
product would bring eventual
manufacture from it cotton product;
not requiring a long fiber, In three
years his valley waste j \
worth £500,000 and doing
Since the World war
way group of mills has
from nine to
products are di
dive
manufacture of
other cotton goods
nson
«com
and
fourteen g,
and
‘sification is th result of
new f{deas,
result of
One day na
plant
finges
wny
reme;
Iavestiz reves
to the same cause,
versifie
Often a new idea
an accident,
foreman
hospital a
took to
worker wl
had badly torn.
back to the mill he
uber a number of su
little
On the
began to
h accidents,
led the: all “]
O86
been
ition
waste for cleaning
ery. A worker got his fing
gled in the f
himself
Jured a digit.
The exp
put to work
duced n w
very same
better und
Mr. Calloy
group to
Bu
such cloths Ia
000 units,
WOMEN SHOULD
LEARN USES
OF MAGNESIA
To women who suffer from
or so-called “morning si
Is a blessing. Most
It is advised by
Over a
cracked ice pour
Phillips’ Milk of M:
ly until you are rel
sick stomach or inclinati
Its anti-acid mr !
Hps' Milk of Magnes
in heartburn, sou
fld laxative action
bowel]
wash It he
during expe
moving
Ci
ers ta
free had
lost or badly in.
erimer
h eloth
nausea,
kness,” this
know
leading spec
smal quantity of finely
nurses
agnesin
ieved
ry
movement
ips prevent
tancy.
Distracting
green
and blan
as he
the eight
with a nir nel
match. Everybody
the green
made his putt—and m
it he
anyone putt with
ed ships moving up and
Weekly Scotsman
————
oving
on
je ft
the
inity of
he
stood like statues
gsed !
ns
stormed ; “how the deuce can
confound
down? —
ull these
i
WOMEN OFTEN PAY A DOUBLE
PENALTY for
wearing this gag
of unselfishness or
silly pride. Pro-
fuse or st sppressed
menstruation
should never be
Eontidernd JDeces-
sary. Pa
riods ure's
warn.ng that
someth ng is
wrong and needs
mmediate atten.
tion. Failure to
heed and correct the first painful ") Se
toms usally leads to chr. onic condit ions
with sometimes fearf: conseqt
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pres
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and mail it to Dr. Pierce's C linic,
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re you troubled with bg
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take chances!
neysat the first sign o
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A perfect story teller shouldn't
His funct is to en
ve work. Wn
tertain,
BEWARE OF
IMITATIONS
Bayer Aspirin tablets which
thousands of physicians have
always prescribed.
The name Bayer means
genuine Aspirin. It is your
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S———