The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 05, 1936, Image 2

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    It's the Talk of
the Quilting Bee
Pattern 5591
apple pattern! And why wouldn't
it be? With nearly all the patch
cut your fabric into strips and
made, you start from the center
and sew round and round till the
block is done.
In pattern 5591 you will find
the Block Chart, an illustration
for cutting, sewing and finishing,
together with yardage chart,
diagram of quilt to help arrange
the blocks for single and double
bed size, and a diagram of block
which serves as a guide for plac-
ing the patches and suggests con-
trasting materials.
To obtain this pattern, send 15
cents in stamps or coins (coins
preferred) to The Sewing Circle
Household Arts Dept., 259 W.
Fourteenth St., New York, N. Y.
Write plainly pattern number,
your name and address.
Range of Temperature
Cities in the United States which
have a great range of temperature
are Boise, Idaho, which has re-
corded a difference of as much as
149 degrees between Summer and
Winter extremes; Bismarck, N.
Dak., 153 degrees; Pierre, S. Dak.,
152 degrees; Yakutsk in Siberia
has recorded temperatures as high
as 102 degrees and as low as—82
degrees, and Verkheyansk, 94 de-
grees and—90 degrees (in both
cases a range of 184 degrees).—
Washington Star.
Ren
To Alkalize
Acid Indigestion
Away Fast
People Everywhere Are Adopting
This Remarkable * Phillips’® Way
The wav to gain almost incredibly
quick relief, from stomach condition
arising from gveracidity, is to alka-
lize the stomach quickly with Phil-
lips’ Milk of Magnesia.
You take either two teaspoons of
the liquid Phillips’ after meals; or
two Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tab-
lets. Almost instantly “acid in Jifges-
tion” goes, gas from hyperacidity,
dulgence in food or smoking — and
nausea are relieved. You feel made
over; forget you have a stomach.
Try this Phillips’ way if you have
any acid stomach upsets. Get either
the liquid “Phillips’
able, new Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia
Tablets. Only 25¢ for a big box of
tablets at drug stores,
MILK OF
MAGNESIA
PHILLIPS’
Rather Late
lining till after it has passed.
IN NEW YORK
Small, quiet and select. One half
block from Fifth Avenue stores,
Single from $2. Double from $3.
HOTEL COLLINGWOOD
45 WEST 35TH ST, NEW YORK
Old Men Still Useful
Fists and Razor Blades
Science Works Two Ways
Even in this day of flaming youth,
mature age still has its usefulness.
The average age
Youngest Grandfather
|
i
|
six years ago
seat on the Su-
preme Court
bench. President
Taft rendered
public service by
appointing him to
succeed Justice
Brewer.
He left the
bench to run for
President against Woodrow Wilson,
and would doubtless have been
elected had he not got e to California
Had he been elected he would have
remained in the United States and
probably would have saved the coun-
try ten thousand million dollars that
Woodrow Wilson shoveled out in his
ecstasy of self-approval.
Arthur Brisbane
Rioting in London's ‘‘Mile End
Road,” in which the faces of men
and women were slashed with razor
blades and one man was thrown
through a shop window, etc., seems
rather “‘un-English,"” to put it mild-
ly. Fist fighting has been en-
couraged by distinguished English-
men, including judges, on the
ground that it is "better than using
knives." .
It is better, doubtless,
about the razor blades?
but what
Germany honors its youngest
grandfather, Herman Jahnke, farm
laborer, thirty-six years old. Mar-
ried at seventeen, his eldest
daughter became a mother at seven-
teen.
If all you want is children, that
record is satisfactory, although any
mouse family could beat it by 25,000
per cent, and almost any microbe by
a billion per cent.
If good children were desired, it
would have been better Mr.
Jahnke to have his first child at
38, and his first grandchild at 60
or 70; at least that was Plato's
opinion.
for
Justice uses science—the electric
chair, the lethal chamber-—to punish
criminals. The criminal uses science
to carry on his trade. An SOS signal,
purporting to come from a yacht
in distress, drew the coast guard
away from the coast of Hawaii,
making it convenient for smugglers
of narcotics to bring in their cargo.
Tear gas, comparatively modern,
was used to empty a New York
theater where there was labor
trouble.
Japan, until recently convinced,
mistakenly, that this country is her
enemy, and for excellent reasons
keeping close watch on Russia and
her anti-Japanese Vladivostok air-
plane and submarine base, now
turns suspicious attention on dear
old John Bull
Britain is supposed to have asked
nine nations to protest against Ja-
pan’'s demands on China. That
should not worry Japan too much.
The same old John Bull got fifty-
one nations to protest Mussolini's
attack on Ethiopia; but, paying no
attention, the able Italian went
ahead swallowing Ethiopia; sending
the little Haile Selassie ‘0 live in
Switzerland.
In his villa at San Remo, the
Duke of Borea D'Olmo celebrates
his one hundred and sixth birthday
in excellent health. He has been ac-
tive in Italian court circles since
1841, before the beginning of the
United States -Mexican war.
Mussolini tells 200 farmers and
industrialists to prepare for a ‘‘de-
cisive corflict” that will be neces-
sary '‘to preserve order against an-
archy.”
Those that favor the ‘‘present
civilization,” he said, will have to
preserve it. “We are at the dawn
i of a decisive conflict between the
representatives of order and an-
archy.”
Dr. Irving Langmuir, brilliant
| “counterpartoflife,” produced chem-
| ically; interesting, probably not itn-
| portant, Until some professor can
| produce “some counterpart of life”
{ able to think, manufacture
| escopes, explore the universe and
| run for office, man’s domination
| will not be threatened. A cigar store
Indian is a “counterpart,” but not
| an Indian.
European nations are preparing
| to recognize the Spanish
| when they take Madrid and set up
| a national government.
| The idea is to take prompt action
| and forestall the victorious insur-
| gents’ giving Spanish territory to
Italy or Germany; the Balearic is-
| lands to Italy for instance, to use as
| naval and air bases, with Ceuta for
Germany. This would upset the bal-
ance of power in the western Medit-
eranean and disturb oid England,
with Egypt and the Suez Canal on
her mind. -
Ki tures Syndicate |
Ring WNU Service, ng
By EDWARD
W. PICKARD
“TT IS a new gold standard, a
way of doing business which
has never been tried before,” was
Secretary Morgenthau's character-
|r ization of the agree-
ment just entered
into by the United
States, Great Brit.
ain and France,
whereby, subject to
24 - hours’ cancel-
lation, they will ex-
change gold for each
other's currencies.
Financiers, econo-
mists and business
men were taken by
retary surprise by the
orgenthau move and immedi-
ately gave it close study. Some were
disposed to label the maneuver ‘'po-
litical expediency,’ but experts gen-
erally said it was a logical step in
the sequence of monetary events but
not positively in the direction of
stabilization,
The new plan, Mr. Morgenthau
said, differs from the old gold stand-
ard in that it will permit the export
or earmarking of gold only to and
between governments instead of
private business institutions and
traders.
“The door is wide open,” said
Mr. Morgenthau. “We're not going
out drumming up business, but we'll
welcome all other countries which
want to participate."
According to the Treasury depart-
ment, the United States alone will
announce a selling rrice for gold.
selling prices secret, though there
nations.
the world was there left a fixed yard-
stick against which to measure in-
international exchange."
« OVIET RUSSIA made a second
\J determined effort to aid the be-
leagured government of Spain,
Maisky, Russian ambassador to
England, handed to Lord Plymouth,
British chairman of the non-inter-
vention commitiee,
sider blockading the coast of Por-
tugal against arms shipments des-
was understood in London that Lord
Plymouth replied that if the propo-
be presented through
cerned. The Russian plan was for a
blockade by English or French war-
ships.
Observers in Europe are con-
vinced that the Soviet government
does not expect the powers {0 agree
to any such blockade as is sug-
gested, but is chiefly interested in
stirring up discord among the na-
tions,
British Foreign Minister Anthony
Eden, after hearing of Lord Ply-
mouth's reply, made a speech at
Sheffield in which he pledged Great
Britain's unwavering support to the
policy of nonintervention in Spain.
He declared the government was
determined to “confine that tragedy
within the boundaries of that coun-
fry.”
Leaders of the Fascists were re-
ported to have planned a steady,
steam - roller advance on Madrid,
were hastily building fortifications
in the suburbs and surrounding the
city with trenches. In Oviedo the
dynamite - armed force of loyalist
miners was still battling with the
garrison and rebel troops sent to
city.
N
AURICE THOREZ, French
Communist leader, made a
tered formal protest. The official
many, and also that it was an at-
tempt “to overthrow the German
bolshevization of France for the
benefit of the Soviet Communist in-
ternationale.”
The French rightist newspapers
declare the Thorez incident was part
of the Russian Communist scheme
to throw France against Germany so
that Russia will not be left alone to
face ‘any eventual German attack.”
The rightists were even more vig-
orous in their accusations when it
was learned that Maxim Litvinov,
Soviet foreign commissar, was sec-
retly in Paris.
Ff IGURES made public by the
American Navy Department show
that since July 1 last every great
naval power except the United
States has increased the number and
tonnage of its war vessels.
In the 2% months from July 1 to
September 15, the United States re-
duced the number of its ships from
324 vessels totaling 1,080,715 tons to
306 vessels, totaling 1,062,875 tons.
Great Britain increased ships
from 37 to 309 and tonnage from
1,224,329, to 1,232,854,
Japan increased ships from 213
to 217 and tonnage from 772,797 to
776,397.
France increased ships from 178
to 187 and tonnage from 558,452 to
571,734.
Italy increased ships from 181 to
195 and tonnage from 403,865 to 406 -
333.
Germany increased ships from
forty-nine to fifty-three and tonnage
from 113,708 to 125,458.
The British foreign office an-
nounced that France and Italy had
agreed to sign that protocol of the
London naval treaty forbidding the
use of submarines except under
strict limitations.
ELGIUM, which since the close
of the World war has been tied
tight to France by a military al-
liance, has decided to drop that and
all similar alliances
and to rely for her
safety on strict neu-
trality and a larger
army. King Leopold
s0 informed the cab-
inet, telling the min-
isters that Ger-
many's reoccupation
of the Rhineland
“practically puts us
back where we were
before the great
war.” Belgium's
geographical position, he said
“makes it imperative for
maintain a military machine of st
gize as dissuade any
rom using
another state." The
tary service was extended
twelve to eighteen months.
“Belgium must pursue a policy
exclusively and wholly Belgian,”
Leopold said. “In any case our en-
gagements should not go beyond
keeping off war from our own ter-
Belgium
side of its neighbors’ conflicts
“Any policy of alliance with a
single country would weaken our
position abroad. A purely defensive
alliance would not meet the case
because, however prompt the in-
tervention of our ally, it would only
come after the invader’'s blow,
which would be crushing.”
UTHORITY of the national
maritime commission to de-
clare a permanent truce in current
King Leopold
to
our territory
from
by the negotiating committee for
the Pacific coast maritime unions,
and members of those unions are
instructed to vote on a proposal for
a coast-wide waterfront strike.
The maritime commission had
peremptorily demanded that the
Pacific coast ports be kept open
while it sent an investigator to San
Francisco to discuss the conditions
which have long threatened to bring
on industrial warfare.
In telegrams to President Frank-
lin Roosevelt and the commission,
the committee said the commission
had caused *'great unrest” among
the workers through its participa-
tion in negotiations between ship-
owners and dock and shipboard em-
ployees.
The seven unions, claiming a
membership of nearly 37,000 work-
ers, are the International Long-
shoremen’s association, the Ameri-
can Radio Telegraphists’ associa-
tion, the Marine Engineers’ Benefi-
cial association, the Masters, Mates
and Pilots of America, the Sailors’
Union of the Pacific, Marine Cooks
and Stewards, and the Marine Fire-
men. Oilers, Watertenders and Wip-
ers’ association.
ENATOR WILLIAM E. BORAH
of Idaho, whose attitude in the
Presidential campaign is a matter
of great interest to all parties, has
declared he would
confine his attention
to state matters; but
then, being irked by
some criticism from
Republicans he went
further and said he
was ‘going after the
Republican party.”
The veteran said he
had been accused of
not being regular. FS .
“Well, what is a
regular?” he asked. Senator Borah
“A regular is a man with no ideas,
who waits for someone to tell him
what to do. My idea of being regular
is in doing what you believe to be
right in the interests of the people
you represent,
“Let this be understood—I'm tell-
parties, Republican, Demo-
cratic, Union—I'm going to advo-
cate the things I believe in whether
marked the final session of the
League of Nations assembly, the
leaders admitting that little had
been accomplished. Carlos Saave-
dra Lamas of Argentina, president
of the assembly, even asked if he
might not raise the question wheth-
er “civilization is on the verge of a
final breakup.”
The question of reforming
states should be consulted. Russia
was understood to be anxious par-
and achieved a minor triumph since
ber co-operation was taken. A com-
to study reform proposals.
The assembly approved reports of
its economic and disarmament come
mittees. The economic report
carried a British proposal to create
a commission to study accessibility
of raw materials. The United States
and other nonmembers would be in-
vited to participate. The report of
the disarmament committee ap-
proved the reconvening of the world
disarmament conference at an early
date.
URT SCHUSCHNIGG, chancel-
lor of Austria, is taking his place
among the European dictators. In
order to consolidate military power
in his own hands, he
decreed the dissolu-
tion of all private
armies, this being
aimed especially at
the Fascist Heim-
wehr headed by
Prince Erast von
Starhemberg. The
prince directed his
followers 10 obey
the edict, and Major
Fey, Starhemberg's
Prince yon rhvek for control es
Starhemberg. ;;,. Heimweh r,
called on the elements recogniz-
ing his leadership to preserve or-
der.
The chancellor's order also affect-
ed his own Catholic storm troops.
All the private troops were ordered
consolidated with the Austrian state
militia. This would increase Aus-
tria’s official armed forces to about
158.000 men. The dissolution decree
met strong opporition within the
cabinet, and was voted after three
ministers had walked out.
Schuschnigg's task now is to ac-
————
A
plete control over Austria may be
conceded. It is recalled that the
was ordered to disarm
in 1831, that the government seized
weapons, and that a year
later some 40,000 Heimwehr men
appeared fully armed and uni-
formed. Von Starhemberg may not
be really squelched this time, either.
It is a certainty that he has a power-
ful friend in Premier Mussolini of
Italy.
RABS of Palestine, who had
been on “‘strike’” for 175 days
in protest against unrestricted im-
by the British to call off the strike,
which had been accompanied by
great disorders and the killing of
several hundred persons. The Arab
high committee issued an appeal to
Arabs throughout the country to re-
turn to work quietly, and this com-
mand was obeyed generally. Sir
Arthur Wauchope, British high com-
missioner, was said to have in-
formed the British government that
it was now safe for the royal com-
mission of investigation to begin its
work of inquiring into the grievances
of the Arabs
According to a Hebrew newspaper
of Jerusalem, the Arabs have ar-
ranged for backing by Italian Fas-
cists for their aspirations. Also, the
Moslem authority administering Is-
lamic church property is reported to
be prepared to sell Catholics a
Christian holy place on Mount Zion,
B ASING its conclusions on a study
covering the period from 1800
to 1835, the National Industrial Con-
ference board finds that there is no
evidence to support the theory that
the burden of private debt upon
business is excessive. Statements
that private debt is “absorbing
wealth” or is showing a changed
and unfavorable relationship to
wealth, or that the depression was
precipitated by an excessive debt
burden are without factual basis, the
board reported.
the capacity to pay them, according
that the rates of growth of private
national income.
has tended to decline. Only the pub-
lic utilities have increased the
whole, are neither overcapitalized
nor overburdened with debt, the
board concludes.
ORE of the worst typhoons in the
history of the Philippines swept
across Luzon island, killing scores
of persons and destroying villages.
At least 310 perished and the au-
thorities feared the death list would
be much la for four hundred
were missing. Eighty-two
bodies were recovered from the city
of Cabanatuan alone.
LOWELL
HENDERSON
© Bell Syndicate «WNU Bervies
The Similarities Test
Write
1. Trenton, New Jersey; Bis-
3. 4. P, Morgan, banking;
4 FF. DB. John N.
Washington, ——
5. Lou Gehrig, basebsll; Frank
Roosevelt,
86 Cotton gin, Eli Whitney;
7. Robert Browning, poet;
8. Automobile, garage; sir-
2
Answers
North Dakota.
Louisiana.
Horticulture.
Thomas A. Edison.
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