The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 05, 1936, Image 7

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    THE CENTRE
Irene Dunne
Movie Star
Marble Cake
14 cupful butter.
1 cupful sugar.
1% cupfuls cake flour,
15 teaspoonful salt.
1% teaspoonfuls baking powder,
15 cupful milk.
1 tablespoonful maple sirup.
1 tablespoonful melted choo-
olate.
14 teaspoonful cinnamon,
14 teaspoonful nutmeg.
1 teaspoonful allspice.
Place butter
where it will soften slightly, but
must not melt. Cream sugar in
butter gradually. Add the yolks
of the eggs, which have been
beaten. Sift flour and salt to-
gether several times and add
alternately with the milk. Sift
baking powder in a little of the
flour, which is added last. Fold
in egg whites, which have been
beaten stiff.
Place one-third of the mixture
in a separate bowl” and add
spices, sirup and melted choco-
late to it. Drop a spoonful of
each mixture allernately into
cake pan. Bake in moderate
oven.
This cake in excellent to serve
if the meal seems a little rich.
It is not heavy and is delicious
without icing.
Copyright. ——WNU Service.
DISCOVERED
Way to Relieve Coughs
QUICKLY
TT"S BY relieving both the irritated tissues of the
throat end bromchial tubes. One set of ingre=
dients in FOLEY'S HONEY & TAR quickly
relieves tickling, hacking, coughing . . . coats
and soothes irritated throat linings to keep you
from eoughing. Another set actually enters the
blood, reaches the affected bronchial tubes
loosens phlegm, break " cough ar
speeds recovery, Ra cough due to a cold
before it gets wore, before others eateh ik
Check it with FOLEY'S HONEY & TAR.
It gives quick relief and speeded-up recovery
Necessity of Modesty
No age, sex, or condition is
above or below the absolute neces-
sity of modesty; but without it one
is vastly beneath the rank of man,
—Barton,
SORE MUSC
MADE HER
ACHE
ALL OVER
Feels like a NX
Why suffer with muscular pains of rheumatism,
peuralgia, lumbago, or chest cold? Thousands
{
i
aching legs, arma, chest, neck, back. Just rub it
on—rub it in. Makes the skin glow with warmth
muscles feel soothed —reliel comes quick,
Pleasant odor. Will not stain clothes. At all
druggists.
HAMLINS
WIZARD OIL
For MUSCULAR ACHES and PAINS
Due to RHEUMATISM - NEURALGIA
LUMBAGO - CHEST COLDS
Take Heed of Time
Let him that regrets the loss of
time make proper use of that
which is to come.—O’Connell.
FOR QUICK RELIEF FROM
ACID INDIGESTION, HEARTBURN. GAS
sour stomach or aC at But millions have
learned the smart thing to do 18 < is carry
Tums! These tasty mints give
relief so quickly 1 Con
harsh Sl Cannot oer-alkaize futstacid
contpouln] to to correct stomach acidity
remainder passes unreleased from
no
And re
gu Pocicel
25¢ in the NOGTY PACK.
ERE'S RELIEF
Wherever it is—however broken the
~ Resinol
4
Adventurers’
“Terror of Brooklyn Bridge™
By FLOYD GIBBONS
Famous Headline Hunter
Y OU'VE heard stories of panics in halls and theaters—of panics
on sinking ships and in crowded circus tents, but it's a good idea
to remember that not all panics happen in enclosed spaces. Here's
one that happened out in the open. An eye-witness account of the
historic panic of Brooklyn bridge, told by a newspaper man of the
day—Timothy T. O'Connell, of Elmhurst, L. I
Maybe some of you remember that panic. Maybe some of you
were caught in it. It was on Decoration Day, 1883, that Brooklyn
bridge was thrown open to the public. Tim O'Connell was just a cub
reporter then, and he felt pretty proud when his paper sent him to
cover the ceremony.
“But 1 might not have been so proud,’ he says, or so keen on
going, if I'd known what was going to happen.”
It Was a Happy, Chattering Throng.
Things went smoothly enough for a time, Tim says. The crowd
was the usual mob of sightseers, drawn from all walks of life. There
were doctors and laborers, butchers and bakers, parents with their
children, clerks with their sweethearts, and old folks who gazed in
awe at the huge trellises and networks of great twisted-wire cables.
They thronged the big new bridge, chattering and laughing. “It was
an orderly, leisurely crowd,” Tim says, ‘until suddenly some idiot
yelled: ‘THE BRIDGE IS FALLING DOWN."
Such words, in a place like that, are nothing short of verbal
murder. The cry was taken up by others. There were shouts of fire
and an ominous buzzing of rumors through the crowd. Faces turned
white. There was a moment when a stupor seemed to settle over
the walks jammed with pedestrians, THEN, SUDDENLY, CAME PAN-
DEMONIUM-—-—-CHAOS!
“Men in panic” says Tim, “are disposed to believe anything
they hear. The alarms struck terror into thousands of hearts.
There followed a scene scarcely to be conceived—or believed
by anyone who did not witness it. Wild tumult! Howling and
shouting! The shrieks of women, some of them with small chil-
dren in their arms, who were being jostled, knocked down and
trampled by others in their wild haste to reach the end of the
bridge.
Turned Into a Brutal, Selfish Mob.
“In the mad rush to save themselves, people stripped themselves
of all their burdens. Handbags, canes, umbrellas, were thrown aside.
They got under foot making it all the more difficult for those in the
Panie Stricken Throng on the Bridge
rear to advance. The crowd surged, and fought, and trampled. A
father seized his baby and lifted it from its carriage just in the nick
of time. Ten seconds later the carriage was demolished."
No pen could describe all the horror and brutality of that scene,
and Tim O'Connell doesn’t claim that his old typewriter can either.
But like a good reporter he caught the spirit of terror as it stalked
across that bridge and sent it to me in whole pages of fine, moving
description. The panic had started near the Manhattan end of the
bridge. There, a deadlock of tightly packed humanity was jamming
the exit. Before two minutes had passed, the dread, maniacal fear
had spread to the center of the span and more thousands of people
rushed toward the Manhattan side, doubling the congestion and adding
to the havoc.
The crowd now as one pulsing, terror-stricken sea of heads
milling, fighting, screaming. Stalwart men trampled over
prosirate bodies. ONE GIANT OF A MAN, GONE COM-
PLETELY BERSERK, PLUNGED THROUGH THE STRUG-
GLING MASS, KENOCKING OVER WOMEN AND CHILDREN.
As far as Tim could see there was nothing but bediam, and
shrieking and scuffling of feet. To save himself from being
ground under them, Tim started to climb a trellis of wire cable.
Gthers followed his lead and Tim was forced to climb higher
to enable them to get a footheld. Clinging there with bruised
hands he looked down on the scene, and then, like a good
reporter HE STARTED TO TAKE NOTES.
Tough Job for an Ambitious Reporter.
His notebook had fallen from his rocket, so he tore off his cuff
—a stiff, three-inch one of the kind worn at that period. He couldn't
balance it against the swaying cable—couldn’t hold it and write with
He
tore out the stiff bosom of his shirt and tried that. That too slipped
i
enveloped him in its suffocating folds. He was getting dizzy, and
fixed his eye on the horizon to steady himself. His head was spinning,
the matter--that they were victims of a false alarm.
Tim and his companions on the trellis were assisted down
to the roadway, their hands torn and bleeding. On the way down
Tim rescued a kitten that was mewing pitifully—carried it with
him into the improvised ambulance. The ambulance took them
to a nearby saloon where they were given an alcoholic restora-
tive and the kitten got a dish of milk.
“Some months later,”
in her closed, drowsy eyes. That's gratitude for you. But for me it
would have been floating in a watery grave.”
© WNU Bervice,
Distriet of Columbia Courts
The supreme court of District of
court, and local jurisdiction the same
as state courts. The United States
court of appeals for the District
of Columbia is the highest local
court. The paralielism between
the supreme court of the District
and the court of appeals of the
District, on the one hand, and the
district courts of the United States
and the circuit court of appeals,
on the other, in the consideration
and disposition of cases involving
what among the states wold he
regarded as within federal jurisdic-
tion, is complete.
Cowbird Hitchhiker.
The cowbord ranks as a prime
grafter of the feathered kingdom,
lazy and tricky and possibly one
of the first of the hitch-hikers. The
bird is usually observed following
along in the wake of cows, picking
up insects which are disturbed by
the cow while grazing. With its
food thus easily acquired, the cow-
bird apparently turns ils attention
to other forms of labor-saving.
When it desires to go places with
no effort it hops to the back of a
FARRAR RRA RRARANK
STAR
DUST
Movie + Radio
*%k By VIRGINIA VALE kk¥*
AVE you heard Hildegarde
on the radio? You must,
not merely because she is delight-
| ful in a way all her own, but be-
2 2 20 2 2 2 20 0 00 2 2 2
3 2 20 20 2 2 2 2 00 2 2 0
Not s0 many years ago she was
ture theater. She went abroad. First
ward VIII when he was Prince of
Wales, the King of Sweden, ex-
King Alfonso of Spain, the Duke and
Duchess of Kent—they all helped
make her one of the toasts of Eu-
rope.
Now she has come back home,
and broadcasts on Tuesday eve-
nings from ten to ten-thirty, and
on Saturdays from eight to eight-
thirty over N. B. C.
tc
Marlene Dietrich couldn't wait to
get off to Europe—and now she
can't wait to get
home! She is mak-
ing a picture in Eng-
land, you know, and
there have been de-
lays (it's reported
that Robert Donat
walked out on it, for
reasons not an-
nounced at the
time) and she
doesn't know when
she'll return. She is
so sold on Holly-
wood that she tele-
phoned her studio
dress designer to ask his advice on
the gowns she will wear in the Eng-
lish picture—perhaps she was afraid
that the designers over there
Marlene
Dietrich
ers!
- * -—
Well, another grand picture has
come along, one of the best in years.
It is “My Man Godfrey,” with—
Carole Lombard, William Powell,
Alice Brady, Gall Patrick, Jean
Dixon, Eugene Pallette and Alan
Mowbray. It is almost too funny—
you find yourself laughing so hard
at one bit of funny dialogue that
you miss the next one.
fe
Take }
has become so tremendously popu-
lar in so short a time, her name
should be pronounced "Semone
Semon" —but it takes a French stu.
dent to get that last syllal
actly right. She is having
time in Hollywood; goes out prac-
tically every night, looking even
younger and cuter than she does on
the screen, and gets just about
everything she wants at the studio
by day.
it from Simone Simon,
le ex-
a grand
wen
It Is good news for Nelson Eddy’s
many admirers that his new fall
series of broadcasts is under way.
He began them September 27 from
Hollywood, on a nation-wide Colum-
bia network of eighty-two stations,
and will continue to broadeast from
there until his concert engagements
take him East in January.
lf cin
You can't help liking Errol Flynn.
He refuses to let making pictures
dominate his life,
perhaps because he
did so many things
before he became
an actor. He learned
to play tennis com
paratively recently,
entered the Pacific
Southwest Tourna-
ment — and had to
play Frank Shields
but he gave a good
account of himself,
Errol Flynn though he was up
against a champion. When he lived
in New Guinea he collected rare
snakes for Dr. Raymond Ditmars.
insects for
British museums, and his wife, Lily
Damita, goes along, though she
where he does his collecting.
ifn
you've
No doubt heard Ed.
with the aid of a cast of
a
ODDS AND ENDS .
set feaching Harold Lloyd s children
twimy had giving lessons to
Shirley emple . . . The March of Time
is of 1 the air for only a short while, just
to give the people who do it a chance to
rest after sixty successive weeks of broad.
casting . . . Eleanor Powell ordered pt
teen pairs of slacks at once: the H
wood habit of wearing them got her, i
now all she needs is a mink coat to wear
with them . . . Helen Haves, who is
instead of a wedding ring . . . When Bing
Crosby gets back into the e harness and be
gins making pictures and broadcasting
ST Bt a
ar it's near San
; Na) s
Here's a frock that
seat, first row in any
classroom, |
and likewise makes a
fashion hit
in any office or social gathering.
Outstanding because of its neat
and trim appearance, and as
easy to make as to say your A,
B, C's.
The skirt is simply constructed
with a front and back panel fitted
snugly at the hips and held by a
self fabric belt at the waist. Five
buttons, one after another, trim
the front bodice and make way
for a Puritan collar of contrast
ing color, or a twin set as shown
in the small sketch. Wide har.
monizing cuffs uplift the full el-
bow length bishop sleeve and cre-
ate a ‘ready to work’ appear-
ance. Try cotton, shantung, silk,
broadcloth, or crepe for exciting
effects.
Barbara
1945-B is
Bell
available
Pattern No.
for sizes 12,
14, 16, 18 and 20. Corresponding
bust measures 30, 32, 34, 38 and
38. Size 14 (32) requires 4 yards
of 39-inch material plus contrast
ing two-thirds yard. Price of pat
tern, 15 cents.
Send, for the Fall Pattern Book
containing Barbara Bell well
planned, easy-to-make patterns,
ildren,
young women, and matrons. Send
15 cepts for your copy.
Send your order to The Sewi
Circle Pattern Dept.,
Forty-third St., New York, N.
© Bell Syndicate. — WNL Ses
Education’ $ Cost
Based upon reports received
from 312 city school systems in
the Office of
t $06.18 is
one public
year,
the of
school
average cost
pupil's education per
NOL LLL
ACLU
Mothers Urged to Foll
1 Doctors” Example
discovers
TYE, everyone, young
aon, pOOr a
$50 order
is Quaker Osts an ammiog sbun-
old, combat pervousness, Constipa-
FRaLiER)
a HAY
QUAK
HIE.
‘blue coal’ DEALERS
SPONSOR CONTEST
Scores of Other Valuable
Prizes Including Cash
Awards — Mail Coupon for
Jull Information
mink of it—here’s a chance to en
. joy four glorious years at college—
to win a full college education—abso-
lutely free. This and many other valo-
able prizes—such as radios, cameras,
bicycles, bracelets and wrist watches—
will be given away in the big $5000.00
Contest for school children, sponsored
by ‘blue coal —America’s finest home
fuel. There's nothing to buy—ne box
tops to send in.
For full information about this excit-
ing contest, simply 6ll in and mail the
coupon below. Be sure to give the
name of the teacher you select as your
faculty adviser. Don’t wait—don"t miss
out on this big chance. Send in
the coupon today to ‘blue coal’,
120 Broudway, New York, N. Y.
*Hloe coal”, 120 Broadway, Now York N.Y.
POO ———— ——
CA I en in oe en en 4