The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 19, 1936, Image 7

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    Howehold ®
@ Questions
When cooking a bird in the oven
roast it in the usual way until it
is nicely browned, then turn ths
back upward and let it remain so
until done. This causes the gravy
to run into the breast, making it
soft and tender.
Place straws in lunch boxes
when cocoa or milk are included.
The children will delight in using
them during the lunch period.
* * -
When spreading crackers with
caeese, mix a little butter with
the cheese, creaming with a fork.
The mixture will spread more
easily on the crackers and have
a better flavor.
* ® *
Leftover boiled rice served with
cream, sugar and topped with
jelly usually appeals to the chil-
dren for lunch dessert. It's very
nourishing, too.
» » *
Sometimes when the gravy from
roasts is not quite as dark as
you want it to be, try adding a
little kitchen bouquet. Just
enough to color it.
* * *
Paper white narcissi planted in
a bowl containing
water will last from November to
March if bulbs are renewed as
those in bloom fade out.
© Bell Syndicate. —~WNU Service.
To Quickly |
Ease Pains of
Rheumatism |
rmsd
Bayer Tablets
Dissolve Almost
Instantly
Ask Your Doctor About
Genuine BAYER Aspirin
Any person who suffers from pains
of rheumatism should know this:
Two genuine BAYER ASPIRIN
tablets, taken with a full glass of
water, will usually ease even severe
rheumatic pains in a remarkably
short time.
Ask your doctor about this. He
will probably tell you there is noth-
ing better. For real Bayer Aspirin
tablets not only offer a potent
analgesic (pain reliever), but start
going to work almost instantly you
take them. Note illustration of
glass,
Try this simple way. You'll be
surprised at how Tuiohly pain eases.
Get real Bayer Aspirin by asking
for it by its full name, “Bayer
Aspirin” at any drug store. Now
virtually one cent a tablet.
LOOK FOR THE BAYER CROSS
Effective “Don’t”
unless you make it clear why.
Still Coughing?
No matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough, chest
cold or bronchial frritation, you can
ge relief now with Creomulsion.
ous trouble may be brewing and
you cannot afford to take a chance
with less than Creomul-
sion, which goes right to the seat
of the trouble to aid nature to
soothe and heal the inflamed
FALLING HAIR
DANDRUFF—BALD SPOTS?
They call for
regu use of
Glover's Man
Medicine, fol-
a shame
withGlover's
son
opie an
trestment
f
ne
46--36
MORNING DISTRESS
sduetoacid, upset stomach,
Milnesia wafers (the orig-
inal) quickly relieve acid
stomach and give neceasary
elimination, Each wafer
equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk
of magnesia. 20c, 35¢ & 60c,
By EDWARD
W. PICKARD
“W E LIKE your New Deal poli-
cies and have complete con-
fidence in your administration. Go
as far as you like.”
g That in effect was
the message sent to
Franklin Delano
Roosevelt by more
than twenty-five mil-
lion American men
and women when
they voted to con-
tinue him in the
Presidency for an-
other four years. It
was the most tre-
mendous victory
ever scored by a
Presidential candi-
date since the days of James Mon-
roe, for Mr. Roosevelt captured the
523 electoral votes of 46 states.
President
Roosevelt
and three electoral votes respective-
ly, were won by Landon and Knox,
the Republican candidates. Their
popular vote, when all returns are
in, and tabulated, may be fifteen
and a half million.
The amazing New Deal landslide
is looked upon by most unbiased
tion of the improvement in the coun-
try's business and industry. It was
well consider he has been
carte blanche to do as he
pleases in carrying his policies on
to their logical ends. What he may
please to do depends largely on
pending decisions by the Supreme
may
President Roosevelt, moreover,
will have at his command a con-
gress more heavily Democratic than
were the last two, for the lingering
hopes of the Republicans that they
able them, in conjunction with con-
servative Democrats, to put up ef-
v resistance to New Deal
sures, were not realized. The
‘ew Deal majority in the new sen-
ate will be about five to one, and
in the house it will be almost four
to one. The few Republicans will
but when it comes to a vote the
congress will be virtually a
party affair.
Governor Landon and Colonel
Knox, his running
their defeat gracefully and sent to
grams promising to support, as good
Americans, his efforts for the wel-
fare of the country. The President
responded with wires expressing his
“all us Americans
mon good."
The Republican party, despite its
é ¥
national organization is intact and
it, and such organizations as the
American Liberty league, the Sen-
tinels of America and the Volun-
teers, will continue their efforts to
keep the ship of state on an even keel
William Lemke, candidate of the
and his popular vote was not im-
but he was re-elected to
Republican ticket.
Incidentally, John N. Garner, who
was re-elected vice
president and will
preside over the sen-
ate again. He took
no real part in the
battle, just riding
Among the well-
known Republican
senators unseated
by the upheaval are
Daniel O. Hastings
of Delaware, Lester John N,
J. Dickinson of Garner
Jowa, Jesse H. Metcalf of Rhode
Island and Robert D. Carey of Wyo-
ming. The one gain by that party
was the Massachussetts seat won
by Henry Cabot Lodge II, grandson
of the noted senator. He succeeded
in defeating Gov. James M. Curley,
Democratic boss of the state. The
Michigan seat of the late James
Couzens was won by Representative
Prentiss M. Brown, who beat For-
mer Gov. W. M. Brucker. William
E. Borah’ of Idaho, Arthur Capper
of Kansas and Charles L. McNary
of Oregon, all listed as Republicans,
were re-elected; and so was George
Norris of Nebraska who ran this
year as an independent with the
approval of Mr. Roosevelt. Min-
nesota Democrats meekly accepted
the wrecking of their state ticket
by New Deal orders and helped
elect Ernest Lundeen, Farmer-La-
borite, to the senate. New Hamp-
shire, the only state in which the
Presidential vote was at all close,
sends a Republican to the senate
in the person of Gov. H. Styles
Bridges. Other governors who won
in senate contests were Theodore
Francis Green of Rhode Isiand, who
defeated Senator Metcalf; Clyde L.
Herring of lowa, victor over Senator
Dickinson, and Ed C. Johnson of
Colorado, who defeated Raymond L.
Sauter,
Among the many Republican
members of the house of repre-
sentatives who failed of re-election
were Isaac Bacharach of New
Jersey, Chester Bolton of Ohio and
Mrs. Florence P. Kahn of Califor-
nia. George H. Tinkham of Mas-
sachusetts and Bertrand H. Snell
of New York, minority leader, re-
tained their seats. The new house
will have five woman members, one
fewer than in the last session.
Oregon elected its first woman rep-
resentative, Nan Wood Honeyman,
Dernocrat and close friend of the
Roosevelt family.
T LEAST 25 states elected Dem-
ocratic governors, and the num-
ber may be 27. In only three were
the Republican nominees winners.
William Langer, independent, won
the governorship of North Dak-
ota, from which he was ousted some
time ago. Elmer Benson, Farmer-
Laborite, was victorious in Minne-
sota, and Philip F. LaFollette, Pro-
gressive, in Wisconsin. New York
re-elected Gov. Herbert Lehman,
but he ran far behind President
Roosevelt. Gov. Henry Horner of
Illinois, Democrat, also won, but his
vote, too, was far less than that for
the head of the ticket,
RESIDENT ROOSEVELT, leav-
ing Hyde Park for Washington
to “try to balance the budget.”
he said, authorized the
ment that on November 17 he would
start on a cruise on the warship In-
dianapolis for a rest of about four
weeks, and that it was possible he
might go to Buenos Aires, Argen-
tina, to open the Pan-American
peace conference on December 1
He may also visit Rio de Janeiro.
AMES A. FARLEY, manager of
the triumphant Roosevelt cam-
paign, resumed his office of
master general,
post-election meeting of the cabinet
He said he would serve out his term
but refused to comment on predic.
tions that he would not be in the
next cabinet. Mr.
short vacation in
Ireland.
The
man,
Democratic national chair-
commenting on the election,
attention to his exact fore-
Roosevelt would carry
every state except Maine and Ver-
mont, and added: ‘We would have
Germany, so he urged upon the
chamber of deputies
army committee the
immediate fortifica-
tion of the Belgian
and Swiss frontiers
and the speeding up
of manufacture of
war materials. He
asked the commit.
tee to recommend
an appropriation of
500,000,000 francs to
fortify the borders
with another ‘“Mag- Edouard
inot line” of steel Daladier
and concrete ‘pill boxes” and un-
derground passages.
Obligatory physical training for
all Frenchmen, beginning at the
age of eighteen, was proposed by
Daladier as an aid to building up
the French army.
The number of professional troops
in the army, he asserted, has been
increased in the last few months
from 106,000 to 144,000,
—
ING EDWARD VIII, making his
first parliamentary appearance
since he succeeded to the throne of
England, opened parliament with
all the traditional ceremony. His
throne stood alone in the house of
lords and beside it rested the crown
which has not yet been placed on
his head. Robed in crimson and
gold, the monarch read his address
to the nation, beginning with his
affirmation of the Protestant faith.
“My relations with foreign powers
continue to be friendly,” he said.
“The policy of the government con-
tinues to be based on membership
in the League of Nations.”
He took up in turn the points of
his government's proposed pro-
gram. It would, he promised, work
with other nations through the
league, for peace. It would “per-
sist in efforts” to build a new Lo-
carno treaty and to extend the
naval armaments limitations treaty
signed last March by Britain,
France, and the United States,
The government, he announced,
will call an’'imperial conference in
London next May, and that after
his coronation he would go to India
to be crowned emperor.
Mrs. Wallis Simpson, the king's
American friend, had 8 choice seat
in the diplomats’ gallery, being ac-
companied by two other women.
PA.
bombing of Madrid by airplanes,
and on the land were rapidly forc-
ing their way toward the capital.
Their vanguard, at this writing, was
within four miles of the city and
their artillery was preparing to drop
shells in its center. The left wing
of General Varela's army was on
a hill dominating the Cuatro Vien-
tos airport. It was apparent that
a decisive battle for possession of
Madrid would soon begin, and ob-
servers had little doubt of the suc-
cess of the insurgents. However,
the loyal militia were rushing to the
front to meet the attackers, and
the citizens, though greatly
alarmed, displayed exc#llent dis-
cipline,
The international committee for
nonintervention acquitted soviet
Russia of nearly all the German
charges that it had broken the com-
pact by providing the Spanish loyal
ists with munitions.
ANGS of young toughs in Lon-
don, taking advantage of the
political unrest marked by the rows
between Sir Oswald Mosley's Fas-
cists and the Socialists and Com-
munists, have been terrorizing the
parts of the metropolis inhabited
chiefly by Jews. Houses and shops
occupied by Jews have been stoned
and pillaged and Jews are insulted
and attacked on the streets.
The cost of insurance against
damage due to riots in the east
end is rising rapidly. Many traders
and shopkeepers who have not pre-
viously been insured against these
risks are hastening to obtain cover.
[OWN in Peru they have their
own methods of handling polit.
ical matters. In the recent elections
Dr. Luis Antonio Eguiguren, nom-
inee of the Social Democratic party,
had a plurality over the three other
presidential candidates. But his can-
didacy was not favored by the exist-
ing government, so the constituent
assembly, by a vote of 58 to 17,
declared the votes cast for Egui-
guren and the Social Democratic
candidates for vice president, sen-
ators and deputies were invalid.
HIRTY-SEVEN thousand mari-
time workers on the Pacific
coast went on strike, and im-
mediately the trouble spread to the
Gulf and Atlantic
1
coasts. In the west 3
about 150 vessels
were tied up in ports
and others heading
that way faced
+
crews on arrival. In
the International
Seamen's union
voted a “‘sit down"
strike in defiance of
their national
cers, and workers in
Houston and Port Arthur, Texas,
quit their jobs and picketed the
waterfront. Federal officials were
trying hard to settle the disputes
between the unions and shipping
companies, chief of which relate
to control of the hiring halls, wage
increases and shorter hours. As-
sistant Secretary of Labor E. F.
4 ae ida
Mayor Rossi
¥
ofl
. ou v4 44
manium
“When any group, whether bank-
tion they are assuming a position
that the government must challenge
to protect the state and the people,”
“The free flow of water-borne for-
eign and interstate commerce has
become paralyzed. This will involve
directly or indirectly the lives of the
citizens of the whole nation.”
San Francisco had the added dis-
tress of a strike of 1,000 warehouse-
and Mayor Angelo Rossi was mus-
tering his forces to meet both this
trouble and the maritime strike. He
expected violent warfare along the
waterfront and said he would take
the necessary steps to protect pub-
lic interests. The police set up head-
quarters in the Ferry building.
Admiral Harry G. Hamlet, as a
member of the federal maritime
commission, opened a fact-finding
hearing in San Francisco,
ECRETARY OF STATE HULL
named by President Roosevelt as
the United States delegates in the
forthcoming inter-American confer-
ence in Buenos Aires for the main-
tenance of peace. The conference is
to open on December 1, and the
American delegation is on its way
now to the Argentine capital. Mr.
Hull's colleagues are:
Sumner Welles, assistant secre-
tary of state in charge of Latin.
American affairs; Alexander W.
Weddell, ambassador to Argentina;
Adolf A. Berle Jr., chamberlain of
New York city; Alexander F. Whit-
ney, president of the Brotherhood of
Railroad Trainmen; Charles G. Fen-
wick, professor of political science,
Bryn Mawr college; Michael F.
Doyle, Philadelphia lawyer, and
Mrs. Elsie F. Musser, Salt Lake
city, member of the Utah sta
senate. .
APT. JAMES A. MOLLISON,
English aviator, established a
new speed record for trans-atlantic
flights when he landed at Croydon
airport, near London, 13 hours and
17 minutes after he had left Harbor
Grace, Newfoundland, in his Amer.
ican Bellanca monoplane Dorothy.
The previous fastest west to east
crossing was made in 1932 by Ame-
lia Earhart in 14 hours, 54 minutes
from Harbor Grace to Londonderry,
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and
Foreign Words
and Phrases
Amour propre. (F.)
self-esteem.
Billet doux (F.)
Dum spiro,
spero. (L.)
En bon train. (F.)
way, on the road to success.
Flagrante delicto. (L.)
the act.
Gosse. (F.) Street
“child,” “infant.”
“kid,” “kiddie,”
““gossoon.”’
Multum in parvo.
slang for
(L.)
Iterum. (L.) Again.
Non omnia possumus omnes.
(L.) We cannot all do all things.
Quelque chose. (F.) Something,
a trifle.
Hors de propos. (F.)
the purpose; irrelevant.
Reductio ad absurdum. (L.) Re-
duction to au absurdity; proof of
& proposition by showing the ab-
surdity of its contradictory.
THE CHEERFUL CHERUB
Tost every
tree 1s
nice to me
And n
comforts me
mn all my woes,
And seems just hike =
oe, rend ~~
s tree 1s
of those.
Rrriann
.
Not to
WNU Service,
18 require
} requires
of 39
40, 42, 44 and
two and lhree-f
mst nrianl 4
glerial
“WO
the
Pattern 1843, the fitted slip, of-
fers a choice of the strap or built.
up shoulder and makes a perfect
on garment for a smooth
ouette. Fashioned in silk or
‘a or pongee, the pattern em-
£1 3 ang OCS
Send for it
38, 40, 42
43 ree and
10
for your copy.
ler to The Sewing
Dept., 247 W.
d St., New York, N. Y.
terns, 15 cents (in coins) each.
Pattern
ste WN
When You Feel Sluggish
(Constipated)
Take a dose or two of
Draught. Feel fresh for a
day's work.
Work seems easier, life ple nter,
b—{ree from
the bad feell iuliness often
attending constipation.
For nearly a century, Black-
Draught has helped to bring prompt,
refreshing relief from constipation.
Black-
good
are reail
A GOOD LAXATIVE
Temperament and 3usiness
A man of temperament and his
business are soon parted.
DISCOVERED
Way to Relieve Coughs
QUICKLY
ITB BY relieving both the irritated tissues of the
throat and bronchial tubes, One set of in
dients in FOLEY'S HONEY & TAR quickly
relieves tickling, basking, coughing . . . costs
and soothes irntated throat lirangs to keep you
bicod, resches the afSected bropebial t
loosens phlegm, helps break eough
5. Chock a ough Jos to 4 a
Check it with FOLEY'S HC INEY & TAR.
It gives quick relief and spreded-ap recovery,
oF USED BY 47
LEADING
HOSPITALS
IN TREATING EXTERNALLY CAUSED