The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 28, 1937, Image 8

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    The Oppressor
IF WE should look under the skirt
of the prosperous and prevail-
ing tyrant, we should find, even in
the days of his joys, such alloys
and abatements of his pleasure,
as may serve to represent him
miserable, even in the hour of his
prosperity, and independent of his
final infelicities; and although all
tyrants may not have such accus-
ing and fantastic consciences, yet
all tyrants shall die and come to
judgment; and though such a man
may be feared, he is not at all to be
envied.
“Envy thou not the oppressor,
and choose none of his ways." —
C. Buck.
READY TO BRING
YOU RELIEF
IN MINUTES
Tue Reason
BAYER ASPIRIN WORKS SO FAST
Drop a Bayer Aspirin tablet into a tum-
bler of water.
By the time It hits the bottom of the
glass it is disintegrating.
This speed of disintegration enables
genuine BAYER Aspirin tablets to start
“taking hold” of headache and simi-
lar pain a few minutes after taking.
OU can pay as high as you
want for remedies claimed to
relieve the pain of Headache,
Rheumatism, Neuritis, Sciatica,
etc. But the medicine so many
doctors generally approve — the
one used by thousands of families
daily — is For Aspirin — 15¢ a
dozen tablets — about 1¢ apiece.
Simply take 2 Bayer Aspirin
tablets with a half glass of water,
Repeat, if necessary, according to
directions.
Usually this will ease such pain
in a remarkably short time.
For quick relief from such pain
which exhausts you and keeps
you awake at night — ask for
genuine Bayer Aspirin.
virtually 1 cent a tablet
Others’ Excellences
We should allow others’
cellences, to preserve a modest
opinion of our own.
ET SATIN,
LUDEN’S
MENTHOL COUGH DROPS s
HELP BALANCE YOUR #
ALKALINE RESERVE
WHEN YOU HAVE A COLD!
Making Opportunities
Weak men wait for opportuni-
ties, strong men make them.
HOW OFTEN
CAN YOU KISS AND
MAKE UP?
pd husbands can understand
why a wife should ture from a
pleasant companion into a shrow
for one whole week in every month,
You can say “I'm sorry” and
kiss and make up easier before
marriage than after. If you're wise
and if you want to hold your hus.
band, you won't be a three-quarter
wife,
For threegenerationsone woman
has told another how to go “smil-
ing through” with Lydia E. Pink-
ham’'s Vegetable Compound. Is
helps Nature tone up the system,
thus the discomforts from
the functional disorders which
'E PINKHAMS
VEGETABLE COMPOUND and
Go “Smiling Through,”
MAGIC CARPET
‘re thinking of
By WILLIAM C. UTLEY
LL Europe has glued its at-
tention to the Far East—to
Shanghai, Tientsin, Nanking
and the other great Chinese me-
tropolises now forming targets
for deadly Japanese bombs.
Europeans are watching the
ruthless attacks upon civilian
populations, and the wanton de-
struction of homes and public
buildings occupied by noncom-
batants in something of the
manner of the football scout
watching this week's game to
perfect the defenses of his own
team for the big game that
looms in the future.
The World war gave Europe, and
particularly England, a glimpse of
what might be expected in a few
years, after aerial bombing had per-
fected the efficiency lacking in its
infancy. Air bombers extend the
theater of war into the civilian pop-
ulations of the great cities, reduce
to a mockery the territorial bound-
aries on a continent peopled by
many small nations and threaten,
when coupled with other agencies of
modern warfare, to wipe out Euro-
pean civilization,
There are few qualified authori-
ties who believe that bombing ex-
peditions on large cities could
bring an entire nation to surrender
by shattering its morale and upset-
ting the structure of government.
The cities of Shanghai and Madrid
still stand, if their heads be bloody,
after months of ruthless, coldly-
planned attacks from the air. But
there is always the possibility that
the next time may be different, and
for this reason the race among Eu-
build air forces
and defenses against air forces of
their enemies has been heightened
of recent days to a fever pitch.
There are perhaps 20,000 military
airplanes owned by the nations of
Europe today, and more thousands
are being turned out every month.
The same nations are pressing
plans of defense to completion
among both military and civilian
branches of the population with a
speed born of genuine fear.
Britons Excel Technically.
England, not soon destined to for-
get the terrifying Zeppelin and Gotha
raids which drove London into a
foremost in building her air defenses
and realizes that the best defense
™ football
line strength
fleet and abroad) numbers
2,000 planes, and her
called the best in Europe, raise the
total to 3,000.
circles. Her first.
(at home,
about
ties in production, but is now build-
pg
FAI Leconte Srp
nie LP ;
its gas-bag.
gas masks, now being manufac-
tured at the rate of 300,000 to 400,000
a week.
Booklets issued by the govern-
ment teach citizens to organize
neighborhoods for practice in the
issuance of gas masks and other-
wise reduce the holocaust of whole-
sale air raids. Fire-fighting squads
are being readied to minimize de-
struction by incendiary bombs; oth-
er groups are being organized to
repair damaged public utilities and
clean areas left contaminated after
gas attacks.
Civilians are also being instruct.
room of each house gasproof. Archi-
tects are also being advised to in-
clude gasproof shelters in all new
buildings. The subways were looked
to for shelter in the World war, but
officials today warn that they are
more likely to be traps than shel
ters, being not far enough under-
ground.
Russia Supreme Numerically,
terrible that the plans will not
up, the only alternative is to get
| the population out of London. Rail
roads are now offering plans for rap-
id mass evacuation,
the
first
air force in
about 3,000
| powerful
She owns
er planes, mostly training ships
| cluding 7,000 or 8,000 pilots is well-
organized and effective, but not well
| equipped.
Russia is said to have no
than 400 or 500 first class planes,
planes; the others are obsolescent,
”
cating that perhaps these difficulties
have been straightened out.
nically, her air force is head and
shoulders above the rest of the con-
tinent.
of
any those
nearly 300.
Measures taken to defend
land from air raids exemplify al-
most every precaution known upon
most vulnerable point.
servers to warn in case of air raids
extends out into France and Belgium
and is backed up by naval patrols
London an hour's warning to mobi-
lize her defenses if a raid is com-
of the Thames there
prepare.
based along the coast for purposes
of reconnoissance. These are sup-
plemented by a Volunteer Observ-
ilians equipped with airplane de-
tecting instruments. All file reports
with a central office to chart the
course of invaders.
Nets Hang From Balloons.
The first stationary line of de-
fense is the outer artillery ring of
guns and searchlights. Inside this
is a fighting zone in which squad-
rons leave their airdromes within 90
seconds of receiving an alarm;
searchlights and a few fighting
planes which constantly patrol the
city point their way to the enemy.
Most sensational of all London's
defensive measures is its next line,
the mobile balloon barrage. Steel
cables are hung in the air like a
net from a series of blimps,
both a psychological and a physical
obstacle to the invading airman.
The last line of active defense is a
An English army airman in para-
| chute maneuvers above Henlow.
despite their recent successes in
Spain. However, Russia has the
benefit of capable foreign designers,
engineers, foremen, metallurgists
and mechanics, and has shown
marked imitative ability. _ She is
willing to spend money and her la-
{ bor is cheap. She builds foreign
airplane engines under license. And
of recent months her airplane pro-
duction has speeded to the point
where it is the greatest in Europe.
Despite the fact that 9,000 civilian
pilots were trained last year, that
gliding and parachute jumping are
now popular sports, and that Rus-
sians are the most air-minded people
on earth, the program is just get-
ting under way. The Reds expect
to have 150,000 pilots, a produc-
tion of 20,000 planes a year and a
fleet of giant ships. Russia's chief
weakness is that she depends too
much upon foreign assistance, hav-
ing few skilled mechanical people
of her own and as yet having failed
to produce a good engine.
Italy's Air Force Is Flashy.
Russia's soldiers, children and
civilians are being trained in de-
fense against aerial and chemical
warfare with school and factory
drills. Her anti-aircraft guns are
not so numerous or well-developed
as those of her neighbors, but
great flying distances and snow-cov-
ered mountains are a real protee-
her fame, but her air force still
fails to measure up to that of some
of her competitors in quality. She
has failed to develop a good air-
cooled engine,
Shortage of fuel supply has been
a real obstacle to Italian aerial de-
velopment, and has prevented her
fliers from obtaining sufficient fly-
ing time to qualify them. They are
said to have an average of but 70
hours in the air. Lack of raw ma-
terials, as demonstrated when sanc-
tions were applied in the Ethiopian
war, renders her incapable of sus-
high-speed production, al-
though she is now bui
the rate of 200 a month.
For protecting Italian citizens
the larger cities, Il Duce has cho
to depend chiefly upon rapid ev:
tion in the case of air raids, |
necessary to
” Tenis o¥ wr “
to war industry re
only those absolutely
government anc
+ industrial centers of
the Po valley to north
or four years he expects
Rome's first subway to be
pleted; it will be used as an
auxiliary air raid shelter. A royal
decree has made it compulsory that
all new buildings be supplied-—at
the builders’ expense—with a stand-
ard underground shelter which, it
is claimed, adds no more than two
per cent to the cost
the
come
also
mystery
the air
growth,
Germany is the great
Her extremely rapid
No one
can be sure, but it is a good guess
that Germany's first-line planes are
than 2,000 in number. Her
as fast as those of any other na
a-
b-
oO
enough raw materials, and
Like some other countries, she has
not produced a really top-notch mo-
tor.
French Prestige Slips.
Germany's aerial forces are un
der command separate from t
army. Air Minister Wilhelm Geor-
ing has developed his command so
rapidly that, for the time being, it
probably is not well organized, but
some day soon it will be in good
working order. Her air defenses
are under the same command, and
are probably the best co-ordinated
in Europe. Her anti-aircraft artil-
lery line boasts 480 guns and new
ones are being completed at the
rate of one battery a day. Cheap
civilian gas masks are being rapid-
ly distributed among the populace.
Shelters are being constructed. But
the real defense of Berlin, the capi-
tal, is its relatively great distance
from any frontier.
France has slipped from her one-
time position as the leading air
force of Europe. She has now only
about 2,000 front line planes, includ-
ing those within her borders, with
the fleet and abroad, and 1,000 train-
ing and reserve planes. About two-
thirds of all French planes are ob-
solescent. And production of late
has been halted to a virtual stand-
still by internal economic and po-
litical strife. There are plenty of
good pilots, the air force is com-
petent technically, and the French
have produced good motors.
Much of France's aerial defense
is centered in Paris, as might be
expected. This city is particularly
fortunate in that thousands of cel-
lars made famous by “Les Miser-
ables’ have been inspected and pro-
nounced excellent air raid shelters
capable of giving refuge to 1,720,000
persons. Other precautions—search-
lights, guns, civilian drills and edu-
cation—are being undertaken.
Anti-aircraft guns are said to be
eight times as efficient today as
they were in the time of the World
war, and with the wholesale de-
fense measures, both active and
passive, it is hardly probable that
Europe's pext war will be won in
the air. It just means that the
© Western Newspaper Union,
he
>
lf
1302
ADY, lady, lady have you any-
thing in wool? Smart women
everywhere are clamoring for
They're wearing it to work
in, to play in, to date in, to go to
church in Yes, wool is going
places! Sew-Your-Own is here
with three ultra- new
models for you to choose {1
Needs Slim Lines.
hat “'s *thing in wool”
model at the left ve,
cially does a weightier fabric need
slim lines and here you have
pared d
The zipper from throat
gives this froc)
and the far-reaching llar takes
care of that all-important need for
French wine, black,
green, gendarme blue
are the popular colors
Compliment to Youth.
Youth and the blouse 'n’
have always gone sporting
gether. That's a compl
youth and real flatter
necer above, center, g
ination has a 3t-
img
abo
contrast.
duck and
skirt
+
:
pper and a si
A singular
14 to 42
ny
asset is its
size range
benefited
for the blouse: velvet or thin wool
is smart for the skirt.
For a Busy Body.
of legion labors, you'll
Now is the time
one
frock at the right
to cut two versions
ham for housework,
your “something in wool” in the
long sleeve style for all occasions.
The Patterns.
Pattern 1375 is designed for sizes
12 to 20 (30 to 40 bust). Size 14 re-
quires 2% yards of 54-inch mate-
terial. With short sleeves, 3%
yards of 39-inch material. Collar
and cuffs in contrast
eighths of a yard.
Pattern 1302 is designed for sizes
14 to 20 (32 to 42 bust).
quires 4% yards of 39-inch mate-
rial.
Pattern 1382 is designed for sizes
34 to 48. Size 36 requires 2% yards
of 54-inch material with long
| sleeves; 33% yards of 38-inch ma-
terial with short sleeves,
Send your order to The Sewing
| Circle Pattern Dept., 247 W. Forty-
| Third Street, New York, N. Y.
| Price of patterns, 15 cents (in
coins) each.
| Send 15 cents for the Barbara
| Bell Fall and Winter Pattern Book.
| Make yourself attractive, practical
and becoming clothes, selecting
designs from the Barbara Bell
well-planned, easy-to-make pat-
| terns.
© Bell Syndicate. —~WNU Service,
TO LAST LONGER
For more light, better light and
longer service, alwaysdemand gen
uine Coleman Mantles for your
sir pressure lamps and lanterns. They are
correct in size and shape, and their specie)
weave gives them extrs strength,
Coleman Manties are made from highs
quality materials, specially trested with
Ight ing chemicals to give maxi
mum light. Cost less to use because they
last longer.
ASK YOUR DEALER for genuine Cole
man mantles. If be cannot supply
| write for name of desler who can.
| Folder —send postcard.
THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO.
Piliadeipine, Pa: Los hopes. Cont Vrs
i
+ In NEW YORK CITY .
| 2 blocks east of Central
| Station on 42nd Street. rooms,
Wise and Otherwise
ae
“No, I'm sorry I can’t marry you,”
said the lovely miss to the ardent
swain, “but ll always admire your
good taste.”
Sunny smiles arc sometimes worn
by shady people.
Should sportsmen show emotion?
Well, after a day's fishing the angler
often has a catch in his voice.
If half the world doesn’t know
how the other half lives, it is because
they have never traded cooks.
The words of a wireless announcer
are said to travel through the ether
at the rate of 155.5864 miles a second.
Apparently what he says goes.
1
| Chamfort.
§
Remember This When
You Need a Laxative
It is better for you if your body
keeps working as Nature intended.
Food wastes after digestion should
be eliminated every day. When you
get constipated, take a dose or two
of purely vegetable Black-Draught
for prompt, refreshing relief.
Thousands and thousands of men and
| women like Black-Draughtsand keep #1
| always on hand, for use ai the first sign
| of constipation. Have you tried #17
:
{
BBLACK-DRAUGHT
A GOOD LAXATIVE
that "If Mary had five
But that is mathematice—mnot
a limited family income... we've
Tok. +e five delaes
are ever-willing
newspaper. A
hiTaaw:
marhandios i ches estepil