Page Four THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. @he entre @ewmocrat, BELLEFONTE, ne NA. . Proprietors Editor Associate Editor Business Manager WALKER BROTHERS A. C. DERR. PAUL M. DUBBS CECIL A. WALKFR Issued weekly every Thursday morning. Entered in the ostoffice at Bellefonte, Pa, secon class matter, as TERMS OF BUBSCRIPTION $1.50 per year if paid in advance =.00 per if not paid in advance year subscription expires is plainly printed All credits are given label the first issue of each upon special re- you remit The date vour an the label bearing by & change on the date of month. We send no receipts quest. Watch date on your label after Matters for publication, whether news ing, must reach The Centre Democrat office not later than Tuesday noon to insure publication that week. Adver- tising copy received alter Tuesday morning must run its chances. All reading notices mark {*) Legal notices and all real estate cents per line each Issue Subscribers changing posto tifying us, are liable for All subscr directed. your name unless or advertis tisements 10 are adver advertisements, and nol no- iptions will otherwise NATIONAL €DITORIAL_ 5 ASSOCIATION CIRCULATION OVER 7,000 COPIES EACH WEEK EDITORIAL the which probably form cause we did peace, prepare | There ing a Major and buy a war are § Wal Mot DOnNd 0CCca The be call of the nation and home is to uph \ of Cent: We have no spreading suspicion These nations are fighting \ our unlimited support far as the Centre Democri will uphold during this war armed forces of least, we will not which we know Ma strone richt the strong gn N rel " mmander-ix cruisers in t Japanese have superior The sinking of two Briti Ocean seems to indicate the thing, and they have. The answer is, Almost every Japanese advance has against Inferior numbers and vict and on the sea have been the numbers, more than anything else Sooner or later the scale will be more than balanced and the Jap fighting man will his true perspective appear in } It 15 possible that when gasoll rd to us In proved form aviation gasoline will require less smaller gasoline tank ar ficiency. That is the anss will be done after the flities being develope line be in 100-octane will 5 plenteou The automobile The | fuel per quantitie 1" the future will have a ost-war « ton-mile and engine greater the question of whe » $500 .000 000 ar of are limited to kicking about 3y federal twenty-one kinds. And it. It is not hard to remember when there were only two soups, vegetable and bean, and we thrived on ‘em. Anyone whose taste cannot get along on twenty- one kinds of which is of and a hund: would sali them. soine | soups has a taste red kinds out gear of OU PS ot siy BUT NOT FUTILE American flag still TASK still A HUGE As this is written, the defiantly over Corregl The heroic forces of Amer- fcan and Filiping fighters driven their last de- fensez by the Japanese advance in the Bataan Penins have set a standard of courage, tenacity and determination that ranks them among the classic fighters of all the ages The military authorities s that the sad out- come of Bataan was inevitable, But it has cost the enemy a terrific price and the stubborn resistance to the flood of vellow warriors has given precious time for the Allies to get their forces in order, and it is probable that the heroism of the men under MacArthur and Wainwright has prevented the con- quest of Australia, and thereby has given us the springboard from which must proceed the movement that will drive the Japanese back, step by step, over the road of their conquests, The arm-chaly military critics, in and out of safe editorial sanctums, are harping on the failure to provide reinforcements and supplies in adequate proportions, implying grave criticism because this was pot afforded. The Army and Navy people, who know what Is possible and what is impossible in a military way, testify that everything that could be done was done. General Douglas MacArthur, who in the estima- tion of all Americans knows that situation better than any other human being, is the commander -in- chief of the South Pacific forces, The Philippine theater Is still within his jurisdiction, Does anybody suppose that if anything could have been done to relieve the desperate plight of the men who were under his direct command for so long, that he would not have taken the requisite action? Does anybody imagine that if this magnificent general had rec- ommended a course of action, that that course would not have been taken? The whole world that is fighting the onrush of the totalitarian powers wondered at the miracles that first MacArthur and then Walnwright have per oats dor to ten-to-one ts} a tell u formed and these untold millions of people cudgled their brains in vain for a process that would have relieved those magnificent garrisons Baatan was a tough blow, but the American people are not discouraged by it. It emphasizes the difficulties of the task in which we are engaged, but it has only reinforced the determination of an ulti- mate victory which involves the downfall of Hitler ism and the relegation of Japan to the rank of a second or third-rate power, for the treacherous yel- low horde has demonstrated its unfitness for a place among the civilized nations, Japan like Germany, is Thelr activities are devoted to the sole purpose of conquest, and in the pumsuit of that purpose they recognize no neutrals, They are out to get whatever force can win them--the American Philippines, the Dutch East Indies, the British sions, or such Incidental pieces of real estate as French Indo China They Pre fighting for no ideals for POSSEE ady and are ha know yn And raphy. of In- that the which victor- the antage of the cir locked in bitter strife made thelr initial what this has cost She has geo umstance material 1sands of to destru WITNESS AXIS VICTORY 1942 TO BID FOR Hitler Grasps Last Opportunity it A ry ondition Axis has iticipating y yy # emen efulls the Car guards d day when Axis Hag a Chance at Sea! ’ the chi to generally appreciated i= con trol of the seas. Axis naval bi this year and, if Fren Hitler, the margin 1 in 1942 detailed analysis of naval strength of naval op- erational problems but it is certainly that the U nited Nations not enjoy unquestionable safety Henge uilding programs ch warships are wriority will not permit given to be ext of our su eedingly thir Space does nop true do sue does not depend upon the plane-ver- } ment, although strength in aircraft fers has been a major factor in Japanese Suc- s. In time, we will have ships and planes, ready any form of warfare but the danger lies in the that our sea position is insecure now Car for fact A NEW FRONT IN EUROPE The visit of the American Chief-of-8taff, Gen- eral Marshall to London has revived speculation as to the opening of a new front in Western Europe This is a ticklish problem, It must be solved by professional] military men of the United States and Great Britain, The question cannot be answer- ed on the basis of hope and desire but must be solved solely by the ability of the democracies not only to open up but to maintain and enlarge a new theater of military operations. Obviously, such an enterprise should be under- taken at the earliest possible moment, If Hitler is compelled to fight in Russia and in Western Europe, he will be unable to spare men and materiel for other ventures, For once, the Nazis will have to ac. cept battle upon fields chosen by their enemies. This would be the beginning of the end. However, it would be utterly foolish for Great Britain and the United States to open up a Western front in Europe without adequate men, materiel and shipping. The theory of taking risks to acquire gains Is sound, but before competent military men will ap- prove such an expeditionary force, there must be a probable chance of success, Otherwise, Dunquerque would be repeated upon a larger scale and what might be the basis of de- cisive power in 1943 might be frittered away in a premature effort in 1942 i Ir Orrice C “A Little Nonsense Now and Then, Is Relished by the Wisest Men” THE Al Our Do you want an income | enter this Grand Contest simply | then look below for the answer: | sedan and send it, congressman, And pretty take you away for a 1. We a private SOON 0 long vacation be a shoulder on 047 mld you rather with your the 2. Priv Private in Jones Smith cal 4 m can together peel TH0 long will it 14 how take Ab ks 1s to be Hit « standard How ame poite, but | of $1.000000.00 for answer 1 hen with the questions, nice lHeutenant bar? potatos in NOUrs he them to peel 10 pota arracks must | uilt to house a ton vill gO to make Grand Crazy Quiz Contest Ife? Well, who doesn’t, To the lollowing easy questions and just tear off the top of a Packard but NOT the answers, to your man in a blue sult will come and with a bar on your shoulder, or on minute Rob- work hous 1 18 min while minutes. If and 46 and 17 Irs ana 8 Loes? regiment of gue-al tank 00V¢ Lhe Te BS 4 sheat ip fn Health and Beauty LOUISA’S LETTER Victoria, Tex You my column confused with other one as 1 do not foretell K.E J, have must SOT pre event LOUIBA To Lilly--1 think that married life is the more normal life for me women, but that does not mean that every married woman is and that single ones any means, 1 am su know a great mu | nn and anm happy are IMnappy all amp a with some BLOOD PRESSURE Loo explanatios smple, "The machinery of the rised of ulating comi the reservols which is al and the body heart: system reservoir Venous a low press. ire reservoir. These two are connected by small arterioles and capillaries The pressure in the arterial reser voir is due to the fact that the heart is able to pump blood into the reser- voir more rapidly than i through the small openings which connect the arterial with the ven- ous reservoirs. The size of the out let openings is controlled by nerve centers, acting upon walls of the small ASE reservoirs tubes—the arteries, where they are mad to dilate or contract! i 45 the needs of the body may re- quire. When the small arteries and capillaries contract, the blood es- capes lesg rapidly, rises as long as the heart has energy enough to enable it to respond to | the demand made upon it The Hmit of pressure rise is reach- | ed {as to force out through the smaller | j openings the amount of blood need- ed, to supply each one of the great jorgans, or series of orgs in the Men, Women! Old at 4, 30, 60! Get Pep bodies | ask! m phosphate, Vitamin rel} 1Tea Tayear Fp te Ld i stores wngd, all good - Bellefonte #6 Widmann & — ih 8 jr i fit : Hi wach CSCADPeS | the muscular p | Sweating causes and the pressure). this reason | uable remedy in high blood pressure NegNTiL- CASC)Y As a compensa crippled condition well as in general (harcgeni arteries) chief factors con- cerned in blood pressure in health are the heart energy by Which biood Is foroed the arterial sy; the the blood vestels the blood, the elasticity of inl walls and of the tissues the viscosity (thickness) of the blood Drugs ents for the into stem tone amount the arte: of of alone are not reliable ag- regulating blood pressure Sweating Is effeclive in lowering blood pressure, because it reduces the volume of the circulating blood a large amount of blood to be withdrawn from the gen- eral circulation into the skin. At the same time, the total volume of blood Is lessened, because water is pour- | sweat glands | the sweating is a val- ed oul through Sweating relieves the body also of 'a certain amount of poisons, that only when the pressure lg such | Would otherwise have to be carried out through the kidneys. Thus the wear and ear on the organs of elim. ination is lessened. The warm bath | lowers blood pressure because it di! lates the surface blood vessels and | reduces the viscosity of the blood. This lessons the amount of effort required by the heart to pump the | blood through the arterial system | into the veins. The cold bath raises blood press. | ure, because it stimulates the heart and contracts the blood vessels of the skin, Thus the heart TL work | against greater resistance, tric | light baths and other a a apy treatment help to regulate blood | pressure. For Vigtory: Buy Bonds, nig t oe, twould chemistry, ith prove valuable would be no more fer most kids would be is big folks too who'd feel if U. 8am commandecred cach leaf; Especially spinich of the type, that's mixed in most campaign speech tripe. Most candidates private key- note, Is “feed em get their vole.” Bo like our kids we'd like to see. an all high spinich scarcity Now office seekers with ambishuns, you'd better git wise to conditions; fer here's a tip from me to you, vote gittin spiaich is taboo - - - Named Committee Head Professor R. U. Blasingame. head of the department of agricultural engineering at the Pennsylvania State College, has been named chairman of the agricultural sub- fer war : OT Spinacn- committee on salvage for the State Council of Defense. Read the Classified ads ~ RHEUMATIS A Re be Reg Reta uty $c and $1.20 per box at druggists mail. - br A G. Lusbert, P.D,, Coatesville, Pa. RESTS ume Lo] April 23, 1942. plaint I letters the room tain bs there any way 1 i at P. M~What Is Inscr carries in Ans It ls oa le F. R85 table and Ang wrson who sent the POs! partment will ner ei MAN COTM a Rlass of Try ru obstinate, coy Query & Answer Column a lost de letter? special delivery Lhe VAR maleq lost letter which Blatue side? law, which izes liberty based on law water on my highls polished liv white spot, How can | remove iL? mowsiened wilh Kerosene soda : Lhe lo obtain pecial livery office The Post MaKe eyery where of Wiler find the tablet ort Wo ied the t ‘ , es arm a boo July ning has orn it In bl yImnbol oti DUR ow baking and id a I Mn iron w burn | ’ 0 wood. Repeat Uf heces Sugar Ration To Be Half Pound : own He book temporarily Q. What not A. Applic per: in handy members of ation lor ons unc may the to Labor of the opportunity that if and when 18 years Ration Bool ‘ flv family & save money; it | Rationing Board whether you oan have War Ou Are a mer Vt live ation Ration gel sugar these ne \« Do War wags peeps 14 permi far Ratic letter must file a come. Office of Liberty wk ng If the clone sary sugar and - stamp for nothing? 1 Book giv eg a certain § ng sal are, but you do a family for ratior Random Items od from BEDE ON} aid the if the niinued 14 i WY itizen in id be re -01 t the machine hove into f Bellefonte place ould where the license tag Ks 10 We grocer 0 tag bearing i ) Germany.” war that Suc shi Since the U. 8. Is with Germany, there aoul h a car being at large to the - ———— Take advantage tion could offer no explanation. now presents guess would be that st will come | was testing out the war is over erican defenses FLOOR SHOW! Saturday Matinee at 3:30 P. M. BELLEFONTE'S GREATEST AMUSEMENT PLACE! HARRY’S TAVERN SPRING STREET — not aon need town Acad- wated., moderns trong and the ull motorist noticed front have been was a in large type the word at it doesnt seem d be any excuse for State Mo- tor Police at Pleasant Gap sub-sta- A me newspaper the vigilance of Am- J. MA. Keichline Insurance Agency One of the Oldest Agencies In Centre County. ANN Representative, Temple Court W. KEICHLINE, Phone 190
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers