The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, May 13, 1937, Image 3

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    Thursday, May 13, 1937
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
Many Die in Zeppelin Hindenburg Explosion
Parading the Fashions
1285
Humane Fox Hunting.
ANTA MONICA, CALIF—
In England it has been de­
cided that fox-hunting is hu­
mane. This opinion emanates
from the hunters. The foxes
have not been heard from on
the subject.
S
Maybe you don’t know it, but
there’s a lot of fox-hunting among
us, especially down
south. Being but a
lot of stubborn non-
conformists, south­
erners do not follow
the historic rules. A
party at large wear­
ing a red coat,
white panties and
high boots would be
-
mistaken for a ref­
ugee from a circus
-
band. And anybody
blowing a horn as Irvin S. Cobb
This remarkable picture was made just as the giant German dirigible Hindenburg burst into flames he galloped across
and exploded as it was preparing to land at Lakehurst, N. J., following a flight from Germany. Ninety-eight hill and dale would be set down as
persons aboard were plunged to earth in the flaming wreckage. Thirty-four died almost instantly and of the an insane fish peddler; and if you
64 rescued, many were horribly injured. An explosion of a gas cell in the stern was blamed for the disaster. shouted “View, halloo! Tantivy,
tantivy! Yoicks, yoicks!” or words
to that effect, they’d think you were
a new kind of hog-caller.
Down there they’ve chased the
fox until he’s wise. The foxes have
learned that the hounds can’t fol­
low trail on a paved highway and
so quit the thicket for the concrete
when the chase is on. A fox has
been sitting in the middle of the big
road listening to the bewildered
pack.
On second thought maybe Brer
Fox isn’t so smart, after all—not
with automobile traffic what it is.
’Tis a hard choice—stay in the
woods and get caught or take to the
*
pike and get run over.
aqe
• • •
“we
Courageous Republicans.
tor
HO, besides the writer, can re­
r,
we
call when the Democrats held
their jubilation rallies the night be­
fore a presidential election and the
- A /
gn/
Republicans the night after the re­
* P/ %
turns were in, when they had some­
‘
thing to jubilate over? Now the sit­
uation is just the other way around.
The Literary Digest poll was prac­
tically the only thing the Republi­
cans had to celebrate during the en­
tire fall season of 1936.
Wreckage of the huge dirigible Hindenburg, after the explosion at Lakehurst, N. J., when the great ship
Still, we must give that dimin­
was preparing to land. Costing the lives of more than 34, the disaster was one of the worst in history.
ished but gallant band credit for
courage. ’ Here, in an off-year,
they’re spiritedly planning against
COMMANDED ZEPPELIN
the next congressional campaign.
Escapes Death in Zeppelin Disaster
1282
Journey’s End for World’s Greatest Airship
STYLE show De Luxe for De
A
Ladies on this De Lightful
Spring day!
sleeves it requires only 5 yards
of 39 inch material.
New Pattern Book.
Send for the Barbara Bell
Spring and Summer Pattern Book.
Make yourself attractive, practi­
cal and becoming clothes, select­
ing designs from the Barbara Bell
well-planned, easy-to-make pat­
terns. Interesting and exclusive
fashions for little children and the
difficult junior age; slenderizing,
well-cut patterns for the mature
figure; afternoon dresses for the
most particular young women and
matrons and other patterns for
special occasions are all to be
found in the Barbara Bell Pattern
Book. Send 15 cents today for
your copy.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New
Montgomery Ave., San Francis­
co, Calif. Price of patterns, 15
cents (in coins) each.
Betty Ann feels just a bit the
most elegant of the three for her
housecoat is superlative. She has
“skirts” like the ladies in the
feminine yesterdays; her basque
is form-fitting; her sash has a
bow, and her sleeves puff. The il­
lusion is so perfect that she is
about to reach for smelling salts
or a sprig of old lavender.
Matrons Have Vanity, Too.
Mama, very young for her
years, can not resist styles that
bring more compliments her way.
The no-belt feature of this one is
definitely new, and does wonders
for the figure a bit past the slim
stage.
The continuing collar,
which in soft pastels is always
flattering, gives the break re­
quired by the all-in-one waist and
skirt. The fitted top and flaring
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
bottom make for style plus com­
fort, a demand matrons, even
though youthful, always make.
Parties and Picnics.
Why Laxatives
Winifred on the left is privately
making up her mind to have a
Fail In Stubborn
housecoat, too; though she is
mightily pleased with the way her
Constipation
print has turned out. She chose
Twelve to 24 hours is too long to wait
English Recruiting.
this style because the fitted, brok­ when relief from clogged bowels and
Is needed, for then enor­
HE English are still having
en waist liar and front seamed constipation
mous quantities of bacteria accumu­
trouble inducing young fellows
skirt are so very slenderizing. late, causing QA8, Indigestion and
restless, sleepless nights.
to join the colors. First, the gov­ She’s on her way io the 4-H meal­ many
If you want REAL, QUICK RELIEF,
ernment tried to increase enlist­
ing now and has only stopped take a liquid compound such as Ad-
lerika. Adlerika contains SEVEN ca-
ments by giving every recruit a gid­
to remind Betty Ann of the picnic thartio
and carminative Ingredients
dy new blue uniform, absolutely free
“The Jolly Twelve” are having on that act on the stomach and BOTH
bowels.
Most “overnight” laxatives
of charge, and still the lads re­
Tuesday.
contain one ingredient that acts on the
fused. So now, as an appeal which,
The Patterns.
lower bowel only.
Adlerika’s DOUBLE ACTION gives
’tis believed, no true Britisher can
Pattern 1285 comes in sizes 12- your
system a thorough cleansing,
withstand, the military authorities
20 (30 to 40). Size 14 requires 33 bringing out old poisonous waste mat­
ter that may have caused QAS pains,
announce that, hereafter. Tommy
yards of 39 inch material.
sour stomach, headaches and sleepless
Atkins will have time off for after-
Pattern 1282 is for sizes 14-20 nights for months.
Adlerika relieves stomach GAS at
noon tea.
(32 to 44 bust). Size 16 requires once
and usually removes bowel con­
5% yards of 39 inch material. It gestion In less than two hours. No
This may be a new notion for
waiting
for overnight results. This
requires 2′2 yards of ribbon for famous treatment
peacetime, but, during the great
has been recom­
tie belt.
war, the custom was maintained
mended by many doctors and drug-
for 35 years. Take Adlerika one-
Pattern 1983 is for sizes 36 to 50. Rists
even up at the front. Many a time
alf hour before breakfast or one hour
Size 38 requires 5% yards of 39 before bedtime and In a short while
I’ve seen all ranks, from the briga­
you will feel marvelously refreshed.
diers on down, knocking off for tea.
inch material. With the short At
all Leading Druggists.
However, this didn’t militate
against his majesty’s forces, be­
Mail Service in Alaska
cause, at the same hour, the Ger­
Poor Pupils
Alaska is the show place of mail
mans, over on their side of the line,
Too many graduate from the
service,
the
last
frontier,
the
re
­
were having coffee—or what the
school of life without honors.
gion of the greatest variety of
Germans mistake for coffee. And
mail transportation in the world.
the French took advantage of the
There one may see the mail car­
lull to catch up with their bookkeep­
ried by railroad, wheeled horse
ing on what the allies owed them
vehicles, horse sleds, dog sleds,
for damage to property, ground
Nature can more quickly expel infection when
reindeer sleds, by men on foot and
rent, use of trenches, billeting
aided by internal medication of recognized merit
on
snowshoes,
by
steamboat,
gas
­
space, wear and tear, etc., etc.
oline boat, the white man’s row­
Did it ever occur to our own gen­
boat, the Eskimo kayat and the
eral staff that guaranteeing a daily
HAVE RECOGNIZED MERIT
airplane.—Washington Post.
Chief Engineer Rudolph Sauter, of the Zeppelin Hindenburg, who crap-shooting interval might stimu­
was severely injured, but escaped death when the giant ship exploded late volunteering for the American
as it was about to land at Lakehurst, N. J., recently. Flaming to earth, army?
• • •
the Hindenburg was soon a charred mass of wreckage.
The Job of Censorship.
LIFE’S LIKE THAT
By Fred Neher
NE reason why moving pictures
are so clean is because some
Dog’s Tonsils Out While You Wait
of the people who censor them have
a
such dirty minds. To the very
pure everything is so impure, is it
□ a
not? That’s why some of us think
the weight of popular opinion, rath­
0
er than the judgment of narrow-
brained official judges in various
□
states, should decide what should
and what should not be depicted.
Anyhow, there are so many movies
r
which, slightly amending the old
i
ballad, are more to be pitied than
censored.
Sponsors of radio programs also
lean over backward to be prudishly
proper. But without let or hindrance
the speaking stage, month by
month, grows fouler and filthier.
Suggestive lines once created a
shock in the audience mind. The
lines no longer suggest—they come
right out and speak the nastiness.
Sauce for the goose isn’t sauce for
the gander, ‘twould seem—or may­
be, after the reformers got through
saucing radio and screen, there
wasn't any left over for the so-
called legitimate stage.
IRVIN 8. COBB
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4 •
The dirigible Hindenburg’s 1937
maiden voyage which ended in flam­
ing disaster when the airship ex­
ploded just before landing at Lake­
hurst, N. J., marked the first time
that Capt. Max Pruss commanded
the sky liner on a flight from Ger­
many to the United States. Last
year he was a subordinate officer
when Capt. Ernst A. Lehmann and
Dr. Hugo Eckener, the veteran Zep­
pelin expert, handled the ship on
her regular passenger schedule.
He was schooled in Zeppelin work
for a quarter of a century.
HEADS U. S. CHAMBER
rale
$
George H. Davis of Kansas City,
who was elected president of the
Chamber of Commerce of the Unit­
ed States at its recent annual meet­
ing in Washington, D. C. He suc­
ceeds Harper Sibley. Mr. Davis is
a banker, a farmer and a merchant.
At its convention the Chamber op­
posed President Roosevelt’s propos­
al to revamp the Supreme court
and called for amendments to the
Wagner labor act
FOR COLDS
Salicon Tablets
O
©— WNU Service
Modern Language Coarse
If your dog will not eat as heartily as usually, perhaps he has ton
The study of French, English and
The above picture shows Dr. Clifford Wagner, left and Dr. Harry German
been introduced into
D. Roberts, Cleveland veterinarians, as they remove : the tonsils of El Azhar has
university, Cairo, the old­
Fritz, a Great Dane. The doctors assert that tonsilitis in dogs is a est
university in the world, estab­
common ailment in some parts of the country.
lished in 972 A. D.
silitis.
“Yea!! An' some of you motorists drive around as if you
owned the ear nr'