———————————— i ————— HA BRUTAL TRUTH Dear old home 18 an indispensable place to go back to every two or three years when you feel sent mental about It. Sprinkle Ant Food along win. dow sills, doors and openings through which ants come and 0. Guaranteed to rid quickly. sed in a million homes, In. expensive. At your druggist’s. A LU RS a ele] QUICK RELIEF from Heartburn = by chewing one or more Milnesia Wafers You can obtain a full size 20c package of Milnesia Wafers containing twelve full adult doses by furnishing us with the name of your local druggist if he does not happen to carry Milnesis Wafers in stock, by enclosing 10c in coin or postage stamps. Address SELECT PRODUCTS, INC, 4402 23rd St, Long Isiand City, N. Y. My Druggist’s Name is Street Address Town & State MILNESIA hatin MILK OF MAGNESIA:WAFERS. HAIR BALSAM Bamoves Dandrof Stops Halr Falling imparts Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair We and §1 0 at Drogygh FLORESTON SHAMPOO = Ideal for use in econnectionwith Parker's Hair Balsam Makes the Bair soft and fluffy. 0 centa by mail or at droge gists, Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N., % GREAT LAKES Via the SS OCTORARA and S88, JUNIATA * Nature's Route to and from the West™ For a more snjopable Sasation, or roeying to the West, sailt sreat Lakes, Thrill to the besuty of the Great Lakes countryirelazon gleame fing sun-drenched decks, od by stirring breezes; enj completely comfortable passage onloxurious lin. ers. Frequent sailings and sutomo- bile facilities bet ween all ports. Low fares inclode meals and berth, Cone sult your travel or railroad agent, or write us for descriptive booklet, GREAT LAKES TRANSIT CORPORATION L. Agnew Myers, Agent, 704 Colorado Bldg. Washington, D. CO. Watch Your: SL CAVA Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood YOUR kidneys are constantly filter. ing’ waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in their work-=do not act as nature in. tended—fail to remove impurities that poison the system when retained, hen you may suffer nagging back , dizziness, scanty or too frequent urination, getting up at night, swollen limbs; feel nervous, miserable all upset. Don’t delay! Use Doan's Pills, 's are especially for poorly func. tioning kidneys. y are recoms mended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist. TY TRE DAISY FLY KI WL SINGLE ROOM AND PRIVATE BATH NEW YORK CITY A now hotel on 42nd Street 2 blocks east of Grand Central Station, | i SEEN HEARD around the National Capital &SSSSSS By CARTER FIELD eS Washington.—The fact that Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland 1s so off the Roosevelt reservation Is most persons not interested in figuring electoral vote tables realize, The Maryland senator had just been successfully called off in his Virgin is lands Inquiry, and his row with Secre- tary of the Interior Ickes more or less muzzled, but that is not Important, not to anyone who knows Tydings, and Maryland. Washington opinion about that particular row is that the people Tydings wanted to protect will be pro- tected from the wrath of Ickes, In re- turn for Tydings' piping down on his public utterances. Maryland has only eight electoral votes, but Is Interesting because the state always goes Democratic In years the Democrats win, nationally, and is as Independent as the proverbial hog on Ice at all times. For example, in a Democratic sweep, In 1034, Maryland elected a Republican governor, the third since the Civll war. of the others served only one term. Yet at the same election, the state elected six Democratic mem- bers of the house, and a Democratic senator. To make the situation clear, It should be understood that there were | three or four Important reasons why | Albert C. Ritchle, the Democratic can- didate for a fifth term, was re- | elected. He had angered the eastern | sho e section of the state by trying to prosecute leaders not of a lynching mob, responsible, probably un- | He was held i of Justly, for the coll portant banks. And there deal of : the (2 OLE apse gevernl fm- | = same man in office governor of Marviand | He wa go lon er i been re-elected once, a fifth te $1 rin. ry $ Ix fr outly But it iz interestin nan who was Tydin tole picke i gS very early tadciiffe for Later, on a compromise, Radell for senator and was All of which means that Tydings is | by way of being the top dog In Demo- cratic polities in Maryland at the mo ment. Moreover, he not worried | about the Immediate future, for he | does not come for re-election until 1938, two years after the Presidential election. And Maryviand has a habit of always Demoeratic In off years, It so happens that most the the Union all except tl rather consery She George 1. for the rernor. | ran | Democratic nomination ne elected. is up iT rong is al in Maryland most conservative state Five of her six districts— | at ~aiwnys send | he house once elected fizure, the known France, to a she re- | Lewis, | Lewis was | she was voting agains as a radical—D f charge chief was soclialistically garded ivid The that i had fathered the parcel post bill! Maryiand, a state, always went Democratic In national elections until silver issue. She voted 1508 and 1900, split her electoral vote in 1004, voted for Wilson in both 1812 and 1018, and then voted for Harding, Coolidge and Hoover, There is not like the election were held today, Ivy unohjectionable Rep Roosevelt, is little doubt would get eight voles, ‘here ultra conserva tive about both Maryland and Vir ginia. It rather interesting that Carter Glass, Henry F. Byrd, and Tyd- ings are always found voting together, The other Maryland senator, Radcliffe, happens to be a close personal friend of Roosevelt, but, as pointed out, he was put in the senate hy Tydings, and has yet to demonstrate either real pow. er in the state or political sagacity. aga t he inclined he border the {ree litte doubt that the state New Deal. If the and any fair can opposed he does there Marsland's is something is Brings Up Borah Talk of William E. Borah for the Republican nomination against Frank Hin D. Roosevelt next year is one of the most interesting political and eco- nomic developments since 1932. Not that there {3 actually very much of a possibility that the seventy.year-old senator will be nominated, but because of the various developments and reper. cussions which started the talk. What it really means is that for the first time since the Republicans lost all but six states, In 1932, they are be ginning to chirp up. They are begin. ning to think that there may be a pos gibllity of winning In 1936. Until the Inst few weeks—in fact, right up to the tax message-—they had been say fog privately that 1996 was too soon The whole paychology at the present marked te Woodrow Wilson that the for his country, but he would not pay comment nppealed to the American sense of humor. But not any more The suverage American also is begin. ning to figure that it hay be very glor- lous to wn out and die for one's coun. try on the battlefield, but it's tough to have to do without this or that or the other thing he wants, or his wife: wants, just because taxes take so much of his total Income, Curiously enough this tax consclous- ness, though It may have been In lncu- bation for some time past, did not hatch out until the President sent his tax message to congress. It was dis- cussion of the amounts the various levies would raise, on top of all the fuss about processing taxes making the cost of bread and bacon and shirts and underwear and what not higher, that started folks talking out loud, It was the realization that sooner or later It was old John Taxpayer, in the middle walks of life, who would have to foot the bill for all these New Deal experl- ments, More About Taxes You are going to hear a great desl more about taxes, now that critics of the New Deal have realized what 1s happening. Plenty of oll will be poured on the smouldering fires, Attention will be called to many taxes which most folks pay withopt realizing they are taxes. For example, the federal levy of six cents a pack on cigarettes, And one cent of each three for a let ter is pure tax, levied for tax pur- poses. Attention will be directed to how much of the cost of a pound of ham or bacon is tax; that the cost of everything is boosted by the fact that the producers and merchants have to pay sueh high taxes. Meanwhile Senator Borah Is a won- derful bridge between the conservative and progressive Republican wings, Lie happens to be opposed to most of the no one has hit out Republicans the and the more strongly on what had been hoping would be 1880 Ee about Borah Irpose ¥ Herbert jut talk Serves a very igelracy 8s. About Roosevelt sorts of Washingt Roosevelt, \ All ing dent welrd back to to his alleged rend Parti i court's NRA decision, the tax message. An interesting is that apparently all the stories have as thelr chief basis the way the President is alleged ferences, events, and point to have acted at press con The truth Is nothing like as spectae- ular as the stories, but it Is rather In. Being as the stories seem to ; acted perhaps a particular while, teresting. center on the way Mr. Roosevelt two press conferences ¥ of those two voiild be worth and m loss NT en wing the decision by the high court the NRA Mor Thus, he had nearly in which to make up his mind what to say to the newspapers of the country. Many stories have been printed, mostly by columnists who not present, and got their information sec. ond-hand at best, though more out of their own mental concep tions of how the President should have felt, that the President was vis ibly angered, that he was approaching the hysterical, ete The truth is that the President very carefully sent up a trial balloon, and planted the seeds of some excellent propaganda looking toward a consti tutional amendment which would give congress the power to determine hours of labor and minimum wages in intra. sinte commerce, He very obviously took the same pleasure from his talk with the report- ers that a ernck cabinetmaker takes In putting the finishing touches on a job, or that a lawyer t kes when he thinks of just the right touch to give a dif. cult case, or a golfer when he success. fully ealenlates the precise roll to sink a 20-foot putt. Did a Good Job The other, and more Interesting, press conference was shortly after his tax message. This was far different, and far more difficult. The President fenced and parried with the newspaper men, because he had decided it was necessary to put over the idea that the White Hofise had not changed its strat. egy in the middie of the play, but that two senators had entirely misunder- stood him, Roosevelt knew perfectly well, as he talked with more than a hundred fair. ly sharp newspaper men, that not a man In the room believed what he was saying. Every man there believed the senators had understood him correctly and had expressed the White House views-—that the senators were now willing to take the hiame as politicians have done frem the beginning of time, on the theory that the king Is always right. This destroyed the possibility of the normal Roosevelt approach in handling newspaper men, Considering the difficulties, Franklin Rogseveit did an excellent job, He forced out to the public what he want. ed out, but he was obviously fencing, obviously at high tension. Yet he pev- er lost his temper, ‘ of on the previous 48 he day rs were obviously Copyrioht wu WNL Borvice Bows and Arrows old as First Men on This Earth Jows and arrows are almost as old as man, himself. This form of weap on, used as a method of offense and defense and for hunting before his tory was first recorded, long ago was superseded by improved forms ol weapons, The bow and arrow Is now mainly used In the sport of archery Only a few savage tribes today use this weapon in warfare and for hunt ing. Throughout and un nges the bow arrow has practically changed In general form, with one notable exception which was made by This Inno vation consdted of making arrows that would while in fight. Just innovation eves was made, Is not definitely known, A the remained the Chinese centuries ago. whistle why such an noise making arrow surely gives warn ing, which, apparently, would greatly impair its efficiency as a weapon, The silent an arrow its flight” certainly does not apply in the case of the whistling shafts once used by the Chinese. The Chinese whistling arrow Is one of the rarest forms of weapons. This type of arrow has a head made of jade which was fashioned into a whistle The rush of alr through the whistle pro duced a long-drawn sound which was sure to attract attention. A peculiar type bow ployed in shooting whis rows. It is known bow" and is sald to by Ghengis Khan and who conquered Plain Deal simile, “as as in of the ns have WAS ig Ar “reverss em the been used hig followers Asia, ~Cleve land Says Molecule Cannot Be Solid, Liquid, gle molecul can be neither higher 1 between it cs either, the line between crystaline and g my solids, As a matter of fact, there are no such things as perfect solids or perfect liquids. The and liquid are merely like rich and poor. terms solid relative By Louise Brown Sundays back home, in waves across the garden and where. to Mother, A warm dinner, kitchen, THE MODERN WAY some friends a few weeks ago. Was very warm. in the oven anyway. went to church. the finishing touches! ed off. dinner to the family wanted it. ory day with time is up. Bay this modern y dinner : : Bost of all, - Scattered Over Country The map often proves an index to local loyalty, showing how people have emigrated and the name of thelr home town has emigrated with them. brit. alp's metropolis is duplieated many times, observes a writer In Tit-Bits Magazine, There are Londons in Ken- tucky, Ohlo, Ontario, and many other parts of the world, The Ontario Lon- don actually stands on a Canadian Thames In a Canadian Middlesex. There are ten Colnes on the map, 14 Burtons and 387 plus another name, 23 Prestons and with The name of Wash. ington Ig found over 200 times, ore are, besides, 14 Richmonds, The orig. inal York of the 48 move titular additions. borough, where ous song dwelt, is the » "Lass" The Thames-side Sheen, suburb was orig! and was renamed Richmond bn Henry VII, had Earl Richmond. The names of who been Cumberland, and Cambridge have carried all over the usually, as with Al bany, originally the name of the Scot. tish Highlands, by peers who bore them as titles of nobility. New York is not thé eapital of the state of that name, hut Albany, and both are named after the Duke of York and Albany, who later hecame James II. He also named London's 8t James’, Duke street, and York street, Covent Garden. of York, been world, Trapped by Trifles While the police were an empty house in le, they turbed a mouse Traffic Through Great Lakes ie ance r iu al the f iat yf lake 1 SOA on Bridal Flower of Sharon Was Palestine’s Favorite Apart from the wellknown Greek myth, there Is a beautiful and very Interesting legend which grew up in Palestine in ancient times around that fragrant and still-loved flower, the polyanthus, or “bunch-flowered nar- clasus.” The flower was exceedingly popular ancient Palestine, where, the Montreal Herald, to be found in every house, large su plies being sent in writer In says a it gifts to the rulers and other foreign From Palestine it rope, w hore as of Damascus COUN. tries. its rich pert The narcissus the symbol of e that th legend, the bridal emblem of pure At all marriage feasts It was promi. nent, and its was described by one of the Rabbis as “the link that binds the mortal and Immortal In the earliest Hebrew marriage festl- vals two ble before the symbols narcissus became the Hebrew maidens, and eternal de flower of i votion. perfume loves” oms of pnarcissus were set bride and bridegroom as the beauty thelr mar- of of Tr riage, Ruins of Blue Beard’s Castle on Erdre Banks it 2 3 r | it i TE Sunday dinner is ready when then turns the heat off again. get any warmer than the rest of the house due to the well insulated oven of the electric range. The heat stays in the oven to do the cooking and doesn’t turn the whole kitchen into an oven, Here's the Cunday dinner my hostess served. SUNDAY DINNER Chilled melon balls the family wants it. The auto. rack, the chicken in front, and the pie on the upper rack. The meal was placed in a cold oven, the temperature set at 3560 daogrees, and the switch turned to Bake. The clock was set at the core ed on and off. When we returned from church, dinner was ready to serve in a jiffy. The melon were removed from the refrigerator and placed on the table for the first course, (The went out. The coffee maker was attached so the coffee would be ready. The dinner was removed from the oven and the gravy made (this family liked chicken gravy) and the rolls were popped in to warm on the stored heat. The ple cooled while the dinner was being consumed and was
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers