Doubled Up “Has she kept her girlish figure?” “Kept it? Man, she's doubled %® Too Much for Him “But, constable, I didn't knock him down, I pulled up at the light to let him cross and he just fainted!" WENT OVER “Was it a good speech?” “Fine.” “What did he say?” “I don't remember. All that I recall now is that he said it well.” Fit Guaranteed Drowning Man — Quick, throw me a life belt! size round the waist? As Per Instructions The blacksmith was instructing a novice in the way to treat a horseshoe. “I'll bring you a shoe from the fire and lay it on the anvil. When hammer.” The apprentice did exactly as he was told, but he never hit a blacksmith again! CONSTIPATION R Tablets). She put him wise. He found hat an astonishing difference there was in putely vegetable laxative, Not merely par ef. Instead thorough Swanying action em " ym feel like a mil lion.” Try NR Tablets yourself. Note how gentle they are and eR ie. R) non-habit form. pon Lt bee TE Le hg i3 FEE 25 tablets -26 cents at Training Babes To be perfect, the training of children must begin with the very cradle. The saying that man is a bundle of habits is as true of babies as it is of grown children. CHECK THAT COUGH BEFORE IT GETS WORSE Check it before it gets you down. Cheok before others, maybe the childrgn, cateh it. Check it with FOLEY'S HONEY & TAR. This double-acting compound gives quick relief snd speeds recovery, Soothes raw, irritated tissues ; quickly allay» tickling, hacking. Spoon- ful on retiring makes for a cough-free sleep, No babit-forming, somach-upsetting drugs for children, 30.1 Jou't let that Sough ue tos cold bang on! For quick relie speeded recovery insist on FOLEY'S HONEY & TAR. Individuality Individuality is everywhere to be spared and respected as the root of everything good.—Richter. OR SPREAD ON ROOSTS Sacrifice to Win sacrifice. Health-Wrecking Functional PAINS Severe functional pains of men- struation, cramping spells and jan- gled nerves soon rob a woman of her natural, youthful freshness. PAIN lines In a woman's face too often grow Into AGE lines! Thousands of women have found it helpful to take Cardul, They say it seemed to ease their pains, and they noticed an Increase in their appetites and finally a strengthened resistance to the discomfort of monthly periods. Try Cardul. Of course if it doesn't belp you, see your doctor, Rina] By EDWARD JE, XPORTS of manufactured goods and raw materials exceeded im- ports into the United States during September by more than four mil- a . lion dollars, accord- ing to a report re- leased by Secretary of Commerce Roper. But the flow the other way was 80 strong during the previous three months that the country suffered an unfavorable balance of trade during the first nine months of Secretary the year amounting Roper {s in contrast with a favorable bal- ance of $66,496,000 in the correspond- ing period of 1935. Roper minimized the situation, de- cotton, tobacco and automobiles and this was the province On reciprocal trade agreements he was mum. “We'd like to end the year with a In fact, Roper found the increase import trade to be ‘“‘encourag- ing.” buying raw production in this country. million pigs and non- raising of grain under the AAA. NCLE SAM'S nephews and tor William L. Austin of the bureau of census. The new figure, as of July 1, represented an increase of 1, 1935. It was based on the num- ion. Births exceeded deaths by 809,956 and the net immigration was 8,044, according to the data taken by Aus- tin. The population figure on the basis of the 1930 census was 122,775,- 046, and the biggest annual increase The bureau of agricultural eco- nomics also has been doing some population estimating. It says the back to the farm movement of the was only slightly greater than in minutes in the court of assizes at Ipswich, England, sufficed to give marital “Wally Simpson. ve Hawke heard neatly evidence infidelity of was not represented, to the who has friend of King Ed- For six months she will be on probation, technically chaperoned at all times, Whether or not her new husband, if she takes one, will be King Ed- ward is a question that only time and the two persons most directly concerned can determine. Mrs. Simpson returned from Ips- wich to her London residence on Cumberland terrace, Regents park, and there told interviewers that she was angered and humiliated by the international sensation her divorce has caused. She said she might go abroad for a time but that she would never return to the United States because of "ali the nasty things" said of her here. The Week, a radical London week- ly, was the first English newspaper to carry an open reference to Mrs. Simpson's friendship with King Ed- ward. The article was at the same time a denunciation of the American press for giving the story such prom- inence and of the British press for suppressing it entirely. It also made it clear that there would be wide- spread opposition to a marriage between Edward and “Wally.” Pa- pers from Paris and elsewhere out- side the United Kingdom have been in great demand in London, but of course the vast majority of the English people know nothing about the affair, W. PICKARD ! PURRED to quick action by the “Y new accord between Germany and Italy, Leon Blum's popular front cabinet approved a large in- crease in France's military air force, already reputed to be one of the most powerful in the world. To modernize and build up the aerial squadrons the government will spend $230,000,000 at once. It was reported, too, that the cabinet de- cided to ask parliament to vote ex- traordinary funds for the fortifica- tion of the northern frontier because of Belgium's reversion to a policy of armed neutrality. ENITO MUSSOLINI rattled his | sword again on the occasion of | the fourteenth anniversary of the Fascist march on Rome. “The Ital- ian people,” he proclaimed, ‘‘today are ready and determined to defend as never before—with all their force right up to the last drop of blood— victory and empire." As for Fascism, he said, “When it finds obstacles in its path, it throws itself against them and burns its | bridges behind it.” NT OT to be outdone in martial » gestures by other nations, Japan trotted out her entire navy for review by Emperor Hirohito. It was the greatest (fleet ver brought together in Asiatic waters, comprising 108 warships aggregat- ing nearly 700,000 tons and manned | by 40,000 men. Large numbers of aircraft also took part in the evolu- | tion in Osaka bay. EN. HERMANN GOERING, WILHELM German minister Nazi four-year economic scheme to | make the reich in- dependent of the rest of the world in launched his program at a great Nazi rally in Berlin. “We shall hack fin- ger after finger off the foreign hand clutching at Germany's throat within the next four years,” he declared. Outlining his plans, Goering said no German had starved, nor would | starve. The high seas fishing fleet | will be increased, he asserted, so the people can eat fish when meat | is not available. Whale fishing will | be developed for the margarine it | Gen. Goering | Goering urged all Germans to fol- | low the example of Reichsfuehrer | Adolf Hitler who, he said, eats nei- ther meat nor butter. The audience yelled with delight when the robust Goering told them he had lost 22 pounds by eating less butter. Germany would prefer the old sys- | tern of international exchange of | wares, but this now is impossible in | a mad world, so Germany will build | stitutes for cotton and other ma- | terials for which she now must spend | millions of dollars yearly, the gen- | eral declared. ANY American travelers join the English in mourning the death of Sir Edgar Britten, com- mander of the great liner Queen Mary and commodore of the Cunard- | White Star lines. He was stricken with paralysis in Southampton and died within a few hours. Sir Edgar was sixty-two years old and first went to sea as a lad of eighteen | in sailing ships. He was knighted by | armed private guards and state police, carried a fortune of $25,000,- 000 from the estate of the late Col. E. H. R. Green in South Dartmouth, Mass., to the First National bank of Boston. The fortune, which consists of the famous coin collection, valued at 5 millions; the stamp collection, valued at 3% millions; a large amount of cash and securities, and a quantity of uncut diamonds, has been under constant guard at the Green home since his death, EFORE taking a recess of two weeks the United States Su. preme court announced that it would review and hand down a decision at this term upon the Wagner labor relations act. Many lawyers believe this law will be held unconstitu- tional, for in the Guffey coal act de- cision the Supreme court held that the relationship between employers and employees was local and beyond the power of congressional reguia- tion. ECRETARY OF LABOR FRAN- CES PERKINS announced that the third national conference on la- bor legislation, designed to stimu. late tiie raising of work standards through federal and state co-opera- tive efforts, will be called into ses- UST about everything necessary to a general European war is now ready, At this distance it seems that Josef Stalin, dictator of Soviet Russia, will be the man to fire the starting pistol; and he 1s reported to be convinced that an- other great conflict is unavoidable. The nations of the continent are lining up as Communist or Fascist, either in the constitution of thelr governments or in their active sympathies. The immediate occa- sion for their disputes is the civil war in Spain. Nearly all the conti- nental governments and that of | Great Britain joined in an agree- ment of nonintervention, but that pact is about played out. Russia, accusing Portugal, Germany and It- aly of aiding the Fascist Spanish rebels, has denounced the agree- ment and declared she reserves | freedom to help the Madrid govern- | ment; the accused nations deny the Soviet charges, and the noninter- vention committee voted that Italy and Portugal were not guilty, the | accusations either not being proved | or referring to what happened be- | fore the international agreement | went into effect. Italian counter- | charges, detailing 20 alleged acts of Russian aid to Spanish Socialists | Portugal severed diplomatic rela- tions with the Madrid government, | and the representatives of the two countries were recalled. Dr. Ar- | mindo Monteiro, Portuguese foreign | minister, followed up this action by | sending to Lord Plymouth, British chairman of the nonintervention committee, a long document accus- ing Russia of having planned and brought about the Spanish civil war. He named the Russian diplomats, agitators and soldiers who, he | charged, were directing the opera- tions. He alleged that Moscow sought to start a revolution in Por- tugal and thus provide a base for attacking General Franco's insur- gent forces in the rear. Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy have buried their differences for the time being and reached an agree- ment on a united policy. This was outlined in a communique published after Italian Foreign Minister Gale- Ciano had conferred with In the first place Hitler and Mussolini in- form the world that they intend to headed by General Franco as the legitimate regime in Spain, but they Other important declarations of 1. Co-operation to protect the and ‘the holy riches of European civilization” and 2. Endorsement of a conference to This implied that nei- presence at the meeling. 3. Co-operation for the rehabilita- tion of the Danubian countries. In one clause of the agreement Germany recognizes Italy's sover- OPULAIRE, the organ of Pre- mier Leon Blum's Socialist par- guns from the United States has been added to the secret preparation for a civil war in France. The Croix de Feu, a Fas- cist organization headed by Col Francois de la Rocque, was dis- solved recently by the government and was succeeded by the new So- cial party. Populaire, referring to the sub- | machine guns, said these “terrible weapons used by American gang- | sters”” arrived from America Havre and Fur- thermore, according to Populaire, great quantities of tear gas bombs and tear gas pistols are arriving REMIER MUSSOLINI, talking at Bologna, said that Italy's "‘ol- ive branch grows out of an immense forest of 8,000,000 bayonets’; and | next day at Imola he told 70,000 listeners that he hoped for long pe- | riods of peace, but not for “eternal peace, which is absurd and impossi- ble.” “The Italian people, which gave | its blood for the empire, is ready for any other trial when the crucial hour approaches,” the Fascist chief shouted. “In order to make peace —just as to make love—it is neces- sary that there be two.” ELGIAN Fascists, known as Rexists and led by Leon Deg- relle, clashed with the police in Brussels and Degrelle was jailed for a night. He said the motive of his demonstration was to show that ex-soldiers were backing the Rex- ists, and he announced that he would carry out his threatened “march on Brussels’ with 150,000 followers and overthrow the gov- ernment. S ETTING a new world's long dis- tance train speed record, the Burlington railway’'s streamlined steel Denver Zephyr made a none stop run from Chicago to Denver in Winners HREE candidates for proval, good on any Put your ‘“‘machine” you will win the vote of any group, however critical, with these fetch- ing frocks especially designed for women who sew at home. Cor- rectly styled, accurately designed and cut, they combine smartness with utility and offer the solution to many wardrobe problems. your ap- ticket. Pattern 1966, the jacket ensem- ble, is a smooth, flattering model, as slimming as it is smart and serviceable. The graceful neck- line and jab weal those extra waistline and lick and with- this rn with or clever box jacket, i sheer wool n any or crepe or velveteen will assist you to put your best foot forward and make a successful appearance. Designed for 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, and 50; size 40 requires four and one-fourth yards of 54 inch fabric. Pattern 1874, the beguiling house frock, features a panelled yoke with the yoke and sleeves cut in one. There is gathered ful- ness in the waist, a shawl collar, and one or two patch pockets for your household trinkets. Easily put together with the aid of the detailed, step-by-step instruction guide, this is a morning frock which will survive the day with honors. The pattern is available in sizes, | 40, 42, and 44. Size 18 requires four and one-half yards of 38 inch fabric. Pattern 1800, the graceful smock, is formed with just eight simple pieces including the pock ets, collar, and cuffs. The con trasting yoke is unusually effec tive, the sleeves are full and graceful, and there is an air of sophistication about the design not often found in a garment so prac- tical and useful. Send for size Small (bust 34-36), Medium (38- 40), or Large (42-44). Size Medium requires four and one-half yards of 35 inch material. Send for the Barbara Bell Fall Pattern Book containing 100 } planned, easy - to - make Exclusive fashions for young women, and mate fifteen cents for your copy Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept, 247 W, Forty-third St., New York, N. Y. Price of patterns, 15 cents each. eC Bell Svads WN1 BE Servier OLR TRUM { : A o_o. EJ MTV 1 T-LN oleman HEATER | [lowehold ® Plenty of quick, penetrating warmth wher. ever you want itl... that's what you get with t Coleman Radiant Heater. Carry and use anywhere. No connections. Makes and burns ts own gas from untrested gasoline. Just the thing for removing chill from , office, store or for extra warmth in severe weather. Costs less than 2 an bour $0 operate! See it at your dealer's. just before serving. » . » off furniture scratches. The wax When buying sheets always al- low at least 10 inches on each side and top and bottom, as the bed will never stay neat with sheets that are too short. Preserves of all kinds, more especially if they are in glass bot- tiles, should be stored in a dark place. They quickly deteriorate in flavor if kept in a light place. © Bell Syndicate. ~WNU Service. Theres a beautiful vine on an wgly old house. In 2ll of the corners it wanders and chngs. It loves the old house I er od certainly t rooney] Some v Time to Weigh Words Our deeper thoughts are best | when written; hardly ever as im- | pressive when spoken. | A Three Days’ Coug Is Your Danger Signal
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers