That Is Perfection Perfection does not consist in doing singular things; but it does consist in doing common things singularly well. Always be sure your friends can grant the favor before you ask it; then there won't be the pain and embarrassment of refusal. We always feel great admiration for those clever people who can mend something when we break it. Everyone remembers what a great man says. So much the worse for his reputation for con- sistency. Those That Tried Failures are facts that prove a man has at least actually tried to be successful. Poise is something that keeps one from speaking too suddenly. The sophisticated person finds little to enjoy. Everything is old tc him. If you want to make your friend happy instead of seeking to have him make you happy, that's the true gold. A man who knows that his hard- ships made the best part of his character may not want his son to have hardships. UI Coleman HEATER Plenty of quick, penetrating warmth wher. ever you want it!.. . that's what you get with 8 Coleman Radiant Heater. Carry and use anywhere. No connections. Makes and bury its own gas from untreated gasoline. Just the thing for removing chill from bome, office, store or for extra warmth ie severe weather. Costs less than 3 an hov™ to operate! See it at your dealer's. WRITE FOR FREE FOLDER. Send postcard now THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO. Dept WU), Wichita, Kans; Chicago, Il. Philadelphia, Pa.; Los Angeles, Calif. (6403 No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can relief now with Creomulsion. us trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomul- sion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to ald nature to soothe and heal the inflamed meme branes as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don't be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv) Our Need i What this country needs is dirt- | fer fingernails and cleaner minds. | --Will Rogers. | NEARLY DROVE HER CRAZY Got Quick RELIEF By Rubbing Muscles were so HE sore she could - Nea hardly touch them. Used Hamlins Wizard Oil and found wonder i rubbed it on and rubbed it in. Thousands say Hamline Wizard Oil works wonders for stiff, aching muscles. Why suffer? Get a bottle for speedy comfort. Pleasant odor, Will not stain clothes, At all druggists, HAMLINS Br 4. CH EGE For MUSCULAR ACHES and PAINS Due to REEUMATISM™M NEURALGIA LUMBAGO CHEST COL 25 Lack of exercise and injudicious eating make stomachs acid. You must neu. tralize stomach acids if you would sleep soundly all night and wake up feeling Milnesia, the original milk of magnesia in wafer form, neutralizes stomach acid. Each wafer equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk of magnesia. Thin, crunchy, mintflavor, tasty. 20¢, 35¢ & 60c at drug stores. By EDWARD W. PICKARD HAIRMAN MORRIS L. COOKE and other members of the fed- eral great plains drouth commis- sion are holding a series of meet- ings in the drouth blighted states for the purpose of for- mulating a relief and control pro- gram and are call- ing in the farmers to consult with them. At the first of these sessions, in ; Bismarck, N. D., of- : am ficials and agricul- M. L. Cooke turists of Montana, Wyoming, Nebraska and North and South Dakota heard O. W. Roberts, federal meteorolo- gist, give the encouraging promise that “greater than normal precipi- tation is anticipated in those states next spring on the basis of light precipitation this fall.” Reports of existing conditions, however, showed that the situation is serious. Gov. Walter Welford, of North Dakota, told the conference that water levels throughout his state are seriously diminished, con- stituting a major problem for the state and federal governments. Another official declared that North Dakota's live stock situation is ‘““most deplorable,” that virtually no live stock is left on ranges in western sections the state and that feed is seriously scarce in all sections. “There is no magic wand at the disposal of the government to make drouth areas bloom,” Mr. Cooke said. “We came here to hear your suggestions and we hope to gain from this and similar meetings data which will guide future, helpful leg- islation, ‘““The reports so far received indi- cate that much can be done through government assistance and expert advice.” THE Mississippi Valley associ- ation, meeting in St. Louis, adopt- ed a resolution calling for rejection of the St. Lawrence seaway treaty unless the crown colony of New- foundland and Anticosta island are ceded to the United States by Great Britain. for a minute that Britain ever would do that. “The position of Newfoundland, of the treaty in its present form.” foundland is a crown colony rate from Canada. St. Lawrence plug of Anticosta Island should both be ceded to the United States to guarantee our safe- ty in case of war.” The new president of the associa- tion is Arthur J. Weaver, former governor of Nebraska and now igation association. NE thousand banqueters Washington celebrated the hundredth anniversary of the American patent system and an an- lected by a secret committee prominent men. These are the in- ventors and their inventions: Robert Fulton, steamboat: Morse, telegraph; Charles year, vulcanized rubber; Cyrus Hall McCormick, grain reaper: Elias Howe, sewing machine; George Westinghouse, airbrake; Alexander Graham Bell, telephone; Thomas Alva Edison, electric lamp, phono- graph, motion pictures, and many other devices; Ottmar Mergenthal- um; Wilbur Wright, co-inventor with his brother, Orville, of the air- plane. SEATTLE has a habit of recall- ing its mayors when they are not satisfactory. One was thus oust- ed in 1911 and another in 1931. Now a movement has been started for the recall of Mayor John F. Dore, who is accused of incit- ing acts of violence in a labor dispute. Formal charges of misfeasance, mal feasance and viola- tion of the oath of ofiice were con tained in a petition Mayor signed by fifteen women and eleven John F. Dore men. It asked the corporation coun- sel to draft the charges in con- densed form so that an effort could be made to obtain the 24,000 signa- tures necessary for a special recall election. Dore, fifty-four, was elected in March over Arthur B. Langlie, can- didate of the New Order of Cincin- natus, an independent organization of young voters seeking better mu- nicipal government. The charges against the mayor largely have to do with his ac- tions in connection with the strike of employees of the Seattle Post- Intelligencer. REAT BRITAIN asked Gen. Francisco Franco, leader of the Spanish rebels, to establish a safety zone for neutral ships in Bar- celona harbor which the Fascist chieftain had declared blockaded. Franco's reply was not satisfactory, and besides, one of his vessels sank an unidentified ship off the capital of Catalonia. Therefore the British government promptly started a con- siderable number of warships toward the Mediterranean, cruisers and submarines being included. Foreign Minister Eden already had assured parliament that British shipping would be protected on the high seas with all the might of the British navy-—which is something to give the Spanish Fascists pause. France took the same stand, but warned its merchantmen to conduct themselves “with extreme caution.” Excitement over the torpedo at- tack on a loyal Spanish cruiser by a submarine which the Madrid gov- ernment more than hinted was a German vessel was allayved by the EPORTING on its annual sur- vey, the National Child Labor committee says the improved busi- ness activity has been accompanied by a general increase in the use of child labor, with “appalling con- ditions’ in some industries. “It appears to be hard for the individual who sees business and trade reviving,” the report said, ‘to pause to consider the extent to which this process of creating wealth is being built upon the backs of children who need to be in school instead of having their youth ground out of them at labor.” { ARL VON OSSIETSKY, Ger- man pacifist who has been im- prisoned by the Nazi government after being convicted of treason, has been awarded the Nobel peace prize for 1935—and the Nazis are exceedingly indignant, looking up- on the award as “an impudent chal- lenge and insult to the new Ger- many.” Ossietsky, who is seriously ill, was released from prison recent- ly but is under guard by the secret police. His "‘treason’ consisted in printing an article some time ago saying the German army was sec- retly rearming. The peace prize for 1936 was giv- en Carlos Saavedra Lamas, Argen- tine foreign minister, recently pres- ident of the League of Nations as- sembly and active in ending the Chaco war between Bolivia and Par- aguay. ORs P. VAN SWERINGEN, the Cleveland financier who, with his late brother M. J. Van Swerin- gen, created a great railway em- pire, died suddenly while on a rail- road trip to New York. In his 57 years of life he rose from being a newsboy to a commanding position in Americar yrtation. The great depr st ruined the brothers fin ally, but Oris was 1 well on the over to the rebel side. Madrid was being hammered by rebel shells » was intense figh versity City, northwest tior the capital, where the insurgents h ed. The American embassy closed on orders from Washington and Eric C. ¢ charge d'af- faires, gave protection to Americans who wished to go to Va- of ship. The German and Italian em- bassies, abandoned by their staffs, fense junta and a number of Fas- cist refugees were arrested in the former. Berlin scoffed at this ac- tion but Rome called it banditry. I. STICKLING, a German en- * gineer, was sentenced to death make earnest demands for postponement of the execution, and then suddenly announced that if the sentence were carried out Germany would sever diplomatic relations with the soviet government. Great Britain feared situation the European war terceded. He asked German Am- bassador Von Ribbentrop to urge Hitler not to bring about the open break with Russia, and he instruct- ed the British ambassador at Mos- ling. nent commuted the German's sen- Sev- The agreement directed the communist lin foreign office. paign against communism, and they invite other nations to join them. lawyer of Washington, has served the Democratic party in va- rious ways for many years and has contributed liberally to, its campaign funds, and now he has been rewarded. President Roosevelt has appointed him American ambassa- Jor to Soviet Russia, to succeed William C. Bullitt, who was transferred to the Paris embassy. Mr. Davies, whose wife is the former Mrs. Marjorie Post Hutton, heiress of the big Post cere- al fortune, is a native of Wisconsin and practiced law in that state un- til 1913, when he went to Washing- J. E. Davies eral trade commission under Presi- dent Wilson in 1915-16, and was taken along by Wilson as an eco- nomic adviser to the Versailles con- ference. Before that he had served as western manager of Wilson's campaign and as secretary of the Democratic national committee and he was offered in 1918 the am- the governorship of the Philippines. He declined, however, so he could run for the United States senate from Wisconsin. He was defeated. He was active during the recent campaign, serving on the advisory committee at Democratic headquar- ters in New York. President Roosevelt signed the Davies commission before he left on his South American cruise, but the announcement was withheld until word was Teceived 4 from the soviet government t vies was per- sona grata at Moscow. JOSEF ST exceedingly rar presented to his rymen the prog ch he himsel U nises many 1 leges to Russian » include equal the right to work, in | the secret ballot, leisure, material | age, education, women, zenry, freedom of conscience and the | right to worship, freedom of speech, | press, assembly and meetings and | the right to organize into any group | except political bodies. security equal rights universal equality of citi- s———— IAT work relief as adminis. | tered by the federal | ment be gradually discontinued is the recommendation of the board of United States Chamber of Com- merce. ‘The board adopted a report of a committee headed by John W. O'Leary of Chicago which held that the work relief “proves in op- eration to fall far short of its purposes and to create new . gin yroblems.”’ i J. W. O'Leary ’ *“The committee,’ | said the report, "does not propose | sudden and instantaneous stoppage. | Those gradual steps should be taken {| which are always essential when ad- justmerts have to be made upon a considerable scale. “There is at present danger that, ceasing to have work for unem- | ployed persons as its function, this activity will undertake to replace | some of the functions of private en- terprise in advancing recovery. Nm NEW YORK'S state’s unemploy- ment the court. affecting not only state employment social security program. B¥ A vote of 21,679 to 2,043 the convention of the American Federation of Labor approved the action of the executive council in suspending the ten union that are with John L. Lewis in his Com- mittee for Industrial Organization movement. However the convention accepted the advice of President Green and voted to renew the coun- cil’'s offer to talk peace with the rebel unions and to give the council power to call a special federation convention and expel the rebels if peace negotiations fail. The convention approved the exec- utive council's decision that no steps should be taken to form a labor po- litical party. JEPWARD F. McGRADY, assist. ant secretary of labor, was still trying to bring about a settlement of the great strike of maritime workers, but didn’t seem to be get- ting along very well. Indeed, the situation was made worse by na- tionwide strike calls to the Mas ters, Mates and Pilots association and the Marine Engineers union. Federal operation of emergency ships to Alaska and Hawaii was discussed but not decided. With It Comes B ® oldness in New Ideas; Our POOR salesman may be a genius at gardening; an in- different stenographer sometimes never suspects her own gift for cookery, for dress design, for abil- ity to pick up foreign languages. By thinking candidly about your- self, by being as friendly to your- self as you would be to another, you can often draw up a picture of your tastes, abilities, desires and hopes which will astonish you. Take an inventory of yourself, paying special attention to the things you like but which you have little of in your daily life. Then start putting them into it, From Interest to a Specialty Often we have to begin slowly —reading, or finding courses of in- struction within our means, or working out a program for our- selves in solitude; but every day something can be done toward the new way of living. It can grow Foreign Words and Phrases one learn all; from a single case infer the whole, Blague. (F.) Boastful talk; an incredible story. Damnum absque Loss without legal injury Locum tenens. (L.) One holdi another's place; proxy. Forsan et haec olim mem juvabit. (L.) Perhaps it will be pleasant to remember even these things. Enfonts perdus. hope, Haud passib unequal steps. In propria one's own person; us aequis. persona. (L.) in person. tot many uot homines, Opinions as "Snow" in Hollywood Snow never falls on Hollywood, yet ‘‘siow,” of a sort, bothers cameramen on outdoor whenever the breezes blow gusts. This meteorological freak is due to millions of tiny wisps f silver foil which blow off the portable deflectors. Edges of the sheets of foil are purposely not glued down, for their waving in the breeze gives a *‘soft ' light on the camera subjects. from an interest into a hobby, from a hobby into a side line, from a side line into a specialty. Then comes the day when che un- satisfactory work can be given up (to someone who will find it as satisfying and as absorting as we find our own new field) and suc- { cess is at last really and notice- | ably on its way to us—or we are | on our way to it. Vitalizes Character Then living begins to be fun. We meet people with the same tastes, not just the chance acquaintances who come our way in an uncon- genial profession. Having suc- ceeded once, we begin to show a little daring; we try new ideas more boldly, and our world of friends and activities expands even more. Chances we couldn't even imagine until we got inside our real work turn up on every hand. Best of all, even a small success has a vitalizing effect on character. That is the most interesting dis- covery that success brings in its train: those who are living suc- cessfully make the best friends. They are free from malice and | spitefulness. They are not petty. | They are full of good talk and hu- { mor.— Dorothea Brande in Cosmo- { politan. e Here's a baking powder, tried, tested and used exclu sively by experts. Gr {Baking Powder By 8. Eugene Colgin I have smoked more than two bil. Hon pounds of meat. On my father's farm 30 years ago 1 discovered what happened to meat during smoking In old smokehouse. Fine drops of moisture ap- peared on the hams and sides. “condensing” on them. This led to my discovery that smoke could be condensed, and simply . “brushed on” the 8 8. COLGIN, who meat. discovered FIGARO told hours of backbreaking labor FIGARO Con- densed Smoke has saved since then! Years of research, since, have re- vealed what really causes meat to spoil. Note photograph “A.” This is what the eye of the microscope | cidness, usually near the bone. It is | & bacteria, shown here through the | microscope’s eye. And photo “C" shows that pest called the “skipper.” | which is in reality the larva of a { fly. It lays its eggs on the meat, and iat the first warm spell, they hatch. There is only one known way to prevent all these troubles. That is thorough smoking. Of course every- one knows how uncertain the old | smokehouse is. Other so-called smok- | Ing methods, or substitutes for smok- ing, are likewise risky. How can you tell whether or not the mest is thoroughly smoked? But {If you want to ibe SURE your meatwill come {through the hot summer months sweet and whole some and eat- able, brush ev- ery square enemy, green mold, Mold is a Wo “fungus” ; technically not a bacteria, but its action is similar. This para- site attacks the surface of the meat. Photo “B” shows the cause of ran- inch with FIG- W ARO Condensed | Smoke. It pene trates. It posi- tively prevents skippers, mold, rancidness, or drying out of the meat. And it costs only one-third of a cent per pound! Your dealer has it, or can get it, in two sizses—82-0z. (enough for 500 1bs.), $1.50; and 16- oz. (enough for 250 Ibs.) $1.00. —Ady. price you paper. Your advertisements make
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers