1 1 P AY fo Gardeners More Combinations ROP combination is useful with vegetables such as tomatoes, melons or corn, as well as with ‘“‘small garden'' crops like rad- ishes, lettuce and carrots which require comparatively less space. The following combinations are suggested by Harold Coulter, veg- etable expert of the Ferry Seed Institute: Sow dwarf peas early in rows four to six feet apart; plant radish between rows of peas, and plant one row of cucumbers between every two rows of peas. Set cauliflower early in rows two feet apart; one foot on each side of each caulifiower row plant spin- ach; sow radishes between spin- ach rows. When radishes are used set tomato plants in the space thus vacated. Peppers or egg plant may be substituted for to- matoes. Sow early turnips in rows three to four feet apart; later plant a row of corn between the turnip rows. Give ground ample supplies of fertilizer when combined cropping is practised extensively. Wise and Otherwise sme U mnenn It is said yawning is a sign of unpunctuality, Well, as a rule, it's behind hand. Necessities are the things we do without while we're paying the installments on the luxuries. A professor says that all great fairy tales have been cre- ated by men. Married men? Soft soap is sometimes the best cure for dirty looks. Easy money has the swiftest wings. At least one woman ean claim that her husband always works steadily. She married a tightrope walker. How / [ron the EASY WAY with 7rCeoleman SELF- iron HEATING Thousands of women have banished “ironing day blues” with this time-saving, work. saving Coleman Iron. Genuine instant lighting. Entirely self. heating. Entire ironing surface is evenly beated, with a hot point and hot edges. Iron with less effort, in one-third less time. Do your next iron ing with the Instant Lighting Coleman. It's onderful time and bor saver. See it at your dealer's. ch. WRITE! Send poet \ card for free folder and full details, Address Dept. WU-323 Wichita, Hans.) Chicage, Hl. Philadelphia, Pa Loe Angeles, Cali, (mw) Selected by Trial from the World's || i Best Strains | BEET ~ Early wonder (Special); Detroit |i Dark Red, 1/4 B. 25¢; . 75¢; 10 Ibs. $6.50, ] CARROT —~Long Chantenay; California | Bunching, 1/8 Ib. 25¢; ib. 85¢; 10 bs. $7.50. TOMATO — New Rutgers Certified ; Grot- ben's Globe, az. 40¢c; 1/4 15. $1.25; Bb. $4.00. | Packets of above —10¢ each, 3 for 25¢ || i ® All Postpaid * Catalogue FREE | Let us quote onion sets J. MANNS & CO. ENSOR & FORREST STREETS Eee. 1887 . Baltimore, Md. i Irrational Hate We hate some persons because we do not know them; and we will not know them because we hate them.—Colton. “INSIDE INFORMATION" For Indigestion or CONSTIPATION CLEANSE INTERNALLY the tee-cup way. | /_»* constipation. Ar drug-stores—— 25¢ and 10¢. FREE SAMPLE Write te: MOTHERS, ATTENTION! If your child has WORMS, the best remedy to drive them out is Dr. Peery’'s “Dead Shot” Vermifuge. Good for grown- ups also. 50c a bottle at drug- gists or Wright's Pill Co., 100 Gold St., New York, N. Y. WNU-—4 15-38 J. note. YOR NEW YORK ,.. avi at 36th ST. National Topics Interp by William National Press Building mais — Washington.—The coming primary campaigns for Democratic nomina- tions to the senate Look for and house of rep- Dynamite resentatives are apparently going to be loaded with more than the usual amount of political dynamite. There are three or four reasons for this and, as viewed from the capi- tal, any of them is worth watching for the color of the results. First, I should say these Demo- cratic campaigns are due to show just about how far President Roose- velt can go in dictating party nom- inations and to develop reprisals against those Democrats who pre- fer democracy to the New Deal. This phase of the political picture, of course, will have a bearing on the 1940 Democratic National con- vention. It may be the beginning, therefore, of a battle in which the Democrats will strive to recapture their party machinery from the Deal wing of the Second, the campaign may possi- can be a coalition among those op- posed to the New Deal. The coali- lowers under the leadership of Sen- be said in truth ern Democrats never will vote for a . . Republican label and there are many sections of the bring forth Republican spirit, if result in some sort of life being in- stilled into the opposition party. the Republicans have honest-to- goodness leaders anywhere among them. of repre- all states during the spring and summer, ex- Delaware and New Mexico. In those four states, the nomina- tions are made in state conventions. in primaries excepting the four above and in New New York and to get rid of on Senator Van Nuys So, from now on we may expect out-and-out New Dealers or as out- and-out Democrats who stand with lieve the New Deal policy to be sound. It has been interesting to note the fairness with which some if not all the Democrats treat the New Deal antagonism. I do not know whether it is bred of a fear that Mr. Roosevelt still has a tre- mendous personal following or whether the New Deal philosophy and the Democratic philosophy co- incide at many places. Suffice it to say that in the various speeches and announcements that have been forthcoming, new candidates for the Democratic nomination for house or senate have uniformly stuck to the promise that when Mr. Roosevelt is right, they will support him; when they think him wrong, they are pre- pared to oppose him. * * ® One of the latest to ennounce a candidacy has been Rep. Worth Clark of Idaho. He is seeking the nomination from the Idaho Demo- crats for the senate seat now held by Sen. J. P. Pope. Those two men serve as an excellent illustra- tion of the point I have tried to make. You can distinguish between them as a Democrat and a New Dealer, respectively. Senator Pope has backed up the President on ev- erything and no questions asked; Mr. Clark takes the position and frequently has said so with a bold- ness and an independence worthy of Sen. Bill Borah of the same state, that he is “100 per cent for Presi- dent Roosevelt when I believe the President's policies to be sound. When they are not sound, in my opinion, I shall oppose them just as vigorously as I would oppose moss- backed reactionary plans by Repub- ans.” Now, it may be said by some that Mr. Clark is relegating to himself a considerable amount of authqrity ~~the statement that when he thinks the President's plans are sour, he will oppose them. 1 take an en- tirely contrary view. The people of a state send a man to the house As an Hlustration Bruckart Washington, D. C, of representatives or the senate to serve as their spokesman, their leader. They don't want somebody to follow somebody else, or at least they should not want that type of man. If Mr. Clark feels that he has a better understanding of what is the United States, I think he is only exercising his capacity and his right of leadership. a test in the primary. The people what commends it to me. further illustration, I think it ought fessorial policies that terie of advisers. His record seems to indicate that such is the case. On the other hand, Senator Pope has never wavered. He has found out first what Mr. Roosevelt wanted and has stayed with that through thick and thin. It may be that a thick-and-thin stand is good poli- tics; it may be that voters in many states prefer that. But the thought I am seeking to advance is the necessity for members of the house and senate to think sometimes of the welfare of their constituencies, In the campaigns of 1934 and 1936, the bulk of the Democratic mem- house and senate went out and campaigned wholeheartedly for Roosevelt policies. There were fewer who sounded the tocsin in way in 1936 than did in 1934. Which is to say, that some bers found in policies mem- weaknesses they were wrong, Well, the result has been fewer nit wit laws. ® » . In addition to his other activities, the President United States is probably busy as any man in the world, President Roose- velt is now in competition with the hundreds of men and women who I re- fer, of course, to the publication in newspapers and magazines of his state papers and the serial story publication of his notes and com- ments and the questions asked in his regular semiweekly meetings with the newspaper correspondents. The President's action in selling this material has created quite a has brought home to many writers a fact that has agitat- ed me in a serious way. For the first time, many writers realized what has been happening to pri- of the President as state governments, especially the fore had been reserved for private effort. Of course, the President is not ‘““the government’ as one might say in the case of running electric light plants or building houses or terial he is syndicating and for which he receives money is of the same fabric. It is so because it represents a record of an official in office. I find difficulty, therefore, in distinguishing between the lesson is so pointed. jection to their sale rests on an- other reason than the monetary re- turn. That is, another reason in als. Let me state my objection by a review. It has always been re- quired of the newspaper correspond- ents that the President could say anything he desired in the press conferences and it must be held in confidence and never printed unless the President gave permission for its use. Included in the records now being published, however, are many items never before published. They were held in confidence by the correspondents heretofore, Another thing: a shorthand writ. er always sits at Mr. Roosevelt's left during the press conferences. He takes every question and every answer. The record is complete. But the correspondents always have been denied the privilege of re- examining those shorthand notes or, rather, the transcribed records. They were held as the President's personal property. Nevertheless, the syndicated newspaper stories and the magazine articles and the volumes of state papers now in process of publication use those very records in a most complete form. The President has added his comments to many of them. It makes a most interesting record-— but the three or four hundred Wash- ington correspondents who make their living as professional writers have had no chance to increase their own emoluments or to make their own writings more important by writing the material which is now being disclosed for the first time. . © Western Newspaper Union, * Floyd ADVENTURERS’ CLUB HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELF! “The Doctor and the Killer” By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter ELLO EVERYBCDY: You know, boys and girls, a doctor’s life is full of adven- ture. It’s full of inconveniences too. They never know at what hour of the day or night the telephone might ring and send them rushing along on a sick call. A doctor crashes the Adventurers’ club today with the story of his most nerve wracking experience. Dr. John A. Mangieri of Brooklyn, N. Y., is his name. Speaking about doctors, though, I want to tell you first a thing I saw in a theater one evening. The play was a melodrama. The packed house was silent at a particularly thrilling moment when suddenly a voice rang out from the audience. ‘Is there a doctor in the house?” Everybody looked around at the interruption. the middle of their lines. A little man with a serious face was standing in the aisle. Then another man with a beard got up next to me. He called toward the man in the aisle. “Yes,” he said, “I'm a doctor.” The little man looked the doctor over while bated breath. Then he waved his hand: “Hello, Doc!" he said. And sat down! That's all there was to it. But there ought to be a law think so? The actors stopped in we all watched with Called Out at Two in the Morning. Our Doe. Mangieri's call wasn’t any joke. Doc had gone to bed, dog-tired after a busy day at the hospital when that bloom- ing phone of his tore him out of the drowsy arms of Morpheus. Doc rubbed his sleepy eyes and glanced at the clock. Two o'- clock in the morning! Swell time for anybody to get sick, he thought, and answered the insistent ring. But it wasn't the phone. It was the doorbell. Worse luck! Probably an emergency acci- dent, Well, sir, Doc dragged his weary limbs out o done many times since hanging out his shingle, the door. Ww Wags prac n : at that he had staggered down to Bath Junc- »d, the way 1 the The Man on the Bed Had Been Shot. tion section of Brooklyn looked pretty tough and A stranger stood at the door ie seemed nervous § sick,” he said, and begged the doctor to c« once and visit him }C says he 1its he didn't like the looks man, but a doctor's duty comes first, so he climbed into stepped out to make the call The stranger me at of the his clothes and A taxi stood at the door and the stranger insisted that Doc ride with him. Doc noticed another shady looking gent sitting in the back seat the cab, so he decided he'd take his own car and play safe “I'll follow you,” Doc said and climbed into his coupe Evil Looking House in a Bad Street. The cab shot away and turned so many streets as Doc followed the the good doctor didn't know where he was. Finally the cab stopped an evil looking street and Doc drew up at the curb. The house they had come to was even more evil looking. It was a forbidding looking frame house without any lights showing. As the cab drove away Doc was escorted up the rickety steps by the two men. The second man, Doc says, was even tougher looking than the first. They opened the sagging door with a latch key and went inside. A dim gas light burned low in the hall. Without a word one of the men led the way up the stairs while the other dropped in behind Doc. Doc says he just knew something was wrong and wondered if they were going to attack him. They turned into a half dark bedroom. On the bed fully dressed was a third hard boiled looking gent. Ordered to Treat a Wounded Man. And then Doc understood. The man on the bed had been shot. His bad spot. There is a law that forbids doctors to treat bullet wounds without immediately reporting them to the police. The law is very strict. A doctor in the Dillinger case is in jail now for treating the wounded gunman. realized he'd have to do something OR ELSE! him roughly. “Get busy, Doc,” he growled. Doc did some quick thinking. The men he knew now were gang- sters. If he didn’t treat their pal they might give him the same dose of lead. If he did, the police would have to be notified and the gangsters would come back at him for that, He stalled and told them he had left his stethoscope in the car. They let him go and Doc went out. In the street he got a break. A policeman was passing. Doc didn't want to leave a wounded man die without medical attention, so he decided to go back. But he told the policeman that if he wasn’t out in 20 minutes to come after him. Then Doc as he entered left the latch off the door. Police Came at the Right Moment. His patient, Doc found, had been shot in the stomach. His friends dropped their pretense and told him bluntly to extract the bullet and be fast about it. Doc told the truth that the operation was difficult without an X-ray. He suggested a hospital. The patience of the gunmen was now exhausted. Doc expected any minute to have his head bashed in. One of the thugs raised a clenched fist. “Can that hospital stuff," he growled, “or we'll send you there.” And just at that moment, like in a play, the policeman came with radio car reinforcements and took the gang off Doc's neck. And the next day Doc read in the papers that his patient and his pals were held in jail for wholesale murder! That was years ago, before the G-men made it safe for doctors— and Doc hasn't failed to treat a patient since. Copyright. —WNU Service, One of the men nudged Named Bay of Paria When Columbus discovered Trin. What Causes the Rainbow The rainbow is caused by light from the sun passing into a drop of water and out again after reflection from the far side. Since the drops are spherical, hence are quite alike no matter how turned, it follows that the angle between the lines from drop to sun and eye must always be the same whether the drop be high up or near the ground. This requires that the rainbow, as viewed by an observer, must appear ciycu- lar, idad in 1498 he called the Bay of Paria the Gulf of Pearls, because of the quantities of oysters attached to the trunks of the mangrove trees rooted in the waters there. It was his belief that when the oysters opened, drops of dew fell from the trees and eventually became pearls. He hoped to find enough to make a necklace for Queen Isabella, but enemies sent him horhe in chains without the pearls. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT OPPORTUNITY $1 ~BOTTLE| PERCALE TRIPLE | APRCN 15¢ STRENGTH ORGANDIE Value VANILLA | TRIMMED Valse Both for 99 cents Desert Sample Free— Agents Wanted BOB COOK PURE FOODS 2044-A West Lake Street, Chicago, iilinols OLD GOLD, ETC. : TOP PRICES FOR OLD GOLD, BILVER AND COINS FLOWERS 10 GIANT DAHLIAS, $1.00 Final Offer—8 10 12in. blooms. Labeled. Hathor, Ivory, Hercules, Canteen, Alight, Fontaine, Bluejay, Regal, Grizzly, Mist “ Daklia- Giad-Aeres, D. W. Va. #. Middiebourne, CHICKS CHICKS #0 and Up { ks. also Ducks and Poults Hatches MILFORD HATCHERY, Liberty Rd. Pikesville, Me Pikesville 26.1. week! 0. Reckdale Bob White's SUPERIOR CHICKS NEW LOW PRICES on our money-making spring chicks. Blood -tested, leading breeds. All chicks uncon- ditionally guaranteed. Bob White’s Hatcheries 4001 Eastern Ave. Baltimore, Md. Hello, Folks—It's Chick Time A ar. Gus ontal our circuls ; niee cla scount « 10 breeds Al WwW. D. tested Koch's Poultry Farm and Hatchery Bex 10 Beaver Springs brings Pa. Leghorn — Cockerels, $3.00 per 100 BLOOD-TESTED CHICKS Hollywood White Leghorns, $ Barred or White Rocks. 6:: EL ng, Bone CO) 100 CARTERS 3360 Germantown Ave., Phila Pa. $1.00 Deposit, Balance C.O.D. Plus PP. Barren White Leghorn Chicks also B Rock { LEGHORN $7.50 100, WHITE HFIELD, PA. QUALITY CHICKS Wh & Br leghorns 100°: S00: 1000's Anoones $7.78 536.50 $70 White & Barred Rocks & Single Comb Heads 8.50 40.00 White ¥randoties and Hampshire Reds 2.00 42% Wh & Bik Giants Wh Black, Buff Minoroas, Buf Orpingions Light Brahmas . 3.00 Bronse Turkey Poni Heary Assoried, $7.00 per 10 Light $6.80 per J (Grade A A Chicks ic oa higher) All Breeders Biood tested SLI books your order, balance CO D If cash in Tull is sent Gedy 5. BB to IL UN can be shipped with one order Catalog chicks, ay and June prices | cent less por chick EPHRATA HATCHERIES BOX 1012. EFHRATA, PA. BABY CHICKS C. 0. D. From Selected Blood Tested FF PRICES OW ans £8 C. White Leghorns Barred Plymouth Rocks . White Plymouth Rocks... White Wysndottes New Humnpabire Rods White Leghors Poliets White Leghorn Cockereis Heds 8 and N. H FARMS, RIC i 4 Buvusd 23855383 »” PNuNa RARE, FANCY, ORNAMENTAL Varieties of Poultry. Polish, Hamburgs, etc. Prize winners at all leading shows. Waterfowl Specialists STOCK ~~ EGGS AND CHICKS IN SEASON WRITE YOUR W HOMESTEAD FARMS, McGraw, N. Y. INDIAN ARROW HEADS SEND $100.4 WY Mall repaid 29 REMEDIES RHODODENDRON, KALMIA AZALEA, hemlock, maples, 35 ft.. $10.00 dozen. PHOTOGRAPHY Films Developed Two beautiful glossy, double weight, pro- fessional enlargements and 8 prints all for twenty-five cents coin. Reprints 3 cents. ALLIED PHOTO SERVICE CO. Drawer 289K - - Sparta, Wis. highest mountain, the Russians have built a large hotel, the ma- terial for which was transported to the site by airplane. — : 2 for Single Rooms with Shower $2.50 with Tub Bath $1.00 FOR EACH ADDITIONAL PERSON Il, quiet and select. One block from Empire State Bidg., Sth Avenue and large department stores. Especially desirable for family groups. Two excellent restaurants. Send for booklet” R” with map HOTEL Under KNOTT Management Collingu 45 West 34th St. (bet. Sth & 6th Aves) NEW YORK
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers