CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT CHICKS ROCKS, REDS & BR, CROSSES hatched from selected Blood-Tested Breeders. MILFORD HATCHERY Milford Road nr, Liberty Rd., Pikesville. P. 0. ROCKDALE, MD, Pikesville 36-R. OPPORTUNITIES Come to Sunny California os tn fusines location. Business opportunities, farms, homes. Free particulars. California Owners Listing Bureau, Cnlit, AGENTS WANTED New Discovery by Used Car Dealer saves car owners millions in repairs. Placed in motor through spark plug openings is guaranteed to stop knocks and oll pumping: add pep and power: save cost of reconditioning. F20.00 dally easily made selling ear owners. Send £0 for demonstration package and agents proposition. AUTOMOTIVE SPECIALTY MFG. CO., Atlanta, Ga. ; Aw HOUSEHOLD ( : 2) QUESTIONS \ / Germless Brushes. — Once a week pour a little peroxide of hy- drogen over the toothbrushes to sterilize them. Rinse with cold water and hang up in their places. We pay so much attention to the teeth and so little to the brush these days. * * * Cleaning Behind clean the painted wall behind the refrigerator or stove tightly at- tach a soft cloth to a yardstick, broom handle or fishing pole, dip it in warm water and soap suds and poke around at will. To clean linoleum under refrigerators or stoves, dip the cloth in floor wax. This polishes as it cleans. ® * * Washing Dingy Bath Towels.— Bath towels that have become din- gy should be put into boiler of cold water, soap added and a little lemon juice. Heat water to boil- ing point. Rinse towels in luke- warm blueing water and hang in the sun. + * * Toast Animals. — Cut animal shapes out of bread with animal cookie cutters. Spread with but- ter and toast a light golden brown under the broiler. Serve these to the children to eat with their soup. » » * Economy Note.—Save all celery tops, wash and dry them and place in the oven, turning them now and then. Store the leaves in an airtight tin. Use them for fla- voring soups, salads, etc. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medicines you have tried for your common cough, chest cold, or bronchial irri- tation, you may get relief now with Creomulsion. ous trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with any remed less potent than Creomulsion, whi goes right to the seat of the trouble and alds nature to soothe and heal the ed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel germe laden phl Even if other remedies have falled, don't be discouraged, try Creomul- sion. Your druggist is authorized to refund your money if you are not thoroughly satisfied with the bene- fits obvained. Creomulsion is one word, ask for it plainly, see that the name on jue botile is Croom ilal ok, and e genuine prod and the relict you want. (Adv) Safe From Cajolery Schoolmaster—Why do we speak of the wisdom of a serpent? Willie—Because you can't pull its leg, sir. Healthy Mind Will Preserve Facial Beauty By PATRICIA LINDSAY ® Bell Syndicate. WNU Service. HEALTHY, clear thinking, en- ergetic mind is not only the nucleus of beauty but it is the nu- cleus of a radiant happy life! Had I space to quote famous au- thorities I could convince you that destructive thoughts, or an undisci- health and destroy her hap- As you think, your face and eyes your thoughts. Catch a glimpse of yourself in a mirror as Notice how your eyes sparkle and your lips turn upward when you speak gaily. See how quickly a frown appears and your eyes dim when you talk of sorrow or feel sad. Your lips narrow and your eyes Would you have believed it? Do you know that every unworthy registers on your face? countenances reveal their habitual Of course you have. Over- Sick minds, registered on faces, love. So don’t be a neurotic. Keep your It in- strument of your entire body. Let it receive wholesome, pleasant mes- gages. Let it send wholesome, pleas- ant dictations. You know the old Your face reflects your thoughts adage that within" —well your mind! If you have been in the habit of brooding, of becoming easily hurt at people's thoughtless words or ac- tions, strive to overcome those ten- dencies. Ignore hurts and discour- agements. Realize that brooding— or worrying—is an insidious form “Beauty comes from it does, from within you hold dear. Don’t be a woman consumed with self-pity. Don’t be a girl consumed with self-pity. Every person has a tough time in life. Every person has problems and hurdles to leap. No life is without sorrow nor is any life without joy! Take life as it comes. Keep yourself healthy and HINT-OF-THE-DAY 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. Death Bearers A fit of anger is as fatal to dig- nity as a dose of arsenic is to life.—Holland. GUIDE BOOK to GOOD VALUES When abroad, can he ie Sop 3 out ex setly you want to go, long you can stay, and what it will cost you. ® The advertisements in this are really a The intelligent way to go about changing the style of your hairdress you have given your hair a thor- ough brushing away from the scalp. Comb your hair back from the face. your good features and soften your If you can afford it, go to an ex- pert stylist and let him take you in hand. Otherwise go to a good bar- your clothes. Try all sorts of parts until you find one that does-a lot for you. Area of Dominion of Canada The area of the Dominion of Can- ada is greater than that of conti- nental United States. The area of United States proper is 3,026,790 square miles, while that of the Do- minion of Canada is 3,729,665 square miles. United States proper and Alaska have an area of 3,617,675 square miles. Thus it will be seen that the Dominion of Canada has a greater area than the combined areas of the United States proper and Alaska. Fear of Ghosts The belief that a widow who re- marries will be haunted by the spir- it of her late husband is widespread in both primitive and civilized coun- tries, says a writer in Collier's Weekly. As late as 1912 a man in Macon Ga., was quickly granted a divorce when he explained that the ghost of his wife's first husband bothered them so much they could no longer live together, WASHINGTON. — The period of distorted claims by the winners and the equally distorted alibis of the losers seems to be about over, We have heard all of the tumult and the shouting of an election time, The total vote has been tabulated, and it shows a greater number—83 new ones—of Republicans in the house of representatives and eight new Re- publican senators. Some 14 more states have Republican governors ready to take over from the Demo- crats they have displaced. There were what may be called important numerical gains for the Republican party label. But while the total vote has been tabulated and served as the basis for the claims of the winners and the alibis of the losers, those fig- ures will be forgotten soon. The We will be measuring the results for It is quite unimportant, in my mind, to appraise what the swing of a few votes may have meant, It is, however, mighty important to this 1938 election. There were hard and close fights in the whole of New England; there were bitter strug- gles in New York, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and else- speaking, local questions did not provide the fundamental in the states that are so important politi- cally as those mentioned issue What does it mean? What is the portent? Other writers and analysts have given and are giving views. I guess there is no prohibi- tion against mine I firmly believe the votes cast in the 1938 election the expres- sion of an opposition to further ex- perimentation by government in the field of unsound the were theories; and it was definitely for the-road national policy. It therefore, a showing, a f, prooi of party system of government, surely, to that extent, the and national life benefited by poll taken on November 8, 1938. More Thinking and Less Emotion Seems to Be Rule Looking over the the whole picture good government of a sound lasting character cannot help ing his faith renewed. Of course, power which Mr. Roosevelt so often attributed to a few whom he has called the ‘‘economic royalists.” The New Dealers completely capitu- lated to organized labor of the C, I. O. type, and used the numbers of votes there to bulwark its assault on business. The middle classes which embrace the backbone and the salt of the earth of any nation haven't had much consideration from the New Deal thinkers. They have been the ‘forgotten men'' (and spoke when campaigning in 1932. is quite clear that the middle classes have grown tired of government playing into the hands of a single class. They are tired, as they were in 1932, when the Republicans had big business. The sum total of the situation, as regards the middle classes, is that they have become critical again. They {followed Mr. Roosevelt un- (speaking, now, of the and they accepted his statements that ‘““we have planned it that way.” But when the depres- sion of 1937 came on and it hit as hard of 1930, they as that found doubt in their minds. He them there fol of reasoned. So natural sequence . and the country began to think tha criticism was legitimate New Dealers’ barrage that the criticism, propaganda. With they da Ls the that is good for a democracy, they occupying their rightful government There are han any they are the majority, this year voles. aid of again and they showed it again by the sharp division of The New Deal, old line Democrats, will control the congress for the next two years. But their cx 1 is not character as to permit of rights to any individual representative or senator or any group of them. There can be no ed fist or “must” orders. In- stead, if Majority Leader Barkley in the senate and Majority Leader Rayburn in the house want to get with the ntr naire such a be moderation. Extremes will spell defeat and revolt, and it is conceiv- o radical and forth. That is to be expected. thought. in American life. further statement that more think- ing and less emotion appears to be the rule throughout the land. Ab- for sounder and more constructive conclusions. That is why there is so little use for an analysis of mi- nute returns this year. The aspect is too broad to hinge upon such de- tail. Probably, it can be said that the vote was an expression against waste and extravagance, we ought always to be ashamed; it probably can be said that it was a tions, or against government mess- But we are concerned with the sum into which these several things have been added. Vote Discloses Revolt by So-Called ‘Middle Class’ The United States has been gov- erned by an expression of the will of the majority. It is sound. It is the basis of a republic. There has been much criticism of President Roosevelt on the basis of his dom- ination of government. It has been said that he is the government be- cause he has had such complete conizol that even congress moved this way or that at his drection, in the manner of puppets. If those characterizations be true, then it appears to me logical to conclude that the late election was something of a vote for government by law and not by an individual or group of individuals. By the same reasoning, it is & logical assumption that the vote disclosed a revolt by the great middle class of the Ameri- can people—the group which lives neither by the power of organization and the strike threat, nor by the and into a coalition to de- stroy the New Deal utterly and ef- fectively. There can be no more rubber stamp business. New Deal tactics must change, and the sooner the bunch of so-called intellectuals, the high brows, learn this lesson, the better it will be for Mr. Roosevelt, politically. I am told by a number of politi- cally important personages that the election already has increased the courage of some of the conservative heretofore. It is predicted these will feel free now to tell the will develop. It is a part, how- ever, of the thought that modera- tion must be the rule. Quit Their Demagoguery ership has good sense, it will dis- play its best brand. quit their demagoguery. ward sound proposals, they have justified the country in refus- ing to give them control as was done in 1936. It is proper to say, of course, that the Republicans will not be in control of either the senate or the house. That means, they can have no management of legislative ma- chinery. That machinery, which is all-important in carrying forward political party policies, remains in the hands of the New Deal. But the absence of control for the Re- publicans can not destroy the re- sponsibility which they have as- sumed in electing as many mem- bers of the congress as is recorded. They dare not dodge that responsi- bility. Just ahead, therefore, lies the ne- cessity for Mr. Roosevelt to realize that there is a new public temper which does not like extremes, and for Chairman John Hamilton of the Republican national committee, and Republican Leader McNary in the senate, and Republican Leader Mar- tin in the house, there is the oppor- tunity to fight for reasonable legis- lation all of the way. These three Republican leaders must have something to offer besides criticism of the New Deal. © Western Newspaper Union, Star Dust * Glamorous, the Order % Opera Cycle in Movies * Radio’s Grand Old Man By Virginia Vale A NDREA LEEDS has given | her studio press agents no | end of trouble. They've tried to | “I'd rather get married,” “It lasts longer.” 3ut orders were that she must be glamorous—and that she must take » weight in order to do it In » Last Frontier,” in which she captivates Gary Cooper. She gave in, and then stumbled while playing badminton and broke a bone in her right foot. That meant being in bed with her foot in a was told. But she went night club- bing, plaster cast and all—if a girl's Favorite Recipe of the Week ~ JAPANESE CAKE 1 tsp. soda 2 cups flour 1 isp. cinnamon iz tap. cloves 1% tsp. salt 1% cup shortening 1 cup sugar 3 tbs. molasses 1 cup warm waler 2 egg yolks Cream shortening, sugar, and Add warm water and beaten egg yolks. Sift flour, salt, soda, and spices together and add to first mixture. Bake in two layers. Frosting. Boil together 1 cup sugar and % cup water. When syrup will spin a thread, pour over 2 beaten whites of eggs. Add one cup rai- sins wh put through food grinder and beat until thick enough to spread. wt 1fMiv ich have been Day by Day Let the dawn of every morning be to you the beginning of life, and every setting sun be to you as its close; then let every one of these short lives leave its sure record of some kindly thing done for others, some goodly strength ANDREA LEEDS going to be glamorous she has to be seen about town. And her earnest effort to acquire the reputation the studio had ordered got her nothing but a scolding. mee nn Now we're to have an opera cycle The San Francisco has been tree iciures. Meoliva Cs $1 Meliza Korjus, Two other studios will fol- r the best one of the lot “Farmyard h will be knee- n burlesques of operatic arias; being released practically at Walt Disney's ony, whi a a. Tom Brown's supposed fo break his neck in “The Duke of West Point,” and had to wear one of those braces around his neck for eight hours. (Eric von Stroheim wears one in “Grand Illusion,” a foreign picture that goes down as one of the best of the year.) Afterward Brown's neck was so stiff that he thought he'd never be able to move it naturally again. niloc— William Powell is going back to work in January, under a new con- tract recently signed with Metro. His first picture will be turn of the Thin Man," with Myrna of course. That “Thin Man" series threatens to become as snc v If anyone were fo offer a medal If you heard his tenth anniversary on that. If you didn’t, you can prob- ably remember that the list of peo- ple he's developed as stars of the air includes a lot of famous folk, from Alice Faye to Charlie McCar- thy. Irene Bor- doni was his first guest star. In 1922 his program developed into its present form. The salary list was low, and still is far below the sums paid for some similar programs which are outdistanced by his in the popularity ratings. \ wrens It takes the listeners-in to make Tommy Riggs appreciate his tal- ents. First they made him what he is today with his “Betty Lou" voice, and now they've been writing to him to praise his very pleasant bari- tone voice and urge him to do more singing as himself on his program. wefan ODDS AND ENDS . . . Jimmy Walker, ex-mayor of New York, certainly started something when he began those weekly broadcasts from the city's hospitals; his many friends in the entertainment field clamor to work for him for nothing, he gives his own services, the programs are swell . . . If you like pictures about doctors you certainly must see “The Cita del,” which is one of the best . . . And be sure to see “The Young in Heart” . .. All the studios are making Westerns these days . . . Jamss Cagmey's contribu. tion to the is "0 Kid,” and he's had to to shoot like a cowboy instead of 0 Bape: Unive. HEADACHE H EASED QUICKLY Simple Method Shown Here Brings Relief in Few Minutes 2 4. Toke 2 Bayer Aspirin Tablets with a full glass of water the moment you foc beadache coming on. 2. You should feel relief very quickly. If pain is unususlly severe, repeat accord. ing to directions. To ease a headache with amazing speed, simply follow the easy Bayer Aspirin way shown above. Relief often comes within a few minutes. If this way should fail — see your doctor. He will find the cause and correct it. While there, ask him about taking Bayer Aspinn to re- lieve headache and rheumatic pains. We believe he will tell you there is no more effective, more dependable way normal persons may use. When you buy, ask for genuine “Bayer Aspirin"by my its full name-—not for “aspirin” alone. 15¢ 8 FULL DOZEN 25¢ First Pleasure Looking forward to a pleasure is also a pleasure.—Lessing. these 10 herbs in 'DRIN your daily cup of "HOT WATER Add the juice of GARFIELD TEA's 10 herbs to loosen harmful undigested, ¢linging wastes. Makes your cup of hot water taste better and work more THOROUGHLY wo clean om intestinal wastes and belp you look, feel and work better. Ar drugpistr—l0c & 25%¢. FREE] eo Send | cent postal for FREE SAMPLE —te SAMPLE § Oust. 2, Brockiyn, N. 7. TLEAEGE WATC the Specials You candepend onthe spe- cial sales the merchants of our town announce in the columnsof thispaper. They mean money saving fo our readers. It always pays to patronize the merchants who advertise. They are not afraid of their mer- chandise or their prices.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers