Image provided by: Cape Blanco Heritage Society; Port Orford, OR
About Port Orford post. (Port Orford, Oregon) 1937-19?? | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1937)
PORT ORFORD, OREGON, POST The HOME CIRCLE INSTRUCTIVE, ENTERTAINING AND AMUSING READING FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY Bedtime Storv & Harry Ilas Considerable Mustache NEWS NOTES OF THE NORTHWEST A A Winsome Quartette 1224 1276 Brief Summary of Events of Special Interest to Oregon, Washington and Idaho Communities. GRANGEVILLE, Ida. — Joseph W. and Louie P. Klapprlch, broth ers, have sold their 400 acres of wheat land near Cottonwood to Leander J. Wlmhoff for $30,000. BURLEY, l<la.—Reet growers of Burley, Oakley, Rupert and Paul will receive a total of $62.- 125 as their first participating payment for their 1936 crop of beets. .ThorntonW Burgess STRANGE TRACKS IN THE GREEN FOREST tually feel the stillness. It gave him a creepy, lonesome feeling. The KENNEWICK, Wash.—The city farther he went the more the council has renewed an old ordi ' j 'HERE were strange tracks deep creepy, lonesome feeling grew. Two I in the Green Forest. Of course, or three times he almost decided nance calling for dog licenses. Res it was Peter Rabbit who found them to turn back, but each time his idents have complained that dogs first. None but Peter or some one curiosity drove him on. chase cars, keep people awake at with curiosity as great as his would night, despoil shrubbery and lawn3 “If I could sing, I would,” thought ever have been wandering about so Peter, “for if I heard even my own and scare children. deep in the Green Forest at that voice it wouldn’t seem so lonesome. GOODING, Tela_ A total of time of the year. It had popped There’s nothing to be afraid of. Of 2 4,800 trees' have been receivei into Peter’s head one day that he course not. I’ll go a little ways far here from the nursery of the Uni would like to see how that part of ther and then I’ll go back.” versity of Idaho for Gooding coun the Green Forest way in deep at So Peter went on, but every two the very foot of the mountain looked ty of which 24,300 are for farm or three hops he stopped to sit up ers and 500 are to be planted on and look and listen It was so still □ifn! M W Ml '51 ’< the local golf course by the club. in the great white woods that he could hear his own heart beat, and SPOKANE, Wash.—Every adult that creepy feeling had grown until Indian on the Spokane and Col if he had heard even a tiny noise he ville reservation will receive $20 would have jumped almost out of immediately to help with spring his skin. He had just decided that crop plantings. Authority for the no one ever came way off there so nayment come from the federal In deep in the Green Forest in the win dian bureau in response to peti ter, and had about decided to turn tions for such aid. back, when he saw something just Fifteen and a half Inches measures the "soup strainer” of Harry Wil HAILEY, Ida.—More than flOO ahead of him. It looked as if some liams, who is in charge of all the automatic machines at Dreamland one had brushed the snow off the park, Margate, England, where he is well known to many thousands deer are reported gathered in the lower branches of the hemlock trees of visitors who seek entertainment there during the summer time. He Warm Springs district, north of in passing. Peter hopped over there. has not only a mustache but a personality, too. here. They are follwoing the re And then he saw the strange ceding snow line into the higher tracks! Sawtooth mountains. The sight At first Peter thought that they tracks. But when he got near them has become an attraction for Sun had been made by Farmer Brown’s the sight of them frightened him day motorists from the lower BING AND BAM boy, because they were so big. He again just as before, and away he country. stared at them. They looked some scurried. He did this several times, GRANTS PASS, Ore. — School for no sooner would he get away By DOUGLAS MALLOCH thing like the tracks Farmer It looked as If Some One Had Brown’s boy left in the mud around than his curiosity would tempt him boy police proved their effective Brushed the Snow Off the Lower the Smiling Pool when he went in to go back. Finally, he ventured ness at the Grants Pass high E USED to hear a swinging .school one night recently, when ¿ranches of the Hemlock Trees in swimming in the summer, but Peter to sniff at them, but whoever had gate, Passing. they apprehended and held for of knew that Farmer Brown’s boy nev made them had done it so long be But now we hear a car door slam, ficers two youths seen stealing er went barefoot in winter. Of fore that there was no odor in the when everything was covered with course not. Peter scratched his tracks and Peter was no wiser than For it seems ev’rything of late gasoline from automobiles parked At least goes bing, and often bam! snow. So off he started, lipperty- long left ear with his long right before. But he felt no easier in his near the school while the oc lipperty-lip, as fast as he could go. hindfoot and looked puzzled. Then mind. It was too dreadfully still! We used to warble “Sweet and cupants were attending a play. Low” The farther in he got, the fewer he discovered something that made And those strange tracks were so Or “In the Gloaming’’ in the BOISE, Ida.—More and more, little people he saw and the fewer his heart jump right up in his dreadfully big! gloom. according to State Bacteriologist “This is no place for me,” decid tracks to show that others had been throat. Whoever made those tracks Peterson, the people of Idaho are there. By and by he saw no tracks had claws! Peter almost turned a ed Peter, and started back for the But now an eight-tube radio Lets loose a brass band in the coming to recognize the import at all. It was very, very still in somersault in his haste to get away. dear Old Briar Patch as fast as his room. long legs could take him, for he had ance of tick vaccine to prevent the the great white woods, so still that He ran a little way as fast as he It seemed to Peter that he could ac- could and then stopped and sat up, great news and it seemed to him Wc used to hear a neighbor's knock. Rocky Mountain fever. More than that he should burst if he didn’t find But now we hear a doorbell ring three times as many applications looking and listening. No one was some one soon to tell about the That you can hear a half a block, for tick vaccine are on file as the to be seen. Not a sound was to be strange tracks he had found in the Collarless Suit For things go bam, at least go department of public welfare has heard. Peter slowly hopped back Green Forest. doses. bing. for another look at those strange © T. W. Burges».—WNU Service. We used to talk but now we yell, SALEM, Ore. — Five hundred You have to in a noisy flat. men are engaged in digging maple culation to bring all of the air in a For even people now as well room to an even temperature. Go bing and bam and things like and laurel burls in Oregon and Washington, making this industry Complaints of uneven heating that. one which is attracting consider may be due to radiators of too small TO THE able attention. J. H. Van Winkle, size, or to their being improperly We used to have one noisy day. The good old Fourth went bing operating in the Silverton and placed. The correct size for a ra and bam. diator can be calculated by any Jefferson areas, informed state By Roger B Whitman competent heating man, who will But now the whole year is that way, employment officials. The burls, Except the Fourth, that ’ s like a measure the room for losses of heat enlarged trunk and root forma clam. and recommend a radiator large tions, are used in furniture manu UNEVEN DISTRIBUTION We used to live here 'way back enough to overcome them. facture and are valued at $25 to OF HEAT when, The proper place for a radiator $35 a ton. Most ot them are ship A place where noise is never ped to Los Angeles. A COMMON heating complaint is is under a window, so that heated known, ** that some parts of a house are air in rising will protect the room And so we’ve moved out here WHEAT CROP UP cooler than others; that on a bitter against the effect of the cold glass. again— BOISE, Ida. — Idaho’s winter day, rooms on the exposed side of Registers, on the contrary, should One minute, there’s the telephonel Wheat crop will amount to 12,656,- a house may be too cold for com be placed across the room from the ® Douglas Malloch.—WNU Service. 000 bushels, 16 per cent more than fort. There are various reasons for windows. An exposed room is likely to be avoid any semblance of tenseness a year ago, Richard C. Ross, fed this. One cause ot trouble may be in the position of the thermostat. cold because outside air comes in and this point by the way often eral statistician predicted recently. If it is in a small room, the air around the window sashes in great causes a confusion in thy golfer’s The estimate is 8 per cent be around It may become heated to er volume than can be heated by mind. He has heard so much about low the five-year average, he a point where the thermostat shuts the radiator or register. The win the straight left that his own inter added. Combined stocks ot wheat, off the heater before other rooms dow glass also has a chilling effect pretation of these words, in terms corn and oats on farms on April have had time to warm up. To on the air of the room. The remedy of his own game, are taken to mean 1, were estimated at 4,438,000 check this, turn off the radiator or for this condition is to seal the joints that the left arm should be abso bushels, compared with 5,84 6,000 the register in the thermostat room, of tne window sashes with tight lutely straight at this point. If the in 1936. and note the effect. The remedy is weatherstrips, and to put on storm left arm is to guide the stroke un erringly in the same groove re- to place the thermostat in a posi windows. FARM SURVEY DONE tion that is closer to the average for A hot air heating system can be peatedly it must be a fixed radius LA GRANDE, Ore.—A survey the entire house. greatly improved by applying an in a circle, i. e.. the actual stroke, of farm production in Union coun In rooms with ceilings that are electric fan to the cold air intake it the left elbow is bent to allow a ty over a period of several years much higher than the tops of the of the heater to drive heated air to measure of freedom it means that has been completed, It was an door openings, there is likely to be the rooms. Without a fan, heated on the downswing the clubhead, due nounced by H. C. Avery, county a considerable difference between air rises to the rooms only because to the straight left at this point, agent. the temperatures at the ceiling and it is lighter than cold air. The dif will be slightly further out than Representatives from granges, the floor; a difference of 20 degrees ference is very slight, however, so the position at address and contact from the fruit growers, the live the ball wrongly. On the face of the that the rising of the air may easily is not at all unusual. To bring the stock industry and the county The collarless suit for town or heated air down from the ceiling be checked. With a fan, the move stroke as they know it this sounds agent's office, co-operated with like logical reasoning. However, ment of the air is much more posi- country is interpreted here in buff and mix it with the cooler air be they fail to take into consideration Charles W. Smith and E. R. Jack eolored woolen, Hand stitching low. a small electric fan can be tive, aud heating more uniform. one thing. At impact the left shoul- man ot Corvallis in completing the © Bv Hoger B. Whitman edges the jacket and pocket flaps, used. An effective place for the fan WNU Service. der is lifted upward which takes survey. Fastenings and accessories are is on the floor, blowing into a hot up the slack of the bent elbow at radiator. This sets up enough cir- black antelope. TEACHERS' address and keeps the clubhead OLYMPIA, Wash.—School dis hitting straight on line. For consist ent results the left arm must be tricts must in good faith endeavor By BEST BALL straight as it hits the ball but it to pay a minimum of $1200 yearly Love, Honor and Obey only straightens after the down to all teachers, even though this swing is well underway. might in some instance reduce the cteANiNci ' © Beil Syndicate.—WNU Service. number of teachers employed. At IMPACT^ VAniA AMT torney General Hamilton held. OPr-Afte The opinion was for State Su T h «UW perintendent S. F. Atwood, who asked an interpretation of the new coasters law providing teachers must be paid at least $100 monthly, unless the salaries exceed 70 per cent of the estimated revenue of the di»- trfet. W FIRST AID AILING HOUSE I HERE was a lull tn the mid-morning ac tivities of the Chic Twins (in aprons this time) and their week - end guests when the candid camera caught this gay quartette. The ’uests are wearing—let’s have a close-up — sports dresses be cause they are so all purpose: tennis frocks go shopping just as often as not. The spectator model to the right with its unusual use of buttons is demure enough to wear when calling on one’s Sun day school teacher and yet would have sufficient swing to “belong” in the gallery at the golf tour nament. Summer days offer so many unexpected opportunities that these dresses are chosen as equal to any informal occasion. particular young women and ma trons and other patterns for spe cial occasions are all to be found in the Barbara Bell Pattern Book. Send 15 cents today for your copy. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) each. © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. The Oppressor There is no happiness for him who oppresses and persecutes; A Two-in-One Idea. no, there can be no repose for The aprons on the charming him. For the sighs of the unfor hostesses to the left are both cut tunate cry for vengeance to heav from one pattern. The clever miss en.—Pestalozzi. will never overlook a pattern package that offers two such charming numbers for the price Keep your body free of accumulat ed waste, take Dr. Pierce’s Pleas of one. The exhibit is over now; ant Pellets. 60 Pellets 30 cents. Adv. feature in one yourself in the very near future by ordering History Defined hese patterns today. History is the essence of innum The Patterns. erable biographies.—Carlyle. Pattern 1276 is designed in sizes small (34 to 36), medium (38 to 40), large (42 to 44). Medium size requires 1% yards oi 39-inch ma terial. Pattern 1915 is designed in sizes 14 to 20 (32 to 42). Size 16 requires S'/s yards of 35-inch material. GAS PRESSURE MAY CAUSE DISCOMFORT. Pattern 1224 is designed in sizes RIGHT SIDE BEST. 12 to 20 (30 to 40). Size 14 re If you toss in bed and can't sleep on quires 4% yards of 39-inch ma- right side, try Adlerika. Just ONE terial. With long sleeves size 14 dose relieves stomach GAS pressing heart so you sleep soundly. requires 4% yards of 35 inch ma- on Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and terial. lower bowels and brings out foul matter you would never believe New Pattern Book. in your system. This old matter may Send for the Barbara Bell Spring have poisoned you for months and GAS, sour stomach, headache and Summer Pattern Book. Make caused or nervousness. yourself attractive, practical and Dr. H. L. Shoub, New York, reporter **In addition to intestinal cleansing, Adlerika becoming clothes, selecting de greatly reduces bacteria and colon bacilli,” signs from the Barbara Bell well- Mrs. Jas. Filler: “Gas on my stom ach was so bad I could not eat or planned, easy-to-make patterns. sleep. Even my heart seemed to hurt. Interesting and exclusive fashions The first dose of Adlerika brought me relief. Now I eat as I wish, sleep fine for little children and the difficult and never felt better.” junior age: slenderizing, well-cut Give your bowels a REAL cleansing patterns for the mature figure; with Adlerika and see how good you feel. Just ONE dose relieves GAS and afternoon dresses for the most constipation. At all Leading Druggists. Don’t Sleep on Left Side, Crowds Heart rGRAPHIcGoLF l i t I ARM SI.IGHTI V BEN I AT ADDRESS ROSUHI RO, Orc. — Authoriza tion for 10,000 booklets explana tory of the resources of the Ump qua valley has been given jointly by the Douglas county court and the Roseburg Chamber of Com- merce. \ T ADDRESS the body sl-.uld be 1 * in a comfort .ble position with the body slightly bent forward at the waist and the arms hanging in an easy. non rigid state from the shoulders In fact there should be a slight bend in the left elbow to POMEROY, Wash.—Work will begin so< n on the PatahA Creek recreational project, under super vision ot forestry officials. Th« dam contemplated to create an ar tificial lake will be completed by July 1. x notkcsbl ijfwy-JL WMV Servie». » Your car, too, feels the stir of Spring an J needs a change. Follow this treat ment. Have your dealer drain the old Winter oil. Give it the best Spring tonic.. a refill of Quaker State Motor Oil of the correct Summer grade. 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