Image provided by: Cape Blanco Heritage Society; Port Orford, OR
About Port Orford post. (Port Orford, Oregon) 1937-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1937)
The HOME CIRCLE INSTRUCTIVE, ENTERTAINING AND AMUSING READING FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY MANNERS OF THE MOMENT tant errand to do way down on the Green Meadows. He was sorry, but it really had to be done. Perhaps Jumper the Hare would go in his place. Reddy grinned wickedly when he said this, for everybody knows that Jumper the hare is very, very timid. So just try to imagine how surprised and excited everybody was when Jumper said: “Certainly I’ll go and give the invitation to Buster Bear. I’ll be delighted to." At first everybody but Prickly Porky stared at Jumper as if they thought that he was joking, and they couldn’t quite see the joke. Then as they began to realize that he meant just what he said, they looked at each other again, as if they thought him crazy. But Jump er appeared not to notice it, and started for the deepest part of the Green Forest to look for Buster Bear. Reddy Fox started off, too, but he went In the direction of the Green Meadows. He didn't want to go, but he had to because he had said he had an important errand there. As soon as he was HEN the little people of the .Green Forest become excited they become very much excited. . Yes, sir, they become so excited \that everybody talks at once, just Ljke some other peoply And now -there was great excitement in the Green Forest Indeed, Peter Rab bit couldn’t remember'a time when there had been so much excitement, not even the time when it was dis covered that Prickly Porky the Por cupine had come down to the Green Forest to live. And it was all be cause of a big black stranger, big ^^e'tirmer Brown’s boy and black Blacky the Crow, and whose le was Buster Bear. immy Jay had been the first to him. Blacky the Crow had been next. Then Unc’ Billy Possum, my Skunk, and Peter Rabbit, least so far as any one knew ’ were the first to see him. As a ter of fact, Paddy the Beaver seen him before Sammy Jay but Paddy Is one who does not all he sees, as does Sammy and so he had said nothing. it with Sammy Jay and Peter bit to spread the news it was long before everybody knew all e was to know about it and noth- Hse was talked about or thought Of course, the news soon W 5. What is pectin? 6. Why are some tin cans en ameled on the inside? 7. What is the population of the EMININE shoestring problems are nothing to masculine shoe earth? 8. How many hospitals are there string problems, we hear. It’s prob- ably because the men havemore in the United States? Hotels? 9. What is the largest vote a Anyhow, shoestrings to handle. we’ve learned on good authority labor party ever cast in the United that most men’s shoestrings get into States? hard knots sooner or later. And it 10. Did the United States have is rumored that wives And it diffi diplomatic relations with the Vati cult to quiet the frustrated untiers can during the Civil war? of knots. Answers WeB, here is our advice to wives of men whose shoestrings won’t un- tie. 1. There has never been a First have some scissors handy. round-the-world airplane flight in Keep your eye on the man who is that such a flight would require grappling with the knot. Don't step girdling the globe at its greatest circumference, either along the equator or along a single degree of longitude. 2. It take" about 10 minutes. 3. The earch is encircled with more than 300,000 miles of sub marine cables, 100,000,000 miles of telephone wires and 5,000,000 miles of telegraph cables. 4. Lebanon, in Eastern Smith county, Kan., is the nearest. 5. It is a substance which ap pears in many vegetable tissues as a constituent of the sap or cell wall. In making jellies its pres ence is necessary to cause the fruit juice to solidify. 6. Red fruits and vegetables bleach in contact with tin plate and foods with sulphur content F “Some say we have passed the horse and buggy days,” says solilo quizing Elizabeth, “but neverthe less the days of horse sense seem to be as far ahead of us as always.” WNU Service. out of sight he made a wide circle back to the Green Forest, and then he tried to get ahead of Jumper the Hare where he could hide and give Jumper a terrible fright. It wouldn't do to let the other little people think that Jumper the Hare dared do something that he didn’t dare do. © T. W. Burgess.—WNU Service. Good Nutrition Is Up to Cook Food Must Be Varied and Include Needed Calories. ■laid Prickly Porky; “That othlng. I Could Do the .e Thing.” .6 all over the Green Meadows le Smiling Pool and it made « mucl^excitement there as irest- Of course, old every one he ad seen Jimmy r Bear get out of rse almost every- eal of admiration . The only one ickly Porky. Prickly Porky. I could do the io more afraid of Jimmy Skunk is. low Buster Bear comes from the n which I came, o be afraid of in one thought that as just boasting, jealous of Jimmy |>x said as much. dyl You go hunt and invite him to 11 show you wheth- aid of him." d boasted that he luster Bear. You eat boaster, and at he isn't afraid nythlng. But, like s always has an ex- he is likely to have uritaF,.). le of his boasts. It was so this time. No sooner had Prickly Porky proposed that he hunt up Buster Bear than Reddy remem bered that he had a veS-y impor- Straight Shooter 1 This is Miss Jean Ainsworth Ten- nay of Clear Springs. Mo , who won ie national women's championship at the fifty-seventh target session of thJNaUonal Archery association wiUra grand total of 1.9M points. A Quiz With Answers Offering Information on Various Subjects discolor the can just as a cooked egg discolors a silver spoon. The stain is harmless but uninviting. 7. There are about 2,000,000.000 people on the earth, according to the 1930 estimates of the Inter national Statistical institute of the League of Nations at Geneva. 8. There are 6,189 registered hospitals in the United States. There are approximately 29,000 hotels. 9. In 1892 a fusion of industrial workers and farmers known as the Populist party, and roughly comparable to the Farmer-Labor party of today, mustered 1.027,000 popular votes and 22 electoral votes. The ante was about one tenth of tlflli'«total vote cast. 10. Yes. At the commencement of the Civil war, John J. Stockton of New Jersey was minister resi dent at the Vatican. Appreciation able to appreciate the T O best BE that there is in life is an ideal that every youth should have. There are all sorts of things in life, some of them good, some of them bad, and some neither very good nor very bad. There are hosts of young people who miss the best things, because they have fixed their attentions on lesser things. So the finest things in life they never see. The youth who has learned to look for the best in music, in art, in lit erature, in his associates and in himself, will get the most out of life. A MISTAKE TO WAIT WHEN “ACID INDIGESTION'1 STARTS CARRYYOUR ALKALIZER WITH YOU ALWAYS The fastest tvay to "alkalize” is to carry your alkalizer with you. That’s what thousands do now that genuine Phillips’ comes in tiny, peppermint flavored tablets — in a flat tin for pocket or purse. Then you are always ready. Use it this way. Take 2 Phillips* tablets — equal in “alkalizing” effect to 2 teaspoonfuls of liquid Phillips’ from the bottle. At once you feel “gas,” nausea, “over crowding” from hyper-acidity be gin to ease. “Acid headaches,” “acid breath,” over-acid stomach are corrected at the source. This is the quick way to ease your own distress — avoid offense to others. READ THE ADS Be on Hand With the Scissors When He Gets Tied Up in Knots. in too soon for he must be given a chance to feel his independence. When he gets to the point where he soned, and let stand in ice box gives the shoestring one tremendous one or two hours. Mix with salad yank and then glowers at it. hand dressing, serve on lettuce and gar him the shears without a word. You nish with parsley. Celery, cut into know then that he is mad enough to cubes, or celery seed may be used ruin a pair of shoestrings willingly. with the other ingredients if desired. Everything will be fine after that. But perhaps you’d better have an Baked Stuffed Fish. 1 medium sized fish, two to three extra pair of shoestrings tucked away in your sewing basket in case pounds his destructive tendencies have Stuffing worn off by the next morning. 2 <40* soft bread crumbs WNU Service. 3 teaspoons chopped onion Salt, pepper 2 teaspoons lemon juice ways; hert is radiated from the 3 tablespoons melted fat hot metal just as it is from a tire Clean the flsh by removing the or the sun, and heat passes to the scales and the fins, and split. Stuff room through the upward flow of and sew. Dredge with flour, dot with air that is heated between the radi butter and bake in a hot oven (500 ator sections. An enclosure with a degrees Fahrenheit). Cook until the solid front prevents the radiation of flsh separates from the bone and heat from the metaL A cover over flakes when tested with the point the top of the radiator prevents the of a knife. free upward flow of heated air. Even Plum Jam. the best of radiator enclosures check 1 pound plums the heating effect to some extent, % to % pound sugar but a checking of nearly one-half is Wash plums and remove seeds. entirely too great to be considered. Add sugar and cook until mixture For the greatest heating effect, is thick and clear. Pack immedi the front of an enclosure should be ately into hot, clean jars and seal an open grill that will not check at once. the radiation of heat from the met- © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service al. Not long ago 1 saw a home- made enclosure; a wood frame with the front filled in with diamond met al lath. This interfered very little with the radiation of heat, and, TO THE painted with the rest of the en closure, was very attractive in ap pearance. By Roger B. Whitman For a full flow of heated air. the top of an enclosure should be open, or at least be of open grill-work. RADIATOR COVERS The alternative is to have a solid top, as much higher than the radi XTOT long ago 1 saw some tests ator as the radiator is deep, and 1 x made on a new type of radiator with its front open. Heated air will enclosures. The results showed that then have room enough to pass out these enclosures cut down the heat horizontally. The lower part of an thrown off by a radiator by nearly enclosure should be open, so that one-half. The enclosures were or there can be a full flow of cool air namental; they were better looking from the floor. than the radiators. But cutting down An enclosure should not be bought the heat by one-half means the chill ing of a room in which they might for its looks alone. First considera be used. There is no satisfaction in tion should be given to the extent to this, of course, for a radiator is in which it may cut down the heating effect of the radiator. tended to supply heat © By Koger B Whitman A radiator delivers heat in two WNU Service. By EDITH M. BARBER OOD nutrition depends upon more than food selection. First of all there Is, of course, the choice of such a variety of foods that to gether they add to the perfect sum of calories, muscle building, ener gy giving, vitamin and mineral bearing foods. While some of these foods may be eaten in their raw form and need merely the process of digestion to be absorbed, others need to be prepared for digestion by cookery. Meat, for instance, must be cooked, because the human teeth are not strong enough to divide raw meat into small pieces which may be easily reached by the digestive juices. Cereals also need preparation, either by long cooking, by grinding or by pressing by machinery, plus a short cooking. The ready-to-eat cereals are examples of the latter treatment. Flour is also prepared by machinery at the mills before it is made into bread, cakes and cook ies. While many vegetables and fruits can be eaten in their natural form, some of them need cooking for two reasons. The first is. of course, to make them ready for digestion; the other to make them palatable. Po tatoes are the outstanding example of the latter fact The raw potato is unsuited in its raw form to take an important place in our diet. Potatoes Hashed In Cream. 2 tablespoons butter 2 cups diced potatoes Salt, pepper 2 cups rich milk Melt the butter, add potatoes and seasoning and stir over fire until the butter Is absorbed Add the milk and cook slowly, about half an hour. Add more milk if needed. Fruit Au Gratin. 12 canned or stewed pear or peach halves Cornflake crumbs Butter Drain the fruit, saving the juice. Roll fruit’ In crumbs. Place in buttered baking dish, cut side up. Dot with butter. Bake in hot oven (400 to 425 degrees Fahrenheit) until crumbs are brown. Serve with lemon sauce. Chocolate Filling. 4 ounces chocolate, cut in pieces 1% cups milk y« cup flour 1 cup sugar 2 tablespoons butter m teaspoons vanilla Put chocolate and milk in double boiler and heat When chocolate is melted. beat with rotary egg beater until smooth, Sift flour with sugar, add a small amount of the chocolate mixture and stir until cook until thick and add butter and vanilla This filling may be stored in refrigerator in a covered jar. It may be used tn the pudding, or to put between layers of cake or as a pie filling Potato Salad. 4 cups cold boiled potatoes 1 chopped onion 1 cucumber or 2 plcRles y« cup French dressing Cooked salad dressing Cut potatoes Into dice or allces, add the onion and Sliced cucumber or pickles, mix with French dress ing which should be very well sea 1. Has there ever been an air plane flown around the world? 2. How long does it take to get a telephone call through to London from this country? 3. How many miles of sub marine cable are there? 4. What town is nearest the geo graphical center of the United By JEAN Thornton W Burgess gbhat excitement in the GREEN FOREST Ask Me^ Another ■ FIRST AID AILING HOUSE Love. Honor and Obey MO OTHER TIRE CAN MATCH ITS PERFORMANCE ! THE GROUND GRIP TREAD IS patented ! F armers everywhere know that the Firestone Ground Grip Tire out-performs all other tractor tires. They know its outstanding performance is due to the famous Firestone Ground Grip tread and no other tire can match its performance because this tread is PATENTED. They know also that no other tire can give them so many important money-saving advantages. GREATER TRACTION — Takes a deeper and broader bite into the soil and has positive self-cleaning action. GREATER STRENGTH to resist the strain of heavy pulling is provided because every fiber of every cord is saturated with liquid rubber by the patented Firestone Gum-Dipping process. 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