Image provided by: Cape Blanco Heritage Society; Port Orford, OR
About Port Orford post. (Port Orford, Oregon) 1937-19?? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 10, 1937)
PORT ORFORD. OREGON. POST Kleopatra's Fan" I Quilt Is the Choice ^Kleopatra herself once used palm-leaf fans as graceful as |Kse that adorn this striking Kilt. You need but three mate- r*ls to bring out the contrast of ^■s rich design—one that will beautify any room. Know the gjand thrill of piecing these sim- The HOME CIRCLE INSTRUCTIVE, ENTERTAINING AND AMUSING READING FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY BUSTER BEAR PLAYS A TRICK pl< 9% inch blocks for quilt or pi)low. Pattern 1579 contains con- pRte, simple instructions for cut ting, sewing and finishing, togeth er with yardage chart, diagram of quilt to help arrange the blocks for single and double bed size, and a diagram of block which serves as a guide for placing th< patches and suggests contrast ing materials. (Send 15 cents in stamps or coins («Joins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle, Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York N. Y. Please write your name, ad dress and pattern number plainly. DUSTER BEAR and Jumper the *-* Hare had had their heads to gether. This doesn’t mean that they really touched heads. Oh, my not No. indeed! Jumper is too wise to get so close to Buster Bear as that. It means that they had made plans together. If Reddy Fox had known about those plans Reddy would cer tainly have kept away from that part of the Green Forest. But he didn’t know about them, and so he didn’t keep away from that part of the Green Forest. You see. it was there that Jumper the Hare spent most of his time, and Don’t Neglect Minor Throat Irritation Don’t take chances. Rub on sooth ing, warming Musterole. Relief gen erally follows. Musterole gets such marvelous re- »ults because it’s NOT just a salve. Its a “counter-irritant" — easing, warming, stimulating and penetrat- . ing —helpful in drawing out local '■'Congestion and pain. Used by millions for 30 years. «¡Recommended by many doctors and '¡'nurses. All druggists’. In three JS&Btrengths: Regular Strength, Chil- adren’s (mild), and Extra Strong. *. Approved by Good Housekeeping. ON GENUINE GET RID OF BIG UGLY PORES Work« for His Food Romance hasn't a chance when big ugly pores spoil skin-texture. Men love the soft smoothness of a fresh young complexion. Denton's Facial Magnesia does miracles for unsightly skin. Ugly pores disappear, skin becomes firm and smooth. Watch your complexion take on new beauty Even the fir ri few treatment« with Denton'« Facial Magnesia make a remarkable difference. With •he Denton Magic Mirror you can actually see the texture of your skin become smoother d^y by day Imperfection* are washed clean. Wrinkles Gradually disappear. Before you know it Denton's has brought you entirely new skin loveliness. EXTRAORDINARY OFFER — Saves Y w Money SELECT PRODUCTS. Inc. 4402 - 23rd St. Long Island City. N.Y. Enclosed find $1 (cash or stamps, for which send me your special introductory combi cation. J ..................n» * Str—t Ad<fr»M ....... ....... J Cit^............ Stete........... .. over it Buster knew that Reddy was close at hand, and so he jumped up with a dreadful growl. Just as he had done the first time he saw Buster Bear. Reddy put his tail be tween his legs and started for home as fast as ever he could go. “Ha, ha. ha!” shouted Buster Bear. “Ho, ho, ho!” shouted Jumper the Hare. "Hee, hee. heel” tittered Sammy Jay. who had happened along just in time to see the fun. ©T W Burgess -WNU Service Nobel Prize Winner Gives His Views on Subject. By EDITH M. BARBER (•XJUTRITION intimately con- * - cerns the welfare of man, and his place in future history will de pend in no small part upon what he decides to eat.” This state ment was made by Dp. George R. Minot, professor of medicine at Harvard university and winner of the Nobel prize for medicine in 1934. According to Dr. Minot, an ade quate diet throughout life will often prevent illness. In the long time studies that he has made of the condition of anemia, he has found that its cause is usually defective or deficient nutrition. It may arise from a lack or non-absorption of iron or of vitamin C or of a mys terious substance found in the liver The condition of simple anemia may be prevented by including a liberal amount of iron and vitamin C. The condition of pernicious ane mia, which is much more serious and tor which no remedy had been found until recently, is apparently related to the ability to utilize vita min B-G. Vitamin B is found in muscle meat, eggs, rice polishings and yeast, which need an unknown gastric digestive factor to make them ready for the body. When this factor is lacking, there is danger of pernicious anemia. It may be sup plied, however, by liver, kidneys and other organs. At present, this disease is being treated not only by an increase of these foods in the diet, but by liver extract taken by the mouth or through hypodermics. According to Dr. Minot, the first cause of any type of anemia is a deficient diet • • • SELECTED RECIPES Baked Eggs. 2 tablespoons butter M cup milk 3 cups mashed potatoes Salt Pepper 2 tablespoons chopped chives or onion. 5 eggs Paprika Add the butter and milk to the hot mashed potatoes and season to taste. Beat well, add the chives and spread in a shallow greased baking dish. Make five hollows, and in each place a raw egg. Sprinkle with paprika and bake in a mod erate oven (375 degrees Fahrenheit) until the eggs are firm. Barbecued Chicken. You can try Denton's Facial Magnesia on the moat liberal offer we have ever made—good for a few weeks only We will send you a full 12 o*. bottle (retail price $1) plus a regular sired box of famous Milnosia Wafers (known throughout the country as the original Milk of Magnesia tablets), plua the Denton Magic Mirror (shows you whtt your skin specialist sees ... all for only $11 Don't miss out on this remarkable offer Write today DENTON’S Facial Magnesia WNU Service Illness Due to a Deficient Diet Softly, Ever So Softly. Reddy Fox Tiptoed Forward. so it was there that Reddy was spending most of his time now, for he was bound that he would catch Jumper to pay him for making him the laughing stock of all the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows. At first Reddy had been afraid, very much afraid, that he might meet Buster Bear there. So Reddy, because he is very Counterfeit B False happiness is like false smart and sly. spent a great deal of gnoney—it passes for a time as time looking for the places where well as the true, and serves some Jumper made his bed and for the Ordinary occasions; but when it places where he ate. Then tie would is brought to the touch we find the hide near one of these and wait pa ..lightness and alloy and feel the tiently for Jumper to come. But somehow Jumper always went to a Boss.—Pope. place where Reddy was not hiding. The truth is. Jumper knew perfectly what Reddy was doing, and so he never went twice to the same place. That is. he never went twice very near together. If he took a nap un der a big hemlock branch and then went out to get a bite to eat. ne would finish his nap under another tree instead of going back to the first one. So. though Reddy often found places Jumper had just left and hid beside them patiently for Jumper to come back, it never was of the least bit of use. But after Jumper and Buster Bear had had their heads together Jump er seemed to grow careless. Yes. sir. that is the way it seemed Reddy Fox noticed it right away and wickedly. Three times he INSIST NUJOL grinned saw Jumper dozing just in front of Copr. 1M7, Stanco Ine. a great fallen tree. Then for a _____________________________________________________________ fourth time he saw Jumper sit in the same place. By and by Jumper began to nod. Then his eyes closed in the sleepiest way. Reddy grinned and licked his chops Jumper’s eyes opened, closed again, opened once more, then closed and remained closed. Reddy watched a long time before he stirred, but there was no sign from Jumper the Hare. He certainly looked to be fast very fast, asleep. PLENTY OF DATES NOW...DENTON’S Softly, ever so softly. Reddy Fox FACIAL MAGNESIA MADE HER tiptoed forward. Jumper did not SKIN FRESH, YOUNG, BEAUTIFUL move. A few steps nearer, and still Jumper seemed fast asleep. Reddy stopped long enough to grin, a wick ed, hungry grin. This time he would catch Jumper and then he would see if the other people would laugh at and make fun of him any morel Softly, softly, ve-y, very softly he stole forward until with one great jump he would be able to land right on poor Jumper. Very, very care fully Reddy fixed his hind legs to make the spring, and then—well- then he landed right exactly where Jumper had been, but wasn’t. You see, Jumper had been just pretend ing to be asleep, and when Reddy had jumped, he had jumped, too. Now, Jumper had jumped right over the old tree trunk and Reddy sprane after him. But Reddy is not < d a jumper as Jump er the Hare, and while Jumper went clear over the fallen tree. Reddy landed on top of it, meaning to jump down on the other side. But he didn't. No. sir. he didn’t. In stead he fell off backward with a scream ot fright. What was the trouble? Why. Buster Bear had been lying down on the other side of that old tree, and when Jumper leaped A bird who has learned that if he doesn’t work he doesn’t eat is shown here at mealtime. He is Oscar, a trained goldfinch who brings many sightseers to the bird shop in Syd ney, Australia, where he literally earns his seed in the sweat of his brew. The bird's food is placed in a small truck on a runway outside the cage. When Oscar feels the pangs of hunger he hauls on a string and pulls the truck to the side ot the cage where he can peck at the content». 2 two-pound chickens Salt, pepper to pound sweet butter Ito cups chicken broth Ito tablespoons tomato catsup 3 tablespoon» Worcestershire sauce to teaspoon finely chopped onion Disjoint chicken as tor trying Season with salt and pepper. Melt butter and fry chicken in it until golden brown. Mix other ingredi ents and cook together six min utes. Pour sauce over chicken and cook slowly about twenty minutes Spinach Nests. 2 cups cooked or canned spinach to cup mayonnaise to cup grated cheese 6 bread cases and melted butter Make bread cases by cutting bread into three inch squares and cutting out the center. Roll each crack in stucco should be widened with a cold chisel, so that a patch can be packed deeply within. The patching material is a mixture of 1 part cement with 3 parts of clean building sand, and only enough wa ter to make the mixture. At the time the crack is patched, the stucco should be thoroughly soaked with water to prevent the absorption of water from the patching material. Cracks in brickwork and masonry are likely to be in the mortar joints. In closing these, the old mortar should be dug out for a depth of an inch or so to admit plenty of new mortar. Special care should be taken to close all cracks in clapboards Small cracks can be closed with thick paint; deeper ones with white lead, used either as it comes or smeared on cotton wicking or heavy cord. In particular, the joints of clap boards at corners should be noted; tor it is there that cracking will be especially serious. © By Roger B. Whitman WNU Service. MANNERS OF THE MOMENT By JEAN © By The Associated Newspapers I WAS always told that a lady ■ should never be seen eating on the street. I believed in the old myth for a long time But as 1 keep telling my mother, life isn’t what it used to be. In her day you had to go into the kitchen, make up a sandwich, and march out into the street with it if you wanted to be caught eating on the street. It was a lot of work for a mere principle. But now street eating creeps up on you. You pass a street corner stand where there are nice hot dogs on view and you get hungry Well, if you decide to buy. you can’t very case in melted butter. Chop the spinach, mix with mayonnaise and fill the bread cases. Sprinkle with the cheese and bake in a hot oven <425 degrees F.) until bread is light brown and the cheese is melted. Liver Dumplings. to pound calves’ liver to cup soft bread crumbs 1 tablespoon mincec' onion 1 tablespoon mel’ed fat 1 teaspoon parsley to teaspoon salt Pepper 1 egg. slightly beaten 5 cups stock Grind the liver fine and mix it with the bread crumbs. Saute the onion in the fat in a skillet until del icately browned. Add the liver mix ture. parsley, salt and pepper. Add the egg and mix well. Drop the mixture by teaspoonfuls into the hot, but not boiling, meat stock. Cook slow'Iy ten to fifteen minutes and then serve with the soup. To make dumplings which may be shaped in balls, add one-haff cup ad Jitional bread crun b: C Bell Syndicate—WNU Service. FIRST AID TO THE AILING HOUSE By Roger B. Whitman PROTECT CRACKS AGAINST ICE A CRACK in anything outdoors— (* woodwork, concrete, masonry- will be made wider should ice form within it Before winter sets in. the outside of a house should be in spected to locate any cracks or crevices that would hold water and that might be enlarged by the ex pansion that occurs when ice forms Stucco walls should be under spe sial notice. Small surface cracks can be disregarded; the cracks to look out for are the deep ones in which water will be retained. A Home Heating F arm VUinf c •» John Barclay niillO Heating Expnrt T opics Rocks Have Value in Mak ing Walls, Yards, Roads. By E. R. Gross. Agricultural Engineer, New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station.—WNU Service. Stones, a nuisance in the field, have a value in masonry or con crete work, but whether it is worth while expending the energy and time necessary to remove them from the land depends upon condi tions on individual fields. Complete stoning is necessary for growing vegetable crops but, land used for tilled field crops, grain crops, meadows, pastures or fores try need only be partially stoned I in most cases. Land used for pas ture or forestry sometimes does not | need stoning at all. If stoning is advisable, the only I way to do it is by hand. Transpor- [ tation may be by means of the old stone boat, if there is a tractor on ♦he farm, or the stones may be hauled away in a low-built, sturdy j wagon. The stone boat is not rec- ommended where there is no trac tor because it is too hard on horses. The wagon permits moving a much larger load at each haul. Removal should be preceded by breaking the larger stones with dynamite, reduc ing them to a size which may be handled by one or two men. Piling the stones along fence lines is taboo on a well managed farm, for it takes up valuable space and becomes a weed-breeding nuisance. Burying stones in a trench involves much digging and is not a com plete means of getting rid of them, I since stones left above the frost line tend to come to the surface again. However, filling a gully with stones and covering them with soil has advantages since it provides addi tional well-drained field area. When using stones for concrete work, all those measuring more than three inches should be crushed. At least two-thirds of the concrete mix ture should be occupied by stones, otherwise too much cement is need ed. When not crushed, the best use for the larger stones is in a mason ry wall, the stones fitted closely together and imbedded in cement mortar. Small stone crushers operated by farm tractor power can be obtained and the crushed stone may be used in concrete work, surfacing roads, lanes or barnyards. In some locali ties there is a market for crushed stones of this type. well put your hot dog in your pock etbook and walk into the nearest ho tel lobby to eat it That, again, would be too much work for a mere principle. The real crux of the problem now lies in how and where you do your street eating In the first place, it is more ladylike to stand still while you eat. rather than to wander along the sidewalk munching In the sec ond place, it is considered more elite to stand still beside the hot dog wagon, rather than beside the church steps while you lap up your roll-and. If it’s a chocolate bar you've de cided to eat on the public highways, be careful about choosing your streets. You shouldn't be caught eating on the main business street, or the ritziest parkway in town. What you do in the back alleys is your own business. WNU Service Cheap Sales Cost United States census figures tor 1929 show that at a cost of but 1 54 per cent advertising created a market for the $70,434,883,443 worth of manufactured products of that year. Love, Honor and Obey - i I | i I j FREQUENTLY I get complaints 1 from home-owners about fail ure of steam or hot water heating systems to keep radiators com pletely hot. This condition is often due to air being in the coils of the radiator. This air must be released before the coils can fill with steam. This usually is simple, being remedied by automatic air valves. If your radiator has such valves and the radiators remain air-bound, un screw the little plug at the top of the valve, tightening the plug again when all the air escapes from the valves. Putting the vent valves for a few hours in a con tainer of kerosene also helps to eliminate the air. However, if neither of these op erations corrects the trouble—or should the coils fill with water—it would be a good policy to have an expert check the valves and remedy the difficulty. It is possible also for hot water radiators to become air-choked. To overcome this, open the air valves once in awhile with a valve key and leave them open until water starts flowing from them. Be sure to have something handy in which to catch the water when the valves are opened. A Three Days’ Cough Is Your Danger Signal No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold, or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with any remedy less potent than Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble and aids na ture to soothe and heal the Inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel the germ-laden phlegm. Even !f other remedies have failed, don’t bo discouraged, try Creomul sion. Your druggist Is authorized to refund your money if you are not thoroughly satisfied with the bene fits obtained from the very first bottle. Creomulsion is one word— not two, and It has no hyphen in it. Ask for it plainly, see that the name on the bottle is Creomulsion, and you’ll get the genuine product and the relief you want. (Adv.) Read to Consider Read not to contradict and con fute, nor to believe and take for granted, nor to find talk and dis course, but to weigh and con sider.—Bacon. CCC UUU Try Close Inbreeding in the Domestic Fowl You Should Pick Your Corner, if You Intend to Eat Hot Dogs on the Street. Keep Air Out of Steam and Hot Water Radiators So Heat Can Circulate Freely USE FIELD STONES IN FARM MASONRY Studies with White Leghorn test birds at Iowa State college, through a ten-year period, indicate that close inbreeding may be practiced in the domestic fowl, providing careful and rigid selection for cer tain characters is maintained at all times, particularly for high hatcha bility. For most characteristics, the birds retained to a remarkable degree the excellent qualities pos sessed by the foundation individu als—four males and seven females, states a writer in Wallaces’ Farmer. The college workers hope that the favorable results obtained from their tests will encourage other in vestigators to undertake the devel opment of good inbreds. If the prob lem of the utilization of inbreds for poultry improvement is to be tested adequately, it'is likely that a good many different inbred lines must be developed and inter crossed before superior combinations are found. LIQUID, TABLETS salve , nose drops COLDS fever r,r»‘ Headache, 30 minute«. Try “Rub-My-Tiam"-World', Best Llnlmeat The Best Day Write it on your heart that ev ery day is the best day in the year.—R. W. Emerson. How One Woman Lost 20 lbs of Fat Lost I ler Prominent I lips— Double Chin—Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor— A Shapely Figure. If you're fat—first remove the causel Get on the scales today and see' I how much you weigh then get a 4 oz. bottle of Kruschen Salts which will last you 4 weeks. Take one-half teaspoonful of Krusch en Salts in a glass of hot water in the morning- modify your diet and get a little regular gentle exercise—Ho 3 weeks get on the scales and note how many pounds of fat have vanished. Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin is clearer—you feel younger in body—Kruschen will give any fat person a joyous surprise. But be sure it’s Kruschen—your ( health comes first. You can get Kruschen Salts from any leading druggist anywhere in America (lasts 4 weeks) and the cost is but little. If this first bottle doesn’t convince you this is the eas iest, SAFEST and surest way to help you lose ugly fat—your money gladly returned. Semi-Scalding Poultry The water for semi-scalding broil ers should be 126 to 128 degrees Fahrenheit, roasting chickens 128 degrees, fowl 128 to 130 degrees, young turkeys 125 to 127 degrees, old turkeys 128 degrees. The thermom eter should be carefully checked for accuracy. The time that birds should be left in the water is 30 seconds. Birds should be killed by bleeding through the mouth and by sticking the brain. Storing Canvases In putting away canvases for bind ers and combines, It is very impor tant that they be protected from mil WNU—13 49—37 dew and from mice, according to a firm correspondent. When through for the season, they should be spread out in the sun on a fence or hayrack until thoroughly dry. then rolled up and hung with wire from rafters or joist? so that mice can . Help Them Clean ne the Blood not get to them. It put away in of Harmful Body Want a Your kidneys are constantly Altering this manner, tney will be found in waste matter from the blood stream. But first class cond.tion for next season. kidneys sometimes lag In their work—do Watch Your Kidneys/ The Black Sumatra The Black Sumatra apparently originated in Sumatra. It is a bird of fair size, slightly larger than the Leghorn, and is characterized by having a long, drooping tail which is abundantly supplied with smaller sickles and coverts. There are no standard weights for the breed, but the body is of good length and fair depth. The comb is V shaped; the color of the beak is black, and the shanks and toes black or dark slate. The ear lobes are red. I j ! 1 not act as Nsture Intended—fail to ro> move impurities that, if retained, may Kison the system >nd upset the whole dy machinery. Symptoms may be nagging backache, pemstent headache, attacks ot disainrea, getting up nights, swelling, puffinsaw und«*r ths eye»—a feeling of nervoue anxiety and loss of pep and strength. Other signs of kidney or bladder dis order may be burning, scanty or too frequent urination. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment Is wiser than neglect. Lrso Doan't Pill*. Doan'a have been winning new friend« for more than forty yearn. They have a nation-wide reputation. Are recommended by grateful people the country over. A at your aeigkiofl DOANS PILLS