Image provided by: Central Point School District #6; Central Point, OR
About Gold Hill news. (Gold Hill, Jackson County, Or.) 1897-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1937)
ThiirNduy, Juu. 21, 1937 The (¡old Hill New«, Gold Hill, Oregon Nazi Gunners Practice for Naval “Engagements” Lights of New York by L. L. STEVENSON Refurbishing the Home— Make an Inventory of Things to Be Replaced Daring the New Year Catastrophe: Two attractive young women, who live in the Riverdale section, were awakened the other H E desire to start fresh at evening by a cat chorus. Peering * the beginning of a new year into the darkness, they saw the appeals to homemakers in con offenders down in the courtyard, nection with their home furnish an advantageous place for slumber ings. There are two w ay* of disturbance since the building walls bringing the desire into effect. acted us a big sounding board. Oth One is by getting new things to er dwellers in the apartment house replace worn out ones or to fill were annoyed also as there were a hitherto long-felt need. The oth commands to “Scat” accompanied er is to refurbish the things al by thuds of missiles. Unable to sleep ready possessed. The combina the girls took counsel and finally tion of these two methods is the one went to the kitchen and filled most practical way to instill that a pitcher with cold water. Taking wanted appearance of freshness careful aim, she shot the contents Into rooms. at the cats. The cats stopped their Making the Inventory. yowling but in its place arose an In order to do this successfully indignant male voice. It seems that it is important to appreciate just a young man neighbor, on whom the what we have and what we have sister had been eager to make an not. We can take an inventory impression, had gone down to settle of what requires doing over or re the cats and had arrived just in placing, and we can also jot down tim e to take a cold bath. So far, the new things we would like to he has been unable do discover who get. By doing this we realize the gave it to him but the girls are worried. degrees of importance attaching • • • to each part of the job. This sug gests a tabulating of the memo i„ii|GUuni’ul*i ,h® "pofket buttleahip” Koenlgsberg are shown manning the guns during a gas mask For once, the Spotlight: A some randa collected so that we attend . " ,n‘* rn“ Uon* 1 Incidents occurring over shipping in Spanish wuters. the German navy is preparing what poorly dressed, white-haired itself for possible eventualities. * r r ■ man, stepped into the way of a to the matters of most importance first, and gradually work through taxicab where the Brooklyn bridge them to those of lesser signifi traffic flows into Park Row, and was cance. Also it makes us realize knocked down. The driver leaped UITO STRIKE MEDIATOR that many of the things we de out and carried him to the curb. The usual crowd collected. A police sire can be taken care of at little or no cost. man arrived, took charge and soon an ambulance was on the scene. A Refurbishing. brisk young interne hopped out and For example, a sofa cushion administered first aid. In a few min may need recovering. We know utes, the old man's eyes opened. it, and have known it for some The crowd, despite the efforts of time, but have done nothing about the cop, pressed in closer. The old it. When we determine to tackle man smiled. He continued to smile the task, we may find we have as the interne worked and was still smiling as the ambulance started away. He had been injured—but perhaps it had been a long time since he had been the center of so much attention. • • • Allons. (F .) Come on; let us be going. Manhattan Novelette: He's a Broadway playboy. She’s young, Bonhomie. (F .) Good nature; beautiful, a socialite and an heiress. credulity. He was, and still is, very much in Commune bonum. (L .) The love with her. Recently, he had an common good. afternoon engagement with her Dux iem ina facti. (L .) The lead which he was unable to keep be er of the deed a woman. cause of the unexpected intrusion Grisette. (F .) A young working | of important business. Knowing her girl. love for music, he engaged a street M ai a propos. (F .) Ill times; John Dewey, representative of violinist to go to his sweetheart's out of place. .Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins | apartment and play for her. Two ; Nunc aut nunquam. (L .) Now in the Detroit automobile strike Julio Kelenzi, famous New York sculptor, is shown putting the finish weeks later the heiress eloped w’itb or never. area. He worked to bring together ing touches to the medallion commemorating the one hundredth anni the indigent fiddler. Otium cum dignitate. (L .) Lei Willium S. Knudsen, General Mo versary of John Deere's steel plow, while Cynthia Hope looks on. The • • • sure with dignity. tors executive and Homer Martin, medallion w ill be used in the national celebration thia year honoring Life's Like That: It seems that Parole d'honneur. (F .) Word of international president of the United Deere, whose achievement symbolized the rapid conquest of the prairie in one of the nearby suburban towns, honor. Automobile Workers union. states and the advancement of agriculture in general. the fire department is a sort of a Ite missa est. (L .) Go, the serv closed corporation. Any able-bodied ice is finished; the mass has been resident of the town has to be a celebrated. Joyce Wcthered, member with his dues paid up be Sub rosa. (L .) Under the rose; fore he gets any service. Recently, secretly. Weds in England when a Manhattanite purchased a Tempora mutantur, et nos mu- home, a delegation called on him tam ur in illis. (L .) The times are changed; and we are changed Miss Joyce Wethcred, the noted to have him put in his application. with them. English golfer, who was m arried in The newcomer turned down the proposition with scorn—he wasn’t St. George's, in London recently, to paying out good money just to be long to a fire department. A few nights ago, he was awakened by the smell of smoke. Hopping out of bed. he found his home in flames. N aturally, he telephoned to the de partment and was informed that as he didn't belong, the apparatus wouldn't roll. So with a singed ap plication, an initiation fee and six months dues, he hurried over to the fire house. But he was too late_ his house burred down before the formalities were out of the way something in the house that will be excellent to use, or, it not, we w ill be on the lookout when we go shopping to discover some m a terial that is suitable and at a price we can afford. New Things. When it comes to getting new things, new lamp shades, new fur niture, and any of the many articles we most need, the clear ance sales offer opportunities to get splendid values at reduced prices. We should take advantage of such sales, thereby making our homes more attractive for months, and perhaps years to come. ® Bell Syndicate.—W NU Service. TA QCLV2Q »V Mr*. Calvin Coolidge Celebrate Steel Plow's Centennial Foreign Words and Phrases _ ® Pineapple Salad Place on a lettuce leaf a slice of Hawaiian pineapple; cover with salad dressing; over this press through a potato sieve cream cheese; place a preserved cherry on top. Dressing for salad—Six table spoonfuls of pineapple juice, 2 level tablespoonfuls of sugar, but ter size of walnut. Heat in double boiler, add 2 beaten eggs and cook until it coats the spoon. When cold add the whipped cream. Deaf Mute Girl Hears by “Vibrations” So that a little child may enjoy the beuuties of life— . Four-year-old Joun Higgins, blind, deaf, and mute since birth, puts her Angers on a phonograph detector, while her instructress. Tertia H art, speaks through a microphone. The child feels the vibrations through her fingertips. C o p y rig h t-— W N U Soryteo. The Game of Life 'T 'H O S E w h o consciously brood on their sorrows were committed by Dante to the deepest p it of hell. They are in love with trouble. They like to gaze on shadows. When a ll comes to all, what we call the game of life is just what makes life worth living. L ife ’s ene mies are not cares and wor ries, deprivations and misfor tunes. They are its greatest al lies. Its enemies are the damp fogs of the spirit, where there are neither shadows nor light. —D r. Nansen. With great great want. Strictly Business: Having noticed for some time a hatless man in full evening dress, white tie, white silk muffler, patent leather shoes and everything, peddling chewing gum in the theater district, made in quiries in the hope of learning a yarn that might have a touch of human interest. All I could find out, however, was that he has been do ing that same thing for several Sir John Heathcoat-Amory, whom years, having learned that such a she met on the links at Hoylake last get-up increased sales to such aD year. Many golfing friends attended extent he makes a good living. the ceremony. • • • Figures: The George Washington bridge over the Hudson recently passed its fifth birthday. In that time, 31,000,000 vehicles and 968,- 000 pedestrians have passed over it. In the last 12 months, 6,800,000 vehi cles traveled between New York and New Jersey, and in the last year, busses carried 11,638,000 pas sengers over the bridge. And it seems only like yesterday that the first work was done on th at great span. Mail Planes Used to Reseed Burned Forest Land O B ell Syndicate.— W N U Service. Root Starches Healthful Honolulu— Experiments on Am er ican school children here have demonstrated that root starches are more healthful than grain starches, ut least in a tropical climate. Trio Charged With Stealing Railroad One of the former m ail planes used by the government which is now being used to scatter seed over burned-over forest land. The compartments once used for m ail have been rebuilt ns seed bins with doors in the bottoms which can be released by the pilot. The planes carry about 800 pounds of seed ; j | ' Steubenville, O.—Charged with stealing a railroad, three Mingo Junction, O., men are under ar rest here. David Strohmeyer, twenty-one years of age Eugene Calderel- ii, twenty-three, and Geno Batt- lochi, twenty-four, were held in County ja il awaiting action of the grand jury. IV is alleged that they ripped. up a spur of the Pennsylvania railroad, cut the rails into small lengths and sold them as junk. W i n t a r d r i v i n g puts an added burden on motor oil. It must flow freely at the first «urn of the motor ... provide constant lubrication... have the stamina to stand up. Quaker State Winter Oil does all three. . . and you'll go farther be fore you have to add a quart. That's because there's "an extra quart of lubrication in every gallon." Quaker State Oil Refining Corporation, Oil City, Pennsylvania. Retail price. . . 3 i i a 1»arl wealth comes