Page 2 « •A W W V W U O u w s w w w • I* i sp l .......... JUS IN H U M A N 5 f ____ I .......... EAST CLACKAMAS NEWS, THURSDAY, JULY 14. 1027 FAMOUS MINING STRIKES By G ERE C A R R nothing to fear—you’re T fIERE'8 as good as the best, C McClure Newspaper Syndical# “ GO O N , S A D IE , G O A S F A R A S Y O U L I K E . If you w ere busy being glad, And ch e e rin g people w ho a re bad, A lth o ug h y o u r h e a r t m ig h t ache a bit You'd soon fo rg e t to notice it. — R ebecca F oresm an. H A V E T W O O F ’E M ! ’» SOMETHING TO T H IN K A B O U T As strong us the mightiest, too; You can win In every battle or test— For there's no one JU ST LIKE YOU I There's only one YOU In the world today. So nobod.fc else, you see. Can do your work In as fine a way. You're the only YOU there'll he I So face the world nnd all life Is your> To conquer and love and live. And you'll find the happiness that en dures. In Just the measure you give. There’s nothing too good for you to possess. Nor heights where you cannot go; Your power Is more than belief or guess— It Is something yon have to KNOW I There’s nothing to fear—YOU CAN AND WILL For you're the Invincible YOU I So set your feet on the highest hill— THERE'S NOTHING YOU CAN NOT DO! ( C o p y r i g h t .) — -----O--------- W H E N I W AS T W E N T Y -O N E BY J O S E P H K A Y E By F. A. W A L K E R A t 21— T om M a sso n Was a T rave l log Salesm an. FIGHTING — RETREATING THE IMPORTANT GARNISH this time I was a trnv A T ing ABOUT salesman, und I believe, one GOOD many battles have been New York city school A lost because the I T girl WAS who a little raised her hand In the general In learning how cooking class when the teacher asked, “W hat is a garnish?” and all the rest of the class looked dumbfounded. “I know, teacher,” piped Yetta. “It’s parsley.” There are a good many women like Yetta, who think thut parsley Is all there Is to the entire subject of gar­ nishing foods to make them more at­ tractive. Pursley and lemon are the house­ wife's stand-bys for garnishes, because they are always obtainable, twelve mouths out of the twelve. The house­ wife who has not access to large m ar­ ket« can grow her own parsley In a pot on the kitchen window sill. Of course, lemons are always to he found In every well-stocked kitchen, and there is scarcely a day when It Is not ’ needed for something. Fish, whether canned or fresh, Is one meat which •eem s to demand a few drops of lem­ on Juice to bring out Its flavor, and for such garnishes the lemon should | be cut into sections lengthwise, six sections from one lemon. These long •ectlons are much easier to use than slices are, though slices are decorative. Cold meats look very tempting when carefully arranged on a large platter garnished not only with parsley, but with other decorative foods as well, «ueh nsSi"ces of firm red tomato, each with a slice of olive In Its center, disks of carrot or Cucumber, rings of sweet green pepper or onion, or tiny disks of 811(4(1,dfweet gerking. Tiny red radishes, either plain or cut Into buds, nnd whole olives are always good looking, either on a platter of cold meats or decorating a salad. In garnishing salnds nnd desserts. niU meats nnd candled or maraschino cherries are a pretty garnish. Stiff Jelly tuny be cut Into tiny culiog with a sharp knife, or scoo|>ed Into halls with a vegetable scoop. This little tool Is very useful. In making balls of apple, banana, watermelon, beet, etc., to rim up various dishes. Ca­ pers nnd tiny pickled onions nre nlso piquant as well as attractive gar­ nishes. (© . 1 9 2 7 , b y W e s te rn N e w s p a p e r U n io n .) T he young lady ACROSS THE WAY commanding to fight, neg­ lected to learn how to retreat. In the battle of life It Is quite as necessary to know how to extricate yourself from a difficulty ns It Is to know the principles of getting ahead. The mnn who continues to nttempt what has proved Impossible of accom­ plishment may have admirable cour­ age hut very poor Judgment. The one thing that a good general does when he is retreating Is to KEKl’ FIGHTING. If you keep fighting hard enough the retreat Itself may he the means of eventual victory. of the worst salesmen that ever hap pened. I was always ambitious to edit a hu morons paper und I particularly want ed to edit Life, but I did not take any' aggressive action. I contributed very frequently to the paper when It was started by Mr. Mitchell and It hap pened that occasionally some of my Items were misplaced, or something else would happen, nnd then they would send for me to come to the of lice to straighten things out. One day, after isuch a visit, Mr Mitchell asked me to edit the paper 1 asked why he had thought to offer me the position when I had not asked for It and he replied that I had shown such a readiness to locate the little troubles regarding manuscripts, nnd such ability to get things right that lie decided 1 had the type of mind to k(*tp the office going smoothly.— Tlinrnns L. Masson. TODAY: Mr. Masson bears the en viable reputation of being America's premier Jokesmlth, having written lit­ erally thousands of Jokes. He was tile editor of Life for over a quarter of a century nnd lias produced many books on humor. As a creator of the Jokes you rend In newspapers nnd magazines he lias few peers In the world. A young man who has chosen the wrong occupation, who has under­ taken a Job for which he Is not fitted, will gain In the end If he retreats and gets Into a new and better position. Most of us are best fitted for one thing. If we try to be more than that or other than thut we sacrifice results, nnd results ure the only things that count. There nre very few Mlcbaelan- gelos who cun be equal successes as sculptors nnd painters and architects. It Is only once In ages that there Is a man like Leonardo l)a Vine!, who (© by M c C lu re N e w s p a p e r S y n d ic a te .) wqs perhaps the wisest man that ever lived. He attained eminence ns an artist whose masterpieces "The Last Supper" nnd “Mona Lisa,” have been reproduced more than any other two pictures ever painted. lie was a great engineer, n wonder­ ful Inventor, a musician of merit, n botanist, n chemist, an astronomer, a geologist, all explorer and geographer and on all of these subjects he was a voluminous und entertaining writer. I THINK you oughta learn kids from the beginning to speak up for their lie was one general In a million— rights and pipe down about their he never had occasion to re tre at wrongs. Conduct your retreat In an orderly Doin' little things yourself ain't no manner. Cyrus the Great, who won many savin’ if you could be usin’ the ttmd victories to have Ills head cut off by for big ones. the woman. Queen Tomyris, to whom If there wasn’t no had friends, there he lost the lust battle lie fought, said of retreating: "When nil army must wouldn't be no good ones. retreat, let the retreat he managed In the safest manner and not In the F O R THE G A N D E R — quickest." Women don’t like conversation. It Don't be In n hurry about chnnglng gets In the way of tlielr talkin’ about your work. Don't be Impetuous and throwing themselves. down your tools, or your books or A silent woman might not keep the whatever you work with, walk out conversational ball rollin', but nt lenst with a “to b—1 with that Job." won't swaller it and stnrt ofT In a Conduct your retreat In a safe, sane she way, fighting as you go, fighting to rubber of solitaire. (C o p y r i g h t .) --------o --------- find the right thing nnd the right place where you w ill tie worth most to your­ w -x~> self nnd therefore most to everybody else. What Does Your Child The one thing Is to he sure you nre doing something. Either go ahead or retreat Don’t try to he n stand still soldier. There Is often quoted a truism that a rolling stone gathers no moss. Itut moss Is not a very valuuhle asset and nobody need count himself a great failure If he dies without ever having possessed any. A well-polished diamond Is the most valuable of the mineral family, nnd the value comes to that only after a good deal of rough rontnet with things harder than Itself which slinpe nnd brighten It. Go ahead all the time If yon can Itut If yon cannot go any further ahead on the line yon have chosen don't he afraid to "back up" and try another road to success. (© by McCluro N .-w *p,p^r S y ad te at« .) ---------- (> ----------- The young lady across the way says T he Pity of It the mnn who first said variety Is tha "My objection to real life," says the | »pice of life didn't know his philoso­ heroine of a Scotch novel, "I* that It | phy would he applied to matrimony. Isn't true to the moving pictures.” I t«£) by M cC lu re New#t>ao«*r S y n d ic a te .) By THOMAS E. STEW ARD *m \m \\V N BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY O W W W W W g » Search for New Mining Methods government's study of the Me­ T HE sa hi Iron district ends with 11H12 and gives the shipments In that year as 18,320,033 tong of ore. Seemingly the author considered this a trem en­ dous figure, perhaps one that would not euslly be surpassed. Yet In the years of the World war' Minnesota shipped as high us 45, A. M. P.M. P.M. •A.M. M. P.M. P.M. P.M. Portland 2:00 5:20 Lv. Estacada 8:00 4 30 8:30 Clackamas 2:30 6:50 Eagle Crack 8:15 4 45 8:45 Carver 2:40 7:00 B arton 8:23 4 56 8:55 Barton 8:05 7:25 Carver 8:43 5 15 9:15 Cagle Creek 3:15 7:35 Clackamas 8:55 6 25 9:25 Estacada 3:30 7:50 A t . Portland 9:30 6 00 10:00 •Daily except Sunday (A) Saturday Only. SUNDAY—Leave Portlaed 10 a. m. Leave Estacada 4:80 p. m. tain area In the northern section of g £ S & B B g H IB 8 IK 3 3 iaS C B IE JESElllilSQ IB B Ei. JE31ÍZI9BCHSBBEIIEE1" Spain's American possessions back In tbe Eighteenth century. As early ns 1660 Spain had sent expeditions Into the districts now known ns California, New Mexico and Arizona, and some gold and silver had been found. In 1738 a rem arkable deposit of sliver S nuggets was discovered In Arizona, but it was exhausted In three yeers. The celebrated and rich silver strike in the Santa Rita mountains of Ari­ zona, made In the year 1760, has been described In au old Spanish work en­ titled “Apostolic Lubours of the So­ ciety of Jesus." It say s: “In the year 1769 a region of virgin sliver was discovered on the frontier of the Apaches, a tribe exceedingly warlike and brave, at the place called This Company has Invested over 577.000,000 Arizona. in this territory. "News of such surprising wenlth at­ i- tracted a vast m ultitude to the spot At a depth of a few yards masses of It has 90,000 light and power customers and fine silver of a globular form and 25 to 50 pounds In weight were found, serves a population of over 400,000. and one lump, discovered by a gov­ ernm ent official, weighed 3.5 A Saie Piace io Fui Your Money ? Portland Electric Power Company r