THE CENTR M. POINT STAR
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER ». 1129
. ______________________ ♦
INRTA’.I MENT PI AN
CENTRAL POINT STAR
Young man—“IIow much «Io I pa;,
for tuarihige license?"
C.li i k -"File dollars down and
your entire salary for the rest of
your iife."
Published by Mac’s Printing Co.» Gold llill, Oregon
C. J. SHORE. Editor
An Independent Newspaper published in the Interests of
___________Central P oint Oregon and vic in ity ___________
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
Entered as second-class matter. October 26. 1928 at the
post office at Gold Hill, Oregcn under the act of March 3,
Subscription $2.00 year in advance. Ad rate • 11 application
Oiiice With Ai Kcrifcanson
spry and energetic.”
THE JOKERS CORKER
“I didn't know you motored.’’
"1 don’t. I dodge.”
J l'S T
ANOTHER ONE
Jo h n (speaking on the p h o n e );
is th at yon. sw e e th e a rt?
P h y llis: Yes, w tio's talking?
TH E PORT YOl LOVE TO SPY
"Y ou’ve b eard of N aples, the fam
ous Italian p o rt, haven't y o u ? ”
“No; how m uch is it a b o ttle ? "
O. MY GOSH
“WJiat is your name, my little
m an?”
“Peter Aloysius Archibald Willard
Dempsey Tunney Hoover MeSwee
ney.”
“My. your father has you well
named.”
"That's nothing. You ought to
hear what he calls Volstead.”
LOST COMPLETELY
An urchin w as w h im p erin g on a
street c o rn e r w hen he w as a d d res
sed by one of those kindly old gen
tlem en w ho a re alw ays bobbing up:
“What’s the matter, son?”
“I'm lost.”
“Lost? Nonsense. You mustn’t
give up hope so quickly. Where do
you live?”
“I don't know. We’ve just moved
and I can’t remember the new ad
dress.”
"What’s your name then?”
“I don’t know.”
ALWAYS IN TRAINING
“What? Don’t know your own
“Motoring is surely a great thing. name?”
“No”, sobbed the youngster. Mo
I used to be fat and sluggish before
the motoring craze, but now I’m ther got married again this morn
ing.”
JOHNSTON'S SHOE SHOP
Shoes Repaired While You
Rest
S. 4 H. Green Stamps
133 West Main St. Medford, Ore
Wheels Re-Rubbered
Phone 261
Medford, Oregon
MEDFORD CYCLE & REPAIR
SHOP
Keys Duplicated by Code
Saws Filed General Repairing
Chas Fisher, Prop 19 N Fir St
Permanent W aves.
w r. c
All Make Curs an.I Trucks.
No Job loo siiiull
20 S. Riverside Avenue
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HOME POINTERS
When buying lamb for roasting,
it is economical to buy a whole
shoulder or leg, even though that
is more than is needed, because
roast lamb is one of the best meats
for slicing cold, says the home eco
nomies department of the Oregon
State College.
As m any a housew ife has found
to h e r so rro w , an egg w hich has
I,een preserved in w a te r glass e x
plodes w hen cooked in the sh rl .
T his is no reflection on the q u ality *
of the egg, how ever, explains Ihe
home econom ic depai tuicnt of (lie
Oregon Stale College. I t,is sim ply
caosed iiy the fact th at Hie egg, be- |
iog coated w ith w ater glass, the I
steam , caused l»> heating Ihe w a te r
in Hie egg, is unable Io escape th r
ough the pores and, n a tu ra lly , ex
plodes T his can he p revented by
pricking tiic end of the egg w ith a
pin before cooking.
Cold lunches, carried day after
day, are never very attractive, but
an element of surprise will add a
great deal of interest Io little Billy’s
school lunch, says Ihe home eco
nomics department of the Oregon
Stale College,. One wise mother ac
complishes this bv including a sur
prise package containing a few nuts,
raisins, dates, figs, a special cooky
or tart, animal crackers, or so-r:e
RULE OF ORDER
other favorite article of food. The
M asIer-“Haven’t you finished "surprise”, of course, is always io
be saved till last.
cleaning those boots yet?
Apprentice-C'N’early; I am doing
Crystalizalion does not spoil hon
the second.”
ey, or even indicate that it is poor
"Where is the first?”
“I shall do that when I have fin grade, points out the home economic
department of the Oregon State Col-
ished the second.”
ege. although some varieties of hon
ey crystalize more easily than
OR HIS CHIN
others. Low temperatures or sud
den changes of temperature tend to
Wife—Deceiver, I hate you!
Husband—But yesterday you said cause crystalizalion. Honey thflt has
you loved every hair on my head. crystalized can be liquified by plac
Wife—But not every hair on your ing the jar in warm water or put
ting the honey in the top of a dou-
shoulder.
None loo Lnr.jc
oOo
MEDFORD BEAUTY
PARLOR
Medford,
Oregon
MERRIMAN’S BLACKSMITH SHOP
DARE TC HE A MEAL TICKET
H e - ‘AVII1 you m arry me?"
The helre*s~"No, I ’m afraid not "
H e - "Oh, come on be a support."
M arcelling, l inger W a vq g
Facials, Shampoos,
Manicures
AUTO SPRINGS
OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING
Phone 279-J
MEDFORl), OREGON
HHmjKjaiif’jijMiS'.. «,
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■ ■ ■ a B tiB a a n a n a a a a n a a s iH B H H i
is
ONLY B X C tV SIY B H TO PAINT CO. IN SOUTHERN OLEGOK
All W ork Gin «an.ciil
Phone 724-lt
T. N. l’.UtRETT
J. U. DAILY
A Pe.inter of Reputation
CRATER LAKE AUTO PAINT CO.
f«01 N G rape
L'ne<|Uiilli (I W ork .1 Ilei s «nuble P rim s
M lJ fo iJ , l lleg an
ai a ■ ■ n u ■ a u ■ ■ a ■ ■ n ■ o » ■ ■ ai
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V .ï cl c l t'a r s a Specialty
Iludir« Ihllll l«> i >r«l r
A n G las:. F e n d e r W ork, Wood
\ , ,rl A h u iiìc .I llarilw om ls a l
vi ays ill stock.
N o i U le ih e a p e sl Imt (Juilllly
Counts. S atisfaction t«tinriin*cr«l i
I h 27Uv .’IH S Itlvci'viile M edford I
-----------------4
"B ri
A weather
./
bureau ?”
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TA« » '« « « » ir
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M iliti P r ir /a f
G m a u l, a i ,Vt,./«J,
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rain b m
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D raw n / ,» ■ a
f l t l t / r a f b »/ a
¿at h l n f l u l l j
ta intw j rt^Ji,
lSITORStoGcncral M o tors’ n6S-acrc Proving Ground marvel at the
sight o f a complete weather bureau and ask w hat it is for.
The answer is that in the testing o f cars every possible factor that
m ight affect a car's performance is considered by General M otors’
engineers.
So precise arc some of the tests tha t even the difference between a
sunny day and a p a rtly cloudy day— or between a north breeze and a
south breeze— is considered.
W ith each day’ s record o f the mechanical tests applied to a Caron
the roads and h ills o f the Proving Ground is included a report o f the
exact weather conditions prevailing. The engineers then can know
how weather affects performance, and can have a comparable record so
that every car tested is given an equal opportunity to prove itself
under exactly the same conditions.
Advance models o f a ll the cars listed below were proved at the
Proving Ground before they were introduced to the public. Read
about them; then clip and send the coupon.
OUR NATIONAL DIET
HEN the Asiatic comes to this
country he increases his diet,
adding that most vital of foods,
milk. His children, when they grow
up, are usually taller than their
parents. Scientists, in explaining
this fact, attribute it to the generally
improved and varied diet available
here, especially in the inexpensive
form of canned foods, and partic
ularly to the addition of milk and
many fruits.
i
Everything Changes
The change ’ i the diet of the
Asiatic is only one example of the
miraculous changes which increas
ingly efficient transportation and
newer knowledge of scientific pre
serving has made in the food habits
of everyone.
Milk is an example of the change.
Only yesterday milk was produced
on the farms just around a town,
brought in in a pail and poured or
dipped into -ontainers provided by
the housewife. Today, the milk that
is sold fresh is pasteurized and
bottled under the most sanitary con
ditions and brought to market as
soon as possible. But as distances
become greater, the use of dried,
■¡vaporated and condensed milk in
creases. Canned milk will keep, its
price is stabilized and the process
which removes all or part of the
water in it, also helps preserve it.
I he conversion of fresh milk into
fanued is » swift process akin to the
stories afloat concerning the assem
blage of an automobile at mirac
ulous speed. But let the accurate
Wall Street Journal tell the tale:
“An official of a company manu
facturing canning machinery tells of
seeing two freight cars on the tracks
of a large chain grocery company
at its milk canning plant in the
middle west. One car was empty
and the other was loaded with
empty cans. The empty cans were
taken from the car and sent through
the plant, filled with the milk which
had been Cfjoked, the cans were
sealed, labeled, and then boxed and
placed in the other freight car and
in fifty-one minutes the car was
ready to start away.”
Astounding though this tale of
canned milk may be, that of fruits
and vegetables which require torrid
climates is no less so. When the
Franciscan fathers started their mis
sions in California, they planted
olive trees which bore plentifully.
For years Californians knew the
joys of ripe olives, but their method
of preserving was not adequate for
long storage after a train trip to the
East. Then some brilliant mind
conceived the idea of sterilizing the
picked olives in cans—and the trick
was done.
Pineapple comes to us canned from
the Hauaiian Islands, grapefruit
from Porto Rico and Florida. Lo-
which are too meltingly
f fanberries,
UM,ious to stand the trip to the
East, are canned in Washington and
Oregon, as are the winey-flavored
red plums.
Loganberries, because they are
seldom or never seen fresh on the
market, are a mystery to many.
Their flavor is similar to the red
raspberry but is richer and more
fragrant. In summer beverages the
loganberry is supreme. For in
stance, boil two and one-half cups
water with three-fourths cup sugar
for three minutes, cool and add one-
half cup lemon juice and the con
tents of an eight-ounce can of logan
berries. Ice well and just before
serving, add a pint bottle of ginger
ale.
Milk and Fruit Beverages
Evaporated milk may be mixed
with fruit juices to make a pleas
ant and nutritious summer drink.
Because of the manufacturing pro
cess which the milk has undergone,
the milk will not curdle with the
addition of the jttice. An excellent
recipe is : dissolve one tablespoon
sugar in one and one-half table
spoons fruit juice and one-third cup
syrup from canned pineapple. Mix
one-half cup evaporated milk with
one-fourth cup water and heat into
the fruit juice. Or shake it« a closed
fruit jar. Chill to taste.
Evaporated milk can also lie com
bined with fruit syrups from canned
fruits to make sauces for cake or
other dessert»,*
"A car /or every purse and purpose ”
C H E V R O L E T . 7 model.. »525 —
$695. A six in the price range o f the
four. Smooth, powerful ¿cylinder
v a lv e -in -h e a d e n g in t. B e a u tifu l
Fisher Bodies. Also sedan delivery.
Light delivery chassis. 1H tonchassis
and I H ton chassis with cab, both
w ith four speeds forward.
P O N T IA C . 7 models. $ 74 5 - - $895.
N o w offers “ Big six” m otoring lux
ury at low cost. Larger L-head engine;
larger Bodies by Fisher. N ew attrac
tive colors and stylish lines.
OLDSMOBILE. R models. $875—
$1055. The Fine Car at Low Price.
N o w offers fu r th e r refinem en ts,
mechanically and in the Fisher
Bodies. A!«o eight optional equip
ment combinations in Special and
De Luxe line.
$1 375. O a k la n d A ll A m erican
Six. Distinctively original appear
ance. Splendid performance. Luxur
ious appointments. Attractive colors.
Bodies by Fisher.
V I K I N G . 3 models. $1595. General
Motors* new ’’ eigh t” at medium
price. 90-degree V type engine. Strik
ing Bodies by Fisher. U nuiuai ap
pointments, also optional equipment
combinations.
L a SALLE. 14models $ 2295-$2875.
Companion car to Cadillac. C onti
nental lines. Distinctive appearance.
90-degree V-type 8-cylinder engine.
D IL C O - L IC iH T Electric Plants—
I*> Water Systems. Provide all electri
cal conveniences and labor-saving
devices for the farm.
COUPON
I
general /
motors ;
Panuly
Party,
ALSO
I R IG ID A IK B Automatic Refrigera
tor. N ew silent models with told-
control device. Tu-tone cabinets.
Prue and model range to suit every
family.
O A K L A N D . 9 models. $1145—
T U N E I N —General Motors
C A D IL L A C . 26 models. $3295 —
$7000. The Standard o f the W< rid.
Famous efficient 8-cylinder 90- degree
V type engine. Luxurious Bodies by
Fisher ai.J Fleetwood. Extensive
range o f color and upholstery com
binations.
(A ll Prices f. o. b. Factories)
B IJ IC K . 14 models. $1225 — $1995.
T hree new wheelbases, 118-124-132
inches. The gieatest Buick o f them
all. Many new mechanical features.
Fisher Bodies with new lines.
M A R Q U E T T ® . 6 mrxlels. $965—
$ 103'. B u n ’. 4 new companion car,
designed and built by BuicL Six cylin
ders. Fisher Bodies. Its price puts
Buick f u;i’ »ryaiid ersff marnhipwith-
in rea.L of mere families.
av-«« .'dutgUy, 9 >oF M . (Eastern Si aoUard
T i t l e /« T A w and j - ae*wu-«dradio»«e.u»os.
Striking color combinations in beau
tiful Bodies by Fisher.
8
Mich-
*
Addresj.....w
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U K M . AC
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OMZRQt,ETTfi
p O akland
U viking •
£JCCUk
D BUICK
tj L a .SALLB
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^ATSitSYSTBU ,
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‘nJ light Plant.
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