Friday, December 19, 1941 SOUTHERN OREGON MINER Page 6 Are You Hou»e-Bound? You Can Earn Money Too 1 bg A kA N- L e MAY U Ml ÍASP l\'I XI l MtA t TWO STAGE SCREEN RADIO THE STORY SO FAR: Karrn Water- son. San Francisco girl, cornine rd by her lawyer, John Colt, that she has a claim to the Island estate of her grand father, Garrett Waterson. arrives In llou- olulu to aitrmpl to gain control of the property. One evening while she and Colt are dining and dlsrussing plans tor pressing her claims, Richard Wayne, or Toata Dick, as he Is known, enters their dining plare. He Is a member ot the Wayne family that has been In control ot her grandfather's island, Alakoa, stare the old man's disappearance. Inasmuch as Karen believes that Tonga Dick does not know her Identity she suggests to Colt that she talk to him and learn what she can. Colt at first opposes the idea but begins to change his mind. Now continue with the story. By VIRGINIA VALE (Released by Western Newspapei Union I T IS difficult to know what to say about the NutionnI Legion of Decency’s banning of (.treat Garbo’s new picture, "Two-Faced Woman,” with Archbishop Spellman also condemning it, and various cities banning it as well. The plot, that of the woman who poses as her twin sister to "I suppose there isn’t any really practical objection,” he said; “but isn't this notion jus^ slightly on the silly side? You can hardly expect—” He started to say something more, but let it pass; then bowed with exasperating courtesy, and walked away. When he was gone she sat quietly a little while, trying to relax. Pres­ ently she turned her chair a little so You needn't invest money or be special­ that she could look into the shadows ly talented to earn at home! Our 32- where Tonga Dick sat, three tables page booklet explains five main rules ot home business success, tells how other away, alone in the obscurity of palm women got started making money; de­ shadows. She still could not clearly scribes enterprises you might try. Has see his face, but she focussed upon ideas for women who can sew. knit, cro­ chet, -cook. type, be helpful. Send your the coal of his cigarette, and waited. She let her eyes rest there almost order to: to the limit of endurance; then smiled faintly, and returned Ijer at­ READER HOME SERVICE tention to the dance floor. 117 Minna St. San Francisco, Calif. Tonga Dick stood up, wound his Enclose 10 cents in coin for your way to her table. He laid a hand copy of 2! WAYS TO EARN MONEY AT HOME. on the back of the chair whera John Name....................................................... Colt had sat Address...................................................... "May I?” "Perhaps, if you wish.” Richard Wayne sat down, crossed his knees comfortably, and took his ‘Closed Shop’ time about lighting a cigarette. Kar­ en waited, determined to make him A “closed shop” is a “shop” or lead the way; but she watched him business in which only union la­ ' curiously, with a sharp interest that bor can be employed, says Path­ i was partly caused by his name finder. In such a shop the employ­ ■ alone. In the world she knew, you er is required to dismiss em­ , could no more be called Tonga Dick, ployees who fail to remain mem­ i in seriousness, than you could be bers in good standing in their called Red-Handed Harry, or Terri­ union. ble Pete. Had she had no other A “union shop” differs from a relationship to this man than that of "closed shop" in that the employ­ a casual tourist, she still would have er may hire non-union workers stared, just because of the name he with the provision that they will was called. become union members within a Tonga Dick surveyed her slowly, specified period, generally, 15, 30 with grave eyes. "You wanted to or 60 days from the date of em­ see me?" ployment. They too must remain Richard Wayne watched with ad­ members in good standing in the miration the perfect serenity of Kar­ union; otherwise the employer is en's poise as she turned a little, and compelled to dismiss them. coolly met his eye. She was much more interesting to look at from across a table, he de­ cided. than from across a number of them. Yet he had noticed her in the first moment in which he had Among several African tribes, stepped upon the lanai. That, of the punishment for homicide is “a course, was the reason he knew who life for a life,” but not as it is im­ she was. He had landed but a few posed by other peoples, says Col­ hours before, and had no more than lier’s. Before serving his prison shaken hands with his brothers; sentence, a murderer must first there were no means by which he produce a life for the one he has could have identified Karen Water- taken, by living with a female rel­ son, if he had not noticed her and ative of the deceased until a child been interested of his own accord. is born. From the shadows of his obscure table at the edge of the lanai he bad Pleasing to the eye and the watched her for some time for no pocketbook, too, is the specially other reason than that it gave him designed Christmas-wrapped one- pleasure to look at her. pound tin of George Washington After a little while he had signaled Smoking Tobacco. Smokers who a table captain and asked who the appreciate quality will be delight­ girl was—and had obtained a cor­ ed with a gift of this great Ameri­ rect answer. * can cut plug tobacco, in its color­ Knowing who she was, it was odd ful holiday package, with gift card all ready to be filled in. An ideal to be sitting at the same table with smoker’s gift for the shopper her now. This was the girl who had whose list is long and purse none come here from the mainland to lay too full. Your dealer is featuring claim to the island of Alakoa, the it in his Christmas line.—Adv. little stronghold in the sea which no one but a Wayne had held for more than two decades. It seemed to him that Karen Wa­ DON'T LET terson did not look the part He couldn't understand how anyone with a face like that, and eyes like SLOW YOU UP that, could get herself hooked up • Whets bowels are sluggish and you feel with a shenanigan that differed from irritable, headachy and everything you a common swindle only in the bold­ do is an effort, do as milliont do — chew ness of its scope. FEEN-A-MINT, the modern chewing gum laxative. Simply cbew FEEN-A- "If I hadn’t wanted you here," she MINT before you go to bed—sleep with­ said, "you’d hardly be here, would out being disturbed—next morning gentle, you?" thorough relief, helping you fee! swell "And so?” again, full of your normal pep. Try FEEN-A-MINT. Tastes good, is handy "So nothing. I wanted you to and economical. A generous family supply come and sit here because I think you look romantic, And I think you * might introduce yourself, now. »» "My name is Richard Wayne,” he said. "I belong here in the Islands. Selfish Gratitude More specifically, I am connected The gratitude of most men is with a small privately owned island but a secret desire of receiving called Alakoa." greater benefits. — La Rochefou­ He watched for her reaction, and cauld. was fooled again; for no reaction came. “That certainly is very interest­ ing,” Karen Waterson said. "I wish I were an Islander.” "Perhaps," he suggested, "you ty4.ick.fy 4¿ií would like to tell me.who you are.” LIQUID "My name,” Karen improvised, TABLETS "is Katie Higgins-something — a SALVE HOIl DIOU white girl from about four miles COUOH DROPS south of Dubuque. I teach school some place, and I think I would like to get in the movies.” Plan your stay at "I should have said,” Dick com­ Portland’s newest mented, “that you were from San Francisco.” She glanced at him hotels, the... sharply, but he added, "Hawaii is a kind of a crossroads; people from every part of the world come through here, sooner or later, so that if you live in the Islands you get to recog­ nize inflectionr of speech." SOO "Oh." ' homelike room« "They raise very good looking from ’2.50 per day girls in San Francisco," Dick said. with bath Broadway "It must be a wonderful thing to and Salmon Street» own your own island," Karen said. mbiî ‘Life for a Life* CONSTIPATION FEEN-A-MINTToi ‘Ä COLDS ‘IM B A psychologist ■»)■ some disappear because they feel ■re not wanted. And noma appear because they know are. men they dis- they prove to her husband that »he Is glamorous, has been used In Holly Who Won? wood ovar aad avof Will h Hay<* “So you and John don’t speak office had pussed the picture. There now'.'" is hardly a picture-goer who hasn't "No; we had n drcudful quarrel seen things on the screen that about who loved the other most.” shocked him. Hut since "Two Faced Woman" was banned, there must The Only Cure have been some excellent reason for Tuo tmarlly dretied girli-were 1'ilk- Money to Carry Out Pet Dreams! •‘I’M HELPING too!” Proud words from a housewife, earning money that may make possible new furniture, education, a new home. Successful home earners have discovered that the way to earn money is to be "dif­ ferent,” but it's not hard to be different! • • • Indoors Man She—You big strong man, do you believe in ■leeping out of doors? He Not while I cun pay rent. in g al th« lop of their voices and in a ■ ♦ eery affected manner in a but. Do you remember that delightful Al lati the conductor got fed up Al glory, "The Constant Nymph"? It the but neared a Hopping piai e Ae Hr laid a hand on the back of the ehair where John Coll had sat. will be made again by Warner raf/ed out in a high -pitched t nice “Darlingt, huit too, too meet King Brothers, with Charles Boyer and "May 1?" "Perhaps, if you wish.” privately "Arc many islands owned?” "Only a few, in this part of the Pacific. Niihau is privately owned, and so is Lanai, which is the sixth largest in the group; and the Waynes have had Alakoa for about twenty years.” "How many Waynes are there?” Richard Wayne said to himself. “You know cockeyed well, young lady, how many Waynes there are." But aloud he said, "Four. My un­ cle, who is really the owner, my two brothers, and myself." "It's like owning a little empire of your own, isn't it? I can't think of anything nicer than that.” "A good many people seem to feel that way,” Dick said. "That'» what makes an island so hard to hold on to.” “You have trouble holding onto it?” “Oh, yes, indeed. Just now, for example, there is an insufferable lit­ tle snip of a girl trying to get her claws into Alakoa by due legal proc­ ess." "Interesting." Karen encouraged him. “And just how does she expect to do that?" “The Waynes bought Alakoa from her grandfather. Now the girl wishes to prove that the sale was illegal, because, she says, her grand­ father was a congenital idiot She says it runs in the family, and she can prove it" Karen studied him for ■ moment with veiled suspicion, but Tonga Dick's face was innocent “What a remarkable person,” Karen said. "What's she like?" "Well—as I told you, I have had no chance to get acquainted with her.” “Maybe you'll have a chance lat­ er." "I'd rather like to. you know,” Dick admitted. "I’d like to find out what makes her tick. But I would hardly know how to go about it." "Just a simple Island boy," Karen smiled. "Well, the circumstances are a lit­ tle awkward. I can't just go up to her and say, T understand you are the little twerp who is trying to get my island away from me, and what are you doing this evening after the store closes?’ Or can I? "Well, invite her for a sail on your boat. Show her selected views of the coast line. Show her this island she's after—what did you say the name of it was? Alakoa? Probably she hasn't even seen it. I'll bet she’d be interested. • • "And just what," said Dick, "would be my idea?" “Get to know her. You said you wanted to find out what the little fright was like, Maybe you'd like her.” "And then what?" "And then what?” Karen repeat­ ed. "Say, wait a minute. Do I have to map out your entire life?” They grinned at each other; and either one of them would have given a good deal to know what the other was thinking then. "It’s a rotten plan," Dick criti­ cized. "Now you've hurt my feelings,” Karep said. "Here I practically work up a headache planning a beautiful day for you, and what credit do I get? You tell me it’s rotten. All that effort wasted!” Richard Wayne appeared to brighten. "No, it isn’t. It gives me • much better Idea. What's the use of wasting the whole program on a chiseling little frump? No! I'll take you sailing, instead." "Me? Oh, I’m afraid I couldn't—” “Tomorrow morning,” Richard Wayne prompted her, “at something like nine?" "Something more like ten," she answered. CHAPTER II It was nearly midnight when Rich­ ard Wayne called upon his brothers. They had been expecting him ear­ lier in the evening, and only an ob­ jectionable message he had sent them by phone had kept them wait­ ing for him at an hour strictly out­ side of their habits. Richard’s two brothers, Ernest Wayne and Willard Wayne, sat in a large room which, in spite of its prim order, showed the wear of the humid years. The whole thing man­ aged a transplanted New England look; obviously nothing had been * - changed here for a long time. The two brothers who here await­ ed Richard Wayne seemed to hnvo been bred and raised by the New England furniture Both were older than Richard, and when he looked at them he was sometimes happy to i remember that they were only his half-brothers, after all. "It does seem to me. Dick," Er- nest Wayne said fretfully, “that you would show a little interest in what is happening here.” Ernest, tall and thin, did not look entirely well; he wore gold-rimmed glasses, which did not seem to be strong enough for his purpose, and when kept up late he developed a peaked look. CIIAKI.ES boyer Dick sighed and sat down. "If 1 weren't interested I wouldn't be in Joan Fontaine—who can have prac­ Honolulu st all,” he said. "Now, tically anything she wants these please try not to get all excited. days—in the principal roles, will you?” —* “You don't realize the seriousness Bob Hope and Victor Moore are of the situation. Dick," Willard said to be teamed in Paramount's ver­ heavily, without heat. “This thing sion of "Ready Money," the furce is critical in the extreme—perhaps about a young man who becomes a even desperate. Uncle Jim can't financier by mistake. Last time It seem to understand that he is not was filmed was in 1914, after it had invulnerable. He has delayed, and been a succcssfe' ■' h ; c production delayed—'* ----- ♦----- “As 1 understand it from your let­ Barbara Manwjik may have con- ters." Dick said, "the complaint tributrd a new slang phrase to our is that when our mutual father language. During the making of bought the island of Alakoa from “Ball of Fire” she happened along Garrett Waterson he practically when Director Howard Hawks and cheated the old boy out of his eye the picture’s authors were trying to teeth—is that the story?" think of something slightly slangy “Father was an industrious and for her to say when she walked intelligent man," Ernest Wayne said up to some men she didn't know with annoyance. very well, in a night club. “Do you know anything much "That's easy," said Barbara. "I'll about the original swindle?" say 'What's bullin’, cousin?' That's "I object to your tone," Willard what we used lo say In Brooklyn. Wayne said; and Dick was aston­ It's in the picture. ished by the vigor of his brother's ------ >------ resentment. "Garrett Waterson was . "For Whom the Bell Tolls" is un­ a disreputable old pirate. He was a waster and a speculator of the der way even though the cast isn't More than 120 techni­ worst sort—absolutely typical of a complete. certain kind of rifTrafT which trou­ cians and actors left Hollywood re­ bled the Islands in the early days. I cently for the loftiest location site If father saw values in Alakoa that In film history—a spot 0,300 feet up Waterson did not, that certainly was in the Sierra Nevada mountains. Waterson’s look-out. But now comes Technicolor and long shots had to be made now because of favorable this girl, this grasping, piratical lit­ ' snow conditions, similar to those in tle adventuress, intent on seizing not the book. only the whole of Alakoa, but all the ----- *----- development which has cost Uncle Donivce Purkey knew what she Jim the best years of his life, and—" “Have you checked the identity of wanted years ago; now she's got IL She wanted to get into the movies; this girl?” Dick interrupted. "She's Garrett Waterson’s grand­ she worked hard in high school and daughter, all right,” Willard said. j college dramatics, for four years, ’ and a Paramount talent scout “Well brought up?" "The family has no distinction plucked her out of a college play whatever. The girl has been work­ and sent her to Hollywood for a ing as a stenographer. Her relation­ i screen test. You'll ace her. proba* ship to the island of Alakoa proba­ , bly, in "The Fleet's In." Oh yes— bly would never have occurred to she changed that name to Laura her as offering any possibilities, if 1 Lee. it had not been for this John Colt.” When Gilbert Roland, Philip Reed, “And who is this John Colt?" Errol Flynn and other Hollywood- "John Colt Is thirty-six years old Ites who like tennis enter the an­ and was bom in New York. He is nual motion pit lure tournament next one of the predatory speculators spring they're likely to rue the day who came to light in the boom days that Paramount signed up Jim of the late twenties. He acquired a Brown, who’s now playing the ro­ considerable fortune through water mantic lead In "Out of the Frying developments in California. In 1932 Fan." Brown is Texas tennis cham­ his stock-juggling activities were in­ pion. vestigated. but without success." ----- 4t "You seem to have snootled Radio's "Woman of Courage" has around to very good effect," Tonga two leading women who made Dick complimented them. names for themselves in the mov­ "And now," Willard concluded, ies in the days when radio was a "Karen Waterson, through her at­ lot of strange machinery and h cou­ torneys, and undoubtedly acting on ple of ear phones. They arc Esther the advice and direction of John Colt, Ralston, one of the most beautiful is bringing suit, on the complaint blondes of that day, and Enid Mar­ that her grandfather’s sale of Ala­ key, one of the most striking bru­ koa was illegal—that Garrett Water- nettes. son, at the time of the sale, was ----- *----- mentally incompetent. That shows If you're a star of “Meet the Peo­ you the girl’s unscrupulous type— ple" you’re destined for Hollywood she is willing to discredit her own fame, apparently. First Virginia grandfather—prove him to have been O’Brien, then William Orr, signed virtually insane—to gain advantage up for the movies. The third mem­ for herself.” ber of the cast to face the cameras "Same old story,” Tonga Dick is Betty Wells, who was nabbed by murmured. "But not so easy, in Metro. the case of Garrett Waterson, I ----- *----- should think." ODDS AND ENDS-hi rumored Willard Wayne exploded. "I tell you it is easy! Unless we find a about that Errol Elynn tucceeded in making him tel/ exceedingly unpopular way out, It is most certainly going with the newspaper photographer! of to be done! This is what comes of New York recently . .. I'reiident Route- dealing with irresponsibles of Gar­ veil will be. heard over the Mutual rett Waterson’s type. Evidence can chain December 24 during the cere- be brought In to show that Garrett moniet at the annual lighting of the Waterson was not only totally irre­ National Chrittmai tree . . . 7 he actor- sponsible, but eccentric in the ex­ raven of "True to the Army" hat been treme. I myself am convinced he offered to the (J. S. army lignal corp», was more or less deranged. Let to co operate with the army’t carrier me remind you that we’ve had hun­ pigeoni . . . Ilob Hope and Rita Hay­ dreds of such cases in the Islands— worth have been ¡elected by the newt cameramen anigned to Hollywood at mostly successful!" (TO HE CONTINUED) "the moil photogeneroui tian of 1941." Itreet!" After ihn! lilence reigned. From the Source ”1 only know one good thing ■bout Tom.” "And what's that?” ■His opinion of himself.” In Full l'»e Mrs. Green bought u sundiul at a sale und had it erected in her garden. She called in the builder and instructed him to move it to a more suitable place. "Where would you like me to put it?” asked the builder. "Under the electric lump on the porch," she replied "W* shall then be able to see the time when it is dark.” BETTER RESULTS when you bake No wonder Clabber Girl Is the baking day favorite In millions of homes . . . the enthusiastic choice of millions of women, women who «re proud of their baking, proud of their thrift. Order a can of Clabber Girl from your grocer today, You will be amazed when he tells you Clabber Girl’s price, And. you will be delighted with your baking results. You Pay Less for Clabber Girl . . . but You Use No Moro . . . CLABBER GIRL BAKING POWDER We Can All Be EXPERT BUYERS • In bringing us buying Information, a« to prices that are being asked for whot wo Intend to buy, and at to the quality we can expect, the advertising column» of this nowipaper perform a worth while service which saves vt many dollart a year. • It It a good habit to form, the habit of coniulting the advertisements every time we make a purchase, though wo have already decided |ust what wo want aed where we are going to buy It. It gives us the most priceless feeling In the worldt the feeling of being adequately prepared. • When we go Into a store, prepared beforehand with knowledge of what Is offered and at what price, wo go as an expert buyer, filled with self-confi­ dence. It Is a pleasant feeling to have, the feeling of adequacy. Most of the unhappiness In the world can be traced to a lack of this feeling. Thus adver­ tising shows another of Its manifold facets—shows Itself as an aid toward making all our business relationships nsxs secure and pleasant.