Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, April 22, 1943, Image 2

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    SOUTHERN OREGON MINER, Ashland, Oregon
Half of World Doesn't
Know If hat Other Thinks
A commercial traveler put up
for the night at a small country
inn. In the breakfast room the
following morning he was asked
by the landlord how he had en­
joyed the cornet playing in the
next bedroom during the night.
"Enjoyed it!" was the reply.
“I should think not, indeed! Why,
I spent half the night pounding on
the wall to make that cornet play­
er stop.”
"I’m afraid there's been a mis­
understanding,” said the landlord,
stiffly. “The cornet player told
me that the person in the next
room applauded so heartily that
he played every piece he knew
five times over.”
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
PHOTO FINISHING
BEAUTIFUL 4x6 PICTURES from 114 Ik
120 negatives, S’tiHn from all smaller
sizes. 3M»c EA. Rolls 8 exp. 30c—12 exp.
45c—16 exp. 60c—36 exp. SI 25. Get price
on enlarge, on portrait wper. copies made
from old. new Diet. OVERNTTE SERVICE.
PACIFIC PHOTO SERVICE
P. O. BOX 666, SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.
ST CH PIC E^MILLIONS^
• “/KATHLEEN NORRIS •
y
(SI nohris
THE «TO BY SO FAR: Charlo«!»
(Cherry) RawUass, an orphan al Sain!
OoroLhea'l coaveat school »Inc» the was
»•ven. know» almost nothin» of her early
history. but »ho hat gradually realised
that like other girl» at th» school ah«
ha« no family. She questions whether
»ho ha» the right to her father's name.
Judge Judson Marabbanka and Emma
Haskell. housekeeper tor wealthy Mr».
1‘orieoo» Porter In San Francisco. are
her guardians. When Cherry 1» twenty
Emma gets her a secretarial Job with
Mrs. Porter, bui she goes flrst to the
Marshbanks
mansion.
meeting
the
Judge's young wife and his rich niece.
Amy. daughter of his brother. Fred, now
dead. Lite at Mrs. Porter’s becomes
monotonous and Cherry Is thrilled when
Kelly Coates, an artist, sends her a box
of candy, and she Is Jealous when he
brings Fran to a party at Mrs. Porter’s.
Emma tells Cherry that her sister Char­
lotte was Cherry's mother. Kelly takes
Cherry along an Fran can visit his stu­
dio, and t berry senses that he Is very
much tn love with Fran, bnl soon he tells
Cherry despondenUy that Fran has prom­
ised the Judge she will not see him any
more. Mrs. Porter dies, leaving Cherry
91.504. and she learns from Marshhanks
that his brother Fred, who was Amy's
father, was also her father. Cherry de­
cides to go to Stanford University and
the Judge suggests that she live with
Mrs. Pringls. As Fran Is driving her
there the asks Cherry to bo Kelly's
friend, saying bo likes Cherry and that
she has decided to do the honorable
thing and avoid Mm. Kelly wires Cher­
ry, drives her to Ms studio, and after a
party there with friends »torts with her
to ths Marshbanks mansion. Dora Marsh­
banks, the formidable woman who was
the Judge’s mother and Amy's and her
own grandmother, objects to Cborry's
presence in the bouse. Cherry tells Kelly
about it some weeks later.
Now continue with the story.
I
* A
4»
7» Jr i,
“Of course 1 don't know what she Mid,“ the Judge admitted with a
faint frown. "But whatever she Mid it didn't last long, for Amelia falaled,
and when she came to she was very ill—and the baby waa born within
the hour."
Just a week later Cherry sat op­ ter's secret must be kept now, of
posite the judge in his comfortable all times, when Fred's wife, who
WORLDS LARGEST Si ILL h a - ! ¿
chambers.
wakn’t sny too strong, was expect­
His kindly eyes smiled at her. ing her own baby any day.
“It's the summer plan—the camp at
"But poor little Lottie couldn't
Turks Ban Clerical Garb
Big
Basin—you wanted to see me bear it.
One night she suddenly
Turkey is the only country in the
about?”
appeared in my brother's room, as
world in which all men and women
“No. not unless you object Beck he was reading to hl» wife, and ac-
connected with religious orders
end
I can’t wait to pack. We go cused him of having ruined her
are forbidden to wear clerical
next Tuesday, and the girls begin life I"
garb on the street.
to coma in Saturday."
"If I wai the baby," Cherry said,
"Then what was the trouble. Cher­ hardly breathing. *T must have
ry? Your letter said ‘trouble.’ ”
been bom Just about that Ume. too. ••
CHAPTER XI
"It’s this. Amy esme down to
“You were only a few days old.
see me Wednesday. I didn't know Your mother, poor Lottie, wss per­
"Yes, but old Mrs. Marshbanki she was going to. She wanted to haps weak and feverish, hardly
was too wild to mind that . . . Well, tell me all about the trip and this knowing what she was doing.”
after we'd all stood petrified for Navy ensign she's so crazy about”
“But she couldn't have come to
what seemed about an hour, she
“Yes. but why look so distressed the house.
She'd have been too
said to An;y, ‘it is extremely dis­ about that? You like Amy?”
weak.”
Any meal becomes a feast with
honorable to listen to the conversa­
"I do like Amy. Amy's my—of
“She may have been in the house
these tempting-texture biscuits! Made
tion of others!’ and walked out of* course we're pretty closely related. with Emma. I have always sus­
with tasty kxlloco ' s au - bsax , they'll
the room. Of course Amy was mad Amy and I. But one thing is—one pected that Emma was there and
make a hit with everyone!
with curiosity and so I pretended thing is that your mother doesn't the baby was bom there. However
All-Bran Buttermilk Biscuits
that her grandmother didn't like me like me to see Amy too much. She it was, she rushed into Amelia's
H eop Kellogg's
1 teaspoon baking
because Emma was once their asked me—she practically asked me room. Amelia had lost all control of
AU-Bran
powder
% cup buttermilk
1 teaspoon salt
nurse, and she didn't think it was a —not to come to the house any herself; she was sobbing bitter­
flour
_ cups
_-------
H teaspoon soda
very suitable friendship for her more.”
H cup shortening
ly .. .”
granddaughter."
A shadow came over the genial
Soak All-Bran in buttermilk. Sift
"Did she say anything about the
“Good girl. Cherry!”
face; the judge's forehead contract­ baby?”
flour, baking powder, salt and soda to­
gether. Cut in shortening until mix­
There was a long silence. Kelly ed a little.
“No. Amelia never knew about the
ture is like coarse corn-meal. Add
raised himself on his elbows and
"My mother did?”
baby.
soaked All-Bran; stir until dough fol­
stared at her.
"Yes. She said it wasn't—decent.”
lows fork around bowl. Turn onto
"Of course 1 don’t know what
“What are you thinking?" Cherry
floured board, knead lightly a few
"H'ml” the judge said, gravely
she said,” the Judge admitted
seconds, roll or pat to H inch thick­
said.
enough. “I'm sorry she did that
with a faint frown. "But what­
ness and cut with floured cutter. Bake
"That you look very nice, today. You know how much we all like
on lightly greased pan in hot oven
ever she said. It didn't last long,
That
—
well.
I
was
wondering
if
you'd
you.
and
what
reason
I
have
for
(450* F.) about 12 minutes.
for Amelia fainted, and when
like to come and live at Topcote, feeling that I've something to make
NOTE: Sweet Milk Recipe: If sweet
she came to she was very Ul,
Cherry.”
milk is used Instead of buttermilk,
up to you.”
and the baby was born wilbia
omit soda and increase baking powder
She looked at him. flushing and
“Amy came in while your mother
the hour.”
to 3 teaspoons.
paling.
was talking to me. I'd reached the
Emma
came hurrying down and
“How do you mean?”
bouse before Amy did, and I was in
took
Lottie
away, and a few days
“
I
mean
marry
me.
of
course;
1
my room, reading, and your mother
Shaky Japan
came in and said how much she re­ later Emma left my mother, and
Earthquake shocks occur in one mean as Mrs. Coates.”
she and Lottie went to live some­
“I see,” Cherry said, she looked sented my being there."
part or another of Japan at the
where in the country.
away.
“How much did Amy hear?”
rate of almost four a day.
“Fred was killed In a motor
"I've been thinking about it Ever
“Well, your mother had Just ssid
since that night when you made the that if I didn't break off al) my re­ smash a few years later, and Ame­
toast and it was so cold and the lationships there, she'd have to let lia didn’t survive long. My mother
Wilcoxes were there. I’ve been won- everyone know, and Amy too. that took charge of Amy. and the money
dering why it was all so cozy that we were half sisters. And she said my brother left tor you I admin­
night. It came to me that it was that would hurt my father, and my istered as best 1 could. Emma had
you. So I telephoned you and asked mother, too. And I said that that sent her sister to this school of Saint
you if you were free last Sunday, meant injuring the reputation of her Dorothea's for a while, when she
was little but LotUe hated It and
and you were going on a picnic to own son! Amy heard that.”
came back. "A school of charac­
Point Lobos.”
"And guessed the rest?”
ter," as the catalogue says, and she
George arranged that”
"Guessed that it was you, instesd
Is George Pringle in love with of your brother Fred. After your wanted you sent there."
CTierry was standing; she came
you?”
mother had gone Amy said that she
"He has a case." Cherry answered always had suspected that I wa , 9» over to his chair, bent over him
swiftly, and he felt her warm lips
indifferently.
Cherry's
throat
thickened,
she
against his forehead.
"But you don't like him."
looked at him imploringly, “that I
"I love you! There's never any
"Not that way. No. He’» nice. was your daughter."
trouble for anyone where you arel I»
but not that way No."
"I see," he said thoughtfully.
she said, and was gone.
“You know how I feel about
"I didn't contradict her — I
“Oh. the relief. Kelly!” she wrote
Fran.” Kelly »aid presently. “She'll couldn't say anything, 1 kept try-
always be the unattainable — the ing to think which would be worse, him from camp. “The relief of do­
dream woman. I can’t help that telling her, or letting it go and talk­ ing something you simply don't
want to do, and having it over, and
But you and J could have a lot of ing some day to you.”
your soul as clear as a bell!
fun. Cherry, roaming about paint­
"Fran and I were in Los Angeles
“When will you see me? When col­
ing things and clearing the creek." then?"
lege opens. For three delicious
He looked at her expectantly, and
“Yes. And then I went to Palo
met a strange, thoughtful look in Alto and didn’t see you, and I knew weeks before that, as soon as we
close camp. Rebecca and 1 and a
her eyes, fixed upon his.
that your mother cared more about
darling girl named Lucie Fargo are
Cherry jumped to her feet, and keeping it from Amy than anything going on a wild cruise. Up to Vic­
ZYOU WOMEN WHO SUFFER FROM^ started
to walk to the car that was else, and I hoped that Amy wouldn't
toria—we’U actually be out of Amer­
talk. But now Amy's back, and she
parked a hundred yards away.
ica. imagine!—and on the way home
"Why, thank you, Kelly!" she said wants me to come in to spend the we're going to stay with Lucie's
politely. “You’re tremendously kind night with her next Saturday, and grandmother, who has a country ho­
If you »utter from hot flashes, dizzi­
to think that way about me. I ap­ -go the Quatres Arts Ball, and I tel. That's up in Mendocino Coun­
ness, distress of "Irregularities", are
preciate it Just as much, and I'm don't know what to do!”
weak, nervous, irritable, blue at
ty, not far from Aunt Emma's
"My mother’s a proud woman.
times—due to the functional
eternally grateful to you,” she went
place; it’s only about thirty miles.
"middle-age" period in a woman’s
Cherry,"
the
judge
said,
after
a
si
­
on briskly, no emotion whatsoever
So I've written Aunt Emma that
life—try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege­
discernible In manner or voice, "but lence. “She’s had a sad life.”
table Compound—the best-known
I'm coming over to see her.”
medicine you can buy today that’s
—well, you see, I’ve missed a good
“She had been living in an apart­
And she signed it “Your devoted
made erpecially ¡or tcomen.
deal in my life. I’ve never had a ment hotel and hating it Fred and
and obedient Marchionesa.”
Pinkham's Compound has helped
father; I barely remember my his wife, Amelia, had had a little
thousands upon thousands of wom­
But despite high spirits she dread­
mother; I had no home as a child, place in Burlingame. But after
en to relieve such annoying symp­
ed the visit to Emma, and was
toms. Follow label directions. Pink­
no birthday parties and bedtime sto­ years, five or six yeafs, I think, she
ham's Compound is worth trying!
glad that it waa to be put off until
ries—all that.
was going to have a baby. Old Well­ the end of the holiday.
"Now I have a half sister and an ington, her father, was an immense­
In due time she and Rebecca and
aunt and a grandmother and a cous­ ly rich man; he was going to come
WNU"—13
16—43 in and I can’t claim any of them,” on from New York for the event, Lucie drove along the ocean coast,
she continued, still in the same light, and do everything for the baby. and into high mountains, and
through valleys where great rivers
impersonal voice. "I never can
Fred, who'd been restless and un­
claim them. So when I am a wife, satisfied, settled down all of a raced. It was all glorious and rest­
ful and exciting.
Kelly.” Cherry said, with a quick
sudden. Mother had opened the city
When they were back in California
glance at him over her shoulder as
house by this time, and they were with the great mountains and the
they walked toward the car, "I want
all together. The baby was coming days of laughter and change and
And Your Strength and
the whole thing. I want some man
in November—”
Energy Is Below Par
adventure behind them. Cherry felt
to think I am perfection. I want
"I know. I’m four days older herself older and wiser. On a cer­
ft may be caused by disorder of kid­
romance and glamor and the feel-
ney function that permits poisonous
ing that we two are all the whole than Amy," Cherry, listening ab- tain sober September afternoon she
waste to accumulate. For truly many
people feel tired, weak and miserable
presented herself at the door of Em­
world to each other. No Fran in sorbedly, put in as he paused.
when the kidneys fail to remove excess
the background!
"But you came two months too ma's cabin with nothing more than
acids and other waste matter from the
blood.
“So I do thank you, and the an­ soon. That's all part of the story. a little shyness In her manner.
You may suffer nagging backache,
Emma lived in a lumber country.
swer la 'No.' And I hope you'll for­ Well! My wife and I and little Gregg
rheums tie pains, headaches, dissiness,
getting up nights, leg pains, swelling.
Cherry, for her drive of thirty miles,
got
here
just
a
week
or
two
be
­
get
that
you
said
anything
about
it,
Sometimes fftquent and scanty urina­
and we’ll have more picnics and fore Amy was born, and what we had borrowed the car, leaving the
tion with smarting and burning la an­
other sign that something is wrong with
walks some day.
I’m w Iking learned was rather confusing.
It other girls with Lucie's grand­
the kidneys or bladder.
Home,”
she finished,
as they seems that Emma’s sister, Char­ mother.
There should be no doubt that prompt
treatment is wiser than neglect. Use
reached the car. "It's not far, and lotte Rawlings—much younger than
Emma had been lying on the
Doss’s Pitt*. It Is better to rely on a
I want to be alone. Good-by Kelly.” she—was sometimes at the house, couch, evidently napping; she wel­
medicine that has won countrywide ap­
proval than on something lees favorably
"Cherry, you’ve got me all and that Fred had seen this girl, comed Cherry pleasantly enough,
known. Doss's have been tried and toot­
ed many years. Are at all drug stores.
wrong!” he began distressedly. But and had taken advantage of her. but without an embrace, and put the
Get Dona’s today.
she only said good-by again, and Emma knew nothing of it until al- girl into a chair at the hearth while
walked away down the orchard. Aft­ most the end when Lottie came to she i tar ted a Are and lighted one
er a minute or two he got into the her and told her. Emma felt that dim kerosene lamp.
car and drove away.
nobody must know, that her sis-
(TO BE CONTINUED)
THESE BUTTERMILK
ALL-BRAN BISCUITS
MAKE ANY MEAL!
Acid Indigestion
HOT HASHES
When Your
Back Hurts-
D oans P ills
ton-down bonnet and matching
panties are ulso very gay with
rickrack edging.
• •
Pattern No. 8337 is In «tarn 2. 3. 4. *
and 4 years. Size 3 ensemble takes 3|a
yards » Inch material.
Due to an unusually large demand and
current war conditions. slightly more Ume
Is required tn fllllng orders tor a tew et
the moat popular pattern numbers.
Send your order to:
BKWING cmct.lt PATTERN DEPT,
149 Naw MonIsomery »treat
Kan Francisco
,
Calif.
Enclose 10 cenia In coina tor rach
pattern desired.
Psltern No. ...
Deceptive, Smart.
DOUNDS thinner and inches tall-
* er—that's what this smart frock
Name ....
will make you look. It was thought
Address ..
••••••••oeeeeeee
up by a top-flight designer who
wanted her style to be as decep­
tive as it was smart! Just look
From an old French word "mes"
at all the good points—the crisp derived from the Latin word "mis­
white vestee, the beautiful han­ sus" meaning a course at a meal,
dling of the bodice, the slimming cornea the Army's name "meaa"
skirt and the attractive styling of for its breakfast, dinner and sup­
the belt.
per. Favorite meal with the soldier
• • •
is chicken dinner—his favorite
Pattern No. B.KM la tn sixes 38. IS. 40. cigarette, Camel. (Based on actual
42. 44. 4®, 4S. 80 and 32 Size 38 takes,
with
sleeves. 41.» yards » Inch material. sales records from service men’s
own stores.) A carton of Camala,
% yard tor contrasung vestee.
by the way, is a gift that's always
welcome. And though there are
Spring Beauty.
HAT a cute figure will a ttvo Post Office restrictions on pack­
to six year old cut in this en­ ages to overseas Army men, you
semble. The frock is all prettied can still send Camels to soldiers
up with scalloped bodice, buttons in the U. S., and to men in the
and rickrack trimming. The but- Navy, Marines, und Coast Guard
wherever they are.—Adv.
W
DON'T IXT
All Weathers on Tap
The army air forces are building
an all-weather room at Wright
Field, Ohio. In it sand direct from
the Sahara desert will blow in
howling storms, rubber boats will
float on a water-covered floor, and
all climates from arctic to equator
will be reproduced, with snow, ice,
rain, fog, and broiling artificial sun
or cold to 50 degrees below zero.
The room is designed for testing
equipment, clothing, and human
reactions under all conditions.
CONSTIPATION
•LOW YOU UP
• When bowels are sluggish and you
feel irr.table, headachy, do as miliums
do - chaw FEKN A MINT, the modern
chewing-gum laiativa. Simply chow
FEEN-A MINT before you go to bod,
taking only in accordance with package
directions - sleep without being dis­
turbed Nest morning gentle, thorough
relief, helping you feel swell again. Try
KEEN A-M1NT. Tasto» good. 1» bendy
•nd economical. A generous family supply
FEEN-A-MINT“ioi
HELP! Quick/ ÇPECIAL OFFER:
a MMU suaw - svaracs eiastis -
•as SCUMS ItCHINS — MIHOS SICtAl
iseiTAtieH-CMAtiM«— cmass tan
4^F •
••••
rtm^T Raanaol (X m -
•MM, Uia Car« F<44ar had • M«Dy wm 4 Hwkte« tea
EE Pa jar of soothing Rest nol
handy and be ready with
quick relief for itching burn­
ing torment of such irritations.
Medicated specially for gentle,
efficient, comforting action.
Enjoy mild Resinol Soap, too.
Il is delightfully refreshing.
Bar both st any druggist's.
RESINOLS
★
Breakfast
Problems ?
Here’s a delicious,
nutritious 3-food meal that saves
TIME «WORK* FUEL* OTHER FOODS
CORN
FLAKES
MM «UN M awe MM mimmi
___ 74afhmW