Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, September 21, 1944, Image 3

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Southern Oregon Miner, Thursday, September 14, 1944
That Old Chair Can
Easily Be Reclaimed
S3at==55Fv=H3e
F ] life I
J Clean Comics That W ill Amuse Both Old and Young j
TH E SUNNY SID
XTEW cane seats are expensive
’ because the work is done by
hand. Endless tim e is required
also for scraping off layers of paint
to get down to the grain of the
wood in doing over m any pieces
of furniture. The chair shown here
did not seem to be worth this la­
bor. It was reclaim ed with a seat
from a scrap of plywood, blue
By BOODY ROGERS
SPARKY WATTS
M A R K O N »LYW O O O C UT
1
X
A t P w it h a keyhole
' , 7 SPM THEM TACK
TO CHAW
<
L USE THIS
PATTERN + A
SEAM FOR
THE COVER
2.
MAKE
A PAPER
PAT TERM
I.
WORM CAME
SEAT CUT ,
AWAY V \ 4 r
SEWM TO
IQAE6S
seam tv
paint and seat cover of blue and
white ticking edged with white
m aterial raveled to m ake narrow
fringe.
The chipped white enam el th a t
was on the chair was rubbed w ith
coarse and then with fíne sand­
paper until smooth. Th new seat
cam e next; then flat paint which
was allowed to dry 24 hours be­
fore applying enam el. Next, the
seat cover was m ade with a
straight band around the front and
across the back term inating in ties
a t the back com ers.
• • •
NOTE—This chair remodeling idea is
from BOOK 10 which also contains direc­
tions lor making an adorable padded bou­
doir chair from an old kitchen chair; a
high-back chair from an old rocker and an
attractive upholstered chair from odds and
ends of wood, a little padding and some
chintz. Send name and address with IS
cents and receive a copy of BOOK 10.
MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS
Bedford Hills
New York
Drawer 10
Enclose IS cents for Book No. 10.
Name .....................................................
Address ................................................
By GENE BYRNES
REG’LAR FELLERS—No Privacy
CLASSIFIED
D E P A R T M E N T
HELP WANTED
• Persons now engaged in essential
industry trill not apply w ithout state­
ment of availability irons their local
United S tates Em ploym ent Service.
ESSENTIAL WAR WORK. 48-hr. w eek. No
exp. needed. M. A M. WOODWORKING
CO.. 2301 N. Colombia B ird ., Portland, Ore.
Business Opportunity
By J. MILLAR WATT
POP— Hard on the Seat of His Pants
R E A D T O ZAE
W H IL E 1 S E W
NO YOD SEW TO M E
W H ILE I R E A D I
SELL OR TRADE—E quity in Groc.. M eat
and Confect. Store and bldg. Stock at in­
voice. Approx. S3.500. WM. D. BEN N ETT,
8640 N . E dison St., Portland 3, Oregon.
FOR SALE
For Sale—Well equipped & furnished con­
va lescen t home. E a sy to keen filled. Good
incom e. % acre of garden, flowers, fruit &
nut trees. lVa blk. Portland bus. 21 mi.
Portland. BOX 126, F orest Grove, Oregon.
rtv stc
Equipped with a triple plate g lass self-de-
frosting
m eat c o u n te r ," scaled K elvinator
'ostfng n
Kooler, g lass ca se s, counter, m eat slicer,
others. Lunch room counters, stools, etc.
N ew elec, gas pump and oil. If desired also
40 a. m ixed berry farm ; som e tim ber.
P rice $6.000. Selling reason ill health.
LIBERTY STORE. RT. 3. BOX 58«
Salem , Oregon. • Ed P etersen , Owner.
FARMS & RANCHES
GET OUR NEW LIST
(A) Dairy and stock ranches.
<B) Small farm s and acreage.
Scenic fertile P u get Sound country.
RAISING KANE—Hi, Neighbor!
By FRANK WEBB
P«C SE N T 5
COLOSSAL P E O P L E '
Don Peters Land Office
Issaquah, Wash.
-
-
Lakeside 386-2.
200 Acres EQUIPPED FARM
in beautiful M innesota; also sm aller farm s
and suburban. J. G. ERICKSON, 1510
Frem ont N ., M inneapolis, Minn.
IRRIGATED STOCK RANCH
John Day valley, eastern Oregon; full
equipment, 100 head of cattle, with hay;
modern 6-room house. Call 9227 N. Woolsey
Court, 5-6 even in gs, Portland, Oregon.
LOGGING TRAILER
(fewtuiCK E n k , r u e m a n
ON4O «UlPOßrs BEAUTIFUL
R U 6 8 E O . 0A0y
eu M P g g s/
USED 2Sb-Ton logging trailer, dual w h eels.
$400. Inspection if interested. Stores dept.
PACIFIC CAR A FOUNDRY CO.
Renton
-
Washington.
Gem-Cutter’s Pay
Few m anual w orkers receive
half as m uch in wages as New
York’s gem - diamond cutters,
m any of whom are paid $235 a
week.
WNU—13
37—44
Watch Your
Kidneys/
W. •'iï
CROSS
TOW N
H e lp T h e m Cleanse th e Blood
o f H a rm fu l Body Waste
Your kidneys are constantly filtering
waste matter from the blood stream. But
kidneys sometimes lag in their work—do
not act as Nature intended—fail to re­
move impuritiee that. If retained, may
poison the system and upset the whole
body machinery.
Symptoms may be nagging backache,
persistent headache, attacks of diuineas,
getting up nights, swelling, puffiness
under the eyes—a feeling of nervous
anxiety and lost of pep and strength.
Other signs of kidney or bladder dis­
order are sometimes burning, scanty os
too frequent urination.
There should be no doubt that prompt
treatment is wiser than neglect. Uss
Doan's Pills. Doon'a have been winning
new friends for more than forty years.
They have a nation-wide reputatio
Are recommended by grateful people I
country over. Ask potar neighbor!
By
Roland Coe
‘The canteen wasn’t doing so well, so we put in a side-line!
’* So that’s what he meant when he bet I ’d see him at
your house tonight!”
D oan spills