Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, January 31, 1946, Image 3

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    LIV E w h ile rab b its 4 to 5 Lbs. 24c.
W ant rabbit sk in s, p ou ltry and veal.
B a b y * Com pany, 939 ■■ W. F ron t,
P ortland , O regon.
Tradition la a fine thing and the
old-time sailor suit was good enough
lor countless stout-hearted Ameri­
cans to fight and die in, but nobody
could feel swank fly tailored In It.
• -
"You cut it too short!”
Some people say, however, that
the garb was a fine thing: It made
the wearer fighting mad.
» —
NANCY
By Ernie Bushmiller
The change is not official yet, but
the navy is trying out completely
new uniforms for Jack Tars, and
they are fully as smart as the army,
marines and aircorps. Pants are
pants, the buttons are in the right
place and there is no lacing remote­
ly associated with them. The old
blouse with the wide collar is also
gone, as is the traditional sail hat
•
Strike up the band.
Here comes a sailor.
Freed from (at last)
Farragut's tailor!
- •
MUTT AND JEFF
By Bud Fisher
J E F F D ID I EVER SHOW You
THESE RECORDS ARE S / t HEY
w ell . t h e y r e
REALLY VERY VALUABLE' 1 S O U N D
T H IS OLD PHOMO6RAPH AND
A l it t l e
_ T H 6 S E OLD VALUABLE RECORDS THEY’WERE THE FIRST ftSCRATCHY.1 SCRATCHED UP
HAVE?
DISC RECORDS M A DE'
BUT THEY'RE
I
D jo '
1 ID
AND LATER
THAT D A Y /
SCRATCHED UP
ANYMORE, M U T T ’ ’
1 SANDPAPERED
T H E M DOWN
SMOOTH FOR
WORTH F IV E
B ucks a
/ they a in ' t
piece '
¡ f'o .
^Cs O» X ' —*
LITTLE REGGIE
By Margarita
/ ' gosh aunt cleo
1
JITTER
By Arthur Pointer
♦_
FOR SALE
B L U E B E R R IE S
B s w e s t and b est In c u ltiv a te d b lu e ­
berry p la n ts. . . . Send fo r fo ld er.
EBERHARDT
BLUEBERRY NURSERIES
B t . 1, B ox 379, O lym pia, W a sh .
“B E S T C H IC E S” P O B ’46
B R E E D E R S cu lle d th e E a m e sw a y —
blood te ste d fo r p u lloru m — W h ite
L egh orn s — N ew H am ps.
“B e s t
C h icks’’ H a tch ery , B o x 1287, M a ry s­
v ille , W ash .
344 e g g s. U. S. A pproved H e a v ie s;
P a rm en ter R ed s; N ew H am p sh ires;
W h ite R ocks; C o rp ish -N ew H am p­
sh ire C ross
All pullorum passed.
Stan dard H atch ery, Inc., W inlock ,
W ash .
Those old-fashioned bell-bottom
trousers were designed so that a
tar could shake ’em off swiftly if
he went overboard, but modern youth T O U R IST CAM P For Sale.
P . P.
Joh n son , 11C2 - 15th S i., Coeur d ’
can break swimming records even
A lene, Idaho.
in a paratrooper’s field regalia.
♦
A. K. C. A IR E D A L E P U P S.
M ales.
Nobody knows why the hat was
designed, but it was never a fit and
was one reason why so many boys
Joined the army.
• • •
’’Show Boat,” first produced al­
most twenty years ago, and revived
in 1932, is back, for instance, and as
terrific as ever. Believable human
beings, decent impulses and the glo­
rification of the more wholesome
things of life mark every minute
of the show.
IMAGINARY ANGLING
By Gene Bvrnes
SA L E SM E N — Men
or W om en—Tak«
ord ers for Bronzed B aby S h oes—
A verage ea rn in g s 220.00 per day.
D ig n ified work. W rite W estern A rt
C j ., 4715 U n iv e r sity A ve., S an D iego,
5, CaUf.
When a g irl has to choose between
the army and the navy it w ill be
all even so far as the costumes are U. S. C E R T IF IE D W h ite L egh orn s
from s ir e s w ith D am s records up to
concerned.
_•_
On the other hand, there is that
sign in 12-foot letters in Times
Square that should help place some
of the responsibility for juvenile
crime, ‘ ‘Roughe« and Tougher Thau
‘Murder, My Sweet’ .”
• • •
REG’LAR FELLERS
HELP WANTED
C h illy
s o f f s h e ll”
S ta te lic e n se d nu r­
se r y stock .
S tr o n g 4’ tr ee s, c lu s ­
te r s o f fib ro u s roots.
P rice 1.00.
Carl J. H en drickson, B t. 1, E sta c a d a ,
O regon.
If there ever was a New York
theatrical season walloping the no­
tion that only d irt pays in the show
world and that the big rewards go
to the author who gets his ideas
from under the linoleum, this is it.
A ll the big money making musi­
cals (with one exception) are of the
refreshingly wholesome type. And
away' on top as money makers are
the revivals of old time favorites,
notable for loveliness of words and
music.
'
W A N T E D — R ab bits and rabbit sk in s.
Mkt. price or better.
O verhanSsr,
H57O4 P o st, Spokane, W a sh in g to n .
You can now join the navy and
look as good as if you were in the
F IL B E R T S — "Du
army.
and p ollen lzers.
♦ ,
Opry House Notes
DOESNT PUT UP
HER HAlR^ANYMOREy^
20c to 45c EACH paid for w h ite ( f r y ­
er)
rabbit
s k in s
H igh
ten sio n
str etc h e r s, 21 50 d o r , prepaid. Ship
to B. B. L aos. W arren, O regon.
This spring I ’ll go fishing
With a rod I cannot buy
On the line nobody’s selling
I will tie a missing fly.
1 w ill haul him in directly
With the reel that's out of stock.
« •
BROADWAY, 1946
Author—I ’ve got a new show.
If It’s
under 20 years old I can’t use it.
• • •
O ld
" u o lf
m ink.
P A K lt AC CO UNTING SY ST E M
Is d e sig n e d so th a t it can be u sed for
the k eep in g o f a c co u n ts a s ap p lied to
ihe gen eral farm , su ch a s c a ttle or
liv e sto c k , grain , d a iries, p o u ltr y or
truck gardening.
Illu s tr a te d fold er
m ailed on req uest.
T o n A re th e L oser.
I f you do not h ave a record o f all
itejjis go in g in to th e c o st o f produc-
ion, you can not m ake th e proper and
-o m p le te d ed u ctio n s on you r incom e
tax return.
Standard B ook— 22.0(1
C olum bia T a lle y P rin tin g Co.. In c.
110-112 Or?ndo, W en atch ee, W a s h .,
»ROAD B reasted Bronze tu rkey p ou lts.
P ullorum clean M em bers o f O regon
T u r k e y Im p rovem en t A sso cia tio n .
Broad B reasted C la ssific a tio n . K en ­
n e th B ills , B t. H o. 2, B ox 64, L eb an ­
on, O regon.
OR SA L E — S a w m ill. W ill clea r 2150
per day. P le n ty tim ber.
Land and
all —212.000.00. O. J . B y e rs, Brock-
w a - , O regon.
B R O A D -B R E A S T E D breed in g t o m s
and p u lle ts; p u lloru m clea n : h ea v y
stock . Order d ir ec t th is ad. w ith
sh ip p in g d ir ec tio n s. T om s, 214; p u l­
lets, 2k.
H a p p y H o llto r T u rk ey
F arm , 3 o x 83, C arey, Id aho.
LOCKERS, b o t t l e co o lers, reach -ln
boxes, m eat c a se s, n ew and used,
r efr ig e r a tio n eq u ip m en t. T B 6644,
PO RTLAND
R E F R IO B R A T IO H
CO M FA NT, 1516 H. B . K illin g s w orth ,
P ortlan d , O regon.
:0 AC R ES fo r s a le or ren t w ith o
w ith o u t stock , m ach in ery. B o x 97
K en n ew ick , W a sh in g to n .
ICELY P R IN T E D P erson al S ta tio n ­
ery, loo lette r heads (clu b s iz e ) 100
e n v e lo p e s to m atch a ll for o n ly 22.25
p ostp aid .
P a c l’ia S u rv-U -W eU Co.,
623 M issio n St., San F ra n c isc o 5,
C aliforn ia.
S P E C IA L
Miami Beach is one of the few
places on earth benefited by the
war. It had a boom all through the
disturbance. If Germans had held
out another year, there wouldn’t
have been a room in the place un­
der $500 a week, without bath.
• • •
And if the Japs hadn’t quit as
they did, any realtor would have
been able to sell a covered wagon
for the price of a waterfront hotel
• • •
Producer—What vintage?
/O R SA L E : 125 H ead yo u n g e w e s and
y e a rlin g lam bs, good sto c k .
A lso
bred H ereford h e ifer s. A eigh P a c k ­
ing- Com pany, M ount V e rso n , W a s h ­
in gton .
PERSONAL
When the fish that isn’t biting
Strikes and runs beneath a roes
•
225.00; F em ales. 220.00. 17. W. H obls,
B ox 625, T w in P a lls , Idaho.
ndttgea ret i.ted.
/ / you cry
often enough you niny get a
A Hereford bull was sold at auc­
tion in Oklahoma the other day
for $51,000. And without potatoes
or butter! It was a case where a
red flag caused no trouble.
Spencer Tracy has been rumored
in and out of “ The Rugged Path”
so many times they are thinking of
changing the name to “ Are You
With It? ”
• • •
We know one of the most disap­
pointed mothers in America. Her
son is not handsome enough (or a
future indorsing of fine whiskies and
yet too good looking for beer ads.
s e e
They say of a certain admiral,
“ That’ s his story and he’s Stark
with It.”
LIV ESTO C K W A N T E D
E. M ACK IN , T el. T acom a, M A 3565.
B t. 4, B ox 374, P nyaU n p, W a sh in g ­
ton.
»».e L.r.eut.8
The principal breeders of fires, all
of which can be wiped out, are:
Negligence in handling lighted
matches; careless smoking habits;
sparks falling on flammable wooden
roofs; defective chimneys and heat­
ing equipment; accumulations of
rubbish around buildings and in
closets, attics and basements; spon­
taneous ignition of hay; and lack
of lightning rod protection.
Dry Hay
Excessive heating of hay in mow
or stack causes decreased digesti­
bility and lowers its value for milk
production. One test showed that 61
per cent of the dry matter in nor­
mal hay was digestible; of brown
hay, 41 per cent, and black bav,
only 27 per cent. Heating also re­
duced palatability. A11 cows fed on
brown ar.d black hay in the experi­
ment lost weight.
Fire Toil
In addition to the 3.500 death toll
of farm persons each year, another
5,950 farm people each year have
been criticnlly burned and maimed.
The dollar loss has amounted to al­
most $100,000,000 a year for the last
10 years.
Optometrist Specialist
An optometiist is an ophthal-
mically trained professional special­
ist who diagnoses and prescribes
for visual troubles, making, fitting
and adjusting glasses when neces­
sary.