Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, January 16, 1947, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Southern Oregon News Review, Thursday, January 16, 1946
C rem atories Offer Service,
N iche for D eparted I’ets
O f the four crem atories fo r pet
anim als in this country, the most
modern is in New Y ork C ity. Es­
tablished in 1939, it crem ates an­
nually over 300 pets, such as dogs,
cats, parrots and canaries, charg­
ing fro m $15 to $25 fo r the service,
fro m $5 to $300 fo r the urn and
fro m $25 to $100 fo r a niche and its
perpetual care.
ÛUSEHOLD HARSH LAXATIVES
LOST LOVER
UNNECESSARY?
BY TfcZj«
To rook m acaroni or spaghetti
Millions Find Healthful Fresh
without
constant watching or s tir­
Fruit Drink Given Them All
heavy and dark and sour in hi* I It couldn't be, but oh, how won­
ring, place it in a colander and then
breast.
derful If it were true that Spung1
the I-uxative Aid They Need
lower the colander into a kettle of
There was so much that he re­ liked her. too! Dooley hud tried to
salted, boiling water.
membered. Julia McFarlane, a put caution Into her head.
Ikm 't form the habit of depending
—• —
dancing, copper-headed scrap of fire
"There's a lot of emotion seething j
on harah. griping laxatives until you 've
F lavor for the soup. Put onion
—Julia, seventeen years old and In the air In wartime, Jill. Some
triad that easy, liealthful way million*
now use to keep regular.
as full of laughter as the little of it is wonderful and tine, and some and spices into tea bull holder that
m ay easily be lifte d out when the
streams that tumbled down the hills of it is a passing fever, a sort o f(
I t ’« fresh lemon juice ami water
O u & l
recklessly into the river. He hud 1 recklessness that leads men to say broth is full-flavored.
taken dnf thing in Ihc morning-just
— e—
been in love with her then. But j things they don't really mean and;
us ««in us you get up, the juice <>(
S ir M a rk Young, governor of
When ironing clothes, place sev­
Richard McFarlane had had a red­ women to believe them. So keep'
one
Sunkist Lemon in a glasaof water
Hong Kong when it was taken by
wheeled buggy, and the glamour of your head, no matter how your I e ral drops of cologne on your iron­
Taken thus, on an empty stemath. it
the Japanese, and who was taken
ing
board
cover.
Then
as
you
iron,
sophistication had invested him. He heart goes.”
stimulates net mat bowel action d.iv
prisoner at that tim e and la te r re­
the cologne aroma w ill be ab­
had had some kind of unimportant
after day, for most people.
“ I was raised in the m ilitu iy tra-l
leased, is the hero of m any stories
job in Washington then, but Dave dition,” she told Spang. "M y broth-| sorbed bv hankies anil blouses
And lemons ore actively gueui for
illu s tra tin g a ra p ie r-like w it. One
had known that he was a swash­ er and I were utterly different, but !
you. They're among therklirst sources
of the best is of the lady, lunching
buckler and a gambler and a liar, even in those stodgy years when
of vitamin C, which combats fatigue
at Governm ent House, who was
even then.
CHAPTER III
everybody was pacifist and soldiers '
helps resist colds and infections. They
aggrieved to find herself on S ir
Dave Patterson tensed his hands were tramps in khaki who weren’t
supply vitamins Bi and P. ad digoi
M a rk 's left instead of his rig h t.
Julia's lips quivered; the color on the reins, so that his horse raised admitted to theuters or good hotels, j
tion and help alkalinize the system
She approached her grievance
Ric and I always marched to m ill- j
Try this grand wake-up drink 10
obliquely—but made it fa ir ly ob­ came Into her face and then re­ his head and snorted.
JiB McFarlane, christened Julia, tary music. It was because our j
vious. F in a lly she rem arked: “ I ceded, leaving it aged a little and
mornings. See it it doesn't help yoU<
father was a kind of special glory '
was dizzily, ecstatically happy.
Use California Sunkist Lemons.
suppose it is re a lly v e ry d iffic u lt filled with patience.
666 STARTS RELIEF IN
that we hud. and we hated anything
The
station-wagon
was
h
ill
of
ra
t­
“
He
was
the
children's
father,
fo r your A.D.C. always to put your
JUST tSECONOS
Dave. Jill's father. He's more hers tles and lumbered along at a dis­ that detracted from his splendor. !
guests in th e ir rig h t places?”
J ill It's a wonderful thing for a child
"N o t at a ll,” said S ir M a rk than ever now that it's war again. creet th irty miles an hour.
CM (Smoua. pre»« i lyMvn l> p-
f»r v«p»r •|>«<l»
blandly, " fo r those who m a tte r She wears his memory like a deco­ nursed a brief hope that her dress to have something like that to live
To Have and to Hold!
from cold rnl«*rir* Try *44 -
’
up
to.”
don't m ind, and those who m ind ration. I can't destroy him for Jill. wouldn't be ruined by grease or
('•14
or.
"Was he decorated or some- ,
UM Liquid
Cold
She admires me now. I want her something before she had a chance
don’t m a tte r.”
U. S. Savings Bonds
preparation lodajr-
to keep on admiring me. That's to dance in it; but this small shad- thing?" Spang asked, steering the ,
Caullon
Vaa only
dlrartad.
' selfish, I suppose. But for people ow upon the beauty of the night she slow vehicle around a halted bus. '
with forthright minds like Jill's, the put out of her mind, because she The bus was full of soldiers hanging
heads and shoulders out of the w in-! ~
world is pretty well filled with peo­
dows, and some of them grinned and
ple who have to be despised. And
some of them saluted, laughingly,
of course there's Ric. He worries
and Spang snapped a salute in
me. John I. says I ’ve spoiled him,
return. "Some of our boys," he
but right now I'm afraid to take
//
told Jill. “ On their way. Destina­
anything away from Ric, anything
tion unknown."
that strengthens him, even a little ."
"No.” J ill took up the convcrsa- '
"But they know that their father
Creomulslon rellrves promptly bo-
tion again, wishing they hadn't'
eau-'J* it goes right to the seat of the
is dead. That’s why he's heroic
glimpsed
those
traveling
troops,
I
trouble to help loosen and expel
to them, because he's a splendid
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
wishing Spang would not look back
idea that never had any substance.
to sooUie and heal raw, tender, In­
at them. "No, I don't know that he
If he had come back—well, I won't
flamed bronchial mucoua m em ­
was decorated. My grandfather in­
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
talk about that, Dooley. But you
vestigated when the war was over. '
a bottle of Creomulslon with the un­
know that we all grew up together
derstanding you must like the way it
when we didn't hear anything from
—I know the kind of life you had
quickly nlluys the cough or you are
my
father—but
he
couldn't
find
any­
with
Richard—"
to have your money back.
WHEN CONSTIPATION makes you feel
thing
at
all.
But
they
were
all
punk as the dickens, brings on stomach
"Yes, I know. There are things
heroes, weren't they?”
upset sour taste, gassy discomfort,
I can't forget, too, Dave. Unpleas­
take Dr. Caldwell’s famous medicine
“ Yes. they were all heroes.” A
for Coughs. Chest Colds, Bronchitis
to quickly pull the trigger on lazy “in­
ant things. John I. has been at me
dead soldier was always a hero, he
nards” , and help you feel bright and
for years to have Richard declared
chipper again.
was thinking to himself, a trifle bit­
legally dead. But somehow the idea
terly.
DR. CALDWELL'S is the wonderful sen­
is horrible to me, like opening a
na laxative contained in good old Syrup
"And so are you—and all those
grave.”
Pepsin to make it so easy to take.
boys back there! War is a hero's
MANY DOCTORS use pepsin prepara­
" I can’t talk to you about it, of
business.”
tions in prescriptions to make the medi­
course, Dooley. Not that—or any­
cine more palatable and agreeable to
"War's a job to do,” Spang de-'
thing else that's in my mind—so
take. So be sure your laxative is con­
murred,
“ a dirty job that takes men .
tained in Syrup Pepsin.
long as you are Richard McFar­
to do it. So we go and do it. We '
INSIST ON DR. CALDWELL’S— the fa­
lane's w ife," Dave said quietly,
don t like it and we growl and gripe, :
vorite of millions for 50 years, and feel
leaning forward, his long slender
that wholesome relief from constipa­
and the enlisted men cuss the o f-!
hands dangling between his knees.
tion. Even finicky children love i t
fleers and the officers cuss the poli­
"B ut I can't agree with you. Your
CAUTION: Use only as directed.
ticians, but we wouldn't miss it, not
.
TO H ELP
attitude doesn’t make sense.”
any of us. But we'll be glad when
i J / EASE COUCHING,
“ I know. But most of the really
it s ended and we can go home.”
TIG H TC H EST
important things in life don't make
"Let's not talk about the war.
sense."
M ----------
USCLES
Though—” J ill shivered a little,
RUB ON
-
Dave walked the length of the
"there doesn’t seem to be very
room, his hands thrust into his
'mifth else to talk about."
coNtaiwgo ■*
p p p s ijj
pockets. "The dead are dead, Doo­
"Let's talk about you,” Spang'
ley. The decent thing is to bury
suggested. " I know you’re Ric Mc­
M SO J -
them and keep your memories. Tell
Farlane's sister, but that's all I
She had see.l him only twice.
me one thing. Is there any love
K ID
do know about you, except that
S h irtw aister
left in your heart for Richard Mc­ was with Spang, and his eyes ap­ you're red-headed and like m ilitary
Farlane?"
proved her, and life was just now bands and dancing.”
C A R E F U L L Y tailored sh irt-
w aist dress fo r women in
She put her hands to her throat very wonderful.
"That’s all there is. really. I
with a young, wistful gesture.
She had met the reality of war went off to school, and I wasn't the la rg e r size range. B rie f sleeves
"That's unfair of you, Dave. That's with a sinking sense of panic. All terribly bright, though I finally did are com fortable and p ractical,
a question I haven't dared to ask the girls of her own age that she grab an A.B. And then I came the deeper notched collar adds n
myself, all these years. I did love knew had been caught up in a home crazy to drive an ambulance fla tte rin g note. P attern provides
Keep your feet dry and
him terribly once, and then, after sort of whirlwind of despair.
or join the WAC or something, any­ short or three-quarter sleeves.
warm with SOUS
time went on, when there was no
"We haven't a prayer!” they thing with brass buttons attached. You’ll find i t your year 'round
favorite.
word, no record, nothing at all, mourned. "They'll all go off to But my grandfather sat on that
as well as
•
•
»
something bitter that I ’ve fought, fight, and then when they come idea. You met him—old John 1.1
N
"!s by
No. B001 Is designed lor size*
with all my soul and all my back we’ll be old maids, and they’ ll He's a unique character. He adores 34 , Pattern
36 . 38 , 40. 42 , 44 . 46 . 46 and 50. Size
strength, began to grow in me. I m arry girls years younger, kids my mother, though he and my fa­ 36. 4 1,« yards of 35 or 3B-lnch.
O'Sullivan
Due to an unusually large demand and
battle it at night, and it ’s like fight­ that are in high school now. It was ther didn’t appreciate each other
change to
condition*, slightly more time I*
C M 3
ing a shadow, but a shadow with that way in the last war; my moth exactly, I understand, one of those current
required In filling orders for a few of the
most popular pattern numbers.
a steely, strangling grip, something er said so.”
fam
ily
things.
He
lectured
me
like
for the io n ic
1
I 1
K e a d v fo r v im n o w — th e n e w S P R IN G
you can't touch or see or feci, but
Some of them had already pulled a top sergeant and said that Mother Is s u e of F A S H IO N . C o n ta in s a w e a lth of
can't defeat.”
Id
e
a
s
fo
r
e
v
e
r»
w
o
m
a
n
w
h
o
s
e
w
s
—
fa
sh
io
n
s
had
had
a
tough
life,
and
now
she
on your smile
out of the dreary eddy and gone
hy to n -n iz h t d e s lin e r * . p e rs o n a lity r h a r t s ,
“ Dooley, you were a child and off on mad tangents, m arrying men needed me around to keep things f r e e p a tte rn p r in te d In s id e the hook. P r ic e
Efficient C alox tcorkx two w a x ti
25 c e n ts .
you fell in love with a boy. A ll this overnight, m arrying men they knew m erry and bright because, of
Send your order to:
1 Helps remove film . . . bring out
course,
Ric
would
go
into
the
serv-|
morbid stuff—a psychiatrist could little about, men who were changed
all the natural lustre o f your
explain it; I can’t. If you were to by the glamour of uniforms, any­ ice, so there I am—just a home girl.
SEW ING C IR C L E P A T T E R N D E P T .
smile.
530 South Wells St.
Chicago 7, 111.
meet Richard now, suddenly—im ­ thing to be saved from being sucked If they keep on taking our men off
2 A special ingredient in Calox
Enclose 25 cents In coins for each
encourages regular massage. , .
possible, of course, just a figure down into the dismal doom of spin- the place I 'll end up hoeing corn
pattern
desired.
w hich has a tonic effect on gum*
of speech—but if Jie were to come sterhood. But something fastidious, and feeding pigs and things."
Pattern No____________ «ti».______
...h e lp s make them firm and
back into your life you might be something that held aloof, in Jill
rosy. Tone up your sm ile ...w ith
Nam e.
Calox!
sick with disillusion. You’d discov­ had made her scornful of these Love Catches Up
Address.
er that you had grown, you'd know fevered and uncertain escapes.
A fadr in jam out McKenou laboratories
W ith Jill
¡13 yean of pharmaceutical knou-boui
that young love of yours was mere­
She told herself that she was a
"Well, the army eats a lot 01
ly one of those wild and pretty fires mature woman. She was not a silly
And the navy—all those
that flame up before the age of rea­ young thing to be swept away on a bacon.
son and then die.”
tide of adolescent emotion.
Her tramps get too fat to waddle off
mother had not been eighteen years their ships.”
"You turn here," J ill said, “ and
old. An infant, practically! She
The Girls They
thought of the eighteen-year-old that building on the hill with all the,
Leave Behind
girls that she knew and how fright­ lights is the club. Don’t laugh at
"To ashes? That’s what you were fully young and naive they were, it; it's a funny little place but the1
A nd Y our S tren g th and
going to say, isn’t it? And some­ and was sw iftly sorry for them and people are grand, and we have fun
Energy Is Below Par
times the ashes are very dark and for that young and deluded crea­ in it. I ’ll bet I ’m the only female
dragging an officer. I 'll bet I have
f t may be caused by disorder of kid-
very bitter. Actually, I'm not cher­ ture who had been her mother.
B^y function that permits poisonous
to fight off mobs to get even one
waate to accumulate. For truly many
ishing ashes though, Dave. I don’t
dance.”
people feel tired, weak and miaerable
know
just
what
it
is
I
’m
keeping,
Jill
Talks
When the kidney« fail to remove excess
Don't try to tell me a lieutenant
acida and other waate matter from the
exactly—an ember, maybe, that re­
blood.
rates that high! Think this bus
About
Herself
fuses
to
burn
out.
Of
course,
if
You may suffer nagging backache,
rheumatic pair.a, headache«, dizziness,
" I liked your mother,” Spang said w ill make the h ill?”
Richard were to come back now
ffettlnar
tin _____
n
ie r h t a
lo
o pain«,
r ,a in >
11.__
fettin^ up
It always has. But the big car
nights,
leg
«welling.'
I ’d probably realize that I ’ve been abruptly, as though he had caught
Sometim es frequent an„
u r in a ­
nd scanty urina-
tion with smarting and burning la an­
harboring something unworthy. It the trend of her thoughts. “ She’s a has practically no rubber, and I put
other sign that something la wrong with
would change everything. Don’t de- grand person. And she looks young mine up because I felt it was the
the kidneys or bladder.
patriotic thing to do, though Grand­
There should be no doubt that prompt
■ spise me for being a fool, please. enough to be your sister.”
treatment 1« wiaer than neglect. Lae
father says the deterioration goes
And
don't
desert
me.”
“
Dooley's
forty-four.”
J
ill
Was
Doan a Pitta. It la better to rely on a
right on.”
medicine that baa won countrywide ap­
He put his hand on her head and not quite sure that she enjoyed the
proval than on something less favorably
“ Plenty of cars around here.”
idea
of
being
Dooley's
sister.
"She
known. Doan'a have been tried and test­
roughed her hair gently. " I won’t
"People
walk for weeks to save
ed many veara. Are at all drug stores
desert you, Dooley. But It doesn’ t and my father were married when enough gas for a party. That’s
Get Doan 9 today.
they
were
children
practically—just
make me happy, seeing you beat
a keen band, but probably half-way
your head against a stone wall for­ before the last war. Then he went through the dance the leader w ill
ever. I ’d better go now. I rode to France before I was born . .
She stopped abruptly, knowing that dash off and enlist in the coast
over, and it's five miles back.”
guard.”
j She said, “ Good-by, Dave. John sooner or later Spang might be go­
They parked at the end of a line
ing
overseas,
too.
She
could
not
j I. w ill be sorry to have missed you.
and
walked across the mown grass,
• Rub m gently-warming, «nothing Ben-Gay for fast
He likes you a lot.” And she pressed say, "He never came back.” Not anl J ill held up her frock and hoped
with
Spang
so
near,
not
with
the
relief from muscular soreness and pain. Ben-Gay con-
his hand.
the
dew
wouldn't
ruin
her
slippers.
lovely present lying about them like
/ ° 2 / * UmCS more methy | salicylate and
Probably the dress was sagging
Dave went out, his head thrust an aura of moonlight.
r iA fth ° »R mr US Pa:n' rel,eving agents known to every
again, but that wasn’t important
forward a little, as men walk who
doctor—than five other widely offered rub-ins. Insist
"So you were born to the m ilitary
love the land best though they may tradition? The first time I saw you now. It seemed a little odd that It
on ¿enuinc Ben-Gay, the original Baume Analgésique.
not serve it. He closed the screen I thought you looked like a daugh­ had ever been important. The im ­
Also for Pain due to RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA, and COLDS.
door without a sound. The horse ter of the regiment.
Something portant thing now was this brief,
Ask for Mild Ben-Gay for Children.
nickered softly as Dave opened the about you—the way you stood so shining hour she held in her hands.
gate, closed it behind him, and slid straight with your eyes shining Over its glittering rim into the fu­
into the saddle.
when the colors went by, the way ture where ashes of empty days
He trotted slowly up the lane, you stood on tiptoe when the band might lie, she would not look. She
rousing all the little pigs again, and played, I knew that you belonged to was going to be happyl She was in
love, and no doubt It showed on her, j
the horse snorted at their scurrying the arm y."
though she tried to keep her gay^
escape. But Dave leaned forward
J ill's heart scudded. It couldn't
in the saddle, and his heart felt be—she had seen him only twice. nonchalance.
ITO B E C O N T IN U E D )
yYlaUsJc
W ind,
Julia M cF arlan e'* huiband. Kir hard,
disappeared In World War I, leaving
her wlih two rhlldren. She and her
father-in-law. John I McFarlane, have
tried In vain to And tome trace of
Richard. Twent.v-Av* year* later. Rlc
It 27 and cervine In the arm y of World
W ar I I , while JUI, Id, profette* an In­
terest In Spans Gordon, a young lieu­
tenant. Julia I* worried about Rlc. who
ha* "«ashed out" In the a ir corps,
and about Jill, who she Is afraid might
become an arm y w lfr. subject to the
same grief she has endured. She con-
fldes these worries to Dave Patterson,
a fam ily friend who loves Julia but ha*
never told her due to her loyalty to
Richard. Spang and Jill go to a dance.
COW
SUFFERERS!
★★★★★★★★★★★★ +
>
When four "Innards"
are Cryingjhe Blues
Shirtwaist Dress
Flatters Figure
How To Relieve
Bronchitis
CREOMULSION
DR.CAIWHTS
SENNA LAXATIVE
MENTHOlATUMf^
syrup
8001
,ll> n
O S III»1
SAYS
CALOX
W hen Your
B ack H u rts -
D oans P ills
I
u. s.
SAVINGS
BONDS
Are Always A Good Buy