Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, September 18, 1947, Image 2

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

    S o u th ern Oregon News Review, T hursday, S ep tem b er 18, 1947
SEW IN G CIRCLE PATTERNS
U h fin it im a ShirLua fot
I was ambling along in my car
There wasn't much about me she during that time M.irtha got some
counting posts and watching my could brag about, but she made up
of the red back in her cheeks and
nervous windshield • wiper as it a lot of things. She said she won
she moved around more lively than
slapped out a clear segment of a me away from a fancy blonde
she had in years. She made me
circle when I spied a smallish man named T illie and told how I saved
get a dinner coat with all the fixings
walking ahead. The back of his the company's payroll when six
that went with it. She had the studs
neck seemed a bit scrawny and a armed bandits broke into the m ill.
screwed in the shirt four days be
little round hat sat on top of his head Of course, there wasn't any blonde fore the banquet.
as though a vagrant breeze had named T illie and the six armed
After we wrote the speech we
dropped it there.
bandits were just two fellows who went over it here and there until it
He was carrying a small bunch looked in when they saw a light and sounded right. Each evening after
of flowers. When I pulled alongside asked the road to Cloverdale.
dinner we'd go to the kitchen where
Martha wasn’t very strong and people couldn't look in and I'd stand
I asked him if he wanted a lift.
His clothes were lim p with the got spells now and then. They said on a chair and make the speech.
steady drizzle and he seemed to it was her heart. I didn't pay much I must have delivered that speech
have walked a long way. 'T ’ve only attention to what the doctor said. at least fifty times.
I'd always make her rest after
got a short way to go now,” he said.
Well, the big night finally came.
“ It ain’t hardly worth bothering one of her spells and she'd come When I got dressed up I looked pret-
about.”
"Jum p in, anyway," 1 said,
“ you're all soaked.”
"A ll right. But I ’m only going
around the bend there to Cypress
H ills.” As he got into the car he
held the flowers high so as not to
break the stems.
"Cypress H ills,” I repeated by
way of showing a little interest.
"That's a cemetery, isn't it? "
"Yes, it's a cemetery.”
"O h." 1 said. Flowers, cemetery,
rain. I kept a respectful silence
14-46
When we had driven a short dis­
’T 'H E best loved frock in every
tance there was a great rumble of
A w ardrobe. This s m a rt shirt-
thunder through the
w aister buttons down the front for
low hills and the
sky opened with
easy dressing, has a belt to tie
pertly in front and two handy
sudden torrent that
pockets, which are optional. Try
made the surround­
ing landscape a wet
a pretty striped fabric, used in
blur
contrast.
• • •
“ Guess I 'll pull
Pattern No 1830 Is for sizes 14. 16. 18.
up a lo n g s id e the
20; 40. 42. 44 and 48. Size 18. 3% yards
road until it blows
of 35-inch.
over,” I told my
passenger. Neither of us spoke for
fN. fN. (V. (X. fV (X. (V. (X. (X. fV. (V (X.
(V. fv.
a while.
"How did it go?” she cried. I shouldn't have told her.
The great clatter of the storm out­
side rendered the silence behind the around fine. Jed M iley down at the ty good. Martha stood at the gate
closed windows a little oppressive. post office told me his wife was like waving good-by and looked ten
Presently the little man said. "M y that and as long as they didn't get years younger. I was sort of choked
wife is buried over there.” He point­ any excitement or shock they could up and happy. I was only sorry she , ? A G eneral Quiz
O-
C-
f\- f^-
ed in the direction of Cypress Hills. : live to be a hundred. Martha al­ couldn't come along. It was just j
ways
rested
when
I
told
her
but
she
"I'm
sorry.”
I
answered. |
for men, you know.
T h e Q ueationa
never really rested even when she
“ When—”
I left my car in front of the house
was lying down. Her mind was
“ Just a few w’eeks ago.”
and walked down to the Clifton Ho- j 1. Do sharks have to turn over
working. She was thinking how she
tel so I could go over my speech to bite?
"Was it sudden or—”
could make the town know what a
2. Is white a color?
He ignored my unfinished ques­ j great husband she had. I tried to just one last time. When I got there
3. How much blood is there in
tion and said absently. " I t ’s strange i explain that it didn't m atter as long I said hello to everybody—even
the hum an body?
what a delicate thing life is. It can as we were happy. But she kept on Longyear, president of the bank. I'd
4. Who was the first president
be cut off by an accidental move being riled. I just kind of hoped never spoken to him before. I felt
pretty important.
of
Texas after its declaration of in­
or even a thoughtless word. Some­ something big would happen to me
T 'H E Y put me on the platfiWrn next dependence?
thing you say can snap it off just for Martha's sake.
5. What city in the U. S. is one
to Charlie Simmons, who is quite
like a thin piece of thread."
Well, sir, it was like the hand of
mile above sea level?
a
wit
around
these
parts.
He
has
There was a clap of thunder and fate. Something big did happen at
6. The Boston Tea P arty took
the downpour wrapped us in a fresh last. At least, it was big to Martha J one of those ventriloquist dummies : place in what year?
;
and
also
does
card
tricks.
He
told
film of rain. The little man told me and me. Mr. Clawson, the presi­
7. In what battle were Am er­
his story. I give it to you in his dent of the m ill, was getting up a me a few jokes and I laughed al- 1 ican troops ordered to withhold
though
I
didn't
listen.
I
took
a
taste
I
words as closely as I can remember dinner in honor of the town council
of the soup but after that I couldn't j their fire till they could see the
them. . . .
and asked me to make a speech!
j eat a thing. The speech kept pound j whites of their opponents’ eyes?
When I came home and told Mar- ' ' ing in my head.
Martha spent her whole life trying
8. A parcel post package is lim
to build me up into something. She tha that evening she nearly jumped ,
ited
in weight to how m any
After the ice cream M ilte r Claw- i
started right at the wedding. She out of her skin. I had never made
son rapped for order and made a pounds?
was about an inch taller than me a speech before in my life. I was j
flowery speech about the town coun i
and she wore her flattest heels at scared stiff at the thought of it. But
T h e A n a w ere
,
cil.
Then the head of the council
the wedding and stooped over a Martha was going to prove every­
,
said
a
lot
of
nice
things
about
the
little when the minister stood us up thing she. had said about me,
1. No, a shark can bite any side
for the ceremony. She looked so through that speech. I just had to m ill and how much good it had
done
the
town.
More
speeches
fol-
UP-
proud you’d think she was marrying show Mister Clawson and the coun-
lowed. Each time the toastmaster : 2. Yes, it is a combination of
a millionaire. And me only a book­ cilmen she was right.
i
got ready to call on the next speak- ; all of the colors of the spectrum
keeper at the m ill.
The dinner was two weeks off and j er I shook all over thinking it might , Black is the absence of color.
FASTfK-SMOOT H W
5U
Bend loci a . y lo r vour eopv of (he F itII
and H in ter K A S IIIO N .
l i e a «ontplvle
.uni ih -in m i i h i .
. m .ir
in i > i in n ln f a
« m a rt, w e a ra b le w ild e r w a rd io lie
i-1»»
p a tte rn p iln te d Inalde the book. 25 r nil«
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Horizontal
1 To stop
the motion of
6 Faith
11 One ruling
for a
sovereign
13 Public
speaker
14 Italian
article
15 Epicure
17 Chinese
measure
18 Encore!
20 To inflict
21 G irl’s name
22 Serf
24 Sailor
25 Son of
Adam
26 Messenger
28 To box
29 Gaelic
30 Large
snakes
31 Suppori
32 Fencer's
cry
34 To change
direction
35 Star
36 Lampreys
38 To say
further
39 Scottish
poet
41 L air
42 Note of
scale
43 Trumpetlike
wind
instruments
45 Six
46 To tolerate
48 Was inclined
50 Austere
51 Augusta is its
capital
Vertical
1 Secretly
offered
inducement
2 Flavor
3 Symbol for
silver
4 Cask
8 Poetic:
enough
Solution in N e x t Issue.
1
2
3
4
5
11
12
14
15
18
19
16
26
i
Ì
38
39
28
32
33
35
37
40
43
41
44
47
40
25
30
8
O
46
w
o
29
34
10
21
27
31
9
17
20
22
42
8
13
23 ! 1
c
7
6
45
48
r
49
51
No. 32
6 Journey
7 Rodent
8 Low note
9 To unite,
as metal
surfaces
10 Test
12 Slow-moving
reptile
13 Persian
poet
16 To peruse
19 Gibed
21 Disconcerted
23 Mistake
25 Quickly
27 Venomous
snake
28 French coin
30 Head
covering
31 One who
displays his
learning
32 To rotate
33 Football
team
34 Poetic: dales
35 Certain
37 Slang;
inferior
39 Brought
into existence
40 Upright
stalk
43 Mongrel
44 Nahoor
sheep
47 Prefix:
down
49 Roman gods
Answer to l'u r ite
N um ber XI
ß A
T Y
0 j;
0 ?
A Y E
L
0 R A
A W t:
C R A T E
il E R 0 I N K
K 0l £ E A
R A R E R
A g
T " t
D 0
o f?
C A 1!
i. L s
R A I'
£jô 0 L 0 N E
R E N E W
u N
B E E
P A ÎÇ R A
0 I?
E K I T <?
V 0 7 E R
A L L U V I A
E L U D E
N E
D E R MA L
N E E
T 0
A k o J S E T s
A li D
Serien H-4Ï
1
‘ be me. It seemed that everybody 1 3. From one to one and a half
in town was making a speech. My gallons, the quantity varying with
mouth got dry.
the size of the individual.
Then Simmons got up and did his ' 4. Sam Houston.
5. Denver, Colo.
dummy act and some card tricks.
6.
In 1773 (D ecem ber 16).
He went over to the piano and sang
7. The Battle of Bunker Hill.
some songs. People called for more.
8. Seventy pounds.
They all laughed and sang with him.
I looked at my watch. It was eleven
o’ clock.
Australia to Standardize
I managed to get my head clear
Rails Over 18,000 Miles
and quickly thought over the first j
few paragraphs of my speech. They
were saving me for the last. A sort i A ustralia’s independent state
of surprise, I thought. Then Mister ; railroads now plan to adopt the
Clawson got up and his voice sound- 1 standard gauge, which m eans re­
ed far off. He said some of the boys I laying the 18,000 of the 24,000
wanted to play poker and others 1 m iles of track s that are using
wanted to sit around and chat. It 1 other gauges. This chaotic situ­
was too late for more speeches. ation, which requires passengers
After hearing Simmons any more I and freight to be transferred from
talk would be tame. It was a one system to another as m any
wonderful evening and everybody as four tim es between certain
had enjoyed it thoroughly. They all cities, has existed for 94 years,
stood up and sang Auld Lang Syne. incurred an economic loss of $2,-
400,000,000 and will cost to correct
The dinner was over.
You can’t blame me for not being nearly $800,000,000.
able to think clearly after that,
was so disappointed I got kind
numb. I sneaked out through
back door and went home. Martha
ran down to the front gate
grabbed me around the neck,
cried, "How did it go?"
I said, "They didn’ t call on me.’
I shouldn’t have told her the truth
It was a dreadful blunder.
Painting Cellar Floor
Rubber base paints frequently
are used for painting cement floors
and basements, because they
resistant to alkali which would
versely affect some other types
paint. Before applying rubber base
paints to a cement floor, any
paint should be removed with paint
remover, all residue from the paint
remover washed off with turpentine
or mineral spirits, and the floor
thoroughly dried out. A further pre­
caution before painting cement cel
lar floors, either r.ew or old, is to
etch them with m uriatic acid solu
tion in the proportion of about one
pint of acid to one gallon of water.
If the acid solution is used the floor
should be well rinsed to remove
traces of the acid and then thor
oughly dried before painting. Two
coats of the rubber base paint then
can be applied, being careful that
the first coet is dry before the sec­
ond coat is applied.
/íh&fieyú a/s.
I y c
Send your order to:
C R E A K IN G
STOP
N IW IN t l ( 1144 I F P A T T F K N » I I T
12« Mlxslua 81., tian F ra n rl*ro , Call I.
in c lin e 33 cents In coins for rack
pattern dratrvd
Pattern No
s in
BEDS! I
SEMI H>K S H OF "SI.AT-CAI’S"
with 91 .oo to
N am e.
1364 0«v«n Av« , to» A ny«U t 34. C «lif•rnl«
SCHENCK RUBBER CO.
W« m il re fu n d muney I f
Addri-sa
or« neat d a b b e d
Piston rings cost less than smoke rings!
Even boy» know a smoking exhaust means
burning nil, wustrd ,wiwer. m aybe costly
engine damuge. I f yuur ear smokes it
ivnbubly needs new Sealed Power Platon
Kingi- There's a Sealed Power Ring Set
apevificully engineered for your Cur, truek
or tractor engine, whatever (he make,
model or cylinder wear condition. See
your Seuled Power Franchise Dealer.
Save oil, save gaa, restore power
Send postal (m illustrât-
cd. in fo r m a tiv «
new
booklet on 7 way« t o «ave
ml
I f • f i r p Mini may
m v « you lot« of money
S e a lr d I ’ - 'w n C o r p
D ept
W 9, M uskegon
M ichigan.
til 1630
: ASK M S
ANOTHSK
[jHNOH 08 DOUHI IPO< ]
¡IIITIIIAUT (IIIN fllfl
SEALED
POW ER
BIST IN .N IW
(N O IN fS t
P IS T O N
R IN G S
BIST IN OtO IN O IN IS t
'W ereadt
TRADE-MARK
FLASHLIGHT BATTERIES
/V v w /w y e /-/*
Enough Energy to
Hurl This Daring Miss
Over 100 FEET!
Im agine!—the girl weight 110
pounds! Yet the total energy
in one tiny "Eveready” flash-
light c e ll-p ro p c rly expended
—i t equal to the charge that
•ends her flying up—up—over
the gasping audience, to land
over 100 feet away.
• T o you. this meant nearly
l u i t t the energy . . . almost tiro
h m ti IttKgrr h t» a t bright white
light. And it’s yours fo r the
pre-war price . . . i l i l l only 1011
A C K E D w ith new dy­
namic p o w e r ... dazzling
in perform ance...durable be­
yond any flashlight cells you've
ever known, "Eveready" flash-
light batteries give you the
year’s greatest energy value.
I hat s a 9 3 % in tr» a i» over
the great record made by pre­
w ar "Eveready’’ celts...nearly
double the life o f light. Yet
you pay no more.
P
T h. rvaUterw] tr w j.n u u k 'E v .r » « d ," d U U n g u l.h .. produrt. at
NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY, INC.
30 East 42nd Street, N e w Y o rk 17, N . Y .
f t i l of Union Cnrbidt jl|d 4 u«d Corio« Corporation
AEREAD!
79*0'
,RICHTen II6H’
l0«GiR tiff