Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, November 06, 1947, Image 4

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    Southern Oregon News Review, Thursday, November 6, 1947
THl FICTION corner
WAS still raining when they
I T came
onto the field for the second
You see what they're doing. Kicking
early. Keeping us away. They've
got a touchdown and we haven't.
Get it back. Get the six points and
I'U send Jerry out there. That's all
we need." And he had turned to
Jerry and smiled.
Jerry bit his lip. Even Dan didn't
realize that you couldn't kick them
all. Sooner or later he was bound to
miss. And this was the last game.
“Here we go," muttered Farra­
day.
The Aggies kicked off. Taggert,
the Tech quarterback, took it on his
five, and brought it back twelve
yards. The Aggie tackier barely
half. After the heat of the dressing
room the air was cold and biting.
Jerry Ellis grunted, and drew his
blanket tighter. He splashed toward
the Tech bench, staring up into the
stands. The spectators, huddled un­
der umbrellas and newspapers,
looked as if they’d melted in the
drizzle and had run together.
“They must be nuts,” said Farra-
day's voice beside him.
Jerry turned. "They?”
"Sure." Farraday grinned; he
nodded at the stands. "They paid
money to sit in the rain. Am 1 glad
I’m third string. You’re going to
freeze out there without that blan­
ket."
Jerry frowned. He said: "You’re
sure I’m going out there?”
“You always have," said Farm
day.
Jerry winced. He always had
Since he'd been a sophomore he'd
kicked every extra point that Tech
had made. Automatic Jerry Ellis,
the newspapers called him—Tech's
place-kick specialist. There'd been
columns telling how’ he hadn’t
missed in twenty-two games, how
he'd run up a string of forty-eight
successive points after touchdowns.
Most of the sportswriters mentioned
the part he'd played in Tech's un­
beaten, untied season, and that this
was his last college game.
There was straw strewn under the
bench and Jerry kicked it into a pile
for his feet. He sat down and one of
the assistant managers tucked a
blanket around his legs.
Jerry wished that he’d missed in
the previous game. He was due to
miss. He was overdue. He'd expect­
ed it a week ago, and the Saturday
Jerry froze, grew rigid; gave
before. Tech had had a nice com­
gert screamed.
fortable lead in both those games.
They didn’t need his points. Today,
they were trailing the Aggies 6 to 0, brushed him, but it w’as enough to
and it was raining, and it was his send him sliding in the mud.
last game in a Tech uniform.
Tech tried three plays and then
There was a hoarse murmur from punted.
the crowd in the opposite stands,
The game settled into a punter’s
and he saw the Aggies sprinting out battle. Taggert had the wind at his
on the field. They’d changed to dry back and counted on picking up dis­
uniforms and it took Jerry a mo­ tance on each exchange. But the
ment to spot the two new men in the Aggie kicker was good, too.
Aggie backfield. Tall men, and fast.
Jerry couldn’t keep from watch­
Farraday sat next to him. He ing the clock on the scoreboard. The
said: “We’re wearing them down. big second hand jerked around,
stopped, moved again. Jerry found
See those subs in there?”
“Subs!” Jerry said. “They’re himself nodding as the hand jerked.
three deep in backs. They're play­ He was cold inside; a chill that had
nothing to do with the wind and
ing safe, that’s all.”
“Sure.” Farraday nodded. “Try- rain. Every minute passing made
ing to protect their lousy six points, the odds against him greater
The quarter ended; the teams
Just like Big Dan said.”
Jerry ‘ remembered the coach’s changed goals. Now, he'd have the
words in the dressing room. Big wind fighting him when he tried to
Dan Winowski didn’t go in for pep- kick. His luck was out all right.
“Hey!” cried Farraday. startled
talks. But there hadn't been a sound
except his calm voice, and a drip­ “Hey!”
Jerry snapped awake. A fumble.
ping shower.
“All right,” the coach had said. There was a wild, awkward scram­
“I know it’s wet, and bad footing, ble for the ball. An Aggie, stumbling
and we can’t pass much with that in the mud, dropped on it. The ball
ball. But they’ve shot their bolt. popped from beneath him, bounded
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Horizontal
1 High card
4 Exists
6 Ordinary
11 River in
Pennsylvania
13 Despicable
15 Upon
16 Sparkle
18 To cloy
19 Greek letter
21 Heraldic
bearing
22 Part of
“to be”
23 Ferocious
spotted cat
26 Posed
29 Soothing
ointment
31 Drink made
from manna
33 Six
34 Land measure
35 Doctrine
38 To stain
39 Man’s
nickname
40 Note of scale
41 Leaping
amphibian
43 Ethereal
45 To recede
47 Howling
50 Conjunction
52 Slender
53 Witnessed
56 Exclamation
used to
frighten fowls
58 Quaking
60 Prefix: two
61 Annual church
celebration
63 Escaped
65 Stop on a
theatrical
tour
66 French
article
67 Poem
Vertical
1 Genus of
•ucculent
plants
2 Penny
3 What?
4 Eskimo house
5 Keen
6 Escorted
7 Therefore
• —Major, the
Great Bear
Solution In N ext Issue
1
2
3
4
11
ii
B
16
•
29
Ì5
40
41
46
61
È
10
id
22
25
31
36
26
18
47
27
23
33
32
w
4J
52
%% 58
59
43
ÌA
8
60
55
¿1
66
67
No. 39
9 Second U.S.
President
10 Illumined
12 Whether
14 French for
“from”
17 To close
noisily
20 Completely
24 To give
forth
25 Author of
"Life With
Father”
27 To state
positively
28 Neat
29 Large bundle
30 Desert
dweller
32 College
administra­
tive official
36 French coin
37 Wild duck
42 Fees
44 Pronoun
46 To raise
48 Fold ol the
front of a coat
49 Archaic:
to anoint
51 List
54 On on’e
sleeping-
couch
55 Broad
56 Compass
point
57 Owns
59 Greek letter
62 Printer's
nibasure
64 To perform
A nsw er to P uzzle Num ber 3M
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Serle« H-41
Relieve
Chest Colds
MISERIES
OF
O n e - ÎJ a rJ J ! , tron f or
* ^ b a te ^Jroch for IflhòeS
1
PENgTRATBS
Into upper bran-
t h ' j l lu b r i with
• p .c le l aoolh ln g
medichi.I «.pun.
S T IM U L A T K «
cheat, throat and
bark lurlecoa like
e warming coin-
lolling poultice.
A t bedtime ru b th ro a t, chest
and back w ith Vicks Vapoftub.
R elief-bringing action s tu rts
Instantly
. 2 waus a t once!
A nd I t keeps up t i l l s s p e c ia l
P e n e tra tin g -S tim u la tin g ac­
tio n for hours
In the n ig h t to
b rin g re lie f.
V apo R u «
k*
7
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Happy Relief When
You're Sluggish.Upset
A'
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17051
12-20 _
W ith Curved Lines
/ l Y O U T H F U L , e xtrem ely s m a rt
date dress fo r misses w ith a
w ealth of head-turning d etail. Soft
gathers accent the curved lines on
P ra c tic a l B ib Apron
T 'H I S p re tty and oh-so-practical shoulder and hip, a n a rro w belt
1 bib apron is fashioned fro m ju s t w h ittle s your w aist to a m ere noth­
one y a rd of co lo rfu l fa b ric in the ing. Have cap or three-qua rte r
sm aller sizes. Bold ric rac m akes sleeves.
e »
e
a s trik in g tr im — crisp ru fflin g
Pattern No 1705 la for elzes 12. 14. 18.
18 end 20 Size 14, cap aleeve, 31. yards
edges the bottom . W hy not put of
35 or 39-lnch
together several fo r C hristm as
gifts.
S E W IN O C IR C I.E P A T T E R N D E P T .
1586
.....
....
a gasping sob. “ Kick! Kick!" Tag-
Pattern No. 1538 cornel In llz c i 14. 18,
18 . 20 : 40. 42 and 44 Size 16, 1 yard of 35
or 39-lnch: I«,» yards purchased rufiting:
6 yards ric rac.
Don't w ait— srnd today for your copy of
the F a ll and W inter FASHION-. I t ’s b rim ­
ful of Ideas for w inter wardrobes for all
ths fam ily . 25 cents.
bench only Jerry was silent, his
eyes shifting from the clock to the
field. He sat on his hands to hide
their trembling.
Tech stuck to power plays. They
bulled through for three yards, two
The Aggie backs were playing close,
backing up the line. The next play 7
bounced off the Aggie wall. No gain 7
Taggert suddenly faded back, 7
passed. It was out in the flat and 7
A* <*• CN- C*- f\- fX- <N~
risky. The Tech half juggled the
ball, but he held it. He went all the
1. The quotation “ F o r the appar-
way to the seven yard line before
i el o ft proclaim s the m a n ” comes
the Aggies caught him.
from ?
Taggert opened up. He called a
2. A p p ro xim a te ly how m any of
spinner, a reverse, a delayed buck B o liv ia ’s 3,000,000 population is
The referee’s arms went up. Touch- !pure Indian’
F
?
f v - ÍV - (V . f*~. ( V . f x . ( V . ( V . f X .
ASK M t 6
ANOTHER.
7 ------
— -
------ _
d ° * n'
.
farraday pulled the blanket oil
Jerry. He said: "Get going.”
Jerry saw Big Dan beckon.
"There’s the ball game,” he said,
smiling. "Make it legal, Jerry."
Jerry swallowed He opened his
mouth, and then shut It tight. He
nodded and trotted out onto the
field. His legs moved him stiffly to-
ward the referee. He heard his
voice, thin and strained. “ Ellis for
128 M in in o St., San Eranrlaco, CaUf.
Enclose 25 ci-nta tn esina for each
pattern drslred.
Pattern No
s i , . ___
WREN CONSTIPATION makes you feel
punk ae the dickens, brings on stomacii
upset, sour taste, gatey discomfort,
take D r. Caldwell's famous medicine
to quickly pull the trigger on lazy " in ­
nards'* and help you feel bright and
chipper again.
DR. CALDWELL’ S la the wonderful sen­
na laiativa contained In good old Syrup
Pepsin to make it so easy to take.
MANY DOCTORS use pepsin prepara­
tions in prescriptions to make the medi­
cine more palatable and agreeable to
taka. So be aure your laxative la con­
tained in Syrup Pepsin.
INSIST ON DR. CALDWELL’S— the fa­
vorite of millions for 50 years, and feel
that wholesome relief from constipa­
tion. Even finicky children love iL
CAUTION t Daa only as directed.
DR. C A I M I 'S
Nam e_
Address.
SENNA LAXATIVE
co h taim o , w
f x . fx_ ( X . f X - f X . f X . f V .
A quiz with answers offering ?
Melkovich. At full.” He walked
woodenly into position and stared
up at the cross-bar. It was a dim
line in the gloom.
Taggert was drying the ball with
a towel. He wiped his hands and
knelt at Jerry's feet, Taggert
grinned and said: “In the bag, kid.
The A n t were
I'U put my hand under it. The
H
a
m
le t—A ct 1, scene 3.
mud’s like grease.”
1,500,000.
Jerry stood rigid. His forehead
A la rg e oak m a y have as
was clammy.
“Steady in there.” called Taggert much as 87’000 s^ uare
leaf
"Keep them off him. Steady.” His surface. That is, if all the leaves
head turned as he glanced along the ^rom the tree w ere spread flat on
line. “ Ready, kid?” Taggert's voice
ground and touching, they d
sharpened. "Signals!” he raised his |
tW0 a c re s’
4. Cerberus.
hands.
Something clicked in Jerry’s
head. This is it, he thought.
“Seven, nine, eleven---- ”
Get Well
At worst it was a tie. But a tie
spoiled the season’s record. He
couldn't make it.
From Your Cough
"Three, five---- ”
Ouo to • Cold
He’d done it too many times. A
miss was overdue. He was going to
■ U L L I w Cough Compound
miss.
“Two!"
The ball moved, grew large. It
came back straight. Taggert caught
it, placed it in position. Jerry took
a step. He froze.
“Kick!" Taggert screamed, wild
eyed.
Jerry gave a gasping sob. He
stooped, snatched the ball from
Taggert’s fingers, and ran.
He nearly hit the Aggie end,
charging in. The end tried to stop
himself, slipped, went down. His
mouth was still open in amazement
as Jerry dodged past.
He raced for the corner of the end
zone. He could hear Taggert pound­
ing along behind him, shouting in a
high, excited voice, but nobody
came near him. As he crossed the
line, Jerry looked back. The Aggies
were standing motionless, bewil
dered.
Jerry touched the ball down. He
started to laugh. He looked up at
the scoreboard and saw the 7 move
into place.
syrup pepsin
Savings Bonds!
information on various subjects |
-
5. M ichigan.
6. On Decem ber 15, 1792, by the
Insurance Company of N o rth
A m erica.
7. About 2,000 m iles.
8. The B ible says gopherwood.
I 3. How m uch le a f surface has a In this country gopherwood is
¡tre e ?
called stin kin g cedar.
4. The m ythological dog who
9. The outer p a rt of the kernel.
guards the gates of Hades is The h u ll and germ are rem oved,
named what?
and only the hard p a rt of the corn
5. W hat is the only state sp lit is used to m ake the corn flakes.
com pletely into tw o parts?
10. E ighty-five m iles.
6. When was the firs t life in ­
surance policy issued in this coun­
Ostriches Kick F orw ard
try ?
I 7. H a w a ii is how fa r southwest of
San Francisco?
An o strich can k ic k hard enough
8. W hat kind of wood did Noah to break a m an's leg—o r even k ill
use in building the ark?
h im i f the blow should catch him
i g. W hat p a rt of the corn is used rig h t. Since ostriches can only k ic k
fo rw a rd , not backw ard, o strich
in m a kin g cornflakes?
j 10. H ow fa r can one see fro m the keepers alw ays come up on the
b irds fro m behind.
top of the E iffe l Tower?
cni cv’QHoney * Tar
44
49
48
S E W IN G C IR C L E PATTERNS
Q UICKER
ii
42 i
62
65
9
14
11
5 0 - 51
57
8
13
/ '/ / /
"14
56
7
24
30
45
6
21
20
23
5
toward the sideline. Taggert dove,
gathered it in He slid all the way to
the Tech bench, and got up.
Farraday swore in sympathy. He
said: "Murder! That ball's slip­
pery!"
“Tough to handle." agreed Jerty.
“ You needn’t worry.” said F arra­
day, chuckling. “They even hold it
for you. All you got to do is kick it.”
Jerry glared. Everybody figured
it was easy because he only ployed
a few minutes each game. He never
even got In a practice scrimmage;
too light, might get hurt All he had
to do was kick it, and he hadn't
slept in a week thinking about it.
Tech started to drive. Taggert
sent his plays into the line. He was
snarling the signuls, snapping his
backs at the Aggie defense like a
whip. Through tackle, guard, the
other tackle. Then, back along the
line. Five yards, three, four. A first
down. Another.
Tech kept marching.
"Yow!” shouted Farraday. Big
Dan leaped into the air. On the Tech
TOO FAT?
Get SLIMMER this
vitamin candy way
Have a more slender.
' graceful figure. No exer­
cizing N o laxative«. N o
drug«. With the «impleAYDS
, Vitamin Candy Reducing Han
vou don't cut out any rnrala.
«tare he«. potatoes, meats or
butter, you «imply cut them down. It’« easier
wh**n you enioy delicious < vitamin fortified i
AYDS candy before meals. Absolutely harmless
In clinical teata conducted by medical do* tore,
more than 1OO poraena lo st 1 4 • • I t l b « ,
average In a few w eeks w ith A Y D S V itam in
Candy Reducing Plan.
TO FIT ALL LEADING
•
MAKES OF PICK-UP TRUCKS
You can get a Caravan Top to fit your
make and model of pick-up truck . . . in 4,
5 or 6 ft. clearance to ruit your specific need.
The waterproof, mildew resistant, heavy
duck cover fit« trim and neat over a
iturdy aluminum frame conforming to
the atreamlined contour of your truck. On
or off in a jiffy. Slide faitener opening
each «ide of back curtain.
3 height« (er>eyery length.
“ dealer or wrff« direct.
Regular «toe $2.25. T rip le ai»e «5 50. You get reaulta
on very first boa or money back. Cali or phone
W herever Drugs Are Sold
Avoiloble
from your automotive
* '* '
*
Teor Owl nils Ad ot a Reminder
CK.TURK CORP.
' j *' •
1 1
SOUTH
**’
.
IN D IA N A
¿¡^Member _a„ the dlfferent brands you smoked
Homes on Wheels
A total of 300,000 automobile trail-:
ers are now in use, either rolling
over the nation’s highways or!
parked in trailer camps, says the
Automobile Manufacturers associ­
ation. Many trailers are painted on'
the outside with aluminum paint to
reflect heat In hot, sunny climates,
and on the inside in attractive color
«< hemes to make them homelike.
d u r in g t h e W a rtim e c ig a r e t t e s h o r t a g e ? T h a t ’«
w hen so m a ,;;p e o p le d is c o v e r e d -fr o m e x p e rie n ce
—th a t C am els s u it th e m b e s t. Y es, e x p e rie nce is
th e b e s t te a c h e r. T h a t’s w h y . . .
IS
teacher!
J