THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
Thursday, March 18, 1937
/lOUfdlOM •
"Flying Fortress” Is Last Word in Air Fighters
"Keep A-Goin‘”---
• Quezon
A little crushed ice added to the |
cold water in a bag makes it com
forting to fevered brows for a
longer time than cold water alone.
• • •
Add two tablespoons of shorten- |
ing to the griddle cake batter and
it will not be necessary to grease
the griddle.
A
4
• • •
5
To make jar lids easy to re
move, place the jars upside down
in hot water for a minute or two
or run hot water over the lids.
...
Lukewarm wash water, luke- g
warm rinse water and a moder
ately warm place for drying are
best for washing woolens.
• • •
Peroxide of hydrogen will re
Uncle Sam’s giant “flying fortress” attracted plenty of attention after arrival at the general headquarters
move perfume stains from linen
air force base at Langley field. This giant Boeing bomber, multi-motored, heavily gunned, all-metal—and
bureau scarfs.
• • •
mighty speedy—is the last word in air fighters.
Shell fish such as crab, lobster
or shrimp should be stored in a
HARVARD’S OLDEST GRAD
Yes, You Are Seeing Double
mild salt brine (1 teaspoon of
salt to a cup of water). Flavor
will be maintained and spoilage
reduced with this type of storage.
© Associated Newspapers.— WNU Service.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are an
effective laxative. Sugar coated.
Children like them. Buy now!—Adv.
Adversity Our Teacher
We become wiser by adversity;
prosperity destroys our apprecia
tion of the right.—Seneca.
FEEL A COLD COMING?
Do these 3 things
6
W
Protect your throat
Build up your alkaline
reserve
a.C
MENTHOL
adid 9 COUGH DROPS
HELP YOU DO ALL 3
Brought to Light
A man’s character seldom
changes—it is merely revealed.
FITa/HAPPY:
GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY
You might think this was done with mirrors, but you’re wrong. It’s
the De Sutter twins, two of Chicago’s leading feminine basketball players,
looking at each other through an empty picture frame. Left to right, they
are, Marion and Mercele. In the event you still believe this clever piece
of photography was done with a mirror, look below the frame where
you can see two sets of legs.
ON CORONATION LIST
p ERHAPS it is my fondness for
- violets that made me stand and
watch him. Anyway, there he was,
with a wonderful basket of scented
loveliness, tempting the home
ward-going throng on a Saturday
afternoon.
“Violets, violets, lovely violets.
Quarter a bunch. Lovely violets.”
Like an unending song, his husky
voice cried his wares, and during
the ten minutes that I stood near
him on the pavement, watching
and listening, he kept up his cry.
Unable to resist the temptation,
I bought a bunch, and even as he
served me, he punctuated the deal
with: “Violets, all fresh and love
ly.”
Persistence Counts.
I remarked, as I waited for my
change, that he had a large basket
to dispose of.
“Yes,” he said, “that’s right,
gov’nor. But they’ll all go. (’Ere
you are, sir, lovely violets, all
fresh.) Only you ’as to keep a-go-
in’. Everybody’s in a hurry to get
’ome, and if you ain’t persistent—
(yes, lady, smaller bunches four-
pence)—you don’t sell 'arf as
many. ’Ere you are, sir, your
change. Thank you very much.
Violets, lovely violets. All fresh!”
I walked away with my purple
bunch—and a lesson in my mind.
“Keep a-goin’.” What a motto!
It reminded me of a little jingle
that is oft quoted by a rolling-
stone friend of mine, who brought
it back from the West of Canada,
where he first heard it. It goes like
this:
If it rains or if it snows,
If it’s calm or if it blows,
What’U happen no one knows,
So keep a-goin‘.
-
s.
Keep your head clear
Persistence in Efforts Likely to
Bring About Fulfillment of Ambition
Henry Munroe Rogers, oldest liv
ing graduate of Harvard university,
who observed his ninety-eighth
birthday anniversary recently by
going to his law office as usual at 10
Postoffice square in Boston, where
he practices as the oldest member
of the Boston Bar association. Mr.
Rogers was graduated from Har
vard in 1862, went to war in the
navy that year and returned to Har
vard for other degrees in 1866 and
1867.
A Motto for Many.
A well-known athlete once told
me that he had won many a sec
ond and third prize by simply
keeping on. Dogged does it. Even
when he realized that he couldn’t
beat the winner, he set his mind
on being in the first three, and got
there.
Keep a-goin’ is a motto not only
for rolling stones and athletes and
violet-sellers. It is a motto for
housewives who are faced with a
tiring washing-day, for families
who are faced with no very bril-
liant outlook for the future, for
those who are apt to lie down un
der the weight of present troubles.
Nothing stands still. Things ei
ther get better or worse, and they
are far more likely to get better
if we persist in our efforts to
make them so.
Take heart. This year, England
is to crown a new king. This
year, too, we may crown some
individual ambition with fulfil
ment. We can do it, I know, if we
“keep a-goin’.”—Editor of London
Answers.
It’s a Good Start
He who puts his best foot for
ward stands the best chance of
getting there with both feet.
There is always a right way to
settle our problems, but most of
our troubles are caused by trying
to avoid that way.
It is far better to fail in a good
cause than to succeed in a bad
one.
If it were not for folly, it would
be hard to define wisdom.
Where the Praise Belongs
A self-made man never ceases
to praise his maker.
Hard work is the yeast that
raises the dough.
We love “The Star-Spangled
Banner” because we can’t get too
familiar with it. It is too hard to
sing for that.
When a sociable man has a min
ute to spare, he goes and bothers
some other man who is busy.
Building Is the Task
It is easier for a man to be the
architect of his own future than
the builder of it.
Don’t annoyingly assert your
rights if it is a matter of no great
moment.
A strict mother often makes an
indulgent grandmother.
Anyone who doesn’t like his job
will stretch a holiday into three.
Marriage has been defined as
when a girl exchanges the at
tentions of a dozen men for ths
inattentions of one.
Leaders Happy Over C. I. O. Recognition
Ihon the
By
Grace Moore
SayUay
Opera Singer
Spanish Chicken
ALL-VEGETABLE CORRECTIVE
4
O wonder old folks talk about Nature’s
Remedy (NR Tablets), the all-vegetable
laxative. They work so gently, yet thoroughly.
They are So kind to the system. So refreshing
and Dcimal. So many aches and pains vanish
when bowels are cleansed of their accumulated
poison in this way— not by mere partial action.
Find out for yourself what thousands of others
have proved. Try Nature’s Remedy today. Get
an economical
25-tablet box—■
MJ TO-NIGHT
only 25 cents at
I v\TOMORROW ALRICHT
any drugstore.
N
2 young chickens, cut in pieces
2 teaspoonful salt, pepper
6 tablespoonfuls butter
8 canned pimientos, rubbed through
sieve
1 onion, finely chopped
2 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
4 tablespoonfuls flour
Season chickens with salt and
pepper. Fry (saute) in three ta
blespoonfuls of butter. Add one
teaspoonful of salt, onion, garlic,
pimientos and boiling water to
cover. Cook until chicken is ten
der. Remove and thicken sauce
with remaining butter and flour.
Cook together.
Culture Needed
The enjoyment of art demands
a certain degree of culture.
Copyright.—WNU Service.
Sentinels
of Health
Don’t Neglect Them !
Nature designed the kidneys to do a
marvelous job. Their task is to keep the
flowing blood stream free of an excess of
toxic impurities. The act of living—¡i/o
ilatlf— is constantly producing waste
matter the kidneys must remove from
the blood if good health is to endure.
When the kidneys fail to function as
Nature intended, there is retention of
waste that may cause body-wide dis
tress. One may suffer nagging backache,
persistent headache, attacks of dizziness,
getting up nights, swelling, puffiness
under the eyes—feel tired, nervous, ail
worn out.
Frequent, scanty or burning passages
may be further evidence of kidney or
bladder disturbance.
The recognized and proper treatment
is a diuretic medicine to help the kidneys
t rid of excess poisonous body waste,
e Doan’g Pilla. They have had more
than forty years of public approval. Are
endorsed the country over. Insist on
D^in’a. Sold at all drug stores._________
Only ten years old, Lord Monta
gue of Beaulieu (above) is the
youngest peer to be included on the
invitation list to the coronation of
King George VI of England. He
succeeded his father, the second
baron, at the age of three. Lord
Montague’s mother is now the Hon.
Mrs. Edward Playdell Bouverie.
w
it GENUINE
INSTANT
tor’s
LIGHTING
L
SELF-HEATINS
I D O N
"7 "
The Coleman is a gen-
uine instant Lighting Iron. ■
All you have to do in turn a valve, strike a match
and it lights instantly. You don’t have to insert
the match inside the Iron—no burned fingers.
The Coleman heats in a jiffy; is quickly ready
for use. Entire ironing surface is heated with
point the hottest. Maintains its heat even for
the fast worker. Entirely self-heating. Operato
for ‘iC an hour. You do your ironing with less
effort, in one-third less time. Be sure your next
iron is the genuine Instant-Lighting Coleman.
It’s the Iron every woman wants. It’s a wonder
ful time and labor sa ver- nothing like it. The
Coleman is the easy way to iron.
SEND POSTCARD for FREE Folder and Full Detalla.
THE COLIMAN LAMP ANO STOVE CO.
Wichita, Kans.;
Chicago, III.;
Los Angeles, Calif.
(MUW
I tol‘ you Skagway
wass dat turn to
de right!”
Left to right, David J. McDonald, Phillip Murray, seated. Standing,
left to right, Van A. Bittner, Clinton S. Golden and Lee Pressman, at
torney for the C. I. O., union officials who won an agreement with the
Carnegie-Illinois Steel corporation, for recognition of the C. I. O. to bar
gain in matters concerning union employees of the steel company.
Firemen Save Lives in Conflagration in Lynn
DOANS PILLS
FOR COLDS
Salicon Tablets
GO MARTWER
Nature can more quickly expel infection when
aided by internal medication of recognized merit
BEFORE YOU
HAVE RECOGNIZED MERIT
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
Pr»v li tor youroolt with the
“First Quart” test. Drain and refill
with Quaker State. Note the mile
age. See how much fanhet this oil
takes you before you have to add
the first quart. The reason is:
“Thtrt't an txtra ^uart of lubrica
tion in tvery gallon. " Quaker State
Oil Refining Corp., Oil City, Pa.
The retail price ia 354 per quart.
OPPORTUNITY
Must Sacrifice Paying Modern Grocery,
Confectionery. Beer, Cabins. Paved High
way, Electric Equip. Four Living Rooms.
Gas location. Munsons Store, Elk, Wash.
MORNING
DISTRESS
isdue to acid, upset stomach.
Milnesia nfen (the orig-
inal) quickly relieve acid
stomach and give necessary
elimination.
Each wafer
equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk
of magnesia. 20e, 35c & 60c.
NEED A QUART
Thrilling rescue by firemen of a woman trapped on the third floor of a burning building in Lynn, Mass.,
is shown in this unusual photograph. Several other dramatic rescues including that of a baby who was
tossed over the roof featured the fire battle.
QUAKER
STATE
MOTOR OIL
I