The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, July 02, 1942, Page 3, Image 3

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    PAGE THREE
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON. OREGON
THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1942.
Draws Large Salary Just
For Showing Her Hands
5.
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Shy. *
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DEFENSE
IN
OF
YOUR
It’s STONE’S for holiday food needs at extra savings!
Your favorite brands at economy prices - make it a habit
to start your food shopping at STONE’S every week-end !
BUDGET!
FOOD
4th!
F OR
Men are dying for the Four
Freedoms. The least we can
do here at home is to buy
War Bonds —10% for War
Bonds, every pay day.
AAAAAAAAkAkkAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA "1
BANG UP HOLIDAY FOOD SAVINGS! A
Deviled Meat
Pigs Feet
Sunkist Coffee
Bosco Topping
Fancy Cookies
Ritz Crackers
Swift’s
A pure meat spread for delicious picnic sandwiches: Swift Premium quality.
Pint Jar
Zestful, spicy flavor that makes them everybody’s favorite!
Drip or regular grind . . . this week only!
23c
Try them!
Pound
27c
Tins
Prices
Effective
July 2nd
to July 9th
Buy all you want at this saving.
Chocolate
39c
A sweet and nourishing milk amplifier or topping for choice desserts!
2 Pound
Cello
39c
Pkg.
21c
Rich baked butter wafers, slightly salted for that extra flavor.
8 oz. bottle
For jelly making or thickening jams.
Frisbie’s Jell-eze takes less sugar!
Kraft Cheese
2 Lb.
Loaf
mr
O / C
CRYSTAL
Theaiute cheit of Flavor • • •
Palled is
Giant Bars
5c Bottle Deposit!
A famous quality known for its
beauty and skin care!
Sandwich
Cookies
25* LB.
Tasty icing!
Kerr Mason Quart Jars
dozen 79c
Seasoning Bacon
FANCY HAMS
lb. 39c
Carstens T. C. Half or Whole
FRUITS E VEGETABLES
SWEET PICKLES
pint 20c
In Bulk
DILL PICKLES
4 for 10c
Large Firm
COTTAGE CHEESE
lb. 15c
Bulk
SWEET RELISH
lb. 15c
Very Tasty
MOCK Chicken Legs 6 For 25c
for
2
Cantaloupes
Jumbo 36‛s, for that picnic
2
Lettuce
heads
PRESCRIPTION for HEALTH
“Eat plenty of Fresh
Fruitsand Vegetables’
99
c
3
2
lbs.
3
for
10Ç
bunches
IOC
New Peas
Well filled, green
lbs.
2
Large and juicy
—
279
Local, large firm heads
Sunkist Lemons
BABY BEEF ROAST
Fancy blade cuts
Lb 278
4
9-
35%
....................
280
3 pkgs. 25°
34*
3 — 106
fek ==" a
Sunkist Oranges 2
Per lb.
3 for 29c
PIERCE’S CATSUP
12 oz. bottle . .....................
NALLEY S POTATO CHIPS
14 oz. pkg.
V-S VEGETABLE JUICE
46 oz. tins ............
PAPER CUPS
Hot or cold
LINDSAY OLIVES
No. 2% tin .........
FLAVOR AID
for beverages
4
Carrots
Local large bunches
dz. 539
29
Medium - Lots of juice
Choice and tender
tin 47c
1 lb. pkg. 14c
PAPER NAPKINS
Double size - 40 count
Specially selected, red ripe
BABY BEEF
SIRLOIN STEAK
21/2
SANDWICH WEEK
Radishes
LARD, Sheaf Brand 4 lbs. 68c
JOWL BACON »a curl lb. 20c
2 lb. pkg. 16c
Sur Jell Pectin
Tomatoes
Selected cuts, se­
lected quality, yet
Stone’s prices are
fitted to small bud-
gets. Variety you’ll
appreciate!
Very Nice
2 pkg. 15c
Parowax—for canning
Orange
15°
Old English Powder Pectin
Regular Package
PALMOLIVE SOAP
3 bars 19c
dozen 3 for 27c
Bradshaw Honey
12-oz. bottle ... 2 for 29c
Quarts
Dozen 12c
SUPER SUDS
macs
Canada Dry
Beverages
Kerr Economy Clamps
GRANULATED
Large Package
TREASURE
PICKLES
"Teasu
1 dozen 23c
2 for 98
NALLEYS
(NALLEYs
WHITE
doz.
.
bunches
Beets
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3
Very fresh, green tops
329
Celery
.
Utah type
IOC
Green Onions
lb.
3
bu.
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+
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Atlas Zinc Caps ............
Brown Sugar-in bulk
Five varieties . . . American, Brick, Swiss, Velveeta or Velveeta Pimiento.
Seal ON WESTERN HIGHWAYS „UsedIN WESTERN HOMES
Makes the most marvelous
salads taste even better!
Kerr Lids—regular size
Liquid Pectin
Jell-Eze
DRESSING
Qt. size 419
CANNING NEEDS
For your picnic lunch!
1 Lb.
Miracle Whip
Closed
Saturday
July 4th
I
Good June 29th
to July 25th!
212 lb. pkg. 23c
Alber’s Flapjack
Shredded Ralston .. 12 oz. pkg. 2 for 25c
Kellogg’s Corn Flakes 9 oz. pkg. 3 for 25c
large pkg. 19c
Kellogg’s All Bran
125 ft. roll 14c
Wax paper......... .
Wonderfood Marshmallows 12 oz pk. 13c
6 oz. jar 8c
French's Mustard
10c
Hormel’s
Sugar Stamp
No. 5
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Del Monte Pears..................... 29 oz. tin 2 for 47c
Del Monte Fruit Cocktail ....
16 oz. tin 15c
Del Monte Grapefruit................. 20 oz. tin 2 for 27c
Del Monte Cream Corn
20 oz. tin 2 for 25c
B & M Baked Beans...................... 28 oz. glass 23c
Rosedale Lima Beans
20 oz. tin 2 for 29c
Continental Soup Mix
21/2 oz. pkg. 3 for 25c
Cream of Valley Cut Beans
20 oz. tin 2 for 25c
FOOD STORES
Three years ago a beautiful black-
haired young lady was sitting at a
manicurist’s table. The tall man
stopped beside her on his way out.
"Young lady, do you know you
have the most beautiful hands I
have ever seen? What’s your
name?”
She said: ‘‘Florence Pearsall.”
"Well, Miss Pearsall, I'd like to
pay you for a picture of your
hands.”
That was the beginning of the
career of Florence Pearsall’s hands.
The man was a nail-polish-company
executive who had been searching
vainly for a pair of beautiful hands
to use in an advertisement. Today,
they earn between $300 and $400
every week for her just by letting
photographers take pictures of them.
They are so valuable that they're
insured for $40,000. The policy stern-
ly forbids Florence to dial a phone,
play golf or tennis, or do anything
else which could possibly damage
her precious manual extremities.
Florence’s business overhead is
high. Expenses include the cost of
35 pairs of gloves and a private
manicurist, paid $50 a week. She
wears gloves all the time. Even
when she cooks. The manicurist
carries a kit with 25 different nail­
polish shades, changes the color of
her employer’s nails five and six
times a day. She keeps her hands
in perfect condition by exercise, too.
She’s gained such perfect control
over the movement of each finger
that she’s now able to balance an
egg on one fingertip.
On occasion she has been the
hands of Joan Crawford, Claudette
Colbert, Merle Oberon, Barbara
Stanwyck.
For advertisements
showing them holding something,
the clever photographers used the
face and bodies of the movie gals
but pasted Florence’s hands onto the
pictures.
£1 05
Just the other day, she turned
down a Hollywood offer of $20,000
5 year to use her hands in close-ups.
She'd rather wait until they want
her face, too.
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New Twist to Earning
—
A Living in Hollywood
Bhogwan Singh has been making
a good living in Hollywood for 27
years simply by knowing how to
twist a cloth approximately 100 dif­
ferent ways.
Maybe this sounds on the silly
side, but to Hollywood it's a serious
matter and Bhogwan is a very im­
portant person, because by follow­
ing his advice the film-makers pre­
vent riots in Asia. The reason for
this is that the cloth in question
technically becomes a turban when
properly wrapped, and Singh is Hol­
lywood’s official turban-wrapper.
Turban-wrapping assumed impor­
tance in filmland some years ago,
when directors discovered there
were dozens of ways to wrap a tur­
ban and that every little wrapping
has a meaning of its own. Each
little twist denotes a specific caste,
and if a Brahmin twist is accident­
ally placed on the head of a Hindu,
the customers tear up the theater
seats in righteous—and riotous—in­
dignation in India, the Malay states,
and sundry other Oriental countries
where they take their turbans seri­
ously.
‘Fall Guys’
Americans are the greatest “fall
guys” on earth. Last year 25,000
of them died from falls—16,000 in
their own homes—while two million
“luckier” ones were either perma­
nently disabled or merely painfully
and expensively injured. And if you
don’t think a careless stumble can
run into real money, bear in mind
that it cost each of those 2,000,000
victims an average of $117 for not
being able to keep his feet! Just
how expensive a simple fall can be
was indicated by a recent National
Safety Council study of 4,602 home
accident cases that were treated in
Cook County hospital, Illinois. Two-
thirds of those patients went to the
hospital as a result of falls. And
each of those fall cases averaged 13
days in the hospital, plus 54 days’
disability at home—with attendant
loss of wages.
Tips for Gardener
If you are a beginner gardener,
here are some do’s and don'ts that
will simplify your work and pay div­
idends in flowers and fruit and fo­
liage.
As a starter select a few essential
tools, with others to be added from
time to time as their need is shown
or your purse permits. Essentials
are a spade with a square edge for
digging, a long-handled shovel for
moving earth about, a garden rake,
a bamboo one for leaves, a hoe and
a trowel, and at least 50 feet of gar­
den hose.
All tools, after being used, should
be cleaned and rubbed with a dry
cloth before being put in the tool
shed. This will prolong their useful­
ness and they will give better serv­
ice if kept clean.
Shiras Was first
George Shiras III, a trustee of the
National Geographic society, made
the first flashlight pictures of wild
animals in their natural habitats Hu
famous “Midnight Series," estab­
lished the beauty and accuracy of
camera and flashlight in big-game
photography, and won highest
awards at home and abroad.