Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, September 17, 1937, Image 2

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    VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON
i But It’s True____________
Varied and Rare in Crochet
i
some used together. Repeat each
alone and you have an entirely
different design in a cloth, spread
or scarf. You can make smaller
squares using finer cotton. Pat­
tern 1402 contains directions and
charts for making the squares
shown and joining them to make
a variety of articles; illustrations
of them and of all stitches used;
photograph of a single square
about actual size; material re­
quirements.
Send 15 cents in stamps or coins
(coins preferred) for this pattern
to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft
Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Please write plainly your name,
address and pattern number.
A CAT ACCIDENTALLY LIFT
IN THE MONT ROSE CLINIC,
CALIFORNIA, ON THE NIGHT
OF JAN. 6, !9ii. KILLED 850
RATS. LOST BOTH ITS OWN
EiES IN THS RIGHTING /
I
'
/MA bUNlZ
X
IS A SCHOOL- TCACHe*
>N N€W BEDFORD,
MASSACHUSETTS...
g)
JK
-s’
*. -æ
f •— * T VJH&I DIVERS REACHED THE HMS. MONTAGUS IN THE ENGLISH
Pattern 1402
V CHANNEL IN NOVEMBER, 1929, 12 YfARS AFTER IT HAD JBEEN SUNK,
I
.VHE^ FOUND A* JAVELIN WEDGED IN AN OfieN PORTHOLE, INVESTIGATION
An opportunity to combine ele­
•wr-F’*
1 ifiEVEALED tT HAD BEEN SHOT OVERBOARD BY HEN Ry PKKENS. AMERICAN OLYMPIC
gance without extravagance—and
J STAR, BS HE PRACTICED ON WAY TO THE 1911 GAMES, ITRETURNED TO HIM •„
Seed Time First
all with your own nimble fingers
and crochet hook! These lovely
How can we expect a harvest of
10-inch companion squares of filet thought who have not had the
Miss Duntz led her class all through grammar school, every year iu crochet, done in string, are hand­ seedtime of character?—Thoreau.
high school and every year in teachers college. Her mother, by the way,
was Miss Ima Rabbit before she married Joseph Duntz.
The remarkable progress in increasing life expectancy is due to
marked decrease in the infant mortality rate. But the expectancy for a
person of fifty, for instance, is about the same as it was a century ago.
That means that science has been able to do practically nothing about
curbing the ailments which kill old people.
WHO’S NEWS
THIS WEEK...
By Lemuel F. Parton
1
vVVwv'wvv1
EW YORK. — Possibly better
than “horse and buggy” days
N
would be “square-rigger” days as
a phrase of poignant retrospect.
There was a touch
Sea Ancients of nostalgia in the
Stow Engines amazingly expert
• c •> n
press stories and
tn bail Kace
beautiful pictures
of the Newport getaway of the Con­
rad and the Seven Seas—the only
seaworthy square-riggers left in
America—on their recent race to
Bermuda. Both boats have Diesel
engines, for emergencies, but they
stow all that, and it is perhaps a
bit tactless to bring it up now. This
is a machine age holiday.
With all its shortcomings, the
power age does enable some people
to make enough money to get away
from It once in a while. Young G.
Huntington Hartford, owner of the
Conrad, is the inheritor of a $200,-
000,000 chain-store fortune. That's
a good beginning for anyone who
wants to voyage back into past ep­
ochs—whether his taste is for old
houses, old prints, old ships, or even
a horse and buggy. Simplicity
comes high. Mr. Hartford spent
$75,000 getting the Conrad in racing
trim.
One doesn’t think of a demon
squash player as a sailing man, but
Mr. Hartford was a squash racquets
wizard in his undergraduate days at
Harvard, in the class of 1933. He
is the only son of Mrs. Henrietta G.
Hartford, of Newport and Charles­
ton, getting about a lot, having a
wonderful time and probably not i
"wishing you were here.”
He takes a hand in all sorts of
sports, and probably stirs more
envy with this
Old Gaff ers
square rigger race
Dream About than in anything
v
.
n
he has done or
Yardarm Days^^ He starts
many an old gaffer dreaming he is
out on the yardarm in a gale, and
that—according to the Prophet Joel
—is as it should be, providing the
young men keep up with their vi­
sions.
Mr. Hartford bought the Conrad
from Capt. Alan Villiers, Australian
book sailor who sailed her all over
the world in his lite, ary argosy. She
had settled down in the valhalla of
old ships at Brooklyn when Mr.
Hartford brought her to life again.
The ship was built more than 50
years ago by the Danish govern­
ment, which later used her as a
training ship. Her proper name is
the Georg Stage. She’s a proud,
staunch old ship, with two full suits
of sails, decks of teak and two brass
cannon on the poop deck. She is
100 feet 8 inches on the waterline.
WHERE'S JUNIOR"?
I CAME HOME EARLY
SO WE COULD
,
FINISH THAT
B oat
WE'RE
making !
SME ■
, looks
F Too
HAPPY
To SUIT
L ME /
YEAH-
WELL,
WE'LL
FIX
“WAT/
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
PHOTOGRAPHY
ROLLS DEVELOPED
8 prints 2 double weight enlargements,
or your choice of 16 prints without
enlargements 25c coin. Reprints 3c ea.
NORTHWEST PHOTO SERVICE
Fargo
-
-
North Dakota
REMEDIES
Clear your skin of pimples and blemishes
with Albolo-Lotion. $1 for 8 oz. Dykman
Laboratories. Sta. D., Box 162, N. Y. C.
Piles—Suffering ended by using UNGEN­
PILE. Guarantee to satisfy. $1. Dykman
Laboratories, Sta. D., Box 162, N. Y. C.
Rheumato — Relieves Neuritis, Sciatica,
Rheumatism and Lumbago $1. Dykman
Laboratories, Sta. D., Box 162, N. Y. C.
Help Kidneys—Use UROCLEAR, the mod­
ern treatment. Safe and pure. $1. Dykman
Laboratories, Sta. D., Box 162, N. Y. C.
OPPORTUNITY
»6000 CASH, gen’l mdse, post office, lodg­
ing, meals, gas, smalltown; money maker,
but owner ill, must sell. I. G. McCormick,
417 HYDE, SPOKANE, WASHINGTON.
mere he comes now — and , why ,
H e 'S CRYING! WHAT'S 7HE MATTER,
X. SONNY? WHY THE TEAR.S ?
aron K onstantin von neu -
B RATH,
German foreign minis­
ter, asserts the right and intention
of Germany to organize Nazi units
abroad. The dec­
Nazis Abroad laration comes at
the peak of a
Organize to
drive by the reich
Back Hitler
to solidify and in­
doctrínate Its minorities in all
European countries and to unite
Germans everywhere behind the na­
tional socialist regime.
In this activity, Herr von Neurath
seems to have displaced the frenetic
Rosenberg, of whom not much has
been heard lately. The foreign min­
ister is of the ancient Junker clan.
close in with the monarchists and
the army, of aristocratic feudal
background, and his new ascendan­
cy is interpreted by some observ­
ers as an indication of the increas­
ing dominance of his allied groups,
as against the newcomers who head
the Nazi party.
He stems from pre-war Germany,
a hefty, ruddy, stag-hunting aristo­
crat, of an ancient Wuerttemberg
dynasty, with slicked gray hair and
close-cropped gray mustache. He
was a student of law, entering the
consular service in 1900. Serving in
many foreign capitals, he was am­
bassador to Rome from 1922 to 1930,
and formed a warm friendship with
Mussolini, whom he characterized
as the ideal ruler.
HEN the President Hoover
was hit by an airplane bomb,
W
Admiral Harry E. Yarnell assumed
emergency command of all Ameri-
can shipping in
Rules Are Off Far Eastern wa­
ters. Since this
When Japs
isn't a real war,
Fight China
just what he can
do about such random shooting isn’t
quite clear—there are no rules to
govern the present situation—but, at
any rate, he's riding herd on our
ships and doing the best he can.
In the Boxer uprising, at the turn
of the century, he was an ensign
on the U. S. S. Yorktown. As Amer­
ica pursued her “manifest destiny,”
he hasn't missed any of the major
excitements since then. Previously
he had been in the Spanish-Ameri-
can war and the Philippine insur-
rection. He helped occupy Vera
Cruz and he was an aide on the
staff of Admiral Hugh Rodman
when our ships were serving with
the British grand fleet in the World
war. He rose in the navy through
his mastery of engineering tech-
niques.
C Consolidated Newi Features,
WNU Service.
7WE NOTE
SAYS JUNIOR IS
LISTLESS AND
/N ATTENTIVE —
T hat his
SCHOOL WORK
G ets P oorer .
ALL THE TIME..
Z IF YOU'D
PUNISH HIM A
TIME OR TWO,
I'LL BET HE'D
PAY MORE
ATTENTION
<70 HIS WORK.'
AND you SAY HE'S BEEN DRINKING
COFFEE? CHILDREN SHOULD NEVER
DRINK COFFEE.' I SUGGEST YOU
try eiviNö him postum - made-wrrU'
HOT-MILK INSTEAD.
^ALLRiG^rr,
'\~!/
K
X
/
S
/id
''YOUR MONEY SACK-—
IF SWITCHING TD POSTUM
DOESN'T HELP YOU I J
8UT, JOHN-HE DOES TRy\
To STUDY —BUT YOU KNOW
RE'S NOT FEELING WELL.
HE'S NERVOUS AND RUN-DOWN.
HE- DOESN'T SLEEP
.
. SOUNDLY AND HAS NO
S'
'HE'S BEEN A DIFFERENT "J/YoU
B oy since he switched / sa / d
"\To POSTUM-MADE
IT! NO
E,
WIW-HOT-
MORE
OR \Y, MILK.'
NERVOUSNESS
-•AND HE'S AS
Y ALERT AND
^ENERGETIC
AS CAN BE!