Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1937)
VERNONIA EAGLE. VERNONIA, OREGON WHATEVER YOU DO Distrust Is Your Responsibility But It’s True! Is it more disgraceful to dis trust one’s friends than to be de ceived by them? A nature lover is like other lov ofa the ers. His love is most ardent when he doesn't know much about it. Do you like to conquer obsta ET us have our peach desserts cles? Try to get over disliking a in abundance while there’s a man you have no reason to. generous amount of this fruit on Romantic names given children the market. may plague them in later life. Open Peach Pie. Likes the Velvety Touch 1 cupful flour 6 peaches A grouch does not like grouches. Sugar, cinnamon 1 egg ’2 teaspoonful 1 egg yolk He hates them. baking powder 3 tablespoonfuls Some pick their friends and cupful sugar cream some are picked as friends by 2 tablespoonfuls 1 tablespoonful milk butter others. Because you are suavely asked Make a cookie dough type of crust from last six ingredients, to give your candid opinion, don't as follows: Mix dry ingredients. necessarily do it. Whenever it is “officially de Work in butter, and add the slight ly beaten egg and milk. Mix and nied” there is a “catch” some then pat and roll out on board or where. pastry canvas. Fit into nine-inch pie plate. Peel the peaches, re move stones and slice in even slices. Arrange in circular fash ion over the dough. Sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon mixed. Beat the egg yolk, add three table spoonfuls cream and drip over and around the peaches. Bake in hot oven for about 30 minutes or until crust is browned and peaches are soft. L Mrs. O’Jawish—Well, Mrs. Mur phy, how did you like your trip abroad this summer? Mrs. Murphy—Well, I liked Paris, London and Rome, but the best part of the whole thing was the trip over. Don’t miss that, if you ever go to Europe. J im F isher - AV1ATO« OF OMAHA, NEB., wave? in rut 5KY IN SKV-MHTMG f! THE FIR5T PART MAS 5TM.L INWT WMfM TH€ LAST SENTENCE »«AS IN PLACE H I * ‘ ... ... wrote the toffps ÖRfGlM OF THE HCTCM IN A MAN'S LAPFL - GENERAL MOAEAN. «WRING A6AW5T NAPOLEON. His Idea HAD HIS FOLLOWED W6AR THE HOTCH A5 A 5ECRET SIGN Mrs. Smythe took her husband to a mannequin parade. An eve 'T he nine S isters ning gown worn by an extremely AND SEVEN BROTHERS WHO ALL BECAME pretty model attracted her atten MISSIONARIES !!! LOCK and KEY .. TMC CHHDßFN OF tion. USED FOR YEARS // «V HENRY LEWIS, “That would look nice at our ...NOW &ÍLONC.ING TO «iw ToßK Or-f H6H8CRT OF party next Saturday,” she said, NEW BEOFoao, MASS. hoping her husband would buy it for her. Fisher, one of the pioneers in air-writing, accomplished his feat on “Yes,” agreed Mr. Smythe. July 6, 1930. It required great speed and no wind. Five previous at tempts over a period of a year had failed. But clear pictures of the “Why not invite her?” “prayer” were taken on July 6. Some clergymen protested that the act was a sacrilege, but others praised the pilot as furthering religion. Before or After The Morean people's notches proved so popular that enemies and First Clubman—I wish I was disinterested folks, not understanding the significance, got to wearing dead. Second Clubman—Can’t you the notches just because of the appearance. marry her—or did you? of A Three Days’ Cough Is Your Danger Signal No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold, or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with Creomulslon. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with any remedy less potent than Creomulslon, which goes right to the seat of the trouble and aids na ture to soothe and heal the inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel the germ-laden phlegm. Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, try Creomul slon. Your druggist is authorized to refund your money if you are not thoroughly satisfied with the bene fits obtained from the very first bottle. Creomulslon lsone word—not two, and it has no hyphen in It. Ask for it plainly, see that the name on the bottle is Creomulslon, and you’ll get the genuine product and the relief you want. (Adv.) WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK... By Lemuel F. Parton EW YORK.—Young James Del- mage Ross rode a bicycle from Chatham, Ont., to New York city to get a job as a chemist. He got the job, but noted that Pestling Is everybody in the factory did noth Piffling to ing but work Young Ross pestles. Pestling seemed piffling, so he pedalled back to Chatham and kept on going, on his bicycle, on foot and on boats. He’s been around a lot and now. at sixty-four, the President hands him a job which no mere pestler or péd alier could handle — boss of the Bonneville project, the biggest dam To Its Capacity A mouse can drink no more in the world. He will resign from than its fill from a river.—Chinese his S. E. C. post to become admin istrator of the huge power plant proverb. Mr. Ross was for 20 years head of the municipal power development of Seattle. His selection for Bonne- ville is taken as an administration declaration that it is going all the way through on its power plans. He has not only been a vigorous champion of public development, but he has fought for public distribu tion. Here, he says, is the kernel of the whole business. He says pri OU have to work at marriage vate companies could manufacture to make a success of it. Men / may be selfish, unsympathetic, power at possibly a lower cost than could the government, and makes but that’s the way they’re made and you might as well realize it. his fight on distribution costs. He When your back aches and your stakes out big regional power hook nerves scream, don’t take it out ups through the Northwest, existing on your husband. He can't possibly and planned. His policies are ag know how you feel. For three generations one woman gressive and far-reaching and his has told another how to go "smil appointment would seem to sharpen ing through” with Lydia E. Pink the disagreement between the Presi ham’s Vegetable Compound. It dent and the power companies. helps Nature tone up the system, thus lessening the discomforts from He has taken and administered a the functional disorders which lot of punishment. Several years women must endure in the three ago. a newly elect ordeals of life: 1. Turning from Knows How ed Seattle mayor girlhood to womanhood. 2. Pre paring for motherhood. 3. Ap tossed him out of to Absorb proaching “middle age.” his power plant Don’t be a three-quarter wife, Punishment job. They recalled take LYDIA E PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND and the mayor and named a mountain Go "Smiling Through.” after Mr. Ross, a rocky peak over- hanging the Skagit river, which Mr. Ross wants to rope and hog-tie fo> the good of all concerned, as he sees it Then his partisans, just to show ...If he knows where to look I that they were with him. spotted up a mountain side, on the Cascades, IATATCH a robin on the lawn some sunshiny tor a Gutzon Borglum bas relief, morning. A few hope, then a pause. A few more hope, and ho listens again Thon, trium like the sculptures of Presidents in phant, ho pulla out a fat, wriggling worm A silly South Dakota. The project is still bird, you would say, if ho merely pocked here and there, hoping to strike it lucky. being worked up. • Reading the advertisements ia for you what His was one of those "roll your cocking hia head ia for the robin. Advert.sers own” educations. After his bicycle toll you just where are the jucieat buya. Cock your eye on the advertisement» in thia news | trip to New York, he headed for paper. They may save pocking on barren ground. j the Alaska gold fields in 1898, bi HOW LONG CAN A THREE-QUARTER WIFE HOLD HER HUSBAND? Y The Early Bird Gets the Worm cycling to the fade-out of the road, tramping up through Edmonton, making his own boat for the rest of the trip. Later, in Seattle, he helped de sign the first municipal power plant and stayed on the job 32 years. He loves kilowatts and amuses himself m his rambling old house by keeping a copper Keeps Trick ball in the air with no visible support Gadgets in and by frying eggs His House in an electrified pan held in his hand. On his living room table is a book on the natural sciences, published in 1832. He says it started him on his career and he keeps on reading it. He was consulting engineer for the New York power authority when Franklin D. Roosevelt was gover nor; also consultant for the St. Law rence seaway and power project. He went to Washington as consultant for PWA power development and later was appointed a member of the S. E. C. As he caroms around mountain cliffs, a violet by the roadside brings a yell to the chauffeur and a screech of brakes. He just has to get out and look at it. He is childless, but he and Mrs. Ross have reared five children. • • • RS. ANNIE NATHAN MEYER, founder of Barnard college, is against women “scabs." "I feel it would be better." she says, “if women, instead of Lady ‘Scabs’ scabbing tor lower Are Bane to wages, would seek out new fields in Mrs. Meyer which there would be no competition with the men." Mrs. Meyer dislikes being called a feminist, but. in her early youth, she dropped her subscription to Godey's Ladies' Book and urged women to do something on their own account. Women as people have been her absorbing life interest. She was an anti-suffragist, but now qualifies her opposition. She thinks women ought to be honest and admit that, when they take a job, they are out for a husband. And that, she thinks, is as it should be. She has written 15 plays, 8 of which were produced, some of them on Broadway. She is a small, merry, white- haired woman, living her life with keen zest at seventy, in her book- littered Park avenue home. She is known as a writer, lecturer and playwright GET READY FOR WINTER DRIVING i M i 1 C Consolidated News Feeturea. WNV Service. Sea Level Sea level refers to the level of the | surface of the sea; specifically, this I level at its mean position, midway between high and low water, adopt ed as a standard for the measure ment of heights. No section of our population is more dependent upon the automo bile as a means of transportation than the residents of the smaller communities and rural districts. Yet each Fall, many car own ers cause themselves a great deal of trouble and expense by neglect ing one or all of the simple yet necessary steps to assure proper operation of the car in Winter weather. A minimum Winter protection program should cover: 1. Complete change to correct grade of lubricants for motor, transmission and differential. 2. Motor tuned up, including ad justing of carburetor, valves, distributor, sparkplugs, genera tor and all electrical equipment. 3. Drain and flush cooling system. Refill with suitable anti-freeze solution. Selection of motor oil and greases for Winter driving is par- ticularly important. You must select an oil which will permit easy starting, that will lubricate the motor throughout the entire driving range of speeds and will continue to do so for a reasonable mileage. For many years Quaker State Winter Oils and Greases have been recognized as the highest quality and most generally satis factory Winter lubricants on the market. Through Quaker State's highly developed methods and equipment it is possible to produce a motor oil which wili have a satisfying body over the 400-degree range of temperature it will meet. That is, when the motor temperature is way below zero, the oil will still be fluid enough to allow the motor to turn easily and also to flow freely to all the bearings. Yet this same oil has enough body to stand up and to give the motor proper lubrication when the temperature inside the cylinder wall reaches 400“ and over. As with any other product you buy. you get what you pay for. An oil of Quaker State quality is necessarily expensive to make. This does not mean, however, that Quaker State is more expensive to use. Being pure, concentrated lubrication, it stands up longer in service. It gives more miles per quart and at the same time gives the bearing surfaces safer protec tion. You will want to step into the car, even when the mercury is hiding in the bulb and press the starter with every expectation that the motor will start off with its usual Summer zest. This sure starting, plus motor protection, is only pos sible by preparedness.—Adv. INSIST ON GENUINE NUJOL Copr. 1MT. Stone toe. Place of Peace Whatever brawls disturb the street, there should be peace at home.—Isaac Watts. checks COLDS FEVER and LIOUID, TABLETS SALVE. NOSE DROPS first day Headache, 30 minutes. Try “Bub-My-Tlim”-World’s Best Uniment GET RID OF BIG UGLY PORES PLENTY OF DATES NOW...DENTON’S FACIAL MAGNESIA MADE HER SKIN FRESH, YOUNG, BEAUTIFUL Romance haan't a chance when big ugly pores spoil skin-texture. Men love the sort smoothness of a iresh young complexion. Denton's Facial Magnesia does miracles for unsightly skin. Ugly pores disappear, skin becomes firm and smooth. Watch your complexion take on new beauty Even the first few treatments with Denton's Facial Magnesia make a remarkable difference. With the Denton Magic Mirror you can actually see the texture of your skin become smoother dav by day. Imperfections are washed clean. Wrinkles ora du ally disappear. Before you know it Denton'« has brought you entirely new akin lovelinee«. EXTRAORDINARY OFFER — Saves You Money Ton can try Denton's Facial Magnesia on the most liberal offer we have ever made—good for a few weeks only. We will send you a full 12 oa. bottle (retail price $1) plus a regular sited box of famous Milnesla Wafers (known throughout the country as the original Milk of Magnesia tablets^ plus the Denton Magic Mirror (shows you what your skin specialist sees) ... all for only $11 Don't miso out on this remarkable offer. Write today DENTON’S Facial Magnesia ■ ■ a a a Kncloeed find SI a <cash or stamp*) lor which send me your i special introductory ■ combination. a SELECT PRODUCTS, Ine. 44B2 — 23rd St., Lang Istand City. N.Y. ■ ■ ■ a a C/ty.. L ■ ■ ■ ■ Name. .. State. J