Image provided by: Chetco Community Public Library; Brookings, OR
About Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1946)
Page Twelve BROOKINGS-HARBOR PILOT, BROOKINGS, OR EGON Home of The Croft Lily L—3B----dHKS——-C^.--- - -- BROOKINGS-HARBOR PILOT Entered as second-class m atter, at the postoffice at Brookings, Ore. March 7, 1946. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Me/n&ea. 0 ® N L W S /Â PER IATION ERJS 0 P ub Harbor Beaot DEWEY AKERS, Editor and Publisher GENE GOULD, Associate Editor National A dve rtitinq R epre»enfafi*a K E V 8PA PB I (•*» A IbVEH T l à l i H oi rtw ' • SE R V IC E . IN C . \ Netooftal tditona» A moc *«* ìoa ) Local News Items Serving America*! Advertiser» and/he Home Town New» paper» IM W RMdolpk — CW moo IH . • O F F I C I ! • Hoferoofc S« m Frwicbco. Cai. Subscription Rate: Per Year, in Curry County, Oregon. Per Year, outside Curry County........ .$2.50 $3.00 Who Has The Correct Version? Henry A. Wallace, late secretary of commerce, once a vice- president, and the form er secretary of agriculture, who taught the economy of scarcity, must have spoken out of turn. Anyway, today, Henry W allace is an “ex” in all these jobs because he told a few things about official W ashington. Commentaries on radio program s seemed about equally divided on the question of “W allace’’ or “T rum an,” which seem s to m ake the general public realize all the more that official W ashington has been hiding something.. This rift between the president and his form er cabinet member, by the way, doesn’t confine itself to the Dem ocratic party, as the Republicans have taken up both sides of the issue. Because of this rift, T rum an will find it difficult to obtain the nomination for presidency again, if he w ants the job. On the other hand, W allace, who never has been too popular in political ranks, has dropped tc a new low, unless the "revelations” which he prom ises, have m erit. To look a t the national picture from another angle, the R e publican party has offered no leadership for 1948, which looks any thing better than has been offered in the past 16 years. Stassen, of Minnesota, is the only hope of G. O. P., and he is too "liberal” for most of th at party to tolerate. With te tu rn of ex-soldiers and ex-sailors, sime seems about rijie tor form ation of a new party, which, unless it can obtain a m ajority from dissatisfied people of both parties, may prove a failure as it did in 1912 when Theodore Roosevelt bolted the Republicans. Day by day. It seems the world is getting n earer the verge of socialism, and today this nation, alone, is an alleged democracy. l o u r vote tor d irec to rs of Coos E lec tric Coop m ay m ean e a rlie r realizatio n of e lec tric pow er this a re a . P o rt O rford th is a re a are e n title d to tw o d irec to rs each be su re to cast ballot just th a t way. Mail y o u r votes prom ptly, th e very day receive these in the m ail. V E T E R A N S and Dependents I’o United Veterans you owe all your past, pres ent and f u t u r e service benefits. Join and tcork wif/» s o w eeferuM'*’ group. V. F. W. Auxiliary Meets I. O. O. F. Hall nt B rookings, a t S p. m. 1st and 3rd Wednesdays There were quite a few fisher-! week for Oakland »ha, men on the Chetco Sunday, but now employed. the only one who caught his lim Mrs. Sy Payne has («, it was Capt. V ic to r Reynolds, who trip to Berkeley, bu, got three silversides. Their house tu rn home this week ” guests, Deputy County R ecorder Bill Barton and Don Ca-» of Los Angeles County and Mrs. made a business trip to r J Frank Daley, arrived ju st in tim e Saturday. to enjoy eating broiled salm on th at evening, and w ere given one to be packed in dry ice to tak e home. They had been on a trip THE to Yellowstone N ational P a r k , and the Pendleton Roundup and were en route home. SALON Mr. and Mrs. H arvey N. Cegav- INVITES ske returned to th eir home at Al ham bra. Calif., a fte r visiting Lew Evening A ppoint^ Frazier for a wreek . Mrs. Kaufman Mrs. Polly Schroeder arrived from K lam ath F alls and will re w attendance main until th eir bulbs a re h a r vested and replanted. Catherine Sandst Benjamin K erns Jr. left last your and your you F riends here have received word of the m arriage of Mrs. M ary Moore Barrow s and H arry Wor- thylake a t the F irst Congregation al churhc, Bellingham , Wash., on Aug. 31. Mrs. W orthylake taught a t the H arbor school several years ago. Mr. and Mrs. D. F. M assett have as guests for a week, th eir niece. Mrs. L. E. L am bert of Los An geles, who arrived Monday a ft ernoon. Mr. and Mrs. J I. Welch of G rants Pass accom panied by Miss Edna Allen and Miss Irene Robar of Alta, Iowa, w ere visitt rs at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon H anscam last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Welch are Mrs. H anscam ’s p aren ts and Miss Allen, her aunt. FOR SA LE E ith e r Croft or Royal Lily planting stock. Anyone w an t ing pure strain of either of thes stocks, contact H. FELIPPE 8 m iles up Chetco River, on Ridge Road. N O T IC E NORINE HARRIS HARVEY Accredited Teacher of — P IA N O — Life Certificate Granted In 1919 Brookings Oregon FOR SA LE AT Bush’s Lily Gardens P. O. BOX 131 HARBOR, GROW ERS OF P R IZ E Croft EA STER L IL Y * Temporary Offices Will Be P L A N T IN G STOCK Opened, soon, in the Cen tral Building. Watch for announcements. »* * F O R F ire, A uto and C a su a lty INSURANCE TYPING AND NOTAKY PUBLIC See Edith Ott BROOKINGS OREGON f j, j / i H i f ” - T Q O K ÎN Ç S ---------------------------—2?.. G LASS For W indows’ (»LASS C U T F I. 0 w E R S A N I) P I. A N T S \ isitors Are Welcome Anytime Hetidffs Greenhouse At the WinchucR Bridge * F o r Automobiles (»LASS F or All Purposes Chetco Builders’ Supply Information Building See Us For Your 1- and2-inch LUMBER NEEDS NOW ON HAND1 12-inch and %-inch—also 14-inch pip wood for priority holders. 34- and 43-ineh Heatolators 14- and 16-foot Marine Plywood WHY WAIT FOR FLOORING’ , t se ‘C hapman Board’—no on hand.* Metal Louvers