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About Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978 | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1951)
Thursday, March 29, 1951 BROOKINGS-HARBOR PILOT, BROOKINGS, OREGON P age 1 EX There are two more parties to Special food will feature the be held, and they will be April opening. An advertisement ap 14 and 28, with the blanket which pears elsewhere in this issue. is to go to the person with the rolled, the petals protrud- Tickets for the forthcoming highest total score for the ser Sixteen lumbermen from this but not in Oregon! For here at cately ies, to be presented at the last ing at both ends.” Barbershop Quartet show’ in party. area enjoed a dinner meeting at Weedy Acres, the roses bloom In centuries past, the poets Chetco Inn last Saturday when the calendar around, and prob praised its virtues, and in Guli Crescent City are definitely in standardizing of log scale was ably do so in your own garden stan, famed in Persian stories, the short market. The show', to one of the main topics for dis as well. It is a flower universally where “so many roses grew' that be held Saturday, March 31, at cussion. Problems pertaining to beloved, and a plant which has it was a five-day camel ride the auditorium of the Crescent been in existence for more than through the great garden,” we Elk school, is the first show’ put Will the women of the com the future of the timber indus a million years. This fact has are told that * “wild rose leaves on by the new’ chapter there, of munity who wish to help, or do try were taken up and discussed. been substaniated by recent dis- reduce to an ointment with bear SPEBSQSA. nate for the Rotary luncheons, The auditorium seats coveries of fossil rocks bearing grease, _ only 600 and the Satellite dinner, Tues doth wonderfully make its imprint in Colorado and Ore the hair grow again.” Men may and all indications are that there day, April 3, please come to my gon. Long before the appearance will be standing room only. Tick- home this Thursday night, Mar. to try this one! of man, roses were growing on want And the wild Dog Rose of Eng -I 29, to formulate final plans. Or For Sale New’ 280-gal. steel M'c h..t »et ' ?tOT<\ ht’re but at ,he ra,p they this earth of ours. contact Mrs. A. P. Hendricks. oil tank, $45. Warren Smith, at land ’ s hedgerows “ a rose but set We only enjoy their beauty have been selling there may not We need help. All moneys de go'around. Phone 537. • here, but during the last war, with little wilful thorns and as, ()e rived will be used for a new’ „___ ■” > English gardens supplied a val sweet as English air can make One of the recent acquisitions kitchen sink and built-ins in the For Sale: BearCat Jr. garden uable source of Vitamin C from - her” w'as give its Latin name be to the show’ is the “Mellowaires’ Community church kitchen. cause it was supposed to cure tractor, with cultivators and hill- rose hips. In case you didn’t quartet of Medford. Bill Duggan Mrs. C. N. Goldizen, Pres. er-disc. A-l condition. $80. Glen know that a rose has hips, P^r- hydrophobia. ' w «‘ pai . m ™ like this for ford recently these We could go on and heard reports that men th at Med- Simpson, near Azalea Park. • haps I should add that the hips com- many a page for roses form a e with Hous > Bros are the ripened fruit of a rose WANTED: Waitress. Inquire fasemating history all brother^ Glenn and Mel bush. at Chad’s. ♦ I am indebted to Mrs. Almo I e Crocker sing the tenor and lead British chemists worked to find ton for the information used. n,irtc rx v White Rock Cottages, owned a substitute for Vitamin C since and I believe her source material P tS respectively and Don Keen- WANTED: Gardener or yard oranges, a usua source, were not was a Varden club member of !r ,s bariton* Charlie Carroll. I by H. A. /Sandy’ Sanders, and ot j former secretary of the Medford under management of Jerry Mc man with some experience or ¡Imported during the war, and VV a * K»» den dub m< mb« Bride, will re-open Sunday. April knowledge o f landscaping or they discovered that rose hips the Oregon Federation, Mrs. Na- chapter, sings bass. kVmanr . The Crescent City chorus and 1, according to Mr. McBride. plant care. Goetz Cottages. 4-3 yield 400 times as much Vitamin One of our finest roses here is I quartets are working hard to C as oranges and 300 times as much as black currants another the peace rose. It can be slipped I make this, their initial try, an by placing a cutting in a glass evening of good harmony and excellent source. of water. After some wrecks when good fellowship. So the Boy Scouts and women Local Barbershoppers urge all were set to work gathering rose new’ leaves form, set outside in suitable soil, with a glass jar hips and soon some 200 tons were over it to protect the young plant quartet tans of this area to ex tend all efforts to see this show’. converted into a rose hip syrup from wind and cold. Delco-Remy Auto-Lite The grapevine gossip indicates and made available to the Brit ish people through the drug “A myriad lovely blossoms may that quartets from Sacramen Proto and S. and K. Tools to and Berkeley alone would be trade, as a source of Vitamin C. enclose, Hein-Warner Hydraulic Jacios, Gates BàJts Roses are used in cooking in But, whatsoever hath been, there worth the price of admission. In addition to the Brookings still must be many countries throughout the and Crescent City choruses there! and hose; Bert DeMoss world, and here is a recipe to try Room for another rose.” will be these quartets: The Jes- FLORENCE COATES. some afternoon when you have ters; the Camellia City Four; S guests to tea. Rose butter. Put I ncalled Four; The Lumberlads; =5? into a stone jar %-lb. of butter Miss Jacqueline Lyons and her The Harmonettes; The Ocean- |O< and cover it entirely with rose brother, Gary, spent the latter petals above and below' and leave part of last w-eek at Grants Pass aires; The Beachcombers and two _ *2 from Crescent City. it overnight in a cool place with visiting relatives. They returned foursomes All over the United States the t“~ the lid on. The butter will absorb home Monday. Ba I’hprshnn chnuc 1.:„11 Barbershop shows are packing all 1 big auditoriums and they alw ays leave the audiences feelii feeling they had a grand time, and monev’s worth. Chapters of the1 national gas society are springing up all over pumps, trailer court, barn. the countrv and are affording a good, wholesome hobby to men land, shade, on Hwy. near Grants Pass. For Partic from all walks of life. ulars write The date is Saturday, March 31 tickets are at Gould’s. Along Azalea Row tWAZM Charter Festivities , ’• "T , ■ Tickets "Selling" Juno is the month of roses— ‘ _________ June NOTICE "Classified Ads" White Rock Opens 1 BERT DeMOSS Box 621, Grants Pass, Oregon * k National Cemetery Is A Reality Now MF REE ■■ ■ 3 K f < byArvin (DEALE/' FOR INFORMAT' NOTHING TO BUY! Just Come and Register Your name Before Friday! DIAMONDS. WATCHES. JEWELRY 0,0 < ('attera» fìnd Rra lectors 'rj GOLD BEACH—The first na- tional cemetery to be established jin the three northwestern states came into being this month in Multnomah county, Oregon. To be knew n as Willamette National Cemetery, the 200-acre site is lo- ¡cated adjacent to the Lincoln Me morial park cemetery, some 10 I miles southeast of Portland, re- perts C. E. Seger, county serv ice officer. These are entitled to burial there: Any person who has had serv ice in the U. S. armed forces in w ar or peace and w ho died on active duty or following discharge provided the period of last enlist ment w as honorable. Unremarried widow of an ex- service man buried in a national cemetery, or who intends to be buried there upon her death. Minor children. an unmarried daughter, regardless of age; a widowed daughter remaining un remarried; or a physically or mentally incompetent, unmarried son of any age. Further information may be obtained from Mr. Seger. WHITE ROCK COTTAGES Grand Reopening SUNDAY, APRII 1st FINE FOOD DANCING! COCKTAILS Sixth Card Party Held Last Saturday Sixth in the series of pinochle parties being given by the Re bekah Social club, was held at the Odd Fellows hall Saturday, with a good crowd. The commit tee had used the Easter theme in decorations and refreshments. Prizes for high score were won by Dorothy Simpson and Wm. Weideman; low* by Madge Moore and Jack Tungate; the pinochle prizes were held at the end of play by Dorothy Simpson, and M. E. Dixon, and the door prize was won by Ethel Olsen. WARREN G HUNTER 1 C r N o R I n E TEACHER OF PIANO, VOICE, PIPE-ORGAN Life Certificate High School Credits For Studio Bldg., Brookings Jeweler JCWeier Accredited Pupils M(lne Your Watche* Ten tk * Trut^~ 943 second Street, Crescent City, California