Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978, July 17, 1952, Page 11, Image 11

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    Thursday, July , 7> ,952
_ _ B R O O K IN G S -H ARBOR PILOT. BROOKINGS. OREGON
Mrs. John H. Kline, sister of
J im Yv’.tor.. anti her ht;s‘
i
For What It's Worth .
were guests of the Yel-
I tons over the week-end. On their
By C lifford P. R dwf
way home to Portland from a va­ bro"gh, 'n ™ ,h ™ 1; o ' 7 ” ' - i , " 1" ’ a Kroup ° f bllsi”'-ss
1 had i.
cation to San Francisco, they had
° PiniOn
timed th eir visit to see the lily often be baaed e n tire ^
parade in Brookings.
Most of us. I believe, are inclined to assu m e that
BROOKINGS
CI.INK
Office hours, 9 a. m.
5 p. m.
P R R. E. SMITH
D E N TIST
PH O N E 2831
Dr. Richard L. Smith
O PTO M ETR IST
PR. ROY M. W HITE
O STEO PA TH IC PHYSICIAN
and Surgeon
Em ergencies a t A n y Hour
PH O N E 2701
Evenings by Appointment
T R E N C H IN G
because tood costs are high the farm er m ust be
h’etiing rich at our expense. A few hours con­
versation with farm ers coupled with open-m inded
consideration of their problems will do much to­
ward correcting any erroneous attitu d es we m ay
have acquired. I learned of the many expenses in­
volved in relation to seed, fertilizer, labor, soil
conservation and equipm ent. I also discovered that
the^ price we pay for food is far, far a tp v e that
which the farm er gets for the original product.
I am now firmly convinced that in view of the
am ount of time put in by the farm er and his fam-
the> are probably the most underpaid w orkers
in . he land. Perhaps our thinking along other lines would also change
radically if we were more informed. Those who citicize labor for
paralyzing certain essential industries with strikes and those who
accuse industry of being only interested in excessive profits to the
detrim ent of labor cannot be in possession of all the facts. Common
sense alone indicates th at no side in any controversy is entirely
guilty or guiltless.
PAGE ELEVEN
A fter selling their place, north
of town, to Dave K irkpatrick, Mr.
and Mrs. K. D. Vaughan anil two
daughters left Tuesday for Spring-
field where Mr. Vaughan will be
employed by W eyehauser Co. Lyle
will rem ain here and will live at
the home of his brother, Don. The
address the Vaughans gave so the
Pilot could be mailed to them was
4513 McKenzie Drive. Springfield.
DONE
C- E
Katherine's
Beauty Shop
R ay Sandstrom
Evenings by A ppointm ent
H arbor, Oregon
»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Know your
OREGON M ILK
CONTROL LAW
the state
So long as hum an nature is w hat it is and so long as m an must
, struggle against man to get those things he desires from life, just
so long will there be conflict. Labor in ahsolute control would be
disastrous; sim ilarily with in control, labor would soon be enslaved
Confllict will always be with us; and fair conflict is healthy It
behoover, the public therefore to be fully informed so th at in its
capacity as referee it may arrive at just decisions for all concerned.
The answ er to many of our problems would seem to be “Know
neighbor as thyself.”
WORK
N - O —T—I
dictates WHO
may produce
milk and
HOW MUCH?”
On the Main Drag
That good music at the Chet co
Inn Sunday afternoon.
rhe perfum e from those nice
SEWER LINES, WATER LINES,
lily decorations.
DRAINAGE DITCHES, ETC.,
Those tiny tired m ajorettes.
R eturn to cave man days.
At $12.50 PER HOUR
The expression on Mrs. Fred
Fox’s face.
An open m arket saving the day.
Tuckered B arhershoppers
hut
the old Toonerville Trolley came
through a winner.
N o farmer can sell milk for home or restaurant use without >
P. O. Box 1240
HARBOR, OREGON
permission from the M ilk Administrator.
Thanks to Bob K renik who de­
M ilk Control decides how much milk w ill be available for
signed and painted the Festival
tour use.
First House South of Sunset Motel
street sigh and to the Manleys
It picks out which if either o f two neighboring farmers can
who helped m ake it.
•ell
their
m ilk even though both may be equally able to produce
T h a t excellent horsewoman,
wholesome Grade A milk.
«
“Brownie” Brimm and that A rab­
I
f
M
ilk
Control
permits
either
o
f
them
to
produce
such
milk,
ian horse of Mrs. H u rst’s.
ft then tells each farmer how much he may provide for your use
Will not try to get so interested
This powerful, single control over Oregon’s milk sunnk w
in the antics of the cave men and
railed the “ quota system.”
let the flag go by w ithout giving
f, a farm er^ cows forget this, get out o f line and produce more '
Our complete shop is open to general repair
it proper respect and salute.
than the quota picked for him, he must take w h iti-vr- -,rs* h' ci»
O ur faithul ambulance.
ret some other way—such as selling it at much lower .in.-es for
for trucks and trailers.
rheese, powdered m ilk, and the like.
'
m
A plethora of pea-soup io?.
Not Oregon's producers, hut the State, decides exactly who w ill
Puzzle: Bubble g u m in the
produce the milk fo r our needs and how much each farmer can
’20s? How can that be?
produce.
Such limitations frequently have made it necessary to
Mrs. Longw orthy’s pet coon.
depend
upon
the uncontrolled Washington market for enough
Those Brookingsites
nice pea*
m ilk, instead o f our ow*n Oregon farmers.
*
pie, aren 't th ey ?
ACETYLENE - ELECTRIC WELDING
Mrs. T. S. Abbott looking for
fam iliar faces.
Dorothv S h rad er and her m oth­
1 block south of Mobile Sta. - Next to Plywood Plant
The questions and answers below show some other w ays lr
er on the go.
which Oregon M ilk Control affects YOU.
George Funk still liking blue
O- bo»« M ilk Control hold price« up?
ribbons.
* ' l i t , ! hn ' ' r
P*“ ? 0 “ io t which the law was designed. I ,
/f..,
Resolutions to en ter the comic
prices, not (.tiling prices.
'
'section next year.
O. Doot M ilk Control diaceuroge com petitive d iitrih u tle n of m ilk?
Pete Lesm eister all smiles and
09090101020000010001000001000001530001000200040202010102021001010000010248011008110505050900020202020001030000000200020100
* . VM N o one can enter the m .lk business it the A dm inistrator say. .uch
ready for any thing.
new com petition m ight disturb existing distributors.
• ,‘cn
Earl B reuer getting ideas for his
□ D o .» M ilk C on^ '
’ '• * *
* * " v « to rry m ilk hom e y .u n d tt
t Frank's Plumbing & Electric Shop
N O T IC E
TO
TRUCKERS!
25-ten Public Truck Scales!
Shop Safeway. . . for fine foods at everyday low prices
FOX
BROS.
CHETCO MILL & LOGGING SUPPLY
HEADQ UARTERS FOR:
Sawmill and Logging Supplies; F.sco Logging Rig.
ging; Skookum Blocks; Forgings; Pacific Wire
Rope, Socketing and Splicing; Hi-Voltage, Rough
Service Light bulbs; R. Hoe & Co. Ins., Inlaid.
Electro and Regular Saw bits. Shanks, Hoe. Symons
*and Atkins Pattern.
543
Brookings
Phone 2539
float.
For Once Clive “P ain ted ” the
world red.
Those young smooehers on the*
float sta rt early in these parts.
.hi,
oi /o u ’ "
deliver, .h e ,h e r
n«
□ . Doot M ilk Control lim it the richne«« of m ilk?
h. VIS.
I he ric h n e s s (h u tte rfa t c o n te n t) o f m ilk s o ld in *>a<-h
is lim ited by the rulings o f the M .lk A dm inistrator
P
**
9. Do»« rhe O rego n M ilk Control lo w regulate Sanitary condition«?
I. NO. It has absolutely nothing to do w .th the sanitation, health in «nee-
tion, cleanliness, o r the purity of m ilk .
Montgomery Ward
M ontgomery W ard’s rep resen ta­
tives are here to stay. M ajor ap­
pliances, fu rn itu re and floor cov­
erings with estim ates on plum b­
ing and building m aterials We
will deliver freight free to you
O ur location at present is at the
Hotel Brookings.
Send for th i. free booklet V o « ,n d r o w fam ily ar« vfanlfc
concerned by anything that • (fecit the m ilk topply o f r o - r
cumm em ty Learn how O rego n M ilk ComroJ a fe c it Y o |
W rite to Safew.y Stores. 1139 SB. Th.rd. Portland 14 Ore.*
SA FEW A Y
Wher« you always get
moto
for yoar mw