Thursday, August 28, 1952
BROOKINGS-HARBOR riL O T , BROOKINGS. OREGON
-X
vated varieties which have gone
PAGE
SEVEN
—
.
~ -TXT— —1^
On ' thfi
A/lflin l/rcia
fir fin
llic IllUin
Aild and grow rampant in parts
somebody put the brakes on.
Life is getting too speedy.
>f western Oregon, so rampant
n tact that in many places they
Jake the barber, finding hair
Salesmen being put to work by
¿re
considered pests. The Him. cutting strenuous labor.
Chas, and Pearl Young.
B y Mrs. E. F. Rapraeger
i
daya blackberries are now at
P ’'* '
_______ ---- ------------- - -
A recent public opinion poll next day he would have air the their best and the Evergrec i 1 thru Frenchys view finder.
showed that city people thought i land a man needed,
blackberries will be at their best
Mr. Sibleys white bread slow-]
people in country areas were more : W hen the sun crept over the I he
U
,
" ”,e
,,,rninK
' la"< bread.
rontmue Io hear until
Orchids to those tlremen who
content. Almost all of the country horizon the next morning he star-
‘ a'> lams of late September. deserve medals for their fine
people
agreed with
He iraxeiteo
travelled a a long
long distance
distance
,
. them. One of | ted. nv
lackberries have been Ihe ba- service in the face of hazards.
nn most satisfying features of I in a straight line.
lino The
'n,.. further
the
many pleasing recipes from
Pete wishing he were twins
country life is love of soil which. he went the better the land be-1 Grandma’s
~.....
day till the present | Mrs • Mol i nos furniture suffering I lours: 9 a. in. to 5 p m.
comes with
ownership
it h t the
ho m
v n n r c i, ,. , of land , came. It was almost noon w h e n |time- They tan be used for tast\
hard knocks.
A person does not need a lot of he erected a chain of stones and deserts, jams, jellies, preserves some
Pupils,
getting.
"Back
to
preserves
K'\t door to Brmking Mkt
land. A small piece will do just so turned the first corner. In mid- and light wines. Here is a rec-
rec-1 School," shoes.
you can call it home and your afternoon when he turned the ipe for wine taken from ihe "JOY
Bui’ w orkers becoming popular. Peenings by A ppointm ent,
own. The love of land brings to second corner. Late in the day OF COOKING".
We have not
I aVern Mendenhall, turning ou*
mind a story about a peasant man he turned the th’ird. His strong fried it but the writer of the
to let the Chet co bridge go by.
who loved land and finally had sturdy legs were getting tired book recommends it.
all he needed. He lived in one of his lungs ached and his heart was
Mash in a stone jar 20 pounds
those strange far-away countries pounding furiously. His money I of blackberries. Add 5 quarts of
of central Asia where people drink dm a!rh,ake S° hC did n°‘ <tarc '’°'linK "«'er. Cover the jar. Pcr-
mares milk and speak strange jo p The sun was sinking low mil these ingredient» to stand for
languages . This man owned a wh'7', hC Sa" ' h<? *‘>rt,nK Place 3 days. Strain the fruit through
small piece of land. He was not
eie a group of the Bashkirs a cheesecloth hag. Return the
. . 1
rich but he was content until he «ere waiting. He collected Ins the juice to the jar. Ad,I 10 cn ,s R
heard glorious tales of unplowed
II ; tJ'y io meet t -e ititslers ct'cry tteetll
a
amng strength, threw himself of sugar. Cover the jar Permit .
terrain in the land of the Bash forward, and collapsed at Ihe fin- these ingredients to stand until
kirs where a man could buy a T |,, ine'riI,e had w°n! Or ha<l he? fermentation has ceased. Remove
vast area for a song. So he gath Z h,mat v ? r nH ,hP Va agF ,urn- ,he scum- S,rain ,h- jul«- Boult
ered all his belongings and travel
uc
" aS
" How “ ,igh,ly- Scal ,hc hotties Wi'b
led to the land of the Bashkirs. much
land does a man need? The sealing wax
In the heart of town
Brookings, Oregon
He was well received by the head Bashk'rs dug a grave in the lone
man of the village. He could have ly prairie. It was seven feet long
hll the land he needed. All the and three feet wide. It was all
---- --------------------
land he could walk around in one the land he needed
daywas his if he would first de
posit a certain sum in the village
There is still time to p ek
treasury. There was only one stip
blackberries.
Last week two of
ulation. If he failed to return at
us
picked
six
gallons
of Himalaya
sunset to the place at which he
berries
in
two
hours
up
the Chet-
started all his money was forfeit
co
river.
The
Himalaya
and
Ever
He agreed. At the end of the
green bla-. LUrries ai two cult'
Along Azalea Row
NORMA'S
Beauty Salon
'is of
• ¡T R E N C H IN G
WORK
J
J Sporting Goods— Fishing Gear!
I
j
j
I
J
J. J. GALLAGHER
DONE
*¿2',
SEWER LINES, W ATER LINES.
T R
DRAINAGE DITCHES, ETC.,
At $12.50 PER HOUR
GASOLINE ’/> TO 30 TONS
A G tn tral Motori I'a lut
DIESEL
V/ i 1 0 35 TONS
•
Frank's Plumbing & Electric Shop
P. O. Box 1240
HARBOR, OREGON
1 11 it Hottie South of Sunset H otel
H9S extra pounds o f I t !
IM P O R T A N T
N O T IC E !
Effective immediately, for a limited time and until
further notice, G w » / Cz/y Furniture is pleased t<.
announce its willingness to finance retail sales on Ke!
vmator freezers listeil bc'ow, on terms indicated with
each model:
Model
I R-6$
I R 9}
HR 153
ER-203
Cap. Cn.
Lbs.
Feet
Froz. Food
Down
Payment
M onthly
P aym ent
210
P5
455
“< M »
—Io cut your costs, increase your profits!
CMC
e n g in e e rin g B rings you
this great new M o d e l 470 high
w a y tra c to r that hauls up to 1,195
p o u n d s m o re ca rg o than a n y
o th e r vehicle in the 45,000 gross
w eight class.
$13.00
S i 3 .0 0
Si 5.<x)
$ 1 5 .0 0
$ 1 5 .0 0
$15.(X)
$25.(X)
S 2 5 .0 0
^ ...d « vv.«unuiuin,w 1952 i\eivin.itor tree/-
ers and include Federal Excise l ax. State Tax. De
livery installation, exclusive of special wiring free
service and parts for 1 year and additional 4-vear
warranty on refrigeration unit. A b so lu te ly N othin?
Maximum p o w e r-to -w e ig h t ratio. The
more to pay!
•‘ 302’’ engine weighs us much as 500
♦
♦
«
Here are the reasons why. It w ill pay
you to study them carefully.
Sensational new engine. Model 470 is
powered by G M C ’s new 145 h.p. valve-in-
head “ 302” engine — the most powerful
gasoline engine lor its weight in truck
history.
pounds less than other engines of com
parable ¡Tower, due to new high efficiency
design.
z
H ighest Com pression —7.2 to l - e x c e l i
any other standard gasoline truck engine,
accelerates faster. Delivers full power a t
an easy-stroking 3,200 r .p .m .
M o rs ton-mTIes p e r g a llo n -le s s dead
weight in engine and chassis means more
profit in every mile.
Highest payload «opacity-upw ards of
one-half Ion (treater than any other trae-
lor of the same (XJW raliug.
P ric e —th e b ig g e s t su rp ris e o f a lD
i ompare the price you have to pay for
this pace-setting GMG against the field.
Nowhere else will so little buy so m uch
In a 3- to 4 S'»ton tractor.
D hy not come in and see Jot yourself I
( heck these figures against any other plan 1
CRESCENT CITY FURNITURE
1220 2nd Street
Phone 3861
BUFFINGTON MOTOR CO.
131 I lighway Street
You'll do better on a used truck with your GMC dealer
( >nid Bench, Oregon