Image provided by: Chetco Community Public Library; Brookings, OR
About Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1952)
h 'i'/ t K. «. w. ..... , ^23 k» V. of 0 . Library 16 Pages, this issue « On all newsstands ......... ... io c v' Nowhere A Finer Climate — Nowhere a Finer Community Volume 7 — Number BROOKINGS. CURRY COUNTY, OREGON !O Local VFW To Buy Wheel Chair RESIDENTS TO VOTE FOR COUNC1LMEN At the General election on No vember 4th, Brookings residents will also be presented with a bal lot on which votes for three coun- cilmen will be m arked. Those elegible are urged to register so that they may vote. Books close 30 days before election. Registration may be made at Moor's V ariety and Apparel Shop. A nother wheel chair for use in the com m unity has been ordered by the local VFW post and Aux iliary and they are accum ulating funds for the purchase of a hos pital bed with a plastic covered m attress to be made available when folks are ill in their home. A wheel chair was bought some years ago by the H arbor Com m unity club has been in use evei since and the one now on order will, on arrival, be loaned to a m an in H arbor who cannot get around very handily. Most of Mrs. Ethel F rasier received a the money used in the purchase newspaper clipping this week of this chair comes from the Bud showing the photo of her grand dy Poppy sale money while th a t daughter, M arilyn Brown model for the hospital bed will be from ing for W einstock and Co. of Sac the general activities of the two ram ento. groups. People of Brookings will re Julius Koehler, com m ander of m em ber the little girl with the the post, aspires for a N ational long brown curls, who made her aw ard and a free feed a t the home with Mrs. Frasier for sev Milwaukee, Wisconsin N ational eral years until the close of school Encam pm ent this summ er, by last June, when she went to S ac obtaining a 100 per cent paid up ram ento to live with her m other 1953 post m em bership of ninety- and father, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. one, equalling the 1952 m em ber S|M*er. ship, w ith O ctober 1, 1952 the M arilyn is now 10 years old. deadline date. There are fifty-four m em bers in the very active Ladies Auxil Birthday Greetings iary and there is a contest on For Mrs. Ackley betwen the two groups for the Friend* of Mrs. Ed Ackley g reatest percentage of m em ber calkxl io wish her many happy re ship increase during fhe term s of turns of the day on Friday a fte r office of the com m ander and the noon. A uxiliary president, Mrs. M. S. An interesting conversation Brainard. piece at the tea-table was the Koehler urges all who would unusual coffee m aker and server help him obtain this one hundred per cent post m em bership goal presented to her by Mr. Ackley, to contact him at the Chevron and from which she served her station or any other post m em guests. About 11 friends called during ber. the afternoon. Granddaughter Is Model Miss Phylis Darger To Wed Soon Miss Phylis D arger will be m arrieif to Robert L. K err on Sunday, Septem ber 28. at four o’clock in the afternoon at the Baptist Com m unity church. The reception im m ediately following will be given at the Rod and Gun club on Benham Lane. Harbor. Miss D arger, popular with the young set and much liked by ev eryone who knows her. was a graduate of Brookings-Harbor high school, and grew up here. Mr. K err returned early in the year from a term of service in Korea and is now associated with the K err hardw are. The young couple will m ake their home in Brookings. — - ■ — NEW C H E F AT CHETCO INN Bob Miller, form erly at the famous H artsook Inn. south ot E ureka in the Redwoods, is now chef at the Chetco Inn. He and wife will serve the dinners and prepare the dalicases served at weddings, receptions, teas and all i i : b ’:e fu n ctio n * h e ll a t Bn» Virgil Goldsberry I litu I. i \ , Si p t c i n l k l i v)S2 SCI IOOL BUSES TO G O Man Hospitalized ON STANDARD TIME Speaks At Rotary Next Monday morning schixri students and bus drivers will get one more hours sleep. School will convene on standard time, which will change from DST at 12:01 a.m. Sunday. Buses will sta rt on their routes and pick up the students on standard time. The Brookings R otary club heard an interesting talk on the South Pacific given by Virgil Goldsberry at the Tuesday lunch eon. Mr. Goldsbery was stationed there with the Sea Bees during the war. He brought with him m nay souveniers he collected and gave some very interesting com m ents on the people, animal life, The strength and love of a fa vegetation and w eather in the ther, the understanding and gent area. leness of a m other, the desire for hildren, the needs of children. W hat’s in a home? W arm th mil com fort, freedom to grow, the privelege to serve, and resi>onsibil- ty to stand for the things that are right, for the things th at we be On decision of the city council. lieve and for the things that we Mayor Robert Dimmick announ want. T h a t’s bow the young m arried ces th at one m inute a fte r m id night S aturday night, Brookings couples feel at the Com m unity will change over to S tandard Baptist Sunday school. President tim e along with most of the towns Dali Sanders, acting secretary in Oregon. Sally Sanders. Teacher Ed Mc teacher Earl At 12:01 A M. on Sunday m orn Clain, assistant ing residents will set their clocks B reuer and Franklin Fanger. hack one hour. What's In A Name Standard Time To Begin Midnight In Car Mishap Can you imagine a m an fast asleep at the wheel driving into a strange garage doorw ay? T hat ii what happened W ednesday a fte r noon to Capt. John K. Thompson, Tenn. When nearing H arbor from San Pedro, Calif., he evidently fell as leep at the wheel. His car crossed the highway, passed between two trucks going south, driven by Earl Cokes and Ted Freem an, and on its own ¡xjwer went into the garage of the cabin next to the highway of C ham ber’s Fir C ourt. The impact was so strong when the car struck the heavy tim ber of the wall it moved the building about 18 inches off the founda tion, broke some boards, pipe lines and did other dam age to the cab in. Mr. Thompson at ter living ex amined by Dr. Ronniger was hos pitalized at Seaside, Crescent City. He sustained a brain concussion, severe cut above the eye, fra c tu r ed rib and possibly internal in juries. GARBAGE FRANCHISE McCARNF.Y-LENTZ WED SEPTEMBER 15 Brookings is to have a new S an itary Service. Next week H ar J. P. McCamey, genial m anager old Dodds and George Rooney for- of tin* Coffee Mill and Mrs. M anie erly of Camas and Tacoma, Wash- Luntz were m arried at the par- I ington wil begin a canvass of the •onage by Rev. Mumbowc. n com m unity previous to establish- Mou.lay, S e p tjn lie r loth. ' ing a route for garbage collection. The com m unltys goixi wishes Jam es Sm ith has faithfuly giv- go to this couple in the establish- en this service to Brookings for ir.ent of a new home. many m onths past. f; One Fined For Dumping Garbage s ; E---- Deputy sheriff. Wes Sm ith was driving on the H arbor Lum ber t o. road last W ednesday morning when he noticed some garbage dumped along the road about 300 feet from the junction of that road and highway 101. By check ing through the •‘m ess’’ he was able to obtain the name of the party doing the dumping. The inform ation was taken to I Justice of Pence Charles S. Sehaal where a cong.Iaint was signed and a w arrant issued. Sm ith located this party Friday afternoon and took him before fhe judge where he pleaded guilty to the charge and was fined $5.00 and costs, or a total of $9 50. with the fu rth er instructions that the garbage must lie cleane<| up at » -.ice. It is going to take the cooper ation of all of us to keep our roadsides clean and we can do a b etter job by not dum ping than bv then cleaning k * help us out m ASSISTS PILOT STAFF Ivan O. Shepherd left his work building on an addition to his home on the old airport tra c t ov erlooking the ocean, this week to help out with work at the Pilot. Mr. Shepherd says he is temj>oiar- ily retired from newspujMT work a fte r having served for 35 years and coming from a family of newspaper people. He took his apprentice work as a lad on the Statesm an, Boise, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. Shepherd come here a couple of m onths ago from Portland. They purchased a ranch thirteen miles up the ( hetco River and are now en larging and remodeling the house near the river m outh where they plan to live. Ocean Drive-In To Show 'Quo Vadis' •A «.<*> ly J EL ¡2* wa shot at his ran ’h on thi Many o. his friends share in a t R. F. M iller of the Ocean Drive- In theatre, north of Crescent City, is very pleased to anounce to the public that he will be able to pre sent “QUO VADIS”, th at new picture just released, for a long run nt popular prices. Every oth er place it has shown, there ha* been an advance in prices, accord- to Mr. Miller, but he assures it will be show n at regular adm is sion rates. This movie is rated as the greatest picture since "Gone w ith the W ind”. It will run from O ctober 5 to 9, inclusive. Robert Taylor and Deborah K err are the s ta rs o! this outstanding film. P-T \ chorus rehearsal will I on Monday at 7:30 p m