Weather Renort
r the week ending Nov. 30;
Mir. Rain
24
25 .
33
26 .............. 55
32
-•
27
32
28
31
29
40
30
41
.28
PAGE T H IR TEEN
The Week A t
Patricia Henry
November Bride
Brookings H. S.
There will be no school Thurs
School board members of south
day and Friday of this week be
ern Oregon joined with teachers
cause of the annual teachers’ in
and school administrators Satur
stitute for the Coos and Curry
day in a day-long discussion of
county teachers. Teachers are
problems related to teacher com
required to attend this institute
pensation at Ashland.
unless excused by the county
The more dollars invested in
otal rainfall ... N .............. 28 school superintendent because of
educational programs, the more
—
1 illness.
desirable is the product which C.‘
J tAf
ThiS Wcek ,he basketball sea-
results, according to the results ■ lie nazard Worse son begins in Brookings With a
of surveys, reported by Dr. Wil
_
u p
.
game in lhe l°cal gym with Crrs-
liam A. Sampson of Southern Ore Muring W inter
cent ™.v. Calif. Saturday the
gon college in his keynote address.
The National Board of Fire Un- u
• ° ° Phlr f°F a game
Bare elementary skills, such as derwriters this week (or today)
\ thC ? PhlF SqUad> 11 is to°
reading, writing and arithmetic, warned against fire hazards in the Jh™ t>?
tO S®y m° rC
seem to fare as well in minimum home that during the winter
tlH the °ca Bruins s(Wad
programs as in more expensive months - especially Christmas
,
® 800(1 account of th« a -
<,Unng ,h° Seas°"'
ones, said Dr. Sampson. But when tim e-result in fire losses g r e y e r '
inquiry is made into whether than at any other time of tho L
Denn,s Fad‘
these skills are taught so as to year.
' I In8» Lloyd Russel, and Jack
help children make effective use
According to the NBFU. total
T " ®CrViCe last
of them socially and economically, fire losses in the United States 2 ® ’ 1 <>acl (,ullm<’ should need
there is great divergence in favor this year (1952) will reach $770,-1 X
CO[ncr of the "cry>ni{
of the results obtained by supe 000.000 an Increase of some six
f°,r ,he season's forecast,
rior teachers in superior schools. per cent over last y e a r’s record
°
F T ? . Kames
This divergence grows with the losses
losses of
of $730
084 000
h n sim as holidays are:
$730.084,000.
amount of per-pupil investment.
Friday, Dec. 12—Port Orford.
Last year, NBFU said, fire loss
Friday, Dec. 1& Ophir.
Research director Paul Collins, es for the months of December
Tuesday, Dec. 13—Eagle Point.
of the Oregon education associa (1951) through March (1952)
tion staff in Portland, explained amounted to $284,540.000, an in-
the information available to crease of three ¡>er cent over loss- causes are overheated or defective
schools from the executive of cs of $276,149,000 reported for the ! rhnnneys and flues* hot Mhes and
fices.
corresponding months of the year ' i OaL1 ,lncluding open fires», and
Attending
from
Brookings before, and an increase of 10.8 sp‘' ' k* on roof-
were Frances S. Henry, Ruth O. per cent over losses of $256 910-: . A " 1<? baslS oi f,re ,oss cl«ims,
Garcia, and Bernadine Steele.
000 for a like period two y e a r s retx,r' f'd ,ha‘ 'hose haz-
J ago.
ards accounted for close to 20
from
D
. n
. .
Faulty stoves, furnaces, hollers i pet cent
’ of all tires
'™ resulting
rCSU"
Buy in Brookinqs. a«»unt for a major portion of all
» “ «*<•* 'luring a 10-year
1941 ' through
3
fires during winter months. Other t . ’ od.
X'“ 1941
hro,,,?h 1950. Such
hazards are in addition to the
ever-present ones of matches,
smoking and misuse of electricity
n
that account for nearly 40 pei
cent of all tires every year.
To help overcome such fire haz-
j
ards,
the NBFU offers these sug
By L. C. O ’B rieh
gestions:
I
“T H E VOICE OE ONE AMERICAN”
1. Never overwork or “force” a
(This iff the Third Article of a Series)
furnace or heater that is giving
(Continued From Last Week)
insufficient
heat.
Salvaging our precariously balanced destiny is not the re
sponsibility ol Mr. Eisenhower but the responsibility of each and
2. Never try to “speed up” a
every individual, YO.U, AND YOU. AND YOU. The solution do«
fire by using gasoline or kerosene
not lie in Korea, neither does it lie in Moscow. Mr. Eisenhower’s
3. Keep a metal screen in fronl
coni used search for the will-o-the-wisp will not only be very haz
of a burning fireplace
ardous but it will be futile and could lead to catastrophe.
v z A r r J V AoI,uti?rn Iies ?n the bands of we fathers and mothers,
4. Use care in handling hot
i
A&D I. We can bring peace on earth, good will to man. and
ashes.
Always deposit them in a
qr’nK ,he \? ys honw from Korea. WITHOUT MILITARY FORCE.
metal container equipped with
OR BLOODSHED. “I have the solution.”
You and I, we fathers and mothers, through our traditional cover (never a wooden cardboard
blundering and inconceivable errors have unquestionably placed container).
our own boys in the fox holes of Korea. It is our duty, not oniv
5. Keep wood, coal and flam
io them but to ourselves, to rectify this unredeemable error and
bring them home. THIS REVERTS TO BOTH SIDES, there.
mable liquid away from furnace
It can he done through intelligent negotiation, but, and the furnace room free of
th e military will only bring disaster and the inconceivable retio-
trash.
version of civilization, end possibly the annihilaton of eartiis
peoples.
6. Dispose of all rubbish safely.
Military Intelhgenre has systematically maneuvered us
in to this obscene predicament, but common intelligence will save
Tuberculosis costs the Ameri
us, IF WE USE IT
can people well over $330.000,000
Dictatorship is Dictatorship in any language, and we are liv each year. This figure includes
in g m a make-believe era a disillusioned conception of democracy
which will not, and can not be successful. It will take the com cost of hospital and other medi
bined. integrated force of the individual to rectify this error an I
I and nursing care, f ase find
bring peace on earth; good will to man, and this colossal responsi ing, health education, rehibilita-
b i l i t y can not be intrusted to a minority of selected individuals.
tion, relict to families, medical re
If has been tried and retried in every generation all through the
search
and pensions io veterans^
ages, 'THE RESULT—read your history”
(TO BE CONTINUED N EXT WEEK)
"BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN OF
C O N S E R V A T IS M "
We Deiniftely Support the
“Buy at Home”
Campaign
Sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce
atch for our Advertisement in the next Issue
E. E. HANSCAM & SONS - Harbor
News and Notes
From The
Alexander Studio
It s not too late to have your
portrait made for Christmas.
Whether you are six or sixty,
your portrait is one of the most
precious gifts you can give.
Recently we have heard many
grandmas and grandpas say they
would like photographs of their
grandchildren.
Not many of
them realize that their children
are just as anxious for a picture
of them. So, grandma and grand
pa, this is the Christmas to please
them.
No 6 Manley Bldg. Tel. 2864
I
Mrs. Mayme Patterson of Grants
I Pass, grandmother of the groom;
(Stephen II. Henry, brother of the
1 bride; Rev. and Mrs. Sydney A.
Rev. Sydney A. Walker of Gold Walker, and Mr. and Mrs. W. II.
Beach officiated at an informal Henry, parents of the bride,
home wedding Nov. 29 at 1:00
l he bride, a 1951 graduate of
p.m., when Patricia Anne Henry Brookings high school, is now n
became the bride of A2/c Harold sophomore at Southern Oregon
P. Patterson, Jr., of Klamath college. The groom, who joined
Foils. Attendants were - Miss the air force in Dec. 1951, is on
Auerlia Patterson, sister of the a 15-day furlough. He will report
groom and her fiance, William to March Field at Riverside, Calif.,
Stonecypher, both students from Dec. 8. where his wife will join
Oregon State college. Others him when she completes her
present were .Mr. and Mrs. Harold school term.
P. Patterson, Sr., parents of the
They left early in the after
groom; Mr. dEnuind W. Hale of noon to attend the evening wed
Klamath Falls, Mrs. Hulda Som ding of a college friends in Grants
mers, grandmother of the bride; Pass.
PATRONIZE YOUR HOME STORES
See Our
t
•
1 ROSLEV PRODUCTS — Refrigerators,
Stoves, Freezers
•
AMERICAN KITCHENS
•
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS
•
JACUZZI PUMPS
•
ESTATE RANCES
•
BENDIX WASIIERS - DRYERS
•
HOUSEWARES
•
SPORTING GOODS
•
HARDWARE
•
(B IT S
Par Store — Brookings Hardware
5&// Green Stamps
HHP YOURSELF BY
BUYING AT HOME
BROOKINGS AUTO PARTS
AUTHORIZED
McCULLOCH CHAIN SAW DEALER
AND REPAIR SERVICE
Across from Shell Station
Brookings, Oregon
. O . Lox 195
Brookings, ( )regon Phone 2274
LOG
SCALE
BOOKS!
SO'C ’ er Book, or
3 Books for $ 1 .2 5
BOR SALE—
AT THE PILOT OFFI
-
iy
y s ; > s. 2. * s 1«
Brookings Teachers
* Attend Ashland
Meeting Saturday
BR<H)KIX(;s,(ARBOR r,,.O T . RROOKINGS. OREGON
j n
1 rursday, December 4, 1952