L ocal N ew s H a p p e n in g s
A b o u t F olks Y o u K n o w
The Ja n u a ry m eeting of the They will retu rn on Sunday.
P.-T.A. will be held at the school
Bobby Coverdell cam e to visit
this »Thursday* evening.
The Pilot office on W ednesday.
Mrs. F. N. Tygart entertained Bobby is about seven years old.
the B irthday club at her home His family bought one yellow ami
Tuesday afternon in honor of Mrs. one blue parakeet from Mr. Yahr
Tora Gustafson. Pinochle was en at the Feed and Seed some tim e
joyed a fte r a dessert luncheon.
ago and became very fond of their
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carpenter pets. A fter having them a few
from Bodego Ray w ere visitors weeks they escaped. Bobby heard
at C arpenterville. They also visit Someone had found one and hopes
ed Fred M artin and his sister, it was one of his and the person
Emma, in Brookings Jan. 1.
will come to see him. He lives on
March of Dimes containers were Fern avenue off' Easy street, ad
placed in the various places of joining the Denn Supply Co.
business S aturday.
The same
Officers of the E astern S ta r will
drum s are used from year to year. honor their retiring w orthy m a
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis will tron, Iris Kindel, and w orthy pa
go to Portland today to attend a tron. C harles Schaal, w ith dinner
dealer m eeting of the Internaional a t Shap’s Sm orgasbord, north of
H arvester Co. on Friday at the Crescent City on W ednesday eve
Brant Motor Truck branch there. ning. Jan 14.
Judge H ans Nelson, his s o n ,• Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kessler
iNeil, and grandson, Denny. 4 years and son, Gold Beach, were visi
[old, went fishing in the Cheteo tors at the Homer K essler home
hast week. Denny hooked two Sunday. They brought Phillip
¡salmon, one 12 pounds and the home, who had been visiting with
[other just under 15 pounds. The his cousin since Thursday last.
'm en let Denny play and bring the
F rank Burdell is visiting at the
fish to gaff all by himself. Of
course, they a re som ew hat en home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
vious of his luck, but p retty proud Swearingen. Frank was one of the
of their sm all fisherm an.
boys on the local baseball team
Mrs. F ran k Chapin is now as last year and is now on his way
sisting the A rrells as clerk in the to the University of Oregon.
Cheteo Drug.
The Cheteo Choral club will
A
q u a rte rly
congregational
m eet as scheduled Monday eve
m eeting was held at the Commu
ning, Jan. 12, at the high school
nity church on W ednesday eve at 7:30.
ning of this week at 8:00 p.m.
Mrs. H a ttie M ackey received
word S atu rd ay th a t her uncle,
Fred Cole, had passed at Med
ford. Bud Cross delivered the
message to her on the south bank
Cheteo river road w here she lives.
The Am erican Legion and la
dies of the auxiliary are planning
a V alentine dance at the Grange
hall Feb. 14. Prizes of various
kinds will be given.
Bill Brown was confined to his
home over the weekend and first
part of the week.
Mr. Cross
looked a little w eary and his ex
planation w as th a t he had been
serving double d uty but glad to
do it
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd W eeks were
host and hostess to a group of
friends on New Y ear’s eve, a fte r
games and refreshm ents a prayer
service and devotional period was
held beginning on the stroke of
midnight and ushering in a new
year.
About tw enty-one were
present. The g athering was also
in the n a tu re of a housew arm ing
for the new home ju st recently
completed on Pioneer Road and
into which the W eeks family have
recently moved, in tim e to cele
brate the holidays.
Mrs. Lyle Redfield, Jr., and
children
returned
home with
Lyle from Philo, Calif., where he
went for C hristm as. Mrs. Red
field has been caring for her sis
ter, Mrs. Je rry Ruddock, form erly
Irene Rau.
The Ruddocks are
parents of a baby boy, born Dec.
8, named Allen M arlin, and weigh
ing 7 pounds 8 ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ackley re
turned S atu rd ay evening from
S an ta Cruz, Calif., w here they
had visited Mrs. A ckley’s m other
for several weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Rhoads went
by bus to N ew port, Ore., on Dec.
24 to spend C hristm as with their
son and family, retu rn in g on S a t
urday. Mrs. Rhoads found an ex
ceptionally tine large agate on
the beach there and had it made
into a necklace, of which she is
very proud.
T erry O ’Brien had the m isfor
tune to fall from the monkey
bars on the school grounds on
S atu rd ay and break his right
arm .
Word was received of the
death of Randel F oster Jan. 2 in
P ortland. Mr. Foster, 66 years
old, had no relatives here but
will be rem em bered by old tap ers
as having lived here about nine
years ago in the house which is
mow occupied by Southern Ctirry
Television treat—the BUICK CIRCUS HOUR —every
R ealty Co. Burial was at N ational
cem etery. Portland.
ere you
oadm
BUICKS
GREATEST EARS
IN 50 GREAT YEARS
Freight Service
Coast Freight
fiftieth year of Buick building.
A quick listing of simple facts will reveal just cause for
celebration.
It has the world's new est V8 en g in e. Vertical
valves; 12-volt electrical system;
pounds lighter;
entire engine is so compact, a new, more maneuver-
able chassis has been built around it.
★ It has 188 Fireball horsepow er. A new Buick
record; engine horsepower per pound increased
★ It has a com pression ratio of 8.5 to 1. Highest
compression on the American scene today; bettered
fuel economy.
It has a dynamic-flow muffler. For the first tim e in
automotive history, a muffler w ith zero power loss.
It has a new Twin-Turbine Dynaflow Drive. N ow
adds far swifter, quieter, more efficient getaway to
infinite smoothness at all speed ranges.
It has new braking pow er. zMor/ pow erful braking
action of any Buick in fifty years; plus the new ease
of Power Brakes, optional at extra cost.
ie It has a still finer ride. The softest,
steadiest, most buoyantly level ride that
Buick' s advanced engineering has
yet produced.
h '•
It has, also, wondrous handling ease, w ith Power Steer
ing as standard equipm ent. It has superb comfort. It
has sumptuous fabrics and tailoring. And its acoustics
are so thoroughly mustered (hat it may well be one of
the world’s most quiet ears.
B/HIH BflJiB MTBMOBMS M i BUM
BIIICB BULL BUILB JBBB
see p ictu red th e G olden A n n iv ersary
H R ASTER — engineered, styled, powered and
bodied to be fully worthy of its paragon role in this
( .
fourth Tuesday.
B ut no listing of facts can do true justice to this p h e
nomenal automobile, or to its brilliant brothers, the
1953 S upers and S pecials .
And no words can really tell you the beauty you sec,
the comfort you feel, the excitement you experience —
w hen you kx>k at anti drive any one of these big, beauti
ful, bounteous Buicks for 1953.
Will you come in and see for yourself that these are,
in simple truth, B u ic k *9 greatest cars in five brilliant
decades?
a rre w o rv a . tr im a n d mzxizU a r r eabject to change wM haut nutxr*.
Lines
DAVE FRANKLIN,
Owner
CONN MOTORS
Phone 2634
BOB WILLI AMBON
I Areal Agent
North Highway 101
7
M argaret Byrne Sleagle and
family of Selma, Ore., w ere guests
at the home of her m other. Mil
dred B> rne, for five days a t
C hristm as time.
F a th e r Dimmick returned to
Brooking a fte r a three week pe
riod of confinement to Ix'd in
W heeler, Ore. He is much im
proved in health and his friends
are happy to welcome him back.
C. O. Leonard has been quite
ill w ith a th ro a t infection for
some tim e and is under doctor’s
care. His wife reports that he
has lost 26 pounds.
Mr. and Mrs. K enneth B arker
are driving a new Dodge car. A
tine C hristm as gift.
(I
Worlds n e w o slY J powers
DAILY
Brookings Harbor Pilot
THURSDAY, JANUARY 8. 1953
Brookings, Oregon