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About Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978 | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1953)
Miss Shirley Bowlin spent the F ourth of July weekend at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Bowlin at their home on the W inchuck. Miss Bowlin, a graduate of the 1952 class of the local high school, is working in Portland this sum m er and will enter her second y e a r at the sta le dental college this fall. HARBOR NEWS Mrs. Ruth B athiany arrived home the la tte r part of the week She had gone to K lam ath Falls where she was joined by two friends. Mrs. M artha McCollum and Mrs. Ellen Upp, and they drove down to San Francisco and other C entral C alifornia points. On their way home they enjoyed the big Lakeport celebration at C h a r Lake on the Fourth. Mrs. McCollum and Mrs. Upp are re maining here for a short visit. for September Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Kelly and three children of the W inchuck CLASSIC. MODERN. BALLET area left last W ednesday for Fairbanks, Alaska w here they ex TAP, FOLK pect to rem ain at least th ree 4 years up years. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Payne BLOSSOM B E H E E Fifth house from cem etery on left and family of Langlois are spend ing this week as guests at the H erbert Payne home. Lawrence is having his property near the H arbor T railer Court cleared while they are here. Mrs. Kay Malloy of Salem has Kay Sandstrom been a house guest at the home of Mrs. Rose H ubbard during the past week. HARBOR Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Weigel had as their guests over the Fourth of July weekend, Mr. W eigel’s Will Be Closed sister, Mrs. Ted Lewis of San from July 17 to Aug. 1st Francisco; his brother, George, and his wife of Portland, and Mr. FOR VACATION . and Mrs. John Snyder of Lake side. Mrs. Weigel returned the middle of last week a fte r a three weeks trip which took her to Portland and to Elkton, where Livestock Hay-Grain she helped out a fte r the birth of a son to her daughter, Mrs. W ade Henderer, a month ago. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew HofTeldt and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Foster took a three day trip over the weekend over the m ountains from O’Brien to Happy Cam p on the K lam ath river and from there to Sawyers Bar on the Salmon river. BROOKINGS, OREGON Mr. HofTeldt went into Saw yers W. L. CAMPBELL, Phone 2281 Bar in 1921 and spent several TED L. FREEMAN, Phone 2625 years there mining. OFFICE, Phone 2411 George, Bob and Marion Tol- man, form er H arbor residents, but now of northern California, drove their jeep into Pearsol Peak from the Illinois river side, then hiked through to Tincup and on down the Chetco to the head of Long Ridge w here they w ere met by a car. The trip took five days. REGISTER DANCE CLASSES Beauty Salon HAULING Brookings Livestock and Trucking Co. BROOKINGS CLINIC Trees Producing Seeds This Year SALEM T here W’ilP be favor forest tree seed crop this fall. A fter several dangerously lean seet’ producing years, W ilbur Engstrom . research forester for the sta te forestry departm ent, re ports this coming fall will find most trees loaded with enough of the precious com m ercial tree seeds to carry on natu ral and a rti ficial reforestation. Not a heavy crop, hut enough to end the for e s te r’s nightm are of no seed. Foresters say that w ithout this all-im portant seed, reforestation of logged and burned over areas m ust be discontinued. Continued tai lures of the seed crop cuts out planting, aerial seeding and re duces n atural regeneration. These conditions seriously jeopardidze long range m anagem ent program s of forest ci’s and tree farm ers. Engstrom advised th at during good seed years, foresters store all available seed for use during the lean years when old M other N atu re is stingy. However, suc cessive poor seed years have de pleted these reserves. The sta te forestry departm ent usually c a r ries a backlog of six tons or more The forester advised that an ade quate seed crop is necessary so tree grow ers can select only the best seeds from superior trees for the new forests. The seed crop is forecast upon the basis of tre e flowering su r veys conducted annually by the sta te fo rester’s office Engstrom said. This survey gives a general indication of the cone crop. Flow er crops are rated as heavy’, m edium ’, ‘light’, ’very ligh ’ and poor’. Combined field surveys indicated a light’ crop for Doug las-fir this year. S trongest indi cations of a good seed crop for hr was found in the upper W il lam ette valley, the Vernonia area and in the foot hills of the northern Cascades around Eagle DR. R. E. SMITH DENTIST PHONE 2831 Hr. Richard L. Smith OPTOMETRIST HR. ROY M. W HITE O STEO PA TH IC PHYSICIAN and Surgeon ^’m erpeneirs at Any Hour PHONE 2701 if Evening^ by A ppointm ent Read the class ads. They pay I . t..rt.tii'.i . T,IB,-. ui, «. " ill be in Brookings every week to care for your - er crop rated overall as m edium ’. A »ste m red cedar was reported as spotty and varying from non«'’ to ‘heavy’. Port O rford cedar in southern Oregon also has a gtxxl flower crop w ith ’m edium ’ luting. ’l*he w hite firs will prob ably have a very light crop. Pilot Class Ads get results! Due to Daylight Saving Time, only one com plete double feature will be shown Sui day through Thursday. A double show will lx» shown Friday, S aturday and holidays. Shows will s ta rt at tuhri (approxim ately 9:00 p.m June 1 and one m inute la te r ''neh day.) Friday and Saturday, July io - i i — ANGEL FACE ROBT. MITCHUM JEA N SIMMONS MONA FREEM AN TH E HALF BREED ROBERT YOUNG JA N IS CARTER ♦ ♦ ♦ Sunday and Monday, July 12-13— ROBIN HOOD RICHARD TODD — JOAN RICE CHICAGO CALLING DAN DURYEA ♦ - ♦ MARY ANDERSON ♦ Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, July 14, 15, 16— CONFIDENTIALLY CONNIE — JA N E T LEIGH TH E LUSTY MEN Susan Hayward Robert M itehum ♦ * A rth u r Kennedy ♦ Friday and Saturday, filly 17-18— BLACKBEARD THE PIRATE Linda D arnell Robert Newton W illiam Rendix MY SON JOHN HELEN HAYES - VAN H E FL IN BE 3 Say Service -■ -jY. SINGER SEWING MACHINE REPRESENTATIVE SALES Brookings I lalxir Pilot 7 THURSDAY, JULY 9. 1953 ON HIGHWAY 101 - 5 M ILES NORTH O F C R ESC EN T CITY AT W IN D E R STUM P ROAD VAN JOHNSON WARD'S ^ronane Service We carry a CO M PLETE linn if Gas A nnlinnees. ' v M<n.vond Tappan, O'Keefe & M erritt, and ( alorie ranges — General w atei AGRICULTURAL LIME heaters Servel R efrigerators UNDER PMA PROGRAM Lime applications on farm land Coleman furnaces. under PMA practices are now be Thinks for rent, note or leone ing made, according to Otis Bow C rescent City Phone 111 man, PMA com m ittee chairm an. At Jet. Hwys 101 and 199 All farm ers having signed up for this practice should have re ceived their lime order blanks during April. Lime O rder bk> ks may still be obtained from the PMA office in the courthouse at (iold Beach, either by a personal or mailed request. Bowman stated that the date j. delivery should be at least two weeks from the date when t he application is re f urnet 1 to the PMA office. Office hours, 9 a. m. 5 p. m. Creek ami Deep Creek. Ponder osa pine, which needs two years to m atu re its cones, is also re ported to have a lig h t’ crop. Best flowering was reported in north « ast Oregon on the upper G rande Ronde river and south of Baker. A light’ crop of cones for pine was also forecast for southwes; Oregon. W estern h e m l o c k flowering ranged from light’ to ’m edium ’, w ith the coast range better than the Cascades. Sitka spruce flow- Latest M ost Modern Equipment 4 Plenty of Free Parking 4 SERVICE 't '• lif e Box 4, The Pilot, or Singer Sewnng Center Cordernten's Across 260 S. BROADWAY, COOS BAY, OREGON 4 "Appearance from Bowling Counts prycleaning A lky Everywhere"