sister, Mrs. Kate Jamison, who
was looking after her, was taken
ill and is at the home of a niece,
Mrs. Milton DeMartin.
Several lily growers left Tues
day for Corvallis to attend the
open house at Oregon State Col
lege during which the results of
experimentation of the Easter
Lilies will he shown. This work
is financed from the nursery
man’s license charged the bulb
growers and is of great import
ance to the lily growers.
Nick Baumgartner, Sr., is now
at home after a bout in the Sea
side Hospital, with his daughter,
Mrs. Louise Cooke caring for
him. He will need to remain in
bed for at least a month, accord-
ng to reports.
HARBOR NEWS
George Oldham, who was in
jured in an automobile accident
near the state line last week,
was able to he brought home
Thursday. He suffered two brok
en ribs, concussion, a badly in
jured knee and sundry cuts and
bruises and must remain in bed
for a while. He will lx* able to go
back to work in six weeks or
two months if he continues to
improve as he is now. His moth
er, Mrs. J. K. Murphy of New
port and his sister, Mrs. Clair
Fluke of Agnes«, were here to
visit him from Thursday to Sat
urday.
L. G. Stafford is reported to
lie feeling better since coming
home. He has two nurses caring
for him at the present time.
Mrs. Walter Pearmine left for
Los Angeles last week where she
will visit her sister, Mrs. J. W.
Withrow, who has been in ixxir
health.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Payne
spent the woekend at the home
of their daughter Mrs. Gene Red
ing in Grants Pass. While there,
they attended the joint install
ation of officers of the Grants
Pass VFW Post and Auxiliary,
with Mrs. Reiling being installed
«s President of the Auxiliary.
Mrs. William T. Mathews and
daughter, Pat, of Calpella, were
weekend visitors nt the home of
Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Masset.
Aunt Sue Benham was able to
come home from the Seaside
Hospital, last week, but still
needs someone with her. Her
Thursday, April 12, 1956
BROOKINGS-HARBOR PILOT — BROOKINGS. OREGON
PAGE TWO
Winchuck Ladies to Form
An Extension Unit
Mrs. Sylvia Lee, County Ex
tension Agent of Home Ec,
will meet with the women of the
Winchuck area, Thursday, April
19th at 1 :30 p.m., at the home of
Mrs. Leland Pettegrew. The
meeting will lx? for the purpose
of discussing and forming an
Extension Unit in that neighbor
hood.
Any women living in the Win
chuck River neighborhood and
are interested in Extension work
is invited to attend the meeting.
REPORT ON WALKING JOHN
Jess Ellis dropped in to tell us
he saw' Walking John tramping
through Newport, this past w'eek
end.
JUST RECEIVED
A NEW SHIPMENT
OF THE A M A ZIN G
VOLKSWAGEN
MORSE MOTOR’S
1201 N. Riverside — Ph. 2 -7 2 5 4
MEDFORD, OREGON
BROOKINGS GOLD CACHE ?
Who got, or will get the $20
Gold Piece?
Mrs. Anna Clark has been down
visiting her son, Jack, at Santa
Rosa, and besides bringing back
word to all who knew Jack dur
ing the Old Mill Days that he is
doing just fine and has been
operating* a cat for the California
Highway Department for years.
He told her that when a portion
of the foundations for the old
mill w'ere being poured, he was
standing right beside Mr. Brook
ings when the latter tossed
a $20 gold piece into the mix.
If Jack confided in his mother
as to just where that gold Eagle
was tossed, she didn’t say, and
may have ideas on doing some
prospecting herself. Jack’s Enid’s
(Mrs. Glen Hurst) brother, torn
on the old Clark place, up on
Pistol River, and often asked
for by the old timers. Wilma,
(Mrs. Oscar Miller) of Crescent
City, is another of Anna’s daugh
ters.
BILLETS WANTED —
A man dropped into the Pilot
Office, this week, looking for
some unusual material. He want-
ed billets of wood six inches
square by 17*4 inches long—
oodles of them. Needed them in
Portland where he was process
ing 35M board feet a day, and
must have enough “stumpage”
to run to 50M feet or better. He
was scouring the coast for this
material and said he thought he
had established a good source in
Brookings. Asked why he didn’t
move his processing plant nearer
the source, said his market was
in the Portland area, but he
might find it better to have it
closer to the raw material sup
ply.
CAM ELI AS ARE BEING
PROCESSED NOW —
Nearly two thousand camelias
have been put to bed in the lath
houses at the Azalea Farm. At
present they are mere “whips”
which Gary Wimberly hopes to
shape into real ornamental
shrubs. They are a galaxy of
varieties and should be ready
for market in another year or so.
The farm has been a principal
source of azaleas going north
into the area where the plants
were destroyed by the early
December frosts. Several thous
ands of hydrangeas are also in
process, from gorgeous blooming
plants to dormant cuttings just
getting ready for their seasonal
growth.
OTHER JOBS —
A great deal of publicity has
been given the hot search for
technical college graduates, es
pecially in the various engineer
ing fields, and nothing has been
said about the need for business
staffs to keep them employed,
and less yet, about those who
may be called upon to carry on
the work of both the engineers
and executives. Neither has there
been much publicity on the men
and women who are to do the
merchandising of their concen
trated efforts. Possibly the lat
itu d e of potential employment
is wider the further one gets
from concentrated knowledge on
one specific topic, but all are
needed in bringing that which,
today, is but a scientist’s wildest
vision to tomorrow’s acceptance
as commonplace.
The young folks, thinking on
these lines, need not be so dazed
as they stand on the platform,
a fresh hign school diploma in
their sweating hands. They will,
eventually, find their place in the
world, too.
D im m ic k Bros«
Brookings M k t
NEW BUILDING DATA —
All turf inside the side walls
of homes being built must be
ginned down to solid earth, ac
cording to instructions being put
out by W. N. Kernan, appraiser I
for the Department of V eteran'
Affairs. This will also facilitate
getting the lower woodwork of j
the building the required 18I
inches above all the ground.
PAPER TOWELS 2 -330
Pound Can 89<
COFFEE 2 Pound Can $1.77
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Smith
returned last Tuesday from sev
eral months touring Euroke.
• Mr. and Mrs. C. Ed Dempsey
returned home this past week
from a trip to Los Angeles.
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ L’
■ W hat’s
a most
Z important
! ato y o u ...
is getting a senator who can
f i n THINGS C O N I »/» Washing
ton for i ou and Oregon . , . get
things done on the senate floor,
in committees, at the White
House, with federal departments.
THAT takes a b ility . . . experience
. . . and TRIINDS.
DOUG McKAY has
LOWEST
PRICE
EVER
< Handy Storage Doari
i f Naw Calar Sty Ungi
# Holds 595 lbs. Foodl
WIZARD — 17 Cubic Foot
UPRIGHT FREEZER
The Prestige
o f service in the President's cab- I
met and w ith the nation's top
budget and policymakers.
|
"Food Front" Door,
Latest Decorator Trim
Regular Price . . . $ 3 3 9 .9 5
A-L-S-0
15 Cubic Foot — WIZARD
Chest Type
Holds 525 Pounds of Food
20 Cubic Foot — WIZARD
Chest Type
Holds 7 0 0 Pounds of Food
t
GRATED TUNA 2 - 35 c
19É
PEAS
SUNBLEST —
3 0 3 Can
Medium
k*-
ú •..
h il l s
Í
Colored
ZEE
BROS. —
s w if t s
—
4V ~<aB i
CHEESE SPREAD
690
HOLIDAY —
Oleo2lbs35(
DUBUQUE CORNED BEEF —
Pound Can
HASH
25 Pound — No, 1
8-Pound Cello Bag
POTATOES
ORANGES
38c
S 1.18
The Understanding I
CAULIFLOWER
lie
o f W ashington— Its politics and ■
personalities. He already knows ■
them.
Coachella V alley W hite
Pound
GRAPEFRUIT
90
The Knowledge
j
o f O re g o n 's p ro b le m s and
heeds, gained as mayor, state i
senator, veteran, and governor. *
The Background
1
o f a man who bu ilt a business |
from the ground up— to o u t
standing success.
|
The Personality
.
o f a man famous fo r m aking
friends easily. W herever he goes ■
he will make friends fo r Oregon. B
The Integrity
I
both personal and p o litica l in
which all Oregon believes. "H e |
says what he thinks and does
what he says he w ill d o .”
g
■
o f a fighting Republican who in
26 years o f public service has ■
never lost an election.
The Devotion
■
o f a man who w ould give up _
the honor and prestige o f the ■
P re s id e n t's c a b in e t because
serving the people o f Oregon ■
more directly and e ffe ctively.
means that much to him .
■
$258.*
HURST MKT.
•
FOR THE FINEST IN MEATS
U. S. D. A . GOOD —
F.I A4. M cka, rM
O . » B V l8.ll)
Ph ilips Ckr« . saj s B Brd, PwtWa4. O r..
•
Pound
RIB STEAKS '
750
SIRLOIN STEAKS 790
BEEF ROAST
49C
BrisketBoilingM eat 251
SAUSAGE
450
U. S. D .A . GOOD —
U. S. D. A. GOOD —
$298.
jf
2 Pounds
•
Pound
The Fighting Spirit
NOW $298.00
lóSize C a n i
SEA-TANG
SNOW WHITE —
t
Stores 588 Pounds Frozen Food
THE PRICES QUOTED IN THIS AD ARE EFFECTIVES
THURSDAY APRIL 12 thru SATURDAY APRIL 14S
Pound
Blade Cut
Pound
U. S. D. A. GOOD —
Pound
PURE PORK —
Pound
i