Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978, January 24, 1957, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Thursday, January 24, 1957
Brookings-Harbor Pilot
sons, Louis and W alter of C res­
cent City, E lbert of S eattle,
G eorge of G ranger, Wn., and Rob­
e rt of H arbor, O re.; th ree sisters,
Mrs. B ertha Hess of Sacram ento,
Mrs. May Betts of Florence, Colo.,
Lillian Abigail Lively passed and Mrs. Anna P ark er of G len­
aw ay a t her home in Elk Valley dale, Calif.; also tw enty-eight
and
twenty-one
on Ja n u ary 19 after a lingering grandchildren
illness. Born in W etmore, Colo., great grandchildren.
on Nov. 21, 1877, she had lived
F uneral services w ere c o n
in Elk Valley for the past 13 years
ducted at W ier's M ortuary Chapel
and was a m em ber of the local
i on Monday, Ja n u a ry 21 at 11 a.m.
church of the Nazarene.
w ith the Rev. Dave A lexander of
She is survived by lour d augh­ . the Crescent City N a z a r e n e
te r s / Mrs. Ruby B utler of San church officiating. Rev. Jam es
B ernadine, Calif., Mrs. Nellie Bell 1 Shelton of Sm ith River sang
of Santa Ana, Calif., Mrs. Bertha “Good Night and Good M orning”
Ipson of C rescent City, and Mrs. and “The Eastern G ate” accom ­
Edna W oodriff of H arbor; five panied by Mrs. Edith S chroeder
Lillian Lively
Death Reported
B. P. O. E. ELKS 1934
Brookings, Oregon
SMORGASBORD
P r e p a r e d b y th e E m b le m C lu b la d ie s
SUNDAY, JAN. 27
Served from 5 p m. to 7:3« p.m.
A D U LTS $1.50
CHILDF.N 75c
Cocktail» served all afternoon
Elks and their out-of-town guests only
ST. VALENTINES IH X C E, SITCKDAY, FEB. OTH
Dam e and Buffet L u n c h ................................ $1.50 ,„r person
Would You Believe It's Ten Years Since:
Ralph V incent setting th e town
agog w ith new and fancy soda
fountain about w here H arold dis­
penses his trinkets.
• * *
a t the organ.
Pall bearers w ere Lloyd Cow­
ley, H arvey Smith, A llan Wood­
riff, Vic Anderson, Jo e H am m er
and W alter Ayres. Im m ediately
following the services the rem ains
w ere shipped to Florence, Colo.,
for in term en t in the fam ily plot.
M u . P atrick, dissecting a chick­
en at her Nook Cafe, finds a bon­
us— it had two gizzards.
* • *
Lyle and Ruth Redfield get a
license to wed and there's a bridal
show er at Mrs. F rank H assett’s
for Mary E'ttmger, a prospective
daughter-in-law and an o th er sim i­
lar ruckus at T y ler’s S tate Line
Cafe for M ercedes Mclndoe, who
is betrothed to Jo e Mendez, and
Mrs. W. P. A ndrew s had a stork
show’er for Mrs. W elton Blagdon.
• * *
VFW Reports
Good Meet
VFW Post Com m ander “Red”
Ross reported, at last W ednesday
evening’s well attended meeting,
th at 85 veterans paid their 1957
dues and th at less than tw enty
O phir high w alloped 31-28, by
more on the post’s rolls would the Brookings team —Felipe, Reii-
equal last y ear's m em bership.
mg, Nelson, C hurch and Foltz.
* ♦ *
It was voted by the post to send
Tony Olsen is fresh home from
a 1957 card to Vernon Travis,
cu rren t m em ber, still in the m ajor surgery in Portland.
♦ * *
arm ed forces. The post also ad­
Mrs. Lockland goes to 'Frisco to
vised investigating the replace-1
m ent of the old issue carbines m eet Col. H arry, new ly arriv ed
from arm y service in Europe.
used by th e Post firing squad.
The post service officer report­
ed he had, since the last meeting,
initiated
three hospitalizations,
two of w hich w ere of a very
urgent em ergency nature, besides
being consulted on the usual run
of v eteran s’ and th eir fam ilies’
problem s, and th at most of these
inquiries cam e from sources with-
out v eteran s post or A uxiliary
affiliations.
*»* *
Milton Brow n and Mrs. Dorothy
K uhn of Langlois suprise th eir
friends by w edding in Coquille.
If F ran k lin w ere w ith us today
and undertook to p rin t an issue
of th e Sunday O regonian or the
Sunday Oregon Jo u rn al on his
hand press, it w’ould take him 166
years, w orking 10 hours a day,
six days a week.
Brookings, Oregon
Advice To The Wash-Worn
'I
Tomorrow’s bridegroom is going to get a break! He won’t push
aside sopping wet undies to take a shower; he won’t poke an open«
ing through dripping nylons strung across the bathroom mirror to
shave his chin. Washbowl laundry is on the way out—thanks to the
fine fabric cycle adequate a g ita tio n , sufficient
on modern auto- sudsing
ma tic washers rinsing. detergent and thorough
which reduces
Unfortunately, hot water, while
wash, spin and important
to cleaning, must be
rinse time to avoided in washing man-made
the point where fabrics because of the wrinkling
the most deli­ factor.
cate of beruf-
Generally washbowl laundres­
f l e d s w e e t ses use enough Tide or other
nothings can now be washed as sudsing detergent but fall down
safely as the bride’s aprons and on agitating and rinsing. The fine
her groom’s shorts.
fabric cycle swooshes clothes 2
Mere important than gentle
to 4 minutes.
handling is the fact that the auto»- F e w w o m e n
matic does a better washing job hand knead lin­
on milady’s lingerie than she can gerie that long.
do with her own bare hands.
T h e av e ra g e
Reporting on a lingerie wash w o m a n stuffs
test program which compared too many items
washing results of automatics
in t h e wash­
with typical washbowl laundry,
bowl. And the
the Tide Washing Clinic found rinsing job is
that in all cases the automatic too casual. The automatic pro­
did the superior job. It also found vides at least two rinses, or the
that washbowl laundry was suc­ equivalent—the typical bride one!
cessful only when it approxi­
Washbowl laundry, of course,
mated the washing process of the can be successful if you:
fine fabric cycle on the automatic.
1. Wash daily so soil does not
This is particularly true with become imbedded and pre-treat
nylon and other man-made fibers. soiled portions.
When washed, lingerie picks up
2. Use enough Tide to make
dye from lint specks- of outer rich sud3 and wash in lukewarm
garments to give it a grey cast. water <110°F.)
Good washing procedure com­
3. Agitate clothes for at least
pensates for this but it is difficult two minutes.
to achieve in a washbasin. Es­
4. Rinse in warm or cool water
sentially, four factors are needed twice, avoiding w rin g in g or
in good washing—hot water, tw isting.
Q3
4-H Leaders in Schoo,
Three 4-H leaders and 1 ju n ­
ior leader from Cu ry c u n ty are
atten d in g the annual 4-H L eaders
Conference a t Oregon ¡stave Col­
lege Ja n u ary 22, 23, 24, w ith the
Home Extension
A gent
Mrs.
Sylvia C. I^ee.
T
is the third y ear for Mrs
E e rth a S harp of Cold Beach to
atten d this conference and th®
first for C harles Lyon, ju n io r
leader from Gold Beach. Mm.
Gladys Mann and Mrs. V era
Leeds, both of Brookings, are a t­
tending for the fir t time.
Methods in w orking with yoking
folks will be th e three day pro­
gram .
M arch ©f D im es
ANNUAL
F E E S CCFFEF1
Police in th e city of Cave Ju n c ­
tion w ill hand out chits, good for
a cup of coffee anyw here in tow n,
to those checked for exceeding th e
speed lim it w ithin the city. T his
scetne was tried, last year w ith
considerable success, although,
according to reports, most of the
“victim s" w’ent on and d id n 't
pause. According to the story, it
created a great deal of good will
advertising.
CLIFF HOUSE
Saturday, Jan u ary 2.6
AUCTION
•
•
•
ENTERTAINMENT
fìtti for Everyone
•
' •
•
VARIETY SHOW
John Lo Buono Master of Ceremonies
Wed., January 30 -- High School Gym
Local and Outside Entertainment
Sponsored By Brookings - Harbor Lions Club
Welcome Wagon
Offers Hand
WELCOME WAGON offers
hand of friendship and service
our homes and our com m unit
On im portant fam ily oaccsions
W elcome W agon hostess is hai
to call on you. And w hat occas
is m ore im portant than the Bi
of a Baby? It is a red-letter ev
in every family.
O ur Welcome Wagon host
tak es special pleasure in call:
a few days a fte r the new ba
arrives. She carries w ith I
greetings from the Welcome V
gon sponsors, w ho are interesl
in th e needs of th e new little oi
The sponsors are eager to ser
m other and baby too, and th
are th e ir friends.
These
civic-minded
busint
men and m erchants are interest
in the new baby because th
know’ th at the baby of today w
be the citizen of tomorrow’ ai
they w ant to have a p art in he!
ing the little citizen on his way.
The sponsors would like to c£
personally on the m other and h
now baby, but they are busv pc
pie and so they send them the
55555555555555555555555555BYQ555555555W
congratulations and good w ish
through the Welcome Wagon ho
ess.
A fundam ental principle c
Welcome Wagon is coopératif
w ith recognized civic and welfai
groups Welcome Wagon is oftc
referre d to as “an asset to tl
progress and w’ell-being of an
com m unity.” O thers call the se
vice “invaluable in c e m e n t i n
neighborliness and friendliness
T he W elcome Wagon hostess
call is a definite influence in th
Mfe and happiness of a con
m unity for the basic principle c
Welcome Wagon is “service t
h u m an ity ”.
O th er calls m ade by the We
come Wagon hostess include 16t!
birthdays, engagem ent anounc<
m ents. on change of residence an,
on new com ers to the community
Calls are also m ade on spcciâ
e v a sio n s, such as the 25th o
Gulden W edding anniversary th,
85th. 9«th or looth birthdav. anc
other im portant events.