Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, March 25, 1932, Page 2, Image 2

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    cracker crumbs (rolled fine with
rolling pin) and put in pan. Salt
and little pepper. Fry a deep
brown, and turn. Brown on both
sides.
—Mrs. A. Dowling.
A sunrise service Easter Sun­
Mrs. Herman Veal was ill for
everal days tho first of the day on Corey hill is planned by
the Christian Endeavor society
week.
of the Christian church. After­
H. V. Holcomb left Sunday for wards they will serve breakfast
Longview where he has secured in the church parlors.
a position.
W. B. Lappe was in the hospi­
Pete Bergerson traded his Wil­ tal at Longview for two weeks
lys Knight for a 1928 Chrysler with flu and throat complica­
62 sedan.
tions. While convalescing he was
H. E. McGraw has been in St. at iis home here for six days,
Helens several days this week leaving March 14 for Longview.
on jury duty.
Ralph Bergerson’s condition is
Thane Ohler is driving the reported as very much improved
school bus as relief driver for during the past week. He is con­
sidered practically out of the
Elmer Bergerson.
danger stage. The bone also is
W. T. Lilly has accepted a pos­ clearing up nicely. X-ray pictures
ition in Longview and is working were taken March 15.
there this week.
According to an article in the
The Legion Auxiliary will meet Oregon Journal, Enoch Dumas,
in the Legion hall Monday night Willamette university junior, has
March 28 at 8 o’clock.
been elected vice-president of the
campus Y. M. C. A. Mr. Dumas
Mrs. Pearl McCabe spent Sun­
was until last summer, bookkeep­
day at her home here, but return­
er in the local J. C. Penney com­
ed to Portland again for treat­
pany 3tore.
ments.
R. L. Tyrone, former resident
W. J. Armitage, Lloyd W.
of Vernonia, was a visitor here
Baker and Eugene Shipman made Tuesday. He has been staying in
a business trip to Portland Sat­ Portland for some time for medi­
urday.
cal treatment, but left for his
Carl Helsing of Juneau, Alas­ home in Burns Wednesday morn­
ka, spent several days last week ing. “Sunny Boy” Tyrone, who
visiting at the home of his niece, has been staying with Mrs. Chris
Nicar at Coquille, also returned
Mrs. Harry Kerns.
to Burns.
F. N. O’Donnell of Treharne
had a finger badly bruised last
Friday while working for Clark
and Wilson company.
U. A. Scott, former bookkeep­
er in the O.-A. office here, now
has employment with the Coca-
Cola company in Portland.
A. L. Kullander drove to Inde­
pendence Sunday to bring Mrs.
Kullander home following a
week’s visit with relatives.
Winema grange of Birkenfeld
will give a dance in the high
school gym April 16. Berg Bros,
orchestra will furnish the Music.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Groat and
son Jimmy of Astoria spent the
weekend with Mrs. Groat’s par­
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Veal.
Mrs. P. K. Peterson, who was
taken to the state hospital at
Salem March 7, returned Sunday
March 20, greatly improved in
health.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Prothroe
of Longview spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Timmons and
also visited the power plant at
Keasey.
Robert Holcomb, Pacific uni­
versity student, arrived Thurs­
day to spend the spring vaca­
tion with his mother, Mrs. H. V.
Holcomb.
Marvin Porterfield moved the
Charlie Johnson household goods
to Port Ludlow, Washington,
Tuesday, where Mr. Johnson has
employment.
Mrs. O. T. Bateman, who has
been employed in Portland, re­
turned to her home here this
week with her small daughter,
Beverly June.
Word received from Grandma
Rogers this week says she is
feeling much improved in health.
She is visiting at the home of
her son Nelson in Salem.
H. A. Holyfield was out of
work for only about one month
after moving to Portland, as he
now has a position in the office
of the Ford assembling plant.
H. Burnside
from a two
Angeles. Mrs.
Mrs. S. E.
with them.
CORN BREAD
2 eggs
14 teaspoon salt
2 cups sweet rich milk
3 tablespoons sugar
% cup flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
Yellow corn meal to form bat­
ter.
Beat eggs well. Add salt, milk,
and sugar. Beat in flour and bak­
ing powder with enough corn
meal to form a soft batter. Bake
in a shallow, well-greased pan in
a moderate oven one-half hour.
—Mrs. J. W. Neurer.
FRIED OYSTERS
1 pint oysters (fresh)
1 egg
10 crackers
14-lb butter or bacon fat
Dash of salt and pepper
Have fry pan hot, put in but­
ter or fat, dip oysters one at a
time in beaten egg then roll in
Mrs.
Devine, passed away last week.
Mankind Yet May Have
Weather Made to Order Funeral services were held last
The rainmaker Is no longer the
only dispenser of tailor-made weath­
er, according to the St. Paul Pio­
neer Press. Counterpart of the
gentry who once roamed the
prairies In dry years, and bombard­
ed the heavens for moisture, at the
behest and after the payment of
drought-stricken communities, Is the
Porto Rican tornado buster. The
theory is that a shell exploded In a
tornado will break It up. The the­
ory sounds just as plausible as the
rain-maker's conviction that a sim­
ilar operation would jolt the sky
into surrendering a thunder shower.
The Porto Rico Progress, only
English periodical on the Island,
presents the tornado-busting theo­
ries of a contributor who has even
more Ingenious plans for worsting
the wind. He proposes a system of
underground conduits with occa­
sional upright air shafts. A torna­
do, striking such a shaft, in his
opinion, would suck into itself a
volume of air that would destroy
the vacuum of which tornadoes are
made and Immediately deilate the
storm.
Had ’Em on Wrong Limb
Mrs. Nitwit giggled once too
often during dinner, and the head
of the house insisted on knowing
the reason for his wife's mirth.
“It's Just another Joke on the ab­
sent-minded Miss Blank,” she told
him. “We had a rummage sale at
our club this afternoon and right
In the middle of It, In marched Miss
Blank with a pair of wet stockings
over one arm. She said she had
rinsed them out, hung them over a
radiator and then decided she ought
to put them some place else since
she was going out. So she took
them down, draped them on one
arm and forgot they were there un
til she got to the club.”—New York
Sun.
Left-Handedness Rife
in Tribe of Benjamin
No passage In the Bible Justices
the common belief that all the de­
scendants of Benjamin were left­
handed. The tribe of Benjamin
was always the smallest of the
tribes of Israel and left-handed­
ness seems to have been more com­
mon among them than among other
people. Judges 20:15, 16 says:
"And the children of Benjamin were
numbered at that time out of the
cities twenty and six thousand
men that drew sword, beside the in­
habitants of Glbeah, which were
numbered seven hundred chosen
men. Among all this people there
were seven hundred chosen men
left-handed ; every one could sling
stones at a hair breadth, and not
miss.” Judges 3:15 says In part:
"But when the children of Israel
cried unto the Lord, the Lord
raised them up a deliverer, Ehud
the son of Gera, a Benjaminite, a
man left-handed." I Chron. 12:2
indicates that they were ambidex­
trous: “They were armed with
bows, and could use both the right
hand and the left In hurling stones
and shooting arrows out of a bow,
even of Saul’s brethren of Benja­
min.”—Pathfinder Magazine.
HXHXHIHZHZHZHXHXHZHZHZHXI
GARDEN
and Farm
Tools
Priées Lotter Than Peer
Our Mail Order
Price Catalogue
ROUND BOW RAKE $1.15
14 teeth
LEVEL HEAD RAKE
.75
HOE, solid and general 1.00
SHOVEL, irrigating .... 1.40
SHOVEL HANDLES
RAKE HANDLES
HOE HANDLES
$1.15
.. .45
.35
.25
.99
1.07
1.48
.50
.48
.28
Miss Grace Dewey, sister of
Mrs. F. H. Veith, arrived Tues­
day afternoon for a few days
visit with her sister and mother
who is staying at Mrs. Veith’s.
GARDEN CULTIVA­
TOR. All steel, 4 tools $4.00 (Don’t
Wonderful value.
carry)
Phoebe Greenman, Neal Bush,
Glen Hieber and Marvin Porter­
field, U. of O. students, have
If You Want to SAVE Your Money
—COMPARE THESE PRICES
by traveling ministers at the Na­
tal grange hall.
Norman, the small son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ira Peterson, still has
a bad cold and cough.
Pleasant Hill school pupils who
Fred Watkins, Columbia county took part in the contest at Wash­
assessor, is working in this com­ ington school Friday evening
munity this week.
were Jennetta Lines, Catherine
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Peterson ,Schurback, Kile Clark.
and aon Richard visited from
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Smith
down the river Sunday afternoon. and children and H. Smith motor­
ed to Hillsboro on Saturday.
Mrs. F. O’Donnell and children
were at camp on Thursday.
| Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Garner
jand daughter and Mrs. Weed mo-
Treharne
Natal
Mr«. Jake Neurer
Reed Halding’s mother,
Clyde Jordan was a Portland spent the past week with their
parents here during their spring
visitor Sunday.
vacation.
C. O. Ortner has moved to
Velma Veal was elected vice
House 19, O.-A. hill.
president of the Christian En­
Dudley Spofford has secured deavor society, at the Christian
e ployment at Swenson.
church Sunday night, to fill the
Mrs. E. B. Miner visited with vacancy left when Helen Charles-
worth moved away.
friends in Portland Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J.
returned recently
months trip to Los
Burnside's mother,
Matthews, returned
FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1932.
VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON
PAGE TWO
Thursday afternoon at Hudson,
Oregon.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Kuback
and daughter Louise were Mist
visitors on Thursday.
Mr. Brown and Mrs. Pontius
from St. Helens were at Natal
visiting friends Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Estes and
son Ole from Riverview visited
their daughter’s family here Sun­
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Doyle have
day.
spent the past week in Portland
Miss Marian McMullin has ac­ where Mr. Doyle is working tem­
cepted a position at the home of porarily.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox in Portland
Carl Westlin left Friday to
and is leaving this week to as­ look for work.
sume her new duties.
Mrs. D. F. O’Donnell has been
Mrs. M. Peterson with her ill but is much improved at this
grandson Floyd arrived here from ¡writing.
Eugene to spend their Easter va­
Mrs. Virginia Gilkerson, Delma
cation here at their home.
¡Jeanne and Mrs. Dutro were re­
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Neurer were cent dinner guests of Mrs. H. W.
business callers in Vernonia Fri­ Jones.
day.
Mrs. C. E. Westlin and daugh­
Zale Holmes from Riverview ters Lois and Lorna are visiting
was a Natal visitor for several relatives in Portland. They will
days last week.
return after the Easter holiday.
Mrs. William Bridgers motored
Mrs. Tom Scott has been suf­
to Forest Grove
Wednesday fering with a severe cold.
bringing back with her two col­
Arvid Johnson took Hazel to
lege girls, Miss Alberta DeRock Vernonia last week for dental
and Miss Millie McMullin.
treatment. Hazel is back in
Donald Sundland, a student at school this week.
Monmouth normal school is here
Bertha, Avious, Jack and Tom
with his folks and will return Scott and Oke Anderson hiked
to school again after the Easter to Keasey from here on Saturday.
vacation.
Mrs. Theodosia Lambert enter­
Ira Peterson and Lee Osborn tained Mrs. Frank O’Donnell and
spent several hours in Vernonia children as dinner guests last
on business Monday.
Friday.
Mrs. Marie Holmstrom was a
Sam Berry had lunch with the
guest of Mollie Wright and her T. F. Scott family recently.
daughter Ella Caywood Tuesday.
Bill Landis spent one day here
Lode McDonald, fire warden this week to remove his house­
from Vernonia, was a Natal busi-' hold goods.
ness caller on Monday.
A school board meeting was
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nelson and held Friday at the home of Mrs.
little daughter are now living in H. W. Jones. It was decided to
their new house recently built re-elect Mrs. Theodosia Lambert
for them on the Hy Tracey place. as teacher in event of a school
A few men were given a week’s here next fall.
work on road work by the county
Mrs. Virginia Gilkerson, Delma
this week.
Jean and Mrs. Dutro plan to
A crew is going over the high­ spend the Easter holidays in their
way this week with the road grad­ home at Hood River.
er keeping the loose rock on the
Mrs. Tom Scott and Avious
roadbed.
spent last weekend visiting Jack
Lee Osborn and Stanley Ku­ Phelps and wife of Vernonia.
back are working on the road
Camp McGregor school will en-
near Birkenfeld this week.
C. C. Clay from Vernonia was
a Natal visitor on business Tues­
day.
James McCormick is plowing
some ground at Mist and planting
it in grain for hay.
Bible reading and preaching
services are being held this week
Camp ...
McGregor
I
tored to St. Helens and Portland
on Wednesday.
Mrs. Gus Olson and Goldie
May of Riverview called at the
home of Mrs. H. M. Smith Mon­
day afternoon.
Twilla and Arley Morton are
ill with flu.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kelley and
family from Vernonia have moved
to Treharne.
Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Smith and
children and Homer Smith spent
Sunday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. G. Schmidlin.
T. Henderson of Stony Point
was a business caller at the
home of S. Baker.
Geo. Baslington is employed at
Clark and Wilson camp.
Edgar Crawford was absent
from high school one day the
past week.
Mr. Lamoreaux has bought a
team and farm implements from
Emery Sheeley.
Weaver Clark purchased trac­
tor and plough that were on
the Omar Sheeley place.
joy March 25 and 28 as holidays
in conjunction with Eister Sun­
day.
Pat Jones is the proud owner
of a second hand Chevrolet.
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Estey and
Doris Rae spent several days in
Portland. Mr. Estey’s sister is re­
ported quite ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hagaman
and Betty were in camp Sunday
to get part of their belongings.
Mrs. Paul Dodge visited school
Monday afternoon.
Eagle classifieds will pay you
Easter
DAINTIES
Individual baskets made of tender
little Sponge Cakes with icing
flowers or tiny eggs peeping from
under the covers. As delicious as
they are lovely
and novel — EACH .............. eJ V
(They are so popular it might be wise to
order early.)
HOT CROSS BUNS—
20c
Per Dozen ............
EASTER BUNNY COOKIES
A wide variety of
HOME MADE CAKES
FOR THE EASTER DINNER
Vernonia Bakery
“HOME OF MOTHER’S BREAD”
Specials for Fri. and Sat.
P & G SOAP
The largest bar WhiteNap-
toda 710'"29 c
r
TOMATOES
American Legion
Vernonia Poet
119, American
Legion.
Meets
2nd and 4th
Tuesdays
each
month, 8. p. m.
J. E. Kerr, Com-
mander; Eugene Shipman. Adj.
A. F. & A. M.
Vernonia Lodge No. 184
A. F. & A. M. meets
at
Masonic
Temple,
Stated
Communication
First Thursday of each
month. Special called
meetings on all other Thurs-
day nights 7:30 p.m. Visitors
most cordially welcome.
K. A. McNeill, W. M.
W. E. Bell, Secretary.
Order of Eastern Star
Nehalom Chapter 153, O. E. S.
Regular commu­
nication
first
and third Wed-
of each
at Ma-
Temple.
visiting sis­
ters and broth­
ers welcome.
Mrs. Edith Pearse, W. M.
Mrs. Alma Bell, Secretary.
Alta Villa—Ripe, red Cali­
fornia pack, 2 Ki’s
CAN ....................
10c
PINEAPPLE
Silver Bar—l’s flat. Sliced
or crushed, your choice.
3 for ...... 25c
SHRIMP
Otter Brand — Extra large
fancy , finest pack obtain­
able, l’s—
"1
„
CAN .......................
lOC
MEAT-
Fresh Side Pork lb. 12c
Hamburger - 2-lbs. 25c
Pork Sausage 2-lbs. 25c
Ground Veal 2-lbs. 25c
For Meat Loaf
Round Steak - - lb. 16c
SALMON
Sandwich Brand — North-
ern Alaska pink, rich in Na­
ture's iodine, l’s tall—
2
FOR
19c
PEANUT BUTTER
Hoody’s—Today a big
POUND
O I „
JAR ..................
2
34 C
FLAPJACK FLOUR
Albers — large
PACKAGE ..........
19c
COCOA
Hershey’s — Delicious and
nourishing. 14 -lb
TIN .........................
12c
PRODUCE
Mountain Heart
Rebekah Lodge No. 243
LETTUCE, head
No. 243, I.O.O.F., meets every
second and fourth Thursdays in
I. O. O. F. hall, Vernonia. Visit­
ors always welcome.
Marie O’Donnell, N. G.
Emma Miller, Secretary.
CAULIFLOWER - 15c
Greeu Onions 3-bunches J 2c
Pythian Sisters
Cal. Grape Fruit 6 for 25c
YAMS - - - 6-lbs. 25c
Vernonia Temple 61 meets
every 2nd and 4th Wednesdays in
W.O.W. hall.
Edna Brown, M. E. C.
Clara Kerns, M. or R. A C.
- - 5c
PRUNES
Finest quality, large 40-50
size. Delicious, economical,
healthful. Today—
5 POUNDS
25c
GRAPE FRUIT
Gold Bar — Florida’s finest
finest pack. Rich, ripe
whole segments, 2’s
CAN .......................
14c
COFFEE
Affiliated Best — 1-lb pkg.
Today 1 big stick pure sugar
candy free with
each PKG................
30c
SOUP
Campbell's Tomato — Deli­
cious and nourishing—
4 for .......... 29c
BROOMS
Kitchen —4-sew, good corn,
white enamelled handle —
made by Institution for the
Blind.
TODAY
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
HARDING LODGE 11«
Hoffman Hdwe. Co.
FOR BARGAINS—SEE HOFFMAN ABOUT IT
zhzhzhzhzhzhzhzhzhzhzhzh :
Meets every Monday
night In the I.O.O.F.
hall. Visiting broth­
ers welcome. R. M.
Aldrich, C. C.
H. Culbertson, K.R.S.
Nehalem Market & Grocery
(Incorporated)