Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, January 12, 1940, Page 5, Image 5

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    FRIDAY, JANUARY 12 1940
VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON
NOTICE
Classified
Ads............
FOR SALE—Saddle pony, gentle
for children. Old growth wood;
will deliver. Seven pigs. G. A. Rig­
gins, Rock creek.
It3
FOR SALE—Buff Orphington chic­
kens. 22 hens and a rooster for
$18. J. M. Peachey
lt3—■
BOY—15, wants work for board
and room while attending school.
Can milk. Reference. Inquire A. L.
Parker.
its—
WANTED—Shake boards and shin-
gle bolts; one-half bf 2J double
splits. Cedurwood Timber company,
Timber, Oregon. See Mr. Thomp-
son at Timber.
46tf—
FLOWERS
—
Cut Flower»
Potted Plants
Sprays for Funerals
Bush Funeral Home
Phone 592
Ctf—
Corsages
FOR SALE—Ten-ton truck or wag­
on scales. Heavy Vaugiin <1 ag
saw, 2 blades. John Deer plow.
Spike tooth harrow. Viking cream
separator, 400 cap. Excellent con­
dition. A. L. Parker
52t3—
FOR SALE—Banquet cook stove,
price $10. H. Thacker, Treharne.
2t3
WILL BUY—Beef. See Bob Tipton
at Sam and Bob’s Grocery and
Market. Phone 657.
2t4__
FOR SALE—House on Bridge St.
Inquire at Soden’s Barber Shop,
756 Bridge St.
2t4
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,
that the undersigned has been ap­
pointed enforcement officer, charg­
ed with the collection of dog li­
censes within the City of Vernonia,
Oregon, by the Columbia County
Dog Control District Board, and
You are hereby notified that
said licenses must be paid on or
before the 1st day of March, 1JU0,
at the City Hall at Vernonft, Ore­
gon, and in default thereof a pen­
alty of fi'ty cents will be charged
in addition to the amount of said
dog license.
A. D. Lolley
Enforcement Officer
The Forum
As the gray morning broke,
The Pup, having fed
On a roller and bone,
Took my coat for a bet.
Yelled I, “Scum of creation,
Your black hands are tainted
With murder and thievery!”
As ten women fainted.
I went out of doors
And looked up at the moon
And the stars, where they print
Thé Celestial Tribune.
Then I flopped down to sleep
Off my own weariness
On a pile of old papers
Right back of the press.
They cried, “Ghosts! Murder!
Thieves!”
As I stepped up before them,
With a club in my hand
I kept swinging o’er them.
I longed to be there
Where the white presses run
By a belt of bright stars
That circle the sun.
The paper they use
Is spun from the dawn
By the shutteling sun,
Dropping dew on my lawn.
[ snapped on a light,
Then, with a loud wail,
'n bounded a dog
With a can to his Jail.
1940 Baby
One Dollar in Trade
In appreciation for the business derived from Bill Heath
Signal Oil Company
The Forest Grove
National Bank
Invites You To Bank By Mail if
Inconvenient To Come In Person
J. A. Thornburg, President.
"THE ROLL OF HONOR BANK’’
You Get Better-Looking Shaves Faster
With This New
n « j
^Hleife Blade
W
Then I said to myself,
Oh, what is the use
To toil as I toil
To be paid in abuse?
The news of the angels
Is all that they print
The following poem is one com­
posed by Fred K. Dix, editor and From type made o» gold
In their Heavei^y mint.
publisher of the Prospect (Ohio)
Monitor and poet:
With angel’ subscribers,
PART ONE
Who pay in advance,
The Arrival of the Pup—
A printer in Heaven
Oh, listen, my lads,
Might have half a chance.
With your ears up,
I thought of old friends
Of this wonderful tale
Promoted from here
Of Our Oifice Pup!
To the Tribune above,
i’ll never forget it—
Without shedding a tear.
That cold, blustery night,
Phen I thought of my lot
He blew into my sanctum,
With my old squeaky press
A terrible sight.
v'ith its rattle and bang
The Banner was printed,
And black, inky mess.
And, weary and cross,
,’m tiled of it all
I sat down at my desk
And I’ll end it right now,
To check up my loss.
Said I, stepping inside,
I scanned the long columns
And it matters not how.
With shivery and shakes,
I turned out the light
Gripped tight in the nightmare
And started to grope
Of all my mistakes.
kround in the dark
I searched through my pockets,
For a rafter and rope.
More holey than whole,
stood up on a stool
For a dime to buy soup
And looped the noose o’er
To cheer my old soul.
Vly head, when a racket
I longed for some soup,
Broke loose at the door.
* was hungry as sin,
1 threw off my necklace,
The paper was out
Leaped down to the floor
And I was all in.
from my rickety stool
And jerked open the door.
Our Gift for the First
AtHPrlcel
"
Improved Kind Of Edges
Stand Up Where The
Going Is Tough ... . Protect
Your Skin From Stuirt And
Burn Caused Bg Misfit Blades
OR fast, good-looking shaves at a
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F worthwhile
Thin Gillette is the blade for you.
Selling at only 10c for 4 ... this blade
has super-keen edges of a radically
improved kind. And it’s made of easy-
flexing steel hard enough to cut glass.
That’s why it shaves tender skin
smoothly without smart
or burn ... out-performs
and outlasts ordinary
| nt blades two to one! Buy
I hX a package from your
dealer today and enjoy
real shaving comfort.
2.
Thin Gillette Blades Are Produced
By The Maker Of The Famous
Gillette Blue Blade
.
le was furiously frightened,
He leaped and he sprang
knd howled while the tin can
Went bangety-bang.
Type, ink, paste and plaster,
Forms, presses and pi
Got mixed in the scuffle
And started to fly.
For breaking my door
I vowed I would lick ’em,
And as Rags leapTd and snarled,
I yelled, “Sickem, boy, sickem!"
PART THREE
The Editor Enlists the Office Pup “You’ve ruined my office,
And for this rash caper,
In the Work of Making the Town
Pay Up
Step forth, everyone
It was dark when I ’rose from
My hard paper pallet
By a noise at the door
Like the beat of a mallet.
They rushed at the door
But its trusty lock weathered
The assault of the crowd
That before it had gathered.
And renew the home paper.”
Each one paid his subscription
And groaned, “Oh, oh, dear,
for the POKE CENTER BANNER—
One fifty a year.”
VISIT IN GOBLE;
FOWLERS ENTERTAIN;
VERNONIA SHOPPERS
They flashed lights and they
screamed;
WILARK—(Special to The Eagle)
Someone yelled, “See him hanging
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Cantwell and
Right in there by his desk,”
children, Frances Ann and Lorena
Still they kept up their banging. Rae motored to Goble and visited
friends and relatives Sunday.
Then I heard women scream,
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Cantwell en­
“His H-heart, it was mellow . . .
tertained
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Pearl
His own worst enemy . . .
; nd family with a birthday dinner
And a p-pretty good fellow!”
in honor of Mr. Pearl Monday, Jan­
I kept back of the press
uary 8.
Still hiding and harking,
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Pearl enter­
Clamping tight to the Pup
tained Mr and Mrs. Chris Fowler
To keep him from harking.
Then I said to myself,
Hear them talk without thinking.
When a woman’s voice shrieked,
“The outcome of drinkink!”
No one said they owed me
And it ’stoo late to settle
As I searched through my pockets
All empty of metal.
Get a battering-ram!
A bold voice suggested.
I’ll admit, by this time,
My wits were sore tested.
I slipped out the back door
As the crowd made its sally,
Leading Rags by a rope
I ran fast down the alley.
Then right into the street
Where the crowd was assembled,
I approached unconcerned,
While I inwardly trembled.
Teil us what you want
over the phone and curl up in your favorite
chair with a good book! You don’t have to
brave the sharp winds or the icy pavement.
And we guarantee to send just what you ask
for!
DELIVERY SCHEDULE------
Corey Hill—10 A. M. and 3 P. M.
O-A Hill and East Side—10:30 A. M. and
3:30 P. M.
Quantity Orders Gladly Delivered
Phone 761
Then I lived for a moment
A lifetime of winters
As their battering ram
Broke my front door to splinters.
SAM and BOB
Grocery & Market
There I caught him, at last!
When I sized the cur up,
I said to the Devil,
He’s a born Office Pup.
I stroked the poor Pup,
My zace wore a grin;
The Banner was out
And I was all in.
PART TWO
Poor Old Rag» I» Washed Up and
Fed
Then Take» the Editor’. Coat for
a Bed
From the end of his nose
To the tip of his tail
That poor Pup dripped black ink
Like a leaky old pail.
He shook and he shivered,
He was boney and thin
With his tongue hanging out
And drooped tail turning in.
His stomach was shriveled
And clung to his spine.
He looked very much like
He needed to dine.
A black mess was his hair,
With large chunks pulled out,
As if twenty old tomcats
Had put him to rout.
He licked out the pastepot
That stood on the floor
Then gnawed an ink roller
Clean down to the core.
I set in to wash him—
It took the whole night
And barrels of water
To make that pup white.
Such rubbing and scrubbing
He had to endure,
While drowned fleas-and soapsuds
‘Most stopped up the sewer.
And while he was drying,
He sniffed ’round the room
For the scent of a cat—
A dog’s rarest perfume
/ouTSHtS
RAZOR
Then the Devil tacked up
My old gag sign again,
That “THE EDITOR’S OUT!”,
And the town talked like sin.
by playing cards at the Pearls'
home Friday night.
Jack Townson spent a few days
at Goble last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Fowler enter­
tained Mr. and Mrs. Glen Pearl and
children by a dinner at their home.
They spent the remainder of tho
evening playing cards.
Mr. and Mrs. Brinn and children
were Wilark visitors Sunday after­
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Atkins and
niece, Lylath Van DeBogart visited
Mrs. Allen Ray of Vernonia Sun­
day.
Dorothy Hanna spent Saturday
afternoon and evening visiting Lu­
cille Rufli of Vernonia.
Lester Roberts spent the weekend
at Rainier.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Howard were
Vernonia shoppers Saturday.
Mrs. John Rieder was a Vernonia
shopper one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Olson visit­
ed Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gay of
Pittsburg Saturday afternoon and
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Losier visited
friends and relatives at Washington
New Year’s.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Orwig were
Vernonia visitors one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Andy Bransdel were
Vernonia visitors one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Johnson were
Vernonia shoppers Saturday after­
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hanna were
'’ernonia shoppers Saturday.
I raced and I chased him,
Till, quick as a wink,
He fell into a barrel
Of Black Diamond Ink.
The Devil came in then,
■ As usual—late—
He emptied the ashes
And shook down the grate.
AH* OTHER
PAGE FIVE
I told him to run out
And fetch a big bone,
Then lock up the office
And leavg us alone.
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Vernonia Auto Company
Vernonia, Oregon
A Safe Place to Trade