Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, October 22, 1942, Page 5, Image 5

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    shells.
Vernonia Eagle
Thursday, October 22, 1942
5
The 2¥- per person weekly allot­
FOR SALE—Bargain. 120 ft. new
ment of meat being followed in a
program of voluntary rationing in­
9/16 cable; 3 blocks, one new; 2
cludes the bones. But resourceful
% chockers; 1 short 7/16 yardling
housewives can use bones for broth
tine; also miscellaneous tools. C.
and soup stock. And. incidentally,
•
•
A. Macdonald, Keasey Rt., Vernon­
kidney, brains, heart and other or-
gons are not included in the 2 Mi FOR SALE—Large circulator heat­ ia. Inquire at Cedarwood Timber
Co.
42t3—
pound allowance.
er and kitchen range. Vernonia
Grange. See Harry Culbertson.
42t3— FOR SALE—Real modern, Vernon­
ia homes. All 5 rooms or more.
FOR SALE—-100 acres of grazing with bath, etc. Easy terms. A
land, could be cleared for farming. chance of a lifetime! (1) 841 Rose
Ave., $1600. (2) 191 A St.., $1650.
Has firewood and cedar 'for posts.
(3) 858 First Ave., 8-room house,
Inquire at Eagle office.
42t3
$1700. Small down payment, bal-
ance like rent. Own your own home
in a few years. Buy direct from
owner. Kliks, 410 Pearson Bldg.,
Portland, Ore.
40t4—
Classified
Ads .
WAR NEWS
Oregon Leads in
The Columbia county rationing Fire Prevention
committee announces an amendment
Rationing Change Announced
to the farm machinery rationing
order that will save farmers the
necessity of making certification to
dealers before purchasing small it­
ems. All machinery and implements
including attachments having a re­
tail value of less than $25 have
been exempted from Group B—it­
ems requiring certification.
Copper Chemical Orded Eased
FOR SALE—Modern 4-room house.
For cash, a bargain. Formerly ad­
An all-time low in forest fires for vertised by L. A. Boeck. See Perry
the season puts Oregon at the fore­ Browning, Stoney Point.
41t3—
front of all states in fire preven­
tion progress, according to State FOR SALE—1935 Master Chevrolet
sedan. $250. Perry Browning,
Forester N. S. Rogers, who has just
Stoney
Point.
issued a report showing 311 man­
made fires in protected areas up to
October 1. This is a drop of almost FOR RENT—9-room house on Rose
avenue and Columbia street. $35
1000 from the 20-year average of
a month. Two or three rooms may
1300 fires each season.
be rented as apartment. Inquire at
“Credit for this outstanding re­ 1009 Columbia st.
43tl
cord is shared by loggers and tile
general public,“ Rogers stated. WANTED—Modern house to rent.
“Both cooperated whole-heartedly
3, 4 or 5 rooms, in town or close
in prevention work and exercising in. Inquire at Eagle office.
43t3
care in the forests.”
The county USDA war board has
been informed of a change to the
recently-announced WPB order con-
troling sales of copper chemicals.
^T^HIS cartoon was first published by the Omaha World-Herald, originator of the “Nebraska Scrap Plan-
To obtain copper sulphate or cop­
1 In three weeks the people of Nebraska collected 136,171,012 pounds of scrap metals for war industries.
per carbonate for agricultural pur­
That was 103.4 pounds per capita for every man, woman and child in the state. (NAME PAPER) believes that
poses, a farmer need only certify
the Citizens of (NAME STATE) are equal to Nebraska’s challenge. Let’s get out the scrap to bury the Axis.
to his dealer that the material will
Although danger in logging woods
juices—are on the basis of the high­ such as Persian guf fleece, New be so used.
was exceptionally great because of
est prices charged by the individual Zealand fleece, ’and others.
an accumulation of two year’s
Wickard Predict Action
The go’.'»rnment will take vigor­ slashing, operator fires numbered
store during th» five days between
Russian mothers may be feeding ous action soon to keep all good just 37. Of these, the only one
September 28 and October 2. By
their children a new American cer­ farms producing and make best use causing material damage was at a
'.ollowing Price Administtraior Hen­ eal soon and likewise allied fighters
of available agricultural manpower, log deck at Tillamook where a fire
Ninety percent of the foods that derson’s advic-e, Mrs. America can will be tasting this rtew product. Secretary Wickard told an Illinois got away 'from a donkey crew and
go into Mrs. America’s market bas­ be sure that she isn’t paying above It’s a quick cooking mixture of rol­ audience this week. Farm labor pro­ destroyed one million feet of logs.
ket are now price controlled thanks the ceiling. His suggestion is that led oats, soya 'flakes, dry skim milk gram will include assistance to na­ Only 100 acres of good standing
to the new anti-inflation bill. Prices housewives make a list of the pric- and sugar. This cereal is going to tion’s unemployed a mers in mov­ timber was burned in the state.
for most items in the American diet es paid from September 28 through the United Nations along with ship­ ing from marginal farms to more The other 5027 acres burned
were set at March levels by the October 2. Then check against this ments of vitamin products, canned productive farms being abandoned, were in slashing and grass lands.
General Maximum Regulation, but list when marketing to see that the fish, cheese, skimmed milk and in some areas because of the labor
“Fire consciousness,
promoted
other foods. Although the new pro­ shortage and o.her war reasons.
the additional controlled commodi­ ceiling price is not exceeded.
through
the
Keep
Oregon
Green
duct
has
been
manufactured
and
ties under temporary ceilings—poul­
floors
shouldn
’
t
campaign,
has
been
unusually
high
More Warcrop* Wanted
America
’
s
rt
rs.
packaged
in
the
United
States
it
try, mutton, butter, cheese, eggs,
that 30,000,000 will be labeled in Russian when it
Oregon wheat growers are asked this year,” Forester Rogers said.
canned milk, onions, white potatoes, be too I bare now
to divert as much wheat acreage “This fine public-sponsored move­
dry beans, cornmeal,- fresh citrus pounds of carpet wool have been reaches the Soviet table.
manufacture of
as they can to crops more needed in ment has done much to awaken the
fruits and canned citrus fruits and eleased I for the
floor coverings. The wool had pre­
And now add to your household the war effort. Approved “war­ people of Oregon to the real dang­
viously been restricted in the be­ items made precious by WPB re- crops” which can be substituted for ers of forest fires. The Keep Ore­
lief that it might be adapted for strictions—the scale. The manufac- wheat to qualify a 'farm for pro­ gon Green association through its
Guaranteed
;he manufacture of clothing. How­ ture of all types of sc. les is pro­ duction adjustment payments under county chairman, Edmund Hayes,
Watch Repairing
ever, only a small part of it was hibited in an order which also for­ the 1943 AAA program, include of the executive committee, and
w. T. JACOBS
used by the apparel industry. Mean­ bids the production of repair parts cover crop seeds, sugar beets, flax­ the hundreds of members through-
941 let Avenue, Vernonia
time, restriction still stand for some. for hbusehold scales. But your gro- seed, dry beans and dry peas. Pay­ out the state, deserve special cred-
of the better types of carpet wool cer won’t be in such a di', ficult po­ ments will also be conditioned on it."
sition since replacement parts can the farm’s 1943 warcrop goal being
Of the fire total, 62 were caused
be made for all types of scales be­ met.
by smokers, 46 were from incendi­
WPB
Control.
Crawler
Tractor*
sides those used strictly in the home
Crawler-type tractors cannot be ary origin and 26 were from un­
attended campfires.
Soon furniture and other house­ released by the farm machinery ra­
1
hold upholstered articles using iron tioning committee, the county US­
MAKE EVERY
and steel will be a past chapter in DA war board advises. It is still
American firnishings. For Novem­ necessary for a prospective pur­
PAY DAY
ber 1 is the deadline for the com­ chaser of crawler-type tractors to
WAR
pletion of studio couches, sofa beds, apply to the War Production Board
[\[
BOND DAY
lounges and other furniture using for a release.
iron and steel..After that date, only Army Truck, Gather Scrap
STOP SPINDING— SAVI DOLIAIS
the final assembly of fabric covers
The army has offered its trucks
will be permitted. And, incidentally,
to assist in collecting scrap iron in
the WPB has further reduced the
rural areas, the Jackson county U- Business-Professional
amount of steel which can be used
SDA war board reports.
in bed sp ings. However, simplified
Directory
designs and wooden frames will Feed Wheat Sales Up
help manufacturers meet the limi­
An increasing volume of Oregon’s
tation order and stilli save 15,000 wheat surplus is being converted in­
Roland D. Eby, M. D.
tong of iron and steel annually.
to milk, meat, eggs and wool, the
state USDA war board reports. Dur­
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
If your neighborhood grocer’s ing September, 356,000 bushels of
shelves have been minus certain Commodity Credit wheat was sold
$1.00
Overcoats
Town Office 891
Pants ................. 50c
food items lately—like breakfast to Oregon farmers for feeding to
$1.00
Suits ......
Dresses............. $1.00
cereals, shortenings, some canned livestock and poultry under the gov­
Sweaters ....................... 50c
vegetables and the like—you may ernment’s feed wheat program.
For Your Beauty Needs
Pick Up and Deliver Mondavs and Thursdays
expect to see the reappearance of Farmers and dealers wishing to pur­
many of these products that have chase wheat can get information
Office: Ben Brickel’s Barber Shop
ELIZABETH’S
either been low in stock or missing from the county AAA office.
BEAUTY
SALON
entirely. The answer is the new al­
Truck Bumper* Scrapped
Phone
431
ternative pricing formula of the
Claus Christiansen, Toledo farm­
OPA. The plan will relieve the
Elizabeth Horn
squeeze on food stores and whole­ er, believes that action speaks loud­
Hair Stylist and Cosmetologist
salers whose March ceiling prices er than words. As chairman of the
NEW and USED PARTS
have been too low to permit the Lincoln County USDA War Board,
restocking of the items because of he has been urging 'farmers to turn
Gas and OIL
Exert Auto Repairing
higher replacement costs. They’ll be in their scrap metal. This week the
Dr. U. J. Bittner
permitted to charge slightly high­ Christiansen dairy trucks were
Open at 7:30 A. M.; Cloeed at 7:30 P. M
stout
wooden
boards
for
sporting
er prices—a cent or two for the
Dentist
most part—for the following groups bumpers fore and aft. The metal
We close all day Sunday
Phone 662
of foodstuffs: breakfast cereals, bumpers had gone into the scrap Joy Theatre Bldg.
canned fish, cooking and salad oils, pile.
sugar, canned vegetables, coffee, Russian* Get u. s. Food
rice, hydrogenated shortening, other
Oregon pork and dairy products Expert Tonsorial Work
shortenings, dried fruits and lard. may be helping the Russians hold
RIVERVIEW
Phone 773
Increased prices won't be true ev­ out at Stalingrad, the State USDA BEN’S BARBER SHOP
ery time for these foodstuffs—only War Board reports after being ad­
«
in the case of those items where a vised that an increasing volume of
Vernonia, Oregon
grocer’s March ceiling was abnor­ lend-lease food is reaching Russia.
mally low.
A total of 6*4 billion pounds of
American farm product« have been
Nehalem Valley
Thirteen million pounds of gun­ bought by AMA for lend-lease
powder sounds like the product of shipment since the program started
Motor Freight
a munitions plant. But the experts 1
years ago.
say that the kitchens of America
Frank .Hartwick, Proprietor
could be the basis of that produc­ Go* for Migratory Workers
Portland • Timber • Vernonia
Migratory
farm
workers
will
not
tion ?f every housewife in the coun­
Sunset • Elsie • Cannon Beach
try were to save as little as four be stranded away from home by the
Gearhart - Seaside
Vernonia Telephon. 1042
ounces of waste cooking fat in a advent of gas rationing, the State
week. Add each of these four-ounce USDA War Board has been inform­
savings together, and you’ll have ed. Farm workers away from home
G. J. Ten Brook, M. D.
enough glycerine from which to who decide to stay in the area
make the 13,000,000 pounds of gun where they ar«. now working will
Physician and Surgeon
powder. And there's enough ex­ be allowed ^aoline rations to carry
Office Phon. 72
plosive power hidden in ten pounds on their work, and to get back to
R..id«nc. Phon. 1026
of waste fat from Mrs. America's home towns when their work is ov­
kitchen to fire 49 anti-aircraft er.
M rs. America
Meets the War
Dry Cleaning Prices Reduced
Oregon Laundry and Cleaners
LYNCH AUTO PARTS
Oregon-American
LUMBER
CORPORATION
Vernonia, Oregon
WANTED—The Vernonia Golf club,
a
has
organisation
semi-private
an attractive offer for someone who
can satisfactorily
keep
up the
golf
course. Leave name and address at
42t3—
The Eagle office.
LOST — Brown purse. Saturday
night around 9:30 p.m. in front of
Nance’s drug store. $15 reward if
returned. Contains sugar books,
stamp album, driver’s license and
money. Badly needed. Mrs. Jesse
Stanley, Gen. Del., Vernonia. 43tl
LOST—Between Elsie and Vernon­
ia. 17-jewel Waltham wrist watch.
Bill Ingram, Smogard Cottages,
Seaside, Oregon.
43tl—
LOST—A 3-month old pup, black
and brown. Answers to name,
“Ginger." Reward.
Mrs.
Tom
Magoff, Riverview.
41t3
Lodges
Vernonia Lodge No. 246
6JOb’I.0.0.F.
Meet« Every Tuesday
8 P. M.
Robert
Slawson,
Dwight
Strong,
N. G.
Secretary
442
Vernonia F. O. E.
(Fraternal Order of Eaglet)
I.O.O.F.
Hall
Vernonia
2nd and 4th
Friday
Nights
* o’clock
Lee Miller, W.
Willis Johnson,
Sec’y.
7-43
Knights of Pythias
Harding
Lodge
No.
116
Vernonia, Oregon
Meetings:—I. O. O. F.
Hall, Second and
Fourth Mondays Each
Month.
Pythian Sinters
Vernonia Temple No. 61
Vernonia,
Meetings:-—• I. O.
Second
Oregon
O. F. Hall
and Fourth Wednesday!
each month
2|43
Order of Eastern Star
153, O. E. S.
Regular Communi­
cation first and
third Wednesdays
of each month, at
Masonic Temple.
All visiting sisters
and brothers wel­
come.
Verla Porterfield, Worthy Matron
Mona Gordon, Secretary
1-43
Nehalem Chapter
A. F. & A. M.
on ■n
P- m.
come.
Special
Vernonia Lodge No. 184
A. F. 4 A. M. meet, at
Masonic Temple,
Stat­
ed Communication First
Thursday of each month.
Special called meetings
other Thursday nights, 7:30
Visitors most cordially wel-
meetings
Friday
■
Elmore Knight, W. M.
Glenn F. Hawkins, Sec.
VERNONIA
POST 11»
AMERICAN
LEGION
Meet* First Wad.
and Third Mon.
of Each Month.
AUXILIARY
First and Third Monday*