■ ■—---- price regulation aleo applies to boye shirt* and to pajamas for men and boys. Each garment made in accord­ ance with the WPB order must be labeled with the symbol “R" for “reduction.” That’s how the shopper Although Junior may insist it’s can be sure it’s made in accordance still spinach, the OPA has extended with WPB simplification orders. price control to the green vegetable made famous by Popeye. Besides The click of needles knitting spinach, six other fresh vegetables sweaters and socks for military have been brought into the price needs will continue to be heard de­ control fold by the OPA. This is spite the fact that steel cannot be particularly good news to Mrs. used in the manufacture.of knitting America now that canned vegetabl­ needles. Plastics and other non- es are rationed, and she will be metalic materials are used for larg­ shopping for fresh vegetables to er sized knitting needles. The ban make ration stamps go as far as of steel has hit the crochet hook possible. According to the OPA, too. Mrs. America should not pay more Mrs. America will be learning for lettuce and spinach than the long-range planning as far as the top price charged by her grocer from February 20 through Febru­ use of sugar is concerned. When ary 24, and cabbage, carrots, snap sugar stamp No. 12 became valid beans, peas and tomatoes also have on March 16, it was good for been brought under control at the 5 pounds of sugar however, it top prices charged by the individ­ must last until the first of June. ual merchant from February 20 through February 24. Mrs. America’s purchases of glass utensils have tripled since Pearl And here are tips on the proper Harbor and now that metal short­ storage of vegetables to prevent ages have invaded the kitchen 'many food waste. Experts of the bureau more articles of glass have appear­ of home economics of the depart­ ed as replacements. A deep dish ment of agriculture recommend that pie plate with a fu ted edge is a raw salad vegetables should be popular number in glass and so is washed, drained and stored in cov­ a versatile salad bowl which can be ered vegetable pans in a cold place. used for mixing, baking and serv­ Cooking greens should be washed, ing. Perhaps a glass topped table drained and piled loosely in cov­ sounds dangerous for the kitchen ered vegetable pan or water-proof but not if it is a heat and acid bag and kept cold. Beans, peas and resistant glass which is strong. corn should be kept cold and pref­ erably in the pod or husk until And here’s a fashion note. . .al­ ready for use. Vegetables in the though two-color shoes are prohib­ cabbage family should be left un­ ited by the WPB simplification cut, cold and not too dry. Onions order, two-texture shoes are permit­ should be stored dry, cool and ted. So, leathers of two different dirk, but avoid freezing. kinds may be used together and combinations of leather and fabric Mr. America can keep his shirt are approved if they are the same on, and he may even save a few approved color. cents on it, thanks to the OPA. Speaking of shoes, rest assured For if the shirt has been made ac­ that no child will need to go with­ cording to the WPB simplification out proper-fitting footwear under order, the OPA decreed that sav­ shoe rationing, actually the ration ings in manufacturing costs should for men is liberal, and so' father’s be passed on to consumers. This stamp could be used to buy addi- - Mrs. America Meets the War 9 LUMBER — SHINGLES — VENEER WHOLF^AIF AND RFTAIL See my bargain« in Kiln Dried Lumber at $12 per M and up. Open Saturday* from 8 a. m. to noon. C. ItRUCE X NEW and USED PARTS Exert Auto Repairing Gas and Oil Open at 7:30 A. M.; Closed at 7:30 P. M. We close all day Sunday LYNCH AUTO PARTS Phone 773 RIVERVIEW Dry Cleaning Prices’Reduced Pants ................. 50c Overcoats Dresses............. $1.00 Suits ...... Sweaters .................... 50c $1.00 $1.00 Pick Up and Delivery Service Office: Ben Brickel’s Barber Shop Vernonia Eagle_____Thursday, March 18, 1943______ 5 Look! Listen! Live! Classified Ads... Business Directory FOR SALE—16-inch cord wood, 3 V» miles out on Rock .creek road. FOR SALE—Three-room house with Will deliver. Call or write A. J. three lots and hen house. Locat­ Hicks, Keasey Rt., Vernonia. 10t3 ed on Third street. See T. B. Mills or Mrs. Harold Carricker, 1127 FOR SALE—Save labor with good Cougar St. Ilt3 permanent pastures. Alta fescue, Chewings fescue, red creeping fes­ FOR SALE — Farm implements: mower, disc, rake, spring tooth cue, Highland Canary, and tall oat harrow, and two plows. Sell or grass seed. Also pasture grades of trade for livestock. C. J. Conley on these at attractive prices. Oscar H. old Ornduff farm, 2 miles north of Lee, Silverton, Oregon. 3 mile« Sunset camp. 1 lt3 east in Evans valley. 9t4— FOR SALE An average of 435 passenger trains are delayed a total of 200 hours each month by grade cross­ ing accidents. Illustrated here is a typical case which helps build those monthly totals. The truck was struck by a pas­ senger train at a crossing pro­ tected by flashing light signals, which were functioning. The truck was thrown clear of the tracks, striking and breaking a telegraph pole and an electric power control box. Although the truck driver had defective hearing, he was familiar with the crossing. The engine was damaged a..d ft was necessary to cut out one Pull­ man car due to flat wheels. The National Safety Council is conducting a special campaign to stop these accidents, which every day delay 38 trains a total of 22 hours—a big blow to the nation's wax' transportation effort. Driver carelessness is the cause of almost all these accidents, ac­ cording to the Council. To help win the war—to save yourself and others needless suffering—.the Council asks you to be sure ihe track is clear before starting to cross. Less Gum Stamp Sheets to Be Used tional shoes for Junior. But if a child needs a pair of shoes and there is no stamp number 17 avail­ able in the family to buy shoes for him, parents may apply to the local Information from the district ra­ war price and ration board for a tioning officer, OPA is that gummed shoe certificate. sheets R-120 are not to be used by anyone* except gasoline dealers and WOOD SAVING PLANNED distributors. Gummed sheets R-304 Snipping one-sixteenth to one- may be used by the coffee and quarter of an inch off each match sugar trade while they last. Fuel manufactured in the United States oil dealers should stop using gum­ in 1943 will save at least 7 milli. n med sheets when their supply is board feet or 380 carloads of lum­ exhausted. ber. Details of a temporary procedure for which envelopes are used are available at the local rationing of­ fice. It is to be used by processed food dealers entirely, and if and when R-304 is exhausted by the :ugar and coffee trades. This pro­ cedure will apply to the disposal of the stamps of both ration banking depositors and non-depositors. FOR SALE—20-acre farm and FOR SALE OR TRADE~ home. Reasonable. E. H. Condit, Phone 572. ' llt3 FOR SALE OR TRADE—40 acres, liveable house. One mile from Vernonia. $1500, Enough wood to CARD OF THANKS / pay for place. M. W. Mumbach, We wish to express our apprec­ 415 S. W. Montgomery St. Port­ Ilt9— iation and give our thanks to our land, Oregon. friends for their sympathy, kind­ ness and lovely floral offerings FOR RENT during our recent sorrow. FOR RENT—4-room modern house Mrs. M. J. Wall Mr and Mrs. Fred Wall and family Mr. and Mrs. U. Wall Mr. and Mrs. W. P. English and family Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Hieber Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Bowerman Mr. and Mrs. George Noyer Mr. and Mrs. C. Wall and family at 501 Rose Avenue. See Mrs. Lee Bundy after 6:00 o’clock, lltl FOR RENT—New, neat four-room house with 2 lots. Five minutis walk from mill. Now vacant and ready for rent. See J. F. Penney, Riverview. 9t3 FOR RENT—House with garden spot. See W. O. Porterfield, 376 North St. or Phone 262. 9tf— CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank the neighbors WANTED___________ , and friends of the Natal grange for their help in making our Red Cross WANTED—Woman to keep house benefit dance and pie social a suc­ five «lays a week from 8 to 5. cess. Care of child. House 22, O-A hill, lltl— The Natal Grange 1 « SHOES PER PERSON MADE Presenf production of shoes iu Britain is sufficient for 1 % pairs of shoes, including sports and house shoes, per person per year. Lodges G. J. Ten Brook, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Vernonia Lodge No. 246 •0.0.F, Office Phone 72 Residence Phone 1026 Americans who drink milk have more health and energy. They are better able to do their best for our country. Phone today for regu­ lar delivery of Grade A Milk and Cream Meets Every Tuesday 8 p. M. James Cox, Jr., N. G. Dwight Strong, Secretary Roland D. Eby, M. D. (Fraternal Order of Eagles) Office 891 I.O.O.F. Hall Vernonia NEHALEM DAIRY PRODUCTS CO. Dr. U. J. Bittner 2nd and 4th Dentist Friday Night* Joy Theatre Bldg. 8 o'clock Phone 662 Phone 471 Lee Miller, W. P. Willis Johnson, W. Sec’y. Dr. Kent Magruder “Egg” Barrage for the Axis Harding Clatskanie I Oregon Laundry and Cleaners MADDOX HIGHWAY VAN SERVICE L. H. Maddox, proprietor Any point in Oregon and Washington Write 832 N. E. Broadway, Invites You to Bank by Mail if Inconvenient to Come in Person Portland, Oregon For Your Beauty Need* ELIZABETH’S BEAUTY SALON J. A. Thornburg, President “THE ROLL OF HONOR BANK” Phone 431 Elizabeth Horn Hair Stylist and Cosmetologist Expert Tonsorial Work BEN’S BARBER SHOP Vernonia, Oregon It will take both kinds of "eggs" to win eggs gathered on U. S. farms and bomba (“eggs" to an airman) dropped from U. & P|M**- Every Yankee bombardier who torses an “egg’ at the Axis will need 467 eggs to eat this year, and poultrymen, a* part of the 1913 harm Mobilization Campaign, are pledging themselves to greater produc­ tion than over before. It’s estimated it will take 4.780.000 000 dozen eggs in 1943 to feed our fighters and the folks back home enough to m.ir. a solid band of eggs 10 feet wide around the earth. , 7-43 Knights of Pythia« Veterinarian Phone 60R4 The Forest Grove NATIONAL BANK 4-43 Vernonia F. O. E. PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Town MISCELLANEOUS COW MANURE—Free for hauling. J. A. Armstrong, Timber route. 9t3 Business-Professiona! Directory MILK MEANS DEFENSE WANTEID—Baby buggy. Inquire at Eagle office. Ilt3 Lodge No. 116 Vernonia, Oregon Meetings:—I. O. O. K Hall, Second and Fourth Mondays Sack Montli. Pythian Sister« Vernonia Temple No. 61 Vernonia, Oregon Meetings:— I. O. O. F. Hall Second and Fourth Wednesday) each month. 2-43 Order of Eastern Star 153, O. E. S. Regulnr Communi­ cation first ami third Wednesday) of each month, at Masonic Temple. Ail vi iting sisters and brothers wel­ come. Fern Lane, Worthy Matron Mona Gordon, Secretary 1-43 Nehalem Chapter A. F. & A. M. Vernonia Lodge No. 184 A. F. 4 A. M. meets at Masonic Temple, Stal­ ed Communication First Thursday of each month. Special called meeting» on all other Thursday nights, 7:80 P- m. Visitors most cordially web Cilllit. Special meetings Friday nights. Elmore Knight, W. M. Glenn F. Hawkins, Sec. 1-41 Nehalem Valley Motor Freight VERNONIA POST 11» AMERICAN LEGION Frank Hartwick, Proprietor Portland • Timber • Vernoni. Sunset • Elsie • Cennon Beech Gearhart - Seaside Vernonia Telephone 1042 Meets First and Third Mon. of Each Month. Ss • ..fl IARY First and Thin I Mondays 1-43