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About Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1943)
Your Town's Topics T he Hera— Rushing Girl Born in Clatskanie— Mrs. A girl, Mary Ruth, was born on Tuesday, July 13 to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pringle of (Vernonia at the Clatskanie hospital. She weighed five pounds and ten ounces. Mrs. Bob Rushing and daughter, Judy Lee, of Portland are visit ing Dr. and Mrs. R. D. Eby. They arrived Wednesday of last week, and Judy underwent a tonsilect omy on Thursday. Away Two Day*— Mrs. M. A. .McNutt spent Mon day and Tuesday of last week vis iting in Portland at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Arthur Fluke, Jr. Mrs. Floyd Smith of Portland was a guest of Mrs. Frank DeBate on Monday and .Tuesday of last week. Evertharp One way to bring harmony into $22.50, a home is with a musical powder- You pen lucky and people! sets pencil for $14.75, $10.00, $8.75, and a spec Dog Breeder* Here- Mr*. O. E. .Barren and Mrs. J. P. O’Hare, both Seattle Boston terrier breeders, visited C. C. Piper both before and after the Portland and Vancouver dog shows and purchased a small female ter- ried from J. A. Bush. They had three dogs with them. _______ V t .‘» hr1*? Fardé *______ Thursday, Jul1 * " is . ooo banks OF THE U.S. CONTAIN K. 75.000.000 SAVINGS ACCOUNTS OF AMERICAN Mt PEOPLE S SUMMERTIME TIPS Here Last Week— Nance’s. from box Buy Pointless Foods for Hot-Weather Meals 29tl — ial pen at $3.95 at Nance’s. 29tl — Visiting in Oklahoma— from Return Vacation— Mr. and Mrs. Tom Turner and daughter, Jean, returned Sunday after spending a week’s vacation visiting relatives in Salem and Portland. State Guard Dance, Legion hall, Saturday, July 24. It— Floy Harris left here Friday for Oklahoma to spend two weeks visiting his mother. On Saturday, July 24. It— The Eastern Stars’ picnic had been postponed to the early part of August, the date to be an- nounced later. New supply c>f wool rugs and swing rockers at Bush’s Furniture. 29tl — Steam Burn, Face— Vern Sykes burned his fore head and part of his face Monday with steam from an auto radiator. Visiting Sick Brother— Mrs. W. J. Armitage left Sat urday for Roseburg to be with her brother who is ill. Week-End---- Home Miss Vona Weidman, who is employed in Portland, visited her family here Sunday and Monday morning. A few to gets”. such “hard Noxema, Halo Brushes, Walko Shampoo, a* Shaving Flasfc- Tablets, rings weighing only a few OUNCES.TO CONNECT ABUTTING TIMBERS FOR TRUSSES AND GIRDERS. OFTEN REDUCES THE QUANTITY OF WOOD REQUIRED YET ACHIEVES GREATER STRENGTH. SUCH CONSERVATION OF WOOD 8Y THE FOREST INDUSTRIES IS ALSOA FACTOR WHICH AIDS CONSERVATION IN THE FORESTS E. J. Douglass is on vacation from Miller’s store this week. Postponed— Picnic 4 il U se of steel Vacation— State Guard Dance, Legion hall, Visits from Attends Price Meet— Mrs. Ray Mills, price the local war price and board, was in * Astoria Tuesday and Wednesday a district price meeting. New supply of wool clerk for rationing Monday, attending rugs and swing rockers at Bush’s Furniture. 29tl — Here Mrs. W. F. Rainey was recently received at the Jones hospital in Hillsboro and underwent a major operation on Monday. Her hus band, son and daughter were with her until she regained conscious ness after the operation, and be lieve she will soon be home. the electrical "A’o one ever keeps a secret so well as a child ”—Hugo ITJLY CONNECTIONS IN A MEDIUM BOMBERCAN BE SOLDERED BY THE METALS SAVED FROM 60USEP -TOOTHPASTE TUBES ./ from Portland— Miss Nina MacDonald, who is employed at the Swan Island ship yards in Portland, was here Mon day night and Tuesday. It will be her last chance to come home until school starts. Illinois— A. E. Wheeler of Rockford, Ill inois, who is one of the owners of Wheeler Inc., a large lumber brokerage firm in Chicago, was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Bush Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Monday he was a business visitor at the O-A office. He is an old friend of the Bushes, is very much interested in Boston Terriers, and visited the Vancouver and Port land dog shows. New supply of wool 23—General Ulysses S Grant dies, 1885. 24—Birthday of Simon Boli var, South American pa triot. 1783. A lites, are now in at Nance’s. 29tl- Undergoe* Operation— At Tillamook Week-17, nd—*■ R. . L. Thomas, accompanied by Jimmy Frazee, was at his home in Tillamook from Saturday even ing until Sunday afternoon. Mr. Thomas has been baker at the local bakery while tho Masseys, who are returning this week, have been away. rugs and ZS^-Dolfuss. Chancellor of Austria, assassinated. 1934. 26—£ on of Abraham Lincoln, Robert T., dies. 1926. 27— Baltimore mob attacks b Great Britain appeasers. ' 1812. This way you save yourself the work of a hot meal and no one likes to eat that kind of food on a hot day. So be wise and make fruit and vegetable dishes that are cool and appetizing and easy to fix. We get the freshest of these foods because they move fast and we are always getting in a new supply. 28— Steamship Henry Clay burns in Hudson river, —1852. 29—Treaty between U. S. <S Japan is signed, 1858. 1 DELIVERY DAILY WNU Servie« King’s Grocery and Market swing rockers at Bush’s Furniture. 29tl — “Where Your Money Buys More” State Guard Dance, Legion hall, It— Saturday, July 24. HaYte Picnic Guests— Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scharman and family, Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Groves and family, all of Port land, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Eckland And Billy were picnic guests Sunday of the Glen Bodells. RE-CAP BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE! Because the latest tire news sounds encourag ing, don’t be misled. Get the best re-caps money can buy and have it done neither too late nor too soon. Have your tires regu larly inspected by our specialists—and you’ll know the right moment for the job. We recap with best approved fac tory equipment. —•— VERNONIA AUTO COMPANY —•— OPA TIRE INSPECTING STATION NO. 5-2-1 If I were to say to you, quote: “skeet, poison ivy, and sun-tan lo tions, foot powder, straw hats, caps, heat-fag visors, tabs., dust-gog gles, sun glasses and leg make-up,’’ you would at once think of Nance’s wouldn’t you? Fingers 29tl— Lost---- Glen Bodell caught his hand in the hay fork pully and smashed two fingers off his left hand. Visit Here Sunday— Mr. and Mrs. Harry Morris of Albany were visitors here Sunday. State Guard Dance, Legion hall, Saturday, July 24. Blue Ribbons It— Won— Bush’s Caesar’s Last Son, from Glen Gibson’s’ female and owned by J. A. Bush, won blue ribbons in the Leveridge park dog show in Vancouver Saturday and in the Portland show at Multnomah sta dium on Sunday. He is a young dog, and will be sent to New York this fall. Summer Meals Are Easier Glider?, transport planes, invasion barges, carried the Sicilian Invasion! When You Use Vernonia Bakery Products Save the fuss and bother of baking your bread and pastries. When you can buy such delicious bread, rolls, pies, cakes, and other pastries, a large part of your meal problem is solved. Vernonia Bakery Phone 991 MUffi TROOPS M EUROPE! Closed Every Tuesday Telephone Operators Needed Now! Experienced or inexperienced APPLY TO CHIEF OPERATOR at any of the following exChangen: Camas Mc M inville Newberg Clatskanie Sandy Forest Grove Gresham Vernonia Woodland Hillsboro Our telephone service is absolutely essential to our fighting forces and to every war industry. WEST COAST TELEPHONE CO. 5000 MODE LOGGERS HEEDED! The War Manpower Commission is calling loggers out of the ship yards, airplane facto ries, and other war industries — for no work is more impor tant than log produc tion right now I FANTASTIC? Not at all! America is building the greatest fleets of troop carrying transports and gliders the world has ever known. And they are made of WOOD! England is mass-producing Mosquito Bombers that out-speed the Nazi’s fastest fighter planes. They’re made of WOOD ! Literally — logs are flying — from the woods right into en emy strongholds. THAT is why Amer ica so desperately needs more saw logs, more peeler logs, more pulp logs NOW! In addition to planes and gliders, there MUST be wood for thousands of inva sion barges, pontoon bridges, sub chas ers, shell cases and aircraft carrier deck ing. Logs are making munitions from nitro-cellulose to shell cases. Every log ger can serve America best by sticking to his ax and saw...and by urging his logger friends who’ve quit the woods, to return to the forest fighting front! Oregon-American Lumber Corporation