Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, August 12, 1943, Page 2, Image 2

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    8_____ Thursday, August 5, 1943
Drawings Due
• For Special Tags
Applications for special doe
deer and cow elk tags are com­
ing in rapidly according to the
Oregon state game commission,
particularly for the Grant county
doe deer and the northeastern
Oregon cow elk areas. For the
latter two areas, at least, it ap­
pears that the quota will be ov­
ersubscribed by August 16, which
will necessitate a drawing to de­
termine tc whom tags are to be
issued. Anyone wishing to partic­
ipate in the drawing must have
his application in the office of
the game commission before five
o’clock the afternoon of August
16. The drawing will then be held
at ten o’clock, Thursday morning,
August 19, at the game commis­
sion offices in 616 Oregon build­
ing, Portland.
For those areas for which no
drawing is necessary, tags will be
issued for the applications on
hand and thereafter applications
will be filed in the order received
until all tags are issued.
One Area Allowed
For the Grant county doe deer
area 2,000 tags will be issued;
for the Steens mountain area,
1,000 tags; and for the Lake-
Klamath area 6,000 tags. Appli­
cations may be made for only
one of these three areas. Open
season is from October 1 to No­
vember 3.
In addition, one may apply for
either a buck or doe deer tag or
for both for the federal Hart
mountain reserve special deer
hunt from October 9 to 24. There
will be 250 buck deer and 400 doe
■leer tags issued for this area.
There will be 2,000 cow elk
•ags issued for the Minam-North
?owder-Wenaha area. Open sea­
ton is from October 26 to Novem-
)er 3.
Antelope tags will be limited to
1,500 and the open area is in
certain portions of Lake, Harney
and Malheur counties. Open sea­
son is September 18 to October
1.
Feet
for Tags Listed
Fees for the special tags are
is follows:
Resident Nonresident
$5.00
$3.50
Doe Deer
5.00
3.50
Hart Mtn
25.00
5.00
Cow Elk
5.00
Antelope
2.50
gon building, Portland.
Printed copies of the official
synopsis of the hunting regula­
tions as well as of a map show­
ing the special doe deer, cow
elk and antelope areas and the
closed army maneuver area will'
be available at all license agencies
throughout the state about August
15.
McCoys Have Giri-
Mr. and Mrs. Mason McCoy of
Portland are the parents of a
girl, Margaret Ann, born July 31
at the St. Vincent hospital in
Portland. The infant weighed 7
pounds 11 ounces. Mr. McCoy is
former coach at the high school
here, while Mrs. McCoy is the
former Pauline Christian.
★
★
Wluä'lfMßiUf'lViik
WAII IIIIXIIS
Prevents the "Bends"
Before our fighting pilots take to
the air for stratosphere flying they
must be ’’suped-up.” To do this the
pilot just before he takes off pedals
a stationary motor driven bicycle to
reduce the amount of nitrogen in his
blood. Otherwise gas bubbles would
collect in his blood stream.
Vernonia Eagìè
Ball Field Here
In Good Condition
V. S. Treasury Deyartmanl
I
The Army & Navy Need
LUMBER QUICK...
Are In It
George Bishop, who is stationed
in Portland with the coast guard,
and his wife, the former Betty
Thacker, visited here Saturday
night. As he is on leave they went
to the beach to spend several days.
An advanced first aid class
will begin this Fridav night at
the Legion hall. Instruction will
begin at 8:00 p.m. with Lee White
as instructor. The course will
take five nights—this Friday,
Tuesday—August
10, Friday—
August 13, Tuesday—August 17,
and Friday—August 20.
Anyone having had the standard
first aid and who desires the in­
struction, particularly to meet ci­
vilian defense requirements is in­
vited to take the course.
Increase Noted
In Motor Vehicles
The field’s excellent condition
is due to several facts, he said.
Considerable work, including fill­
ing and seeding, was done this
spring; it has been mowed and
kept in good shape all summer;
and no activity has taken place
there this summer. This is the
first summer the field has been
free.
Those Who
Advanced Class
In First Aid Due
Sales of bonds at the local post
office during July were above av­
erage, totalling $19,143.75. Stamp
sales totalled
$751.50. During
June $21,300 was the total fig­
ure..
The ball field at the city park
here is in the best shape it has
ever been, according to W. W.
McCrae, principal of Vernonia
high school. He anticipates that
it will be the best football field
in the county this fall.
Motor vehicle registration in
Oregon amounted to 395,007 un­
its at the end of the first six
mohths of this year, Secretary of
State Bob Farrell disclosed this
week. This is a decrease of slight­
ly more than one percent from
the registration a year ago.
Trucks and busses continued to
show increases over last year.
Trucks this year total 39,650, an
increase of nearly four percent
over last year’s figure. Busses to­
taled l-,006, an increase of 31
percent.
Private passenger cars number­
ed 319,008, a decrease of 6,690
vehicles.
Total motor vehicle registration
fees for the first six months were
$2,969,635.04.
PLANES
LOGGERS & MILLMEN
KEEP IT COMING!
Pioneers to Meet Sunday
The Columbia County Pioneer
association will have its annual
meeting and picnic this Sunday,
August 8 at Hudson park, four
miles west of Rainier on the Co­
lumbia river highway. The picnic
dinner will begin at 1:00 o’clock
and coffee will be served. The
business meeting and election of
officers will follow at 2:00 p.m.
DeLoss C. Powell, who enlisted
in the navy in May and who has
had his boot training in Virginia, HF.7 P THE HOME FRONT
Help hold the home front by
has been sent to Davisville, Rhode
preventing
forest fires. They are
Island for advanced training.
While in Virginia he was present­ a military threat that might turn
ed a “Life Membership in the Sea­ to disaster.
bee Masonic club.” He also vis-'
ited lodge at the place of the first
Masonic lodge in the U.S.A, in
Williamsburg, Virginia.
George
Washington was master and his
jewel is still there; the lodge hall
is just the same as when he was
master.
Diamond Ring Won
A diamond ring is on its way
to Mrs. Glen Gibson as a prize
for her song entry on the “Mil­
lion Dollar Band” radio program
of Saturday night. The song and
the reason why it is one’s favor­
ite is sent in and winning entries
are played on the program. Mrs.
Gibson’s song was “Sunday, Mon­
day, or Always.”
KEEP FORESTS
CARD OF THANKS
AN APPRECIATION
I wish to thank my many
friends for tbje gifts, lettetrs,
bouquets, cards and calls which I
received while recently detained
in the hospital, all of which con­
tributed very materially to my
speedy recovery.
Mrs. W. O. Livingstone
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
$5.00 REWARD for information
leading to return of boy’s blue
bike with white trim. Left at
swimming pool. Leave information
at Eagle office.____________ 31 tl
Sent to Hospital---
John Wilcoxen was sent to the
Portland General hospital with
a fractured clavicle and four
other fellows were cut and bruis-
e'd when their car left the high­
way and turned over not far
from Natal, between Vernonia and
Mist late Saturday night. The car
was almost a complete loss.
GREEN
Keep our forest green for our
homecoming heroes They want
to forget destruction and devas”
tation. Prevent forest fires.
HOP PICKERS WANTED.
Start August 16. $4.00 a hun­
dred. Early Bohemians. Trans­
portation provided. W. L. Moore,
Banks. See Mrs. Frank Hartwick
or Bruce McDonald.
31t2
40
Æfl/yfKlP ’HmnemaJceu’fyùfe
PO/3c Ellis Austin was here
from Tongue Point Wednesday
of last week.
Safeway Fa rm •Fresh
fruits and vegetables
O. T. Bateman, 1/c specialist
(mail), in the Seabees, was trans­
ferred several weeks ago from
Camp Perry, Virginia to Davis­
ville. He has been at the Sun Val­
ley rifle range for a week or so,
but will leave soon. He may have
a chance to come home.
Word recently received from
Melvin Powell, A.M.M. 3/c, a pet­
ty officer in the navy, by his par­
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Pow­
ell, .tates that he is fine and en­
joyed a nice trip from the United
States. At the time of his writ­
ing he was held over for a few
days at a small island in the
Southwest Pacific, and enjoyed
going out in the jungles with the
natives picking bananas and co­
coanuts. He said the ones they
gathered were so green they had
to trade them with the natives
for ripe ones, and that the natives
were very friendly and liked to
have them come and visit "them.
Melvin says “hello” to all his
friends, and would enjoy hearing
from them. His address is: L. M.
Powell, A.M.M. 3/c, Navy No 131
F.F.T., By Com. Fit, Air, c-o
Fleet Post Office, San Francis­
co, Calif.
Fred L. Lusby, son of Mr. and
Mrs. C. Lusby, and Calvin J.
Sasse, son of Mrs. James Cox, are
Vernonia men who began train­
ing at the U. S. naval training
station at Farragut, Idaho this
week.
Now a second lieutenant in the
quartermaster corps of the army,
Hugh Caton, son of Mrs. Cleo
Caton, arrived here Tuesday to
spend a week’s furlough. Lt. Ca­
ton received his commission July
30 at Camp Lee, Virginia after
completing
officer
candidate
school there. The young officer
entered the army last December
and was stationed at Ft. Warren,
Wyoming until April, when he
was sent to Camp Lee. He began
training, which he described as
“very thorough,” on May 1.
Hugh says he is very glad to
be home and to have a chance to
see all his friends.
The stationary bicycle is an in­
expensive piece of equipment, but
the vast quantities of this and other
materials of war make it imperative
for all of us to keep our fighting men
well supplied by greater and greater
purchases of War Bonds.
Bond Sales Totalled
M POUND BUTTER 3 POINTS
Consumers who buy butter in
the *4 -pound size must pay 3
points for it, the district OPA
has announced. A pound of butter
costs 10 points now instead of 8.
LUMBER — Wholesale and Retail
See my bargains in Kiln Dried Lumber at $12
per M and up. Open Saturdays 8 a.m. to noon
< . BKK i:
Midsummer
garden plates
Now’s the time of year to take a
careful look at the fresh vegetables
on the market, for varied menu in­
spiration. The ways you can serve
these garden treats are almost limit­
less—and they do wonders for lazy
appetites.
COMBINATION SALAD PLATS— A whole
meal on one plate! Arrange shredded
greens on large plates. Lettuce,
other salad greens, or crisp, raw
spinach may be used. In the center
of each plate, place large tomatoes
hollowed out and filled with chopped
egg, meat or chicken salad. Around
the tomatoes, arrange a circle of
chilled, cooked peas, then another
circle of sliced, pickled beets. Pass
the salad dressing separately. Hot
cheese biscuits or toasted cheese
sandwiches are delicious with this.
And custard or pie fits in well for
dessert.
MIDSUMMER PLATTER — At one side of
a large, heated platter, place pastry
shells filled with creamed, sliced,
hard-cooked eggs and peas. In
separate groups place mounds of
sauteed, shredded cabbage, broiled
tomato halves and broiled fresh
peach or apricot halves. Serve with
toast or crackers, and follow with a
fruit bread pudding.
HOT WEATHER SALAD PLATE — Place in
separate lettuce cups a generous
serving of potato salad, chopped
spiced beets and cottage cheese, and
cooked, green string beans. Garnish
with cucumber and carrot strips.
Serve your favorite dressing sepa­
rately, and pass a plate of oven-hot
muffins. Apple pie and cheese will
polish this meal off.
MORE GARDEN SPECIAL IDEAS
You'll find more delicious food ideas
in Julia Lee Wright's article this
week in Family Circle Magazine. It
is entitled Victory Garden Specials
. . . and real specials they are, too.
Get your copy from your Safeway
today.
Sajeuay
Homemakers' Bureau
lb 6c
lb 5c
lb 18c
CARROTS, clp-top
BEETS, Local
TOMATOES, Texas
PEACHES - HALE
PLÜMS
ORANGES - SUNKIST
POTATOES
Calif. No. 1
lb. 4c
Per hundred $3.95
No. 2
50 lb.
$1.58
/ Special Values $$) /
Blue Stamp Values
Price
Value
Split Peas
lb. pkg 19c
Green or Yellow-4 points
Pork, Bcar.s 17*/2 oz 13c
Heinz- 12 points
Kidney Beans 2-lb 25c
Red-8 points
Green Peas No 2 can 12c
Gardenside-18 points
Beets, Del Monte 2s 14c
Whole-10 points
Cream Corn, whole 2s 13c
Country Home-16 points
Grpfrt Juice 2s can 14c
Texas Zest-4 points
Prunes No 2’/2 glas» 21c
Starr-7 points
Red Stamp Values
Shortening 3 lb jar 64c
Royal Satin-12 points
Shortening 3 lb jar 71c
7c
Salt, Maximum 26-oz pkg
$1.89
Kitchen Craft Flour 49-lb sk
Corn Meal, Mammy Lou Yel 9 lb 33c
18c
Blackeye Peas 2-lb pkg
13c
Brown Ricci, MJB 1-lb pkg
Soup Mix, Minute Man asst 3 for 25c
Raisins, Del Monte Seeded 15 oz 14c
Apple Juice, Hood River 16-oz bot 11c
Clapp’s Oatmeal, baby food 8 oz 12c
Parowax Paraffin 1-lb pkg 2 for 25c
Edwards Cof-no stamp nt tided! lb 24c
Nob Hill Coffee-whole roast lb 23c
Nabisco Bran-100%
lb pkg
13c
Spaghetti, Golden Grain 27 oz 22c
Soil-Off Cleaner
quart
60c
Old Dutch Cleanser
can
7c
White King Soap, gran 22-oz 3/14c
Ivory Soap
med bar 6c
Spry or Snowdrift-12 pts
Shortening lb ctn
25c
SAFEWAP MEATS/
Crisco-4 points
Maozla Oil pt bottle 30c
4 points
Parkay Oleo 2-lb ctn 49c
Red Startif*
Volva
Fríe«
Valu«
8 points
Cherub Milk baby can 5c
or Pet, Borden’s, etc.-H pt
Cheese-Bluhill
pkg 15c
2 points
Jl'LlA LEE WRIGHT. Director
1/
WHY OAOOY ! I
can evBuy
OF NV FOOO
as A C1NCM IF
XXJ KNOW NOW*
6 VEAL STEAK shoulder
8 VEAL CHOPS rib
9 LOIN PORK CHOPS
4 PORK LIVER
SALMON, Chinook
SLICED HALIBUT
31c
41c
38c
24c
49c
40c