Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, July 13, 1944, Page 3, Image 3

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    LET’S BE SOCIABLE
Several Anniversaries
Fall on Same Day
Mr .and Mrs. Frank Lange cel­
ebrated their 25th wedding anni­
versary June 30, with visiting
friends and relatives present fur
the occasion, which also marked
the 5th wedding anniversary of
their daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Thurman DeHart
and at the same time ithe 24th
birthday of their daughter was
feted. The DeHart’s small daught­
er, Sunny, reached her 2H'-year
mark the day her parents and
grandparents held their anniver­
sary party.
Legion Officers
Named Tuesday
Part of Monday night’s meet­
ing of the American Legion was
devoted to an election of offic­
ers for the local post for the
coming year.
The members
named to official positions will
not take up official duties until
after the state convention to be
held August 10, 11 and 12 in
Portland.
Shirley Kirtland will serve as
commander for the coming term,
and Cleve Robertson as vice
commander. Others elected are:
finance officer, Cass Bergerson;
historian, E. A. Shipman; ser­
geant at arms, H. H. King; and
executive
committee,
Harry
Kerns and Walter Kent.
Named as delegates to attend
the annual Legion convention
are: Shirley Kirtland, H. H. King
and J. W. Nichols. Alternates
are: Everett Wood, Cleve Rob­
ertson and A. L. Kullander.
Mrs. Bittner Honor
Guest at Tea
Mrs. John Burnside was host­
ess Tuesday afternoon for an in­
formal tea given in honor of Mrs.
U. J. Bittner. The Bittners plan
to leave Vernonia next móntn
to make their home in eastern
Oregon.
Christian Church Women
Meet Friday Night
National Dlstillrrs Products Corporation
New York
86 Proof
The Women’s Missionary so­
ciety of the First Christian
church will meet at the home of
Mrs. Harry Woodruff on Ruth
Ave. Friday evening at 7:30 p.m.
FROZEN
Dessy’s
Tavern
FOODS
GOOD
Frozen fruits and vegetables
kept for seven years in a Uni­
versity of California freezing
room were found when recently
opened to be well preserved and
palatable.
Is the solution to warm
weather comfort. On
hot days it’s cool here
and the brews are cold
and to your liking.
Try Dessy’s for com­
fort when you have a
minute or two to spend.
— • —
Mike and Marge White
Managers
THESE SHOES
LOOK NEW!
Lines just repaired
them — and you can
have yours repaired to
look new again, too!
FRANK LINES
SHOE REPAIR
MAIL ORDERS GIVEN
PROMPT ATTENTION
NEW AND USED PARTS
Expert Auto Repairing
Gas and Oil
Open at 7:30 A.M.; Closed at 7:30 P.M.
WE CLOSE ALL DAY ¿UNDAY
LYNCH AUTO PARTS
Phone 773
RIVERVIEW
Three things enter into the picture when you
buy groceries:
HEALTH DEFENSE— The most important
item to anyone is the maintaining of health and
thereby, happiness. Proper foods are a highly-
important factor in keeping your family heal­
thy in these days of long hours and hard work.
King’s has the foods you need for health.
BUDGET DEFENSE— Your budget must be
considered, too, when buying groceries. King’s
grocery prices will help you Balance your bud­
get.
NATIONAL DEFENSE— By buying health­
giving foods at the right prices, you are contrib­
uting to national defense.
King’s Grocery and Market
“Where Your Money Buys More”
At the Mile Bridge
Phone 91
Riverview
Mag Carries Local
Interest Story
The following article is one
that will appear in the next issue
of ‘‘Dutch Boy Painters,” a mag­
azine published by the makers
of that paint product:
“While we haven’t seen the
“gainful occupation” figures from
the 1940 census, we feel pretty
sure that they would show no
great increase over the previous
censustaking in the number of
women house painters. Since the
war began, however, we have
occasionally heard of the inva­
sion of this once 99.9 per cent
masculine craft by the fair sex.
As, for example, the instance re­
corded here.
“This will introduce Mrs. Ethel
Buffmire of Vernonia, Oregon,
who, a little over a year ago, de­
cided to do something about the
painter-manpower shortage in her
community. And Mrs. Buffmire
has kept right at it. SI e started
out rather modestly with an inter,
ior job which entailed calsomining
several rooms, painting kitchen
and bathroom walls and enamel­
ing the woodwork.
“After another inside job, a
theatre lobby, had been properly
disposed of,
Mrs. Buffmire
turned her attention and newly-
acquired talents to exterior
work, the first of which was a
two-car garage. The results here
were so favorable that another
exterior job was promptly lined
up, a three-room cottage, and
done in white and black trim.
Then came a larger dwelling,
this one white with navy blue
trim.
“All told to date, Mrs. Buff­
mire writes, she has done 17
interior and three exterior jobs.
Because the local manpower
shortage continues acute, Mrs.
Buffmire intends to keep on
spreading paint and the gospel
thereof. On her schedule for
early attention, Mrs. Buffmire
has several more outside joBs
'and some work for a logging
concern. Some of our sterner
sex painter friends may not
agree with Mrs. Buffmire’s con­
tention that women make better
painters than men because they
take more interest in the way
a job turns out, but we have
no wish to argue the point—not
when the lady has a loaded
paint brush in her hand.”
Soldier Returns
To Camp Ellis
NATAL — Staff Sgt. Floyd
Deeds left Fri. for Camp Ellis,
Ill. where he has been stationed.
Mrs. Mary Peterson spent Fri.
with Mrs. Alice Lindsay.
Callers at the Dunlap home
Sun. were Mr. and Mrs. R. S.
Lindsay and Mrs. Carmichael and
John.
Vernonia shoppers Mon. were
Mr. and Mrs Oblack and Mrs.
Ira Peterson.
Bill Pringle, Jr. has been go­
ing back and forth bo Forest
Grove taking treatments for a
neck injury which he received
a couple of weeks ago when he
was thrown from a mowing ma­
chine.
Laura and Alice Steers are
staying with their grandparents,
the Carmichaels, while their
mother is at Mrs. Lloyd’s matern­
ity home with her baby daughter,
bom Mon., May 10.
The state crew was very busy
at Big Eddy Mon. oiling and
resurfacing the road.
Max Oblack bought a car of
government wheat and he and
Charlie Bragg have been busy
sacking and hauling it home from
St. Helens.
Thursday, July 13, 1944
Vernonia Eagle
Classified Ads...
Business Directory
NOTICE
CLASSIFIED
ANYONE indebted to Armitage
Drug Co. please call at Nance
Pharmacy and pay at earliest
possible date.
28tl—
1 WILL not be responsible for
any of my wife’s debts. Guy
Tiffney.
It
RATES:
AD
first
word,
insertion.
le
Three
ineortione for price of two. Mini­
mum charge 25c.
10c
ADS
CREDIT
EXTRA.
Cards of Thanks and Notice«:
75c.
Blind ad«
with answer«
to
be
handled by The Eagle: Minimum
charge 50c. No information given
on
information
classified«
will be given out until after pap­
BANTAM ROOSTERS. Several
different kinds. End of Slaughter
house road.
28t3
DAVENO, dining table, four
chairs. heater, refrigerator, kit­
chen stove, linoleum. Jack Adams,
945 Third Ave.
28tl
BRASS bed. Very good condition
2 pairs of springs, inner spring
mattress. $35. Mrs. Frank Lange.
________________ 28t3
ONE BROWN saddle horse, 5
years old. Weight about 1150.
Gentle for anyone to ride. John
Siedelman, phone 12F55.
28tl
SMALL Dining room table, » 1
chairs and
dresser.
Robert
Stubbs, 114 O-A hill.______ 28t3
MODERN five-room house and
2 lots. 185 C St.
28tf—
MODERN 5-room house, lot and
garage. Tel. 427.
28>t3
SEMI-MODERN 4-room house
with dinette. Reasonable. Inquire
R. A. Bramblett, Wilark, Ore.
28t3
ONE LARGE team horses, 8 and
10 years old. True and gentle.
Work anyplace. One three-year-
old G. heifer to freshen July 14.
O. B. Bittner.
28t3
USED 9 by 12 all-wool rug.
$7,50, 141 B St,_________28tl—
FIVE-ROOM modern house with
furniture, 3 lots. Oscar Sorlee.
28t3
FRYERS. Average 2 Mi lbs dres­
sed. OPA prices. Full line of
Hodgen Brewster poultry and
dairy feeds. Phone 336. Free de­
livery. H. J. Peasnail.
28t3
TWO NICE .white New Zealand
does and a buck. John Elder,
Riverview.
27t3
HEAVY slab wood; 8-foot green;
fine for heater, furnace or split
fcr range. Older now and have
good dry wo6d for winter. $5.50
per cord. John Dickhaut, River­
view dist. (Harmon Place) 26t3
Herb
Counts,
26t3—
GROWING SCHOOL
CHILDREN
Need lots of milk for
health and energy.
They’ll like Nehalem
Dairy milk, too. Phone
us for regular delivery
to your home.
—•—
NEHALEM DAIRY
PRODUCTS CO.
Phone 471
WANTED
WANTED: Fir piling, cedar
poles, all sizes. Quote prices
f.o.b. shipping point, earliest
shipment. Niedermeyer »
in
Co., Spalding Bldg., Portland,
Ore.______
'______ 26t7—
MISCELLANEOUS
ALL KINDS of insurance: sick,
accident, life, car and fire. Geo-
W. Bell, Phone 773.
6tf—
PAINTING, paperhanging esti­
mates free. H. B. Simmons, 1206
State Ave. Phone 272.
28tl
relative to «uch ad«.
No
FOR SALE
WEINER pigs.
Keasey Rt.
per
er is issued.
Poetry
matter.
accepted
only
as
paid
5c per type line.
Rate:
FOR RENT
FIVE-ROOM house, running wat­
er. Two miles out on Keasey Rt.
E. A Kingsbury.
28tl
FOR SALE
PERSONAL
FRESH cows for sale. $75 to
$100. Collins Guptill, Old Doc
Hall place three miles north of
Vernonia.
26t6
PERMANENT WAVE, 59c! Do
your own Permanent with Charm-
Kurl Kit. Complete equipment,
including 40 curlers and sham­
poo. Easy to do, absolutely harm­
less. Praised by thousands in­
cluding Fay McKenzie, glamorous
movie star. Money refunded if
not satisfied. W. J. Armitage
Drugs.
7-20-44
MCCORMICK Mowing machine,
12” plow. A. F. Swanson, River­
view.
26t3
YOUNG, fresh cow. O. S. Poynt­
er, Keasey Rt.
27t3
CHILD’S play pen with casters,
floor. Pad indluded. 458 North
Street.
26t3
LOST AND FOUND
LOST:1 gold necklace with heart
shaped child’s locket at swim
pool Tuesday. Two pictures in­
side. Please return to Eagle
office. Reward.
28tl—
LONELY?
WRITE BOX 26,
VANCOUVER, WASHINGTON.
FREE! If Excess acid causes you
pains of Stomach Ulcers, Indi­
gestion,
Heartburn,
Belching,
Bloating, Nausea, Gas pains, get
free sample, Udga, at Armitage
Drug Company.
8/17/44
LODGES
LOST: A gas coupon book. Cass
Bergerson.
28tl—
V. F. W.
FOUND: General Motors car keys
and folder Sunday. 1162 State
St. any morning between 10 and
1 o’clock. Owner can have by
paying for adv.
28tl
YEARLING Guernsey
heifer
branded with bar under M on
right hip. Finder notify Eagle
office.
27t3
1 & 3 Wed». 8 p.m.
Commander
Adjutant
Visiting members welcome 4-45—
Vernonia Lodge No. 246
¿%X5io.o.F.
WANTED
Meets Every Tuesday
WANTED TO RENT: Furnished
or partly furnished house. Ref­
erences furnished and will pay
premium rental for nice place.
Might be interested in buying
later. Advertiser, 8414 Aurora
Ave., Seattle 3, Wash.
27t4
WE WILL purchase spruce, fir
hemlock and white fir pulp wood
at following prices delivered by
truck to our Wood Mill. Prices
are subject to cancellation on 30
day’s notice or sooner if request­
ed by WPB or OPA.
8’ slabwood (minimum thick­
ness 3”) $10.00 per cord. 4’ or
8’ pulp wood (either split or
round) $12.00 per cord. 4” to
20” diameter. Both above for
unpeeled wood. If peeled, $2.00
per cord additional.
12’ 8” logs at ceiling prices
and prices for longer logs on ap­
plication. Delivery can be made
any day except Wednesday be­
tween 8:00 A.M. and 4:30 P.M.
and any night up to 1:30 A.5p
except Saturday night. ST. HEL­
ENS PULP & PAPER CO., St.
Helens, Oregon.
26tf—
WANTED: Day-old calf. L. E.
Stiff, Keasey Rt.
26t3—
8 P. M.
Robert Tunnell, N. G.
R. A. Bramblett, Sec’y
Meets
2nd
evenings
of
SURGEON
and
PHYSICIAN
72
Office Phone
Thursday
4th
in
month
each
Grand
Geraldine Bramblett, Vice Grand
Alice
Secretary
Gwin,
Claudina Banta, Treasurer
3-45
Vernonia F. O. E.
(Fraternal
Order
of
Eagle«)
I.O.O.F. Hall
Vernonia
2nd
and 4th
Friday«
8
M.
P.
Wm. Anderson, W. Pre«.
R.
L.
Sec’y.
Thompson,
7-44
Knights of Pythias
No.
Harding Lodge
116
Vernonia, Oregon
Meetings:
I.O.O.F.
Second and
Hall,
Monday»
Fourth
Each Month
Pythian Sisters
Vernonia Temple No. 61
and
Fourth
each
of
Hall
I.O.O.F.
Meetings:
Second
Residence Phone 1026
and-
1. O. O. F. Hall.
Lena Shroeder, Noble
Business - Professional
Directory
G. J. Ten Brook, M. D.
4-44
Mt. Heart Rebekah
Lodge
Wednesday
month.
2-45
Order of Eastern Star
Roland' D. Eby, M. D.
PHYSICIAN
Nehalem
O.
E.
S.
com­
Regular
munication first
SURGEON
and
143,
Chapter
and
of
LUMBER—Wholesale and Retail
€. BRUCE
meetings:
Regular
Town Office 891
See my bargains in kiln dried lumber at $12
per M and up. Open Saturday 8 a.m. to noon.
3
Wed.
3rd
each
month
at Masonic Tem­
All
ple.
For
Your
Beauty
Needs
ELIZABETH’S
BEAUTY SALON
visiting
sister» and broth­
ers
welcome.
Alberta Mills, Worthy Matron
Genevieve
Hatfield,
Sec’y.
1-45
A. F. & A. M.
Phone 431
Vernonia Lodge No. 184
Elizabeth Horn
Hair
Oregon-American
LUMBER
CORPORATION
Vernonia, Oregon
Stylist
and
A.F.
Cosmetologist
A
Masonic
A.M.
meets
Temple
Communication
Expert Tonsorial Work
BEN’S BARBER SHOP
Vernonia, Oregon
NEHALEM VALLEY
MOTOR FREIGHT
Frank Hartwick—
Proprietor
Timber
•
Vernonia
Portland
•
Sunset -
Elsie • Cannon
Gearhart
*
Beach
Seaside
Vernonia Phone 1042
at
Stated
first
Thursday of each month,
at 7:30 p.m.
Franh E. Lane, W. M.
Glen F.
Hawkins, Sec’y.
1-45
American Legion
VERNONIA
POST
11»
Meet, fir.« and
af
Third Mon.
Each
month.
AUXILIARY
First and Third Meaday.
l-*4