Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, January 10, 1946, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
Thursday, Jan. 10, 1946 VERNONIA EAGLE
Events m
Oregon
I* »
W-i
PLYWOOD PLANT
TO RESUME WORK
WILLAMINA — With the leg­
ging situatin still acute, the
Pacific Plywood c rporation de­
cided Monday against starting up
the plant until January 14th.,
one week later than was planned
at the time of closing down be­
fore the Christmas holidays.
Logs will not be too plenti­
ful for a t me because of bad
weather in the mountains and
lack of inventory because cf la­
bor close down in the logg'ng
industry during last fall.
CITY CHOSEN
SITE FOR PLANT
FOREST GROVE — Prelimi­
nary construction work g t un­
der way this week which will
bring th? main food f eezng
plant and cannery of Hudson-
Duncan to Foret Grove. The
plant will be rushed to ccmple-
tion in time to operate during the
coming sens n.
The plant to be started with
an initial unit <lf 232 x 300
foot frame building w th a ce­
ment floor raised to truck bed
height will be the largest of the
five units operated by the com­
pany.
Cost of the Huds:n-Duncan
building is estimated at $350,000.
It will be in two units of 300,000
cubic feet of freer: r and cold
storage space and two high speed
canning lines t> be b ought from
Dunde? wi e e the company's
canney burred early in Sep­
tember. It is estimated th? plant
will represent eventually an in­
vestment of $500,000 and em­
ploy 400 s.’.imnal worke. at its
peak.
s-i)
EllITt Ilf'S VOTE: 7/iis neuigpuper,
through »pernii arrangement with the
If avhinuton Ihireuu •
II extern V.ics-
paper Inion at Ihlh Eye Street, V
.,
U axhington. II
i» able tn hring
reader» ibi» ueeklv mlunin on pride
lern» of the veteran and xrrviremun
and hi. family. (,lue»liwnx max be aib
dretxed Io the idiote llur.iu and they
udl be anxwered in a xuhxexfuent rol.
Unin. \o replie» ran he linde direct he
mail, but only in the column which will
appear in liti» niwxpaper regularly.
INFANTILE
PARALYSIS
I-------------------- 1
---------- - -------- 1
PURCHASE POWPP |
I
-- ---------
=22-^.
Queit'ons and Ar:v:cri
ÄfoMliWTEP BV
THEIR ÓOVERNOR-ÓENERAL.
GANÄDWN SBWnORS
H/4VE LIFE-TIME J0Ô5
i t'
Cl *
i>Ÿ IN51ALIINÔ LABOR-SÄVIN&
awhinery . a
B irmingham
M1W.T. CTURZR DC-U3LEP HOCRLV
■.'tfCFS.INCRTASEP EMHOyMEHT 2X
TIAIÏ5. SELL«
rAco'.r ■ for
LL'wS.
A
Letter-Writing Rules
The
Veterans’
administration,
faced with an unprecedented vol-
ume of correspondence ard a short­
age of trained personnel has ap­
pealed to veterans everywhere *o
restrict their T^wil to oHirial busi­
ness and to follow certain rules to
expedite its processing.
The Veterans’ administration is
now receiving approximately 125.000
letters per day in the central of­
fice here in Washington and the
skeleton force is working overtime
in an effort to ke°p up with the mail.
Here are some rules which will aid
in getting early answers to your let­
ters:
1 Include the veteran’s name, ad­
dress. legibly written, in every let­
ter;
2 Give the “C” number in letters
relating to pensions, compensation,
rehabilitation or training;
3. Include the “N.” “V” or “K’’
numbers and the serial number of
the veieran in each letter regarding
insurance;
4 Give the “XC” numhei in the
case of a deceased vet» ran
U. less the “N” or pol’cv number
and serial number in h surance cor­
respondence are given it means that
a master index of 24.0°0 000 nam* s
must be che< ke * 1 fi r proper id n-
tifiration. This list contains 228.080
Sm ths of whom RH.O.'O are named
John and 13.000 have ro middle ini­
tial. There are 150,000 Johnsons
and 120.000 Browns.
Q. Have been read’ll? vour serv­
ice bureau In the local papers. Our
problem is this: We. who have lost
our boys in this war and wish to
bring them back want to Know to
whom to write and when. And when
they arrive do s the government
er ployees, or the American I eg’on
take care of services. Can there he
a church funerrl of t^e kinfolks'
choice? Please explain the proce­
dure to be tak**n and oblire.—The
Mothers of Rock County, Nebraska.
A.—The quartermaster corps is
n<>w making plans to bring the
bodies of <?ur war dead now in Euro­
pean cemeteries to this country at
some future time, probably next
soring
There is rn transportation
available now.
They are making
j
a’l Inclusive plans and when these
plans are complete, the next of kin
uf all our war de d will he notified
and you will be advised uf the prop­
er procedure.
Q.—What fa th'- proper pwednrc
tn locate a soldier we haven’t heard
from for nearly a year?—Mr. and
Mis. P.. Lars’:!?, Mich.
A —Your Lest bet is to ask the
a d of your local Red Cross, who
w 11 contact their field services. In
JANUARY 14-31
case that’ is unavailing, write to the
The National fv-ndatlun fvr Infantile Paralysis
office of the Adjutant General. War
department. Washington. D. C.
Q. — A so’d’er who has been
kl’L J in action was married and
j American 'Rea!
j separated
frem his first wife, then
divorced and married again. He has
I In Oct. Off 22
•,
named bis wife with whom he was
| On $1 From Year
living when he was called to the
army as beneficiary in his insur­
ance. Can the first wife get his
insurance?—Mrs. E. P., Browns­
ville, Tenn.
A —The wife who is now named
as his beneficiary in his policy will
get the insurance.
Q.—if a soldier receives his dis­
charge by other than the point sys­
tem. that is on a dependency charge,
will he lose his mustering-out pay
or privileges to which he is entitled
under the G.l. Bill of Rights?—Wor­
ried Mother, Table Grove, III.
A.—If he was discharged on a de­
pendency or convenience cause, he
will lose his mustering-out pay. but
not necessarily his benefits under
the G.l. bill.
Q. Can a veteran of World War
No. 1 get a pension if unable to work?
Can a wife of a World War I veteran
receive a pension at his death? Will
the government furnish money or al­
lowance at time of death of World
War I veteran?—Wife. Miami, Texas.
A. The Veterans’ administration
INVESTORS SYNDICATE MINNEAPOLIS
says if a World War I veteran is to­
tally disabled he is entitled to a non­
HE above chart, showing how
service connected disability pension.
the average American fared n
If the widow of a World War I vet­
national income changes in the eran is living with him at the time of
last twelve months. Is based on he
his death or was separated through
monthly consumers’ study of in­
misconduct of the veteran, she is en­
vestors Syndicate of Minneapolis.
titled to a pension of $45 per month.
The American public in October
The Veterans’ administration pays
had a ’real income" of 78 cents,
$100 to the undertaker (or burial of
or 22 cents on the dollar less than
In October. 1944. This "real n
a World War I veteran.
come" Is not a subtraction of cash
Q.—My husband will complete
income and expenditures but
.1
five years of service in February
average relative of these figures de­
and has 80 points. He Is in Manila
signed to show how living costs
with the T. C. 50th Service Bn. I
affect adjusted income dollars
was told a service unit is somewhat
Cash Incomo of the American
public In October was 79 cents
like a part of the occupational army.
for every $1 a year earlier. Ths
Is this so?—Mrs. M. T., Lei eta,
following changes per dollar were
Calif.
wages off 35 cents, salaries off 21
A.—Actually a service battalion
cents on the $1.00; investment in
may not be part of an occupational
come nt $1.00 was unchanged ani
unit, but a transportation corps,
other income at $1.01 was up on«
such as your husband is in, is to
cent.
j
| Rents In October were unehange,
all practical purposes part of the
compared with a year ago. Foot
occupation army for he may stay
was up one cent, and clothing and
in Manila as long as he Is needed
miscellaneous items were each u|
them
i one cent.
T
T&Ws-.
HIES IfTizeJ
B. E. MALI NG PLANT
CHANGES CORPORATE NAME
HILLSBORO — B. E. Maling,
Inc., was dissolved us a corpora­
tion at the close of business Do­
cember 31, and opened in the
name of General Foods corpor­
ation, Birds Eye-Snider division,
on January 1, aucaiding to Ar­
thur L .Reiling, wests n prod.c-
ticn manager of the company.
B.E, Maling previously was a
part of Birds Eyc-Snider divis­
ion, retaining its corporate iden­
tity, but is now to be referred
to as the Hillsboro plant of the
Bi:ds Eye-Snider divlaon, th?
fame as other plants in the
division.
‘ini
^WASl'.K&TOHA
.Q
x
'T hsre / ire about
18.000 SPECIES CF
81RPS IN THE V.CRLC’.
I
^0
■MUWKI »
t/HL r.'LLON, FORMER
CMCH CT THE UNIVERSITY Of
AM5SOURI FCaTSflLL TEAM,
CTOUlREP W -iEAU AlEMEfRS
WEAR MTS WHENEVER 0UTP0CR5
FOR HEALTH’S SAKE.
D ut
J
:
:
V/cMEU ARBA'.OaSlHô JBUcLRV
•STORES IM RUSSIA MOW 1>WT
1He WTPDIN6 RIN6 ߫M 15
OFF
of thi Vi
BYJIMSTi
Presenting a case in the Sen­
ate—whether for taxes, finances
or a bigger Navy—is nothing
new to David I. Walsh of Mass­
achusetts. He’s been doing that
now for more than a quarter
cf a century.
Better known perhaps for his
ten year’s service as chairman
of the Senate Naval Affairs Com­
mittee, Senator Walsh neverthe­
less plays an important role in
and ether committees. Recently,
he plumped in favor of a law
compelling the State Department
to keep the Army and Navy in­
formed of its foreign policies. If
we’d had it, he said, we would
not have had the Peagl Harbor
disaster.
A democrat, Senator Walsh
first entered politics as a young
Boston lawyer at the turn of
the century. Pricr to that he’d
won diplomas at Holy Cross Col­
lege and Boston University Law
School.
Walsh, new 73, was born in
Leominste”, Worcester County,
but nearby Clinton has buen his
s’smping ground for must :<f his
life. After serving in the Leg-
is ature he decided to run for
something bigger .He became
I t. Covernor, twice Governor of
Mas.aehupsetts, in 1918 was elec­
ted to the U.S. Senate, and be
Fa- served therein since except
for two years out of off!ce when
he was defeated by a republican
in 1924.
tl.c affairs cf ti e Senate finance
At the
Churches
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Services on Saturday:
10:00 a.m.—Sabbath school.
11:00 a.m.—Gospel service.
8:00 p.m. Wednesday—Devo­
tional service.
Sermon by district leader—
First Saturday of each month.
A cordial invitation is extended
to visitors.
LATTER DAY SAINTS
Sunday school convenes at 10
a.m. at 925 Rose Ave und­
er the direction of Charles
Long, Branch President. Polly
H. Lynch, Superintendent.
7:00 P.M. — Evening Sacrament
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC
Rev. Anthony V. Gerace
Rev. J. H. Goodrich
Mass: 9:30 a.m. except first
Sunday in month-—Mass at
8:00 a.m. and 9:30 a.m.
Confessions from 7:45 a.m. on.
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
—Rev. II. Gail McIlroy, Pastor
9:45—Sunday school with clas­
ses for all ages.
11:00—Morning worship.
7 :30—Evangelistic, service.
7:30 —Wednesday, prayer meet­
ing.
7:30 — Friday, B!ble study.
FIRST CHRISTIAN
—The Livingstone«. Ministers
9:45—Bible School led by M. L.
He rin.
11:00— Junior church, Bernice
Tunnell, Sup’t.
11 00—Morning communion ser-
5 to 6 — Ve.per hcur.
vice and preaching.
7:30 Wed.—Prayer meeting.
Runaway Tres ....
tongue.
Ths old tale cf the woods The Great Car&Ie. . .
is f r Ch istmas Day, New Year’s
And there Shanty Boy, the
Day or any tint«.
small
leggsr, and the runaway
Ch:istmas Day was done, when
Shanty Boy rode the runaway tree were for a week. There’s
tree full into the jaws of Eahe nothing much to tell about that,
the Blue Ox. Within the mam­ a they only clung to the ba’.e3 Lady In Torments
EVANCELICAL
moth cave of Babe’s mouth the of hay fou'ed cn Babe’s 1 ft ton-
A'.way , she kept her house spie
daikness v as as black as pitch,
—Pev. ATen H. Backer, Minister
of course and the'e was no tell- si, and waited. Shanty Boy tied and span. She lead only the bet 9:45 — Sunday school.
in" where tree and rider were himself to a bale so he cuuld books and magazines and never 11 :00 — Morning worship.
sleep v.ithcut fall ng. He chewed did she turn a hungry soul fr.m 6:30 — Junior Endeavor and
g in.
Dewn thev went in the b’ack- clover to utave eff hunger. A her door without a bite.
Evangel’cal Youth Fellowship
rc's with Shanty Boy clinging year seemed to go by in the
But she called God a l'ar. She 7:30 P. M.—Evangelistic service
f r his life t: the shak’ng boughs
7:30 Thun. — Bible study and
cf the n.adly galloping Christ­ b’ackr.ess, with big winds roar­ forbid b.or hea t to believe God,
p ayer.
mas tree! But even as the wind ing ba:k and forth from Babe’3 that hi had sent Christ to d e
for her sins. By that she called
began to whistle in eara and sighs.
NEW FORESTS PLANNED
through boughs, from the speed
But it was only a week. In God a liar and a'.l liars have
Er.slund has a poutwar refor­
of their fail, the runaway tree it Paul Bunyan invented gar­ their part in th? lake that
estation
program which will pro­
and i s lider came to a sickening,
burns with f re and brimstone.
stunning stop. The tree wilted. gling, and taught Eabe the Blue A truz lake or : Ise G rd’s awful vide full employment for 50,000
Shanty Boy saw stars, and more Ox how to garglo. Paul P nyan warn in g. See P.ev 19:20 with men.
did all this w’th kind pat ence, chop 20:15. And in hell she
sta“s.
The wild runaway was over. gaigling a lake full of water over lif ed up here eyes, being in
And there they were—stuck t o and over, day after dav, before torments—See Christ’s word, Lk.
far down Babe’s gullet (so b’g Babe's sick cye3, until the Blue 16:23. And all about in hell she
that even as a calf he swallowed Ox understood. Then he shev- saw the murde ers, l a s, the un­
a barn), t: cimb back up again e’ed a mountain cut. of the way clean cf ail the a~es.
and ran the Red River into
w th ut he’p from ebsve.
Except we have Chri.t to give
Baba’s jaws. The Blue Ox took ns new birth and to Fold us vp,
In Back cf it All . .
it in till his gullet w?s fall. And we (~row to b like such a3 we
Paul E.njan ruled Am •’■¡a
then did not, swallow, b t gar­ li
among. This being so, what
in a time before the Indians. gled perfectly, just as Pa l Bun­
w 11 the passing eternities do for
Then th? land was young and
yan had taught him to do.
this woman of culture there a-
w l I. Mountains often stood on
“Take to high ground!” the mong the rats, the human coo’-
their heads. Some rivers ran like
Have you tried our,
loggers out in fr nt of Babe's
co k crews. There were forests rru-zle yelled. “Babe is un-gar- ies, the liars, thieves and unclean
everywhe e, but only a little glin’ now! Here comes a flood!” of all time and all nations? And j ipeedy service depart-
what for you? Nio wonder the
“standing” timber. Most trees
And such a flood it was that
|ment? Expert lube ser-
could pull up roots and trot or nobody noticed a tree on. the Bible urges action today—Now
is the day of salvation. “Count
scamper about at will. Paul Bun­
tide and a small logger riding it
yan tamed some of them and amid the ungargled baled hay your sins blotted out by the Ivice, battery testing, &
ta- ght them to be still, under and bobwire. They were washed blood of Christ and st >p ahead. i tire checking. Every­
candles and bells, ribbons and up in the brush and stuck in the Feelings or no feelngs, look to
stars, at Christmas time, When mud. The sadder and wiser Christ for life and power.
thing for the automo­
Shanty Boy, a small logger, Christmas tree took root for good
climbed one at the end of Christ- on the spot, and it remained
bile at LEE'S!
mrs Day, to take the star from standing timber to the end.
This space paid for by Oregon-
its top, the tree got scared, and
Shanty Boy tried to tell the Washington people. If you wish a
to-e up its roots and ran efr other loggers he had been parked part in this gospel by newspaper,
with the logger.
on Babe’s tonsil for a week, but send your sum, large or small.
Pad Bunyan was so big it took no one believed him. From then
four regular men, all looking at cn he was cunsidered a born liar
crce. to see to the middle button by the loggers. The suspicion
c f his vest. Looking above that, made life hard for Shanty Boy.
even four, men at once cou’d l ike the loggers cf todav, Paul
I
s-e only a beard like a high black Bunyan’s loggers couldn’t bear
♦
cloud.
for a man to exaggerate.
Babe the Blue Ox was Paul
Bunyan’s right bower. How big
Babe was may be guessed by GAME ANIMALS INCREASE
There are now 332,996 big
Paul’s pet name for him— “OP
Mile High.” He came down sick game animals in Oregon, accord­
this Christmas Day, from having ing to the U.S. fish and wildlife
broken through the “bobwire” service and the state game com­
fence around the mountain of mission. This is said to be an
baled clover that was for his increase of some 20 to 30 per
winter’s feed. Babe had gorged cent over the prewar game pop­
I
and gorged, gulping a dozen bales ulation. Included in the total are:
»
at a time. In all the haste of 197,400 mule deer; 72,500 black
!
his big appetite, the Blue Ox tailed deer; 500 white tailed
even swallowed sections of the deer; 27,500 elk; 26,500 ante­
broken wire. The tangle of barbs lope; 8,550 black bear; and 46
caught on his left tonsil. Gulped big horn sheep.
bales of hay were caught and
lumped.
At last Babe noticed he had a
mighty, mighty sore throat. He
was afraid of only one thing on
earth, and this, with his lung
power was pneumonia. More
really scared than sick, Babe
QUALITY HAS BECOME AN INSTITUTION WITH US AND IT MUST
backed off and lay down. Pretty
soon he had five stomach aches
BE MAINTAINED. FOR THOSE WHO INSIST UPON OBTAINING
at once—one in each stomach.
THE BEST, MAY WE RECOMMEND A TRIAL TRIP TO GRAVES’
The Blue Ox felt he was nigh
FAMOUS COUNTER. IT WILL TAKE ONLY A MOMENT TO CON­
death. Wheezing and sighing,
VINCE YOU THAT YOU’VE FOUND THE RIGHT PLACE TO DO
jaws open, he waited for the
ALL YOUR SHOPPING.
worst. The runaway tree and
Shanty Boy rushing in were no
more than a twig and a cricket
to him. They hardly tickled his
Th-
Lee Motors
Sales and Service
Oregon-American
LUMBER
CORPORATION
Vernonia, Oregon
GRAVES' GROCERY