Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, August 01, 1946, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    J THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1946
THE EAGLE, VERNONIA, ORE.
Rent Records
Still Needed
TOPICS OF THE TOWN
Mr. and Mrs. Carl David«on
and daughter, Doris, of Portland
were gueets last week end of
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Anderson.
Mr«. Claude Norri« is at St.
Vincent’s hospital in Portland
whene she underwent on opera­
tion Thursday of last week.
Visitor« at the H. H. Williame
home recently were Harry M.
Eden «nd Helen Eden of Burling­
ton, Iowa, and Mrs. Samuel Ral­
ston of Bremerton, Washington.
DANCE Saturday, August 3,
I.O.O.F. hall. Rhythm Vendors
All-Girl orchestra . Adm. 75c in­
cluding tax.
Smartest-
B ulova
Mr«. Edw. Calomonsen and Mrs.
Zoe Whitsell left Sunday for Mof-
fitt Hot Springs where they plan
to remain for one week vacation­
ing. The springs are located near
North Bonneville, Washington.
Richard Earl Wright was born
June 30 to Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
Wright. Mrs. Wright was for­
merly Ruth DeHart. Grandpar­
ents are Mr. and Mrs. E. M. De­
Hart and Mrs. Clint Fanning of
The Dalles. The boy weighed sev­
en and onje-half pounds at birth.
Arthur Tou«ley, former high
school student her«? who was se­
lected by the navy for further
schooling at the Case School of
Applied Science at Cleveland,
Ohio, is now at Bikini as part
of the force conducting the atom
bomb tests. He was one of three
students of his graduating class
to be selected for the work.
James C. Caywood, ACMM(PA),
son of Mrs. A. E. Wood, has re-
oeived his separation from the
service at the navy personnel sep-
aration center at Memphis, Ten-
nessee. Caywood spent 120 months
in service, 96 of them on sea duty
in the Atlantic, Pacific, S. China
Sea and Indian Ocean areas. He
was in six major engagements,
two invasions and has received
six battle stars.
aoooEss
•« TIMI
tZ |«w«l>
17 Uw«U
Mr. and Mr«. E. II. Washburn
are now located at Phoenix, Ari­
zona, where they have purchased
residential property.
They are
former Vernonia residents.
Mr. and Mri. Louis Blackburn
and two daughters of Albany
were here Monday for a short
time to visit Mr. and Mrs. A. L.
Kullander. Mr. Blackburn learned
the jewelry business from Mr.
Kullander over 20 years ago and
now has his own store at Albany.
Mrs. Blackburn was the former
Lillian Wellington and will be
remembered as teaching school
here a number of years ago.
M. A. McNutt was taken to the
Emanuel hospital Monday after­
noon in the Bush ambulance after
a severe injury to his foot while
working at the O-A mill.
JEWLER
Official Watch Inspector
S. P. & S. Ry.
Oregon
•
Thurs.-Fri.
Augu«t 1-2'
HER KIND OF MAN
Jane Clark-Jani« Paige-Zachary
Scott
CALLING ALL FIBBERS —a
comedy featurette with Vera
Vague and Selected Short Subject«
August 3
SNAFU
Robert Benchley-Conrad Jani»
IF A BODY MEETS A BODY
THREE STOOGES and Cartoon
Saturday
Sun.-Mon.
August 4-5
JANIE GETS MARRIED
Joan Le«lie-Robert Hutton
BUGS BUNNY Cartoon and New»
August 6-7
Tue«.-Wed.
TONIGHT AND EVERY NIGHT
Technicolor
Rita Hayworth-Janet Blair
STORY OF A DOG and Cartoon
Mr. and Mr«. Ed Frazee and
son, Jim, drove from Stayton to
the Camp Fire Girls’ camp near
Bull Run Sunday.
Betty Lou
Frazee and Janet Peterson are
attending the camp from here.
Mrs. Opal Counts and daughter
have gone to Banks to spend a
week with her folks, Mr. and
Mrs. Mays.
SCHICK ELECTRIC
RAZORS
$18
Shaverest for Schick Razors Has Built-in
Automatic Switch and Cord Reel.........$7.95
JUST ARRIVED
YOUK
fVTIM
Hoffman Hardware Co.
For Values—See Hoffman
PHONE 181
Vernonia, Oregon
in
The First Postwar
Here la»t week end from Port-
land was Mrs. Leatha Tousley. She
visited at the O. S. Poynter home
on Keasey route and with Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Tousley. Mrs. Tousley
now has a civil service position
and is working for the veterans
administration. .
*Fric«« includ«
Federal Tax
A. L. Kullander
Vernonia,
F
DANCE Saturday, August 3,
I.O.O.F. hall. Rhythm Vendors
All-Girl orchestra . Adm. 75c in­
ltc
eluding tax.
NAVIvATOK
WATCHMAKER
All landlords operating hotels
or rooming houses under rent reg­
ulations were obliged even during
the interim period between June
30 and the effective date of the
new act, to preserve all records
which the rent regulation re-
quired them to keep, Jackson T.
Moore, district rent executive, an-
nounced Friday.
This same obligation ia in the
new act, he explained, and all
such landlords are cautioned not
to destroy such records but to
preserve them.
Also, the obligation to post
maximum rents for all rooms con­
tinues if landlords have removed
their postings, they must imme­
diately re-post them in every
room as the June 30, 1946, max­
imum rents are re-established
by the new act, Moore said.
Mr. and Mr«. Marvin Meyer,
formerly of Vernonia and now
living in Portland, are the parents
of a seven-pound boy bom July
17. He has been named Phillip.
•foif Theatre
Sheer Lace-Tnmmed
NIGHTGOWNS
The Apparel Shop
Mr«. Clara Kirk
Mr«. Lottie Swanson
Phone 396
The Forest Grove
NATIONAL
RANK
INVITES YOU TO BANK BY MAIL IF
INCONVENIENT TO COME IN PERSON
See this bank for
LOANS of all types
A Locally-Owned, Independent Bank
Î
Enjoying la«t week end at Long
Beach, Washington, were Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Merritt and Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Laramore.
Mr. and Mr«. Harold Currey of
San Diego arrived here Tue day
morning for a visit at the T. F.
Hillyer home in Riverview. The
visitors are cousins of Mr. Hillyer
and have been on an extended
motor trip.
Mis« Thereta Hanel ha« been
ill for the past week with yellow
jaundice. She is recovering satis-
factorily and expects to be up
this week.
Mrs. Doris McAlister of Port­
land was a visitor of Mrs. M. F.
Ruhl Tuesday and Wednesday of
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Heenan are
spending a two weeks vacation
trip by visiting relatives in South
Dakota.
They plan to return
here by way of Yellowstone
tional Park.
Walter L. Daugherty of
ramento, California, spent
week end here at the home of
Mrs. Lulah Fullerton. Mr. Daugh­
erty and Mrs. Fullerton are old
friends who, previous to last week
end, had not seen each other for
25 year«.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Gwin and
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schroeder
left Sunday morning to spend a
week vacationing in eastern Ore­
gon.
Mr. and Mrs Harold Me Entire
drove to Stayton last Wednesday
where Mrs. McEntire remained to
pick beans.
Mr«. Harry Ballhorn and daugh­
ter of Warrenton are spending a
week with her mother, Mrs. Ruby
Smith and aunt. Mrs. Edna White.
PRICES AREN’T HIGH AT THE MILL MARKET
We have some very nice A A quality voting beef for your selection now
lb. 45c
Iround fresh daily, all beef lb. 35c Best round Steak
lb. 50c
lb.
T
Bone
Steak,
very
nice
30c
Fancy Rump Roast
lb. 40c
Other nice roast cuts lb. 33c to 35c Fresh Pork side, sliced
lb. 42c Fresh Ground Pork Sausage lb. 40c
Baby Beef Rib Steak
These are our DAILY case prices anil it is our intention to maintain these
prices as low as possible regardless of the future of OPA. Our entire gro­
cery line is priced to be competitive with daily average prices. YOU WILL
SAVE AT—
Mill Mar het and Lockera
County Fair Grounds
[Deer Island]
August 15-16-17*1
Bigger and Better Than Ever
More Parking Space, Greater Seating
Capacity, Wonderful Program of Events
",
L—’X. •
BE SURE TO
ATTEND YOUR
OWN FAIR
4 DAYS OF
ENTERTAINMENT
Gate Adm., 50c; Season ticket, $1.50; Grandstand i adm., $1.00 matinee*,
$1.50 evenings; Bleacher adm., 75c afternoons, $1.00 evenings.
/
♦