Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, November 14, 1946, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE EAGLE, VERNONIA, ORE.
FOR RENT
GARAGE. Call at 175 North St.
after 4:30 p.m.
46t3
FOR SALE—General
FOR SALE—General
WANTED
BIBLES, testaments, mottos, story
books, scripture pencils, Christ­
mas cards, hymn3 in simplified
form for beginners, etc., at the
book stand in the Nazarene
Chapel. Open Wednesday, Fri­
day and Saturday P.M. or call
1132.
43t3
30-GALLON extra heavy water
tank and fittings. Three doors
and two windows. Double bed
springs and mattresses. Mrs. R.
D. Eby.
46t3c
3 OR 4 ROOM modern house with
good garage. Must be priced
right. Box 16, Vernonia.
46t3
TD9 International cat with dozer
and Carco drum. Max Oblack,
Mist Oregon.
46t3
SEVEN-FOOT 18 to 21-inch fence
posts, 18c. Seven-foot 21 to 24
inch fence posts, 20c on landing.
R.H. Meyer, Timber Rt.
46t3
FOR GOOD, used pianos at all
times write to W.M. Blowers,1205
Broadway, Longview, Washington.
46t6
Portland Gas and Coke
Co. Briquets
NOW AVAILABLE
Sunnyside Service and
Feed
Phone 887, Treharne
44tfc
1935 CIIEV 1%-ton truck.
Also
1939 Chev. stake bed pickup.
First house on right on Stoney
Point road. R.M. Baker
46tl
LODGES
meetings:
2 & 4 Wed». 8 p.m.
O. T. Bateman, Commander
B. J. Horn. Adjutant
AUXILIARY
Regularly meets: 1st & 3rd Wed.
4-47
Vernonia Lodge No. 246
¿O^LO.OJ.
Meets Every Tuesday
8 P. M.
Tom Turner, Noble Grand
William I). Shafer. Sec’y.
4-47
Mt. Heart Rebekah
Lodge
Meets 2nd and 4th Thursday
evenings of each month ’ in
I.O.O.F. Hall.
Silvis Turner, Noble Grand
Noma Callioter, Vice Grand
Juanita Edwards, Secretary
Ella Cline, Treasurer
3-47
Vernonia F. O. E.
(Fraternal
Eagles)
of
Order
Bridge
810
Street
Vernonia
2nd
4th
and
Fridays
8
M.
P.
H. W. Carrick, pr*s.
Geo. Armstrong, Sec’y.______ 7-47
Knights of Pythias
Harding
Lodge
No.
116
Mondays
Fourth
Each Month
Pythian Sisters
Vernonia Temple No. 61
Meetings:
Second
and
Wednesday
2-47
Order of Eastern Star
Chapter
153, O. E. S.
Regular com­
munication first
and
Wed.
3rd
each
of
month
at M atonic Ten*
pie.
All
visiting
sisters and broth«
welcome.
ers
Inez Powell, Worthy Matron
1-47
Dorothy Sandon. Sec’y.
Vernonia Lodge No. 184
&
A.M.
meets
Masonic Temple
Communication
at
Stated
first
Thursday of each month,
at 7:30 p.m.
Walter H. Kent, W. M.
Glen
F.
Hawkins,
ONE cookstove, 1 heater, 1 wash­
ing machine, garden hose and
sprinkler, 1 dresser, 1 table with
4 chairs. Miscellaneous clothing.
Mrs. Middendorp, House No. 112,
O-A hill.
44t3
PEKINESE male puppies, show
type. 8 champions in pedigree.
.Wonderful watchdogs.
Eligible
for registration
Helen Spof­
ford, Corey Hill. Also agent
for purebred Collie pups.
44t3
TURKEYS for Thanksgiving.
Leave orders at Girod’s Food
Store, Kings Grocery or see or
write Mrs. M.B. Steers. (Formerly
Herb Condit's place.)
46t2
Sec’y.
1-46
American Legion
VERNONIA
POST
11»
Meets first and
Third Mos. of
Each month.
AUXILIARY
First and Third Tue.day.
1-47
3% ACRES all clear. 6 room
plastered house with bath. Full
basement by owner, $5250.00.
Charles Burke, Box 6, Banks Ore.
45tfc
WE ARE looking for listings in
Vernonia on farm and city prop­
erty. If you want to sell, come
in and see us. Reeher’s Real Es­
tate (Howard and Arthur Reeher),
18 First Ave. N. W., Forest Grove.
Phone 33.
41tfc
WANTED; Poles and piling, all
sizes. Quote peeled, also unpeeled
State quantities can supply,
earliest shipment. Niedermeyer-
Martin Co., Spalding Bldg., Port­
land 4, Ore.
41t7c
WANTED—Poles and piling, all
sizes. Advise' prices f.o.b. ship­
ping point, earliest shipment.
Niedermeyer-Martin Co., Spalding
Building, Portland 4, Oregon.
45t7c
SELL your cream and eggs to the
Forest Grove Creamery. Build
a market close to home good as
Portland. Write or phone us for
pick up arrangements.
30tfc
J. E. POSSUM electric service.
Knight’s building, 708 First St.,
Vernonia. Contract, day work, in­
stallations, alterations, repairs.
Home, commercial,
industrial­
phone 283 or 662
22tfc
LISTINGS on your homes, farms
and small acreage. Free apprais­
als given. We have cash buyers
waiting to buy your place. Call
or write Mr. Thompson, c-o Slay-
ter Realty comp» y, 528 S. W.
Salmon,
Portland 4,
Oregon,
phone BRoadwity 1146. 43tf—
LOST AND FOUND
LOST on Beaver Creek road, bun­
dle containing 2 wool blankets
and 5 sweaters. Reward. Rusty
Bernardi, Vernonia, Ore.
44t3
MATURE does and bucks. $4
each. See Geo. F. Woods, Camp 8
road.
4613
LOST: Sterling s'lver lapel pin,
unusual design with short chains
attached to each end. Keepsake.
Reward. Laura McCrory, 830 2nd
St.________________________ 46t3
R.I.R. HENS, young geese, heifer
calf. Reasonable if taken soon.
Mrs. Krinick, 10th St., Riverview,
Vernonia, Ore.
44t3
. FOR SALE—F.«t»te
HOME with good income. All
nicely furnished and another 3-
rjom furnished all modern house
on rear of lot. On another lot, a
warehouse 76ftx28ft and garage
20fexl2ft. L. M. Porterfield, 376
North St.
45tf
FURNISHED house, 4 rooms with
breakfast nook. Inq. Eagle office.
46t3
WANTED—35 ft. unpeeled Doug­
las Fir Piling, top diameter 4in
to 7in. Advise price f.o.b. ship­
ping point, earliest shipment.
Nie lermeyer-Martin Co., Spalding
Building, Portland 4, Oregon.
________________________ 45 t7c
miscellaneous
Helene Curtis Park Avenue
Machine or Machineless
Permanents
__________ Phone 7712__________
NEHALEM VALLEY
MOTOR FREIGHT
Frank Hartwick—
Proprietor
Portland
•
Timber
•
Vernonia
Sunset - Elsie - Cannon
Gearhart
•
Beach
Seaside
Vernonia Phone 1042
FRED LUNDGREN
Carpenter Work of
All Kinds
924 Second Ave.
or
less.
for
30c
charge
MINIMUM
words
over
Words
imum, 2c each. Thro*
for the price of two.
25
min­
insertions
CARD of Thanks & Notices: 75c
THE EAGLE assumes no finan­
cial responsibility for errors that
appear
may
in
ads
published
that
which
the
part
an
of
adv.
typographical
BOLD
FACE ads,
in
mistake
minimum
Dessy’s
Tavern
in
its columns, but in cases where
'his paper is at fault, will re-
g.fint
If you are and it happens to
be a glass of the best brew on
the market, we can save you a
lot of eyestrain by telling you
that we have just what you
want.
50c
ea., 3 for the price of 2. Words
NEEDS SOME EXPERT
ATTENTION
Every car needs the attention of
an expert at times to iron out
minor troubles. Expert mechan­
ical attention is yours for the
asking at the Vernonia Service
Station.
over minimum, 3c each.
POETRY
matter.
BLIND
only
accepted
as
paid
Rate: 5c per type line.
ads with answer» to be
handled by The Eagle:
Gao. Johnson Vernonia Serv. Sta.
Minimum
charge 75c. No information given
relative to »uch ad».
No
information
on
will be given out
paper is mailed.
classified»
until
after
CREDIT ADS, 10c EXTRA FOR
BILLING.
NO CLASSIFIED OR DISPLAY
ADV. ACCEPTED AFTER WED.
NOON
EXCEPT
WEEK’S PAPER.
FOR
NEXT
Hudson River pilots in a normal
year have an average income of
$150 weekly.
FOREST GROVE CREAMERY
Highest cash price paid for cream and eggs.
Picked up at your door once or twice weekly.
Phone us and arrange pickup days.
Cream prices advancing as t’ ey have recent­
ly with good pastures and feed crops should be
special inducement to save and sell cream.
PHONE 126
ALL KINDS of insurance: sick,
accident, life, car and lire. Geo
W. Bell, Phone 773.
6tf-
PIANO TUNER Walter Norby
will be in Vernonia the latter part
of this month. Anyone wanting
their piano tuned leave word with
Mrs. Fullerton.
46t4
BEN’S BARBER SHOP
Expert Tonsorial Work
Vernonia, Oregon
Classified Ad Rates
LOOKING FOR
SOMETHING?
LONGVIEW VICTORY CENTER
Longview, Wash.
2-ft. to 5-ft. in Height
SEE PHIL MURPHY AT
HYVAN HOTEL
or inquire at the Club
Attomey-at-law
Office at Joy Theater
building every Monday
I WANT TO take this opportun­
ity to express my sincere appre­
ciation to members of the Loyal
Women’s Class of the Christian
church and to all neighbors and
friends who have been so thought­
ful during my illness. The cards,
letters, gifts, visits and acts of
helpfulness will always be re­
membered with gratitude. MRS.
A.D. LOLLEY
46tl
The famous 7th Infantry Division, now
guarding the peace in Korea, has opened
its rank«- to hand-picked, keen young
men capable of meeting its high stand­
ards.
F t : st to recapture American territory
from the Japanese—heroes of battles on
A*tu. Kwajalein, Leyte and Okinawa—the
Hcurgla s" 7th offers the right kind
of man a chance to join a toi outfit. A
three-year enlistment for service in the
Far East will enable you to pick the
7th—and to join it overseas after initial
training in the U. S.
A Private starts at S90 a month (over-
feas pay), with plenty of opportunity
for advancement. Many other advantages
make this well worth discussing with
your nearest U. 3. Army Recruiting Sta­
tion.
FOR ALL Kinds of hauling call
8810. Shorty Lee Transfer. 14tf—
Business - Professional
Directory
NEAL BUSH
46tl
Oregon's citiens won high praise
from State Forester N.S. Rogers
for outstanding cooperation in the
state’s fire prevention program
which has kept forest fires to a
gratifying low for the 1946 sea­
son, both in acreage burned and
in number of man-caused fires.
“Due very largely to the efforts
of the Keep Oregon Green asso­
ciation which has conducted an in­
tensive state wide educational
campaign to prevent forest fires,
there were only 516 man-caused
blazes in protected forest lands
this season,” the state forester
pointed out.
“By far the most encouraging
part of our preliminary 1946 esti­
mates is the extremely small
amount of forest burned, only
8,459 acres on private, state, and
county lands,” the state official
disclosed. “Only in 1942 was this
record exceeded and then we lost
7,163 acres and had 424 man-
caused fires.”
Fore-,ter Rogers pointed out
that there had been a steady de­
cline in both the number of fires
caused by carelessness and in the
area of land burned Over since
1940 when the Keep Oregon Green
Association first undertook its
program of prevention of fires.
THERE'S A JOB
WAITING FOR YOU
IN JAPAN
ALL EXPENSES PAID
AND
$90 PEP. MONTH
Qualified young men 18 to 34 <17 with
parents' consent* may now sign up for
an interesting job in the 25th Infantry
Division in Japan. The 25th is famed
for heroic action an Guadalcanal. New
Georgia. Vella LaVella and Luzon. Its
members wear two Distinguished Unit
citations.
Clerks, stenographers, typists, machinists,
truck drivers, plumbers, carpenters and
specialists in more than a hundred other
fields will find profitable extension of
their trades and opportunity to learn
new ones.
Living conditions are excellent. 8ports,
entertainment and travel opportunities
are highly developed in this division's
area.
High overseas pay <20 per cent above do­
mestic Army base pay», excellent medi­
cal and dentar care, and a generous re­
tirement plan make this opportunity too
good to miss.
Young men who can meet prescribed
standards, and who enlist for 3 years,
are entitled to designate the 25th In­
fantry Division at time of enlistment
Initial training given before departure
f'ora U 8 Get full details at your local
U. 8 Army Recruiting Station.
Longview Victory Center
Longview, Washington
GRANGERS SHAPE THE PATTERN
of OREGON’S DEVELOPMENT
OREGON’S CANNING INDUSTRY helps make
Americans the best fed people on earth.
The canning industry—supplied by thousands of
Grangers—also helps Oregon business. Last year, for
example, the pack of 9,885,101 cases of vegetables, fruits
and berries may not have been worth quite its weight
in gold... but it meant a lot of money for distribution
among Oregonians.
This building of healthier people and better business
through sound, stable agriculture is a long-standing ob­
jective of 30,000 farmers of vision who make up the
Oregon State Grange. That's why the Grange policy will
continue to be one that shapes the pattern of Oregon's
future development.
OREGON STATE GRANGE
Ills S. E. SALMON STREET
PORTLAND 14, OREGON
73
7
In 1945 the total area burned
jumped as the third re-burning
of the blackened Tillamook stump
patch covered over 200,000 acres,
and in 1943 when careless fern
burners set fire to more than
25,000 acres of fern-covered junior
forest land where young seedlings
were getting a start.
Worst fire of the 1946 season
was in Douglas county and cov­
ered 1500 acres.
JOIN A FAMOUS
FIGHTING
DIVISION
Christmas Trees
Wanted
LUMBER hauling wanted. See
Jim Troy in Bank building. 45t3
WE WISH TO thank our many
friends for the support they gave
us in making our Bazaar a suc­
cess. In particular we wish to
thank Mr. Gene Shipman for the
free use of his building, Mr. John­
son, manager of the Miller store
for a window display of our quilt,
Mr. Kamholz for his fine front
page write-up, Miss Theresa
Schmidlin for the way she hand­
led the poster propostion and the
men and women who helped pre­
pare the building and conduct the
sale.
St. Mary’s Alter Society
occurs.
3 WEINER pigs, $15 each. Trade
ltj-ton ‘36 Chev. flatbed for car.
Morris Falconbury near 10th in
Riverview.
46t3
Riverview Beauty Shop
A. F. & A. M.
A.F.
ANYONE wishing to buy roses
or shrubbery please call at the
Riverview Flower Shop.
45t33c
Hall
I.O.O.F.
Fourth
of each mpnth.
Nehalem
BUNDLES of newspapers, excel­
lent for starting fires. Obtain
them at The Eagle office.
45tf
I.O.O.F.
Second and
Hall,
TWO BEDS with springs, dining
room table and six chairs and
cook stove. W.R Wolff, Mist Rt.,
10 miles from Vernonia.
46t3
WANTED
Vernonia, Oregon
Meetings:
BABY BUGGY. Collapsible. In
good condition. $10. * House 15
O. A. Hill
45t3
FOR SALE—Livestock
V. F. W.
Regular
GENERAL CLASS
SUPREME circ. wood heater,
excellent condition, $60.00; Heavy
Wade drag saw, $50.00; Canner
beef, $70.00; first quality hay
(ton lots) horse or cow; one 3-14”
Oliver plow, very good, $150.00;
50 cords pulp stumpage (free).
Yes, you don’t have to steal it as
some do. Elmer Bergerson, Tim­
ber Rt.
46t3c
CARD OF THANKS
1946 Fires Near
Low Point-Rogers
THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1946
YEAR« OF SERVICE TO
OREGON FARMER«