THE EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON THURSDAY, JAN. 22, 1948 7 NOTICE FOR SALE—General FOR SALE—General FOR SALE—Livestock 2 TEN GALLON milk cans and strainer. 100 feet garden hose in 50-foot lengths @ $2 per length. 100 feet drop cord, No. 8 wire. 1 riding bridle good as new. 1 milk cow, come fresh in Feb. gives 5(4-6 gallons. Albert Walk­ er, Phone 8813, Treharne. 4t3c COLEMAN GAS lantern ($5.00), Coleman gas camp stove, 2-bumer ($7.50), Marlin 22 long rifle bolt action repeater with 800 rounds ammunition and cleaning rod ($25). All practically new. See M. P. Sanderson at Workman Ranch on timber road. 4tl 8-YEAR-OLD 1700 lb. logging horse and harness. Willing work­ er. No reasonable offer refused. J. W. Judd, Keasey Rt. First Mill on Rock Creek. 4t3 ONE OIL HEATER nearly new. Includes stove pipe, copper tub­ ing and 5-gal. tank. Price $50. Two propane gas floor furnaces with automatic shutoff. 25,000 B.T.U. Does not require a flue. CoBt new $87.00 each. $50.00 each. One wood cook stove with coils, $10.00. Inquire at Dessy’s Tavern. 4t3 INSURANCE on all kinds of cars regardless of age. All kinds of insurance. Phone 773 Vernonia. Oregon. George Bell, Agent 32tfc DRY WOOD for sale. Cut to any desired length. Delivered. Phone 9F51. 42tfc STATE FARM Automobile Insur­ ance Co’s. Winston Walker, 843 3rd St., Phone 1066. 34tfc WHITE ENAMELED wood range for sale. Slightly damaged. Mrs. Frank Hartwick. Phone 1042. 3t3 PHILCO electric radio for sale. 1(4 years old. $35. Second house right at Treharne junction off Timber road. M. M. Odam, Box 102, Vernonia .Oregon. 2t3 TWO-MAN army tent. 10x12 wall type. New, never unpacked from case. Thirty dollar value for $17. See M. P. Sanderson, 4 and one- half miles out on Timber route. Located on Workman residence. 2t3 WHY PAY more for gas in Ver­ nonia than Top Hill prices. Top Hill Station. George Long 4tl ALL WHITE enamel kitchen range. Coils and hot water tank for same. In A-l condition. Del­ bert Ashford, 10th St., Riverview. 2t3 EVERBEARING Gem strawberry plants. Produced in central Ore­ gon. Heavy producing plants care­ fully selected and crated. $18 per thousand delivered. A. Hayes, Rt. 1, Redmond, Oregon. 2t6 FOR SALE—Real Estate ONE-ACRE all cleared and fenced. 4-room house, chicken house, gar­ age and woodshed. Electricity and water system. All furniture included. One-half mile from Vernonia on Timber road. Price $3500. T. B. Mills. 4tl FOUR-ROOM house on Bridge St. Two lots. Owner is leaving. Only $1,000 if sold immediately. In­ quire at 758 Weed Ave. 4tl 7-ROOM modern house on Bridge St. Full basement. Nearly one acre of land. Inquire at 758 Weed Ave. 4t3 FOWLER’S New and Used Store for sale. Well stocked, no com­ petition. See Cliff Fowler at Store. ltfc BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL BEN’S BARBER SHOP Expert Tonsorial Work Vernonia, Oregon Riverview Beauty Shop Helene Curtis Park Avenue Machine or Machineless Permanents Phone 7712 NEHALEM VALLEY MOTOR FREIGHT Frank Hartwick— Proprietor Portland • Timber • Vernonia Sunset • Elsie - Cannon Beach Seaside - Gearhart Vernonia Phone 1042 NEAL W. BUSH MELVIN G. HEIBER Attorneys at Law Joy Theatre Bldg. Monday, Thursday and Saturday Afternoons LODGE AND CLUB NOTICES V. F. W. Knights >»f Pythias 116 Vernonia, Oregon meeting» Regular No. Harding Lodge Meetings: 2 & 4 Weds, 8 p.m. Hall, Bert Brunsman, Commander James Cox. Adjutant I.O.O.F. Second and Monday« Fourth Each Month AUXILIARY Regularly meet»: l»t & 3rd Wed. 4-48 Pythian Sister* Vernonia Temple No. 61 Meetings: A. F. & A. M. Vernonia Lodge No. 184 A.F. & A.M. meets at Masonic Temple Stated Communication first Thursday of each month, at 7:30 p.m. 1-48 Order of Eastern Star Chapter 153, 0. E. S. Regular com­ munication first and 3rd Wed. each of and I.O.O.F. Fourth Hall month of each month welcome. ers Clara Kirk, Worthy Matron Florence Messing, Sec’y. 1-48 Vernonia F. O. E. (Fraternal Order of VERNONIA CLUB MEETS EVERY MONDAY EVENING AT 6:30 HOTEL MACDONALD DINING ROOM Edward. Salomonsen, President Bill J. Horn, Secretary 5-48 810 Bridge Street Vernonia Meets Every Friday 8 P. M. W. N. Noakes, W. P.. Timber Rt. Bob Wallace, Secretary 7-48 American Legion VERNONIA POST 11» first and Third Mon, of Each month. AUXILIARY First and Third Tuesdays 1-4S CHEV. MOTOR, V-8 motor; two 11:00x20 tires and tubes; 1 wheel. Best offer takes. Hank’s Parts Hoyse, phone 773, Riverview. It5c COMPLETE Ford V-8 motor $55. House 114, O-A hill after 5 p.m. 3t3 ¿X-X^>IOO.F. Meet* Every Tuesday Homer Gwin, Noble Grand Wm. D. Shafer, Sec’y. 4-48 Columbia Encampment No. 89 will meet the 1st and 3rd Fridays of each month at the I.O.O.F. hall. Bill Heath, Chief Patriarch Wm. D. Shafer, Scribe. 1-48 Meet. 2nd and 4th Thur.day evening. of each month in I.O.O.F. Hall. Grace Cantwell, Noble Grand Pauline McKee. Vice Grand Jewelle Robinson, Secretary Louise Hamnett, Treasurer 3-48 CARD OF THANKS THE FAMILY of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Childers want to thank tach and everyone of the Ver­ nonia people including lodges and organizations who so kindly ex­ tended help in the time of need. 4tlc LOST AND FOUND FOR SALE OR TRADE Chapman Home Freezer MISCELLANEOUS 1929 MODEL A Ford pickup. 191 A St. Phone 794. 4t3c For Sale or Trade 15 cu. ft. - new - never been un­ crated. Cost $471 - will sell at $350 on long terms - or trade for beef cattle or hogs. Write The Vernonia Eagle, Vernonia .Oregon. 4t3c 20 SHEEP for sale or trade for milk cows. L. 0. Gillham, Keasey route. 2t3 INCOME TAX—State and Federal. W. K. Pace, O-A 24, Arkansas Avenue, Vernonia. 3t7c FOR ALL Kinds of hauling ca'l 8810. Shorty Lee Transfer. 14tf- . 33 000 More Licenses Expire Thirty-three thousand more dri­ ver’s licenses will expire this HOUSE FOR RENT to couple month, motorists are reminded by with one child. $37 in advance. state officials. See Mrs. Jeps at 6th St. in All licenses bearing the serial Riverview Thursday. 4tl numbers 5R231001 to 5R264000 APARTMENTS for rent. Morrow become void on January 31. Any Apartments, 545 Bridge street. license numbered below 5R231001 ___________________________ 26tfc is past due for renewal. Under Oregon’s new license re­ newal system, now in its eigth WANTED month of operation, driver's per­ CONTRACTOR with cat to take mits expire in blocks of 33,0000 out cedar and haul to mill. L-A each month in accordance with the Shake Company, 1092 Second Ave., serai number on the face of each Vernonia, Oregon. 4t2c cafrd. Printed shedules issued by HIGHEST ca3h prices paid for the seretary of state list the cor­ cream and eggs at your door— rect renewal dates. These may picked up once or twice weekly— be obtained from sheriffs’ offices, call or write Forest Grove Cream­ police stations, or from driver’s ery, Forest Grove, Oregon, phone license clerks and examiners. The procedure was adopted to 126.________________________ 14tfc offset the yearly rush of renewals WANTED to purchase 4 and 8 under the old system and resulting inch, 8 foot Second Growth Fir strain on driver’s license division cants. Van Vleet Lumber Co., personnel. Rainier, Oregon. It4c Being stressed is the fact that no individual notices are mailed when licenses expire. CALVES CALVES No* advantage is gained by de­ laying until after the proper time, CALVES a license spokeman explained. The license issued will expire at the We need 100 more calves every same time as if taken out during Monday to supply the demand of the correct month. our buyers. Day old to 18 mos. old calves. Don’t give them away. Bring them to Sudtell’s Community Auction, Beaverton, Oregon. FOR RENT 2tfc NEW, HOME LAUNDRY. Family washing washed and dried, 15c lb. Finished at reasonable rates. Mrs. E. .M. York, 108 A St., phone 1107. ___________________________ 38tfc CASH FOR YOUR CAR. Before selling your car, let us make you an offer. Greenwood Motors, Dodge and Plymouth dealer. Phone 1121._________________ 17tfc Classified Ad Rate«_____ worth charge 30c 25 for over Word« or les«. min­ insertion« imum. 2c each. Three for the price of two. CARD of Thank« A Notice«: 75c NO CLASSIFIED OR DISPLAY ADV. ACCEPTED AFTER WED. NOON EXCEPT FOR NEXT WEEK’S PAPER CREDIT ADS. 10c EXTRA FOR BILLING. BOLD FACE ads. 50c minimum ea.. 3 for tho price of 2. Word« over minimum, 3c each. ads BLIND with answer« to be handled by The Eagle: Minimum charge 75c. No information given relative to such ads. No information be will Mt. Heart Rebekah Lodge INVITATION TO BID The City of Vernonia will open bids on Monday, February 2 at 8:30 p.m. for 3500 gallons of heavy fuel oil delivered at Ver- nonia, Oregon. Albert Childs, ,City Recorder LOST: BROWN WALLET belong­ ing to Rosie M. White. Several pieces of identification. Bank payment book from Commercial Bank of Hillsboro. $28.00 and few cents money. $5.00 reward if money is returned. Need very badly. Lost by theatre January 16. 4tl 1932 GRAHAM four-door1 sedan. Fair condition. Sealed beam lights, 2 new tires, others fair. $75. John Kells, Treharne. 4tl MINIMUM Vernonia Lodge No. 246 * F. M. Eagle.) FOR SALE—Machinery 2-48 at Masonic Teaa pie. All visiting sisters and broth­ RHODE ISLAND red and New Hampshire pullets, laying. Mrs. John Krinick, 10th St., Riverview. 2t3 Wednesday LIONS John T. Kirk, W. M. Kay Mills, Sec’y. Nehalem Second CALVES for sale. Week old. Pebble Creek Dairy, phone 8812. 4tl THE ACCOUNTS payable to tha Herra Meat Market are now due and payable. Arrangements for payments should be made before February 1. It is hoped that settlement will be made in the same prompt and cheerful man­ ner in which credit was extended. 4tlc classifieds on until out given after paper is mailed. POETRY matter THE accepted Rate: 5c as peiJ type line. only per EAGLE assume« no finan­ cial responsibility for errors that may appear in ads its columns, •his paper print that which the but is at part in Oregon gasoline use in the first 11 months of 1947 neared 400 mil­ lion gallons for an. all-time high, Secretary of State Earl T. New- bry has announced. Not counting December, the year saw over four and one-half billion mile« of automobile travel, a climb of 11 per cent over the same period in 194«. Heaviest travel came in July, August and September, with Aug­ ust recording the top gasoline con­ sumption, over 37 million gallons, Taxes on sales for the 11 months netted the state treasury approx- imately $17,000,000 after refunds were made on fuel used off the highways. “The increase in travel . has brought a higher percentage of fatal wrecks in rural areas,” New- bry said. "Accidents on open high­ ways and secondary country roads claimed about four out of five of the lives lost.” Rural area smash-ups in 1946 ac­ counted for 73 per cent of the fatalities, compared to eighty per cent last year. The secretary of state said traf­ fic volumes would probably con­ tinue to climb, a situation calling for stepped-up efforts by every enforcement and safety agency in the fight against property damage, injuries, and death. Reducing production costa is the best way to increase the income from the dairy herd according to W. G. Nibler, county agent. In these days of high feed and labor costs the dairyman must look to every possible means to keep down production costs. Studies of many dairy herds through cowtesting association re­ cords have brought out two points as being particularly important. The first and most important peint is the production level of the individual cow. Does she pro­ duce 200 pounds of butterfat a year or 600 pounds a year. Re­ cords from testing association showed that while a 200 pound cow returned only $78 above feed costs, the 600 pound cow returned $334 above feed costs. These re­ cords showed that very'Often poor producing cows in the herd were actually losing a large part of the money being made by the higher producing cows. Practices that help to increase the production of ce-ws in the herd are the use of better sires, selection of heifers from the best cows, and rigid culling low pro­ ducing cows through a testing program. The second point in lowering production costs is keeping down feed costs. Dairymen everywhere agree that good pasture and plenty of it is the cheapest and best food for dairy cows. Many dairymen figure they lose money or just break even on barn feeding during the winter and make their money during the pasture season. Many dairy farmers are without ad- equate pasture, however. Under average conditions 100 pounds of feeding value will cost only one-fourth as much from pasture as from grain. Next in value to pasture is good grass and legume silage. The full feeding value of excess pas­ ture and early hay crops can best be stored as grass silage. Many coast dairymen are now using grass silage entirely in their win­ ter barn feeding. Its excellent palatability and high feed value keeps production levels high with lower feed costs. Hay is the next most important feed"for dairy cows, The greatest difficulty with hay in Columbia county according to Nibler is its poor quality in so many cases. Poor curing weather, over ripeness, over curing, and the wrong kind of cases an typographical re­ adv. in mistake BUNDLES of old papers for sale. Inquire at The Eagle Office. WANTED: Commercial printing THE VERNONIA EAGLE Send your Laundry & Dry Cleaning to Portland’« most mo­ dern plant. Two pick­ ups and deliveries] weekly at Vernonia at your home or our local agent— BEN BRICKEL’S BARBER SHOP OREGON Laundry and Dry Cleaners FRIDAY, Jan. 23—7 p.m. SUDTELL’S COMMUNITY AUCTION Beaverton, Oregon New dining, living and bedroom sets; chests, tables and chairs; sinks, cabinets and mattresses. Used furniture of all kinds—Heaters, ranges and stoves. Miscellaneous items of all kinds—Ornamental shrubs and fruit trees—Produce of all kinds. Lunch will be served OREN E. SUDTELL, Auctioneer SUDTELL'S Community AUCTION Rt. 2, Box 100 BEAVERTON Phone 2605 I $hipfl’ent reivgá! hlew just r*- X FERGUSON SYSTEM IMPLEMENTS I Offset Discs Plow« Grain Dri’as Weeder« Mower» Tandem Disc» Cultivator«- Tiller« Wood Saw« CRAWFORD-OLSON equipment COMPANY 734 Second Street, Vernonia, Ore Phone 1342 Free Delivery, where will crop all contribute to this poor qualtity in much of our local hay. Cows fed this kind of hay will not eat enough of it and more high priced grain mixtures must be fed to keep up production. Grain is the most expensive dairy feed. One hundred pounds of feeding value costs four times as much in grain as in pasture and twice as much in grain as in good hay. Grain does have a place in dairy feeding but it should be fed to the cows that have the ability to use it in milk produc­ tion. A high producing cow can­ not eat enough pasture, silage, and hay to produce to the max- imum of her ability. Grain mix- ture added to the rations of such a cow after she has had all the good pasture, silage, or hay she can eat will pay. Dairy farming should be planned as a long time enterprise. It is not possible to increase the pro­ duction level of the herd in a short time nor is it possible to develop a good feed production program in one year. A progres- sive program can be set up, how­ ever with a definite plan for im­ provement that will show some good results in three or four years if a little progress can be made each year. FURNITURE RUCTION published in fault, of Gasoline Use at All-time High Lowering Production Costs Judged Best Means to Raise Dairy Income I