« THURSDAY, DEC. 11, 1952 THE EAGLE. VERNONIA. ORE CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE—Real Estate FOR SALE—General I »OR SALE: Canned fruits, blue­ FOR RENT: 3-room house, bach?- I lor or couple. $18 p°r month. berries, raspb rries. Cascades, lo. FOR RENT: Good 2-b?droom ranberriea. Strained honey. Wild mod rn house, wired for range. turkeys and geese. A. F. Scha- Unfurnished. lurk, Hurd St., Riverview. 50t3 | I HOMES THREE singer canaries for sale. t IT'S NEW' 2-bedroom home, liv- Mrs Roy Sutton, last house on left. Riverside Drive. 5Ot2c t. inb room and kitchen. Con- I Crete foundation. Extra large ONE Coleman oil heater, 55.000 • lot. Price only $5000. Can get BTU. almost new. Price $35.00. vets loan on this. Can be seen at 867 Second Ave., I VERY NEAT 3-bedroom modern A I. Ixll.ut m I home wired for range. One I I acre ground, barn and chick i SPINET PIANO house. Just out of city limits. Will sacrifice for quick sale. Only $5250, good terms. Cash or terms. May be seen in i VERY GOOD 2-bed room modern Vernonia. Oregon. Write: Cre­ home wir"d for range. Full dit Department. cement basement. One block from business district. Priced SALEM MUSIC CO at $5500. Salem. Oregon 50t2c • EXTRA: This very neat 2-bedrm. house, electric heat, wired for SPINET PIANO. Will sacrifice range. Concrete foundation, 3 for quick sale. Cash or terms. lots. Only $3750, easy terms. Can toe seen in Vernonia. Write See this one. Tallman Piano Stores, Inc., Salem, ONE ACRE ground in city limits. Oregon 49t3c Good building site. Price $400. Very good terms. FOR SALE AFTER 30 DAYS: 3 LOTS, very good location for One old fire escape on May home. Price $600. Hoerle*« property, brown house 3 ROOM house, 50x100 lot. gar­ next to Masonic hall. 49t3 age, very good location. Price $1400. $500 will handle. HOUSEHOLD ITEMS: Maynard I FARMS player piano, 2 washing machines, I 2 bicycles, canned fruits, jellies, ! SEE this modern 4 bedroom home, basement, furnace plus Royal portable* typewriter, gar­ electric heat. Wired for range. den tools, 3 stands bees, 2-wheel New garage. On paved high­ trailer, oth'r items too numerous way 5 mi. out. Price $9000. to mention. End 2nd St., by the Very good terms. swinging bridge to Swords. 4813 NEW unfinished 2-bedroom home. HEMSTITCHING, hand painted All insulated so far and enough articles, aprons, pillow cases, insulation on ground to finish. r lu r set , teatowels. June Willis, One acre land, good barn. Price •91 Ro ■■ Ave. Phone 557. 37tfc as is $3500, t>asy terms. DON BAYLEY, BROKER All, makes of sewing machines MacDonald Hotel — Vernonia «•paired. Electrification of any 50tlc make much in ■. Park’s New Home Store, 41:16 N. Lombard or in­ NOTICE quire Eagle office. 38tfc NOTICE TO ALL REBEKAHS. AUCTION: Cash paid for live­ Please bring food to help fill stock. turnilure. tools, machinery barrel for Christmas gifts to Odd any day or consign your property Fellows home. Bring food to next 10 our weekly Friday auction. meeting Dec mber 11 or leav? ALTMAN'S Auc. Mart, phone with Faye Davis or telephone oi- 16215 Walt Altman. Auctioneer. fice._________________________ 50tlc Rf«. phones: Walt, 4615; Arch Frye. 3464. 30tfc CLASSIFIED RATES DEAD STOCK PICKED UP Free of Charge ALSO OLD. WORTHLESS LIVE HORSES BOUGHT. Phene collect, Clatskanie 65R8 11 no answer, call Twin Oaks ltd, Portland, Oregon. Xchimbia R ndering Company lotfc ì MINIMUM charge 40c for 25 words: or less. Words over min­ imum. 2c each. Three inser­ tions for the price of two. NO CLASSIFIED OR DISPLAY ADV. ACCEPTED AFTER WED. NOON EXCEPT FOR NEXT WEEK’S PAPER. 3LIND ads with answers to be I handled by the Eagle: Minimum £ DON SfMMONSON registered charge 80c. No information piano Tuning and Servicing given relative to such ads. Member National Ass'n. Piano THE EAGLE assumes no finan­ huners. Contact Mrs. Fullerton, cial responsibility for errors Phone 837. 31tfc that may appear in ads pub lished in its columns, but in CRUSHED ROCK FOR caso where this paper is at roads and driveways. Also have fault, will reprint that part of »and and gravel and fill dirt. See an adv. in which the typo­ D P Spoffoid hi call 1023. Ntfe graphical mistake occurs. r OR SALE Insurance CARD of Thanks & Notices: 80c ■ No information on classifieds will BELL.HUDSON Insurance, tel •- i be given out until after paper phone 773. We hUVe a reliable is mailed. Co, writing cars for 3, 6, 9 months at low rates. Also fire insurance. Geo. Bell, H. Hudson 37tfc Three Granges Seat Officers FOR RENT 3 ROOM house for rent. Also rk. 108 A St., phone 1107. I2tfc STOCK SIGNS AVAILABLE AT THE EAGLE BIRKENFELD — There was a good crowd out to Winema Grange Thursday for installation of officers of Winema, Vernonia and Natal Granges. Mrs. Pearl Becker of Warren Grange had charge of Installation assisted by Mr Recker, Mr and Mrs. Erick­ son of Clatskat le Grange and Mrs. Flor-nee Rawlinson, teacher in the Birkenfeld school and member of Winema Grange. Mrs. Ttd Bellingham spent Wednesday in Vernonia. Mrs. Cloice Hall and Allyson returned home with her and stayed until Friday. Several ladies of this com­ munity gathered at the home of Mrs Guy Bellingham Monday to tie a quilt. The quilt will be given to a n -edv family at Christ­ mas They also arranged a sur­ prise birthday celebration for Anna Hanberg. Bob Hanbrrg won the quilt at the Winema Grange bazaar Sat­ urday night Door prize went to Mrs. Robert DuPuis Th- HEC chairman. Mrs. l-arson. wishes to thank all who assisted at the ba­ zaar. Also those who donated and especially those who came on such a stormy night. White flour is made from wheat w ithout the outer coat of the ker­ nel. OUT OF THE WOODS . . . Termites Cause Christmas Thee Farming Pays Building Damage Canada and Us Up there our Canadian cousins have 37 p-r cent of their coun­ try in forests and down here 33 per cent of the nation’s land is classified as forest land. The contrast is w.d r in terms of forest acres pr person. In Canada it is 67 .2 acres for each man. woman and child, while the per capita share of the U.S.A, woodlands is but 4.61 acres. Each country has roughly 500,- 000,000 acres of "accessible” tim­ ber suited for commercial uses. Billions of Canadian and U.S. dollars are already deeply in­ vested in mills, roads, machinery and all kindred items for getting out logs and making lumber, paper, plywood and other forest products. Additional billions of dollars are invest, d in North American industries and businesses such as newspaper publishing and build­ ing construction, and each invest­ ment depends on continuing ma­ terial supplies from forest land. Continental Convention Some of us in the States shiver in our caulked boots as we con­ template th • fact that the Feder, al Government owns about half of the forest land in the Western states. Nationally the percent­ age is about a fifth of the com­ mercial forest acreage. This is worrisome enough, but the Canadians are also a free enterprise pople, and nation­ wide a full 92 per cent of their forests are on "Crown lands.” The Canadians really shiver. In times past the private own­ ers' of production in the Canadian timber have given Americans heavy competition in domestic as well as the foreign lumber, plywood and shingle markets. As sources of supply stand to­ day, many giant newspaper, mag- j azine and book publishing com- . pani s in the United States are i absolut ly dependent on Cana- ! dian paper for continuance in 1 business. So there i.: competitive conflict, 1 and there xi.‘ business brother- I hood in the uti izati n of the I cent in nt's ccmmerc'al forest re­ source, the world's' mightiest. We all face Enemy Fire to­ gether, and tne spruce budworm and other deadly tree bugs and blights finds us united in forest defense. ' / World View The surveys of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations show that -out of all the world’s forests some 2.862,000.000 acres can be made to yield an industrial wood sup­ ply. But the existing wood-using in­ dustries of th * world have been I mainly built to employ softwoods, and vast areas of the untapped forests are tropical hardwoods. Hundreds of millions of the soft­ wood forests, too, are in the Soviet Union and its satellite countries. Today only Canada is a net exporter of wood—shipping out more cubic feet than the Cana­ dians themselves consume. South America, Africa, Asia, Oceania are now net importers of wood. But research in wood chemis­ try and in forest engineering is regularly opening' new ways and providing new means for , man to master the problems of 1 growing trees and of producing ! shelter, reading matter clothing ! and food from the wood of trees. To keep termites out of house and home, the homeowner and farmer should make an annual inspection of their wooden build­ ings. Oregon has a huge termite "crop", causing untold thousands of dollars of damage each year. Two types which bother Oregon buildings are subterranean and damp-wood termites. Both re­ quire favorable moisture condi­ tions, but subterranean termites can construct earthen tunnels up and over cement foundation walls to reach wood. Absence of the tunnels is no assurance that termites are not present. Once access to wood has been obtained, tsrmites can extend their tunnels for long distances into seemingly dry wood. They have been found in wood parts of buildings on the second floor and *n oak floors over basements. Conditions favoring their de­ velopment in buildings are in­ adequate ventilation, presence of wood debris or wood forms in the ground beneath houses, and contact of wood siding, joists or other wood members with the earth. Many of these conditions prevail in basemcntless or par­ tial basement houses. Houses with basements are by no means immune from attack. Poured concrete porches may be an important source of initial infestation, unless adequate pre­ cautions are taken to prevent th.? wood from being in direct con­ tact with the concrete. This is. a good construction practice and should be kept in mind by con­ tractors and homeowners. Termites are present through­ out Western Oregon, with great, er numbers along the coast where the humidity is higher. In East­ ern Oregon, termites are less ex­ tensive. Raising Christmas trees can be a profitable business if good farm­ ing practices are followed, says an Oregon State college farm woodlot specialist. Paul Goodmonson, extension products marketing specialist, says Christmas trees develop best on poor, shallow soil where re­ tarded growth gives them time to fill out and become bushy. He adds that a good crop of Christ­ mas trees will return as high profits as most Oregon crops grown on such soil. Proper thinning, pruning, weed­ ing and bush control will triple the number of high quality trees that can be cut from wild stands where fertile forest land brings fast, spindly growth, the forestry specialist states. Goodmonson advises against stumpage sales where the buyer selects and cuts trees on the own­ er's land at 6 to 10 cents a tree. ( The OSC specialist says many owners don’t place enough im­ portance on Christmas tree sales to properly supervise the cut­ ting. This has resulted in mount­ ing public sentiment against wasteful use of timber resources. Growers will profit most if they select and cut their own trees for on-farm sales to dealers at prices varying from 10 cents { for small trees up to $1.50 for 10 to 12-foot trees, Goodmonson says. Some buyers are offering 50 cents a tree for field-run of 1 cut trees picked up at the farm. I Trees should be carefully se- I lected for size, crown, density, | shape, and fresh green color i Spindly, fast-growing trees will bring better returns if left for a timber crop. HEC Leaders to Serve Again BIRKENFELD — The Christ­ mas HEC party was held Decem­ ber 2 at the home of Mrs. W. C. Johnson. Lunch was served at 1 o’clock. After lunch they held th?ir business meeting. Officers serving this year were re-elected. Birthday pals were revealed and new ones drawn for the coming year. Plans for the bazaar were discussed and y.ar books started. Next meeting will ba January 6 at the home of the chairman, Mrs. Ethel Larson. The sewing club met with Mrs. Art Bellingham Tuesday evening with eight memb rs present. Next meeting will be December 16 at the home of Mrs. Ted Bellingham. Secret pals will be revealed. Mr. and Mrs. C.cii Elliott went to Portland Sunday to see their daughter, Kathryn, and her room­ mate, Kathryn Erickson. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Elliott cal­ led on Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Mills TYPEWRITER Friday evening. FOR SALE! Geor^ianna and Norman Mills Rebuilt and Guaranteed Under­ were home from college for the wood Champion. Î Thanksgiving holidays. I Vernonia Eagle Mr. and Mrs. Robert B.rry and Printing — r .lblishino children moved to Coos Bay where Mr. Berry has employ­ I ment. I Mr. and Mrs. Ellis St. Clair spent the week end w.th Mr. and Mrs. Henry Turner. Mrs. W. C. Johnson and Vir­ I ginia were in Portland Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Bryon Winslow, Jr., and family of Gaston spent i last week end with Mr. and Mrs. Bryon Winslow, Sr. The Episcopal Guild will hold 1 I their annual bazaar at the Grange hall Friday. When the little lady of the house puts down |the best there is. Why» {don’t you try our meat I • when you wish the best, • | and you too, will be-| | come one of our many» • satisfied customers. ■ MILL MARKET: ■ AND J.OCKERS! I j Remember— • ! DELIVERIES TWICE • ! DAILY: 10 am - 3 p.m. | ! PHONE 1391 I I Our $64.00 question is "What Makes a Groaner a Crooner?" Our answer ... A complete oil Olympia so popular? Light Olympia, like (he beers of Munich and Burton-on-Trent, is famous for quality . . . and largely for the same reason ... and grease change will make your car pur and sing like "Bing." Geo. Johnson Telephone 311 Vernonia Sen. Sta. Corner Rose and Bridge "If i the Water." Premium quality hop«, grains and yeaspare used. Final touch of perfection is the skillful brewing gained through three generations of brewing experience. "Its the Water DO YOU HAVE A SAFE DEPOSIT BOX? Light Refreshment Beverage of Millions of Temperate People This is Safe Deposit Box Month at the Commercial Bank of Pregon. For less than one cent per day you can rent one of our Boxes for your Insurance Policies. Deeds, Birth Certifi­ cates, Jewelry’, and many other valuables which could not be replaced in case of fire or theft. • itrarii ihvik M. Mtant aiti lit •Tr.4. Mvta u. S. »■< on. SEE US ABOUT A BOX WITH DELAY (Limited Number Available.; SINUS SUFFERERS AMAZING NEW DISCOVERY — FREE TRIAL THIS AMAZING NEW DISCOVERY give« qu ok relief from sinus head­ aches pressure in forehesd soreness in eves aching cheek bones bridge of nose top of head back of head and down neck, can't think straight or see well at times even tho glasses have been recently fitted, nervous­ ness dixiyness This new treatment relieves most sinus headaches in few minutes and as general rule soreness in head face and neck is entirely relieved tn short time No matter how lone sou have suffered or how chronic umr case mas be or how many different treatments sou have tried or how much money you have spent without results, w'e believe yot will be amazed at the fast relief thts amazing new treatment gives 'ou It ha' given amazing fast relief to thousands Write for FIVE DAY FREI TRIAL poet paid to you RO cost or ob’.gation except th is when sou writs for it. it is agreed that you will mail it back at the end of five days if not satisfied since it is not a same’» NATIONAL LABORATORIES » ODt CALIFORNIA Vernonia Branch Commercial Bank h Oregon