Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, October 22, 1953, Page 6, Image 6

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THURSDAY, OCT. 22, 1953
THE
EAGLE.
VERNONIA.
ORE.
CLASSIFIEDS
A
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WANTED______________
FOR SALE—General
LADIES, earn extra cash by ad­
dressing advertising postals at
home. Writ?, vali Co.. Box 1042,
I Muncie, Indiana.
43tl
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| HOUSEWIVES wanted—Address
advertising postcards. Must have
1 good handwriting. Write Nation­
1 al Engraving, Watertown, Mass.
i
40t7
|
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ALDER LOGS WANTED
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Will pay premium price for
[
i really good logs.
j
JURGENS MILLS
}
[ Beaver Springs Road—Rainier
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Phone 6 8256
25tfc
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SLIGHTLY used spinet piano.
Can be ven in Vernonia. Terms
or will take old piano in trade.
Write Day Music Co., 808 S.E.
Morrison, Portland 14, Oregon
or phone FI5389.
43t3c
PARAKETS
for sale. Albert
Srhalock, phone 1322.
43tlc
■ - —■
ROASTING and stewing heavy
red hens. Louis
Carmichael,
Ston-?y Point Road.
43t3c
REPRESENTING Curtis Circula-
tiun Co.: Saturday Evening Post,
Ladies Home Journal, Country
G-.ntleinan, Jack and Jill, Holl-
day. Edw. R. Thornton, agent,
phone 253.___________________ 43t3
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Douglas Fir Forests Decrease in
Production oi Annual Seed Crop
REMODELED and repainted 4-
room house fully modern. Wired
for electric heat, or equipped for
oil or wood. Has electric wat:r
heater. Partly furnished if need­
ed. One block from high school.
470 North St. Inquire of Pete
Brunsman.
43t3c
PCRTLAND MUSIC COMPANY
514 £-. W. Third Avenue
Portland, Oregon
Not since 1949 have the Pacific
Northwest Douglas fir forests pro­
duced a good crop of seed. Arti­
ficial reforestation in Washing­
ton and Oregon is threaten d with
a temporary decrease in its rapid
momentum of the last decade.
A drop in the usually prolific na­
tural regeneration of this species
is expected for a year or two.
Foresters in need of five tons
of Douglas fir seed a year for us.
in northwest nurseries and for
dirett seeding from helicopter,
find th -ir cupboards are bare,
said W. D. Hagenst in, industrial
forestry association chief forester. I
"We generally get a good seed
y?ar in four,” Hagenstein stated,
"about thr'.e times in ten years.
Hemlock and cedar are much
more regular seed producers, for
they produce good seed crops
eight out of every t n years."
During light seed y ars like
1953, the forest leader said, the
output of seed is just barely
nough to feed the rodents and
insects and little if any is left
to produce new trees. Result is
that natural regeneration is less
than average during such years.
Hag.nstein observ'd that ro­
dents especially savor the rela­
tively large—40.000 to a pound—
Douglas fir seeds. Hemlock and
cedar seeds are only about a tenth
as large, requiring from 300,00(1
ONE folding leaf breakfast table, j
Mis. L. H. Cates, house 88 O-A TWO-BEDROOM horn , modern.
to !, near Mill Market and Albert Schalock, phone 1322.
Lockars._____________________ 42t3
43tlc
« • APIS ft r sale at Th ■ Old
Fi rn'? 1 mi. cast of Cornelius on
Tualatin valley highway No. 6.
Rt lecea E. Goodin, owner. 42t2c
5-RM. and 3-rm. apartments. Both
places have bath, wired for elec,
stove. Two sleeping porches with
ach. 4-rm. house with shower.
Helen»? Hanel, 1302 State Ave.
41t3
TWO-PIECE overstuffed set in
>» od condition.
$30.
Ray S.
Stanley, Trehaine.
41t3
APARTMENT for rent.
Three
rooms and bath. Electric range,
ACCORDIAN Lessons. Inquire
oil heat. Rivervi.w Apartments.
in m Mrs. Woolsey, 976 Second |
36tfc
Phon 1493.
41t3c
ON ACCOUNT of illness am SMALL, clean, unfurnished house
• rc?d to st II my small heij of for two. See Mrs. R. D. Eby.
34tfe
nj.'Stored Nubian milk goats.
Y> iing laying hens. E. R. Thorn- 4-ROOM house. John Steele, 4th
V
Riverview or phone 253. 411.3 I and Nehalem Sts.
42t3
• E gas Kenmore stove, two
years old Inquire 991 Ros Ave.
W ham Vealey.
41t3
FOR RENT or will sell: 2-bsd-
room house, bath and garage.
Half acre. $30 per mo. Phone
11F03.
Pittsburgh. For details
write owner, A. J. York. 923 N.
E. B:ach St.. Portland or phone
TRinitv 7293
42t3
">41 FORD (> pickup. Good .motor
a* d tires. Body rough. Cheap
transportation. See it at Midway
Ajartuient No. 5.
40tfc
CARD OF TUANKS
U\Y AND STRAW, gram and
ft d gram.
Fair prices as to
o. ality and quantity. Will con-
• t r beef or milk cattle in trade.
> r i r Bergerson. Timber Rt., Ver-
ntnia, Oregon.
36tfc
WE WISH to take this means to
thank all our fri nds for the
cards, flowers and many acts of
kindness during our recent be­
reavement.
Mrs. Alvin Wantland. Don,
Doris and David
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wantland
and Marlene
Mr. Richard Wantland
Mrs. A. R. Williams
Mrs. F. E. Hopkins
Mrs. George Grenia
Mrs Mary Hoskin
Mrs. William Scott
Mrs. Emery St venson
Mrs. Alice Barlow
43tl
INSULATION AND WEATHER-
^TRIPPING. ‘'Th? more comfort,
t*c less cost." No money down,
easy payments. E. L. Blake Con-
r truction Co., box 93, Clatskanie,
Oregon. Phone 312.
28tfc
?
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ND. gravel, crushed rock, fill
■
Call 3811, A. G. Ostrander.
26t52c
!• • MODELING, home improve­
ments: house leveling, founds-
• is, additions. All work guaran­
ty'd
No money down, easy
terms.
E L. Blake Construc-
».•;) Co., box 93, Clatskanie. Ore-
K' n. Phone 312.
28tfc
Bowling Results
INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE
IiOSt
Won
King's Grocery
17
3
Bob’s Union Service 11
9
Mill Market
11
9
Clatskanie
1
19
CITY LEAGUE
Won
Dessy's
17
Team No. 4
11
S.P.&S.
8
Sundland Electric
4
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CLASSIFIED RATES
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MINIMUM charge 40c for 25
words or less. Words over min­
imum. 2c each. Three inser­
tions for the price of two.
CARD of Thanks 8t Notices: 80c.
NO information on classifieds will
be given out until after paper
is mailed.
NO CLASSIFIED OR DISPLAY
ADV. WILL BE ACCEPTED
AFTER WED NOON EXCEPT
FOR NEXT WEEK S PAPER.
BLIND ads with answers to be
handled by the Eagle: Mini­
mum charge 80c. No informa­
tion given relative to such ads.
THE EAGLE assumes no finan­
cial responsibility for errors
that may appear in ads pub­
lished in its columns, but in
case where this paper it at
fault, will reprint that part of
an adv. in which the typo­
graphical mistake occurs.
POETRY accepted only as paid
matter Rate: Sc per type line.
APRON SHOP, clothing repairs,
mstitching. At Vernonia Clean-
June Willis, phone 1211.
____________________________ 23tfc
AUCTION
Every Friday. We
have a good market for your hve-
*1< ek. furniture, tools, poultry.
W»- buy, sell, trade, every week
day, paying cash for livestock,
lu-mture, machinery, tools. Alt-
r.in’s Auction Mart. Forest Grove.
P ones: 7615 nights. 5320 Walt
A.tman, Auctioneer, selling live-
•t<«k or general farm sales any»
where.______________________ lltfc
FOR SALE—1 nturance
R* LL-HUDSON Insurance, tele­
pt ne 773. We have a reliable
Co, writing cars for 3, 6, 9
e i ■’ths at low rates. Also fire
• • >u:ance. Geo. Bell, H Hudson
37tfc
GUARANTEED
FUEL-SAVING
WITH THIS
"TWIN”
"FUíLSAVíR”
FOR RENT
S* veral Small Uprights, Used
Sp .ndid Values. Buy Th m at
Forest Products, with Tacoma’s
Ed Heacox co-chairman. It is :n
these technological channels that
wood is finding utilization that
may eventually mean the turning
of the last shred cellulose and
ultimate drop of ligin into pay
rolls and dividends—and into more
and more forest industry income
to allocate to the practice of in­
dustrial forestry.
Su^erpfame
FOR SALE: New bricks. 3Oc.
Cail Vernonia 382. H. M. Draper. [ HlGHt-Sl' cash prices paid for
43t3c i cream and eggs at your door—
picked up once or twice weekly—
call or write Forest Grove Cream­
LOVELY SPINET SLIGHTLY
ery, Forest Grove, Oregon. Phone
USED
126.
14tfc
At a Bargain!
The official boss of all the na­
tion’s foresters is SAF President
George L. Drake of Shelton,
Washington. Albert Arnst of Au­
burn, Washington, is chairman of
the Public Relations Division of
the Society, E. F. Heacox of Ta­
coma, W. D. Hagenstein, Clarence
Richen, Kendall B. Wood and E.
J. Dunford of Portland, Drs. Philip
G. Haddock and Walter H. Schaef­
fer of Seattle, and Dr. Walter F.
McCulloch and John B. Gran­
tham of Corvallis, Oregon. All
have prominent places on the pro­
gram for Colorado Springs.
Forestry Boss Drake and his
fellow thinkerrs-up have chosen
"Nature on Edge” as the conven­
tion theme. It was mad? for a
state where the natives like to
drawl, "Spread Colorado out flat
and she would be a bigger state
than Texas." In most sections of
the West the many problems of
how to harvest, grow and protect
trees on land that stands on end
keep foresters and boss loggers
awake. And nowadays tree-kill­
ing bugs are swarming up the
ridges and over th? pinnacles in
hellish hordes.
On such questions foresters of
all branches have learned to get
together with a right good will.
Last year the annual meeting was
made into an international bi-
vouac at Montreal, with th”
Canadian Institute of Forestry
sharing the sessions. This year
the forester from Pico Park, Ver­
mont, will shoot the breeze on
Pike’s Peak, Colorado, and the
lowland forester from Okeechobee
Florida, will bieathe hard in the
rarefied air of th? Garden of the
Gods where a "Chuckwagon Din­
ner” is in the cards. Many field
trips up the canyons and over
slide rock and down timber are
in store. The Englemann spruce
beetle will be studied in his lair. II
Big doings!
Men of the Hour
The latest report to come to my
mailbox gives a figure of 13,bod
for the technically-trained forest­
ers now at work in the United
States. There are 5.600 employed
by industry and other private
sources, 4.700 in the hire of Uncle
Sam. 1.900 in education and re­
search. and 1,400 with stat", coun.
ty and municipal forestry agen­ i
cies. By far the greater numb r
I
of these able and earnest men are
members of the Society of Amal­
ean Foresters.
Perhaps the most important
event scheduled for Colorado i
Springs is a joint session of the
Division of Private Forestry and
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Licensed Bonded
Lost
3
9
12
16
to 400,000 to make a pound.
Foresters store seed during good
years, he pointed out, but the poor
seed crops for several years in a
row has n arlv exhausted seed
reserves. "What the Douglas fir
region needs most,” Hagenstein
said, "is a bumper seed crop in
1954.”
OUT OF THE
WOODS . . .
Ep Hoyt Country
The news that the Society of
American Forest, rs is to hold its
1953 annual convention in Colo­
rado Springs, September 14-17,
has set me to thinking about Ep
Hoyt. Colorado is his country
now. There he is publisher of
the Denver Post and a top-hand I
"golf crony” of President Einsen-
hower.
Some of us knew Ep when he
was an Oregonian reporter, with
a sideline of Western fiction. I’ll
never forget his cowboy story’
htro who had a glass eye. It
looked very cold but right rea1
and he could eject it from the
socket at will without raising a
hand. This got him out of many •
a tough spot.
•
Once Ep let his hero be trapped
•
at a cowtown bar. with a jigger •
of whiskey in his 1 ft hand. The •
dirty guy of the story had his •
thumb twitching back for the
•
hammer of his .45, but before he
could fan it he was startled to
see the cowboy’s left ey? pop
forth, curve down, and splash
into the whiskey glass. For a
split second his thumb went limp.
It was all the tim' the cowboy­
hero n.eded to draw his own
revolver. A gun went "Kapow!"
and it was the dirty guy who took
i
the bloody fall.
I
Mighty good readin’, folks.
"Nature on Edge"
Livestock Scales
Lunchroom
AUCTION
AUCTION TRADING BARN—Clatskanie, Ore.
SELL
TRADE
CONSIGNMENTS
Open Daily E. of Clatskanie on U.S. 30—S’ll Your Unwanted
Items. Buy Your Needs at Your Own Price.
SURPRISE SPECIALS
Wl GUARANTEE . ..
Exclusive "Fuel-Saver” saves
you up to ONE-THIRD on
fuel; reduces chimney loss
40%; gives you more heat
and more winter comfort
from every penny’s worth of
fuel!
ONLY
SUPERFLAME
HAS THE
"FUEL-SAVER”
WE GUARANTEE ...
✓ No otner oil heater like
it! Feature for feature, dollar
for dollar, it’s America's
Biggest Heater Value!
✓ It's a super-circulator
with twin burners. Use ONE
when it’s mild, TWO when,
it's cold! Plenty of extra ca-"
parity for bitter cold weather.
✓ Exclusive "Triple-Com­
bustion" burners burn clean­
er at any dial setting. Gift
you thrifty operation!
SUPPLY LIMITED!
LIBERAL TRADE-IN!
BUDGET TERMS!
No Tresspassing
For Rent
Absolutely No admittance
No Minors Allowed
No Peddlers Allowed
No Hunting
No Fishing or Hunting
Without Permission
MODELS
PRICED
FROM
Ws
HARDWARE
Phone 181 — Vernonia
HAHN
VERNONIA EAGLE
«•ST,
!
SATURDAY, OCT. 24
Miscellaneous
12:30 P.M
Livestock
1:00 P.M.
Expect Several Good Large Livestock Buyers.
BUY
Ì
STOCK SIGNS
OIL NEATER
SAVE PLENTY
PHONE 1600
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Serve the whiskey
that’s “Cheerful
as its Name”
:
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«
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Old Sunny Brook adds
a “cheerful” note
that makes a ¡father­
ing sparkle!
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Pint
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HR SALE OR TRADE
OR TRADE 1944 1ST
with large van (suitable
fcr h< »use trailer or "crummy")
t< pick up oi tractor. Ph. Hills-
bero 24FI3 evenings
42tl
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SELL
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FOR TRADE
WILL TRADE $3000 equity in
Hdlsboio horn? for property in or ,
mw Vt rnonia. Inquire 642 Third j
Ft.. V •immia
40t3 |
TNI DIAN CLINIC
Open 10 •**»! S
I » *
Pt'dev
SPOKANE. PORTLAND and SEATTLE
RAILWAY SYSTEM
d«v a**d
I» •*' 43»d
MM MOOTMCAIT 1ADMT BOULEVARD
T>l»pj>«w I A h Hll
13. Or>-
Ship onW Travel
£
I
KIMTUCKV
RliNOiO
WHISKEY
The Norfhweif’i Own Railway"
•6 PROOF 65t GRAPE REUTRAL SPIRITS. THE OlD SURRY BROOK CO LOUISVILLE KY.