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About Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1954)
»5 THURSDAY. JAN 21, 1954 THE EAGLE, VERNONIA. ORE. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE—General ONE Guernsey cow with three- «»<>nth-old calf; 1 Jersey cow to fi’-shen in March. Tom Solomon, «■nd of Oth St., Riverview. 3tl BOY'S small size bicycle. Inquire Nehalem Service Station. 3t3c MAYTAG washer $60. 6 cu. ft. Frigidaire refrigerator, $55; wood « «»king range, $60. All for $160. All it.ms very good condition. Phone 543 or 542. E. V. Robert son. 2t3c GRAIN FED Hertford steer beef For sale. Halves only, 41c. See Herold Bergerson. 2tfe GUITAR outfit, electric Hawaiian, vzi h beautiful amplifier. Used very little. May be seen at house IM ' ¡nd 143 A 11 2t3 I F. ACTICALLY new trailer house. Worth $3500. Has scarce ly been lived in. Will trade for ho'.ie in Vernonia. Inquire Ver nonia Eagle, 1*3 HAND, gravel, crushed rock, fill dirt. Call 3811, A. G. Ostrander. 26t52e A f RON SHOP, clothing repairs, htrr ititching. At Vernonia Clean er June Willis, phone 1211. 23tfc FOR SALE -Cars, Trucks 1943 BUICK 5 pass, exc lient lue-. Radio, heater. 123 North S' Apt 6. evenings. 2t3 15 ! 3 CHEVROLET 2 Dr. sedan. Light green color. Radio and ater. Real comfort at low tost. $1675 $495 Down CHEVROLET 4-ton pick -P. 9000 miles. Used as family t»r. Equipped with heater and defroster, radio. Save $550 on flbfe unit. Now $1395 1952 CHEVROLET 4 Dr. sedan. F.dio and h?ater and POWER GLIDE trans. It looks like x«w. $1555 $450 Down 1951 CHEVROLET 2 Dr. sedan. Safe for the kiddies and real • c momy. $1095 $350 Down J9!3 FORD 2 Dr. sedan 1 Real e.assy blue color. This’ll I be :>.e talk of your friends. This week at $895 $285 Down 1949 CHEVROLET 4-Dr. sedan. Beautiful deep blue paint. R&H. L oks. acts, drives like a new car. $845 $285 Down 1949 STUDEBAKER 4 dr. sedan This car is spotless. Radio and ‘«afer. Black finish. $725 ■946 CHEVROLET 4 Dr. sedan. Completely overhauled and rea dy to go anytime and any- where. $445 $145 Down 1946 HUDSON 4 Dr. sedan. Ra. c.o. heater and big and roomy $395 $125 Down 1946 OLDSMOBILE 4 Dr. sedan Fully equipped. This car reflects c-.aracter $395 $125 Down 1346 CHEVROLET 14 ion Flat b.d truck. New motor. Bug t>res. Sutable for farming or ..'gginq $675 $220 Down VERNONIA AUTO COMPANY 30 Years in Business in Vernonia Vernonia JO . 3« 342 3tlc FOR SALE Insurance * FI.l. HUDSON Insurance, tele pt . • 773. We have a reliable C< , writing cars for 3, 6, 9 m< at low rat.s. Also fire 1 u.aiK’C. Geo. Bell. H Hudson. 37tfc I OST AND FOUND FOUND: License plate No. 940 3C2 with '54 tag January 9. mile Claim at Eagle south of town i ff ce by paying for this adv. 2t3c CLASSIFIED RATES MINIMUM charge 40c for 25 words or less. Words over min- ■num. 2c each. Three inser tions for the price of two. te given out until after paper is mailed. BLIND ads with answers to be handled by the Eagle: Mini- mum charge 80c No informa- on given relative to such ads. CARD of Thanks & Notices: 80c NO CLASSIFIED OR DISPLAY ADV WILL BE ACCEPTED ATTER WED NOON EXCEPT FOR NEXT WEEKS PAPER. NO information on classifieds will THE EAGLE assumes no finan cial responsibility for errors that may appear in ads pub lished in its columns, but in case whtre this paper is at fault, will reprint that part of an adv. in which the typo graphical mistake occurs. OUT OF THE Bowling Results WOODS Forest Freeholder i Harvey L. Rendsland | ger and a tree farmer at Tahuya, FOR RENT I on Hood Canal. Harvey’s tree farm is in tracts MODERN, 4-rm., furnished house that total something more than at 445 North street. For rent. a thousand acres, One quarter- but will sell. Inquire Mrs. Olive section was patented to Chari’s Powell. 2t3c N Stowell in 1866. Another 160 I THREE-ROOM house partly fur acres were claimed by Charles i nished; one-room cabin, furnish W. Bates in 1875. I ed; one sleeping room. Mrs. These acres, like all the others I i Alice Mills, end of First St., owned today by Harvey and It3 Ranka Rensland have seen all I Riverview. kinds of logging—by hand, by i WANTED 1 bullteam, and by horse, donkey I I and cat. They will see much I CASH PAID for any number or I more, f< centuries to come, ' kinds of cattle, pigs, feeder or fat Might b airway skidding by hogs. Walt Altman, Auctioneer. atomic j war, sooner than we j Writ? or phone 7612, Forest think. I Grove. 3tfc On tree farms of this size and WANTED TO RENT: Flattop of- character it is possible for the flee desk with chair. Inquire Dr. tree farmer to plan in detail. For Poyntz at office formerly occu example. Freeholder Rendsland 2tlc says that, around the year 1925 i pied by Dr Manley. i he took note of an area which he LADY between 60 and 70 years had been in the habit of calling I as housekeeper companion to lady i “the fir thicket” since 1900. i of same age. Very little work In 1925 some of the trees in the with small wi age and good home I for someone, Will interview at thicket w.re of marketable piling I < trailer house near Natal grange sizes. Harvey began to clean up 1 between Mist : and Vernonia. Nc d the old road to the stand and to help as soon as i possible. 2tl apply other protection practices. He took out timber with great REASONABLE proof of labor, care for the tr s that were left, The cletnent have tak n a costly etc., against Columbia Timber most of all in reducing the fire toll of timber on West Coast tree Company previously operated by hazard without burning slash farms already this winter and the Cass Bergerson and Mr. Haines. within the stand. end may not be in sight. Reply care of Vernonia Eagle. In 1950 he harvested 100 trees High winds along coastal Ore 5 It 3c from the old thicket, in the way gon and Washington have done HOUSEWIVES- Addr.ss adver of an improvement cutting. They incalculable damage, according to tising postcards. Must have good ranged from 75 to 90 years of W. D. Hagenstein, managing di handwriting. LINDO, Watertown. age. and averaged 1,517 board feet rector of the Industrial Forestry Mass. 53 ti per tree. So each tree had put on association. about 20 board fe t of growth p?¡ He listed the four natural HIGHEST cash prices paid for year. scourges of the tree farmer as: cream and eggs at your door— Lone Tree fire, wind, disease and insects. picked up once or twice weekly— The Rendslands have a pct “Timber blown down this call or write Forest Grove Cream cottonwood. They like the winter,” Hag nstein stated, “will ery, Forest Grove, Oregon. Phone species. A st’m can b? stuck create ideal bre -ding and feedin;, 14tfc anywhere along a bank or hump conditions for the Douglas fir i i i CARPENTRY WORK: R pair, re of gravel where the conifers won’t beetle which reached epidemic I state after the big blowdown in modeling, new construction. Rea grow. The pet grew on a gravel sonable rates by day or by con fill that was made in 1912. It is the winter of 1951-52." The forest leader said tr e tract. E. J. Parkhurst, 1042 Weed now 36 inches in diameter, breast high, and is a foot through at a farmers and timber-owningagen- Ave., or see Pete Brunsman. 50tfc height of 86 feet. It has about cies would be hard-pressed this 1929 board feet, Scribner scale— coming year to ext;nd logging a growth of some 50 board feet road networks rapidly enough to per year. Cottonwood is a comer. catch up with salvage operations necessary to save timber blown Harvey thinks. And heark n to this. On an- down this winter and certain to other Rendsland area hay was be bietle infested this coming BIRKENFELD — Mr. and Mis. cut on cleared land in 1912. In- summer. Hagenstein said these are cal Cecil Elliott wire business visi side 41 years a crop of Douglas farming tors to Astoria. They also left fir came up on the old hayfields, culated risks of tree where private landown :rs are and it now has many trees of 21 Monday for South Bend. Indiana to bring back a new Studebaker. inches diamet r, with 8-inch tops raising timber crops which have a They will visit friends enroute. at 76 feet. These figures are an growing cycle of from 60 to luO Timber for pulp and Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Jepson average of from 50 to 10 trees years. paper making can be harvested at per acre, amounting to 50.000 went to Portland Sunday to visit from 45 to 60 years, but sawlogs at the horn ■ of his sister, the board fe t per acre, or a growth of 1,230 board feet per acre per generally take Richard Thompsons. years to grow. A. R. Mills of Birkenfeld is a year since 1912. Tree farmers fared well firn- Harvey Rendsland is patient at St. Vincent's hospital wise this year, Hagenstein re- in Portland, He went in for ma first of all. He believes jor surgery, Reports are that he farming begins with the markets ported, with one of the smallest They must pay fire losses in history. This was is doing as well as can be ex- and the mills. the bills for the tree farmer's due, he said, to the wonderful pected. Mrs. Fred Udey returned from equipm nt, roads, gates, protec with newspaper Portland Wednesday, She had tion program, logging, hired help owner-loggers and taxes, A mastery of ma- counties Harvey men of three been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Robert Burkholder, who had to chinery has bcen a mainstay of Rendsland said: “If we are to have an adequate have major surg. ry at the his success as a freehold forest owner and tree harvester. He supply of merchantable timber Emanuel hospital. was experimenting with power for the future, it is advisable to I saws, tractors and trucks before establish as many tree farms as World War I. He is a Pope and possible and to keep our lands Grades Dismissed Due Talbot log supplier from away in private ownership instead of Lack of Building Heat back yonder. risking the rule of scmi-socialis- NATAL The grade school A New Force tically inclined government and children had a day of vacation The woods are full of freeholds what amounts t > practically a Monday as there was no heat with histories of log harvest and shutdown on revenues from th due to the electricity b ng off tree growth that go back beyond land . . . Let us keep our land part of the day. 1900. Many of the owners of to- under private ownership, large The Mist Helping C’.cle will day are amazed to discover that and small. Harvest it. r’seed meet next Thursday. .In: uary 28. they have been practicing tree it. protect it. and grow tree crops, at the home of Mis. Ma;-. Oblack. farming without knowing it. This and help keep this a nation of Miss Virginia Mathew : of Port was common testimony of per- free people and free enterprise land spent the we. k md at 1er sonal experience at meeting after and prosperity.” home here. The Industrial Forestry As meeting up and down the Doug las fir region in 1953. At an sociation, Portland 5, or Seattle 1, Olympia meeting of freehold will tell you how. INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE Won 46 King’s Grocery 39 Bob’s Union 35 Mill Market 24 Clatskanis Lost 26 33 37 48 CITY LEAGUE 62 Dessy’s Team No. 4 334 29 Sundland's 204 S. P. & S. 10 3# Vi 41 sm TWERP LEAGUE 21 Lew's Place Dusen bury’s 20 16 A. B. C. ’s Vernonia Bakery 15 15 16 20 21 WOMENS RESULTS Dessy’s 51 21 Safeway 37 35 Vernonia Drug 37 35 Sam’s Food Store 19 53 Mrs. Robert Mathews rind Mrs. Lena Mathews were las Thurs- day afternoon visitors w '.h tfn L. B. Eastman. They werj ac- companied Mrs. Dorotny Jones. High Winds Cause Heavy Blew Dowa Of Timber; Ideal Sei-Up for Beeile crop-ration of loggers, hunters and the g neral public in b ing more careful with fire, along with favorable weather. Men used to mak? slaves of one another — today it’s installment buying that does it. PHONE 853 1 i i i I I • : NEHALEM VALLEY MOTOR FREIGHT ■ I 1 I I J »■ i • i i i Laundry and Dry Cleaning IN THURSDAY BACK THURSDAY Bring To— BEN BRICKEL’S BARBER SHOP Oregon Laundry and Dry Cleaners Trip Started East for Car THE OPENING OF adiant Cleaners TO THREE-DAY SERVICE ON DRY CLEANING ALSO LAUNDRY SERVICE We do ail types of alterations. Tailoring and Repairing 969 Bridge Street i ■J ^HXHXHXHXHXHXHXMXHSMZHXKT; £ M Be sure to include NUCOA with H X H your next food order. H £ Lesson Studied by Keasey Unit Group ROCK CREEK — The Keasey extension unit met at the home of Mrs. W. L. Dibben on the second Wednesday of January, the regular meeting day. Iola Dibben and Ella Martan were the project leaders for th? lesson. "Making Belts and Buttons." Others attending were Betty Brady. Rena Brady. Eda Parker. Isola Morris. Hilda Keasey, Mary Christensen. May Kri ger. Vi vian Counts, Necia DeWitt, Blanche DeWitt and two visitors, l.ola Fugate and Norma Meier ROYAL The V orld’< TRI IA MODERN Dessy's Tavern & Bowling Alleys will not be open until 5 p.m H for the next several weeks due to repairs and redecoration. triti- H except Saturdays and Sundays l*i>r<shle Typewriter VERNONIA EAGLE POUNDS TH! MARGARINE « « H 14 H X I I >4 KING’S Grocery - Market Phone 91 "Where V our Money Buys More H Riverview H At the Mile Bridge H