★ Meat Department ★ TIMt‘ 3 85’ Fancy White O'/r-oz. Can Rich in Poly- Un.saturates— Qt. B ottle.... CROWN’S ZEE PLASTIC 100-Ft. Roll ivi LIMA 3.49 Beans No. 303 Cans D E L MONTE CREAM STYLE Fancy Com No. 303 Cans............................ For C Crackers THURSDAY. JULY 12, 1962 •I Of/ T / l <»<!/!•<• Fri.. Sat. July 13-11 DAYS OF T llR IL k S AND LAUGHTER Plus THE FACTS OF LIFE HENRY & POLLY HUDSON DRY GOODS NOTIONS — GIFTS FIRE. AUTO AND CASUALTY INSURANCE LINES Phone HA 9 6058 At Mile Bridge. Riverview No. 303 Can............. 8-oz. 2 55 Fuiten's Chapel in the Hills VERNONIA. HILLSBORO. FOREST GROVE 24 Hour Mortuary Service Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Thomas. Res. Managers Lbs. 7C|ç bw9 teacher in Vernonia high school, visited here Saturday with Mrs. Lois Clark. She was accompanied here from Portland by Miss Ila Comstock. Miss Drake is now a teacher in the Kentucky Mountain Bible Institute. The third birthday of Valerie Gail Aldrich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edison Aldrich, was ob served June 30 with a party at which Criss Ann East, Vince Par ker, Bryan and Kevin Roberts and Sandra Leonard were present. Ice cream and cake were served. News from Mrs. Molly Davis who now lives at Independence is that she has just returned home from a months trip by bus to Mis souri where she attended a family reunion. The reunion is held every two years and this year, 81 at tended. After spending two weeks with relatives there she visited a daughter in Chicago. She said she encountered hotter weather than Oregon is having and a tornado struck just 30 miles from where she was visitng. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis McGraw of Banks were in Vernonia Friday of last week. Guests the early part of this week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Moran on O.A. hill were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Fortune from Chehalis, Washington. Mrs. Lois Clark and Mrs. L. H. Thomas were at Laurelwood Ma nor near Gaston Sunday to visit their mother, Mrs. Alice Malm- sten who is residing there at the present time. New residents in Vernonia are Mr. and Mrs. A1 Derrick and three children who are purchasing the Butler place on South Rose ave nue. They are Oregonians but had recently been in California prior to coming here. They also have two married children. The wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Nels Hogberg was ob served Saturday with a barbecue in the Hogberg yard which was attended by their daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Hass and children from Portland and Mrs. Hogberg’s two brothers and wives. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lentz and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Lentz who arrived here Tues day of last week to visit with the Frank Lentz and Hogberg fami lies. They were on a months vaca tion and from here went to Bend. Guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Callister is their niece, Laura Lee Hopkins of Albany who will be here for some time. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Hartiell and family and Herb Sturdevant re turned home Saturday evening from a week’s vacation trip dur ing which they covered 1900 miles in Oregon and Idaho. They made stops at a number of points to hunt agates and rock forma tions and brought home some very nice specimens. Some of the points touched were Heppner, Opal Butte where some fine ag ates were obtained, Lewiston and Weiser, Idaho; and enroute home they came across the Santiam Pass and found some nice rock there. Weather was good with the only rain being a light rain near Pen dleton when they evidently were on the fringe of a thunder storm. Mr. and Mrs. Darrold Proehl and family returned home last week end from a three weeks va cation during which they went to Lake Preston, South Dakota to visit her family They stopped at 52’ i Cottage Cheese ! Darigold................................Pint 1 Q< For F A N N IN G ’S B R E A D A N D BUTTER Pickles 15oz. Jar ............. SW IFT ’S 2 49 PREMIUM Sausages V IE N N A E QEc ^0 S U N N E E FROZEN BUTTERED The children stayed with their grandparents to visit until Jam boree time. Dr. and Mrs. M. D. Cole of Longview were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Gar ner. They also called on Mrs. Mä elle Grady. A heart condition claimed the life of a former Vernonia resident, Mrs. John Larimore, Wednesday of last week. She had been in the Roseburg hospital but apparently was improving when the attack took her. Friday, John’s brother Otis Larimore of Portland came for Mr. and Mrs. Mike Willard and they all drove to Springfield to stay overnight with another bro ther, Lewis. They all went to Roseburg Saturday morning for funeral services. Mrs. Willard is the sister of the Larimore men. Guest this past week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Thompson has been his sister, Mrs. Lynn Clements from Billings, Montana. They all visited at the Crestview Nursing home in Scap poose with Mrs. Isabel Thompson, mother of Mrs. Clements and Mr. Thompson and were pleased to find her improving. Mrs. Fred Heckenliable and Mrs. Dave Lowell drove to Portland Saturday afternoon to visit at the Veterans hospital with Maynard Gründen who is making very slow recovery from recent surgery. They also called on Ray Chese- bro who is making good recovery from a heart attack. Guests last week end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Heck enliable were their daughter and husband. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wil liams and family from Salem. Mr. and M.*s. E. E. Garner call ed on Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wy ckoff in Forest Grove Saturday evening. Mrs. Wyckoff had come home from Tuality hospital Fri day. Other guests Saturday at the Wyckoff home were Mr and Mrs. Don Campbell from Skamokawa; Washington. They had brought their vacation trailer as far as the Crown Zellerhach park at Pitts burg that morning and returned to it Saturday eveniny. They spent Sunday in Vernonia attending ser vices at the Christian church and calling on former neighbors and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Westerberg went to Ocean City, Washington early last week wh.’re they joined friends from Winlock for a week of camping. However, they were rained out July 4 so they returned home to complete their vacation indoors. Last week end. her mo ther, Mrs. Eola DeVaney and her brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Veil DeVaney and son Jim from Portland w re guests at the Wes terberg home Miss Mildred Drake, a former in Phone HAzel 9-6611 Asparagus HEINZ 57 MEAT TOPICS OF THE TOWN Oernonia Eagle OCc Pork Steak IN D IA N GEM ALL GREEN Pound P k g..................................... Golden Fruit I For * For * 4-oz. Can.................... 1 ■ For On the Fourth of July. Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Keas?y entertained at a picnic Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Keas- ey and three children, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Memovich and two children, and Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Eades and son Neil. Later in the week their guests were Mrs. P. B. Keas?y and three children of Helena, Mon tana and Mrs. Ann Thomas and daughter Joanne of Medford. Mrs. Kenneth Walker of Med ford spent three wseks at the home of her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown, car- inb for the home and her new grandson. On the Fourth Mr. Wal ker came and remained the rest of the week. They both returned to Medford Sunday. Unusual events have made life interesting for Mr. and Mrs. Har vey Tilley this past week. Last Friday they were dining in the Chinese cats at Hillsboro when they were given the opportunity to talk on the roving mike pro gram over the Hillsboro station, KWIK Mrs. Tilley took advantage of the chance to boost Vernonia. Monday, they received a tele phone call from New York in re gard to efforts they arc making to locate Mrs. Tilley’s parents. She was adopted out when a baby and has never known them but has been trying to get some trace of them. The call indicated there may be some clues now Mr. and Mrs. Richard Night- wine and children, Sherri and Randy completed a 15-day vaca tion July 1. They visited Yellow stone Park, then went on to Ne braska to visit relatives. Enroute home they went to Seattle to at tend the fair and visit his folks, Mr. and Mrs. Perry McFarland. fi fij S1 NABISCO D A N D Y OYSTER Sai fi $1 J| 1 /IQ# Bananas f 1 7 b No. 303 Cans 2 2 98* Sw eet Peas For MISSION GREEN 15-oz. P k g.................. FLAV-R PAC F ANCY T E N D E R G ARDEN Cc o S 1 gb ^0 1 gP Wrap 7 fi O CCc 2 Cereal VEG. OIL A7* Lean and M eaty.............Lb. Q UAK ER’S LIFE CHUNK TUNA Pork Roasts You're As Close to the Mill Market As Your Telephone HA 9-3492 For 69 Patío Steaks Pkg. of 5 Steaks ................... P eas & Carrots Flav-R-Pac Frozen— 10-oz.' | | R UP $1 A For THE PEOPLE SPEAK . . . Kennedy’s Medical Bill is mis named. It does NOT cover the cost of a doctor’s services. It does NOT cover the surgeon’s fees or den tal bills. It does NOT pay for med icine used outside of hospital or nursing home. It does NOT cover the cost of preventative medicines. It does NOT cover all hospital bills — the aged would be required to pay $10 a day for the first nine days and the first $20 of costs for diagnosis in hospital out-patient clinics and the patient does NOT select the physician to perform the diagnosis. President Kenedy’s bill also does NOT cover four and a half million aged who are NOT en rolled in the Social Security Sys tem. The bill DOES give the rich a free ride. We already have the Kerr-Mills Act which takes care of a greater share of the expenses but only for those UNABLE to pay. Lawrence Meisner GEMS OF THOUGHT THE PRESENT Sieze the present; trust the fu ture as little as you may. —Horace Remember that it is only this present, a moment of time, that man lives. —Marcus Aurelius The future is no more uncertain than the present. —Walt Whitman The present has a right to gov ern itself! —Oliver Wendell Holmes Look upon* every day as the whole of life, not merely as a section; and enjoy and improve the present without wishing, through haste, to rush on to an other. —Jean Paul Richter Yellowstone Park enroute and vis ited friends in various places. Monday afternoon, Mrs. Diana Marshall, Mrs. Blanche DeWitt, Mrs. Pearle Adams, Mrs. Betty Jones and Mrs. Lois Clark drove to Glenwood to visit Mrs. Lena Stanton and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Uhlin at whose home Mrs. Stan ton now lives. They reported a most enjoyable afternoon. A family reunion last week at the H. T. Hudson home in River view brought together his moth er, Mrs. Opal Bechtold of Port land and her three sons and daugh ter and their families. Included were Mr. and Mrs. William Hud son and three children and Mr. and Mrs. Lindy Hudson and four daughters from Butte, Montana and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lara and four children from Portland Thursday they all were at Cannon Beach for a picnic and Friday they all were at the Hudson home here. The two families from Butte spent the remaining days visiting here and with the Laras in Port land. Last Sunday, after a strenuous week of company, Mr. and Mrs. H T Hudson and daughter went to the beach to relax. While lying on the sand, Mr. Hudson discov ered a tumor on his side which prompted him to see his doctor Monday. It was removed and found to be benign and he re turned home that evening and was able to work the following day. Free Deliveries Twice Daily 10 A.M. and 3 P M S U N SH IN E VAN ILLA Wafers Large 10-oz. Pkg. Adventists Go To Camp Meet Members of the Vernonia Sev enth-day Adventist church will join their pastor Elder E. E. Strat ton and thousands of other Adven tists from Western Oregon and Southwestern Washington at the Gladstone campgrounds for the fi nal day of services Saturday, July 14. H. M. S. Richards and the King’s Heralds Quartet of the church’s international radio broadcast, the Voice of Phophecy, will present the 11 a.m. morning worship ser vice at the giant adult tent, which seats more than 7,000 including surrounding benches. Elder L. A. Skinner, Adventist world youth leader from Washington, D. C., will speak at the youth tent and there will be morning services in five other children’s divisions. The morning adult inspirational service at 7:00 a.m. will be con ducted by Elder C. A. Scriven of Portland, President of the North Pacific Union Conference of Sev enth-day Adventists and the youth service by Elder C. C. Weis, newly appointed pastor to Med ford. Missionaries from South Amer ica, Viet Nam and the South Pa cific have brought reports during the week from their various fields of labor. The 16,000 attendance last week end is expected to grow to 18,000 on the final day of the 10-day session. Committee to Select Officers The Columbia chapter for Re tarded Children held a meeting June 25th in the St. Helens cham ber of commerce office. A com mittee was appointed by the pres ident, Mrs. J. W. Thorp, to nom inate permanent officers to voted on at the next meeting. Memberships were taken and a local attorney engaged to re view the by-laws and constitution, also to file articles of incorpora tion so the association may b? affiliated with state and national associations. The date of the next meeting will be announced in all county papers and over the local radio station, KOHI. All interested persons are in vited to attend. | 9 bi fifi For Lei's Gel Acquainted! Do You Know This Man? Bom May 11, 1904 at Waurika, Oklahoma. Married June 6, 1931 at Vancoi;- ver, Washington. Has two children, some grandchil dren. Is interested and much involved in fraternal affairs. Has served in public elective office Is in business locally and cleans up on it. Enjoys riding and other sports ac tivities. (Information supplied by J. W. Nichols.) Answer to last weeks quiz, Kate Coates. DATES io Remember FRIDAY. JULY 13 American Legion and Auxiliary installation, Legion hall, 8 p.m. SATURDAY, JULY 14 Vernonia Grange, hall near golf course, 8 p.m. MONDAY, JULY 16 City council, City hall, 8 p.m. Jamboree meeting, West Oregon Bldg., 8 p.m. TUESDAY, JULY 17 Vernonia Odd Fellows lodge, Odd Fellows hall, 8 p m. Initiation. Phone HA 9-3462 NEHALEM VALLEY | MOTOR FREIGHT J 4 Broke Brake Relining W ith American Brakebloc Bonded Brake Shoes R A L P H 'S CHEVRON SERVICE Atlas Tires Batteries Accessories Motor Tune-up Auto Parts HAzel 9-6691 BEELINE SUMMER SALE NOW ON CLOTHES FOR ENTIRE FAMILY Display at office— 875 Bridge Daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. to I p.m Closed Tuesday. Also closed Friday. July 13th and W ednesday. July 18th. Open all day Saturday. July 14th and 21st. Î i Special awards to former hostesses havinga second show before A ugust 31st. Style Show coming A ugust 3. All new fall fashions. I Professional and local models — 8 p.m., I.O.O.F. Hall. ♦ DORIS SKIDMORE ♦ I e