CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE-General DANCE HERMAN GRAVES & THE OZARK CHEROKEE SAT., AUG. 11—9 to 1 AM. LEGION HALL — VERNONIA Heard on KBAM from 7:30 to 8:00 A.M. Saturday FOR SALE: Lawn mower, 22-inch twin jet self propelled. Fulton Deluxe three-horsepower 4-cycle Briggs and Stratton motor. $30. Carl Davis, HAzel 9-5243. 31tfc FOR SALE: Roll-away bed in good condition. Call HAzel 9-5164. 31t3c FOR SALE: Refrigerator, rug, chest of drawers, miscellaneous household items and appliances. Also, seme clothing. Call HAzel 9-6254, Clarke Anderson. 31t2c FOR SALE: Raspberries and Blue berries. Ready now. Albert Scha- lock, Third street, Riverview. HA- zel 9-3582.________________ 30t2c FOR SALE: Electric roaster with stand; two sets of stationary tubs; several inside doors. Inquire at Linn Grocery._____________ 30t3c FOR SALE: Davenport with two new spring units; chair; 15 pounds cotton and 10 yards upholstery material. Reasonable price. Mrs. Paul Gordon, 141 A St. 29t3c KOG Aims Told County Group FOR SALE-Rea) Estate THREE BEDROOM house, living rocm, dining room, kitchen, glas­ sed-in porch, garage, large shop, on four lots. All redecorated. Available now. $5500. On 4th St., Riverview. Contact Mr. Sozoff for key. 29tfc COMPLETELY furnished all elec­ tric, five rooms, bath. Newly dec­ orated home. Garage. Ideal for retired couple. Corner lot. Rea­ sonable. Orval Clark, 1011 Ne­ halem. 29t3 FOUR-ROOM house, garage with extra room, electric water tank, wired for washer, dryer, range; lawn, garden space. 1*4 blocks from main street on Rose avenue. Mrs. C. O. Thomas, 876 Third St.. Vernonia, Oregon. 29t3c FOR SALE: Three-bedroom fur­ nished home inside city limits. In­ quire at 425 Rose Ave. $1,000 down, balance payments plus 5 percent interest. 30t3 FOR SALE-Car, Truck FOR SALE: 1946 Dodge pick-up, good condition. 350 gallon fuel tank. Call at Mrs. Oscar Shiffer’s, by Riverview bridge, next to Bur­ ton apartments. . 31tl SERVICES FOR SALE: 11-cubic foot refrig­ erator, good condition, $50. 123 North St., HAzel 9-5603. 29t3c BOOKKEEPING, taxes, public stenographer, notary public. New accounts invited. Doris Skidmore, 875 Bridge St. Office open Mon., Friday., 10-5. Closed Tues. Satur­ day, 9-1. After hours by appoint­ ment. HAzel 9-6005 or HAzel 9- 5895. 27tfc FOR SALE: Alfalfa hay, wire bales, conditioned. $25 per ton. Bill Sword, HAzel 9-6491 or HA- zel 9-5411.________________ 28tfc OPPORTUNITY! Your money can earn dividends and free life insurance. See your Credit Union. 959 Rose Avenue. 7tfc FOR FLOWERS for all occasions and potted plants, call your local florist, Spofford’s Garden and Florist Scrviea. HAzel 9-5863. ’___________________ 28tfc WORKING MOTHERS, let me help you. Ironing done reason­ ably $3 & up per basket. You need help, I can use money. Ma Vike, 1654 Nehalem St., Corey Hill. 5tfc FOR SALE: Baled hay in the field. Perry Smith, Birkenfeld, Oregon. SKyline 5-2332. 2913 BULLS for rent. Angus, Milking Shorthorn and Whiteface. John Wilmarth. Phone Clatskanie 2368. 28t4c EVEN-TEMP INSULATION CO. 18860 SW Vista, Aloha, Oregon. Blown - in insulation. Aver­ age house, $50-$60. Call collect, Mitchell 4-3918,___________ 18tfc FLOWERS THAT PLEASE. Fin­ est in flowers for all occasions. Plants, bouquets. Floral pieces for funerals. Flowers speeded by long distance or wired anywhere. Mrs. Lloyd Thomas, HAzel 9-6611. ltfc FOR SALE: Used chain saws. Keasey's Saw Shop, corner of Bridge and State St. 27tfc TEN-POUND bundles of news­ papers for sale. Suitable for starting fires, etc. Vernonia Eagle office_______________________8tf FRESH FLOWERS for any occa­ sion Flowers wired nnywhere. Ruth Steers, HAzel 9-5384 15tfc Many a man who lives it up finds he must also live it down. Haberman's Meat PROCESSING PLANT State Inspected CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING Beef: Monday, Tuesday, Friday Hogs: Thursday, Friday till noon Cutting and Wrapping Sharp Freezing Smoking and Curing Free use of Stock Trailer Shop Res. EL 7-3922 EL 7-2981 Rt. 2, Bx 141, Forest Grove, Ore. On Fern Hill Road ltfc CLARENCE R. WAGNER, county surveyor, Court House, St. Helens. Phone office, 698: home, 183. P ri­ vate surveying, engineering work. 24tfc FOR RENT CHERRY TREE Apts, and rooms —Furnished, Private bath. 830 Second St. HAzel 9-5(M2. 24tfc WANTED in vicinity of Vernonia: Smallv acreage with good house. Contact E. C. Trellis, Rt. 1, Box 136, Othello, Washington. 30t3c FOR SALE: Seven-room house plus 1 andxs baths, located on Ne­ halem River. Lots of built-ins, pa- tio-deck, carport, and shop. Dan Lawler, Riverside Drive or call HA 9-3092 30t3c WANT FARM Must have water and buildings Can pay cash Write No. 11, N. E. 39th Ave., Portland, Or« • 'o 28tfc FOR SALE: 856 & 866 Rosa Ave. 1058 2nd Ave. Will finance re­ pairs. Perfect title. Lawrence Meissner, Meissner Road, Deer Is- 1 ovl_______________________'HI FOR SALE: Five-room house. On city sewer. Needs some repair. Will consider car or trailer in trade. Write Lyman Hawken. Rt. 1. Box 475. Warren, Oregon. 29tfc WANT TO RENT, option to buy: Acreage, 10 to 15 acres, preferably river-bottom soil, available water for irrigation, in Vernonia area Jerome Stark, Gen'ral Delivery, Vernonia 29t3 THREE BEDROOM house, needs repair In th? city. Make offer. Georg > Laws, HAzel 9-5603. 29tfc CARD OF THANKS MAY WE take this method of thanking our neighbors and friends for their kind expressions of sym­ pathy in our bereavement. They have all been deeply appreciated. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Towne and family 31tlc LOST AND FOUND STRAYED to our home: Weimar- aner bird dog wearing choke chain. Female, short tail. Owner can claim by identifying and pay­ ing for ad. Call HAzel 9-3848. 31tlc LOST during Jamboree: Pair of child’s glasses, one lens? covered. Needed badly. Finder please con­ tact the grandmother, Mrs. Nels Hogberg, HAzel 9-5924. 31tlc CLASSIFIED RATES FOR SALE-Real Estate WANTED FOR SALE: Lot on Nehalem riv­ er. Septic tank, lights, rock drive­ way. Ideal for house trailers. In­ quire nt Spar Tree restaurant. Mist Rt., Vernonia. 31t3c The Columbia County Keep Oregon Green committee held its annual maeting in St. Helens on Thursday evening of last week. Mr. Albert Weisendanger, execu­ tive secretary of Keep Oregon Green, spoke to the group, giving an outline of the aims and accomp­ lishments of the forest fire pre­ vention program in Oregon since inception of the Keep Oregon Grean movement in 1941. Bob Madsen, District Warden from the Forest Grove headquar­ ters of the Northwest Oregon Dis­ trict pointed out recent fire sta­ tistics for the area and for Colum­ bia county. The Kaep Oregon Green com­ mittee is organized to further the efforts of fire fighting agencies by keeping the people of the area constantly alert to prevent fires. The program of public education is carried by posters, news stories, ra­ dio and TV releases and personal contacts to all classes of people using the forests. This includes tourists, vacationers, hunters, fish­ ermen, farmers and ranchers, log­ gers, and land-owners. On display at the dinner meeting were all of the many posters, pam­ phlets, and other materials being used in the Keep Oregon Green campaign this year. Each member committee present at the meeting took home with him a supply of these materials for use in his own local community. Anyone interest­ ed in helping this program locally or in securing Kaep Oregon Green publicity material should contact their lecal representative. The 1963 Columbia County com­ mittee, as announced by Bob Lind­ say, Vernonia chairman, includes the following people: Scappoose area: Phil Holsheimer Jr. and Tharrel Marcott. Rainier area: H. C. Owens and Carl Zimmerman. Vernonia area: Wilford Holce and E. T. Johnston (Birkenfeld). St. Helens area: Howard House (Warren), Jack McGuire and Paul Vance. Clatskanie area: Ralph Kleger and Willard Evenson. DESPERATE! Need ride to Tek­ tronix, day shift to Building 39 or vicinity. Please call Judy Cay- wood, ll.V rl • 3198. 29t3c MISCELLANEOUS WE Republicans believe that the Constitution of the United States is the most inspired document written by man, under the gui­ dance of God for the governing of a nation of free men. I do not al­ ways agree with the Supreme Court's interpretation. Lawrence Meissner. Pd. adv. by Meissner for Representative, 198 Meissner road, Deer Island. 30t3c Demoni a Eagle MARVIN KAMHOLZ Editor and Publisher O fficial N ew spaper of V ernonia, O regot Entered as second class mail matter, Angus* 4, 1922 at the post office in Vernonia, Oregon under the act of March 3, 1879 Sub­ scription price $3 00 yearly in the Nehalem Valley. Elsewhere $3 50. N A T IO N A L IO IT O R IA L kmmnKiEnza N O U V I3 O S S V tiiH tn m f \ VW THE EAGLE assumes no finan­ cial responsibility for errors thal may appear in ads pub­ lished in its columns, but in case where this paper is at fault, will reprint that part of an adv. in which the typo­ graphical mistake occurs. NO CLASSIFIED OR DISPLAY ADV. WILL BE ACCEPTED AFTER TUESDAY N O O N EXCEPT FOR NEXT WEEKS PAPER. BLIND ADS with answers to be handled by the Eagle: Mini­ mum charge SI.00. No informa iion given relative to such ads. POETRY accepted only as paid matter. Rate: 5c per type line. M I N I M U M charge 50c for 25 words or less. Words over min imum. 3c each. Three inser­ tions for the price of two. CARD of Thanks & Notices: S1.00 for up to 12 lines. Additional lines, 8 cents each. NO information on classifieds will be given out until after paper is mailed. HENRY & POLLY HUDSON DRY GOODS NOTIONS — GIFTS FIRE. AUTO AND CASUALTY INSURANCE LINES Pnone MA S 60S« At Mile Bridge R i v e r v —<» Vidor Bergs Visit with Friends While on Trip BIRKENFELD—Mr. and Mrs. Vick Berg took off for a couple days trip last week. They went to the coast, visited with the Buddy Larsons, Brick Lamberts, Lau­ rence Jepson, then went to Grande Ronde and visited with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Chase spent Sunday at Eugene and other places along the way. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Richardson, Elsa Richardson and Ethelyn Free­ man left last Saturday for a trip to northern Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Udey and children of Dallas spent the week end here with his folks. Robert Berg left Sunday for a few days visit with his sister, Win­ ifred Hult at Horton. Guests from Iowa Visit At R. S. Lindsay Home NATAL - PITTSBURG — Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Lindsay of Scap­ poose accompanied by their guests, Mr. and Mrs. M. Reno and daugh­ ter of Newton, Iowa called on Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Lindsay Wednes­ day. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Christensen and family of Portland were vis­ iting her folks, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Howard this week end and also took in the Jamboree. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Devine visited Mr. and Mrs. Max Oblack Sun­ day evening. Monday callers of the Oblacks were her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Reed Holding of Scap­ poose who recently returned from a trip to Calgary and Sun Valley where they visited their son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Holding. Visitors Find Patient Nearing Home Coming Mrs. Jim Watson, Shirley Berg and Sulo Sanders were in Port­ land last Monday and visited with Mrs. Charlie Sundland. They re­ ported her as coming along real well. She has the cast off now. Mrs. Buddy Larson, Bobby and Duane of Netarts visited Friday morning with the Larson families at Birkenfeld then went to Ver­ nonia. She returned home that evening. Gary Murray and Mrs. Bobby Murray and two children of Port­ land spent Saturday evening and Sunday with the Fred Larsons. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Chase of Ar­ cata, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. My­ ron Chase and daughter of Long Beach, Calif., visited with the Roger Chase family for two weeks. Ted Bodenhamers Move To L. Callisler House RIVERVIEW — Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bodenhamer and baby have moved from Riverview cabins in­ to the Callister house on the high­ way. Jim and Lynne Abney returned to their home at Spokane Satur­ day after spending several weeks at the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Welter. Mr. and Mrs. Rex Normand Jr. and Jerry Oakes visited at the home of his mother, Mrs. Ruby Normand this week end. Mrs. Grace Normand accompanied them home. Also visiting Mrs. Normand was her daughter, Mrs. Wm. El­ dred and daughter Sheryl and mother-in-law, Mrs. Edith Eldred. E agU Grangers Gather 6 Oernonia THURSDAY, AUG. 2, 1962 At Pomona Day Berry Picking Hazardous NATAL - PITTSBURG—Among those who attended the Pomona Picnic at Big Eddy Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Sam Devine, Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Waddell, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mathews, Mr. and Mrs. Noble Dunlap, Richard Pet­ erson, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Lindsay and Mrs. Kit Kennedy. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Carmichael of Hillsboro former residents, also were pres­ ent. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Olstedt and family of Beaverton were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Pringle this week end. Jeffrey Frederickson returned home with them after spending the week here with his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Grant and family of Bay City were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Dass and attended the Jamboree. Mike Anderson and children of Rainier called on Mr. and Mrs. DeeVeere Hershey Sunday even­ ing. Ladies Make Visit at Providence Hospital BIRKENFELD—The Mesdames Ted Bellingham, Art Bellingham and Geo. Richardson went to Port­ land last Friday and visited with Mrs. Don Tiffney at the Provi­ dence hospital. Mrs. Bellingham and Marty stayed over the week •end at Vernonia with her folks. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hammerberg and family of Renton, Wash., spent the week end here with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Wanstrom and Hank Robinson went to Port­ land Sunday and attended a house­ warming for their nephew and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Swan­ son. Niece Attends Funeral Of Former Resident RIVERVIEW—Mrs. B. R. Nor­ mand went to Seattle Tuesday to attend the funeral of her uncle, Robert Raymer. The Raymers for­ merly lived here. On her return, she brought her son, Leslie For- cier, home after he had spent sev­ eral weeks with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Andy Raymer. Mr. and Mrs. Vance Kovac of Aberdeen, Washington spent the week end at the home of their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Holmes and daughter of Astoria sp. nt the week end at the home of her mother, Mrs. Maude Wells. For Mrs. Willard Garlock Mrs. Willard Garlock had the misfortune to fall and hurt her leg quite badly while picking ber­ ries. Grandma Garlock of Mist went down to assist with the work. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larson and Dave went to Portland Monday evening, Fred for a pickup he had purchased, and she and Dave to stay over so Dave could go to the orthodontist on Tuesday. Diane Rogers of Jewell spent Thursday night and Friday with her grandparents, The Francis Larsons. Berg Bros, went to Portland Monday and brought out a load of cattle for C. P. Meyer who lives on the Workman place. Mist Circle to Repeat Picnic NATAL - PITTSBURG — Mist Helping Circle enjoyed a picnic at Dass Park Thursday. Next month’s meeting is also planned to be a picnic at the park. Mr. and Mrs. DeeVeere Hershey visited Saturday with her folks, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Childs and their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Phillips and girls of Portland. Carmen and Cynthia Peterson of Vancouver are spending a week with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Peterson. Week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Wolff were Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Turner and children of Hood River and Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Turner and family of Port­ land. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner and girls of Portland were out Saturday. Sunday callers includ­ ed Max Wolff, Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Wolff and Mr. and Mrs. H. Wolff. Mr. and Mrs. J. Folken were Sun­ day evening callers. MARR & STAFFORD MEAT CO. Rt. 2, Box 379, Forest Grove, Ore. EL 7-7281 Slaughtering, Cutting, Wrapping, and Curing Meat for sale, any quantity. Cattle Received Sunday and Monday until noon. Hogs received Tuesday and Wednesday until noon. Come through Banks, take Tillamook road 1 (4 mile, lake first lefthand road. ltfc E N Z H Z H X H X H X IIX H X H Z H X If lX H X H ^ S KING’S Grocery-Market Ï Riverview jj M Phone HA 9-6015 f "Where Your Money Buys More" | [ At the Mile Bridge ALWAYS — Top Quality H X ALWAYS — Best Prices X I ALWAYS — Phone and Delivery X c H I —From your home-owned independent grocery. X H I SHOP BY PHONE — YOU RING. WE BRING X C H J : h x h x h x h x h x h x h x h x h x h x k x h £ IT PAYS TO READ THE ADS. It happened 100 YEARS ago The oldest incorporated trade association in the country, the United States Brewers Association, was organized in 1 8 6 2 .. . the same year that DERREL ROSE Our concern is to give you con­ siderate care, handle all details with a service of quiet dignity and beauty that will comfort you and your family for years to come. PRICKETT’S MORTUARY IN OREGON, to protect their frontier against marauding Indians and rebel sympathizers, patriots formed the First Oregon Cavalry. No outfit performed more essential service or displayed more bravery in battle than the Oregon troops. Throughout the state folks toasted their success with foaming steins of beer. For then, as now, beer was the traditional beverage of moderation — light, sparkling refreshment that adds a touch of Oregon hospitality to any occasion. Folks in Oregon have always enjoyed the good fellow­ ship that goes with every glass. TODAY, in its centennial year, the United States Brewers Association still works constantly to assure maintenance of high standards of quality and pro­ priety wherever beer and ale are served. OF FOREST GROVE Please Call Collect 1920 Pacific A v e—Dial EL 7-3128 * UNITED STATES BREWERS ASSOCIATION INC