IL L ARKET FOLGER'S COFFEE 1-Lb. Cans 59c £ $1.17 INDIAN GEM INSTANT COFFEE B& M ASPARAGUS BAKED BEANS QQc 3» 85* 3 7Q { O QCc 2 CCc E $| 3 210« Q flc Q V 2 “ Jt 9 All Green Spears — No. 303 Cans LARGE 28-OZ. CANS BAKER’S CHOCOLATE CAMPBELL’S RED KETTLE Chips SoupMixes For g 12-oz. I’kg. 2 Can Pkg............... GIN SING CHINESE JE Potatoes I5-oz. I’kg. For Pound Pkg. .................................. CROWN’S ZEE PLASTIC ASTIC SEA Wrap ISLAND For / | $1 7® For Large 16-oz. Pkgs. ® Boiling Onions Mr. and Mrs. Larry Garner en­ tertained Saturday evening with a dinner honoring Miss Mildred Weed who left Sunday to return to her home in Pasadena after a two weeks visit here. Other guests were Oscar Weed, Mr. and Mrs. Oren Weed and Mr. and Mrs. El­ za Weed and son Dennis from St. Helens. RUMMAGE SALE: Thun.. Fri.. Oct. 11. 12. Fire hall. EUB church. 4012c Mr. and Mrs. Desmond Laird and family have now moved to their new home in Salem. Mrs. Laird is teaching there this year. Mr. Laird has been working in Portland while awaiting comple­ tion of the bowling alley in Salem with which he is to be associated. The strikes which affected con­ struction work has delayed its completion. The trapper. Robert Walker and his family are moving from Washington street to the Davies place on Rock creek, formerly known as the McFarland place. Larry Kuehn who is a freshman at Reed college this year visited here last week end with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Steers. Mrs. L. G. Bowerman drove to Corvallis Sunday to pick up her daughter, Mrs. Merritt Tuttle for the drive on to Toledo to visit Mrs. Bowerman’s brother. Fred Wall They found him at home and doing fine and he sent his greet­ ings to his many Vernonia friends. Mrs. Bowerman spent Sunday night at Corvallis with her daugh­ ter and husband and returned home Monday. A family get together at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L E. Stiff was occasioned by the visit here of their daughter Lorene and hus­ band, Mr. and Mrs. Olan Pousson and four children from Farming- ton, New Mexico. Other guests wpre Mr. and Mrs. John White from Moses Lake, Washington; Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Stiff and Mrs. Clayton Stiff and family, Hills­ boro; Dr. and Mrs. Frank Wallace and family and Mr and Mrs. Ray Ballard and son, Clackamas; Ro- liert White, Battleground, Wash­ ington; and Mrs. Ozzie Ray and family, Vernonia The Stiffs re- Oernonia Eagfe THURSDAY. OCT. 4, 1962 : Phone HÄ 9-3462 NEHALEM VALLEY MOTOR FREIGHT gretted the absence of their son, Elvin who is at present in Hong Kong. RUMMAGE SALE: Thurs., Fri.. Oct. 11, 12. Fire hall. EUB church. 4012c Mrs. Betty Cochran of Glendale, California is visiting here with her father, A. B. Counts and other relatives. Mrs. A. B. Counts en­ tered the University of Oregon Medical School hospital Monday for some surgery and tests which were done Tuesday. A telephone call Saturday to Mrs. Harry Emmons brought word that her father, W. E. Mc- Gilchrist who made his home at Roseburg with his son Robert had suffered a heart attack or stroke. Other news from the Robert Gil­ christ home was that a son, Da­ vid Scott, had arrived Septem­ ber 27. This is their sixth child. Guests the past several weeks at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Nelson have been his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Nelson from Moor­ head, Minnesota. They will leave for home Friday of this week. Mrs. Carl Davis and Mrs. E. E. Garner drove to Longview Sunday morning and accompanied Mrs. M. D. Cole to opening events of the Washington Grand Temple, Pythian Sisters at the Montecello hotel. Included were a tea honor­ ing the grand officers of the Knights and Sisters, the joint op­ ening ceremonies in which the welcome to the convention was extended by the Longview mayor, joint memorial services and group banquets in the evening. Mrs. Cole and Mrs. Garner attended the past grand chiefs banquet and Mrs. Davis was at the representa­ tives banquet. Groups all joined for entertainment after the din­ ners. RUMMAGE SALE: Thurs.. FrL. Oct. 11, 12, Fir® hall. EUB church. 40t2c Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Frank and their daughter, Mrs. Larry Brown and her two children drove to The Dalles week end before last to v isit their son Roy and family. Mr. Frank remained there all of last week and Roy brought him home last week end. Mrs. Larry Brown who is at present staying here with her par­ ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Frank so as to be able to make frequent trips to visit her hushand at Good Samaritan hospital where he has been for some time, is pleased to see him showing some improve­ ment now, although progress is slow Gordon Raed was rushed to Good Samaritan hospital Friday of last week after he had suffered a heart attack and was placed in an oxy­ gen tent By Tuesday of this week he had recovered sufficiently to be allowed up briefly and hoped to be allowed to come home soon if his progress continued. Fuiten's Chapel in the Hills VERNONIA. HILLSBORO. FOREST GROVE s : 24-Hour Mortuary Service Women of All Saints Episcopal church in Hillsboro at 4th and Lincoln streets will hold their an­ nual fall treasure and rummage sale Thursday and Friday, Octo­ ber 11 and 12 from 9 a m. to 5 p.m. and each evening from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, October 13 doors will be open from 9 a m. to 5 p.m. The sale features the “French Room with better merchandise, dresses, suits, hats, shoes and cos­ tume jewelry. An added attrac­ tion this year on Friday, October 12, will be “Surprise Paper Bag Sale." Mrs. A E Campbell is general chairman with assisting chairmen. Mrs. J. W Kelley, Mrs Fred Wheeler and Mrs Glen Hieber »x®x®x®x®x®x®x®x®x®x®x® Open Six Days a W®«k 5 A ® :< .x < .: .x .: .: .x .:.x o x .x .: .: .x .x .x ® x .x .: * x .x « .x .x .x .x .x ^ 79c Y ott'n A n CI om I o the Mill Market As Your Telephone E " $1.29 59’ Soap Powder 69’ Shortening 63« Pop Corn 23« Dry Milk 55’ M a rsh m llw sO /IQ « 2 l 7® 49 M ¿1 HA 9-3492 Mr. Clean Free Deliveries Twice Daily 10 A.M. and 3 P.M. All Purpose Cleaner, 28-oz. Bot. Meat Department ★ * Fels Naptha Inst., Giant Pkg. REPEAT BY POPULAR DEMAND SWIFT’S 710« Slab Bacon Shurfine Pure Vegetable, 3-Lb. By The Piece.................. Lb. NEBERGALLS PURE PORK O $1 Sausage Rolls White or Yellow..... 2-Lb. Pkg. Pound Rolls......................... For ■ ■ Skinless Wieners Shur Lac Instant, 8-Qt. Size TIQc Swift’s Worthmore....... Lb. CAMP FIRE NEW a SUPER u r a n SOFT Lb- BaK For No. 2 Potatoes Netted Gems............. 20-Lb. Bag DATES io Remember Nursery Visit Is Informative Twenty-two 4-H Forest Plea­ Sunday afternoon, September sure clubbers rode Ralph Keasey’s 23, Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Spofford pickup to the woods at the north visited the Lost Park Nursery end of Rose avenue September 25. and Fairdale Nursery Co. after A quick plus and minus test which they went to the home of showed that there had been a their daughter, Elsie Graham and high degree of absorbtion of the her family. subject matter of the previous The Fairdale Nursery Co. is meeting. Jimmy Proehl and David owned by Frank Morishita, a Reynolds were the high men to­ landscape architect. He explained ward October’s prize of a pocket the difference between landscap­ glass to study leaves and insects. ing and garden design. The dis­ After a Douglas fir and a grand tinction is not too fine to be easily fir were Christmas treed, many understood. members were able to walk up Landscaping of an entire area to a new tree and say, “The tree establishes the background for the begins here.” That lowest perfect garden design. He said fall was swirl of limbs is the beginning. the best time to do this. Below this most careful judgment He then showed them several is needed to grow a second tree acres in nursery stock, including from a limb. A nicely brushed rhododendrons. These were in an tree Of the forestry club of sev­ open field with no protection from eral years back was again pruned wind or sun except a distant grove at the needed correction points. of firs near Troutdale. He men­ Considerable buzzing accompan­ tioned a couple which he consid­ ied the counting of the limb swirls ered best for planting in sunny on two trees. It was decided that locations. He said that the Eastern one was eight years and other trade preferred the larger species was 20 years old. but he recommended the dwarf for foundation Several wild foods in abundance rhododendron were sampled so as to give confi- planting. Clarence Paul, owner of the d ’nce if one is lost and hungry. Everyone ate some mild snowber- Lost Park nursery on the west ries and some strong rose hips, side near Portland, specializes in the latter having ten times the vit­ rhododendrons and azaleas. His amin C. fields were also in the open. He Big Mac and Little Mic were showed Mr. and Mrs. Spofford found to be Big Leaf Maple (Ac- his propagating house where cut­ ra Macrofilia) and Vine Maple tings were rooted. It may take (Acra Microfilia). The members six months before cuttings root. picked the scaled leaves of the Then they are planted in beds in Western Red Cedar (Thuja Plica- a slat house where they are pro­ ta) with their fingernails and ob­ tected from sun and winter winds served how they were plated, (Pli- from one to two years. Only the strongest plants are cata) They crushed the leaves of the Grand fir (Abies Grandis) be­ put in the fields. The ground is tween their fingers and noted the fertilized before being planted. Af­ pungent, strong balsam odor, the ter one year in the field, plants nice pine smell, socalled by cus­ are ready for sale. Mr. Paul was in agreement with tomers on a Christmas tree lot. Mr. Morishita that the larger, old­ And the reason for the need to know the botanical names’ Be­ er plants were best for the home cause even to a Finnish or a Ja ­ owner to purchase. Plants that panese or an Italian forester, were in the field two or more Abies Grandis is Abies Grandis years are stronger and better able to establish themselves after in his language, too. transplanting. Field grown plants have a better shape and more blooms than other methods of rais­ Mrs. Glen Hieber Is On ing rhododendrons. BEN'S BARBER SHOP Expert Tonsorial Work Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Thomas, Res. Managers Phone HAzel 9-6611 Forest Club Explores Woods 6-oz. Jars Names Added To List Surviving M. V. Ring THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1 Neighbors of Woodcraft, IOOF hall, 8:00 p.m. Vernonia Study club, home of Mrs. Harry Culbertson, 8 p.m. IWA Local 5-14, Union hall, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5 Football. Loggers vs. NeahKahNie, Greenman Field, 8:00 p.m. Columbia Encampment, IOOF hall 8:00 p.m. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6 Rainbow Girls public installation, Masonic Temple, 8:00 p.m. MONDAY, OCTOBER 8 Chamber of Commerce dinner Legion hall, 7:00 p.m. Nehalem Assembly Rainbow Girls Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m. Clothing workshop, West Oregon building, 10:00 a.m. EUB Guild, home of Mrs. Mathil- de Bergerson, 8:00 p.m. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9 Timber Rt. Extension Unit, Ver­ nonia Grange hall, 10:30 a.m. Chapter BS, PEO Sisterhood, at home of Mrs. Paul Gordon, 8 p.m. Vernonia Odd Fellows Lodge, IOOF hall, 8:00 p.m. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10 Vernonia Temple Pythian Sisters, IOOF hall, 8:00 p.m. Natal Grange, Natal hall, 8 p.m. Names of survivors were omit­ ted last week from the obituary of Merle V. Ring due to the acci­ dental misplacement of a piece of paper on which the informa­ tion was given. In addition to the brother Ro­ bert Ring from New York who was mentioned last week, he was survived by a brother Jay, who with his wife, son Jimmy and daughter Cathryn drove from Cali­ fornia to Tacoma for the services, a brother Kenneth in Ohio who was unable to come for services and a sister Peggy, Mrs. Bon Barnell of Portland, who, with her husband, was at Tacoma. Mist-Nehalem Unit To Sample Lesson Items New ways of cooking vegetables will be studied when the Mist- Nehalem Extension Unit meets October 12 at 10:30 a.m. at the Birkenfeld Community Center. Mrs. Arby Mills and Mrs. Jim Watson will present the lesson to the ladies. Samples of the cooking will be served for lunch. There will be a baby sitter pro­ vided. All interested women are invited to attend. J o y T h e a tr e DR. R. V. LANCE~’ Fri., Sat. Oct. 5-6 WALT DISNEY’S OPTOMETRIST , Wed.. 10 A.M.—5 P.M. I P h o n e HA 9-6565 • Complete Visual Care r r a s 59 BON VOYAGE ! Fred MacMurray r o " ! | A FARM CHAIN SAW i j for EVERY woodcutting need { Hillsboro Sale Committee y®;®;®:®;®:®;®x®x®x®x®:®x®;®x®x®x®x®x®x®x®x®:®x®x®x®x®x®x®:®-. >; • 1 Qi 3-Lb. Bag .................................... TOPICS OF THE TOWN Mr. and Mr». E. E. Garner and /■ No. 2 Cans................ For In Heavy Syrup FLAV-R-PAC FROZEN Green Peas For HAWAIIAN Pineapple 100-Ft. Rolls 2 For FLAV-R-PAC FROZEN FRENCH FRIED Noodles & LOCKENS Vernonia, Oregon > :.x .x .x ® x .x ® x .x .x .x .x .x ® NEW TYPE SAW NOW ON DISPLAY A new type of chain saw that combines the low cost, light weight and operating simplicity of the do-it-yourself chain saw with the ruggedness and lugging power of professional models is on display at Keasey’s Saw Shop. Known as the C5 convertible drive model, the new saw for the first time provides small contrac­ tors and other users who do not require the features of a complete professional model with a small power conversion unit that can be added to convert direct engin? drive to a gear drive for rugged, difficult cutting jobs. It is anticipated that the new saw will be widely employed for pruning and trimming shade trees and orchards, part time logging, repairing storm damage, clearing acreage for buildings, building fence« and small bridges, building cabins and shelters, and a variety of other applications. N EW H O M E L IT E c fJ C O N V E R T IB L E D R IV E W hat’s the job? Pruning, clearing, cutting firewood or fence posts, bucking sawlogs. cutting a cash crop — the C-5 does them all! Use it as a fast cutting direct drive for most woodcutting chores. Then, in 9 minutes or less, convert it to a rugged gear drive for the really tough ones. n -jj C U * " '* See the new Homelite C-5 soon. It’ s ONLY the ideal all-purpose saw , . . — * ■ MA VC A FREE DEMONSTRATION T O D A Y / KEASEY'S SAW SHOP 292 Bridge Street Vernonia, Oregon