CLASSIFIED ADS IT'S YOUR LAW Respect for Law Makes Democracy Live FOR SALE-General SERVICES FOR SALE: Nearly new Telectro Stereo tape-recorder, cost $279.50, sell for $200. 500-watt 35mm slide projector, used one time, cost $62, sell for $35. $55, 35m camera, like new, sell for $30 with case. Heavy duty one quarter horse motor on portable stand with jack shaft and pulleys, $20. Call HAzel 9-3742. 47t3 HELP for your budget! See your Credit Union for Savings and Loan needs. 959 Rose Ave., Vernonia. 37tfc FOR SALE: RCA Victor console AM-FM Radio-phonograph; Ad­ miral console 21” TV; Stauffer “Magic Couch”; pair platinum permanent finish end tables, matching coffee table. Phone HA- zel 9-6005 or HAzel 9-5895. 46t3c FOR SALE: Trailer, good shape, one new tire; handmade antique rocker, upholstered chair, two small tables; two bucking saws, five-foot and seven-foot. Oliver LaFontaine, 1025 Clatsop St., Ver- nonia. HAzel 9-6374,_______ 46t3 APPLES for sale. $1 to $2.50 bx. Vernonia Golf Club. 46t3c SEE US for several good used davenos. Call HA 9-5651 or stop in at Brunsman Hardware. 45t3c SHRUBS and bulbs for fall plant­ ing now available. Also, potted plants, corsages and funeral de­ signs. Long distance phone ser­ vice and local delivery, including Mist. For the finest quality at the lowest price, call your local flor­ ist, HAzel 9-5863. Spofford’s Gar­ den and Florist Service. 42tfc EVEN-TEMP INSULATION CO. 18860 SW Vista, Aloha, Oregon. Blown - in insulation. Aver­ age house, $50-$60. Call collect, MlUhcll 4-3918. 18tfc FLOWERS THAT PLEASE. Fin­ est in flowers for all occasions. Plants, bouquets. Floral pieces far 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 FRESH FLOWERS for any occa­ sion. Flowers wired anywhere. Ruth Steers, HAzel 9-5384 __________________________15tfc FOR SALE-Real Estate WE HAVE the buyers, we need the listings. Call collect, write or visit. United Farm Agency, Gas­ ton, Oregon. YUkon 5-3021 days; YUkon 5-3263 evenings. 47t6c Columbia River Real Estate Scappoose, Oregon 543-6617 543-6351 Vernonia Branch — HAiel 9-3186 V-6 Desirable residence, River­ view, $500.00 Dn. $50 00 Mo. V-5 OA Hill. 3 Bedroom on Hi- way. $1000.00 Dn. V-7 On Rock Creek 24 acres, all fenced, cleared, irrigated, loaf­ ing shed, milking parlor, separa­ tor room, two wells, water in barn and house. V-l 4 Acres on Nehalem River, Service station and cabins. Park setting. V-3 Good income property. 2 houses in town. Total price $3500 00.47tlc FOR SALE: Two bedroom house at 558 Thud St., Vernonia Inquire at 575 Third Street. Phone HAzel 9 3803 FARMS AND DWELLINGS LISTED REEHER REALTY 2007 21st, Forest Grove. Sec Bill Horn, Vernonia Phone HA 9-6203 Branch Bank Building. WANTED WANTED: Used half or three- quarter horse power electric mo­ tor, 3450 RPM, single phase Dud­ ley Spofford, HAzel 9-5863 47t3c HELP WANTED: Secretary-book­ keeper, permanent position. Sub­ mit qualifications and experience in writing. References required Write: Attention Mr. Saucy, Sun­ set Packing Co., PO Box 7, Banks, Oregon 47t3c WANTED: In niy home, elderly gentleman, room board, and care Call HAzel 9-5312________ 46t3c Please advise us of your new address if you are planning to move. PLAN AHEAD WORKING MOTHERS, let me help you. Ironing done reason­ ably $3 and up per basket. 50c extra for pick-up and delivery. You need help, I can use money. Ma Vike, 1654 Nehalem St., Corey Hill. 36tfc 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. Pri­ vate surveying, engineering work. 24tfc FOR RENT CHERRY TREE Apts, and rooms —Furnished, private bath. 830 Second St. HAzel 9-5042. Now un­ der new management, Edison En­ terprises. H. J. “Hill” Edison, managing owner. 47tfc FURNISHED three-room house for rent, reasonable. 108 A street. Mrs. T. A. Adams, HAzel 9-5573. 46t3c FOR SENT: Farm with large house, in Vernonia school district. Lights, telephone in. Call Forest Grove, ELgin 7-6243,______ 45t3 APARTMENT available at River­ view Cabins. 44tfc LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Notice is hereby given that the undersigned as administrator of the estate of Charles Ludvig Fa- ger, deceased, has filed his final account in the County Court of the State of Oregon for Colum­ bia County, and that Monday, December 10, 1962, at the hour of 10:00 o’clock in the forenoon of said day and the Court Room of said Court has been appointed by said Court as the time and place for the hearing of objections there­ to and the settlement thereof. Date of first publication, No- vember 8, 1962. Date of final publication De- ceniber 6. 1962. Harold W. Rushing, Administrator John L. Foote St. Helens, Oregon. Attorney. 45t5c NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING A Public Hearing will be held at the Vernonia Fire Hall, No­ vember 27, 1962, at 8:00 p.m., for the purpose of discussion of a pro­ posed Ordinance establishing a Building Code and building per­ mit system for the City of Ver­ nonia. 47tlc MISCELLANEOUS WANT to place in good home, a female blue-point Siamese kitten. Anyone interested please call HA­ zel 9 3123 47tl CLASSIFIED RATES THE EAGLE assumt* no finan­ cial responsibility for errors that 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- NO CLASSIFIED OR DISPLAY graphical mistake occurs. 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 $1.00. No informa tion given relative to such ads. M I N I M U M charge SOc for 2S words or less. Words over min­ imum. 3c each. Three inser­ tions for the price of two. CARD of Thanks A Notices: $1.00 for up to 12 lines. Additional lines. 8 cents each. NO information on classifieds will be given out until after paper is mailed. POETRY accepted only as paid matter. Rate: 5c per type line. Each of us may like to think of himself as indispensible. Without him the business, the office, the home would fall This is oft­ en true, alas. P eo p le do suddenly be­ co m e sick , ca n n o t do work have a breakdown, or die. Who is to do this key man’s work? Maybe only he can sign checks, open a deposit box, sign papers, or handle certain dealings. Some firms collapse in such an event. The law may dissolve partnerships and agencies at once, leaving part­ ners with only power to wind up affairs. To take care of this, plan your business affairs. Write letters of instruction to banks, or other business houses, to take care of your affairs in emergencies. When a person dies, be­ comes incompetent, or unable to act legally, his affairs are suspended and a court names a legal representative to act for him. This takes time for a court hearing, notices, and other legal steps. Action tak­ en after a representative’s ap­ pointment often needs more time for court confirmation. To protect the interests of the person, the court must look over all new transactions unless he has provided other­ wise. person should ap p ly or in te rp re t any law w ith o u t the aid of an a tto rn e y, who is co m p letely advised o l the tacts involved. E v e n a slight variance in facts m ay change the ap p lic atio n o l the law. AROUND THE FARM CARD OF THANKS I EXTEND my sincere thanks to the many friends who made the long hours in the hospital more bearable by their visits, cards, let­ ters and other thoughtfulness. It was all deeply appreciated. Mrs. Marie Frazee. 47tlc Oernonla Eagle MARVIN KAMHOLZ Editor and Publisher Official Newspaper of Vernonia. Oregon Entered as second class mail matter, Augus’ 4, 1922 at the post office in Vernonia, Oregon under the act of March 3, 1879. Sub- (cription price $3 00 yearly in the Nehalem Valley Elsewhere $3 50. N A T IO N AL E D IT O R IA L A U 'U A H as M ( M il» N IW S 9 A M » tU IL IS H tlS ASSOCIATION 4 MONDAY—WOMEN Alley Oop League W L 19 29 Vernonia Clinic 24 24 Sam’s Food Store 26 22 Curl’s Grocery 27 21 West Oregon Electric High game, Doris Skidmore, 204; high series, Mary Groff, 509. Splits picked up: Florenz Huff, 3-10; Doris Skidmore, 2-7; Jacquie Antles, 2-7; Nell Thomas, 2-7; Margaret Thompson, 5-6-10 and 4-5-7; Shirley Huss, 5-7: TUESDAY—WOMEN Lost Won 16 28 Standard Oil 23% 20% Vernonia Drug 23% 20 >4 King’s Grocery 25 Quinn’s Insurance 19 Trudy Magoff, high game, 191 and high series, 495. Splits picked up: Beaulah Hall, 4-5; Trudy Magoff, 2-7 and 3-10; Hazel Shipman, 3-10. WEDNESDAY—MEN The law has a special proce­ dure to take care of a per­ son's property if he suddenly gets hurt or becomes physi­ cally ill. The court may name a temporary conservator at once to take care of urgent matters and protect the sick or injured person from loss. It may name a permanent rep­ resentative later. /Vote: Oregon law yers offer this colum n as a p u blic service. N o “Agriculture is an industry that requires relatively large amounts of real and personal property and is, therefore,vulnerable to the le­ vying of property taxes,” as many folks can testify at this time. Har­ vey Shapiro of USDA’s Economic Research Service points out that “while property is subject to tax­ ation in all 50 states, in no two states are the property tax laws identical. The result is that the tax treatment accorded to differ­ ent kinds of property varies from state to state and from locality to locality within many states. Whether any specific property is to be placed on the tax roll is, therefore, determined largely by the item’s geographical location. “These interstate variations re­ sult from differences in the exem- tions permitted by the separate states, as the property tax is gen­ erally hased upon the principle that all real and personal proper­ ty is subject to taxation unless expressly exempted. “As far as tangible personal property used in agriculture is concerned, the tax differences range from complete exemption in Delaware, Hawaii, New York and Pennsylvania to no exemptions in Rhode Island, Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas, Montana and Nevada. Alaska permits real and personal property located within the cor­ porate limits of a municipality to be taxed. Farm property located outside of these municipalities is presumably exempt. "The tax status of farm personal property in the remaining states is not so clearly defined. Some cate­ gories of farm property are com­ pletely exempted in several states and are taxed in others. In some instances, partial exemptions are granted through such varying methods as excusing some part of the valuation from the tax roll or, in the case of livestock, not taxing animals under a certain age on the day of assessment. For example, all livestock are exempt in Louis­ iana; Kansas confines the exemp­ tion to those animals under six months old; and Ohio exempts Uernonia Eagte BOWLING By DON COIN WALROD County Extension Agent $100 of the assessed livestock from the tax roll. In a few states property is ex­ empt from taxes levied by one level of government if they are subject to taxes by some other governmental unit. Thus, farm ma­ chinery and tools are exempt from local government levies in Ken­ tucky but are subject to state property taxes. “These exemptions are more fully described in a recent de­ partment of agriculture publica­ tion entitled: Taxation of Tangi­ ble Personal Property Used in Ag­ riculture (ERS-86). “There are interstate adminis­ trative differences that also affect the amount of taxes levied on spe­ cific properties. In general, the tax levied on property is supposed to represent the same proportion of the value of the property in every instance. Value is usually defined as the price the property would bring in a fair market sale between a willing buyer and a willing seller. “However, several states do not follow this general procedure, em­ ploying in its place some form of classification of property for tax purposes. The aim of classification is to permit the tax on different categories of property to represent different proportions of market value in contrast to the general rule of proportionate taxation em­ ployed in most states. The differ­ ent tax rates are achieved in sev­ eral ways. West Virginia lists all taxable property at its “true val­ ue” and then permits differing rates to be applied to the separate classes. Tangible personal proper­ ty used in agriculture is placed in the class with the lowest maxi­ mum rate. "Virginia permits its local gov­ ernments to classify property with the purpose of imposing varying rates of tax. Counties receive ex­ plicit permission to classify ma­ chinery, tools or livestock. In con­ trast to West Virginia, classifica­ tion is not mandatory but is left to the discretion of the unit con­ cerned. “The states of Minnesota, Mon­ tana, New Jersey and Ohio classi­ fy property by having the various categories of property placed on the tax roll at differing percentag­ es of their full value. For example, in Minnesota stored crops and seed in the hand of the producer is placed on the tax roll at 10 per cent of its full value, while farm machinery and tools are listed at 20 percent. One overall tax rate is applied in each locality to these fractional assessments with the re­ sult that the tax per $100 of full value will vary between classes. “Knowledge of these interstate differences may be useful to those farmers wishing to modify their own tax laws. Projections of re­ cent trends indicate that farms will require even larger amounts of tangible personal property, such as machinery, in the future and will be even more vulnerable to property taxes than they are now However, in light of recent studies« suggesting that state and local governments will require larger revenue than they are now raising any proposals to modify existing tax laws must take into account the effects of changes upon these governments’ finances. 32 12 .727 Brunsman Hdw. 20 24 .455 Fisher’s Elec. 20 24 .455 Col. Riv. R. E. 16 28 .364 Bob’s Union High game, Zeke Lemaick, 188; high series, Ted Bodenhamer, 538. Splits picked up: Ralph Keasey, 3-10; Doug Beckman, 3-10 and 5- 7-8; Norm Axon, 5-7-9; Zeke Le- maick, 4-5-7. THURSDAY—MEN Crown Zellerbach 24 20 .545 22% 21 .512 Mill Market 21% 22 .488 Curl’s Grocery 20 24 .455 Vernonia Milk Bob Curl, high game. 215 and high series, 570. Splits picked up: Ed Burton, 5-6, 2-4-10 and5-7; Fred Johnson, 5-8-10; Albert Schalock, 5-7; Hen­ ry Anderegg, 5-10 and 3-10; Dick Elliott, 8-9. THURSDAY, NOV. 22, 1962 Couple Arrives From Okinawa NATAL - PITTSBURG — Mr. and Mrs. Ike Dass were pleasantly surprised Wednesday by the ar­ rival of their daughter and son- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. E. Allbee who have just, returned from a two-year stay on Okinawa where he was stationed. Mr. and Mrs. Justin Folken of Vernonia were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Wolff Satur­ day evening. Afterwards they all attended the program at Mist. Mr. and Mrs.’ Noble Dunlap and Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Lindsay at­ tended the Historical Society meeting at Vernonia Grange hall Saturday. Mrs. Nettie Titus of Astoria came Thursday to spend a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Wm. Pringle. Mr. and Mrs. John Buchanan and family of Longview were here Sunday to visit her folks. Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Dass. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Wolff drove to Portland Sunday where they were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Max Wolff. Also present were Mr. and Mrs. Max Glienke, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Haag, Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Wolff and son and Mr. and Mrs. H. Wolff and daughter. IT PAYS TO READ THE ADS! DR. R.V. LANCE OPTOMETRIST Wed., 10 A.M.—5 P.M. Phone HA 9-6565 Mist Circle Program Acclaimed As Success Complete Visual Care MIST—The program and auc­ tion held at the Mist gym Satur­ day night was a big success. The auction and other entertainment brought around $343 which will be used for upkeep of the ceme­ tery and lights for the community. The circle expressed their apprec­ iation to those who donated to the auction, those who helped with the program and to the auctioneer, Henry Anderegg, who did a fine job. It was all very much apprec­ iated. Shalmon Libel was in Portland Monday on a business trip. Mrs. Don Hall of Morton, Wn. has been a recent visitor at the home of her mother, Mrs. Maude Rogers, and her sister, Myrtle Mathews. ! HENRY & POLLY HUDSON • DRY GOODS ! NOTIONS — GIFTS { FIRE. AUTO AND ; CASUALTY » INSURANCE LINES [ I Phone HA 9-6058 At Mile Bridge, Riverview i. , ---- -------- You don't have to squeeze your FAST, FAIR, FRIENDLY Fast service. Fair •attlament of claims. Friendly p eop le who ■ro on your oido. And you save money, tool Lower rates because F a rm es insures careful drivers. Farmers Auto Insurance srtMMwnn 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, lake Tillamock road 1 % mile, take first lefihand road. •5 •5 ■ 5 V V V V V i ♦ Insurance is supposed to provide peace of mind. You can’t rest easy if a lump sum insurance premium badly deflates your budget. Our handy Premium Payment Plan lets you space your in­ surance payments over a number of months. It’s a convenient way to maintain a healthy insurance program . . . and a healthy budget. See us for details. BILL J. HORN Lloyd Quinn— HA 9-3693 V V V Phone HA 9-3462 NEHALEM VALLEY MOTOR FREIGHT I Vernonia Insurance Exchange Phone HA 9-6203 905 Bridge Street Vernonia, Oregon Kepreienttng Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company Member Hartford Insurance Group Hartford 15, Conn. ltfc V V I Î V ’ V 5 •5 •5 S • V :« V V 3 3 S g 3 $ g ► : V •5 s ÿ ï 3 3 I £ ¡5MIHXHXHXHXHXHXHXHXHXHXH3 h KING’S Grocery-Market S H J H X H Z H Phone HA 9-6015 H —From your home-owned independent grocery. M SHOP BY PHONE — YOU RING. WE BRING "WhtM Your Money Buya More” Riverview j At the Mile Bridge ALWAYS — Top Quality ALWAYS — Best Prices ALWAYS — Phone and Delivery H Z M Z H XHZHZHZHZHZHZHZHZHZHZKZHX’