CLASSIFIED ADS a V . . ---------------------------------- AROUND THE FARM FOR SALE-General SERVICES AVON CALLING! Now presenting Christmas Gift lines. For appoint­ ments call local representatives: East side of State avenue, Mrs. Shirley Huss, HAzel 9-6395 after b p.m.; west side of State avenue, Mrs. Genevieve Hanson, HAzel 9-6262. Many new items. Good specials. SEPTIC TANK service. Pumping and repair. G. A. Russell, Columbia City, Oregon. Phone St. Helens 397-0650 daytime; 397-0074 after 5:00 p.m. 46tfc am FOR SALE: Brown Swiss oow, good milker, three years old. For more information call HAzel 9-6585. 37tl FREIGHT DAMAGED Sewing machines equipped to zig zag, makes button holes. 17 ONLY Brand new 1964 models, slight scratches on cases. Must be sold immediately to s e t t l e insurance claim. For the low price of $57.54. Or, terms with good credit reference. For more information write to col­ lection Dept., Box 922, Longview, Wash. 37t2c FOR SALE: Automatic wood heater, jlOO. Phone HAzel 9-6392. 37tlc FOR SALE: One 12-inch diamond saw and one drum agate tumbler. 831 Third Ave. 36t3 THERE will be a LDS Rummage Sale at Polly’s Variety store Thurs­ day and Friday. 36t3c CANNING peaches, canning corn and pears ready now. Elberta peach­ es start September 7. Lloyd’s Peach Center, W mi. S. Cornelius on Golf course road. 36t2c Second growth fir pole wood for sale, dry, $16 per cord. Leave orders at Vernonia Eagle office for Harold Peterson, Buxton, Oregon. 36t4 FRESH FLOWERS for any occa­ sion. Flowers wired anywhere. Ruth Steers, HAzel 9-5384. 15tfc 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. ____________________________ Hfc FOR SALE-Real Estate 2 and 3 bedroom rentals 39 ACRES, three bedroom home. Rock creek frontage. $11,500, terms 7-ROOM home on 9/10 acre. Work shop. Beaverton, Ore. $12,000, will trade for Vernonia property. 2 BEDROOM House 2 blocks from schools. $4500. Easy Terms. LISTINGS WANTED BILL HORN REALTY and Vernonia Insurance Exchange Bank Bldg,_____________ HAzel 9-6203 FOR SALE: One acre, all cleared on paved street, city water and sew­ er. 5 room house, $4500, $2750 down. Call 1307 Rose Ave., Vernonia, or phone YUkon 5-3281. Call for Wm. Heesacker. 35t3 WE NEED SMALL ACREAGE LISTINGS Columbia River Real Estate VERNONIA BRANCH 866 Bridge St. Phone HA 9-5211 LISTINGS WANTED ___________________________35tlc FOR SALE OR RENT FOR SALE OR RENT: Large house *«n Capitol Hill on 1 acre. 3 bedroom, , possible 4, living room, kitchen, bath. ¡Wired for washer and dryer. Ph. HA , 9-3064 or inquire at house. Mr$ Ruby ^Jackson. 35tfc FOR SALE-Car, Truck Buy From Local Boy BUY YOUR NEXT CAR FROM AL HUNTLEY Specializing in new 1364 PLYMOUTH, VALIANT, 8IMCA, CHRYSLER, INTERNATIONAL plus 100 Reconditioned new car trade-ins. KNF'r Financing, debt consolidation, bank term s. Lowest price in town. These term s will be handled by me only. — Phone AT 8-6366 — Gary Worth Plymouth Co. 4913 N.E. Union, Portland 34t8c Is it time to renew your Eagle subscription? FREE LIFE INSURANCE on your savings deposit with Vernonia Credit Union. 853 Bridge Street, Vernonia ____________________________ 17tfc Haberman's Meat PROCESSING PLANT Slate 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 Ri. 2. Bx 141, Forest Grove, Ore. On Fern Hill Road ltfc CLARENCE R. WAGNER, county surveyor, Court House, St. Helens Phone office, 397-0698; home, 397- 0018. Private surveying, engineer­ ing work. 24tfc FOR RENT FOR RENT: Three-room house plus bath, utility room, partial basement. Near downtown. $25 per month. Call HAzel 9-3867 after 6 p.m. Or, will sell. 26tfc CHERRY TREE Apts. Complete­ ly furnished except bedding, dish­ es. Rent includes all utilities, heat, lights, water. Private bath, kit­ chenettes. 830 Second St. HAzel 9-5042. H. J. “Hill” Edison, Mgr. ___________________________ 14tfc MISCELLANEOUS I’VE HAD IT! Who will cut down my willow tree? Make me an offer. E. Heath. Phone HA 9-3702. 35t3c WANTED WANTED: Top prices paid for Doug­ las fir cones. Vick Berg, two miles west of Birkenfeld. SKyline 5-2362. Agent for Manning Seed Co. 37t3c WANTED: Cabinet work, furniture repair, carpenter work. HAzel 9-6827, Fred Lundgren. 37t3 WANTED: Top prices paid for Douglas fir cones. Enco Service, Se­ cond and Bridge Streets, Vernonia. HA 9-3462. 36t3c CALL Guy A. Luttrell collect for domestic and irrigation well drilling. FHA terms. 397-2140, St. Helens, Rt. 1, Box 732. 36tfc Want to buy farm for cattle and horses. Must have water and build­ ings. Can pay all cash, b.k.r. Call Portland, BElmont 4-6681 or write 3059 NE Glisan St., Portland, Ore­ gon. 20tfc LOST AND FOUND HELP FIND OUR PUPPY! Small, two months old, brown with dark spots, named Mitzi. Disappeared Tuesday. Family pet. Finder please contact Bill Howard, HAzel 9-5255. 37tl HELP FIND OUR PUPPY! Small, two months old, brown with dark spots, named Mitzi. Disappeared Tuesday. Family pet. Finder please contact Bill Howard, HAzel 9-5255. 37tl CLASSIFIED RATES THE EAGLE assumes no finan­ cial responsibility for errors that may appear in ads published in its columns, but in cases where this paper is at fault, will reprint that part of an adv. in which the typographical mistake occurs. MINIMUM charge 75c for 25 words or less. Words over minimum, 4c each. Three insertions (or the price of two. NO CLASSIFIED OR DISPLAY ADV. WILL BE ACCEPTED AFTER TUESDAY N O O N EXCEPT FOR NEXT WEEK'S PAPER NO information on classifieds will be given out until after paper is mailed. CARD of Thanks Sc Notices: $1.00 for up to 12 lines. Additional lines. 8c each. BLIND ADS with answers to be handled by The Eagle: Mini­ mum charge $1.00. No informa­ tion given relative to such ads. POETRY accepted only as paid matter: Rate: 10c per type line. il C O IT O t lA l m em b er . V V a The U. S. Navy has a very attrac­ tive program open for student nurses enrolled in colleges and universities accredited by the National League for Nursing wherein girls who have completed the first semester of their sophomore year are eligible to make application for the Navy Nurse Corps Candidate program. Student nurses selected under this program are enlisted in the U. S. Na­ vy as Officer Candidate Hospitalmen and are placed on active duty with pay during their final two years at school. Tuition and fees, medical and dental care, 30 days paid vacation a year plus pay and allowances of ap­ proximately $228 are paid during the final two school terms. Six months prior to graduation, candidates are given a commission as Ensign in the U. S. Navy Nurse Corps with cor­ responding increases in pay to ap­ proximately $355 per month. In return, student nurses must agree to serve on active duty for up to three years as commissioned offi­ cers in the Navy Nurse Corps. Upon graduation from nursing school, can­ didates attend an eight week indoc­ trination course at Newport, Rhode Island and then are transferred to their duty station. Every effort is made to locate them in the locality they request. Freshman, sophomore and junior girls can check their eligi­ bility for this program by contacting the local Navy recruiter, Chief Card at Portland or writing to the Office of Naval Officer Procurement, 520 S.W. Morrison St., Portland, Oregon. Don Coin Walrod With Canada thistle down blowing in most parts of the county, a con- stant stream of questions are being asked with the general thought be- ing, “Why isn’t something being done to control Canada thistle?” These inquiries come by letter, by phone, and by callers to the exten­ sion office. These questions reveal a general knowledge that the state has a weed control law and the fact that some areas, such as Washington county, have a compulsory Canada thistle control law, but a lack of under­ standing cf the details of the weed control programs being conducted. Oregon law provides for the con­ trol of noxious weeds when so desi­ gnated. The entire county may be designated as a weed control dis­ trict as Columbia county is for tan­ sy ragwort. If certain weeds are not named as noxious and falling under the provisions of a county control dis­ trict, interested parties may petition for a special weed control district. The petition for a special control district would include the boundaries and the specific weeds to be con­ trolled by preventing from producing seed. The petition must carry the signatures of not less than seven farm owners constituting a majority of farm owners in the described area. If this is done, the law provides that the county court declare the area a weed control district for the weeds indicated. After a weed control district is created, Oregon law provides the weed inspector with right of entry to the land within the district. If land- owners do not voluntarily comply with the provisions of the weed con­ trol law, the inspector posts the property. If the weeds are not con­ trolled within the specified time in­ dicated, the matter is turned over to the district attorney and the coun­ ty court. Upon authorization from the court the weed inspector can then go upon the land, employing assis­ tants to destroy the weed involved. Upon completion oi the weed remov­ al, the costs of such work are filed with the county clerk who enters them on a lien docket as a first lien upon the land except for taxes. Generally the cooperation of land- owners in the county has been good as far as tansy ragwort is concern­ ed, although there are isolated in­ stances in which problems have arisen. Many large land owners, rather than do the job of spraying and oth­ erwise removing tansy ragwort, have requested that County Weed Inspec­ tor Henry Thompson hire crews to go in and do the job for them. Now that tansy ragwort is well along in bloom, the only real solution to control is to pull the plants, cut the heads and burn them. If plants are only pulled, there is enough vi­ tality in the plants to complete the maturing of the seed. Even if sprays that will kill mature plants are used, there will still be mature seed left to contaminate the area. This was well demonstrated several years ago when one operator sprayed mature tansy ragwort with chlorate. The plants were killed readily, but after drying, seeds were pulled at random from the standing plants. Upon checking with the Oregon State Uni­ versity seed laboratory, it was found that the seed had a germination of 61 percent — enough to keep the tansy ragwort growing there for some time to come. The similarity between names of common ragweed and tansy ragwort is unfortunate in that it leads to much confusion. Most folks who are native of the area do not know com­ mon ragweed since relatively little grows in Oregon, partially due to the diligence exercised by the state in controlling it through the efforts of the state department of agricul­ ture. Common ragweed causes no real Oernonia Eagle MARVIN KAMIIOIJ! Editor and Publisher Official Newspaper of Vernonia, Oregon Entered as second class mail mat­ ter, August 4, 1922 at the post office in Vernonia, Oregon under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price $3 00 yearly in the Nehalem Valley. Elsewhere $3.50 i P U B IIIH IO "ASSOCIATION a f f il ia t e Student Nurse Plan Offered >. _ problem to farmers. At least no more so than the many other species that offer competition to some crops. It is the bane of hay fever sufferers who are bothered by the heavy amounts of pollen produced by it. For this reason the state takes control measures without cost to the land- owner. Tansy ragwort control is important for two reasons. First, it is poison­ ous to livestock, particularly cattle and horses. Although the plant is not readily eaten as long as there are adequate amounts of forage, once they are forced to it, or an individual starts for some reason, the effect is much like a narcotic in that they de­ velop a liking and start to seek it out. Also, the poisonous properties are cumulative so that resulting tox­ icity builds up over a period of time. The second and probably nearly as important a reason for control­ ling tansy ragwort is the ability ot the plant to compete with nearly every other species except those that shade it. If shade is heavy enough, as in the case of a good stand of trees, the tansy will die. While good pastures can provide sufficient competition to kill Cana­ da thistle, this is not the case with tansy ragwort. These plants can in­ vade and smother the most vigorous pasture, but they will not grow in cultivated land as will Canada this­ tle. What will happen to Columbia county as a weed control district for tansy ragwort depends pretty much upon the wishes of the people of the county. In a short two or three months period one man cannot possi­ bly search out and cause the elimina­ tion of all patches of tansy ragwort. The cooperation of the people of the county in reporting the weed when it is noticed. Like most laws, enforce­ ment hinges to a considerable de­ gree upon the interest and wishes of the people in general. Employment in August Higher As August ended, the rate of in­ sured unemployment at 2.1 percent was the lowest for the comparable week since 1959 when the rate was 2.0 percent, David H. Cameron, com­ missioner, Oregon Department of Emploment reported here. Only 9,1000 weeks of unemployment insurance benefits were claimed for the week ending August 27 compared to 11,229 weeks a month earlier and 9,855 weeks a year earlier. Late summer vegetables led by beans and sweet corn are providing the principal impetus to employ­ ment’s present high level with pack­ ers in the Willamette Valley and Eastern Oregon operating with full shifts to process these crops, the commissioner said. He added that high activity in construction and lumber is expected to continue as long as the weather permits. Ample job opportunities are expected to be prevalent through October, since schools' starting will shrink the la­ bor force considerably. Rate of insured unemploment in Oregonf or the comparable week in August of 1963 was 2.4 percent; in 1962, 2.6 percent, and in 1961 was 3.0 pereent. For the week ending August 8, insured unemployment’s rate in the United States was 3.1 per­ cent; in Oregon 2.4 percent. Oernonia Eagle 6______ THURSDAY. SEPT. 10, 1964 Proclamation Whereas, Several thousand citizens of Oregon are not now registered to vote in the coming election on No­ vember 3, and Whereas, Oregon one of the most convenient voter-registration laws in the nation, to register to vote in this state is simple, easy and convenient, and Whereas, At the November 3, gen­ eral election throughout the state citizens will choose national leaders, state legislators, county and city office holders, and determine direct­ ly several state issues, and Whereas, The problems facing all of the American people today are serious in nature at every level of government, involving national sur­ vival, conservation of resources, eco­ nomic stability and growth, educa­ tion and public health and welafre, now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, That we the citizens of Columbia county representing la­ bor endeavor to promote voter regis­ tration and to encourage other citi­ zens representing a variety of pro­ fessional and business groups to join with us in a non-partisan voter regis­ tration campaign. Punctuality is a bad habit usually indulged in by people who send out bills. YOUR JOB — (NOTE: This column is written weekly and published by this news­ paper as an educational and public service. If you have questions with regard to the Oregon State Employ­ ment Service and-or Oregon Unem­ ployment Insurance Division, please address them to Oregon Department of Employment, 402 Labor and In­ dustries Building, Salem, Oregon 97310, Attn. Informational Represent­ ative.) QUESTION: When will the Youth Opportunities offices be in operation in Oregon. ANSWER: At the present time, plans are being made to establish a youth opportunities office in the Port­ land area and at present this is the only office scheduled for the State of Oregon. It is felt that the need for a youth office in the Portland area is the most critical at this time. Youth oouselors, some of whom are now taking training at the University of Oregon will be part of the staff in this Portland office and attempt to find suitable employment for un­ employed youth or recommend suit­ able training for those needing it. In the meantime, youth services are handled by the youth services divis­ ion in the Department of Employ­ ment office at 1407 S.W. 4th Avenue, in Portland ,and by youth repre­ sentatives in each of the other 25 areas served by the Department of Employment. You and only you ! T H « M IG H T Y M ID G E T WANT ADS WORK Oernonia Eagle Sm okey Sayat 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 Banka, lake Tillamook road XV, mile, lake first iefzhand road. ltfc Art Needlework Entries Judged The Pomona Grange HEC meeting was held in Yankton Grange hall on Thursday, September 3 for the judg­ ing of needlework entries. Members of Yankton, Warren, Fern Hill, South S c a p p o o s e and Beaver Homes Granges were in attendance. The en­ tries were judged by Mrs. Agnes Hovland. Mrs. Anna Mauris of Fern Hill won blue ribbons on crocheted edg­ ings and place mats; Mrs. Martha Wilburn, who was sponsored by Fern Hill Grange, won a blue on knitted socks; Mrs. Blanche DeWitt of Ver­ nonia, a blue on doilies and Mrs. Earl Avis a blue on sweaters. The blue ribbon winners will be judged at the State Grange level. The next judging contest on the Pomona level will be held in October and will consist of canned tree fruits or berries and jelly, featuring White Satin sugar. The tentative date is October 8 at South Scappoose Grange hall. V v Í S r Í 3 V •I’ # ■ No Job Is Too Small and m— No Challenge Too Big IK 1 J Cards, billheads, business and social forms of every type get careful, creative planning and prompt precision printing here. For results wor­ thy of you, at low cost, see us THE VERNONIA EAGLE >x*xex*x*x*x»xex*x*xox*xex*x*x*xox*x*x*x»xJ