Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, September 17, 1964, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE-General
FOR SALE-Real Estate
U-pick pears, $1.00 per bushel. Bring
own containers. Lucille Fowler,
Stoney Point road.
38tlc
Two and three-bedroom rentals
FOR SALE: Two and three-year old
steers: also spring calves, grade and
registered Shorthorns. Archie Dass,
Mist Rt., HAzel 9-3845.
38t3
FOR SALE: Upright piano in good
condition. For further information
call HAzel 9-3693.
38ttc
.1*-----------------------------------------------
FOR SALE: Practice piano, good
condition, $50. Call HAzel 9-3107.
38tl
FOR SALE or TRADE: Large oil
heater with fan. Call HAzel 9-3743
evenings.
38t3
FOR SALE: Ladies and mens full
set of golf clubs, umbrellas, Kroyden
woods and irons. Call HAzel 9-3211
for inspection and price. Calvin B.
Dawson.
38tl
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 5
p.m.; west side of State avenue, Mrs.
Genevieve Hanson, HAzel 9-6262.
Many new items. Good specials.
____________________________ 37t3
FREIGHT DAMAGED
Sewing machines equipped to zig zag,
makes button holes.
17 ONLY
Brand new 1964 models, slight
scratches cn 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.
Ifor more information write to col­
lection Dept., Box 922, Longview,
Wash.
37t2c
THERE will be a LDS Rummage
Sale at Polly’s Variety store Thurs­
day and Friday.______________36t3c
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.
____________________________ ltfc
FOR SALE OR RENT
FOR SALE OR RENT: Large house
on 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, Mrs. Ruby
Jackson.
35tfc
FOR SALE-Car, Truck
Buy From Local Boy
BUY YOUR NEXT CAR
FROM AL HUNTLEY
Specializing in new 1964
PLYMOUTH. VALIANT, SIMCA,
CHRYSLER, INTERNATIONAL
plus 100 Reconditioned new car
trade-ins.
100'’; Financing, debt consolidation,
bank terms. Lowest price in town.
These terms will be handled by me
only.
— Phone AT 8-6366 —
Gary Worth Plymouth Co.
4913 N.E. Union, Portland
34t8c
FOR SALE: CLEAN 1960 Ford %T
pickup. 4-speed, economy 6 cyl.
28,000 actual miles. HA 9-5103. 38t3c
See hometown boy
AL HUNTLEY
Pick-ups - Scouts - Travalons
All units available in 4-wheel drive.
J9Í4 INTERNATIONAL PICK-UPS
Half ton, heater, defroster, spare
tire and wheel, internal cooling
system, 100,000 mile warranty.
Immediate delivery
$1790
1964 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
Dual tanks, sure-grip rear end,
bucket seats, full top, 4-wheel
drive, loaded with extras $2488
100% Financing - Debt Consolidation
Budget Terms
Twu-bunn house near school, $4500
Easy terms. Owner to hold papers.
Two-bdrm, all electric, $3700. Terms.
Twc-bdrm, like new. Concrete foun­
dation. Excellent condition. $5800.
$500 dn.
LISTINGS WANTED
BILL HORN
REALTY
and
Vernonia
Bank Bldg.
Insurance Exchange
HAzel 9-6203
WE NEED SMALL ACREAGE
LISTINGS
Gary Worth Plymouth Co.
4943 N.E. Union, Portland
For information call collect
38t8c
N A T IO N A L
(D IT O IIA L
AFFILIATI MEMBtl
6______ THURSDAY, SEPT. 17, 1964
Arabian Horses Give
Week End Riding Fun
BIRKENFELD—Visitors at Shirley
Berg’s over the week end were Caro­
lyn, Grace and Becky Wagoner of
Portland. Carolyn brought two of
their Arabian horses over and they
did a lot of riding. Roger Berg was
also with them.
Mr. and Mrs. Arby Mills were in
Portland Monday on business.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larsen of Mon­
mouth are spending several days
with her folks, the Francis Nord-
s trams.
John Cahill has been ill but is some
what improved now.
Ar/na Hanberg and Mrs. Samuelson
were in Portland last Thursday. An­
na also visited with relatives at
Gresham.
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE
TO THE PUBLIC
Columbia County Road Department
will sell at Public Auction used
equipment listed below cn September
26, 1964 at 1:30 p.m., at the Columbia
VERNONIA BRANCH
866 Bridge St.
Phone HA 9-5211 County Road Department Shop, St.
Helens, Oregon. Each item listed
LISTINGS WANTED
will be sold by oral auction bids to
____________ _______________35tlc
the highest bidder. All equipment is
located at County Shop at St. Helens,
and wili be 9old as is and where
Fcr piano and organ lessons call is, and without recourse against Co­
lumbia County. Failure to inspect
Mrs H. L. Russell HA 9-6941 who is shall not constitute grounds for sub­
also a representative for Rife’s Conn sequent cancellation of purchaser’s
Organ Store, Portland, Oregon. All bid. All sales will be final. The
instruments car? be purchased on County will set a minimum bid on
rental basis.
38t3c each item and will reject any bid
below minimum bid.
SEPTIC TANK service. Pumping
When Auctioneer states an item
and repair. G. A. Russell, Columbia has been sold, the successful bidder
City, Oregon. Phone St. Helens shall make payment by check or
397-0650 daytime; 397-0074 after cash at end of sale. Complete pay­
5:00 p.m.
46tfc ment must be made before removal
of item from storage site. All pro­
FREE LIFE INSURANCE on your
perty shall be removed not later
savings deposit with Vernonia Credit than October 6, 1964.
Union. 853 Bridge Street, Vernonia.
ITEMS TO BE SOLD
____________________________ 17tfc 2—1952 Chevrolet Pickups, 4 speed
1—1950 Chevrolet Pickup
1—1951 Chevrolet 2 door sedan
1—300 Amp. Arc Welder, trailer
PROCESSING PLANT
mounted
State Inspected
1—1948 Allis Chalmers Motor Grader
CUSTOfj SLAUGHTERING
By: Columbia County Court
Beef: Monday, Tuesday, Friday
38t2c
Hoqs: Thursday, Friday till noon
Cutting and Wrapping
Sharp Freezing
Smoking and Curing
I want to say a great big and sin­
Free use of Stock Trailer
cere thank you to all the wonderful
Shop
Res.
people of Vernonia who sent me
EL 7-3922
EL 7-2981 cards, and gifts, and called on me
Rl. 2, Bx 141. Forest Grove. Ore. while I was in the hospital. It helps
On Fern Hill Road
a lot to have the good wishes of
ltfc friends when one is down. Again,
thank you to all of you.
CLARENCE R. WAGNER, county
Kate Coates
surveyor, Court House, St. Helens
Phone office, 397-0698; home, 397-
0018. Private surveying, engineer­
ing work.
24tfc
IN MEMORIAM
The Saviour sounds His gavel
In the Beautiful Temple above.
Silently the Angel of Death
FOR RENT: Three-room house plus
Calls home the ones we love.
bath, utility room, partial basement.
In loving memory of our Sister,
Near downtown. $25 per month. Call
HAzel 9-3867 after 6 p.m. Or, will Erie Counts, Be it resolved that Ver­
sell.
26tfc nonia Temple No. 61, Pythian Sis­
ters, extend love and eympathy to
CHERRY TREE Apts. Complete­ the family.
ly furnished except bedding, dish­
Be it further resolved that a copy
es. Rent includes all utilities, heat, of these resolutions be sent to the
lights, water. Private bath, kit­ bereaved family, also that a copy be
chenettes, 830 Second St. HAzel spread on the records of our Temple.
9-5042. H. J. “Hill” Edison, Mgr.
Also, be it resolved that our char­
___________________________ 14tfc ter be draped in mourning for a per­
iod of thirty days.
Resolutions Committee
Faye Davis
WANTED: Top prices paid for Doug­
Cora Lange
las fir cones. Vick Berg, two miles
Launee J. Cousins
west of Birkenfeld. SKyline 5-2362.
38tlc
Agent for Manning Seed Co.
37t3c
Columbia River
Real Estate
SOIL fumigation injector equipment. Tests are under-
way at the North W illamette Station to find a low-vila-
til fumigant that will control nematodes and sym-
phlans, yet will not harm growing plants nor leave
residues,
Strawberry plants in these two photos were taken from
the sam e field, but soil for plants at left w as not fumi-
gated while soil for plants at right was fumigated,
SERVICES
Haberman's Meal
CARD OF THANKS
IN MEMORIAM
FOR RENT
WANTED
WANTED: Cabinet work, furniture
repair, carpenter work. HAzel 9-6827,
F n d Lundgren.
37t3
WANTED: Top prices paid for
Douglas fir cones. Eneo 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
Oernonia Eagle
MARVIN KAMHOLZ
Editor and Publisher
Phone AT 8-6366
Oernonia Eagle
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.
Is it time to renew your Eagle
subscription?
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 for 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 & 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.
H IW H A M I
k P U B L IS H IR S
"ASSOCIATION
Increased Yield Possible from
Control of Pests by Fumigation
Soil kumigation may be the next
new practice that will boost small
fruit yields in Western Oregon, says
Columbia county extension agent
Tom Zinn.
“Such yield increases, if they oc­
cur, could conveivably add an esti­
mated 12 to 14 million dollars to our
annual income from strawberries and
red raspberries”, states Zinn. These
are the primary small fruit crops on
which fumigants have been tested.
What is soil fumigation? Soil fumi­
gation consists of adding certain
volatile chemicals to soil for pest
control. Many different kinds of soil
pests are called nematodes. Which
brings about another question, what
are nematodes? They are classified
as microscopic thread or round
worm being parasitic in nature.
Once these nematodes are intro­
duced they spread locally by culti­
vation, irrigation, floods, soil erosion,
or any other action that disturbs soil
and moves it from place to place.
More than 140 species of nema­
todes are known to attack various
plants and at least 40 of these are
considered major crop pests.
The objective of fumigation as it
applies to nematode control, is to
place chemicals in the soil where
they can effectively volatilize into a
gas which will spread through spaces
between soil particles and kill the
nematodes.
Research conducted by R. M. Bul­
lock. Oregon State University Exper­
iment Station at Aurora, indicates
that in some cases fumigation has
doubled strawberry yields. Fumiga­
tion also reduced the present re­
placement of strawberry plants and
increased the length and number of
red raspberry canes per hill while
reducing nematode counts.
"These positive results must be
balanced with results in which fumi­
gants have had no effect,” Bullock
says. In some cases there has been
an increase in plant vigor, but there
has not always been a corresponding
increase in yields.
Sometimes, fumigation of the same
soil in two fields has shown good
yield responses in one field but no
response in the other.
Experimental fumigated plots of
strawberries at the North Willamette
station are producing more than
eight tons per acre while adjacent
non-fumigated plots are producing
only four tons per acre. In other
cases, fumigation has shown no ad­
vantage.
Interest in soil fumigation by sever­
al local growers in Columbia county
will bring commercial applicators to
the county this fall for fumigation
work. “This will provide an oppor­
tunity for field evaluation of the prac­
tice while research continues”, says
Zinn.
W hen we fill ’er up we include
m any free ex tras you’ll appreci­
a te . . . such as tires, windows
checked , . . fo r driving ease and
pleasure.
Stop here and go with
confidence!
BOB'S
U N IO N SER VIC E
Sunday Fishing Trip
Yields Catch For Two
BIRKENFELD—Terry and Dave
Larson went fishing with Herbert
Rodgers Sunday. They come home
with four nice fish. Dave caught
one and Herbert got three.
Ephriam Koljones and Thelma
Hort were married August 26 at
Escondido, California. They will
make their home at Seattle
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, take
Tillamook road < W mile,
take first iefrhand road.
ltfc
In Oregon...
after a swim, beer is a
On a hot summer day, a dip in a cool stream can be wonderfully
refreshing. Equally refreshing when you’re relaxing afterwards
with friends is a hearty glass of beer. There’s hardly another bev­
erage around that suits what you do for fun as much as beer.
Camping, hiking, or just lounging on a lawn chair—beer brings to
each just the right touch of extra good living.
Your familiar glass of beer is also a pleasurable reminder that
we live in a land of personal freedom—and that our right to enjoy
beer and ale, if we so desire, is just one, but an important one, of
those personal freedoms.
In Oregon...beer goes with fun, with relaxation
UNTTED STATES BREWERS ASSOCIATION. INC