CLASSIFIED ADS Oernonia Eagle 6______ THURSDAY, SEPT. 24, 1964 FOR SALE-General FOR SALE-Real Estate FOR SALE: Monarch combination electric range and trash burner. Al­ so large blue-ribbon unused study Bible. Both priced to sell. Part Per­ sian kittens to give away. See at House 24, OA Hill. 39t3 FOR SALE: Three, possibly four, bedroom house on Capitol hill. For more information call HAzel 9-3145. 39tfc FOR SALE: 10-inch tablesaw with one HP motor. Many extra blades, and dado set. For more information call HAzel 9-3171._____________39tl 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 or TRADE: Large oil heater with fan. Call HAzel 9-3743 evenings. 38t3 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. ____________________________ 37t3 Second growth fir pole wood for sale, dry, $16 per cord. Leave orders at Vernonia Eagle office for Harold Peterson, Buxton, Oregon. 36t4 866 ROSE AVE. 50 x 134. $654; Easet 4th east of Nehalem River 100 x 100 Good 3 rooms, bath, $1240. Terms. See signs. Lawrence Meissner. Deer Island, 397-3166. 39t3 Two and three-bedroom rentals Two-bdrm house near school, $4500 Easy terms. Owner to hold papers. Two-bdrm, all electric, $3700. Terms. Two-bdrm, like new. Concrete foun­ dation. Excellent condition. $5800. $500 dn. LISTINGS WANTED BILL HORN REALTY and Vernonia Bank Bldg. WE NEED SMALL ACREAGE LISTINGS 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-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. Insurance Exchange HAzel 9-6203 Columbia River Real Estate VERNONIA BRANCH 866 Bridge St. Phone HA 9-5211 LISTINGS WANTED 35tlc SERVICES For piano and organ lessons call Mrs H. L. Russell HA 9-6941 who is also a representative for Rife’s Conn Organ Store, Portland, Oregon. All instruments can be purchased on rental basis. 38t3c 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 FREE LIFE INSURANCE on your savings deposit with Vernonia Credit Union. 853 Bridge Street, Vernonia ____________________________ 17tfc Haberman's Meal — Phone AT 8-6366 — Gary Worth Plymouth Co. 1943 N.E. Union, Portland PROCESSING PLANT ____________________________34t8c CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING FOR SALE: CLEAN 1960 Ford tiT pickup, 4-speed, economy 6 cyl. 28,000 actual miles. HA 9-5103. 38t3c Beef: Monday, Tuesday, Friday Hoqs: Thursday. Friday till noon C utting and W rapping Sharp Freezing Smoking and Curing Free use of Slock Trailer Shop Res. EL 7-3922 EL 7-2981 Rt. 2, Bx 141, Forest Grove, Ore. On Fern Hill Road ltfc See hometown boy AL HUNTLEY Pick-ups - Scouts - Travalons All units available in 4-wheel drive. 1964 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 Phone AT 8-6366 Gary Worth Plymouth Co. 4943 N.E. Union, Portland For information call collect ____________________________38t8c CLASSIFIED RATES T H E EAG LE aziumes no finan­ cial responsibility for errors that may appear in ads published in it* columns, but in cases where this paper is at fault, w ill 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 w ill be given out until after paper is mailed. B L IN D ADS with answers to be handled by The Eagle: M in i­ mum charge $1.00. No informa­ tion given relative to such ads. P O E T R Y accepted only as paid matter: Rate: 10c per type line. C A R D of Thanks & Notices: $1.00 for up to 12 lines. Additional lines. Sc each. Almost 90 percent of all disease germs which cause infection enter the body by way of the hands State Inspected 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 WANTED W A N TED DEER. EI.K, STEER HIDES Trade for Gloves and, or Cash. .1. B. ARTMAN- Vernonia 39-52C 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. 37U 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_________________________ 201 fc N A T IO N A L t D I T O I I A l l A50 c6 , , 4 ‘ ___n n i n u i A ' H i u F H . l ' I . A i T t . M iM IU Date Given for NROTC Exam Vice Admiral B. J. Selles Jr., chief of naval personnel, announced today that December 12 has been desig­ nated as the test date for the 19th annual national competitive NROTC examination. Parents and high school officials should remind eligi­ ble high school seniors and graduates to submit their applications before November 20. The regular NROTC program, which is designated to supplement the career officer output of the U. S. Naval Academy, offers a wonderful opportunity for a young man to earn a regular commission while studying at one of the 52 NROTC colleges and universities which he has chosen. The Navy furnishes tuition, fees and books, plus a retainer of $50 per month to the NROTC midshipmen. Each summer NROTC midshipmen go on interesting and rewarding training cruises to different parts of the world. After completing his four year college course and all require­ ments, an NROTC midshipman is commissioned as a regular officer in the U. S. Navy or Marine Corps and goes on active duty with the op­ erating forces. The program is open to male high school seniors and graduates who will have reached their 17th but not their 21st birthday on June 30, 1965. Those who make a qualifying score will be interviewed and given thor­ ough medical examinations early in 1965. Approximately 2,000 young men from those remaining in competition will thus be selected to attend col­ lege next September to prepare for their naval careers. The 1965 NROTC Bulletins of In­ formation and application forms are available at local high schools and Navy recruiting stations or from the Chief of Naval Personnel, Depart­ ment of the Navy, Washington, D.C. 20370. Mixed greens are good for you. . . especially the fives, tens, and twen­ ties. SHOP LOCALLY FIRST! LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC Columbia County Road Department will sell at Public Auction used equipment listed below on September 26, 1964 at 1:30 p.m., at the Columbia County Road Department Shop, St. Helens, Oregon. Each item listed will be sold by oral auction bids to the highest bidder. All equipment is located at County Shop at St. Helens, and will be sold as is and where is, and without recourse against Co­ lumbia County. Failure to inspect shall not constitute grounds for sub­ sequent cancellation of purchaser’s bid. All sales will be final. The County will set a minimum bid on each item and will reject any bid below minimum bid. When Auctioneer states an item has been sold, the successful bidder shall make payment by check or cash at end of sale. Complete pay­ ment must be made before removal of item from storage site. All pro­ perty shall be removed not later than October 6, 1964. ITEMS TO BE SOLD 2—1952 Chevrolet Pickups, 4 speed 1—1950 Chevrolet Pickup 1—1951 Chevrolet 2 door sedan 1—300 Amp. Arc Welder, trailer mounted 1—1948 Allis Chalmers Motor Grader By: Columbia County Court _______________________ 38t2c CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our friends, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sawyer for all the help during the recent illness of our baby daughter, Pam. Also, we are so grateful to Bill Hom who drove the ambulance to take her to the hos­ pital for his great kindness and con­ cern. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Steele ___________________________ 39tlc I extend my sincere thanks to friends for the flowers, cards, good wishes and calls while I was in the hospital and since corning home. All have been appreciated. Sam Murray ___________________________ 39tlc Oernonia £a$ie MARVIN KAMIIOLZ 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 Wheat Growers Told Deadline Columbia county winter wheat growers wishing to participate in the 1965 wheat program have until Oc­ tober 2 to declare their intentions by signing up with county ASCS of­ fice, reports Don Coin Walrod, coun­ ty extension agent. Participating growers will receive price supports and certificates in ad­ dition to diversion payments. To qualify growers must plant within their allotment, diverting at least 11.11 pereent of the allotment to soil- conserving uses. Under the 1965 program, price sup­ ports will be down five cents to $12.5 per bushel. At the same time certifi­ cates will be raised five cents, put­ ting export certificates at 30 cents and domestic certificates at 75 cents. Domestic certification will be is­ sued on normal yields of 45 percent of the allotment and export certifi­ cates on only 35 percent. The 11.11 percent diversion requir­ ed for participation receives no pay­ ment in 1965, but alloting an extra 10 to 20 percent to soil conserving uses will result in payments equal to 50 percent of the normal yields times the county support rate. Growers who have a feed grain base as well as a wheat allotment can substitute one for the other in 1965. It is necessary to meet divers­ ion requirements in both cases, and wheat grown on feed grain acres will get support prices but no certificates. Wheat growers who raised oats or rye in 1959-60 or 1964 may want to request an oat-rye base from the ASCS office, says Walrod, since wheat may be allowed on these acres. Sign-ups made by the October 2 deadline may be revised before the end of the spring wheat sign-up dead­ line which has not yet been announc­ ed. Meet Planned On Sure-Cures The food and drug administration and the Oregon Medical association are co-sponsoring a conference on medical and nutritional quackery Monday, October 5. Registration will begin at 8:15 a.m. The conference, to be held in Portland’s Sheraton Motor Inn, fea­ tures an all day program aimed at educating the public on the dangers of sure-cure notsrums, quack med­ icine and cultist practitioners. Dr. Daniel K. Billmeyer, president of the Oregon Medical association, states that although progress has been made toward the elimination of quackery, especially in its cruder more obvious forms, it remains a persistent blight on community and national life. Unsuspecting victims of medical quackery are not only fleeced of the price of the “cure”, but, more importantly, as a result of reliance on a false cure are de­ prived of the benefits of modern medicine. This can become a m at­ ter of life and death. And this is why all need to concern themselves with the ways in which communica­ tion, health education and law en­ forcement are relevant to the fight against quackery Dr. Billmeyer said. Portland's Mayor Terry Schrunk will welcome the conferees, opening the day long session of speeches by experts on the various forms and phases of quackery. Most prominent among those speaking will be Sena­ tor Maurine B. Neuberger who will speak on “Helping Our Citizens Fight Quackery.” W ater System Loan Granted A $105,000 loan to a group of 130 rural families to construct a water system has been approved by the Farmers Home Administration, ac­ cording to Robert V. Pierce, the agency’s state director. The loan, together with approxi­ mately $13,000 contributed by the as­ sociation members, will allow the McNulty Water association to install 32,000 feet of pipeline, metered ser­ vice connections for each water user, and fire hydrants located at strateg­ ic points. Additional fire hydrants will be installed as needs increase. The water will be purchased from the city of St. Helens. Approximately 1000 man days of employment will be required to con­ struct the water system; this in­ cludes the engineers, operators of construction equipment, surveyors and day laborers. When completed the system will be capable of deliv­ ering more than 200,000 gallons of water per day. The new cooperative water system will serve more than 600 people plus several small businesses. It will re­ place individual wells which have been deficient in both quantity and quality. Several of the people in this area presently spend more than $10 per month to own and operate indi­ vidual water treatment plants. The new system will not only eliminate this water treatment cost but will also provide fire protection and eco­ nomical water for lawn and garden irrigation. State Director Pierce points out that construction of the new water system will, in addition to providing a safe and adequate water supply to area residents also increase proper­ ty values and should result in the construction of 20 or more new homes along the water line in the next three years. Pierce stated that this is an outstanding example of rural areas development. “These people applied for a loan only eight short months ago. At that time, they desired to borrow to construct a sys­ tem which would serve approxi­ mately 30 rural families. With the advice and assistance of County Ex­ tension Agent Don Walrod working with Farmers Home Administration County Supervisor Victor Madsen and many hours of time donated by the association officials and other area residents, the project has been extended to serve 130 rural families.” The Farmers Home Administration loan is to be repaid over a period of 40 years. Funds for the loan are provided on an insured basis by the First National Bank of Oregon. Officers of the association are: President, Max Lawrence, 631 Cow­ litz, St. Helens; vice-president, Louis Serafin, 915 S. Columbia River high­ way, St. Helens; secretary, Noel Marshall, Route 1, Box 147, Warren; treasurer, Mildred Peterson, 416 Di­ vision road, St. Helens; directors, Richard Backlund, Fischer Lane, Warren and Jim Smith, Achilles road, Warren. Rural water system loans are available to organizations operating on a non-profit basis such as non­ profit, corporation, water districts and towns of less than 2,500 popula­ tion. These loans are made only when adequate credit at reasonable rates and terms is not otherwise available. In the past five years, the Farmers Home Administration has made some 20 loans to groups of farmers and rural residents of Oregon for a total of $1,760,000.00. Firearms accidents rank sixth among the major causes of acciden­ tal fatalities. Drownings rank fourth. Most such accidents occur when the victim is preparing for or engaging in a recreation activity. Many things deter progress the greatest obstacle has a been prejudice. "HAVE AN OLY” A good way to extend Western hospitality, assuring you and your guests the enjoyment of truly distinctive refreshment. r/fs th e Water Olympia Brewing Company, Tumwater, near O lym pia, Washington. *Oly 9-64 CONES BUSHEL MEASURE Deadline Near On Tax Refund September 30 is the deadline for filing applications for refunds of the federal excise tax on gasoline used on a farm for farming purposes, re­ minds Don Coin Walrod, county ex­ tension agent. Claims for the 4 cents per gallon refund are for gasoline purchased between the period of July 1, 1963 and June 30, 1964. Special forms are to be used in filing claims. The forms can be obtained at county extension offices or from the dis­ trict director of the internal revenue service. MARR & STAFFORD MEAT CO. Rt. 2, Box 379, Forest Grove, Ore Douglas Fir (5 Seed)-$2.25 Douglas Fir (3 Seed) - $1.25 Grand (or White) Fir-$1.50 Noble Fir................ $1.50 Hemlock (Clean)...... $5.00 9:00 A.N. TO 5:00 P.M. EVERY DAY E L 7-7281 Slaughtering. Cutting. Wrapping, and Curing Meat for sale, any quantity. C attle Received Sunday and Monday until noon. Hogs received Tuesday and W ednesday until r.oon. CROWN ZELLERBACH CORP. Coma through Banka, take Tillam ook road i >6 mil«, take first ¡afzhand road. VERNONIA, OREGON ltfc Mist Route