Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, March 04, 1965, Page 2, Image 2

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

    DEL MONTE
CAMPBELL’S
1 A A T /A
■ /*
TO M Ä T 0 K .
A
4
46-oz. $ |
£ Cans
0 0
H U N T S FRUIT
SW ANS DOWN ANGEL FOOD
IX
CAKE
M
si
A
Onion Rings
3/ 1
0 , 5’
A
2
5
10
£
A
Carrots
Margarine 2 u. 79’ Prunes 2-Lb. Pkg. 65’
Celery
15 Hash S " .. 4 / 8 9 ’ Sardines 3/85’
a a •
2/75’ Bags
2/45’ Patties
iVliX
A
Tl JNA PI ES Cookies
39 ’ Fryers
43’ Crackers
A
( » äl 00
3/«l Red Snapper
M eat Balls
i a ms N°- 2'/j Cans L
ORE-IDA
FROZEN
COCKTAIL
CORN
6
$1°°
MILL MARKET
7-oz. Pkg.
15-oz.
Pkgs.
No. 300 $ | 0 0
Cans
CALIF. FANCY
■
Pound
Cello Rag
STARKIST FROZEN
LIBBY’S CORNED BEEF
15‘/i-oz.
Cans
TINY TOT IMPORTED
Norway
3%-oz-...
FUDGE BROWNIE
Betty Crocker
2 2W -O Z . Pkg.
BAGGIES PLASTIC
Sandwich Size
Roll 50 Bags
SUNSHINE HYDROX
Choc. Creme
Sandwch., Lb.
NABISCC
NABISCO
HONEY
Fey. C
BEE 3
Cut
In
Syrup
in
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Knowlton and
Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Bateman vaca­
tioned last week in California and
Nevada. They went first to Blythe in
Southern California to visit Mr.
Knowlton’s sister and husband, Mr.
and Mrs. W. R. Hall. From there,
they went to Las Vegas, then up
through Nevada to Reno with a side
trip to Death Valley. Enroute home
Saturday, Mr. Bateman stopped at
Corvallis for the remainder of dad’s
week end with his son Steven at
Oregon State University. He came
on home Sunday with James Davies
who had spent the week end with his
son Craig.
Mr. and Mrs. II. J. Peasnall of
Astoria were week end guests of
their daughter and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Schwab and family.
Rummage sale, March 4, 5, 6. Fire
hall. Vernonia Grange.
9tlc
Henry Anderegg attended Dad’s
week end at Oregon State University
Saturday and Sunday as the guest of
his son Ralph. Mrs. Anderegg and
her mother, Mrs. J. Dimbat, visited
in Salem with lier brother, Edward
Dimbat and family. They also cal­
led on Susan Fowler who is in state
TB hospital and found her much im­
proved and very cheerful.
Mrs. Sam Davis entertained last
Thursday afternoon in honor of the
fourth birthday of her son Duane.
Guests were Mrs. Oscar Vike and
granddaughter, Venetia Daughtry;
Mrs. Frank Steele and children,
Mike, Karen and Pam; Mrs. Don
Wantland and son Duane, Mrs. Owen
East and children, Chrissie anti Bar­
ry; Mrs. John Rinkes and children,
Connie and Julie; Gary Meyer, Gary
Zimmerman, Lori Lawler, Lori and
Bryan Wilson and Kenneth Brown­
ing. Ice cream, cake and kool aid
were served and all the children re­
ceived party favors.
Mrs. Evelyn Heath was entertain­
ing her daughter Harriet and hus­
band, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Light
of Beaverton and their two sons last
Saturday, February 27 and they
were observing the fourth birthday
of grandson Larry Light when a
call came from North Bend with
news that a (laughter, Karen .Marie,
weighing seven pounds, had arrived
at the home of her daughter Caro­
lyn and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Ir­
vin Ladd. This is their second daugh­
ter and the fourth grandchild for
Mrs. Heath.
Rummage sale, March 4, 5, 6. Fire
hall. Vernonia Grange.
9tlc
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Nelson arrived
home Saturday evening from Moor­
head, Minnesota where they were
called the previous week by the
death of his father. Enroute both
ways, they had a three and a half
hour stop in Minneapolis which they
spent with relatives of Mrs, Nelson.
Weather was good for flights both
ways. Temperatures of 20 degrees
below were encountered at Fargo,
North Dakota.
Attending the final performance at
the Barbershop Ballad contest at
Forest Grove Saturday evening as
guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Fuiten
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Friesen
were Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hearing Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Hom, Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Thomas, all of Vernonia,
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Turk of
Cornelius.
Art Gardner returned
to
work
Tuesday after being ill with pneu­
monia.
Mrs. John Serafin received word
Wednesday of last week of the sud­
den and very unexpected death of
a cousin at Long Beach, California
whom she had visited during her
recent trip there.
George I-aird is spending this week
at Rainier with his daughter, Mrs.
Edwin Roberts and her family.
Donna Wantland was honor guest
Oernonia Eagle
2
THURSDAY, MARCH 4. 1965
last Saturday afternoon on the occa­
sion of her tenth birthday at a party
given by her mother, Mrs. Don Want-
land. Guests included Sally Leffler,
Gayle Welch, Vicki May and Susan
Garner. Also present were her sis­
ters, Linda and Pam Wantland and
her brother, Duane.
Rummage sale, March 4, 5, 6. Fire
hall. Vernonia Grange.
9tlc
Monday evening after school, San­
dra Stockwell observed her 12th
birthday by inviting as guests Shar-
lene Gibson, Celeste Hytrek and Su­
san Gamer. The girls enjoyed a hike
after which they returned to Sandra's
home to be served refreshments by
her mother, Mrs. Roy Stockwell. Al­
so present were Sandra's sister Judy
and brother Dean.
O. T. Bateman returned from a
JO Y T H E A T E R
— THIS WEEK ONLY —
S a t, Sun.
March 6-7
Big Parade of Comedy
Plus
Rhino
weeks vacation Sunday to find wait­
ing for him the news that his moth­
er, Mrs. Emma Bateman of Cov­
ington. Kentucky had suffered a
stroke.
The fellow who imagines he was
cut out for a big gun often turns
out to be a misfit .
Pay your debts as promtly as your
grudges and your credit will be ur.
limited.
The National Tuberculosis Assoc­
iation offers the following information
on Chronic Bronchitis in hopes that
the public will become aware of this
serious health problem.
Bronchitis is an inflammation of
the lining of the bronchial tubes
These tubes, called bronchi, connect
the windpipe with the lungs. When
the bronchi are inflamed and infect­
ed, the air flow to and from the lungs
becomes labored and a heavy mucus
or phlegm is coughed up. Many peo­
ple suffer a brief attack of acute
bronchitis with fever, coughing and
spitting when they have severe colds.
Chronic bronchitis, however, is the
term applied when the coughing and
spitting continue for months and re­
turn each year, lasting slightly long­
er after each cold.
Chronic bronchitis is almost always
associated with h e a v y cigarette
smoking. It is likely to begin in mid­
dle age and to get worse as the years
go on unless the victim seeks help
from a doctor early in the disease.
Almost four times as many men get
chronic bronchitis as women. Most
victims live in cities where air pol­
lution is a problem.
In Great Britian, chronic bronchitis
causes at least one-quarter of all
male illnesses, is responsible for the
loss of 22 million working days annu­
ally, and is listed as the cause of
30,000 deaths each year. U. S. doctors
do not report their cases in the same
terms the British do, but there is no
doubt, that chronic bronchitis is one
of this nation's costliest diseases in
terms of manpower, money, and
misery.
The disease does not strike sud­
denly. After a winter cold seems
cured, the patient may continue to
cough and spit for several weeks.
Since people who get chronic bron­
chitis are nearly always smokers,
the cough is usually dismissed as on­
ly “smoker’s cough” As time goes
on, colds become more frequent.
Coughing and spitting last longer
after each one.
Without realizing it, the patient
begins to take this coughing and
spitting as a m atter of course. Soon
they are with him all the time - be­
fore colds, after colds, all year round.
Generally, the cough is worst in the
morning and evening and in damp,
cold weather. An ounce or more of
yellow mucus may be brought up in
the coughing each day.
The most common causes of chron­
ic bronchitis are from cigarette irri­
tation and air pollution. Once the
bronchial tubes have been irritated
over a long period of time, excessive
mucus is secreted constantly, cough­
ing becomes necessary, air flow is
hampered, and the lungs are endang­
ered. The tubes then make an ideal
breeding place for infections.
The discovery of antibiotic drugs
has been of tremendous importance
in treating chronic bronchitis. These
drugs can usually overcome even
deep and long-lasting infections, so
they make it possible for a patient
to get back on his feet in a shorter
time after an acute attack.
However, to really clear up and
prevent chronic bronchitis, it is ne­
cessary to eliminate all sources of
irritation a n d infection i n nose,
throat, mouth, sinuses, and bronchial
tubes.
The disease isn't usually consider­
ed a "killer”, Perhaps that’s why so
Free Deliveries Twice Daily— 10 A.M., 3 P.M.
M EAT D E P A R T M E N T
SW IF T S PREM. SAUSAGE
Brown and Serve
12-oz. Pkg.................
9-oz. Pkg.
New Merry
Makers........
NALLEY’S CREOLE
CRE
49c
Oregon Grown Fresh
Cut-Up.....................Lb. 39c
Ocean
Fresh, lb. 39c
15-oz. Can
In Tom
Sauce
National TB Association Gives
Explanation About Bronchitis
TOPICS OF THE TOWN
Paul Runyan car wash March 6,
10 a.m ., high school.
9tlc
You’re as close to Mill Market and Lockers
as your Telephone— HAzel 9-3492
— Member of United Grocers —
..... Stalk
Week end before last, Miss Vicki
and Lockers
DEL MONTE LGE. DRIED
Ready To Eat
SAFFOLA
FANCY CRISP
Nance came from Monmouth where
she is a student at Oregon College of
Education, to spend the week end
with her grandmother, Mrs. Essie
Nance. She was accompanied by Curt
Hilt of Monmouth. Mis Cathy DuPuis
rode from Monmouth to Vernonia
with them then went on to Birken-
feld.
I
many people neglect it until it is in
an advanced stage. Often by the time
a patient gees to his doctor his lungs
have been injured seriously. Then
he may be susceptible to heart at­
tacks or to serious lung diseases.
Savings Stamp
Plan Promoted
Postmaster O. T. Bateman said
today that he had just been instruct­
ed by Postmaster General John A.
Gronouski to extend all cooperation
possible to students, educators, bank­
ers and other volunteers in promot­
ing and servicing the treasury’s
school savings program in Vernonia.
“I am pleased to carry out Mr.
Gronouski’s instructions,” he said,
“because any program which stimu­
lates young Americans to save these
days is for the good of the country
and for themselves.”
The school savings program, dur­
ing World War II provided one of our
most effective instruments for teach­
ing thrift and good citizenship, he
stated.
An adequate supply of savings
stamps and books and promotional
material will be on hand to meet the
needs of the students and the com­
munity in carrying out the stamp
consignment plan, he concluded.
Riding Club Members
At McMinnville Meet
The Vernonia Ridge Riders met at
the fire hail February 23.
A party had been held in January
and cards and games were enjoyed
by all.
John Siedelman, Shalmon Libel,
Lawrence Johnston and Wally Noakes
were appointed on the Trail Ride
committee for 1965. A ride will be
planned very soon.
Anyone interested in joining the
Ridge Riders may contact Jim Johns.
Meetings are held the last Tuesday
of each month.
The Bob Thompsons, Lawrence
Johnstons, John Siedelmans, and
George Bellingham attended a play
day February 21 at McMinnville. It
was held in a covered arena and
there were 75 entrants.
John Siedelman won first place in
the keyhole race. Bob Thompson and
John Siedelman won second place in
team pole bending and third place
in team figure eight stake race.
A movie on Alaskan game was
shown.
Unit Schedules Lesson
On Emergency Meals
The Timber Route Extension Unit
will meet March 9 at 10:30 a.m. at
the home of Mrs. Don Bergerson.
Project leaders. Mrs. F. E. Fuquay
and Mrs. J. Fields, will present the
lesson. Meal Planning for Emergen­
cies. Everyone interested is urged
to feel free to attend.
The American Heart Association
has a booklet for farmers with heart
or blood disease. "A Safe Work
Load.” It is a guide to help the farm­
er and his doctor plan a work pre­
scription.
Johnson Heads
Highway Meet
Cecil Johnson, president of the
Lower Columbia Highway Associa­
tion, has announced that a delegation
from the group will be given a 15-
minute audience with the Oregon
State Highway Commission in Salem
at 11:45 a.m. on March 11.
The delegates, headed by Johnson,
will bring up the possibility of get­
ting the four lane highway complet­
ed from Portland to St. Helens, in
view of new industries moving into
the area which will increase the traf­
fic load. Another problem scheduled
to be aired is the Rainier hill road.
Johnson, who is also the chairman
of the Scappoose Planning Commis-
sion, was recently appointed b> the
county court to fill out the unex(. . ed
term of the late Walter Erickson on
the Columbia county budget commit­
tee.
Happy Cooks Plan For
Demonstration Meet
On February 18, the Happy Cooks
met at the home of Mrs. Higgin­
botham. The girls talked more about
demonstrations and decided what
they are going to make.
The demonstrations are going to
be on March 11 at the grade school
at 7:30 p.m.
They also talked about the cookie
sale to be held on March 12.
Dales To Remember
THURSDAY, MARCH 4
Vernonia Grange Rummage Sale -
Fire hall - all day.
Vernonia Study club - Home of Mrs.
B. J. Hom - 8 p.m.
FRIDAY, MARCH 5
Arts and Crafts knitting class - West
Oregon Bldg. - 2 p.m.
PTA Revue - High school - 8 p.m,
Columbia Encampment No. 89-IOOF
hall - 8 p.m.
SATURDAY, MARCH 6
Natal Grange Card party - Natal
hall - 8 p.m.
MONDAY, MARCH 8
Nehalem Assembly Rainbow Girls-
Masonic Temple - 7:30 p.m.
Basketball, Rainier here - High
school gym-JV 6:15, Varsity 8 p.m.
Chamber of Commerce board - West
Oregon Bldg. - 8 p.m.
Band parents - Washington school -
7:30 p.m.
TUESDAY, MARCH 9
Mt. Heart Social C’jmmittee - Home
of Mrs. Nels Hogberg - 8 p.m.
Chapter BS, PEO Sisterhood - Home
of Mrs. Wm. Bridgers - 8 p.m.
Timber Route Extension Unit - Home
of Mrs. Don Bergerson - 10:30 a.m.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10
Vernonia Temple Pythian Sisters -
IOOF hall - 8 p.m.
Natal Grange - Natal hall - 8 p.m.
Some countries are so mad at us
they don’t even offer a receipt when
they take our money.
It’s an iron will that causes some
men to grow rusty.
FREE
ELEGANT TABLET BOX
when you buy regular priced Geritol. Stop
feeling tired because of iron poor blood.
$ 6 .9 8 V a lu e -— Only $ 4 .9 8
$ 4 .4 8 V alue— Only $ 2 .9 8
$2.19 Value - - - - Only $1.19
--------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------
Medicated Cosmetics by Rexall—
Marvalove . . . a rescue plan for
young skin problems.
Medicated Pressed Powder....................$1.50
Medicated Cleansing Lotion................. $1.00
Also Others