CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE-General SERVICES PIANO for sale, fair condition. Riv erview Cabins, HAzel 9-3344. 9t3c WILL BAKE and decorate cakes for all occasions. Mrs. Everett Hazen, 1246 Rose Avenue. HAzel 9-3205 7t3 FOR SALE: Rollaway bed with coil spring mattress. Never been used. $25. Also, heavy duty vibrator for massaging. Brand new. $25. Mrs. Margaret Hobnberg. Phone HAzel 9-3392. 9tl CONSOLE PIANO BUY! Want re sponsible party in this area to as sume small mo. pyts. Write or phone 363-5707, Adjustor, Tallman Piano Stores, Inc., Salem, Ore. 8t3c CARNATION FUEL - ELgin 7-6821 - Forest Grove. Immediate delivery, slab or planer wood for next two months. Order now. 8tfc FOR SALE: Used piano, $25. Fair condition. HAzel 9-6805.________ 7t3c FOR SALE: Used oil stove with fan, good condition, $75. Dick Gwin, HA- zel 9-5752.____________________ 7t3c FOR SALE: Used Frigidaire elec tric range, 40-inch size, new oven unit, good working condition. $35. Call Wayne Markham, HAzel 9-3645. ____________________________ 7t3c FOR SALE: One Jersey cow; also, two purebred Ayrshires, both bred. Doc Fuquay, HAzel 9-6506. 8t3c J. H. McKnight Well Driller Rt. 1, Box 240, Warren, Oregon Domestic, irrigation or exploratory well drilling. Also Pump Sales and Service FHA or GI Terms Available Write or call collect, St. Helens 397-2910 ____________________________ 50tfc FRESH FLOWERS for any occa sion. Flowers w ired 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-Real Estate RILL HORN REALTY ;ind Vernonia Insurance Exchange Bank Bldg. HAzel 9-6203 2 BEDROOM home inside city, half acre. $2750, terms. THREE-BEDROOM home, large kit chen, living room, dining room. Oil furnace, one full acre, double garage. $7500, terms. TWO-BDRM home, completely furn ished. All electric. A give-away at $6500. FARM LISTINGS NEEDED 9tlc TWO-BEDROOM house plus garage. All electric. On one acre, cleared, appnox. two miles SW of golf course on Timber road. V. A. Kubom. HA zel 9-3271. 9t3 Columbia River Real Estate REALTORS VERNONIA BRANCH 866 Bridge St. Phone HA 9-5211 FRED FLOETER, Broker LLOYD QUINN. AGENT 3 B/R house for rent with stoves, $37.50 monthly. 2 B/R home on 4 lots in town fully furnished. $5500.00. 1 ACRE in city of Vernonia with beautiful 3 B/R home. Birch kit chen, knotty pine and mahogany paneling. $12,750. ONE block from business district on 2 lots with double garage, fruit house and woodshed. 2 B/R home, $6500. ____________________________ 9tlc Oernonia Eagie 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. N IW S F A H R PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION E D IT O R IA L fb c & T I& N FINANCE your new 1965 car with a loan from Vernonia Federal Cred it Union. 853 Bridge St. 43tfc 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 Haberman's Meat PROCESSING PLANT State Inspected CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING Beef: Monday, Tuesday, Friday Hogs: Thursday, Friday till noon Culling and Wrapping 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 CLARENCE R. WAGNER, county surveyor, Court House, St. Helens Phone office, 397-0698; home, 397- 0018. Private surveying, engineer ing work. 24tfc MISCELLANEOUS WOULD $40 per week fill the gap between income and outgo? 15 hours a week, days or evenings and Sat urdays. Must have car. Joe Rezac, 201 Lloyd Plaza, Portland, Oregon. 4tfc WANTED Work wanted, any kind, reasonable. Have pick-up, will do odd jobs. Marvin- Sippi- Brewer Sr., 124 A Street. Phone HAzel 9-5751. 7t3 WANTED: Boys aged 11 to 14 for Oregonian routes. Make money and win trip to Disneyland in June. For information call HAzel 9-3825. 6tfc 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 CARD OF THANKS WE EXTEND our sincere apprecia tion to neighbors and friends for the many cards, messages of sympathy and acts of kindness in our recent bereavement. The many things done for cur children during our absence were especially appreciated. Thank you to each of you for your thought fulness. Mr. and Mrs. William Nelson 9tlc WE WISH to gratefully acknowledge all the cards, flowers and other ex pressions of sympathy and the many acts of kindness extended to us in •our bereavement. Mr. George Laird Mr. and Mrs. George Laird Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Desmond Laird Mr. and Mrs. Ed Burton Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Reynolds Mr. and Mrs. Ed Roberts 9tlc FOR RENT CABINS for ren, furnished. River view Cabins. HAzel 9-3344. 9t3c FOR RENT: Three bedroom house on one acre on river. North Mist Drive. Large chicken house and gar den plot. Guy Thomas, HAzel 9-3051 or HAzel ‘K3031. 6tfc 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 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 TUE8DAY N O O N EXCEPT FOR NEXT WEEK'S PAPER NO information on classifieds will be given out until after paper is mailed. BLIND ADS with answers to ba handled by The Eagle: Mini mum charge $1.00. No informa tion given relative to such ads. >»s««ciom«:«»»o«aœaaamaœB«iMon«œoc<wwo«e«œQ«* $ 1 A R O U N D * THE FARM BOWLING By Don Coin Walrod MEN'S LEAGUE Wednesday night standings W Shaw Bros. 11% 8% Ralph’s Chevron 11 9 St. Helens Ice & Bev. 10% 9% Dean’s Market 7 13 High series, William Smejkal 493; high game George Shaw 198. Splits picked up. Red Ade 6-7, Dick Aldrich 3-10. Thursday night standings W Crown Zellerbach 16 Lions Club 15 Vernonia Milk 11 Bob’s Union 6 Homer Fuller, high game, 200 and high series, 513. Splits picked up. Dick Aldrich 5-6, Dick Elliott 4-5, Phil Woodworth 3- 10, Jack Holsey 3-10, Bill Vealey 3- 10, Bill Hall 3-10, Henry Anderegg 3-10. WOMEN'S LEAGUE Team Standings W L Pills 15 9 Quinn’s Insurance 13% 10% Standard Oil 12% 11% West Oregon 7 17 High series, Trudy Magoff, 518; high game, Sadie Miller, 191. Splits picked up: Joyce Johnson 3-10 and 5-10, Sadie Miller 2-7, Gladys Sharar 2-7-10, Margaret Berg 5-7-9, Judy Stewart 3-10, Trudy Magoff 3- 10 and 3-10. Couples Attend Portland Rites NATAL - PITTSBURG — Mr. and Mrs. DeeVeere Hershey, accompan- ied by Mr. and Mrs. Mike Mullins of Forest Grove, attended the wed ding of Carol Chandler and Jon Carter in Portland February 19. Af terwards they visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Childs. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Cook and son Eddie of Walla Walla spent tlie week end here recently with his folks, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Ek- hoff. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Overberg of Portland were also recent callers at the Ekhoff home. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. DeeVeere Hershey were Mrs. Albert Childs, Jim Mullins, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Mullins and daughter Tara and Billy DuPuis. Billy spent Sunday night with Dee Hershey. Mr. and Mrs. Barr of Mist called on Mr. and Mrs. Noble Dunlap re cently. Mr. and Mrs. Reed Holding of Scappoose visited Mr. and Mrs. Max Oblack Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. John McLeod and three sons of Yamhill spent Sunday visiting with her folks, Mr. and Mrs. Orin Davis. The group drove to Timber Junction for lunch. After they returned to the Davis home, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Davis and son of Port land called on them. Applications Due At Clatsop Applications for admission to the fall term of Clatsop college, Astoria, are now being accepted, according to Dr. Stewart F. McCollom, direc tor of admissions. To apply for admission, a student should submit immediately, a com pleted Clatsop College application form. Upon high school graduation, a grade b anscript must be sent to the college in addition to a health form. No admission tests are required although English and mathematics placement tests are required for some students. It is recommended that esllege entrance examination board scores be submitted, if they are available. The application deadline for fall term scholarships is March 15. Strokes are the third leading cause of death in the United States, taking 200,000 lives each year. IN MEMORIAM IN LOVING memory of our mother, Mrs. Mary Peterson, who passed away thirteen years ago March 5. ’’Gone but not forgotten.” Daughters: Alice Lindsay and Nellie Dunlap 9tl Two years ago when working on sod-webworm controls in bentgrass fields at Clatskanie, we reported in this column that researchers had found that natural diseases were killing many of the pests. At that time some thought was given to the possibility of control procedures us ing cultures of the disease organisms. Now researchers are using mass- produced insect viruses in tests to control cabbage looper and com ear- worm. These viruses occur naturally, but natural epidemics generally oc cur too late in the season to prevent crop damage. Tests indicate that ear- ly-season spray applications of the virus will induce artificial epidemics and control the insects before they damage crops. Studies are now under way to de termine favorable times, rates and frequency of application, and to gath er further data on effectiveness and eoonomic advantages. In addition to providing a tool for control of insects, this method of control has the advan tage of eliminating residue problems. It is important to recognize that bi ological control methods seldom pro vide more than partial control. Just as with insecticides, insect species have built-in facilities to cope with factors that tend to destroy them as a species. other cereals, leaving a clean, crea my-white whole grain. The new process will result in a bulgur that is nearly white. This light-colored wheat product has a good commercial potential, not only in domestic markets, but also over seas, especially in countries where regular bulgur is not yet well ac cepted because of its color and bran content. Even without the new debranning process, U. S. export of bulgur has risen seven fold — from 60 million pounds in fiscal 1962, the first year it was exported, to 420 million pounds in fiscal 1964. Since the new process removes on ly the bran, it is more efficient than pearling, the commonly used abras ive process which removes outer coats of the grain, including a por tion of the endosperm. Food value of the new product in thus higher. Oats and barley can be peeled by the same new process, but these peeled grains will not be nearly so white as those of wheat. The peeled grains can be milled to flour or used in other ways. . a» Demonia tagfe y í 6 THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1965 ened stainless steel, or special hard ened alloys. Spray pressures are important in this business of nozzle wear. Using brass nozzles, the wear life at 30 pounds per square inch may be four times the same nozzle at 75 PSI. High pressures are not needed for many of the chemicals now in use. Urea is a nitrogen compound pro duced from carbon dioxide and am monia. It is used in agriculture as a fertilizer and as a source of pro tein for cattle and sheep. Urea in in dustry goes into the manufacture of plastics. Sales of urea are now well over a million tons annually, having tripled in the last six or seven years. About 80 percent of the urea pro duced in the U. S. is sold for ferti lizer, 13 percent for feed and 7 per cent for industrial uses. Sales of urea for feed have gained sharply since this outlet reached a commercial scale in the early 1950s. The 142,000 tons sold in 1963 is equi valent of about 760,000 tons of 44 per cent protein soybean meal. Urea is fed only to ruminants, since only the bacteria in the rumen can convert the nitrogen to usable protein. Urea alone contains no en ergy so molasses or grain is usually fed with it. Most nutritionists recom mend that no more than a third of the total protein in a complete ra tion be replaced by urea. As an ex ample, in substituting urea for an oilmeal, 7 pounds of the meal are re placed by 1 pound of urea plus 6 pounds of com. Despite a number of limitations in feeding urea, the chief advantage is in preparing less costly rations in periods when prices of natural pro tein are high in relation to the prices for cattle, sheep and dairy products. Dr. Albert L. Ingram Jr. of Penn sylvania State University reports that eating morning glory seeds can re sult in hallucination and possible ad diction, and that at least one suicide The Brown Swiss Cattle Breeders’ has resulted from this cause. Appar association will provide any boy or ently there have been instances of girl 10 to 21 years of age who has people eating these seeds purposely title to at least one registered Brown because of the narcotic effect. Swiss female recorded in his or her Timber owners face the possibility Through the Journal of American individual name an opportunity to be Medical Assoc., Dr. Ingram has urg of further losses of standing timber come a junior member. There is no ed controls be established over the this year-now from the Douglas fir charge for junior membership and sale of these seeds. So far as we bark beetle. There is considerable such membership permits the junior know, no action has been taken to evidence that some of cur green to register his animals at member put these seeds under some type of standing timber has been attacked rates until his or her 21st birthday. regulatory provision, but the poten by heavy beetle populations. If the A junior membership does not, how tial danger of the seeds of this old- trees are not successful in “pitching ever, entitle the individual to further time garden flower may result in out” these beetles when sap flow privileges such as voting, etc. starts this spring, trees will be gir some action by federal agencies.. Application blanks, available upon dled, needles will brown from the request, may be received by writing Producers of wheat, com or barley top down, and trees will die. Marvin L. Kruse, secretary, Brown will want to acquaint themselves Swiss Cattle Breeders’ Association, with the provision of the 1965 feed MARR & STAFFORD Box 1019, Beloit, Wisconsin. Upon re grain program. This voluntary pro MEAT CO. ceipt of the application and after gram is essentially the same as the Rt. 2, Box 379, Forest Grove, Ore. ownership of a registered female is 1964 program with the deadline on EL 7-7281 substantiated by records in the asso sign-up being March 26. Slaughtering, Cutting, Wrapping, ciation office, a junior membership and Curing Farmers who sign up and meet certificate will be sent to the indivi provisions of the feed grain program M eat for sale, any quantity. dual. C attle Received Sunday and may qualify for diversion payments, Monday until noon. price-support loans, and price-sup Hogs received Tuesday and The trend is for the use of more port payments on the normal yield W ednesday until noon. wettable chemicals for the control of of the diverted acres. The wheat pro Come through Banks, lake Tillam ook road < •/, mile. weeds, insects, and diseases. Wet- gram offers participating farmers take first ieiih an d road. table powders are less expensive to diversion payments, price - support ltfc market but more difficult to apply loans, and domestic and export cer than soluble pestiedes. Wettable pow tificates with a cash value for as der sprays require special nozzles to much as 80 percent of the normal NEW POWER FOR withstand wear, vigorous agitation production of the allotment, provided to keep them in suspension, larger it is planted. Some substitution be YOUR ENGINE WITH screens to prevent clogging, and ap tween feed grains and wheat can be plication volume of 15 to 20 gallons made. per acre, or less. Before the spray season arrives is Because wettable powders for use a good time to make changes or im in weed and insect control are in provements in your spray rig so that creasing, apparently due to the fact it will handle wettable powders with that they are less expensive to pro Im proves and m aintains en the least trouble and least danger of duce and market then other forms, gine efficiency, perform ance damage due to over application or spray operators need to give some under application. Here are some of special attention to their equipment. and economy. the things that should be done: Wettable powders are more abra 1. Use mechanical agitation if at sive than other materials. Conse all possible; quently, if an operator is using brass 2. Use a 50-mesh screen, or slightly nczzles he may find that wear at the larger, but not one large enough to orifice has increased rate of applica permit particles to pass that will tion considerably. This in turn, may clog orifices; increase the cost of application, af Atlas Tires 3. Operate at the lowest presure fect residues, or cause crop damage. Batteries that will give uniform and adequate While growers can make frequent Accessories coverage. This may require new replacement of brass nozzles, a bet Motor Tune-up nozzles or new orifices. ter alternative is to use one of the Auto Parts Orifices made of special hardened abrasion resistant nozzles on the HAzel 9-6991 alloys, or hardened stainles steel, market. In order of increasing cost give excellent wear against erosion. these might be stainless steel, hard- There are several other types of noz •x*x*x*x»x*x*x*x*x*x*x»x*x*x*x*x*x«x«x*x*xex* zles that are coming into more gen eral usage, including the flooding Î V nozzle and the whirl chamber noz V zle. Both give good spray patterns at low pressures and have an excel Î •5 lent service life in brass. They can î V also be obtained in stainless steel. A fact sheet entitled “Equipment 5 Recommendation for Spraying Wet table Powders,” is available from î county extension offices. ’♦’ V Principal users of such spray ma V î terials in Columbia county have been 5 strawbery growers, but Everett 8 Skeans, Rainier, has found the pro gram useful in forest seedlings, and Wallace Johnson, Scappoose .has suc î cessfully used altazine in control V ling weeds and grass in corn. V A TLA S A D D IT IV E S R A L P H 'S CHEVRON SERVICE No Job Is Too Small and No Challenge Too Big Bulgur, a specialy prepared pre cooked wheat product, has been find ing favor in many foreign countries, particularly those where rice has been one of the principal staples in the diet. Market possibilities will likely improve as a result of a new low-cost process developed by the Agricultural Research Service to re move dark bran from wheat, or 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 I Î V V V 3 THE VERNONIA EAGLE 3 $ >x«x«x*x«x«x«x*x«x«x*x«x«x«x«x»x*x*x«x*x*x«xX