Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, April 21, 1966, Page 5, Image 5

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

    -
O F F IC IA L E N T R V o
T o e V A LUET : ; A^
.
I t ’s a W in n e r
sN K
Shop DEAN'S for that WINNING com­
bination of FUN - GAMES - PRIZES &
the best, always in MEATS, PRODUCE
and GROCERIES- - - -
Name,
City_
Telephone Number.
Die
» " P ly fl« out , „ d „
-STORE
KRAFT PARKAY
<Sf« e Address)
Ato'”* - " Ä
« K You S S 'n f e . A W ? .* *
*• 2'!£í.*!«be
MARGARINE
F ,der»(. State and u .
-• XB°Drtia«' 01 *•>• winnar’ '• lne re. " t~K wlnn®'i racai'J.™ wln-
”
ASSTD
ZEE GIANT
PAPER TOWELS
KIDS WEEK
Giant
Rolls
BETTL CROCKER
family size
EA.-Big
Boxes
WHEATIES or
CHEERIOS
GOLD MEDAL
WONDRA
PANCAKE
ANGEL FOOD
BETTY CROCKER
White Only
DETERGENT
Large
Crisp
Stalk
Large
Box
PHTT
v l l l l j l T Haleys
Regular or hot
40-oz. C0<
tin Di»
P Ï 7 7 A Chef Boyardee
T l í i í i ñ cheeese
12 oz.
49e
13 oz.
59"
P I 7 7 A Chef Boyardee
sausage
Chef Boyardee
Spaghetti
MEAT BALLS
100
4 15-oz. tins
Nabisco-Wheat Thins-Triscuit
CRACKERS
2 „ ,8.79'
Nabisco-Chicken in a box
CRACKERS
IVORY LIQUID
Dry Dog Food
VITA-BITS
2 k ., 79-
I
BOILER ONIONS
ORANGES
I CUCUMBERS
ORANGE JCE
Navels ...........................
Firm and fresh. 2 for
Snoboy Blend. Quart
35c
39c
Gt. cq c
Size *>«
io-ib.
Bag
qq
PORK
LOIN
SALE
Whole Loin
of Pork
Pork Chops
5
Hatchery Due
On Nehalem
Apparent low bidder on a con­
tract to construct an Oregon Fish
commission salmon hatchery on
the North Fork of the Nehalem riv­
er in Clatsop county was Cloyd R.
Watt Construction Company of
Portland with a bid of $276,912. The
15 proposals submitted to the com­
mission by the 2 p.m. deadline on
April 15 ranged from the $276,912
low to a high of $390,648, Edward
K. Neubauer, the agency’s engin­
eering director stated.
Award of the contract is expect­
ed to be made on April 26 during a
regular monthly meeting of the
commission in Portland. By that
time, review of the construction
proposals will have been completed
by the commission’s engineering
staff.
Under terms of the agreement
the contractor will have 160 days
to complete the job. The initial pro­
ject calls for construction of rear­
ing ponds, water supply systems,
egg collection facilities, a service
building, and gravel roads. A sec­
ond construction contract to in­
clude three dwellings is expeeted
to be advertised within 60 days.
The new facility, not yet formally
named, will be located on the south
bank of the North Fork of the Ne­
halem river approximately eight
miles south of Necanicum Junction
on Oregon Highway 53 in Clatsop
county. Initial plans call for annual
production of 1 million yearling
coho and 1 million 90-day reared
fall Chinook.
With official approval of the con­
struction contract, the Oregon Fish
commission will be on the way to
adding another modern hatchery
to its string of fish production fa­
cilities. In the not too distant future
this latest salmon factory will be
pumping new life into the old Ne­
halem as well as helping to boost
the offshore sport and commercial
fisheries.
Science - Math
Award Received
CELERY
Granulated
DUZ
i L lt t i n .
4-Lb.
Bag
BETTY CROCKER
Light Fluffy
Oernonia Eagle
THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1966
FLAVO-PAC frozen
f resh
10-Oz. $
Pkgs.
12 Oz.
2 for 99c
Tree Sweet
frozen
1.00
$
1.00
ORANGE juice
POTATO chips
DOG FO O D -120.00
6-Oz.
Tins
Big
3-Pak Box
Loin End Roasts
National recognition has been
won by Oregon State University for
its teacher preparation programs
in science and mathematics.
OSU was one of 40 U.S. colleges
and universities given 1966 achieve­
ment awards by the American
Association of Colleges for Teacher
Education. The schools were hon­
ored for their leadership in teacher
preparation, President James H.
Jensen said.
Oregon State won its award for
its work “to improve the prepara­
tion of science and mathematics
teachers” through a series of semi­
nars aimed at pinpointing “skills
needed by teachers on the secon­
dary level and how these skills
might be developed to a higher
level.”
The seminars brought together
outstanding high school teachers
and supervisors, the state super­
visor of science, department chair­
men of all OSU science depart­
ments, and national consultants in
the various science fields. Recom­
mendations during the past three
years have provided guides for im­
proving science education pro
grams, according to Dr. Stanley
E. Williamson.
He is head of the OSU depart­
ment of science education; was
president two years ago of the 35,-
000-member National Science Tea­
chers association; and represented
this country in 1964 at international
teacher meetings in Europe.
Ten years ago, OSU was one of
16 U. S. universities chosen by the
National Science Foundation to
spearhead the training of U. S.
science and mathematics teachers
through special academic-year in­
stitutes. It has been on the select
list each year since then. Nearly
500 teachers from every section
of the nation have come to OSU for
the special training and grants for
the program have totaled nearly
$3,000,000.
Now that man has proved he
can walk safely in space, wouldn't
it be great if he could walk safe­
ly in the big city streets at night.
735 Jefferson St., Vernonia
Hours: Daily 9 a.m. to 7 p.m
Sundays 10 a m. to 7 p.m.
Ä
/
Prices Effective April 21-
22-23-24 — Thurs., Fri.,
Sat., and Sunday
iduertising
wwj® for you I