Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1974)
■■■■ ■«' ri» UJQflT-flDS FOR SALE-General SERVICES CONTINUOUS Garage Sale — Starting Saturday, August 31 at Natal by Mist Shake & Ridge, Hwy. 47. Clothing, furniture, and misc Phone 4293775 36tlc FOR SALE: Womans 50 cc Hon da. »125 X1800 AKIA tape and 8 track, 2 Pioneer speakers and 6 month old Whirlpool dryer. See to appreciate. Call 755-2277. ________________________ 3612 DON'T merely brighten your car pets . . . Blue Lustre them , , . eliminate rapid resoiling. Rent electric shampooer, »1. Bruns- man Hardware __________ 36tlc USED Lawn Mower (like new) with grass bag, »75 Call after 6 p.m 4297092.__________ 35t2c FOR RENT professional painting N E W V E R N O N IA Hotel - Rooms by day, week o r month. Also, tra ile r hook-up*. Phone 429-5091. Interior - Exterior — Free Estimate* — Special Summer Rate* LELA ND SEIBERT Phore 4296181 ________________________ 6tfc 9tfc KELSO S A l T " BARN R. Vaughn Baker, Auctioneer AUCTION F R ID A Y 7:00 P.M . Phone 425-3212 130 Sales Barn Road KELSO, WASHINGTON 18826 49tfc VERNONIA SANITARY S E R V IC E Phone 429-8711 LARGE WHITE ducks for sale, »3 each Three week old duck lings, 75 cents each. Banty chick ens, 50 cents each, regardless of age Call 429-8261 between 1-2:30 Pm ______________ 35t2c FOR SALE: Corn, tomatoes, pep pers, zucchini, slicer cukes, par sley. Lloyd Whitcomb, 1 blk. W. Brown Derby, Banks. Phone 324- 2494 for info._____________ 34tfc SHOE REPAIRS — Open 8:30 a m. to 5:30 p.m. Tandy Shoe Repair, D St., Vernonia, 429-3301. _______________________ Sltfc FOR SALE: Approximately 100m marked timber near Mist Phone Mr. Good, Portland, 289-9781, evenings.________________ 20tfc Blown-ln Insulation Rockwool Batting F R E E ESTIM ATES FOR the home Seamstress - Full line of Simplicity Patterns at SEW SIMPLE SHOP, 725 Bridge, Vernonia. Phone 429-7441. _______________________ 17tfc CUT FLOWERS, weddings, fun eral designs, plants. Also flowers by wire. Artificial flowers and gifts. CHALET FLOWER SHOP. Phone 429-5733 or 429-6301. _______________________ 13tfc FOR SALE-R'l Estate FOR SALE by owner — No down payment to G.I., 3 bedroom home on Mi acre in Vernonia, unfinished basement, outdoor fireplace, un derground sprinkler system, tim ber, close to schools, on dead-end street.! »16.200. Call 357-3448 Forest Grove.____________ 36t3c "FABRICS 'n FASHIONS" Busi ness for sale. Make offer. In quire at store___________ 36tfc Rill Horn m Realty Ws- GRI 953 Bridge St., Vernonia Phone 429-6203 B ILL HORN, BROKER SALESMAN: Deri Roberts—4293804 Sue Filter—4297014 FOREST GROVE BRANCH - Arlie Satterlee, Mgr —Ph. 357-232i 30tfc ARCTIC INSULATING CO. Call C olled 397-1670 ST. HELENS lOtfc Norman Hillihery, Builder New Home* Built To Your Spec If lc & (ions New Construction - Addition* - Re- modelng - Roofing . Foundation* — F R E E ESTIMATES — 429-8942 42tfc BAIR Logging Co. 429-7485 The Place To Call For A ll Your Rock Needs! Trucking, Excavating, Bulldozing, Backhoe Sand - Gravel - Rock Stockpiled In Vernonia for —Immediate Delivery— 16tfc SEPTIC TANK PU M PIN G Licensed • Bonded and Insured PHO NE 397-3172 I f no answer call 397-2281. Columbia County Septic Tank Service FOR SALE-Aulos 1971 DATSUN P.U. with canopy. »2100. Phone 429-7642 34t3c AUTO INSURANCE * License Suspended * Driving Record * Uninsured Accident Matching your driving record with one of 20 companies to pro vide maximum coverage for a minimum cost. PIPER-RA NDA LL AGENCY St. Helens Phone 397-0714 WANTED MAN to do house foundation work. Phone 4295751 or call at 966 East Alabama Avenue. _______________ 36tlc WORK WANTED WILL CARE for children ages 1 year or older in my home. Have fenced yard, play equipment. Call 4295692_________________ 36tlc CLASSIFIED RATES M IN IM U M charge »1.00 for 20 word* or le u . Word* over mini mum 5 cents each. NO Information on classified* w ill be given out until after paper is mailed. CARD of Thanks and Notices: »1.25 for up to 12 lines. Addi tional lines. 8 cents each. DISPLAY classified are »1.20 per column Inch. T H E EAG ^E assumes no finan cial responsibility for errors that may appear In ads pub lished In Its columns, but In cases where this paper is at fault will reprint that part of an adv. in which the typographi cal mistake occurs. NO CLASSIFIED OR DISPLAY ADV. W ILL BE ACCEPTED A F T E R NOON TUESDAY E X CEPT FOR N E X T W E E K ’S PAPER. B U N D ADS with answers to be handled by The Eagle: M ini mum charge »2.00. No informa tion given relative to such ad*. PO ETR Y accepted only a* paid m atter: Rate: 10 cent* per type line. During World War II the U.S. armed forces consumed enough lumber to build 9.5 m illion average-sized homes. K ' !' Elfe? M tfc Coach's Comer M E L V IN NICE Football Coack After a full week of football practice there were few sur prises but no major disappoint ments, according to football coach Melvin Nice. “Everything seems to be progressing well, he said “We now have 25 varsity football players and 20 fresh men. We nave also picked up one transfer student from the Port land area His name is Rob Vicors and he is a senior.” Injuries so far into the year have been minor Kris Crowston received a bad bruise on his left knee while Jim Thompson had been hampered by a bad ankle but only the usual cuts and bruises have prevailed to date with no slowing in play. “Many of the positions are be ginning to solidify,” Nice com mented. “As of now we are running Clint Holsey as No 1 split end, backed up by Bob Brooks At flank, Bryan Traylor is first. On the strong side of the line we have Kris Crowston, Loren Kennedy and Gordy Crowston. On our quick side, we have Randy Hansen and Mike Sutherlin. Scott Nance is now at center with Don Knight helping Our backfield is made up of quarterbacks Kandy Ellson and Jeff Bellingham. Running backs are Ed Buckner. Brad Belling ham, Ken Enneberg, Tim Titus, Rob Vicors and Terry Ellson.” The coach went on to say, “our biggest defensive surprise of the season so far, is Don Knight At five-foot nine-inches and 240- pounds, he has been causing a lot of problems for our offensive linemen. His speed for short dis tances is very good and being built so close to the ground is one tough fella to move.” All football fans are invited to the Loggers Booster Breakfast slated this Saturday, September 7, at 7 a m at the Evangelical Church. All seniors are invited as guests Others are welcome to join in boosting the Loggers Cost for the breakfast is $1. s ) LIVESTOCK SPIRITED Bay Gelding. Has had prveious 4-H training, but needs experienced rider. »150 or best offer. Phone 543-6212. _______________________ 35tfc CARD ol THANKS WE WISH to thank all the people in this area for all their prayers for me when 1 was sick and also for all the kind things and the help they gave us in our time of need. Mr. and Mrs. Entwistle 36tl A MESSAGE of thanks for my many friends and neighbors with their kind thoughts and deeds. Special thanks to Violet Aldrich and Glen Hawkins. Vida Alexander 36tlc WE WISH to thank all our won derful friends and neighbors for all the lovely flowers, cards, con tributions to the ambulance fund and food we received during our recent loss. Special thanks go to the Grange, and the EUB church ladies for the very fine lunch that was served after the service. The Keasey family 36tlc NOTICE N O T IC E Regular meeting of School Dis tric t 47J, Board of Directors, se cond Thursday of each month, 8:00 p .m ., School D is tric t Office, 475 Bridge Street. __________________________ 36tlc N O T IC E : F o r Oregonian Service call E d die Wilkerson, 4292724. ______________________________ 33t4 F O R O R E G O N J O U R N A L ser vices call A1 Im an , 4292081 be fore 10:30 a .m . and a fter 5:30 29tfc p.m. LOST and FOUND F O U N D : Irish setter wearing col la r and shot tags found in vicinity of Keasey Route. Dog is full grown. M a y be claim ed by iden tifying and paying fo r ad. Phone 4295083 o r 4397171. 34tfc J IM THO M PSO N Senior Jim Thompson played middle linebacker for the Log gers last year and won all-league honors at that position. “When you start talking about hitters, Jim would have to be included,” said coach Nice. "He is the con fident kind that enjoys colliding with people.” At five-foot nine-inches tall and 165 pounds. Jim has to be one of the toughest players in the league, according to Nice. “When we will be using our 4-3 defense, Jim will be middle line backer and on the six-man line, left linebacker.” Nice smiled wryly, adding, “a few years ago I use to enjoy dressing down and scrimmaging with the team but with line backers like Jim, my chances of survival is about as good as a weed in Bud Weigand's garden ” Richardsons At State Fair BIRKENFELD—Mr. and Mrs George Richardson and Joe went to the State Fair Saturday. They stayed overnight and came home Sunday Mr. and Mrs Frank Enbsley from Springfield, visited over the weekend at the Roy Stuve home. Mrs. George Scott visited at the Tornblad home on Monday of last week On last Friday Dr. and Mrs A.G. Spillman of Seattle visited the Joe Lonnquist's Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Beach were in Portland last Monday The Roger and Allen Berg families of Portland camped over the long weekend at the Nick Berg place. Mrs Mary Cooper and Harry Crist of St Helens were Sunday visitors at the Roy Stuve home Mr. and Mrs Bob Hauberg spent the Labor Day holiday at the Tornblad home Other vis itors were Mr and Mrs Earl Tiedeman, Mr and Mrs Francis Nordstrom, and John Lotze. The Tornblad s brought him home with them Sunday to spend awhile, bringing him back home in the evening THE NEW football sled pictured above give* the squad practice in shoulder and body contact. The boards are heavily padded to stimulate a human body while the complete form is con structed on a ski-type base which give* when a player hits the board. Thia enables players to concentrate on their blocking ability and helps them establish a good charge from the line of scrimmage. Retail cost would have been »1106, but Nice built it for the boys at a coat to the high school of »175. I*:*:*:»;*:*:*»»:«*;»»:*:*»:« AROUND THE FARM - - - By Don Coin Walrod County Extension Agent past 10 years. Even so, the bottom of the slump in sheep numbers ap parently is not in sight. Econ omists estimate that this years sheep and lamb slaughter would have to drop 15 to 20 percent from the 1973 pace if the inven tory is to stabilize. Apparently the prospect of that happening is highly inlikely. » » » » T o » » » » » » A Protein Perspective. The magazine “Agricultural Research" notes continued dire predictions of a so-called protein crunch appearing in the press Their gist: mass starvation if food production does not keep pace with the world population growth over the next 50 years. Since protein is expected to be come the most limited nutrient, many writers are urging that grain be consumed directly by people rather than be fed to live stock, especially beef cattle, which they portray as grossly inefficient converters of grain and oil-seeds into meat, thereby reducing the world’s food sup ply People have long practiced several kinds of vegetarianism and that is a basic right, but most of us want meat in our diets. Observers who contend that grain must inevitable re place meat as a protein staple fail to take into account basic realities concerning reminant livestock and and agricultural science. For such ruminants as cattle and sheep are superbly endowed to thrive on forages, pasture and harvested herbage, converting fibrous material that people cannot eat into protein- rich-m eat and milk. Indeed, forages account for about 70 percent of the nutrients that beef cattle consume over their life times this is a notable statistic because over half of the total U.S. land area about a billion acres-is fit not for cropping but for producing forage Urban societies, it appears, need more public awareness about the food production that goes on in that miracle chamber, the rumen. In the dark of a cow’s rumen are Lilliputian armies of mi crobes that digest and mobilize nutrients for the cow to assim ilate Some microbes digest cell ulose, others make certain vita mins, still others make digest ible protein for the cow, either from nonprotein nitrogen pres ent in forages of that fed as urea The ruminant's “fermentation vat” can also digest many waste from the processing of food for human consumption. These in clude by-products from prepar ing flour, starch, glucose, sugar beets, and distillery products as well as meatpacking wastes. Another feed source that scien tists are working to exploit is the mountain of high-fiber wastes produced each year, especially straw If straw could be ren dered digestible, it could main tain 49 million head of cattle. Urea looms large in meeting the future feed needs of rumi nants. Although some problems remain to be worked out, more urea is being fed to cattle. A measure of its promise is at tested by a 10 year-old bull at Beltsville which has since the age of 84 days obtained all its nitrogen from urea Agricultural scientists of many disciplines are striving to find and develope new sources of protein. Even so, the ruminant will maintain its age-old role as a major con tributor of protein-rich meat for tomorrow. Sheep Numbers Continue To Decline. Thousands of farmers raise sheep, enjoy the work, and make money at it. However, the ranks of the sheep producer are being closed year by year as ev idenced by the steady drop in the nation’s sheep population. Already the smallest of rec ord, the stock sheep and lamb inventory took another plunge in 1973. Only 13.9 million remained at the beginning of 1974-about a million fewer than a year earlier and down 15 million from 1960 when the present downward trend started Livestock specialists of the economic research b l a m e the decline on a long list of problems plaguing the industry, among them predator losses, a shortage of good labor, and up until last year, low lamb and wool prices. The improvement of lamb and wool proces may en courage producers to stay in business and the rate of li quidation will probably decline from the 6 percent average of the Sheep Numbers Past In connection with the matter of sheep numbers, a paragraph from an annual extension report of 1937 states “one of the im portant projects carried on dur ing the year was . the ranging of sheep from Eastern Oregon and Washington on the cutover lands of Columbia county. According to the census there were about 3,000 sheep in small farm flocks During the summer there were 16,500 sheep brought into the ocunty for summer ranging. The county agent had the principle responsibility of the detail work in ranging the sheep such as dividing the range into allot ments sufficient for bands of 1,000 ewes and their lambs in most cases, and in a few cases two bands were run over the same range A total of 49,886 acres were leased to 13 sheep owners.” At the peak of the season for the year, Columbia County now will have less that 4,000 head of ewes. For the landowners in clined to do so, a small farm flock presently offers more po tential than most other agri cultural enterprizes currently possible. Use W ant Ads And Save Fran 91 Larsons Dinner Guests BIRKENFELD—Mr and Mrs Francis Larson were Saturday evening dinner guesta at the Herbert Rodger s home Others enjoying it were Mr and Mrs Mike Tiedeman and l i t t l e daughter, Tara, Mrs. Phyllis Gronnel, and a friend of Doug las, Steven Adamson Tom Hopkins is still in the hos pital and is coming along fine He had been up in a wheel chair and also on his feet some. He is hoping to get home soon. The Joe Lonnquist's attended church in Clatskanie on Sunday, then went on to Marshland to visit her cousin, Mrs. Freda Foster. PCC Teaches Home Decorating Skills Decorating a room, a home, or an apartment can be more fun when you make the accessories yourself Portland Community College Community Education offers a course this fall that will help you do just that. Creative Home Accessories classes, taught by Mrs. Marilyn Schulte, will meet from 7 to 9:30 p.m. on Tuesdays for six weeks beginning October 1, at Grant High School, 2245 NE 36th Ave. Portland. Tuition is »9. Uernonia £aqic THURSDAY, SEPT 3, 1974 9 Hank Hudsons Take Trip Down Coast RIVERVIEW-Mr and Mrs Hank Hudson and Debbi took a recent trip down the coast, visiting relatives. Their first stop was at Otis where they visited Mrs Ellen Glenn, then to Coo« Bay for a few days with Mrs Rhoda Woods, who went with them to Merlin to visit Mr. and Mrs. Pete Wells and family. Mrs Woods came home with them and stayed until Saturday at which time they took her home. Let litte r bug you MARR & STAFFORD MEAT CO. R t. 2, Box 379, Forest Grove, Ora. M7-7261 Slaughtering, Cutting, Wrapping, and Curing Cattle received Sunday A M onday until noon; hogs received Tuesday and Wednesday until noon. Meat for sale, any quantity. — Call for Appotatmeat — Come through Bank*, take TUI*. road I K m l., take fe a t left- life WE SERVICE A ll B rands and M akes of- Television - Sound Sys tem s and A ppliances! Whirlpool . Kelvinator - RCA Zenith - Toshiba SALES A SERVICE W e Have 2 Full Time Service Men PHONE (COLLECT) 543- FOR IN T H I HOME SERVICE (Twice W eekly Service In Vernonia) O pen 9 a.m . to 7 p.m. M on.iSat. T.V. and APPLIANCE CENTER Chinook Plesa on H w y. 30 ^ S ca p p o o se, Oregon Phone 543-7322