The North Santiam's Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 194?-1949, March 17, 1949, Image 10

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    MILL CITY ENTERPRISE,
T
' '7.C
MARCH 17. 1949
Valley to make lumber was in 1849.
The trees that were felled then were
at the river's mouth and so close to
wa terthat they were rolled by hand
into rafting booms.
Tha logging
cleared a site for the start of Illahee, .
a town of homes. More clearings
I were the start of farms.
The first logging in the Mamook Tsicgi- g went on, slowly and ptead-
O ut <9? the W oods
J™ Zfews
ONE FOREST VALLEY
ji
■ T«’ if
of Only
ENAMEL
I
Hara’« your chance to put new color into your home at a real saving!
Simply come into our store, buy one quart of lustrous Boysen Tru-Lite
Enamel at regular price
get second quart for only H
additional. Ten glorious pastel shades ... easy to handle ... dries over*
night to a beautiful gloss . .. won't chip . .. washable as a china dish.
I
B Uy HOW M THfSf SPECIAL SALE PRICES m SAVE
Boysen 100% Pure House Po"”
Boysen TRU KOTÍ Fiai
Wall Paint
sSE-SSS
in 1 hour
p«r gol
In $
Per
5.a0
5.OÜ
1.16
.S3
PHYSIC1AS & SL ÜGE0N ‘
Mill City
<«•
<« •»:
;«• •»
THE C/i# Ambers
M aples
JUST EAST OF GATES
•:«
* <♦:
Don't Borgo». Subscribe!
UlMiHUiUUlUU1
.»Hi
NORTH
SANTIAM
TAUERN
H. A. Schroeder
Repair Shop
* Blacksmithing
* Weldins
* Logging and Sawmill
Repairing.
BLOCK WEST OF THEATER
i
unm i
quart al Boys."
Tru-lit. at Regular Price
4
By 1929 the type of tractor that
took itself along on belts of broad
steel I nks cleated outside and cogged
inside, providing tremenous traction,
was in the mountains that rose from
the headwaters of the Mamook. In
front it carried a broad blade for
trail making—bulldozing. It pulled a
trailer with a high A-frame rig that
stood on crawlers, like the tractor
itself. A cable ran from a drum at
the ti actor’s rear up through the
peak of the A-frame or arch. By this
logs were snubbed up, their head ends
were hoisted, and the tractor punch­
er—he r of the bullpuncher and don­
key puncher — could yard timber
down any old mountain side. The
powerful logging truck was another
development. Truck-and-tractor log­
ging was the new giant of the for­
ests of the Cascade Mountains, in
the pineries of the east as well as
on the fir-'bearing west slope.
The development meant more than
mechanical change. It was new pio-
mise for business in the timber.
Young wage-earning loggers could
not hojx to save enouj^ from their
wages to build and equip a railroad
outfit, but the could hope to finance
a tTuck-an-tractor deal; and thous­
ands have done so.
Between 1929 and 1939 the depres­
sion hit the lumber industry harder
than any other. Not until 1937, ac­
cording to the U. S. Treasury, did
the industry produce a profit—and
in 1938 it slipped intc the red again.
In 1933 the Tillamook Fire burned
more sawtimber on 275,000 acres in
Oregon than had been cut from the
nation’s entire 500 million and more
commercial forest acres in the pre­
vious year.
LD W. Reid MD
HiiuuitW ’ MBftr mi uirmi
‘Cat” Lugging Conies In.
And now the lands of the loggers
look good up the Mamook. Most of
the tracts that were torn up by over­
sited and over-fast railroad logging
in the 1920’s have come back with
thriving young forests. State laws of
Washington and Oregon now require
the leaving of adequate stands of
seed trees on the logging cutovers.
The truck roads and tractor trails
serve as protection of the new crops
’iom fire in these times. Logging is
less like mining and more like an
orderly farm harvest on the Mam­
ook.
V «
ily, »preaiing out to benches, then
to hills. The skidroad and the bull­
team moved the timber from stump
to waterway. By 1899 the hoars,
chugging loar and shrill whistle of
the Dolbeer donkey echoed in the
can yons.
Then the railroad came, and big­
ger and faster logging machines with
high-lead and skyline skiddiffg sys­
tems. They tore through the timber
in thetwenties. Fire often rampaged
through the logging debris in the
wake of the steam-driven giants of
the woods that had put Paul Bun-
yan and Babe the Blue Ox in the
shade.
Still there was timber, The Mam-
ook area was roughly^one-hundredth
of the Douglas fir region, the land
between the snow of the Cascades
and the foam of the Pacific. It had
more than 250,000 acres of “com-
meicially available” forest land Half
of the acreage and the sawtimber
were publicly owned. Most of the
sawtimber stands were on the up-
lands; rough country, tough railroad-
Jewel Myers, Mgr.
lii mi ib i
•" in 1
-
¡'it
Ul l!l
Don’t Borrow, Subscribe!
There'll Be No Crosswords
•t.
When You Put Your
Reliance in
roaowau
50
I
APPLIANCE1
453 COURT 2-15651
SALEM
Industrial Forestry Arrive«,
KELLY Lumber Sales Co
Retail Division
Russell Kelly,
HCT HOW!
This offer good only while supplies lost!
USE PROPANE (¡AS FOR
COOKING
WATER HEATING
REFRIGERATION
HOUSE HEATING
BROODERS
i
But also 9rr 1933 a set of forest
practice rules was accepted by the
lumber industry as part of the Lum­
ber Code of the National Recovery
Act. When NRA was outlawed by
the Supreme Court the industry vol­
untarily kept the forest practice rules
effective.
Pine loggers and fir loggers of the
Cascade country were leaders in this
voluntary movement. In the Western
Pine and West Coast Lumbermen's
Assns. forest conservation depart­
ACROSS
ments were organized, with staffs of 1. Fine washing machine at Broad­ 20. The Thunderer. (Norse Mythol­
graduate foresters. The larger tim­
way Appliance. Also Charybdis
ogy). Also a bang-up appliance
ber companies began to hire forest - |
(Greek Mythology). (Pl.)
at Broadway Appliance.
ers right and left. Now 600 are etn
Í. With these jou hear about Broad­
21. This lady’ll be mighty grateful
ployed in Washington and Oregon.
way App. ance on KSLM Bargain
for helpful Broadway Appliances.
Counter at 8 a.m.
24. The sheik of this place was made
8. What legislature is holding now.
famous by Rudolph Valentino.
Also famous brand of clocks at 27. Preposition.
Broadway Appliance.
29. A high tower holding feed.
I
12. Reserve Officer (Abbreviation). 30. That which you need not watch
13. Southern State just a little bit
when you have Broadway Appli­
|
north of South Carolina. (Abbr.)
ances. Also, measure of distance.
14. That which we use to see those
(English).
wonderful Broadway Appliances. 31. Tops in ranges an i refrigerators
16. He or himself. (Latin).
on display at Broadway Appliance
18. Phoney locks worn by radio
Also city in Michigan.
comedians.
Ch°P Wood?
Propane gaa in a quick, dependable
fuel from the
natural
delivered to you
gas fields—
in o< 1 1prv.-aved li­
quefied forni. Over 4.500,000 homes
enjoy this »er« ice.
da«!
)»k about it to­
tpplianrea for Immixiintr
1 *e1i* err
Estímale» Without Obligation
EASY
TERMS
DOWN
1. Has Been.
24. To request.
2. “Things” (I-atin*.
25. The whole. Everything at Braod-
3. Stretched out. Past tense.
way Appliance.
4. Grand irons carried bv Broadway 26. First name of a big snake.
Appliance. (Brand Name).
27. Shriner’s hat.
5. O, So Nice Like Broadway Ap­ 28. Motor car of ’20s. (Brand name).
pliances. (Abbr.)
30. Here's the girl who deserves
6. A bright ray. Also a shining ex­
those fine Broadway Appliances.
ample of fine Broadway Appli­
ances. (Brand namri.
Answer to Puzzl« No. 1.
9. The Marshall Plan. (Initials).
10. Distress signal.
11. French coin of sail value.
tí
(A few of those will buy
any Broadway Appliance).
15. Measure for turns of
wheel. (Att>r).
H S C
16. Present tense of was.
17. •'And”. (Latin).
19. There’s no "if", “and
“but” about bargains
Broadway.
22. Song. (Italian).
23. With “aire". Broadway
cuum cleaner.
O H
0 o
Propane (!•« Sy «tema
In «ta lied and
Srrviced
in Mario«. I.inn, Folk and
Renton < «untiro
PROPANE GAS
& Appliance Co
•HONE SALEM 3-5098
349 Ferry Street
Aero««« from Marion Hotel
PHONE LEBANON 8441
Santiam Highway
1 Mile Smith
• 9