The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, November 03, 1949, Image 8

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    MILL CITY ENTERPRISE. NOVEMBER 3. 194»
MILL CITY
Mrs. Walter L. Peterson ami her
mother, Mrs. C. J. Dahlen visited in
Cloverdale on Monday and Tuesday of
this week at the home of Mrs. E. O.
Minor.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson and
children of Bend where guests at the
home of Mr. and .Mrs. Walter L. Pet-
erson on Wednesday.
Mrs. Rosa Daly ami Mrs. Gladys
Mason attended the Pacific Telephone
company conference in Salem last
Thursday. All connecting telephone
companies with the Pacific Telephone
were guests.
Mrs. Peggy McCoy is now working
at the Santiam Telephone company,
Mrs. Rosa Day taking a leave of
absence.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Stone visited
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lake in Redmond
over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Kelly and chil­
dren are vacationing at their home at
the coast for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Davis are leav­
ing this weekend for ther cabin at
Alsea for a four-day vacation.
Ed Kellom has retired from service
with the Southern Pacific railroad
company. He will devote his time to
his store on Alder street where he
specializes in fresh meats and groc­
eries.
Mrs. Otto Witt is ill at her home
with a sinus infection. Monday she
went to a specialist at Salem for
treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. John Swan had din­
ner with Mr. ami Mrs. Elmer Culwell
of Lyons this week.
Mrs. Gladys Trask of Fresno, Cali­
fornia is visiting her sister, Mrs.
Elsie Potter and her brothers, Del­
bert and Ellis.
Mrs. Trask and Mrs. Elsie Potter
spent the weekend at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Bub Haseman of Idanha.
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Mason had
dinner with friends in Redmond Sun-
day.
Mr. and .Mrs. Edward Schroeder
and children of Forest Grove visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Schroeder over the weekend. Edward
attended the home-coming game at
Corvallis.
Mrs. W. W. Allen is leaving Satur­
day for San Francisco to visit her
son and his family, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Allen.
Mrs. Vernon Todd and children
i and Mrs. W. W. Allen drove to Idan-
ha
1 Tuesday and had lunch with Mrs.
Sam Palmerton.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blazek at-
tended the Elk’s dance in Albany Sat-
urday
night. Sunday they drove to
i
the coast with friends from Jeffer­
son and spent the night.
Mrs. Helen Williams, director of the
Lions’ club local talent show arrived
Tuesday evening in Mill City and is
staying with Mrs. Jennie Davis. Mrs.
LOST FATHER
While Paul Mason was elk hunting
in eastern Oregon, Mrs. Mason gave
birth to a little “dear,” Douglas Allen,
on November 1st at the Salem General
hospital, he weighed in at 7 lbs. 9
ounces.
This is to Announce
Our New Office
In Jenkins Building
Church Activities
-
(Formerly Baker’s Jewelry Store)
Mark Hammericksen
REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
Open Every Thursday 1 to • P.M.6 P. M. to 8 P.M. by appointment
* Eye examination
* Eye glana adjust men ta
I
Williams’ home is in Wichita, Kans.
Two former publishers, Dave Epps
and Charles Wolverton, met with the
new publisher, Don Peterson in the
Enterprise office W’ednesday, proba­
bly the first time that three owners
of this same paper ever were to­
gether.
Mr. and Mrs. William Scott and
family of Columbus, Ohio, is visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wolverton Fri­
day.
Mrs. Scott is a high school
friend of Mrs. Wolverton. She was
state supervisor of corrective speech
defects in children for several years
in Indiana. Mr. Scott was area head
of the YMCA in Columbus and is
being transferred to Florida.
Mrs. Leroy Dike has been confined
to her home the past few weeks be­
cause of illness.
Dr. and Mrs. D. J. Ferguson are
entertaining the members of the Pres­
byterian Youth Fellowship with a
Halloween party.
Mrs. George Laird, local beauty
operator, is having a modem shop
constructed on the Linn county side
of town on Broadway street, where
the Presbyterian manse formerly
stood. Construction has already be­
gun and occupation is expected some
time next month. Miss Daisy Hend-
ricson plans to move her variety and
ladies’ apparel store in the shop va­
cated by Mrs. Laird.
Norman Brayford, OPS representa­
tive at the Detroit Dam, motored to
eastern Washington over the week
end.
Mr. and Mrs. James O’Leary and
family plan to go to Portland this
week end to attend a Christmas pre­
view and party at a Portland whole­
sale house.
John Davis and his family and Mrs
N. E. Davis of Lafayette visited their
sister and «laughter over the week
end.
• Glasses fitted.
• Broken lenses replaced
General office« at TenBrook Jewelers, 313 W. let St.. ALBANY
ST. CATHERINE CATHOLIC
CHURCH, MILL CITY
Sunday Mass at 9 A.M.
Confessions heard before 'mass.
Father C. Mai, Pasfor
•
•
•
LATTER DAY SAINTS OF JESUS
CHRIST CHURCH, DETROIT
Sunday School each Sunday 10 A.M.
in high school building, Detroit.
Priesthood meeting 11 A.M.
Zealand Fryer, Presiding
•
•
•
Church notices will be welcomed
without charge, kindly furnish any
| changes desiied, as we will be happy
to keep this column up to date.
¿The University Bowl
of Salem cordially invites th« Bowling I’ublir to come in and en­
joy the sport and fun of bowling.
12 Modern Brunswick alleys to bowl on
OPEN 11 A. M. <0 12 P. M.
Rate 35c per line—3 line« for $1.00
I As a Special GET ACQUAINTED Offen this Ad. is good I
I for one Lin< of bowling at our modern bowling palace. I
l the finest in the Northwest.
UNIVERSITY BOWL
1340 State St.
Salem. Ore.
Tel. 20631 for reservations
COME IN AND TRY FOR SOME OF THE HANDSOME PRIZES
Marion Forks
BY MRS. SCOTT YOUNG
Plan Your Sunday Dinner
At MANOLIS CAFE
Full Course Dinner $1.50
Alsc Delicious Steaks and Fried
Chicken
MEN’S WORK GLOVES
Drastically Reduced
Letters to the Editor ■
I have recently moved to Mill City, §
luckily finding a very nice house on
N.W. Alder Street. . This street is
paved up to a certain point. In front
of three homes half way down Alder
street, one finds huge holes which are
getting worse every day. The bal­
ance of the street, ipast this point, is
fine.
Can’t something be done to force
the property owners to pave or fill
in the holes on the street fronting
their property? I am sure that I,
along with numerous others who have
to drive their cars over this very bad
strip of street, feel that if any dam­
age is done to our cars because of
this situation, it should be the re­
sponsibility of these property owners
to repair our cars.
Signed^ Mrs. Cecil L. Fritts.
•
•
•
DESTRUCTION OF PROPERTY
D. B. Hill, Whitey Goodman and
Dick Turpin built a concrete walk
with an iron-pipe railing on it be­
tween the bank and the Bank Cafe.
is coming in daily
Shop early for the best selection
MILL CITY VARIETY
Jim O’Leary
?
a
s
§
2134 Fairgrounds Road
Salem, Oregon Phone 3-7193
BUILDER’S SPECIAL
Here is your chance to buy Common
Lumber at a savings while
quantity lasts
Random length 2x4, No. 4 Grade $14.00 per M
2,(MM) ft. lot»
Random length ixb N0.4.S&S $18.00 per M
Random length 1x8 No. 4 Shiplap $18.00 pel M
2,000 ft. lots
Smaller Quantities Slightly Higher
and
Irene O’Leary
A Chance for
Reliable Businesses
Tenants wanted for 100-foot business block
to be built on Highway in Mill City.l 20 to 40
ft, frontage units planned. See . . .
I AT V OUR1 FINGERTIPS
DAVID M. REID
Real Estate
& Tavern Supply
FRERES’
Jefferson
CHRISTMAS STOCK
Davis Electric
Commercial Refrigera­
tion Sales and Service
pushed over five nights straight.
Whoever is doing this undecent act,
might think they have something to
laugh at, but instead they laugh
alone, and are putting themselves into
the category of the worst people in
the world.—Signed, Dick Turpin.
Mrs. Josephine Morgan and daugh­
ters of Scio, accompanied by Harry
Stillwell and Mrs. Morgan’s daugh­
ter’s two children all visited Marion
Forks Sunday. They are all relatives
of Mr. and Mrs. Vern Morgan.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Smith made a
Quality job printing at the Enter­
business trip to Culver and Redmond
prise.
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Westerberg and
I
son George, who have been living here
in their summer home on the San-
I
tiam, have now moved back to their
I
home in Portland. They have done
I
extensive work on their place ami it
is a credit to the countryside.
I
Mr. Bear likes apples, so the folks
I
up at Marion Forks have found out.
A small bear is becoming a pest.
I
He ,ransacked around a trailer house
I
and emptied a bushel of apples and
I
left only four. Could it have been he
was thoughtful of others or was he
just plumb full ? What do you think?
He totes garbage cans around, claws ¡annsn»!a»»iannnnnnia»nniaannnnnHiann»»!cta!a!a¡a»»n)9íHnHHn»Hn«n»
I
around on doors with the hopes he
I
might get in.
People’s hearts go
B
B
bump bump but that doesn’t help. The
o
«
only sure cure is a rightly driven shot.
I
I
People who work would rather sleep
I
and that is the time he prowls.
I
I
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Parker of De­
I
I
troit were Sunday visitors here.
I
M. and Mrs. Paul Klug are making
I
I
their summer home ready for the
B
a
winter months.
I
Mr. Don McNeil was here at his
B
summer home putting in braces
s
g
against the winter snows.
s
PHONE 207
MILL CITY
Broadway Hits of Today--4 records
Album .... 3.27
Vaughn Monroe Album
Wide Stock of 45 rpm records—
Classics, Popular, Westerns and
all vinylite — 69c each
Classic Albums:
FRERES BIJ1LDIN<
They built this walk so that all citi­
zens would not have to walk in the
mud, and they built the iron-pipe
railing along side the walk so that
the citizens and particularly the elder
citizens, could hang onto the railing
while coming down the hill during
freezing and snowy weather without
falling and breaking leg or neck.
Commencing last Saturday night
October 29, the walk railing has been
Beethoven Symphony No. 7
Tchaikovsky Symphony, No. 6
Tcsaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite
Wagner’s Des Rheingold
and many others
PORTER & LAU
OPENING UNDER
NEW MANAGMENT
MICK’S BOARDING HOUSE
Home cooking and baking
First With What Yeu Want Most"
COMPLETE APPIANCE SERVICE
Radio. Washer Refrigerator and
Electrical Appliance
Mill City 1884
Stayton 215
Phone 3306
Virginia Chaffin
Marie Petersen