The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, March 02, 1950, Page 3, Image 3

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    Deanha PTA
Held Monday
Out of the Woods
F. and D. R. . . .
Deanha P.T.A. February general
meeting, the first of the new year,
due to the heavy winter, was held in
the grade school Library, Monday
night, Feb. 27. At the business
meeting with T. S. Moore presiding.
; it was voted to hold a dance for the
Social project of the year. Cub Scout
sponsorship was discussed and tabled.
A program based on Founders Day
followed at which 13 grade girls
j presented a skit, which demonstraed
a good P.T.A. worker. The Mongold
Musical Maverics played several num-
' bers with their string orchestra.
The meeting was adjourned for re­
freshmens served by the fifth grade
mothers. Mrs. Leach’s room won
the room attendence prize.
ï
a
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The first sign of the Big Freeze
was when Ancient Age Hogan, the
bullcook, was seen to button up his
vest as he went to hustle stove
wood. Somebody looked, and came
back to tell that the thermometer
said it was a hundred below zero.
The freeze went on until it took
Hogan and some others. The bodies
were froze so hard they were used
to make double-bitted axes.
"We’ve got a plan,” Double Jaw
Murphy, the NAM efficiency expert
man said to Paul Bunyan.
"Turn
me loose on it. and I’ll make the big
gest name that was ever made for
anything. I call the plan F. and D.
R.”
"What could F. and D. R. be?’’
Paul asked, with due caution.
"Frog and Duck Relief.” Double
Jaw said.
"You mean,” said Paul Bunyan,
and pretty grimly too, “that you
are going to give relief to frogs
and ducks?”
"Oh, no,” Double Jaw hastened to
say. "I'll use the frogs and ducks
that was caught in the freeze to
feed the loggers."
"F. and D. R.,” Paul Bunyan mut-
tered. "I just don't like the sound
of it.”
3—THE MILL (TTV ENTERPRISE
Limited Sweets,
Adequate Diet
Good Teeth Aid
- . -.....
Mr and Mrs. Jack Toothman were
visitors of his sister Theo Asmus the
past week.
Bernice and Loren Jolmk and Theo
and Harry Asmus and son Chuck
attended the wrestling matches in
Stayton this week.
Ada and C. M. Hamm motored to
Hillsboro Sunday.
Jean Wilson motored to Salem
Thursday on business
Lynn Johnson has been in Portland
the past week, due to his father’s
illness we hope he is improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Long of San
Francisco visited his parents Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Long and brother and
sister-in-law Mr and Mrs. Roland
Long.
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Kopp and
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Pogue are the
proud owners of new cars.
Pearl Durham and Ruby Stubbs
combined business and pleasure in
Salem one day last week.
__________________
Start sooner, drive slower, live
longer.
No Job Too Large and None Too Small
o
B
B
Albany Laundry
Phone 50
All
M
8 H
g
B»
FOR SALE!
at Bargain Prices
6 STEEL COTS AND PADS
7 DOUBLE BEDS, SPRINGS AND MATTRESSES
1 DOUBLE BOX-SPRING
Mill City Hotel
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av
se
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Repaired
The
Honeymoon
Is Over
Excessive speed is a factor in two
out of five traffic accidents. A heavy
foot on the gas pedal is one foot in
the grave.
No one can gain In a race with a
train.
WE HAVE JUST RECENTLY PUT INTO OPERATION
A NEW HEAVY DUTY WRECKER
WE ARE NOW
EQUIPPED TO HANDLE ANY JOB
WE HAVE AN
24 HOURS A DAY
i
Rubber Footwear :
g
The Last Word In Modern
Wrecker Service
EXPERIENCED WRECKER DRIVER STANDING BY
TWO WRECKERS DAY & NIGHT!
The Douglas McKay Chevrolet Co.
DICK’S SHOE SERVICE !
s
Ph. 2-7390
J
4 Different Kinds of Service
8 H
»
A lit atmr
..... —----- ~
2 for ¿|7C
B
Mill (Uy
OPEN WEEK DAYS
8 AM. to 7 P.M.
SUNDAYS and HOLIDAYS
9 AM. to 4 P.M.
Shop and Residence 4'!6O Macleay Road, SALEM
PEACHES
0
Kel loin’s Grocery
LET US FIGURE YOUR ESTIMATES ON
PLUMBING AND HEATING
Friday & Saturday Special
I
VERY REASONABLE
iiiii I mii ^
Quality Meats & Groceries
»
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g
Fresh Meat
GREENLY’S I I
MILL CITY MEAT MARKET
g
The music department of the
Pacific Lutheran college will be re­
flecting the nation wide attention
being focuseel upon the works of
Johann Sebastian Bach, when they
present a "Bach Festival” on the
fifth of March. March 1950 marks
the passing of exactly two hundred
years since the death of the great
composer. Al! over the nation music
minded individuals and groups will
be' paying homage to the composer.
On the program committee is Carol
Sletto of Lyons, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs Lloyd Slettik M isb Sletto is a
Sophmore at the college.
Butler’s Trailer Neus, Gates
Toy & Hobby Shop
'l
Bach Festival” Sunday
TRAILER COURTS
Evidence that the combination of
an adequate diet and a restricted use
of candy and soft drinks results in
fewer decayed teeth in children is
shown in a dental study of 163 boys
and girls at the children's farm home
by two Oregon State college school
of home economics research staff
members.
Results of the study are published
in the December edition of the
Journal of dental research. The in­
vestigation. part of the state-federal
cooperative research on the relation­
ship of nutrition to tooth decay, was
conducted by Dr. Demetrios M.
Hadjimarkos and Dr. Clara Storvick.
The investigators, both in the O.
S. C. foods and nutrition department,
found that the children at the W.C.
T. U. home, three miles north of Cor­
vallis. had an average of 4.5 de­
cayed. missing, and filled teeth each.
Their ages ranged from 6 to 16
years.
Previous investigations by Dr.
Hadjimarkos and Dr. Storvick
showed that the number of decayed,
missing and filled teeth for 15year-
Use Our Mail Order Service and Order
olds in Clatsop county averaged
That Winter Game TODAY!
15.1, nearly double the 8.4 caries
Meals on Ice. . .
But Paul Bunyan was willing to average in the same farm home age
try anything, the winters were so group. The average for Coos county
SALEM’S ORIGINAL
hal'd.
Yes, "winters,” for the 15-year-olds was 13.6, for Deschutes
trouble was that two winters had 12 and for Klamath 9.6. Similar
come at one and the same time. studies for 15-year-olds showed 6.6
They had struck in the first big in Hagerstown, Md; 6.5 in San
N.
Commercial
SALEM
Phone
2-158«
o
163
Francisco and 6.9 for New York
» freeze like lightning.
I
"That’s how they hit over on Bull­ City.
In an effort to explain the wide
frog Lake, "Double Jaw Murphy
Ì told Paul Bunyan. “There it was, difference in the dental caries at­
sundown of an Indian summer day, tack in farm home children and
with frogs croakin’ away all along those in the four Oregon counties,
the shores, same time the sky was the researchers turned to an exam­
black with ducks fixin’ to d.ve ination of the fluorine content of the
down on the lake for the night. water supply and the overall diet
Then the freeze struck like sheet pattern of the farm home children.
They found that the small amount
lightnin’. It caught the frogs when
FROZEN FOODS
they were half-way under from a of fluorine in the water of the farm
jump they all made at once to escape home could not be considered as a
the freeze.
It caught the ducks factor. After studying the weekly
j mostly by the necks as they came allotments of basic foods served in
down in their dive. And there they the eight different cottages at the
1 are, ducks and frog legs stickin’ up home, plus the variety of foods
like grass all over the lake ice. Just available in almost unlimited a-
HALVES AND SEGMENTS, No. 2% can
usin’ scythes, all the camp can be mounts from the institution’s own
fed through the twin winters, no farm, the researchers concluded that
the children's daily food intake con­
matter how they keep froze.”
Paul Bunyan thought about it, but stituted an adequate diet.
Desserts, such as pie, cake and
not so much. He had more logging
and timber problems to worry over I pudding are served once or twice
| than he could manage, so it seemed [daily and there is no deliberate re­
! all right to let Double Jaw Murphy striction in the consumption of re
get all the glory for staving off star­ fined sugars, it is pointed out, but
vation.
Nature had supplied the candy bars, carbonated beverages
ducks and frogs, and the lake and and sweets in general are not used
the woods and the camp belonged often as the sale of these items is
DRY CLEANERS
0
0. to Paul Bunyan, but Double Jaw got not allowed at the institution. The
authors concluded that "the shel-
the credit.
tered life of the subjects as well as
one
Next winter there was only
winter but it was a bad one. No the adequacy of refined sugars and
BETTER SHIRTS
free froglegs and duck drumsticks sweets in general.
this time, either. But there had
Don’t Borrow—Sirtetcrlbe Today!
been a good hay crop, and Double
Jaw came up with a program on
this.
1— DELUXE FINISH.
’’We'll make hay eaters out of the
2— s/4 FINISH:
10 lbs. $1.25.
Each additional pound 15c per pound.
loggers,” Double Jaw Murphy told
Men’s shirts 15c each.
Hanks lc each extra in this
Paul Bunyan.
service.
"By exhaustive and painful re­
3— FLUFF-DRY:
searches we have proved loggers will
10 lbs. 99c. Each additional pound 9c per pound.
4— LINEN SUPPLY:
eat hay, if you sprinkle whiskey on
Doctors, Dentists. Barber, Beauty Shops, Restaurants,
it.”
Qrocery and Garage Shop Towels.
Again Paul Bunyan gave in. By
spring he figured it had cost him
PICK UP MONDAY —DELIVER THURSDAY
seven times as much to buy whiskey
PICK UP THURSDAY —BACK MONDAY
Mill City
to sprinkle on the hay as ham, beans,
LET ONE CALL DO IT ALL
and prunes would have cost him.
But what did it matter, he could
add it to his expenses, and that would
only come from the taxes he would
have had to pay the government on
March 15th
Hobby Supplies and
Games of All Kinds
March 2, 1950
510 North Commercial St.
Phone: 3-3175 Day and Night
SALEM, OREGON
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and
STORE OWNERS-
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FOR CONSULTATION==r
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at Mill Citv Theatre
Complete
Supply of
All Your
Buildiny
Needs . . . .
Thurs., March 9,1950
Curtain at 8 PM
Proceeds Benefit Gates \\ omen s
Club Building Fund
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RUSSELL KELLY, Manager