The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, May 25, 1950, Page 6, Image 6

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    •—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
May Î5, 1950 legal advertising
No. 12641
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT
I have filed my final account in the
estate of W. L. Oliver, deceased, with
the County Clerk of Marion County.
HOUSE FOR SALE
Seven rooms Oregon and the court has set the 3rd
and bath plastered, basement with day of June, 1950 at 10 o'clock A.M
furnace, new GE 64-gal. electric and the Circuit Court Room as the
hot water heater, 4 lots with lots of time and place for hearing objections
fruit, nuts and flowers. A beauti­ thereto and the settlement of said
ful home.
Willard Allman, Scio, estate.
Box 162.
19-3p
CLYDE ROGERS.
Executor of the Estate of
FOR SALE—Sewing machines cheap.
W. L. Oliver, Deceased.
Red’s Hill Top Trading Post. 21-lt Bell & Devers,
Stayton, Ore.
FUR SALE—Grand Piano, recondi­ Attorneys for Executor.
tioned and recently refinished ma­ First publication May 4, 1950 5t
hogany baby grand.
Guaranteed
perfect.
$775.00 cash, terms, or FOR SALE Bunk beds and springs.
rented with purchase option. Stone $4 75 each. Red’s Hill Top Trading
Post.
21-lt
Piano Co., 1540 Fairgrounds Road.
Salem.
16tf
FOR SALE — Attractive 3-bedroom
home In Mill City on 1 acre fenced
WANTED — Strawberry, gooseberry,
Plenty of
Cherry pickers.
Cabins, electric and landscaped yard.
closets and cupboard space. Mod­
lights, stoves furnished. Etzel Bros.
ern bathroom with tub and shower.
Stayton, Ore., R. 1, Box 234. 21-3p
Modern electric kitchen with double
A GOOD SELECTION of linoleum sink. Full basement. Automatic
yardage. 6 and 9 ft. widths, 69c per oil furnace, 42 gallon electric hot
sq yard. Dave Epps Furniture Co.
water heater.
Laundry trays
Good garage and bam. Everything
FOR SALE—Tents, new, waterproof,
in excellent condition. Ph. 3534
fire-proof, mildew-proof, 9x9 $24.51
appointment to see this fine
14x14 $49 00 Reds’ Hill Top Trad­ for
place.
20tf
ing Post.
21-lt
AUTO and home radio
KODAK FILMS DEVELOPED — EXPERT
20 years experience, all
Fastest service in Portland and sat­ service,
Guaranteed service.
isfaction guaranteed by Portland's makes.
oldest company.
Eight exposure Stiffler’s Radio and Appliance. 3tf
roll developed and one print each FOR SALE—32 Colt automatic, belt
25c. Two prints each 35c. Rolls and holster, $35 takes all. See K.
with more than eight exposures one C. Snyder cabin 4 Deerhorn Motel
print each 35c. Re-prints 3c each.
20-3p
Mill City.
Send coin. The Quality Picture Co.
Box 4401Z, Portland 8, Ore.
18tf FOR SALE—1930 Model A Ford se-
dan $85.00 cash. McElvain, Martin’s
LOTS «150.00 UP
Trailer Court.
21-lp
Wants and Sales
WANTED Want to buy used piano.
See Mrs. E. Skinnarland on North
Alder street near Kellom’s grocery.
20-3p
PLEASE LIST all available rooms,
room and board, houses and apts.
Write, telephone or visit Personnel
Dept. 10 a m. to 3 p.m. Consolidated
Builders, Inc., Detroit Dam.
12tf
FOR SALE Boy’s bicycle, baby play
pen, basket, nig. See Mrs. T. R.
Burton, next to Gates school. 19-3t
FOR SALE 1949 Kaiser Deluxe, ex-
ceUent, clean condition. R. A. Long,
Butler’s Trailer Court, Gates, Ore.
21-3t
FOR SALE — Feather pillows, 75c
each. Red's Hill Top Trading Post.
21-lt
By JIM STEVENS
How is the owner of a farm woodlot
to "merchandise" his crop? How is
the investor in any type of small for­
est ownership to finance the prac­
tice of forestry on his land ? On
every forest acre of private owner­
ship the first questions are: What
wood is salable, where can it be sold,
and for how much?
Believe me. and I speak from ex­
perience as a three-time small forest
land owner, the answers have more
bearing on the practice of private
forestry in these United States than
any other facts that can be brought
up.
Forestry must be paid for. It is
paid for on publicly owned lands
through the collection of taxes and
their disbursement by government
agencies. It is paid for on privately
owned lands out of capital investment
or from sales returns.
This towering, overshadowing fact
of facts in our American forest econ­
omy is amazingly by-passed by for­
esters in all the branches of the pro­
fession. It is most of all avoided by
foresters who are charged with the
promotion of farm forestry.
Look at the Record. . .
Now I am going to tell a tale out of
school. Eight years ago the Ameri­
can Forest Products Industries orga­
nization was set going to educate the
public on the general forestry prin­
ciple that trees are a crop, on the fact
that the forest is the one natural
resource that replenishes itself, and
to tell the good news of many pro­
gress programs of American private
forest management.
For four years this educational
work was conducted with increasing
appreciation by the public in general,
and particularly by educators. Then,
the directors and technical folks of
AFPI met, in November, 1945, to add
an "action program.”
It was decided to (1) carry infor­
mation on the best forest practices
to small forest land owners, including
farmers, (2) "encourage an industrial
program for the orderly marketing
of farm forest products.’’ (3) enlist
cooperation from all groups and
agencies interested in forestry for the
MILL CITY
advancement of the entire program.
This was the stuff I’d been wanting
A FRIENDLY
to see put into effect ever since my
FAMILY
hard luck as a small forest land
owner. And now I’m glad to say
ATMOSPHERE
| that No. 1 has been made a real job
for four years by this highly efficient
PREVAILS
outfit, all the while earning more
plaudits from educators, farm leaders,
state foresters and the U. S. Forest
Service.
But No. 2 has remained practically
a dead letter. The reason. I think,
A Friendly Place
is that until recently the merchandis­
ing of wood was a dead letter in the
To While Away
education and experience of the pro­
fessional, technically-trained forester
Your Idle Hours
. and forest engineer. The government
forester is still all but prohibited from
calling on retail lumber dealers in the
course of his professional work. The
industry-employed forester, a freer
man, nevertheless commonly steers
clear of forest products salesmen,
their organizations, their meetings,
and their literature, and would not be
caught dead reading a forest products
sales promotion advertisement.
GATES
Thus the AFPI "More Trees For!
; America" program remains unknown
to the sales and advertising depart­
ments of forest industry, and too
often farmers fall into the belief that
it is just another government pro­
gram in forest education.
The Farmer’s Friend. . .
There’s nothing seriously wrong
with all this. I hasten to assert,
LAND SURVEYOR
4 There’s a lack, that’s all. To fill the
Farms, Subdivisions, City Lots, ♦ « lack first of all it should be recognized
City Maps and Water Kights
that in this region the farm forest­
B. F. "Sparky" CUSHING
owner's best friends, and all for­
64U . N High St., Salem, Ore. i estry's best friends, are the West
Ph. ’’ 6011
Eve.: 2-1669 f Coast lumber companies that adver­
tise West Coast lumber all over the
.......................... country and have staffs of salemen
"merchandising” it.
This sort of marketing effort helps
«
Expert Repairing
everybody who has a crop of wood to
SHELL OH. PRODUCTS
Î sell from his land in Western Oregon
U. S. ROYAl. TIRES
♦ and Washington Such effort does
Introït
I’. F. I n, Mgr. I not build up consumer interest in
Just one company's lumber but in all
lumber that is sold as Douglas fir.
♦ West Coast hemlock, Western
cedar and Citka spruce.
BEAUTIFUL VIEW
and home, acreage on river and
creek, gravel road by door.
Only $3,500 00 Terms
C. E. (XJV1LLE BROKER
West Side, Mill City
FOR SALE — Three choice building
lots In Swift's addition, water, elec­
tricity available, level ground. W.
L Peterson.
20tf .
LIST YOUR homes and farms with
me. Have cash buyers. MUI City,
David M.
Gates, Detroit, Lyons.
Reid, Real Estate.
3tf
FOR SALE Electric airline phono­
graph $20, man’s bicycle A-l condi­
tion $30.00. Mrs. Joe Novak, Phone
1484.
20-3p
Terms
FOR SALE Spinet Piano, $35.00 de
G. E. COVILLE. BROKER
poBit, and $15.00 per month places
HU Hide. Mill ( Its
a fine instrument in your home.
FOR
SALE
— 6-room house, bam,
Can be seen locally. Write Stone
chicken house, orchard, several
Piano Co., 1540 Fairgrounds Road,
16tf acres of good garden soil goes with
Salem.
this place, can all be irrigated, at­
FOR RENT—3-room modern apart­ tractive terms can be had. Phone
ment, furnished. E. D. Cooke, Mill
742, Royal Johnson, 2 mL east of
City, Ore., 2 blocks west of high Gates in Linn county.
18-6p
school.
20tf
WE BUY Cascara Bark. Red’s Hill
FOR RENT — Two-room apartment, Top Trailing Post.
21-lt
completely furnished for house­
keeping, including electricity for FOR SALE ’49 62 Kelvinator $160;
1950 roll type Maytag washing ma­
cooking.
Suitable for two men.
Enquire at Enterprise.
2O-3p ( chine $105; 3 months old furniture:
1 ilaveno and matching rocker; rose
FOR SALE Good baby buggy, $7.95.
frieze, sponge rubber padding $150;
Red'H Hill Top Trading Post. 21-lt
1 bleached eastern oak dining room
table, 4 chairs $60; 1 bed and Mr.
FOR SALE Large wood circulator and
cheat with large mirror,
$15.00; home made ripsaw with light Mrs.
mahogany
$100; 1 set coil
Maytag gas motor $18.00. J. O. springs, Simons $25;
9x12 floral rug
Herron, Route 1, Lyons, Ore. 20-3p and pad $50; 1 walnut
coffee table
$10. Inquire Keith’s Chevron Sta­
WANTED
Reliable, conscientious,
tion.
21-3p
baby sitter urgently needed. Call
Ruth Stovall, Phone Mill City 2006. WHY PAY RENT? Buy income prop­
21-3t
ri tv New duplex for sale. VV. L
Peterson, Swift's addition.
20tf
3-ROOM HOUSE
and lot $1,300.00. Terms
M X x :: t x ■: x XXXIIY :< X >rx x x « « x x x x
( E. (’OVILLE. BROKER
X
x
West Side, Mill City
M
FOR RENT Partly furnished duplex. M M
Manolis Santiam Cafe or at The ».M
Enterprise.
2O-3p M
Home of the Famous
M
FOR SALE Lot 150 by 133, high ;;
FISH AQUARIUM LUNCH
ground, good view, inside city. See
COUNTER
20-3p
Ernie Brown.
2O-3p
Specializing in
GETTING BALD? Stimulate blood K
supply to starving roots with
Sandwiches
Milk Shakes
$3 "
15 CO D.
SCALP-MAS-SAGE C
(hill
Ice Cream
or $3 with order. R Behm. Sil
Pie a la Mode
Sundleo
19-4t
Box 338, Lebanon, Pa
Soft Drinks
WANTED Strawberry pickers. Ph. if
CLOSED TUESDAYS
14F51 Stayton, RFD 1, Box 243, x
8tayton
21-3p X On Illway
East of Mill City
Don’t Borrow—Subscribe Today! XM M M KJQt.M
Les s Tavern
SHAKE SHACK
Business
Directory
■
[
HARLOW L. WEINR1CK
«—■
FLOWER OF MANHOOD—Vice
President Barkley »miles his
approval of spring blooms os
o bi-partisan policy. O.K. for
Democrats
and
Republicans
alike, the bouquets were ar­
ranged by the Florists' Tele­
graph Delivery Association for
the polio benefit Flower Co­
tillion in Buffalo, New York.
BON VOYAGE TO ACHESON-President
Truman (right) shakes hands with Secre­
tary of State Dean Acheson as he boards
a plane for Paris to attend the Atlantic
Pact meetings.
IN NEW-TYPE ROLE - Shelley
Winters does a complete turn­
about in her latest
picture "A Place
In The Sun." She
appears as a small
town girl who falls
in love with Mont­
gomery Clift.
11 X
SWING SINGERS
—Betty Brewer ond
Bill Harrington of
A3C-TV'» "Holiday
Hotel"
are
the
object of this tele­
vision camera­
man's eye. The
TV musicomedy
starring Edward
Everett Horton is
sponsored by the
Packard
Motor
Car Company.
THREE-LEGGED HORSE-Born
recently in Milan, holy, with
only three legs, this pony is
perfectly formed in every
other way. The animol it
doing well and the owner
will let it live.
Quality job printing at the Enter* prise.
< »»<M
MILL CITY TAVERN
BYRON DAVIS, Prop
“At the Bottom of the Hili’’
OREGON
MILL CITY,
JUNGWIRTH
Sand and Gravel Go.
RICHARDS
Washed Sand, Cement Rock, Crushed Road
Rock, Oil Rock, Fill Rock
TAVERN
Shovel and Trucks for Hire
LYONS ' 294 D&ya
I 297 Nights
MILL CITY: Phone 9242 Days
Mill City Plant 2 Miles West on River Road
I
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON ;
Mill City
—• —
LIPPOl.D - BRENNER
Canyon Garage
318 Broadalbin
Aeroliti tante
Service
Auditing
Payroll Reports
Income Tax
Phones:
Mill City 207
Salem 3-7615
aw«>
Bookki-eplug
RALEIGH HAROLD
HOWARD CORSET SHOP
Foundation Garments
Special Attention Given to Fittings
Houle ry Lingerie-Dreaaea Smocks
HI High St.
Salem
Phone 4032
WEEKS NEWS
Professional
I I). W.RI’.II). Ml).
Attorney at Law
Albany
Out of the Woods
Detroit Tavern
and Trailer Court
FLORIST and NI RSEKA
319 W. W m I i . Street I •> blocks on
W. Stay ton HI way
Phone 8681
I
__________________
FIRST IN DETROIT
STII.I. FIRST IN DETROIT
Red Rynearson
Otto Russell
Glen Dryden
J
I
I
I
»
It’s New!
MEANDER INN
It’s Smart !
Where Friends Meet
On Highway 222, Linn County Side
MILL CITY
Tony Ziebert
George ’Sparky’ Ditter
* ♦ ♦--------- -____ _
|
,
BARGAINS
In Furniture, Stoves, Dishes
Clothing Housewares
MAC’S
145 S Church, next to Salem Parkin»
►♦♦ ♦♦ ♦♦♦♦•• ♦ **************
FLOWERS :
GOODh’S I LOW ER SHOP
l’hone Blue mu
Stayton. Ore.
MIKE'S Septic Service •
J SeptIc Tanks and Sewers ( leaned ♦
♦ Phone SALEM 3 9168, COLLECT ’
1079 Elm St.. W. Salem
XPCX'.XtX.X X XX xuuxix.x.xxx.;i 1. >1 X XMX
WOOD S STORE
General Dry Goods
NOTIONS
LINGERIE
READY-TO Wl AR
HOSIERY
1.1 ZIERS COSMETICS
UM XiWGMJ
>ui
-NEW STOCK-
prrAA Print*
—
(Ml
Silk mid Wnol Scarf*»
Nr* shnilr* In Nylon*
('urttain 'l.it* rial — Ticking
llriH.’ricsoii’s Stori
In the I hi*4 cm Hhlg
WF.DDLE FUNERAL
H ME
Dull) M. REID
Modern Funeral Service
STAYTON
OREGON
Real Estate
Mil I
Mill Cltv
(. E. ( oville
>nrbMj;r
trimmings, etc
Aerktv p
$1 per month
Also light hsullng
»«•murcl Urmia n
o «own «n e n n o n o a on
Phone ?.V’5
Real I state
I’h
IV’M Shle 'till Oty
S40T
LISTINGS W ANTED
1 he Last Word In Modern
Wrecker Service
WE HAVE JUST RECENTLY PUT INTO OPERATION
A NEW HEAVY DUTY WRECKER
WE ARE NOW
EQUIPPED TO HANDLE ANY JOB
WE HAVE AN
EXPERIENCED WRECKER DRIVER STANDING BY
24 HOURS A DAY
TWO WRECKERS DAY & NIGHT!
The Douglas McKay Chevrolet Co.
81« North Commercial St.
Phone:
*
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