The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, July 13, 1950, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE MII.I. CITY ENTERPRISE
_ __________________ July 13, 1950
Winter Wheat Brings High Price
Doctor Explains
Polio Statistics
In spite of an increasing population,
there has been no substantial increase
in the polio death rate, says Dr
Gaylord Anderson of the University
of Minnesota school of public health
• When an infantile paralysis epi­
demic occurs, there are two out­
breaks." Dr. Anderson remarked.
‘‘One is an outbreak of polio, ond the
other an outbreak of hysteria."
The doctor points out that more
cases of polio are now being reported
because additional types of cases are
now included in the statistics.
In addition, better methods of
diagnosis increase the figure as does
the fact that many states did not
previously have statutes requiring
formal reports on polio cases.
Figures released by Dr. Anderson
show there were less than 1-2 deaths
per 100,000 persons from polio in any
year for the last 16 years.
In the disastrous polio year of 1916,
there were ten polio deaths for every
100,000 persons.
KANSAS CITY—After spirited bidding, the first carload of
winter wheat, a ripple in what will become a flood of golden grain,
was sold for $2.44*4, regarded as an excellent price Last year’s first
carload brought $1.99*4 Harvested in Temple, Okla., the first of the
new grain was graded as No 1 hard It test-weighed 61.7 pounds and
protein content was 12 per cent
Warm, dry weather in southern sections of the winter wheat
belt resulted in early maturity of the advanced grain. As the harvest
progresses, .Massey-Harris Self-Propelled combines like the above
will again be seen in large numbers, each machine combining 50 or
more acres per day Rains halted a critical stage in crop prospects
in some large-producing areas Timely moisture brought some im­
provement in yields and the Department of Agriculture's report of
154 millions in Kansas alone may be topped by 10 million bushels.
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Lampblack Used
To Get Fish Eggs
Bartlett Sees-
(Continued from Page 1)
City chamber.
Most of the evening was spent in
I working out details of the breakfast
! hop. The meeting adjourned to be
1 continued in a special meeiting at the
I airfield for a pre-show briefing Fri-
1 day night.
Jack Bartlett was accompanied by
Herman Lemke, “his old mechanic’’,
in his visit to Mill City. Earlier, he
had visited the Davis airport.
When an airplane swept low over
ice coated East Lake, south of Bend,
this spring and dusted fine soot over
the frozen surface of the lake, the
state game commision was breaking
J the way for spring collections of rain­
bow trout eggs from the 6,400-foot
i high lake.
The altitude of the lake prevents
j early melting of the heavy ice cover.
Your lifetime can be spent in care­
Many trout become overripe before
spawning crews are able to seine lessly crossing a street.
them.
Bob Borovicka,central Oregon fish­
Some people’s voices are hard to
eries agent, conducted the first lamp- extinguish over the telephone.--H.P E.
black experiments on the lake in
May, 1949. Covered by a warming
WE SEE BY THE ADS:
layer of lampblack, ice on the lake
Bean Festival next week.
melted at the rate of two inches per
Outboard motor $85
day.
Electric hot plates $1.00.
More than four million trout eggs
Shoe vale starts Friday.
were obtained from wild rainbow by
Oregon
state
game
commision
spawning crews this spring. Diamond
Lake
spawners
alone
produced
nearly two million eggs. At East and
Paulina Lakes, spawning rainbow
seined from shoal areas were stripped
of 370.000 eggs.
Me Kenzie
hatchery
yielded
1.538,000 eggs and Spencer creek in
the Klamath basin supplied 500,000.
The spring take supplies only part
of the trout hatchery demands. Fall
spawning rainbow, a hatchery devel­
oped strain of trout, provide many
million eggs from brood stock held
at the hatcheries.
Rock Creek Timber
Up For Auction
All salvable timber in the Rock
i Creek area south of Mill City will be
offered at oral auction by the state
forestry department at Salem, Mon­
day July 24 at 10 a. m.
The sale involves a minimum of
of eight million board feet of timber,
Lynn F. Cronemiller, assistant state
forester, said.
The sale covers salvage of patches
and scattered stands of yellow fir,
snags, windfalls, hemlock and red
cedar on about 7,000 acres of state
forest land. This area was logged off
some twenty to thirty years ago by
the Hammond lumber company.
Present high lumber values make
it possible to remove this type of
material. It would not be economic­
ally feasible to cut this timber under
ordinary conditions. Removal of the 1
old stagnated timber and replacement
with young fast growing trees is a
part of the state forestry plan to get
the land back into maximum timber
production.
Minimum stumpage prices that will
be considered are listed as follows:
Old growth Douglas fir—$5 per
thousand board feet.
Western red cedar and hemlock
—-$3 per thousand board feet.
OFFERS
A BARGAIN
.II RY CONVICTS MIL!. CITY MAN
Marvin C. Shumaker of Mill City
was found guilty of assault and
battery by a Marion County District
Court jury last week. He was given
a 25-day sentence with credit for time
served.
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REFRIGERATORS
Jenkins Hardware Co.
Appliance Sales
Mill City
Service
»hone 2206
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