The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, July 26, 1951, Page 8, Image 8

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    »—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
MILL CITY
Mrs. Dave Epps was called to Port­
land the latter part of last week be­
cause of the last illness of her father.
The D. B. Hills are driving a fancy
new Buick about town. Mrs. Mil­
dred Allen also is driving a new auto­
mobile.
A new guard rail hewn from an
old power pole has been placed solidly
in front of the precipice extending out
from the back of the Dawes’ Building
and Hendricson’s Dry Goods store.
Good work Mr. Hedges!
Herbert C. Smith fractured an ankle
CASH
COUNTS
Girod’s
Super
Market
ON THE HIGHWAY
at STAYTON
Elsinore
ORANGE JUICE
46 ox. can
29c
ICE ( REAM
39c
1.49
<it.
gal.
(RISCO
3 h » 89c
last Friday morning in the wee hours
of the morning. For some reason fire
broke out in the debris of the old
bridge approach located near the pro­
perty of Kelly Lumber Sales. In his
rush and running towards the fire
Smith stumbled over an obstruction
in the dark and broke Ids ankle. Mill
City Volunteer Firemen called to the
scene soon had the fire under control
without any damage to valuable prop­
erty.
Z. B. A. held a picnic at the Bohem­
ian Hall, Sunday. Some 50 picnic­
kers were present and enjoyed a big
spread of fried chicken, salads, cakes,
pies and al) the fixin’s that goes with
picnics the Z. B. A. traditionally en­
joys.
The Clayton Baltimore residence
was the scene of another picnic Sun­
day. The remaining members of the
Mill City high school class of 1926
gathered together for a class re-union
picnic. Anton “Tony” Moravec, Jr.,
who recently was fatally injured in a
mill accident, was a member of the
high school class graduated in 1926.
There are now eleven members of this
class remaining.
The Ray Roberts are vacationing
in the East. A card from them with
the return address, Ishpiming, Mich­
igan, was received by E. S. Petersons
recently.
Officers of the "Dam” Mustache
club hereby publish notice that their
much awaited and gala party will
burst forth this Saturday night, July,
28, in the Davis Airport hangar
facilities. Those galant lads who suf­
fered the torture of growing mustaches
in honor of the Third Annual Aviation
Day festivity may now lay aside bur­
densome things.
Mrs. James Tanner and son, Jamie,
of Minneapolis, Minn., are guests in
the Shields Remine home.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Newell and Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Ferguson of Portland
were weekend guests at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Keen. They re­
port that they enjoyed themselves
immensely, but Mrs. Ferguson unhap­
pily went back to Portland with a very
bad case of sunburn.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Timms of
Detroit and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Turpin,
Saturday motored to Albany where
they attended the funeral of Mrs.
Virgil E. Looney. Mrs. Looney was a
sister of Mr. Turpin and the aunt of
Mrs. Timms. Mr. and Mrs. Looney
had lived together for half a century
on the old John Looney homestead
located three miles outside the city
limits of Albany.
Pfc. A. J. Ziebert, son of Mr. and
M.s. Frank Ziebert, of the Army
Medical Corps on furlough was hon­
ored Sunday when many of his rela­
tives and friends, from all points of
the compass gathered at the Tony
Ziebert home. Cafeteria style dinner
and supper were enjoyed by Mr. and
Mrs. Grover C. Moore, Carlos, Clyde,
Sharon and Karon of Donald; Mr. and
Mrs Albert Ziebert, Charlotte, Robert,
and Kenneth; Mr. and Mrs. Tony Zie-
PACIFIC COFFEE
79c
ib.
ICE (OLD
WATERMELON
TOMATOES
2
ib..
29c
CORN
49C dozen
CARROTS
2 bunches 15c
FRESII YOUNG HENS
39c »
f
Colson’s Large Fresh
I’an Readv
FRYERS
1 .49
The DEBUN
July 26. 1951
Quick Dependable
GUARANTEED
SHOE REPAIRS
By John Hartty Furbay, Ph.D.
Any physiologist knows that the
hand fs not capablt ot movements
that are as quick as those of the
eye People who perform •sleight-
of-hand tricks do not depend upon
moving faster than the eye can fol­
low but divert the eye to another
(Hunt while they make their real
movements
Idanha Boy Scouts
Return From Camp
Idanha—The Boy Scouts returned
home Sunday afternoon after a pleas­
ant week in Camp Pioneer. Boys who
won awards and advancements at the
Court of Review. Saturday night were
Brad Humprey, Forestry; Donald
Snyder, Animal Industry; Robert
Lady, Cooking and Star; Merle James,
woodcarving and Order of the Arrow;
Frankie Barton, Animal Industry and
Forestry and Russell Rice, cooking and
Order of the Arrow.
Parents visiting camp Sunday and
having dinner with the boys were
Mr. and Mrs. A] Cokenour and chil­
dren, Mr. and Mrs. Brad Humprey and
daughter and Mrs. A. R. Snyder and
Arnold.
Henry Hiebert drove to the camp
with the panel and returned some of
the boys. S. T. Moore, Al Cokenour,
N. A. Castleany and Scoutmaster A
R. Snyder acted as counselors during
the week.
Tomato Hailed As
Good For Reducing
The man or woman who wants to
lose a few pounds this summer will
do well to take an extra serving of
tomatoes and forget dessert, says
Agnes Kolshorn, extension nutritionist
at Oregon State college.
The tomato is a natural in reducing
diets. One medium sized "love apple”
will supply nearly half the vitamin C
needed daily and a third of the vitamin
A, but only one percent of the calories
needed daily.
“Fill up on them while they're at
the peak of their goodness,” Miss
Kolshorn suggests. “Mid-summer sun
brings out the best in tomatoes, for it
builds up vitamin C. Tomatoes grown
in full sunlight may have up to twice
as much Vitamin C as those grown in
greenhouses or in fall or winter sun­
shine."
The tomato is also a source of
some iron, niacin and thiamin, but is
valued most for its vitamin C. Since
the body can’t store this vitamin,
some food providing it Is needed daily.
Better than most foods, the tomato
keeps its high vitamin value when
canned as a vegetable or a juice.
What a thrill this homemaker must get from her new kitchen. Now
she had both beauty and convenience right at her finger tips. Using
standard steel cabinets and a twin-bowl cabinet sink, the old kitchen
was transformed into a modern one where work no longer is a drudgery.
Note how the wall what-not shelf and the base what-not shelf at left add
extra smartness to this attractive new kitchen.
Linn Grange Picnic
Enjoyed by Crowd
lust Arrived...
A DAUGHTER—To Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Fowler, Gates, July 24, at
Salem General hospital.
----------------------- •
An estimated 300 Grangers and
.
.
.
friends enjoyed the annual Linn,
We
must
keen the poison of intol­
County Grange picnic at Cascadia
Park on Sunday.
Distinguished erance out of our mi.ids ard hearts.
guests, introduced by Pomona Master We must put on guard our best and
Ray Herman, included State Master kindliest judgments and our generous
Elmer McClure. Mrs. Elmer McClure and con ¡derate feelmgs. Rev. Simons
National District Home Economics
■hairman. State Chaplain Mrs. Flor­
ence Tarbell, ar.d Robert Schmidt Linn
County Deputy.
The affair was a real old fashioned
picnic with a pot-luck dinner and such
time honored contents as pie eating
and horse “hoe pitching.
Morning Star (¡range, in a closely
contested program, swept into first
place with a "kitchen band”. Mem­
bers of the band were appropriately-
adorned with kitchen gagets and music
poured fourth, somehow, from various
kitchen utensils,
Harry Wiley of Crowfoot Grange
chairmaned the picnic with train
schedule accuracy. Others on the
county wide committee were Ray Her­
man, Western Stai; Earl G. Mason.
Morning Stan; Allen Campbell, Calla-
mette; John Hayes, Evening Star;
Ralph Robnett, Holley: H F. (Doe I
Sherby, Morning Star; and Ethel
Kizer, Charity.
59c
SLAB BACON
h .
CHIRLES l MPH RESS. Prop
Sawlog prices were steady, and
demand continued good in the Will­
amette Valley during the week ending
July 11. Most mills continued to buy
their normal volume even though
the lumber market remains unchanged,
according to the weekly farm forest
products market report, prepared by
the OSC Extension Service from data
supplied by State Farm Foresters and
other information.
Douglas Fir Logs:
Second growth Douglas fir sawlogs
I at Willamette Valley mills remained
' steady at $30 to $41 a thousand
i board feet, mostly $35 to $38. De-
I mand was good. Eight-foot logs,
down to six-inch diameter were also
in good demand at $15 to $18 a cord,
or $35 to $38 a thousand. Old-
growth Douglas fir sawlogs were $32
to $58 a thousand, mostly $38 to $45.
Peelers ranged from $70 to $110.
Second growth Douglas fir stump­
age prices have been unchanged for
some time at $7 to $16 a thousand,
mostly $10 to $12.
Pulpwood:
Pulpwood prices were unchanged
during the week. Northern and cen­
tral valley pulp mills offered $20 a
cord for peeled spruce, and $19 a cord
for peeled Douglas fir, white fir,
noble fir, and hemlock in 4 and 8 foot
lengths down to 4 inch diameter, Un­
peeled, these species brought $2 less.
Poles and Piling:
Douglas fir poles and piling re­
mained steady, with good demand for
all except short barkie poles. Peeled
poles ranged from 9 cents to 45 cents
a linear foot. For example, 30 foot
peeled poles were 11 cents to 12 cents
a foot, while 60 foot poles ranged
from 32 to 40 cents. Barkies brought
from 9 cents to 43 cents a foot for
lengths from 30 to 80 feet, and were
only 2 cents under peeled prices at
one central valley yard. Piling prices
ranged from 15 cents to 42 cents a
foot for length from 20 to 100 feet.
Hardwood Logs:
Hardwood mills paid $30 to $40 a
thousand for alder, $30 to $45 for ash
and maple, and $24 to $28 for cotton­
wood. There was a limited demand
for oak and chinquapin at $37.50 a
thousand in the Eugene area.
Other Forest Products:
Dry cascara bark was unchanged
at 15 cents to 17 cents a pound during
the week. Sword fern was also un­
changed at 16 cents a bunch.
MILL CITY MEAT MARKET
Mc?afs and Groceries
FOOD LOCKERS
FROZEN FOODS
He who governs by moral excellence
may be compared to the pole-star,
which keeps its place, while all others
bow towards it.—Confucius.
ymous member stood in a corner,
watching the good time being had by
all, and said, ‘Boy, if we could have
only gotten together before we quit
drinking, wouldn't we have had one
helluva party?’
"All in all, it was a grand and
glorious celebration that the Alcoholics
Anonymous group conducted last night
and I consider it a privilege indeed
to have been invited to attend . . .(a
local physician and myself were the
(Continued from Page 1)
only ‘outsiders’ there) ... it was a
drinking, but every one of them has hang-up party ... it couldn't have
sworn off the stuff.
b<»-n better ... as »matter of fact, I
"When the stroke of midnight even won the -pecial prize.” By Chris
sounded, the A As hooped and hollered Kowitz, Jr. of the Capital Journal.
to the tops of their lungs, and made
noise with whatever happened to be
at hand . . . one group stood in a
circle, holding each other up. singing
“Auld l-ang Syne” . . . reminiscing,
perhaps of previous New Year’s eve
celebrations . . . one Alcohol vs Anon-
COMPLETE STOCK OF SAWS AND PARTS
Lyons Saw Shop
Salem Alcoholics-*
Armour’s
49c
This was really a work room. There obviously was no planning to
this kitchen. Look at the isolated range, with no facilities for storage and
only a table as too-low work surface. The old fashioned cupboards af­
forded no convenience except space and much of that at unhandy height.
bert, Lucille, Larry, and Luella of
.Mill City; Mrs. Frances Boardman.
Florence, Farol, and Diane of Salem;
Mrs. Henry Greule of Sacramento,
Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ziebert
and Miss Gay Peltier of Mill City.
Pfc. Ziebert arrived home July 12
and will report back, July 27. Mrs.
Moore, Mrs. Greule, and Mrs. Board­
man are Pfc. Ziebert’s sisters; and
Albert and Tony are his brothers.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Pound, Jr.
of Eugene, drove to Mill City for a
visit over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. H. D. Pound.
each
PORK SAI SAGE
or PORK STEAK
MILL CITY FIREMEN S
WASTEPAPER DRIVE
SUNDAY, JULY 29th.
Forest Products
Market Report
SKIN EL ESS WEINERS
43c
HOW TO GET OUT OF WORK
P. O. Box 12
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TRAILER HOMES
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SAVE at
Girod’s
AT STAYTON
“Everything in
Never
a Dull Moment
“Al the Bottom of the Hill”
HEART ATTACK OR
INDIGESTION?
TBANK maWM' Moat attack- • ■
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For
moderate
refreshment..
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MILL CITY TAVERN
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Traveleze
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