Wonted by FBI August 2, 1951 »—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE all the homes in Mill City and some of the outlying areas during the x- ray campaign. It was no small task that Mrs. Cleo Thomas and the Mill City Girl Scouts performed in caring for the children of those taking time out for their Mill City and the Canyon area have x-rays. Hostesses for the x-ray unit teen commended for the excellent during its three-day stay in Mill City showing they made during the recent were Mrs. Ruth Harmon, and Mrs. x-ray campaign in the North Santiam Ruth Bauer, Mrs. Bertha Baltimore, Canyon. Mill City citizens responded Mrs. Bernice Bigger, Mrs. Jeane Don­ >n a generous manner by visiting the aldson, Mrs. Harry Dyhrman, and x-ray unit an average of 48 per hour Mrs. Ida Carey. for a period of 22 hours, or a total of Those performing a wonderful job 1056 persons were x-rayed. of canvassing were Miss Joyce Kester, Mrs. George Ditter, local x-ray Mrs. Roy Beebe, Mrs. Goldie Rambo. chairman, deserves the thanks of the Mrs. Dolores Stiffler, Mrs. L. Ver­ entire community, as do also those beck, Mrs. Hazel Irwin, Mrs. Bernice who worked as faithfully with her Bigger, Mrs. Jeane Donaldson, Miss in making Mill City’s x-ray program Sue Mikkelsen, Mrs. Ruth Bauer, Mrs. a grand success. Cavassers contacted Ruth Harmon, Mrs. Given Jones, Mrs. Mary Galbraith, Mrs. Ida Carey Mrs. LaVern Knowles, Mrs. L. Kanoff, Mrs. Mary Tuers, Mrs. Bertha Baltimore, Mrs. Hugh Jull, Mrs. Marge Ditter and Mrs. Frank Klecker helped with the transportation problem. Putting $500,000 worth of expens­ ive'equipment in this area for several months, plus technical experts, The U. S. Public Health Service receives nothing directly for this help. The bill for this work is paid for through national taxes. The state health department is loaning part of its technical personnel and equipment and although the de­ partment is financed from general state taxes no charge is being made for this extra service to the residents of this eight county area. The headquarters of the survey group, located in Salem, has been equipped through the generosity of individuals and organizations who are interested in seeing the survey pro­ perly conducted in all counties partic­ ipating as well as their own Marion. The trail of the individual x-ray is a long one and is checked and re­ checked so in the end it will give each individual a true story of the condi­ tion of his or her health as far as it is possible for the x-ray to disclose. Films and individual cards go from a specialized locations department to the technicians operating the x-ray ON THE HIGHWAY units which practically park in the front yards of the general public in order to be convenient. When an individual signs a card it is inserted in the x-ray machine in No. 2 POTATOES such a way that the number of the card and the name of the participant 50 lbs. is exposed to the flash when the picture is made. When the film is LEMONS developed the chest x-ray, card num­ ber and participant’s name are in­ dozen cluded. Returned to headquarters, the roll of films containing approximately TOMATOES 300 pictures is developed and then dried on electrically operated infra­ bs ray heated, automatic driers. Four of these driers can be operated at Ice Cold Stripped the same time carrying 1,200 chest pictures. WATERMELON After the drying is completed the films are re-run on roll and delivered to the records department. Here the cards of participants and the actual YELLOW NUCO A x-ray pictures are arranged in regular order, picture-card, picture-card. Cubes lb. After this recording the roll of films plus the corresponding cards are ICE CREAM taken to the film interpretation room where five doctors from the United