The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, August 16, 1951, Page 4, Image 4

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Kelly s Snag One
And Lose One
I— THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
August 1<*. 1951
Pays Tribute To Pacific War Dead
it’s the
Kell^ Lumber Sales softball team
mature is
came out fighting Monday in their
district 4 playoff game on Allen Field
again: t. the Santiam Sporting Goods
o f Lebanon.
Kelly’s
«oft bailers
piled up four solid runs in the first
inning, The visitors did not make a
showing until a fourth inning burst
of three runs. Kelly’s added one in
the third and another in the fifth for
a total score of six to Lebanon’s four.
This win over the Santiam-ites as­
sured Kelly’s of a spot in the final
I »J. x
play-offs, which is now in a unique
condition. All teams have lost and
IZ. A'
won one game each.
Kelly's run in the third inning came
■when Don Davidson, pitcher for
Kelly’s, hit one to left field in the
midst of the Lebanon players, who
stopped short of getting under the
high flyer and let it fall to eurth.
This hit pushed in the vi’al run. In
ENOLESG CEtJTURlES , KECE 'M THE VAST RAisJ
the fifth, Don Carey, catcher for
F orests of D ougla ., fib . im western O regon ahd
Kelly’s, hit a very nice homer between
UUASHIN&T o M CROPS op USEES have GRO w L x J BG afo T al L
two fielders for the final run of the
T ifm pied of ’ clo a E, •"- o T ted Awf F allen down . nature -
slay. Pitcher Davidson became a hero
ALWAYS RESEEDED THE' LAMP. Tt’DAY MAN HARVEST'S
by striking out a Santiam-ite when
THE TREES WHEN Try ARE MATJRF ,USING l *’EOOUS
WOOD FOR KOL'SES. »i WOOLS,GLOTHING, PAPER. A nd
the bases were loaded.
This coup
HUNDREDS OF MEEDS . SEEP TfaEES ARE LfFT AFTER—
ended the game by retiring perma­
L ogging and nature reseeds most of a . l lands ,
nently the opposition.
J us T as - S he has done from T me wthcut end .
The shoe was on the other foot for
Kelly's, however, when they tangled
with Albany Tuesday night, Kelly’s
stropped that one, by one point, The
same old spirit was there in the first
inning, however, since four runs were board feet for logs 12 feet or more in $26 to $16 a thousand for alder, $30
again scored!
One more run was ■ length. The top of the range held at to $45 for ash and maple, and $24 to
squeezed out in the last inning, but last week’s advance, and the lower $26 for cottonwood. There was some
it wasn’t enough. Errors by Kelly- side moved up $2; but most sales were outlet for oak at $35 a thousand and
it»» hurt them too much for a win. made within the $35 to $36 spread, as chinquapin at $37.50 in the southern
Pitcher Davidson was the hero of in other recent weeks, Eight-foot part of the valley.
the Albany joust also, when he nailed logs brought mostly $16 to $20 a cord Other Forest Products:
or $30 to $36 a thousand.
a good round homer in the seventh.
Harvesting of conifer
Old-growth Douglas fir continued started in Western Oregon. Doug­
at $32 to $40 a thousand for No. 3 las fir cones are bringing $2.50 a
grade, while No. l’s brought up to sack, and white fir $3. Hemlock and
$60 at valley mills. Plywood peelers Port Orford cedar are $5 a bushel,
held at $60 to $110.
while Ponderosa pine brought $1 a
I’ulpw ood:
bushel.
Leading pulp mills have started
Douglas fir sawlogs in the Willu- curtailing purchases of Douglas fir
mette Valley continued in good de­ temporarily. Large stock piles of
mand at advanced prices, but pur­ pulpwood have been accumulated this
chases of pulpwood were being re­ summer.
Water shortages have
By JAMES STEVENS
stricted during the week ending Aug­ slowed processing, and storage space
ust 11, according to the weekly farm is being filled rapidly. Plants still Green Guards Again . . .
The previous column on the Green
forest products market report pre­ in the market were paying around
pared from data supplied by State $17 a cord for unpeeled fir, spruce and Guards of Oregon brought more than
2,(6)0 inquiries to Keep Oregon Green
Farm Foresters to the OSC Extension hemlock wood.
Director Albert Wiesendanger at
Service and other information, The Poles & Piling:
Salem. What did they get in return'1
cone harvesting season has started.
The market for poles and piling Each received a “Green Guard Kit”.
Douglas Fir Logs:
held steady at valley pole yards dur­ The main item was a manual.
Demand continued good for second- ing the week. Peeled poles ranged
The manuals of the Green Guards
growth Douglas fir sawlogs during from 9 cents a fool for 20-foot lengths tell of fire-prevention jobs young
the past week. Offers by valley mills up to 45 cents for poles 60 feet or folks can do around the home, around
ranged from $32 to $42 a thousand more in length. Barkies were usually the farm, and when they are playing
2 to 3 cents a foot less than peeled in the woods.
poles. Outlets for short poles were
Through the years the Green
limited. Piling
prices
were
un- Guards have become youthful crusad-
changed at 15 to 42 cents a foot , de- ers and their alert eyes never miss
pending on length.
a danger spot. Adults are constantly
Hardwood Logs:
being cautioned about throwing ciga­
Mills sawing valley hardwoods paid rettes from moving cars. Kids have
learned how to put out a campfire.
County committees feature the Green
Guard youngsters at service club
luncheons. Award winners are pre­
sented oVer their local radio stations.
Schools honor them when they win
prizes in essay and poster copetition.
MILL CITY
Some county chairmen sponsor Green
Guards in their home counties. Boy
Scout leaders and 4-H club leaders
give them a hand, but mostly the
Green Guards are on their own.
Honors and Credits . . .
A boy or girl who can enlist
Green Guards becomes a captain
is entitled to wear the double bars of
a captain on his or her specially made
arm-band. The self-made captains
are the only actual leaders in the field.
The impact of this wonderfully
democratic organization on the youth
of Oregon is solidly felt. Every boy
and girl considers it an honor to be­
long to the Green Guards. Although
only nine years old. the record of
achievement of this kid-ruled out,
sized club ha- al-.eady reached tre­
Where Friend» Meet
mendous propoitions.
“Keep Green” began in Washington
State. In time Washington is sure to
On Highway 222, Linn County Side
adopt the Oregon Green Guards idea.
MILL CITY
Good swapping.
I’nder Fire . . .
George "Spark»” Hitter
Art Priaulx has a prize collection
of true tales about Green Guards
One is of 11-year-old Patricia Barnes,
whose courage prevented a vast forest
NU METHOD
C-JR. CHIEF
rO»ESTEf<
Forest Products
Market Report
Out of the \\ oods
Les's Tavern
gt^
Shuffleboard
X
For Guaranteed Cleaning
A FRIENDLY
FAMILY
ATMOSPHERE
PREVAILS
Good Music
MEANDER INN
24-HOUR SERVICE
Mill City
Close« at 6 P.M.
WE ARE PLEASED
TO SERVE YOU!
We hope you are pleased
with our service.
Mom s and Pop s
CAFE
Mill City
Elenita Carpio, 10, pays tribute on behalf of the children of the
Philippines, to the American and Filipino war dead of World War II
in Fort McKinley Cemetery outside Manila. 17,350 American soldiers
and Filipino scouts are buried in the cemetery, one of the largest in
the Pacific area.
Now, six years after liberation, the Philippine Republic is plan­
ning observance of Achievement Week in July. Achievement Week is
a national summing-up of the progress made in the reconstruction and
rehabilitation of the nation during the post-war period.
fy Sfaliy 7/]UUl, X>ittc\or. GAINES DOG RESEARCH CENTER
baron , ENOUGH SETTER
OWNED BY PR. LYNDON
responsible
PRtSGRIPlM
• Ye», thi» Prescription
Pharmacy is responsible
—responsible to you, and
to your physician. In all
seriousness we accept
this responsibility for
safeguarding your health
and welfare. When you
bring a prescription here
it will be promptly and
expertly compounded
and the price will be fair.
TOTTER, ONEONTA,N-Y,
HAS SERVEP AS A X- 9
BLOOD BANK for
7
\EAR5, DONATING 3 PINTS '
ANNUALLY^ '
Salem
MR ANP MRS.SIFNEYp^Vr#
AON KERS,N.Y, EXHIBIT BOXERS
AT VARIOUS DOG SHOWS
4 V *.
È C’
If » àï &HM
THE FIRST OFFICIAL REGISTRY OF
PUREBRED POES
in THE UC.
WAS MADE IN CHICAGO IN 1876
© 1951, Gaines Dog Research Center, N. Y. C
fire.
Some cigarette flipper, late one
summer night, had tossed a lighted
fag into dry roadside grass next to a
green young forest. Pat's grand­
father tried to corral the fire with a
shovel, but it was soon apparent he
would need more force. Pat ran
home a quarter mile, called out grand­
ma, and the two loaded a stone sled
with five-gallon tins of water. Pat
then climbed on a small tractor, which
she scarcely knew how to start. She
backed it around, hooked on to the
stone sled and took off over ditches,
roads and fields to the fjre with
grandmother hanging on for dear
life and holding the water cans up-
right.
Grandma, grandpa and little Pat,
wonting .with wet gunny sack.'
finally corraled the fire, but
long after midnight.
There are tens of stories
exploits of these kids. Some
tragic like the little l-ebanon
who wrote: “Will you please send me
a new Green Guard manual? Our
house burned down and all my things
are lost.”
Or the 78-year-old man down at
Florence who insisted on being per­
mitted to join the Green Guards and
is now one of our best correspondents.
His second childhood is a wonder and
may well become another “Oregon
System” of how to keep young in old
A'lnjri
A Friendly Place
To While Away
Your Idle Hours
RICH \RI)‘S
TAVERN
GATES
einhardt
•
» • I I £ t <
FOR YOUR PROTECTION!
^BETTER PACKAGE»
foods
Kellom's Fresh Meats
Complete
Supply of
\// Y'our
ftuildtn
Knotty Pine Paneling
Pioneer Flintkote Roofing
Bovsen Faint
FRESH DXIIV — VERY KF. ISONABI E I'RKT.'i
Kellom's Grocery
X »
Kelly Lumber Sales
OPEN SATURDAYS
[MAAni r J
Phone 1815, Mill City
Russell Kelly, Manager