Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1951)
r The MII.LC ï ENTERPRISE COMMUNITY AIMS THRU CO-OPERATION: CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING: One insertion for 50c or three for 11.00. The Enterprise will not be responsible for more than one incorrect in sertion. Errors in advertising shouid_be reported immediately. Display Political Advertising 75c inch. Advertising 45c column inch NATIONAL EDITORIAL k PUBLISHERS iltu iÄ.II8Mifl.ua ¡üi à. I ldi LMil SANTIAM MEMORIAL HOSPITAL. MILL CITY STREET IMPROVEMENT. LOCAL YOUTH RECREATION CENTER MILL CITY DIAL TELEPHONE SYSTEM MILL CITY PARK PUBLIC SWIMMING POOL. ELIMINATION OF BANFIELD’S NIGHTMARE. MILL CITY AREA SEWAGE DISPOSAL SYSTEM. IMPROVE HIWAY 222 BETWEEN MILL CITY AND LYONS. OBTAIN CANYON YEAR 'ROUND PAYROLL INDUSTRIES. DETROIT, GATES, AND MILL CITY UNION HIGH SCHOOL. Entered aa B«<on<i-<*ia*a matter Nov-mber 10. 1944 at the pout office at Mill City, Oregon, under the Act of March 3. 1879. NEWSPAPER October 11. 1931 2—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE x. UU üfl.UU M UttOLICI UU . ’« a DR. MARK I AHHI I II IM S REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST Will be at his Mill City office in the Jenkins Building Thursday afternoons 1 to 6 p.m. Also Thursday evenings by Appointment HOME OFFICE: 313 W. FIRST. ALBANY ASSOCIATION By Ed Nofziger JOE BEAVER "THE PAPER THAT HAS NO ENEMIES HAS NO FRIENDS." --George Putnam. It Takes Blood It’s all right to cuss the weather and dam the President, but let's not forget the simple act of donating a bit of blood for the men in Korea- Yes, we all get butterflies when stepping up and volunteering some of our blood. Those men in Korea aren’t calm and collected about the prospect of their blood being smeared over the landscape either. 1 he liloodmobile will be in Mill City. Wednesday. October 17. Even if one gets turned down when volunteering, that s going all the way in helping out a worthy cause. Blood given to the Bloodmobile not only helps the men in Korea, but also the young and old here at home. It is a comforting feeling, indeed, to know that should you, your.,elf. ne.u blood it will be there. It’s a pretty personal gift—this gift of some of our blood. Strictly speaking it’s the perfect gift. This idea of doing a good turn for someone, somewhere without chance of reward is okay. Who better can we give a lift to than those in Korea? ALL TYPES BRICK WORK GENERAL MASON WORK Box 195, MEHAMA PHONE LYONS 76 posing After winging the Democratic donkey. Republican The proudly for his “gun-in-hand and foot-on-the-carcaaa snapshot. McCarthyism shot-gun has worked just fine. We must now stamp our calks into a sound wood floonw—a big blow is showing on the nolitical barometer. Soon we will find the sun darkened by the big storm's sweep. There'll be no “aittin this one out . . the storm cellar beckons. That big black cloud thundering "Mr. Republican" has fierce winds, big hailstones and plenty of lightning in it. It will be amusing—this sweeping up into the swirling roaring mass of Johnnie Republicans". Like a hypnotized chicken they can’t do any- thing about it! The shaggy and weary Democratic donkey isn't around to I.ick them out of their trance—remember someone filled his hide with heavy buckshot. New ’ Baby - Sitter” Yep! Get your hoodie on Johnnie . . . this thing means a roarin’ rough whow! We wanted a change of weather—we’ll get it! • The passing scene records that parents are using movie theatres as baby- nitters. Sure it's a cheap way of getting the little ones out from underfoot, hut what about the little ones? A home isn’t a home anymore—it’s a place to leave! Maybe we are looking at this thing through the wrong end of the Field glasses, but any good gained from this "baby-sitting" practice looks like its pretty far away. Even the best theatre proprietors can’t be sub stitute parents for all those “dumped" kiddies. The parents who do this shoving aside of their children do not even consider what the show is—be it a murder mystery or a war picture. It is constantly repeated that the young of the human race are the ones who must carry on in the future. If the fathers and mothers of today set such a poor example as they seem to show in this baby-sitting theatre business, then serious matters are at stake. SERVICE QUALITY Ifuilding Materials of All Kinds FRERES BUILDING SUPPLY WE DELIVER Stayton Mill City Phone 2484 Phone 3215 Salem Heavy Hauling & Equipment Co 1105 N. Front St Salem Phones: 2 1924; Night 2 4117 SALEM, ORE Lyons Phone: 143 HAULING AND MOVING HEAVY MACHINERY and Mill Equipment Up To 25 Tons Including D8 and IID14 Cats, and ’»-yard shovels. Complete Rigging Outfit. Winch Trucks, Low-bed Trailers KEEPrlUP YOUR!HOME! Note is the time to think About a new ROOF or Perhaps a Foundation— HOME BUILDING SERVK’E ROOF I NG R E MODELING Call or See Valley Construction Co General Contractors Phone 97 LYONS. ORE (LEANING FIAES ;; :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: « :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: a •: :: :: " :: :: :: :: Platt » B S s B § o B H H B I | Traveleze § TRAILER HOMES Angelus •> Forest Servioe. U. 8. DeparUner.t of Agriculture 'They mutl be prehistoric—nobody leaves a smoking camp fire nowadays!” (Continued from Page 1) LICENSED G1RB\< J SERVh I 41.50 per month and up \l»o »erving Gate«. Lyon». Idanha and Detroit MILL CITY DISPOSAL SERVICE Phone 39 »2 LEON \RD Hi RM AN NEW AND USED ALL SIZES FOR FULL INVESTIGATION other communities, to nursing homes, or private homes. This will provide additional beds in existing hospitals. Use of the Oregon state mental hos pital at Salem for emotionally dis turbed patients is planned and Cor vallis is slated as a special center for radiation casualties. An emergency medical-hospital team will include eight doctors, four dentists, 15 nurses, ‘.’5 female aides, > 10 male aides, two pharmacists, four laboratory technicians, and nine mortuary personnel. “Even those areas which did not receive assignments for first aid and j medical- hospital teams for mobile I support are asked to provide medical protection for use in their own coun- | ties in the event of local emergencies,” said Dr. Harold M. Erickson, who heads the medical phase of Oregon civil defense. Mobile welfare teams will be de signated as independent units which could be rushed to disaster areas to I handle mass care requirements, in cluding feeding, registration, and billeting. There are three types: (1) Full team, made un of 49 persons, which could care for 1000 people for a | 24-hour period; CJIhalf team, 28 per sons, 16-hour period; and (3) quarter team, 16 people, 8-hour period. The welfare teams will include shelter managers, cooks and food handlers, doctors, nurses, first aiders, case workers, and maintenance men. “If Portland is bombed, it is es timated that not more than 30,000 persons would have to be evacuated Ito points outside Multnomah county.” said Miss Loa Howard, bead of state CD Aid & Welfare department. Es timated mass care shelter needs are: Washington county, 15.000; Clacka mas county, 20.000; Columbia county, 12000; and Hood River county. "000. If Salem is bombed, it is estimated that not more than 10,000 persons would need evacuation to points outside Salem. ~ Estimated needs for handling evacuees are: Marion county (outside Salem), 7124 persons; Linn county, 3000; Benton county. Ì000; and Polk county, 3000. The job of freeing people from collapsed or shattered structures will be handled by 24-man rescue units comprised of three 8-man teams. Personnel equipped and trained for this job can save the lives of a large number who might otherwise d lie as a result of injuries, shock or other causes. Rescue team.« will be made up of specialized personnel foi nd in the construction industry, h at riggers, carpenters and building wreckers, supplemented locally bv hand labor. The CD assignments are based on population and local resources, said the state civil defense director. If the area feels it is capable, it may form more teams than the state re | quested. Goals for various counties i MM Boles-Aero Editorial Comment Defense Goals-- Large numbers of Americans have only recently come to know of the existence of an organization called the Institute of Pacific Relations They have learned that through its research projects, conferences, and publications it has greatly influenced scholarly, official, and to some degree popular thinking in the United States. They have heard it charged with being a subversive organization controlled by Communists. They naturally want to know if these charges are true. If they are true, the organization properly belongs on the attorney gen eral's list of Communist fronts. If they are not true, a great injustice is being done to prominent Americans whose membership in the IPR is being used to cast doubt on their loyalty. If they are only partially true, then there is house cleaning to be done among both accused and accusers. Fair-minded Americans will want to know all the facts and will properly reserve judgment until they are in. From the evidence and allegations already brought before the McCarran subcommittee there would appear to have been a strong drive by the Com munists to infiltrate and “capture" the IPR and at least a partial success in i influencing some of its policies and publications. But the institute has not yet been allowed to present its de- | fense before the subcommittee; nor has the general public been apprised of the many respected, conservative Americans who have actively sup- ported and continue to support—the IPR. The fact that Ambassador Philip Jessup was preceded in his chairman- ship of the organization by Newton D. Baker and Jerome D. Greene and was succeeded in office by Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur and Dr. Robert G. Sproul does not necessarily absolve Dr. Jessup from an “affinity for Com munist causes.” Nor does the support of IPR by the Carnegie and Rocke feller Foundations, by Henry Luce, arch-foe of the Chinese Communists, by Gerard Swope and other prominent businessmen give the organization a clean hill of health. But these facts combine to suggest the illogic of using Dr. Jessup to prove the IPR pro-Red. then turning around and using the IPR to prove Dr. Jessup pro-Red. What is needed is the truth, the full truth, and nothing but the truth. We trust the McCarran subcommittee will show itself as zealous to hear the case for as the case against, and that the public will then make up its mind on the basis of all the available evi dence. From the Christian Science Monitor. may be revised following direct con- tact work with local civil defense directors. “Although Portland may be the | prime target area in Oregon, outside iarras arr the main source of mobile support.** said Hayes. "The import- ant thing is to develop civil defense according to the resources available. ar.d to have them trained and ready.’* HEART ATTACK OR INDIGESTION? I nANK HgAV FN.« M.-*t attacks are .st acid taWlwa It ainkea. take BeU ana tableu They contain the rastest act ■< medicine» known to tartan tor the relict ot keartburu ( m aa4 4-j.rea» 25». PARTS AND SUPPLIES South Side Trailers ALBANY — 2 Miles South on 99E ATTENTION! WE HAVE PURCHASED THE EQUIPMENT AND BUSINESS OF THE Santiam Ready Mix Co. AND SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE Prompt Service in Stayton-Mill City-Mt. Angel Areas and Surrounding Communities — Call for Service at STAYTON—541 Third Street Sumpter Jewelry Bldg. Phone 4174 MILL CITY— Call Stayton Phone 4174 Marion County Redi Mix Co. FRANCIS LULAY AL BOCHSLER i All Loggers TO SAVE TIME AND MONEY FOR ALL THE LOGGERS IN THE NORTH SANTI AM AREA. I AM PUTTING A COMPLETE STOCK OF LOGGING SUPPLIES IN AT BASSETT’S WELDING SHOP AT LYONS, ORE. BETWEEN FLOYD AND MYSELF, I AM SURE WE WILL BE ABLE TO GIVE YOU BETTER SERVICE THAN YOU H WE EVER HAD BEFORE IN THIS AREA. FRED GOOCH. JR. I nion M ire Rope* Tuffy Chokers Esco Rigging Skookum Blocks and Rigging Dynamite Fire Equipment Power Saws Splicing and Socketing a Specialty Gooch Logging Supply Everything for the Logger" DAY & NIGHT SERVK’E Sweet Hom,. Ph.Umatk Phone 1111 Roseburg Phone 3*6656 ?