•'JOE BEAVER Out of the Woods By JAMES STEVEN’S GATES 7—THE Mil.I. CITY ENTERPRISE “Where Not ember 29, ne Fire, Chief?” By MRS. ALBERT MILLSAP The Old Woods. . . . Members of the Carey family Lumbering in the Lake States gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. stands in history as one of the biggest Donald farey in Stayton. Present jobs ever performed by the so-called j from Gates were Mrs. Velma Carey human race. The facts of it have been and son James who was at home from put on paper only in records that mold Willamette University; Mrs. Norman in vaults until some stray researcher ' ! Carey and infant son of Albany and asks for them to look up sundry items | Lt. and Mrs. Gale Carey and daughter, for his own uses; in such popular ac­ who had just recently returned from counts as Stewart Holbrook’s HOLY i Phoenix, Arizona, where he has been OLD MACKINAW; and in the folk I stationed ‘ for the past year. Lt. | tales of Paul Bunyan. uo v Camp Stoneman, ' Carey W1JJ will lrpvrv report to Paul and Babe the B ue Ox come , Calif. before he will be sent t() Korea. closer to preserving the life and color A1 Mr and M„ Eugene Carey alul of a giant chapter of American devel- children of Portland. I opment through timber mining,' Mr. and Mrs. Warren Varcoe were I through use of the forest resource j Thanksgiving day guests in Mill City without thought or plan for renewal, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Larry than any other form of art or history Kellogg. that we have today. Mr. and Mrs. John La Haie had as One other item of the kind should be cited, as a reflection of the might their dinner guest her ■ sister and and scope of the lumbering enterprise brother-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Edward of the Lake States. It is Menoir Welsheimer. Thanksgiving was observed here in Bulletin No. 4. entitled "Michigan Log Marks,” published by the State keeping with the good old American College Agricultural Experiment Sta­ tradition. Family dinners at the various homes with relatives and tion at East Lansing, Michigan. The bulletin runs to 90 pages of guests from out of town. Many who Little “Smokey" seems to be ready for a five-alarm fire as he stands behind the wheel of one of the fire trucks at Lederle Laboratories, wonderful reading and pictures, with did not entertain at home gathered Pearl River, N. Y. If you haven’t noticed, this cute mascot is also • the page margins illustrating a total with members of their families in camera "hound." of a thousand log marks. They make other places. the days of King Pine in the Lake States come alive, county by county, | Forest Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture river by river, mill town by mill town. "For goodness sake, if you're going in for planting trees, do it on The log marks themselves are curios I the millions of idle acres needing it!" hard to beat. Muscle Power. . . . The statistices are worth nothing. I Records of the old Saginaw boom com- I AVOID DANGERS OF PAYING BY CASH! panies show that lumbering had j grown on the great waterway in 1856 ' Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Peterson and to a figure of 110,000,000 board feet. son Dale, formerly of Detroit with the In the peak year of 1882, the Sagi- j MILL CITY public roads, and now located at Port naw’s output was over a billion—all Angeles, Washington, were calling on cut and hauled by the muscle power | A FRIENDLY friends in the Detroit vicinity over the of horse, ox and man, power stoked by j Thanksgiving season. They were dis­ hay and beans; and then transported FAMILY appointed in finding so few of their by river and man power combined. ATMOSPHERE friends at home. The big year of Michigan lumber­ Mrs. Ray Johnson and Mrs. Cal ing, the record shows, was 1890, when PREVAILS Schaldor were Portland shoppers on mighty drives were still booming Monday and Tuesday of this week. I down the Menominee. Steam was ini Mrs. Jerry Pittam of Idanha was i the pineries then, on railroads, and in | released from the Salem uenerai on | the log loaders called jammers. Sum- Monday, having given birth to an I mer logging was done by horse-drawn eight pound boy on the 24. j pairs of big wheels, which are backed A group of Mongold and Gates i astraddle bunched logs for loading. | ladies were present at the Hut in | The average log scaled 200 feet. So the rivers ran in Michigan, and EXMTLYt>36 AHO VOCTS Mongold on Tuesday afternoon for the Oregon Sweets demonstration the I in Wisconsin and Minnesota as well, I Extension service of OSC. The demon­ when the freshets would take off the Your stration included all sorts of confec­ snows and fill the splash dams in no Physician tions and sweets made from strictly time, back in the 1880s and the 1890s. Oregon fruits and nuts. The sweets Away Back Yonder. . . . All th* prestige and conveniense of your personal check is no were made by Mrs. Worthington of An early picture of the development assisted by Mrs. Clarence | of forest markets in the Lake States ’’MEDICINE MAN” Mongold Rush from Gates. is in the start, during the 1830s, o£ • Don’t expect your Phy­ Mr. Ralph Sigmund from Stayton furniture manufacture in the settle­ sician to perform mira­ will bring a moving picture to the ment of Grand Rapids. The hard- cles. Remember, it takes Detroit Christian church on i next ! woods grew at the door of the shop. more time and effort to — Sunday evening, December 2 begin ­ , Settlers were wheeling into the climb uphill than to coast SIMPLi AS A. B.C. ning at 7:30. Mr. Sigmund has Northwest Territory as the Saginaws down! Your patience and brought these pictures periodically and Chippewas were forced to give us Present amount of money full co-operation are es­ ____ about once _______ a month ____ during the ____ early I their tribal lands for lttle or nothing; order, plus the small fee. sential to rapid recovery. is no charge whatso- ¡»nd into the t summer. ’ There _____________ ________ . Illinois and Iowa . country ever for admission although contri- as tbe Sioux and other tribes were g You receive money order butions are accepted. The name of pushed west and north. and your record copy. w the picture has not been announced The prairie pioneers needed wood Salem nor the length of the film, but those I {or fences and buildings as well as 1 C Fill out , ,v Sign . . . «ho have attended previously will . furniture. For lack fence rails the . * That's all! RELIABLE« • Osage orange hedge was introduced ' know that it is worthwhile. in Illinois. For lack of workable pine ★ * * * * - Mrs. Carrie Clester was a guest in lumber in such settlements as Fort Sweet Home with her son and his wife | Dearborn, water power sawmills be­ the Art Clesters. gan to whack up logs where the pine rivers emptied into Lake Michigan and Huron. The first sawmill of the Lake States region was built at Flint Try Our 5c Coffee; in 1830, five years after the first on the West Coast. MEMBER FEDERAI. DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. — To avoid warping cake pans, codl op a before soaking in warm suds of dreft Next Door to Mill City Variety or joy. Les’s Tavern DETROIT REGISTER CHECK Cost Only 15c per Check MILL CITY STATE BANK M Coffee Shop Hamburgers Fountain 5c Coffee A — Dinners Short Orders Pains, distress of “those days’’ stopped or amazingly relieved in doctors’tests! Scientifically Modern Action Yes! Lydia Pinkham's has been proved to be scientifically modern in action! This news will not surprise the thousands of women and girls who take Lydia Pinkham s regularly and know the relief it can bring. And it should encourage you (if you're not taking Lydia Pinkham s! to see if your ex­ perience doesn’t match theirs .. to see If you, too, don't avoid FOR LITTLE EXTRA RAIL FARE Sometimes a bargain is so big people find it hard to believe. Like this: in 3 out of 4 cases • Here’s wonderful news for women and girls who — each month — suffer the tortures of “bad days” of functionally- caused menstrual cramps and pain — headaches, backaches, and those “no-good," dragged- out feelings. It's news about a medicine famous for relieving such suf­ fering! Here is the exciting news. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound — gave complete or striking relief of such distress in an average of 3 out of 4 of the cases in doctors' tests! 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