The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, February 28, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    The DEBUNKER
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By John Harvey Farbay, Ph.D.
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February 28. 1952
6—THE Mil.I. CITY ENTERPRISE
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Every Winter we hear many "old-
timers" telling us how the present-
day Winters do not compare at all
with those of thirty years ago. The
records of weather bureaus, how­
ever. fail to substantiate such state­
ments; for they show no general
tendencies towaid milder Winters
over the last hundred years The
reason those earlier Winters seemed
more severe was probably because
people rerpember only the worst
Winters and forget the others.
building that had been in prospect for
1952 will not get off the contractor’s
blueprints.
By JAMES STEVENS
Urgent school construction needs
may be supplied by allocation of
More Work for Schools. . .
A chameleon changes its colors no scarce materials, so I read in the
writings of the experts, but as defense
oftener than a government statis­
production rises with the growing
tician changes the figures of his
cloud of the Communist menace on all
guesses when the subject is human
horizons the precious metals of war
beings and their wonderful and
are most certainly going to go where
amazing doings.
they are needed most urgently.
The Census Bureau statisticians had
One thing we must do is to catch up
predicted a baby crop of 3,450,000 for
1951, and now they confess, with with the architects who have learned
joy and pride, that 3,9000,000 new that the type of school designed and
cherubs and imps of humankind came built to last as long and as unchanged
out of the everywhereinto here last as the Washington Monument is the
year, about 13per cent above expecta­ poorest kind of business. Three-
fourths of the nation’s school districts
tion.
are stuck with one or more schools
The population came up to a round with ancient wails that only dynamite
155,000,000 in the year, a 15 per cent can destroy but which inside are
gain in ten years, for all the traffic utterly obsolete.
and the wars. Again the Census
Back in 1949, before the present
sharks of the statistical seas were
trouble, the Architectural Form said:
pleased to up their old estimate of
"The small elementary school, of
170,000,000 New Yorkers, Dogpatch-
ers and other Americans in 1960 to light construction intended for 25 or
30 years of use, would meet the chang­
(maybe) 180,000,000.
For Guaranteed Cleaning
As a cynic might put it, folks are ing pattern of community need much
marrying like fools let loose, and better than the heavy buildings whose
there
’s nothing in sight to stop them. physical life span of 50 years will
it’s the
probably far outlast their useful life.
The Small School of Wood. . .
This is not only because school need
If we had peace and normal pro­ is likely to recede, it is also because
duction for peacetime needs through today’s rapid developments in design
| 1952 and on to 19<>0, say the author­ and technology mean a more rapid
24-HOUR SERVICE
ities, the country would build at least rate of building obsolescence—a
6,000,000 new homes and spend 10 to matter which has not yet been given
Mill City
12 billion dollars a year on all home adequate consideration by all types
construction, including remodeling of building investors.”
Cloaca at 8 P.M.
and repairs. Now it appears that as ««And it was pointed out that when
much as 40 per cent of the home school needs recede the small school
building can continue in service as a
community center.
Turn to the Trees. . .
The one-story, campus-type of
school building was an idea that Port­
land school architects put to work as
early as 1923. Three were built, they
endure, they are modern today.
California school authorities carried
the principle on in earthquake-resis­
tant construction. The Long Beach
quake of 1933 was a terrific demon­
stration of the danger to life in the
old-time monumental type of school
and the safety to life in the one-story
‘At the Bottom of the Hill”
school on a campus plan.
Whatever the materials used, the
latter tvne is not only the safest under
powerful shocks and blows but if
fire. Children > an go out almost
instantly from many exits without
risk of panic or suffocating smoke.
The oldest existing homes, schools
and churches in the Pacific Northwest
today are of wood construction all the
way through. Wood is an ideal
material for schools today, in terms
of modern design and engineering.
. So our trees hold the means of more
school building to meet our dire needs,
despite war restrictions.
IT’S AMAZING!
Out of the Woods
D octors
of
RURAL CHIN»
PRESCRIBE
flW PIGS'
'T'PILS
AS A
FOR STOMACH
AILMENTS J
KEEP OREGON GREEN
6“)
NU METHOD
Never
a Dull Moment
MILL CITY TAVERN
FOR YOUR PROTECTION!
b
ELKHORN
By MRS. ELSIE MYERS
Kellom’s Fresh Meats
FRESH DAILY — VERY REASONABLE PRICES
Kellom’s Grocery
I
I
I
I
MUX CITY
OPEN WEEK DAYS: 8 A.M. to 7 I’ M.
CLOSED: Sundays and Holidays
WE GIVE TRADING STAMPS \ND ALUMINUM AND DISHES
Pains, distress of ‘‘those days" stopped
or amazingly relieved
/
S taked CWfleTtccw
INSECTS
USING
WfiTER
success. Moving pictures were shown
at the close of the dinner to all who
chose to stay.
Those holding the
lucky numbers and drawing the pillow
cases were Mrs. Steve Dark and
Johnnie Lambrecht.
Keith Phillips '
was the winner of the door prize.
Mrs. Carl Longenecker and son
Billie are among those from this area
who are confined to their beds with !
the flu. They are in Silverton where
they are being cared for at the home
of Mr. Longenecker’s. brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Longenecker.
Others in the valley
who have been suffering from the
same disease are Bill and Jackie ,
Bickett, Allen and Alvin Ray and
Janet Glunz. Treva Sue Bickett was
able to return to school Tuesday after
being home about a week.
Recent dinner guests at the Steve
Dark home included Mr. and Mrs.
Russell McLaughlin of Salem and:
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pietrok and family
of Stayton. The occasion being the
birthdays of Mr. Pietrok and Durwood
Dark. Sunday dinner guests at the
Dark home were Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Coleman and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Shaw of Portland.
Spending Friday and Saturday at
the Bill Bickett home were their sister
and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. E.
A. Newsome of Sisters.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Dark spent the
day Thursday at the Luther Stout
home where they also visited with
Grandma (Mrs. John) Allen of Port­
land.
as
THE BOY'S SHOP
Headquarters for
BOY’S WEARING APPAREI
2 to 16 Years
New Location After
March 1st:
265 North High
One Door South of Model Food Market
1HE BCY’S SHOP
265 N. High, SALEM
e
Look at these features:
t
Mom s and Pop s
CAFE
Try It
Yourtelf...
Faci It« Power
and
Smooth nett I
Mill City
“T/P/
*
YOU CHANCI ILARI«
PRISTO!
V «¿vttk
ONI-PIICI
RAZOR
Stop In today and try out
the naw McCulloch 7-55 ,..
wHh Cuahlonod Power
N mm H m O v «W by atiCNHccb-
W»HCl Largggt Ru>ld»«V o<
Few»« Chain S aw »
Sales and Service
HOCTOlOGtST
the nervousness and tension,
weakness, irritability — and
pain so often associated with
"those days"!
Remember Lydia Pinkham's,
too — if you're suffering the
"hot flashes" and other func­
tionally-caused distress of
"change of life."
Get Lydia Pinkham's Com­
pound or nctc. improved Tab­
lets with added Iron itrial size
only 59«». Start taking Lydia
Pinkham's today!
Amning Smoothnesil Cushioned Fowerl
E»y to us* all day bacauaa apaclal rotating bal­
ancers geared to crenksheft noutrallio vlbretlon.
Power! Light Weight! Full 7 horsepower, yet
welghe only 55 pounds with 20-lnch chain and
blade.
Fast starting I Super hot epark, automatic-rewind
starter, pueh-button primer.
Easy Operation! Chain oiler and tank built In.
controlled from handlebar. Simplified grouped
controls— throttle controls and Ignition switch
on hsndlebar for fingertip operation.
Safetyl Full automatic centrifugal dutch die­
engages chain when engine la Idling.
Convenience! Ignition pointe eaeily accessible
>n eaterlor housing. Full 360* swivel transmission
locks st sny snglo Flostless csrburetor permits
full-power sawing in any poeltlon.
JOHN NELSON
MILL CITY
NATUWO^ATHiC FH'5CAN
How Lydia Pinkham'* works
It hat a calming ' and soothing
fffect on the uterur . . quieting
the contraction (w* the chart*
that to often cane menjitm*
pain. c*ramjM, other dutreM.
with
Cushioned
Power/
We are proud to present thia
great new chain saw—the moat
powerful In the McCulloch line.
We hope you are pleased
with our service.
DR R REYNOLDS CLINIC
SALIM
Of
B ullets ’
WE ARE PLEASED
TO SERVE YOU!
SUPfR-SPffD
TIIPNONI JUiO
OilGON
DROPS
B oot \\ e . gh ' ng
>50-LBS contains 113-LBS
of WATEg A no OA ilv PE O u PE S
fop sustenance , either as a
L‘QU'0 OB COMBINED V411U
Fooo 5 J 'LBS OF WATER '
MUZZLE AS A GUN 1t> SHOOT AT
- 1 D»aenpt>v» *oo*l»t
| on R»^umt
1IU CINTI! STRUT .
human
fish
OF INOA USES ITS ELOMGATEO
Gillette
NO HOSPITALIZATION
Scientifically Modern Action
Yell 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, loo, don’t avoid
HEMORRHOIDS ’"l”
< FISSURE . FISTULA
PROLAPSE and olh*r
RECTAL disorders
# Stomach and Colon
AHmonK
in 3 out of 4 cases
in doctors* tests!
• Here's wonderful news for
womi'ti 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!
i
Spot-lighting is not an uncommon
occurence in the Elkhorn district but
mute evidence was left Friday night
of such a raid. Saturday morning a
doe was found near Franks mill where I
it had run a short distance after beingj
shot twice before dropping.
The I
hunters apparently having lost sight
of it let it lay. Evidence was also
found in the snow near the Charles
Sprague summer home where another:
deer had been killed and loaded into I
a jeep.
The cafeteria dinner held Saturday |
night by the Mehama local of the1
Farmers Union, while not drawing a
large crowd, was declared a decided
■fur
WITH 10>BLA0l
GILLETTE DISPENSER
NAMED FOR
PVT. J.W. OZBOURN. A
POSTHUMOUS MEDAL OF
HONOR WINNER, SHE
WAS LAUNCHED IN 19*45.
PHONE 320?
RESIDENCE PHONE 1241
LATER,
TME OZBOURN OPERATED
OFF TME COAST OF JAPAN,
HUNTING FOR SMUGGLERS,
IN AUGUST,
AFTER NINE MONTHS IN
KOREA, SME RETURN­
ED TO THE STATES FOR
A WELL EARNED REST.
ÏIGHTING
IN KOQFA, SME
MELPf D BOMBARD WONSAN
AND LATER MIR SMELLS FELL
AMONG CONCENTRATED RED
TROOPS ON TME BATTLE LINES.
OFF TME
CHINA COAST IN 1987,
SME RESCUED A DIS­
ABLED CHINESE TANK-
. ER AND TOWED IT
TO ITS DESTINATION.
TEN VOLUNTEERS FROM THE
OZBOURN MADE A 8 HOUR. 26
MILE TRIP THROUGH ICY. MINE-
INFESTED WATERS TO RESCUE
A DOWNED FIGHTER PILOT.