Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1952)
New Quonset Dries Grain Nature’s Way IN OUR 3—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE________________________ July 10, 1952 ¡Co^TioH DETROIT CHRISTIAN CHURCH CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. 3rd and Juniper, Mill City Sunday 11 a.m. Preaching at 11 a.m. by James Wednesday meeting 4th Wed. 8 pm. Stock, minister. Youth meeting at 2:30 each Sun- • • * IDANHA COMMUNITY CHURCH day afternoon. a a Sunday school 10 a.m. COMMUNITY CHURCH Morning service 11 a.m. Full Gospel Preaching Evening service 7:00 p.m. Sunday school 10 a.m. Thursday prayer meeting 7:30 p.m. Morning worship 11 a.m. Bob Unger, Pastor Evangelistic service 7:30 p.m. • • • Prayer meeting Tuesdays 10 a m. to ST. CATHERINE CATHOLIC 3 p.m. CHURCH, MILL CITY ^reaching services Wednesday and Mass at 8 a.m. on Sunday, June 22. Friday 8 p.m. Mass at 9 a.m. every Sunday. Rev. Lee M. Joiner, Pastor Confessions heard before Mass. a a a Fr. Frans Schubert, Pastor FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH • • • Mill ( it) OUR LADY OF LOURDES PARISH Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Jordan. Oregon Morning worship 11:00 a.m. Music by choir. Mass: 1st, 2nd, and 5th Sunday at Young People 6:30 p.m. 8:3® a.m. Evening services 8:00 p.m. Mass: 3d and 4th Sunday 10:30 a.m. Midweek service Wednesday 8 Fr. Leander Schneider, SDS., Pastor Mehama as* Morning worship 9:45 a.m. ST. PATRICK'S PARISH Sunday School 10:45 a.m. Lyons, Oregon Midweek service Thursday 8 p.m. Mass: 1st, 2nd, and 5th Sunday at Rev. Noble Streeter, Pastor, 10:30 a.m. a a a Mass: 3rd and 4th Sunday 8:30 a.m. Fr. Leander Schneider, SDS., Pastor L.D.S. of JESUS CHRIST CHURCH Detroit I * • • Sunday school each Sunday 10 a.m. SANTIAM CHAPEL in high school building, Detroit. Lyons, Ore. Priesthood meeting 11 a.m. Zealand Fryer, Presiding Sunday school 9:45 a.m. a a a Morning worship 11:00 a.m. FREE METHODIST CHURCH Young People’s service 7:15 p.m. North Mill City Evening worship 7:45 p.m. Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. Prayer meeting every Friday 7:30 p. Morning worship 11 a.m. Luster Young, Pastor Junior church 11:00 a.m. • • * Evening service 7:30 p.m. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Wednesday prayer meeting 7:30 pm. Sunday school 9:45 a.m. Phone 1906. Morning worship 10:55 a.m. Rev. C. O. Tremain, Pastor Young Peoples meeting 6:30 p.m. Evening Services 7:30 p.m. Wed., 7:30 p.m. Bible study hour. Mr. Hugh Jull, Pastor « * a ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m. Morning Worship 11 a.m. Young people’s service at 6:30 p.m. Evening service 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting and Bible study, Thursday at 8 p.m. Rev. W. D. Turnbull, Pastor. a a a For Guaranteed Cleaning LYONS METHODIST CHURCH Church school at 9:45 a.m. it’s the Worship service at 11 a. m. Evening service at 8 p.m. Choir at morning service. Choir practice at 7 p.m. Thursday. Rinke R. Feenstra, Pastor a a a 24-HOUR SERVICE GATES COMMUNITY CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday school at 9:45 a m. Close* at 6 P.M. Morning worship 11 a.m. Loren R. Swanson, Pastor NU METHOD The 1952 political conventions are the first in history to be air conditioned. While delegates may still get "hot under the collar,” they can't blame the heat or the humidity. Here are facts compiled by engineers of Carrier Corporation, which manufactured the air conditioning equipment for the International Amphitheatre in Chicago. T- i E heat GENERATED gv This addition to the well-known line of Quonset buildings, the All Purpose Granary, points up the fact that not all round buildings are Quonsets with the new observation that not all Quonsets are round. Among several features as new as its lines, this all-steel structure has double walls for self-ventilation and provisions for drying and cool ing grain Nature’s way by unheated air. Fan and tunnel units for this are available as optional equipment. The basic building unit is 16 ft. wide, 12 ft. long. Length may be increased by any number of 8 ft. units. Fan and tunnel accessories for drying and cooling grain in stor age are removable, enabling the building’s use for many other pur poses when not filled with grain. Drying Cost Ixiw Drying and cooling are accom plished by a “down-flow” circula tion of unheated air, sketched at left. Cost of this drying operation is only about 3 cents a bushel. Ne cessity for "turning” grain in stor age is eliminated by cooling. When using the building for these purposes, grain is piled over the tunnel to a 6’2-ft. depth as the structure is filled. When the fan is operated, air is pulled into the building through its openings down through the grain. Carrying moisture picked up from the grain, the airflow’s out through the tunnel. Fan Runs 20-60 Days At harvest time, the fan is oper ated continuously for an initial period until the grain's moisture content is brought down to a safe level for storage. This requires from 20 to 60 days, depending upon moisture content of grain and local weather. Thereafter, the fan is operated occasionally on cool days and nights in order to reduce grain temperature to the lowest possible point for winter storage. In event grain temperature rises Top sketch shows flow of unheated abnormally thereafter, any heat air from louvers and side-wall ing due to excess moisture may be openings for grain drying and cool reduced by further fan operation. ing in Quonset Granary. Lower Under normal conditions this will sketch shows how removable tun lie unnecessary if drying was done properly at harvest time. nel and tan are installed. /usf Arrived... A SON—To Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bangs, Mehama, July 4, at Salem Gen eral hospital. A DAUGHTER—To Mr. and Mrs. John Vezzoso, Gates, July 6, at Salem Memorial hospital. A DAUGHTER—To Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Kersch, Lyons, July 9, at Salem Memorial hospital. A SON—To Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hiebert, Idanha, July 10, at Salem Memorial hospital. A DAUGHTER—To Mr. and Mrs. Harvey L. Grimes, Lyons, July 10, at Salem Memorial hospital. Car-Saver Service ADDS THOUSANDS OF MILES OF CARE-FREE DRIVING Our Car-Saver Service starts with good lubrication—regularly. Not only the right lubricant in the right amount, in the right place, but a thorough inspection to catch trouble before it starts ... a check for rattles and squeaks and a report on any mechanical attention needed. A complete record of service is kept here to assure car-saver service at proper intervals. BATTERY SERVICE: 80% of all battery failures occur where a service call is re quired ... our Car-Saver service protects you against this inconvenience and ex pense...it includes adding water...test of condition ... an inspection and cleaning of terminals and cables — insurance of maximum battery capacity and life. TIRE SERVICE: Let us tell you how our tire switching service can save you money through increased tire mileage. There is often more uneven wear on front tires than on the rear...rear tires wear evenly but at a faster rate...then, too, to be kept "alive,” the spare tire should be run. But further, our service includes an inspec tion for glass, tacks, and nails embedded in the tires...a check for cuts and bruises. M k RADIATOR SERVICE: Keeping the cooling system filled is just the start. You receive a check of the cooling system, water hoses and damps. These are but a few of the important car saving services you receive when you put your car in our hands. THE 12,000 PERSONS in THE CONVENTION ARENA WULP BE ENOUGH EVERY HOUR LONG. C omport will be the key note OF THE 1952 CONVENTIONS. AN ACRE OF COOLING COILS WILL REMOVE 1900 QUARTS OF moisture per hour from INSIPE THE CONVENTION HALL. C arper refrigeration machines in the amphitheatre create a COOLING EFFECT EQUIVALENT TQ PROVIDING EVERV DELEGATE WITH A SEVEN-RPUNP CAKE OF ICE EVERV HOUR; OR SPREADING A LAYER OF ICE KNEE-PEEP OVER THE ENTIRE ARENA FLOOR EVERY MORNING. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiih Gooch Logging Supply "Everything for the Logger' BASSETT’S WELDING SHOP Phone 116 Phone 1141 Weekly Farm Forest Products Market Sawlog prices were about steady in | the Willamette valley last week, but I demand slacked off slightly. Most forest products were relatively quiet as Fourth of July vacations | started, according to the weekly farm I forest products market report pre- I pared from data supplied by the State I Board of Forestry to the OSC Exen-1 sion Service. Saw logs. Second-growth Douglas fir sawlogs ■ were generally below ceilings through out the valley. No. 2’s were $38 to $46 a thousand, mostly $40 to $42. I No. 3’s were mostly $35 to $37.50. Some Lane county mills limited the amount of No. 3’s they would receive. Camp-run logs 12 to 24 feet long were mostly $38 to $42. 8-foot logs re mained in good demand at $14 to $18 a cord or $34 to $40 a thousand. Old-growth Douglas fir sawlogs ranged from $36 to $60 a thousand in the northern and central valley and $37.50 to $42.50 in 1-ane county. Peeler logs were $85, $100, $110 in the north ern and central valley and $75, $85, and $100 at Eugene. 4-foot Douglas fir logs over 30 inches in diameter brought $35 at Albany. There was a light demand for 16-foot white fir and hemlock sawlogs at $30 in the central valley. Pulpwood: The pulpwood market was slow. Unpeeled hemlock and true firs were $13 to $17 a cord and Douglas fir was $14 to $15. Poles and Piling: Demand for poles and piling over 50 feet was generally good. 50-foot barkie poles ranged from 20‘i to 28 cents a lineal foot, with longer poles up to 45 cents a foot. Hardwoods: Alder and ash brought $34.50 to $40 a thousand in the northern valley. Maple brought $40. Cottonwood was $28 to $30, with peelers at $40. One Lebanon mill paid $35 for alder and maple. Cottonwood for excelsior was $14 a cord at Eugene. Other Forest Products: Cascara bark sold at 12 cents a pound, dry, or 4 to 5 cents, green. Sword fern was 16 cents a bunch. Branch Store Lyons Sweet Home, Philomath Eagles Dance at the Mill City Firehall Saturday, July 12 9 P.M. ALL EAGLES AND AUXILIARY MEMBERS INVITED TO ATTEND Delinquent Eagles and Reserve Eagles also invited. LOW AND WIDE... BIG INSIDE ...AND ITS BEAUTIFUL... plus up 35 miles per gallon, with uverilrivp. Quality job printing at The Mill City Enterprise EXPERT LUBRICATION • TIRE SWITCHING • BATTERY CARE ATLAS TIRES • BATTERIES • ACCESSORIES RALPH NIBLER WE ARE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU! TODAY We hope you are pleased with our service. / Mom's and Pop's CAFE WE TAKE BETTER CARE OF YOUR CAR Wllfys Mill City Elsner Motor Co SALEM. OREGON