The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, August 21, 1952, Page 7, Image 7

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    7—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
August 21. 1952
Wants and Sales
FOR RENT—One-bedroom duplex in
AVON COSMETICS
Swift addition. Inquire at Enter-, See Mrs. R. G. Herlofsen, white
prise office or at W. L. Peterson 1 house south of Beebe Apts, on NW.
residence in Swift addition.
31tf | 7th Ave.
Box 658, Mill City.
If It’s in the Canyon, It's Advertised in The Enterprise!
PIANO BUYS — SAVE $ $
Out of the Woods
Used and rebuilt UPRIGHTS
from $95.00 up
New Kimball — Janssen —
SEE US FOR GOOD Real Estate TRUCK SEATS REPAIRED AND
Gulbransen spinets.
buys in Canyon area.
Listings
Try in your home —
UPHOLSTERED—one day service.
wanted.
See GLEN SHELTON,
Stayton Upholstery, W. Washing­
$10.00 per month.
salesman with C. E. COVILLE,
ton St.. Stayton.
20tf
Broker, west side Mill City. Phone
SALEM MUSIC CO.
2207.
52tf PLUMBING SUPPLIES —Pipe fit­
153 S. High St.
tings, toilets, sinks, washbowls,
bathtubs, showers, etc.
Bargain, Across from Elsinore Theater in
FOR SALE—'47 Hudson club coupe,
prices. Red’s Hill Top Trading Post. I
Downtown Salem
convertible, blue, leatherette uphol­
stery, radio and heater, good tires
and paint, $695.00. Inquire at Nib- FOR RENT—2-room apartment, clean,' FOR RENT—Two modern, 1 bedroom
newly painted and air conditioned, I duplexes, partially furnished. In­
ler’s Chevron Station, Mill City.
everything furnished. Agness Allen,
quire at Whitie's Santiam Cafe at
34-lp
Mill City.
34-3
Gates.
34-3p
WANTED TO BUY — Clean peeled
Douglas fir poles, delivered to SPORTSMEN—Join the North San­ FOR SALE—Bailed alta fiscue grass
Lyons yard. For further informa-1 tiam Sportsman’s club now. W’e are
straw, and bailed grain straw, in
tion call or write Allen Gould, 1424 ■ devoted to game conservation and
the field. Etzel Bros., Route 1, Box
propagation
and
need
your
help.
Filbert Ave.. Lebanon, phone 5745,
234, Stayton, ph. 14F71, five miles
Only $1.00 per year, you will have
Puget Timber Co. of Oregon. 24tf
NW of Mehama.
33-3
that much fun at one meeting.
Enquire at Enterprise office, or see
INSULATION—Owens-Coming Fib­
Jerry Coffman, at Ken Golliet’s. 9 FOR RENT—Small 1-bedroom, fur­
erglass Blowing Wool—finest in­
nished house $35.00. H. N. Wilson,
sulation known to man. Save over
1st house across river at Gates, Ore.
20 to 40% fuel costs. Phone col­ STOVES—Heaters and ranges, in oil
or wood. Save at
32-3p
lect for estimates.
AMERICAN
Red's Hill Top Trading Post
IMPROVEMENT CO., 975 Market
St., Salem, ph. 2-4687 or 2-8010. 6tf
FOR SALE—Fruit jars, pints 45c per
LOST—Spade female dog, answers to
dozen, quarts 65c doz., ^-gal. 75c
"Susie”, 2 years old, license No.
FOR SALE—'49 model Zenith refrig­
doz. Red’s Trading Post.
30tf
erator $125; ’49 model Zenith elec­ 3679. Brindle color, with four white
paws, white tip on tail, with white FOR RENT—One bedroom apartment.
tric range $100, or both for $200.
chest marking, may be near Idanha.
First house west of real estate of­
Inquire at Enterprise or phone 2652
A. P. Hoffman, Mill City.
32-3p
fice in Lyons.
34-lp
or 2602.
30tf
Gasoline
— TUBES — BATTERIES
AND AUTO SUPPLIES
gKMJCx'-Cxx « « « » » « x x x X X"x:x;xiX.’x¡x;x:xlx;x x :: a X'X x x x,>OX,s:.xi>rx x x.XIxMMXMX
esa© iäxsüö
Prtpor^d by th» SISTtK KENNY FOUN3ATION
SHROCKZS
TARPS—Tents, new and used. Selec­
tion of sizes.
Red's Hill Top Trading Post
Safety Check Lubrication
TIRES
State Fair
TYPEW RITERS AND ADDING Ma-
chines. We sell, rent, repair and
swap all makes. Trade your old
machine towards a new one.
ROEN, 456 Court St.. Salem.
MILL CITY
Phone 903
Flower Show
EXPERT AUTO and heme radio
service, 20 years experience, all
service.
makes. Guaranteed
______
Stiffler’s Radio and Appliance.
SILVER SADDLE
SERVICE STATION & TRAILER COURT
1
a pvbO- ....... '-■■■
FOR SALE—Complete furniture and
furnishings, some nearly new. Call
before Sunday, apartment behind
Heidt's Auto Electric, Mill City.
34-lp
NEED A TELEPHONE.’ — Stop in
and see the new Lech combination
desk or wall phone, also used |
phones from $10.00 up. Telephone
and Hearing Aid batteries stocked.
Stiffler’s Radio and Appliance.
REAL ESTATE
LACK OR LOSS OP APPETITE,NAUSEA,
vomiting ; indefinite feeling of
UNEASINESS, 0I5CDMFORT OR UST-
LÊ35NÊSS.
New 1052 Detroiter trailer house,
37*4-ft. inside, modern.
3-bedroom house for rent.
Apartments for rent.
Highway and river frontage
for sale.
See W. R. HUTCHESON
At Gates Furniture Store
FOR SALE—4-room house on 3 acres,
on highway; '48 Chevrolet sedan de­
livery; combination electric, wood
By JAMES STEVENS
range; wood burning circulating
heater, new automatic hot water Noggin, Piggin and Treen . . .
heater, never been used; misc. house­
They are not names from a story
hold equipment.
Roselia Smith,
«• children l but x each
1 is a particle
x" I of f
for
Gates.
34-lp
| speech that was in general use when
FOR SALE—4-rm, house on 100x120 the American industrial economy was
lot. fenced, garage, by owner. F. based mainly on wood.
F. Paul, Gates, Ore.
33-3
“Treen” in its earleist use was a
plural for “tree”. Later the word was
applied to woodenware generally.
GORGEOUS GARDEN
“Noggin", a small wood mug, was a
and
common item of the treen trade of
150 years ago. So was the “piggin”,
a baby bucket that had a stave stick-
ing up to serve as a dipping handle,
Pipe Organ Music
The noggin and the piggin were
prime tools in family life when Abra­
ham Lincoln was a boy and water was
commonly carried by hand to house
SALEM
from spring, creek or well. They we be
CAT
SAT
also prized as measures in the sale of
AUG. 30 through SEPT. 6 whisky when it retailed at a penny
j a snort and at 25 cents per gallon jug
—with the consumer providing his own
jug.
WHEN IN SALEM
Hewers and Whittiers . . .
Visit
Whittling boys of Colonial times
“HUDSON CITY”
grew up into carpenters who were
Home of GOOD Used Cara
kings of labor all over the colonies.
Others became shipwrights. Sons of
HUDSON
breed came to Boston in due
Sales — Parts — Service I this
course, to build the Constitution of
white oak from New Jersey and white
pine from Maine. Around 20 years
ago new masts were cut for the old
316 N. Church St.
Phone 3-9101
flagships, then and now a floating
museum, in a Columbia river sawmill.
They were Douglas fir. The main­
mast timber was 36 x 36 and 112 feet
LICENSED
long. The main yard timber was a
90-footer.
*
GARBAGE
There were still men who had the
SERVICE
know-how to work up and fit out such
a
job. At last report the Constitution
$1.50 per month and up
remains a Navy showpiece. What is
Also serving Gates, Lyons.
needed is a complete national museum
Idanha and Detroit
to show off the sycamore wheels, mill­
MILL CITY
wheel cogs of dogwood, butternut
coach panels, cypress and cedar water
DISPOSAL SERVICE
pipe, harrow teeth, whip handles, wood
Phone 9952
LEONARD HERMAN
grist mills, printing presses, looms,
wood and brass clocks by Rittenhouse.
Terry and Seth Thomas, early wood­
working machines such as the Blanch­
WE SELL BETTER
ard lathe, along with the multitude of
American hand tools for hewing and
CARS FOR LESS!
whittling wood into usable shapes.
I Century of Progress . . .
What set me to brooding on these
things is a copy of the National Lum­
ber Manufacturers Assocation ‘News’.
I have it right here.
Stayton
It says in the NLMA News that
IT PAYS TO BUY AT
the American Society of Civil Engi­
neers is to celebrate its 100th birthday
HOME!
in Chicago during the days of Septem­
ber 3-13. Part of it will be five ses-
GENE TEAGUE
CHEVROLET
LYONS
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Lyons and their
‘tuaghter and husband, Mr. and Mrs
r.<l
Ed (,l'«lx»V
Gisler frnm
from Vluli.m
Marion aa*A»«A
were am^aaaa
among
those attending the roundup at Prine­
ville Saturday.
Mrs. Lyons and Mrs. Gisler spent
two days at the coast last week. They
were guests at the home of another
daughter, Mrs. Keith Taylor, at Tay­
lor’s Landing near Waldport.
Miss Edna Holder, for 27 years a
Methodist missionary in India, will
present her work at the Lyons Meth­
odist church next Sunday evening 8
o’clock. Youth fellowship at the par­
sonage will be at 7 p.m. Rev. R. A.
Feenstra will speak at II a.m.
Claudia Johnson returned to the
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Johnson, after spending some time
in Ashland, where she visited her girl
friends and spent a week at the Girl
Scout camp. The Johnsons are former
residents of that city.
W. R, Stevens and Albert Stevens
received word that their father, who
is in Sheridan, Wyo., and 89 years
old, had fallen and broken his hip
and is in the hospital there.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Free have had
as their house guests, her brother and
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Leon McCaleb from
Rochester, Minn.
A weekend guest at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Loren Chamberlain was
her son, Harvie Wright, from Cres-
well.
Recent visitors at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. John McClurg were his son
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mc-
Clurg from Baker.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Skillings hare
returned from a 10-day trip to Yel-
lowstone park, returning by way of
Spokane,
sions given to a century of progress
in engineering with wood. One of the
21 lecture subjects on the program is
“History of the Woodworking In­
dustry”, to be presented by Fred E.
Wangaard, professor of forestry, Yale
university. I'm writing for a copy of
the lecture. Then I’ll tell you more
about it.
It is my hope that Professor Wan­
gaard will see fit to advocate the
establishment of a national wood en­
gineering and woodworking historical
museum in Chicago, with branches in
the principal lumbering regions of the
country. With the big hope goes a
little one—that the project will serve
to collect and save surviving examples
of early American noggins, piggins
and other treen.
WE ARE PLEASED
TO SERVE YOU!
SISTER ELIZABETH
HEADACHE, USUALLY SEVERE AHO
GENERALIZED;MODERATE FEVER
seldom
We hope you are pleased
with our service.
R ising above iob *
t
Mom's and Pop's
ifHE KENNV TREATMENT
OFFERS POLIO VICTIMS
THEIR BEST CHANCE RD«
RECOVERY. RESULTS OF
THE KENNY TREATMENT
HAVE SHOWN A MARKED
REDUCTION IN CRIPPLING
after - effects pormerlv
ASSOCIATED WITH THE
CAFE
! 1
Mill City
|
STIFF NECK, STIFF
j
EXTREMITIES,MUSCLE WEAKNESS
PAINFUL
j SYMPTOMS FREQUENTLY ABATE
I TCMRDRARiLV AFTER AN INITIAL
| ILLNESS OF ABOUT TwEuTy-FOUR
I HOURS. RECURRING NffHIN 2o> 5 CAYS
! CAU 'tOUADOCTQA FT ONCt IF TWSC
A Friendly Place
To While Away
Your Idle Hours
SYMPTOMS APf OKiPVFO!
Directory - Professional
HEWITT, ESTEP & SORENSEN
Attorneys at Law
180 N. Commercial
Phone 3 6412
Dan River Prints, Children's Books,
Wool Scarfs, Stamped Pillow Cases,
Blankets. Handkerchiefs, Nylons
Hendricsoifs Store
RICHARDS
DR. VICTOR J. MYERS
Chiropractic Physician
TAVERN
Post Office Building. 2nd Floor
Phone: Stayton 2274
Stayton, Ore.
GATES
MIKE'S Septic Service
Service:
Septic Tanka and Sewers
Seweni Cleaned ♦
:
Phone SALEM VMM.
3-94M, COLLECT •
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
107» Elm St..
St., W. Salem
i
WHITIE S
S ore P iles
in THE ENTERPRISE
SANTIAM CAFE
Don't let «ore, fiery, painful, ltcblnx
simple Piles drive you nearly craxy. In 15
minute« CHINAROID start« giving you
wonderful cooling, soothing, temporary re­
laxing relief from pain, burning and Itch­
ing or money back guaranteed Genuine
CHINAROID emU only |1 00 at druggUU
Try It today for better «ieep tonight and
• brighter t—a rr ow
SPECIALIZING IN DINNERS
THE WAY BOYS
MILL CITY
DISPOSAL SERVICE
From the Heart of Texas
Garbage, ashes, trimmings, etc.
J. W. GOIN
VETERINARIAN
STAYTON'
Phone I14S
»
<
Opposite
Claude Ilenia' Servire Station
weekly nick up« $1.50 tier month
HARLOW L WEINR1CK
Also light hauling
Attorney at Is»
918 Broadalbin
Albany
I>eonard Herman
I
Orchestra Saturday Nights
OPEN: 2:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m.
âllIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIUIIUIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
CLOSED MONDAYS