The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, September 11, 1952, Page 4, Image 4

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    Mill City Hi-Liles
September 11. 1952
4— THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
SPORTS PAGE
Football Schedule
Sept. 11—Sweet Home “B” there
Sept. 18—Lebanon “B” There
* Sept. 26—Chemawa, there
* Oct. 3—Gervais, here.
First home game
* Oct. 10—Jefferson, there
* Oct. 17—St. Boniface, here
Oct. 84- Monroe, here
■Oct. 31 Philomath, here
•—League games.
Mill City high school’s first home
game under the lights will be with
•Gervais, last years league "champs”.
■Gvrvais also was runnerup in the state
"B” 11-man football championship.
Inasmuch as Gervais will be Mill
City’s fourth game, the local fans
should see the local team in mid-sea­
son form.
This year’s team is led by eleven
lettermen with an all senior backfield
unit; barring injuries this unit should
be a potent scoring threat in all games.
The line is made up with green
hands most of them having only one
year’s experience on the varsity. Dale
Andreassen, Brooks Crosier, Jack
Melting, Leroy Emerson, Tom Stew­
art and Richard Verbeck are letter-
men from last years line.
Transfers are Mike Misner, Evart
Brewer, Lloyd Ross, ends, all three
have had very little experience but
show considerable promise.
With eight games on the schedule
this year Mill City's team will have
to be well conditioned and have con­
siderable luck with injuries in order
to keep a strong lineup on the field.
The squad this year has showed
considerable enthusiasm with spirited
calisthenic drills led by Jim Hale, as­
sistant football coach.
CARHARTT
CHICAGO—Dr. 0. C. Nelson, medical director of Cook county hos­
pital here, accepts delivery of two iron lungs, a gift from the Amalgam-
at Meatcutters and Butcher Workmen of North America. A. F of L.
Earl W. Jimerson, (left) union president, looks on with Harriet
Dre er, therapist of the Sister Kenny Foundation, and Patrick E.
Gorman, union secretary-treasurer, as Dr. Nelson explains function of
the iron lung worn by Mary June Dougherty.
In addition to Cook county hospital, iron lungs were donated by the
union to the Sister Kenny Foundation, Minneapolis; the Red Cross nos-
f ital, Louisville, Ky.; and to St. Mary’s hospital in East St. Louis,
11., bringing the number of iron lungs donated by the American Fed­
eration of Labor to 1,000.
Extra Heavy Brown Duck
OVERALLS
(Jackets to Match)
UNION MADE
Points of Superiority:*
* Closely Woven 11-oz. High Count
(B4x32)
* Special Hardware
* Copper Riveted Throughout
* Pockets Re-inforced
* Water Repellent
NO OTHER OVERALL HAS THESE FEATURES
Town Ô” Country Store
293 N, Commercial, SALEM
General Motors will sponsor the television football “Game of the Week"
this year on the nationwide—63 television station network of NBC. In
co-operation with the National Collegiate Athletic Association, GM will
televise 11 selected games on successive Saturdays during the football
season, concluding with the traditional Army-Navy game in Philadelphia
November 29. The first game to be televised will be the Kansas-Texas
Christian game at Lawrence, Kan.. September 20. William F. Hufstader,
GM vice-president in charge of distribution staff, is shown signing the
contract for the games as Asa S. Bushnell. NCAA official (center), and
Paul Garrett, vice-president of public relations staff for GM, look on.
There's
MO value
ike Chevrolet
value I
By CLIFFORD P. ROWE
By RICHARD LOVEL
Forest Grove, Ore.
Mill City high school started its
In the many years that I have been
1952-53 year last Monday, Sept. 8.1 driving, I had never been stopped by
There are 112 students enrolled, 19 a police officer for an infraction of
seniors, 21 juniors, 31 sophomores, j
ltly, however, my
the law. Just
and 41 freshmen. This is approxi­
record went on
mately the same enrollment as there
the rocks.
was at the same stage last year. There
Nearing the end
are several new students. The Mill
of a 700-mile va­
City high school student body wel­
cation trip and
comes the following new members:
witbin six miles
Evart and Regine Brewer from
of home, I was
North Bend; Marvin and Marilyn Mis­
brought to a stop
ner from Prineville; Frances Brunner
by the wail of a
from Woodbury, N. J.; Donna and
siren just after
Donald Ellingson from Detroit; David
passing through a
Hunt from Salem; Dorothy Steinfelt
small town.
from Sublimity; Floyd and Janet Ross ■
Mixed emotions
from Molalla; John Thompson from
stirred my pas­
St. Maries, Ida.; Shirley Shipp from sengers. The young daughter, with
Morton, Tex.; Darlene Billington from visions of her father behind bars, be­
Stayton; Charles Kuhlman, Roberta gan to cry; the son looked at me
Loucks. Shirley Moore, and Paul Thee- with scorn and suspicion; and my
man from Gates. Also the student co-pilot assumed that look of smug­
body welcomes the freshmen who ness which all wives assume when the
graduated from the Mill City grade husband proves himself to be far
school last spring.
from perfect.
On Monday the classes held their
Personally, I was racking my mind
meetings and decided that their of­ in an attempt to discover wherein I
ficers would be:
had erred. The officer soon put my
Seniors: Philip Goble, pres.; Roy mind to rest: I had exceeded the town’s
Podrabsky, vice pres.; Tom Kanoff, 25-mile speed limit.
Lacking any
sec.; Dorothy Downer, treas.; and defense, I was given a lecture and a
friendly warning and sent on my way
Marvin Misner, sgt.-at-arms.
Juniors: Richard Verbeck, pres.; —but my record, of which I had been
Maurice Childs, vice pres.; Virginia so proud, was broken.
Timm, sec.; Donna Bengston, treas.;
Now if I were a big city newspaper
and Frances Brunner, sgt.-at-arms
columnist with a cantankerous dis­
Sophomores: Phil Carey, pres.; Pat position, I would take this opportun­
Nibler, vice pres.; Marilyn Misner, ity to write bitterly of hick town
sec.; Tom Stewart, treas.; Delmar “speed traps”, for that is one of the
Syverson, sgt.-at-arms.
favorite peeves of metropolitan “big
Freshmen. Chuck Kuhlman, pres.; shots” who complain that small towns
Truman Jones, vice pres.; Karen An­ slow them down in their mad dashes
dreassen, sec.; Maurice Bassett, treas.; hither and yon.
On the contrary,
and Eddie Leach, sgt.-at-arms.
however, I wish to congratulate the
Also on Monday the first student officer and the town which hires him.
body assembly was held and this
Most Oregon towns are weak-kneed
year’s student council members were liars in this respect.
While their
installed.
speed limits are prominently displayed,
The Lettermen’s club and the Girls’ the person who obeys them finds him­
Athletic association held their meet­ self highly unpopular as drivers tear
ings and elected their officers. The past him casting angry looks in his
results were: for the Lettermen: Lyle direction for holding up traffic.
Fleet wood, pres.; Dale Andreassen,
In my own case, I suppose I could
vice pres.; Roy Podrabsky, sec.-treas.; have found an excuse: I was nearing
Dick Kanoff, sgt.-at-ai ms. For the the end of a long trip and I was tired.
G.A.A.: Pat Brown, pres.; Geraldine That excuse would havejbeen pitifully
Hamblin, sec.; Frances Brunner, treas. weak though if some unguarded
and Donna Bengston, sgt.-at-arms.
youngster had dashed into my path
The football team has been work­ from behind a parked car.
ing out under the guidance of Coach
I am resolved to be even more care­
Burton Boroughs and Assistant Coach ful in the future.
James Hale. There are two managers
this year. The boys had to work hard
I
»
to be in shape for the football game ! Tax Consultant
Auditor ♦
with the Sweet Home “B” team, there,
at 7:30 Thursday.
The cheerleaders and the song lead­ i
ers were elected Wednesday. They
are: Janet Ross, Pat Brown, Dorothy ¡PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
Downer, and Donna Ellingson for ♦
Bookkeeping, Accounting and
?
Tax Service
*
cheer leaders; Pat Nibler and Ger­ I
aldine Hamblin for song leaders.
Comer 3rd & Marion
Floodlights have been installed on
STAYTON. ORE.
the tennis courts. They are pay lights
¡Telephone
1114
P. O. Box 1321 j
and are turned on for an hour by
putting two-bits in a slot. Unfortun­
ately, however, the clock which was
to be installed was defective and had
to be returned, so, as yet, the lights
cannot be used.
The interior of the building has been
redecorated and an inter-communica­
tion system has been installed. Now,
the office is connected with each class­
room, the gymnasium, the ball field,
and the grade school.
There are two new members of the 1
faculty. Mr. W. I). Hoeye is the in­
dustrial arts director and Mrs. Lor­
raine E. Caughey teaches girls health
and physical education, English, and
Spanish.
Next week all freshmen dread. They '
will be “thoroughly" initiated accord-I
ing. to tradition.
W. N. SIMMONS \
WDebunker
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far What It’s Warth
Scientists who have examined
the stomach contents of many
chicken hawks have exploded the
idea that these birds live on
small chickens which they are ac­
cused of stealing from farmyards.
The truth is that these hawks—
properly called red-shouldered
hawks—live almost entirely on
mice which they catch in the
fields. Instead of being killed,
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The perfection in quality of
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CHOKED .xhthGAS?
4
THAXK HKAVKN8' Most attacks are
Mid
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