Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1952)
' to supervise a construction job for 3—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE_____________________ October 16. 19.32 Kaiser aluminum company. Mr. MILL CITY I i the Pinkston took a crew of eleven men IN OUR ♦ 4 ST. CATHERINE CATHOLIC CHURCH. MILL CITY Mass at 9 a.m. every Sunday. Confeaaions heard before Mass. Rev. Maurice Crammond, Pastor • * • OCR LADY OF LOVRDES PARISH Jordan. Oregon Mass: 1st, 2nd, and 5th Sunday at 8:39 a.m. Mass: 3d and 4th Sunday 10:30 a.m. Rev. Bernard Neuman, SDS, Pastor • * * ST. PATRICK'S PARISH Lyons, Oregon Mass: 1st, 2nd, and 5th Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Mass: 3rd and 4th Sunday 8':30 a.m. Rev. Bernard Neuman, SDS, Pastor • * * LYONS METHODIST CHURCH Church school at 9:45 a.m. 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 * » • ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHl’RCH Sunday School 10 a.m. Morning Worship 11 a.m. Young People's service Tuesday night at 7:30 p.m. Evening service 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting and Bible study, Thursday at 8 p.m. Rev. W. D. Turnbull, Pastor. • • • L.D.S. of JESUS CHRIST CHURCH Detroit Sunday school each Sunday 10 a.m. in high school building, Detroit. Priesthood meeting 11 a.m. Zealand Fryer, Presiding * * • FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sunday school 9:45 a.m. Morning worship 10:55 a.m. 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 » « « CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 3rd and Juniper, Mill City Sunday 11 a.m. Wednesday meeting 4th Wed. 8 pm. • • • DETROIT CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. Preaching at 11 a.m. by James Stock, minister. Youth meeting at 2:30 each Sun day afternoon. P. W. Hale, candidate for county with him for the job which is ex- commissioner was in town Monday ■ pected to take two months. campaigning and meeting his many Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hunter visited friends. I relatives and friends in Anacortes, The electric power was off for 20 Wash., and Vancouver, B.C., over the GATES COMMUNITY CHURCH minutes again this afternoon at 1:45. | weekend. OF CHRISI Mrs. Claude Bruder was taken to Shirley Veness celebrated her 7th Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. birthday with an outdoor luncheon and the Salem General hospital for med Morning worship 11 a.m. Lorer R. Swanson, Pastor play party Saturday, followed by at ical attention last week. George Vet- • • • tendance at the children’s matinee. eto and Mr. Bruder were in to visit FREE METHODIST CHURCH Her guests were: Mary Ann and Linda Mrs. Bruder Wednesday evening of North Mill City They report she is im Bassett, Ray Yankus, Ellena Nelson, ' this week. Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. Donna Marttala, Laura Lee, and her proving. Morning worship 11 a m. Mrs. Mary Futter, grandmother of sister, Carol Veness. Evening service 7:30 p.m. Marcand Tony Botohby is visiting at Mildred Ginn and Lydia Granes, Wednesday prayer meeting 7:30 pm missionaries for many years in India, the James Armstrong home and taking Phone 1906. care of the boys while their parents Rev. C. R. Brewer, Pastor will be at the Assembly of God church, are in Helena, Mont., this week. Mr. Thursday evening at 7:45, October 23. • * • IDANHA COMMUNITY CHURCH All friends and those interesetd in mis Armstrong’s house there was demol Sunday school 10 a.m. sions are invited to hear them, accord ished by a gas explosion last week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wolverton Morning service 11 a.m. ing to Rev. W. D. Turnbull, pastor. were visitors in Mill City on business Evening service 7:00 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Don Peterson and Thursday prayer meeting 7:30 p.m. j this Sunday and Monday. They are three daughters, Diane, Sylvia and Bob Unger, Pastor living in Tacoma. Wash., where Mr Susan visited in Eugene at the home • * « Wolverton is employed on a Tacoma of Walt Peterson and family over the FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH paper. The Wolvertons are former weekend. While there they called on Mill City owners of The Enterprise. the Tony Ziebert family in their new- Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Mrs. Victor Thomas is expecting her Morning worship 11:00 a.m. home. The Zieberts have a beautiful son Cpl. Douglas Thomas home from Music by choir. new home just south of the fair I Wackenheimer, Germany, where he Young people 6:00 p.m. grounds in Eugene at 1610 Friendly [ has been stationed with his unit of Evening services 7:30 p.f. avenue. anti-aircraft. He is expected home Midweek services Wed. 7:30 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Pinkston and Mehama j before Christmas. daughter Jo flew to Jamaica last week Morning worship 9:45 a.m. The city council at a special meet Sunday School 10:45 a.m. ing Wednesday evening ordered seven Midweek services, Thursday 7:30. new mercury lights installed along Rev. Noble Streeter. Pastor. the new highway right-of-way. The * * • council is calling a special election COMMUNITY CHURCH for the purposes of filling vacancies Full Gospel Preaching on the council early in December. Can Sunday school 10 a.m. didates should get their petitions Morning worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic service 7:30 p.m. signed up and turned in to the city Prayer meeting Tuesdays 10 a.m. to clerk as soon as possible so that a 3 p.m. date can be set. Preaching services Wednesday and The Mill City Lions club met in the Friday 8 p.m. Presbyterian recreation rooms at 7 Rev. Lee M. Joiner, Pastor p.m. Monday for the regular weekly » » • business session. Vernon Todd is SANTIAM CHAPEL president of the club this year. Din Lyons, Ore. ner was served to the 16 members Sunday school 9:45 a.m. present by a committee from the Pres Morning worship 11:00 a.m. byterian church women. Young People’s service 7:15 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Rambo, George Evening worship 7:45 p.m. See or Call Collect and Laura Jo. were in Salem over th* Prayer meeting every Friday 7:30 p. i weekend visiting at the Steve Champ WALTER W. GRAY Luster Young, Pastor home. The occasion marked the birth day anniversary of Mrs. Rambo’s mother, Mrs. Champ. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis and two THANK HEAVENS' Most attacks are Just acid children of Valset i visited her father, 1049 Second St. Phone 23870 indigestion. When it strikes, take Bell-ans Cleve Davis, over the weekend. Mrs. tablets. They contain the fastest-acting SALEM, OREGON Davis is a former Mill City high school medicines known to doctors for the relief of heartburn, gas and similar distress. 2S<. graduate. CHOKED -2L GAS? Fiber Fluí Insulation Co. DEMORE? WF0R? Before this year, if you wanted a big-car ride ... a high-compression engine ... a complete choice of interior-exterior appointments ... or a curved 4 one-piece windshield and a car-wide rear window, you had to pay hundreds of dollars more. Now FORD offers all these features at no extra cost. It’s the one fine car in the low-price field. Lake io minutes and “Test Drive” a Ford. You’ll agree ... you can pay more but you can’t buy better. Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll MILL CITY MEAT MARKET Quality Meats and Groceries FOOD LOCKERS FROZEN FOODS Eat at the INSIDE CAFE WE SPECIALIZE IN Rib Steaks & T-Bones Chicken & Dumplings Every Sunday every family is entitled to... RICHER MILK- LOWER PRICES Vote 332 X YES for a FAIR MILK LAW The MILK PRODUCTION AND MARKETING ACT on your November ballot will give the people of Oregon a FAIR milk law—fair to consumera and producers alike. It will do away with state enforced milk prices, by which the present unjustified middleman’s margin is protected by law. It will permit the lower pricing of cash-and-carry milk, relieving store customers from paying the higher costs of home delivery whether they use it. or not. It will protect fair farm prices. Don’t bo deceived by these LIES about the new milk bill A reckless, unscrupulous minority of selfish interests is telling bare faced lies about milk. These inter ests are preying upon the fears of Oregon mothers for the health of their children. Behind a misleading front of baby pictures they make a false emotional appeal. They hope this will keep you from forming judgments based upon the truth. We herewith quote some of these lies and accompany them with verified facts. The lies are quoted directly from campaign literature of the minority group of milk interests leading the fight against the new milk bill. LIE No. 1 "Baby's sanitary milk supply endangered." This is a downright falsehood, as shown by the following statement by Dr. Thomas Meador. Portland city health officer: "Sanitary regula tion* for milk are set up by the state department of agriculture. Re peal of the eresent milk control law in favor of the proposed new law hacked by the Affiliated Milk (Lom- mittees of Oregon would have no effect whatsoever on the sanitary requirements set up by the state law. in addition to the state regula tions on purity of milk, Portland has its own milk code, the operation of which would be effected in no way by repeal of the milk control law." LIE No. 2 "Th* new substitute milk control initiative . . . could disrupt your steady milk sup ply" and "put Oregon's many small dairymen and distribu tors out of business." Li* No. 2 is a complete reversal of the actual facta. While our popula tion has increased by almost 60% our dairy farms have decreased hy 19%, the number of dairy cows is down 23% and our milk produc tion has decreased nearly H,'r. Here are the figures from "Agricultural Statistics" issued by United States Bureau of Agricultural Economics: Herrold-Philippi Motor Co., Stoyton » NUMBER OF DAIRY COWS IN OREGON 1934........................... 263,000 1951........................... 202,000 This is a decrease of 23% since 1934. MILK PRODUCED IN OREGON (in pounds) 1934............... 1,323.000,000 1951............... 1,208,000,000 This is a decrease of over 7H% since 1934. POPULATION IN OREGON (Oregon Blue Book) 1930........................ 953,786 1950........................1,521,341 During the decline of the dairy industry in Oregon the population increased 59 % over almost the same period. How has Oregon made up this deficiency in its m-lk supply? The answer is largelv in the fact that Portland get* the ar—ter part of its milk from the neighboring State of Washington, which has no state controls that limit milk production. The Oregon Producer-Distribu tors Association, composed of small dairymen who produce and dis tribute their own milk, has an nounced its support of the new milk hill with these words: "Under Oregon milk control (in effect since 193 4) the number of pitoducer-distributcrs has shrunk from 600 to lest 'han 10O. Unless we organize we will find ourselscs out of business.'* //» the fate of these iocfi the noisy opponents of the now milk bill art (/aiming fa be the friends of the small dairymen. eo«T trr msf tits foot rou von j « x ns. AFFILIATED MILK COMMITTEES OF OREGON ra «4. - sm»<.a was iw^ « NUMBER OF FARMS IN OREGON AU Forntt Dotry Fortt» 1930.......... 31,938 ».150 1950.......... 59,627 6,618 While the total of all farms increased 15% the number of dairy farms decreased 19%. u <>,. 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