Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1952)
The Sweetheart of the Cora 3—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE_____________________ November 27. M2 (hit of the \\oods OUR LADY OF 1.01 RDES PARISH FIRST PRESBYTERIAN (HURCH Jordan, Oregon Mill City Mass: 1st, 2nd, and 5th Sunday at Sunday School 9:45 a.m. 8:30 a.m. Morning worship 11:00 a.m. Mass: 3d and 4th Sunday 10:30 a m. Music by choir. Rev. Bernard Neuman, SDS, Pastor Young people 6:00 p.m. • • • Evening services 7:30 p.f. Midweek services Wed. 7:30 p.m. ST. PATRICK S PARISH Mehama Lyons, Oregon Morning worship 9:15 a.m. Mass: 1st, 2nd, and 5th Sunday at Sunday School 10:15 a.m. 10:30 a.m. Midweek serv:ces, Thursday 7:30. Mass: 3rd and 4th Sunday 8:30 a m. Rev. Noble Streeter. Pastor Rev. Bernard Neuman, SDS, Pastor • * * • * * COMMUNITY CHURCH LYONS METHODIST CHURCH Full Gospel Preaching Church school at 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 10 a m. Worship service at 11 a. m. Morning worship 11 a.m. Evening service at 8 p.m. Evangelistic service 7:30 p.m. Choir at morning service. Prayer meeting Tuesdays 10 a.m. to Choir practice at 7 p.m. Thursday. Rinke R. Feenstra, Pastor , 3 p.m. « * * Preaching services Wednesday and ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH | Friday 3 p n. Rev. Lee M. Joiner, Pastor Sunday School 10 a m. • * * Morning Worship 11 a.m. Young People’s service Tuesday SANT! A.M CHAPEL night at 7:30 p.m. Lyons, Ore. Evening service 7:30 p.m. Sunday school 9:45 a.m. Prayer meeting and Bible study, Morning worship 11:00 a.m. Thursday at 8 p.m. Young People’s service 7:15 p.m. Rev. W. D. Turnbull, Pastor. Evening worship 7:45 p.m. • * « Prayer meeting every Friday 7:30 p L.D.S. of JESUS CHRIST CHURCH Luster Young, Pastor Detroit * * * Sunday school each Sunday 10 a.m. IDANHA COMMUNITY CHURCH in high school building, Detroit. Sunday school 10 a m. Priesthood meeting 11 a m. Morning service 11 a.m. Zealand Fryer, Presiding * * * Evening service 7:00 p.m. Thursday prayer meeting 7:30 p.m FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Bob Unger. Pastor Sunday school 9:45 a.m. • * * Morning worship 10:55 a.m. FREE METHODIST CHURCH Young Peoples meeting 6:30 p.m. North Mill City Evening Services 7:30 p.m. Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. Thurs., 7:30 p.m. Bible study hour. Morning worship 11 a m. Mr. Hugh Jull, Pastor * * * Evening service 7:30 p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting 7:30 pm CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Phone 1906. 3rd and Juniper, Mill City Rev. C. R. Brewer, Pastor 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. Y’outh meeting at 2:30 each Sun day afternoon. * * • GATES COMMUNITY CHURCH OF CHRIST WITH BLUE BLADE Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. DISPENSER AND Morning worship 11 a.m. STYRENE CASE Lorer? R. Swanson, Pastor • • « ST. CATHERINE CATHOLIC (HURCH, MILL CITY Mass at 9:15 a.m. every Sunday Confessions heard before Mass. Qualify Job Printing at Rev. Maurice Grammond, Pastor The Mill City Enterprise Since 1911 the Sweetheart of the Com has been as famous to tin- American public as the face of famous motion picture personali ties, presidents and international dignitaries. For a few years however, she has been missing now and then from the American scene but again' on millions of boxes of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes she returns dressed in a red and white checked gingham dress with sunbonnet to match and holding several ears of corn. The original Sweetheart of the Corn was fanny Bryant who was a stenographer at the Kellogg Company office in 1911 I he present Sweetheart is a typical American girl in her late ttens with reddish blonde hair. By JAMES STEVENS The Luggers’ Own . . . What’s that you say? "Who is Olive Barber?” Friend, you must be flesh in the Northwest, mighty new to the woods. Take a gander around my boompond shack here and you’ll see newspaper columns with her name at the top stuck up and peeking out almost any where. More are somewhere up there on the main shelf. There you are. in the Ing envelope between the bottle of Old Pawnbroker and the Copen hagen dispenser. Best of all, here’s her new book, “The l.ady anil the Lumberjack". The newspaper columns that Olive Barber used to write show where she has lived and what she has observed in timber towns from Alaska to Coos Bay, while the book, just out in the store-, tells her own colorful and ex citing life story in those places, and tells Curly's with her own. Curly is the logger of the book. . He is one of the kind you meet with the conviction that here is - trian who was born to log and do nothing but 1 log. to do it forever, an indestructible, unstoppable man. Olive's man . . . Frank (Curly) Barber. Logger’s M ife . . . By Ed Nof: rer "JOE BEAVER ' If you are of the woods, or if you have been around the woods at all, you will admire what Olive Barber has to say of loggers' wives. They have an especial champion in Olive. She defends them against all comers, 1 human or inhuman. “Loggers’ wives,” says she, "For one thing, have more dignity than most women. They always wear dresses when out in public. You sel dom or never see them in slacks or Levi-. Not that these breeches are in any way wrong. But loggers are strong for femininity. Their ladies strive to please.” Olive was a school teacher in Washington state 30 years ago when she married Curly. While the "I dos” were still echoing she ! found herself on the way to the Coos Bay wilderness and to a honeymoon in a tent. It was ten years before she and Curly bought a hillside farm home. South of Coos Bay, it could be leached only by boat on a slough. I Life was hard work, tough and lonely going. The lady began to write. At first it was of birds. Olive had become a bird-watcher by hobby and found bird study to be of absorbing interest in her wilderness life. A Coos Bay edi tor. Wendell Webb, now n anaging editor of the Salem Statesman, was and is—the soul of friendliness. He began to publish Olive Barber’s little columns about birds in the Coos Bay Times. The column grew, from 50 to 300 words, from birds to a variety of sub jects of the world and the people about her. Success at Sixty . . . Olive Barber is of the young in heart. So is Curly, now- a boss log- gei at Yakutat, Alaska, where the two spend their summers on the edge of a glacier. She is down here to see her book through publication. Well, friend, light there she sat on the hewn log bench with its gunny sack cushion, and admitted that writ ing a line on the 1909 Model Three Bank Oliver Visible Typewriter was one of the few things she’d ever been afraid to tackle. “Some day it will fall apart, like the One Hoss Shay, and all from just a single poke at a key,” she said. "I won’t risk the poke.” Olive Barber has a kind and com plimentary tongue. "You look like a Methodist,” she said to me. Friend, it has warmed my heart ever since to think I really might look that good. Olive Barber is a wonder. Read that book! Mr. and Mrs. Al Molnar former op J erators of the Richfield station here were visitors from Portland at the Firemen’s annual dance Saturday. PILES (Hemorrhoids) Fistula, F’issure, Itching, Prolapse, and other Rectal disorders corrected. *Mild Treatment Call for examination or write for Free Descriptive Booklet. Don't become incurable, by delay. R. REYNOLDS, N.I). Rectal Specialist 2073 Fairgrounds Rd., Salem, Oregon »TO'X-xYtx-x'X’xiX’xix x x<x x x x X X x-xix!>: x’x:xx;x-xw(xtxtxtXtx x;xix.xnaxixo<nt'x1: $100 X All Building Supply Needs g at H x x — GET YOUR QUALITY JOB PRINTING AT THE ENTERPRISE — F.tcdom from want in tha future depends upon our con servation practices today X M « «- » « MILL CITY MEAT MARKET Kelly Lumber Sales NEW RETAIL LOCATION: East City Limits on Highway 222 Phone 321.'» MILL CITY X-: OLYQriwcxDtwxx'x x x xxx x xirx.xTcxTmotngxauxor x rrxanxtxMXtXMXWKi Quality Meats and Groceries FOOD LOCKERS BOPr-ffNDfR REFAIRS i FROZEN FOODS Automotive Repairs WEARY—While waiting for ••’unspo.-fa tion to »oke him to a rear area this baffle-weary Gl, veteran or .'*e Fight ing on Triangle Hiil, Karra aecided to catch up on hi; corresporr1*." e But weariness *rom week-long f-ght.»,^ overtook him and he ft»i asleep. PMNTilic -a fíne Artf, HEROIC ROLF—Rothe. Choi. V Lucier, pr son chopfo.n shown leaving Colum bus Onio, Penitentiary offer pleading wi»h rioting convicts to return to their cells os they broke out in wild disorder. Modern Equipment F. S. WILSON, ’ re president Osborne Company, Clifton, New Jersey, and Gerald Reynolds, vice pres ident of the Future Formers of America, inspect a pain*.ng honoring the voca tional agricultural teacher used for the Future Farmers of America 1953 cal endar published by Osbome. 300,000 calendar« will be distributed to form families by public spirited businessmen.. TVo Job Too Large ROY ROGERS and Dole Evans ore among the rrony prom nent Americans sponsoring Worldwide d bit Reading, annuol project of the Americon Bible Society From Thonktg.ring to Christ mas, the people of 40 countr es will jointly read the Scriptures to help unite notions in peoce and brotherhood t'EW FOR THE OFFICE—lovely Gerald ne Palmer demonstrates the new $elrr-< 1200 offk« unit which will replace the old type wafer coaler The ur ♦ dispenses dr ->ks at a very low cost to the employer and so^es many manhours. It is manu factured by Selmi« Dspe^sers Inc , long Island C *y N Y or Too Small Guaranteed Satisfaction Your Local Chevrolet Dealer Gene Teague Chevrolet Sales and Service Stayton, Orc.