Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1953)
7—THE MILI. CITY ENTERPRISE Januarj H. 1953 Wants and Sales If It’s in the Canyon, It’s Advertised in The Enterprise! FOR RENT—One-bedroom duplex in PIANO TUNING and REPAIRS— 20 I AVON COSMETICS Swift addition. Inquire at C. E. years experience—all work guaran COVILLE REAL ESTATE, Mill See Mrs. R. G. Herlofsen, white teed. New and used pianos for sale. house across from Martin's trailer City. Mtt ALVIN WALL, 1320 E. 2nd Ave. court on NW. 7th Ave. Albany, phone 1691R. 51tf Box 658, Mill City. FOR SALE—Wood burning furnace, very reasonable. Mt. States Power FOR RENT—Small furnished house, LOST—900x20 truck tire and wheel Co.. Mill City, Phone 2584. 50tf refrigerator and electric range, city mounted between Mill City and water. Geo Cree, phone 924. 43tf Mehama. Reward for information FOR SALE — Women's skis, boots, and poles, good condition. Write leading to return. Phone 3452. Mill TAILORED SUITS—$55 and up, im Mrs. Richard Budlong, Box 503, City, Santiam Garage. 52-3p I Mill City for information. ported and domestic woolens. Al l-3p terations, cleaning and pressing. MOTOR TUNE-UP SUNDIN THE TAILOR, 196 S. RENTAL HOMES—Modern 2 and 3- at Liberty, Salem. 50tf bedroom, two blocks from school. HEIDT’S AUTO ELECTRIC Arey Podrabsky, phone 1242, Mill Mill City, ph. 2403 MEHAMA WOMEN'S CLUB RUM City. l-3p AGE STORE will be open every FOR RENT 3-room modern ^jouse, EXPERT AUTO and home radio Tuesday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. over furnished, on Marion county side, service, 20 years experience, all Golliet’s Store. 2-3p reasonable. See Kay Colburn at makes. Guaranteed service. Mill City Meat Market. 47tf Stiffler’s Radio and Appliance. REAL ESTATE See us for good buys in the canyon TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING Ma- chines. We sell, rent, repair and area. Listings wanted. swap all makes. Trade your old machine towards a new one. Glen Shelton, Salesman ROEN, 456 Court St.. Salem. C. E. Coville. Broker NS « st side Mill C ity Ph. 2207 WANTED — Baby Sitting; Mrs. Agness A. Allen is available for WANTED TO BUY — Clean peeled baby sitting, nights, days or week Douglas fir poles, delivered to ends in your home, ph. 3424. 2tf Lyons yard. For further informa tion call or write Allen Gould, 1424 SPORTSMEN—Join the North San Filbert Ave., Lebanon, phone 5745, tiam Sportsman’s club now. We are Puget Timber Co. of Oregon. 24tf devoted to game conservation and propagation and need your help. £ WANTED — 34- or 34-h.p. electric Only $1.00 per year, you will have motor. See Frajik Caraway, Mill that much fun at one meeting. City. 2-3p Enquire at. Enterprise office, or see Jerry Coffman, at Ken Golliet’s. 9 NEED A TELEPHONE.’ —Stop in and see the new Lech combination desk or wall phone, also used FURNITURE REBUILT and Uphol stered, latest fabrics and plastics. phones from $10.00 up. Telephone Call 4884 for etsimates. Stayton and Hearing Aid batteries stocked. Upholstery. 38tf Stiffler’s Radto and Appliance. Gooch Logging Supply w % BASSETT’S WELDING SHOP H I ■ Everything for the Logger' I I I Rhone 1111 Phone 116 Sweet Home, Philomath Branch Store Lyons I See W. R. HUTCHESON At Gates Furniture Store WE SELL BETTER CARS FOR LESS! GENE TEAGUE CHEVROLET IT PAYS TO BUY AT HOME! WE ARE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU! We hope you are pleased with our service. t By td Nofziqe' "JOE BEAVER Mom s and Pop s CAFE Mill City FOR SALE T wo feeder pig K. W. Hunt, east city Kingwood ave., ph. 2808. FOR RENT -2-bedroom house, newly decorated outside and inside. Mod ern, See Glen Shelton, Mill Citv. 43t FOR SALE -Oat, vetch hay. per bale $1.15; alta fescue hay per bale 50c; straw, per bale 40e. Etzel Bros., route 1. box 234, Stayton, ph. 14F71 or 14F52. 2-3p WANTED Carpentering, cabinet work, or repairing. Call 1906, C. R. Brewer. Mill City. 2-3p Out of the Woods. By JAMES STEVENS Joe Genetics . . . While up front the boompond shack for shopping, I bought a little spruce tree in the kind of place that used to be called “the dime store." It was labeled "Genuine Minnesota Spruce Christmas Tree”. And these trees were selling. Each specimen had form, symmetry, den sity of branches, and other elements that combined to make a near-perfect table ornament of Christmas tree . character. The trees had been bred I that way, perhaps through seed se lection, maybe by managed pollination and other practices of GENETICS as an applied science in the forest. Now any technically trained for- 4 WHEEL DRIVE WILLYS TAKE YOU THROUGH WHEN OTHERS CAN’T! WHEN IN SALEM Visit “HUDSON CITY With the extra traction of 4 - wheel drive and the power of its high-compres sion HURRICANE Engine, this "go-anywhere" Willys Truck gets through mud, snow and sand tnat stop ordinary trucks. Ask us for a demonstration. 118-in. wheelbase, 53OOlbs.G VW. Home of GOOD Used Cars b’ore«( Service U S Department of A<riruh>ir- Management forests il improving but not fas’ enough We »till have too much timberland loafing—no» growinc HUDSON Sales — Parts — Service SHROCK'S 316 N. Church St. timber " Phone 3-9101 ELSNER Directory - Professional Motor Co SALEM, ORE. • DR. VICTOR J. MYERS ! • Chiropractic Physician ♦ ♦ * ♦ Post Office Building. 2nd Floor Phone: Stayton 2274 Stayton. Ore. WOOD’S STORE General Dry Goods NOTIONS LINGERIE READY-TO-WEAR HOSIERY____ I.CZIERS COSMETICS J. W. GOIN VETERINARIAN STAYTON Phone 4148 Opposite Claude Lewis' Service Station WEDDLE FUNERAL HOME Modem Funeral Service mtatton oregon ♦ I ♦ I). W.REII). Ml). MIKE'S Septic Service: PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Septic Tanks and Sewers Cleaned » Mill City Phone «OI.F.M 3-944M, OOI.IJCCT • 1079 Elm St., W Salem ■ iti I« «• FOR SALE Wood range $25. quire at Mrs. Roland Berry, Gates. l-3p FOR SALE BY OWNER Newly dec orated 2-bedroom home with garag«' and work shop. Utility wired for dryer. Floor coverings through out with wool rug in living room; oil circulator. Priced to sell as owner REAL ESTATE is vacating in three months. New 1952 Detroiter trailer house, 1025 Mill City, $1500.00. 37rs-ft. inside, modern. FOR SALE -1-room unfinished cabin Highway frontage between on 160x140 lot, good well; Hardwick Gates and dam. gas range anti Coleman oil heater, Modern home on 11 acres for also bed and dresser. See Barney sale. Trout, Box 585, Gates, located on Houses for rent. county road in Marion county near saw mill. 2-1 p Stayton I I■ WOMEN TO SEW for spring busi ness. Easy to sew- product, good pay. Sewing machine not essen tial. Write. Kenroe Mfg. Co., York town, Ind. There was a time when “elegance" as applied to meals could have had nothing to do with a budget—but it's not so today. Good taste is the key to everything we eat and wear today, and food, like fashion, sparks a flavor of elegance when good taste is assured with Ac'cent (pure monosodium glutamate). This unique seasoning, which intensifies and holds natural food flavors, has become so well recognized by budget-conscious food pro cessors as their key to good taste, that it is included in over 1000, nationally known brands of canned and packaged foods The house-' wife, taking her cue from commercial food people, is now learning that a shake from the "third shaker” will give he- tastier meals for less at home. Pointers also may be learned from the chef-who must combine, glamor and low-cost in catering to discriminating tastes. Today, Ac’cent is his assurance of flavor in every dish. Chef Ernest of the Waldorf Astoria, who knows as well as anyone, the importance of simple pood taste, passes on his recipe for “Seafood Waldorf” as a suggestion to the homemaker for budget entertaining in elegant style. Buffet service from a chafing dish and the latest accent in fashion lend the final touch of splendor to this relatively inexpensive one-dish meal. SEAFOOD WALDORF J 6 01. cans lobster meat, diced or I lb. fresh cooked lobster meat, diced V? cud dry Vermouth I teaspoon Ac cent (pure monosodium glutamate) 2 cups med um «mte sauce V? cup heavy cream 2 tablespoon» butter or margarine V? lb. fresh mushrooms, slued I tablespoon minced onion I lb. fresh cr quick frozen scallops Melt butter or margarine; add mushrooms; cook 5 minutes. Add onions and scallops; cook 5 min utes. Add lobster; cook, covered, until hot. Add Vermouth, Ac’cent ester could readily identify one of these selectively bred black spruce ’ as a specimen of a family of forest ' plants, and then outline its neighbor- hood, or environment, and the influ- ECOL- ences of such relatioships. OGY, that is. And then he might introduce you to dendrology. You can 1 look that one up for yourself. Popple and Puppies . . . Popple is a species of aspen that 1 grows on the fire-made barrens of | the lake states as alder and vine maple do on the west coast. It is a tree that commonly rots before it can mature into sawtimb«*r. But it has a tough fiber. Since the Cloquet, Minn., fire of 1918, forest products scientists have ben working to convert popple | fiber into consumer items, Now a large Michigan company has foresters at work on the popple problem, not on more ways to utilize the wild weed trees of nature, but on prospects of breeding this vital, tough and pro lific aspen species into a better grow ing domesticated tree—of using spec imens with exceptionally desirable characteristics to create new strains. The great genetical improvements in the species of Indian maize that the Pilgrims found on Cape Cod in 1820 have been made mostly since 1917. The dairy cow is another ex ample of this science at work. On the dark side of genetics are the mod ern monstrosities of dogdom that are shamelessly exhibited at every show of so-called “pure-bred" canines. These puppies are examples of gen etics perverted. The nightmarish and white sauce. over hoti water 10 minutes. in cream;,' heat. Serve on fluffy rice. Mikes 8 to 10 serving*. dogs of the fancy breeders outdo the horrible hodags of the Bunyan myths. For good or ill, the forestry sciences are growing as the trees grow on the land, and we all should pitch in to help make the most of them, as the Minnesota Christmas tree grow ers are doing—and as the growers of Montana Douglas fir Christmas trees are doing. Forestry, in all its branches, has its final and most vital effect as an act on the land. It is through this effect, resulting in more profitable utilization of the tree crops we have and in putting acreage that has been idle or unproductive to work again as tree-growing land, that forestry has sold itself to farmers, industrial exec utives and government official* and legislators. So the foresters are leading a new and mighty march of progress on the 55 000,000 acres of lake states forest land. So they are in New York, which imports 70 percent of the lum ber and 58 percent of the pulpwood consumed in the state. New York now has 4,000,000 acres classified as “idle or unproductive forest land." While up in the small northeast comer of the state alone 18 large pulp and paper mills are showing the way to new markets for tree crops, encourag ing York staters all over to follow the foresters in restoring tree pro duction to their idle land. That's coming competition, friends. These Minnesota Christmas trees are like the proverbial cloud no bigge" than a man's hand. WHITIE’S Soothe Itching, F iery P iles SANTIAM CAFE Dor. t kt wr*. fiery, painful. Itchinc «lmple Piles drive you nearly crazy In 15 minutes CHINAROTD smarts giving yoa wonderful cooling, soothing, temporary fl itting relief from pain, burning and Itch ing ■ r money back Eja-ar.teed Genuine CHUiAJtOIL) costa aly 11.00 at druggUU. SPECIALIZING IN DINNERS DR. MARK HAMMERICKSEN REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST Has moved his Mill City office to Stay ton in the Poet Office Bldg.. 2nd Floor, in the Dr. Victor J. Myers offices MILL CITY DISPOSAL SERVICE Orchestra Every Saturday Night Garbage, ashes, trimmings, etc. weekly pickups $1.50 per month Also light hauling HOME OFFICE: 313 W. FIRST, ALBANY inattBBBBBBnBBBnBBBDBBBBB: léonard Herman Phone 3952 nil