The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, February 05, 1953, Page 6, Image 6

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    Oregon Loggers Cut
20% Production
February 5, 1953
6—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
HUCKLEBERRY FINN
Salem — Loggers removed 8,704,-
487,000 board feet of logs from Ore­
gon forests during 1961, according to
Vance Morrison, administrative as­
sistant for the state forestry depart­
ment. This figure was over 20 per­
cent of total U.S. production.
Total cut was an increase of 814 |
million board feet over the 1950 log
harvest. Cash income value to the
state of Oregon from the forest pro­
ducts manufactured from the timber
was estimated at approximately 1900
million.
eluded in the county totals.
Douglas county led all other coun-
Leading log producing county in
ties in the state with a total of 1,-
214,513,000 board feet harvested. Lane eastern Oregon was Grant with a
was second with 1,149,975,000; Coos total harvest of 129,569,000 board
third with 664,544,000 and Tillamook feet.
Morrison reported that 7,309,673,000
fourth with 554,155,000, These totals
board
feet of logs were removed from
include logs harvested from Bureau
of Land Management tracts. Timber
'_____ lands administered by the state for­
cut from National Forests is not in- ester; 1,216,000,000 board feet from
IT’S AMAZING!
the National Forests and 178,814,000
board feet from the Indian Service
lands for a grand total of 8,704,487,-
000 board feet of timber. These fig­
ures do not include volumes removed
in poles, piling and wood-cutting op­
erations.
The forester advised that initial or
first logging was started on approxi­
mately 480,000 acres of timberlandsj
in the state Salvage logging opera­
tions were conducted on 272,309 acres.
HINTS FOR
HOMEMAKERS
KEEP FAN BUSY
ALL WINTER LONG
by the
Gtutrt! EJtcIric CoHiMutrri
I
IF YOU OWN 3 ACRES OR MORE
SEEDLINGS MAY BE PURCHASED
FROM STATE FORESTER.
BE PLANTED IMMEDIATELY AFTER
Is it cold outside? Turn on your
fan!
In the wintertime, many rooms do
not heat evenly. Air at floor level may
be cold, while a few feet above the
floor the air will be warmer and more
comfortable. But a fan, properly
placed, will circulate the heated air
and give your home a more even dis­
tribution of heat. It will also do away
with the drafts so often found in
homes during the cold weather.
If your room is heated by a radia­
tor, set the fan about three feet from,
and in front of, the radiator, and turn
it so that the air will blow directly
into the radiator.
WDebunfcei
JOE BEAVER
BY JOHN HARVEY FURBAY PH D
INJURIE5 ARE NOI THE
CHIEF HAZARDS OF
FOOTBALL
I
ON THE DAY OF PLANTING KEEP
ROOTS DAMP WITH WET IOSS OR
BY DIPPING IN PUDDLF LI 'E THIS.
If you have a warm-air heating
system, place the fan three feet from
a register and turn it so that the air
will be directed away from the register.
You'll also lind a fan invaluable for
quick-drying clothes indoors if the
outside weather is inclement (and
you don't have an automatic clothes
dryer). Just place the fan at one end
of the clothesline so the breeze strikes
the lower edges of the clothes. Or if
you use a revolving clothes rack, set
the fan at a level with the clothes—
and about three feet away—and turn
it on at high speed so that air will
blow directly into the clothes.
Remember, too, that clothes need
airing, even in the winter. You can
air a closet full of clothes easily by
setting a fan in the doorway and run­
ning it at high speed to force
air out of the closet.
Quality job printing at
The Mill Citv Enterprise
Although parents usually do
most of their worrying during the
football season Decause they fear
bodily injuries to their sons, the
truth is that broken bones are not
the major hazards. Doctors say
that the greatest danger to foot­
ball players lies in injuries to the
heart and lungs, due to the vio­
lent form of the game. It is
recommended that every player
be given a thorough physical ex­
amination frequently, and that the
playing season be approached by
building-up exetcises.
Fore«t Service, U. S. Department of Agrirultui e
PUCE TREE IN HOLE AT CORRECT
DEPTH THIS DEPTH IS SHOWN BY
COLLAR MARK ON STEM SPREAO
PACK SOIL FIRMLY AROUND SEED­
LING TO PREVENT FROST HEAVING
< ROOTS FROM DRYINGOUT.
"To keep your Christmas tree green and moist cut off the butt diag­
onally an inch above the original cut, and keep the tree standing in
water.”
ROOTS ( PACK WITH MOIST SOIL.
PLANT A TREE-KEEP OREGON GREEN
COOD HEALTH
OREGON STATE BOARD OF FORESTRY
SALIM,
«wwx«»
GEORGE SPAUR
OREGON
STATE FORESTER
„
*1
Hot flashes" of Change of Life stopped
or strikingly relieved
In 63-80%’ of the cases
in doctors’ tests!
• Those suffocating "heat
waves" — alternating with ner­
vous. clannny feelings — and
accompanied often by restless
irritability and nervousness —
are well-known to women suf­
fering the functionally-caused
diatressof middle life "change"!
You want relief from such
suffering. And—chances are
you can get it. Thrilling relief'
Thanks to tiro famous Lydia
Pinkham medicines!
•In doctors'tests. Lydia Pink­
ham's Compound and Tablets
brought relief from such dis­
tress tn 63 and 30% I respective­
ly) of the cases tested. Com­
plete or strtking relief!
TbtvMndl Hove
Answer to Question No. 1
Brneftr-d
Amazing, you say? Not to the
many thousands of women who
know from experience what
these Lydia Pinkham medi­
cines can do!
Their action — actually — Is
very modern They exert a sci­
entifically calming. soothing
affect!
Try Lydia Pinkham’s on the
basis of medical evidence' See
if you. too. don't gain blessed
relief from those terrible hot
flashes" and weakness so com­
mon in "change of life "
Don't put it off' Get Lydia
Pinkham's Vegetable Com­
pound or netc. improved Tab­
lets with added iron (trial
only 59« L
Wonderful — too
functional pains,
"dragged-out" feelings and
other discomfort of monthly
menstrual periods!
Almost all women must work
during pregnancy — either at
every-day ,iousehold chores or in
business, Work during preg-
nancy is advisable. if not too
strenuous, since it helps keep the
Her
mind occupied.
mother’s -------
.
phvsician will advise her on the
tne
kind and extent of work she can
perform with safety.
fever has been reduced mere
sharply than those from any of
the other principal communicable
diseases of childhood. The de­
velopment and widespread use of
modern drugs have greatly re­
duced the death rate.
Answer to Question No. J:
Everybody has a temperature.
In humans, normal temperature
is 98 6 degrees Fahrenheit. A per­
son has fever when the tempera­
Answer to Question No: 2:
ture of his body goes above nor­
__
Scarlet ____
fever was_
once the mal Fevers are an indication that
____ of thousands of childhood the body is working to combat
cause
deaths in the United States, but some illness High temperatures
has been brought under control can be a sign of serious illness.
to the extent that today the dis­ Medical advice should always be
ease is responsible for fewer than prompt in such cases
. CopvnsM IMS by Health Informs-
70 deaths annually. In fact, the
number of deaths from scarlet I tMNi FoundaUon)