Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1953)
5—THE Mil I. CITY ENTERPRISE June 25. 1953 FEMME PAGE MILL CITY A Silver Tea to help sponsor a j foreign missionary will be given by ¡the Fiiendship Circle assisted by the ' Presbyterian Women’s association at the home of Mrs. D. B. Hill, Wednes day, July 1, from 2 until 4:30 p.m. Anyone interested is invited to attend. C. E. Coville was in Mill City Gates — The Gates Woman's club The Ed Cookes of Mill . City saw Wednesday on business and reported met with Mrs. George Bailey Thurs their son and brother, Jim, graduated that Mrs. Coville suffered a heart at day. Mrs. Kenneth Martig conducted from the University of Southern Cali tack a few days ago while they were the business session. fornia in Los Angeles recently. They on their way to visit Yellowstone na Mrs. W. R. Hutcheson, chairman of also witnessed his being commissioned tional park. The attack was suffered the building committee reported $47.50 an ensign in the United States Navy. while at Teton national park and they had been donated by members of the Mr. and Mrs. Cooke and their were forced to cancel their trip and North Santiam Chamber of Commerce daughter, Carol, drove via Reno to return home to lower altitudes. Mrs. to whom the Gates women served pie Los Angeles for the graduation cere Coville is resting comfortably at their and coffee at the meeting in Gates. monies. Donna, the Cookes’ eldest home in Turner. RALEIGH HAROLD, Florist, open Net gain of $88.76 was realized daughter, went direct by train to Los from the lunches served at the dedi Angeles from Eugene, where she is Sundays and evenings, flowers tele- cation of the Detroit dam. These enrolled in the University of Oregon. graphed anywhere. Funeral sprays, sums will be added to the building While in Los Angeles the Cooke planters, pot plants, corsages, wed dings, also shrubs and landscaping. fund. family took part in a Shoemaker fam Mrs. Hutcheson also reported the ily reunion. Ed Cooke and daughters 319 W. Washington, Stayton. Phone 12tf floor in the recreation room of the returned to Mill City, Sunday night; 3684. Miss Lynn Brown arrived Wednes Community Center, under construe-1 Mrs. Cooke is still visiting in the Los tion by the club, would be laid soon. Angeles area. Jim will begin his tour day morning from her home at Fair Mrs. Don Miley and Mrs. Dale Rey of duty with the Navy soon. He re Oaks, Calif., to spend a few days with nolds were awarded first prize. Mrs. ceived a B.S. in business administra Miss Diane Peterson visiting her W. R. Struckmeier and Mrs. Walter j tion from the university under a navy friends here. Lynn is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brown, former Brisbin, consolation in games played scholarship, residents here for a number of years. before refreshments. Mrs. Bailey, the — Miss Brown will 1 eturn home on Sat hostess, was assisted by other new urday. officers, Mrs. Martig and Mrs. ____ Miss Kathleen Hartmann i. Louis Mrs. Robert Veness is convalescing Brown. at her home after a serious illness The social meeting of the club will Betrothal Announced be Thursday, July 2 with Mrs. Albert , Announcing the engagement of their , that kept her in a Portland hospital Millsap. No-host dinner will be daughter, Miss Kathleen Hartmann, under special treatment for several served at 1 o’clock. to Wm. Hoffman of Mill City, are days. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hartmann. Mr. Hoffman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hoffman of Mill City. No date has been set for the wed- ding. Miss Hartmann was graduated from (The following is- one of many St. Boniface school in Sublimity this June and Mr. Hoffman was graduated reports to the people of Montana, made by Congressman Lee Metcalf from the Mill City high school. through the columns of The People's Voice, published at Helena. Metcalf is a former Montana supreme court James B. Toomb, Lyons, justice, a W. W. II veteran, and a Democi at.—Editor.) Receives BS Degree By LEE METCALF Oregon State College, Corvallis — (Special)—James Bernard Toomb of Congressman, 1st District, Montana Lyons was among the 1171 seniors The House of Representatives is and graduate students receiving de more than half-way through one of grees at Oregon State college’s 84th its big jobs, appropriating money to annual commencement exercises June run our government for fiscal 1954, 8. He completed work in the school the year beginning July 1. Seven of of engineering and industrial arts for twelve big money bills are through a bachelor of science degree. the House. Permanent? — Instantly! SUNDAY & MONDAY Gates Women Report Mill City Couple Club Building Fund See Son Graduate Veterans Hospital Program Crippled on TOP GRAPE FOODS Gir Olis Super Market On the Highway at STAYTON 69c 3-lb. can 89c Wesson Oil Qt- Snowdrift Shortening ib 87c 2 ibs. 1.73 Mannings Coffee Sunshine Krispv Crackers It. box Standby Chunk Style Tuna, can Sell well Vienna Sausage. 2 cans Potatoes, California White Shafter 10 Ibs. 29c Cucumbers 2 for 15c Radishes and Green Onions bun. 5c 25c 29c 35c Del Monte Pineapple .Juice 16-oz. can Velveeta Bisquick Sperry Pancake Flour 29c 2 lb. loaf 89c Ige pkg 39c I-lb pkg 49c PRODUCE Watermellons Tomatoes lb 43/<C 19c Nature's Goodness ... at its best! MEAT Fryers. Pan Ready lb Luncheon Meat lb Beef Roast tb Pay Cash HERE SAVE at Girods AT STAYTON 69c 59c 49c DE IN M \RTIN and JERRY LEWIS in The Stooge Feature at 5:20, 7:30 Sunday TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY CECIL B, De MILLE Présenta CLAUDETTE COLBERT as Cleopatra THURSDAY. FRIDAY and SATURDAY KIKK DOUGLAS and PATRICK WYMORE Every woman wants manage able hair. Particularly in the summertime when keeping hair well groomed can become some thing of a problem. And, as most women know, a home permanent is the best bet for keeping hair manageabi“. At least, it makes hair stay where you put it. But though home permanents are easy to do, many women pro test the amount of time they take, reports Katherine Potter, head of Procter & Gamble’s Beauty & Grooming Information Service. So now, there’s a new home wave with an instant neutralizing ac- If we are going to abandon the President’s U-point progiam of ‘must’ legislation, as indicated by the Re publican leadership at this time, Con gress may well adjourn by the end of July. One of the appropriation bills still to come at the time this was written has brought a flood of mail into my office. It is the second section of the Independent Ofices Appropriation bill, which will provide funds for the Veterans Administiation. Mail reaching me shows it is prac tically impossible to get a Montana veteran, suffering with a mental con dition, in to a VA hospital in our area although there are such hospitals at Fort Meade, S.D.; Sheridan, Wyo.; Roseburg, Ore.; and American Lake, Wash. No Beds Available for TB Vets Veterans with tuberculosis are hos pitalized at Walla Walla, Wash., where there is also a shortage of beds. As a result, many Montana veterans are going to the Galen State Hospital for treatment, some because it is closer to home, others because there are no beds available at a Veterans Administration hospital. We cannot let this situation con tinue. It is unthinkable that this pro gram, already inadequate, should be cut back. But that is exactly what is happen ing. As pari of the genera) economy campaign, the Administration through the Budget Bureau cut 3279 million from the so-called Truman budget for the Veterans Administration duiing the year beginning July 1. This re duction includes $60 million from the $921 million requested by President Truman for the VA medical and hos pital fund. As a result, Veterans Administra tion experts figure they’ll have to close six or seven Veterans hospitals. They say 4,800 beds will have to be closed in addition to nearly 2,300 al ready held inactive because of a lack of funds. VA officials have prepared a list of hospitals from which those to be closed may be selected. The Veterans hospital at Miles City is reported to be on that list. 21.000 Vets on Waiting Lists It is estimated that more than 24,- 000 veterans, ill and disabled, are on VA hospital waiting lists. Adminis tration leaders have been warned that ( under the present limitations, the VA cannot open 11 new hospitals next year without cutting back or wreck ing operations in existing hospitals. The VA says the 369 million cut j (bringing the figure to nearly 314 million less than in the budget fol i For Guaranteed Cleaning In Technicolor — Plus — With this there's no clock watching, no pouring over and over, no maddening wait for your hair to dry on the curlers. Simply saturate your curls with the neutralizer and your wave is fin ished, ready to take off the rods and set. Not only that, but the neutralizer contains a wave con ditioner which makes your wave so soft you can feel the difference when you torch it. A boon to busy women, this new Lilt. Its instant neutralizing ac tion means you save time for other things you ha'.e to do. JOEL MeCREA and YVONNE DeCAR 1.0 San Francisco this year) is too deep to be absorbed by closing a few beds or a few wards here and there. Unless the cut is restored, the VA has two equally-bad alternatives: (1) close 4,800 beds in addition to nearly 2,300 already inactive—making a total more than 7,000, or (2) continue to operate existing hospitals at their present inadequate level and fail to open any of the 11 new hospitals (which have cost us $136 million plus expensive equipment) scheduled to be completed within the next year. 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