Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1953)
5—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1953 1 of the Detroit dam, where he was a [ construction engineer with the CBI. ................................... .................. . Mr. and Mrs. George Arthurs left Friday morning for Seattle upon re- 1 ceiving news of the sudden death of Mrs. Albert Millsap Mr. Arthur's father, James Moore of In spite of the rain Saturday and that city. Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Mollet, former Mrs. Helen Saucier and .Mrs. Phyllis Sunday the woods on the hills sur- Flatman, attended homecoming at Mt. rounding Gates were full of hunters, residents of Gates, now of Eugene both local and from out of town. were in Gates Saturday on business. Angel Saturday. There has been no time for parties or Mr. Mollet was formerly employed at Detroit dam and still owns property Mrs. Lola Crites, of Carlton, was a other forms of entertainment, every here. body has been out after de^r. dinner guest of Mrs. Ruth Witt last Mr. and Mrs. Rex Hull and family For the purpose of electing two Thursday. Mrs. Crites is recorder and councilmen to fill the exp;red terms returned to Gates recently after hav municipal judge at Carlton. of A.T. Barnhardt and Charles Geibler ing spent the summer at Marion a city election will be hied, Tuesday, Forks. They have rented the Brosig JoAnn Hoffman, daughter of Mr. November 3. Mr. Barnhardt is running place east of town, on the Linn county and Mrs. Russell Hoffman, was home for reelection and Ray Lord for side of the river. from the University of Oregon for councilman. Mr. Lord was a former Major and Mrs. Jack Brown have the weekend. On Saturday the fam councilman and acted as Mayor dur returned to Gates from San Francisco ily attended the Oregon-W’ashington ing his term of office. where Major Brown was met by his game in Portland, and on Sunday the Mayor and Mrs. Mrs. W. R. Hutche wife upon his arrival from Korea. Hoffmans took JoAnn back to Eu- son had as their guests for several He had served with the U.S. Airforce gene. days last week, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip there for the past eight months. He Cann, of Oakland, Calif, Weekend will be here for at least 30 days be Mr. and M rs. Howard Farmen, Mr. guests were Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mc- fore his reassignment. Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Hirte returned and Mrs. Melvin LaVine and Mr. and Allister, from Bend. From Klamath, Calif., at the home with a big buck, the first of the week Mrs. Jack Scott went hunting in Eastern Oregon over the weekend. of Mrs. Walter Brisbin was her daugh from a hunting trip to Prairie City. Howard Farmen got six geese, Mrs. ter, Mrs. Gilbert Brosig. Other guests Farmen one, Melvin LaVine four and at the Brisbin home.over the weekend A Look At Oregon’s Jack Scott two. They stated the wea were Mrs. Brisbin’s son-in-law and 1953 Fire Season daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Hack- ther was really wet. enberg and daughter, Sandra and his Figures compiled by both State and Vernon Todd, superintendent of son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Federal units show a total of 1,543 I schools, was in Portland Friday where Brisbin and son, Greg, all from fires occurred on forests of Oregon past season according to Paul M. I he attended a state meeting of dist Portland. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hudson and Dunn, chairman of the Keey Oregon ' rict superintendents. He attended the annual state-wide conference of the two children, of Salem spent the Green Association. One of the very | Oregon Elementary School Principals’ weekend at the home of Mr. Hudson’s significant fact is that only 473 fires I parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Hudson. were man-caused while the balance I association in Salem on Monday. Joe Novak left Monday for the of 1,070 were caused bjj lightning' W. H. Nelson is convalescing at first visit for 45 years to his boyhood strikes. With heavy rains of last week both the home of his son and daughter-in- home in Cresco, Iowa. He will be the law, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Nelson, after guest of former friends and relatives east and west of the Cascades practi- I cally eliminating the fores fire threat six weeks in the Veteran’s hospital in while there. Mr. and Mrs. Tex Allen, enroute to for this season the Keep Oregon Green Portland. Mr. Nelson is in a wheel chair and would like to have his Seattle from Cleveland. Ohio made a Association will chalk up one of the flying visit to Gates Sunday evening. best fire-free years since 1941 when friends call. They called at the George Clise and this popular forest fire prevention pro Albert Millsap homes. They were resi gram to Keep Oregon Green was Rev. Noble Streeter of the Presby dents of Gates during the construction organized. I terian church was in Corvallis Sunday afternoon and evening and Monday attending a two-day meeting of the Willamette Presbytery. W. B. Shuey and Clyde Rogers attended the Sunday meetings. Mill Ends Rudolph Rada was an overnight guest at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rada, Sunday. He was enroute to Salem for the two-day meeting of the Oregon elementary school principals’ association. Mr. Rada is assistant superintendent of schools in Pendleton. Mrs. P. F. Willoughby arrived in Mill City last Wednesday and is now living with her husband in the house near the W. B. Shuey home. Mr. and Mrs. Willoughby spent Saturday and Sunday in McMinnville taking care of business matters. They returned Sun day evening. Mr. Willoughby is em ployed at The Enterprise office. Dinner guests at the Floyd Jones home on Friday evening were Ardith Jones, Kay Maloney, Russell Forless and Tom Shepherd, all students at the University' of Oregon. They were enroute to Portland where they at tended the Oregon-Washington game on Saturday. Ardith was a guest of Kay Maloney for the weekend. The girls are sorority sisters at the Uni versity. The Christian Woman's Fellowship met Wednesday, October 14, with Mrs. Ed Haynes. The program was in <harge of Mrs. Gladys Chance, with the devotional resented by Mrs. Jull. The program theme was, “The prob lem of the migrant workers, with its challenge to the church.” The next meeting wlil be at the home of Mrs. George Flook, Wednesday, Novem ber 11. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Chaney are spending a busy year attending The University of Oregon. He is getting his master’s in history and she is com pleting her fifth year and earning her permanent teacher’s certificate. Mr. Chaney taught social studies the past two years in the local high school. Mrs. Chaney writes that their three children, Mark 3, Pamela 2, and Cyn thia 8 months, are all happy and well. She says she gets homesick for Mill City when she reads The En terprise. Their address is 1456 E. 19th in Eugene. GATES MONARCH^ I Yes. Monarch of All He Surveys. You, too, can be monarch of those hills to be paid. A checking account at the Mill City State Bank can make you master of the situation with absolute con trol of income and expenditures. Mail your check. Your check is your receipt. Half of your accounting is already done and the bank does the rest. * Forget bad weather, parking difficulties and the merry-go-round of unnecessary calls. Mail your Mill City State Bank check. MILL CITY STATE BANK MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. ¥)u 11 get more than you expect In feature after feature, Ford matches the finest . . . with fine car ride . . . Fine-car build ... and Fine-car V-8 GO! Check these fine car features that are yours when you buy a Ford, the one fine car in the low-price field. You get glass area galore . . . the most in Ford’s field. You get more usable inside space than in any other low-priced car. Seats are foam-rubber-cushioned both front and rear. You get such Ford advances as convenient Center-Fill Fueling and suspended clutch and brake pedals. Rut here are the tig reasons why Ford is worth more when you buy it and when you sell it, too! Built like the finest Up to 80% less road shock Ford has reduced front end road shock (the kind you notice most) up to 80% . And by a perfect teaming-up of rear springs, diagonally-mounted rear shock absorbers and tailored-to-weight front springs, Ford has proved that a car can ride smooth as silk without gas-eating extra weight. Ford’s hull-tight body is sealed against water, dust and draft. Body panels are made of steel of the same quality and thickness as that used in the costliest cars. Ford’s rugged box-section frame has five strong cross members including a special K-bar member which adds extra twist resistance . . , gives longer car life. V-8 or Six power Only Ford in its field offers you a fine-car high- compression V-8 engine . . . the result of Ford’s experience building more V-8’s than all other makers combined. And Ford’s high-compression, low-friction Six is the most modem Six in the indiMtry. Both engines have Ford’s exclusive Automatic Power Pilot which squeezes the last drop of power out of every drop of gasoline. Mastor-Guide power steering Ford Master-Guide is the last word in power steering. It does up to 75% of the steering work for you when you need it . . . yet it leaves you with a natural feel of steering on the straight away. And it helps you control the car on rough, rutted roads. Available on all V-8 models. Fordomotlc Drive It’s the finest, moat versatile of all automatic drives . . . combines the smoothness of a fluid torque converter and the "Go” of automatic mechanical gears. Ford also offers you Overdrive and Conventional drive. in the Wnrlh More’ FORD Hunters who pass the bottle around, may end up six feet under the ground. He drug his gun along the ground, they never heard another sound. KELLOM’S H A M B URGE R STAND Serving Delirious Hamburgers, Coffee. Pie and Ice Cream i Open Daily 2 p. m. to 10 p. m. I Open Sunday 11 a.m. to 10 p. m. | Mill City, Oregon SCHWINN BICYCLES and Bicycle Repairing Toys and Hobbies Camp’s Sporting Goods Stayion, Oregon COME IN . , . SEE . , . VALUE CHECK . . . TEST DRIVE IT TODAYI STAYTON, OREGON IF YOU’RE • HERROLO - PHILIPPI MOTOR CO INTERESTED IN MILL CITY, OREGON