The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, June 21, 1956, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    •—THE MILT CITY ENTERPRISETHl RSDAY, JUNE 21, 1956
%
ner. The charter was also draped in
an impressive memorial service for
Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor, who recently
passed away. A tribute was paid to
the president, with Mrs. Hazel Lewis
in charge. Those taking charge were
Jacquie Harper, Helen Johnston,
Mildred Carr, Blanche Wagner, Nor­
LYONS—Mrs. Ethel Gibbs, presi- ma Pennington, Hazel Neal, Marion
dent of the Rebekah Assembly of Pennington, and Beulah Lewis.
Oregon, paid her official visit to
Guests were present from Mill
Faith Rebekah lodge Wednesday I City, Stayton and Massachusetts.
evening, June 13, with a school of Mrs. Inez Ring, a charter member of
instruction held in the afternoon for Faith lodge, was also present. At
the officers. She was a guest at the the social hour, cake and coffee was
home of Mrs. Alice Huber.
served, after which George Cole
At the evening session, degree ! showed poctures of the Odd Fellow
work was put in in a beautiful man- I Home in Portland.
Rebekah Assembly
President Visits
Lyons Lodge
FORD sets 500-miIe record
at Indianapolis Speedway
I
Again proves nobody outperforms Ford
.. . dramatic demonstration of the kind of
performance and roadability that makes
all your driving more fun in a Ford!
K Ford V-8 hurtled across the brkk and
asphalt surface of tough and testing Indi­
ana,Kills Speedway . . . whirling through
the tight turns and Hashing over the
straight stretches ... to set a mark that no
stock car ever reached Ix-fore!
Previous to Ford's record run, no other
stock car had gone even one lap at Indi­
anapolis at 100 m.p.h., but one of Ford’s
laps was timed at the electrifying speed
<4 113.7 m.p.h.! And Ford at eraged over
107 m.p.h. for the full five hundred miles
. . . close to the average set by the ex­
tremely costly, specially-built racer which
won the Memorial Day “500”!
r
MILL CITY
Phone 7402
Ford fully realizes that the welter of
daunt and counter claims about “racing
victories” (many of them completely con­
tradictory) must l>e confusing and disillu­
sioning to the public. Ford ran this race
against time, over the true "Classic” dis­
tance and at the most famous track in
America, in order to dispel this cloud of
doubt and disbelief and prove that no one
outperforms Ford!
Peter de Paolo, leader of the team of
drivers that piloted the winning Ford,
states flatly: “No other stock car could
have equalled this performance!” And
Pete de Paolo should know, for he was
MEHAMA
Bv Mrs. Jahn Teetera
The Westminister Fellowship of
the Mehama church were hosts for a
skating party Tuesday evening, June
12 with groups from Mill City, Lyons,
and Mt. Pleasant attending. The
young people went to Albany by car
and following skating returned to the i
church for sandwiches and hot
¡chocolate. Fifty-six young people and
¡their chaperones enjoyed the party.
The two weeks vacation Bible 1
school held at the Mehama church I
ended Friday morning with a pro- i
gram and presentation of certificates i
and awards to which parents and |
friends were invited. The average at-I
tendance was 62 and a fine staff j
of teachers and helpers added to the
success of the school.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Smith from i
Richland, Wash., were
weekend I
guests of Mrs. Smith’s brother and I
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Art An-j
deYson.
A special meeting of the Women’s
club was called for Wednesday af­
ternoon, June 13 at the club house
to make final plans for the saddle
club breakfast, which was served
Sunday morning, June 17. After the
short meeting refreshments were
served by Mrs. Frank White and
Mrs. Gerald Rockwell.
Mrs. B. L. Kirsch returned home
the last of the week from a vacation
trip to Bakersfield, Calif., and other
points. She took her granddaughter,
Lai Lonnie to California, for a stay
with her mother. Mrs. Grace Halbert
of Bligh, Calif., returned home with
Mrs. Kirsch for a short visit.
Friday evening dinner guests of
Mrs. Mabel Patton were her cousin
and wife, Mr. an Mrs. Frank Taylor
from Salem.
A Sunday guest at the Ed Castle I
home was J. M. Herberger of Salem. I
Visitors in the afternoon were Mrs.
Lovecik and son, Tom, also from
Salem.
Mrs. Al Molnar and son, Jimmy,
from Oak Grove, spent several days
last week here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Buckler.
Mrs. Cliff Parrott and daughter,,
Peggy from Gold Beach, visited last
week with Mrs. Pearl Allaway.
Mrs. Jim Hudgins arrived at the
Lou Kirkland home Friday evening
from Arizona where she has been for
several months. Her mother, Mrs.
Kirkland has been in Santiam Me­
morial hospital for some time. She is
improved at this time.
Announcement was received here
of the birth of a daughter, June 10,
to Mr. and Mrs. Jim Sanford of B>g
Sandy, Mont. The new arrival, who
has an older brother, has been nam­
ed Carla Diane. Mr. and Mrs. H. W’.
McCarley are grandparents.
the first driver to win the “500” Classic
with a better than 100 m.p.h. average.
And now he comes back w ith a group of
drivers to establish a stock car record with
the great '56 Ford!
Ford wrote this new mark large and
bold in the record books. And the uhole
Ford did the trick. From the hood-full of
throbbing horsepower to the road-hugging
rear end. Ford demonstrated that it has
wh.it it takes to make your driving more
enjoyable. Convince yourself that driving
.v Ford can be real fun. Test drive a '56
Ford. There’s a set of keys waiting for
you, so come in and see us soon.
PHILIPPI MOTOR CO
THE MILL CITY
ENTERPRISE
Entered as second class matter No­
vember 10. 1041 at the post office at
Mill City, Oregon, under the Act of
March 3. 1879.
Marion-Linn Counties, per year 13.OU
Outside, Marion-Linn Counties S3.56
national
editorial
NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
Telephone 2651 or 7605
DON W. MOFFAT! Editor-Publisher
«
Yes it’s dad who sets the ex­
ample for son with clean well
groomed clothes. And the best
way to assure son followiag
this fine example is to let us
give his clothes the same
cleaning care we give to dad’s
PHONE 3418
NUMETHOD
4b HOUR SERVICE
Mill City, Oregon
SnmiertiM Eating
is hi ii Oregon
f lAlftl FIE1B
Nrat Ecmaot
Ori|ii WbMt L n (V
L iws liifiit
PwUlM I.OtlfM
Here we live in the one spot in
the world where the finest straw­
berry shortcake Is possible. Our
Marshall variety strawberries
are the finest berries known for
flavor and richness. Oregon's
dairy products meet the high
standards set by the nation's
dairy industry. And of course,
the flour used in your shortcake
is the finest baking flour known
... made of soft wheat grown in
Oregon.
STAYTON
Phone 2524
Great TV, Ford Theatre, Station KPTV, Channel 6, Thursday, 9:30
Time for
SOMETHING SPECIAL!
*the light
refreshing
ORICON HAS AU IT TAXIS to give
you a summertime of fine straw­
berry shortcake eating. The
wheat growers and strawberry
growers have encouraged your
grocer to make “specials'* this
week so you will be able to give
your family all they want of this
super dessert. Your baker too,
will be featuring many delicious
shortcake treats. Particularly
handy are the shortcake dessert
cups. However, If your idea for
shortcake is crunchy, golden bis­
cuits, here's an old-fashioned
recipe which is a real snap... and
made better because of Oregon
Wheat
beer
Shortcake Biscuits
Combine: S cups biscuit mix
<4 cup melted butter
H cup milk or light cream*
Mix ltchtly until blended. Turn out
oa lightly floured board or cloth and
knead 4 or S times. Cut in large
rounds. Rake at VO degree« 1J min­
ute« or until golden brown.
*’o make o 'orga »ke-'ka fo cvt in »tee«
or Wuo'ri odd
cup milk or creorn.
sail I ghtly ond toreod in g-eoted baking
pan. Bole ot 425* obovt 20 minute«.
Satisfying In every way. eye-appeal­
ing and mouth-watering; there Is
nothing that tells you eo well that
summer 1a really here. Try Straw-
berry Bhort.-ake tor enacktlme. dee-
eart-tlme. party-time or anytime . ..
eervn plenty.
rieoioni reword
lot a rob wall dona! »••ahi blottom» and fragrance«
vary offro dive helper 1
Ar«t notvroRy coll, for *e hgM. refrethmg bear .. Blifi Wemhord. Ditcovar for yov'talf ma light.
rafrethmg beer * *• b< »M, naw am><«e'Mcy package .. me light refrathmg bear
*o» be*or»ga «men H « *"’« »or «omarting «pec-all
RlMMSTt «.„„„„I,,
te 1»
year AarWeke. rwa. the rtw l re Orepen
■ ti e Me« in rawr AwrVaa«o ba»«a «1»«
rw «*• weadaU aaergy ter rfca hw, www-
mee mem*« Sv cem-*vHn« rtah hedv
«retain.
OXtGCh WMtXT COMMISSI»
Mb s. w lot*. ptuotnon. oat
goo
O regon W heat