The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, June 18, 1959, Page 8, Image 8

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

    mill. The only joker was that the s—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
power plant had to shut down at 11 THURSDAY. JUNE IS. 1M»
p. m. each night to rebuild the water
level at the company’s reservoir.
You Find the Best In
This reminisces Nils Hult, presi­
dent of the firm which now operates
modern plants at Junction City and
Horton, was a wonderful arrange­
when you shop regularly
ment for young bucks who were court­
ing their sweethearts—if they could
at our meat and grocery
manage to stick around the living
room until 11 o’clock.
store.
• • •
See mb about a Locker Today.
Scale Your Fish Hydraulically
There’s an easy way to clean that Order one and have it ready
steelhead, salmon or trout you may
for fafi.
be lucky enough to hook in some Tree
Open 7 Days A Week.
Farm stream or elsewhere.
Above are three future Mill City citizens. They are
Simply lay it out on the lawn, put
the children of Mr. and Mrs. Lavem G. Ohrt. From
'your foot on its tail and turn the hose
left to right are Leland Wayne Ohrt 15 mönths
; on it from a low rear angle. A hard
old; Cathy Ann Ohrt 2 years and Christine Marie,
stream of water will flip the scales
off in a matter of moments.
4 years old.
___
Not too hard, though, or you’ll have I
Mill City
I fish all over the yard. Also, it won’t Phone 2642
I for industry nationally.
work
on
catfish,
perch,
bass
or
other
T'r e report sa.d that, nationally, 86
| per cent of all forest planting is be­ I species.
ing d ne on privately owned lands.
By John E. Benneth
Along The Lead Line
Tree planting has more than doubled
Aerial seeding of new forest is in­ in the last five years.
Some 340 students from four Coos
creasing by leaps and bounds nation­
, County high schools planted tree
ally, and greatest use of this new re­
seedlings in a recent Keep Oregon
Cupid Wore Calk Shoes
forestation technique is on forest in­ I All the electricity you can use fer [ Green project with 25,000 seedlings
PROPERTY
dustry lands in Pacific Northwest. 'a dollar a month!
' supplied by Coos Bay Pulp Corp.,
values
Some 32/306 acres of industry Tree
A That
nat ’s s tne
aeal
wmen
auiv
euu,-
Empire,
and
the
State
Forestry
De
­
the deal which Hult Lum-
Farms and other private forest lands bej. Cu offerea neighboring folk back partment. Bay Area JCs served a hot
were aerially seeded in the Pacific in liMMj when the pioneering family lunch to the planters with funds con­
Northwest last year, according to the lim ua¿ ruulilng a water-power tributed by Evans Products Co., Coos
Department of Agriculture. This was plant lor it* then Clackamas County Head Timber Co. and Menasha Ply­
63 per cent of the 51,848-acre total
wood. . . Nearly one million water­
fowl were counted in Oregon during
t^e annual mid-winter waterfowl in-
sntory — the highest count on record
JUST HOW FAR
and a 53 per cent increase over the
previous year. . . . One reason to use
WOULD YOUR I
wood: Rust-Oleum Corp., produer of
rust-preventing coatings, estimates
COVERAGE GO?
•urrent national losses due to rust
at about |75 billion annually. Crown
Zellerbach Corp, loggers haul their
Would your present fire In­
timber harvests over a 2,020-mile net­
surance cover replacement
work of rock-surfaced and dirt roads.
The company’s forest-highway system
costs at today’s higher fig­
would reach from Seattle to Milwau­
ures? If you want to play
kie, Wis., if stretched into a single
line. . . . What is conservation,
safe, better look Into the mat­
George W. Reynolds, editor of the
ter now.
Wyoming Wildlife, puts it this way: 1
“Conservation is,- when the fat’s
NO OBLIGATION
boiled out, wise use. Conservation is
enjoying without waste. Conservation
in resource use with an eye on tomor­
D. B. HILL INSURANCE
row Conservation is the thing we
practice now so that we can enjoy
its benefits now and next year. Con­
' COMPANY
servation is just common sense back­
ed up by technical know-how."
Citizens of the Week
MEAT and GROCERIES
Mill City
Meat Market
TIMBFRUNE
||
SUBSCRIBE TO THE Mil.I CITY
ENTERPRISE TODAY! S3 BO a Year
Last Frentier Resort
Phone 5844
Gates, Oregon
ANNOUNCING!
New Summer Hours
Open 7 Days A Week
Restaurant Opens 11:30 a. .m
Pool Open; 1 p. m. - 9 p. m.
SWIM TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE
12 Days
s5.00
About that boulder
in your eye
“Got something in my eye,”
the customer »aid. “Feea
like a boulder. How about taking it out?” He
was hurting and wanted help then and there. U o
pharmacist remembered hearing about another
man whose “something” turned out to be a steel
splinter embedded in his eyebalL He advised him
to see his physician. Prompt surgery saved his
sight. So, we're careful. And if we seem overly
cautious sometimes, remember—we're pharma*
cists, not physicians. We work a-frA doctors, dis­
persing the drugs and medications they preset. m .
But we don’t practice medictne.
MILL CITY PHARMACY
Dependable Prescription Service
Phone 6607
Mill City, Oregon