The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, October 01, 1959, Page 6, Image 6

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    al grandparents are Mr. and Mrs
Chris McDonald formerly of Mehama
and now of Tumalo. The Allen Mc­
3» Mrs John Teeters
Donalds are in Monterey while he is
The Rev. James Hardy and B L- attending Army Language school.
Kirsch went to Waldport last Tues­
Visitors at the Frank Buckler home
day to attend the meeting of the last Wednesday were Mr. Buckler’s
Willamette Presbytery that was held sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and
there.
Mrs. R H. N’iemyer of Salem.
A meeting of the church elders and
Mr- and Mrs. Perry Shelton and
the Christian education committee I two children of Salem visited here
was held in the Fellowship rooms of | Sunday afternoon-
the Mehama Community Presbyter­
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Branch
ian church Saturday evening, Septem­ were called to Babbitt, Nev., the first
ber 26 Burton Al vin, dire tor of of the week by the death of Mr.
Christiau Education for the Synod Branch's sister, Mrs. Darrell King.
of Oregon, was present at the meet­ Mrs- King, who visited here earlier
ing to discuss the role of the session this summer has been in poor health
and the Christian education commit­ i for some time.
tee in the church work.
Garry Rice, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A 2c and Mrs- Richard Garland, Tom Rice spent several days last
who have been spending a leave vis­ week in Santiam Memorial hospital
iting Mrs- Garland’s parents, the for rest and treatment.
Tom Rices, left Friday for Grea.
Sunday guests at the Charles Crook
Falls. Mont-, where he is stationed home were Mr and Mrs. Ted Jacoby of
with the Air Force-
Stayton and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mr. and Mrs. William Longfellow | Crook and daughters, Barabara and
visited a couple of days last week Alyson of Mill City.
with the Chris McDonalds at Tumalo.
__________________
Preschool classes started here
i Tuesday, September 22 with an enroll­ Lyons Extension Unit
ment of 18. The classes are held on
Tuesday and Friday mornings in the Observes Rally Day
church basement with Mrs. James
LYONS — The Lyons Extension
Hardy as teacher.
unit observed their Rally day and
The pre-school mothers held a first meeting of fall Thursday with
CHECK OTHER SALEM FEDERAL ADVANTAGES short meeting following classes Fri­ their meeting held in the basement of
day morning and decided to hold two I the Lyons Methodist church- A pot
food sales during the year. The first luck dinner was served at noon. A
* Friendly Fast Service
i sale will be held Saturday, October i short business session was held with
* Savings Insured up to $10,000 by F. S. I. C.
31 and will feature home made Hal­ Kay Lindemann presiding. Chairmen
’en “Trick or Treats ”
of the following standing commit­
* Save — By Mail — We Pay Postage Both Ways lowe
Mr and Mrs. Eugene Manock and tees were appointed
Membership,
two children of Salem were Friday Rev. Ruth Cotton and Gypsy Weav­
* Customer Parking — Lot Next Door
night and Saturday morning guests er; luncheon, Eleanor LaMunyan;
at the Manse with the Rev. and Mrs- ACWW. Alta Bodeker; Health and
.James Hardy and family.
Alma Olmstead.
The Allen C McDonalds of Monte­ 'Safety,
The October meeting will be held
rey, Calif., are announcing the birth Thursday, October 22, and subject of
of a son on September 21. The baby the day will be “Make Mine Pie ” The
weighed 7 pounds lounce and was leaders will be Gypsy Weaver and
560 STATE STREET
SALEM, OREGON
1V11
named Christian Emery. Maternal Kathleen Manning. Special events for
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs Boyd October will be the District IV meet­
E Norton, Stayton Rt. 1, and patern-I ing in Albany, October 11-14; Na-
Open Friday Night« Til 8 Closed Saturday From The I st
S—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, ¡959
Automotive 4 Industrial
Maintenance
Welding, Diesel Engine
Service
Shop or Field
Deleo Batteries
Factory Equipment Ignittoa
Parte
Dealer for Airoo Welding
Product»
Hoover's Repair
Jim and Very! Hoover
Phone 2602
MW Otj
WE HAVE
• Hobbies
• AthleUe Gda.
• Fishing Tnefcle
• nSwSa g Comp.
• Boat* and TraOera
• Rod and Reel R epa ir
• Schwinn Bike« A Repair»
CAMP’S
SPORTING GOODS
185 First BL
Stayton, Oregon
NEW and USED
Furniture
♦
♦
♦
♦
CARPETING and
LINOLEUM
WHEREYOU SAVE DOES
MAKE A DIFFERENCE!
Salem Federal’s
Convenient Location
MEHAMA
Per Annum
Current Rate
Salem Federal SAVE
C© Savings & Loan B\
Santiam Ripples
By Sharon Whitsett
Monday night the Student Coun­
cil was hard at work as they held
their workshop in which they learn
parliamentary procedure- It was con­
tinued during activity period the next
two days.
“Uncle Ernie” Franklin, who was
having a revival at the Free Method­
ist church, paid a visit to the high
school. He talked about football and
was very interesting.
W’e were also visited by a Mongol­
ian Mousehound named Fox. He is
JoAnn Chailender’s dog He went to
all morning classes with JoAnn. She
took him home at noon.
Friday night a “wild” slumber
party was held at the Chailender
house. It wasn’t really wild; we slept
two whole hours. We ate all night,
then got up and went to Whitsett’s
house for breakfast. The following
girls attended: JuDee Logan, JoAnn
Challender, Sandy Harris, Leatta Mc­
Call, Marcia Barnhardt. Janice No­
vak, nd Shraon Whitsett. We all
had a “blast ”
The yell leaders are “sneaky" as
they arranged a surprise send-off
for the football boys Saturday. About
30 girls came out to cheer for the
boys, with a sign and all- Our efforts
were profitable; we won 12 to 0.
There were six of us at the game and
we out-yelled, or almost out-yelled,
the Siletz cheering section. It really
was exciting to watch 22 boys wal­
lowing in the mud-
The magazine subscription drive at
high school is coming up soon-
tional Home Extension Council in
Portland, October 23; County-wide
planning meeting, and recreation
workshop.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE MILL CITY
ENTERPRISE TODAY! $3.00 a Year
QUIET REVOLUTION! ON DISPLAY FRIDAY! HOORAY! SMALL W0NÜ17!
G. E.
APPLIANCES
We Give and Redeem
Penny Saver Stamps
GO
367 3rd St. Stayton
M c C ulloch
ONE/7O
Chain Saw
• Cuts strong... cuts fast
• Weighs only 21 pounds
• Direct drive for light touch
cutting
• Pintail Chain
• Torturotestod for dependability
GO
M c C ulloch
ONC 80 Chain Saw
• Brut* force lugging power
• 3:1 gear ratio
• Bars up to 44"
• 15" plunge bow
• Pintail Chain
• Tortured tested for
Here’s the car created to con­
quer a new field—Chevrolet's
low-priced compact Corvair.
The product of nine years of
reaearch and development at
the auto industry's most ad­
vanced facilities, it's Ameri­
ca’s first truly compact. ei'o-
nomical car that retains the
ride and 6-passenger comfort
you're used to in a big one.
The key to this small miracle:
America's first and only
modem rear-mounted alumi­
num engine—a lightweight 6
that's so revolutionary it can
be packaged with the trans­
mission and drive gears as
one compact unit.
By putting the engine in the
rear. Chevrolet has made the
floor practically flat, front
and rear. There's plenty of
foot room for everybody, in­
cluding the passengers in the
middle.
Shifting engine weight to the
rear also makes for smoother,
easier compact car handling
and gives gluedto-tbe-road
traction on ice, mud or snow
Corvair’« size—some 5 inches
lower. 2H feet shorter and
1,300 [>ounds lighter than
conventional sedans—makes
it a joy to jockey through
busv streets, a pleasure to
park (no need for power
assists). It® revolutionary
Turbo-Air 6 gets up to 30%
more miles on a gallon of
regular (a real magician on
mileage . Anti, because the
Tap
Phon« Ul 9-2160
Mehama, Oregon
STYLING
SURE ANO SIMPLE
Clean, uncluttered lines shape
both 4-door models— the de luxe
Corvair 700 and the standard
Corvair. Each has its own dis­
tinctive trim, and you get more
visibility area than in many
full-sized cars.
FOLD-OOWN REAR SEAT*
Works easily, instantly, adding
to Corvair's versatility by
enlarging rear seat cargo space
to 17.6 cu. ft.
FLAT FLOOR
Corvair is America's only com­
pact car with a practically flat
floor, the only one with the kind
of relaxing room that UJS.
motorists are used to.
UNISTRUT BODY SY FISHER
Doe* away with conventional
frame, incorporating all struc­
ture into a rigid body-frame
unit that gives you more inside
room with less weight.
UNDER-HOOD LUGGAGE
COMPARTMENT
The engine's in the rear where it
belongs in a compact car!
engine's air-cooled, you never
have to fuss with antifreeze,
vou get quicker warmup with
¡ess wear on parts even on the
coldest mornings even heat
for ixi.wngers comes quicker
—almost instantly — from an
airpl.uie-tvpe heater*
Yet. wonderfully practical as
all this sounds, you'll find the
moat practical Ching of all
about this new Corvair is its
remarkably low price. Your
is«
HIGH TRADE-INS
Raymond Branch & Son
Equipment Company
America's only car with an airplane­
type horizontal engine! America s
only car with independent suspen­
sion at all 4 wheels! America's only
car with an air-cooled aluminum
engine!
Tronk’s up front (like an ele­
phant's) where it's convenient
tor groceries, luggage.
«-WHEEL INDEPENDENT
SUSPENSION
dealer's the man to see for
all the short, sweet details.
revolutionary turro - air
«
Gets up to 30'7 more miles on
a gallon, needs no antifreeze,
provides quicker warmup with
less wear on parts
OStSlCKlCt POWER TEAM
Wraps rear engine, trans­
mission and differential together
into one compact lightweight
unit. Takes less room, leavna
you more
There's no conventional »lie —
front or rear Wheels, cushioned
by coil spring« take bumps in­
dependently of each other, for
smooth, road-hugging ride
•Optional at extra tm T
Corvair
BY CHEVROLET
TV-PM
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer
SHORT AND SWEET! SMALL WONDER! THREE COMPACT CHEERS!
«
120 W. Hollister
Stayton, Oregon
Gene Teague Chevrolet
Phone RO 9-21*26