The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, January 24, 1963, Page 4, Image 4

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    Gates Women's Club
Discus New Plates
GATES Mn
Mary Wilson
was hostess for the Gates Wom­
en's club meeting held Thurs­
day at her home. New business
dicussed at the meeting was
whether the club should select
a new Santiam Canyon plate.
Many area residents have the
old plate, which is colorful and
depicts the local industries,
towns and recieatamal areas.
Mrs. Lola Henness. secretary,
stated that there had been quite
a few inquiries about purchas­
ing plates with the old pattern,
however, she said the plates
have to be ordered in such large
quantities that there was con­
cern that they could all be sold.
Therefore, the organization will
probably order plates with a
different pattern.
4—The Mill City Enterpr ae, Thursday, Jan. 24, UMW sen cted as «Hitstanding citizen
GATES
lly Marion Stov all
Sunday visitors at the home
of Mrs. Velma Carey were Mr
and Mrs. Norman Carey ami
two sons of Albany ami their
iriends. the Holman brothers,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Carey and
two sons of Stayton. and Mr.
and Mrs. James Carey of Al­
bany.
'
Last Wednesday. Mrs. Hattie
Cole. Mrs. Margaret Rush and
Mrs Lola Henness drove to
Dallas, where they helped Mrs.
Henness' mother, Mrs. Roy-
Taylor. celebrate her birthday
at a dinner.
The Gates Volunteer
Fire­
man's Auxiliary will meet Mon­
day. January 28 at 8 p. m. at
Bette Relle's home.
The Santiam Canyon Home
Present at the meeting were
Maude Davis, Toni Thomas. Extension unit will meet Thurs­
Elsie Völkel, Lola Henness. and day (today» at 10 a. m. at the
Mary Wilson.
clubhouse. On the program are
demonstration of a hot rull re­
cipe and "twisted’’ rugs. The
safety chairman's report will
follow the potluck luncheon at
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. John Pitcher
and children of Cottage Grove
were weekend visitors at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Rvtsamond.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Henness
and grandson, Gary, drove to
Albany Sunday to help their son.
Keith, celebrate his birthday.
Dinner guests Saturday even­
ing at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Gabriel were her
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles
M ison. of Cascadia
Sunday visitors at the honw
of Mr and Mrs Bob Blumcn-
siein were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Beaty and four children of Sa­
lem.
Miss JoEllen Asher of Salem
was a guest of Miss Alice Bick-
ett last weekend.
M ss Melody Barnhardt was
in the fifth and sixth grade
room at the Gates Elementary
school for the last nine-week
period.
Sunday visitors at the home
ot Mr. and Mrs. O. K. Hirte
were Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Reed of Silverton
Miasea Anne Mnie ami Bar­
na Hirt«* spent the weyicMd
nt th«* home ot her parents. Mr.
ami Mrs. O. K Hirte. Ann«*
Marie is employe«! at th«* Oh*-
gon State liospital in Salem.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry lairsen
left Thursday for Sonora. Cal.,
where they plan to visit his
father. Albert Larsen, for a
week, i'lem there they will go
to Nevada, where he will at­
tend survival school.
Sunday visitors to Itoodoo
Howl wen* Mrs.
Rosemary
Freeborn ami two boys. Jack
and Eii Oliver. Miss Barbetta
Krogman, Toni Kosydar, ami
Sheryl, Sandra ami Karen Oliv­
er. dauhters. of Mr. ami Mrs
Bob Oliver. The adults enjoyed
I
Future Citium
Haie. l-tmaitlis-old son of Mr
and Mrs. Arthur Hempeck ami
Judy, their 18-months-old daugh­
ter.
th«* day skiing ami the children
playc*d in th«* snow. Sheryl Ol­
iver had her first skiing lesson
and is reported to have «lone
very well.
RAMBO’S RAMBLINGS
III «luidle K hiii I mi
I am «till sort of limp ami
»lightly hour»«* from Saturday
night« exciting basketball gam«.
A« a basketball player from
"way back when" at Mill City
high » c I hxi I I really live th«*
game with the kids. It's ex­
hausting. lx.it fui
One thing 1 ho|x> 1« continu­
ed al the games and that ia the
Pep band playing «air National
Anthem. They did a fine J«»l>
and 1 am sure it gave every­
one a good tveling. There ia a
(eeling of pride and emotion
that 1 think moat of ua have
when that particular piece la
play«*«! milking ua proud ot our
country, our achuul ami «air
town. We may gripe alout all
of diem nt times, but are quick
to rise to their defense when an
"outsider" makes a disparaging
remark.
Ami mm for the lighter sl«ie
III case you nra Intel rated, the
answer to last weeks brain
twister was the word, "queue".
For a finish line The w.wnan
with the bulging shopping bag
Speaking of teen-agers an in­ panted to her seat in the movies
teresting article was brought In­ just as the feature was reach­
to the office and I think it is ing an exciting point Once set­
worth repeating. It has been is­ tled. she ignored the screen in
sued In the name «>f the lien ver order to dig through her bag.
obviously in search of some
Juvenile Churl.
Always we hear the plain­ special parcel.
One by one six* removed the
tive cry of the teenagers What
can we do
where can we go package«, unwrapped them amt
—?
explore«! their contents, while
The answer la go Home ! ! ! her neighbor» straln<*d to hear
Hang the storm windows. paint tin dialogue above the ctack-
the wtxxiwork. rake the leaves, ling of the paper This persist­
nmw tile lawn, shovel the walk, ent. rustling search continued
wash the car, learn to cook, until th* man directly in fnwit
scrub «orne floor». repair the «4 her turwd ami fixed the
sink, build a boat, get a Job. woman w ith an infuriating stare
Help th«* Church, visit the sick, "Lady," he sake«!, "what are
assist the poor, study your les­ you doing back there building
sons. ami then when you are I a nest*"
through and not too tired
Ever have It happen to you?
Remember the
Reddy Kilowatt had a busy year
serving you in Pacific Powerland
From The Enterprise
Five Years Ago
At a meeting of the Lions
club that week James Putman
had explained reorganization to
the group. Hr was serving as
high school principal
W. R. Hutcheson had tx-en
elected t > s*-rve as pres:d«*nt of
the North Sritmin Chamber ot
Commerce
Flr.yd Völkel was
chairman of I’ m * nominal ng
committee.
Harold Champion and Otto
Oja of Detroit ha l made a trip
to Portland to bring back n
www plaw. recently purchas«-d
by the city.
Mr. and Mrs. Vhillip Cann
had returned
to
California
where hr had employment.
Dr. Don Foster, former Mill
City dentist, had made a flying
trip to Mill City to vM witti
friends. He was then in Alaska
W. B Shuey had returne«!
home from Santiam Memorial
hospital following surgery.
Ten Years Ago
DELIVERIES OF ELECTRICITY SET NEW RECORD
In 1962, PP&L customers used 7.4 billion kilowatt hours—400
million more than the previous year. Reddy Kilowatt is doing more
jobs than ever before to bring you the comfort and convenience of
modern electric living.
S40-MILLION IN CONSTRUCTION LAST YEAR
And PP&L’s long-range program calls for $58-million more in con­
struction during 1963. This action program is geared to produce
and deliver vital electric energy whenever and wherever you need
it in Pacific Powerland.
Miss Ursula Glaeser. Willam­
ette University exchange stu­
dent from Austria had been the
guest speaker nt the Mill City
Woman's club. Hostesses were
Mi- ll.irry M'Son. Mrs. O. K
DeWitt, Mrs. W W. Allen an«!
Mrs. F. H. Kcye«.
At Lyons Mrs Bob Free ha<!
entertained members of the
Wednesday card
club with
prizes won by Mrs.
Herman
Free, Mrs. Vem Nydeggcr,
Mrs. Orville Downing and Mrs.
Oscar Naue.
Marilyn Chapter OES had
observed their 30th anniversary
at special ceremonies at the
lodge hall. Iaiurel Johnson was
worthy matron
and George
Huffman, worthy patron.
Julia Bassett, member of
Santiam Rebekah lodge, had re­
ceived an ajipointment as color
bear*r to act at the Grand
Itxige in Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. Tex Allen of
Gat. s had left for their new
home in Cleveland, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Herm­
an were visiting that week in
Rich'and, Wn., with friends.
Fifteen Years Ago
ANNUAL PAYROLL REACHES $26-MILLION IN ’62!
Operation and construction activities throughout the PP&L sys­
tem provide a major payroll for hundreds of men and women who
live and work here in Pacific Powerland. Their paychecks mean
more business for the widespread area PP&L serves.
$10,825,000 IN LOCAL AND STATE TAXES!
These big annual PP&L payments help support such vital commun­
ity services as schools, parks, fire and police protection and reflect
the large investment Pacific Power has made to assure you
dependable electric service.
Now, more than ever, modern PP&L electric service is your
biggest value for better living
Pacific Power & Light Company
Your Partner in Progress
read a I took
Your |>ar«-nta do not owe you
entertainment. Your town does
mil owe you recreational facil­
ities The world «iocs not «»we
y«H a living. You <»we the world
soniething You owe II your time
and talents so that no one will
I lie at wr.r or in jxivei ty or sick
or lonely again
In plain wor«la grow up. Quit
; Ix’lng a crybaby, get «Hit ot
your dream world «wi develop
a iMicklxMH*. not a wishbone
Start actin { like a young man
or lady.”
Strong wonts Ixit certainly
wot thy ol consideration and ac-
ti«m.
Glen Shelton had lx*cn named
vice president of the Mill City
PTA. A crowd of about 100 had
attended the meeting that week
when Mrs. Agnes lkx>th was
guest speaker.
Mrs. George Ditter was serv­
ing as president of the Mill
City Firemen’s Auxiliary with
Mrs. George Crook as vice-
president and Mrs. Ray Roberts
as secretary-treasurer.
Mrs.
Frank Blazek had just been
elected as the new president.
Th‘eves had broken into the
E. W. Hartman chicken house,
taking eight prize hens.
Miidred Toman was writing
the Mil! City Hi-Llghts at that
time and stated work on the
annual by members ot the sen­
ior class was progressing rap­
idly.
Mrs. Hazel Shields had been
installed as noble grand at
Faith Rebekah lodge at Lyons.
Ruth Morri« was to serve as
vice grand.
A theatre party had been
given tor la-la Roily and Aloni
Daly on their birthday anniver
•arics. Refreshment» were serv­
ed at the Kelly Itonie following
the »how. (The show was Fr«*d
MacMurray in "Partion
My
Past.")
Your Social Security
Q I am moving next month
What can 1 do to make sure I
I get my social ««»curtly aback on
time?
A Report )our rw-w address
to the Social Security Adminis­
tration as far ahead ui your
move us you can giving your
name an«! social security num-
' ber. It the notice is reoelvi*d by
the middle of the month, then»
' will be time to changi* the ad-
dr«-»» un your next check. You
»hould also notify jixir post of­
fice.
What should I do if I cannot
give the Social Security Ad­
ministration my new address
until idler the middle of the
month?
A. If you cariniH notify us toe-
tore the middle of the month,
your next check will probably
go to your old address There­
to»». it 1» very important that
you also make arrangement»
with vour post office to for­
ward your next check to your
new dadress.
Q
What information doe«
your office need in order to
change th«* address on my next
check, other than my name and
new address ?
A. Always give us your full
name, new address, and )w
social security claim numlwr
Q. Can I notify you of a
change In my address by phon­
ing your office?
A. No, for your protection, we
require that a change of ad­
dress request I m * in Writing and
signed by the person to whom
th«- cheek Is payable
Q. Why has the contribution
rate ot social security taxes
liecn scheduled to increase |x-r-
i<Mlically?
A. The number of older peo­
ple in th«* country Is increas­
ing; therefore year by year
costs are expected to grow for
•nany years. Income from th«*
gradually increasing schedule of
taxes in the law will meet tins
expected future rise in costs
withiHit disrupting the economy
by imposing the whole tax need-
<•<1 to support the program all
at once.
Q. What hap|x*ns to the social
security taxes taken out of mv
wages?
A. First of all these tax con­
tributions are placed In tnist
funds from which benefits are
paid. One tme fund is used to
pay benefits to retiretl people
and their dependents and the
families of deceased workers
The other trust fund is used to
pay benefits to disabled workers
and their families. Money |n the
trust funds that is not needed
for current payment of benefits
is
invested
in Government
nondi. Thr intermit on thin
money is added to the tnist
funds.
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