4—The Mill City Enterprise, Thursday, Nov. 24, 1966 Advertising in The Mill City Enterprise Brings Results—Try It Every Week Ufa & c^rv \ / Miss Salem Universe invites you to the Grand Opening of our Salem office of Columbian Optical in the New Salem Plaza and to register for the Free Prize Drawing. To celebrate the Grand Opening, our Hearing Aid Department will award as Grand Prize a beautiful 1967 GE Porta-Color TV set, PLUS four Modern, AII-in-the-Ear Type Zenith Hearing Aids, PLUS Binoculars and Barometers as additional prizes. FREE tickets. Nothing to buy. You need not be present to win. Register NOW! 6 fit COLUMBIAN OPTICAL Hearing Aid Department SALEM PLAZA / Center at Liberty— almost GATES By Mrs. Floyd Swaim ■ Mr. and Mrs. Percy Mulli­ gan met his brother and wife, the Otto Mulligans of Port­ land, in Salem Saturday and the two couples motored to Klamath Falls where they were the overnight guests of the Otto Mulligan’s daughter. They went on to Reno Sunday for a day and night, going on then to San Jose, where the Otto Mulligans will be spend­ ing Thanksgiving with anoth­ er daughter and her family. The Percy Mulligans continu­ ed on to Redondo Beach to spend the holiday with their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kruse. Mrs. Mulligan plans to enter a California hospital for a checkup after Thanksgiving. They expect to be gone several weeks. Friday visitors at the home of Mrs. Lang Stafford were her brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Myers of Elkhorn. Mrs. Myers, who received a broken arm in a fall recently, is getting along fine. The ac­ cident occurred while her hus­ band was in Eastern Oregon elk hunting. Mrs. Lang Stafford called on her sister-in-law, Mrs. Alice Thacker of Mill City Monday. Mrs. Thacker is ill at her home. Gael Cutsforth returned Sunday from a 10-day elk hunting trip in the Wallowa Mountains. His companions were D. C. Henry and Harry Blanchard of Salem and Rich­ ard and Ross Chrz of Gervais. The group encountered bad weather, but had moderate luck in spite of it, bringing home a cow elk. The Trail Seekers CampFire Girls met Tuesday afternoon at the Mill City grade school. The girls made get-well cards for shut-ins at Santiam Me­ morial hospital. A dinner guest Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Barnhardt was David Ver­ non of Northwest Christian College at Eugene. Mr. Vern­ on delivered the morning ser- mond at the Gates Church of Christ and will be serving that church for the next several weeks. Gene Jacobson and John Wills spent Sunday goose hunting in Eastern Oregon. Mr. and Mrs. Gunter Cline and Doug and their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Tourville and family of Salem, were Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Grant. Doug Cline was among those getting deer over the weekend on the special hunt. Mrs. Fritzie Ward and Mrs. Hazel Devine enjoyed a day in Salem Saturday, visiting friends and doing some shop­ ping. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Cornell have returned to California for the winter due to illness in the family. They hope to return in the spring. Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mrs. Bessie Novak were her daughter and grand­ daughter, Mrs. Marie Herron and Dinah Herron and a friend from Salem and Mrs. Janis Baughman and two children of Mill City. Mrs. Verna Hunziker and Mrs. Julia Stoffel of Portland spent Friday to Sunday visit­ ing at the homes of relatives, the George Staffords, the Dave Barnhardts and Richard and Oscar Nystrom. Mrs. Bob Blumenstein and Carol visited Saturday in Sal­ em at the home of Mrs. Blum- enstein’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Bonnet. Mrs. Bon­ nett is convalescing from a recent stroke. Bob Blumen­ stein and Carol’s fiance, Pete Brundige, joined the ladies in the evening for dinner and a movie in Salem. A guest all last week at the Fred Stone residence was his sister-in-law, Mrs. Marion Stone of Tacoma. Bob Kelle, Irv Tucker and John Taylor went Elk hunt- I charter member of Eva Re­ bekah lodge at Stayton. Burial services were at Lone Oak cemetery at Stay­ ton. BESSIE R. WEIDNER MINNIE BROTHERTON Services were held Friday, November 18 at Weddle Funeral Home for Minnie Brotherton, 91. The elderly woman had been in good health until about a week be­ fore her death the previous Monday. Minnie Shepherd was born in Kansas on June 28, 1875 and moved to Stayton when she was 10 years old. She at­ tended school in Stayton and later moved to the Southern Oregon area. She also lived in Lyons for a number of years. She came to live at the home of her son, Henry Eccleston in 1961. Survivors in addition to Mr. Eccleston are a daughter, Leta Henderson of Medford and two step-children, Mrs. Wyma Boone of Bellflower, Calif., and Alfred Brotherton of Klamath Falls. Mrs. Brotherton was a ing in Eastern Oregon Wed­ nesday through Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hen- ness weekended in Medford at the home of their son and daughter-in-law, the Keith Hennesses. Mrs. Walter Thomas and her grandson, Chris Emerson, visited Thursday with her mother, Mrs. Jessie Ziegler In Vancouver, Wn. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Thom­ as planned to attend funeral services Wednesday for his nephew, Charles C. Donald­ son, Jr. of Hood River who died Monday following a heart attack. He was 27. Sunday dinner guests at the Lauran Holman home were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lane and two children of Albany. IDANHA—Funeral services were held Wednesday, Novem­ ber 23 at 10:30 in the chapel of Ringo-Cornwall Funeral Home, Woodburn, for Mrs. Bessie R. Weidner, 71, late resident of Idanha, who pas­ sed away Saturday at a Woodburn Nursing home where she had been a patient for a week. She was born in Leon, Kan., and lived on a farm near St. Paul for 40 years. For the past two years she has resid­ ed with her son and family, the William W. Smiths at Idanha. Her husband Earl J. Weidner passed away in 1960. In addition to Smith, anoth­ er son, Jack C. Weidner of Salem survives. Interment was at St. Paul cemetery in Woodburn. NOTICE Our Property Is Posted. It is not Open To Anyone for Hunting. MARTIN KELLY TV, Radio & Appliance Call Us Any Day For Service No Mileage Charge on Route Calls Between Stayton and Gates. ONOR OFF THE CABLE RCA VICTOR The Best TV for Cable or Fringe Areas. RCA WHIRLPOOL The Best Laundry Equipment PORTER ä L AU1 IEa TV a3B Appliance — Radio SALES — SERVICE 503 N. Third Ave. Stayton Ph. 769-2154