The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, September 05, 1968, Page 2, Image 2

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    MEHAMA
Game Commission
Sets Bird Hunting
Rules for State
Oregon bird hunters will
have 1968 hunting seasons sim­
ilar to last year with a long
gunning period for most upland
game birds and waterfowl, ac­
cording to the rules adopted
by the Game Commission fol­
lowing a public hearing tn
Portland Friday.
The general upland game
bird season for cock pheasants
and quail opens October 19
and extends through Novem­
ber 24 except in eastern Ore­
gon, where the season for quail
extends through January 19.
Bag limit for pheasants in
eastern Oregon is 3 cocks daily,
9 in possession, while gunners
on the west side are allowed 2
cocks daily and a possession
limit of 8. The bag limit for
quail is 10 birds daily in the
aggregate, 20 in possession.
The general waterfowl sea­
son opens on October 19 and
extends through January 12,
except in Columbia Basin
counties where the season ex­
tends one more week through
January 19. Bag limit for ducks
is 5 daily, 10 in possession.
Only 3 mallards are allowed
in the daily bag this year. Bag
limit for ducks in Columbia
Basin counties Is 0 per day,
12 in possession. Hunters have
the same goose bag limit as
last year, 3 daily, 6 in posses­
sion. The daily bag may be in­
creased to 6 providing 3 or
more are snow geese. Only 2
western Canadas are allowed
in most of the Willamette Val­
ley area.
Chukar hunters are again al­
lowed a long season beginning
October 5 and extending
through January 19. This sea­
son also includes Hungarian
partridge. Bag limit is 8 birds
in the aggregate, 16 in posses­
sion.
Blue and ruffed grouse hunt­
ers will hunt these forest up­
land game birds from Septem-
l>er 7 through 29 in eastern
Oregon and from October 5
through November 3 In west­
ern Oregon. Bag limit is 3
daily in the aggregate, 6 in
jjossession.
The Commission also set a I
short two-day sage grouse sea-1
son In Harney and the south
portion of Malheur counties
September 7 and 8. Sage grouse
limit is 2 birds.
For the second year, the
Commission established a gen­
eral turkey season and includ­
ed the Wasco and Sled Springs
game management units as
open areas. This season ex­
tends from November 23
through 27 with a bag limit of
one turkey for the season.
November 23 through Feb­
ruary 23 is the season estab­
lished for black brant. Bag
limit for these coastal geese Is
4 daily, 8 is possession. Snipe
hunters will have a season
from October 19 through Dec­
ember 1, with a bag limit of
8 snipe daily, 16 in possession.
Mrs. John Teeters
Tips from a Pro
Wray Mundy
NATIONAL TRUCK DRIVER OF THE YEAR
IECK YOUR CAR
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AT LEAST ONCE 'U
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THE MILL
P. O. Box 348
CITY ENTERPRISE
Phone 897-2772
Mill City, Ore. 97360
1 ublished at Mill City, Marion County, Ore. every Thursday
Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Postoffice at Mill
City, Oregon, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
The Mill City Enterprise assumes no financial responsibility
for errors in advertisements. It will, however, reprint
without charge or cancel the charge for that portion of an
advertisement which is In error If The Enterprise is at fault.
An independent newspaper, dedicated to the development
of the timber industry and agriculture in this area.
Subscription Rates
Marion-Linn Counties, per year ............
$4.00
Outside Marion-Linn Counties, per year
$4.50
Outside Oregon, per year.
$5.00
DON W. MOFFATT
.....Editor and Publisher
GOLDIE RAMBO ....
Society and News Editor
GEORGE LONG ....
........................... Printer
/
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Mr. and Mrs. Marion Clark
have purchased the Donald
Teeters house here in town and
moved in the last of the week.
The Clarks came here from Ne­
braska and has a sans family
living in the Salem area.
Mrs. Donald Teeters and Mrs.
Harold Ixmgfellow met their
parents Mr. and Mrs. Chris
McDonald of Glide in Salem
Tuesday Morning, August 27 ;
and they spent the day at the
Fair.
Mrs. Charles Crook and her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Goodell of Lyons visited Sun­
day afternoon and evening
Aug. 25 with Mrs. Goodells sis­
ter, Mrs. Minnie Zimmerman
and at the Vern Sandberg home
in Stayton.
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Hughes
and three children of Astoria
arrived Aug. 29 at the home
of his mother, Mrs. E. J.
Hughes for a few days visit.
They also visited with other
relatives and friends here and
their daughter Cynthia who
had been here picking beans
returned home with them.
■Mrs. Gordan Ward of Phoen­
ix, Arizona left Sunday morn­
ing, Aug. 25 by plane after a
two weeks visit at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. |
James Owen. Another daught­
er Joan Owen who has been
working in San Francisco ar­
rived, Sunday evening as she
had become ill and is confined
to bed for a number of weeks.
Mrs. Keith Henness and
daughter Terri of Albany visit-
ed a short time Tuesday, Aug.
27 at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
C. M. Cooper.
Peter Hughes was taken to
Santiam Memorial hospital and
then transferred to Salem
General hospital Tuesday, Aug.
27 after he received a crushed
right arm in an accident at
Idanha. He is employed by
Young and Morgan.
Advertising in The Mill City Enterprise
Mill City Enterprise Brings Results—Try It Every Week
Fine Printing
PERSONAL STATIONERY
LETTERHEADS
ENVELOPES
ENCLOSURES
BUSINESS CARDS
BOOKLETS
ACCOUNTING FORMS
RULED FORMS
INVOICES
The Mill City Enterprise
Phone 897-2772
Mill City, Oregon
Pamper Ybur
♦
with Growth Vitamin
My Neighbors
r
"Well, finally—!"
very drop of water, every
bit of fertilizer that you put on a grow­
ing plant is returned to you in value
increased many times.
ing at home that it takes to support and
improve our jobs, our businesses, our
schools and churches and other com-
munity helps to a richer life.
And every dollar spent at home in­
stead of in some other community ...
promotes the growth and luxuriance of
your own little personal prosperity tree.
Trouble is ... a lot of them are look-
ing for us to keep the ball rolling
while THEY go city-shopping.
We don’t expect the neighbors to wa­
ter and weed and fertilize our gar­
dens so that we won’t have to put out
any effort on them. But a lot of us ex-
pect somebody else to do all of the trad
Are you a target?
Outitindini people ere
2—The Mill City Enterprise, Thursday, Sept. 5, 1968
Subscribe to The
Let’s ... every one of us . . . remem­
ber that loyalty to our home com­
munity is merely loyalty to our own
economic welfare ... that scattering our
buying power leaves our own personal
prosperity plant with less nourishment.
be'.v
prospeclt then most for luwsui:«
running into hundreds of thov
sands of dollars. See us for i
special ''PHJS" program of m l
lion dollar or-more liability pu-
teetion.
HILL INSURANCE
AGENCY
J. C. Rimmel E. L. Davis
Owners
Ph. 897-2345 Mill City
Salem Mobile
Ph. YP2-2600
These Firms Are Genuinely Interested in the Future of Our Community and Your Welfare
Hill Insurance Agency
Distributor of Shell Products
Mill City, Oregon
Jerry Pittam Insurance
Mill City Hardware
Phone 897-2413 or 897-2754
We Give S & H Green Stamps
Head Office Portland
Representing
THÈ ¡TRAVELERS
J IMURANCf COMF AMIS
W »SftTRMO. COMMCI »CUT
Bob's Phillips 66 Service
Strout Realty
Vivian Kealen, Mgr.
Highway 22
Ph. 897-2124
Gates
Jerry Coffman
New and Used Cars
Kelly Lumber Sales
Building Supplies, Paints, Plumbing
Supplies, Electrical Fixtures
Don's Tire Sales
Tires Are My Business
Highway 22. Mill City, Ore.
We Give S & H Green Stamps
Mill City Enterprise
Girod's Hilltop Super Market
Santiam Cable Vision
Less Body & Fender Repair
Advertising — Commercial Printing
S & H Green Stamps
Mill City. Oregon
Complete Body Repair & Paint Service