Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1969)
Public Notices Summer Homes Answer To Cancer Sought NOTICE OF ANNUAL. SCHOOL ELECTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV EN, in compliance with Sec tion 331.001, ORS, to the quali fied votei-s of Administrative School District No. 29J, of DETROIT—Several summer Linn and Marion Counties, | homes and other buildings in State of Oregon, that the An the Breitenbush area were da nual School Election of said maged by the winters snow, District will be held at Mari- Detroit District forester Al Linn Grade School between the Gardner reported. hours of 8:00 A. M. and 8:00 P. Included in the damage were M. on the first Monday of the lounge building at the Low May being the 5th day of er Hot Springs, and the Lodge May, 1969, for the purpose of and old store building at the electing one member to the Upper Hot Springs. Board of Directors for a five- About two-thirds of the old year term. hotel lounge at the lower Dated this 24th dav of April springs collapsed leaving only 1969. that portion of the side where DONALD HUBER. the hotel rooms were housed. Chairman Board of Several cabins at the resort Directors. were also damaged. Attest: In the Breitenbush summer I-OUIS HENNING. home tract trees are on three District Clerk. houses and the chimney brok Published April 24 and Mav en on one, Gardner said. He 1, 1969. added there is still about three feet of snow in the area. At the Upper Hot Springs, the chimney on the main Lodge (hotel) collapsed and punched a hole in the roof. I 2viaect by a grant from the American Cancer So One end of the old store build- ciety’s Oregon division, Dr. Don C. Wood, a bio-chem ing along the highway also ist, is evaluating the anti-tumor effects of hematoxylin collapsed. In the Devil’s Creek summer at Providence Hospital in Portland, where John Mat- home tract, two houses have schek, Oregon’s cancer crusade chairman, joined him collapsed, three roofs of homes to leant first-hand how crusade funds are being spent. damaged, and one home has It is known, Dr. Wood said, that hematoxylin has an a tree on it. effect on some types of tumors. Breitenbush Road, which had Hee our Ads on Page Seven been closed several weeks dur as a smoke jumper. Daven ing the heavy snow season Salem Tech Forestry port should be awarded hls as (open only to emergency traf sociate in science degree in fic) opened officially last week. Students Include June. Gardner said an inspection This is the last group of for tour has not been made yet of Mill Ci+y Men estry technician students to the summer home addition in participate in such a program. Imagine a local student tak Other the Marion Forks area, but felt participants and their that damage there if any would ing his algebra class in Salem, assignments include David Ba and following this up with a ley, Mill City and Greg Kaser, be slight. geometry class in Montana. . . Silverton, Siuslaw National the following term. The credits Forest: Brandon Taylor, West Historical Society would be transferred back to Stayton, Ochoco National For To Meet Sunday Salem. est; and Harry White. Mill The Linn County Historical This Is somewhat like the City, Detroit Ranger Station. Society will meet in the Meet scholastic activity of Lindsey The forestry curriculum in ing room in the Swan addition Davenport of Mill City, a se the future will not include such corner of the Courthouse in cond year student in the for internships because industry Albany on Sunday, April 27 at est technician curriculum at and government advisers indi Salem Technical Community cated that more technical class Your Transportation 2 p. m. The program will feature College. room training would prove Is My Business Mrs. Lucille McBride who will Davenport is on an industry more profitable. Also, enroll talk on her trip to Scotland internship (on-the-job training) ment has multiplied so that It For NEW or USED and her boat cruise to North | with the U. S. Forest Service, is difficult for instructors to CARS and TRUCKS Africa. | Region 10, in Fairbanks, Alas- supervise on-the-job activity Floyd Jenks is president of, n work'will A majority of this year’s 34 Call the Society and said anyone be submltted by hls supervisor first year students have ob JERRY COFFMAN ’ interested is welcome to join|to his !ocal instructor Joseph tained summer jobs for sum tnn nv nnvmcr the cnnintv society by paying tho the nn. an '_ W. ~ Smith every two weeks. _ To mer, 1969, in the forestry field. nual dues. get credit for this term’s work, They will be employed by NEED TICKETS FOR THAT he must participate in five dif state and federal agencies, as STAYTON Card party or dinner. Spee- ferent phases of forestry activi well as private industry. Home cial rates for clubs and ties. 769-2117 859-2552 He chose this position be Whv Don’t You Subscribe to «hurch organizations.—The cause he was anxious to work The Mill City Enterprise Mill City Enterprise. Damaged in Upper Canyon Area Subscribe to The Mill City Enterprise $4.00 per Year Read it Every Week Philippi Ford Inventory Tax Exemption Rates High in Survey 5—The Mill City Enterprise, Thursday, A ril 24, 1960 THE MILL CITY ENTER W P. O. Box 348 Phone 897-2772 Mill Cl<*. ’ re. 97360 Published at Mill City, Marion County, Ore. ever* Thursday Entered as Second Class Mali Matter at the Postoffice at Mill City, Oregon, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879. The Mill City Hnterpri.se 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. Top U. S. industry rates tax exemption on manufacturers’ inventories second in import- anoe among its considerations in plant location or expansion, according to a recent national survey conducted by the Ark ansas Industrial Development Commission. WHAT A MAN CAN DREAM, MAN CAN DO! A list of some 60 economy boosting legislative programs now in effect in various states, was submitted to 100 of For tune magazines 1967 top-rated U. S. industries. Respondents were asked to rate items from one to 20 in order of import-1 ance. | Tax exemption on manufac-; turers’ inventories placed se-1 cond ou* of the 20 in their weighted response. The same item tied for fourth place has-I ed on the number of times it was rated number one, and first among the total number of times rated. 1 The same set of considera tions also was sent to state agencies engaged in industrial development, of whom 43 re- sponded. They were asked to list the top 10 items, in order of importance, which they felt were attractive to industrial development in their states. Tax exemption on manufac turers’ inventories ranked six th out of 49 in their weighted response. The same item plac ed fifth among the number of times rated numlier one, and sixth on the number of times rated. Although nine of the top 10 weighted legislative items rated by industry involve some I form of tax exemption, respon dents generally did not favor NEW POSTAL CORPORATION NKKDKI) tax incentives or concessions. The United Htatrs P<»t Office iaceu u crisis. I.idi yrur it “It is interesting to note the -lips further Is-hi im I the rest of the economy in nervier, in ef differences in values assigned ficiency, and In meeting Its rrs|M>n*ubilltle«> as an employer. by state agencies working with It operates at a huge financial I omm to the American tax industries and the Industries payer. The iMistal managers and employees who daily bear the themselves," according to in dustrial Development, official staggering burden of moving the nuOon'a mail know that the publicatin which conducted the remedy lies largely beyond their control. study. The President's <'ommission on Postal Organization, after “The top 10 industry ratings an exhaustive study, recommends that a ismtal corporation be include only five of the top lol chartered by Congress to operate the postal nervier of the rated by state agencies. Appar United Htates on a self anpisirting basis. The new corporation ently the state agencies view- would br designed to provide: dependable postal service, at <>d the items as prerequisite« for the accommodation of in-* fair prices, fully responsive to the public needs; a soundly fi dustry, whereas industry seem nanced and nelf-snpporfing postal nyateni; better working condi ed to accept these things as a tions and greatly increased career opportunities for one of the sort of foundation on which to nation's largest work forces. add their own specifications.” The establishment of a public mail corporation should Is- In summarizing Its findings, given serioua consideration by Congress in order to provide the commission wrote: the nation with n sound and efficient mail service. “T h e general philosophy The Presideat*n Com miss am stated, “It is our considered seems to be that a company judgment that postal costs can br reduced by at least 20 per should pay its fair share of the taxes necessary to maintain cent If normal investment and operating pnictices used in pri the type of community in vate Industry are made available to pontal management.’’ which it would wish its per sonnel to live, but that busi Green Veneer Down nesses should not be called up on to subsidize or carry a dis To Four Day Shift proportionate burden for gov ernment services which the IDANHA A Barker is b. people themselves may be un ing installed at Green Veneer willing to bear in proportion Inc. Idanha, Prior to the in to their own wealth and in stallation a small (scraper) op come.” was used a spokesman DETROIT—A hungry flock eration Some industry respondents, at the plant said. the report stated, registered of some 50 birds landed in the The plant's crews are work general opposition to any spec Champion’s front yard late ing only four-days a week on ial tax incentives, especially Sunday afternoon. They ap a temporary haRis. when they tend to discriminate parently were migrating to su between established and new burban areas in the valley. The males were quite a bit businesses. ‘‘Nonetheless, some firms fa larger than the females and vor provisions which would were black with reddish brown better enable both old and new heads, and about the size of a manufacturers to effectively bird commonly called a cow By Roots Chamnlon compete with their neighbors bird. The females were gray The baseball game scheduled in adjacent states,” the report ish in color with flecks of brown and white mostly on here last Thursday vs. Falls said. One company, opposed to the wings, breast and tail. Not City was cancelled out due to general tax exemptions, said ing that they all landed in one rain. The game will be played there ‘‘may be some merit in big group and chattering like May 1st at 3.00 P. M. April the provisions when applied to a bunch of magpies as they 24th. Detroit will play Eddy all manufacturers, especially searched the lawn for food, ville here and Siletz there in such matters as ad valorem this reporter decided to help April 28th. Both games are exemptions for goods in tran them out with a hand-out of scheduled for 3:00 P.M. sit, inventories and raw mater wild bird seed. The males act The Mill City Grade School ed like a bunch of western Chorus will present a program ials. . . ” Another wrote that plant movie cowboys fighting each here at 10:00 A. M. Thursday, site selection is based upon ec other with all of their might. April 24th in the grade school onomic considerations ‘‘which Watching them it was noted gym. On Friday, April 25th in our operations are far more everytime they were frighten at 7:30 P. M. Detroit High important to us long range ed away, they all left in a Chora la 1rs will present their than any special concession. . . sort of uniform flight and re annual Spring Concert in the we are also interested in taxes turned the same way. Elementary gym. Since they have not been to the extent that they do not Visiting at the home of Mr impair our competitive posi noted here before, and since and Mrs. John Estey on Sun they did not reappear Mon day was Frank Eliis of Cor tion relative to other areas. “Thus, we would favor pro day, they must have been en vallis. grams that are uniformly ap route to their nature habitat. Mrs. Rosea nn Derrick of plicable to all industries, such Mill City stayed with her aunt, as statewide uniform property Gary Meuser To Mrs. Estey, on Monday while tax evaluation laws and tax Pearl Giebeler accompanied exemption on manufacturers’ Speak at Christian Mabel Poncia to Salem. Mrs. inventories.” Estey is in poor health and Church Sunday The First Christian Church must have a constant attend Mari-Linn School will have Gary Meuser as ant Charlisle Tubbs of Port guest speaker this coming land, a frequent visitor at the Budget Passed I-ord’s Da v, said Charles E. Estey home, has been transfer Mari-Linn School district vot Fultz, minister. Gary is the red to Spokane, Wash., where ers at Lyons approved their son of Jack Meuser, who was he will set up a finance office budget of $128,427. the former pastor of the there for the company he is The vote was 67-44. The bud church. employed by in Portland. get represents an increase of Gary is a student at North about 3 percent over the cur west Christian college prepar rent year. ing for a vocation of Christian James Silbernagel was re service. Antonia Thomas flected to the school board. He The college has many stu Phone 897 2605 was unopposed. dents that will lie serving the Mr. and Mrs. Robert John area church both last and this son were pleasantly surprised Lord’s day, he said. The day Saturday evening when long will be known as Northwest time friends, Mr. and Mrs Christian College day, to be Ulas Moss of Lebanon visited observed April 27 in the Mill them. The two ladies were City Christian church school friends at Lebanon Champions Have Visit From Bird Family DETROIT IDANHA r R I 1 ■ 1 r \’ 1 1 GATES Subscribe to The 'Mill City Enterprise