Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1969)
1— The Mill City Enterprise, Thursday, Oct 23, 1969 at the home of Mr. and Mi’s. LYONS By Eva Bressler Members of the Wednesday afternoon card club held their party at the home of Mrs. Per cy Hiatt. 500 was in play fol lowing a one-thirty dessert luncheon. High score was held by Miss Zeta Prichard, second high by Mrs. Oral Williams and low by Mrs. J. W. Mc- Pheeters. O t h e rs attending were Mmes. Earl Allen, Arth ur Olmstead, Andrew Sieg, Chester Roy, Ralph Davis, Sam Bridges, Ruth Lyons, Leo ta Worden, Eulalia Lyons and the hostess Mrs. Hiatt. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Diester are receiving congratulations upon the birth of a new grand daughter Valery Lynn, born to their son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Diester at Dalles, Texas. Overnight guests Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ro bert Jobe were Donald Soren sen and Manuel Birge from Joplin, Missouri. Mr. Sorensen is a son of Mrs. Jobe. David Shadden son of Mrs. Geraldine Shadden was in jured Friday and was hospi talized for three days. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bassett and sons of Seattle were week end guests here and with rel atives in Mill City. They were at the home of his father Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Bassett, also her father Otto Witt of Mill City. They were called here by the death of her mother. Mrs. Ruth Lyons of Salem was a Tuesday and overnight guest at the home of Mrs. Eu lalia Lyons and attended the Wednesday afternoon card par ty held at the Percy Hiatt home. Funeral services for Hugh Gavette of Florence and a for mer Lyons resident will be held at 11 a. m. Friday morn ing at Harrisburg where he was a long time resident. In terment was at Fox Valley Cemetery in Lyons. Weekend guests at the home of Mrs. Effie Anderson and Keith were her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spain and daughter, Sandra from Aberdeen, Wn. Miss Nikki Cruson is con valescing at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leon ard Cruson following a tonsil ectomy at Good Samaritan hospital in Portland, where she is a student nurse. Miss Donna Huber of Salem spent the weekend at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Huber and fam ily. Mr. Gillen from Eugene spent several days last week V* Reduced Prices Some Odds & Ends as Low as $1 per panel Others............................... $1.98 and up * ¡SÿiSÿÂîiÂW:: KELLY LUMBER SALES CITY. OREGON Phone 897-2610 V Hehmthe'semgs; lb. 79c Smoked Pork Chops Fresh Picnics LlOa • • • • • Farmers Sliced Bacon Johnathon Apples 49’ lb. 69c $179 10 Lbs. 79c Bu. Box ■! Delicious Apples 10 lbs. 89c $049 Bu. Box No. 1 Potatoes 10 lb. bag. 39c Extra Large Bunch Celery bu. 19c Cauliflower ... lb. 13c Alice Love Jam . . 2 lb. jar 79c Strawberry, Blackberry, Apricot, Pineapple Duncan Hines Cake Mix 3 pkgs. SI For perfect baking and frying 69 Golden Fluffo 3 Lb. Can Flav-R-Pac Crinkle Cut O Qc 2 Lb. Bag...................................... wP Mortons Pies French Fried Potatoes Apple, Mince and Pumpkin 3/$l We Have A Full Line of Trick or Treat Candy. Also Pumpkins and Cider SITPORT YOLK TEAM Regis at Salem Academy Gladstone at Stayton Chemawa at Santiani Prices Effective October 23, 24, 25, 1969 BOB'S FOOD MARKET Phone 859-2494. 1015 Main St MEHAMA Mrs. John Teeters On Plywood MILL Harold Hawthorne. Mrs. Leonard Cruson and Mrs. Keith Phillips were in Lincoln City Monday and Tuesday, October 20-21 attend ing the annual Oregon Asso ciation of Hospital Auxiliaries held in that city. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Julian were in Eugene Sunday at the home of their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Julian Jr. They went to see the new grandson, Paul Albert. He was greeted at home by bro ther Bradley. Mrs. Jack Roy underwent major surgery at Santiam Memorial hospital in Stayton Monday morning. Her mother, Mrs. Gladys Kuiken from Sal em is at the Roy home help ing care for the children. Pfc Royce Longfellow from Fort Knox, Ky., is spending a 15-day leave with his wife at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spellmeyer, also his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Longfellowr at Me hama. He and his wife will leave the first of the month to return to Fort Knox. Mrs. Charlotte Imus is con fined to Salem Memorial hos pital where she is in traction suffering with back trouble. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Thiel from North Bend were week end guests at the home of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walton and Sally. Lyons, Oregon Ralph Thompson Working on Space Program for Brazilian Government Archie Thompson brought Although Brazil’s research an item in to the Enterprise last week taken from the Hear activities are limited, the na ld News (front page, no less!) tion’s CNAE (the equivalent in Livermore, Dublin and of the United States’ NASA) Pleasanton California about is receiving data from a U.S. weather satellite and is work their son Ralph Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson ing on a data collection sys said their son worked his way tem for an “earth resources” through school almost entirely satellite. When launched by on his own. He worked for the U. S., the satellite will Ced;u’ Lumber company and transmit infra-red data about Wills Shingle Mills during the the temperature of trees and summer. His “buddy” in Mill crops. From this data. CNAE (Commiso Nacional Ativados City was Jerry Johnson. He attended Oregon State Espacious) will be able to de University where he received termine if vegetation is diseas his BA degree then after work ed or getting adequate mois ing two years he came back ture, and if harvest time is for two more years of study near. Thompson’s assessment of on a fellowship. The article from the California paper is life in Brazil is almost as in being re-printed for the inter teresting as his enthusiastic est it should be to Ralph’s description of the tumultuous space business. friends here. LIVERMORE — Sandia “My wife, year-old daughter Laboratories engineer Ralph and I lived in a modem apart Thompson recently’ took a ment about a mile from down three week leave of absence town Sao Jose.” he said. “The from his job at the Livermore apartment didn’t have central research center to assist the heating, so when nights got Brazilian government in laun cool, you piled on more blan ching two “Aerobee” rockets kets. Water was heated by over 130 miles into the atmos small, electric heaters attach phere. ed to faucets. But Thompson's interest in “Washing machines and dri the impoverished nation’s ers were in short supply,” he fledgling “space program” be added.” They’re expensive and gan long before the dramatic electricity is hardly abundant launch itself. Clothes were washed by hand In 1968 Thompson was part and usually took two days to of a group of engineers and dry in the relatively high hu scientists doing astrophysical midity. research under a joint arrange “My wife did like the way ment between the University groceries were delivered to of California’s Space Science your kitchen table by the mar Laboratory and the Brazilian kets and the availability of government. The object of fresh fruit (bananas one cent their complex, layman-baffling apiece, pineapples 25 cents study was to obtain data on each) twice a week at the door some 30 stars known to emit of our apartment,” the season X-rays in the .1-100 kilo elec ed suburbanite noted, adding tron volt range. that an “excellent” city bus “My Job was to design the system eliminated the necessi 260-pound rocket payloads con ty for a car. taining the X-ray counters,” he stated. “Those counters fit between the nose cone and the liquid fuel rocket.” Why go to South American to conduct the tests? “The launch site was at Na tal — 300 miles below the equator — on the eastern tip of Brazil,” he explained. At this location, instruments in the freely-spinning rocket could scan the southern sky to discover new X-ray emitting stars, and they could also mea sure X-rays from stars prev iously observed in the North ern Hemisphere.” For several months in 1968 the Sandian worked and lived in Sao Jose Dos Campos, a city of 60,000 about 60 miles north of Sao Paulo. Guests Sunday October 5 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank White were her brother- in-law and sister, Mr. and Donald Donovan of Albany. Mrs. R. J. Brush left Thurs day for her home in Seattle after a 10-day visit at the home of Mrs. Jack Ryland. Mrs. Art Anderson was a Sunday dinner guest at the Jack Spoelstra home in Salem, when they were celebrating several family birthdays. A group from the Mehama church is planning a cake walk and bazaar to be held at the firehall Saturday evening, No vember 8. Mrs. Wesley Helsel is chairman of the committee in charge. Guest speaker at the morn ing worship services of the Me hama church was the Rev. John Phillips of Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Finkner of Akron, Colo, visited several days recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Kirsch. The Finkners also visited in Mill City and Silverton. Mrs. Joe Jones and daugh ter, Mrs. Ron Kowalis and baby daughter of Klamath Falls visited a few days here when they brought Mrs. Jones’ mother, Mrs. Jennie Moe from Klamath Falls where she had been visiting. Mrs. Moe, Mrs. Kowalis. Mrs. Jones. Mrs. Lar ry Kimsey and children Mary, Lloyd and Leon visited Sun day afternoon at the Lee Brant home at Macleav. They went especially to see the Brant’s son-in-law and daugh ter, Mr. and Mrs. Hans Wies- enbrunner. The Weisenbrun- The U. S. Forest Service has ners will be leaving soon for just published a new map bro Australia where he will be em chure for the 196,708 acre Three Sisters Wilderness in ployed for five years. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Monroe the Deschutes and Willamette spent Saturday in the Metol National Forests. ius area east of the moun It replaces a brochure print tains. ed in 1964. Mrs. Ernest Malloy and two The new brochure differs in sons of Oakland, Calif., were that the map for the huge Wil guests Tuesday and Wednes derness is topographic; that is, day, October 14 and 15 at the it has contour lines to indicate home of Mrs. E. J. Hughes and elevations. Mrs. M. V. Frame. They had one trail log is provid been spending some time visit ed: Only this is for the Pacific Crest ing at the home of Mrs. Mal National Scenic Trail. All oth loy’s parents, the Carl Hughes er mileages can be obtained at Newburg. the map itself: distances Mrs. Hughes and Mrs. Frame .from printed between marked visited Sunday at the home of are points, their brother and sister-in-law, map. much as on a highway Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Mulkey in The new brochure contains Portland information on geology of the Three Sisters Wilderness, as well as on mountain climbing, exploring, and fishing and hunting. The brochure is available without cost at any office of the Willamette National For est. New Wilderness Area Maps Are Available Now Santiam Memorial Hospital (Stayton) FIELDS—To Mr. and Mrs Kenneth L. Fields, Detroit, a boy, Friday, October 10, 1969. Grange Members To Have Ham Dinner LYONS—A 6:30 ham dinner will precede the regular meet ing of Santiam Valley Grange Friday evening, November i • Ham will be furnished by the grange and members will ORR—To Mr and Mrs. Jer bring pot luck carrying out ry C. Orr, Aumsville, a boy, the Thanksgiving motif. Guest speaker will be Mrs. Thursday, October 16, 1969. Alberta McElroy from Keizer She is district No. 2 chairman of WAC and will outline the program for the year. Saturday night several from Santiam Valley grange attend ed the Scio Grange meeting where they honored past mast ers. Attending from Santiam were Mr and Mrs. Lloyd Sletto, Mr and Mrs. Frank Basl, Mr. and Mrs. John Shaf er and Mrs. Georgia Hays. Guest speaker was Allen Wheeler. JOHNSON — To Mr. and Mrs. George S. Johnson. Stay ton. a bov, Thursday, October 16. 1969. Subscribe to The Mill Gty Enterprise S4.00 per Year Read it Every Week Advertising in The Mill Gty Enterprise Brings Results—Try It Every Week /PL17MBlNn\ Well Keep You In Hot Water When the hot water dwindles to a trickle . . it’s time for a new, automatic Na tional water heater. That’s the time to call us! You can depend on our fast, efficient installation service . . . save money, too. Moffatt Plumbing and Heating Inc. Licensed Plumbing and Heating Contractor Ph. 897-2799 MUI City, Oregon