Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 16, 1973)
2—The Mill City iiiterpri.se, Thursday, August 16, 1973 Cooper's Honored On 25th Anniversary A potluck dinner and recep tion was held Sunday. Aug. 5, at the Firs Shelter, Fisher man’s Bend Park, honoring Mr. and Mrs Albin Cooper on their silver wedding anniver sary which was July 31. Host ing the affair were the couple’s daughter and son-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Ryan (Peggy) Swan of Corvallis. Their other daughter. Sandy, is in Germany and was not able to attend but assisted with the arrangements. Guests attending were Mrs. Vee Golden, Mr. and Mrs. Donovan Moffatt, Mark and Rick, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Law- rence and Mr. and Mrs. Harry White. Leslie and Heidi, all of Mill City; Mr. and Mrs. John C. Cook, Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. Willard Parker and Mr and Mrs. Harvy L. Burns of Bend; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Coeval, Mr and Mrs. Gordon Howton and Robin of Port- :-;:“jgH!imi“«n»nWnnn land; Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Buck, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. Elton Wriggelsworth and family, and Mrs .Eunice Wiggelsworth of Salem; Mr. and Mrs. Den- zil Cooper and C. W. Cooper of Molalla; Mrs. Edith Kirk wood of Donald; James Jack- son of Woodburn; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Willis and Mr. and Mrs. Ken Jacob and Penny of Me- Minnville; Mrs. Jay Canatser and Jay Dean of Waldport: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Willis of Newport; Mrs. Jane Becker and Staci of Carlton; Mr. and Mrs. Sharell Wriggels- DATSUN SERVICE AND REPAIR All Work Guaranteed and you SAVE 30% on Salem Prices Call 897-2062 worth and Troy of Brooks; Kathy and Cindy Tallman of Boise. Idaho; Mr. and Mrs. Ron Bassett and the hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Swan, all of Corvallis. Misplaced or Lost Mr a.nd Mrs. Cooper were married July 31, 1948, in Bend. They have two daugh One set of Gold ters, Mrs .Swan of Corvallis and Sandy Cooper, who is Bells. If Found presently in Germany. Thej’ lived in Detroit and then in return to Marie Stew- Mill City where they resided II for nearly 20 years, moving to art Thank V ol / I Astoria in October, 1971, and finally to Corvallis where they I ———————JI now reside. ELMER TRIPP FOR QUALITY FURNITURE It Pays To Take A Drive Out To ANN’S Furniture & Antiques The Country Store With The BIG SAVINGS On Hwy. 22 at Sublimity-AunisviUe Jet. 749-2975 OPEN Tues, thru Fri. 10 till 5:30; Sat. Close at 4 Closed Mondays Convenient Terms OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT It's Dairy Queen fresh- frozen an a stick «nd dip coated with chocolate BUSTER BAR" A tower ai tas!eTwo layers of DQ. two layers of cold fudge 4- yeanufe! MR. MISTY KISS" A tai! treat on a stick Your choice of Misty fiaroTs. See how long you can make one last.' For Charity At Fair Womanh. ßaqe Norma J. Long, Roman's Page Editor /»/»one «97-2772 Crist-Monroe Wed Ever wonder what ever happens to the old cartons, news papers or computer cards discarded by the millions of homes and offices every day? All most of us know is that they seem ingly vanish, never to be seen again. But that isn t quite accurate. Much of this waste paper re- appears as boxes and cartons in which our new shoes, waste is paper. Collection and dresses, suits and appliances disposal of this waste is cost are packed. That "six-pack" ly This adds up to about Jf> carrier of soda or beer you billion a year now. By the end just took home from the super of this decade, the cost of market or the toothpaste, soap dealing with solid waste will ot cereal box may once have that of both air and been waste paper, casually exceed water pollution. thrown away at what seemed There is another important to be the end of its useful aspect to recycling — the con life. servation of natural resources. All this is due to the mir Most paper products can be acle of recycling, carried on made either with virgin wood by the waste paper processing pulp from trees or with waste industry. These processors, In paper. Recycling Is the alter hundreds of plants throughout native to the increased use ot the country, sort, grade, proc trees, which conservationists ess and bale waste paper into warn us can no longer be paper stock which is then counted on to meet the rapidly shipped to the nation’s paper rising paper and lumber de and paperboard manufacturing mands of the economy. mills to be remade into car It is the double-barreled im tons, boxes and other paper pact of solid waste utilization products. and natural rescource conser At present, the waste paper vation that should motivate processing industry recycles the American consumers to over 12 million tons of paper move from use-and-discard to stock every year. Impressive useand-reuse habits. According as this figure is, the 12 million to the National Association of tons make up only 20 per cent Secondary Material Industries of the paper and paperboard — the trade group for the re produced in this country an cycling companies — such nually. consumer action "doubles and. Each ton of paper stock pro redoubles the mileage we get duced to satisfy our needs for from wood resources.” paper and paperboard, writing Consumer awareness, the As paper, tissues and toweling, sociation points out, is the way newsprint, building board and to greater recycling activity in roofing materials helps to re the United States. With Amer duce the amount of solid icans using an average of 600 waste requiring disposal. This pounds of paper products each is a major factor when you year, the more that comes consider that each year each of from recycled sources, the us averages over a ton of waste greater the impact on environ which we discard and which mental management, conserva our municipalities must collect. tion of resources, and reduc Almost half of this collected tion of consumer costs. WHAT SMALL : buys Arm " DILLY BAR" G’rls To Pucker Up ::: DO" SANDWICH We make ’em righi here so they're always fresh * . . . in our own chocqlaty wafers. Retirement Dinner Only close relatives and intimate friends attended the wedding of Catherine Leslie Crist, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne B. Crist of De troit, and Michael Ray Mon roe, son of Mr and Mrs. Ray Monroe of Idanha, at the Woodland Chapel in Salem at 5.00 p.m.. Sunday, Aug. 12. Performing the ceremony was the Rev. William B. Hoff- hines, Sr., pastor of the Morn ingside United Methodist Church in Salem. Organist was Mrs. Winifred Bantsari, a Sa lem music teacher, who play ed the "Theme Song from I^ove Story” and the “Wedding March”. The lovely blonde bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore a full-length dress of muslin and cotton lace, with a halo of fall flowers in her hair, and car ried an arm bouquet of car nations and chrysanthemums in autumn shades. Large baskets of gladiolus chrysanthemums and in orange and yellow colors de- corated the sanctuary of the church. Mrs. Wayne Crist, the mother of the bride, wore a full-length flowered dress of green and orange, with a corsage of yellow rosebuds at her shoulder. The mother of the bride groom, Mrs. Ray Monroe, was gowned in a melon shade floor-length dress, and also wore a yellow rosebud cor sage. Following the double-ring ceremony, a reception in honor of the young couple was held at 8:00 p.m. at the home of the bride’s parents, the Lakeside Motel in Detroit. Mrs. George Bentley of Ore gon City, an aunt of the bride, cut and served the wedding cake. Miss Vicki Monroe, sis ter of the bridegroom, passed the guest book. After the reception, attend ed by a large group of friend« and relatives, the newlyweds left for a two weeks honey moon trip which will take them as far south as San Diego, Calif., and possibly across the border into Mexico. Upon their return, the Michael Monroes will make their home in a house trailer at Detroit. The bridegroom is employed at the Green Veneer mill at Idanha Both young people are graduates of the Detroit High School. Robert L. A bemused Stevens, Oregon State Fair manager, looked at the two pretty girls in his office, Illis..» .x.— had knzl one kuforn “We’ .... ve — never before," ” he said, scratching his head. What was he talking about? A kissing booth. The girls, Lynette Jones, 19, and Liz Jones, 20 (no relation) had driven to the fairgrounds from Klamath Falls to plan a kissing booth to raise money for the United Good Neighbors of Klamath County. “We’ll need six cases of Listerine and forty cases of Chapstick," joked the girls, students at OTI who will at tend the U of O this fall. "We haven’s practiced at all, but by the end of the fair we should have it perfected.” The idea for the booth came from a friend who had partic ipated in a similar booth in Los Angeles. “I had contribut ed to the United Good Neigh bors before,” said Lynette. “I thought ’Why Not?’ It would be something fun and differ ent.” “We sort of wondered if it really worked,” Liz added. The fair will charge the kiss ing booth a percentage fee rather than the usual rent. Kisses will go for a minimum $1 contribution, and up to six girls will man the booth. Assistant Fair Manager Wes Bouche commented that puck ering up for charity is “unique, something that used to be done—that if it’s done in the right place, could be a lot of fun.” The right place, of course, is the lips. Community Calendar Of Events | Wednesday, August 15 Santiam Rebekah Lodge # 166 meets at the I.O.O.F. Hall at 8:00 p.m. Thursday, August 16 Women’s softball practice ar Allen Field at 10:00 a.m, F.O.E. #3384 Aerie meeting at 8:00 p.m. at the lodge. Sunday, August 19 Gates High School 50th An niversary at the old Gates School. Festivities begin at 10:00 a.m. Potluck at 12:00 noon. Sponsored as a public service By MADISON & DAVIS Insurance Agency, Inc 493 Third Street, Stayton Remember Us For Your. Life and Health Insurance Phone 769-6311 Stop In And Check Our Unadvertised Spring and Summer SPECIALS Lawn Furniture, Lawn Mowers, Barbecues, Etc Check our 24 pages of Advertised Specials In This Issue of The Enterprise. WESTERN AUTO CATALOGUE ORDER STORE Phone 897-2785 Mül City, Ore. Honors VonHarten William J. Von Harten of Salem was guest of honor last Wednesday evening, Aug. 8,, at a Retirment dinner and | party at a Salem restaurant. I Mr. Von Harten retired from North Santiam Ply where he ( had served as their account ant for more than ten years. |i He started with North San tiam Ply in December of 1962. Friends and co-workers at tending the dinner for Mr. < Von Harten and his wife, were I Mr. and Mrs. Vern Morgan, i Mr. and Mrs. Bill Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bell, Bob ’Young, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pynch, Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Skillings, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Amsberry, Mrs. Jo Cruson, Mr. and Mrs. Donovan Moffatt, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Stevens, Mrs Bert Pallett, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bamhardt, Miss Debbie Bamhardt and Dennis Coming. | Mr. and Mrs. Von Harten are now planning an extend ed trip through the southeast ern part of the United States | Mrs. John Swan MILL CITY TV REPAIR NOW OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 9 A. M. To 6 P. M 538 First Street Phone 897-2626 We Service The Detroit-Idanha Area With No Mileage Charge Returns From Texas I MY L mtty . tVMD 'Boor putt W 4 AMCTHLki Dn-LYBAR (T? i -e J'S ALL GO TC DÄ/R.Y QUEEN* Thursday thru Sunday Orders To Go Ph Stayton, Oregon Mrs. John Swan returned to her home last week following I a three weeks trip to the mid I west and into the south. She flew to Denver, Colo., where she stayed overnight with a I nephew. Driven to Kansas, she was met by her son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Estel Swan of Fithian, Ill. Enroute to Mis- ' souri, they visited the famous I Eisenhower Center in Kansas, and stopped to visit relatives in Missouri. I While visiting the Estel Swans and their two daugh ters and families in Illinois, Mrs. Swan was notified of the death of a brother-in-law in Dallas, Tex., so she immediate ly flew there to spend about ten days with his sister before returning home. Reconditioned B/W Port. TV $35 and up State L censed Technicians Jim Bostwick Bill Garrett Owner 'Technician Owner/Technician