The Enterprise Prints Wedding Announcements Tanirv >ew Pear And Cheese Salad Expert Craftsmanship—Fast Service Too CHURCH HEWS St. Catherine’s Catholic Masses Every Sunday 9:00 A. M. Holy Dav and First Friday 7:30 P. M. Church Services — » 30 a.m. Sunday School — 11:00 a.m. Get Your Car Tuned Up Now! JSa For Better Gas Mileage During The Summer Months Ahead Bartlett pears are at their iiavorsome best with cheese and a touch of lemon. •'Bartlett Bitter Lemon Salad" combines these flavormates in ar. unusual and tempting way. Bitter lemon sparkling beverage is used in the gelatin, along with French dressing, giving a Darticularly refreshing flavor. Slices of Cali­ fornia Bartlett pears and Cheddar cheese cubes are folded in along with watercress The bitter sweet flavor makes this a par­ ticularly delicious salad to serve with ham or fried chicken. BAKTLETT BITTER LEMON SALAD 2 fresh California Bartlett 2 envelopes plain gelatin pears ’ - cup cold water 1 cup chopped watercress 2 bottles (10 oz. each) bitter 14 cup sharp Cheddar cheese lemon or grapefruit cubes beverage Watercress 2 tablespoons French dressing 14 teaspoon salt Soften gelatin in cold water, place over heat and stir until gelatin is dissolved Stir into bitter lemon. Add French dressing and salt. Chill until mixture mounds on spoon. Pare, halve, core and slice pears. Stir into gelatin with watercress and cheese. Pour into 5-cup mold; chill until firm, t'nmold; garnish with watercress Serve with mayonnaise if you wish. Makes 4 to 6 servings. For additional recipes and serving suggestions tor this and other summer fruits. send a stamped, self-addressed busi­ nesssue envelope to "The Fruits of Summer." P. O. Box 4640. Sacramento, CA 95825. You’ll receive a 48page cookbook with luscious color illustrations of more than 100 ways to serve California fruits. Vern’s Shell - Tow ing Mill City Phone 897-2442 Advertising in The Mill City Enterprise Brings Results—Try It Every Week Electronic Servicing And Sales at Reasonable Rates CAPITOL PHONE PHONE SALEM GATES 581 -4047 897-2777 SERVICE 3882 State Street, So says tie VA... """ Salem. Oregon 97301 No Mileage Charge A MONTH .».»/ Canyon Area Every Thursday From Mehama To Idanha SYLVANIA and ZENITH SALES GOOD SELECTION fVrs: S. y -- Of New or Used, Color or Black and White TV’s at REASONABLE PRICES THE FAMILY LAWYER AT3 RI&4-TT... WERE VETS. THEY'D 1 25Ï US TO &O TO SCHOOL' A COOL TWO HUNKERS AND TWENTY S Mass; 1st. 2nd. and 5th Sun­ Stayton day. First Ave. and Fern Ridge Rd. Rev. Norbert Dey. Pastor Sunday School ___ 9:15 a. m. Worship Service_ 10:30 a. m The Church of Jesus Christ of letter Day Saints George J. Rolfe Detroit Community Btanch President—585-4442 Christian Church Meetings at Stayton Branch Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m. Chapel • Westown Subdlviaon Children’s Church, 11:00 a.m Priesthood Meetings ___ 9:00 Come as you Are and Sunday School ...... 10:30 Worship with us. Sacrament Meeting _ 6:00 Relief Society Wednesday 10:00 Idanha Community Church MIA Wednesday____ 7:30 Arvin E. Johnson, Pastor Primary Tuesday 4:30 Sunday School. 10:0 a. m. Morning Service 11 o’clock. Evening Service at 7 o’clock Bible Study, Wednesday 7:30 p m. I NAME IN VAIN “I urge you to veto the wel I fare bill.’” So said a telegram sent to the governor, supposedly from a concerned citizen by the name of Watson But in fact. Watson had nothing to do with :he telegram. It had been sent by a local manufacturing firm, which had simply picked his Gates C ommunity 1 name out of the telephone Church of Christ book. J Watson later found out Morning Worship 10:00 aan. Bible Study 11:15 a.m. about the telegram, and filed a damage suit against the com­ Seventh Day Adventist pany “for taking my name in 8. W Ivy Kt Mill City vain.” 'And a eourt ruled that G. M. Richardson. Pastor he did indeed have good 11 a. m. Worship service grounds for complaint. The 7 pjn. Tuesday prayer meet­ court said: ing. Mill City Prenbvtertan Phone 887-313» Morning Worship_ 11:00 a. m. Adult Bible Claw _ 10:00 a. m. Nursery for young children under competent supervision. re Subscribers, please check the label on your Enterprise Ÿe, this week. If the figure following your name is 8-74 My Neighbors “Sir, I love your daughter and I’ve aaked for her—you are president of Doolan’a Motors, aren't yonf—hand in marriage.” HOMEOWNERS SAVE BILL AM. MAN Phone 760-5728 715 1st—Stayton State. Fj’m Fire end Ciiuiff» 1 WfÄ \ PO« 1 SALE./1 ■ REEF YOUI tENTAl FtOFEtTY FILLED WITH AN AD IN THIS NEWSFAFft... ANYTHING FtOM tENTING A BfDIOOM TO SELLING A CLASSY tESIDENCE t CAU M MOW Mill City Enterprise Telephonen 807-2772 P SPECIAL SALE ITEMS Shop our Daily In-Store SPECIALS 7 A. M. — 11 P. M. MILL CITY Seven Days A Week OUR FABUWUS FORE s T s your subscription has expired. Why not send in a check for your renewal today By Subscribing to THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE YOU SAVE MONEY You can save more than the subscription price of The Enterprise by reading the ads and then taking advantage of the bargains offered. Try it and see. SUBSCRIPTION RATES In Marion and Linn Counties Outside Marion and Linn but sti in Oregon Outside the State of Oregon The Mill City Enterprise “(The company) appropriat­ ed, without the plaintiff’s con­ sent, his name, his personal I ity. and whatever influence he may have possessed This they had no right to do. This case illustrates growing recognition of ___ I right of privacy as a legal doctrine Often called “ the right to be let alone,” it has already been applied in a wide variety of situatons. Another example arose when an obstetrician, summoned to a woman's home to deliver her baby, brought a young man into the bedroom wtih him. The woman assumed that the stranger was some sort of medical aide Only afterward did she learn that he was merely a personal friend of the doctor She sued for an in­ trusion on her privacy, and the court upheld her claim. Of course, the right of priv­ acy is not unlimited. It must be reconciled with other rights with which it ay conflict. I Thus: A man who was mugged on a downtown street objected to the publicity that appeared in the local press He argued in a court hearing that, as a priv­ ate individual who had done I no wrong, he was entitled to! the shelter of the privacy doct­ rine. But the court pointed out that whether he liked it or not, he was newsworthy”—a legitimate object of public in­ terest The right of privacy, said the ciurt, did not out­ weigh the freedom of the press guaranteed by the Constitu­ tion. I A BILLION uew 1WEGS HfiME 066N HAND-PLANTED ON FOREST LAMOS IM OREGON AMO WASHINGTON OVER THE PAST 30 YEARS TO PERPETUATE OUR "TIMBER SUPPLY. NON­ PROFIT NURSERIES 0F1ME INDUSTRIAL FORESTRY ASSN. HAVE PROVIDED 23% OF1HE1DTAL. GOVERNMENT AND PRIVATE TREE NURSERIES SUPPLIED THE REMAINDER. IMTH 50 MILLION TNY DOUGLAS ARS AND OTHER CONIFERS GROW­ ING IN IJ.A. NURSERIES IN CANBY, ORE. ANO OLYMPIA, WASH., 20 MILLION WILL BE SHIP­ PED APR PLANTING ON iNOUSTRY TREE FARMS THIS SEASON. SINCE 1942, 460,000 ACRES OF TiMBERLANOS HAVE BEEN REFORESTED BY I-FA. NURSERY STUCK. THIS CONTINUING REFORESTATION IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST ASSURES A PERPETUAL "TIMBER HARVEST AND THRIVING FORESTS FOR FUTURE GENERATONS TO USE ANO ENJOY.' Frank Lumbar Co Young & Morgan Timber Company Mill C3ty, Oregon MID Qty—Idanha, Oregon Wills Shingle Mill Stout Creek Lumber Co. MUI Qty, Oregon Lyons, Oregon—Mill at Mehama Mill City .Oregon U. S. Plywood-Champion Papers, Inc. f Idanha—Lebanon, Oregon Mill Ci+y Enterprise MUI Qty, Oregon