The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, August 15, 1974, Page 4, Image 4

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    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<XXS_.
Far
xka sic
NOTICE
Canyon Conservative Bap th. I
Rev. Don Prorciw
5th & Cedar. Lyons
Hoy Decter. Youth Pastor
Phone 859-2956
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship 11 a.m.
Training Hour, 6:00 p.m.
Evening Service, 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday evening Bible
study and prayer time 7 p.m.
First Christian Church
Rev. Richard L. Halstead
Bible School 9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.
ST CHRISTOPH*« MISSION Youth meeting at 6:00 p.m.
Detroit
Evening Services 7:00 p.m.
Sunday Mass 10:30 a.m.
Adult Bible study each Thurs
Holy Day and First Friday
day at 7:30 p.m. Youth Bible
5:30 P M- Detroit
study each Wednesday at 7:15
p.m. Santiam Searchers each
I Wednesday at 3:30 p.m.
LYONS UNITED
METHODIST 'Hl 'ROH
Mill City Community Church
8th and Ash St.
1 Rev Donald L Dishong. Pastor
Phone 859-2540
Full Gospel
Rev. Arthur Hansen
Sunday School 10 .00 A. M
Welcomes you to come as
Morning Worship 11:00 A. M
you are.
Evening Service 7:30 P. M.
Wednesday Evening 7.30 P. M.
Santiam Chapel
E.’eryone welcome.
Assembly of God
Phone 859-2644
Lyons
Free Methodist Church
Robert Harkins.............. Pastor
North Mill City
Sunday School. 9:45 a.m.
Rev. John DeMain
Morning Worship. 11:00 a.m.
10.00 a. m. Sunday SchxJ
C. A. (Youth) Service Thurs­
11 a. m. Morning Worship
days at 7:00 p.m.
Royal Rangers and Mission-
5 p. m Evening Worship
ettes Family Night, Wednesday i
I
at 7:00 p.m.
Anyone desiring counsel and Mehama Community Church
prayer may call Pastor Robert Frank Schultzwohl, Pastor
Harkins.
Sunday school 0:46 a. m.
Morning Worship, 11 a. m
Ht. Patrick's Parish
Evening Service« 7:30 p. m
Bev. Bernard Neuniaa. Pastor
Lyons
Mass 1st. 2nd and 5th Sunday 1 Our Lady of Lourdes Parish
at 10:30 a. m.
Jordan
Mass 3rd and 4th Sunday at
Mass 3rd and 4th Sunday ai
8:30 a. m.
I day at 8:30 a. m.
In Lyons
Calvary Lutheran Church I>
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