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About The Sandy news. (Sandy, Clackamas County, Oregon) 1914-1917 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1916)
CHERRYVILLE HOME ‘ h II i April Shower« all right. A few day« of warm rain will tl > a lot of good. Is W h at You M ake It C. A. Weatherford came home last Saturday from Deer Island where he w do SO it looks 1 employed on a big ranch, to spend Sun- Brighten it up and it looks cheerful, unless you dreary and you feel the same. W hv not paint the floor w ith d“ y w,th *•» family JAP A LAC FLOOR PAINT ? Shingle mill got an order recently tor . ... . . , . . . . . . L a sily applied and wears like iron. A little Jap A Lac applied to the furniture and woodwork w ill work wonders that is sure to please you and w ill cost very little . We now have in stock a good supply of f loor Paint and .ither Jap A l.ac Stains and w ill be pleas ed to supply your needs. Sandy Mercantile Company Change in Price Lum ber of Until M ay 1st, 1916 w e M ill m a k e th e follow = ing p rices on lum ber Rough $5.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 2 x 4 -6 o 2x4=24 1x4=16 1x4=24 2x8 16 2x8=14 2x=6l6 2x6=24 2x4 S h e e tin g Sized ec nn ViJ.vu 6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00 5.00 5.00 sized 6.00 5.00 6.00 5.00 6.00 sid e, one random 4.00 le n g th s 1x6 S h e etin g sized on e sid e , random 5.oo 1x6 & 8 S h ip lap = 7.oo No. I R ustic - - I6.00 No. 2 R ustic 12.oo Barn R u stic 8.oo W e a ls o h a v e B uilding M a teria l of ail k in d s a t e x c e p tio n a l low p rices. Sandy Fir Lumber Co. S an d y, O regon - P h one S a n d y 46 THE CHURCHES notice TO creditors In the m atter of the intate of llcnrv Swartz, tleeca«e«l. Notice is hereby g iv ii th a t th e under- signed has lx tin appointed executor of tin estate of Henry Swartz, dt'ccHHe«!, by the t'o u n ty Court .«( Clackamas County, tiregon. All |ar«ons having claims against said estate an- hereby notified In present the same to in«1 for paym ent at the otlbx* of IIAMMONl) AND 1I\M MOND, Beaver Bldg Oregon City, Ore gon, with pro|»T vouebers, within six inontbs from the date of this notice. Dated Man'll 10th 1910 Henry 1». Alien. Executor of the estate of Henry Swartz, Deceased. HAMMOND AND ilAMMOND Attorneys for exeeutor < j ; ■■ METHODIST Sunday School 10 a M Preaching 11 A M Preaching 7 :3t) P M Everylssly invite«!. Rev. L. W. Cl.anilli r, Pastor, GERMAN LUTHERAN 400,000 shingles and the party who order- e«i ,ai(1 tb(.y W1.n. the lx,st ihingleH he ever saw and would want a« many more bclore long. Over 75,000 were packed last week and the mill «’ill run to full capacity as long a« the we ter lasts. In the meantime millions of feet of cedar stubs and logs are awaiting use here in every direction, doing no one any good on this R. R. land which the S. P. R. R. says is good for nothing but still refuse to sell it for $2.50 as they J contracted to do mom than 40 years ago. Our remarkably bright statesmen have allowed this tiling to hang fire all tins time, cheating the people out of homes and beating the state out of an immense lot of taxes which they could have de rived out of thousands of homes. Our Representatives are nearly always R. R. lawyers. HAYNES DIXIE BREAD Mr. and Mrs. tfussock came up from Portland on their motorcycle Sunday to visit at tiie hotel and enjoyed a pleasant time and a delightful day. To advertise Haynes Dixie Bread wo w ill give ONE DOZEN DIXIE Mrs. J. T. Friel has opened a millenery di pai imeiit in C. W. Miller’s store where BUNS FREE to the firs t tw e n ty purchasers of Haynes Dixie Bread the ladies can get an Eastci iiat at re during the coming week. Cut out this ad and present it at markably low prices. A W. Watkins lias gone to Aurora, Oregon, where lie tias rented a ranch but tiis wife will stay here until after the school closes. A lady friend of Mrs Beidenstein came out from Portland to visit her over Sunday and will stay the most of the week. GRUNERT’S j Boring Junction; $400, KELSO P. R. an«t t? p to a S. Hirseb 1 acre of section 2, township 2 south, R. C. Murray has gone to Bridal Veil Mrs. Jack Patterson, who has been range 2 east; $10. where he has secured employmi nt in a ill for some time was taken to the Good planing mill. Samaritan hospital in Portland Friday J. C. Steenks lias given up the Freil where she will undergo an operation. BORING place as his team could hardly stand the Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Eri visited re extra work and another renter will take latives here for a few days last waek possession this week. There will be a field meet at Boring while enroute from Southern Oregon to Mrs J. A. Ayeril has gone down to Burke, Montana, where they intend to next Saturday the 15th, if the weather visit w ith tier daughter, Mrs. Olive Fall stay for awhile. is pleasant. There will five schools en, for a few days. take part in this meet and a large A field meet in which some of the crowd is expected. E aster comes very late this year and local schools will take part will be held Linden Richie who has been gone for according to some w eather prophets that at Boring Saturday, April, 14th. about a year has returned. indicates backward Spring weather. It The Parent-Teacher Association will will not lie as late again for 40 years. Mrs. J. W. Roots and Miss Edith meet Friday evening April 14th, at the S. G Runyan has secured em ployment school house. A short program will be Nass have gone to Fort Stevens to visit relatives. Miss Nass expects to be at the new saw mill in San ly but was given after the business meeting. gone all summer. home over Sunday. The seventh and eighth grades are O. M. Richie has purchased an auto rehersing a play which will be given in Mrs. Restsnia gave a picnic to her mobile from Herz Brothers. the near future. scholars last Saturday dow n on Cedar Geo. Driesel has gone to Estacada to ( ’reek. The kids enjoyed themselves as Ned Nelson spent Sunday with his the day was perfect and had the biggest family, returning to his mill near Bull work. kind of a fish fry. Over fifty tine trout Run Sunday evening. being taken but the biggest one as usual A REAL BLIZZARD. Mr. and Mrs. Varetti spent the week got away. end at their daughter's, Kligel’s home. Mrs. Max Ernest Hutchinson with wife and two children, of Pendleton, Oregon, formerly a resident cf Kelso, spent a few days with his wife’s mother at M rs. Hunter spent Thursday and Fri Pleasant Home, while enroute to Cali day visiting relatives in Oregon City. fornia where he is taking his wife for Jack Bettis was a Portland visitor benefit of her health. COTTRELL Thursday and Friday. Road Supervisor, Jarl, has been do Chas. L. Hunter made a trip to Scap- ing some good work on the road be I ose, Oregon, Thurs«iay to attend a sale tween Kelso and Sandy the past week. of tine Jerseys. Several of the ladies from Cottrell at te n d s! a meeting of the Embroidery Club Wednesday afternoon at Mrs. D D. Jacks, of Scenic. Real Estate Transfers it W as tha W o rs t Snow storm E ngland E v e r Experienced. Naw In February, 1717. occurred what Is considered to have been the greatest snowstorm that ever visited this coun try—or perhaps any other. So deep was the fall that practically all through the New England states people were barricaded In their homes, and It was i considerable time before that section was opened up for traffic. Accompan.« lug ibis snow there were i terrific tempest and a very low tem perature. It was not only in sections, iiut all over the north, and at manv places It drifted to the extent that It may be said that “whole villages were snowed under." The blizzard caused a very heavy damage to property und es|«ecially to live stock. Thousands of cattle perish ed throughout the country because their owners were unable to go to their assistance, and many remarkable in stances were related of rescues. On one New England sheep farm it Is said that 1.100 sheep, the property of one man. were found dead, and one flock of a hundred, on Fisher’s island, were found burled sixteen feet In the snov Two of them only were alive, they hn- ing subsisted on the wool of their con pantons for twenty-eight days after t.l storm.—Philadelphia Press. The following real estate transfers were filed in the office of County Re corder. the fourth of each m onth. William A. Prentice to Alfred Davis Preaching at 10:30. and Walter Davis, land in D. L. C. of F. Dohlierfnhl, Pastor Fendal C. Cason and wife, township 2 MONEY TO LOAN rob'ssor tjnivksall and family autoed sout^« fange - east; $150. On Improved Property. Large to Portland Saturday. J Jennie A. and John F. Switzer to CATHOLIC Mr-. 11 D. Griffin «as a Portland Ella M- Brown and Charles C. Brown, and Small Amounts. Mm*« is held at III .'Hi a m in tli : ® acres of Section 36. township 3 south DIMICK & DIMICk AND Church of Saint Michael, Samly, tii«' \ isitor W«xlncmlay. _________ j range 2 east ; $10. W. L. MULVEV. first and tbirtl Sundays of cacli m onth. The government of tla* Bahama Islands O. W. and Lucy I. Boring to Samuel Andrcscnltulkllng. Ore. Rev. Fr. Basal. is trying to revive the production of Sea Lawrence and Emma Jane Gregson, 5 Island cotton once a flout ¡shing mdtte-! acre8 of 9ection 6< township 2 south. Seyenty-rtv«' |x 'r n u t ol lb«1 work of i The vacuum principle lias lax-n ap try la re Stu dy of Synonym ». range 4 east; $550. m aiiu isetu rin g ride am in u n itio n for tls* plied to a n«*u drinking fiMintahi for . , IJttle Dulcie was asked by her teach A ni'» furniture «•otnhination serves as I define the word “whimsical.'' "It CniUsl Slate- arm y am i navy is done by ,Miultry so (bat it« contents will 1« «■>«'1 a table for a -iek bed, high Itacked eh air I O. W. and Lucy I. Boring to Samuel er it: rum m er an«l » arm in winter. w om en. ' or cart for conveying dishes between a Lawrence Gregson and Emma Jane means 'odd.' she replied. "And now." Gregson, one-half acre of stetion 6, ***• teacher went on. “please write a kitebeii ami «lining room. sentence containing the word properly township 2 south, range 4 east: $50. \ftc r several years of experimenting ! used." a gras* An Engli«lttnan hn» John and Grace Knox to Wallace R. Hesitatingly the little ten-year-old liim tm r that n »-iiible« borw* e»ipi«ers Turkish cigarette totaux*« <>f high «piality M,«rr I ban ihixx* hundred kiwis of ti-h- is la ing raised in German Fast M'rica Telford and Myrtle I. Telford, land in took up a pen and after a moment's ami is o|a*rate«l by bi>tb liamls es are known to produce sounds. Serwivs are hcl«l every Sunday except tin Friday evening the Cottrell school basket ball trains wrent to Orient ami played the O rient school teams. The Cottrell girls «von by the score of 15 to 13. The Cottrell Isiys losing to Orient score, 42 to K. thought wrote. “There are two kinds • f numbers—whimsical and even.”