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About Estacada progress. (Estacada, Or.) 1908-1916 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 17, 1914)
Quality Groceries $ .25 3 cans Corn 3 ” Tomatoes .25 - .25 3 ” Milk . . . 3 ” Lye .25 3 ” Old Dutch - .25 3 packages Raisins - .25 3 Starch - .25 3 Mince Meat - .25 10 lb. sack Pancake Flour - .45 9 8-10 lb. sack Farina .45 9 lb. sack Rolled Oats - .45 9 lb. " Corn Meal .35 10 lb. ” Graham - .35 1 pkg. cow brand Soda, 5c, 6 for .25 After Jan. 1st only two deliveries will be made each day at 10 a. m. and 4 p. m. Please place your orders in time for these. All Jewelry at % price. Waterbury & C h ap m an “ The Quality Grocers” Estacada, • Oregon We have just received A nice assortment of useful Christmas Presents Which we now have ready For Y o u r I n s p e c t i o n Our lines of H O R SE C O V E R S, RO BES, A C Q U A P E L L A S, R U B B E R and DU CK STORM A P R O N S, are complete. Everything in Hardware Implements Harness Bert H. Finch Estacada, O regon Your Christmas Gift S lig h tly Used a n d S e c o n d -h a n d In s tru m e n t« $1500 Chickering Player Piano, $976. 1150 Weber Pianola ” ” 488. 500 Kingsbury ” ” 288. 600 Angelus ” ” 225. $500 Weber Piano $246. 600 Everett ” 178. 375 Wheelock ” 153. Hundreds of other, equally attractive bargains. All Sold on Small Payment Down and Easy Terms. Portland Oregon. R. M. Standish, Estacada, Agent EST A C A D A tI Published PROGRESS n c o r po r ated ) Thursday M o rn in g ESTACADA. OKI (»ON F v e r y at R. M. Standish, Editor *nd Manager ín te re d ai the i-ostoffice In Estacada O regon as second class mall S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S One ye a r.....................................................................S i 0 0 Sts m onths ............................................................. 50 Thursday, December 17, 1914 bought the material, cooked the New Thorobred Stock food, served the meals, washed the; Herb H u xlevo f Garfield returned dishes, and were pleased with a ¡ last Monday with two thorobred, mighty small net profit; said profit registered Hereford cows, which being largely the results ot the con he bought at the recent livestock tinued patronage of their respective show at the Portland Union Stock husbands and others. Yards. These cows weigh 1200 L e t's leave the city in darkness j lbs. each and are exceptionally from now otl, unless some other I handsome animals. They will he way can be arranged to pav tor the; used for breeding purposes, as lighting. Let them use their mon- ! Huxley, Cnrt W ilcox and others in ey for some worthy object, which Garfield are raising cattle for the they may decide upon, something market and ranging them in the that will bo permanent and one mountains abo\e. that will not completelv disappear This is but the beginning of bet with the first rays of the morning's sun. W e will now join in singing, ter stock for breeding purposes, in Sometime ago, Deputy Game Warden l’ attoti of Kstacada set aside and created a game refuge for the wild ducks. This preserve " I ’ m Atraid to Go Home in the this country and it will not t-e long comprised all of the back water before the "oruerv critter" of no D ark ". adjoining the Faraday Power House special breed will be a thing of the and is intended as a resting and Th e result of the recent Farm er’s past. feeding place for the wild ducks Week with its attendant drawing and geese that may happen along attractions, should prove to the Farm er*’ W eek Recipes this way. merchants of Kstacada and to the Statistics would show, if com population of this part of the coun As furnished by Mrs. Alice M. Dolman, during the Domestic Science Course. piled, that about one lone, home ty, that everyone is benefitted in sick duck gets up around this sec some way, by such gatherings. It Y F .A S T R E C I P E — Add four tion to every 2 000,000 that feed, offers an excuse, if excuse is nec medium sized potatoes peeled and live and breed throughout other essary. for the farmer and his fam grated to four cups of boiling water. parts of the state, especially along ily to take a day of recreation, for Add tour tablespoons of sugar and the Columbia river and through the people from the various sec four teaspoons of salt and cook until the Klamath country. tions to become better acquainted clear, like starch. Soak one cake Local hunters occasionally are and it cements a bond of friendship of dried yeast in one-fourth cup of able to shoot a duck in this district, and business, between the town and hike warm water and after that where hunters in other parts of the the surrounding country. From a cooked mixture has cooled, add the state can kill wild fowl to their financial standpoint, it means a soaked yeast. Put in an open jar hearts content good business to the merchants and ! for 24 hours, then after that, put in It does not seem a very fair shake ultimately helps develop Hasten) a jug and cork lightlv If using to the local sportsmen to spoil the Clackamas County, and that is liquid \ east, use one-fourth cup to limited amount of dnek shooting where we live. More ot such gath each one cup of milk. here, and to protect a duck that is erings should be held and oflener. foolish enough to wander up into B R E A D R E C I P E — T o one cup the mountains for feed. Now that the Christmas season is of scalded and cooked milk, add. With all due respects to N^r. Pat ! here, 've should practice that little either one fourth cup of liquid veast ton and lus good intentions, i 1 verse, ' It Is More Blessed to G ive or from one-fourth to two cakes of would tie wiser to protect the fowl, Than to R eceive", except as re compressed veast. soaked in one- where the fowl are. and not where gards "knocking” and during the fourth cup of hike warm water: one they aint A n y nimrod, who can holiday season at least, the old fa tablespoon of sugar, one and one- kill a duck in these here parts, de miliar "k u o c k '' should belaid aside third teaspoons of salt and from serves a medal tor his prowess. and tnavhe it will freeze up during three to four cups of flour, depend this cold spell. The pen may be The ladies of the Estacada Civic mightier than the sword, but the Club at their recent meeting, hammer is no slouch showed a balance in the treasury, considerably in excess of the hun T rain S ervice dred dollar mark, besides a few other It has been customary in the past stray balances in various funds to run the train that leaves Port For the past two years, this ag land at 1 1:3 5 p. m. through to Caz gregatiou of hustlers have raised adero on Christmas eve and New and earned the money to pay for Year’ s eve, December 24th and the lighting of the City of Kstacada 31s t.. in order to accomodate the at a cost of about $2 0 per month. dancing parties at both Kagle Creek At the end of each month, there is and Kstacada. Signed F. D. Hunt nothing to show for that expendi ture, not even the vanishing radi ance of the benetaction. B a g g a g e C hecked These ladies undertook this task, as a civic duty, at a *ime when the city proper was not able to pay for, or could not afford to continue the street lighting. It is doubtful if the city is in any better hnancial I condition at present, but it is time ! that either the city, the merchants or the populace in general bear this | burden, or get along in the dark. Arrangements are now being made to handle all trunks and other baggage to be checked, from the 1st & Alder St. station of P. R. L. & P Co. in Portland, instead of from the East Side freight house, as at present. The company is to remodel the present waiting room to accomodate the¡haggage, will is sue and exchange checks there, and eliminate the necessity of the trav These energetic women have g iv en dance's, served lunches and din eler having to make a trip to the ners, and the last item should read. East Side. 1 ing upon the kind of flour used. Bake in individual pans, after it has risen properly and when it is turned out of the pans, cool it as quickly as possible. Never wiap bread in a cloth. PARKER H O U SE R O L L S - One cup of milk scalded and cooled, one-fourth to two cakes of com. pressed yeast, soaked in one fourth cup of luke warm water: two table spoons of sugar, two tablespoons of butter, one nnd one-half teaspoons of salt, flour to make a stiff dough, as can be managed with a spoon C IN N A M O N RO I.LS-U se Parker House dough recipe and when dough has risen, roll it out and cover it with melted butter aDd then sprinkle cinnamon and sugar on it, roll it hp in a roll as for jelly cake and cut it about one-half inch thick and place it in the pans cut side up, let it raise and bake. Pro portions of cinnamon and sugar are. for every five parts of sugar, use | one part cinnamon.