Image provided by: Portland General Electric; Portland, OR.
About Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1916)
Studebaker* 7 Passenger “6” $1450. ' 5 Passenger “6” $1385. 7 Passenger “4” $945. Touring Car $440. Runabout $390. Coupelet $590. Town Car $640. Sedan $740. F. 0. B. Detroit. Navajo Woolen Auto Robes New F. O. B. Detroit Stream-line . Hood - Oakland Six $5. to $7.50 (fo r Ford cars) $18. Do You Know $ 895 . HERE that all makes of BRANDED TIRES, sell for the same price in all places in the Northwest. We are selling all standard auto tires at the same price as sold in Portland or elsewhere. Sparc Tire Holders, Latest Improved $4.25 These Ford attachments are specially constructed to accomodate the License Tag, Tail Lamp, and securely carry the extra Tire. SO LA R S C O P E price 50c The Gleam o f an approaching car need not bother you, if your windshield contains a SOLARSCOPE. PAINTS, ENAM ELS, o f all colors. POLISHES Make your car look as good as new. Expert Mechanical Force Always On T h e Job. V O T E S G I V E N ON A L L P U R C H A S E S ESTACADA GARAGE Reed C&, Bartholomew, Ltd. 1916 Friends Donate Wheel Chair Maxwell ” 25 ” Complete with Electric Starter and Lights $ 745 . Delivered at Estacada Demonstrations Gladly Given. H. P. Jochimsen Estacada, Agent Oregon Votes Given On - - Lunches - Confectionery Drinks - Tobaccos - Fruits International AT Tailored Suits R/G. Marchbank’s Store The many friends o f Grandma Jennings o f Estacada last week purchased and had delivered to her an invalid’s wheeling chair. This convenience was purchased with funds subscribed by many local people, through the solici tation o f Mrs. P. M. Wagner and others. This chair will belong to this community and when Grandma Jennings is through wi h it, it will be for public use, under the supervision o f a committee con sisting o f Mesdatnes Underwood, Sparks and Adix. Grandma Jennings wishes to herewith thank the kind people of this community, for this token of friendship. B a ll a d s a s N e w s p a p e r s. The ballad, or that form o f It which I k asso luted with the broadside, was one predecessor of the newspajier as u commentator on events. It was writ ten for the |»eople and sold t<* the pe<*- ple. rrlnte I on pool paper and passed from hand t * hand. copies o f early bal lads were seldom preserved. Fortu nately several men of the seventeenth century berau t«» make collections of ballads, and the copies of broadsides printed before 1700 that are now in ex istence are supposed to uumher about 10,000. Soon after 1700 the printed form of the ballad was changed, the “ black letter” disappearing. ' lit the ballad continued as a chrouh'ler of haj>- peiiings and a commentator on politi cal. military and other public events until the middle of the nineteenth oen- tury and in the United States as well as Ftiglund. The “ topical** w»ng o f to day per]>etuates tin* satirical function of the ballad.— Springfield Republican. Furniture Company Makes Assignment The News is sorry to chronicle the fact that the Estacada Fur niture Company, o f which W. ¡ . Henthorn has for years been it c proprietor, was this week forced to make an assignment to its ¡creditors, with the conseipiei t ; closing o f the store Tuesday, i It is hoped that when the sto< k is finally disposed o f and an ad justment made, that Mr. Hen- ! thorn will find himself with a ¡cash surplus, as he deserves far from the fate that has overtalo n him, which is largely due to his generosity in extending too lib eral a line o'" credit to his cus tomers. B e lg ia n K o n g o . Belglau Kongo, founded thirty years While Mr. Henthorn w ill not Dr. Whiteside o f Portland vis ago. is still in the early stage of devel | re-enter mercantile lines in Es opment. So far practically uo manu ited in Garfjeld Sunday, at the facturing Industries have yet been es tacada, he expects to remain heie tablished. and. uside from the iuq>or- for the summer at least and his Nunn bungalow on Delf Creek. tunt c pper mines In the Katanga dis friends hope he will remain per trict. the only large industrial euter- S h ip M oney. prices are the railways and river trans manently. Charles l. was badly In need o f mon port atlop services. It may lie said that ey. and hi» attorney general In the all business activities In the colony are course o f his antiquarian researches devoted to the collection of tropical discovered that In the dim uges o f the products — rubber. Ivory, gum copal, past the crown had Issued writs to the palm oil and kernels, cacao, etc.-and cities and towns on the coast requiring the railway and river mpt vices are in them to provide vessels for the royal reality only accessories to these activi nee*is, and he suggested that this an ties. having been established primarily elent right might be brought Into use to aid in the transportation of these again. Instead o f the actual vessels a pnxiuet* to the seaports. The gather money contribution might be exacted ing of rubl>er In Kongo has never re Instead. Thus the king would be able covered its former activity, and lu nil to tax a larger part of the realm while probability will never again lx* so rich theoretically observing the laws. Writs I a source of Income to the colony as it for ship money were a<*cordingly Is was previous to 1912. sued. hut the !>atrlot John Hampden declare«! that they were illegal and Life without pursuit Is a vague an«, raised such a protest agulnst them languid thing. —Bacon. that they were practically nullified. Miss Doris Jénsen, who has successfully conducted the Gar field school for the past year, left Tuesday for her home at Dee. Or. The entertainment given by the Springwater Ladies Aid So ciety last week was a success both financially and socially. The machinery in the Esta cada Cannery has all been in stalled and the boiler is being unloaded at the plant today.