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About Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1918)
% V 1 f > X 4 i Eagle Creek Notes Contributed The regular Wednesday meet ing o f the Red Cross Unit of Upper Eagle ( ’reek was held at the home o f Mrs. Geo. Judd last week. About ten ladies were present and made comfort pil lows for the soldiers. The Eagle Creek R#d Cross auxiliary met with Mrs. E. Fos ter last Thursday. The Douglass school opened for the 1918 term Mrnday, Jan uary 7th. Mr. nJy is much pleased with the improvements made in the school-house during vacation. Mrs R. B. Gibson called on Mrs. Roy Douglass last Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Woodle and J. P. Woodle were Estacada visi tors last Wednesday. Ernest Hoffmeister is working at the Nelson Mill on Sandy Ridge. Dick Gibson sold a couple of pigs to Mr. Fuchs the other day. Geo. Judd and son Oscar were Portland visitors last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Douglass and Mrs. R. B. Gibson called on Mr. and Mrs. Ray Woodle Sun day afternoon. Miss Veroo Beckettt came home Sunday to stay for awhile with her mother, Mrs. A. Beck ett. Mrs. Viola Douglass was the guest of her daughter, Mrs. H. S. Jones, of Portland for several days last week. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Palmateer o f Silverton are visiting at the home of his brother, L. J. Palm ateer o f Garfield. Mr. Palma teer is recuperating from an attack o f pneumonia and tempor arily taking it easy. Miss Virginia Scott of Estacada after her return from Forts! Grove, where with her mother she spent Christmas, was taken seriously ill and for a time it was feared an operation for appendi citis was necessary, but at last reports she was on the road to recovery. Bill Campbell o f Currinsville met with an accident in Portland the day before Christmas, having fallen against a curb and serious ly injured his knee. At last re ports he was at the Good Samari- r* tan Hospital, where an operation * was performed. E. C. Peery, an experienced pharmacist of Scio, Oregon, is l ow at the Estacada Pharmacy, where temporarily he will con duct the business, relieving Miss Sturgeon, who contemplates tak ing a much needed rest. There is m ore Catarrh lo this section c f the cou n try than all other disease* I ut together, and for years It w a i «up* j osed to be Incurable. Doctor* pre- ecribed local remedies, and by con stant ly fa llin g to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Catarrh Is a local disease, greatly Influenced by con stitutional conditions and therefore re quires constitutional treatment. H all's Catarrh Cure, manufacWired by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. Ohio. Is a con sti tutional remedy. Is taken Internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces o f the 8ystem. One Hundred D ollars rew ard is offered for any case that H all's Catarrh Cure falls to cur*. Bend for circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo^ Ohio. Sold by D ruggists. 75c. H all's F am ily P ills fo r constipation. % ' Thrift Stamp Paragraphs Lend your quarters to warm the quarters of American soldiers “ Over There” There are 1(X).000,000 of us in the United States. So let’s cut out the little extravagances and when the pennies have been saved, Uncle Sam has provided simple machinery with which to take care of them. Twenty-five cents buys a Thrift Stamp. Six teen Thrift Stamps pasted on a card given you when you buy the stamp, with 12 cents additional will buy a War Savings Stamp. Twenty War Savings Stamps pasted on a War Savings Cert’fi- eate, given with your first War Savings Stamp, becomes virtually a government bond, for which the Government will pay you $100. in five years. A War Savings Stamp is just as safe as your country. And the more Stamps sold right now, the safer your country will be. The mighty oak was once an acorn. A Thrift Stamp may be come a Liberty Bond. Uncle Sam’s War S a v i n g s Stamps “ drive” isn’t really go ing to be a drive at all. Rather it’s going to be a campaign of education, the drive features of which will be consci mtious effort to drive home knowledge and appreciation of the real life-giv ing results of thrift into the heart and head of every Ameri can mother and father and each of their little ones. There will be no centralized “ drive” to raise the $17,000,000 Uncle Sam has asked Oregon to furnish by the sale of War Sav ings Stamps. There will be no effort to “ drive” the people of Oregon into the purchase of War Savings Stamps and T h r i ft Stamps. Uncle Sam wants Oregonians to develop and practice habits of thrift to such an extent that they will do their own “ driving” and again send Oregon “ over the top” with colors flying. The members of the Red Cross in Currinsville are planning to conduct meetings and sewing cir cles in their home district here after, as it is too far from the Estacada or Eagle Creek organi zations for easy attendance. The ladies will meet Tuesday after noon, January 15th and ask that all neighboring ladies join in the sewing, which will take place at the church. All are asked to bring material for making band ages and wash cloths. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Eschleman have this week moved back into their Estacada home, after an absence o f a year at Scobey. Mon tana and later visiting in Corval lis and Oregon City. For the first time in seventeen years, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Jubb of Estacada succeeded in getting the entire family together for a reunion, which was celebrated Sunday, with the guest of honor being their daughter, Mrs. J. Hart of Seattle, who will visit here and among Viola relatives for a few days longer Revival Meetings will begin at the Estacada M. E. Church with next Sunday morning’s service. Rev. F. W. Snyder will preach. Everyone is cordially invited to be present. Our Closing Out Sale Is Still Continuing And Will Continue Until Our Entire Stock is Sold, Regardless of Prices Call at our store and you will find plenty of articles which you need and cannot a fh id not to buy at the prices at which we are selling. Park & Closner Estacada, Or. Broadway at 2nd St. Battery Charging Station Don’t let your motor get cold and expect your battery to respond, which is the fault o f the gaso'ine not vaporiz ing. Sometimes you forget your switch too and when you press the button continually, you are hurrying it to our station but that is our business. If you tee a brilliant light coming into Estacada from any direction at night, don’ t get excited and think it is a Kaiser War Gun for improbably is only a J. R. INTENSI- F1ER for FORD Gars. Sold only by us in Estacada. W h en you are in need of a good tire, think of Brunswick with the 4,000 mile guarantee. U That’s our business too. C om m ence the New Year right L et gasoline pull your plow E nd your drudgery of Walking V cry much cheaper to keep than horaes E ngine trouble a thing o f the past L ikea wet ground as well sh dry. A nd your little girl can operate it N o more broken riba from plow handles D on’ t make shallow, crooked furrougha either. T he price ia $1286. but after Jan. 15,$1500. R emove your old plow to the Clearing liouae A nd letStandiah sell it C ome in to the Cascade Garage T omorroW and ask ua about it O rder your» before the spring plowing R eat eaay with this year’ B plowing, by S hifting to Cleveland Tractor. Cascade Garage S. P . P e s z n e c k e r J. C. P e t e r s o n