Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928, November 21, 1918, Image 1

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    NEWSPAPERS
Are What the Community
Makes Them
ÎÎPWB
Devoted to the Interests of Eastern Clackamas County ’
V olume 12,
LE I EVERYONE
G IV E JH A N K S
Union Services Will be Held
in High School Auditorium
Thanksgiving Day
MUSIC BY GARFIELD BAND
A Good Program has Been
Arranged, Which Includes
Able Speakers
Pursuant to the call of the
Mayor a union service has been
arranged for, to be held in the
High School auditorium at 10:30
on the morning of Thanksgiving
Day.
The program which is
given below, is patriotic in char­
acter, as befits the special cir­
cumstances attending this year’s
Thanksgiving.
From both the standpoint of
religion and patriotism, every­
one should attend unless positive­
ly prevented, and help make this
service one which will not be soon
forgotten.
Ih e program will be as follows:
Music— - - By Garfield Band
America— - By Congregation
Invocation—
Song— ......................... School
Address on Patriotism— Mayor
Music— - - - Garfield Band
Address— - - - U. H. Gibbs
Song - - - - - - -
School
Address— - Kev. J. F. Dunlop
Subject “ The Fruits of the War.”
Song — When the Boys Come
Home.
Benediction—
This program will be subject
to some modification.
Card of Thanks.
...................
■ ■ i
%
We wish to thank our friends
for their kindness during our re­
cent bereavement, and also for
the beautiful floral offerings.
Mrs. H. Rivers and family.
■
1
E stacada , O regon , T hursday , N ovember , 21, 1918
N umber 9
■ .....«
P. E. Linn on four acres has
gathered twelve tons of prunes.
They graded 76 but if the season
had been more favorable for ri­
pening, they would have graded
at 50 to the pound.
tEljankagtfnng for llictiiro
?
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0 Almighty God, the Sovereign Commander of all the world,
in whose hand is power and might, which none is able to with­
stand; We bless and magnify thy great and glorious Name for
Y this happy Victory, the whole glory whereof we do ascribe un­
Y
Y to Thee, Who art the only giver of victory.
And, we beseech
Y
Y Thee, give us grace to improve this great mercy to thy glory,
Y
Y the advancement of thy Gospel, the honour of our country, and
Y
Y as much as in us lieth, to the good of all mankind. And, we
X
t beseech Thee, give us such a sense of this great mercy, as may
Y engage us to a true thankfulness, such as. may appear in our
Y
J Y lives by an humble, holy, and obedient walking before Thee all
î our days; through Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom, with Thee
Y
Y and the Holy Spirit, a« for all thy mercies, so in particular for
Y
Y
1 this Victory and deliverance, be all glory and honour, world
without end. Amen.
—From the Book of Common Prayer.
$1.50 P er Y ear
LIM
E
THOMPSON
BOV
|
I OF LOGAN DISAPPEARS
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Y
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Y
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X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X -X ’l-X-X-X-X-X-X-X-vvvv*:-
Kenneth Bartlett has a Thrill
Funeral of Lester Rivers
From the Telegram of last Fri­
day we clip the following, about
Kenneth Bartlett son of Mayor
and Mrs. E. W. Bartlett.
“ Bartlett’s home is in Estaca­
da. He, too, had his thrill not
far from the apple tree where a
certain mess-kit was abandoned.
Boche aviators were bombing the
place, trying to get the engineers
who were working like beavers
repairing the road so the artill­
ery could move up; Bartlett was
on the road at the time and heard
the sound of the motors over­
head. He looked up, noted the
iron cross painted on the wings
and at the same instant saw, a
bombstart falling from the plane.
At first it looked about the size of
a football, but in an instant it
seemed to be as large as one of
the O. W. R. R. & N. locomo­
tives. ‘If that bird had held on
to that egg two seconds longer,
he would have gotten me, ’ stated
Bartlett, ‘for he was coming
right in my direction and flew o-
ver my head. I looked up when
I heard the motor, thinking as a
fellow would, that they were our
planes; I saw the iron crosses,
then a couple of flashes and
something black started to fall.
Then I heard a guy yell “ Ger­
mans” and I teat it.’
The body of Lester Rivers who
died at Fort Stevens, Wash.,
was shipped to his home at Eagle
Creek, and the funeral took place
there on Sunday.
He was the son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Rivers of Eagle
Creek and twenty-five years old
at the time of his death which
resulted from the Spanish in­
fluenza. The services were held
in the Eagle Creek Church, a
minister from Gresham conduct­
ing them. The church was bank­
ed with floral offerings and the
casket draped with a large flag.
The internment was in Forester
cemetry where the mortal re­
mains of this soldier will rest un­
til the sounding of the reveille
on the day of the Great Awak­
ening. He leaves a widow and
baby, besides a father, mother
and a brother. The bereaved re­
latives have the sympathy of his
country.
Undertaker L. A. Chapman
had charge of all arrangements
which he carried out in his usual
sympathetic and efficient manner.
Notice to Stockholders.
The meeting of stockholders of
the Cooperative Cheese Associa­
tion of Garfield, which was called
originally for November 9th, and
postponed on account of the in­
fluenza, will now take place at
the cheese factory at 2 p. m,, on
Saturday November 30th.
Estacadans Joined in Search
Last Sunday for the
Missing Boy
THE HUNT STILL GDNTINUES
Officials are of Opinion that
a Passing Autoist Picked
the Little Fellow up
About twenty-five men from
this place, joined in the hunt last
Sunday in the Ixvgan woods, for
the little 5 year old Thompson
boy who disappeared the 13th.
He w n assisting an older broth­
er in driving some cattle and be­
came tired and the elder brother
told him to wait on the road for
his mother, who was to pass there
in a short time, with a load of
furniture.
When the mother
and an older son arrived at their
destination and missed the young­
ster they asked the other son
about him and he said they should
have met him on the road. Be­
coming alarmed the older boy
immediately mounted one of the
horses and went back to the place
where the boy was left. He hunt­
ed all around and called to him
but with no result.
An autoist from Portland who
drove his machine over the road
said that he saw the lad sitting
by the roadside as he drove by.
Since that time no trace has been
discovered and the officials are at
a loss to explain the case. ' The
only plausible theory that has
been advanced is that the child
has been picked up by some pass­
ing traveler who has not heard
of the search for the child. Some
think that the boy has walked
to the river and accidentally
drowned, officials claim that the
distance to the river from where
the child was left in the road, is
over a mile and a half, and ever»
if the lad had gone in that
direction he would have met his
mother, who was driving a team,
before he could have reached the
river, for in order to get to the
river the lad would have to follow
the road at that point.