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About Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1920)
Thursday, June 17, 1920 eastern cl . ck l \ iad nevvs VIOLA BREEZES C. Collard bought Mrs. Wm. Hicinbotham’s cow. C. N. Brash has a craw of men putting up his saw mill on little Clear Creek. Alice Hicinbothom spent the past week with her grandparents Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Sevier. Grandpa Miller returned last week from Portland where he spent a couple of weeks with rel atives. Byron Randolph has sold his Oakland Six. With his brother Worth, he came out from Port land to spend the week end with his parents. Wm. Hicinbotham has moved his famils to Hillsboro. He sold his Ford to his brother Charlie of River Mill, and bought a new Overland Six. Oar school closed two weeks before the term was out, on ac count of sickness among the pu pils. The teacher Mrs. C. B. Stone and her three children will join her husband in California. Want and For Sale Column •5 cents per line. Cash in advance Pull Together for an «. American Merchant Marine The war resulted In the creation of a grout merchant marine--10,000,000 tons of American ships which cost us r $3,000,000,000. Everybody agrees that we must keep this fleet on the seas. * If we fall hack to pre-war conditions—when only 0 per cent of our foreign trade was carried In American ships— We shall be in the position of a department store whose poods are delivered In its competitor’s wagon* Congress is considering legislation which will perpetuate our war-huilt merchant murine. Until this is done the ships we have should not be sold to face conditions which, prior to the war, resulted in the decline of our merchant marine to insignificance. This Committee calls attention to these facts because u right solution of our shipping problem is vital io the future prosperity of shipbuilding, lint equally vital to the safety and prosperity of the nation. Send for Marine." free copy of “ For an American Merchant Committee of American Shipbuilders 30 C H U R C H S T R E E T . N EW Y O R K CITY You Can Get The • • Pngs Three Sanitary Porcelain Lined Mason Jar C a p s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Cakes Royal White Laundry Soap for 4 Cakes Toilet Soap for . . . Tomatoes, one can for • . . . . . . . . . . . Camp Fire Roast Coffee . . . . 15c doz. $ 1.00 . 25c . 10c 38c lb. EVERY THING .in our line is FRESH and NEW. N o o l d g o o d s t o pick from. OUR PRICES ARE ALW AYS THE LOWEST. Get in on Our GINGHAMS for Your NEW DRESS at 40c a yard. FOR SALE A good general work and riding horse/ K. C. Hoygaard, Faraday. 7 1 FOR SALE A fresh cow and one horse. Mts. A. L. Baker, one mile east of the Grange hall. FOR SALE Lot8, Block 22, 1st Addition. Write E. Maple, 449 E. Yamhill St., Portland Or. _____ 6-1017 FOR SALE About two tons of cheat hay, loose. $20 per ton. Neil Taylor. Curinsville. 6-3-10 FOR SALE 27 Ijead of ewes, 16 head of male lambs; will sell or trade for cattle. L. J. Rucker, Eagle Creek, Ore. USED GASOLINE ENGINES in IK-, 2, 6, S and 14 horse power for sale in good (condition, at about halt the price Of a new one. We have also gang plows, sulky plows, walking plows and other good used implements. W. A. Hessel, 6-10-24 Gresham, Ore. BERRY PICKERS WANTED For logan, red raspberries and blackberries. Camp of 25 pick - ers needed. Phone or write R. C. Deming. Garfield. 6-24 NOTICE There will be a meeting of Tut: H ill T e l e p h o n e C o ., Limited, held at the School House of Distrtct 88 on Saturday, July 17. 1920, at 4 p. m., for the purpose of amending the Constitut ion and By-Laws, and re-organizing the Company, and the transaction of such other business as may come before the members. H. A. La Barre, President, Ben T. Rawlins. Secretary. Dated June 15, 1920. 7-15 J. W. SHAFFORD — DEALER IN — ► LU M B ER , R. R. TIES , CEDAR PO LES, and FE N C E POSTS INDIAN H EA D the best quality, at The People’s Store * CAR STRIPS A SPE CIALTY-ONE HUN DRED C A R L O A D S WANTED H. B. SNYDER, Proprietor Our Motto is Service. Estacada, Estacada Hotel ►