EASTERN CLACKAMAS NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 17 , 1921 . ELWOOD ITEMS Dan Stahlnecker is putting up a fireplace. Mrs. Lilly Park is working near Portland. T. Munson and Stanford Cox sold some beef last week. Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Lankins drove to Oregon City on business last Saturday. E. Douglas and E. Bittner anc families have moved back to their homesteads. Mrs. Gusta Powers was in this vicinity one day last week, look ing after household goods. 0. M Scheistroen deliverec two head of beef cattle to the Estacada Meat Co. recently. Ed Hotchkiss is sowing some grain on the Wilson place, and will move on to the same in the near future. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Vallen and Mrs. Lulu Dories and two little daughters, Esther and Hel en Mae, were out from Portlanc a few days last w'eek, guests at the A. Vallen home. Frank Evanson of Clear Creek lumber company is cleaning up the lumber yard, and shipping ail machinery, and selling off all salable articles, expecting to be throughlat the old mill site in few days. SPRINGWATER NEWS Mrs. Wm. Still’s grandmother, Mrs. Boyce, is visiting her, from Portland, Orde Carr, a cousin of Wm. Bard, is visiting at the Bard ana Shibley homes. The road bridge meeting mill be held Nov. 30, at 1:30 p. m., at the Grange hall. Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Guttridge, James and George Guttridge, were business visitors in Oregon City, Monday. Mrs, A. M. Grable and Mrs. Myrtle Young will represent the Springwater Grange at the Na tional Grange in Portland, all this week. A special session of the Grange was held Monday evening, doing degree work, so some of the new members could attend the Na tional Grange. A Silver Tea will be held at the parsonage by Mrs. Weir tor the Missonary Society, Monday, November 30th, at 2:30 p. m. Everybody welcome. DOVER M. Pedersen spent most of the week in Portland, on business. Mrs. Wismer from VancoverJ* B. C., spent nearly a week vis iting at the home of her father, Mr. S. W. Benjamin. The stork passed through Dodge again last Wednesday night, Nov. 9, and left a baby boy at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Finster. On Thursday afternoon, a number of the patents called at the Dodge school to hear the program given by the pupils in honor of Armistice Day. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Chindgren and Herman Chindgren, from Meadowbrook, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Horner and daughter Kathleen, were Sunday visitors at the Fred Horner home. Interesting Letter and we are pulling up the stream. Mr. Bland and myself are en joying good health. Enclosed Cleaning, Pressing. Dyeing. you will find $1.50 for year’ s ALTERING AND REPAIRING, subscription for the E astern SUITS MADE TO ORDER. - C lackamas N ew s , which we en Low Prices. WM. BASS, Prop. joy reading so much. Yours truly, RE-NU-EM TAILORS. J. . ♦ ♦ ♦ E. METZGER, Undertaker and Embalmer - Oregon G re s h a m + + + + ♦ + + + * + ♦ + + + ♦ + + ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * Confectionery, Phonographs, ♦ » R. G. M A R C H B A N K , Warren McWillis Local Agent for Estacada L ig h t M rs . O. O. B land . L u n c h e s , We’ve Just Unpacked (Published by request.) After months of suffering, death came to Mrs. Amanda Pay- ton, on Saturday afternoon, Oct. 15th, aged fifty-five years, ten months and ten days. Mrs. Pax ton had recently been to the hos pital at Charlottsvile, but there it was found she was suffering from cancer of the liver, and the physicians advised the hus band that she was beyond med ical aid, and that life was but the matter of a few months. Deceased is survived by her husband, H. Grant Paxton, and the following children, all of whom were present in her last hours: Mrs. Rosa Looney, of Estacada, Ore., Mrs. C. P. Cald well, o f Sinking Creek, Geoffrey, Arthur, Virginia, Lillie and William; one sister, Mrs. Joe Paxton and a brother, Mr. Jacob Runnels, of Sinking Creek. Funeral sevices conducted by Rev. J. A. Hopkins, of the Chris tian Church, of which the de ceased was a member, w’ere held at the grave near the residence of Mr. Dave Looney, on Sunday afternoon, in the .presence of a crowd of neighbors and friends of the family, many coming for quite a distance to do honor to this good woman, kind neighbor, model wife and mother, whose earthly pilgrimage is over, but whose Lads of character and life will live on and on . -Record, Newcastle, Va. OREGON. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Cigars and Tobaccco, International Clothes, 4 + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + A SHIPMENT OF Fancy Turkish Towels for Initialing Terry Cloth Pongee, Crepe De Chene, Black Sateen, Etc. THE U N I V E R S A L C A R Lie F>rJ M-it»r Ompany was the first to re- aace prices o 1 cars, September 22, 1920 That iT-st re taction priaw all models below the 1 *.4 p n cj Ijisia. Now another cut is mad«.— effective Sept. 2. 1921 - t o the following prices f. o. b. Detroit: Transfer Patterns Now in Stock One-half £ ha8i* ................................................. $295.00 Runabout ............................................. 325,00 I ouring .................................................. 355.00 Truck with Pneumatic Tires............ 455!()0 Starters on above models $70.00 ad ditional. Demountable wheels $25.00 additional. Price offer on the D E L IN E A T O R , good until Saturday, November 19th, 1921. Eight months for One Dollar. Coupe with Starter and Demountable wheels............................................$595 00 Sedan with Starter and Demountable wheels ........................................... $660.00 T H O S . H. M O R T O N . Millinery, Notions, Dry Goods, Furnishings. EX CISE T A X E X T R A . Successor to Wm. Dale Co. Ford prices are uniform everywhere, except for freight became Mr. Ford himself fixes the retail price. Place your order quickly td avoid delay from the rush o f or ders these new prices will product. R A K E R & SON, Estacada and Gresham, T ANC FOR SALE AOS. Oregon W A R M T H FOR SALE.—One-half horse lower water motor. Inquire at \TBWS office. when you want it. Clean and in stantaneous. And the cost is less than 2 cents per hour. '"M a K - K - V X -K - W k - K - K - W W - I- X - I- K - I- M - X - X - I- '- '- V K - i- V X -K - M a X * Cozy warmth for cold comers on cold days. In the bathroom, bedroom, sewing room, office— anywhere. | Especially Priced! j FOR SALE — Italian Prune Trees, one year old. R. F. D. No. 1. 0 . W. Failing _ 10-27-11-17 FOR SALE A second hand Universal coal stove, at the Smith Hardware Store. ll-3 tf W e have all types and sizes of electric heaters at right prices. EOR SALE — Italian Prune Trees 1 year old. Height 4 to 514 feet, 15c; 6 to 8 feet, 25c. J. J. Marchbank. ll-17-12-8tf Only $35.00 installs an Electric Range in your home, ready for use; the balance on easy terms. FOR SALE—Jersey cow, milk ing now and coming fresh in March. Inquire of Charles Hicenbothon, Estacada, Ore. 11-17-24 PORTLAND | ---------- I j I 1-2 H Z Type Gas Engine $ 5 5.00 1 1-2 H Wade Gas Engine, new $ 75.00 RAILWAY, LIGHT & POWER CO Y, I Reversible 2-horse Disc, $ 7 9.75 ELECTRIC STORE FOR SALE OR T R A D E -O . e 2-year old black Jersey bull. The Bard strain. D. E. Mendenhall, Estacada, Ore, It Electric Bldg., Bet. Sixth and Broadway. ?F8S?ärsmS2 FOR SALE -Pullets and one- year old hens, Rhode Island Reds and White Leghorns. D. Horner, Dodge. ________ 11-17-24 QUALITY SPRYAERS THE ESTACADA MEAT CO. FOR SALE Nine Chester White pigs, 8 weeks old, Thomas A. Miller, Currinsville, Oregon. 11-17-24 WANTED—To hear from par ties who car. furnish me 3 or 4 thousand Cedar Posts. W. 0. Echols, Estacada, Rt. 1. Phone 11-17 EOR SALE — One K Hand- power Stump Puller in good me chanical condition, three blocks, one hundred feet of heavy cable and chockers. All for $55.00. For further particulars write Joseph DeShazer, Eagle Creek, or phone 186 Dover. 17-24 ♦ ESTACADA, Obituary * ♦ ♦ * ♦ Anything from Barrel T y p e s- Power Outfits. BEEF CATTLE, VEAL AND HOGS, Dressed or Live, Bought The Reed Auto Co. See our Delicatessen Department, containing Pickles, Relishes, Catsups, Cheese, Butter, Milk, and Salt and Smoked Fish. Buy a Quarter of Beef for Canning, 10c and 12c Per Pound. ESTACADA, OREGON. M. J. KERKES & Co. Estacada DRESSMAKING?“ :: Oregon i Costa Mesa, Nov. 9, 1921. I have opened a Dressmaking Shop in the Hunt building. Call Dear friends and neighbors, I and see me about sewing. have just finished reading Otis MRS. ROY W AY. Wagner’s letter and want to cor 1 0 - 2 7 t f _________ ____________ roborate every word of it, only NOTICE l o k PUBLICATION I will say, the trip can he made Department o f the Interior, U. 8. Land Office, at Portland, Oregon, Oct. 20, in a Ford. All o f California is 1921. good, but the one spot is Or NOTICE is hereby given that George W. Nevling, o f EstHcada, Oregon. K. ange County and the idea! place F. D. No. 2, who, on August 1. 1918 in Orange County is Costa Mesa. made Homestead Entry, No. 052IS, for 7 and 8. SW j SEj /»nd SEj SEj. We can raise such a large vari Section 17, Township 4 S, Range 4 E. ety o f things we all enjoy and Willamette Meridian, has tiled notice of intention to make three year proof, do have the ideal climate. to establish claim to the land above I We have apples here equal to described, before the Register and | the noted Hood River apples. Receiver of the U. 8. Land Office, at j Portland. Oregon, on the 8th day of j This place is settling up very; December, 1921. Claimant names as witnesses: Ebon-j fast. The community spirit is eier Lacey, of Estacada, Ore.. R. F. the best I ever saw. So you peo D. No. 2, James R. Millard, o f Esta ple in Oregon who want small cada. Ore., K. F. D. No 2. Mrs. Ethel Julian, of Estacada. Ore.. R. K. D, No. acreage in California, come on 2, William Hendren, of Estacada. Ore.. down and spend the winter at R. F. D. No. 2. Act 6-9-1918- Costa Mesa. We are trying to A lkandkr S week , Register. io -a -n -1 7 improve our little five-acre place 1 D eak E dito r :| » A FEW THANKSGIVING SUGGESTIONS: Kitchen Knives and Food Grinders, Chopping Bowls and Knives, PYREX Pie Plates and Pudding Dishes, SAVORY ROASTERS, both in steel and enamel. Come in and see them* SMITH H A R D W A R E STORE, ESTACADA.