Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928, January 05, 1922, Image 3

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    I
EASTERI
LOCAL B R E V IT IE S
AND NEWS I! LMS
PORTLAND TEACHER
TOURS THE STATE
School Board Releases Miss
Margaret Reid For Near
J. H. Sharp has m o v e d to
Gresham.
East Relief.
Have you tried S. O. S. ? You
can get it at Rose's.
W. E. Linn and V. W. Hauser
have bought the Red Front pool
hall.
W. F. Cary has assumed the
management of the Hotel Esta-
cada.
Mrs. Jake Looney of Currins-
ville, is the fortunate winner of
the suubonnet quilt.
Dr. and Mrs. C. K. Carey of
Chicago, are guests this week of
Dr. and Mrs. R. G. McCall.
Your boy would be very prouc
of one of those nice, warm woo
suits at Rose’s, the place to buy.
Miss Lydia Mattson returned
to Portland, Monday evening af­
ter being home for New Year.
< LACKAMAS NEWS, THURSDAY JAN. 5. 1922.
Dr. W. W. Rhodes, osteopathic
physician, located at Hotel Esta­
H o w A n Armenian O r p h a n Became • cada, on Mondays, Wednesdays
M ovie Star.
and Fridays, from 8:30 to 4 p. m.
A three reel motion picture film en-
9-8tf
ALICE IN HUNGERLAND
______
I.O.O.F.
Estacada Lodi'c
No. 175.
distress as she saw the great multi­
tudes for whom we have been unable
to make room. The real Alice is now
in America bringing a message to
American children of the gratitude of
the children of all nationalities, Armen­
ian, Syrian, Greek, Jew, Chaldean,
Assyrian and others for the life given
them by America.
"Those desiring a showing of the
pictures should address Near East Re­
lief, 613 Stock Exchange, Portland,
Oregon.”
OREGONIANS MAKE RECORD
J. J. H a n d s a k e r F i n d s O r e g o n W o r k e r s
In M a n y A r m e n i a n Tow ns.
"Oregonians are making a record in
the Near East of which the State will
M ISS M A R G A R E T REID
be proud, once the story is known,”
says J. J. Handsaker, State Director.
for the mothers of Armenia. They j
"During my summer in Armenia I did
came to me on cold and stormy winter j
not visit a town where there was not
days, only last winter; I saw them an Oregonian at work, or some mark
open their arms to show me a little of an Oregonian’s doings. At Derindje
naked babe lying there and then beg
I found a hut made of packing boxes
me for a piece of cloth, even a piece
which I had shipped. At Trebizond,
of burlap, anything to wrap around the j
Nellie Cole of Forest Grove, was striv­
tender little body. Last year I was I
ing to stem the flood of refugees
able to give them a bit of flannel and
caused by the Greek and Turkish war.
some little cotton clothes, and I was
Margaret (Dollie) Hinman of Forest
able to do this sirhply because the peo­
Grove, was in Constantinople, having
ple of America had sent cloth and
been expelled from the Interior. At
clothes and money.
Alexandropol we left Mrs. Ethel Long
"You fathers and mothers of lovely Newman, 0. A. C. '20, in charge of
rosy, laughing boys and girls, will you the office where there are 7,000 or­
continue to 'thiifk for' the pitiful little ; phan boys. At Erivan I met Nvart
waifs, driven from home, lost from j Gurdjian, for whom Frances Gage of
dearly loved fathers and mothers and j Portland laid down her life three years
brothers and sisters? I wish you all ago. Mrs. Amy Burt of Bend told me
might have the joy I have had, to pick of how she had rescued 1,000 children
up a thin, starved, sickly, dirty little | at one time.
mite of humanity, hair matted, with I ‘T hope to visit every part of the
awful sores, and with your own hands 1 State to tell the story of these heroic
to wash him and clean him and to Oregonians.”
feed him and heal him, and in a few
weeks to see him changed into a N e a r E a s t A m e r ic a n W o r k e r s Stick.
wholesome, happy, normal kiddie.
"American workers are sticking to
“ The hard part comes when the their posts in the Near East against
orphanage is full and the budget ex­ the greatest of odds," said J. J. Hand -1
hausted and you have to turn away the ; saker on his return from a summer in |
starved and desolate boys and girls j relief work in Armenia. "They declare
from the gates. In my own orphan­ they will not leave until every child j
age we never refused admittance to i In Armenia is cared for. Last year
a very little one. We couldn't. We for a time we were obliged to put our
Jammed them In some place. But orphanages on half and quarter ra­
again and again we had to turn away tions, and thousands of our children j
a big boy and sometimes the larger died. When I was in Armenia last |
girls, because ‘there was no room.' i summer the children were In raga,
"America has been generous, Oregon some had practically nothing on,
has been generous, but we must con­ others wore grain sacks or flour sacks.
tinue to think and think hard, for 1 Then it was wr rm, but as Mount
these kiddies if they are to be kept Ararat towers above the country, I
warm and safe and protected and realized that before long those rags
happy through *nis desperate time will be of no use, and they must hava
warm clothing.”
Miss LylaMcKenr«y who spent ahead.”
her Christmas vacation at home
Miss Bertha Burns was home
with her mother, Mrs. Grace for the New Year holidays.
Complications following acute
McKenney, returned Sunday to
We give double trading stamps contagious and infectious cases,
her school in the Foster district, with all cash purchases on Wed­ rarely occur where patient has
near Lebanon, w h e r e she is nesdays at Rose’s.
had osteopathic treatment. 12-15
teaching.
The ladies of the VV. C. T. U.
had a delightful meeting last
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Hassek After a sumptuous din­
ner, the ladies pieced blocks for
a quilt, visited and had a gener­
al good time.
Timothy, Alfalfa, G cver, Vetch and Clover mixed
One day last week Mrs. Gor­
don Lawrence went to Gresham
to visit her father and sister, and
THE BEST SHINGLES ON THE MARKET
was taken ill so she was unable
to return home. She is improv­
ing, however, but does not know
Get your supply of Mill Run while price is low.
when she can return home.
H A Y
Miss Lucia Haley, assistant li­
brarian at the 0. A. C., visited
Mrs. Upton H. Gibbs, last Satur­
day. They knew each other in
La Grande, where Miss Haley
was librarian. She is an expert
in her profession, having gradu­
ated at the Pratt college at
Brooklyn, N. Y. After leaving
La Grande, she was librarian at
the University of Montana in
Missoula in that state.
Now For The New Year
W
E ARE
S T A R T IN G
With a Larger
STOCK OF GROCERIES than ever, and
just remember it is Straight G r o c e r i e s .
I specialize in groceries just as a doctor
does in bones. If you are sick you do not
go to the blacksmith; if you are hungry you
do not g o to the druggist, but just come to
me, I have everything to eat.
Give me a trial and be convinced that this
IS the place to get G R O C E R I E S .
I AUTOMOBILE *
WWiV.i'iv.v.--,v.\----v.-.y.vx<b* ¡I
SHOE REPAIRING A SPECIALTY.
RE-NU-EM TAILORS.
; THE PACIFIC STATES:
: FIRE INSURANCE CO.:
KtMWWMKSWv
American Shoe Shop
Meets every Saturday evening in
j titled, “ Alice in Hungerlaud,” is now
their lodge room, corner of Broad­
Harness Kepnited. Shoe laces retipped
! being shewn through the State as a
way and Third streets. Visiting
Custom prices. Everything for Shoes.
i part of the Near East Relief campaign,
brothers are always welcome.
j The heroine of the play, "Alice," was
H. L. M c K enney , N. G.
found by J. J. Handsaker, State Cleaning, Pressing. Dyeing.
B. H . J O H N S O N .
J. C. H atm an . Secretary,
i Director of the Near East Relief, and
ALTERING AND REPAIRING,
♦ * * * * * > 4 ‘**4 -**4 "»«*4 «M '***+ *** ESTACADA, P. O. Box 44 OREGON
j other Relief workers, in a Jewish
SUITS MADE TO ORDER.
| orphanage in Constantinople.
"W e all fell in love with Alice," says Low Prices.
WM. BASS, Prop.
Mr. Handsaker, “and we took her with
us all through Armenia, that she might
J. E. METZGER,
'star' in our movies. The picture
A t the request of Gov Ben. W. 01-
cott, honorary chairman Near East Re­
lief, the Portland School Board ha3
given three months leave of absence to
Miss Margaret Reid, teacher of his­
tory in Jefferson High School, that she
Undertaker and Embalmer
might help organize the schools and
colleges of Oregon for the Near East
Gresham - Oregon
Relief. Miss Reid has recently re­
Warren McWillis
turned from the Near East where for
two years she was in charge of an
Local Agent for Estacada
orphanage of three hundred seventy-
» + + + + ♦ ♦ ♦ + ♦♦ + +
five children in Homs, and later help­
ed care for 6,000 refugees in Marash.
“ For the first time in my experience
as a teacher I find my heart is not
in teaching,” says Miss Reid. “ My
'thinks', to use an Armenian expres­
sion, are for the kiddies I left in Tur­
key, so I ajn glad of the chance to give
♦
is your Home Company.
i
to Oregon the message given me by
♦
See us regardi. g your
the people of Marash as I was leaving
property,
Insure your
* i
there last April.
“ 'You are going bacle to your home
in America. Please carry our love
and gratitude to the American peo­
ple, and tell them to please "think for
+
—Against—
+
Mrs. 0. E. Smith is still con­ us",’ they said. This is an Armenian
*
FIRE,
*
fined to her bed with an aggra­ idiom for, ‘help us.’
“ This is the message I bring to the > shows her frolieklng with the hun­ *
vating attack of rheumatism.
THEFT or'
+
people of Oregon. You mothers with dreds and thousands of happy children
Mrs. W. A. Heylman took the sweet, wee babies in your arms, 'think'
*
C
O
L
L
IS
IO
N
.
+
in our orphanages, and it shows her
noon train to Portland, Saturday,
and the P. M. followed Sunday
morning.
Matt Lonsberry returned Sun­
day afternoon from a visit to
Vancouver, Washington, and to
Portlan d.
Mr. and Mrs James Closner
have gone to housekeeping in
the Snyder cottage on Terrace
Addition.
Mrs. A. E. Sparks visited her
old Fort Dodge. Iowa, friends,
the Misses Train, at Lents, Sun­
day.
Mrs. Lily Close of Vancouver,
Wash., passed the week end at
her brother’s, W. A. Wilcox’ s,
home.
The friends of Mrs. T. R. Jubb
will be glad to learn that her
health has improved since her
arrival in California.
Special bargains in broken
lines of shoes, to make room for
spring goods now coming in, at
Rose’ s, the place to buy.
The Ladies Auxiliary to the
American Legjon will hold a
meeting next Monday night,
Jan. 9, at 8:30, 1. 0. 0. F. hall.
The various students from Es-
tacada and vicinity, at the state
colleges and other institutions,
have returned to them after
spending their v a c a t i o n s at home.
James Norris was in town on
Tuesday from Dwyer’s camp.
The mill has been shut down for
a short time, but will soon re­
commence operations.
Mrs. Thomas Morton has pur­
chased the W. J. Moore resi­
dence. For the time being, both
families will live together, and
later on Mr. Moore will build on
Terrace addition, on the lot be­
longing to Mrs. Moore adjoining
the residence of Roy Wilcox.
The Progressive
Yours for Lower Prices at
THE SQUARE DEAL GROCERY
H. L. M c K E N N E Y .
* J. W. Reed Estate ♦
ESTACADA, ORE.
♦ i
+ + + + + + + + + + + + +
-
% % % %
i'
GAIN the season h a s
come when both cus­
tom a n d inclination
prompt folks to remem­
ber old friends and to give
some expression to that
remembrance. In the spir­
it of the season we send
you greetings. Fully ap- |
preciative of the p a r t
your friendship and pat­
ronage have played in our
progress we thank you.
And we extend to you and
yours o u r sincere well-
wishes for a N ew Y ear
of continued joy and pros­
perity.
A
DO YOU KNOW
T H A T we Shoe Horses the way Uncle Sam
requires the work done?
T H A T we are selling a first class Eastern Oil
and giving free crankease service with it?1
T H A T you should “ save the pieces” for our
oxy-acetylene welding apparatus?
T H A T we are now equipped to do grinding
and saw gumming?
T H A T we are manuracturing a few F O R D
E X T R A S that are not found on the mar­
ket or elsewhere on this planet?
T H A T we see to it that “ Y O U
W I N? ”
Portland, Estacada
Transportation Co.
J. V .
Fred C. Bartholomew,
G. M. Lawrence.
B A R R
&
S O N ,
Blacksmiths, Horseshoers, Repairmen.
INVENTORY SALE
Shoes
W e have several lots of W ork and Dress Shoes, standard makes, all
sizes and styles, formerly priced from $4.50 to $10.50
N o w ...................................................................................... $ 3 .9 0 the pair
B u n g a low A p ron s
Best quality Scout Percale, in a fine variety of patterns
in all sizes................................................................................. $ 1 .0 5 each
Blankets
W e have some real bargains in gray and also white Cotton Blankets
full double bed size........................................................................................
A new lot of U. S. Arm y Shoes has just arrived and we can fit you in any size
HOUSE SLIPPERS FOR MEN AND WOMEN
Have you seen the new LAUN-DRY-ETTE? AsK for a demonstra­
tion. The only Washing Machine that DRIES WITHOUT WRINGING
JOIN THE CROWD AT
Oats and Wheat wanted
A FULL LINE OF GROCERIES AND FEED
i
Estacada Feed Co.
U. S. MORGAN
W. H. KANDLE.
The People’s Sto re
H. B. SNYDER,
-
-
C. E. KILGORE.
W here the Motto la Service.
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