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About Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 8, 1923)
EASTERN CLACKAMAS NEWS, THURSDAY FEB. 8. 1923. Farm Reminders Thomas H. Morton drove to Pcrt'and Friday. / Mrs. Gina Rynning has had her house wired and install?«! electric lights. I am now prepared to do all kinds o f watch, clock and jewelry repairing. A. N. Johnson. tf Mr. and Mrs. H. C. injar were county seat Saturday. • Mrs. M. Sagner went Creek Sunday to visit parents’ home. Golying visiiors to Eagle at her Dintvand Andy can stay a little longer—Uncle Bim came across with fifty thousand beans. tf Mr. and Mrs. A. W: Douglass spent Sunday in Portland. Their daughter Kthel works there. Mr. and Mrs. J. VV. Dillinger o f Garfield were among those from Estacada who went to Portland, Sunday. Blister mite on apples is be coming increasingly prevalent in Oregon. Growers are finding its control harder on apples than on pears. Lime-sulfur, 12 100, will give good control if applied previously to opening o f buds, generally on apples spray before March 1 One tom should be used for 12 to 20 turkey hens, with 15 hens a good average number. In creased egg production may be obtained by running two toms to this number of hens. I f the toms are quarrelsome alternate them as to time with the flock, Succesful pdultry men test the I. 0. 0. F. members take no fertility o f their flock before the tice: There will be work in the regular hatching season begins. first degree on Saturday |even- A trial hatch is run to determine ing. I J. K. Ely, Sec’y. . the fertility of the eggs and A traveling man told us Tues whether the birds are properly day that everything was very mated.—O. A. C. Exp. Station. quiet along the line, but he O. A. C. Extension Service looked for business to pick up soon. A Portlandbanker inform The educational campaign in ed him that the banks had plentx cooperative marketing is but a of money which would be: let out p irt of the well-rounded pro as soon as work began to start gram on sixteen phases o f pro up again, and that the business jects conducted by the extension prospect was bright. service of the Oregon Agricultu Don’ t forget the chowder par ty at the I. 0. 0. F. hall Satur day night, February 10. Serving will commence at about6 o’clock Among the notable visitors to be present will be Jiggs and Mag gie, Mutt and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs. Katzenjammer, Ci Slocum and Mandy, and perhaps others. This entertainment is fot everybody. You are welcome. A tte n tio n There will be a meeting of th< stockholders of the Estacad. Packing Co. at the Estacada ho tel, on February 16, beginning at 7:30 p. m. The purpose of the meeting is for th.e election of officers. J. G. Hayman, Sec’ y. P. T. A. Let everyone meet with us on February 13, 1923, at the high school auditorium. Prof. Jamts Mathews of Willamette Univers ity, will be with us and will give a talk that will be of interest tr all. Mrs. R. H. Carter, P re s id e n t, Not so Inappropriate N ext Wednesday is both Ash W eines'a.v and St. Valentine's Day, rati er a peculiar combine- tion of penitence ar.H spooning. But judging from " the divorce court records, the former fre quently follows the latter. Coming A big feed at Currinsville!! The Community supper ancf entertainment will be given Fri day evening, February 16. The proceeds will go to the benefit of the Currinsville Community Sun day school. Give your support to a worthy cause. The menu is as follows: Meat Loaf, Baked Beans, Scalloped Potatoes, Va riety Salad, Pickle-s, Pie or Cake, Coffee— Price only 35 cents. The program will appear next week. W. O. W. T ake Notice. Beginning Friday, February 2, the W. O. W. and N. O. W. will meet the first and third Fridays of each month, instead o f Thurs day. J. E. GATES. Clerk. A n o th e r C lu b O ffe r Until February 28, we will take subscriptions for the Port land Telegram and E a s t e r n C l a c k a m a s N ew s , both for one year, by mail, for only £4.50. This makes a saying o f $2.00 on the two papers. OLD LOVE TOKENS Inaccurate incubation t h e r mometers may cause failure of incubations. T h e r m o m e t e r s Years Ago All Valentines Had a should be tested for accuracy Personal Touch. with a doctor’s clinical thermom eter. Place the two in water and gradually raise the temperature Much of the Romance of the Day Haa Passed, Though Sentiment la to 105 degrees. Check carefully the Same at Ever. between 100 a id a 105 ¡degrees. I f the incubation thermometer is Throe hundred years ago young men off one-half fe g re e or more, re and women wrote their own valen tines, which consisted then only of mark it with a file. ral College in 1922, and reported in extension bulletin 354 just is sued. The activities include; Writing an average c f 123 let ters a day during each working day of 1922; printing 100,000 cop ies o f bulletins for distribution; •onducting extension schools in seventeen counties; organizing 675 boys and girls in club work; assisting in reclamation o f many thousand acres o f wet land by drainage; demonstrating prun ing, sprayings, thinning, aridsoi: bidding methods i i many orch-1 ards o f the state; securing the adoption o f better feeding and breeding practices and assisting in disease control among the herds and flocks of the state; de termining cost o f wheat, milk and alfalfa production; conduct ing gopher, squirrel, and jack- rabbit control campaigns; coop erating wiih the federal govern ment in training wounded sol diers and sailers for successful farming, * Farmers and others interested may write for extension bulletin 354. j ^ Bring in your old stove. 1 can make it good us new. ' Am prepared to do all kinds o f sheet m e t a I w o r k and plumbing—«let vour plumbing supplies here at the old Pesz- necker shop. 4 - '.’;a r» if £ A. G. A M E S JOSEPH E. G4TES-Y01R HOME FUNERAL DIRECTOR A N D F .M B A L M E R |A place where your loved ones will he cared fo.1 with lender care.— Lady « « ¡s t a r t . N IC H T A N D D A Y T E L E P H O N E FLOWERS A N D TOMBSTONES Estacada, Oregon. w.o.w. Camp No. 539 N.O.W Circle No. 832 Meet iF irst and Third Fridays 'o f esch month.— Every Neighbor urged to attend:—Visitors alrvsys welcome. J O S E P H E. G A T E S . Estacada, Clerk cf W . O. W . M R S . F R A N C E S C A T E S . Estacada. Clerk, of N . O . W . I.O.O.F. A n d I * f $ t I Meets every Saturday evening in their lodge room, corner o f Btoad- 4 way and Third streets. Visiting t brothers are always welcome. 4 J, G. Hayman N. G. J. K. Ely Secretary, RE-Nll-EM Estacada Pressing Club Suit Pressed - 50c Cleaned & Pressed 75c up J.E , G A T E S I. O. O. F. B U I 1, 0 I N (i WEAVING Carpet, Rug, Fluff Rug and Portiers weaving Prices reasonable and satisfaction guaranteed. W . R. COBB Main St., two doors from City Laundry Estacada, P. O. box 83. s w e e t hearts true swapped v a le n tin e s . What Joy wr.s ours! How we recall Their mushy lines! Vtien when to man’s Im p o r t a nee grown, Those dread ful comics were o u r bane; Their hits at faults w • though t unknown Oave us a pain. e w e r s . - « ¿ - /.t To our Store Where you Wiil Lind Two Large Counters Lull of Granite and Tinware at Real Bargain Prices and 15c TINWARE But February 14 morsa us ne more Although the day brings missives still; We get a dun ning letter, or, Psr chance • bill. old time token greets our eye. To make us either gay or mad; Soth love and malice p»æ us by— It’» very sad. Ne lake Sure ef Valentine Kltg. you have no sweetheart to come Iss you early on SL Valentine’» ting, go out and rweep the nearest with a broom. Once the cobweba gone he will com# flying. Job printing at the N ews office 10 qt. Pails Cake Tins Dish Pans Collenders Strainers Gem Pans Milk Pans Dippers Bread Pans Dust Pans Funnels, large Angel Cake Tins Graters All for I5c each 25c GRANITEWARE 6 qt. Berlin Lip Kettles 8 qt. ..................... Granite Wash Pans 4 qt Milk Pans 8 qt. “ 8 qt. Handled Stew Pans Wash Pans Dippers and many other varieties All for 25c each J. P. Coats Crochet Thread, Broken Numbers, While They Last— 4 Balls for 25c THE PEOPLE’S STORE Where the Motto Is SERVICE. H. B. SNYDER, - J Estaada Lodt>e t w zsr No. 175. When we were yet a young ster s m a ll, S ze of Garde i The Dalles. I love mottoes, or declarations of affec tion. written In verse from a very full heart and on plain paper. Many of our great-grandmothers saved these old missives. Perhaps our parents came across such valentines, old and yellow and decaying, packed away In lavender In Funeral Train of the Martyred Presid ent Leaving Washington Under Escort. the bottom of n dusty trunk up In the I From an O ld P r in t | attic. Yet when these valentines were first penned and put In her hand how The splendor of the ceremonials most continuous procession of mourn grandma’s heart did palpitate and the which nggrandlze living royalty as ers attended the remains of the lie- blushes rise to her cheeks! No mat much os they glorify dead heroism loved President. There was no pag ter how halting the sonnet, or ana wns wholly wanting In the obsequies eantry save their presence. There gram or triolet, It was the music of of Mr. Lincoln. No part was taken was no tribute but their tears. They by the government except the provi bowed before the bier of him who had love to her. “ Heart," “ dart” and "art” did rhyme sweetly 1 sion of a suitable military escort. All been prophet, priest and king to Ills beyond wns tbe spontaneous move people, who bad struck the shackles The machine-made valentines that we buy nowadays have lost this per ment o f the people. For seventeen from the slave, who had taught n high- hundred miles, through eight great er sense of duly to the free man. who sonal touch, though perhaps some of them hove gained from an artistic states of the Union whose population had raised the nation to n loftier eon point of view. Today It Is only the was not less than Jfi million, a n ul- ceptlon of faith and hope and chi r tv school children and a few open-heurted Interested grown-ups who find the cus- j "Pardner».’' | The Oregon legislators will journey tom of valentine making and valen In these days of bonding companies j to Mary Hill farm, on the Washington tine giving the fascination that it used and enormous corporations the old to be. Why, even Charles I.nmh wrote phrase, "H is word was ns good ns his I side of the Columbia river, 100 miles [ east of Portland, Sunday, February valentines, and loved to. bond," has a homely sound, and little Now the modern young man drops I tales of long partnership with never j XI, where they will be the guests of In n confectioner's or florist’s shop and ; a hard and fast legal Instrument nam Sam Hill, well known good roads orders candy or flowers sent to Her. ing whnt Is his and what Is other’s, j enthusiast, in a trip over the Columbia He scorns the valentine sonnet— highway and an Inspection of the pow seem like old tnles out of the past. whereby the girls of today are missing But the other day when Snm Harris er possibilities of the Columbia river. a heap of romance. mid George M. Cohan dissolved their Acceptance of the invitation followed This was the day when a young man seventeen-.vear-old partnership, they immediately upon its extension by Mr. might accuse some young woman he ended a period of agreement In their Hill, who was introduced to the law admired of being a coquette without Joint producing business in which no Insulting her. In those days "co contract ever existed, and yet their makers by Governor Pierce as “ the world’s most noted private citizen." quette" had Just such a naughty business wns one where more enn meaning as “ vamp” has today. It tnnkerous hitches occur than In most. meant a heartless trifler. Armistice Day, Columbus Day and Smooth are the sens when two men, I f she thereupon sent him a hand each of whose word goes, do business Lincoln’s Birthday will be added to made valentine on which were two together.—Christian Science Monitor. the list of legal holidays in Oregon if bleeding hearts made as one, It was a bill which has been passed by tbe her answer to his accusation. It meant senate banking committee becomes a Caribou Swarm in Yukon. that conquering the hearts of other Tens of thousands of wild caribou law. men than he, mennt nothing to her; are reported to be swarming over the that only his heart and hers In all the world counted, that her heart was hills through the suburbs of Dawson. bleeding for him just as much as his Y. T., for a radius o f 50 miles. The N O T I C E O F F I L I N G F I N A L | great herd, which annually treks ACCOUNT. was suffering for her. The comic valentine Is an outgrowth j through the district, Is now moving No. 2317. Large herds swimming In the matter o f the estate of Christian or burlesque o f the super-sentimental l northward. Gantenbein, deceased. valentine and has almost died out. In | the Yukon have Interfered with the stead of pointing out the recipient's progress of steamers. The herd Is NO TICE is hereby given that the perfections and charms It dwells vivid so vast that the hunting hy men, wom undersigned as administrator o f the ly and uncomplhnentnrlly on his man en and children, who have provided estate o f Christian Gantenbein, deceas nerisms, clothes and appearance, in nearly every home with deer meat for ed, has filed his final account as such colored caricature. Red hair, large the winter, lias made no noticeable administrator in the County Court of the State o f Oregon, for the County noses, blotched complexions, remark effect on It. o f Clackamas. That Monday, the 2<>th able skinniness or avoirdupois are us day o f February, WHS, at the hour of ually the jocular themes. Because Lost Souls. 9:30 a. m, o f said day and the Court valentines are sent anonymously, It Is A spiritist tells us tlir.t people play room of said Court has been appoint:d possible with Impunity to remark golf In the life hereafter. If they use as the time and place for the hearing ■cathingly on the physical character the same language while playing It of objections to said final account and istics or disposition of one’s friends or that they do here, we think we know settlement thereof. J. G A N T F N B E IN . foes. In which division of the hereafter the Administrator o f the estate of gnme is played.— James J. Montague. Christian Gantenbein. NOT AS IN DAYS OF OLD M cG' IR K & SCHNEIDER Attorneys for Administrator. See Mrs. J. E. Gates for piano Dated and first publication, January 25, Valentine Day Missives Somehow Dif 1923. instruction. Prices reasonable. fer From Those of One's Gay Date of last publication, February 22 , and Festive Youth. I. O. 0. F. building. 5 4tf 1923. “ Plans for gardens should be made at this t :me since the gard- ner has more available time to consider carefully what crops he is going to produce this comirg season and to what event each will be grown,” says A. G. Bou quet, head o f vegetable garden ing at O. A. C. I f the garden is a commercial one, the selection o f crops to be gro-vn and the acreage appor tioned to each should be care fully planned b e f o r e actual decision is made. Too great acre age o f vegetables is often heed lessly planned, without fere- tsought a« to where the crop will be sold. Vegetable growers have three possible markets for their pro duce, and should realize this before planting heavily to vege table crops. These are local markets, canneries and dehydra tors, and shipping markets. Pro duce is usually sent to the ship ping markets only when commu nities grow a vegetable in carload lots. Some good thinking now may save muen in the future, | especially towards the end o f : summer.— O. A. C. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Rhodes, ; the parents o f Dr. W. W. Rhodes, j were visiting him a few days last week. The L)r. drove them back Sunday to their borne at W i t h a N a t i o n ’s T r i b u t e j P L U M B I N G i- tr-w n *w , ^ " '- 3 ' • j and TIN SHOP -- . - ; ri . C. A. DYKEMAN.