Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928, June 25, 1925, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    'A 3 T :':k Ñ c l a c k a m a S n e w s , T h u r s d a y , j u n e
PAGE TWO
I
m
Eastern Clackamas News
LOOK OUT FOR
P ile in i at th« postofijee in Estacada,
Oregon, a« seeond-clas* mail.
SELF POISONING
Published every Thursday at
Estacada, Oregon
by the
Neglect o f the liver results in
self poisoning!
Not so quickly,
perhaps, but just as surely as if
you drank poison out of a bottle.
If your liver is not doing its work
o f helping digestion, eliminating
waste from the bowels and purify­
ing the blood, you will always be
troubled with sick headaches, nau­
sea, biliousness, bad breath, gas,
sour stomach, or constipation.'
Cleanse and tone your liver! put
your system in condition so you
feel your very best again! Try just
a spoonful of Dr. H. S. Thacher’s
excellent Liver and Blood Syrup af­
ter the next few meals and notice
the quick improvement in the way
you eat, sleep, look and feel— the
return of health, vigor and energy.
You will be completely satisfied;
otherwise there will be no cost.
ESTACADA PUBLISHING COMPANY,
A CORPORATION.
S ubscription R ates
On« year
•
-
-
$1.50
Hx month*
•
*
•
.76
THE BEST 50 CENT MEAL YET
9Z6T '92 3 N ílf ‘AVGSHÍ1HX
High
Voltage Service—Nothing but the
Best o f Food served here, and Say! those
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKES
Far through him we both have ac- |
cess by one Spirit unto the Father.
— Ephesians 2: 18.
we furnish daily, they are very popular.
We have a few rooms vacant now at
$16.00 PER MONTH.
Very Cozy, Snappy and Clean. - T R Y US.
FREE!
Joyfully,
CHERRY
FRUIT
FLIES
AND SPRAY TIME IS HERE
The flies o f the cherry fruit
worm are busy about the trees,
and growers who have not already
put on the first sweetened poison
bait spray arc advised by the ex­
periment station to do so at once.
The following formula is used and
recommended by the station:—
Lead arsenite, one-half pound;
Molasses— not
honey— 2
quarts;
Water, 10 gallons. This is enough
for 60 average trees, as the appli­
cation is very light— just enough
to deposit small droplets on the
leaves and branches, where the fly
will find and sip them.
The flies sport around the trees
for ten days or more before be-
ginning to deposit eggs from which
SPM NGW ATER NEWS
NOTE— The editor regrets that
. ■„ *u„
an error occurred in the Spnngwa-
ter items last week in mentioning
the birth o f a son to Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Guttridge, it should have read
Mr. and Mrs. George Guttridge.
Berry
C r a te s
Five factor* are essential to pre­
vention and control o f potato dis­
eases in
Oregon— crop
rotation,
seed
selection,
seed
treatment,
qlant spraying, and good storage.
These practices are outlined by the
experiment
station
potato
iqie-
rialists, who also list the following
as minor factors o f control:
Kind o f fertilizer used, cultural
methods, checking o f insects that
spread disease, nnd use o f irriga­
tion water. The first practices are
the most to be dopended on.
All
o f them must be considered if the
grower is to produce potatoes of
high yield and good quality, free of
potato disease.
Results at the experiment station
in Corvallis show that more than
one o f these methods arc necessary,
and that two or more— such as ro­
tation and seed selection— must be
employed on each lot successfully
grown.— From Dept. Ind*. Journal­
ism, O. A. C.
Mr*. C. F. M.Browne and chil­
dren returned this week from a
visit with friends and relatives in
Logan.
Maxine is feeling fine, eating good
and has gained two pounds in the
short time she has been there.
...
Miss Eranna Bluhm of Beaver
Creek ha8 been visiting in this
neighborhood this week,
John Closner and family o f Es-
tacada were Sunday guests at the
Ed- Closner home.
Closner
Mildred
and
Edna
were Sunday guests o f Valine Jul-
lan-
George Perry was home on Sun
da. V
- _______________
„ „ „ „
FURNITURE MOVERS
ESTACADA
Umatilla Indians
Bucking Horses,
Bucking Buffalo
Bucking Steers
60-1
WILD HORSES
and L A W R E N C E
Estacada, Or«.
J ik.
THE ESTACADA MEAT CO.
H. C. GOHRING Prop,
vV
Mutton, Veal find Hogs Bought
THAT
WE
SHELL GASOLINE. ...................... ...................
............. 21c gal.
WESTERN MOTOR OIL, ...................................................... 15c qt.
WESTERN MOTOR OIL in
5 gallon cans .................... $2.50
SUGAR IS STILL ADVANCING—-W E HAVE IT AT $7.00
Currinsville, Oregon.
J. O . T U N N K L L
PHARMACY.
GEORGE ITEMS
MOLALLA FIREMEN
BARTHOLOMEW
Phon« 60t
THE
ROUNDUP
For Quick Service When You
Want Anything Done
Just Right, Call
ASK FOR PRICES ON THINGS YOU W A N T
DO NOT CARRY IN STOCK.
ply for free distribution is already
given away. Read the full details
above, then act at once, as this o f­
fer is limited. Get a trial size now
py
presenting „ this
coupon
to
MOLALLA
Under Public Service
Commission...
BINDER TWINE,
CREAM SEPARATORS,
GASOLINE ENGINES,
FORKS, FORK HANDLES,
SCYTHES, SCYTHE SNATHES,
SHINGLES, ROOFING PAPER,
SCYTHE STONES,
OILS, GREASES AND GENERAL
MERCHANDISE.
Sample Bottle.
Mr. and Mrs. P. Paulsen, Otto
Paulsen and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Joyner and family were guests of
o f Mr and Mrs J. C. Duus o f Es-
tacada on Sunday.
Miss Emma
Paulsen o f
Port­
land, accompanied Mr and
Mrs.
R. Maxwell out to visit the home
folks over Saturday and Sunday.
VIOLA b R LL/ES
Mr. and Mrs.
Huffman and
-----------
and Mrs.
Wm. Graham, our popular m ail1 dauShter a" d husband
carrier on Friday cvellini? invited Burn and daughter from Portland
his friends.and neighbors to a so- called at the Julius Paulsen home
c'a* *n his new barn. There were Sunday.
They are old friends of
fifty people in attendance. Games Mr. Paulsen and have not met for
o f all kinds were played and a nail a number of years.
driving contest for the ladies and
----------------------
a needle threading contest for the
Mr. and Mrs C. A. Dykeman and
Men'
Refreshments consisting of Mrs. O. T. Olson were Portland
cream visitors last Thursday evening and
cake, strawberries and ice
attended the performance ofRosa-
were served at a late hour.
Mrs. Wm. Hicinbotham and little r' e
evening.
daughter, Esther, returned to their
......... ” ■ —
home at Stevenson,
Wash. , on Once Populous Cities
Monday after spending a week with
Reclaimed by Jungle
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
The old question whether a thing
Sevier. Two daughters will remain
enn be lost when you know where it
til after the Fourth.
Is applies In part to lost cities, be­
Mrs. Clara
Hicinbotham
and
cause the sites of ninny of them nre
children, Alice and Leslie,
came
known nnd in some enses even the
over Friday evening to attend the buildings nnd stntunry are almost In­
social. Mrs. Amanda Creason from tact.
Portland
was
also
present
as
Now, however, their only Inhabit­
Washington.
ants are the hensts of the Jungle, lions
The Children’s Day exercises prowl through their echoing halls,
were held at the church Sunday monkeys race across their fretted
evening. A fine program was given arches nnd snakes lurk In their dark
by the children and the Viola choir dungeons or glide across their crum­
also sang. All enjoyed the pro­ bling pnvements,
For instance, the holy city of the
gram.
Buddhists—Baraboedoer, In Java—
had been forgotten for 000 years when
CLACKAMAS NEWS $1.50 YR. , Sir Stamford Raffles rediscovered It
t and Its wonderful temple, the eighth
wonder of the world, says a writer In
London Answers.
The Jungle of Slam has hidden Its
ancient capital, Ayuthln, for four cen­
turies. Its Inhabitants fled before the
conquering Burmese, and never re­
turned. It Is now said to be the lurk­
ing pluce of thousands of enormous
snakes.
Mystery surrounds the dead city of
Tibet, which Cnptnin Itnwltng discov­
ered. It Is a vast collection of pal­
AIISPIfFS
aces. monasteries and dwelling houses,
but the Tibetans professed Ignorance
of Its existence and also of the rea­
son of Its abandonment.
Five centuries ago Angkor had a
population of three-quarters of a mil­
lion. Today It Is the dead city of
Cambodia.
The carved stone ele­
phants, the Immense causeways, the
majestic temples, still remain, but
the Jungle has Invaded the streets
and squares.
I Famous Riders
Lady Riders
GET OUR PRICES BEFORE
YOU ARE SORRY
DON’T FORGET WE ARE
EXPERT
WE CARRY
This Coupon is Good for
JULY 3, M 5
Yes, We have them in any
Quantity.
C u r r in s v ille S t o r e
Dr. Thacher’s Liver &
Blood
Syrup if presented before the sup­
THE ESTACADA HOTEL
Rally
The Christian
Endeavor
held at the church on Wednesday
evening was well attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gribble and
children o f
Oregon
City were
guests o f Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ward
^ on Thursday.
Mrs. Jim Marrs o f D o d g e was a
^ r s d a ^ c v e m n g caller at the W>-
ley Howell home
This
the worms
are
hatched.
The Children’s
givesthe orchardist
an opportuni- tbe church was well attended and
ty to poison them before
they j much enjoyed.
reach the egg
laying
stage. If
Bernice Erickson of Portland is
allowed to place their eggs about visiting her grandparents, Mr. and
the fruit, the worms are certain to { 'V*rs' *’etel Erickson.
to enter by boring a small round
the To'hn Park home
hole through the skins. The worms ¡n Dodge.
or “ maggots”
make the fruit unfit
...................................
“
j . A. Shibley and family were
for sale or use.
visiting at the home o f their daugh­
Expensive
spraying
equipment ter and sister, Mrs. L. S. Tenny
Is not needed, as the application in in Viola on Thursday evening.
no way resembles a regular spray­ ""Visitors on Sunday at the Wiley
er. For low trees a knapsack is Howell home were Carl Ward and
family and John Park and family
advisable. From a pint to a quart | 0f Dodge,
o f the solution is enough for one
Mr and Mrs. Dayball o f
Port-
tree. Two later applications are land were Sunday guests at the
generally necessary, the second 10 Ilansenhome.
John Moger has gone back to
days after the first, and the third
work at Camp 2, much improved
one week after the second.
in health.
Miss Madden and Mrs. McDon­
PASTURES TO dB STUDIED
ald were
callers at the
Moger
BY EXPERIMENT STATION home on Monday evening.
Quiet a number from here at-
An extensive study o f the pas- tended the dance at Dodge hall on
tures o f Oregon, which will cover Saturday night and reported a very
a period o f several years, is being I fine time.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Guy Grable and
conducted by the Oregon Agricul-1
™r'
tural college station. N. ( . Janu- ¡ n|, rt,i a t j v e s here thefirst o f the
son. Dairy extension specialist, has week,
been temporarily
transferred
to
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Howell made
the
experiment station to
take a business trip to Estacada on
cha rge o f the work. The work is Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ward received
to be started in Washington coun­
ty. An effort is being made to a letter from their daughter Maxine
who is spending
the
summer
get the farmers to keep an actual with her grandparents,
Mr. and
record o f what the cows are pro­ Mrs. W. Ward at Gateway, Oregon.
ducing on pasture.
“ The development o f more pas­
ture for dairy cows in Oregon is
an important, problem, both from
the standpoint o f economy o f pro
durtion and nutrition,” says P. M.
Brandt, professor of
dairy
hus­
bandry.— From Dept’ Ind. Journal­
ism, O. A. C.
FIVE FACTORS CONTROL
MOST POTATO DISEASES
25 , 1925
Co Up Into These Mines
One usually thinks of mines ns deep
und far below the surface of the earth.
But In South America many of the
most famous mines nre not only deep
but also high In the air, being situated
in the lofty rango* of the mighty
Andes. At this place, whpre one of
the largest nnd richest copper mines
In the world is being worked by an
American copper corporation, the mine
is 1.000 feet deep and more than 14,000
feet above sea level. To reach It from
Lima one crosses a mountain pass by
railroad at an elevation of more than
16.800 feet above sea level. One of the
newest Peruvian copper mines Is en­
tered at the bottom, the miners work­
ing upward inside the mountain toward
reins which rise vertically.
,
Almond's Queer Habits
The almond tree has peculiar whims.
It seems to prefer California ns Its
habitat, as !>S per cent of the almonds
grown in America are produced In timi
state, and in a father restricted terri­
tory at that. The bulk of the crop it
grown around Banning, says Nature
Magazine. It seems to require the
spots where extremes of ,-,,ld and beat
ari* present In their respective seasons,
and photographs have been taken of , n
orchard with snow on the ground on
the first of February, niul again with
the trees In full bloom by the .’Mil of
the month. The same variety will n >t
fertilize one another. Gnawers must
plant alternating rows of hardshell«
and pai>ershel!s jn order to insure a
harvest.
vk
THE SPIRIT OF HELPFULNESS
TO OUR CUSTOMERS IS ONE OF THE
FUNDAMENTAL IDEAS OF THIS BANK.
THE JUDGMENT AND EXPERIENCE
OF THE OFFICERS*AND DIRECTORS
IS ALWAYS AVAILABLE IN ASSISTING
IN SOLVING THE FINANCIAL PROB-
LEMS OF OUR PATRONS.
ESTACADA STATE BANK
How to buy a
Chevrolet with
$5 down
1 — Choose the Chevrolet model you like
best, paying down as little as $5.
2 —
W e will issue to you a 6% Purchase
Certificate
you earn 6% interest on
hll the money you pay in.
3 —
You make regular weekly or monthly
payments, as little as $5— until—
4
Payments plus the earned interest equal
the amount required for actual delivery
l u ,car’ After you get your car You pay us
the balance in regular monthly installments.
>V e deposit your money in a separate trtist
account at a bank insured against loss by
a strong, well-known insurance company.
•
If you already own a car we will credit
your certificate with an additional 6% on
all service, repairs and accessories you
buy from us.
} pu
be surprised to find how easy it
Is to buy your Chevrolet this way. Come
,n an<1 1 « us give you the details o f this plan
wbteh will save money for you.
Touring Car - *525
Road»ter • • *525
Coupe « • • *715
Coath * . . * 7 3 5
*
ab
Sedan •
Commercial
ChlMif
£*.
.
Tn*k Chnri*
n™., Miduim
*
*825
.*425
*550
Q uality at Low Cost
Cascade
Motor Co.
W I L C O X BROS., Props.
OREGON