Eastern Clackamas news. (Estacada, Or.) 1916-1928, April 22, 1926, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    EASTERN
CLACKAMAS NEWS THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1928
weeks o f March show four full car-
---------
gos o f wheat moved to the United
Binger Hermann had a long. Kingdom amounting to 1,018,800
clear evening of life.
To many bushels.
This was in addition to
men who fought the battle o f l i f e , several smaller shipments,
as vigorously as he did it is denied.! Eleven passenger automobiles for
They fall on the battlefield. They delivery in China was placed abourd B rief Resum e of Happenings of
rest beneath their laurels.
i the steamer West Holbrook which
the W eek Collected for
But the man who so many years sailed fo r delivery on the 20th in
served Oregon as a congressman China.
O u r Readers.
and whose period o f public service
Two shipments • o f zinc concen­
stretched over much o f the active trates moved during the week fo r
„
period o f his career, came to the Belgium.
This makes ■ the fou rth ' Cut worma again ar0 ai,poar,nR ln
time when he might let go gently. shipment of that commodity during Lane countjr’ according ‘ ° ©■ S‘ Flelch’
From his home on the hill in the past two months, with a total er’ county agent,
Roseburg he could look out over tonnage o f 6,322 tons. The move- ! Umpqua valley strawberries will be
the charming city, over the placid, ment o f these commodities through on U>e market within a few days, ac-
beautiful valley o f the Umpqua. the port proves the value o f our cording to reports made by growers,
—•
Madison street bridge, long an old
To him now and again
came his bulk storage facil.ties.
Twenty-nine tons o f frozen fish 1 landmark of Oregon City, and con-
friends.
Some of them were the
was dis- demned for a long time, Is to be re-
friends o f long ago.
They made with a value o f $8,600,
a recent Placed by a new structure,
their visits in the sense o f a pil­ patched to Europe on
grimage to a citizen beloved. And steamer in addition to
numerous Alva A. Bonney. 24, was killed • at
when they sat with him in the old- small shipments o f canned pears, i Lasen station on the Oregon Electric
fashoned front room p f the old- plums and dried fruit.
railway by a short circuit when operat­
fashioned house, it was as though
ing a switch at the sub-station.
ON BEING USEFUL
the walls were lit with the warm
F. B. Ingels of Dufur, who recently
afterglow.
And when they talked
Men and women who sow the j was appointed a member of the state
■ reminiscently o f days once active, seed o f constant useful activity ! fair board to succeed Wayne Stuart
once competitive, but now softened reap the harvest o f success from a i of Albany, hag declined to accept the
In retrospect, it was as though tlm soil fertilized by their own steady I appointment.
patriarch o f public service there
purpose. It would be as foolish to j The contract for building four miles
in his Roseburg home presided 0 ''ev
expect success without active ex- j of the Missouri Flat market road has
a banquet o i memories.
ertion as to gather a crop b e fo r e ! been let to the Security Construction
No halting foot kept Binger Her­ you plant the seed. But in culti- j company of La Grande for $20,812.60,
mann in his later years from go­ vating that character which reaps by the Union county court,
ing back to welcome the advent o f true achievement, you may sow in
Marshall Fleshman. a farmer about
the railroad in Coos county( tile all seasons and gather the fruits , $5 years of age residing about 20 mile*
region he had known in his print:- with the serene assurance that even j north of Wallowa in the Promise coun­
tve stages as the son o f a pioneer wind and weather, storm or stre. s, try, was dragged to death by his team
family.
No palsied hand lessened are a part o f the process o f per- while logging in the woods,
the cordiality o f his handclasp. No
sonai giowth.
Headquarters company, third bat-
thickened tongue reduced the gen­
Optimism is an ally o f effort and talion, 182d infantry, of St. Helens, was
ial flavor o f the greeting with which
,
,
success. It is the kernel o f the nut mustered in Monday night as company
he was wont to had old and young. not the ghelIi It
ig the fin,; trait K>
re(flment, Oregon national
Binger Hermann played hie large 0f the man, net the faults. It is guard, with a roll of 62 men.
part in the destinies o f Oregon. He the fiowers on the hillside, not the
Hearing on the motion of the pub-
hved to see some o f h.s most opt,- dead leaves under
the snow. It is lld 8ervic8 CommiRsion to determine
mistic dreams come true.
It was the opportunity in any job, not the the oondltlon of the roadbed and equip-
for him, as one o f the few that was grind.
It is up to the individual . ment of thg Oregon Electric railway
written t
whether h:s world will be golden or hag been 8et for Friday in Salem.
Grow old along with me;
drab. Optimism in a word is the
.
. .,
__ . ..
,
. ..
,
Officials of the bureau of agricub
The best o f life is yet to be.
.V
. . e sou
's
e c° 1,1 lrj i tural economics of the department of
i— Journal. he vision revealing the fine beyondj agr|cultur8 wll,
,,
..
. , ,
_
i -(u v u i.u ,- m..i visit Portland on
t h e j m a m , the best beyond the ! Aprl, 23 t0 hold hearing9 on the pro.
PORT OF PORTLAND REPORT worst.
posed official grain standards for har-
Figures compiled by the Traffic j The
hammer
o f construction ley.
The new Young Men's Christian as­
Department o f the Port o f Portland1 drowns out the hammer o f the
sociation home which is nearing com­
Commission during the first three j knocker.
pletion at Salem will be occupied on
May 1, according to announcement.
The building cost approximately $160,-
000.
The board of Multnomah county
commissioners will go before the vot­
ers at the primary election M?y $1
W. A. Hcylman
Wm. W. Smith |
B A b a t HSR S
with a request for a $2,600,000 bond is­
ATTORNEYS A T L A W
L . die.* , nd children’s Heir- f sue for county road construction and
We will take care of any legal ’ ’
Cutting a Specialty,
;; improvement,
Cutworms have invaded several
m . , have
1 1 . f t ? . .7 . f X f M j j S Z Z j
orchards of Wasco county, and are
Insurance, Loans and Collections,
causing considerable damage by eat-
lhg the foliage and blossoms, accord­
ing to reports reaching the office of
DR. W. W. RHODES
the county agent.
Osteopathic
Bend is to be the 1926 convention
city of cattlemen and horse raiser*
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
of Oregon, The 13th annual conven­
Office in Lichthorn Bldg,, Estacada
tion of the Oregon Cattle & Horse
Get our prices before you buy
Raisers’ association will bs held there
DR. G. F. MIDFORD
on May 28 and 29.
D ry e r Pipes Made to O rd e r
Rev, A. T. Smith of the First United
Physician and Surgeon
For Sheet Iron work,
Presbyterian Church Of Portland ws*
repairs, soldering and
Xx-Ray Equipment
Glasses Fitted
elected moderator of the Oregon pres­
plumbing, call at the
Office and Residence Second and
bytery of the United Presbyterian
Main Streets, Estacada, Oregon.
Telephone Connections
church at the semi-annual session of
that body At Albany.
MAIN 8TKEET.
DR. CHAS. P. JOHNSON
The Thompson-Kelly sawmill In
Marshfield, which had debts amount­
Dentist
ing to mors than $40,000, was sold by
Evening Work by Appointment
Deputy Sheriff Malehorn lo r. $1400
Phones: Office 316, Residence 6061
whldr sonv represented a portion ot the
Estacada, Oregon
taxes due Coos county,
The request of residents along the
0 . D. EBY
John Day highway for a motor truck
mail delivery service out of Arlington
Attorney at Law
is receiving favorable consideration At
Broadway
Garage
General Practice. Confidential Ad­
the poatoffice department, Representa­
viser. Oregon City, Oregon
tive 8innott has been informed,
HENRY BOHN. Estacada
The Portland Fe-d & Fertilizer com­
pany, with headquarters in Portland,
S. E. WOOSTER
¿iled with the .public service commis­
Real Estate, Loans, Insur­
sion application for reduced rates on
ance, Rentals
horses shipped to the plant from east­
Farm Loans a Specialty.
ern Oregon and other points in the
Telephone Estacada, Oregon
date.
Gresham 2471
Rev. Walter Benwell Hinson, D. D„
C. D „ D. C. and E. C. LATOURETTE
ED LINN, AT LINN’ S INN,
M. A.. LL. D.. pastor of the*East Bid*
AGENT
ATTORNEYS
Baptist church, Portland, author,
Katacada, Ora.
Phoaa 543
Practice in ail Court«.
(lurch-builder and recognized nation-
J. E. GATES
First National Bank, Oregon City,
>lly as one of the lei ding minister*
Oregon.
•f his denomination, died In Portland
Thursday.
AFTER
THE
TW ILIGHT
OREGON NEWS ITEMS
OF SPECIAL INTEREST
"i *3—
> • x —x —8—>»x
DENNY BROTHERS
\\
PLUMBING
PIPE and FITTINGS
AM ES SHOP
TIRE AND TUBE
REPAIRING
GATtS’ FUNERAL HOME
r
JERSEY
MILK AND CREAM
GEORGE LAWRENCE & SON
Phone No. 37-3
The only milk sold in Estacada from Federal
accredited Tuberculin free cows
BOB S
BARBER SHOP
AND MARCEL SALON
STRICTLY SANITARY
SATISFACTION
Haircutting 35c
MASONIC
BLDG.
ESTACADA
GUARANTEED
shave 15c
ART. SMITH. Prapr.
Orders for pine lumber booked by
18 mills of the Western Pine Mann-
laoturere' association for the week
ending April 3 totaled 1294 cars of
33.<44.000 feet, which was 299 cars. Of
19.774.000 feet more than for the pre­
ceding week.
,
,
Contract for the conetrucfion of the
\iiler Blepe ditch near Bnterprlse has
pen Awarded to Edward B.shop Of
’«ker. ft I* estimated the ditch proper
.111 cost $8900, but coet of bridges and
engineering will bring the total to
•boot »15 009.
A. D. Dewee. who was said to repre­
sent tome large mining interest* In
the middle west, bee filed in the office
of the state engineer on a power alts
on the Little North fork of the San-
tlatn river, approximately one mil*
from the mouth of Gold" creek. The
filing calls for 300 theoretical h one
power.
PAGE FIVE
•
WOMEN’S CLUBS CONVENTION
TO BE HELD IN LA GRANDE
...
spendthrift with time. That son's -
thing is the recognition o f the need
o f a stock o f fresh air, recreation
and evi-pcise. to restore us to perfec’
health after the rigors of winter
and t6~prepare our body and mind
for the tasks o f next winter. The
average American plays not for
surcease -from
work,
but
for
strength for work.
There are no
people on the globe who work as
‘ industriously and vigorously as do
Americans and so there are nop •
requiring as much recreation.
wait ning o f east siTn ‘highway be­
tween Portland and Oregon City is
an early necessity, said Van Duzer,
and the commission is consdering
the problem.— Journal.
The 15,000 club women o f Ore­
gon are already keenly interested
i i the twenty-sixth annual conven­
NOTES AND COMMENT
tion c f the Oregon Federation of
i Women’s Clubs to be held in La
By Chad Alton
: Grande, May 3, 4, 6, and 6. It is
i expected that practically everyone
W ith systematic diamonds manu­
i o f the 175 clubs affiliated with the
factured from old pop bottles, rub­
federation will be represented, and
ber tires mad from rags and paper
the voting body will be between 200
-ilk from wood, booze from almost
and 300.
anything, and beefsteak from cot­
The two weeks’ vacation is a ton seed, we ought not to kick if
“ Preparation,
Participation, Pro­
gress,” is the slogan for the conven­ national trait and as such tells the grandma bobs her hair, uses the lip­
tion and ajoun the theme,. “ En­ story o f a nation which works j;> stick and abbreviates her skirts un-
larged
opportunities for yeomen weeks out o f the year and plays’ iil they i xpose her lower extermoi-
During the fifty weeks of ties until there is no mistake about
challenge better preparation and ut­ two.
most participation,” a program of labor the more mature play golf for it.
interest and instruction is. being pre­ exercise, not pleasure, the midd>eT
Luther Burbank, the great plant
pared by a committee headed by aged motor, swim, ride and hunt, scientist has passed.
Whether or
not
for
pleasure
alone
but
to
store
Mrs. C. W. Hayhurst o f Portland^
not he was an atheist matters little,
up
new
energy
for
more
work,
the
assisted by Mrs. C. H. Scranton,
his life here taught him love o f
president o f the La Grande Neigh­ young swim, play tennis, dance, flowers and plants and all that was
hike
and
motor,
perhaps
with
pleas­
borhood club, the hostess organiza­
beautiful in nature, and these the
tion: Mrs. William Krassig o f Ore­ ure as the lone motive, but never­ great man used in the search for
theless
assimilating
the
sturdine
s
gon City, chairman o f the division
the great mystery, and which yet
o f music, and Mrs. Dunbar, state and health o f the out-of-doors. That remains a mystery to all o f us. This
the
American
is
as
systematic
and
president.
regular in his recreation as he is has now been revealed to him, and
Dr. E. O. Holland, president of
in his work explains in great part for his work done here, in spite of
Washington State College at Pu.l-
his seeming inexhaustible capacity his beliefs and doubts, a just judge
man, will address the convention on
will overlook his human frailties.
for work.
“ Education and Democracy” and l)r
Lieutenant-governor
Young
of
Americans do not place pleasure
Alfred H. Uphani, president o f the
California makes the statement that
before
business
but
to
the
contrary
University of Idaho, is the other big
the criminal of today sees thirty-
attraction in the way o f a speaker. make business of their pleasure
two chances out of thirty-three of
The Department o f Fine Arts, as
VAN DUZER BACKS AID FOR escaping the penalty o f his crime.
its part in the program will present
This condition has lasted so long
COUNTIES
a three-act play, “ The Circle.” Mrs.
and is so well known and been talked
E. P. Mossman o f La Grande,
Oregon City, April
14.— Belief o f so much o f late that it would
chairman of the division of Art and
that
the
state
highway
fund
should seem something might be done to
Mrs. Kra-sig, chairman o f the divis­
Otherwise crime will
be
used
to
aid
counties
in
main­ remedy it.
ion o f Music will be in charge. Dr.
soon rule the land.
Homer P. Rainey, associate profes­ taining state highways was ex­
sor o f education at the university pressed by H. B. Van Duzer, mem­ “ Bobbed hair bandits” are not re­
c f Oregon will speak on the pro­ ber of the state highway commis­ ferred to any more for fear that
gram o f the department o f Applied sion, at a luncheon o f the Member’s your home town barber will take it
Education o f which Miss Grace H. forum o f the chamber o f commerce as a personal offense.
Relief for the overbur­
Chamberlain o f Ashland is chair­ Tuesday.
The man in the pulpit today has
dened highways that carry the brunt
man.
need of something new and inter­
A. A. Smith, a former member of travel through tha county is the esting to talk about to lure people
of the state legislature from Baker plan o f the commission, according with an auto to leave the country
county, will be the speaker on the to Van Duzer,
roads, the woods and streams. The
Widening o f the highway between pew is usually a drowsy place where
program in charge of the legislative
department o f which Mrs, Alexan­ New Era and Canemah is one o f the one may listen to spiritual matters
der Thompson o f Portland, is chair­ first step* and right o f way is bairg which should interest, but the wide
man, The American Citizenahip de­ purchased by the county. The com­ and open spaces may furnish much
partm ent Mis. Charles H. Castner, mission plans to get the legislature that may benefit the observant per­
Hood River, chairman, will present to pass on a law by which the state son.
Mr. A. C. Strange, executive sec­ will be able to pay for right-of-way
Repair and
retary o f the Oregon Americaniza­ rather than counties.
Say you saw it in the News.
tion commission.
Mr. Frank B. Appleby, editor and
publisher o f the La Grande Obser­
ver, will speak at the session con­
ducted by the department o f press
and publicity, Wednesday evening
“ The shop where the barker knows his stuff.“
at Baker. The Department o f Pub­
lic 'Welfare, Mis* Grace Phelps of
EARL LA FORGE, Proprietor
Portland, chairman, announces three 1
speakers, Chaplain W, S, Gilbert, a
ESTACADA’S LEADING TONSOR1AL ARTIST
regent o f the University o f Oregon, j
Heir Cut 35c; Children’* Hair Cut'ing 25c; Shave 15c
who will speak on the Doernbechar \
hospital project in which the feder­
All other work at popular prices
ation is interested having pledged
M OTTO: “ LIVE AND LET LIVE”
$20,000 at the convention last year
Bobbing and Sningl-ng a Specialty
W. J. Herwig, president o f the Ore­
BATHS
BATHS
BATHS
BATHS
gon anti-narcotics league, and Miss
Broadway, near Linn’s Inn, Esacada, Oregon
Lida C. Bowler o f San Francisco,
executive secretary o f the Indian
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Defense league.
Officers of the Federation and
heads o f the departments will be
guests o f the Rotary club on the
opening day of the convention, In
the evening the formal opening will
take place^ this being a reception
at which the women o f La Grande
will be hostelsqi.
A "cow boy”
breakfast is scheduled for Thursday
morning with the business men's j
Presenting all tha* is new and dcsireable
chibg as hosts. In response to an
in the new season’s
invitation from Baker, the conven­
tion will be moved to that city for
The Wednesday evening session,
which will be proceed d by a dinner
given by the people o f Baker.fl
*
TJje chief item o f business to
come before the convention will be
A most comprehensive assortment of
the election o f officers. Club lead­
fine wash fabrics are presented here
ers have expressed thfl desire t h - t ,
the delegates go into convention
in Worthy Qualities; in Favored Pi -
without a slate, appraise the women
terns; in the most fashionable color­
and make their choice to f»ll the)
several offices accordingly,
ings and every popular weave. We
Mrs. Sadie Orr-Dunbar o f Port­
invite your immediate inspection and
land, president o f the Federation,
particularly call attention to their
and membtrs o f the Board and De­
partment chairmen will prseide,
The “ Square D eal’ ’ B arber Shop
11
THE P E O P L E S STOKE:
W ash Fa b ric s
WHY AMERICA EXCELS
Americans are often criticized for
love o i pleasure and lack o f thiift
with time and money. It is often
charged that we spend too muc1)
time in the theater, the dance h ell,1
the motor car, the stadium and
,ther resort* o f pastime.
The j
P-eaeure-lov.ng Frenchman believe*
we are coming around to their way
o f taking life.- The *obcr-eid«s at
hortle remember the decline and fail
o f the Roman empire_ but molt of
u* know that none o f them see, u*
aright. ’ .
The word "pastime” was deri-ed
from the phrase “ pate the tim e."
A usual definition o f the contrac­
tion is some expedient to keep time
from lagging. This ie r.Gt, however,
the definition which can be appl ed
to the pastimes o f the mass o*
Americans.
Jt is never more obvious tha- in
the spring that American* lova
sport* and pleasure* for something
more than a desire to play and to 09 (
moderate prices. English Prints 30c,
3 5 c and 50c a yard.
SEE OUR NEW CRETONNES FOR DRAPERIES
Priced at 19c per yard
One lot of Beef Scrc.pa in 5Gtb «aclus, er.ch
{l/S
We now’ havfe a full line of khaki pants for men
and boys, a good one for ............... ......... $1.90
Waist overalls with rivets, double stitch, .... $1.49
Little girls’ Kute Kuts in patterns at ........... $1.25
CHILDREN’S SHOES REDUCED 25 PER CENT
THE PEOPLE'S STORE
WHERE YOUR DOLLAR HAS MORE CENTS