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About Clackamas County news. (Estacada, Or.) 1928-1957 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1929)
CLACKAMAS COUNTY NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH 1. 1929 The elimination of noises— from motor and from road shocks— was one o f the things to which Henry Ford and his stuff of engineers de voted particular attention in the de sign and construction of the nev Model A Ford car. The motor o f the Model A Fore is one of the quietest, most nearl\ vibrationless engines that modern au tomotive engineering lias developed Its designers provide for that featurt with parts that are made o f the fin est possible materials and that an machined to fit exactly. Balanced flywheels and crank shafts, precision made bearing! aluminum pistons, unusually well de signed and constructed valves and i particularly efficient lubricatioi system, all contributed to the quie' smooth performance of the Model / engine. The same careful iles'gn and coi struction in body chasis and runnirq gear have also eliminated most of thi other sources o f noise in motor ca performance. All body parts of steel stampings that might develiq noises have reinforcing beads which tend not only to prevent squeaks an rattles, but also increase the strengt! and dur .bility. Panel and frame sections arc welded and riveted together wherev, 1 there is possibility o f the body wear ing, due to uneven road conditions Where bolts are needed in the fina’ assembly o f large units of the body strips o f rubber or other anti-squeal material is used between the sections Sound deadening material is used in many place, thioughout the bod\ interior. Fender squeaks are pr< vented by doub'e-ply leather tape b tween the fender and body. The same material is used where cowl an body join. Hardwood fillers arc used in all body sills. Rubber cusV ions are placed at all points wher- the body is bolted to the chassis. All the experience of twenty year o f automobile design and construe tion ha’ -e been employed to mala the Model A Ford one o f the quieted smoothest cars ever built. FARM REMINDERS ELWOOD 1, ELWOOD, Feb. 28.— (Special).— variety is the New York, sometimes >lr. and Mrs. Dan Stahlnecker and erroneously known as Iceberg. New ion Everet visited Mr. Stahlnecker's York is the leading variety for spring nother at Sherwood Saturday and and fall growing, but is not adapted Sunday. to hot weather. The most outstand- Stanley Turel of Zig Zag and Jack , ing improvements, says the Oregon .vlarrs o f Dodge spent Friday night . Experiment station, are in its tight in Mr. Turel’* ranch here. ness of leaf folding and greater re- Orel Vallen from Portland spent . s stance to disease caused by unfav .he week end caring for the stock on orable weather conditions. Uniform- he home ranch while his mother w#q | ity o f heading and trueness to type away having some dental work done are the most important characteris a Portland. tics of this variety. Ervin Moehuke and Lillian Shu- Fruit growers are cautioned nacher were calling at the Otis Val- against the use o f oil emulsion sprays en home Friday night. during cold weather. The use of Otis Vallen is suffering from an these on trees preceding, during or ittack o f rheumatism. after a freeze, may result in serious Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ginther injury or death to the tree, says the nd daughter Gertrude o f Portland experiment station. Care is also visited relatives in Eiwood Sunday. needed in use of the emulsion that William Bittner made a business has been stored over winter. Such crip to Portland Friday. emulsions frequently “ break” and Our roads were never worse than the oil separates from the base caus hey are today. One neighbor re ing serious damage to trees due to ports that he was one hour driving the pure oil application. F'reezing » mile and a quarter with his Ford o f the oil emulsion may also cause Saturday night. Another man left it to break. iis Chevrolet and walked the remain- Kale is a cheap succulent feed rich ng half mile to his destination in the in minerals. The cost per ton is only eighborhood recently. about half as much as corn silage, A dance was given at the Baker being $3.78. The cost per acre is nail Saturday night. Mr. Stauffer of greater, but the greater yield gives Maple Lane and Earl Day of Esta- lower cost per ton, says the Oregon uda furnished the music. Experiment station. It is sometimes GOLDEN WED DING C E L EBRATED BY EADENS Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Eaden of Janemah celebrated their fiftieth /edd.ng anniversary on Washington's rirthday. Sons and daughters pres e t were George Eaden of Logan Mrs. John Ross and daughter o f Col on, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Riebhoff of i-ogan, Edwin Eaden o f Pendleton, Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Schmale and amily o f Carver, and a granddaugh- -er, Mrs. M. Lehman o f Carver. The friends present included Mr. and Mrs. John Mostul and family and Grandma Vlostul, Mr. and Mrs. Thompson, all of Logan. A lovely dinner was served and Mr. and Mrs. Eaden re Mrs. Flora Glorkin, a nurse, was reived many beautiful gifts. They arc the parents o f eight chil- an-estad in Chicago for robbing s c . lren, 34 grandchildren and eight eral o f her patients. great grandchildren. They have lived Walter Remorse, o f Chicago, ob in Oregon forty years. tained a license to mary Miss Adelo Drink. Try a Want Ad in the News. IT’ S SURPRISING A few packets o f seed, spaded soil, a rake and soma s trin g — y o u r planting's done. ILY Sunshine and moisture bring up the sprouts and the great miracle is on. BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS All sum niW r they grow grd" and bloom' ra d ia tin c o l o r an fragrance. ARE GROWN FRO H igh g row ers, dwarfs, climbers, — reds, yellows, blues— all shades. — Everything you c o u ld want in annual flowers. THESE SE E D S Dependable êvertpehere Nor thmp.King &G& Size JÌII Standard Vegetable Packets Jtnd ¿Kost O f *Che Flower 'Packets Considerable improvement has re- 1 cently been made in the strains of c/Isk Your T tealer N O B E T T E R S E E D S A T A N Y PRICE j ----------- — ■ 1 -------------------------------- * C H E R R Y V IL L E We Specialise in E X T R A C T IO N OF T E E T H CHERRYVILLE, Feb. 28.— (Spe cial).-—Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Deaton were down Thursday night to attend the big card party at Sandy. Marie Wall was in Portland a day recently, accompanied by Mrs. Frunk Sladky. Cherryville’s obliging postmaster, Oscar Thayer, assisted Mrs. Blanche Lundy in getting a number of sub scriptions for the Clackamas County News last week. Mrs. Carl Alt is getting along fine and has been moved from the hospi tal to an apartment. Mr. and Mrs. James B. Ogden en tertained with a dinner February 21 in honor o f their sixth wedding anni versary. Home made ice cream and all the delicious things that go with it were on the menu. Present were Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Dixon, Mr. and Mrs. Oren Ganger and Bobby, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Howitt, Dorothy Dixon, Mr. and Mrs. Ogden and Dick. Mrs. Leonard Howitt recently re ceived a letter from Florence Mills and she stated that her father had been dead a year. Currin.ville Woman At this office we are equipped to handle the most difficult extrac tion, with gas or local injection around the gums. A trained dental nurse to insure cleanliness. My past experience will bear me out as a painless extractor of Teeth. (T e n Years Successful Practice) X-Ray Examinations GUARANTEED PLATES $10.00 to $37.00 Out o f town people served in one visit good dentistry. when consistent with DR. P. G. BROWN, Dentist Willamette Building, Oregon City Entrance Opposite Post O f fic e Phone 562 Service... Distance is no question with us. Ha. Operation Our Mrs. C. W. Fuller o f Currinsville j equipment is at your service day or submitted to an operation in a Port- ! night. land hospital Wednesday and the j mother o f Mrs. J. W. Saunders was disagreeable to get kale in the win operated on for goitre the same day. Phone 2471 Gresham- Oregon ter time but it makes a good supple M i x Fink in Portland ment feed. Miss Gertrude Fink o f Estacada is NOTES FROM UP THE MOUNTAIN in Portland this week for medical iiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii treatments, and expects to return Edward King is already laying home Saturday. plans for next summer, and expects to open up his park this spring at Notice o f Sale Salmon River. Foreclosure of lien on chattels; Geo. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Cash, propri G. Geil, claimant, vs. M. F. Sar- etors of Rhododendron Inn, are keep 1 W here go the dollars that you have earned? Are ver, defendant. ing the annex wide open for business By virtue o f a certified copy of | they really yours, or are they spent and gone, until time for the hotel to open. an auto mechanics notice of lien up | " * forever? Brightwood store reports many on chatties, filed in the office of the men are up that way looking for county clerk o f Clackamas county, work. Oregon, on the 27th day of February, | I A bank account is a great aid in careful saving and “ Happy” Hauglum had his wood 1929, I will offer for sale to the = wise spending o f on e’s funds, and will keep your sawing outfit thawed out and began highest bidder for cash, a Ford truck money w orking fo r and with you. getting out wood again last week for pursuant to law under section 10277, | his customers. Olson’s Oregon Laws, for claimant’s Pleas Roork is in the best of health lien, $56.06; filing fee, certified copy i at his home in Evergreen Park, which $1; attorney fee, $5; together with = W e should be pleased to carry your account at this bank if you are not already a depositor. park Roork laid out for summer cost o f service, advertisement and homes two years ago. His place is sale or any other cost necessary in located near Wemme. making said sale. Arlie Mitchell, who was in Sandy Said sale will be held on the 9th Sunday night, reported four feet of day o f March, at Geo. Cell's Gar snow at Faubian. age on Main street in the City of The Mountain district came thru Estacada, Oregon, at the hour o f 10 fine last week when Mrs. Lundy was o ’clock a. m. = Safe De p o s i t B o x e s $3. 00 per Ye ar taking subscriptions for the Clacka, 2t CHARLES LYNES, Constable. itiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiimiimiiMimimimmimmiiiiiiiiiiimmmimiiiii mas County News. Gates Funeral Home YOUR DOLLARS I j E ST A C A D A STATE BANK * ¡¡miiiiiiimiiimiiimiiimimiiimiiiimmiiiiiiimiimimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiB R A T T L E TAK EN OU I OK NEW MODEL A FORDS “ FREEDOM OF THE PRESS” ST IRRING FILM PL AY For sheer sweep and power, “Free dom of the Press,” the Universal picture which will be shown at the Liberty, Estacada, Thursday and Fri day, next, has few equals. From the very beginning when you see Lewis Stone at the crooked polit ical boss fighting his boyhood chum, now the editor of the Free Press, played by Henry B. Walthall, who is conducting a fierce campaign to bring out the identity o f the mem bers o f the vice ring, you know you are in for a thrilling hour or moro of entertainment. One is as ruthless in his pursuit o f good as the other is o f evil. Both men give remarkably power ful characterizations meriting praise as the finest performances of the year. The love story is moving in its pa thos but finally emerges triumphant ly. Merceline Day and Malcolm Mc Gregor furnish the juvenile interest with sincerity. The story itself is revealing. Accur ate in its newspaper detail it also dis closes the heart o f a newspaper in a way which many other pictures have failed to accomplish. From a news paper man’s viewpoint the story is without a flaw. It all could happen just as it does. In fact, it would seem that the story by Peter B. Kyne from which this was taken, was ac tually based on the murder of Don Mellet, the courageous Canton, O., editor. George Melford deserves the high est praise for maintaining the spirit o f the story and the suspense from beginning to end. The supporting cast is well chosen. Hayden Stevenson is good as the star reporter. Tom Ricketts, as the city editor, represents a member of the fine old school o f journalism. Rob ert Emmett O’Connor, Robert Ellis and Boris Baronoff are menacing as underworld lieutenants. If you are at all interested in the newspaper that you read daily, and who isn’t?— don’t fail to see “ Free dom o f the Press.” As R. H. Rogers, of New Orleans, was sinking for the third time in the Mississippi a rescuer grabbed his hair and dragged him into a boat. A little foresight will mean a finer garden h e r e is a surprise when you first taste the m elting sweetness c f Ferry’s sweet corn. It is not o r d i nary sweet corn by any »leans. N or is a plump, red, smooth-skinned Ferry tomato like an ordinarv to mato. N or are the Ferry’s Seeds that grow these like ordinary reeds. Remember that when you buy T Ferry’s purebred Seeds, you buy inherited quality. Quality is bred into the seeds. A careful up breed ing of vegetables and flowers lias been going on in the Ferry trial gardens for 51 years. This means that the Ferry’s Seeds you can plant today came from parent plants and grandparent plants that were them selves purebred. Sixty thousand tests arc made annually in the Ferry gardens for germination. Thousands of other trials are made for size, form, color, resistance to disease. So far as is humanly pos sible, we determine that every crop will meet the Ferry standards. Ferry’s Seeds are easy for ama teurs to make grow well, and are naturally the choice of professional gardeners. T h ey arc fresh for planting now, at the “ store around the corner.” N o packet of Ferry’s Seeds is ever carried over hy the dealer for sale the second season. Send for the Ferry’s Seed Annual. Tt is more than a catalog, \ddrcss D. M. Ferry & Co., Dept. 11, 500 Paul Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Your garden -will have its best possible shirt with F e r r y ’s purebred Seeds.