CLACKAMAS COUNTY NEWS FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1941 ELWOOD There is only a few Cents difference between Inferior Cleaning and the BEST. Why don’t you treat your Clothes to the BEST. We come to tho front again with Flex Form, an instrument that mea sures your garments precision fit combined with It’s time for TRIANGLE DEVELOPING FEEDS LUSTERIZE You really get something for your money . TIME SAVER PANTORIUM c o n o m is t s ten us that every labor saving device ultimately makes more work for everyone because more of the thing that is made so easily is consumed, and so it takes more people to make the increased amount in the easy way. It all sounds very compli cated to us, and we don’t know. We wouldn’t advocate going back to doing everything by hand, and we privately prefer traveling in a car to walking, or riding a horse, but that’s just a personal idiosyn cracy of our own. And we believe that a greater proportion of our population is employed making cars than ever worked at making harness and carriages or buggies. We do know of one up-to-date time saver, however, which not only saves time, labor and trou ble, but results In a far better product than was ever made by hand. We refer to the ready mixed vegetables that come In cans and are being used all over the coun try in rapidly increasing quan titles. And we’re willing to bet anything, from a diamond tiara to an old silk hat, that more mixed vegetable dishes containing five or six vegetables are made In a year today than were formerly made in a hundred years by hand. Can you conceive of an old-fash ioned housewife cleaning and pre paring half a dozen different vege tables to cook in a dish like the following Delicious Dish Scalloped Mixed Vegetables : Diain the contents of a No. 2 can mixed vegetables, turn into a but tered baking dish, and pour over one-half cup cream. Mix together one-fourth cup grated cheese and one-fourth cup buttered crumbs, and sprinkle over top. Brown in an oven. Makes five servings.* E CLEANERS AND DYERS Telephone or Leave Bundles at LOFTON’S BARBER SHOP, ESTACADA BARKER’S DRUG STORE, SANDY CURRINSVILLE STORE, A n d Thay Say It With a Smilml Do the members of YOUR family say this? If not, perhaps it is because you have never given Alka-Seltzer a thorough trial All over the world people who have used Alka-Seltzer enthusiastic in its praise. are If Alka-Seltzer is as good as we say it is, you want it in your med icine cabinet; if it is not, it won’t cost you a penny. We will refund the purchase price to any new user who is not antirely satisfied. Your family may need Alka-Seltzer sooner and more often than you think. Our guarantee of satisfaction or money refunded covers its use in all conditions listed be low. Gas on Stomach, Add Indigestion, Heart burn, ‘‘Morning After”, Muscular Pains, Neu ralgia, Headache, Distress of Colds, as a Gar de in Minor Throat Irritations. , many were in western costume. Splen 1 getting orders. The timber is mostly did i f ‘ ic was furnished by Maxine’# pine. Wranglettes and the evening was top- M n. Lilly 1’urk ami Mrs. Evelyn ped o f f with chuck served in the Stahliu* -er moteleu to Salem Thurs dining room o f the hall. day. They hail dinner with Mrs. Li bert Hai. is and visited many point-, o f interest in the capital city. We offer a good western saddle Mr. and Mrs. R. Westlund and in excellent condition. Has fine tree daughters Janet and Novie were Ore and is comfortable. Priced at only $10. Also have some very good bar gon City shippers Saturday. Rev. R. Durbin pastor o f the Mo- gains in new and used linoleum. Also lalla Nazeiine church preached at money savers on hundreds o f other items o f household furnishings. Come Elwood Sunday afternoon. and see. Tobaison Second Hand Store, Bruce Brown spent the week end Powell Blvd., Gresham, Ore.— Adv. in Camas, Wash., visiting his daugh ter Mrs. Henry Alder and Mr. and Mrs Bill West and baby daughter ol SMALL MILLS TURNING OUT Alameda, Calif,, Mrs. West is Mr. MUCH TIMBER Brown’s granddaughter and the baby is his only great grandchild. W’ hat small sawmills mean to a Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Snyder had community in the wilds is evidenced their children all home Sunday. Thej in the Bear Springs district where report Mrs. Arthur Snyder who re the following mills are operating. cently underwent a major operation Each cuts 5000 to 10,000 feet dai. is getting better fast and will soon ly. They are: The Dewey, A. B. Linn Durgess, Moehnkc, Bates & Linn. be home again. Cluver and Jim Linn plants which pro j Miss Frances Novak our local tea vide work for families that are trying cher and her pupils are busy these to farm a little and have small homes I days getting ready for graduation. of their own. All the mills are now Virgnia Lekberg is the only graduate this year. ■CLAMS * Mr. and Mrs. Harry Traylor ami family were picnicking in Elwood on Sunday. iCaiim ¿’Hinuorial JJark Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Doyle purchas ed them a new car last week. Mr. Doyle is attending the defense school at Clackamas. GRESHAM,OREGON A LAW N CEMETERY W ITH PERPETUAL CARE Lots including burial priced as low as $15.00 ANNUAL SPRING ROUNDUP IS JOLLY AFFAIR The first annual “ spring roundup” or dance sponsored by the local rid- ng club Riders of the Cascades, a the Redland grange hall on Saturday night o f last week proved a jolly a f fair. Nearly 250 people attended and DIRECTORS B. W. THORNE L. L. KIDDER ARTHUR DOWSETT FRANZ OLBRICH A. W. METZGER WM- METZGER ROY BOHANNON, Superintendent Phone Gresham, 245 I A record never before approached! and HEAUX HISTORIC HERITAGE % P COURSE you want your beaux to be good-looking and O well-bred But how about your T ï t W î IT M O U T T H R IF T PURITANS WOULD H A V E PERISHED ON o THAT STERN AND ROCKBOUND C0AST."1? TH E jJL,ji il , lilt »nil' S U T TH E S E HARDY W ORKERS WITH THE BIBLICAL NAMES - ^ NATHANIEL, NOAH, DANIEL, J? T 'f - i * . Civs?' I‘= r JOSHUA,GIDEON, ELI, IC H A B O D - ~ L KNEW THEIR OLD T E S T A M E N T , PARTICULARLY JO S E P H S S TO R Y O F r ’V U . T H E S E V E N GOOD AND S E V E N T iT ? ,.--- ,'X . A FAM INE Y E A R S ,— AND WHAT H E ■ DIO A B O U T IT. . - I f ¡fV.Y '■ #y i V. .___ ____ W T * ----- I -. J A Li. slhw - HiijBfr-. . A * - H r i ■ • i II “ I : • beans? That’s even more impor tant presumably because we trust that you’re going to control your self and not eat up your beaux. Raw beans such as you ordi narily find in the markets fro quently tarn out to be mature and large, and, many times, stringy. And who wants a matuia and stringy bean or beau? Canned beans are packed when young and garden-fresh. They are especially bred to be stringless. In fact, only in the canned product Is it po» sible to be sure of getting small 'young, crisp stringless beans, utt less you have a garden of you! own. t What to Do with Them * The next question after you’ve caught your well-bred beaux—beg pardon, we mean beans—is what to do with them. If they’re the raw kind we’ve described, they must be washed and snipped in the kit chen, and they must have their strings removed But the well-bred canned stringless beans, on the other band, come all prepared for anything. Try them in some such Jish as the following. Cabbage and Stringiest Bean Ramekins: Melt four tablespoon* butter in a skillet, add two cope ■fcWhen the 29,000,000th Ford rolled recently from the assembly line, an all- time record for the industry was set. 29,000,000 units built by the same man agement and all bearing one name—a name that has become one o f the best- known trade-marks in the w orld! It is significant that this achievement com es at a time when our country is making a mighty effort to re-arm swiftly. For to further that effort, to help speed it along in any possible way, we have offered the vast facilities o f the Rouge Plant and every ounce o f our experience. As you read this, a new $21,000,000 Ford airplane engine plant, started only last fall, is nearly completed. A new mag nesium alloy plant, one o f the few in the country, is already in production on light weight airplane engine castings. W ork is rig h t n o w u n der way on a new $18,000,000 plant for mass production o f big bom ber assemblies. Orders have been filled for military vehicles o f several types, including army reconnaissance cars, staff cars and bomb service trucks. In the midst o f this activity for National Defense, building the 29 millionth Ford car is simply one part o f the day’s work. The public has acclaimed the 1941 Ford car as the finest in Ford history. Ford Dealers are enjoying their greatest sales and expecting their best year since 1937. It is good to be producing the things America needs, and to be setting records on the way! FORD MOTOR COMPANY JT hi S M O T IV A T IN G HERITAGE OF OURS HAS MADE AMERICA W H A T IT IS AND HAS RESULTED IN H IS TO R Y ’S G R E A T E S T A G G R E G A TE OF INDIVIDUALS' T H R IF T — 117$ BILLION IN L IF E IN S U R A N C E O W N E D BY 65 M ILLIO N A M E R IC A N S TODAY. Try a Classified A d . in this pa per. Cost Small, Returns Lanjc •bredded cabbage, one small chopped onion and the drained etrlngless beans from a No. 2 can. and simmer gently for from eight to ten minutes, stirring often to prevent browning Put alternate layers of the vegetables and of two caps white sauce in battered rame kins and top with buttered crumbe or flaked cereal. Brown in oveas Kervea eight* * - -a Free Enlargement et Davidaon’ i Drug Store, Gresham, with any 6 or 8 exposure film fin sh at leasonabi price o f 23 cents.— Adv. Ford Motor Cars on Display at Our Show Room A3K FOR DEMONSTRATION Bob Cooke Motor Co. «Your Ford Dealer” - Estacada, Oregon