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About Clackamas County news. (Estacada, Or.) 1928-1957 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1941)
CLACKAMAS COUNTY NEWS FRIDAY, NOV. 21, 1941 SALMON EGGS TO HATCH ufacturers for combining with pig per hundred pounds. F. T. Daniels at Welches went up in mers and many others is needed in i-nt tbi-re are 38 pupils enrolled and iron. The prices paid would not alone smoke Thursday afteinoon and noth moving all salvaged materials back the classes range fiom beginners to B. Taylor of Adams .chair be enough to insuie the thoro comb ing was saved but a little clothing. into useful channels because many of the eighth grade. School will contin One million salmon eggs have man Robert of the Oregon USDA defense ing of rural areas for scrap points In addition to all household furnish the men who have usually collected ue for a term of sir months. A num been placed in the hatchery near the board is asking cooperation of all out Chairman Taylor but farmers ings an extensive library collected waste materials are now engaged in ber of pupils in the district have Itig Sandy dam at Murmot. Orville county boards in carrying not yet enrolled. will profit in other ways by helping thru a long married life was lost. other activities. Gieer is in charge of the hatchery. for the collection of scrap on in a drive Estacada is having an electric light con to provide an adequate supply of iron The Big Sandy river is too low this nection with the current campagn to and steel scrap. If the flow of scrap FARMERS URGED TO GET Price is of course of interest to system put in. time of the year and it is claimed see farmers. It should he borne in mind The park has been seeded with that usable machnery is repair, is not sufficient to meet needs steel REPAIRS NOW the salmon are still unable to come ed early however that if there is an advance lawn grass and clover. for use next year. output will be further reduced which up to spawn due in part to too much A graduated scale of prices for will mean that farmers will encoun in the price of iron and steel scrap and grade on Main street sand which has piled up in the stream farm scrap thruout the U .S. based ter still more difficulty in obtaining Farmers of this territory are urg the cost of producing new steel will that The hits cut been impassable since ed to get their tractors and other below the dam. • in a higher price that the manu the rains began about has fixed and on distance from consuming centers machinery and other steel products. farm machinery repaired now. The result facturers of farm implements will is thot to be in good been shape for traf. has been set up so that farmers will Besides it will be a patriotic ser Hessel Implement company of Gre have to pay for1 new steel. Farmers Asked to Collect and fic again. A .Havens did the work know approximately what they will vice. points out that the wise farm Sell More Scrap Iron the townsite company. receive for their material at the var The OSC extension service is co sham ITEMS TAKEN FROM THE FIRST fou- When er will order his repairs and part3 in town put your horses up ious assembling points. For Oregon operating by urging county agents now while he can still get them. “We ESTACADA NEWSPAPER at the 10c barn.—Adv. Oregon farmers have been asked the price of 61 cents per hundred and 4-H club organizations to help urge our farmer friends to check to participate in the nation wide cam pounds at Portland has been estab in the scrap collection campaign in over their tractor and implement part Items taken from the first edition John Linn of the firm of Linn paign for the collection of scrap iron lished. The amount received by the every way possible. requirements at once and place their of the Estacada newspaper dated De Bros., proprietors of the large saw- and steel to aid bh: defense pro-Tam. faimers however will be this price ami planing mill 10 miles east of order as soon as possible,’’ said Mr. cember 1, 1904 . Farms of the U .S. are considered less the cost of shipping to Portland MARONEY BUILT FIRST The winter term of the Estacada Estacada was here transacting busi W. A. Hessel this week. one of the most important sources and the cost of preparing the scrap Requirements of the defense pro school began three weeks ago and is ness Saturday. Mr .Linn has been out of scrap supplies which are now ur for shipment to the steel mills, the MT. HOOD LOOKOUT gram make it imperative that farm progressing nicely under the manage here from the East two years and gently needed for use by steel man latter being approximately 12 cents ers do not delay in making known ment of Miss June Oakley who is re is well pleased with the country and’ George C. Maroney who died on their needs. cently out from Wisconsin. At pre- ts future prospects. Armistice day in Portland after a seveial months’ illness was a charac teristic “man of the mountains” and l.O.O.F. AND REBEKAHS spent most of his life at Sandy. He was born in Wisconsin in 1868. He NAME NEW OFFICERS "NAVY TRADE TRAINING GAVE ME MY came to Oregon when about 19 ami Election ol officers for the Clack worked in Oregon and Washington county l.O.O.F. and Rebekah SAYS PRESIDENT, SPERRY CORPORATION until the Alaska gold rush when he amas lodge associations was effected at went to the Klondike, had many hard balloting in Sandy. L. A. Dougherty integrity is bound to win the approval of ships and returning to Oregon was of Molalla heads the Odd Fellows with his father, John Maroney at and Gilgan of Estacada is pre thinking people the Barlow Toll Gate for a time sident Birdie of the Rebekah group. after which he has lived at Sandy The 43rd semi-annual convention and vicinity. About 1916 he, Lige the two organizations will be held Coleman and some others took a con of at Canby the meeting decided. tract from the forest to carry lum Other officers chosen include: Odd DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE ber on their backs to build the first Fellows; Henry Helms, Sandy, vice lookout on top of Mt. Hood and he president; P.G. Schneider Rock Creek GRESHAM. OREGON Phone 247 and Coleman lived several months on secretary; W. C. Kendall, Canby, top of the mountain while working treasurer; Rebekahs: Harriett Sare. on the lookout and they also "re mal, Millwaukie secretary; Geottgie ceived” the first mountain cilmbers Gunderson .Sandy .treasurer; Agness the cabin was completed. Clifford, Molalla, marshall; Harriet While digging in the ice 20 feet Meinig, Sandy, conductress; Eklith the top of Hood that year Ma- Cranswick, Clackamas, inside guard; found the bones of a prehis- Gladys Emerick .Oswego ,outside animal which with his picture Ethel Meldrum .Milwaukie, sent to the Smithsonian Institute guard; right supporter; Della Ewalt .Esta Washington, D. C. where they are cada, supporter; Lucile Hilyard, display. He also made several of Boring left .chaplain; Edith Gray. Wil first forest trails around Mount lamette musician; and Dorothy Lind- blad, Molalla junior chairman. THOMAS A. MORGAN (pictured of the modernly equipped Navy in insert), president of the Sperry Trade Schools. The Navy offers Corporation, world’s largest manu training to young men in nearly HARD E. OLSON IS No contented mooing of homeward facturers of aeronautical and ma different trades and vocations. LLED BY DEATH bound Guernseys rises above the cla. rine instruments, received his 50 Opportunities for advancement, — o— early technical training in the mor at the navy’s bustling air sta U. S. Navy, in which he enlisted to learn skilled trades, for travel Richard Edwin Olson was born in tion on Japonski island near Sitka- as a young man. “This has proved and adventure are identical wheth Norway, April 26, 1873 and Alaska. great value to me in later years,” er a man enlists in the regular d November 8 ,1941 at his home But that’s no sign the navy’s offi of said ex-sailor Morgan. Pictured Navy or the Naval Reserve—and r Cherryville at the age of OS cers and enlisted men stationed there above new Navy recruits re his pay, food, clothing, medical 6 months and 13 days. He is- don’t have milk that at least tastes ceiving are electrical training at one and dental care are the same. by his widow Mrs .Electa as though it were no more than a Olson of Cherryville, 3 sisters couple of hours from the hoof. d 1 brother, Mrs. Julia Pederson, The secret is thet “iron cow” re rs .Amanda Moore, Miss Constance cently installed as part of the regular Ison and George Olson and many galley gear. Every day it turns out iends in the community in which gallons and gallons of seeming fresh lived. ’ i >< milk and cream for hundreds of hun Funeral services were held from gry bluejackets and not in cans ei e Chapman Funeral home in Sandy ther. 12th at 2 p.m. Rev. N. K. How? Well, powdered skimmed oberts of Portland officiating. milk, water and large quantities of services were in the San- butterfat in the form of sweet, un cemetery. Mrs Swails accompany- salted butter are poured down the g herself at the piano rendered iron maw of this mechanical substi. o beautiful selectons. tute for peaceful meadows and long, Pallbearers were Messrs. Krebs, lush grass. Wheels turn. Something xton, Boler, boler, Monsu and happens. Finally out comes a stream of wholesome fresh milk with the taste of the dew still on it. It’s raced to the station messhail and from then S EDITH FOSBERG IS on the bluejackets and marines take ECTED GRANGE HEAD over. .Edith Fosberg has been elect ed to succeed Jay Westcott as mas ter of the Boi ing-Damascus grange. Other officers elected were. Overseer, Melville Richey; chap lain Minne Wellman; lecturer, Grace Old Time and Modern Richey; Flora, Helen Shubert; Ceres, Boynton; Pamona, Leah Mae Scrap iron from Clackamas county EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT AT EAGLE CREEK Mercy Gregson; secretary, Hannah Kelly; farms is needed for national defense treasurer, Victorine Heacock; execu immediately and in quantity accord Music by Tiny and His Wranglers tive committee .Jake DeYoung, Mae ing to Glen Cumberland chairman of Humphrey and D. Kelly, musician, the Clackamas county agricultural Every Sunday Night at Mabel Westcott; steward, Alfred defense board who suggests the Clack Wellman; gatekeeper, Chas. Drake; amas county farmers make use of Ensign Wayne Morris Seeks Wing» RIVERSIDE HALL, WILLAMETTE ass’t steward, Dave Foster?; lady any possible spare time to team down Wayne Morris, recent 3tar of “I struction from Navy pilots who intro discarded machinery save parts need, Tune in on KWJJ Every Sunday at 3 P. M. ass’t steward Mary E. Boynton Wanted Wings,” became a member of duced dive bombing, aircraft carriers ed for repairs and to deliver the re Uncle Sam’s Navy in May, 1941, and catapult take-offs to the rest of Refreshments Union Music mainder to a junk yaid. when he was appointed to the rank the world. Also, there are opportuni The request for scrap iron comes of Ensign. ties in Naval Aviation for men who to the county agricultural defense When asked what he thought of don’t wan t to fly. They can be trained the United States Navy, Morris raid, as aviation machinists, metalsmithg, board in a special letter from secre “I think every man who is consider photographers, observers, or they can tary of agriculture Claude Wickard, ing joining a military service should receive instruction in many other resulting from an appeal for cooper look into the ‘chance of a lifetime’ trades. It’s a greatlifein the Navy.” A petiton is being circulated by ation of the U .S. department or ag- which the Navy and Naval Reserve of Ensign Wayne Morris is pictured more than 20 new settlers to be in ruculture from Donald Nelson di fer to get into the big-pay Held of the here in his line of duty as a member rector of priorities, office of produc cluded in the Boring rural mail route future—aviation. In the Navy you of the Naval Aviation Cadet Selec No. 1, which ak.eady practically sur. tion management. can attend the fir: t flight training tion Board at the Long Beach Naval schools in the world, and receive in Reserve Air Base. rounds this group of home owners Farmers are entittled to the follow who purchased five or 10 acres of a ing facts accordng to Mr. Nelson. 180 acre tract one or two years ago. ¡“We are appealing to you thru the The location is near the intersection department of agriculture’s facili- of the Booth and Brooks roads south I ties to lay befo:e the farmers thru- | out the country the fact that both of Cottrell. These newcomers most of whom patriotism and selfinterest will be ser are from the East have cleared home- ved if they will at once make available sites built small homes .raised their all the iron and steel scrap they can first gardens the last season and the from their farms. first electricity has Just been instal “We feel that farmers ate entitled led at the Bert Axness place. Some to know the full farts in conjunction We strive to measure our service in every detail of the residents have been getting with such an appeal. We have already- by the Golden Rule their mail at Sandy and others at the launched a campaign to bring in th* Gresham postoffice. scrap from the auto junk yards and have had most encouraging response. WELCHES HOME COES We feel su--e that the response from farmers will be equal'y heartening, UP IN SMOKE once the facts are understood.” P hone 208 G rea ham. Ore. The modern home of Mr. and Mrs. Volunteer help on the part of far- UNQUESTIONED CARKOLL FUNERAL HOME DANCE Scrap Iron Needed for Defense Settlers Seek Postal Service The Golden Rule JA C O B S ! FUNERAL HOME