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About Estacada's Clackamas County news. (Estacada, Or.) 1957-1976 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 31, 1958)
t THE CLACKAMAS COUNTY NEWS Page Estacada, Oregon, Friday, January 31, 1958 McHugh and son Michael and Sharon Kishpaugh, Clackamas ; Mrs. Dallas Kishpaugh and (By ANNE JUSTICE) daughters o f Portland. Mrs. (Too Late for Last Week) Perry DeLapp o f Elwood, Mrs. A. T. Varitz of Springwater Christner and Mrs. Buckner ox Grange was the chairman o f a Estacada and Mrs. Lloyd Kish t-H organizational meeting paugh o f Oregon City. held at the Dodge hall Monday. 29 adults and children were pre THIS WEEK’S NEWS sent. Several clubs were organ The Dodge Community Club ized, including sewing, cooking, sponsored a Chinese dinner at forestry and livestock. Great the hall Saturday evening. O v interest in the entire program er 90 people were served a s being shown by both Adults menu of pork chow mein, pork and children. fried rice, salad, hot rolls, co f Ricky and Billy Slane have fee and tea and almond cakes. he mumps and Debbie Bryan The hall was decorated in a has the 3 day measles. Get well Chinese motif by Mrs. Paul soon kids. Slane, Mrs. Bill Simmons and Friday, Jan. 17, Mrs. Ed. Cas Mrs. Ronald Bryan. The wait the Dodge well and Mis. Ronald Bryan resses were from by were co- hostesses at a baby Teen age club, super vised shower for Mr. Max Kishpaugn Mrs. Slane and Mrs. Jack Kish and Mrs. Stan Rutherford. 26 paugh. Food preparation was Mrs. ladies and six children enjoyed in the capable hands o f an afternoon of games. Mrs. Howard Westerberg, Mrs. Bill Rutherford and Mrs. Kishpaugh Simmons, Mrs.Ed Caswell, Mrs. each received many lovely Ronald Bryan, Mrs. Paul Just Fol gifts. After the opening of the ice and Mrs. Paul Slane. hall was gifts the hostesses served a del lowing dinner the turned over to the guests for icious lunsheon. Guests included Mrs. Am ey dancing. Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Ott at Keeth, Portland; Mrs. Russell D 0 ÙGE tended the American Legion ] GUNS SLATHERED WITH dinner in Estacada on Sunday. | BUTTER During the afternoon they call The old saying about having ed at the Gentemann and Ay- our cake and eating it too has cock homes in Springwater. taken on a new and deep sign Mr. and Mrs. Robert Conner, ificance. formerly o f Dodge became the There is no doubt whatsover due parents o f a 7 lb baby boy at that military spending is Doctors Hospital in Oregon for a big jump—perhaps much City this week end. The baby bigger than the President indi message. will be named William Bryan cated in his budget Conner II after his grandfather And. along with this, there is considerable doubt whether Wm. B. Conner of Dodge. Kevin Justice is recovering non-defense spending will be from a fractured jaw. He and materially reduced in any dir ection. his brother Tom were indulging in a bit of horseplay Friday Those who want the govern on morning while waiting for the ment to everastingly take more and more responsibilities, school bus. Both fell and in the at everlastingly inrreasing « nsuing melee Kevin’s jaw was costs, are mobilizing now.A last fiactured. ditch fight will be made t() get for Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Kish maximum appropriations paugh and Mrs. Lloyd Kish welfaie, grants to states, social greater paugh were Saturday evening ized power projects, farm subsides, .pork-barrels as visitors in Dodge. The newly formed 4H Clubs usual, and all J inner of hand * in Dodge will begin holding outs. If this fight is successful, the meetings this week. The 1st choices. year cooking club will meet nation will face two with their leader Mrs. Paul One is higher taxes on top of Justice Wednesday evening at already staggering taxes. The h o’clock. Club members are other is deficit financing and a Sally, Karyle and Sherry R e p - further cheapening of the dol olds, Celia Begulin and Susan lar - - that is more isflation. This isn’t a question of whe Caswell. The meeting will be organizational in nature. ther we shall have guns or but ter. It is a question of whether vast gobs of political butter will be slathered onto the guns. Economic undermining o f this country would serve the Soviets ns surelp as military under mining. Never did a Congress, an Administration or the people face plaine facts. Will they recognize them and act accord ingly or will they continue on the road to bankruptc; via in flation. The state of Oregon produc ed over-all income of slightly more than $3 biilion last year. Of that sum the Oregon Voter reports $1.155.000.000 was ab sorbed in direct taxes, fees, li censes, contributions and other froms of compulsory or manda tory assessments, not including hidden taxes. class -struggle argument is false; that workers and mana gers, employes and employers, are essentially cooperators in production; that the whole system of private capitalism is a marvelouss system of social cooperation. Broadhurst of Estacada. A nice dinner and visit was enjoyed by all. , , Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lun- deen were pleasantly surprised to have her cousins Mr. and Mrs. Norman Henderson of Fortland and Mr. and Mrs.Clar A specialist on Soviet science ence Yand of Singapore, Thai and industry who is associated land, as dinner guests on Fri with the Standard Oil Compa day of last week. ny of Indiana says that Russian Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Parks boys and girls even in the first enjoyed a trip 10 grades of school put in more and children than 35 percent of their time last week to Kelso, Wash., to on science and mathematics.By visit friends. way of contrast, columnist Jay Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cromer Hayden states that during 1955 Satur only 3 4 .4 percent of all high of Seattle visited last A. H. school students took chemistry; day with Mr. and Mrs. 24.5 p rcent took physics; 9.2 York of Estacada. Jack Cromer pei cent took trigonometry, and was a former graduate of the 7.5 percent took solid geometry local high school. 1 The Tax Foundation finds Henry Hazlitt writes in News that in every year but one be week: ‘What we must do is to tween 1945 and 1955 consum answer the Communists with ers spent more to support gov truth and clarity on every int ernment than they spent for ellectual level. We must point i food. out that government ownership and operation are gros- ly inef Mrs. Lucy Broadhurst had ficient; that socialism does not as dinner guests on Monday create wealth but impoverish Mrs.Winnie Lakin and son Bud ment; that dialectic material of Salem, Mr. and Mrs. Arnie ism is nonsense; that the whole Broadhurst, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brown, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mrs Della Nicholson visited with Mrs. Mollie Bates on Fri day afternoon of last week. We are glad to see Rev. Vio let Bolliger out and around again. She was sick in bed ten days with the flu. Maxine Smith .daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Eugene Smith, en tered into kindergarten. Mr. Smith is employed on the dam. STRICTLY,,BUSINESS byMcFeaH.r,| TïTïïjTÏÏ'ïi'''■ That’s Wetherby. the investment banker! JVUCready Lumber Co. 1959 E. Powell Phone MÔ 5-2095 Gresham, Oregon Storm Windows Priced Low By Reynolds Aluminum Co. Custom Made from Plastic or Glass to fit your w indow s! W E WILL CUT & ASSEMBLE FREE OF CHARGE ready for installation Until Monday, Feb. 3rd. A L E X G R E S C H O K , toiler o f W e y e r h a e u se r's W h ite River tree farm teaches a new step to b eg in n e rs In Enum claw 's M e r r y M ite s folk d a n c in g group . The G re sch o k s a re a rd e n t folk dancers. A le x a n d wife Lena b e lo n g to an adult g ro u p a n d help d a u g h te r Lorilyn teach 5 4 juvenile M e rr y M ites. S o n A lla n is a m em ber o f this group . Prices o f windows vary with size W hile you’re in, look over our storm doors meet one of your forest industry neighbors... Active in Cub Scouts, Little League baseball and folk dancing, Alex Greschok’s leisure-time interests center around his family Forest industry pay checks work for everyone. The average family spends $100 of income like this: and community. He is typical o f today’s forest industry people. make valuable social and economic contributions to this area. Like Alex, most are permanent homeowners and taxpayers who F o o d ........................................ $ 27 H o u sin g .................................... 17 C lo t h in g ........ ......................... 9 Today some 160,000 men and women work in the Washington A u tos a n d tra n sp o rta tio n .......... 14 and Oregon forest industry. Their earnings total about 750 H o m e fu rn ish in g s ...................... 6 million dollars a year. Most o f this money is spent locally. . . M e d ic a l a n d p e rso n a i c a r e . . . . 7 T a x e s (incom e a n d p r o p e r t y ) . . 7 Recreation, sa v in g s, insurance, education, etc........................... 13 spreading out into all channels of trade. These payroll dollars help support healthy community grow.h and prosperity. Pay checks and other expenditures of the forestry industry are $100 F stitn n ted fr o m U . 8 . B u reau o f T .«b or S ta tistic*. S u rv e y o f C o n s u m e r K t pen d t u re« baaed on averag e w a g e earner fa m ily o f 1?.4 i h t m i i u . i the basis for about one-half o f our regional economy. Balanced timber growth and harvest sustain continuous plant operations... a major factor in the economic stability o f our region. r ■, ■ V ,\V,YS , 4-SCUAMv\M f v ¡ v .'. m Y, „’M E WEYERHAEUSER working TIMBER COMPANY to b u i l d a permanent, stable forest industry AT ESTACADA EVERY WEDNESDAY GRESHAM SEED & FEED CO. Gresham, Ore. Phone MO 5-2186