Estacada's Clackamas County news. (Estacada, Or.) 1957-1976, July 11, 1958, Page Page 4, Image 4

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    of their cousin
Mrs.
James
Smith.
Mr. and Mrs Raymond Har­
ries and family spent the 4th of
T H U R ., FR1., S A T ., JU L Y 10-11-12
July weekend with Mrs. Har­
Pheasant PEAS, 303’s
6 for 75c;
12 for $1.45 ries parents in Klamath Falls,
returning home on Monday.
Sun Spun M A R G A R IN E
5 Lbs. $1.00
A pleasant family picnic was
at
Arnold
JELLO, A L L F L A V O R S, 6 pkgs.
49c held in the yard
Broadhursts on the 4th.Present
Pillsbury ICE B O X CO O KIES
39c were Mr. and Mrs. Art Smith
Mrs.
Kraft Miniature M A R S H M A L L O W S 10.» oz. 25c of Currinsille, Mr. and
Smith and family of
Pheasant FRUIT C O C K T A IL , 3 0 3’s
2 for 45c Lawrence
Oak Grove, Mr. and Mrs Harry
BISQUICK, 40 oz.
39c Broadhurst and family of M il-
Pheasant G R ATE D T U N A
5 for $1.00 waukic anil Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Brown and family of Estacada
Snack LUNCH M EA T , 12 oz.
47c
Spending the 4th with
the'
Don Sager family was Mr Sa­
W e have a new assortment of Aycock knives.
gers sister and her family M i.
of
The grandparents
of
little and Mrs. Murwood Foust
Yvonne here in
Springwater Oregon City. Sharon Sager re­
ports a nice day
at Jantzen
are Ml-, and Mrs. James Smith
Word h;is been received
,.t
..
. ..
Beach and at Molalla in
the
the birth of a baby girl weigh- p M r' an^ M rs' D° n P,nce f™ m
evening with a group of friends
ing 7 lbs- llo z to M r and Mrs f e<?rla* I“ s' . sf ? nt a f‘?w / lays
Charles Mann on June
29th' laSt WCek vlslt,ng at the home OLDSTERS HOLD KEY ROLE
SPRINGWATER STORE SPECIALS
LEE CLACKAMAS COUNT Y NEWS
;
B A N K NOTES
L. J. AN D E RSO N
.....................
Editor and Publish «r
Published weekly on Fridays at Estacada, Clackamas County,
Oregon. Entered in the postoftice at Estacada, Oregon, as sec­
ond class matter Subscription rates m Clackamas County one
year $3.00; outside the County and in the State of Oregon one
year $4.00; outside the State o f Oregon, one year $4 50. Sub­
scriptions payable in advance.
STA FF CORRESPONDENTS
G a r fi e ld ......................................................
Mrs. Ray Gordon
Viola
.....
Mrs. Lafaye Fou'.s
George
.
.......................... Mrs. Joe Wiederhold
Eagle Creek
..
Mrs. M argar'* Ross
Dodge
.............................................................. Mrs. .anne Justice
Currinsville . .
..
Mrs. Nellie Currin
V.
Springwalet
Estacada's Business Men's
M X PARKING LOT
W ade possible by the business tax)
Behind the City Hall
SAL, JULY 1 2 ,8:30 P.M .
FREE
Hot Bogs - Coffee - Sof t Drinks
PRIZES!
Dance and Treats
Ccm^imenis of
MICKEY'S TAVERN
IN LAB O R M A R K E T
The stepped-up exodus
of
older persons from the
labor
force threatens to lower
the
nation’s average standard of li­
ving. delegates to the North­
western Regional
Conference
on Aging warned today.
Presenting industry’s view In
the conference section, "Social
and Economic Implications of
an Aging Population” Mrs.Bet­
ty Mirris, Palo Alto, research
director for the National Asso-
1 ciation of Manufacturers’ wes­
tern division, said
"E very means of obtaining
utilization of competent older
workers must be studied; not
for sentimental reasons, but be­
cause our economy cannot yet
afford the loss of their produc­
tivity.”
The problem grows as an in­
creasing number of and p o ,-
portion of older workers retire
and stop producing, but
con-
1 tiue consuming
A
smaller
number of goods and services
to divide among the same num­
ber of people results in a liv­
ing standerd reduction, accord­
ing to Mrs. Morris.
The Pacific Northwest’ s lab­
or force, by
present
yard­
sticks, will have lost 1.8
per
cent of
men ages 55-64 and
17.3 per cent of men 65
and
■ Ider by 1965, Mrs. Morris pre­
dicted.
Gains forseen among
older women will not
offset
these losses, she said
Warning that the problem of
the older persons in our socie­
ty is not one o f the short run,
Mrs. Morris urged that they be
judged on
their
individual
merits, ability and degree
of
contribution they make to the
economy.
"A lready over 14 percent of
the country’s eligible
voters
are persons 65
or over” she
MEAT CUT FOR LOCKERS
TO EXÍRA HOURS a week ape b o -
V IL€ D CUSTOMERS OF A BOSTON fcANK.
A SPECIAL WINDOW OFFERS EW 4 W G
bEFVICESFWOMB^AM^it&bPM-S
IWSAWSK1
f
AJO/VUWLL PVTSW .NicSS W.Trl l f €
.V
tin, wrapped and delivered for 6c lb.
Pork 8c lb.
ZT
Cooling, cut, wrapped alia delivered, 4c lb.
M
Dial CR. 9-5145
HELP OF A LOCAL tíí* - . TO l W
CXWTPAUY I5 YX’CTH MORE THAN
A MILLION DOUARS.
THIS
1 TUNGON 1
oven
said. If industry' will not take
care of their needs— which on­
ly to use o f
their services—
government at indutsry’s ex­
¡¿a
pense, will end up doing
the
THUR., FRI., SA T., July 10-12
job.”
IN TECHNICOLOR
Industry must think of emplo­
yees in terms of functional ra­ RICHARD W ID M A R K ,
ther than chronological, age to JANE GREER and
offset unions practice of pro­ TREVOR H O W AR D in
//
moting spread
of automatic / /
retirement at 60 or 65 througn
negotiated pension plan prov­
SECONG BIG FEATURE
isions she said.
D A N A AN DR EW S and
Obstacles deterring
elim ­ PEGGY CUM M INS in
ination of
automatic retire­
ment are not unsu, mountable,’
Mrs. Morris said.
The goal of
successful retirement—
full
use of a persons capacity
as
long as he is able and willing
to give the benefit o f his
ex­ SUN. MON TUE. July 13— 15
perience and talents to his em ­ YU L BRYNNER,,
ployer— is worth the effort ”
M A R IA SCHELL,
Joining Mrs. Morris in soc­ CLAIRE BLOOM and
ial economic discussions were LEE J. COBB in
G. Warfield Hobbs, New Yorx
City, chairman of the National
Committee on Aging;
George
Brown, Portland, Oregon State
Labor Council political educa­
tion director, and Robert
M.
Little, Pasadena, consulting ac-
turian.
Gov.Robert D. Holmes was to
address delegates at 8 PM July ,
1. Other Oregonians pa, ticipa- i For Information leading
tmg in the conference included to the whereabouts of a
Mayor Terry Schrunk and 22
ivory radio, gold ornate
other Portlanders-
eR ff
:
io /
Harold Middleton
wnu $80C«^ a
• iw m
tcucy
Run for the Sun
" Curse of the
Demon'
" The Brothers
Karamazov"
REWARD
OPEM 7 Days a Weak
"
Including Hauling, Butchering, Cooling, Cut-
4\
"A
-
clock and electric plate
taken from our hom^
near. Estacada. C ALL
Esfacada CR 9-3241 or
Beaverton MI 4 - 7341
Collect.
SPECIAL'
TWO WEEKS ONLY
ONE PIECE, PLAIN
Each1
f*lus
S A N I7 0 N E
at no extra cost
ODORLESS
CLEAN ING
S . A -N U
Keeps Fabrics
Like New!
PANTORiUM - WARDXC2E
CLEANERS
Oregon City 4213
Phone Your Local Agents
DlU'/E
Li
<
s- , v „ ■
F i
a y io r 's
|
GROCERIES
Orange ¿ Chocolate Fudge
CAKE MIXES
4*o ¡ 1 - 0 0
Caswell
COFFEE
i . :h.
4 roll Pak
«
|f T
*
'SUE
3P ai(s 1 . 0 0
^ ria . <
AS. URGE EGGS
? dozen 95 c
i^ i
MEATS
Fresh Dai!v
| GROUND BEEF
lb. 49 c
¡f U.S.D.A. G
rads Good
1 POT ROAST, Blade Cut lb. 6 5 c
^ " " Ronnd Bone ib. 69 c
jjj BOLOGNA
lb. 59 c
PRODUCE
Luscious 10AAAT0£S
10 c lb.
Fresh CORN
doz. 49 c
U. S. NO. 1 Poiy Bagged 3
2 5 Lb. Bag POTATOES
169
LEMONS
Taylor’s Hi wav Market
r==
*>. am
People of Estacada and our neighboring area for
snaking June a record month in safes of FORD and
MERCURY cars and FORD TRUCKS! We are going
ALL-OUT to make July a bigger month!
\
Prices or Thurs. Fri. Sat. July 10-12
4
_ CLACKAMAS COUNTY NEWS
THE FIRST RMÍR MONEY IN this
COUNTRY INAS ISSUfcD BY THE STATE
f p i p YOU K N O W
Page
Sstacada, Oregon, Friday, July 1 1 ,1 9 5 8
Doz. ? 9 c
OPEN s u m YE
A M .
t o l O P . M.
SEE US FIRST FOR A SETTER DEAL!
Estacada Motor Co.
Small Engine Service
Paris & Service
M cCULLOCH
Chain Saws
CLINTON
ENGINES
W ISCON SIN
ENGINES
Your small engines like
all nrecision machines
w ill work better and
provide more years of
satisfactory service if
?ivsn regular expert
care!
ESTACADA McCULLOCH
POW ER
PRODUCI
ENGINES
“ Small ENGINE Specialists”
Estacada, Ore.
CR 9-3300
Parts & Service
JACOBSEN
ENGINES &
M OWERS
BRIGGS &
ST R A TTO N
ENGINES
iiii