4 OREGON CITY COURIER THURSDAY, SEPT. 4 1913 OREGON CITY COURIER Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and en- tered in the Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as second class mail matter. OREGON CITY COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS. Subscription Price $1.50. Official Paper for the Farmers M. J. BR.OWN, Affidavit of Circulation I, M. J. Brown, being duly sworn, say that I am editor and part owner of the Oregon City Courier, and that the average weekly circulation of that paper from May 1, 1912, to May 1, 19 13, has exceeded 2,000 copies, and that these papera have been printed and circulated from the Courier office in the usual manner. M. J. BROWN. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 5th day of May, 1913. GILBERT L. HEDGES, Notary Public for Oregon THE CURE As the Enterprise correctly states, passing the hoboes onto the next town doesn't solve the problem it only aggrevates it. Week after week we open the jail doors in the morning and drive them on to Canby and Woodburn. And day after day these towns get back at us by sending a new drove north. There are no doubt many men in army of "tie hitters" and "truck rid ers" who would not take a hard job of work if it was thrust upon them, but at the same time there are many who want work, and will work, but . at the same time there are many who want work. There are many men in this army who have been lured to the Pacific by "Golden West" dreams. They came and found that jobs were fewer than men and they could not live on cli mate, i ! ; i A few weeks without work and ; money puts any man on the bum. Sleeping out and riding the break beams takes the crease out of his clothes, and grows whiskers on his face. Then he is classed as a "hobo" and in that class he can only get a "ho bo's" job an occasional odd and end. The hop men are afraid of him; the farmer dare not truBt him, and he is a down and out. And unless somebody or something gives him a foothold, then he degen erates, loses all self respect and blos soms into a thug, a postoffice rob ber or a porch climber. But the Courier does not believo( with the Enterprise, that a city rock pile is the cure. What other effect would it have than passing the tramp on to the city without stopping. This would be no cure, simply an ex pedient. It would make the tramps avoid THIS city, but would it help Woodburn or Canby ? And would it help the man who was honestly hunting for work to condemn him because he could not find it? Would it settle the matter to make a criminal of a man because there was no work for him. It will take more than a city police man and a rock pile to solve the prob lem of employment that confronts this coast country in fact confronts the whole country. There are too many men for the jobs. Arresting the' too many is not right or justice. There is hardly a man who reads these lines but who has seen the time he was temporarily broke, the time he was all in and could have been called a vagrant, When there is not work enough in a state or nation for its people to sub sist on, it is up to that state or nation to make that work raher than to make criminals of the workers. Just as fast as it can be made, is the issue coming into shape, of the people against the trusts, of the peo- pie against special interest and class legislation. The masses want legis lation that will break up monied com binations effective, clear cut, anti trust legislation. They don't got it. They want congressmen that repre sent the people who elect them, and not the railroads, the express com panies and tho giant trndo monopo lies. And they don't got it. It's an is sue of whether money or men shall run this country, and tho people are interested in the issue. It seems to us that the United States is in a pretty small business when one of the federal judges at Se attle permanently enjoins tho enforce ment of a city ordinance requiring the salo of street car tickets on the street cars. Woodburn Independent. accept the "A 15. A" d everywhere goml. 1 kfi III IH wAar" -JA Y.I III I Hotel gladly are alwayt an Iyour next m-. The They suve tune and woriy. Bank of Oregon City 1 OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY . Telephones, Main 5-1; Home A 3-1 Society of Equity of Clackamas Co EDITOR WATCH THE BABY There are pretty good indications that the Citizens Independent ticket which was born at the recall nominat ing convention here in July, will be raised to maturity that it will be come a party and a factor in Clack amas county. Already the "county ring" is lay ing its mines to again get control of the coutny court a year and a half hence. They want Mattoon to stick, to brazen out the verdict of the people and refuse to resign. With him it will only be necessary to nominate one candidate, the judge or a commissioner, at the next primar ies, and they will again have a "county ring" county court and they figure it will be easy enough to see that at least one is nominated. . All a very nice scheme, and all very true. But it is just possible and very probable, that when this inter esting primary time rolls around the "ring" will find that it may nominate all the "ring" candidates it chooses, without any opposition whatever, but that the people who downed the ring August 16 will stay by the party which they won under and will nom inate its own candidates, irrespective of party and name candidates for the Party of the People. And it is just possible again (mind you this is only the wildest flight of guesswork) that this same Citizens Independent party may take a hand in county nominations next spring, may make a few nominations on the side and put up some candidates with out any old party brands on them just Clackamas county mavericks. The recent elections and the more recent recall election pulled the ve neer off both old parties in this county and showed the people the amusing spectacle of once hated rivals, one a Democrat and the other a Republican, occupying the same platform and vie ing with each other in making the stronger defense for a county court buried under charges. Its howed a Republican central com mittee-man working his head off to keep a Democratic official on Ws job. It showed such a scrambling of pol itics, parties, breeds and rings all working for the same end, until many a man decided party means little in ring bossed Clackamas, and it is time for individual plays. And it is just possible this new ba- by is going to be adopted in this county. It is weaned, it is healthy, has no indications of cholera infantum, has cut its teeth, has learned to stand alone. ALL FOR BIG BUSINESS Doesn't it appear to you a mighty strange policy, when there are a mil lion and a half Americans in this country who cannot find work, that our ports should be almost wide open to almost every country on earth and that foreigners should be permitted to come in droves every week? In Oregon City we are discussing a rock pile and sentence for men out of work, yet our country permits the in coming steamers to dump load after load of foreign workmen onto our shores, men who will work cheaper and take tho places of our own work men. There has ever been a loud cry from the manufacturer that a tariff should be retained to the amount of the difference in wages at home and abroad, so the mills and factories could compete, How about a tariff on immigration, a head tax so high that the cheap wage foreigner cannot cut wages of the American? The manufactories don't want this kind of a tariff, and because of the great vote of foreigners in this coun try, no congressman dines to back it. And while a million and a half Am ericans are hunting for work at wag es that an American can live on, thousands and thousands pour in and snap up the jobs at wages the for eigners think is a snap. And some day what are we going to do about it? Card of Thanks We wish to thank our many friends and neighbors for tho kindness and sympathy shown us during our re cent bereavement. August Mautz and family, iCcrt airily J We accept hm TRAVELERS' CHEQUES which Sc'n'-iUeiitifyiiiC. Curry Ihem on nr.'. y-. TV- MV IliiKT Rase, &&Ut2 r it till i i . .7''.'- mm t f HELP CHANGE THINGS. "I favor a small number of well paid legislators with the members so directly responsible that they would not dare obey in structions. The supporters of the present system virtually say they are willing the people should be poorly armed for the war between the masses and organized capit al." These are not the utterances of soap boxer or agitator, not of a Soc ialist or I. W. W., but the sentiments of the governor of Wisconsin, Gov ernor McGovern, spoken openly at tht conference of governors at Colorado Springs last week, and endorsed by governors Hodges, Hunt and Dunne, The people realize, as they never have before, that he states must have more direct, responsive and respons ible government that a public offic ial must do the will of the people and he must stand .right out in the open and be alone responsible for his work The double chamber legislative systems we have in this country are petrifications handed down from the old country and they should be shuf fled into the discord of What Has Ended. There is no more common sense in clinging to them than to th whipping post relic of Oregon or the old eastern blue laws that forbade man to kiss his wife on Sunday, or prescribed how he should have his hair cut. Oregon has paved the way for the United States on practical reforms and majority government, and Ore gon will be the first state (mark the prediction) to 'abolish the useless senate and start responsible and econ omical legislation. Ask any man you meet "Why is a Senate?" and he wouldn't want his answer printed, if he defended th upper house. There is no good reason for its ex istence, and about the only reason at all is that we heired it from Great Britian and should keep it. When we get a state legislature down where we can pick out any and every man and know what he is and is not doing, then will we have a leg islature that will work like yeast. And so long as we have a double system that can be used to hide un der and cover up, so long will we have big business governing and taxes out of all proportion to results. Take away individual rights of legislators to ask for appropriations and you take away the power of big business and big politics to run the state. Give the governor the entire re sponsibility of introducing appropri ation bills and that man will have his ear to the ground to hear taxpay ers' protests, and he will get out in the campaign and tell you just what he will and will not do. Cutting down the legislature and taking away its power will give the pople morep ower and make the re duced representation more responsive, We can't be worse off. Our legisla tive sessions are the limit of misrep resentation now. Thee hange promis es much good. Try it. DON'T SLEEP AT THE SWITCH Two laws that should have never been held up through the referendum are the county attorney law and the employers liability law. The first was held up by the Re publican politicians of the state and the latter by the ambulance-chasing attorneys and the insurance compan ies. The probabilities are that the liab ility referendum will be thrown out, as it is faulty and dishonest, but the county attorney hold up must be downed by the voters. A fine opportunity presents for the politicians to win out on the county attorney referendum, unless the vot ers take an active interest in this re form and vote. It is figured there will be but very little interest in this fall's election, because only referendum matters may ba voted on, hence a small vote. You know when the farmers stay at home, the politicians get busy. Every friend of the ring that wants to continue the present district attorney and assistant district attorney system will be on the job. If those who want the re form law are not, politics wins out. There is no question as to how the majority of voters in this county stand. They favor the county attorney law and the elimination of politics from the prosecuting attorney's of fice. This law gives each county its own government and own election of the prosecuting attorney. A year and a half ago thia county reversed a big Republican majority and carried for Gilbert L. Hedges for district attorney, but it was a vote thrown away, for the other counties offset it, and Mr .Tongue was elected. It is simply a matter of taking an interest and voting. If the people will vote the county attorney law, as passed by the last legislature, will stand. If they do not vote, the ring will put the referendum over. We glory in the grit of Governor West and wish there were more gov ernors like him. If we must be ruled by the arbitrary will of an official, we much prefer it should be the man whom the people have made the head of the state government than by any judge or lawyer who ever lived. And in this connection we deem it pertinent to remark that the people of this country and these states will never really be free to govern them selves so long as courts possess or ex orcise the power to declare unconsti tutional the laws the people have en acted. Woodburn Independent. It is a fright, the women styles you see in Portland, and it would seem they are harking back to fig leaf days. The three-piece gowns, many of them, would scare a team on a public highway, and the single skirts look as if they had been cut down and made over from a baby's dress. OUilOxoa Cry for rtrrcHWS CASTORI A DELIVER US Three or four hundred new laws went onto Oregon's statute books last winter, and I'll bet there are not over three or four hundred voters in the state that know a quarter of them. One big weak spot in the head of nearly every member or senator, and especially with the first termer that he thinks he must pass a law or his district won't think he weighs very mucn. it doesn t matter much what, but he must show that he is in th running. . What this state needs is men to go to Salem and watch the job, get next to every bill introduced and get with the poeple on their votes on these bills. Less laws, less appropriations, less junketing committees, Ies3 fat job: and more independence is what is wanted at Salem, and the man who will take this stand will make entirely good, if he never introduces a bill or heads a committee. TAX PROGRESS IN STATES OTHER The Legislature of California and Pennsylvania are following in the foot steps of British Columbia. Oregon will be forced by competit ion from California and other states to begin the process of exempting personal property and improvements from taxes. In California a home rule amend ment was passed giving counties or their subdivisions, the right to exempt any class of property from taxation for county or local purposes respec tively; this would not affect taxation for State purposes, although-Califor nia has now seperated its sources of State and local revenue so that there is no direct State tax. This amendment is to be voted on November, 1914. Its purpose is avowedly to permit any lo cality by vote of the people, to exempt personal property or improvements; or both Pennsylvania has enacted a law pro viding that in second-class cities (Pittsburgh and Scranton) the rate of taxation on buildings shall be reduced 10 per cent every three years, begin ning 1914, until by the year 1925 buil dings will pay only 50 per cent of the rate upon other property. In Pennsyl vania personal property is classified and taxed for state purposes only, and the practical effect of this legislat ion will be to make the tax on land values twice the rate of the tax on improvements. This measure was ad vocated on the ground that it would encourage. the erection of buildings, diminish congestion of population. and, by increasing the tax burden upon vacant land, increase the avail able building sites for homes and in dustry. The successive steps of reduc tion are taken every third year large ly because the real estate assessments are triennial. This legislation in Pennsylvania is the first positive enactment in the United States which follows the ex ample set twenty years ago by the provinces of northwestern Canada. It may be added that the Province of Saskatchewan in February, amended its rural municipality act so that, be ginning with next year, all lands out side of cities will be taxed on actual value, exclusive of buildings, improve ments or the expenditure of labor or capital thereon, which will be exempt, In these communities there is no per sonal property tax, so that local rev enues will come entirely from the taxation of land values. The new law provides also for a sur-tax of 6 cents per acre upon large holdings which have only part of their area under cultivation, and this is avow edly designed to discourage the hold ing of land idle for speculative pur poses. The American Political Scien ce Review for August. When asked for a comment on the decision of the supreme court that states have the power to regulate in- terstate freight charges, E. P. Ripley, president of the great Santa Fe sys tem, replied: "It is a long step toward government ownership." It is. The day will come when the government will not only own the railroads but the wire corporations, the coal mines, the express companies and the other im portant means by which necessities controlled. And why shouldn't the gov ernment own or control these, for the benefit of the many rather than the few? The Proof in Here the Same as Every where For -those who seek relief from kid ney backache, weak kidneys, bladder ills, Doan's Kidney Pills offer hope of relief and the proof is here in Ore gon City the same as everywhere, Ore gon City people have used Doan's and Oregon City people recommend Doan s, the kidney remedy used m America for fifty years. Why suffer? Why run the risk of dangerous kidney ills fatal Bright's disease. Here's Oregon City proof. Investigate it. Edwin Albee, Washington and 17th Sts., Oregon City, Dregon, says: "For five or six years I suffered from kid ney trouble. There was pain in the the first of the week looking over the small of my back and twinges when stooping or lifting. I tired easily. The kidney secretions were too frequent in passage and I had to get up two or three times during the night I used Doan's Kidney Pills and they helped me greatly." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburne Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. Adenoids are Menace to Children Adenoids result from a succession of colds in babies and young children. They spoil the mental and physical life of a child. Thee ondition that causes them may be easily avoided by careful parents. Quickly and thor oughly cure all colds and throat irri tations by the use of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, and adenoids will not develop. Huntley Bros. Co. FROM TWILIGHT The News and Comments from Our Handsome Suburb O. E. Freytag was recently elec ted president of the Oregon City Far mers Jlub. The premium, by way of increased taxation, is greatly retarding the clearing or land in " the Willamette Valley, especially in Clackamas Co. By way of refutation of charges re cently made against this neighbor hood by the Commercial Club of Ore gon City, I am requested to state that the output of potatoes from a half an acre of our soil, has kept the gro cery market of Oregon City glutted for thirty days. The writer has traveled bv rail as far east as Niagara Falls, south to Tampa Bay, Florida, but until he spi ed the Clackamas Southern Railway Crossing of the Highland public road did he witness the comic opera act of halting the iron steed.while the fire man let down a pair of bars before continuing their journey across the country highway. Mrs. Chas. Webber of Portland, Mrs Kirk and Mrs. Sweetman of Toronto, Canada, together with Mrs. Eva Em ery Dye of Oregon City, were Totem Pole Ranch callers Wednesday. The absence of the hostess interefered somewhat with the pleasure of the occasion. Don't misjudge the thresher engin eer. He's neither announcing the ap proach of a station or a railway cros sing, nor is he calling in a flagman, or awakening a sleepy operator at a closed night telegraph office. He's not recognizing a red signal on an opposing engine, nor shooing an obsti nate cow off the track. He's only playing with the whistle. Bear with him, the suspense will soon be over, for the season. Light fingered parties recently stole a derrick rigging, valued at thirty dollars from the contractors engaged in the erection of the dairy ranch buildings. The application of Geo. W. Smith of Muhno was rejected by the Look Pleasant Club after an unique test A member of the club dropped in and took dinner with George, and after partaking of fried chicken the third time, the host insisted on helping his plate to a fourth piece, when George frowned at his courteous refusal. Our public school will open Monday, September 29th, for an eight month term, with Mr. Adolph Speiss in structor. A successful school year is predicted. Mrs. Ed. Schwab of Portland, Mrs T. P. Randall and Mrs. W. H. Hessel- din of Oregon City, were guests of lotem Pole Ranch Wednesday. FACTS ABOUT KANSAS Figures and Statistics a Reasoner Can't Get Away From A subscriber sends in the following clipping regarding conditions in Kan sas and asks that it be reprinted: A half million young men and wo men in Kansas have never seen a sa loon in that state. There is not a Kan sas newspaper which published a li quor advertisement since Kansas adopted prohibition. Illiteracy has been reduced from 49 per cent to 2 per cent There is only one pauper in every three thousand population. Eighty seven of the one hundred and five counties have no insane, fifty- four no feeble-minded and ninty-six no inebriates. Thirty-eight poor farms have no inmates. In July 1911, fifty-three county jails were empty and sixty-five counties had no prison ers serving sentence. The county jail at Hfigotan has not had an inmate for two years and the county commis sioners have rented the building for a dwelling. Some courts have not called a jury to try a criminal for ten years. In one Kansas county there has not been a grand jury. In 1880 the saving deposits in Kansas were thirty mil lion dollars and today they are two hundred million dollars. Kansas stands first among all the states in per capita valuation of assessed prop erty. During the panic of 1907 Kansas sent fifty million to New York to re lieve the money market, while her eighbor, Missouri, sent nothing. During the panic of 1907 Kansas has dropped from seventeen in three thousand to seven and one-half to the thousand Kansas is also the most healthful state in the union. Do you not feel sorry for such a state? It is lacking in the luzuries of the other states, such as jails, the poor farms and grand juries. Kansas would have all these things were she to permit aloons to return. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR I A A CARRIAGE THAT IS RE PAIRED AND RE-PAINTED by us you couldn't tell from the new article, for we will make it just as good as it ever was. If your horses need shoeing you will find us good judges of a horse's hoof and what kind of a shoe it needs, and our work will be properly and scientific ally done. If you want anything done in our line we guarantee satisfaction. Owen G. Thomas Oregon City, Ore. HVc.KWffc 'fill ' ""' 11 ' ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. AVcgelablePrcparalionrorAs similaiing ihcFoodandRetjula ting the Stomachs andBowdsof Promotes Digestionflieerful ness and Rest.Contalns neither Opium.Mor)hitie nor Mineral. Not Narcotic Jfanjtio Seed' Jlx.i'cium WotmSeed Clarifled Sltqar Jimttaftml'lml'. 3&P.SI MO! Ancrfect Rcmedv forConslipa- Hon , Sour Stoniach.Diarrtoea Yorras,Convulsions.revcristi ness andLoss OF Sleep. Facsimile Signature of 3 s NEW YOKK. 11 t :; ;.., ',! ! ; i --'"w:L,BV'1 - j m mm m tn tc u m wrr M pri Ml I ' tJ.-.'-tf.iy jwrmM.vi lurf mm n) u7k M Mm KM J an m n efssuii i yum Exact Copy of Wrapper. thiointauiiiompanv. hiwyobkoitt. Notice of Final Settlement Diarrhoea Quickly Cured In the County Court of the State of "I was taken with diarrhoea and Mr Oregon, for the County of Clacka- Yorks, them erchant here, persuaded t "l?3 ' n . . . - r, me to try a bottle of Chamberlain's In the matter of the estate of Per- v - m i . n- . n melia Mathews, deceased: Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Notice is hereby given that the un- After JaklnS one dose of lt was dersigned Administrator of the es- cured- 11 alsoc ured others that 1 ave tate of Permelia Mathews, deceased, it to," writes M. E. Gebhart, Oriole, has duly filed with the County Clerk Pa. That is not at all unusual. An of Clackamas County, Oregon, his ordinary attack of diarrhoea can al final account therein , and the said most invariably be cured by one or V?u" nas sAl monaay, tne lotn oayltwo doses of this remedv. For sale bv of Sept. 1913, at the hour of ten o'clock, A. M., at the Court-house in Oregon City, Oregon, as the time and place ot hearing any and all obiec tions to said final account and to the discharge of said Administrator. David P. Mathews Administrator of the pstato of Ppi fmelia Mathews, deceased Date of first publication August 14, SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clacka mas. Ivy M. Kinney, Plaintiff, vs. Earl V. Kinney. Defendant. To Earl V. Kinney, defendant: in the name of the State of Oreeon You are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint of the plaintiff filed herein against you in the above entitled suit on or before the 3rd day of October, 1913, said date being after the expiration of six weetcs. irom the Urst publication of this summons and if you fail to so appear and answer this complaint, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to tne ourt lor tne reiiet prayed tor in the complaint to-wit: For a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony now existing between the plaintiff and defendant, and for the care and cus tody of the two minor children of plaintiff and defendant, and for such SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County. The Frankfort Marine Accident and Plate Glass Insurance Company of Frankfort on the Main, Germany, the Frankfort General Insurance Co., Plaintiff vs. Owen Boyle and Anna Boyle, Defen dants. To Owen Boyle one of the above named defendants: In the name of the State of Ore gon You are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit within six weeks from August 21 1913, the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fail to answer tor want thereof the plain tiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in his complaint, to wit: For a judgment foreclosing and Darnng you lorever ot any rieht, title or interest in and to a certain sum of six hundred dollars ($600) on an insurance policy written by the plaintiff insurance company, in which you are named as beneficiary, and that this plaintiff may be forever discharged of and from any liability under and by virtue of the terms of said policy, or the money due or ow ing tnereon, ana tor such other fur ther relief as the plaintiff herein may be entitled to in equity and good conscience. This summons is published by vir tue of an order of H. S. Anderson, county judge in the absence of the rlon. J. U. Campbell, judge of the above entitled court made this 18th day of August, 1913, directing the same to De pubiisned in the Oregon City Courier, a newspaper of general circulation published at Oreeon Citv. .v.iiichanms county, uregon. -! I . ' j BHEPPARD & BROCK G25 Yeon Bldg., Portland, Oregon, Attorneys ior naintitl. Date of first publication August 21, Date of last publication October 'I, 1913. other and further relief as to the Court seems equitable. ims summons is served unon von by. publication in the Oregon City Coruier, a weekly newspaper printed uuu puonsuea ana naving a general circulation in Clackamas county, Ore gon, pursuant to an order of the Hon orable II. S. Anderson, county judge, in the absence of Hon. J. U. Campbell, judge of the above entitled Court made and entered on the 19th Arm 1 i 1.- U 1 . 1 of August, 1913; said summons will be published for six consecutive and successive weeks, and the date of the first publication is August 21, 1913. J. F. CLARK, ' Attorney for Plaintiff. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years Huntley Bros. Co. Sheriff's Sale on Execution In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clacka mas. D. P. Mathews, Plaintiff, vs. L. E. Williams and A. E. Williams, Defendants. State of Oregon, County of Clackamaa, ss. By virtue of a judgment order, de cree and an execution, duly issued out of and under the seal of the above en titled court, in the above entitled cause, to me duly directed and dated the 7th day of July, 1913, upon a jud gment rendered and entered in said court on the 2nd day of January, 1913, in favor of D. P. Mathews, plaintiff, and against L. E. Williams, and A. R. Williams, Defendants, for the sum of $275.00, with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from the first day of March, 1913. and the further sum of $75.00 as attornev's fee, and the further sum of $14.25 cob(,h aim aisoursements, ana tne costs of and upon this writ, commanding me out of the personal property of said defendants, and if sulHcient could not be found, then out of the real pro perty belonging to said defendants on and after the date of said judg ment to satisfy said sum of $275.00 and also the costs upon this said writ. JNow, therefore, by virtue of said execution, judgment order and decree. and in compliance with the commands of said writ, being unable to find any personal property of said defendants, I did on the 9th day of July, 1913, duly levy upon the following described real property of said defendants, sit uate and being in the Countv of Clack amas, and state of Oregon, to-wit: .L,ois pvo (Z), three (3) and four (4), in block numbered seventv-two (72) in Minthorn Addition to thn mtv of Portland. Oreeon. find T will on Saturday, the 13th day of Septem ber, 1913, at the hour of 10 nVWk n Ei., at the front door of thee ounty court huse in the city of Oregon City, in said county and state, sell at public auction, subject to redemption, to the highest bidder, for U. S. gold coin, cash in hand, all the right, title and interest which the within named de fendants, or either of them, had on the date of said judgment or since had in or to the above described real pro perty or any part thereof, to satisfy said execution, judgment order, decree interest, costs and all accruing costs, c,, . E. T. MASS, Sheriff of Clackamas County, Ore. n f a n By ' J Staats- DePutv Dated Oregon City, Oregon, Aug. 11, 1J13. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas Etta May Erickson, Plaintiff, vs. Al- fred Erickson, Defendant. To Alfred Erickson, the defendant aoove named: In the name of the state of Droo-nn you are hereby required to appear and answer the enmniaint in th filed against you in the above entitled suit within six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fail to so appear and ans wer, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the pnnrt. fnr th ut demanded in her enmnlaint tr,.-art a decree of absolute divorce from the uonus oi matrimony heretofore and now existing between the plaintiff and defendant on tho crmnnWo ,;n-..i desertion. This summons is nublishml in ,. suance of an order of the Hon. R B oeatie, Judtre of the Tnnntu- rni J Uackamas county, Oregon, in the ab sence from said county of the judge of the circuit court of said county made and entered on the 12th day of August, 1913. ' Date of first nuhhVotinn a., 1 1 . jgjg - -v nuijUSH-i, 25D19l3f laSt publication September ' WESTBROOK & WESTBROOK Attorneys for Plaintiff.