OREGON CITY COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1917 7 Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clack amas. Martha Webb, Plaintiff, vs. Claude Webb, Defendant. To Claude Webb, Defendant: In the name of the State of Ore gon, you are hereby notified and re quired to appear and answer the above complaint of the plaintiff in the above entitled court and cause on or before Thursday, the 10th day of May, 19l7, and if you do not so appear and answer the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in the complaint, to-wit: For a decree dissolving the mar riage Contract heretofore and now ex isting between plaintiff and defend ant, and for such other and further relief as to the Court shall seem meet and equitable in the premises. This summons is published by the order of Honorable J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Fifth Judicial District of the State of Oregon, which order was made on the 23rd day of March, 1917, directing that the same be published in the Oregon City Courier once a week for six consecutive weeks, and the date of the first publication is March 29th, 1917, and the last pub lication May 10th, 1917. JOHN F. LOGAN, 421-4 Mohawk Bldg., Attorney for Plaintiff. ,5t $ $ vSt $ M 3 OPPORTUNITY vJ? 0 M i & Master of human destinies am I! Fame, love and fortune on my steps wait. . Cities and fields I walk; I pene Deserts and seas remote; and passing by Hovel and mart and palace, soon or late I knock unbidden once at every gate! If sleeping wake: if feasting rise before I turn away. It is the hour of fate, And they who follow me reach every state Mortals desire, and conquer every foe Save Death; but those who doubt or hesitate Condemned to failure, penury and woe. Seek me in vain and uselessly im- plore. answer not, and I return no more! John J. Ingalls. Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clacka mas. Maggie Bozley, Plaintiff, ' vs. W. L. Bozley, Defendant. To W. L. 'Bozley, above named de fendant: In the name of the state of Oregon you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit, on or before the 19th day of April, 1917, said date being the day fixed by the court, and being six weeks from the publication of this summons, and if vou fail" to acpear and answer said complaint, for want thereof plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief Draved for in the complaint, to-wit: A decree of divorce dissolving the honds of matrimony now existing be tween the above named plaintiff and defendant, and for the care and cu- tnrlv nf Dorothy Mav Bozley and James Lewis Bozley, minor children of Dlaintiff and defendant. This sum mons is published by order of J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Circuit Court of the County of Clackamas, State of Oreeon. and the order was made and entered so directing that on the 3rd day of March, 1917, as the time pre scribed for the publication of sum mons for six weeks, beginning with the issue dated the 8th day of March 1917, and continuing every week thereafter for 6 successive weeks and continuing in the issue of April 19th, 1917. Dated this 3rd day of March, 1917, WM. P. LORD, Attorney for Plaintiff. Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clackamas. Manoah N. Swetnam, Plaintiff, vs. Mary Katherin Swetnam, Defendant. To Mary Katherin Swetnam, the above named Defendant: In the name of the State of Oregon you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint tiled against you in the above named suit within six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and if you fail to appear or answer said complaint, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed tor in tne compiaim,; For a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony now existing between plaintiff and defendant. This summons is publisned py or der of the Honorable J. U. Campbell, Judge of the Circuit Court, which or der was made on the 29th day of March, 1917, and the time prescribed for publication thereof is 6 weeks, be ginning with the issue of March 29, 1917, and ending with the issue or May 10, 1917. CHIUSTOPHERSON & MATH EWS And PAUL L. LONG, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Yeon Build ing, Portland Ore. Notice of Final Settlement In the Matter of the Michael Shufer Estate. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, as Executrices of the es tate of Michael Shafer, deceased. have filed their final account in the County Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County, and tnai ivion day, the 23rd day of April, 1917, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day and the court room of said Court has been appointed by said Court as the time and place for the hearing of objections thereto and the settlement thereof. Dated and first published March 22 1917 ' SARAH WEBER MAGGIE UTZ Executrices aforesaid, W. S. WARD, Attorney, 407 Spauld ing building, Portland, Ure. Divorce Decree A divorce decree was signed here Friday separating Harriet and Olaf Lund. There were no property rights. children or MONEY TO LOAN PAUL C. FISCHER Lawyer Deutscher Advokat Room 2, Beaver Bldg. Oregon City. Ore. Home Phono A-23 Pacific Phone Res. 36-F-ll Olllce 253 DR. WM. C. SCHULTZE DR. F. P. SCHULTZE Physicians and Surgeons Rooms 217-218 Masonic Bldg. Oregon City, Oregqn C. SCHUEBEL LAWYER DEUTSCHER ADVAKAT Oregon City Bank Bldg. Oregon City Dr. L. G. ICE DENTIST Beaver Building Oregon City Phones Pacific, 1221. Home, A-19 MAN AND HIS WEIGHT. Foods That Are Enemies of Persons Inclined to Se Stout. : j If ytu are Inclined to be fleshy here are the foods you should avoid, accord ing to an article lu the American Mag azine. The author says: "Overeating is not necessarily glut tony, or anything approaching It A small meal made up of certain foods will furnish more fuel and more fat to the body thun one twice ns large and less discreetly chosen. Foods vary vastly in fuel value, for Instance, one pound of olive oil will stand sponsor for more surplus .flesh tlwii forty-five pounds of the lettuce on which you are likely to eat it. "The stout person must learn that he has both friends and enemies at the tuble. His enemies are sugar, bread, cereal, desserts, butter, cream, olive oil, bacon, cocoa and rich sauces. Among his best friends are leiiu incuts, unsweetened fruits and green foods. Yet, alas, most plump people seem stricken with an ardent love for their enemies. Tills may be good Scripture, but it- Is mighty poor dietetics. "Between forty jitul fifty u man who allows his weight to remain high is running more danger of an early de mise than he would run if he contract ed typhoid fever. What is more, if he were stricken with that disease his chance of recovery would be 10 per cent less than normal. A man who is thinner than the average, on the other hand, has less danger of dying in this decade than a man who tips the scales at the normal figure. "When a man is in his twenties a de ficiency of twenty pounds in weight makes him 12 per cent more liable to fall before the scythe of the implacable reaper. A slight surplus of flesh seems to assist one in cscapmg diseases that cause death lu this perlod-prlneipally tuberculosis and typhoid fever. "A man in his fifties who is twenty pounds over normal weight has a 15 per cent mortality handicap to face. Should he be forty pounds over weight his chances of dying are increased 45 per cent thereby." OUR ECONOMIC HOUSE. Statement of Ownership, Manage ment, Circulation and etc., Requir ed by Act of Congress, August 24, 1912, of Oregon City Courier, published weekly at Oregon City, Oregon, tor April 1, 1917. Publisher, The Courier Press; Ed itor, C. W. Robey; Managing Editor, Same; Business Manager, Same. Owners J. E. Hedges, Oregon City, Oregon; C. W. Robey, Oregon City, Ore.; Nettie Kruse, Oregon City, Ore. Known bondholders, mortgagees and other security holders owning or holding one per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages or other securities M. J. Brown and A. E. Frost, Corvallis, Ore.; Holzman Es tate, Portland, Ore. C. W. KUUUX, Business Manager. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 2nd day of April, 1917. JOHN N. S1EVUKS, Notary Public for Oregon. (My commission expires Sept. 10, 1920.) Notice of Final Settlement of the Es tate of Martin Walter, Deceased Notice is hereby given that, the undersigned administratrix of the es tate of Martin Walter, deceased, has filed in the County Court of Clacka mas County, State of Oregon, her fi nal account as such administratrix of said estate and that Monday, the 7th day of May, 1917, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m. has been fixed oy said Court as the time for hearing of ob jections to said report and the settle ment thereof. CAROLINE STROHMEYEK, Adminstratrix of the Estate of Mar tin Walter, Deceased. C. SCHUEBEL, Attorney for Administratrix. POWER OF A WIFE. Her Attitude May Make or Break Her Husband's Business. Charles M. Schwab considers that the attitude of a man's wife has a vast deal to do with his success in business. Iu "Succeeding With What You Have," the little book he has published, the famous steel mnster pays the following tribute to Mrs. Schwab: "I can never express the wonderful help Mrs. Schwab has been to mo from the very start. One time a group of men offered me u large sum, $00,000,000, I believe, for half of Bethlehem. I told my wife about it tliut evening. 'This is a big sum.' I said. 'Half of what I have Is j ours. What shall we do? If we sell, your share, invested at 5 per cent, will bring you an Income of over $100,000 a month ror the rest of vour life.' '"We wouldn't sell for five times that,' my wife said. 'What would I do with the money? And what would you Co without your work?'" "I have scon more men fail iu bus! ness through the attitude taken by their wives in their younger days than from all the vices put together. A nag gins w-ife or one who is not in sym pathy with a man's work, who expects impossible things of him and is incapa ble of taking a general Intelligent in terest in his work, is one of the worst himilicnns he could have. If a man works with his mind clogged by do mes! ic troubles he is of no use to him- spf. his employer or the world at large." Dr. Wiley's Tip. Says Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, the fa mous scientist und food expert: I could double the wages of every laboring mnn without adding 1 cent to his stipend if today I could go into his home and he and his wife would listen to what I have to say as to what they should buy and eat. If we could come back to simple life no one would com plain about fond prices. ' Wheat and milk are all that is necessary ror chil dren. The meat problem is not much of a problem hi my family. My boys eat whole wheat or brown bread with butter and milk." r It May Bs Rebuilt, as a Railway 6ta- . f tion Is, While In Use. f i i Sometimes, when 1 think of the growth of wr economic system, it seems to me s if, leaving our law just about where it was before any of the modern inventions or developments took place, we had simply at haphaz ard extended the family residence, add ed au office here and a workroom there and a new set of sleeping rooms there, built up higher on our foundations and put out little lean-tos on the side until we had a structure that had no char acter whatever. Now the problem is to live in the house and yet chunge it Well, we are architects in our time, and our architects are also engineers. We don't have to stop using a railroad terminal because a new station is be ing built. We don't have to stop any of the processes of our lives because we are rearranging the structures in i which we conduct those processes. I What we have to undertake is to sys- j tematize the foundations of the house, J then to thread all the old parts of the structure with the steel which will be laced together in modern fashion, ac commodated to all the modern knowl edge of structural strength and elas ticity, und then slowly change the par titions, relay the walls, let In the light through new apertures, Improve the ventilation, until finally, a generation or two from now, the scaffolding will be taken away and there will be the family in a great building whose noble architecture will at last be disclosed, where men can live as a single com munity, co-operative as in a perfected, co-ordinated beehive, not afraid of any storm of nature, not afraid of any arti ficial storm, any imitation of thunder and lightning, knowing that the foun dations go down to the bedrock of principle and knowing that whenever they please they can change that plan again aud accommodate it as they please to the altering necessities of their Uves.-'The New Freedom," by President Wilson.' Geo. C. Brownell LAWYER Caufield Bldg. Oregon City Notice is hereby eiven that the un dersigned has been duly appointed administrator of the estate of Luther Warner, deceased, by the County Court of Clackamas County, Oregon Anv and all oersons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same with vouchers as by law required within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice to the undersigned at his office in the Weinhard Building; Oregon City, Oregon. Dated this March 22, 1917. GILBERT L. HEDGES, Administrator of the estate of Luther Warner, deceased. Notice of Final Settlement In the County Court of Clackamas County. State of Oregon. In the Matter of the Estate of Henry Stier, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has filed her final account in the above entitled estate and the court has fixed Monday the 23rd day of April, 1917, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m.. as a day and time for hearing objections to said report, if any there are, and for the settlement of said estate. SOPHIA CAROLINE STIER, Administratrix of said Estate, H. E. CROSS, Attorney for the Estate. Oregon MONEY TO LOAN We have several sums of money to loan on good real estate, from $100.00 to $1,000.00. HAMMOND & HAMMOND ATTORNEYS - Beaver Bldg, Oregon City O'e. Attention, Contractors We are prepared to furnish bridg rods and drift bolts and solicit your patronage. Estimates cheerfully giv en. County work solicited. Shop on Fifth street. SCRIPTURE & MAY. A Word to Girls. The late Inez Mllhollaud Boissevaln. the beautiful suffragist, never wearied of impressing on young girls the duty of being as beauliiul as possible, for she knew what an instrument for good beauty rightly used can be. One of Mis. Boissevaln s favorite dlctuius was: "A girl can't help her looks, but her looks can help her." . Why Catch Them at All? An Indianapolis mini recently saw for the first time a "flock" of flying fish iu the raciflc ocean. "1 am perplexed as to the proper thing to do Iu the case of flying fish," he writes. "Should one cutch them with a hook and line, shoot them or use a bird net?" Indianapolis News. STEVENSON IN HIS YOUTH. And a Satirical Forecast That Became a Reality. I do not think that in these early days Steveusou appeared to any of us as specifically a genius, un exceptional man set apart for great accomplish ments. Indeed, had we been solemnly assured that he would share the honor, with only one or two possible competi tors, of being the foremost English writer of the latter half of the nine teenth century we Would certainly have received the assurance with a smile. What! Louis! So simple, kindly, natural; so all round a good fellow ; so like all the rest of us, only nicer ! And I am quite sure that in.his in most heart at this period he could never really have looked forward to or expected the fame which later came to him and which grows and expands as time gives us the perspective where with to view it in all Its roundness and bigness and essentiul simplicity. In fact, iu Introducing himself to me he remarked simply that he was "a writer chap" or hoped to be one. I was told of a rainy afternoon "blague party," at which 1 did not chance to be present, during which Bob Stevenson amused himself by fore casting the future careers of those present. When he came to his cousin he remarked with a satirical little smile : "There sits Louis, as smug and complacent as any old typo de bour geois. I have not the least doubt that he fondly imagines that one of these days they will be publishing all of his dinky privute correspondence 'the let ters of R. L. S.' in boards." And Louis Joined as heartily as any one iu the laugh which the sally rais ed. Boh, at least, did live to see the publication of the "Vailima Letters," and I have often wondered if he re membered this little Incident as lie thumbed their leaves. Birge Harrison in Century. No Midnight Walks for Modern Father ERE'S another electrical convenience, and one that mothers and fathers are sure to appreciate. .It Is baby's milk warmer, operated by electricity. But why should fathers appreciate this? Well,' fathers don't have to get up in the wee, small hours out of a comfy bed and trot way down stairs, light the stove and heat baby's midnight lunch. No, Indeed. Mother merely turns a switch don't even have to get out of bod If the milk warmer Is placed on a table near by. In a Jiffy, or to be accurate, about a minute and a half, the milk Is heated and ready to give baby. Attractive in design, being finished In nickel, and supplied with several feet of cord, these heaters are especially popular among women folks. Not only may they be used to warm baby's milk, but also to boil eggs on the dining room table or, In an emergency, make tea or coffee. They are vory Inexpensive to operate, may be used In any room In the house. They come In two sizes, pint and quart capacity. An ebony handle, by which the device may be lifted when hot, is pro vided. They are also easily washed. Squid Ink Bag. Ancient ink was made by a squeez ing out of dead cuttlefish after the body was perfectly relaxed. Painters got their sepia from this same squid's bottle. Thia likewise Is the true source of the genuine and original India ink, for which there has never been any satisfactory substitute found. The ink bag of the cuttlefish is as big as a man's thumb and can squirt six feet, darkening more than a hogshead of water, so the squid can make uu seen a dart and dash and get away when squid eating sea fish come round -New York Telegram. Portland Railway Light Power Company The Electric Store Phones-Home A-229 Pacific Main 115 Andresen Bldg. 619 Main St. I t t fist, and cite as an example one who said "blessed be the peacemakers" and "they that take up the sword shall perish by the sword." I cannot adhere to the doctrine that a righteous and peaceful condition can be established on this earth by brute force. I consider that all war is ruthless and that no especial act committed in conducting a war is worse than the entire war as a whole. The people do not know all the reasons why we should not mix in such a trouble, because the strongest arguments are rejected by most of tho press. Our entire trouble has risen over sending munitions to Eur ope. A host of our best citizens showed that we as a nation were headed straight for the breakers un less is was stopped. It does not pay to become an accessory to murder for the purpose of making money. And the worst of it is, that the money is not shared in by the people who will have to do, the fighting. We have sowed to the wind, we will soon be reanintt the whirlwind. My motto is, "my country, when right to keep it right; when wrong to set it right. CLAUDE HOWARD. CLASSIFIED Watching Sponges Grow. Outside the harbor of Sfux, Tunisia. In the shallow water of the clear Medi terranean, is situated a biological lab oratory for the study of sponges. It Is one of the most unique in the world and affords opportunity for observing the development of the sponge from n tiny larva, so small that it can only b? studied under a microscope, until five years later it has developed iuto a per feet sponge) Moon Shadows Perilous. 'If you sbquld chance to be strolling on the surface of the moon do not step Into a shadow or you will disappear from sight, you will be unable to make a cry for help and, furthermore, yon will be frozen stiff within three sec onds," says a teacher of astronomy. Reassuring. The Departing Guest I hope my two weeks' stay hero with you hasn't prov ed a big additional expense to you. Mrs. Inwrong Oh, no! George and 1 have what we call a "catastrophe fund" that we've saved for just, such emergencies. New York Times. The Courier and the Daily Jour nal $4.75. Rural Credit Money Now AVAILABLE Farm Security Only interest 5 per cent Long time loans. Apply at once Dimick & Dimick and V. L. MULVEY Attorney at law Comparisons. "I hadn't been six months in this pluce before I was. robbed." "I hadn't been a day Here belore l was held up." 'By grafters?" 'Not exactly ; by my nurse." Balti more American. Qualifications. An exchange asks, "Can an actress make a good wife?" If she's a good actress she probably can. Life. To accept good Rdvlce is but to in crease ones own amiiiy. ,oeine. HOWARD A PACIFIST Writer Says Motto Involves Setting Country to Rights on War Mulion, Ore., April 2, 1917. To the editor: When the great Euro pean war commenced I had hoped that America would show to the world that our country, at least, would not go crazy. We are not justfied in go ing to war with Germany. That will nrolone the war and cause thousands mora lives to be lost as well as em broil our country in European rows, I am quite willing to be called a pac WANTED Spring pasture for 15 head of cattle; address "Courier." SHADELAND Seed Oats recleaned 3 cents pound, at Viola. A. C. White. FOR SALE $275 spring wagon prac tically new for sale for $50. Clackamas Tavern. ANYONE wishing to relinquish their homestead is requested to corres pond with M. A. Kaye, Rt. 2, Box 139, Milwaukie, Ore. WANTED Country girl for house work. Must be neat and good cook. Only experienced need apply. Phone 30 Oregon City. Tirst national Bank -of-O REG ON GITY Capital Stock Surplus ' ' $50,000.00 $25,000.00 Member FEDERAL RESERVE BANK Member OREGON STATE BANKERS ASSOCIATION Member AMERICAN BANKERS ASSOCIATION Under Government Supervision U. S. Depository for Postal Savings Funds SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT INTEREST PAID on Savings Accounts or Time Certificates We Solicit Your Banking Business Our Banking Room has been remodeled to meet the requirements of our patrons ! : FOR SALE Pigs and brood sows heavy with pigs. Also one heavy wagon. George Hargan, Tualatin Meadows, 3 miles from Willamette. FOR SALE Two half Belgian colts, one and two years old. Black in color. The two-year-old has been worked some. Price $225. Also one 314 wagon. A. J. Ringo, Hoff, Rt. 1. FOR SALE Lots or acreage. I will sell from one lot to 14 acres, all in one tract; in Oregon City, mile from courthouse, jitney ser vice, in city limits; city water and electric lights. Some of these lots face Molalla avenue and some face on Mt. Hood street. If you are thinking of establishing a perma uent residence in Oregon City you cannot afford to pass up this op portunity. Price right. D. Grady, 515 Mt. Hood street, Oregon City. Vim :.ttM MWM Have installed a MODERN and up-to-date VAULT which is mob and burgular proof. OFFICERS D. C. LATOURETTE, President M. D. LATOURETTE, Vice-Pres. F. J. MEYER, Cashier (Established 188 9) OPEN 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. Willamette Valley Southern Railway Co. Arrival and Departure of Trains Leave Southbound 7:50 A.M. 10:00 A.M. 2:50 P.M. , 7:20 P.M. -Daily Freight Service (except Sunday). The American Express Co. operates over at Oregon City Arrive Northbound 8:20 A.M. 10:55 A.M. 2:20 P.M. 5:40 P.M. this line. FOR SALE 320 acres. 100 acres cultivated; 20 acres waste land, but can all be cultivated. Good buildings on good road. Close to electric line. One of best ranches in Clackamas county. Can put in stock and equipment. Price, $100 per acre; one-half cash, bal. time. 30 ACRES on good road. 20 cultivated. Good young orchard. Good house. Fair barn. Good water. Consider good vacant lots or house to $2300 as part payment 60 ACRES. 30 cultivated, balance pasture. Land lays rolling. Fair buildings. Good road. Close to school. Some stock and equip ment. Take trade to $3000, balilnce time at 6 per cent. We have many other good trades and property for sale. H. E. CROSS & SON