OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1921. Page 7 PRESIDENT ASKS II WITH THE PARTY PHILADET .PHIA, May 4. A tele gram from President Harding deolar ing the greatest service of womeen in politics "is within the organization of parties," was greeted with applause at a meeting "Wednesday of the state chairmen of the republican women's political organizations ' of the eastern division. The telegram said: "I wish you would convey my cor dial greetings and my expressions of gratitude, to the women of the eastern divisien of the republican women's organization. I cannot refrain from expressing a deep interest in every such convention. "The new era in Amereican politics, which calls women into the activities' of the government, offers inspira tion for women more frequently to get together for a fuller understand ing of the obligations of the citizen ship which they have assumed "I need not tall you I firmly believe that the greatest service of women ia within the organization of the par ties, which are the chief agencies of popular government. I hope we shall have the influence and your associat eg in making the republican party one of" such purposes and such perform ances as to enlist the enthusiastic devotion of America womanhood throughout the land." Nose Dives and Tail Spins By W- W." Woosbeck. Four years ago About this season of the year The -red blooded young men Of the United States Were putting on the uniforms ... Of fighting men. '' Whenever a bunch of them Marched by Those of us Who "kept the home fires burning,'' And hung service flags . In the windows --- ........ And talked about our patriotism, . Assuring a war stricken world . That we were Americans, Of the 100 per cent variety; - ' That we would ever hold The boys who went to the front In grateful remembrance. Some of the boys are home; Some are sleeping Beneath the poppies . That bloom on Flanders' field. Anything within reason - ShoHld be theirs for the asking. For more than a year The American Legion Has been trying to arouse " Public sentiment For the purpose Of erecting a memorial For the boys of Clackamas county. Sentiment is about all There has been to it so far. And now the boys Who fought your battles Are forced to stage ' . A cheap street show . To raise the necessary funds For that purpose. . Heaven forbid, f That it should ever - ;.- , j Have become necessary 41 ' To resort to this method For a memorial for such A worthy cause. ' Maybe- if they would appoint . A committee to visit ' Henry Albers They might get enough .-- To build a first class memorial, For he has a good opinion Of this country now. That the war is. ended ' And the recent ruling . . .. " Has been announced. . , WOMEN TO STICK SANDY (Con Untied" from Page .) chased recently and is fitting it up for a first class work shop. Gus Dahrens is out of work a week while the Dwyer Co. is adjusting things but expects to be put to work at "steam' shovelling" fn a week or so. Mrs. A. E. Collier and little Hazel and David and Miss Barton drove to Hood River on Saturday. Mr. Collier returned with them in the evening. Douglas Fairbanks in "Arizona" at Sandy Community Theatre Saturday night. Adv. Dave Douglas, stockman, farmer. road supervisor, and well known Cherryville-ite was down here again last Monday. Clarence Brown a newcomer in San dy who is recently f rom the east and his bride of last Sunday will move into. the Ernest Bo"nett home this week and we shall be glad to welcome them as on of us. Mr. Brown is em ployed at the Smith . garage, The many friends of Mr. and Mrs Bonett are sorry they will be away for a year and nerhaps longer, but hoDe the chanee may benefit Mrs, Mrs. Bonett's health. Friends of Mrs. N. Schmitz will be glad to learn that she is gradually im proving. Joe Albel has been suffering with an infected hand recently which has caused him a lot of pain as well as "botheration.1 Max Woenche is still walking a lit tle farther on his crutches day by day which shows constant improvemen Mrs. Dock Hite of Kelso was taken to a Portland hospital last week by Dr. A. Williams who has charge of the case. Mrs. Mary I. Wilson reports her pa tient. Mrs. O" Neil as no better and is in a helpless condition. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Elliott were called to Scio Saturday on account of the sudden death of Mr. Elliott's mother. Ed Hein had the hard luck to slash his knee one day last week while snip ing in the woods of the Twin Valley Lumber Co. mill. .He is under the care of Dr. A. Williams. "The stork flited over the town last Tuesday night April 26 and decided to leave a little baby girl as a gift to Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Sykes. The little one weighed eight and one half pounds. Dr. Botkin bf Gresham was the attend ing physician. The mumps have made their advent at Boring and a number of cases are reported. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. 'DeShazer attend ed the funeral of Earl Gibson, an ex service man, who was staying with his uncle H. F. Gibson of Barton, one day last week . The deceased was the third son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Gibson- and was a cousin of Mrs. D Shazer. He died April 25th and was buried at the Gibson cemetery be tween Firwood and Eagle Creek. Mrs. Ed Sitz of Sandy-ridge has been ill with a cold, grip or "some thing," but has about recovered Joe Albel has recently . purchased the Mark Senske acreage over in the Burn vicinity Mrs. John Mitchell is getting two hundred eggs daily from her fine flock of white leghorns of the Tan creed strain. She has two hundred and seventy-five hens. , Jack Greenwood has leased the big Scales truck and will start to haul freight up the mountains making reg ular trips from Portland at once. (Dan Velvick has gone to Portland to work at his trade as layer of hard wood floors since the Bruhs mill stop ped sawing ties and does not run a full crew. The Velvick family will re main here at least for the present. Ernest Harris has exactly the right idea ! He would prefer . to work - for one-fifty per day than to be idle. That is the spirit that will carry any ship of state over the rocks of labor or an- trouble! Such red-blooded young men are the base of the nation! and we are proud to have some of them in Sandy. Tice, the Marmot "chef" has sixty seven acres of grain sowed and also has a fine lot of strawberries that will be bearing this spring which he hopes to market, according to report. Gunderson Brothers are going out of the dairy business and are going to raise beef stock which will be less work for them, but they were good dairymen and the country needs more, not less cream and butter! Some people advocate oleo and but ter made from various nut oils is as nutritious and good to the taste as the real article, but may the day never come when the cow perisheth! There is always more "money" in the counterfeit article, but no food can approach the product of the cow as an all around substantial health builder for little children, and if we deny the children the righ to nature's best, what will become of the future gener ations? The Shelley house has been repair ed so there is no more leakage from the roof which was recently burned so badly. Mr. and Mrs. J. Scales and family attended the Roberts-Post wedding at Dover on Sunday, May 1. . Mrs. M. Summers of Portland came to Sandy to close out a stock of mil linery last week but the roads and weather reminded everyone pf every thing but spring bonnets! The time of three days was too short to make many sales. ' - Mr. and Mrs. James Dixon, little Dorothy and Mrs. Carl Alt drove to Oregon City on business last Tuesday. Mrs. Platts, mother of C. H. Platts came over from her home at Hubbard, to visit here for awhile. Platts look nice with their new "touches'- about the place. Douglas Fairbanks, well-known globe-trotter and all around good fel low makes an appearance at Sandy Saturday night. Adv. -i ' Jack Scales went to Portland Mon day taking little Frankie Co&tello with him. Frankie is going to Tacoma to his mother after at stay of several weeks with his "Uncle Jack and Aunt Alice." : - ." R. E. Esson and j. C. Duke were Portland visitors on Monday. ; , R. . C. Frace, George Maronay, George Beers and L. M. Wilson were all city visitors last Sunday, and car troubles delayed their return till thej wee hours. - .- . - - - Mrs. Alma. Maronay and Mrs. J. Cline, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Bacon and family were all day Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hagan. The happy "bunch" were entertained by Harry Hagan who does some interest ing -"stunts" the rest of us would like to hear! Mrs. Annie Michells came down from ; Rhododendren Saturday night and went over to Asehoff3 to stay for a while. Mrs. Michells is recovering from an operation. Mrs. Scales says "Austria, Italy, South America and Germany and few more countries will be at the big doings on May 21," and she ought to know. Just why hens should choose to double up in their product when eggs are so cheap is a mystery, but such is the honestrtof-goodpees fact with three "Rhode Island Reds belonging to Mrs. Blanche R. Shelley, ex-mayor of Sandy, who vouches for the statement that last week her three hens laycd five eggs, .two of which contained double yolks' .The hens are kept shut up so it was impossible lor other hens to lay them. A. C.Thomas killed a big gray eagle the other day and it measured seven feet and two inches from tip to tip and three feet from beak to tip of tail. W. G. Webber, Cherryville shingle man and F. E. Clark were in town lay ing in supplies. Mr. and Mrs. August Senske were out from Portland today, and report Mrs. Burmeister as well, but Mrs. Wencell is not' at all well.- Hugh Esson, brother of R. E. Esson and Messrs Stipe, and Keisey from Blumauer and Frank Co. were out yes terday calling on the Esson family. R. E. Esson, Fred Proctor and C. H. Platts took a drive up to the Willam ette valley today. A- B. Miner and C. A. Miller, both of Portland are . building summer homes at Still Creek. " LOST one Diamond tire and rim, size 30x3 between Cherryville and Bull Run. Finder plgase leave at Smith's gara"g!e, Sandy. Art Dixon. SANDY SCHOOL NOTES SANDY, May 4. Dorothy Esson spent Saturday night and Sunday with ber friend Dorothy Mattingly and the twain of these young girls enjoyed the companionship greatly. They prac ticed piano duets together, which was profitable for each. "Sahoolma'ams" are very busy every where now with programs, and every thing that goes with the closing of the years work. Plans are being made for the bac calaureate service to be held at the Methodist church on Sunday evening, May 29. The whole town is busiest ever just now, school children included, but but everybody feels better when the spirit of enthusiasm abounds in both the school and the home. Ruth Eason missed two days of school last week because of a billious attack like that which seems to have "been going around." - Miss Bertha and Martha Hoffman went to Portland recently for a short stay. Miss Bess Barton was the guest of Mrs. A. E. Collier at dinner last Sun day. Little Laura Hoffman has begun tak ing plane lessons from Mrs. Purcell. The regular meeting of the -Sandy Parent Teacher was- poorly attended last Friday night, which showed a lack of interest on the part of many. During the business session it was djecided to 1ld the nex meeting at the school house on Friday P. M. May 20. at two o'clock. The election of officers will take place at the meeting. Mrs. Esson presided and light refreshments were served. Those present feel a great interest in the work. Miss Opal Selby went to Oregon City to spend the week with her home folks. Miss Selby is busy with her school program for closing of the term. Miss Louisa Wentz of the Sandy- ridge school has been ailing the past week with la grippe and had to miss two days of school. Miss Wentz will close her school on May 20 with a picnic. In June Miss weniz ,expecis to enter the U. of O. where she will specialize on violin and piano study, which has been a "dream" of hers for some time. Miss Ruth Crum is now rooming at the Loundree home. Fenton.Dunn missed several days of school the past week 'because of a spell of indigestion, and it is not the green apple season either! Catherine and Zelma Allen were slipping around to their little friends with May baskets Sunday evening. Miss Rildie Roberts a student of Jefferson High acted as bridesmaid at the wedding of her sister Mis Lulu Roberts of Dover on Sunday, May 1. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN Gus Hangdog, Nobody's Friend, got Fined for Selling Short-Weights, and he is going to Ask the Editor not to Mention It in the Paper. Gus always knocks the Editor and the Paper, nev er spends any .Jack for Ads, and has his Envelopes printed out of Town. Gus will get a column on the Front Paget OBITUARIES Emery Dell Frenclw)nly son of Mr. and Mrs. Emery French, of this city, died suddenly at the family home on Fifth and Jackson streets Sunday ev ening. ' . The little fellow was playing dur ing the day with other children, and in the evening was stricken with an attack of bronchitis, causing his deth; The child was 6 years of age, and his twin sister died a number of years ago. William H. Hughes, of Hoff. son ot Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hughes, died at the family home Sunday morning at 10 o'clock from an illness of several months. His death was due to leak age of the heart.- Deceased was 16 years of age, and was among the popular students of the Hoff school. H is survived by his parents and three sisters. Thomas Hammond, of this city, died at the family residence on Willamette street Sunday morning after a brief illness. . Deceased was born In Illinois, and his age was 69 years. He came to Oregon City a number of years ago. Mr. Hammond is survived by his wife and several children. Funeral services over the remains of the late Mrs. Sophia Noe, widow of the late John B. Noe, who died at her home in Woodburn April 27th, were held from the Rock Creek church Friday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, with interment' in the Rock Creek cemetery. Rev. Henry Spiess, a former pastor and old friend ot the family, officiated. During , the ser vices a choir from Molalla composed of Mrs. Grace Park, Mrs. Mary T. Rid ings, Thomas Reynolds, George V. Ad ams and George H. Gregory, sang most impressively, "Nearer My God To Thee," "I Need Thee Every Hour" and "Abide With Me." Rev. Spiess spoke highly of the character of Mrs. Noe, who was held in the highest esteem by her many friends and acquaintances, and the many floral tributes were a silent tok en of the esteem in which she was held by all. Pallbearers were George C. Perdue, R. I. Garrett, P. J. Scheid- er.'A. A. Schneider, E. L. Stowe and Solon Kimzer. Mrs. Noe, whose maiden name was Sophia E. Gibbs, was born in Vinton county, Ohio, January 30, 1841, and at the time of her death her age was 80 years, 2 months and 27 days. She taught school for some time before her marriage to John B. Noe. To this union were born, lour children, the eldest daughter, . Jessie, died March 30, 11881. Those living are Mrs. Frankie E. Chenoweth, of Woodburn; Mrs. Mattie Archer, residing near Woodburn; Gilbert J. Noe, county re corder, of Clackamas county, whose home is at Gladstone. All her chil dren were at her bedside when death came. Mrs. Noe is also survived by a brother, George F. Gibbs, of Oregon City; two sisters, residing in Iowa, and a grandchild.) Iris Chenoweth, a student of the .- Willamette Universi ty. .-' For more than sixty years Mrs. Noe was an ' active member of the Methodist Episcopal church. The family movied to Oregon from Iowa in January, 1879, residing two years in Gervais. and in 1881 bought a part of the William McOowan donation land claim near where the Rock Creek Methodist t Episcopal church now stands. In 1882 they moved to a farm near Estacada. but in 1888 re turned to the Rock Creek farm. After the death of Mr. Noe on Aug ust 31, 1903, Mrs. Noe moved to Woodburn in 1904. and continued her residence in that city until her deatn. Deceased was an active worker in the Rock Creek settlement in builji ing the M. E. church and social bet terment of the community. The" remains of Miss Mable Phil lips, formerly of Oregon City, and daughter of Mrs. Phillips, whose maid en name was Miss Bacon, were brought from Portland last Saturday and buried in the family lot of the Bacon family, old time residents ot this city. J. M. Bacon, grandfather of the young woman, was a former postmaster in Oregon City. The remains of . Miss Phillips, who was 25 years of age, were recently found beneath a skating ring in Port land, after her disappearance seven years ago. It is believed tnat sne was murdered, and her ' body buried beneath the building. The young woman was an unusually attractive girl, and every effort had been made by the family to find some trace of her. The burial certificate reads that her death was caused by murder. The remains were interred by Mr. Brandt, sexton, and the mother and several other relatives of the young woman were here to attend the bur ial service Many friends attended the impres sive funeral services of the late L. J. Schwerin, held in the Holman & Pace funeral chapel Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, that were conducted by the Spiritualists of this city, with Mrs. Griffith in charge. Several selections were rendered during the services. The Iloral tributes were beautiful and in great profusion.. Among these were those received from the Crown Willamette Paper' company and North west Bridge & Iron works. Many fol lowed the remains to their last resting place fij Mountain View cemetery, where 'the remains were laid to rest in the new plot. A son, Arthur Schwer in, who lost his ' life while fighting for his country in France, during the world war, will be brought here and laid to rest beside those of his father in the near futures. Mr. Schwerin, who was 63 years oi age, ana a native or towa, recently underwent a critical operation for' ap pendicitis at the Sellwood hospital, and was rapidly improving from the effects of the operation, when he was stricken with pneumonia last Wed nesday, resulting' in -his death a few days later. . He-was a prominent res ident of Willamette and many from that place were among those attend ing the funeral services. Blind Service Men Present "Black Jack1 99 With a Hammock ASHINGTON, D. C, May 4. Six soldiers, blinded in France and now taking vocational training at the Ev ergreen Institution for the Blind at Baltimore, paid a visit to the nation al capitol and met Mrs. Harding, wife of the president, and General Persh ing. They gave Mrs. Hard Lag a bas ket they had made themselves and General Pershing a hammock. All six are members of the American Le gion. "Black Jack," in accepting the ham mock, asked James E. O'Hara, form erly of the 13th Field Artillery, with a twinkle in his eye", if there was any significance in their having chosen a hammock for him. "Yes, sir," quickly replied the Le gionnaire, .we thought you deserv ed a soft berth, so we made it for you." Work or Suicide Writes Ex-Service Man to Legion INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. May 4. "Must have work or suicide," is the way an unemployed ex-service man expressed his condition in an adver tisement in a Houston, Tex., newspa per. It is an indication r.f a deplor able unemployment situation, which the American Legion is endeavoring to relieve through its more than 10, 00 posts. The desperate Houston veteran served two years in the army, which time he spent eight months In France. He is a high school graduate and an experienced railway, warehouse and shipping clerk, and has been out of work for four months on account of the business depression. He has two dependents. Veterans of the world war have suffered most in the unemployment crisis. Legion officials, declare be cause they are usually the youngest employes. "In these days when hundreds of thousands are out of employment,' said John Thomas Taylor, of the Le gion's national legislative committee, "the American Legion is making a vigorous effort to see that ex-service men and women do not lose their jobs without sufficient cause. We intend to watch particularly all departments of the .government." Big Explosion at The Dalles Laid to I. W. W. THE DALLES, May 4 That the terrific explosion which wrecked the A. D. Kern Construction company s powder house near Mosier Sunday night might have been the work of members of the I. W. W. in line with May day demonstrations was the o pinion advanced Wednesday by Sher iff Chrisman, following an investiga tion Monday. , A foreman for the Kern company told the sheriff that he had heard some of the men discussing I. W. W. propaganda and the proposed May day demonstration before and fol lowing the explosion. A party of campers near the scene of the ex plosion informed the sheriff they had seen a man, apparently a laborer, hur ry away from the powder licuse short ly after, the blast occurred. About 50 kegs of black powder and 12 cases of dynamite were set off. HULA HULA SKIRT PROVES "HOT STUFF 199 DES MOINES, la.. May 4. Charles Cain makes his living as a walking advertising signboard. For several days he paraded the streets of Des Moines with bare knees and wear ing a skirt of imitation dried (grasses and hay, advertising a theater. Me closed his contract suddenly the oth er night when an unidentified person touched a lighted match to the" low er part of the skirt. Firemen finallj caught him and extinguished the blaze. Tho next day he was confined face downward to his bed. Jury Hangs In Case of Boy Who . Took 772,000 CHICAGO, May 4. The jury in the case of William Dalton, 17-year-old employe of the Northern Trust com pany, who walked out of the bank wun jz.uuo in Liberty bonds, re ported a disagreement Wednesda and was discharged. - The jury had been out since 1 p. m. Tuesday. It was understood the jury was ev enly divided. CASHIER NOT DROWNED BUT IN CALIFORNIA KELSO, Wash., May 4. Belief in Kelso that F. L. Stewart, cashier of the Kelso . State ' bank was drowned after his disappearance from the fer ry between Goble.and Kalama, on the night of March 17 began to vanish to day when George Elwood, an arrival from Los Angeles, said he had seen Stewart at .Hanford, Cal., between March 22 and 24. C. E. Spence, of Beaver Creek, was in Oregon City Wednesday, where he came on business. MONEY TO LOAN Farm Loans TJreferred PAUL C. FISCHER Baaver Bldg, Oregon City PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY D. C Latourette; President F. J. Meyer, Casbie. The First National Ba nk . of Oregon City, Oregon CAPITAL, $50,000.00 Transacts a General Banking Business Open from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M Herman Grieber, of Mooseheart, III., is ' in Oregon City and is registered at the Electric. THREE SEATED hack to trade for milk cow. Box 381, Route 1, Milwau kie. DEAD HORSES TAKEN Cash paid for dead cows and down and out horses. Will call anywhere. Phone Milwaukte 6-J. 2-TON G. M. C. truck, 1913, for sale by owner, in A-l condition, run 9000 miles, 1921 license, lots of extras, $2400, half cash balance terms, or will consider good 5-passenger car , as part payment. H. Fronzel, Ore gon City, Or., phone Stafford 552. FOR SALE A well developed, typy bull calf, 5 .months old. His sire Oxford's Liberty Loan was placed first in a class of 8 at 1920 Interna tional Stock Show. His dam is a Register of Merit cow, with a record, as a. 2 yr. old, of 373 lbs B. F. in 10 months. And as a Jr. 3 yr. old, has made an average of 58 lbs B. F. for first 4 months. Price reasonable. A. Malar, Jr., owner, Boring, Oregon. SUMMONS No. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, For Clackamas County. Peter Swanson and Karen Swanson, husband and wife. Plaintiffs, vs. Valdemar Lidell, administrator, of the estate of Iver Naslund, deceased, Olef Naslund, Nils Naslund, Johan Naslund, Sam 'Naslund, Jonas Ed holm and Johanna Edholm, Defend ants. To the above named Olef Naslund, Nils Naslund, Johan Naslund, Sam Naslund, Jonas Edholm and Johanna Edholm, defendants; 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 3rd day of June, 1921, said date being more than six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons and if you fail to appear and answer for want thereof, plaintiffs will apply to the above entitled court for the relief prayed for in said complaint, to-wit: For judgment and decree ad judging and decreeing that the agree ment entered into between the plain tiffs, Peter Swanson and Karen Swan son, husband and wife, and Iver Nas lund. deceased, before his death con stitutes a valid contract to make a will and that said plaintiffs having fully complied with all their portion of said contract are entitled to be declared the owners in fee simple of lot four (4) in block eighty-six (86), First Sub division of a portion of Oak Grove as shown upon the duly recorded plat thereof, located in the County of Clackamas, State of Oregon, free and clear ot any claims of the heirs of said Iver Naslund, or of said adminis trator of the estate of Iver Naslund, and that said heirs and each of them and said administrator be barred from any claim, right or title in or to said property and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet and just in equity. This summons, is served upon you by publication in accordance with the order of publication made by the Hon orable J. U. Campbell, judge of the above entitled court on the 15th day of April, 1921, directing publication of summons once a week for six con secutive weeks in the Oregon City En terprise a newspaper of general circu lation in the County of Clackamas, State of Oregon, printed and published in said county. Date of first publication. April 22nd 1921. Date of last publication, June 3rd 1921. OLSON, DEW ART & BAIN, Attorneys for Plaintiffs, 530 Chamber of Commerce .Bldg., Portland, Oregon. SHERIFF'S SALE. In the Circuit Court of the State ot Oregon, for the County of Clacka mas. Valdemar Lidell, Plaintiff, vs. F. F. Johnson and Nina 3f. Johnson, husband and wife and J'. A. Imlay, Defendants. State of Oregon, County of Clacka mas, ss. By virtue of a jif&gment 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 April 1921, upon a judg ment rendered and entered in said court on the 21st day of March 1921, in favor of Valdemar Lidell, Plaintiff, and against F. F. Johnson and Nina V. Johnson, husband and wife, and J. A. Imlay, Defendants, for the sum of $1500.00, with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the 27th day of July 1914, and the further sum of $44.69 taxes paid, and the further sum of $150, as attorney's fees, and the further sum of $16.75 costs and disbursements, and the cost of and upon this writ, commanding me to lake sale of the folowing described real property, situate in the county of Clackamas, state of Oregoif, to-wit: Tract No. 10, Arcadia Tracts, as the same appears on -the duly recorded plat of said tracts on file in the office of the County Clerk of Clackamas County Oregon; tog-ether with the right of way of Crossing -' over the Arcadia and Fielding Tracts, and alsa all rights of laying pipes for convey ance of water over said above describ ed tracts. Now, therefore, by virtue of said execution, judgment order and decree, and in compliance with th( commands of said writ, I will, on Saturday, the 14th day of May 1921; at the hour cf 10 o'clock A. M., at the front door of the County Court House in the City of Oregon City, in said County and State sell at public auction, subject to re demption, to the highest bidder, for V. S. Gold coin cash in hand, all the right, C. D. A D. C. LATOURETTE Attorneys-at-Law Commercial. Real Estate and Probate oui Specialties. Of fice in First National Bank Bldg, Oregon City, Oregon. O. O. EBY Attorney-at-Law Money . loaned, abstract furnish ed, land titles examined, estates settled, general law business. Over Bank of Oregon City. William Hammond Philip L. Hammond HAMMOND A HAMMOND Attorntya-at-Law Abstracts, Real Estate, Loans, Ins or ane. " OREOON CITY, OREGON Pacific Phone 81 Home Phone A-X7S . Phone 405 WM. STONE : ATTORNEY AT LAW Stevens Bldg., Oregon City. Ore. title and interest which the within named defendants or either ot them, had on the date ot the mortgage hero in or since had in or tb the above de scribed real property or any part thereof, to satisfy said execution, judg ment order, decree, interest, costs and all accruing costs. W. J. WILSON, -Sheriff of Clackamas County, Oregon. By E. C. HACKETT, Deputy. Dated, Oregon City; Ore., April 15 1921. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County. George P. Brown, Plaintiff, vs. Marie Carr Brown, Defendant, To Marie Carr Brown, above named defendant: ' In the name of the State ,of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed againct you in the above entitled suit on or before the 13th day of May, 1921, said date being more than six week , from the date of the first publicatiou of this summons, and if you fail to so appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in his complajnt, to-wit: For a decree dissolving tne marriage contract here tofore and now exisiting between plaintiff and defendant, and granting plaintiff a divorce and for such other and further relief as to the Court may seem just and proper. This summons is Berved upon you by publication thereof, by order of the Hon. J. TJ. Campbell, Judge of the above entitled court, made and enter ed on the 30th day of March directing that such publication be made in the Oregon City Enterprise once a week or six successive weeks; the first publication thereof being on the 1st day .of April, 1921 and the last pub lication thereof being on the 13th day of May, 1921. E. J. M ENDENH ALL, Attorney for Plaintiff. 926 Chamber of Commerce, Portland, Oregon. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clacka mas. Adah M. Lloyd, Plaintiff, Glen L. Lloyd, Defendant. To Glen L. Lloyd, Defendant: In the name of the State of Oregon You are hereby i required to appear and answer the complaint of plain tiff herein heretofore filed in the above enitled Court 'within six weeks from the date of the first pub lication hereof, and on or before the 13th day of May, 1921, and if you fall to so appear and answer, the plaintiff will apply to the above Court, for the relief prayed for in her complaint filed herein, to-wit: for a decree dissolving the marriage contract heretofore and now existing between the plaintiff and yourself herein. . This summons is served upon you by publication in the Oregon City Enterprise at least once a week for a period of six successive weeks, pur suant to an order heretofore made and entered herein by the Honorable J. U. Campbell .Judge of the above entitled Court, which said order was dated and entered on the 25th day of March, 1921. Date of the first publication hereof is April 1st, 1921. Date of the last publication hereof is May 13th, 1921. JOSEPH, HANEY & LITTLEFIELL-. Attorney for Plaintiff, 511 Corbett Building, Portland, Or. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned Albert D. Erb has rendered and filed in the County Court of the State of Oregon for- Clackamas Coun ty, Oregon, his final account of his administration of the estate of Daniel Erb, deceased, and that . Monday the 6th day of June, 1921,' at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M." of said day at the County Court room in the Court house at Oregon City, Clackamas County, Oregon,. has been fixed "by said Court as the time and place for the hearing of any and all objections to said final account, at which time and place any person interested in said estate may , appear and file his objections in writ ing to said final account and contest the Eame and show cause, if any, why the same should not be approved, al lowed and settled. The first publica tion is April 29th, 1921, and. the last publication May 27th, 1921. ALBERT D. ERB, ' Executor If the last Will, Testament and estate of Daniel Erb, deceased.