OREGON CITY, ENTERPRISE, FRiDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1921. Page 7 eiier Lucy Jeanne Price NEW YORK, Dee. 24. On a recent Monday night, society ways virtually tom in twain. The opera and the Na tional Horse show opened on the sami night, and while it was assumed that some would endeavor to attend both the early arrivals in the "diamond horseshoe" as well as an equally repre sentative throng at the same hour at the horse show would demonstrate that we are becoming a right big town and that the "four hundred" must be expanding. It was a very different horse show from that of preceding years. It has moved from the Garden at twenty-sixth street to the armory of Squadron A in the upper nineties, is limited, with but a total of sixty Also, the seating capacity of the armory boxes, so that there was a great amount of promenading, which tha New Yorker likes so much. The mili tary showing by the swanking Squad ron A men, who stood guard in their blue and yellow dress uniforms, made the scene quite as interesting and col orful as the splendid turn out down at the Metropolitan. Do you make a practice of acumu lating overshoes at the office? Does it always clear up and render these use ful articels a positive burden in the evening? Cheer up! We have met the annoyance here. Let the United States Mail solve the problem. Clerks in the Post Office are protesting at the number of rubbers which are prompt ly dispatched homeward by parcel post at the end of a fair day. Seems sensible doesn't it No telling where the practice will lead to, but down on the East side, the peddlers are selling penny packages of bird seed just like your little yellow Hop Sing consumes, except that the seed has been roasted. They call it "poor man's pop corn." fish food would seem to be next, and somehow it might even seem appropriate in some cases Euegne O'Neill has scored again this time with 'The Straw." Not con tent with one success flourishing on an arid Broadway he has dramatized a thing as ghastly as tuberculosis, put the action in a sanatorium, and laid the awful horror bare in a straight, pure, and direct way. We look for grim reality from this un comprising writer, but never has he de lected so little from a purpose to ex ploit the drama of the inevitable. The play is enriched by the characters out of whose qualities the quality of the story grows. They are not new people, only more clearly seen, and for that reason thought unique. Otto Kruer and Margolo Gillmore carry the poig nant roles and very well. The play is unodubtedly one of our few authen tic American tragedies. Not many of you will want to boast that you remembetr Edna Wallace Hopper in the early days of her ap pearance, but all of you would be proud to claim her acquaintance now. That acrtress lady of fame twenty years ago has astounded the town by coming back and appearing only twenty. She those revealing crow's feet around the eyes, ana to tignien up a iew laciai muscles, and to a plastic surgeon she went. Presto! They are gone and by a simple tiny incision or two behind her ears, a drawing up of the sagging' muscles, which erased all the lines and removed the superfluous skin. She is now the girl you remember of musical comedy fame and to see her is to be glad of it. If you are one of those people who like to believe that sentiment is dead, I'd like to take you up Madison Avenue and show you a two hundred thousand memorial to sentiment. It is the home of the late Charles Lewis Tiffany, and for twenty years, his daughter, Miss Louise Tiffany, has kept it permanent ly closed as the repository of all the beautiful effects which her father ac cumulated during his life time. It is precisely in the condition in which her parents left it a monlument to artis tic perception. What to do with our ex Vice-Presidents has always been particularly acute in the personage of Thomas . Riley Marshall. I shall always be inter ested in everything that Jeffersonian does or says. He has lately appeared in an engaging foreword to a new comedy of American manners which has official political life for it3 setting. He does it with characteristic tartness and inevitable humor. He is reminis cent of so many good things, but the one I have always liked best is his re ply to the State convention in Indiana, when it endorsed him for President. He likened the endorsement, to the small boy's estimate of his first ice cream soda. "Mom, it's just sweet wind." The public never tires of seeing the people of the stage acting under natur al conditions and hence flocked to the Equity Ball given last Saturday night. Never have so many of the entertain ment profession assembled in one place for a grand and glorious time and never have so many of the audience crowd assembled in one place to see th'em disporting even as you and I. The party started early and continued until late very late. Had the striking milkmen been on the job they would have had some thing to relieve the dullness of Broad way at 6 o'clock the morning after be cause stage people whose names have always suggestedelectric lights to you and to whom you have given longing glaces from the galleries were romping about the town just like any other gay .folks. These dear people can never resist giving a show, however, and in the midst of the dancing program, sus pended their jazz to see a remarkable review containing -more stars probably than any like dramatic occurence. This stunt was worked out by Hassard Short and was a super-caberet In every respect. There were little things like supper and refreshments, but the main attraction was rubbing elbows with the greatest luminaries of the stage today. Men of big business in New York who lead as strenuous a life in their 01 fices as the average boiler maker in a foundery have found a method of keeping fit which doesn't take them away from the scene of their activities. Many of the Wall Street financiers who are obliged to work at top speed, longer hours than we think, have shower baths installed in their offices and when it comes time for the mid day lunch, slip over to the shower and have a refreshing spray to keey alive the energy which is necessary for them to keep a tight hold on the pulse of their business organizations. One man I know claims it is the only way he can acquire the new vim which permits him to face the close of the stock market as freshly as he under stood it in the early morning. It seems that everything conspires to keep the plumbers rich. We become more adept fakirs all the time. It is amazing to go by the cheap novelty stores and see the most pre cious appearing articles which have al ways been thought part of the rich man's estate duplicated with amazing fidelity. Tinted wax candles that are supposed to give a mellow glow in aristocratic halls may be had by every man for ten cents. The marvelous coral and jade ornaments representing plants and flowers of the artistic China land are now within the purse of most any one, being made of leather and tinted to give the efefct of age and rarity. One funiture dealer and repair man in the Bronx puts it quite frankly in his sign "Atique furniture made in modern styles. "It would seem easy to become refined, with the accent on the first syllables as every one is now saying in these parts. Not long ago I told how bachelors might be spotted on Saturday nights. I have recently learned from a ticket choper at an elevated station on the Upper West side, how to tell a newly wed even thought he is not with his bride. "Isn't that the limit," he burst out as a nice young man dropped two tickets in the box, "wasting tickets like that! He's a newlywed. It's most ly them as dropes two tickets. They are thinking about the bride so much that they drop one for ner even when she isn't along."- This would seem to demonstrate again, "The high cost of loving." "The easiest place to find a sucker is along dear old Broadway," is tha refrain of a popular ditty, and nothing could be more accurate. Lower Broad way and adjacent streets have blos somed forth recently in "Japanese Dates," so called by the vendors. Spread out on trays and otherwise dis played, the alleged "Dates" made a fine showing, appearing to the sugary and flavorfull, and extracted the pen nies very easily from passersby al ways on the lookout for something new and unusual. Imagine their surprise to find them of the same vintage of the sad old prunes which they had battled with at breakfast in their boarding house. Botanical experts tell us there is no such thing as a Japanese date and that the best that may be said of them is that they are Japanese sugar plums which in your language and mine means a sweetened plum. I dislike being wholly frivolous, but if age can succumb to frivolity as I will now relate, surely I cannot be blamed for keeping my eyes open. Mrs. Rivka Zippe, a gay butterfly of 150 years and known as the belle of the Aged, is peeved because she can't bob her hair. "Why shouldn't I bob my hair like the rest of the girls? I am only 105." As a inmate of the Daugh ters of Israel Home for Aged she has long sustained a reputation for gener al smartness. She primps day and night. and is jealous if 'the old men of the home pay attention to the other "girls." She is a believer in fresh air as a permanent beautifier and thinks her general attraction would be en hanced by shortening of her tresses to conform to the popular mode. Too bad, but the trustees woudln't permit. A litle too zippy I imagine. LUCY JEANNE PRICE. BUDGET SHOWS DEFICIT RIGA, Dec. 24. The soviet govern ment will face a deficit of 305,000,000 gold rubles (normally $152,500,000) for the first nine months of 1922, ac cording to advices from Moscow to day. The soviet has just made public the budget for the first nine months of 1922, showing revenues of 1,572,000, 000 gold rubles against expenditures of 1,877,000,000 gold rubles. The government does not reveal how it will make up the deficit. RED CROSS IS SANTA WASHINGTON, Dec. 24. From Ply mouth Rock to the Golden Gate, the American Red cross today was pre paring to spread Christmas cheer among 20,000 wounded veterans of the World war. - PRESIDENT TO TAKE REST WASHINGTON. Dec. 24. President Harding will spend Christmas quietly nt the White House but early next week he plans to slip away from Washington for a few days' rest and golf at Pinehurst, N. C-, it was learned today. TAXATION IS Being Considered By Nation . as the BIG QUESTION Which Will Need Prime Attention OF NEXT YEAR By Robert E. Smith President, Lumbermens Trust Com pany Bank,. Portland, Ore. Activities of many minds are devot ed just now to devising new methods of taxation. Mostly, these taxes are designed to fall on the well-to-do. En actment of the law providing for grad uated taxes on incomes and so-called "excess profits" marked a definite de parture from the old constitutional theory of equal taxation Discussions of the revenue bill be fore Congress recently brought out the usual line of demagogic argument for consumption by the proletariat, whence come majorities in elections. Whether so designed or not, the tax measures of the national government and of the states are becoming an ef fective leveler of wealth and a burden on capital that is reacting on all lines of business. Thomas Babington Maculay in his Letters on American Institutions" said in effect, that a democracy necessarily contains the seeds of its own destruc tion. The people is the government, he said, and in time of famine "either some Caesar or Napoleon will seize the reins of government with a strong hand, or your government will be as fearfully laid waste and plundered by barbarians of the twentieth century as the Roman Empire in- the fifth; with this difference, that the Huns and Vandals who ravaged the Roman Em pire came from without and that your Huns and Vandals will have been en gendered in your own country by your own institutions." HISTORY SHOWS TREND The idean held by so many people that the world is in a state of constant pro gress, and that our civilization of to day will continue to improve century by century is fearfully answered by a book entitled "The Reolutions of Civ ilization" by W. M. Flinders Petrie, noted archaeologist. Dr. Petrie re views the phases f civilization for a period extending over ten thousand years. He has epitomized his conclu sions in a chart in which he shows that the progress of each period of civilization in the world's history has occurred in regular phases, one identi cal with the other, commencing with sculpture and ascending through paint ing, literature, mechanics, science and wealth. With wealth comes democ racy, and with vox populi the consump tion of wealth and the degeneration into a period of dark ages before civi lization again makes its appearance. Dr. Petrie concludes: "The regulation of daily affairs and the repression of wrong is of little meaning in civilization when compar ed with the great formative interests of man's mind. It is true that man thinks and talks about government, in all ages. But then the concern of man is no measure of the real value of a subject, as appears by his perrenial in- ters1j in. gambling, which now oc cupies a large part of the printing in this country (England). So also government is of great concern, but of little import. Constitutional history is a barren figment compared with the permanent value of art, literature, science or eco nomics. What man does is the essen tial of each civilization, how he ad vances in capacities and what he be queaths to future ages; the relations between the different classes of a coun try are merely subsidiary. England, Frances and Russia will be remember ed by Newton, Pasteur and Mende lieff when all their forms of govern ment are forgotten. "At every invasion by a new people, which as we have seen, is the neces sarly foundation of a new period of civilization .there must be strong per sonal rule. The holding together of the invaders, the decisive subjection of the invaded, the strife of the fusion of people, all requrie an autocracy of greater or less scope. This period lasts during four to six centuries. Leadership Long Essential "The next stage is an oligarchy, where leadership is still essential; but the unity of the country can be main tained by law instead of by autocracy. This stage varies in length; in Greece and Rome, it was about four centuries, in Mediaeval Europe, about five or six centuries. "Then gradually the transformation to a democrcy takes place: beginning about the great phase of literature in Greece, Rome and modern ' Europe. During this time of about four centur" ies wealth that is the accumualted capital of faclities continues to in crease. When democracy has attain ed full power, the majority without capital necessarily eat up the capital of the minority, and the civilization steadily decays, until the inferior pop ulation is swept away to make room for a fitter people. "The consumption of all the re sources of the Roman Empire, from the second century when democracy was wominant, until the Gothic kind dom arose on its ruin, is the best known example in detail. Sucn is the regular connection of the forms of government, or the relation of the classes, which is inherent in the con ditions of the revolutions of civiliza tion. "There is no advance without strife. Man must strive with nature or with man if he is not to fall back and de generate. The harder a nation strives and mo-e capable it will be. This is not only the slow result of selection, but it is the immediate result of each individual, produced by the attitude of his mind. "The Northern nations, accustomed to striving against climate, thrive vast ly when they get into easier countries, until their tone is let down to their conditions. The necessity of striving implies a rapid advance during the centuries after an invasion. There 1s the whole organization of the new period to be evo'ved by continual strife of ideas and personalities, there Is the civilisation to be evolved by striving of ideals until a definite plat- form is reached. So soon as each sub ! ject loses its archaism and reaches ! more strife with difficulties and uncer 1 full freedom of expression, there is no ' tainties of mode; then, strife being ended, decay sets in shortly after. 1 "Further the accumulation of the fa cilities of life, or capital in every form, diminishes the need for striving. There is so much the less worth striving for, there is so much more to enjoy with out strife. Hence, the easier life is rendered the more easily is decay and degradation. The maximum of wealth must be inevitable lead to the downfall." Timber Our Greatest Resource Timber and the manufacture of lum ber continue to be the greatest re source of the Pacific Northwest and are very likely to continue to be for many years to come. Oregon has stand ing timber to the amount 444,000,000, 000 feet. At the current rate of cut ting, this will ast for 140 years. Wash ington has about 300,000,00,000 feet, but is cutting faster. At her present rate of cut, Washington's timber will last more than half a century, without making any allowance for reforesta tion, either artificial or natural. Last year, saw mills of Oregon turned out 3,316,000,000 feet of lumber, and the output in Washington ws 5,525,000, 000 feet. The average value of lumber at pres ent is $15.97 per thousand feet. Ore gon's output for this year to date is 70 per cent of normal; the percentage in Washington is slightly higher. The recent storm caused a loss in produc tion. The Kerry railroad has shut down, a slide having carried out t trestle . 175 feet high. Camps on the Tillamook road have shut down, the flood in the Willamette having disrupt ed blooming operations. There is lit tle market in the niddle West for Oregon lumber at present. This is due to two causes, unfavorable freight rates which give a differential to Southern manufacturers and small purchasing power on the part of farm ers. The off-shore demand is good, and large quantities of lumber are be ing shipped to the Orient, Australia, California, the West coast of South America and the Eastern seaboard of the United States. The California de mand is especially good, and building operations in Los Angeles are boom ing. There is considerable building going on in Portland with accounts for a good local demand for lumber. Bond Forger Quickly Caught Sporadic attempts to counterfeit se curities continue to be made, but al most invariably the forger is promptly caught and put behind the bars. Last week the Lumbermens Trust Company received a telegram from J. P. Morgan and Company of New York, containing a warning that trust receipts repre sent the last French government loan in the United States had been forged and that the forgeries were in circula tion. Morgan and Company stated that counterfeits had been presented to them for exchange. A few days later, associated pres3 dispatches from St. Louis announced the arrest of George V. Halliday, bankrupt stock and bond holder, on a charge of conterfeiting the trust receipts. Halliday confess ed that he had counterfeited $1,500,000 of the securities, and had passed $63 000 of them on St. Louis banks in an effort too rehabilitate his credit. Har ry Turner, editor of a magazine, and Paul Murphy, a magazine solicitor, are ! held in connection with the case. None of the forged receipts reached Port Hand. Morgan's telegram statetf that no ticeable defects in the counterfeits were border too dark, paper of heavier texture, serial number hand-stamped in too light a color, paper bore water mark "Strathmore Deed" "instead of "American Bank Note Company Bond," signature fac-simile instead of hand written. These trust receipts were issued to purchasers of the 20-year external gold 7 per cent bonds of the government of the French Republic, pending issuance of the definitive bonds. Canada Reducing Her Debt The net debt of Canada was decreas ed by $3,406,000 in October, and now stands at $2,329,262,902, or about $50, 000,000 less than the net debt of a year ago. The gross debt decreased by $1,000,000 during the month and as sets increased $2,000,000. Canada's national debt per capita is $245; this, compares with a per capita debt in the United States of $225, of $S14 in Great Britain, $1218 in France, $516' in Italy, 615 in Belgium, $124 in Argentina, $41 in Brazil, $58 in Chile and $27 in Mexi co. Seattle Sells Bonds at Private S,ale Seattle newspapers have been mak ing a sensation over the private sale by the city commission of $2,000,000 6 per cent water bonds of the'eity of Seattle at par to a syndicate of Seat tle, and New York bond dealers. The bonds are known technically as "Wa ter Revenue Bonds," and are payable out of the revenues of the water de partment, but are not a direct general obligation of the city. "Newspapers claim that the city could have obtain ed a premium of from $60,000 to $100, 000 if they had advertised for bids. Two of the commissioners stated that they were willing, to rescind the sale, but when the motion was presented to the commission it was lost. J. P. Morgan Remains Abroad J. P. Morgan is finding his stay in Europe. He has been hunting in Scot land, according to his custom, and, at the termination of the shooting sea son, he went to the Continent where he plans to spend some time. He is not expected to return to New York until after the first of the year. ALLIES TO MEET JAN. 4 PARIS, Dec. 26. The supreme coun cil meeting at Cannes in January to consider German indemnity was the chief topic of conversat'on in finan cial and newspaper circles today. Premier Lloyd George left England today to attend the meeting. CONFERENCE PLANNED WASHINGTON, Dec. 24. A formal project for holding another confer ence of the powers. In eight or ten ye'irs to deal with naval policies and related questions of international peace, will be submitted to the Wash ington conference by the American delegation. SANDY (Continued from Page 6.) and everyone received a presnt, also a bag of candy and ' huts. The pro gram was: piano solos by Frida Dob berful and Dorothy Mattingly, and Miss Lippold. Recitations by Edith Hein and Grant DeShazer, Bertha Hoffman; Christmas song. Miss Margaret Miller; Theme, ''Christmas was in history and legend," John Motejl. Xmas carol, H. S. chorus. Miss McZenzie of the Sandyxidge school had a small Xmas tree for her children and they played games and ate candy. The children are too far be hind in their work to undertake a public entertainment. Miss McKenzie is mak ing good in the school. Mrs. Baumback gave a short pro gram and had a Christmas tree for her pupils in the Kelso school. Miss Vaeretti, the principal, had a taffy pulling for her room. Raymond Murray was home from O. A. C. to spend his vacation at Cher ryville. Firwood had no school for two weeks on account of the illness of the teacher, Miss Ruth Johnson, but school opened again last Monday. Pearl and Hazel Dixon are spend ing their holiday happily. Maxine Thomas stayed over night with the Meinig girls while on her way home to spend the holidays. Ruby Dodd was in Portland the day of the program to see her sister who was ill and to do shopping and failed to get back in time to take part. Lutie Welsh passed through town re cently on her way to her home at Welches to spend her holiday vaca tion. The atendance was so small in Mrs. Malar's room during the cold days that she dismised school Wednesday after noon of last week till Tuesday, Janu ary 3. Mrs. Connor will also begin her teaching again that day. HE'S A COLONEL NOW NEW YORK, Dec. 28. "Hardboil ed" (Lieut. Frank H.) Smith, probab ly the most cordially disliked man in the A. E. F. because of his treatment of American prisoners at Prison Farm No. 2, France, is now a Colonel in President Obregon's army in Mexico, according to advices received by ac quaintances. Smith was paroled from Fort Jay military prison after serving all but four months of an 18-month sentence, resulting from a Congres sional inquiry into his actions. His home was in Painesville, O. The American Legion doubts the Mexican colonelcy, reporting that Smith was in Ohio last month. . JAPAN RAISES PROTEST TOKIO, Dec. 28. The so-called "protection clause" of the Pacific treaty drawn up by the Washington conference has aroused a storm of protest in Japan and there were indi cations todav that JaDan would only I ratify with reservations unless the pact is revised. WILSON 65 YESTERDAY WASHINGTON, Dec. 28. Former President Wilson today quietly cele brated his 65th birthday at his home here. LOST: Monday morning on West Side Portland road, salesmans black sample grip. $1.00 reward. Enter prise office. WANTED: Hop stove. H. G. Crocker, 801 Madison. Phone 224W. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned, a Administrator of the Estate of Lillian Crockett, Deceased, has filed his Final Account in the County court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County, and that Sat urday January 28th, 1922, at 9:30 o'clock A. M-, in the Courtroom of said Court, in Oregon City, Oregon, has been set by said Court as the time and place for the hearing of objections thereto and the settlement thereof. Date of first publication December 30, 1921, date of last publication Janu ary 27, 1922. S. W. LAWRENCE. Administrator BECK & HOECKER, Attorneys. NOTICE OF HEARING OF FINAL ACCOUNT No. 2167 In the Co-.inty Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clacka mas. In the matter of the estate of John J. Honebon, Deceased. Notice i:? hereby given that the un dersigned has filed his final account in the esta'e of John J. Honebon, deceas ed, and that Monday, the 30th day of January, 1922, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon cf said day, and the County Court Rocm in the Court House of Clackamas County, Oregon, has been set and fixed as the time and place for the hearing of said Final Account, together with any objection.? there may be to the same. J. J. JOHNSON, Executor of the Estate of John J. Honebon, Deceased. SHERIFF'S SALE In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clackams. Mat Park and Lilly Naomi Park, Plain tiffs, vs. George O. Clouse and Pearl Clouse, Defendants. State of Oregon, County of Clackamas, 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 20th day of December, 1921, upon a judgment rendered and entered in said court on the 17th day of December 1921, in favor of Mat Park and Lilly Naomi Park, Plaintiffs, and against George O. Clouse and Pearl Clouse, Defendants, for the sum of-$1000.00, with interst thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from the 20th day of August, 1920, and the further sum of 17.62, and the further sum of $100.00, as attorney's fee, and the further sum of $17.62, and the further sumof $100.00, the costs of and upon this writ, com manding me to make sale of the fol lowing described real property, situate PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY - - D. C Latourette, President F. J. Meyer, Cashie. The First National Bank of Oregon City, Oregon CAPITAL, $50,000.00 Transacts a General Banking Business Open from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M in the county of Clackamas, state of Oregon, to-wit : The Southeast quarter of the Southeast quarter of section num bered Twenty (20) in Township numbered Four (4) South, Range Four (4) East of the Willamette Meridian and in Clackamas Coun ty, Oregon. Now, therefore, . by virtue of said execution, judgment order and decree, and in compliance with the commands of said writ, I will, on Saturday, the 21st day of January, 1922 ; at the hour of 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, sub ject to redemption, to the highest bid der, for gold coin cash in hand, all the right, title and interest which the with in named defendants or either of them, had on the date of the mortgage here in or since had in or to the above de scribed real property or any part there of, to satisfy said execution, judgment 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., December 23rd, 1921. SUMMONS In the Circuit Ccurt of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clacka mas. Christina Madsen, plaintiff, vs. Chris Madsen Defendant. To Chris Madsen, the above named de fendant: In the name of the State of Ore gon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complain of the above named plaintiff in the above entitled court now on file with the Clerk of said Court on or before Friday, the 3rd day of February 1922, being the last date prescribed in the order of the court for the publication of this sum mons upon you, and you are hereby notified that if you fail to appear and answer said complaint as hereby re quired, plaintiff will take a judgment and decree against you as prayed for in her said complaint, to-wit: For a de cree of the above named court dissolv ing the marriage contract now existing between the plaintiff and the defend ant, and that the minor children of plaintiff and defendant, to-wit: Eleanor M. Madsen, aged 13 years, and Floyd H. Madsen, aged 8 years, be awarded to the care, custody and con trol of the plaintiff, and for such further order as to the court may seem just and proper. ! This Summons is served upon you by publication in the Oregon City En terprise, by virtue of an Order of the Hon. J. U. Campbell, Judge of the above entitled court, duly made and entered of record in said Court on the 16th day of December, 1921. Date of first publication, December 23rd, 1921. Date of last publication, February ,3rd, 1922. WEATHERFORD & WYATT AND O. D. EBY, Post Office Address: 122 W. First Street, Albany, Oregon. Oregon City, Oregon. CITATION In the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clacka mas. In the Matter of the Estate . of Arthur Cliff. Deceased. To Edwin Cliffe, Thomas Cliffe, Ellis Blease, Frank Blease, Tom Blease and Ernest Blease, and to all other persons unknown: In the name of the State of Oregon: You are hereby cited and required to appear in the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clackamas in the county Court Room of said County on Monday, January 16th, 1922, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M-, then and there to show cause, it any exist, why the Administrator should not be allowed to sell the fol lowing described property, belonging to the estate of Arthur Cliff, deceased at private sale, to-wit: Situate in Clackamas County, Oregon : All of tract 30 Outlook, accord ding to the duly recorded plat thereof, except Land described in Vol. 145, page 376, deed records of ciackamas County, Oregon. Also the following described tract of land lying and being with in the boundaries thereof and South of the County road, crossing said described tract, to-wit: Com mencing at a point 18.25 chains East"of the quarter section corn er between Sections 13 and 14, Township 2 South Range 2 East of the Willamette Meridian, running thence East to the Clack amas River; thence down stream following the meanders thereof to a point due North of the place of beginning; thence South to the place of beginning. And also beginning at a point 10 chains East of the Northwest corner of the fractional Northeast quarter of the Southwest quarter of Section 13, Town ship 2 South, Range 2 East of the Willamette Meridian, run ning thence West 10 chains; thence South to the intersection with the West line of the Horace Baker Donation Land Claim No. 68, said Township and Range; thence South 9 30' West tracing westerly line of said Baker Claim, to the northwest corner of that certain tract of land described Vol. 152, page 40 Deed Records of C'ackamas county, Oregon; thence East along the North line of said tract described Vol. 152, page 40 to a point due South of the place of beginning; thence north to the place of beginning. . '. WITNESS the Hon. H. E. Cross, Judge of said Court, this 13th day of December, A. D. 1921. FRED A. MILLER, t Clerk. Bv G. H. PACE, Deputy. (Seal of Court) C. D. & D. C. LATOURETTE Attorneys-at-Law Cwiumetcial, Real EslaUj and Probate oui Specialties. Of fice in First National Bank nidg., Oregon City, Oregon. O. D. EBY Attorney-at-Lavw Money loaned, abstracts furnish ed, land titles examined, estates settled, general law business. Over Bank of Oregon City. Phone 405 WM. STONE ATTORNEY AT LAW Stevens Bids., Oregon City, Or. SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clacka mas. Sadie Bottinellif plaintiff, vs. James Bottinelli, Defendant. To James Bottinelli, Defendant: 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 27th day of January 1922, and f you fail to appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof, plaintiff will take default against you, and ap ply to the Court for the relief prayed for in her Complaint, to wit: That the Marriage contract here tofore and now existing between the plaintiff and defendant be dissolved and held for naught, and that the 'plaintiff herein have her former name of Sadie Hill restored to her, and for such other and further relief as to the Court may seem meet and equitable. This summons is served upon you by publication in the City Enterprise for six successive weeks, pursuant to an order made by the Honorable J. U. Campbell of the above entitled Court on the 13th day of December, 1921. Date of first publication December 16th, 1921. Date of last publication January 27th, 1922. JOSEPH, HANEY & LITTLEFIELD, Attorneys for Plaintiff, 511 Corbett Building, Portland, Ore. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY In the County Court of the Count of Clackamas, State of Oregon. In the matter of the estate of Helma Gillespie, deceased. Notice is hereby given that from and after the 2nd day of January 1922, the undersigned administrator of the estate of Helma Gillespie, deceased, will proceed to sell, at private sale for cash or cash and credit, to the high est bidder, all of the following describ ed real property, to-wit: Lots 11 and 12 of Block 100 of the Second Subdi vision of a' Portion of Oak Grove, Clackamas County, Oregon, pursuant to an order of the Hon. H. E. Cross judge of the above entitled Court made on the 30th day of November 1921, which order provides the terms of the sale. Said sale to be on the premises. A. E. TROGEN, Administrator. J. DEAN BUTLER, Attorney for Administrator. First publication December 2, 1921. Last publication Decemberf 30, 1921. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby given that the un designed, has been duly appoined Executor of the Estate of Frank E. Bingham, deceased, by . the County Court of Clackamas County, Oregon; any and all persons having claims against the said estate must present them to the undersigned, duly veri-' fied as by law required, at the office of Wm. Hammond, Oregon City, Ore gon City, Oregon, within six months from the date of this Notice. ELLIS S. BINGHAM, Executor of the Estate of Frank E. Bingham, Deceased. WM. HAMMOND, Attorney for Executor. First Publication December 16, 1921. Last publication January 13, 1922. SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clacka mas. J. E. Wilson, Plaintiff, vs. Esther Wilson, Defendant. To Esther Wilson, above named de fendant: In the Name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby requested to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit, on or before six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wit: the 27th day of January A. D. 1922, and if you fail to so appear or answer for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in his complaint herein to-wit: A decree of- divorce dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between the plaintiff and the defendant and granting to the plaintiff the care, cus tody and control of Abbie Jane Wil son, plaintiff and defendant's minor child herein. This summons is published once a week for six successive weeks by or der of the Honorable J. U. Campbell, Judge of the above entitled Court, sa'd order being dated the 13th day of De cember A. D., 1921, directing the pub lication thereof. ALLEN & ROBERTS Attorneys for Plaintiff, 714 Swetland Bldg., Portland, Ore. - Date of first publication, December 16th, 1921. Date of last publication January 27th, 1922.