Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, January 13, 1922, Page Page 7, Image 7

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    SANDY
(Continued from Page 6.)
Scales who says it looks like a mow
ing machine . had gone through the
country there and cut down everything
before it. The Reed cherry orchard
was ruined along with the other dam
age. Mrs. Li. Lehnfield went to Oregon
City the first of the week on a short
business trip.
Mrs. J. W. Dixon came down, from
Cherryville Monday morning and
went on into Portland for a short stay.
Clarence Cassidy is doing some fine
cabinet work these days.
SANDY SCHOOL NOTES
SANDY, Jan. II. Miss Hazel Beers
received a letter from Miss Bess Bar
ton recently. Friends here are glad to
hear Miss Barton is getting on nice
ly and doe3 not forget Sandy folk.
Mrs. Florence Connors went to Port
land Friday evening and was enter
tained at the home of her mother-in-law
who gave a dinner party in honor
of Mrs. Connor's birthday.
There will be graduating exercises
at the Ke!so school on the evening of
Jan. 28. A class of seven "eighth
graders" is supposed to be ready for
high school after this event, and it is
hoped all of them can enter the Sandy
high school. Some, have already de
cided to do so.
Dorothy Mattingly was out of school
several days last week because of a
severe cold.
Miss Elsie Lippold was the charm
ing guest of Miss Miller and Mrs. Mil
ler last Saturday night.
Marie Baumback played the marches
at the recent joint installation of the
Odd Fellows and Rebekahs.
Edith Hein and Dorothy Mattingly
expected to attend the surprise party
on Miss Miller Saturday night but the
Hein machine got chain trouble and
could not get up the bill ,to the regret
of all concerned.
Bernice and Wayne Duncan have
just bad their first experience in hav
ing dental work done and are grateful
for almost painless dentistry.
"Exams" have been on at the Kelso
for the Tighth grades this week.
Arthur Frace missed Sunday School
only once in the past ten Sundays and
Arthur says he was sick on that day.
Alta DeShazer missed two days of
school the past week because she was
ill, which is the first time any of the
De Shazers have been out this year.
Miss Ruth Johnson took up her
school work again Monday morning at
Firwood. Miss Johnson was ill a
month and there was no school during
that time.
The new windows in Mrs. Malar'a
room are relieving the situation won
derfulyl and it is a pity there is not
room in Mrs. Connor's wall space for
the same improvement.
Miss Elsie Lippold entertained Miss
Margaret Miller at dinner Saturday
evening.
Lloyd Mayhorn is another pupil in
the Sandy schools for the next two or
three months while his mother is here.
Mrs. Connors is starting a "health
crusade" in her room which is creat
ing great interest among the children.
The children are already learning to
keep their faces and hands clean, and
they are receiving marks for health
chores. This crusade is sponsored by i
the. Oregon Tubercular associaition !
and prizes and medals will be given to
the children winning the most points.
The children will be taken down town
this week and will be weighed by Mrs.
Connors.
Ruth Krebs was taken ill and is still
in bed and not very much improved.
Ruth is very much missed at school
by everyone and her many friends
hope she will soon recover.
A surprise party was given at the
borne of Mr. and Mrs- J- M. C. Miller
Saturday night on Miss Margaret Mil
ler, high school principal which was
greatly enjoyed by everybody present.
Miss Miller was so completely sur
prised when she came in from up town
and a number of the high school
"bunch" all "yelled" at once that she
insists she is not over it yet. Games
and music and much laughter made
the young folks happy: Those present
were Ruby Dodd, Bertha Hoffman,
Mary Scharnke, Carl Loundree, Fritz
Junker, Hazel Beers, Dorothy McFad
den, Dorothy Esson, Mildred Bosholm,
Carl Scharnke ,C. O. Duke, Lueile Mc
Carter, Miss Lippold, Miss Margaret
Miller, Mrs. J. C. Duke. Refreshments
were served at small tables. The mer
ry party lingered til ltwelve.
BORING ITEMS
, -
Current Business Conditions
By GEORGE E. ROBERTS
(Prom the Monthly Letter Issued by The National City Bank of New York for January)
SANDY, Jan. 11. The Boring I. O.
O. F. and Rebekah lodges held a joint
installed the following: Ed. Brown, N.
installed the .folowing: Ed. Brown, N.
G.: Otis Rich, V. G.; Emil Johnson,
"Warden: J. Nasholm, Chaplain; H.
Beck, Conductor; J. McBain, I. G. ;
Chris Bohren, R. S. ,N. G.; J. Hoffmeis
ter, L. S. N". G. Rebekahs: Matilda
Lake, N. G.; Mary Potter, V. G.; Mrs.
Caldwell, chaplain; Olive Bohren,
oCnductor; Effie Duley, Warden; Wi
nona Lake I. G.;Emil Johnson, O. G.
After the installation a fine banquet
was served.
Perry Bartemay from Eastern Ore
gon was at Boring for the week end
and 'Kenneth Child went back with
him to kill a few jack-rabbits and coy
otes. W. T. Child is working: at Yacolt,
Wash, and Miss Buna Child hns taken
up work at the St. Vincent's hospital.
Like to hear from someone that nas
stesl 14-in. plow for sale, with roll
in sr .oitAi- and painter or without.
Must be good plow. M. A. Rataezijk, j
Oregon City, Ore., Box 15.
LINCOLN. Neb., Jan. 11. Mrs. Effie
Smith, wealthy society matron, today
was awarded judgment for $4600
against Mrs. Cora Perry, rich widow
and church organist. Mrs. Smith ask
ed $10,000. alleging theft of the affec
tions of her husband, Joseph Smith.
The suit, heard by a jury, was replete
with spicy testimony.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10. The gov
ernment's rivers and harbors engi
neers tnrlav recommended to congress
the appropriation of $3,310,000 for the
improvement of Coos Bay harbor and
TetTn no o'nmrn in th state of Oregon.
The improvements would include the j
dredging of a new channel.
"J"f an industrial forecast for 1922
I . it 5s necessary to consider the
rjtues of the depression, chief
;.uiong which is the unbalanced re
lationship between the prices of
rm and otbr primary products on
he n ;"Jid and the prices of
manufacture! good, transportation
service end nnom other products
and teiT'cci oti the. other hand.
TT 6m1 eitimates of the Depart
ment of Agriculture apoja the 1921
crops give them market value to
the farmers $8,000,000,000 below the
value ot the crop of I91S and
$3,400,009,000 below the value of the
crop of 1920. These are figures of
great significance. The farmers
have produced nearly as much in
quantity, but it has been valued in
the exchanges at less than one-half
the figures of 1919. As other prod
ucts and services have not declined
in like degree, the farmers must buy
much less, and all the industries are
suffering in consequence.
It is useless to expect a return to
normal conditions while this dis
parity of compensation between
preat bodies of producers exist. It
unfair and it establishes an
.t?ctive blockage against a revival
ot business. It is time that the busi--es
community took cognizance of
he situation, and set itself to the
rask of correcting it. The arjrtimcnt
.hat stock on hand was purchased
it higher prices has lost whatever
fdYce it ever had. Merchants who
re interested in the return of pros-p.-rity
should do their part for it.
nd one of their duties is to reduce
operating costs.
In large part the situation is
chargeable to the action of organ
K(i labor in clinging to the war
t'me wage rates. Raw materials
.id foodstuffs have had a preat de--vinc
at wholesale, but between the
'vholesaie markets and consumers
the cost of handling and manufac
turing has not declined in like pro
portions. The effect is to obstruct
the distribution of goods and throw
millions of wage-earners out of em
ployment, at the same time keepin.tr
up the cost of living on the entire
ivaic-carninR population. In the
afjsreirate there is no pain, but a
preat loss, to the wage-earners as a
class.
Railroad V.-s;es
i lie raiiroad companies are
.-trutrijiing with a difficult situation,
inri although their CiTrirts are in the
public interest they have little help
mm the public. Railroad wages
in shops and for common labor are
so far above the wages piid for
similar work alontj . their lines that
the companies find it practicable to
rmWe important savings by con
tr:i -tine; for their repairs and much
of!?r work. The New York Central
contracted for freight-handling
a ome of its terminals, and the
En.- has contracted for track-main-Kr?ir!ci'
nvr ; nnrtJri'' :a lio.
The operation of railway repair
shops always has -been regarded as
a matter of policy within the dis
cretion of the management. If a
company can save money by oper
ating its own shops it should do so,
and by the same reasoning if money
can be saved by letting out the
work, that should.be done. The
railroads are maintained primarily
to give service to the public, and
the public is entitled to have them
operated upon a level of costs cor
responding to what the public pays
and receives for like labors and ser
vices. . Continuity of serviae and
merit in service may well be recog
nized, but compensation should be
based upon the value of services
rendered. Any other system would
make railroad employes a favored
class, at the expense, not of the rail
road companies, but of the public,
including millions of people who
have less pay than the' railroad men.
We have a letter from Mont
gomery, Ala., in which the writer
says : '
"The producers are forced to sell beef for
from 1 Vi to 3 cents per pound and hides
for from 1 to 3 cents and the consumers
pay from 25 to 40 cents per pound for
steak and from JS to $15 per pair for
shoes. The same is true of all other prod
ucts. The negro porter on railway trains
get a salary of from $100 to $200 per monlh
for eight hours of easy work a day; while
the farm laborers work from 10 to 14 hours
a day in the dew and cold and receive a
salary of from $8 to $15 per month, and
the farmer loses money paying that salary.
Something is radically wrong and I fear
the result will not be good for our country."
The prospect is for a cessation of
coal-mining when existing contracts
expire on April 1st The pay for
mining coai is so far above what
it was before the war that the price
of coal is one of the most serious
obstacles to the general reduction
of living costs and the revival of
industry. The increased cost of
coal and increased cost of trans
portation are causing more unem
ployment and more hardship in this
country than any other two influ
ences that can be named. No pre-"
dictions can. be ventured as to when
industry will be running full time
so long as it labors under such
handicaps.
Agricultural Conditions
Conditions in the agricultural sec
tions are far from inspiring, but in
the cotton country the feeling is a
little better. The final government
es'imate upon the cotton crop is
8,340.000 bales, which compares
with the October estimate of
6.537,000 bales, an increase that
might have been expected to p!ay
smash with the market. The ex
planation given for this extraor
dinary revision is that the Depart
ment of Agriculture was crippled in
the bureau of estimates by a reduc
tion of its force of investigators,
and was misled as to the acreage
planted in cotton. The ginnings
proved the inaccuracy of the Oc
tober estimate, and the conclusion
seems to be forced that the acreage
.-i.-rtailment was much less thrn
claimed by the organizers of tfce
movement.
The first effect of the revise! esti
mate was to cause cotton to ssll Si,
January contracts going unuei C
cents, but since then with goo.i
conditions in the cotton (food
trade prices have advanced atou.
two cents the pound. Exports oi
cotton since June have been well
above those of the corresponding
months of last year, and there is
some feeling in the British cotton
Irade that world stocks of cotton
goods are low and that better buy
ing is not far off. Trade in India
is unfavorably affected by the patr.
otic boycott of British goods.
The Government's final report
makes this country's production of
wheat about 54,000,000 bushels above
former figures. Exports for the
twenty-five weeks ended December 22,
as reported by Bradstreet's aggregated
231,000,000 bushels against 238,000,000
in the corresponding time last year.
The market has been unsettled and
fluctuating, but at the end of Decem
ber was upon about the same level as
at the beginning. The world's needs
and supplies seems to be closely bal
anced in this crop, but the growing
crop in this country is rated at a low
condition.
The West has a surplus of corn
which rests heavily upon the market,
but prices have held their own during
the past month, and gained a couple
of cents, partly on the strength of
prospective purchases for Russia.
Cattle are depressed, but hogs around
$7 per hundred-weight in Chicage
yield a fair return to the farmer who
has grown a good crop of corn. Dairy
products also are bringing fair prices.
Farmers who own their land and
are out of debt can get along very
well under present conditions, although
local taxes have been pushed up in
recent years until they are as much
as rent was twenty years ago. Far
mers who went into debt for land at
the prices ruling two years ago have
an interest charge which cannot be
met from the land. This will be the
first year in a great many in which
numerous defaults will, occur in the
payment of interest upon farm mort
gages. There is good reason to believe that
presort prices for farm products ait
about the lowest that will be seen.
The last two seasons have been un
usually favorable for the grain crops.
The carry-over of wheat certainly
will not be large and the growing crop
lias a poor start. It would be re
markable to have another bumper corn
yield after three great crops, and there
is reason to believe that less com will
be planted this year. Moreover, :t is
likely that the hog crop will be in
creased. During the years when 50m
brought high prices, it became ihe
popular thing to sell corn and a good
many farmers got out of hogs. The;
are likely to get back to a more cvr-dy
balanced agriculture, with more m V::
cows, -rtf r'srs. more grass and for
age ., M .. . -'Vntific - .' .iv.
A Printing Establishment
A Barometer of Active Business
When we hear the rumble of
the Presses and notice new faces
in all departments of our Plant
we know witliout asking any
questions that it means new
business and extra help for our
busy shop.
More business means en
larged facilities for properly
producing printing in all its
branches.
Big Industries and smaller
manufacturing plants; Com
mercial Institutions; Mer
chants; the General Public
Everybody is RESUMING.
Have vou determined that
your business shall keep up
with the procession?
Have you definitely decided
jon a campaign of advertising
and publicity?
If we can be of service to you
command us.
Oregon City Enterprise
PRINTERS PUBLISHERS BINDERS
Enterprise Building Oregon City, Oregon
Rata have, among other damage,
gnawed through gas and water pipes,
rendering various buildings uninhab
itable until repairs were executed.
Accommodation for dining and sleep
ing, and electric cigarette lighters, are
prcviu.-J on a motorbus recently de
signed by a French firm.
Hampshire boar for sale at 10 cents
pound. Large, well built animal. I
- don't nted him any longer. Bred
sows reasonable- R- Cherrick, Bar
low, Oregon.
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
D. C Latourettb. President F. J. Meysr, Casbie
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
t SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for Clackamas County. De
partment No.
Edith Daniels, Plaintiff,
vs.
Lewis E. Daniels, Jr., Defendant,
To Lewis E. Daniels, Jr., the defend
ant above named: In the Name of the
State of Oregon, you are hereby requir
ed to appear and answer the Com
plaint of plaintiff filed against you in
the above entitled cause and Court,
within six weeks from the date of the
first publication of this Summons
against you, to-wit: Within six weeks
from Friday, January 13, 1922, and if
you fail to so appear or answer said
Complaint, the plaintiff will take a de
cree against you forever dissolving he
marriage contract existing between
and plaintiff and restoring her to her
maiden name of Edith Dickson, and
granting to her such other relief as
may be equitable.
This summons is published for six
consecutlye weeks in the Oregon City
Enterprise, a newspaper of general cir
culation, printed and published at Ore.
gon City, in Clackamas County, Ore
gon. The first publication thereof, be
ing Friday, January 13, 1922, and the
last publication thereof, being Friday,
February 24, 1922, all done in accord
ance with the order of the Honorable
James U. Campbell, Judge of the
above entitled Court, made and enter
ed in said cause and Court, January
6th, 1922.
WM. G. MARTIN,
CAREY F. MARTIN,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Postoffice Address: 413 Masonic
Temple Building, Salem. Oregon.
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.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In the County Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of Clacka
mas. In the Matter of the estate of
J. Herbert Yates,
J. Herbert Yates, deceased.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned have been appointed
executors of the estate of J. Herbert
Yates, deceased, by the County court
of the State of Oregon for Clackamas
County, and have qualified. All per
sons having claims against said estate
are hereby notified to present the same,
duly verified as by law required to the
undersigned at the office of the Ore
gon City Sand & Gravel Co., Oregon
City, Oregon within six months from
the date hereof.
Dated and first published January
6th, 1922.
JOSEPHINE MOREY.
HERBERT D. YATES,
EDWARD S. YATES,
Executors, i
GUY L. WALLACE, attorney.
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT
Notice is hereby given that' the un
dersigned, aa 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 County Court of the State of
Oregon, for the County of Clacka
mas. In the matter of the estate of
John J. Honebon, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned has filed his final account in
the estate of John J. Honebon, deceas
ed, and that Monday, the 30th dav ot
January, 1922, at the hour of 10 o'clock
in the forenoon of said day, and the
County Court Room 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 objections
there may be to the same.
J. J. JOHNSON,
Executor of the Estate of John J.
Honebon, Deceased.
SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court of the Stale of
Oregon, for the County of Clacka
Christina Madsen, Plaintiff,
vs.
Chris MadSfen, 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. XT. 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. x
WEATHERFORD & WYATT
AND O. D. EBY,
Post Office Address: 122 W. First
Street, Albany, Oregon. Oregon City,
Oregon:
C. D. A D. C. LATOURETTE
Attorney-at-law
Commercial, Real Estate and
Probate our Specialties. Of
fice in First National Bank
nidg., Oregon City, Oregon. .
O. D. EBY
Attci-ney-at-La a
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 Bldg., Oregon City, Or.
gon; You are hereby required to ap
pear and answer the complaint filed
against you in the above entitled suit
on or before the expiration six weeks
from the date of the first publication
of this summons, which date of ex
piration is fixed by order of the above
entitled Court as February 17th, 1922;
if yon so fail to appear and answer
plaintiff will apply to the Court for th
relief prayed for in his complain,
namely, for a decree dissovling the
marriage contract heretofore existing
between the plaintiff and defendant
and for such other and further relief
as may seem just and equitable to the
Court.
This summons is published by order
o Hon, J. XT. Campbell, Judge of the
above entitled Court.
The order is dated January 4 th,
1922.
Date of first publication January
6th, 1923.
Date of last publication February
17th 1922.
E. R. LXTNDBTJRG, '
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Address 425 Yeon Bldg., Portland, Ore.
SHERIFF'S SALE
In the circuit Court of the State ot
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.C2, 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
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 I
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, if
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 Clackamas County, Oregon.
Also the following- described
tract of land lying and being with
in the boundaries tnereor ana
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 x 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
Clackamas 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, thic.l3th day of
December, A. D. 1921.
FRED A. MILLER,
Cleric.
By G. H. PACE, Deputy.
(Seal of Court)
SUMMONS
In the Circuit "Court of the State of
Oregon for the County of Clacka
mas. ,
Sadie Bottinelli, 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 otber 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 Deoembe?
16th, 1921.
Date of last publication January
27th, 1922.
JOSEPH, HANEY & LITTLEFIELD.
Attorneys for Plaintiff,
511 Corbett Building, Portland, Ore.
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 Clackamas County.
Clarence W. Thompson, Plaintiff,
vs.
Elizabeth G. Thompson, Defendant.
To Elizabeth G. Thompson, the above
named defendant,
In the Name of the State of Ore-
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. XT. Campbell,
Judge of the above entitled Court, said
order being dated the 13th day of De
cember A. D., 1921, directing the pub
lication thereof.
ALLEN & ROBERTS
Attorneys for' Plaintiff,
714 S wetland B'dg., Portland, Ore.
Date of first publication, December
16th, 1921.
Date of last publication January
27th, 1922.