OREGON CITY, ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1922. Page 7 RECALL FIGHT AT MILWAUKIE WAXE8J0TTER Citizens Seeking to Unseat Mayor Declare they Have Nearly Enough Names to Put Issue Upon Ballot. CHIEF EXECUTIVE'S CONDUCT ATTACKED Management of Boxing Arena Scored; No Definite Charge Of Dishonesty Is Advanced. MILWAUKEE, Jan. IS. That the petitions, seeking to recall Mayor J. M. Snyder, of Milwaukee, are meeting with little opposition, and will have enough signatures before the end of the week to call a special election, is the statement of those who are circulating the documents here. Four petitions are being circulated by citizens who have expressd them selves as thoroughly dissatisfied with the mayor's conduct of city affairs. Snyder, on the other hand, is equally belligerent, and ig wholly unmoved by this first move of his critics and will not resign. Underneath the surface of the charges is declared to be concerted opposition to the manner in which prize-fights have been managed at the car-barn arena during the last two years. CITY SAID GYPPED It is asserted that through lax and inefficient supervision of these box ing bouts the city of Milwaukie has been deprived of its just quota of the gate receipts and that Mayor Snyder, who is responsible for the steward ship of the Milwaukie boxing commis sion, is largely responsible for alleged financial mismanagement. Fire chief Charles Mullan, who holds an elective office, is one of the petition circulators and a leader in the campaign to oust Mayor Snyder. Referring to the reasons for the recall movement, he said: "For two years, since the Milwau kie boxing commission began to func tion under the supervision of Mayor Snyder, the city of Milwaukie has been getting the short end of the prizefight receipts. SHORTAGE C-AIMED "Something like $1S0.000 or $200,- 000 has been taken in at the various bouts staged and of this amount the city of Milwaukie has received only a part of the money to which it is en titled under the state law. For in stance, in the recfnt Wills-Tate fight, the receipts approximated $12,000. 1 claim that the city's share of this sum should have been above $2000. The amount actually received was $200, less fees for special police which the mayor is empowered to deduct from the proceeds. "I am not at this time prepared to say that anyone is guilty of grafting on the prizefight funds, but will say that there has been an utter lack of efficient management on the part of the boxing commission and Mayor Snyder. If we are to make a success of the boxing" game in Milwaukie it is necessary that the people of this city get all that is coming to them for the privilege of staging these fights here." SUCCESSOR NAMED G. C. Pelton, one of the leaders in the recall movement, and predecessor of Snyder in the mayoralty chair, was defeated in the city election six years ago. To this result, according to Snydar, is attributed much of the later difficulty, while Pelton's friends maintain "hat he stepped aside in favor of his opponent in the race. Moreover, failure to pay street as sessments led to the forced sale of Snyder's bakery in order to meet the required levy, it is alleged. To this charge Phillip Streib, city treasurer, while not defending Snyder's non payment of the tax, maintains that the entire amount of the transaction, togetlier' with interest, was later paid to the city by the mayor. The treas urer's books, according to Streib, are open for inspection at any time to prove this assertion. Another incident mentioned by the administration's antagonists occurred last summer, when, it is alleged, a city traffic officer, whose activities were said to be detrimental to Mil waukie business, was discharged without the sanction of the council. Twenty-five per cent of the electors voting in the Milwaukie district for Justice of the Oregon supreme court is necessary to qualify a recall peti tion. The names necessary under this rule total some 63. Members of the Milwaukie city council are standing with Mayor Sny der in the recall movement, while the city firemen are supporting the recall. Petition circulators are: Charles Mullen, fire chief; Ray Mclntyre, Wil liam Kleeb and N. B- Harvey. The boxing commission is com posed of the following: W. H. Coun sels Frank Arrighi and Albert Thom as. H. R SCHEER ACQUITTED ON GHARGE OF ASSAULT H. F. Scheer was acquited by a jury in Justice Noble's court Wednesday of charges of assault and battery. The complairt was brought by P. E. Frank of Twiilght. People with twelve fingers and twelve toes are common in Bandera, a Texas town. IS FOR UNEMPLOYMENT WASHINGTON, Jan. IS.' The most practical solution cf Hie prc'olera of uii efployment is to open factories the mils now closed or increase the activ ity of plants now running with partial forces or on part time. All other at tempted solutions of the problem of unemployment are but temporay at the best. Permanent and profitable employment is possible only when the nation's industries are busy. In extending aid to the agricultural districts Congress has done a very practical thing to diminish uneffploy-! head badly gashed and his. ankle bro ment. Owing to a combination of cir- i.en km was unconscious for several cumstances, the American farmer dur ing the past three or four years has not purchased as much farm machin ery as he did in the average years be fore the war; neither has he made many repairs upon his buildings, nor purchased much fencing or other farm equipment. As a result of the lack of either the ability-or the disposition of the farfer to buy machinery or equip ment, practically all of the agricultural implement concerns in the United States are closed. One or two of the largest of them have virtually becon:e insolvent and are undergoing reorgan ization. Farmer is Largest Purchaser According to a survey made by the federal Bureau of Public Roads, there are approximately 500 manufacturing concerns in the United States engag ed in the production of farf machinery and equipment, producing in norfal years approximately $550,000,000 worth of goods, and employing under normal conditions hundreds of thousands of working fen. Nearly all of these are now shut down. In addition to the farmer being the sole purchaser of this vast production of strictly agricultural equipment, he, under normal condi tions, is the purchaser of over one third of the annual output of motor ve hicles; taken as a class, the armer is by far the largest .purchaser of every sort of household necessities furnish ings and staple merchandise. He con stitutes 40 per cent of the nation's pop ulation. Consequently all iudustrieb suffer when the farmer ceases buying for any reason whatever. GAVE FARMER CREDIT The present session of Congress has provided the agricultural classes of the United Staes with unprecented credit facilities: under the War Finance Cor poration act agricultural interests will be enabled to obtain $1,000,000,000 in credits; the Curtis-Nelson act increas ed the amount of money available for loans by Farm Loan Banks in the sum of $31,000,000, making a total revolving fund of $56,000,000 available for farm loans; at the request of and under the direction of the administration a $50, 000,000 fund for cattle loans has been created and is bein utilized. There is no reason, therefore, inso far as the Congress and the Republi can administration are concerned, why the armer should not begin the year 1922 in good financial shape and with sufficient credit to enable him to buy whatever machinery and farm equip ment he may require and to make, meantime, whatever repairs are neces sary. The moment this buying on the part of the farmer begins, that mo ment will hundreds of manufacturing plants now partially or entirely idle resume their activities and give con stant employment to hundreds of work ing men now idle. Once this process is started it goes like a snowball. Manufacturing con cerns making farm machinery and implements use an enormous amount of iron, steel, lumber and other raw I material; they use coal for fuel and coke in their foundries; they will -im-1 mediately increase the defand for rail road cars, which will set another circle of manufacturing activities to work. Logan Woman Visits In City Mrs. C. N. Trary, of Logan, was an Oregon City visitor on Saturday. I Si -po ACQUAINT the U' I(VsJf'-Ti'iS public with the possi- y o.'5 A unities of the Used Auto- u . .;,s -'r-r--. j N(lnP'1 n $ mobile when it is han- f . H'j' 3 JS Villi S &iJ$"im dled with a view t0 r',4VT-li IJiLrTtal? r- giving the buyer full :' V' i t C?" w -V MfeS- ' lH value in service for his K1 fcS W tf T1 ' i 'i-'K - V a money, we are making, fc' I Vir JTf'i ;r t t'fiyH during Auto Show week, t'yJ Ky f r '! yl .'ivS a special showing on our I C fv J jMpiJ Main Sales Floor of re- ;VS t-y Vr. -i j "A, built refinished automo- MSi tSgS'V I P biles of various types ftlK C-j "FV MAN IS STRUCK BY AUTO ON ROAD AROUND BASIN Wymore Sustains Broken Ankle and Cuts On Head; Bright Sun Blinds Driver. J. Wymore, of Canemah waa severly injured at four o'clock Wednesday atteinoon when he was struck by a passing automobile as he was going along the basin walk between Oregon City and his home. wvmore was knocked down, his hours. His injuries will not prove seridus, it is beiieved. He was thrown several feet from the machine, and suffered minor bruises about the body. Wyman is employed at the county rock crushing plant near this city. He was taken to his home in Cane mah where Dr. Meisser is in attend ance. The car, it is said, was driven by a man from Silverton. The driver, who stopped after the accident, said the sun waa shinning in his eyes and that he could not see Wymore. Elected Mayor of Cathlamet Oregpn City friends of Emil M. Orth, who was connected with the Bank of Oregon City for more than two and one-half years previous to 1920, will be pleased to learn of his election as Mayor of Cathlamet. Washington. Mr. Orth severed his connection with The Bank of Oregon City to assume the cashiership of the Wahkiakum County Bank of Cath lamet in January 1920. He has taken an active interest in the affairs of his community and built up a most prosperous business for his institu tion. Last November he was married to Miss Janet G- Ingram, auditor of Wahkiakum county, and daughter of Captain Dave Ingram, well known pilot pn the Columbia river. In the recent election for mayor of his city, Mr. Orth won over his opponent by a large majority and assumed office on January 1st of this year. CHARGES DENIED WASHINGTON, Jan. 17. Charges that bodies of American soldiers who died in France were often sent to the wrong homes in the United States were branded as false tod&y by wit nesses before the senate investigating committee. Three men who served overseas with the grave registration service told the committee that every body sent home was positively identified and re-checked against error before it was prepared for shipment. SHANTUNG IS TALKED WASHINGTON, Jan. 17. The Jap anese and Chinese arms conference delegatons, continuing today their ef forts to j-each a settlement of the Shantung question, took up the mat ter of coal and iron mines in the Kiao Chow leasehold of Shantung, prov ince, but made virtually no progress toward an agreement. TOBACCO TRUST CHARGED WASHINGTON, Jan. 18. Three of the largest tobacco manufacturers of the country are engaged in conspira cies to prevent reduction in the price of cigars, cigarettes and other manu factured tobacco, -the federal trade commission today charged in a special report to congress. IRISH IRE RISES i TTTTT TXT T 10 A . .1 t , 1 i - T , j .i Lllti SUUl.il UJL AltJlilUU LUUdJ WCltJ LGcW- ed to the first signs of republican op position to the Irish Free State. The police station at Charlestown, in County Mayo, was attacked by armed men who seized quantities of arms and ammunition and kidnapped three policemen. BROADWAY at EYE.RGTT BEAUTY BELT Of History and Modern Time Is FOUND ALONG Tropical Places; In U. S. It Is In SOUTH STATES By Edgar Jepson Edgar Jepson, famous British novel ist, author of "The Admirable Tinker," "Pollyooly," and other worth-while novels, has started a discussion in British papers by the article on beauty. He says that if there is ever a great outbreak of beauty in the Unit ed States it will be in Florida or Cal ifornia. Do you think this is so? Those who live in England know well what climate is; but I had better make clear what 1 .mean by beauty.Iu common with most of the painters and sculptors and critics of today who have given to the matter their earnest consideration, I refuse to accept such dictionary definitions as that it is "a combination of qualities, such as shape, proportion, color, that delights the sight," or even to accept the stricted metaphysical definition of that most modern philosopher Georges Santayana: "Beauty is pleasure as the quality of a thing." I do not believe that any great artist of any age would accept them. He would deny that pleas, ure is the only emotion, or the whola emotion, or the really important emo. tion awakened by a thing of beauty. World's Beauty Belt For me, as for all the men and wom en I know who have given thought to the matter, a thing of beauty is a fine and significant manifestation of the Life Force which surprises and thrills and stimulates. Always there is the elment of surprise in the emo tion. Always it comes as a revelation and a stimulant. If it does not, if it merely produces pleasure, however charming and delightful it may be, I will not call it beautiful. The world has its beauty belt. The beautiful things have been produced in the belt which runs from about twenty-seven to fifty-five degrees north of the Equator. Up to now no great work of art has been produced in the corresponding belt south of the Equator; but doubtless there is still hope for South Australia, the south of South .America, and South Africa. Even the most beautiful human be ings have been born and are born In this belt; all the beautiful women whose names have sweetened the ages Semiramis, Helen, Cleopatra, Gue nevere, La Gioconda, Ninon de l'En- clos were born in this belt. Venus herself and Ashtaroth were creatures of it. Others Not So Beautiful Doubtless beautiful women are born above and below it in Scandinavia, for example, and Southern India. But they are never quite as beautiful as the most beautiful women born in it. To take familiar instances, the beauti ful Irish girls are of Southern Ireland; the beautiful Scots come to London young and stay there; the women of Argentine are more beautiful than the women of Brazil. If ever there does come a great out break of beauty in the United States it will be in Florida or California. But in England there are summer days all the year round to relax the spirit; and the lines: I may not sleep till high upon tneir spars I see the pale hand of the morning gleam are quite. likely to have been written on the twenty-first of December as on the twenty-first of' June. All the great art and literature of the world has been produced in this belt When enthusiastic pursuers of the new come to me and tell me that they have discovered great' art in the ruined temples of Tehuantepec or on the banks of the Ubangi, I am not even politely incredulous. The belt includes Egypt, a great part of China, Greece, Italy, France and England and Japan. Fifty-five degrees are rather high, twenty-seven rather low, for beauty. Sunlight and. ;Warmth The great burgeonings of beauty have taken place in even warmer and more equable climes, in lands where the winter lingers no loners than is needful to brace and invigorte, never long enough to dull in Greece and. in Italy, in parts of China in which the climate is equable, in equable Ja pan. A certain physical easiness is necessary to the' production of beauty; the fibres must be stiffened or numb ed by cold, or actually relaxed by heat. In bodies enjoying this easiness the shackles of the flesh bind the spirit more loosely; it functions more freely. In those bodies the creative imagina tion enjoys the fullest play and pro duces it fine and stimulating works. Also a great deal of sunlight is neces sary to the production of beauty; sun light is the exhiliarating and stimulat ing ally of warmth. It isiia.the(waxm( sunny lands thnt you get the sustained effort of the artist, an effort which has lasted over years and produced such masterpieces as the Iliad, the Odyssey, the friezes of the Parthenon, the Theban Trilogy, the Inferno, those jade bowls or fig ures which the artist has wrought to exquisite form by seven or ten years' loving toil. There is no Greek, or Latin, or Italian lyric as beautiful as the finest English lyrics. But set the Paradise Lost against the Odyssey or the Inferno, and it is not of so sustain ed a level of beauty. The Painters Set the paintings, of the great Ital ians beside the paintings of the North ern painters and that graciousness which come of the warmth and sun light is yet more strongly marked. There is a graciousness of color and pattern and idea in paintings' by Leon ardo, Botticelli, and Luini whicn even Rembrandt lacks: but no one could say that Leonardo's "Virgin of the Rocks" or Botticelli s venus Rising from the sea" are a whit less signifi cant than Rembrandt's "Night Watch." The demand of Northern critics for the primitive and the crude, which has i been so clamorous and persistent of late years, is chiefly climatic; their revolt against graciousness and deli cacy is the product of the ruder climes of England and Northern France. N. Y. POST SOLD NEW YORK, Jan. 12. The New York Evening Post, one of the oldest newspapers in the city, has been sold to a syndicate,' it was announced to day. Full details of the transaction and the names of the purchasers will be made public later. FORD SUBMITS PLAN WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. Content to "rest his case with congress," Henry Ford will leave Washington late today for Buffalo, without holding further conferences with government officials regarding his offer to take over and operate the government's ni trate plant at Muscle Shoals, Ala. Like to hear from someone that as steel 14-in. plow for sale, with roll ing colter and painter or without. Must be good plow. M. A. Rataezijk, Oregon City, Ore., Box 135. Hampshire boar for sale at 10 cents pound. Large, well built animal. I don't need him any longer. Bred sows reasonable. R. Cherrick, Bar low, Oregon. FINAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that Monday, February 20th, 1922, at 9:30 o'clock A, M. at the court room of the County Court in ' Oregon City, Clackamas. County, Oregon, has been fixed as the time and place for hearing the finai account of A. J. Lewthwaite, adminis trator of the estate of Mary L. Lewth waite, deceased, at which time and place .all persons interested in said estate may appear and show cause if any, why said final account shoulu not be approved and the said adminis trator discharged. Dated and first published January 20th, 1922. A. J. LEWTHWAITE, Administrator of the Estate of Mary A, Lewthwaite, Deceased. GRIFFITH, LEITER & ALLEN, Attorneys for Administrator. hU I IOC I O bllCUl I Ol6 Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned have been duly appointe Executors of the Estate of Anton Malar, Sr., deceased, by the Count? Court of Clackamas County, Oregon; any and all persons having claim, against the said estate must presen them to the undersigned, duly veri fied as by law required, at the offic of Wm. Hammond, Oregon City, Ore gon, within six months from the dat. of this Notice. ANNA KRUSE, t DOROTHEA MENG, AND ANTON MALAR, JR. Executors of the Estate of Antor. Malar, Sr. deceased. WILLIAM HAMMOND, Attorney for Executor' Firt publication January 20th, 1922 Final publication February 17th, 1922. NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING In the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clackamas. In the Matter of the Estate of Alexander King Wilson, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that Dora E. Wilson, executrix of the Estate of Alexander King Wilson, deceased, has filed her final report in said estate, and that the Judge of the above en titled Court has fixed the county court room ,in the county court house at Oregon City, Oregon, and at fen o'clock A. M. on Monday, the 20th day of Feb- ruary,"1922 as the time and place for the hearing of said final report and the settlement of said estate. All persons having objections to the approval of said final report shall file their objections on or before date of hearing. Dated January 19th, 1922. DORA E. WILSON, Executrix of the Estate of Alexander King Wilson, deceased. First publication January 20th, 1922. Last publication February 17th, 1922. O. A. NEAL, Attorney for Executrix. C31 chamber of Commerce Bldg., Portland, Oregon. " SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County. De- j partment No. Edith Daniels, Plaintiff, vs. Lewis E. Daniels, Jr., Defendant, To Lewis E. Dajiiels, 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 the 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 consecutive 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. 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- PKUFtbblONAL DIRECTORY D. C. Latourette, President F. J. Meyer, Cashlei 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 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. 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 2Sth, 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 day 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. 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 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 J and State, sell at public auction, sub ject to redemption, to the highest bid-1 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. X. WILSON, Sheriff of Clackamas county, Oregon. By E. C. Hackett, Deputy. Dated, Oregon City, Ore., December 23rd, 1921. SUMMONS Iu 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 or&ef 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 f'irther 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 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. D. EBY Attorney-at-Law Money loaned, abstracts furnisn ed, land titles examine J, estates settled, genera law business. . Over Bank of Oregon City. Phone 405 WM. STONE ATTORNEY AT LAW Stevens Bldg., Oregon City, Of. 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. 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 gon; You are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint files, against you in the above entitled suit on or before the expiration six week 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 you so fail to appear and answer plaintiff will apply to the Court for tb 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 ky order of Hon. J. XJ. Campbell, Judge of the above entitled Court. The order is dated January 4th, 1922. Date of first publication January 6th, 1922. Date of last publication February 17thy 1922. E. R. LUNDBURG, Attorney for Plaintiff. Address 425 Yeon Bldg.,-Portland, Ore- 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 U 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 ths 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. Thi3 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 en the loth day of December, 1921. Date of first publication Decembe 16th, 1931. Date of !ast publication January 27th, 1922. JOSEPH, HANEY & LITTLEFIELD, Attorneys for Plaintiff, 511 Corbett Building, Portland, 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. U. 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 Bldg., Portland, Ore. 16that 1921 firSt pUbHcation' December 2lTtL IaSt PUb,ication nuary