EASTERN CLACKAMAS NEWS THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1027 Pair« 5 H I G H S C H O O L N O T E S that the title of the plaintiff is good and valid. By Lillian Duncan fc0ö (3) That the defendants he forever enjoined and d< barred from asserting LOCAL STUDENTS ENTERED any claim in or to the eeid IN COUNTY TYPING CONTEST lands and whatever premises adverse to the plaintiff, and foe such other and fur­ Estacada high will be represented ther relief as this Honorable Court may deem just and equitable ia the by six students at lha annual typ­ premises. ing contest to bo held at Oregon City Saturday. Contestants from both Said lands and premises arc situ­ first and second year typing classes ated and lying in Clackamas County, State of Oregon, bounded and des­ from ail schools in the county will cribed MOTOR CO. IN IMPORTANCE as follows to wit:__ be present. Lots Seven (7) Eight (8) Nine (9) Those chosen to represent the is the adoption of the HOLLEY HOT SPOT VAP­ and Ten in Block Thirty-nine local school are: Edan Carter, Ev­ (39) B. of (10) Subdivision of Blocks 10, ORIZER as standard equipment on Ford cars. By elyn Dibble, and Marvel Deal; second 28, 20, 80, 3S, and 39 of Clackamas year students; and 01ive Bishop, Heights. its use, dry gas at as low a temperature as possible Grant Robley, and Helen Carter! is delivered into the combustion chamber. This This summons is served upon you first year entries. pursuant to an order of the Honor­ result is achieved by the two air supplies in the able J, U. Campbell, Judge of the Vaporizer. E. H. S. DROPS TILT TO CANBY above entitled Court, which order was made and entered on the 1st The advantages are: of Feb. 1927 A. D., said Order The first baseball game of the day 1— !r.cro',aed mileage, as every particle of gas is untilized. directed be served by pub­ season, played at Canby Friday en­ lication of that the you 2— No crankcase dilution- No wet gas to get by the piston rings. summons for a ded disastrously for the locals, who period of six successive herein 3— Smoother operation due to uniform mixture. r.nd consec­ came back with the small end of a utive weeks In the Eastern Clacka- 4 — More power. The combustion is faster and complete. 9-7 score. C__Reduces carbon, as no wet gasoline burns on pistons and valves. mas News, a news paper of genera! The game was hotly contested from circulation o—Lesc use of choke- Hot spot heats instantly after car is started. printed and published in start to finish, and the boys expect Clackamas County, The price of the Vaporizer is $10.50 installed on your old car State of Oregon. better luck when they play Milwau! Date of first publication, April 14, kie. 1927. Date of last publication, May 26, JUNIOR PLAY FRIDAY NIGHT 1927. Harry Frazer, Attorney for plain­ tiff. Address Mnlluiu, Oregon. Tomorrow evening the Juniors will THE MARQUAM WHITE LEGHORNS give their annual play, "A Strenuous NOTICE TO CREDITORS Life,' in the high school auditorium. (Trapnested continuously for tan consacutiva yaars) Everybody come. Your time and In the County Court of the State of Chicks all Sold up to the Middle of May money will be well spent. Oregon for the County of Clacka­ Send for Prices on May and June Chicks mas. OREGON CERTIFIED BREEDER. Member Oregon Accredited SUMMONS In the Matter of the Estate of Rebert Hatchery and Breeders’ Association (under the supervision of the W. Akins, Deceased. Oregon Agricultural College.) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF Notice is hereby given that the THE MARQUAM POULTRY FARM THE STATE OF OREGON FOR undersigned has been appointed by order of the above entitled court, du­ CLACKAMAS. COUNTY BREEDERS OF WHITE LEGHORNS C. E. RAMSBY Plaintiff ) ly made, Administrator of the estate One Mila East of Estacada, Oregon, on Garfield Road MR. MILLS IMPROMPTU S K E T C H OF E X P E R IM E N T A L 01L —VS— ) of Robert W. Akins, deceased. All AN O IL D O M E SHALE REDUCTION PLANT R. G. MOORE, also all other per-) poisons having claims gaainst said The V. S. Bureau of Mi net is confident that motor fuel supplies sons or parties unknown claiming) cstato arc hereby notified to present trill hr ample for many yearn to meet all need* of the country's mil­ ‘‘llllilllilllllllll llllllllllllllllllil¡lillll¡iil|lllll ¡i¡lli¡¡ll¡lllllllllllllllllíllllll!lllllíl¡llllll'llilíllillll¡!ll¿ any right, title, estate, lien or in-) them to the undersigned at the oflfiee lion* of automobile*. H arry H. Hill, chief petroleum engineer of the B unau, here tell» the reason* for thi* conviction, and *ketches the terest in the real estate described) of H. E. Cross, my Attorney, in Ore­ advances in industrial method* which justify hi* opinion*. in the complaint herein. ) gon City, Oregon, within six months Defendants ) from the date of this notice. Easter is drawing neftr^- ARCHIE HOWELL To R. 0. MOORE i only a few days more to Administrator IN THE NAME OF THE STATE think about that Coat, Hat, == ! By HARRY H. HILL OF OREGON; You are hereby re­ Chief Petroleum Engineer, United States Bureau of Mines. quired to appear and answer the or Dress. Dr. M. M. Martindale NE reason why there is no rea-joil out. How to shut off the water complaint of the plaintiff filed son to worry greatly about ¡ and permit the oil to run out is a prob- against you in the above entitled suit Why not go to Rose’s and Chiropractor motor fuel for a long time lem with which the engineers have or before the 26 day of May, 1927 pick one out and forget ahead is that people are worrying long worked. They have made great on D., said date being six weeks from of Oregon City about It. Interest In such a question psogress and so Increased recoveries. A. your troubles. the date of the first publication In earlier times most oil producer« at the right time, is the best insur­ ance against disaster. The President carefully guarded all Information of the summons herein, and if you We also wish to mention and the Federal Oil Corporation about their wells and experiences, but so fail to appear and answer for fail­ Monday and Friday eve­ our luxurious line of Per­ Board have done what was needed, at j latterly there is co-operation in three ure thereof the plaintiff will apply to the right time. matters. Geologists and petroleum for the relief prayed for nings after six o’clock. fumes, Powders, Creams, We know that most petroleum has ! engineers, once derided by the “prac- in the the Court complaint herein, namely:— from rather limited areas and deal" oil men, are. more and more (1) That the defendants E= and Lotions. One's Toilet would hardly be complete without those = eome may bo re­ that even from these only a small pro-! accepted as guides and mentors. Now Office at Linn’s Inn == little feminine allurements. You will find that we can supply all = portion has been taken out. Oil pro- knowledge Is constantly increasing re­ quired to set forth the nature of their claims; and that all adverse duced by gas pressure capable of lift­ coveries. * of your needs for a finer and prettier Easter == ing It to the surface when we drill claims of the defendants may be de­ As to Mining for Oil EYES Are Precious hole« Is but a small proportion of all In Lorraine they have dug shafts termined by a decree of this Court. I treat them accord­ the oil contained in the sands. Even down to the oil sands and actually (2) That by said decree it be declar- ingly. A complete from the best pools recovery by the brought the sand« out, like coal from cd and adjudged that the defendants optical aervice that old method« Is small, perhaps one- satisfies. Dr. Freeze pleases have no estate or interest whatever AT half In the most favorable conditions, | a mine. But It’s costly, specialist. Masonic building,, Or­ oftener one-«lxth, or one-seventh, or ' Another mining process is to «Ink a j in or to the said lands and premises I eye egon City. one-tenth. But a considerable part of j shaft to the oil sand* and from ! or any part or parcel thereof; and j what still remain« in the ground can bottom drive tunnel« in all directions be recovered by methods now eBtab- j through the sand«. From these tun- lished as technically and economically | nels small perforated pipes are driven RETURN BOUT practicable. into the sands, which drain the oil Producing oil from coal and shales out of the sands. It flow« to larger and by mining the oil bearing sands pipes back at the foot of the «haft and T H E P L A C E TO B U Y Is entirely possible, Experimente are thence is pumped out. This requires going on in these directions, and if w0 Installing an expensive plant, but !r. ever have to fall back on these re- j some field« the high recovery that is sources we will be ready. For a long j assured might Justify the C 03 t 11 time, however, the present method« of understand the process ‘s about to b« exploration and drilling, with Improv­ lntsalled In a few fields In this coun­ ing processes to assure larger recov­ try, some companies being convinced It Is practicable and profitable. eries. are likely to suffice. Oil can be distilled from coal, and An Oil Dome Illustrated much work Is now being dour I am no draughtsman, but maybe I along this line. But more appeal has can draw something that will help ex­ been mads by the plan of extracting plain. Here'« a rough drawing of an . _ . oil dome. The shaded part at the bot- oil from shale. The shales of Scotland By special arrangement with the County tom is a deposit of oil bearing sands- have been worked for three-quarters with an impervious rock stratum of a century, and they are almost un- Agricultural Agent, we are enabled to make above. In this country, richer In oil A wild-catter drilled the hole limited than those of Scotland. Kentucky, A-B and gas pressure caused oil and Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Wyo- i available to this section of the county, farm­ gas to flow. After a while the gas Ohio, ming and California are particularly pressure wasn't sufficient to keep up shales. It Is Just a question ers’ bulletins issued by the Oregon Agricul­ the flow and they pumped until ulti­ of rich the In cost of extracting the oil. Con­ mately even this ceased producing AT THE ha« given $180,000, with which tural College and by the U. S. Department Nevertheless, most of the oil was gress the Bureau has Installed a plant necr still left «ticking to the «and grains. Rullson, Colorado, to distill oil from of Agriculture. Then the operator drilled the well the Colorado River Shales It is C-D, which flowed for a time, but most calculated the «hales mined at was still down there in the Rullson will that produce We consider it a privilege to be able of sand the oil about a barrel If the gas pressure could be re­ of oil to the ton. stored more would flow. So the oper­ to offer not only the best in Banking Ser­ ator injects ga« Into one well, restor The Use of Oil 8hales the pressure and causing the oil In Scotland they are working shales vice, but also this additional feature which Ing to resnme flowing from the other. that produce about twenty-five gallor.o After the flow will stop again, oil per ton. The seams are from ' will be of distinct value to the community. but still a time much of the oil will be left. of three-and-a-half to eight or ten f»nt1 In some flelds It ha* been possible to thick. In Colorado are seam« manv obtain additional amounts of oil by times as thick and containing much -------------------0 ------------------- introducing water In some of the wells tnore oil per ton. Reduction of shales and forcing the oil to others. The ad­ Involves an enormous mining opera­ dition of a chemical such as soda ash tion, and after the oil Is extracted the to the water may aestst In removing vaJt tonnage of refuse mult be dis- the oH from the sand grains, but n«l posed of. So It is expensive compared ther plsin water nor water containing producing oil from wells. chemicals should be introduced Into with Ben E. Lindsey of the Bureau of tn oil sand except a# a last resort, Mine» Experiment Station at Bartles­ for it Is likely that the water, which ville, Okla., is confident that explora- travebt faster through the «and. will tlon. better recoveries, better utiliza­ J get to the open well* ahead of the oil tion and deeper drilling would turn."h and when the flow le resumed under enough oil to mee; alt requirements NOTICE TO CREDITORS WINNER TAKE ALL date of this notice. pressure water will come out. for at least twenty-five to fifty years, Everything laved Nowadays If It could be extracted In that time Dated March 29th. 1927. .Notice is hereby (riven that the Date of first publication March The gas cacaplng from an oil well But «• a practical matter thle will not SPECIAL PRELIMINARY carries with It s proportion of gaso­ be possible. Within that period there undersigned has been duly appointed 31»t, 1927. dll be time« of shortage, wh*n oil line, which In the old day* was lost. administrator of the estate of Wil- Date of last publication April 28th Nowadays It I* extrge-ed from the gas from »hale« will be needed to supple- N IX JACK and saved, while the dry ga* can be mer.- 'h* oil from wells, etc. liam Wallace DeLapp, deceased, and 1927. back Into the ground to main­ HlUtlSM federal and «tate govern­ any and all persons having claims Sidney L. DeLapp, Administrator forced ments and the Industry are co operat­ against said estate are hereby re­ of the estate of William Wallace De tain One pressure ing In an astonishing range of inves­ of the menaces to most oil quired to present said claims, duly Lapp, deceased. DECISION MATCH pools Is the Inflow of subterranean tigation« and studies These activities verified as by law required at the water Water flows through the oil cover such s wide Held that even : n office of my attorney, W. A. Heyl- W. A. Heylman. Estacada, Or«- sand* faster than oil and by surround- enumeration of them wojud ran Into lag rb« botiem et tb* *»U kttps thsj urason* dstgil __ man. within fix months from tb« fon, attorney for Administrator. Next to the SELF-STARTER j U. S. Authority Sees Ample Motor Fuel for Long; Future COOKE MOTOR CO. o ROSES Our Bulletin Service WRESTLING MATCH Liberty Theatre ESTACADA, OREGON April 19 ESTACADA STATE BANK The Two Wild Bills THORNTON vs. DONOVAN LaFEVRE vs. GLISAN