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About Albany weekly democrat. (Albany, Linn County, Or.) 1912-1913 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1912)
r TWENTY SIX ARGUMENTS AGAINST ROOSEVELT ELECTION The following arc twenty-six of the 100 reasons (jiven by the New York World why Roosevelt should not again be elected president. More will be given in subsequent issues: 1. He has broken his solemn pledge not to be again a candidate and therefore no reliance can be placed upon any pledges or promises he may make to govern his future conduct. 2. He is. advocating the abandon ment of our established form of gov ernment a representative democracy and the substitution of a direct form of government. 3. 1 lis nomination would violate an established precedent and tradition against a third term, which his pres ent candidacy confirms as a wise clieck upon unscrupulous ambition. 4. The cost of living constantly in creased during his two previous ad ministrations. 5. There was no corresponding in crease in wages during his two terms as president. 6. He recommended no tariff leg islation in all the time he was presi dent to reduce the cost of living. 7. He has been the most expensive and extravagant president the United Stales has ever had. H. Mis elective term from 1905 to 1909 cost the people of the United States $3,522,9H2,K10.97, twice as much as the combined administrations of Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Mad ison, Monroe, John (Jtiincy Adams, Van liuren, Harrison, Tyler, J'olk,' Taylor, Fillmore, -Pierce and Huchan an. 9. His two administrations were unparalleled for extravagance, costing approximately $7,740,000,000 more than double the appropriation for the four years of the Civil War. 10. He has announced no plan nor declared any intention to reduce the cost of living, or to reduce taxation, or to reduce the extravagant expendi tures of government, or to do any thing that will materially benefit the people as individuals or as a nation. II. Upon the most vital question affecting the high cost of living the tariff he has no definite opinion and never had. No utterance of his com mits him to any concrete tariff policy or plan. 12. Ily threats and bullying he de stroyed coiidfidence and credit (in 1907), precipitating a panic resulting in the idleness of 2,000,000 working men and a loss in wages of $1,000, 000,000. I. i. No trust was convicted of a crime while he was president, despite his continued denunciation of wicked trusts. 14. There was not a single criminal prosecution by the government of any individual offender against the Sher man law while he was president, de spite his coiil imu'd d en uncial inn of "malefactors of great wealth." 15. lie refused to prosecute the Sugar Trust, although George II. Karle tendered liiiu ample evidence to obtain a conviction. 16. He forbade the prosecution of the Harvester Trust, of which his present chief financial hacker, George W. Perkins, was the organizer and ;i a director. 17. During his administrations the Iteef Trust was perfected with a cap ital of $200,000,000 ami an advance n prices id ,HJ per cent. IS. His prosecution of the Iteef Trust was abortive. At the final trial it was found that the most damaging evidence again;. t it was barred by the Statute of I. imitations. 1. He personally licensed the United States Steel Corporation, a billion-dollar truM, to absorb its chief competitor, the Tennessee Coal & Iron Co., a hundred-million dollar cor poration, which was accomplished by the payment of onlv $d.t2.(o5 in cash. giving t the Morgan interests, which he described as "so friendly to us," a practical monopoly ot the iron and steel business ol the country. 20. I M" $.S'7,25S,000 in 'dividends paid by the Standard Oil Company in the 25 years immediately preceding P'llO nearly one hall ot it was paid while he was president. 21. While he was president the number ot unlawful business combi nations increased from l-W with ap proximately $.l.0tK.000,(HHI capital to 10.020 wilh'approMinatelv $.(1,000,000.. 000 capital. 22. He declared that there would be no iuunuuily tor any criminal who could be readied under the (Anti Trust) law, but alo declared that the Anti-Trust law could not be enforced. M. He created an army of special agents anil spies, operating secret ly at a cost estimated as high as $7,000, IK'O in one year. 21. He denounced rebating (pun ishable by law! and refused to prose cute hi spei sonal h tend, 1'aul Mm ton, alter Motion had admitted on the wit Hess stand that as an oliicial of the A. T. - S b". Uaiboad he had author ized rebates to be paid to the Colora do h'liel - hou Company. 25. Alter promising and threaten ing to put rebate! s in jad, he put Uc baler Moiton in bis cabinet. 2(v According to Governor IVneen, of illinoi-.. he a-ked that eecutie not to prosecute I-'.. H. I I.m i im.m lor looting I he Alton Uaib o.id. on the ground that it would iliMinh business. MORE ARGUMENTS AGAINST Yi'tvi d,iv the I irim-vT.it pi inicd twi-utv M of tin- oik bundled w,i-.ns nixcn'bv the N. u oik mU u hv lxov.-i. v., It ,. .,:!.! n.-t .v.- n-i Iv v bvt i-d Une .ne vr.u- m.-w. JS Av-.m hit'.; to tV l-i .-.! ,i"hc! of thv l.tt.- Scn.Mor I lioui.oi . I I. itt he went ll.'.l IU il.Mlil In I'.o- I'l itt to a1! an m nb -I M-nieiii A-i-'ini See let. n v ol the v .uid f.-t it. : ' lie p, rsoi..llv ho.-, d Ju- Ke prMi- V.:i : .1 v .m. nt oi m I". S ard I .-: I' ! bi .lit Suit I o.: w n t I Nov .H IU- p,-;-oiMl!v ene.-ti: .! I II I!...,-' 1 1 -o t.,i-e .i v :r-., -m fund i 1 : : V ', ,n. h, :.ev o; t. : : i -1 i .m in- in. i ', :..,! .Vi-'i i 1 1 in . w V - it, ..! M. lo .1 u,... , i . i you, secretary of Commerce and La bor, which department had supervis ory power over corporations, as a collector of his campaign fund in 1904, derived chiefly from corporations. 32. He professes to favor publicity of campaign 'contributions, but has refused to make public the names of the corporations and the amounts they contributed to his campaign fund of 1904, although challenged repeat-; edly to do so. 35. His primary campaign has re sulted in the expenditure of the larg est campaign fund for the selection of delegates ever known in a national campaign. 43. He prostituted his powers as president add abused the legal ma chinery of the government by at tempting to revive an infamous se dition law to punish editors who had personally offended him. 44. He attempted to establish a precedent that a person indicted by a federal grand jury for an alleged ot fense upon a military reservation could be tried in any one of the 2,809 military jurisdictions of the United States. 45. Through the medium of an au thorized speech by Klihu Root he ac cused William Randolph Hearst of having been morally an accomplice to the murder of 1'resident McKinley, and two years later received Hearst at the White House. 47. The insurance graft at Al bany, exposed by the Hughes inves tigation, developed and flourished most during the years of 1899 and 1900, while Roosevelt was governor, lie made no attempt to check it and in his two annual messages ignored the subject of insurance. 50. He autocratically deprived the Iioston Herald of departmental news at Washington, including the weather forecast, because that paper had pub lished something that displeased him. 52. He has attacked the honor and capacity of nearly every"" judge who refused to decided cases according to his wishes. After Judge Anderson, of Indianapolis, decided against him in the Panama libel case, he called the judge "a crook and a jackass." 56. He caused the official records in the Harvester Trust to be taken from the files of the government de partment and sequestrated iu the White House, refusing Congress all information concerning them. 59. lie nullified in a large measure the Pure Food law by creating the Remseii Referee Hoard, which over ruled I Jr. Wiley and permitted manu facturers to continue the use ot cer tain adulterants. 6n. His efforts to ccntrahc power iu federal government and to create a multiplicity ot commissions and bureaus have tended toward Russian izing the government. 67. He has persistently appealed to the passions of the mob and to class prejudice, inflaming the poor against the rich and the rich against the poor. ()K llclorc Ins ambition and lust for power had become an obsession he wrote the following, which was published iu the Review of Reviews, September, 1896: "Furthermore, the Chicago convention 'attacked the Su prece Court! Again this represents a species of atavism that is, of recur rence to the ways of thought of re mole barbarian ancestors. Savages do not like an independent and tip right judiciary. They want the judge lo decide their way, and if he does not they want to behead him." He hs since been flagrantly guilty of at atav ism he condemned. 70. He has indulged in derogatory criticisms of many of his predeces sors iu the presidency, calling Jeffer son the "most incapable executive who ever filled the president's chair;" accusing Madison of "bringing shame and disgrace to America;" character izing Monroe, the author of the Mon roe Doctrine, as a "triumph of imbe cility to the last;" denounced Jackson as "ignorant;" attributed Van Huron's success to his "moral shortcomings;" referred contemptuously to Harrison, Taylor, Fillmore, Buchanan and Polk as "small presidents," and Pierce as a "small politician of low capacity and mean surroundings." WHY HE FAVORS CANDI DACY OF WILSON Henry Wade Rogers, deai' of the Vale Law School President Taft's own university nives his reasons in the New York American whv he will vole for Wondrow Wilson lor Presi dent. He says: "To punish the Republican party as the repi eentati e of the inercen ary interests that have preyed upon the people- for a generation, and to punish it for the sins of Ui Itusiuess in pai tnei liip with crooked politics. "Hecause the policies of the Repub lican party tend to make the rich rich er and the poor poorer. Those poli cies widen the gull between the rich and poor. The crying need today con t't out iiii; all eh died states is to n.u i ow I lie too - w ide unit" between those who aie too iich ami those who aie too poor. The Republican party in recent f.u;, and alter accomplish inn the abolition of slavet y. has shown a singular indifference to the diiiic injunction to consider the poor. "Ilec.uise Woodrow iUon pos see-i the enct e.y. the ability. til.1 e-ni.u;e. the independence, the re-pec! foi the c n l n nt ion an vl laws which .:e so neccN-uy it one is to till the hie.Ii olliee ot picMilcut of the l ulled Si. ites. -1 believe that his persoiul ,lMi ties -c stvh tlt.it he will he iimu- -V ces.!til ill kc!:iii tl: Ko.. Ion: elt K.-o -eelt c in l;.-i:i:i II, . I til, . V, -s,i;.. t..!l C or hi ini.f.:! Ke w.i-. I In-, m.iv , 'V... T. mi. .-. --till Willi loll. I. 1-., BOLD THIEF STEALS CECIL CATHEY'S GRIPS FROM TRAIN While Train Was Standing at Eugene Depot Man Walks Off with Sample Cases. Calmly walking through a passen ger coach on the Koseburg local train as it stood at the Eugene -station about 9:30 last night a tall, "bum" looking individual picked up several valises and grips belonging to other persons and started to walk out of the coach with them, says the Eu gene Guard. The owners of two of the grips which the man was carry ing called out to him to stop, that he had the wrong luggage, and he re turned them with apologies. C. C. Cathey, of Albany, was the owner of the other two which the man picked up, but he did not notice their dis appearance till he reached Cottage Grove. The thief was over behind the ware houses on the depot grounds and pro ceeded to demolish the larger of the two grips in order to get into it. He rifled the contents, but as it contain ed nothing of any great value, it is thought he left everything in it. The other was sent to Cathey this morn ing. The night police found the grips after they had received information of the theft. Those who observed the man tak ing the grips say there were two or three others with him, or they seemed tir be his companions. Some thought the man was really a thief, but most of the passengers thought he was simply mistaken and picked up the wrong grip when the two owners call ed to him to let theirs alone. The police have not located the nervy miscreant. Cecil Cathey, whose grips were stolen at Eugene, resides in Albany and is one of the city's most promi nent traveling salesmen. COURT HOUSE NOTES Warranty Deeds. Ida S. Chamberlain and bushany to Alma T. Morris. Sept. 24, 1912. 375 acres in Tp. 12, S. R. 2 west. $300.00. L. W. Dclanccy and wife to Jackson A. Bilyeu. June 25, 1912. Part of block 99 iu Montcith's Southern Ad dition to Albany. $2700.00. Jackson A. Bilyeu anil wife to I.. W. Delancey and wife. 'June .5, 1912. 225 acres iu Tp. 10, S. R. 2 west. $-1500.00. Probate, lit the matter of the estate of Elisha Ci. Sperry, deceased. Petition to pay claims granted. Circuit Court Proceedings. T. 1''. Miller vs. all whom it may concern. To register title. Marriage License. Tracy J. Tuniclift, Mill Ciiy. Ore gon, aged 34 years, oorn iu Oregon, anil lva May Meyer, Mill City, Ore gon, aged 20 years, bom in Michigan. Pete Williams, a well known farmer residing near Lebanon, returned home today after a short visit here with J. W. Douglas of the Pullman Cafe. J. W. McKnight of Portland who lias been visiting in Albany for the past lew days at the home of his son, 1J. II. Mcknight, left for the me tropolis this afternoon. MISFITS Contributed by F. P. Nutting "My dear Mr. 1 iarriniau," was the way Roosevelt bega-i nun. emus let ters the gre u :niM ma ;nat-!. the head o; -he Mteates: railroad trust in the worid. Tha: was .he way he mi i,d ih tru ts. Figures may not lie, but lots of liars who handle them do. When the men from Arkansas saw One never saw so many smiles As then come from the Arkansas Filling the air tor miles and miles. The Roosevelt idea is permeating Sunrise. For once the Democrats and Re publicans agree that Roosevelt should be defeated. There is a good deal of difference between about a thing and knowing; the tiling, a pointer for school child-i ten wanting to make it in life. The world is full of hungry hearts, says a late novel W ho w ill be the first to tell the Misfit man what one? i All human atcivity should eenkv i around the building up of better, S nomes, not more fashionable ones or' tr.r'e eo-tly ones. lUit real homes, lull of human sympathy, uusett;sh-tie-s and hclpfulne-s though placed in a twroom cottage. Af;er alt the old fashioned people ;a:e mighty e.ood citizens, with high er iile.iU than show and in--t a good ;inu in life. Mr t"o-.'e:i-.ni-u L.ifferty. Me m.-o::,1 e;.i-v Can't i-v 1 1 is to spend ail He 1-. eo:i. lan. e up t.e hi-', i-pi-ii Willamette :Me. o:-e .-.I'.li-'.r (or boats that e.ii-.y etU't'ch to eo'.-nt. N-ws e: Th's !i-.;c is ;! IV.v !;: . f r::r..Y. e.-.o. . .: 4. FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES WILL MIX IN BAG RUSH Edmund G. Anderson Will Lead ''Rookies" In Contest at the Agricultural College. The annual freshman-sophomore mix at the Oregon Agricultural Col lege will take place on the campul at the college tomorrow afternoon with 'Edmund G. Anderson of this city leading the "rookies" in the bag rush which will decide which of the two classes is the superior. The "bag rush" consists of placing eleven canvas bags in the center of the field where they arc left until a signal is given, when the two op posing sides rush to the center of the field where they attempt to secure the hags. The side carrying the most hags across the goal line lins. Edmund Anderson who has been chosen to lead the "rooks" in the bag rush is also giving a good ac count of himself on the football field and may be given a place on the reg ular eleven. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. I'. C. Anderson of this city. nnmnn rnma Tiir ininr brAhij thuja nt mm. e Boise, Idaho, Oct. 3. The supreme court of Idaho today took under ad visement the petition attacking the Hull Moose state ticket, which asks that the secretary of state be enjoined from certifying Progressive candi dates to be voted upon at the general election. The court announced that a decision would be rendered on or before Saturday. Portland, Oct. 4. Ten inches be low the throat, a three-inch safety pin, which had been swallowed by Wilma Wade, 12 years old, of Summerville, Or., and had been in her bronchial tubes for six days, was last night re covered in St. Vincent's hospital by two Portland physicians in an opera tion which is thought to be unique in Portland. No record of the recov ery of a safety pin under such cir cumstances was found in medical journals devoted to such operations. Xcw York, Oct. 3. Oscar Straus, aendidate for Governor on the Roose velt Progressive ticket, was indorsed for governor by the Independence League in state convention late to day. The vote was &9 for .Mr. Straus and 79 for William Sulzer, Democrat ic nominee for governor, whose name was the only other one placed in nomination. London, Oct. 3. Peace has been declared between Turkey and Italy. Under the agreement of settlement Turkey abandons sovereignty over Tripoli, the Sultan retaining only the spiritual claims. Turkey agrees to withdraw her troops and to endeavor to persuade the Arabs to lay down their arms. Italy agrees to assist Turkey in floating her proposed loan. New York, Oct. 3. General Dan iel E. Sickles must answer another $8000 suit. Disguised as messenger boys, process servers today were ad mitted to the veteran at 23 Fifth av enue and served him with a summons and complaint in the suit on a prom issory note. Trenton, X. J., Oct. 3. With many persons watching him at the inter state fair grounds this afternoon, Charles F. Walsh, while making a spi ral descent in a biplane, fell to instant death about. a quarter of a mile out side of the fair grounds. Practically every hone iu his body was broken and his face and bodv were badly cut. lie hail fallen 2000 feet. Bert Francis went to Brownsville this morning where he will do some plumbing this afternoon. Have you seen the beau tiful Porcelain Knameled Charter Oak Steel Range on display in our window We are going to give this Ran g e a w a v A B S O L U T E -LY FREE! Full particulars will be giv en at the store. JUST ARRIVED We have just received 75 of the (anions ALl.WIN go earts. ami (or a short time we will Rive a discount of 25 per cent on any cart in the SMre R. Rogowav & Son All Kinds of Seeds for Fall Planting at Murphy's Seed Store 225 We.t Second Street Fisher, Br;u!en& Co. ITNKRAI. MlirCTORS AND rNDERTAKl-KS l.iUr.a'M.iL: Pa-h tv, ;J iw.d I.ADY A TIT. N PA NT Iintli I'lioncs REGISTRATION OF LAND TITLE. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Linn County. In the matter of the application of Geo. S. Acheson, Jennie li. Gaff, Ber tha Dawson, W. B. Acheson, M. H. Acheson, John L. Acheson, and I. R. Acheson, to register the title to the following described real, property, to wit: Beginning on the South boundary line of, and West 6.66 chains distant from the Southeast corner of Section 34 in Township 12 South, Range 4 West or the Willamette Meridian, Oregon; and running thence West 33.34 chains to the Southwest corner of Lot 5 in said section 34; thence N'orth 27.15 chains to a point which is East 3.24 chains distant from the Northeast corner of the Donation Land Claim of G. W. Miller, being Notification No. 2238 and Claim No. 44 in said Township and Range; thence Hast 38 links; thence North 29.WJ chains to a point which is West 2.84 chains distant from the North west comer of the Donation Land Claim of Delilah White, being Noti fication No. 2214 and Claim No. 76 in said Township and Range; ' thence East 39.53 chains to the Northeast corner of said Claim No. 76; thence South 30.00 chains to the Southeast corner of the East Ell of said Claim No. 76; thence West 6.66 chains; thence South 30.00 chains to the place of beginning containing 218.34 acres more or less, all lying and being in Linn County, State of Oregon. vs. Edward A. Pero and Belle M. Pero, and all whom it luay concern. Defend ants. TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CON CERN: Take notice that on the 18th day of September, A. D. 1912, an application was filed bv the said Gen. S. Ache- SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Linn. Elsie Broadley, Plaintiff, vs. T. E. Broadley, Defendant. To T. E. Broadley, the above named defendant: In the Name of the State of Ore gon, you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled court and cause on or before the 15th day of October, 1912, and if you fail to ap pear and answer said complaint as nereby required, the plaintiff will ap ply to the court for the relief de manded in the complaint, to-wit: For a decree dissolving the bonds of mat rimony now existing between plaintiff and defendant, and a further order and decree decreeing to plaintiff the care, custody and control of the minor child of plaintiff and defendant, Louis H. Broadley, and for such other and further relief as to the court mav seem meet in the premises. This summons is served by nublica tion by order of J. N. Duncan, Judge of the County Court for Linn Countv. Oregon, duly made and entered of record on the 30th day of August 1912. directine that the same be nub- lished in the Albany Democrat, a newspaper published weekly in the city of Albany, Linn County, Oregon, for six consecutive weeks, the first in sertion thereof being on the 30th day ot August, lyiz, and the last publica tion thereof on the 11th day of Octo her. 1912. WEATHERFORD & WEATHER FORD, Attorneys for Plaintiff. A.W-Oct U. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an Order of Sale to me directed, issued out of the Circuit Court o( the State of Oregon for Linn County in the case o( H. F. Pcnne hakcr, plaintiff, vs. E. O. Grimes and Susan Grimes, defendants, I will on the 12th day of October, 1912, at the hour of one o'clock p. m. at the front dnnr of the Court House in Albany, Oregon, sell at public auction to tlie highest bidder for cash in hand the following described real propertv, to wit: All of the South half of the north east quarter of Section 24 in Town ship (9) Nine south of Range (1) one east of the Willamette Meridian, ly ing North of the right-of-way of the Oregon Pacific Railway Co. "(Corval lis & Eastern R. R. Co.) containing about (25) twenty-five acres and lying and being in Linn County, State of Oregon. Saul sale will be made to satisfy the judgment iu said case, to-wit: A judgment for the plaintiff for the sum ot $1. 15.3H with interest thereon from the 12th day of March. 1912, at the rate of 7 per cent per annum and the further sum of $'20.00 attorney's fees together with the cost and disburse ments of this action taxed and allow ed at $.kv.00 and cost of sale to be taxed. D. S. SMITH. Sheriff of Linn Countv. Oregon. "SU-OU son. Jennie B. Gaff, Bertha Dawson, W. B. Acheson. M. It. Acheson, John L. Acheson and I. R. Acheson. in the s.iui v.ncim v.ouri oi me Mate ot Ure gon for I. inn County, for initial regis- traiion of the title ot" the laud above described Now unless yon appear on or Fe tor the JSth day of October, A. D. l'12. and show cause why such appli- c-i.mu sn.iii not no granted, tl' v. i . t.tl-u u as confessed and a tie- crei will be enured according to the 1'Iaintn'f therein will apply to the praver of the application and you will above entitled court for the relief ile be forever b irred from disputing the i nianded in the complaint, to-wit: I'or , , n. lll'"ee dissolving the bonds of mat- lines- by hand and the seal of ; rimony now existing between plain said lireuit Court affixed this 18th I and defendant and for nlnintiii's A. D. 1912. -.li W. I.. MARKS. ut;tv Cl-.-r's-. ' Ihe Circa; Oiegon f.-r ! i'W i i I" ,v 5 AppHc-t-.t's vx-Ot'ficio CI f the State of ty. s. S27-Or I.s.per b. :irg i:i North " st - SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an Execution and Order of Sale to me directed, issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Linn County in the case ol" R. H. Liggett, Plaintiff, vs. Henry Loretz and Jennie Loretz, husband and wife, R. B. Leabo, Lee M. Travis. C. W. Liggitt, H. Bryant, August Fischer and Joe Harris, De fendants, 1 will on Saturday the 12th day of October, 1912, at the hour of one o'clock p. m. at the front door of the Court House in Albany, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand the following described real property, to-wit: beginning at the Southwest corner of the Xorth half of the Donation Land Claim of Russell Watts and wife. Xot. Xo. 2589 and Claim No. 43, in Township 13, South Range 4 West ot the Willamette .Meridian, Oregon, and running thence East on said division line 63. S2 chains, more or less, to a point which is 10.75 chains West of the East boundary line of the Southwest quarter of Sec tion 20 in said Township and Range, thence Xorth 7.25 chains, thence East 4.4JJ chains to the West bank of Lake Creek, thence Southerly up said Creek to the South boundary line of the Xorth half of said Claim No. 43, thence East on said division line 29.66 chains, more or less.' to a point which is 16.84 chains West of the East boundary line of said Claim No. 43. thence North 9.30 chains, thence West 2.0 chains, to the center of the County Road, thence North along the ccnted of said Road 15 degrees 30 minutes West 8.78 chains, more or less, to an interior corner in the South boundary line of a 105 acre tract conveyed to Duncan McLaren by deed as appears of record at page 358 of Vol. 97 Record of Deeds, said corner of said tract being situated in the Southwest quarter of said Section 20 in said Township and Range, thence West 20.70 chains to the East boundary line of a 30 acre tract first described, in a certain Deed to Chas. and Wm. McLaren as appears of rec ord at page 396 of Vil. 97 Record of Deeds, thence South 2.25 chains, more or less to the Southeast corner of said 30 acre tract last above mention ed, thence West 19.95 chains, thence North 15.05 chains to the North boundary line of said Claim No. 43, West 28 chains to the Northwest corner of the said claim No. 43, and thence South 30.04 chains, more or less, to the place of beginning, and containing 169.26 acres, more or less, lying and being iu Linn County, State of Oregon. Subject, however, to certain rights of way as described in two certain deeds of record at pages 396 and 358 of Volume 97, Record of Deeds. To satisfy the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants. Henry Loretr. and Jennie Loretz, for the sum of $5S62.58 together with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from the 26th day of August, 1912, and the costs and disbursements of this suit taxed and allowed at $ ; and t osatisfy a judgment obtained by Lee M. Travis against the defendant, Henry Loretz and Jennie Loretz in the sum of $411.59 with interest there on at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the 26th day of Aug ust, 1912; and to satisfy a judgment rendered in favor of R. 13. T.e.iho against the defendant Henry Loretz, in the sum of $194.34 with accruing in terest at 8 per cent per annum from the 6th day of August, 1912; and to satisty the judgment rendered against delendant Henry Loretz and in favor of H. Bryant for the sum of $11S2.40 with interest thereon from the 26th day of August, 1912, at the rate of eight per cent per annum; and to satisiy that certain judgment render ed against the defendant Henry Lor etz and in favor of Lee M. Travis on March 7, 1912, for the sum of $472.45 ini'ij ",lcr"l: tliereon from March 7, 1912, at the rate of eight per cent per annum and for the further sum of $.00.00 attorney's fees: and to sat isiy a judgment rendered against the defendant Henry Loretz in favor of August Fischer for the sum of $1005. 66 with interest thereon from the 26th day ol August, 1912. at the rate of six per cent per annum; and to satis ty a judgment in the sum of $253.38, rendered against the defendant Henry Loretz and in favor of C. W. I ig gett on the 18th dav of Julv, 1912. with interest tliereon at the "rate of six per cent per annum from the 26th day oi August. 1912. and the costs and disbursements of this ' execution and sale. ... D. S. SMITH, Snenti ot Linn Countv. Oregon. Dated this Sept. 11. 19P VEATIIERFORD & WEATHER- 1-OkD, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Sent. 13-0,-t. 11 SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon tor the Countv of Linn. Jessie Craft, Plaintiff, vs. Dick Craft. Defendant. To Dick Craft, defendant above nam ed: In the Name o( the State of Ore gon, you arc herein- r.mir 1 pear and answer the complaint filed ! against vou in the :ihm- ;,..,! .;. "lllllU SIX WeekS ironi l l,- I ret r,LI . i-ation nercot and on or before Octo- "i" ' :uui -vo" are lierebv noti tied that it you fail to answer said I complaint filed in l lie iU- n,,,i,l..,l i court and suit on or ti..t,ir0 c-,;.l ,li... costs and disbursements to be taxed. I Ins summons is served bv publi cation III the Albanv We.-klv Demn- l'fat, a v.cs'-.ly newspaper of general I circulation in Linn Cwnntv anil State ' I Ores- n. by order ot "Hon. I. X. i I'otuv.n. County Judge of Linn Coun- ". raadc at All.anv. Oregon. Sen- o"-i..i !-.'.. Date ol urst pui'- i:c:-.ti.-n September 12. in''- ,!, nf p"' lic-ition Oetobjr .24 l"! ' ( ;" ' i'. i K FORI) cc WEATHF.R- K'.U. Attorneys for 1'ltimtfi. ! Si3-02S WilHa v.s ot tin' Miil Citv