Seattle Republican

Friday, June 22, 1900

Seattle, Washington

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The SEATTLE REPUBLICAN Historical Society VOL. VII NO. 4 BROTHER IN BLACK As Found in Uncle Sam's Great Domain—Tuskegee Institute's Commencement Exercises—Much Money Raised and Disbursed—Louisiana's Disfranchisement Law—Some Glittering Negro Success—South African Republics and the Black Man. The 31st of May last saw the commencement exercises of the Tuskegee Institute, at the head of which is the world wide educator Prof. Booker T. Washington. The entire school presented a most cultured and refined lot of boys and girls, such as it would be hard to discount go where one would or might. The industrial part of the school attracted the attention of the most of the hundreds of visitors, white and black, that were in attendance during the entire commencement week. On dress parade 800 fine looking healthy young colored youths drilled on the campus grounds to the satisfaction of the admiring crowds. From the annual report, which is to soon be published in pamphlet form, the following financial facts have been abstracted in advance: Receipts for the year.....$197,630.00 Current expenses for the year.....94,490.08 Paid on last year's deficit.....29,355.71 Building and improvements.....22,916.80 Toward endowment fund.....47,407.10 Miscellaneous purposes.....1,961.00 Students have paid in cash, around the time.....0.001 toward their ex, ences ..... 9,901 00 Students have paid in labor toward their expenses ..... 63,102 93 There were forty-seven regular graduates this year, there were sixty-four the year prior, but the curriculum has been raised this year, which lessened the number of graduates: * The enrollment this year has reached 1,231, 872 boys, 339 girls. Twenty-even States, two Territories, Cuba, Porto Rieo and Africa have been represented. The enrollment last year was 1,164, 801 boys and 363 girls. Alabama leads with 485, Georgia 223, Mississippi 76, South Carolina 63, Texas 46, Florida 49, Louisiana 36, Tennessee 22. The following Northern States are represented: California, Connecticut, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, Ohio and Wisconsin. No industrial school in the country has reached so high a state of perfection as has the Tuskegee Institute, and that too, despite the fact that all persons concerned are Negroes. Even Northern schools would do well to pattern after Tuskegee and Southern white schools bear no comparison whatever to it. A bird's eye view of the workings of the Louisiana disfranchisement law may be seen from the following excerpt: A very strange and a dangerous feature of the Southern Negro is practically disfranchised. In many counties (parishes) there are very few white people, and a few dozen men are the rulers of thousands. In Concordia Parish, four of the eight wards cast only 40 votes and elected 12 officers. In the seventh ward of Caldwell Parish, but two votes were cast, and one vote was cast for the constable, and it elected him. East Carroll Parish cast but 167 votes; Madison but 151, and they elected full boards of officers and members of the legislature. The small vote is not due to lack of population. One ward which cast 7 votes has a population of 2,051; another which cast 2 votes has 506 inhabitants; and another which cast but one vote has 639, while yet another which cast a single vote for constable has 1,884 inhabitants, and would ordinarily have cast 450 votes. There is one element of discord here; for as representation in the State Legislature goes by total and not white population, it may well be that districts with a large white population, like New Orleans, may not like it to have ten of their votes balanced by one vote in the "black parishes." Rev. W. J. White, editor of the Georgia Baptist, whose columns are devoted to the Christianizing of the colored folk, had a narrow escapal from being treated to a similar dose as that administered to the Manly brothers of North Carolina some years ago, for reproducing an article from the Washington Bee, which article criticised the white people of Columbia, Georgia, for lynching a young Negro because he shot and killed a young white man that grossly insulted a young colored girl with whom the colored man was in company on a street car. Editor White was forced to sign a retraction in the presence of a howling mob made up of drunken scrapegraces with not sense enough to carry guts to a bear, vulgarly speaking, to the effect that he did not even know that the article in question was being put in his paper, and he felt certain that none of his help knew it. Of course Rev. White prevaricated, but under the circumstances he was excusable. In most of the Western towns where there are upwards of 500 colored citizens you can always find two weekly papers published therein styling themselves, "colored papers" Just how two such papers can succeed when it is impossible for one to succeed is the amusing thing of the situation. In the East, South and North, where there are thousands of colored folk in every community, you can not find more than two "colored papers" in a whole state and yet out West every 250 Negroes must have an "organ." Running a newspaper for the express purpose of bleeding candidates for office without displaying any ability to write a sensible article for insertion, does not reflect much credit on the man that is running it and certainly does not elevate the race to which the Negro, who runs such measely sheets, belongs very much in the eyes and estimation of the superior race of this country, who takes this cheap way of bidding for a few Negro votes. If "all coons look alike" to the Canadian-Australian Steamship Co., it will be bankrupt before it gets through paying all of the Coons in the United States the snug sum of $2250 each for refusing to carry the Earnest Hogan Comedy Company from Hawaii to Vancouver per contract on account of their color. The steamboat company refused to carry the company and the members thereof sued for damages and each got a judgement for the amount as stated above. There are 38 members in the company. Since the British people have always been unusually friendly to the black race it would seem that the late war there will prove a Godsend to the Negro, and he will be developed there as other places where British civilization prevails. Under the Boers the blacks fared very badly, and England has always stood between the Boers and the blacks. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1900. HAWAIIAN TRADE With the United States for the Past Five Years Compiled by Senator Lodge-It is Larger By Far than with Many of the European Countries and Exceeds our Trade With Turkey Ten Fold-Greater than Our Trade With Most of the South American Republics. (Special Correspondence.) Washington, June 19.—Senator Lodge is one of the most careful and thorough investigators of the expansion question in all of its bearings. He has just been examining the growth of our trade with Hawaii, and finds that five years ago, in 1895, the total Hawaiian trade with the United States amounted to only $11,500,000. Last year it reached $33,500,000, having increased almost threefold within five years, and most of this increase has occurred within the past eighteen months. The Senator says we may not think that a business of $33,500,000 amounts to very much, when our foreign trade is now running up into the billions, but to compare our trade with the Hawaiian Islands, with their handful of people, with our trade with some of the larger countries of the world, gives a better idea of the value of colonies to the United States. As a result of his investigations Senator Lodge finds that— Our trade with the Hawaiian Islands is over 100 per cent larger than our total trade with Austria-Hungary. It is 75 per cent larger than our trade with Denmark. It is 60 per cent as large as our total trade with Italy. It is nearly four times as large as our trade with Portugal. It is over 150 per cent greater than our total trade with Russia. It is almost double our trade with Spain. It is 125 per cent greater than our trade with Sweden and Norway combined. It is ten times as large as our trade with Turkey. It is nearly 30 times larger than our trade with Greece. Comparisons with countries on the American Continent show that Hawaiian trade with the United States is equal to 30 per cent of our trade with the whole Dominion of Canada. It is nearly 150 per cent greater than our trade with all the Central American states. It is 60 per cent as large as our trade with Mexico. It is 50 per cent larger than our trade with all the British West Indies. It is nearly five times as large as our trade with Porto Rico. It is three times as large as our trade with the Danish, Dutch and French West Indies, with Haiti and San Domingo included. It is almost twice as large as our trade with Argentine. It is almost half as large as our trade with Brazil, whence we import most of our coffee. It is nearly 400 per cent larger than our trade with Chile. It is nearly 400 per cent larger than our trade with the United States of Columbia. It is nearly fifteen times larger than our trade with Ecuador. It is more than six times larger than our trade with British, Dutch and French Guiana. It is ten times larger than our trade with Peru. It is ten times larger than our trade with Uruguay. It is more than five times larger than our trade with Venezuela. He then makes comparisons with countries across the Pacific, and finds that our trade with Hawaii is within six million dollars of being as large as our trade with the Empire of China. It is more than three times as large as our trade with Honkong. It is nearly half as large as our total trade with all the British, Dutch and French East Indies, which send us such large supplies of sugar. It is equal to 65 per cent of our total trade with Japan. It is more than five times larger than our last year's trade with the Philippines. It is nearly twenty times larger than our trade with Asiatic Russia. It was larger by four million dollars than our trade with the whole of the Australasian Colonies last year, with their five millions of people. It was larger last year by more than three million dollars than our trade with the entire continent of Africa. Senator Lodge says the increase in our trade with Hawaii has been very marked since its annexation by the United States, and he looks for equally rapid improvement in our trade with Porto Rico and the Philippines. These colonies will absorb some of our surplus manufactures, and they will also draw upon this country for their provisions, thus increasing the demand for the products of American farms. Kansas has made another record. Not content with plastering the walls of her State buildings with cancelled mortgages; not content with doubling her bank deposits since 1896; Kansas now has but one inmate in the State poor farm. Dining-halls and bedrooms that a few years ago were crowded with the idle, with the hungry, and with the poorly clad, now echo and re-echo the solitary tramp of their one sole inmate, who is without kith or kin, and who is too old and feel le to work. But one sad relic remains in the Kansas poorhouse, to remind the taxpayers of the days when its free soup, free bed and free clothes were donated to those who were compelled to idleness under a Democratic Administration, and under its policy of destruction to all American industries, both of farm and factory. The trusts are not having things their own way by any means. Officers and directors of the Ice Trust, of New York, have been summoned to show why they should not be proceeded against criminally on the charge of conspiracy. They are accused of restraining and preventing competition. There is no tariff on ice, therefore it can not be an offspring of protection. Its parentage has been traced directly to Tammany Hall, which is robbing the poor of New York and depriving the people there of a summer necessity. Senator Fairbanks, of Indiana, wrote the report, which he afterwards submitted to the Senate recommending the passage of the bill to extradite Neeley, also of Indiana. It is a strong argument in support of the Administration's policy of probing the Cuban scandal to the bottom, and doing it promptly. Wanted: By a colored man and woman a place to do work in a private family. Woman good cook and man an all around handy man about the house. Apply at this office for further information. UNIONISM WRONG Causes More Distress Among Laboring Men than it is Ever Productive of Good-Union Laborers Not so Successful in Life as Non-Union Men-Their Representatives Not True to the Cause they are Elected to Battle for-Unionism Proves to be a Failure. We do not think any class of men in the United States are doing the country as much real harm as the union labor organizations. Here is a partial list of the damage they have caused in St. Louis during the present troubles there: Loss in trade ($750,000 per day for thirty days), $22,500,000. Loss in salaries to wage earners thrown out of employment, $500,-000. Loss to transit company in fares ($20,000 per day), $600,000. Cost of citizens' posse so far $50,000. Cost of extra police, $50,000. Extra cost in guarding property of company, $20,000. Loss in wages to 4,000 strikers, $240,000. Loss to property caused by rioting, $20,000. Number of strikers. 4,000. Number of strikers, 2,000. Number of women and children depending on strikers, 20,000. Street railway systems affected, thirteen. Mi es of track owned by the transit company, 200. Thus it will be seen that the loss to St. Louis thus far aggregates the enormous total of nearly $24,000,000. With the citizens' posse on the pay roll at a daily cost of $10,000, this figure is likely to be greatly increased before the end of the strike. On the citizens' posse are a number of men prominent in the business and social community. Several millionaires are among them. As in this case so in all others, and yet labor unions can not point to any great good they have accomplished for humanity since they first became known to this country. We believe that statistics will bear us out in the allegation, that among that class of laboring men, who do not belong to labor organizations and work for moderate salaries, more wealth and comfort are to be found than among the labor union men who work for big wages. The labor unions have forced high wages in many instances, but the laborers do not seem to enjoy the wages they earn, and, if the laborers themselves enjoy it, then the families of the laborers do not do so. While on the other hand, the laboring men who hold themselves aloof from labor organizations have good homes and their families enjoy their earnings. Perhaps there is eminent need of labor organizations in this country, but they appear to be very poorly managed and directed, hence the charge, "they do more harm than good." Laboring men should understand each other and, perhaps, unite for their own good, but when men have to unite for the express purpose of violence and wholesale destruction to defy the very laws that they themselves make, then it looks as though something is wrong with the men. If the laboring men can sufficiently unite for violence they can sufficiently unite for the enactment of laws that will regulate such things, but no. Notwithstanding the fact that the laboring men are fully five to one in this country over the capitalists and their fol- LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON APR 28 1952 PRICE FIVE CENTS lowers, yet laboring men can not be trusted in the legislatures to make laws for their own good. Send a laboring man to the legislature and he passes laws diametrically opposed to what the labor unions declare to the best interest of the laboring men, showing very conclusively that the laboring legislator undergoes either a change of heart or he has no sympathy with the cause of his fellow workmen. The laboring men in the United States can elect every official in the country if they would, and, if their cause is so just, it seems that they would do that very thing and thus right all wrong and have things so run that they would not be imposed upon, but they do not, and, it therefore stands to reason, that the labor union strikes and struggles are on the wrong road to reach the earthly millium they talk so much of. WILLIAM McKINLEY THEODORE ROOSEVELT Were the unanimous choice of the National Republican Convention for president and vice president. Each nomination was made by acclamation. The Philadelphia convention was the most enthusiastic Republican convention ever held. ```markdown ``` According to the Ballard News Jule Reidelsheimer is responsible for the following as to our coming Fourth of July celebration: The eagle's goin' To howl and yell, An' flop his wings And screech; He's goin' ter get Up early too, To wake up all in reach. He's goin' to make Seattle ring; He's goin' to rip and tear; He's goin' to roost on Highest peak And split some ambient air; He's going to rise up In his might, An' circle 'roun' an' sail, An' durn the duck That thinks he kin Put salt upon his tail; He's goin' ter rip The upper air, An' sail down on this town An' let a few Gol durnest whoops That ever hit the Soun'; He's goin' to spread Them wings of his'n An' sail right down our way, An' make us folks A-livin' here, Dead stuck on Elliott Bay. Here is the situation in a nut shell as to a comparison between McKinley and Bryan, the opposing presidential candidates: Hon. William McKinley My chances for President. Prosperity Protection Upright public and private career Good wages Work for everybody Honest statesmanship W. Jay Bryan My chanches for President Free silver Free trade Populism! Wreck" 16 to 1 Ruin!!! Etc. The Seattle Republican Telephone, Maln 305, The Fepublican Pub. Co., Publishers OFFICE 612 THIRD AVENUE H. R. Cayton, Editor Susie Revels Cayton, Associate SUBSCRIPTION RATES: On Year.....2.00 Six Maths.....1.00 Three Months.....60c Advertising rates Furnished upon application Entered at the Postoffice at Seattle as Second Class Mall Matter. Ankeny nervine does not prove a very strong bracer for the Tacoma Ledger. "Favorite Son" sandwitches were freely passed around in Philadelphia this week. Patent editorials continue to flourish on the editorial page of some of our most valued exchanges. China bumped up against the "allied forces" last Monday, and got a bad jar. Don't get foolish, little man. According to the Ballard News Miss Goose has been married. What a goose. Now look out for a flock of gooselings. Germany has a Chinese kick coming and we would not be surprised if the Boxers did not get a beer box before many months. California was prepared to "wine and dine" the National convention, but the convention was not prepared to vice president California. Senator Frink seems to have decidedly the best of it in King county in the race for the nomination for governor.—Port Orchard Independent. Trouble of a very serious nature is most likely to be reported from Nome within the coming season. It has already begun to brew and brew very fast. This "native son" business out West is beginning to be a nuisance of the worst kind. What we need is more working sons and fewer native sons to boast of. If the gold continues to pour down from the North all summer as it has for the past two weeks storage room at the assay office will be in great demand. Wheat, we see from some of our exchanges, is rising in price very rapidly. More trouble ahead tor Bryan. The hand of providence seems to fight the free silver statesman. Ex-Queen Liloukiliana has come to the conclusion that Uncle Sam does not intend to keep her in idleness and foot the bills. Her stay in the United States was at least productive of something good. The buconic plague is becoming a serious thing in San Francisco and unless San Francisco watches it with an eagle's eye it will become a serious thing for the Pacific Coast Steps are being taken to establish a national Negro party.—Chelan Leader. And backward steps they will prove to be ere the party has been organized very long. It is true that the Republicans in Oregon are not quite so strong as they were two years ago, but they are four times stronger than they were four years ago, which makes it a sure McKinley state. Whoever calculates that there will not be a heavy vote polled at Cascade Tunnel in November are reckoning from false conceptions. — Wenachee Advance. Well, Seattle is a bit interested in that Cascade Tunnel vote her ownself, and we are glad to get the information that, it is well to keep an eye on that vote. We trust, however, that the voters up there will not vote on both sides of the mountain the same day. "Going camping" means something this year. Three or four months breathing spell from rent paying will cut quite a figure in your next winter's supply store. Yes, by all means go camping and stay not less than five months. It occurs to us that the Olympia Capital is giving itself a good deal of unnecessary bother about John L. Wilson and the Republican party. If it will only successfully work the Bryan wind wagon it strikes us that it will have its hands full. Alfred Battle for governor of Washington. Well, thats the caping climax of the season's political prognostications. Now add Bob Bridges for president of the United States, and the quintessence of political rediculousness will have been predicted. Neither Democracy or Republicanism is anxious to be known as the sire of trusts, and yet trusts have flourished under Democracy and likewise Republicanism. If trusts are evils both parties should be patriotic enough to come together and supress them. Francis, Pacific county, this state, sustained a $4,000 fire not long since, which threw twenty-one men out of employment and caused the closing down of an extensive lumber industry of that locality. Such losses as that always hurt any community. Mr. Clay Clement has undertaken something that no other actor has ever before had the courage to do in Seattle, and that is to play at the Seattle theatre for three successive weeks. If he proves a success more of such will be done in Seattle during the next theatre season. Wood, the government land shark, may have had his ups and downs, but he wants Attorney Gay to distinctly understand that he will have no more striped up and down anyways soon. He may have skinned the would be timber land settler, but he skinned him so slick that the settler did not even know that he had been skinned. Enthusiastic politicians of all parties are predicting unprecedented success for their respective parties at the coming fall election. Unless something is done to head off some of the partisan success that has been copiously promised, this country is liable to have a half a dozen or more presidents and equally as many minor office holders. "Bryan will win," sagely announces one Col. Robertson of Spokane, meaning of course that Bryan will win in the coming presidential contest. We suspect that was the thousand and one time that Col. Robertson and men of his political ilk have made this or a similar assertion since Bryanism first rose above the political horizon, and we are of the opinion that he is just as far off this time as he was before. Mr. Bryan will undoubtedly wind. Tacoma Newspapers. As was predicted by this paper some months ago the Tacoma News has about put the Tacoma Ledger to sleep for all time to come, and it will be but a few days more and the old vagabond morning sheet will be a thing of the past. It has passed through a tempetuous storm for existence since the News first withdrew from its support, and judging from the quietness that prevails about its quarters during business hours it will not much longer survive the terrible storm toss that it has pasted over in its attempt to keep its head above the waters. Levi Ankeny, the would-be-senator, who gets his leg pulled on every proposition that is in the throes of death, went to its rescue, but on looking over the situation and experimenting with a few thousand dollars in the rat hole, and noting the rapidity with which it disappeared, has about abandoned the idea of trying to administer JOHN H. McGRAW GEO. B. KITTIN ROOM B, BAILEY BUILDING TELEPHONE. MAIN 695 REAL ESTA Fire and Marine Insurance FOR SALE A modern 9-room lighted by gas and convenience; splendid under whole house cost $5,000. Proven over $6,000. Beaute tween two car li from Pioneer Square ful flowers and shr sewered, very si Will sell for A modern 9-room house, with bath, lighted by gas and electricity; every convenience; splendid repair; cellar under whole house. House alone cost $5,000. Property stands owner over $6,000. Beautifully located, between two car lines, eight minutes from Pioneer Square. Lawn, beautiful flowers and shrubs, cement walks, sewered, very sightly, fine view. Will sell for $4,000 One-Half Cash, One-Half Cash, Balance 6 Per Ct. enough "golden medical discovery" into it to make it live in spite of fate. Since Shultz first started in to kill the News and Sammy Perkins, the proprietor thereof, both financially as well as politically, the Ledger has had to travel a rocky road. At present it is issuing about 3,000 papers daily and its columns are filled with news and editorial stuff, one column of which often contradicts what is said in another. In a nut shell, the Ledger is a hot newspaper tomalie, and it has changed ownerships since Shultz left it not less than a half a dozen times with fair prospects of it changing hands again within the next fortnight, unless that new loan is cared for by some aspiring politician. "Seattle has a great paper in the Post-Intelligencer," said a number of business men to the writer one day this week during a visit to the City of Destiny, "but we want you to know that it is finding a close second in the Tacoma News, which has grown from a 2,500 circulation per day to the enormous sum of 12,000 per day." The News to our personal knowledge completely covers the entire southwestern part of the state and gets news to that section of the country fully twenty-four hours ahead of any other daily paper published in the state. The News has had a phenomenal growth since Mr. Perkins has had charge of it and the merchants as well as the business men in general are very proud of it." That the business men of Tacoma do appreciate the News is shown from the advertising columns of the paper. The busy bustle about office and counting room of the News present a striking contrast to the quietness that prevails about the Ledger, and the leading Tacoma citizens, though with regrets, yet freely admit that the Ledger is looking the inevitable square in the face at --- GEO. B. KITTINGER ESTATE --- om house, with bath, and electricity; every endid repair; cellar use. House alone property stands owner beautifully located, beines, eight minutes are. Lawn, beauti- crubs, cement walks, eightly, fine view. Balance 6 Per Ct. this time, and its faint as well as fickle light must and soon will be blotted out forever. "He that diggeth a ditch for his neighbor will himself fall therein." THE NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE H. C. HENRY, Pres. R. R. SPENCER, Cashier SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT F. JOHNSON Pike Street's Leading Grocer TEL. PIKE 28 614 PIKE STREET, SEATTLE, WASH. R. W. BUTLER CARPENTER. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Jobbing plumty attended to. Basement Pioneer Building, First avenue and James street. Telephone White 662. SEATTLE, WASH. McGraw & Kittinger Real Estate, Fire and Marine Insurance DOOM R. BAILEN BLOSSOM ROOM B, BAILEY BLOOK BATTLE CREEK SANITARIUM BATHS 309 Columbia street. Open night and day. SPENCER & CO. A. M. Spencer, Newton S. Lethield, Leland Spencer Real Estate and Business Opportunities We Pay Agents from 2½ to 5 Per Cent BASEMENT P.-I. BLOCK TEL. MAIN 585 WM. H. FINCK Pioneer Jeweler, Established 1882. Watches Jewelry, Silverware, Clocks and Optical Glues, Scientific Office, Wash. Repairs, 816 Second Avenue, Seattle, Wash. Lloyd's Wood Depot Coal, Wood and Bark delivered in small or large lots. 7th and University. The San Diego Fruit Co. 415 Pike Street That's the Place D. B. SPELLMAN Pacific Plumber and Gasfitter: Sanitary Plumbing a specialty. 212 "Columbia St. Telephone Black 1621. Kindly remember our advertisers when you buy. Also speak a good word for THE REPUBLICAN. --- We'll Guarantee That Your Patronage Will Be Ours If You Will Look ...AT THE... OME SUMMER SUITS ...AT... $10, $12, $15, $3 $20 It's Values and Qualities Do Our Advertising KLINE & ROSENBER ...AT... 2, $15, $18, $20 and Qualities That r Advertising & ROSENBERG $10, $12, $15, $18, $20 It's Values and Qualities That Do Our Advertising No. 625 First Ave., Seattle Washington's Largest Men's and Boys' Clothiers Agents for Dr. Jager's Underw A Good Man Gone Wrong We are constrained to think this of a man who persist in the use of a poor light, to the everlasting ment of his sight, which can never be restored, we can get the well-known WELSBACH light for office or residence, thereby getting absolutely the fines known, and for the least expense. 's Largest Men's and ys' Clothiers r. Jager's Underwear Man Gone Wrong ed to think this of a man who will poor light, to the everlasting detri- which can never be restored, when he a WELSBACH light for office, store getting absolutely the finest light st expense. Washington's Largest Men's and Boys' Clothiers Agents for Dr. Jager's Underwear A Good Man Gone Wrong We are constrained to think this of a man who will persist in the use of a poor light, to the everlasting detriment of his sight, which can never be restored, when he can get the well-known WELSBACH light for office, store or residence, thereby getting absolutely the finest light known, and for the least expense. She Lost Her Temper And who could blame her? She had one of those bands who took no note of little things to reliably partially of the burden of housekeeping. Had he put a GAS RANGE his expenses would have been less his wife happier. her? She had one of those hus- note of little things to relieve her of housekeeping. Had he provided expenses would have been less and And who could blame her? She had one of those husbands who took no note of little things to relieve her partially of the burden of housekeeping. Had he provided a GAS RANGE his expenses would have been less and his wife happier. Let Us Supply the Remedy SEATTLE GAS & ELECTRIC CO. S & ELECTRIC CO. SEATTLE GAS & ELECTRIC CO. Tel, Main 96 214-216 Cherry Street. ALBERT HANSEN JEWELER AND SILVERSMITH ..Dealer in.. Diamonds, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver- ware, Rich Cut Glass, Ets. 706 FIRST AVE., SEATTLE. THE BEST PEOPLE Use the BEST ice and that is..... DIAMOND ICE Tel. Pike 159 Jacob Furth, President; E. C. Neufelder, Vice-President; R. V. Ankene, Cashier Correspondence in all the principal cities of the United States and Europe NEW ENGLAND MARBLE AND GRANITE CO. Telephone Green 891, Cor. Sixth Ave. and Pike Street, Seattle, Wash. Twenty-five Years' Experience in Civil and Criminal Cases Satisfactory work guaranteed. Strictly confidential. Tel. Black 301. Washington Dental and Photographic Supply Company Kodaks and High Grade Cameras, 211 Columbia street, Seattle --- HANDSOME Lewellyn & Ward NEW ENGLAND MARBLE AND GRANITE CO. Telephone 801 60th Ave, and Pike Green Street, Seattle, Wash. ```markdown ``` Political Pot-Pie. On the Republican side of the house this year there will bes startling array of candidates for state offices, more, perhaps, than ever before. This is accounted for owing to the fact that the nominees of the Republican party will be elected by not less than 10,000 majority, and there is no ring in the state which is able to dictate the nomination of any man for a state office. Its something of a free for all fight and every man that is a candidate feels that nomi- nation lightning is just as liable tohit him as the other fellow. Of course there aré many local combinations in various parts of the state that fare backing some favorite candidate for the nomina- tion, and this local organization is spasmodieally trying to get out- side local organizations to take up their candidate, but up to the present writing no very formid- able combinations havo been made for the nomination of any number of state officers, Mr. Levi Ankeny has his friends in Walla Walla county and with the aid of another $10,000 may be able to use the next delegation from Walla Walla as he sees fit. Hon. John L. Wil- son has his following in Spokane county, and, it looks as though he will rule the roost there. Mr. Wilson has friends in other sec- tions of the state and you need not be surprised if he has a finger in the pie in naming some of the next state candidates for office on the Republican ticket. The leading candidates for governor up to the present writing are: Hon. J. M. Frink, Mayor T. J. Humes and Hon. E. Heistor Guie, Seattle; J. O.B. Scobey, Olympia; Hon. S. G. Cosgrove, Pomeroy ; Gen. J. J. Wisenburger, ipaiatorn- Mr. Frink is struggling to get the endorsement of the King county delegation, and, if he sue- ceeds in doing that he will doubt- less have Spokane county, Pierce county andalarge shee of the northwest, as well as a part of the southwest delegations. Central Washington will likewise give him some strength, with all of this eom- bined, he feels certain, it will bring to him votes enough to nominate him for the governorship without a straggle. The indications at present are to the effect that Mr. Frink will get King county's en- dorsement and that her entire dele- gation will go to the next state Republican convention instructed to votefor J.M. Frink for gov- ernor, Mayor Humes like Mr. Frink expects first the King county en- dorsement and for that he is mak- ing a most desperate effort. In case he gets that he will be backed by the Levi Ankeny following over the state. In short, if he is endorsed by his home county he declared he will be the next gover- nor of the Evergreen State. Mr. Heister Guie wants first the endorsement of King county and then he is to receive the entire Northern Pacific railroad follow ing in the state. Senator Foster is in this deal, for there seems to be no doubt but that Foster is Crow. ley & Groscup's United States senator by proxy. The Northern Pacifie is using the lash very ex- tensively at present to whip the Republicans into line for support. ing Mr. Gnie for governor. Hon. J. O'B. Scobey is perhaps the next strongest gubernatorial candidate after Mr. Frink. It is said that he will be backed by the entire southwest in his ambition, and should Levi Ankeny see that there are no prospects of him landing his King county stalking horse, it is claimed, by men who seem to know whereof they speak, that he will throw his entire strength to Scobey. He is also strong in the northwest as a second choice candidate, but should Mr, Scobey show any signs of wanting to hook up with Mr. 4nkeny he will loose some of his strength even in the southwest, Hon. 8. G. Cosgrove, the Pome. roy war horse of the bunch gras: section of the state, boasts of being tied to no politician’s coat tail, bu is paddling his own canoe. How much strength He will have for the governorship in the next state convention he himself does no! now know, but he is a candidate and, in case there comes a dead. lock among the leading candidates, he predicts himself as the con. vention’s choice for governor. He will take to the convention a strong following from Central Washing. ton and will pick up scattering votes from other sections quite enough to give hima formidable following to do the coup d'etat act at the proper time. New Whatcom’s candidate, Gen. J.J. Weisenburger can hardly be said to bea candidate for gover- nor in the common aceeptation of the term. He has no following either at home or abroad, s0 to speak, but he hopes, owing to the part he played in the Philippine war, to gather enough popularity about him when the Republicans come together to storm the conven- tion, All the same Teddy Roos- velt—but he will not get a single vote is the prediction of the Pie- maker, for Western people have long since outlived the hero wor- ship business. There are numerous dark horse candidates for the governorship of this state, who are laying their wirés for political lightning to trek to their domiciles in case the other fellows get into a general squabble over the place. While the contending factions in King county will fight each other with a vengance for party supremacy, yet it will be settled at the pri- maries and settled once for all, and the fellow getting the endorse- ment will be the choice of the entire county and the same will be true of the other places. It will be the man that wins out that will sneceed and the dark horse eandi- date will be non est. e mo But few politicians have uppear- ed on the scene to claim the lien- tenant governorship asyet. Judge McBride of Skagit county, claim- ing the northwest is backing him, has announced that he will aspire for the honor. If it be true that he can go to the state convention with a practically solid northwest he will stand some show of getting the nomination, but, if the north- west has a number of candidates for the various places on the state ticket, and be unable to concen- trate their forces on any particular candidate, then Jndge McBride will stand no show whatever of getting the coveted prize. He is reported as haying no strength in any other locality. moe The Pie-maker has been credit- ably informed that J. W. Arra- smith, who was a candidate four years ago for the lieutenant goy- ernorship, will ask for a renomina- tion this year at the hands of the Republican state convention. Mr. Arrasmith hails from the Ankeny part of the state and he doubtless will have Whitman county at his back. If he can also control the Ankeny influence in his favor he will be a good strong candidate for the lieutenant governorship nomination. am It is reported, and reported on it is reported, and reported on very good authority at that, that Samuel Nichols of Snohomish county wil! be a strong candidate for secretary of state. This place, it is thought by many politicians, should go to the northwest to counteract the influence that the renomination of Will D. Jenkins for the same position might have in that section. Nichols is said to be very popular, and, if he proves to be popular enough to more than half organize the northwest, he is most likely to be nominated for the secretaryship. neo ‘Two candidates for state trea- surer have come under the obser. vation of the Pie-maker in the persons of ©. I. Maynard of Lewis county and James H. Price of Tharston county. Mr. Maynard is of the opinion thathe can bring |the southwest in for him instead of it coming to the state conven- tion for Scobey, which, if true, will go a Jong ways toward making him a power in the next state con- vention for the office he seeks. Mr. James H. Price hails from Thurston county this year and is only a candidate in case there is no show for Scobey. He feels that he ean more than break even with Maynard in the southwest, and, owing to former friendship and association with Pierce county, get its support and for “the same reason draw from King and Spo- kane counties, aoe It seems that J. E. Frost is the only serious candidate for state auditor. He hails from Kittitas county and expects to handle the most of central Washington in his favor in the convention. He was defeated four years ago at the hands of the free silver craze and he thinks himself quite entitled to a renomination, which is quite correct, cowed Chelan, Douglas and Okanogan counties have already agreed to support John D. Atkinson for state land commissioner. Mr. Atkin- son was formerly a Seattleite and he reasons that, if he can get that part of the state to come out for him with a bold front he would find plenty of warm friends in Seattle to pick up the cause and stand by him in the state conven- tion. He is making many friends in his candidacy and it looks as though he would sueceed. oad The Pie-maker was just about to overlook the claims of J. M. Hitt of Pt. Townsend, who isa candidate for secretary of state, providing things run smoothly and the northwest will combine on him. baad W. B. Stratton of Pacific county hag been in the field for some weeks for the attorney generalship and is making a thorough cam- paign. He is certain of the south- west as a unit for himself, in the] convention despite the fact that it isnot probable that more than one candidate will come from that section. He declares that candi- date will be himself and to that end he is cutting his eards. noo There will be two supreme judges to be nominated and so far as the Pie-maker has been able to. learn some four candidates have announced themselves. A. L Miller, Vancouver; R. O. Dunbar, Klicitatt; John E. Humphries, King and Milo A. Root also of King. These are all good strong candidates with more or less per- sonal following, and each will make a desperate struggle for the nomination. noo No reference has been made to the two congressmen that are to be nominated, for it is generally con- ceeded that both Jones and Cush- man will be re-nominated by ac- clamation. In case the census declares that Washington is en- titled to another congressman Whateom county is said to be laying dead for the place and Jesse Frye is to bethe man. The next census may declare Washing- ton is entitled to four members of congress in the lower house, and in that case Judge Wallace Mount of Spokane will be a candidate for the fourth plaee. aon F “Noman can go to the next county convention from the Bee DR cee en Oe ae i aa “Noman can go to the next county convention from the Seventh ward, who is not for E. Heister Guie first, last and all time, and this oven includes the First precinct of the Seventh as well as Hon. Edward B. Palmer,” is what Attorney Joseph W. Gre- gory is said to have given utter- ance to one day this week. Per- haps Mr. Gregory can speak offi- cially for his immediate precinct, but, in the opinion of the Pie- maker, thus far and no further. The Pie-maker bas no iden what the Seventh intends doing asa unit, but it will hardly substan- tiste any euch wreckless remarks }as that from Mr. Gregory. Mr- Frink has almost as many friends out in the Seventh as Guie and if it comes to a square fight it will be demonstrated to the entire satis. faction of both Guie and Humes. om The all absorbing topic in Re- publican circles at present is, What willbe the result of the primary election? “It is an easy matter to capture the primary election, if you only understand the art,” said a prominent politi- cian one day this week, “and if the Republicans do not watch things they will see that George Piper will have the city primaries bot- tled before they know where they are at. It will be remembered that Piper lent Lee Hart valuable assistance in the late Democratic primaries, and Hart promised to return the compliment to Piper in the fall Republican primaries. Now in precincts where Piper knows he will lose with Republi- cans it would be an easy matter for him to run in enoagh Demo- cratic and Populist votes to turn the tide in his favor. The poles should be carefully watched on the day of the primaries and every vote that looks suspicious should be challenged.” anne Speaking about primary elec- tions the Pie-maker heard the following from a Tacoma politi- cian one day this week. “Iam in favor of voung for candidates in the primary election and tie ean- didate getting the highest number of votes in the primaries to be declared the party nominee, There is absolutely no fairness in the world in the present primary system. For candidates and their friends can vote opposite parti- sans and elect delegates to the convention that will vote diemetri- cally opposite to the will of the people. Place your candidate's name ona ballot and vote for him direct and that will prove far more satisfactory. Bert Taylor claims he is out of polities and perhaps he will not go to the next county cenvention: Bert occasionally has “blue days” when he talks that kind of staff. but they do not last long. He will be there if the convention is ever assembled. Notice. Notico Is hereby given, that the boasd of county’ cominsstoncis ot King eatnte Wsk Ingo, “wilt meet on the tah aay ot Hees HB ie ofc fn che ang ‘cy a hott in Seatilo, to "henr_and® dcteraiue te Advieability ot selling’ those. certatt feate thalidines how owned by the. county’ of King thd logeted’ oo what is knows as ue eure Sihtotway, to'wite Pieame balding on lot 9, block 79, Denny's & Hoyts Addition Trane buildlig on 1ot7, block 8, Denny's & Hoyts Addition US Trame. bulidings on lot 8, block 80, Denny’s Hoyts Addition’ “frame bullding on 10t5, block 8, Denny's & Hoyts Additions ‘frame buflding on lot 2, plock 0, Denny's acHogts additions frame ‘bullding on lot 1, block 80, Denny's Hoyts additions ‘frame ‘buflding on lot, block 1, Denny's seHoyts Addition” frame tnildini on Tot 20, block 74, Denny Hoyts abuition’ ‘irame Dullding on 2ot 18, block 74, Deny’ a Hoyts Addo ‘frame Dullding on Lot 11, block 78. Denny aeHoyts Audion ‘frame bullding on lot 12, block 8), Denny's Hoyts Addition, THframe bullding on lot 1, block s0, Denny's se tloyt's Addition frame building on 1ot 9, block 8, Danny’ & Hoyts Additions T"frae building on lot 19, block 20 Roes Supplement Addon, iitkame.‘batlding on 1ot2,bloek 40 Koss Sup plement addition® Bone atthe King county court house in Seattle this 23nd day of May 100 2 1 Bexxsoxs, Clerk of the Board of county "Commissioners Notice to Creditors. In the Superior Court of King County ‘Washington. Inthe matter of the estate of Andrew C Freeborn, deceased. ‘No. ———~. Notice W Creditors: All perions having claims against the estate of Andrew 'G. Freeborn, deceased, are hereby noilied, and required to prewnt wich claim ‘With the “necessury'vouchers, within one year Mter the dute of this. notice’ to Aibect Mills Administrator of ‘suid estate, at the place of his transaction ‘of business as seh administrator, towit: at the ofice of Fred Hl. Peterson, attor: Rey. for said administrator, a1 Mutual Lite Building, Seattle,” Washingion, or falling to Present sbeh claims withii anid time that the Smne be hereafter forever barred. ‘Dated June 15th, 190, ‘Auber Mus, ‘Administrator. Fnep I. Patansox, Attorney for Adminis trator. Oflice Rooms 410-413 Mutual Life Building, Seaitie, Washington First pub. Juels. Laat Jaly 12, DRESSY SHOES At Prices that Appeal to Your Pocketbook. The Very Latest Styles at the Popular Prices of $2.50 to $5.00, See them, RAYMOND & HOYT, 918 Second Ave, - SEATTLE, WASH. WANT BETTER HAIR? If s0, your kind of hair ean be found......... MME. BROWN’S 1813 Second Ave., Seattle, Wash. , &° ff | y Do a: > ‘ } & Y 4 6 ra | Eras Pyrartic) ecu rere | WASH . « ‘ haces, Every day, and many times a day, we are told: by customers, @ “We have been all over the city, and find you haye the best : assortment of Laces, and by far the most reagonable. prices.” ‘This is always “sweet incense,” and we try to deserve it by buy- = ing in large quantities and only from the best makers. ‘ New All-Over White and Cream Valenciennes Laces, 50c, 59e, 69e, T5e, 85e, I8e, $1.50, $1.98. ‘ New All-Over Cream Venise Laces, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 & $2.00, $2.50, $3.00. é New All-Over Black Silk Laces, 69e. 980, $1.25, $150, $1.98. § New Black Spangled All-Ovets, $1.25, $1,50, $1.75. : Valenciennes Laces in endless variety, white, croam andblack, § from 15e, 20¢, 25¢ a dozen up to 20e a yard. § Valenciennes Lace Insertions to. match laces, 2he, 340, 6c, up | to 2c a yard. : Imitation ‘Torchon Laces, 50 pieces, narrow or wide, worth | Te, 8c, 10c a yard, for 5e. é Real Hand Made Linen Torchon Laces, be, 8 1-3e, 10e, 124¢, & 15e, 20e, 250. § White and Cream Oriental Laces, 5e, Te, Se, 10e, 1240, 150 “ up to 50e. ‘ Gream Silk Chantilly Laces, Te, 10e, 12, 150, 200, 250 up | to 50e. Black Silk Chantilly, Spanish and Bourbon Laces, 6, 8¢, 10¢, § 124e, 15e, 20e, 25e up to $1.00. ‘ SPECIAL.—650 pieces Black Silk Chantilly Laces, from 6 to § 12 inches wide, worth 5c and The, for 25e. ‘ White Platt Valenciennes. Laces, 1 to9 inches wide, 50, To, | 8e, 10e, 124e, 150, We. Cream Venise Insertions, 5e, 8¢, 10c, 124¢, Lie, 200, 250. Sa Embroideries, Cambric Edgings, 34¢, Se, 6e, Te, 8 1-3c, 1e, 124c. Fine Cambric Liging, with bow knots, Fleur-de-Lis and other novelty patterns, 15e, 20c, 25c, 29, 35c. combate Insertions and Beadings, 5c, 7c, 8 1-3c, 10c, 12he, 15e, 20¢. Fine Swiss Embroidery Edgings, 10c, 124c, 15¢, 200, 250, 29e, 35e. Fine Swiss Insertions and Beadings, 8{1-3e, 10¢, 124¢, 15, 200, 25e. Cambric and Swiss All-Overs, 65¢, 85¢, $1.15, $1.39, $1.50, $1,75, $1,90. Fine Cambrie Tuckings, 50, 65e, 75¢, $1.00. 27-Inch White and Cream Brussels Nets, for ties, hat scarfs, ete, 15e, 20e, 25e, Who’sYour Tailor For Your Spring : And Summer Suit? ) ; See Thee» Choice$Up-To-Date Samples at | Herald Tailoring Company : Colman Blde., Seattle, Wash. ; Bui'ders of the Best Mediam Priced G uments in the World. : Denny-Blaine es Company i | Choice Lots . | ‘ mu ADDITION Does your RUPTURE ctu If not, call at Guy’s Drug Store * : | WEST ; SEATTLE © PROPERTY ; » Will never be as low in price - asnow. This is the golden . opportunity to secnre a bean- . tiful home site on your own , terms. Remember, the elec- trie road will be in operation » by July 15, with regular ser- | » vice from 6 a. m. to 12 mid- | » night. We build homes for | ; you on easy payment plan } also. Call for price list and | Sap : ; 3 <= ! ; WHALLEY & STURTEVANT , Band 6 Cotman Bupa. | See aE SaaS SE MORAN BROS. General Ship Builders Seattle, Waoq JOHN HENRY CLAY CLEMENT. Beginning Sunday, June 24th, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, "A Southern Gentleman." Thursday, Friday, Saturday matinee and Saturday evening superb production, "The Bells." In preparation an elaborate production of Charlie Dickins and Wilkie Collin's romantic drama, "No Thoroughfare." Clay Clement's comedy drama, "A Southern Gentleman," is said to be filled with bright, witty lines, strong situations, and with all, tells an interesting story. No new play has attracted more favorable notice in years than has "A Southern Gentleman." The next big, worthy, attraction at the Third Avenue Theatre commencing Sunday, June 24th, is a mammoth colored minstrel show of 45 people, and comes here commended as the funniest show on record. "Wright's Original Nashville Students" and Gideon's big Minstrel Carnival—one of the biggest minstrel consolidations, represents the most liberal of amusement enterprises in this country. It carries 45 popular entertainers in the most enjoyable variety of acts presented to the amusement public. Fun runs rampant and every feature is high-class and refined. Every act is different and there is no surfeit of any one act, no curtain waits to mar the continuous round of pleasure. Expert wire walkers, acrobats, the famous Occidental Quartette of singers, an admirable Quintette of mixed voices; Jugglers, tumblers, and other interesting features are bunched in its programme in enjoyable profusion and liberality. A grand Symphony Orchestra of skilled musicians play at every performance and two big Peerless bands with 10 soloists form a feature of its attractive street parade. Such an abundance of good features has, it is said, never before gathered into one combination. Watch for its coming! Wait for its parade! A grand free concert at 7:15 daily. Thirty years ago there were 10,000,000 American buffaloes in the country west of the Mississippi river. Today there are but 400 in the whole world. The people have believed until recently that there were 400 buffaloes in the Yellowstone park, and it was reported in 1892 that they SEATTLE THEATER THIRD AVENUE THEATER. were multiplying. However, Congressman Lacey, who visited the park last summer, states that there are only twenty-three buffaloes left. The others have strayed away from the park and have been killed by hunters. There is no parallel in the history of the animal kingdom to the rapid destruction of the buffalo. In Asiatic countries the buffalo has been utilized as a beast of burden. In Europe the bison or aurochs, which was a contemporary of the mammoth, has been preserved in the Russian government forests. In the United States the bison, which was fitted by nature to resist the severity of the climate in the West and Northwest, was not utilized in any way except for food or for the hide. There is no domestic animal to take its place. Where the bison turned its head to the storms on the plain and fought for life with the blizzard, ordinary cattle perished by the thousands. The wild horses of the plains were captured, and did their part in the work of civilization. The bisons were slaughtered without thought of their value. General Manager Bush is sojourning in Montana this week. Pay day was a bit late, nevertheless it brought its usual happiness. Mrs. Cora Teel has rented her front room in which a confectionary store will be conducted. The Silver Leaf club of the A. M. E. church gave a very pleasant sociable last Wednesday evening. The colored miners continue to come and go, much to their own detriment in many more ways than one. Extensive preparations are being made for the Fourth of July, but Seattle will catch a goodly number of our townsmen. With four brothers, two sisters and a father in the city Carter Nicholas is the happiest man anywhere to be found. Thad Donaldson left for Spokane last Thursday, where he will remain for some time, hoping thereby to improve his health. An alarm of fire in the mines last Wednesday was the signal for a mad rush to the top. The usual routine, however, prevailed the next day. If the members of the A. M. E. church make the proper preparations, the Puget Sound A. M. E. conference will be here the 15th of next August. Our collector will call on you next month. Roslyn News. A LEADER IN THE BAKING POWDER WORLD 1 lb. 25 cents It is reversing the whole universe, because it RISES in the West (or North-west). It is a so checking the Cream lattice, Perturbit, Acid, Corn Starch farce, which has been perpetuated upon the public for the past 25 years. ASK YOUR GROGER ABOUT IT Dr. C. A. GAY DENTIST 902 SECOND AVENUE Cor. Marion SEATTLE, WASH. Office open at all hours. Up to date on the most improved Dentistry Hats Cleaned, Dyed and Retrimmed by Practical Hatters SEATTLE HAT FACTORY A Full Line of New Hats at Factory Prices. 1009 FIRST AVE. Phone Green 1821 Why Not Have Your Work Laun- dered Properly? Cascade Laundry Company Phone Main 493. 807 FIRST AVE. BREAD, CAKES AND PASTERIES Cakes supplied to order for weddings and parties. Corn bread retain its moisture and is often supplied to steamboats. Tel. Main 445. GEM MARKET All kinds of FRESH AND SALT MEATS Telephone Green 78 621 PIKE ST., SEATTLE. E. A. GARDNER ...SOLICITS... LEGAL DETECTIVE WORK Satisfaction Guaranteed. Room 316 Pioneer Building' BONNEY & STEWART UNDERTAKERS PARLORS THIRD AVE. and COLUMBIA ST. Preparing bodies for shipment a specialty. Tel. Main 13.. Fine Jewelry at Moderate Prices. 705 Second Avenue, Seattle, Wash. NORTHERN PACIFIC YELLOWSTONE PARK LINE TWO TRAINS DAILY To the East THE FAMOUS Is the finest train ever run to the Pacific coast. Electric lighted throughout New Observation Cars Pullman Tourist Sleeping Cars Short Line via Billings and Burlington Route to Kansas City, St. Louis and all Southwestern Points, with Through Car Service. For information and tickets, call on or write I. A. NADEAU, Gen. Agt. Seattle, Wash. A. D. CHARKTON, Asst. Gen. Pass, Agent, Portland, Oregon. THE NORTHWESTERN'S FAST MAIL THE NORTHWESTERN LINE Have added two more trains (the Fast Mail) to their St. Paul Chi- cago service, making eight trains daily. BETWEEN MINNEAPOLIS ST. PAUL and CHICAGO BETWEEN This assures passengers from the west making connections. The 20th Century train, "the finest in the world," leaves St. Paul every day in the year at 8.10 p. m. F. W. PARKER, General Agent, 606 First Avenue, Seattle, Wash. Seattle & InternationalRailway Short Line to All Points n BRITISH COLUMBIA Train No. 1, for Snohomish, Arlington, Woolley and Vancouver leaves Seattle 9:40 a.m. arrive Summes 2:50 p.m. m. Arrive Summes 11:30 a.m. m. Arrives Seattle, 4:35 p.m. Train No. 5, for Woolley and intermediate leaves Seattle 4:00 p.m. m. Arrives Woolley 8:40 p.m. Train No. 6 leaves Woolley 4:25 a.m. m. Arrives Seattle 10:40 a.m. m. Arrives leaves only) leaves Woolley :20 a.m. arrives Seattle 11:00 a.m. Effective April 23, *Mixed train on Evert branch leaves Everett 5:25 p.m. m. arrive at Snohomish 8:55 p.m. m. connecting with train line for Woolley and intermediate points. Leaves Snohomish 8:55 a.m. m.; arrives in Everett, 9:20 a.m. H. E. DANZ, G. P. A. * Daily except Sunday. Osborne, Tremper & Co. INCORPORATED. Abstract Office and Title Examiners 114 Cherry St. Phone Main 548 U. S. GOVERNNENT GOODS: Nothing better can be bought for Alaska that will give you better service; pea jackets, $8; blankets, $1.25 up; wool socks, 30c; watch caps, $2; cavalry boots, $1.25; shoes, $8; government shoes, $3; shelter tents, $1; rubber blankets, $1.25. Kirk, 1217 First avenue. The San Diego Fruit Co. 415 Pike Street That's the Place D. B. SPIELLMAN Piercal Plumber and Gasfitter. Sanitary Plumbing a specialty. 212 Columbia St. Telephone Black 1621. Kindly remember our advertisers when you buy. Also speak a good word for THE REPUBLICAN. Notice For Publication. U. S. L. BANK OFFICE, SEATTLE. Wash. 1849. March 18th, 1869. Notice is hereby given in accordance with the provisions of the act of Congress of 1869, to the sale of timber land in the States of California, Oregon Nevada, and Washington Territory, to tend to all the Public Land States by act of 1869. BENJAMIN S. WOOD has this day filed in this office his sworn statement No. 7073, for the purchase of the So. 1/2 of $100,000 in township No. 25 N, range No. 8 E, and will be in township No. 25 N, range No. 8 E, and sought is more valuable for its timber use and agricultural purposes, and to establish his claim to said land before the Register and Wash., on Wednesday, the 6th day of June, 1960. He names as witnesses: James Bannan, Ocean, Eliza Wash, and William of Snougallia, Wash. Any and all persons claiming adversely the above-described lands are requested to file their claims in this office on or before said 6th day of June, 1900. EDWARD P. TREMPER Register First pub. Meh. 16. Last pub. June. 1. Notice to Creditors. Date of last publication May 19th. FRANK E. ADAMS. Expert Patent and Mechanical Drawing, Blue Printing Trade Marks, Caveats, Searches. Registered attorney COLEMAN BLOCK, SEATTLE. Tel. Blue 570. Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate. State of Washington, County of King, ss. Sheriff's office. By virtue of the Honorable Superior Court of King county, on the 11th day of April, 1900, by the clerk Administrator of the estate of Paul Rothberth, deceased, plaintiff versus Edwin G. White and wife, the wife, the Puyallup Loan Trust Company, a trust Company, of King, a Municipal corporation, Joseph Beckett and a niece Beckett, his wife, (whose name is not known), and a niece Charles Vanarsall and Jane Doe Vanarsall, his wife, (whose true Christian name is to be determined), and Jane Doe 7250, and to me, as sheriff, directed a delivery. Notice is hereby given, that I will proceed to sell at public auction to the highest older for cash, within the hours prescribed by law for the sale of the property, on the 19th day of May, A. D. 1900, before the Court House door of said King county, in the State of Washington, all the right, title and interest of the said defendants in and to the property, situated in King county, Washington, to卖. Dated this 12th day of April, 1900. A. T. VAN DYAN Sheriff A. T. VAN DE VANTER, Sheriff By T. H. BUKEK, Deputy Sheriff Attorneys: HASTINGS & NEDMAN First pub. April 16, Last pub. May 11. Summons for Publication. In the Superior Court of the state of Washington, for King County, Criminal Department. J. Campbell, plaintiff, vs. Daniel J. Campbell, defendant. He was charged for service by Publication. He is the State of Washington to the said Daniel J. Campbell, defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear within six days after the 22nd day of April, A.D. 1900, and served a copy of the complaint of this summons, to wit, within sixty days after the 22nd day of April, A.D. 1900, and served an entitled Court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the office below stated; and in case of your failure so to judgment will be rendered against you according to the demands of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said County. The object of the above entitled action is to serve a copy of the defendant, Daniel J. Campbell, defendant, divorce, matrimony now existing between the plaintiff and defendant in this action; for the custody of this suit, and for such other and further relief as to the Court shall seem just. MORRIS & SOUTHERN, and plaintiff. P. O. Address: Room 51 Hauler Building, King County, Washington. First in the list. No rest. 3. Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate State of Washington, County of King ss, Sheriff's office. By virtue of an issued out of the Honorable Superior court of King ccc., on the 11th day of April, 1900, by the clerk, in the case of L. E. Stephan, Special administrator of the estate of Paul Rothbard, deceased, of Washington, County of King, Ann Finnigan, his wife, The Payallup Loan & Trust Company, a corporation, the County of King, a mutual corporation, defendants, and delivered, and received and delivered. The herder given, that I will proceed to sell or public auction to the highest bidder for cash, within the hours prescribed by law for Sheriff's sales, to-will: At 10 o'clock A. M., on the 11th day of April, 1900, be court house door of said King ss, in the state of Washington, all the right, title and interest of the said defendants in and to the following described property, situated in King ss, half a mile north of half - E.½ of the southwest quarter - S.W. ½ of section fourteen - 11 - in township of Washington, County of King, half a mile north of the Willamette Meridian, levied on as the property of defendants to satisfy two judgments amounting to $446.22, with interest and cost of $100.00. T. H. K. Deputy, Attorneys, HASTING MERIDIAN, Deputy First pub. April 16. Last May 11. Summons. In the Superior court of King county, Eugene Harris, placed in Shelley B. Harris, defendant. No. 28838 summons, with Washington to the said Shelley B. Harris, defendant. You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit; within sixty (60) days after the date of the second defend the above entitled action in the above entitled Court and answer the complaint of the plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer upon the office below stated, and in case of your failure so to do judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which have been filed with the Gork of said Court. The object of the above entitled action is to procure a degree of Court dissolving the bounds of williamity and covenant for plaintiff at the defendant. JON ABRUTHE M.A. Address for plaintiff. Postoffice address: Seattle, King county, Washington. Office address: Rooms 305-67 New York block, Seattle, Washington. First pub. April 15. Last May 25. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for the County of Washington, William Thomas Battershill, Defendant. No. 28.736. Summons by Publication. The State of Washington, to the said William Thomas Battershill, Defendant. You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the hearing, and to appear within sixty days after the 4th day of May, A. D. 1900, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled complaint against plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his office below stated; and in the absence of such attorney, will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court, and the complaint, as is as follows: To obtain a degree of court dissolving the bonds and ties of matrimony existing between plaintiff and defendant. P. BALL, JR., Attorney for Plaintiff. P. O. Address: Rooms 18-17-16 Roxwell block, Seattle, County of King, Washington. WE MAKE PICTURE FRAMES To order. Also Stretches for Painting, Worry a carry of mouldings and canvas. Mait Cutting, specially in all forms. Everything cheap. GEO. E. Williams & Co. 1114 Tjur Ajd Date: A. T. VAN DE VANTER, Sheriff. By T. H. BURKE, Deputy. Attorneys: Preston & Boll. Appellant: Last publication May 18. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King County. In probate. In the matter of the estate of tia Anna Jukkins, deceased. No. 2288. Said sale will take place on Monday, the 14 day of May, 1900, at 10 Noon, Mr., said sale date, in Seattle, the King County, courthouse, in Seattle, King County, Washington. DAVID R. JUCKINS, Executor of the Last Will and Testament of Ida Anna Jenkins. Cased. Washington, April 16th, 1900. Date of first publication April 21, 1900. Last publication May 18. SUMMONS Notice to Creditors In the Superior Court of the State of Wash- ington, in and for the County of King. In the matter of the estate of Sarah Cooper, deceased on January 18, 2015. Notice is hereby given to all the creditors of Sarah Cooper, deceased, and of her estate, present their claims against the estate, ceased or deceased, and of the estate, with the necessary vouchers, within one year from the date of the first publication of this notice to the Superior Court of the State of Wash- ington, in and for the County of King. office of C. K. Jenner, 407 Pacific block, Seattle, that being the place of business of the said administrator, or be forever identified. ISAC COOPER, Administrator of Estate of Sarah Cooper, deceased. Date of first publication May 18. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Seattle, Wash., May 26, 1980. Notice is hereby made to comply with the provisions of the act of June 3, 1983, entitled "An act for the sale of the lands in the States of California, Oregon, Nevada, and Washington." To be added to all the Public Land States by act of August JOHN ANDERSON. of Issaquah, county of King, State of Wash., has this day filed in this office his sworn statement NO. 6973, for the purchase of the NW% of land, 8 E., and will offer proof to show that the land sought is more valuable for its timber or stone, and for agricultural purposes, and to establish the land for the sale. Receiver of this office at Seattle, Wash., on Tuesday, the 28th day of August, 1900. He names as witnesses: (given) John W. E. Gibson, J. M. Goode, and William Ray, all of Issaquah, King county, Washington. Any and all persons claiming adversely the allied described lands are requested to file their claims in office on or before said 28th day of August, 1900. EDWARD P. TERMER. Register. First pub. May 25. Last pub. July 27. Summons Ethel Ormsby, plaintiff, vs. Ursen Ormsby, defendant. No. — Summons for Publica- tion. The State of Washington to the said Ursen Ormsby, defendant. You are hereby summoned to appear, within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication, to the court of the district court, for days after the 1st day of June, 1900, to defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, in the case of the undersigned attorney for plaintiff, at his office below stated; and in case of your failure to answer the demand rendered against you, according to the demand rendered against you, plaintiff, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The object of the above-entitled action is to dissolve the bonds of matrimony existing between plaintiff and defendant and to give plaintiff the custody and control of the minor child of these parties. MILLO A. ROOT, Plaintiff's Attorney P. O. address 315 New ork building, King County, Washington