Seattle Republican

Friday, August 31, 1900

Seattle, Washington

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VOL. VII NO. 14 CURRENT COMMENTS In the Queen City of the Northwest. For Disables Disqualified to Earn a Living. Beggers' Harvest - Queer Charac- ters-Nomers Rapid Returning- Mr. Hawkins Comes Out Early. Most persons doing business in Seattle at present are reaping quite a financial harvest owing to the fact that the streets are crowded with customers, and, according to hotel rumors, there is not a vacant room to be found in the city. This great press of business has caused many men seeking employment to come to the city, and, for the most part, all who want work get it. It has not only attracted the laboring folk, but it has likewise attracted the beggars, the poor, the sick, the halt and the blind, all of whom can be found on our streets asking for alms from the passers-by. On this corner you will find the blind man putting persistently at his violin, from when he is pouring forth strains of familiar music to attract the attention of those hurrying to and fro, that they may remember that he would like alms from which he could maintain himself and his family, and he does not go home at night empty handed. On the other corner is to be found a man with no legs, but who has placed himself on a board under which wheels have been arranged, and with his hands in the form of legs and feet he pushes himself up and down the street. In his hat he was placed a circle of pencils which he hopes to sell to the passers-by that he too, may earn his daily bread. He travels throughout the city with perfect ease. Perhaps when the unfortunate circumstances first betel num he concluded in his mind that there was nothing left for him to do but seek some charity house maintained by the government, but as necessity is the mother of invention, so Puck is the mother of Success, and he has found success at this business in Seattle, as hundreds buy from him each day. Within the past week not less than 2,000 unsupported Nome gold seekers have returned to this city, and for a while their distressed faces could be seen strolling up and down the street looking apparently for something which they had never lost. They had spent all they could get together to take them to Nome, where they thought they could gather gold by the oushels, but a sad unsappointment awaited them, and they nursed back to civilization, broken in spirits as well as in finances. Seattle being the Mecca for all forms of disappointments, they could be seen in all parts of the city. They soon found work, and that discontented face gave way to bright smiles and all was well, and Seattle's population has thus been materally increased. "Have a stick of gum?" says a young boy who wheels himself up and down the streets on a go-cart. The young fellow unfortunately lost his legs in the frozen regions of Alaska and finding that he no longer could make money to support himself in that land of ice, he came to Seattle, and putting his wits together soon devised a means by which he could honorably support himself, and so he either sells flowers or gum to Seattle population, and, it is said, that quite enough persons drop a nickel or a dime into his till each day to earn for him a good living. 一 On another corner you will find the chattering Indians with their baskets and wares for sale. There may not be any real value in these articles, but they are at least curious, and the American people under the present prosperous condition of the country are curiously inclined, and are ready to spend their money in any fancy that may come over their minds, and those Indian fads are always salable to persons having money to burn. --- It would thus seem that no city in the West offers greater inducements for persons unable to make a living by the sweat of their brow, owing to some form of mishap, than Seattle, and this is so because her citizens are thrifty and in a prosperous condition. The SEATTLE REPUBLICAN A rather amusing story is being told on the streets these days of J. E. Hawkins. About a week ago there was a J. E. Hawkins hauled up into the superior court for insanity, and was sent to Stialacoom, the insane asylum, for treatment. J. E. Hawkins, the attorney, was in the mountains camping, and his familiar face for weeks was not seen about the court rooms. However, he returned one day this week, and while in company with a few friends walking up the street, one of his brother attorneys accosted him: "Why, hello, Ed. I am glad to see that you are out. I was quite sorry to hear of your unfortunate predicament." Mr. Hawkins looked a bit surprised at the remarks and asked for an explanation. "Why, the papers last week reported you insane and sent to the asylum, and not seeing you around I was certain it was correct." "Well," said Hawkins, "I may be off in a good many things, but I am not crazy as yet." However, it cost Mr. Hawkins quite a few dollars for drinks for the crowd before he heard the last of it. --- The familiar face of J. H. Wright, the noted Fifth ward politician, is to be seen on the streets once more, having gotten all the Nome he cared for. "While I have returned from Nome, I am not one of those who believe that the country is not rich with gold. I firmly believe that in time Nome will send out equally as much gold as has Dawson City. What Nome needs is less floating population and more men wanting to work and develop the country. Another thing Nome is sadly in need of is less litigation and let men get hold of those claims which are very rich in gold who will go to work and develop them. I am glad the political fight is all over and that I was not in it." 一 "I went north to look after the interests of the Post-Intelligence and also for my annual outing," said Mr. A. P. Sawyer one day this week. "Nome is, I admit, greatly overdone and the government or somebody else with money will have to aid a great many of the persons now at Nome away from there, but that is nothing against the country. Those persons whom the government will have to help away from there are persons who rushed north with nothing in view save to go out on the beach and gather up a sack of gold and then return home wealthy men. They were disappointed, and moving spent their all to get there, have nothing on which to return. Next year I believe Nome will send to the assay office in this city many million dollars of gold dust. Substantial business houses will do well if they do not get discouraged over a few reverses." After a most unprecedented fight among the three factions of the union convention, the following ticket was named: Governor, John R. Rogers. Congressmen, J. T. Ronald and F. C.Kobertson. Lieutenant Governor, W. E. McCroskey. Supreme Court Judges, E. C. Million and Richard Winsor. Secretary of State, James Brady. State Auditor, W. J. Silverthorn. State Treasurer, W. E. Runner. Attorney General, T. M. Vance. Land Commissioner, O. R. Holcomb. Superintendent of Public Instruction, Frank J. Browne. Presidential Electors, George Cotterill, N. G. Blalock, Fred Reeves and J. G. Heim. Judge Richard Winsor was the only Populist receiving a nomination on the ticket. Governor Rogers' friends fought the Pops to the last ditch, but finally consented to relax to the extent of allowing Judge Winsor to be named for supreme judge. Turner ruled first, it appears, with a golden hand, and then with an iron hand. NEGRO DEMOCRATIC PAPER. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1900. WASHINGTON'S NEXT GOVERNOR IN PRESENTING the portrait of Hon, J. M. Frink, Republican Candidate for Governor, to the thousands of readers of THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN, the face and features of a man as pure, as patriotic and as perfect as could be found in all the wide world. His record as a public man, his record as a business man, his record as a moral man and his record as a citizen of this great "land of the free and the home of the brave," are all as spotlessly clean as purity itself. If elected governor of the Evergreen State, without eqivocations, frills or frocks, he will be the governor in fact. He is as independent and self-willed as he is broad-minded, and as broad-minded as he is just. Tied to the strings of no ring, faction or click, he stands as the emblem of purity in politics and for an upright, honest and economical state administration. The working man's friend because he gives him work and pays him more for it than any one else in the same kind of business. He is the man that all men in the proud young state of Washington can support and not feel ashamed of the fact that they did support him. J. M. Frink will be Washington's next governor. HON. FRANCIS W. CUSHMAN has proven himself a most excellent colleague of Mr. Jones, and during his short labors as congressman has greatly popularized himself with the voters throughout the state. In the present campaign Cushman will be a star campaigner, and will win for his party many thousand votes HON. WESSLEY L. JONES, who was elected to the lower house of Congress from this state two years ago by 6000 majority, has already made a record at the national capital that the Evergreen State can point with pride to and he will be re-elected by not less than 14,000 majority. OUR CONGRESSIONAL ROSTER [Picture of a man in a suit and tie]. HON. WESLEY L. JONES HON. J. M. FRINK. [Name] HON. FRANCIS C. CUSHMAN PERSONAL Master Norris Bennett was among the visitors to the City of Destiny this week. Mr. E. H. Holmes, of Spokane, was among the visitors to the Queen City this week, he being a delegate to the Democratic state convention. Mr. John H. Ryan is again a resident of Seattle. He is now editing a weekly paper in this city in the interests of the Democratic party. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Hawkins have returned from their mountain outing and are looking the picture of health from their stay in the hills. Mrs. Edsen and Mrs. Miller, of Tacoma, and Mrs. Anderson, of Spokane, spent a few days in the city this week visiting with friends. If you have any social news and desire the same published send them to this office and they will be published free of charge. Mr. Will Turner, deputy county assessor of Pierce county, visited in the city this week on his annual vacation. A picnic at Point Defiance, Tacoma, last Thursday attracted quite a few Seattle folks to the City of Destiny. Dr. J. J. Smith, of Franklin, came down last Monday to attend the three-ringed circus, and had a peek of fun at the expense of the Demo-Pops. Master Benjamin H. Moore has been given employment at the Republican state central committees as messenger during the campaign and will begin work today. For some unaccountable reason the Bee's sting was not felt last week. Can it be possible that the Bee's stinger has lost its stinging qualifications? According to reports from Nome James Green and John N. Conna have left that place and sailed for Dawson City, where they hope to get work during the winter season. Madame Rumor has it that no less than half a dozen Afro-American couples in this city will double up for life before January rolls over their heads. Rev. G. A. Bailey, who is now pastor in charge of the A. M. E. church in Tacoma, was in the city last Tuesday on his way to Spokane to hold his first quarterly conference. It is rather a difficult matter to mix preaching with politics, and the Newcastle divine will find that out before the present campaign closes; that is, if he continues in his present political maneuvers. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Oliver have sold their Juanita Hotel property for $2,000 and they will move within a few days to their ranch near Sunnydale. They have been very successful in the hotel business and they hope to do equally well on their ranch. Mr. Mathew Brown, of Newcastle has decided to move his household effects to Seattle, where he will reside for some time. Mrs. Brown has employment as maid with a dental firm and he hopes to be equally successful in finding something to do during the winter season. A NEGRO HERO Joe Fortes, a West India Negro, who lives in Vancouver, B. C., has saved thirteen different persons' lives by swimming into the bay and rescuing them as they were sinking to rise no more within the past twelve months. He has been made swimming instructor of the beach by the city council of Vancouver. He is pronounced a hero of the bravest stripe by all who know him, and he is well known all over the city. WAS A CUTE TRICK There is no longer any doubt but that the recent demonstration against a Negro prisoner in Akron, Ohio, which resulted in the loss of two lives and the wounding of many other persons, all white, and the destruction of so much property, was engineered by the emissaries of the Democratic party to draw public attention from the Southern outrages against the colored citizens. If a similar outrage against a Negro in Ohio, the home of McKinley, as in North Carolina, they reasoned to themselves, could only be made to happen, it would to some extent justify the South, but, thank God, the men who went South and gave up their lives that the Negro might be a man and a citizen left sons in Ohio who stood like stone walls a few days ago, and said the Negro should be protected the same as any other man though he be guilty of crime. The same law and the same punishment should stand for the white man and the black man one and alike. Another Democratic boom has thus been prematurely exploded. LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON APR 28 1952 PRICE FIVE CENTS AFRO- AMERICANISM Throughout the United States of America. MANY RACE RIOTS Causing (Much) Bloodshed and (Grave) Misapprehensions. BRIEF AND BREEZY In Indianapolis With a Most Representative Body of Negroes in Attendance—No Politics; Those colored men who have got the idea into their heads that the Tamanny-Tiger in Greater New York is the Negro's best friend and which has been bending every effort to catch the black men's votes, might read with much satisfaction the following article: NEW YORK, Monday, Aug. 27. —Rev. W. Brooks, the colored pastor of St. Mark's M. E. church, preached a sermon before a large congregation last night on "The Story of the New York Riot." During the sermon the feelings of the congregation were at fever heat, and, despite the pastor's frequent admonitions to be calm, his hearers twice interrupted the sermon with vigorous applause. He said: "I have been visiting the riot victims and making an investigation. I have a book of facts. What I say here tonight may send me before the courts, possibly to jail. In making the following charges against the police, I invite investigation. "Innocent men were cruelly as "Innocent men were cruelly assaulted. "The clubbing in nearly every case was done by the police. "We have not found a single tough character among the victims mattreated, but honest, hard-working people. "Irespectable and helpless women who appealed to the police for protection were cursed and threatened for their petition. "Men and women prisoners were beaten by the police while getting in and out of the patrol wagon and while on the way to the police station. "Men were beaten in the station house. "Men and women were taken from their beds in a nude condition by the police." Now the entire city government of Greater New York is under the control of the Democratic party and the Tammany Tiger, those very dear friends of the Negro. Wherever the Democratic party has any power you can always put it down that it is strictly in for killing every Negro that it can, if it can be done and escape the legal punishment. This is true, whether such Democrats in authority be in the North, South, East or West. All of those colored men who are so anxious to vote the Democratic ticket in the North ought to do so by all means, and if they cannot vote it enough in the North, why go right down to North Carolina and there vote it to their hearts' content. * * * HEAVY DAMAGE SUITS More recent reports declare that the state of New York and the city of New York are confronted with another trouble arising out of the recent riots, and it that the Negroes all over the country are raising a fund to employ the best legal talent in the country to aid those Negroes who were so shamelessly abused by the police and their "foreign devil" henchmen to enter suits in the courts for damages. This same later report declares that Tammany's henchmen are responsible for the trouble, and that the Negroes, who have heretofore been strong allies to that Democratic organization, strong enough in many instances to change the entire complexion of the political situation in Greater New York, have threatened to desert the Tammany Tiger to a man unless some satisfactory arrangement and explanation is made by Tammany. From a Democratic standpoint the situation is a serious one. E. H. Holmes, the colored Democrat from Spokane, who some years ago left Vicksburg, Mississippi, because he and his relatives could not vote as they desired, in fact could not vote at all, owing to Democratic shotguns being in the way, must have had queer feelings come over him while participating in a Democratic meeting in this state. What would his Vicksburg frends think of him if they should hear of this episode? So far no American has attempted to Edward Atkinsonize the cause of the Boxers. The Seattle Republican Telephone, Main 805, The Republican Pub. Co., Publishers OFFICE 622 THIRD AVENUE H. R. Cayton, Editor Susie Revels Cayton, Associate SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year ..... 2.00 Six months ..... 1.00 Three Months ..... 60. Advertising rates Furnished upon application Entered at the Postoffice at Seattle as Second Class Mail Matter. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT: THEODORE ROOSEVELT. REPUBLICAN TIGKET THE TICKET For Congress: F. W. CUSHMAN ..... Pierce W. L. JONES ..... Yakima For Governor: J. M. FRINK ..... King For Lieutenant-Governor: H. G. McBRIDE ..... Skagit For Secretary of State: S. H. NICHOLS ..... Snohomish For Auditor: J. D. ATKINSON ..... Chelan For Treasurer: C. H. MAYNARD ..... Lewis For Attorney-General: W. B. STRATTON ..... Pacific For Land Commissioner: STEPHEN A. CALLVERT ..... Whatcom For Superintendent of Schools: R. B. BRYAN ..... Chehalis For Judges of Supreme Court: WALLACE MOUNT ..... Spokane R. O. DUNBAR ..... Thurston For Presidential Electors: CHARLES SWEENEY ..... Spokane J. M. BOYD ..... Okanagan FRANK G. HASTINGS ..... Jefferson S. G. COSGROVE ..... Garfield KING COUNTY TICKET For Sheriff A. T. VAN DE VANTER For Superior Judges ARTHUR C. GRIFFIN W. R. BELL BOYD J. TALLMAN For Prosecuting Attorney W. H. WHITE For County Clerk C. A. KOEPFLI For County Auditor GEORGE B. LAMPING For County Treasurer J. W. McCONNAUGHEY For County Assessor W. A. BAILEY For Superintendent of Schools W. G. HARTRANFT For County Suveyor CLARENCE E. WHITE For County Wreckmaster DR. SAMUEL BURDETTE For County Commissioner, Second District L. C. SMITH For County Commissioner, Third District P. J. SMITH For State Senator, Twenty-Fourth District DR. J. J. SMITH For Representative, Thirty-Eighth District JOHN RINES For Representative, Thirty-Eighth District JOHN BARCLAY For Representative, Forty-Second District F. R. BURCH For Representative, Forty-Third District O. A. TUCKER For Representative, Forty-Third District EDGAR C. RAINE For Representative, Forty-Third District WATSON ALLEN For Justices of the Peace, Seattle R. R. GEORGE T. H. CANN For Constable, Seattle SAMUEL KAUFMAN At last the famous Irrepressible Conflict has been suppressed. Move you that the 1900 campaign be and is now considered a stern and actual reality. That Republican ratification meeting Saturday night will be a hummer from way back—"Mind, I tell you." Anarchism, Altgeld and Aguinaldo are a trio each of whom is dead anxious to see Bryanism succeed in the coming battle of ballots in the November election. After you have heard the report of the census, which is now being footed up, as a member of Congress it will be your duty to take steps to cut down the number of representatives from the South. Seattle is the recipient of a Demo-Pop-Fusion paper published by a Negro. Now here is a novelty rich, rare and racy, and one that you will see but once in a lifetime. The Fusion convention did not last a whole week, but it was no fault of the delegates, for it would have done so if expense money had not given out. A Democratic pow-wow is a strange look conglomeration of supposed humanity, it matters not where you see it, and those seen in the far Northwest are no exception to the rule. Yes, civil service seems to be quite a farce in Seattle, but, in our opinion, it is not one half as great a farce as it is a commercial commodity for certain men to grow rich on. Partitioning the Chinese empire between the governments represented in the allied forces now doing duty in China has already actively begun. If the allied forces are not shooting each other to death over its partitioning before another three months it will be very remarkable. "Labor day" has developed into a genuine "neice day," for a few labor union agitators, who have succeeded from time to time in making a living by using the workingmen atools and instruments for their commercial convenience. Were it not impolite we would not hesitate to pronounce the editor of the Seattle Argus the prototype of a blackmailing, cowardly cur. But what's the use? It would be no news to a great majority of the citizens of this community who have long since been convinced of that fact. If the Southern Negro is too illiterate to cast a vote, then he is too illiterate for the Southern Caucasian to claim a representation on, therefore it is the duty of every Northern man in Congress to vote to reduce the representation in Congress from the South, which is based on Negro citizens. Now, you, Mr. Man, wanting to take your family for a few weeks' outing, get out and make a great hop for the hop fields, and you will make your outing a paying as well as a playing one. Families have been known to go out and earn as much as $300 during the hop season, and return to the city the picture of health for their country outing. Hellabus, the Democratic side-show exhibition, at the late three-ringed circue performance held in this city, raised its usual amount of hell. It was hotter than the average Populus could stand, and it is more than likely that the most of the Pops will iy the coop as a result of its too hot. New York City got fleeced by an ice trust, and, according to recent developments, Seattle is being fleeced by a civil service trust. It would thus appear that between an ice chest and the sweat box the finances of great cities have a poor show of ever getting away from "de gang." Mrs. Maybrick, the noted female prisoner now confined in an English prison for the murder of her husband, still has hopes of being liberated and having the pleasure of sailing for her Columbia. Most people who have given the subject any study are inclined to believe that, if she does so, she will prove herself to be not only a May-brick, but a June-brick as well, with a golden shine on it at that. Speak to your congressman and ask him to vote to cut down the number of representatives from the South as soon as congress assembles again. He is compelled to do so under the constitution, but if he knows it meets with your approval he will urge it, and the South, with not a tenth of the population of this country, will no longer run the government of this country as it has been doing in the past. Let us implore you to do this. That remarkably harmonious fusion convention, which met last Monday to put up a state ticket to have adjourned sine die. In fact it has adjourned, but we seem to hear its tempestuous billows still down the Republican ticket, seems dashing against the deadly breakers, and the howls of the dying delegates as their wrecked craft go to pieces, leaving death and destruction in its wake. It must be with the utmost difficulty that Billy Bryan learns of the exact whereabouts of his coming secretary of war in case of presidential success, Prince Aguinaldo of Manila. How those Democrats, who have spent their lives in damning Negroes, as well as white men who have treated Negroes as men and brethren, have suddenly learned to love this new Negro found in the Philippine Islands. There are things that are stranger than fiction, and here is one of them. Perhaps John L. Wilson did not have a single friend on the late Republican delegation to the Tacoma state convention, and, for the sake of argument, we admit it; but how many friends on that delegation, pray, did Ankeny, Guie or Humes have? No one but a few enemies of John L. Wilson took the trouble to poll the delegation as to how it stood on the senatorial question, and, strange to say, those enemies of Wilson were not members of the delegation. When Nome will have rid itself of a few thousands of its spurious population, who went there for the express purpose of fleeing their fellow men and not for legitimate business, it is more than probable that it will become a strong rival of Dawson City as a gold producer. There is plenty of gold at Nome, only it is not scattered about on the beach like grains of sand or pebbles, and, if it were so, then gold would be just as common as are the sand and gravel. According to press dispatches there is serious danger of Chili and Peru going to war over disputed territory. At the rate that the "disputed territory" business is being carried on among the South American republics, the first thing they know some great nation will all own of the disputed territories and they will only have the dispute for their trouble. That is to say, neither one of them will have any territory to dispute over sooner or later. The hand of fate seems to be against Tacoma in its futile attempts to rival Seattle as a commercial center. It is reported now on good authority that the census expert sent out from Washington City to examine "the padded census report made by Seattle," as charged by the Tacoma Chamber of Commerce, is thoroughly convinced that a mistake really has been made as to Seattle's population, and that the Queen City of the Northwest is entitled to even more citizens than she is now credited with at the census bureau. Another fancied Tacoma dream cast to the winds. Marcus Daly and Senator W. H. Clark, two multi-millionaires of Montana, have arrayed their millions in deadly opposition to contest for the United States senatorship of that state. In as much as both of them are Democrats, we see no reason why some good Republican can not ship in and capture it from the warring factions while they scrap, in the meantime newspaper men from all parts of the world are flocking to Montana to start cross-roads papers, with a view of pulling one or the other of those men's legs, or both of them. It is claimed that the late C. P. Huntington's art collections are worth all of $2,000,000, and are made up of the rarest and most expensive works of art. This is but another way that rich men have of distributing the money that they have accumulated by driving great bargains. In this way Mr. Huntington made many men of art in rather stratified circumstances, financially speaking, comparatively independent men. With wealth comes winnings, and in satisfying one's whims poor men with genius and talent are made rich. So promote it-be. That Aberdeen robber, who it was thought had been killed by a blow dealt him by a saloon frequenter while the robber was in the act of holding up the saloon, and was laid out for死 in a back room of the saloon, but who came to life and fled while the saloon rowdies were reveling over the bar, so joyful were they over having murdered a human being, who was found in the act of robbing a robber, must have been a genuine Prohibitionist, and drinking was so offensive to him that it even raised him from the dead in order to get away from it. Morally speaking, the robber was no worse than the men carousing over the killing of a human being, though he was a robber and a highwayman. Among the notable converts to McKinleyism in the present campaign is Dr. Emil G. Hirsch, the great Chicago Jewish divine. He makes no bones in pronouncing Bryan a dangerous political character to succeed either in this or any other country, and, for that reason, he will support McKinley, a man who has been tried and found not wanting. Without flattery, Dr. Hirsch is one of the foremost thinkers of the world at present, and his writings, lectures and sermons all bear us out in this allegation. As votes Dr. Hirsch so will vote a great majority of the Jewish people of the North. Senator Beveridge, who was at one time something of a doubling Thomas as to the advisability of the United States government holding the Philippines, betook himself to those islands for the express purpose of studying the conditions existing between the natives and the soldiers, and having given the question a thorough study and ample consideration, he has now decided to take the stump for McKinley and expansion. Other questions in the campaign will be but subsidiary ones to him that of expansion. In other words, he proposes to make "expansion" the paramount issue so far as he is personally concerned. That simply means that Senator Beveridge is going to be a star in the present campaign of education. Chinese Boxers have had quite a bit of fun at the expense of the "foreign devils", but, unless we miss our guess, that bit of fun is going to prove a rather expensive bit. It's easy enough to have fun when once you get in a mood to have it, but when you come to count the cost, it's not near so funny as when you were having it. It's the after consideration that comes so high. The Seattle Republican met your hearty approval last week, did it? Well, that was the consensus of opinion with all who got a glance at the paper; but, if that issue met your approval so well, what have you to say of this number? We have been begging for the good Lord to help us, but, directly speaking, He seems to have turned a dear ear. Now we are only praying that He will not help the other fellow, and, if He will not, during this entire campaign, he will see The Republican put up one of the darnest fights for Republican success that any weekly paper has ever before put up in the Northwest. We agree with the Tacoma News that there are some newspapers in Seattle trying to make much out of a supposed speech made by Congressman Cushman at Waterville not long since, in which it is claimed that the German folk were ridiculed by Mr. Cushman, but the News should tumble to itself sufficiently to explain to its readers that the papers trying to accomplish such cussedness are Demo-Pop papers and by no means Republic papers. The Republican papers in King county are heart and soul for Cushman and will work to give him an increased vote over two years ago, when he was a candidate for the same office. Do not let your enthusiasm lead you into editorial indiscrections, neighbor. Arwell township, in Pennsylvania, has an old eight-day clock that promises to outrival for value "the old armchair," out of which the old侵入or got "ten thousand pounds or more" years after it had been given to him and it had gone to pieces from constant use. A miserly old lady, who recently died in the community mentioned above, after giving all of her relatives valuable property at her death, willed the black sleep of the crowd, the old eight-day clock, which subsequently proved to be loaded with gold and silver valued way up in the thousands of dollars. It is useless to add that all of them now wish that they had the old eight-day clock, or that they had been the black sheep of the family. It strikes us that the Reverend Mr. D. D., LL. D., M. D., who writes threatening letters from Newcastle, and better wait until he becomes a voting citizen of this state before he proclaims that he is The Great Negro 1 AM of Washington state, through whom all patronage as well as all recognition or colored voters must pass. Remember, my good brother, that there are others, and many of those others do not even know such a being as yourself exists, notwithstanding your many high-falutin titles. It seems that you have begun to demand a bit early, and that there is danger of your running out of demands before the campaign is over. The same trick has been played here before, "doctor," and by strangers just like you. If any one thinks for a minute that Bill Bryan is going to be outdone in any respect by bill McKinley, then they are way off in their thinking functionaries. Recently it was reported that European anarchists had come to this country for the express purpose of murdering President McKinley, and that the president was being guarded by day and by night to prevent the diabolic threat from being put into execution. Five days thereafter up jumps Mr. Bryan and declares that anarchists were "laying dead" to kill him and thus prevent him from being elected to the presidency next fall. Is not Billy Bryan a bit over-solicitors for the good of the "dear people" to have himself guarded for fear he will get killed and the people robbed of an opportunity to vote for him? There are many thousand citizens in this country that would make a thousand times better president than he, his 16 to 1 to the contrary notwithstanding, and among the Democrats at that. Perhaps the most extensive farm in the United States is to be found in Jasper county, Indiana, and it is the property of B. J. Gifford. It covers 33,000 acres and is valued at a round million dollars. So extensive is the farm that a small railroad line has been built about it, over which the owner is drawn at least twice a day to those points on the farm needing his attention. But a few years ago, comparatively speaking, Mr. Gifford was himself a poor boy, working for wages on another's farm. He began to acquire farm lands on a small scale, and continued to add to it until he is now the proud possessor of the magnificent acreage mentioned above. He, in other words, found his calling and stuck to it until he has made himself just as wealthy as if he had been a successful dealer in Wall Street's "bulls and bears." There is always a fortune on the farm, young man, if you will only go out and dig long enough. Some of the Federal officeholders of this state may have refined from attending the late state Republican convention at Tacoma in compliance to a threat sent out by Senator Blundering Foster that, if they did so, a charge of "offensive partisanship" would be filed against them, but Hon. M. W. Malloy, register of the Waterville U. S. land office, was not among the number of stay-aways. "I am neither ashamed nor afraid to attend a Republican state convention, and even do more, take an active part in its proceedings. Owing to Republican success I hold my present position, and if I hold it any longer, it will be from Republican success, and I propose to do all in my power to promote Re- publican success, threats to the contrary notwithstanding." Let us recommend this kind of Republicanism to you, Senator Blundering Foster, and when you will have adopted it you will find that you will have more friends in the Republican party. 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. Moran Bros. Company Manufacture and Sell LUMBER For All Purposes SEATTLE - - - WASH. R. W. BUTLER CARPENTER. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER THE NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE H. C. HENEY, Pres. R. R. SPENCER, Cashie SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT THE BEST PEOPLE Use the BEST ice and that is..... DIAMOND ICE Tel. Pike 150 GEM MARKET All kinds of FRESH AND SALT MEATS Telephone Green 78 621 PIKE ST., SEATTLE. Oh! Be Happy! IF YOU LOVE YOUR WIFE BUY HER A GAS RANGE SeattleGas&ElectricCo. C. R. COLLINS. General Mgr. WANT BETTER HAIR? If so, your kind of hair can be found..... MME. BROWN'S 1313 Second Ave., Seattle, Wash. Meydenbauer's Bakery, 308 COLUMBIA STREET. BREAD, CAKES AND PASTERIES Cakes supplied to order for weddings and parties. Corn flour bread retains its moisture and is especially adapted for steamboats. Tel. Main 4K. Coal all Coal The Best Coal NEWCASTLE Lump Coal Only at the Bunkers of the PACIFIC COAST CO. 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Magnificent View of Lake Washington and the Cascade Range The first gun of the Republican campaign will be fired Saturday night at the Armory hall, when a joint ratification meeting of both the state and King county Republican tickets will be endorsed. Chairman Schively in connection with Chairman Morris has arranged an elaborate programme for the evening, and many notable speakers, as well as candidates, will be heard on that occasion. This promises to be the largest meeting that Armory hall has seen for the past four years, and every good and loyal citizen is invited to be present. *** It is all business and bustle about the Republican headquarters in the Starr-Boyd building, where both the county and state headquarters have been located. Chairman Schively has already begun to send out communications to outlying lieutenants, and is receiving all visitors with open arms. The campaign of education has already begun, and many interesting as well as valuable documents are being mailed to Secretary Lysons and his assistants. Said Mr. Schively one day this week: "The present campaign will be one of education like unto the one of 1896, which will depend on how well the voters will have been instructed, as to what will be the final outcome of the campaign at the polls in November next. We feel certain at this time of winning the state by not less than 15,000 majority, and surely by not less than majority than the vote we won it by in 1898. The Northwest is much interested in the expansion question, and I feel certain in saying that the farmers in Eastern Washington will vote almost as a unit for expansion. The McKinley administration has given the country prosperity, and it will be endorsed at the polls in November." * * * Chairman Morris has begun to give his instructions to the various republican workers throughout the county, and many have called to confer with him as to the best methods of conducting the coming campaign. "Under ordinary circumstances King county is overwhelmingly Republican, and, in my opinion, it will give the Republican ticket a rousing majority this year. It will be remembered that the Republicans lost a number of their candidates two years ago, but we believe that we will be able to win the entire ticket this year. There is no dissension in our ranks at present. Whatever division there may have been prior to the holding of the county convention has been buried into party oblivion, and each and every republican in the county is working for Republican success. Representatives from both factions of the Republicans of this county prior to the convention have already called on me and assured me that there would be no differences in the campaign," said Mr. Morris one day this week. * * * The opposition papers are making a misquoted speech that was made at Waterville by Congressman Cushman some days ago, in which it is said that he spoke derogatory of the Germans of this country. In speaking of the matter to Prof. Smith, who is the editor of The Staats Zeitung, published in this city in the interest of the Germans, he spoke as follows: "The German vote will be practically solid for McKinley and Senator Frink. The Germans are too well posted to believe that Mr. Cushman would make any such a political break as is being reported by the Democratic papers, in the midst of the campaign. The German people feel certain that it was a misquotation, and misquoted by a Democratic correspondent for the express purpose of making political capital out of it. Since the report has first been circulated I have talked to many of the leading Germans throughout the Northwest and they take no stock whatever in it, but say, on the other hand, that they will support Mr. Cushman because Mr. Cushman will support McKinley's policy if re-elected." Prof. Smith is a pronounced leader among the Germans of this city and county, and he knows whereof he speaks in using the above language. *** It would appear that Senator George Turner, who has been a member of every party that has ever existed in this state and who has been a delegate to every convention that such party has held, has reached the zenith of his political power and is now rapidly declining. Until 1896 Judge Turner was a rabid Republican and was considered a leader in Republican conventions. In 1896 he left the Republican party and was a delegate to the three-ringed circus held in Ellensburg and was a Free Silver Republican delegate. Under that banner he floated until he succeeded in having himself elected United States senator of this state. Then he at once announced himself a Populist. He attended the three-ringed circus again at Ellensburg in 1898, and under a Populist banner he went as a delegate to that convention. As soon as it adjourned Senator Turner announced that he was a Democrat, and since that time he has been preaching and supporting Democracy in its wildest forms in the senate. As a Democratic delegate he came to the state convention which was held in this city this week, and at once assumed the leadership of the Rogers faction on the convention floor. He was pitted against C.G. Heifner for the permanent chairship of the meeting and was turned down with a dull tund, which must mean that Senator Turner is soon to be a political thing of the past. The Pie-maker was pleased to meet at the late Democratic state convention ex-Senator E. W. Taylor, of Tacoma. For eight years Senator Taylor was one of the Republicans' most brilliant campaign orators and legislative workers, but he flew the political coop in the free silver craze, and, owing to continuous sickness for the past two years, he has been unable to pull himself sufficiently together to return to the Republican fold, as have most of the Free Silver Republicans who went off in 1896. It is hinted that Mr. Taylor had congressional ideas in his bonnet while in this city, but the circumstances were against any more Free Silver Republicans going to the front as did one George Turner of Spokane, hence Taylor got left and went home sore as well as sick. A remarkable thing about the late three-ringed circus convention held in this city was that each of the permanent chairmen elected by the respective wings of the convention were men of strong and pronounced single tax proclivities. Bob Bridges, who was overwhelmingly elected as permanent chairman of the Populist side show, is the most rabid single taxer in the state. In fact he is practically the head and shoulders of the movement in the Northwest. He was not satisfied with being made the chairman of the Pop convention, but his single tax friends forced him on the union convention as its permanent chairman; and no less pronounced in singletaxdom is C. G. Heifner, who was elected permanent chairman of the Democratic wing of the circus, as at present Heifner is secretary of the State Single Tax League. Davis, the permanent chairman of the Free Silver Republican wing of the show, has also embraced the single tax theory, and declares it to be the panacea that will cure all the political ills, of which he and his parties declare this country is suffering from at present. It will thus be seen that the Fusion party is completely under the influence and control of the single tax faction of that party. How do you farmers like this for a change? * * * The Populist party as a party has been completely swallowed up by the Democrats. There is nothing else for it to do now but to disband and declare itself Bourbon Democrat. Neither on the national ticket nor on any state ticket has the Populist as a party been recognized, though a few of the men, who in the past have been pleased to call themselves Populists, have been nominated for office on state tickets. It seems that those men nominated finally reached the conclusion that they were perfectly willing to sacrifice all party principles providing they were given an opportunity to run for an office. Two years ago the Populist party forced the Democrats to give them the name of the party in this state, and it branded the conglomeration as the People's Party Ticket, but the Democrats would not stand for it a single minute this year and the ticket took the old Bourbon name as of yore and is now the Democratic ticket. Such men as Judge Winsor, who has fought for the principles of Populism for so long, must feel like fools at a trolic as they go out to the world fighting for the election of a Bourbon Democratic ticket. * * * Heifner's reference to the immortal Lincoln in a Democratic meeting did not meet with a very heavy approval, in fact, it fell on deaf ears. It was a desecration of the worst type to refer to so good a man in a Democratic convention, and the Democratic delegates recognizing that fact failed to respond with a single applause. Lincoln's name in a Republican convention always brings forth the wildest cheers, because Republicans recognize the greatness as well as goodness of the man. * * * William Jennings Bryan may still be a very popular politician and presidential candidate, but the mention of his name fails to elicit that wild enthusiasm it did four years ago even in a Democratic convention. The Democratic spell binders in the late Democratic convention who expected to make a great hit for themselves by making their peerating of their speeches with a Bryan eulogy failed to accomplish their purpose. * * * As permanent chairman of the union convention Bob Bridges looked just as he was ready to lead the entire delegation, 2,200 strong, to Franklin and Newcastle and kill every "nigger at work there, even if they had to blow up the entire mines to accomplish it." Are there any colored men in this state who want to support a man of that stray? *** Pierce and King counties got to tickle each other under the chin in the convention, and it was so good that they did not know when to stop. Pierce wanted a governor and King wanted a congressman. *** That delegate from Walla Walla who was such an enthusiasiaa Ronald man should learn to stop murdering Mother English before he goes to another convention. It is more than likely that he and Ronald had been “practicing at that private bar” too long before he got up to make his speech. *** E. H. Holmes, the colored Democrat from Snokane, who some years ago left Vicksburg, Mississippi, because he and his relatives could not vote as they desired, in fact could not vote at all, owing to Democratic shotguns being in the way, must have had queer feelings come over him while participating in a Democratic meeting in this state. What would his Vicksburg frends think of him if they should hear of this episode? *** The Populist party has been sold out bag and breeches to the Democratic party by a few men hungry for political honors. No more name and no more party principles. How do you like it, Mr. Populist? * * * Here is an offer for you: Send fifty cents to this office and receive The Seattle Republican until next January. Do not miss this opportunity if you desire to keep posted on the campaign. *** "I have traveled over most of the wheat belt in this state as well as the farming section in general and, I believe, I make no mistake when I say that the farmers are almost unanimous for expansion as enunciated in the Republican platform," said a prominent politician one day this week. "Unless Western Washington gets a hump onto itself," continued he, "Eastern Washington is going to roll up much larger majorities for the Republican ticket than it does." * * * Said another prominent Republican: "It has been my pleasant duty to hear the Republican ticket most favorably spoken of wherever I have been in the state, and that has been almost all over the state. Thinking I would learn the true feeling of the people as to the ticket named by the Republicans, I would let it be understood by innuendoes on arriving in a community that I was not a Republican and then draw my audiences into a political discussion, and to my surprise I found a warm feeling for the Republican ticket everywhere I went. I believe the ticket will be elected by an overwhelming majority." *** This paper would be very much pleased if you would enclose a fifty-cent piece in a letter and order the paper sent to your address until next January. If you appreciate good work you will do this. *** The success of Governor Rogers in the union convention after he had been turned down by overwhelming majorities in both the Democratic and the Populist conventions in the permanent organization, is the real wonder of the conventions. That astute politician, Senator George Turner, who plucked one legislativeman after another until he had plucked enough to elect himself United States senator in 1897, managed the Rogers campaign, and delegation after delegation climbed into the Rogers band wagon under his seductive Le Roi influence. It was charged on the floor of the convention by both Democratis and Populists that Senator Turner bought delegations enough on the convention floor to nominate his man. What kind of "reform" is that? * * * You Populists who were most shamely turned down by George Turner in the 1897 legislature can now console yourselves on being fool enough to get a second dose of the same kind of medicine from the very same man. You have not only lost your party name under his seductive Le Roi influence, but you have likewise lost all of your party prestige, and now you are as naked as a redbird in blackberry time. *** Robertson and Ronald, the two Democratic nominees, are lifelong Democrats and spurn Populism like they would the hiss of an adder. If such be Demo-Pop fusionism, where in the devil does the Pops get in on the fusion part. * * * As governor of the state with its great public patronage in his hands, John R. Rogers used it all to aid in the election of George Turner, at that time a pronounced Silver Republican, and that, too, despite the fact that there were two Populist candidates for the place, and also despite the fact that it was the persistence of the Populist party in his behalf that gave him the high public position he was then filling and using as a club to beat the very men to death, politically speaking, that elevated him. In turn Senator Turner seems to have let loose the latch strings of Le Roi to renominate Governor Rogers, and Rogers will, in turn, two years from now, give Turner his second favorable attention should he be-elected. How does that catch you, Mr. Populist? * * * Will Judge Winsor rise and explain how he can support a Democratic platform which is doing all in its power to disfranchise the Negroes of this country, the very men he, as a black abolitionist, fought to enfranchise? What has come over you, Judge Winsor? *** Hon. J. E. Hawkins, the well-known Afro-American attorney-at-law of this city, who was selected a member of the Republican county central committee from at large understands well his business and will prove one of the most useful, as well as tireless workers on the committee. He has served on the city central committee in a similar capacity through two campaigns. The payment of nine million dollars a year to build up American ships in the foreign trade, says Senator Frye, will, through the keen competition that will be engendered, effect a reduction in ocean freights on American imports and exports equal to about twenty-five million dollars a year. The Democratic managers have rigged up an emperor scarcrow, but it will not stampede the American voters. It is a good thing that the Democratic party has no reputation to lose for accuracy of statement. Facts are stubbornly against them. They are wrong on silver. They are wrong in predicting distress in Porto Rico. They are wrong in predicting the doom of the republic in the event of McKinley's re-election, and they are wrong by about a million and a half votes in their forecasts as to the election of their candidate in November. Protection for American citizens abroad may always be relied upon under a Republican administration. The reception given to the Democratic national platform's utterance on the shipping bill by the patriotic press of the country has been one of ridicule and disgust. Nothing more partisan and untrue was written in the Democratic platform than what it said in opposition to that bill. In their change of mind concerning the Goebel law the Kentucky Democrats are moved by expediency and not by morality. The Kansas City ticket and platform is calculated to make things lively at the exits instead of the entrances of the Democratic party. It might be well for Bryan to arrange with his publishers to get out a limited edition of "The Second Battle," and begin to prepare matter for explaining how it happened. Senator Bacon has been pounding away at the Philadelphia platform. Senator Bacon is the gentleman who recently distinguished himself by not being able to tell the difference between toadstools and mushrooms. If American ships carried American foreign commerce, about $200,000,000 that is now annually paid to foreign ships would be kept in the United States. The Tammany Ice Trust is coining fever and thirst into such handsome profits that their mayor is receiving an annual dividend of $35,000 on his stock. This is no political canard, for the Democrat mayor confessed it under oath on the witness stand. The Tammany ice box will cut somewhat of a figure at the ballot box. So will the ice trust in Chicago. The shortage in the country's stock of lumber simply means that the lumbermen underestimated the extent of the building operations. Building activity always accompanies prosperity. The Democratic leaders are unable to point out one act of the Republican Congress that is inimical to public interests. Unlike its Democratic predecessors, it didn't take orders from the Havemeyers and other trust magnates. Wheat, corn, oats, barley, rye, hogs, beef, eggs, pork, bacon, rice and cotton all advanced in price during June. These are McKinley prosperity facts. Cash in hand is better than Bryan's theories. Boss Croker snarls and makes a cheap bid for votes by declaring his objection to American troops fighting under an English admiral. He would probably prefer to witness the murder of American citizens. Mr. Towne now realizes just why he was nominated. Commissioner of Navigation Chamberlain estimates that the building up of American shipping will cost the United States about $250,000,000 in thirty years. That is the sum Great Britain has paid to British ships n the past xty years. It is the sum, moreover, that the American people pay to foreign ships for doing our import and export carrying each fifteen months. Exports of mineral oils were over $18,000,000 more in the last fiscal year than in 1899, and $33,000,000 more than in the Democratic year of 1894. Mr. Sulzer has been telling of the many things Mr. Bryan will do when he is President. Mr. Sulzer is continually exercising his imagination. The Philadelphia platform is such an acceptable document that there is naturally a little good-natured rivalry over its authorship. The value of the raw cotton exported in the fiscal year just ended was $241,666,165. It has never been so much since 1892, when it reached $258,461,241. Southern cotton growers will appreciate this return to the good old Republican times. President McKinley describes Republican Imperialism as follows: "To the party of Lincoln has come another supreme opportunity which it has bravely met in the liberation of 10,000,000 of the human family from the yoke of imperialism." When Mr. Croker shook hands with Chairman Jones at Kansas City the Tammany Ice Trust and the Round Bale Trust were on very good terms with eachother. Happily for the ice consumers of New York, all of the judges of that state are not Tammany tainted political hacks. The Kansas City platform appears best under the "A Glance Into Gloom" headline. The American people, being determined to have a merchant marine equal to the needs of American foreign commerce, naturally look to the Republican party—the party of construction—to pass an effective measure. The Democrats, on the other hand, being the party of destruction, are only able to oppose such a measure—they are apparently as incompetent as they are indisposed to put American ships upon the seas. Fiscal Year— Values. 1890 $154,925,927 1891 128,121,656 1892 299,363,111 1893 200,312,654 1894 166,777,229 1895 114,604,780 1896 141,356,993 1897 191,090,341 1898 324,706,060 1899 263,655,106 1900 253,223,525 Farmers will notice how the exports steadily declined during the last Democratic Free Trade Administration, and how much larger our exports of breadstuff have been under the Republican Administrations and protective tariffs. A REAL GRAPHOPHONE ..FOR... $5.00 Simple Clockwork Motor, Mechanism Vehicle Durable Construction. NO BOTHER, MUCH FUN. All the Wonders and Pleasures of a High-Priced Talking J'sachine. When accompanied by a Recorder this Glyphphone can be used to make Record Price calls to the REST 67.0. To make the standard Records. Send order and money COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH CO. Dept. 30 NEW YORK, 129-145 Broadway. ST. LOUIS, 1450 Grosse Pointe Ave. WASHINGTON, 919 Pennsylvania Ave. PHILADELPHIA, 1450 Baltimore. BALTIMORE, to R. Baltimore St. BUFFALO, to R. Buffalo St. SAN FRANCisco, 159 Geary St. PARIS, 160 Boulevard des BRASSIN, 159 Kronenburg. BONNEY & STEWART UNDERTAKERS PARLORS. THIRD AVE. and COLUMBIA ST. Preparing baskets for shipment a specialty. Tel. Main 13. NEW ENGLAND MARBLE AND GRANITE CO. Telephone Green 801. Cor. Sixth Ave and Pike Street Green 801. ALBERT HANSEN JEWELER AND SILVERSMITH ..Dealer in.. Diamonds, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver- ware, Rich Cut Glass, Ets. ( ) 'AVE. - - SEATTLE. The Frederick... ...Douglass Watch. A Premium Watch which Breaks The Record. Read carefully our Offer Below. FREE FOR ONE DAY'S' WORK. A GENTLEMAN'S watch with the bust of AGE, Frederick Douglass on the case. We wear a white dress with a black watches eyes over me! They are stem winders and stem setters, having all the modern apparel known to them, and silver watchs. They are made on the celebrated thin model plan. Remember this watch is a large, heavy, but a highly jewelled, nickel movement, made by one of the celebrated watch manufacturers, guaranteed by the manufacturers, and if not found exactly as represented the guarantee is in the box. The watch also would have cost $20 if they could have produced, but the fact that many appalachian men were properly adjusted and will be sent in running order. His character: They have a silver nickel silver. Are stem winding and stem setting. They have a duplex movement. Free to any one sending $4 for two yearly subscriptions, or $2 for one yearly and $1-$3 in all. This watch and the Colored Americas watch. The watch as a special inducement, postpaid, to any one send, $2.25. It will be seen therefore from the above that someone need be without a week until they keep to any in the neighborhood, a single daylonger. Indeed it will not take a day for anyone to assign a usual club of the national newspaper of The Colored American, the national newspaper of the race and the newsies and best race journal published. By it ouse and see for yourself how easy it is to get this watch on a foreign American. Don't lose time and attend to this matter as soon as you see this notice. Money can be sent by Post Office Money Order, Express Order, Bank Check, or Registered Letter. Address— ...THE COLORED AMERICAN... 450 C St., L. W. Washington, D. C. NORTHERN PACIFIC YELLOWSTONE PARK LINE TWO TRAINS DAILY To the East THE FAMOUS NORTH COAST LIMITED 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. Art, Seattle, Wash. D. CHAK, FUN, Amt. Gen. Fass, Agent, Portland, Oregon. New Groceries —O. KNOX Fresh Vegetables —O. KNOX What You Want —O. KNOX Come and See O. KNOX 813 Third Tel. Black 1971. —O. KNOX 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 E. A. GARDNER ...SOLICITS... LEGAL DETECTIVE WORK Satisfaction Guaranteed. Room 316 Pioneer Building 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 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. Osborne, Tremper & Co. INCORPORATED Abstract Office and Title Examiners 114 Cherry St. Phone Main 548 DRESSY SHOES If not, call at Guy's Drug Store F. JOHNSON Pike Street's Leading Grocer TEL. PIKE 28 614 PIKE STREET, SEATTLE, WASH Why Not Have Your Work Laun- dered Properly? "DOMESTIC" Is the latest finish machine. Cascade Laundry Company Phone Main 493. 807 FIRST AVE. The San Diego Fruit Company 415 PIKE STREET Has Double the Stock. The Greatest Variety and The Best Fruit of any house in the fruit line in Seattle. PRICES ARE ALWAYS RIGHT Come and See Us When in Need in Our Line. Washington will send a Missouri Democrat to congress this year—nit. Most Northern states have gone out of that kind of business. JOHN H. McGRAW ROOM B, BAII M B, BAILEY BUIL ROOM B, BAILEY BUILDING TELEPHONE. MAIN 695 REAL Fire and Marri FOR 2 A modern 9-room lighted by gas and convenience; splen under whole house cost $5,000. Prop over $6,000. Beau tween two car lin from Pioneer Squar ful flowers and shru sewered, very sig Will sell for REAL ESTATE and Marine Insurace FOR SALE eern 9-room house, w y gas and electric ace; splendid repair whole house. How 000. Property star 000. Beautifully loo to car lines, eight neer Square. Law s and shrubs, cem very sightly, fi for FOR SALE 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, Balance f Cash, Balance One-Half Cash, Balance 6 Per Ct. ```markdown ``` WE ARE AGENTS 18 INSURANCE Seattle & International Railway Short Line to All Points in BRITISH COLUMBIA SEattle & International Railway Short line to All Points in BRITISH COLUMBIA Train No. 1, for Snohomish. Arlington. Sedro- Woolley and Vancouver leaves Seattle 9:30 a. m. arrives Sumas m. connecting with Canadian Pacific railway for all points east; arrives at Vancouver 4:50 p. m. Train No. 2, leaves Sumas daily at 9:20 a. m. m. leaves Sumas at 12:00 p. m.; arrives Seattle 1:30 p. m. Train No. 3, "Daily, except Sunday," leaves Seattle 4.05 p. m.; arrives Sumas 9:45 p. m. connecting with Snoqualmie and Everett branches. Train no. 4, daily, leaves Sumas 5.20 a. m.; arrives Seattle 10.55 a. m. connecting with Snoqualmie branches. "Daily, except Sunday" Train No. 5, "Sun, lets only," for Sumas and intermediate points leaves Seattle 5:30 p. m. arrives Sumas 10.45 p. m. Service on Snoqualmie branch to and from President. H. E. BREZT, G. P. A., Seattle Pioneer Jeweler, Established 1888. Watches Pioneer Jeweler, Established 1888. Watches Scientific Optician. Watch Repairs Scientific Optician. Watch Repairs THE NORTHWESTERN'S FAST MAIL Have added two more trains (the Fast Mail) to their St. Paul Chicago service, making eight trains daily. BETWEEN MINNEAPOLIS ST. PAUL and CHICAGO This assures passengers from the west making connections. The 90th Century train, "the finest in the world," leaves St. Paul every day in the year at $8.00 p.m. F. W. PARKER, General Agent, 606 First Avenue, Seattle Wash passengers from the connections. Bury train, "the finest leaves St. Paul every at 8:40 p. m. F. M. PARKER General Agent, Avenue, Seattle Wash. Graham & Fine Jewel Second Ave. D. B. SPELL Practical B Frambling Telephone INSURANCE THE NORTHWESTERN LINE GEO. B. KITTINGER AILEY BUILDING ESTATE Marine Insurance SALE room house, with bath, and electricity; every lendid repair; cellar house. House alone property stands owner beautifully located, be- lines, eight minutes quare. Lawn, beauti- hrubs, cement walks, sightly, fine view. Balance 6 Per Ct. OFFICES 27-28 BAILEY BUILDING PHONE MAIN 337 FRED A. WING FRANK M. GUION (Wing-Guion Agency) Maryland Casualty Continental Girard Fire Massachusetts Mutual Life Standard Accident WAY A edro. m.; with east; 20 a. seattle WEST SEATTLE Will never be as low in price as now. This is the golden opportunity to secure a beautiful home site on your own terms. Remember, the electric road will be in operation by July 15, with regular service from 6 a.m. to 12 midnight. We build homes for you on easy payment plan also. Call for price list and map. WHALLEY & STURTEVANT 5 AND 6 COLMAN BLDG. Washington Dental and Photographic Supply Company Kodaka and High Grade Cameras, 211 Columbia street, Seattle Kindly remember our advertisers when you buy. Also speak a good word for THE REPUBLICAN. Graham & Moore Fine Jewelry at Moderate Prices. 705 Second Avenue, Seattle, Wash. D. B. SPELLMAN Practical Plumber and Gadgetter. Scallary Plumbing a specialty. 212 "Jumba St. Telephone Black 1621. PROPERTY AFRO-AMERICAN COUNCIL. The National Afro-American council of the Negro race of the United States convened in Indianapolis last Tuesday with an unprecedented number of delegates present. Bishop Alexander Walters called the meeting to order promptly at 11 clock, and the picture presented to the spectator was the most representative body of Negroes that had ever before assembled in this country. While politics will be a side issue in its deliberations, yet it is expected that such will bob up here and there during the entire proceedings. At the last meeting of the council a move was made to consure president McKinley for remaining silent on the lynchings in the South, that same feeling exists at present, but another trouble has arisen for the organization to discuss since the last adjournment, and it is the disranchise of the North Carolina Negroes. Both the Republican and the Democratic parties have their friends among the delegates who will work assiduously to present the council from becoming pronounced one way or the other as to political parties. Bishop Walters is aid to favor the election of Bryan, but a great majority of the delegates seem to favor the re-election of McKinley. They seem to think that of two evils it is better to choose the lesser. The American people, being determined to have a merchant marine equal to the needs of American foreign commerce, naturally look to the Republican party—the party of construction—to pass an effective measure. The Democrats, on the other hand, being the party of destruction, are only able to oppose such a measure—they are apparently as incompetent as they are indisposed to put American ships upon the seas. Our exports of breadstuffs compare as follows: Fiscal Year— Values. 1890 ..... $154,923,927 1891 ..... 128,121,656 1892 ..... 299,363,117 1893 ..... 200,312,654 1894 ..... 166,777,289 1895 ..... 114,604,780 1896 ..... 141,356,993 1897 ..... 191,090,341 1898 ..... 324,706,060 1899 ..... 263,655,106 1900 ..... 253,223,525 Farmers will notice how the exports steadily declined during the last Democratic Free Trade Administration, and how much larger our exports of breadstuffs have been under the Republican Administrations and protective tariffs. The payment of nine million dollars a year to build up American ships in the foreign trade, says Senator Frye, will, through the keen competition that will be engendered, effect a reduction in ocean freights on American imports and exports equal to about twenty-five million dollars a year. Sailor Sharkey might follow a distinguished example and write a book on "The Last Battle." The Democratic ticket cannot have the support of Tammany without its taint. They go together. The Georgia up-to-date minstrels, who are at the Seattle theater next Sunday and Monday, matinee and night, are well recommended by the press of the cities in the East. The St. Paul Pioneer Press of recent date says: The Georgia up-to-date minstrels have just closed a week's engagement at the Bijou to one of the most successful week's business of the season. The Butte Miner says: George & Hart's up-to-date minstrels are in every way in keeping with their name. Messrs. George and Hart have this year consolidated the Georgia up-to-date minstrels with the Georgia University Graduates (who make such a hit on the Pacific coast two years ago); as a result they are offering the most pleasing performance, of such a diversified nature that the most fastidious will find enjoyment and laughter provoking comicalities by the score. The engagement is only for three performances, Sunday and Monday night, and a matinee on Labor day. "Under Sealed Orders" will be the attraction at the Third Avenue theater next week, commencing Sunday, September 2. The company is under the direction of Joseph Muller, a manager who in past seasons has always brought something good to Seattle. The company carries special scenery for each act, and the costuming of the play is said to be unexcelled. The action of the play alternates between London and Algeirs, and a group of decidedly interesting characters help to work out the idea that it is a decided innovation to the stage. The Baltimore Sun proclaims President McKinley to be a weak candidate. The Baltimore Sun is a very deliberate institution, and it may be that it has not yet had the time to look at the election returns of 1896. NORTHERN PACIFIC YELLOWSTONE PARK LINE RUNS TWO TRAINS DAILY To the East THE FAMOUS NORTH COAST LIMITED 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 NADAEu. Gen. Agt. Seattle, Wash. G. C. Frost, Gen. Fase, Agent, Portland, Oregon. New Groceries —O. KNOX Fresh Vegetables —O. KNOX What You Want —O. KNOX Come and See O. KNOX 813 Third Tel. Black 1971. —O. KNOX 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 LEGAL DETECTIVE WORK Satisfaction Guaranteed. Room 316 Pioneer Building Hats-Cleaned, Dyed and Retrimmed by Practical Hatters A Full Line of New Hats at Factory Prices. 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. Osborne, Tremper & Co. INCORPORATED Abstract Office and Title Examiners 114 Cherry St. Phone Main 548 DRESSY SHOES RUPTURE Does your truss hold you? If not, call at Guy's Drug Store F. JOHNSON Pike Street's Leading Grocer TEL. PIKE 28 614 PIKE STREET, SEATTLE, WASH Why Not Have Your Work Laun- dered Properly? Cascade Laundry Company Phone Main 493. 807 FIRST AVE. The San Diego Fruit Company 415 PIKE STREET Has Double the Stock. The Greatest Variety and The Best Fruit of any house in the fruit line in Seattle. PRICES ARE ALWAYS RIGHT Come and See Us When in Need in Our Line. Washington will send a Missouri Democrat to congress this year—nit. Most Northern states have gone out of that kind of business. TIMBER LAND, ACT JUNE 3, 1878. Notice for publication. United States Land Office, Seattle, Wash., Aug. 25, 1878. Notice is hereby given that in compliance of congress of June 3, 1878, for the sale of timber land in the states of California, Nevada and Washington, James L. Stetlman is public land states by act of August 4, 1878. James L. Stetlman is public land states by act of August 4, 1878. King of Washings is this day in filed in his slaw his stunted body in section No. 2 in township No. 25, N range No. 8 E, and will offer to show that the land sought is more valuable than the land sought for agricultural purposes, and to establish his claim to said land before the regiment. On Thursday, the 22d day of November, 1800, was witnessed: Joseph Emery of Stoquamalie, Wash.; E. G. Plum, of Stoquamalie, Wash.; Max Winter of Stoquamalie, Wash.; Frank Weldel, of Stoquamalie, Wash. And all persons claiming adversely the above-described lands are requested to be served a copy of the notice or before said 224 day of November, 1900. EDWARD P. TREMPER, Register. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE—IN THE Superintendent court of the State of Washington. In Probate. State of the matter of the estate of William C. Hill, deceased. Notice is hereby given that pursuant to the order of the above entitled court the estate of William C. Hill, underwritten, as administrator of the estate of William C. Hill, deceased, with the will annexed, will or after the death of the estate of William C. Hill, at 22 Hall building in the city of St. Louis,砂ington, sell at private sale to the highest and best bidder for cash. United States gold coin, the real or the above described estate, is to say: Lot's seventeen (17) and twenty (20) pounds, pre-eminent for Hudnard's Five Acre lots, installed in section twenty-three (23), township twenty-four (24) north range four (4) cast, King Bids must be in writing and left at my office at 22 Hall building aforementioned and accompanied by ten per cent. (10%) of the amount of purse paid to me for the purchase of a check some reputable bank of the city of Seattle. August 31, Dated, Seattle, Washington, August 31 1900. WILLIAM H. LEWIS, As Administrator as Affected L. T. Turner, Attorney for said Administrator. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF The State of Washington, for King County Emma K. Prulemont, plaintiff, vs. Wiliam K. Prulemont, all persons, it any, having or claiming an interest or easure in or to the heretofore owned property. No. ... Notice and Summons. no, or reputed owners, oit, and ad persons unknown, claiming or having an interest or easure in or to the heretofore owned property. After described real property, no, or reputed owners, oit, and ad persons unknown, claiming or having an interest or easure in or to the heretofore owned property. Notified that the above named plaintiff, Emma K. Prulemont, is the holder of a denquent tax owner of king county. Washington, embracing the following real property situated more particularly as described, toows, to se. $ 4 / of SW 1/2, Sec. 8, T 22 N, R 5 east. sale certificate was based on the 2nd day of November, 1899, for the of $22.34, for the delinquent taxes for the property toow, the takes for the plaintiff, to-wit: The year 1898, the sum the year 1898, the sum of $22, which soral sums bear interest at the rate of fifteen per cent, per annum from said ad persons. Northeast quarter of southeast quarter of north quarter of north of range five east (NE, 45° of Sb) GRAPHOPHONE ..FOR... $5.00 Simple Clockwork Motor, Hydraulic Visible, Durable Construction. When accompanied by a Recorder this Graphophone can be used to make Records. The standard record is the standard record, send order and money to our nearest office. COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH CO, Dept. 30 NEW YORK, NY 10017, Roadway NEW YORK, 192g, 17g Roadway, CHICAGO, 88 Wabash Ave. ST. LOUIS, 192g, 17g Wabash Ave. WASHINGTON, 69g Pennsylvania Ave. PHILADELPHIA, 192g, 17g Baltimore St. BURKFORD, 192g, 17g to k. Baltimore St. SAN FRANCISCO, 192g, 17g Geary St. PARIS, 65 Boulevard. SAN FRANCISCO, 192g, 17g Geary St. THIRD AVE. and COLUMBIA ST. Preparing bids for shipment a spectatty. Tel. Mata 13. NEW ENGLAND MARBLE AND GRANITE CO. Telephone Green 801. Corr. Stark Ave and Pike Street, Wash. ALBERT HANSEN Diamonds, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver ware, Rich Cut Glasses, Etc. Magnolia C. Michelsen, defender You are hereby summoned to appear in the court after the date of the first publication in within sixty (60) days after the 18th day of publication to defend the above entitled action in the court and answer the complaint of the plaintiff and answer the complaint of your answer upon the undersigned being directed to office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered and the complaint, which has been with the clerk of said court. The object of the action is to obtain a divorce on the grounds of abandonment and cruelty. The publication of this notice August 17, 1900. D. E. MELLLAN. Plaintiff's Attorney, Whateau County, Washington You and each of you are hereby notice, that the above named plaintiff, Emma P. Curtis, is the owner of the B. 28, issued by the treasurer, No. B. 28, issued by the treasurer, embarking the following in Washington, embarking in the king county, Washington, and more particularly described as follows, to East 1/4 of SW 1/4 of SE 1/4, Sec. 7, Tp. 22 N., 10.5 east. That said certificate was issued on the 15th of November, 1889, for the sum of $45, the taxes for years 1885 and 1886; that the taxes for the following years have been paid by the county, the year 1888, the sum of $16; the year 1889, the sum of $16; the sums baw interest at the rate of fifteen per cent, per annum from said date of 1885, and each of you are hereby directed and summoned to appear within sixty days upon you, exclusive of the date of service, in above entitled court, and together with the costs. In case of your judgment, and judgment will be applied to foreclosing the lien for taxes and property, lands and premises herein named. EMMA P. PLUKEY, LYMAN E. KNAPP, Plaintiff Office address, in Haller Building, Seattle, Washington. PROFORATE NOTICE. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE County of Washington, for the County of Kinsa State of Washington, County of King-ss. In the Matter of the Estate of James Holyoke, executor of the estate of Settlement of Account, that Richard Holyoke, executor of the estate of James A. Wirth, deceased, has rendered to and issuing a will, and such executor, and that the Friday, the 28th morning, at the court room of the Probez Department of our said Superior Court, in which time and place any person inter- ested in his exceptions in writing to said account, his exceptions in writing to said account, his exceptions in writing to said account, Wilkes, the Hon. Wm. Hickman Moore, Judge of said Superior Court and his exceptions in writing to said account, 23d day of August, 1909, OWAY Clay, R. EARL R. JENNER, DENNER Clerk IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE state of Washington, for King County, having an interest or claim in or estate in property, defendants. No. ... Notice and summons. The state of Washington to W. H. Braden and unknown defendants who are owners, or reported owners, of, and an interest or claim in or estate in and to the heretofore real property. You and your attorney hereby notified that the above named plaintiff, Lyman K. county, Washington, embracing King County, Washington, and more particularly described as follows, to-wit: block eight (6) in the townsite of Washougat, for the detinant taxes for the year 1838, have been paid by the plaintiff, to-wit: year 1838, the sum of $4.38; year 1839, the sum of $4.38; several sums bear interest at the rate of fifteen per cent. You and each of you are hereby not authorized to enter the building nor J. Alexander, the holder of a delinquent tax certificate, No. B 125, issued by Washington, enriched the following property situated in King County, Washington, particularly described as follows, to-wit: IN JUSTICE COURT-Before C. G. Auslice, justice of the peace in and tor Sesquimba, of the state of Washington, John Sullivan, plaintiff, v. E. H. Fisher, defendant. No. ... Summa. State of Washington, county of King, sas. To E. H. Fisher, in the name of the state of Washington, you are hereby not, in the name of Washington, to give a plaintiff against you in said court which will come on to be heard at my office in the county of Washington, on the lst day of September, A. D. Justice at the hour of 10 a.m. and then answer, the same will be taken as contested and the demand of the court will be made of said complaint of John Sullivan and the value of storage for storing certain personal property to-wit: Desks, chairs and other office furniture from October 1, 1851 to December 31, 1851. Complaint filed August 1, A. D. 1900. C. G. AUSTIN. Justice of the peace, Seattle precinct, King county, Wash. IN JUSTICE COURT - Before C. G. AUSTIN, justice of the peace in and for Seattle precinct, King county, Washington, of Washington, and Charles E. Rissler co-partners under the firm name and style of Russell & Russell, defendants. NOTICE. Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate. State of Washington, County of King, ss, Shen iff's ounce. By virtue of an Order of sale issued out of the Bourbon Superior Court of King County, of Bourbon, on June 10, 1800, by the decree thereof in the case of William Bodroyd and accuser Bourroyd, his wife, J. Jones and his captain Bodroyd, his wife, J. Jones and captain Bodroyd, his wife; mary Jane Langeger and Henry I. Langeger, nor his brother Benjamin engagemenand Johanna Auken, defendants. No. 20800, and co-more as Sheriff, directed and d-ivered: to the said Lawn Schererate, Deleminet. You are hereby summoned to appear at the first pronouncement or after the date of within sixty days after the aid day of the court, and answer the above enforced action in the above and answer the complaint of the painter and upon the undersigned attorney for painting at the o e ceBelow stated, and in will be rendered against you according the demand of the company, which has court, county. The object of the said action is to obtain a divorce between the plaintiff and the minor child of the custody and the minor child of the custody, awarded to the plaintiff. L. I. FORKER, Fainnin's Attorney, Seattle, King County, Washington. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE state of Washington, for King County, Kennedy, Plumley, paintn, vs. Wainnin vs. the administrators, and all persons in an interest or estate in and to the described real property, estates. No. In Washington to Wainnin lives, and heirs, who are the owners, or persons unlawful, claiming or making a personal unlawful claim on the described real property. You and each of you are hereby notified of the plaintiff, Emma R. Plumley, is the indictor of the certificate, No. 12, 21, issued by the treasurer of King County, Washington, en- dicated the following real property stat- ment in connection with the more particularly described as follows, tow-t: SW % of SW %, Sec. 9, Tp. 24 N., R. 5, east N. That said certificate was issued on the 2nd day of November, 1898, for the sum for the delinquent taxes for the year 1898, and for the following years have been paid by the painter, to-wit. The year 1898, for the sum of $48,848, the year 1898, the sum of $48,288, which several sums bear interest at the rate of fifteen percent, the sum of the $48,288, payment, each of you are hereby directed and summoned to appear within six days after the service of this notice, and summons upon you excuse for the date service in the office of the date defend the action or pay the amount due, defend the action or pay the amount due, failure so to do, judgment will be rendered judgment, and judgment will be rendered for said taxes and costs against the real property, and premises herein named. EMMA P. PLUMLEY, Plaintiff. LYMAN E. KNAPP, Plaintiff. Office address, 20 Haller Building, Seattle, Washington. SE ¼ of SE ¼, Sec. 7, Tp. 22 N, R 5 east. That said certificate was issued on the 2nd day of November, 1899, for the sum of $3.44 million, and on the 2nd day of November, 1898, that the taxes for the following years have been paid by the plaintiff, w/o. Writen the year, the sum of $3.44 million, and on the 2nd day of November, 1898, the sum of $3.44 million, several years later, the sum of $3.44 million, per cent, per annum from said day of payment. And each of you are hereby directed and summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the action upon you, exclusive of the date of service, in above entitled court, and defend the action or pay the amount due, and summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the failure so to do, plaintiff will apply for the payment of the taxes foreclosing the lien for said taxes and costs against the real property, lands and premises herein owned. EMMA P. PLUMLEY, Plaintiff. LVMAN E. NKAPP, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office added 13 Halter Building, Seattle, Washington. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County, and Ives, his administrators and herds, and all persons, if any, naming or claiming an interest or estate in and to the hereto- wards, No. .... Notice and Summons. State of Washington to Wailord Ives, owners, or repaired owners, or owners, or repaired owners, or persons unknown, claiming or having the hereto-derished real property. You and each of you are hereby notified of the king's paint, ramma (5) Pamley) is the holder of a certificate, No. B 220, issued by the treasurer of King county, Washington, em- pired in King county, Washington, and more particularly described as follows, NE. $ \frac{1}{4} $ of SW. $ \frac{1}{4} $ Sec. 8, Tp. 22 N., R. 5 east. That said certificate was issued on the 2nd day of November, 1899, for the sum of $125,000 for the years 1885 and 1886; that the taxes for the years 1885 and 1886 were $10,000; the payment to wait: The year 1890, for the sum of $4.8; the year 1898, the sum of $42; which several sums bear interest at the rate of $1.25 per day; the notice and date of payment. You and each of you are hereby directed to appear within sixty days after the service to us notice and to pay the sum of $42 of services, in above entitled court, and defend the action or pay the amount due for failure to do so. do. plaintiff will apply for judgment, and judgment will be rendered against the real property, costs against the real property, lands and premises herein. EMMA P. PLUMLEY, Plaintiff. LYMAN E. KNAPP, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office address, 10 Haller Building, Seattle Washington. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County, for the years 1885 and 1886, fits, vs. unknown owner, and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming hereafter described real property, defendants. No. 2135. Notice and sum- State of Washington to unknown owner, who are the owners, or repaired owner, living or having an interest or estate in and the hereditary described real property. You and each of you are hereby notified Hawkins and J. J. Turner, are the holders of a delinquent tax certificate to Hawkins and J. J. Turner, are the holders of a delinquent tax certificate to King County, Washington, embracing the property situated in King County, Washington, parcelable described as follows: to-wait, block 10, Lake Union addition to Seattle. That said certificate was issued on the 7th day of April, 1890, for the sum of 100,000 dollars, the year 1890, 1895, 1898, 1899, 1898 and 1898; that the amount paid by the plaintiffs, to-wait; the year 1897, the sum of $1,010; the year 1898, 1899, 1898 and 1898; that the amount which several bears bear interest at the rate of ninety per cent, per annum You and each of you are hereby direct and summoned to appear within sixty days of the date of the summons upon you, exclusive of the date defend the action or pay the amount due together with the costs. In case of your wrongdoing, the property, lands and premises per named Attorney for Plaintiffs; Office Address, 22 Foner building, Seattle, Washington, You, the said Janet Llewellyn, are the owner of the above described property, given to you information and belief, and you are here authorized to receive service within sixty days after the service of this notice on you, exclusive of the day of the notice, and pay the amount due on the delinquent balance of the notice. In forth, and you are notined that in case you fail to do, judgment will be rendered forecased to you, taxes above set forth and coats against taxes above set forth and premises hereinabove described. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE King—in Washington for the County of King—in the Matter of the Estate of James A. Brown, the Cause of Cause Why Distribution Should Not Matter Richard Holyoke, executor of the estate of Mr. Hirth, occasioned, having met in this Court in 1975, that said estate is now in a condition to be disposed of. The Court resolved thereover among the persons enclosed in the estate, and it appearing to the Court that the facts sufficient to authorize a distribution of the estate are It is therefore ordered by the Court that all persons interested in the estate of the late William H. Moore, and appear before the said Superior Court of King County, State of Washington, at the court of appeal of the court of said Court in the City of Seattle, and at the court of appeal of the court of said Court in the City of Seattle, on hour of 8:20 a. m. of said day, there and there to show cause, if any they may prove that the residence of the said estate not be made of the residue of said estate among the heirs and persons in said petition, and that it is published once a week for four successive months in the county and of general circulation therein. Done in open Court this 23d day of August, 1990, W. HICKMAN MOORE, Judge. State of Washington, county of Kirk, by virtue of an all order of sale, issued the honorable superior court of county of Kirk, by the clerk thereof, in the case of A. Fisk, pennant, N. W. L. Ogden, O. G. Brown, pennant, N. W. L. Ogden, wife, the Eagle Dairy Company, a corporation, and I. N. Bigelow, defendants N. O. Brown, and to me, as she警, directed and signed. Notice is hereby given. That I will proceed to see her by court, within the hours specified by law for sheriff's sales, to-visit Clock a. m., on the sixth day of September, 1908, house door of said King county, in the county of King County, and interest of the said defendants in and to the following described property, situated on the to-will: The southwest quarter of the township twenty-two-thousand acres of east of the William meridian, levied on judgment amounting to $22,500, with interest and costs of suit, in favor of the Court. Dated this 1st of August, 1908. A. I. VAN DEN VAERER. Sheriff. By T. H. BURKE. Deputy. Attorneys: Stratton & Powell. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, in King County, John V. Kingsmith, plaintiff, vs. Kingsmith defendant. No. Summons for The State of Washington to the said Cora V. Klingensmith, defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear before the court on the first publication day after the first publication of the summons to wait: Within sixty (60) days of the 17th August, 1898, and defend the *pillow* in the August 1898 court, and answer the complaint of the unresolved lawsuit upon the unresolved attorney's plan for plaintiff at his office below stated: and will be rendered against you according to the terms of the unresolved lawsuit filed with the clerk of said court. The object of the above entitled action is to seek the relief of the You are hereby summoned to appear with the sixty (60) days after the date of the indictment, and to answer the witt: Within sixty (60) days of the 17th August, 1858, and the above entitled person, in the court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiffs, and serve a copy of your answer to the plaintiffs at his office below stated, and plaintiffs at his office below stated, and will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been satisfied. The object of the above entitled action is to secure a judgment for $50.00 and costs. The object of the above entitled action is to render defendant by plaintiffs. Postoffice address. Plaintiff's Attorney Building. Seattle, King County, Washington