Seattle Republican

Friday, October 5, 1900

Seattle, Washington

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VOL. VII NO. 17 A steamer which lay at the wharf of New Orleans en route for St. Louis, one hot summer day in July, was a little late in leaving the port, and on her ample deck all was busy bustle. John Watson, the mate, was just about to give the signal that the stage-plank be drawn up, when a man stepped before him and asked, "Could you use another deckland, sir?" He did not reply at once, as his wont, but stood silently surveying his man. "How far are you going?" he finally asked, when the surveying process had exceeded all bounds of endurance. "To St. Louis," was the answer. "You don't look much like a roster," said the mate, a d for John Watson this was an unusual admission, for, to him, "a nigger's a nigger always." His remark had been prompted, however, by two oreasons: first, his nature was such that he wanted to see all wages well earned, if not overearned, and the stranger did not seem adequately strong; and, secondly, there was something in the personnel of the man who stood before him which elevated him far above that group of half-clad, crouching specimens of humanity who stood near by, waiting to jump at his next command. "I can do the work, sir," the stranger calmly replied. The mate did not like the applicant's appearance, but he needed more help, so he whipped out a notebook and pencil: "What's your name?" he asked abruptly. "William Nelson," said the stranger. "All aboard!" cried the mate, as he hurriedly scrawled something in his notebook and passed down the stage-plank, Nelson following closely in his wake. The bell rang out quick and sharp, the gang-plank swung upward, the grease splashed and splattered, and the steamer was soon in mid-river dense columns of smoke marking her course as far as the eye could follow. It is a custom among the deckhands, when the boat is not too heavily freighted, to while away the time between landings in various ways, such as singing, dancing, playing games of cards and holding mock church meetings. This is often done for the edification of some upper deck passenger to whom the Southern roster is a revelation, and who scatters dimes among them in return for their entertainment, which, to say the least, is crude, weird and at times extremely boisterous. However, as these rough, uncultured voices join in singing some simple ballad, ever and anon there falls upon the listener's ear a harmony of sound, a sweet, chiming cadence that whispers, ere it fades into silence, of a natural musical ability, the possibilities of powers given, yet doomed to die unknown. Nelson saw all and heard all as his fellow deckhands thus spent their leisure moments', but he kindly yet firmly refused their repeated efforts to draw him in likewise. His refusal brought forth their censure, and their leader, a great, burly man with about 40 years behind him, who wore the nickname of Handy Andy, vowed to revenge himself on the "stuck-up stranger." Because he would not stoop to their level they, as the truly ignorant always do, hated him for having one of his own on which to stand, and from that time on the trip was made even more unbearable for Nelson than the circumstances themselves would naturally warrant. It was no difficult task for men who knew how to take advantage of the size and shape of the freight to be handled to throw the heavier weight on Nelson, and that was done on every occasion. Nelson stood it well, and regardless of the fact that his head and back soon began to ache dreadfully, kept up with the others. Observing this, Handy Andy said, "We must burn him, boys," and at the next landing the rousters, who always walked rapidly, broke into a slow run and freighted in a trot. It was high noon, and the hot July sun proved almost more than Nelson could stand. There were times when in descending the stage-plank he stumbled, for all was dark before him for a moment, but a sneer from some of the men or a mocking laugh from Handy Andy, who seemed to exceed all of the others in the amount of enjoyment gotten out of his discomfort, caused him to quickly fall into line again, and little wonder, if when hurriedly raising his arm to wipe the perspiration from his burning brow, great tears wrung from his inmost heart, unknown to any, were wiped away also. Nelson knew where he got the strength to pass through that day and night. The next day the persecution ceased, as it apparently disconcerted him not in the least, and in its stead Handy Andy inaugurated a plan whereby they completely ignored his presence. Thus the days and nights passed till on the morrow they were to have reached Missouri, Missouri city St. Louis. Sunset on the river is a beautiful sight: the last long, red rays of light sinking lower and lower till lingeringly they leave the boat and lay upon the bosom of the river, later, and to all appearances the waters The SEATTLE REPUBLICAN have swallowed them up, for all is darkness, black, inky darkness, save here and there on the steamer where bright lights make it look like some creature of life plowing on and on amid the darkness. And thus it was on our steamer when suddenly a scream rang out, followed by a splash in the water, and a human body sank beneath the surface of the water. "Man overboard!" rang out the cry. More lights were quickly brought. "Tis Handy Andy," screamed his mate, as he hastily scanned his men to see who was missing. "My God! the man can swim!" he added, as Andy's head rose above the surface and disappeared again. All was eager suspense, and a thrill of terror ran through the watching ones as Andy's head again came above and again disappeared. The silence was new broken by exclamations of surprise as a man in their midst snatched off his coat, took a running leap and dove beneath the water close to the spot where And was last seen. Twas only a few moments, yet seemingly an age, when Andy's head again appeared above, and close to it a man who immediately grabbed Andy and held him afloat. The watchers pressed closer to the boat's edge and the lights disclosed Andy's ain'ting condition, while holding him up and fighting for life could be seen the butt of his recent displeasure, the small man Nelson. Then for the first time some one thought of a rope. It was thrown to them. None too soon, for Andy was not by any means a light weight, and Nelson was well exhausted from the hardness of the trip. A boat was lowered, and the two men were in a short time safe on board the steamer. "Give Andy your attention," said Nelson as he hied away to his bunk and was seen no more that night. The wharf of St. Louis and the steamer unloaded. The rousters settled with, and Nelson had stepped off of the gland-plank for the last time, when some one just behind him spoke: "I would like to say a word to you." He turned to see Handy Andy, who was by that time quite recovered and considerably cleaner, from his fall into the river. The man's chest was heaving, his eyes swam as if he would burst into tears. I owe you an apology, stranger," he at last said, "for I made it as hard and you as I could. I told the boys to burn you 'cause I thought you thought you was the man of us all, and you ends by saving my life and I finds that you is the man." Tears were now trickling over his hardened features. "Would you give me your hand in parting?" he asked, as he pulled his battered hat from his head and stood uncovered in the hot sun, in humble, dejected yet gratefulully. Nelson grasped the proffered hand, and holding it in his said: "Andy, let us go under yonder shed. I would like for you to tell me something of your life. I might be able to aid you in some way." "There ain't much to tell mybody, dear knew," said Andy, when he and Nelson had climbed upon a cotton hale beneath the shed and in full view of the steamer. "I don't know who I is nor where I come from; don't even as much as know my name. My first memories is of a woman in New Orleans who said she were my mother. I never believed her; I always hated her; don't know why as I did, I but I did. Well, when I were eight years old I run off from her and has never seed since. I went from hand to mouth, from place to place ever since. The only name I ever knew was Andy, what she called me, and the boys, cause I allers could turn my hand to do anything, calls me Handy Andy. And that's all the story as I has to tell, for it's all I knows." "Well, Andy," said Nelson, "truly you have not had much of a chance, yet your story interests me greatly, for I am in search of a man whose story I do not know, but who, like you, a child was in the care of a woman who was not his mother. How well she kept her charge I know not. I'll tell you the story in full," he continued, "as you have trusted me with yours. During the last of the slavery days my mother was married and gave birth to a baby boy, whom, as she was hiring out her time, she paid a woman to keep for her. This woman suddenly disappeared one night, taking the baby with her. She went South, mother afterwards learned, but she could not trace her. That has been just forty years ago. Since then my mother has married again, and I am her youngest child by her last husband, who has but recently died. He well used well here in the city of St. Louis, but mother, who is now quite elderly, still beamos the loss of her first born, and it was to seek his whereabouts that I went to New Orleans." "Did you find him?" asked Handy, who had followed the narrative with close attention. "No," said Nelson, "I failed most miserably, and just for the experience, which I must say I bought at a rather high price, I worked my way up on your steamer." "I hope the boy faded better I did," said Andy, "for Mary Malone was anything but—" "Mary Malone" BY TH J. B. H. HON. S. A. CALVERT Candidate for State Land Commissioner TUESDAY TUESDAY TUESDAY, NOV. 6th, NEXT screamed Nelson: "do you know her? That's the name of the woman who ran away with my baby brother." "Mary Malone is the name of the woman who claims to be my mother," said Andy. "Tell me," cried Nelson eagerly, "what kind of a looking woman is this Mary Malone." "A tall, good-looking, Indian-like woman with the scar of a burn on her right hand." "The same," exclaimed Nelson. "Andy," cried he, as he threw both arms around the huge form which he had struggled so hard to save from a watery grave, "you are my brother." Come home with me; mother is waiting for you, Andy." But Andy unwound the arms from about him and slid down from the cotton bale. For a few moments his rough, weather-beaten face was turned upward towards where Nelson still sat; on it was depicted all the desiring yearning of a man whose empty heart craves home and love, of a man who feels that the tide of hope is fast flowing from him. "No," he said, "not there, Nelson. I is glad to know that I has a mother, but such as I is has no right to such a one as has a boy like you: so I still has no mother. Yes, I is proud, too, of a brother like you. Proud to know that somebody as is kni to me is a man like what I has always wanted to be. I will be happier 'cause of having found that I has a good mother and a brother who's a man. --- --- SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1900. WHO [Name] THE RE SDAY, NO but such as I is, is not for the likes of your home, so tell your mother that her boy is dead, fur he is, fur I ain't nobody, just Handy Andy." He drew his arm across his face as if to wipe away something which prevented his seeing, pulled his hat well over his eyes, and without as much as another look at Nelson, perhaps fearing he would fall from his resolution did he venture from one short glance, walked down to the steamer in the rolling gait common to the Southern roster, descended the stage-plank, and a moment later the mate had enrolled among the deckhands for the return trip—the name of Handy Andy. Rev. Prince, the Baptist missionary sent to Seattle to administer to the heavenly wants of the Afro-Americans, has laid aside his divine medicine and is now preaching politics with a Bryan twang. Rev. Prince is himself not yet a voter. Mrs. Matthew Brown writes from Tesla, Cal., saying that her mother and children are well pleased with their new home, and that she, Mrs. Brown, is rapidly regaining her health. Mr. and Mrs. Penn are both well pleased. There will be a musicale given in the A. M. E. church, on Fourteenth ```markdown ``` WILL JUDGE HENRY G. MCBRIE Republican Candidate for Lieutenant-Governor THE REPUBLI Y, NOV. 60 ```markdown ``` PERSONAL BE ```markdown ``` PUBLICA avenue and Madison street, next Tuesday evening, at which all are cordially invited to be present. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Ryan, who thought of entering the journalistic arena of Seattle, has decided to try Tacoma, as it is a more inviting field. Editor Gideon S. Bailey spent last Sunday in Franklin, where, it is reported, he and H. B. Jones indulged in calling each other pleasant names. Invitations to an Odd Fellows' ball to be given by the Mount Rainier lodge, of Taecoma, have been received by Seattle's Afro-American "100." Rev. N. D. Hartsfield and Dr. Prince, of Newcastle, were Seattle visitors this week. John Jacob Gayton speaks of attending the fruit fair at Spokane next week. Telephone Main 305 for The Republican to come for your legal notices. Fine optical work done with neatness and dispatch. M. A. Goldman, 901 Second avenue, Burke building. The Republican's office is just three doors north of Cherry and Third—112 Third. ```markdown ``` M. B. L. C. SMITH Candidate for King County Commissioner For the opening of the new Grand Opera house next Monday night, the management have secured a big attraction, consisting of Ferris Hartman, the popular comedian of the Tivoli Opera house in San Francisco, and the famous comic opera company of that theater, who will present here for the week and usual matinees, the well-known musical, farcical comedy "Ship Ahoy," which is one of the Tivoli's most pronounced successes. Supporting Hartman there is a company of fifty people, and "Ship Ahoy" will be produced here with all the original scenery, costumes and effects. The "prince of comedians," as Hartman is well termed, comes here after a seventy's continuous engagement at the Tivoli—sufficient proof, if any is needed, as to his popularity and talent. Among those who appear with him in "Ship Ahoy" are such well-known favorites as Bernice Holmes, Julie Cotte, Justina Wayne, Ida St Aubyn, Hazel Sanger, Flo Miller, Lois and Harry Cashman, Tom Guise, Fred Kavanagh, Emile Barangon, Frank Prutette, etc. The chorus consists of thirty of the prettiest girls ever seen on the stage, and the performance will be identical with those given in San Francisco. The Republican's office, 712 Third avenue, one door north of Seattle theater. AFRO-AMERICANISM The very latest dodge that the Democrats have taken to capture colored votes in this campaign is to belittle Col. Roosevelt by saying that he would have lost the day at San Juan Hill and would have been court-martialled if it had not been for the Tenth cavalry, which is a colored company, going to his rescue. That the famous fighting Tenth did play a most conspicuous part in that deadly day's proceedings no one denies for a single minute, and, if you please, saved the day to Roosevelt, then they did not do any more than was a soldier's duty. It was the concentrated efforts of all those fighting at San Juan that saved the day to the American army, and had any part of the whole shirked in a single instance the day would have been lost, and what turned out to be one of the most brilliant victories in modern warfare would have proven a most disastrous failure and the United States army disgraced. For the sole sake of argument let's admit that the colored soldiers were the "whole shooting match" in that gallant charge; then is it not strange that the Democrats never cared to hear of that until they thought it would get them a few Negro votes? The colored soldiers that made that charge and who, according to the darling Democrats, are more deserving of praise than Col. Roosevelt, had to pass through the South on their return from Cuba, and in Arkansas a pitched battle was held in the towns with the Democratic mossbacks because the colored soldiers dared get off the train as they were passing through the state. The colored soldiers were hooted and sneered at by the Southern Democrats at every town they passed through in the South. Storms of protests were sent in to the war department from Southern towns that no Negro troops be quartered near any Southern city. It was but a few days ago that the Tillmanites of South Carolina compelled one of the best drilled colored companies to disband in that state because Democracy could not stand to see Negro soldiers. Then it has been but a few months ago that the Democratic citizens in and about Fort Ringold, Texas, decided to drive the Negro soldiers from that fort and openly fired on them. It was returned by the heroes of San Juan with such deadly results that those thugs soon found out for once they had run up against the real thing, and the black boys have since had no more trouble from that source. Yes, Mr. Democrat, the Negro is a brave soldier and fights like a for his country, but you never care to acknowledge that fact unless you think you can get a few Negro votes in the North, where you find it utterly impossible to disfranchise the Negroes. How strange that you would want a vote from a Negro in the North, East or West, so low and ignorant is the Negro vote from your standpoint. If the Negro vote is not good enough to put you into office in South Carolina, North Carolina, Louisiana, Mississippi and other Southern states it should not be good enough to put you into office in the Northern states, for it's a poor rule that will not work both ways. *** Rev. H. C. C. Astwood, of Brooklyn, N. Y., ex-United States consul to St. Domingo, and at present pastor of the Bridge Street African Methodist Episcopal church, was present at an informal gathering held at the headquarters of the Philadelphia Branch Afro-American Council, 1426 Lombard street, recently. Rev. Dr. Astwood, in speaking of the duty of the black man in the present campaign and his obligation to the Republican party, said: "There never was a time when the race needed wise counsels as much as now. We are being discriminated against in every conceivable way, our constitutional rights are being abridged by the Democratic party of the South in an outrageous manner; in the Democratic city of New York we are being assailed by Democratic police officers; our homes are entered and sick men and women pulled from their beds and from the common carriers, clubbed and taken to jail for no other cause than the color of their skin. We are driven from employment by the foreign pauper hordes, and we have really no abiding place where we are not hunted and haunted by Southern prejudice. My advice to the colored people is to respect their manhood and resent the unjust discrimination against our liberties by the Democratic party and stand by the party of equal rights, who enfranchised us by wise and patriotic legislation. Let us be strong and uncompromising in our support of President McKinley our wise and patriotic ruler. His denunciation of the methods of the Democratic party in discriminating against our liberties should get for him the admiration and praise of the entire race. "The lost opportunity of the National Afro-American Council was when it failed to rebuke condemn PRICE FIVE CENTS and denounce the Democratic party, and register its protest against the election of Mr. Bryan, who stands upon its platform proclaimed by Mr. Tillman, the arch enemy of the Negro throughout the country. It showed cowardice and ingratitude when it did not have the courage to indorse, commend and pledge its support to the Republican party, which has fed, protected and enriched the race from reconstruction down. It should have pledged its support to President McKinley, one of the wisest, best and most patriotic presidents we ever had. As a race and representative organization, the National Afro-American Council is a failure and should give place to another." *** Black men who are contemplating voting for Bryan, and thus follow the leadership of the good Bishop Turner, may find some consolation for that by reading the following dispatch: "Montgomery, Ala., Oct. 2.—Linfield Townsend, a Negro, was burned at the stake at Eclectic, Elmore county, fifteen miles from Wetumpka, Ala., this afternoon. He is alleged to have assaulted Mrs. Lonnie Harrington, a white woman of that vicinity." * * * Comes now the report from Georgia, the home of the venerable Bishop Turner, the noed African Methodist divine, who has made up his mind to aid in the election of the Democratic mouthpiece, William Jennings Bryan, to the presidency of the United States, owing, of course, to the brilliant inducements he and his party hold out to better the conditions of the Negro in the South and other sections of this country, that the Georgia Democrats having charge of the convict camps of that state make no hesitancy in capturing innocent colored men and women and pressing them into convict service and keeping them there for years. When the word "innocent" is referred to in this connection it does not mean the hundreds of accused Negroes who go through with a mock trial as the Negroes are given by the Southern Democrats in every state south of the Mason and Dixon line, but colored men, women and children are captured in highways and herded into those miserable bullpins and doomed to life imprisonment, and not one word of objection is heard from the authorities. Little girls and boys are pressed into service who do not exceed 10 years in age, and there doomed to a life of convict imprisonment, on no other charge than that they are Negroes. This is being done by those selfsame Democrats who are shouting for the release of the Filipinos from a humane standpoint. Right here in America innocent people are captured from their farms and homes and driven off to slavery because they are black people, and the Democratic party being in power in those states where such is perpetrated, the law offers no resistance. That’s the kind of cattle that Bishop Turner is supporting for the presidency of the United States and declaring that they will do more toward elevating the American Negro than President McKinley and his associates. While President McKinley is appointing Negroes to leading positions of honor and trust in the state of Georgia, the Democrats are in other sections of the state chasing colored men, women and children from their homes without cause or justification, and on capturing them consign them to convict life imprisonment without the form of a trial. It ought to be an easy matter for Bishop Turner and all other colored folk in the North to see who is the friend of the Negro. Can water rise higher than its level? If it cannot, then in heaven’s name can any more be expected of Bryan as president of the United States than from the men who are responsible for him being there. The Democrats all over the South are doing all in their power to strike down the Negro; those Democrats in the North do not fail to render their Southern brethren all the assistance in the form of national legislation or attempted legislation to carry out their nefarious plans; hence the Northern Negro, whose manhood and public rights are zealously guarded by the Republican party, has a perfect right to do all in his power to defeat the party that is holding his head under the water. If there is a leading colored man in the United States that should be commended for his good political judgment (? that man is the good Bishop Turner, who is advising the Northern Negro, the only Negroes in the United States that enjoy the elective franchise, to vote for the party that is yearly disfranchising every Negro that it possibly can. The Republican is now in the new one-story Lippy block, opposite Bonney & Stewart's. The Seattle Republican Telephone, Main 305, The Popularean Pub. Co., Publishers OFFICE 621 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 PRESIDENT: WILLIAM McKINLEY. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT: THEODORE ROOSEVELT. REPUBLICAN TICKET THE TICKET 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 Surveyor CLARENCE E. WRITE For County Coroner DR. C. E. HOYE For County Wreckmaster DR. SAMUEL BURDETTE For County Commissioner, Second District "Imnocuous desutude" seems to have completely overcome Great Grover. Fair Spokane's fair has fairly begun, and her citizens are having a high old time. That job lot of fusion fungus that was gathered four years ago for the public's use is now quite far advanced in a state of decomposition, and, oh, my! how it does smell when you stir it up. Ed Cudihee is a Democrat, Walter Fulton is a Democrat, and J. T. Ronald is a Democrat, and in each case that in itself is a good and sufficient reason why Republicans should not vote for any of them. "Handy Andy," from the pen of Mrs. Susie Revels Cayton, found herein, is a rather unique story, and with a most pleasing moral. Even "bullies" often have hearts in them, and they are touched when they least expect it. Four years from now Webb Davis will have a presidential nucleus for his own self, as it is reported that hundreds and thousands of Boers are headed for this country. Dear Lord, and what has Uncle Sam done to be so imposed upon? What a coincidence! The Oregonian for once told the truth about Seattle's growth, and Jim Ham Lewis for once told the truth about the political situation in the Evergreen state, and all in the same week. How strikingly strange! "Men are wanted in Washington state to mine coal." If you are a miner and have not got steady work at lucrative wages, come thither and you will be amply rewarded for coming, and this means you. The "hair-bred whelp" stage in the present campaign has been reached by the Daily Liar, which is a splendid indication that Alden J. Times has given up all hope of the Democrats winning the next election. Speaking about country fairs, that one held in Whitman county last week was the kind you read in books, and it was attended by every other man, woman and child in the county. Whitman is enjoying McKinley prosperity. According to the 1900 census the center of the population of the United States is now at Indianapolis, Ind. Thus westward the course of empire take its flight, and slowly but surely is it creeping toward the Pacific coast. Supt. Browne may think he will escape by crying "Stop, thief!" to the American Book Company, but the voters have caught him red-handed in a most shameful act, and they will slaughter him at the polls next November as a punishment. --- Semi-educated white men seem to be at a complete loss to explain how it is possible for them to find meritorious as well as instructive articles in "nigger papers," and yet it is done every day right here in Seattle. The world do move. Seattle is being carried through the mills again by the "hold-up man." Had Seattle a police force the individual members of which were as eager to find criminals as they are dollars, perhaps less of that kind of business would be reported on in the Queen City. Negroes have the same right to divide up in politics as other nationalities, and verily should do so, but somehow or other it always strikes us that a Negro that would vote for a party that endorses Ben Tillman and Southern Democracy in general, is a bit wrong under the hat. Yes, Tacoma seems to be the Puget Sound wheat depository, which, of course, is the source of much wealth, but Seattle is the Puget Sound gold depository, and that is wealth itself and by no means the source of much wealth. "Justice is blind" must mean that the "justice" goes blind when the briber gets his works to working. According to the Daily Liar of this city that's the kind of justice Nome City is getting just now. The man with the longest sack is always certain of winning. Lest ye forget the Republican watchwords of the present campaign in this state the platform is reproduced in this issue. It's a plain and straightforward partisan document and one on which a splendid battle is being waged by the Republicans of the state of Washington, and one on which they will win. Seattle now has a live stock insurance company with a capitalization of $20,000. This is the only company of its kind west of the Rockies, and was certainly organized in the right city, for with Seattle's steep and hilly streets to contend with the poor horse owner has just reason to daily fear an accident, which might deprive him of his faithful bread-winner. Judge Estee's decision to the effect that a Chinaman sailing from one American port to another American port cannot be denied admission to the latter is one which, if upheld by the United States supreme court, throws open the ports of the United States proper to 20,000 or more Chinamen now in Hawaii. Hawaii was admitted into the United States prohibiting the Chinamen living in that island from leaving there and entering the United States after the island was admitted, and if Judge Estee's decision holds good, that clause will be declared null and void. The total amount collected and paid over to the city treasurer from Judge T. H. Cann's court for the nine months ending September 30, 1900, was $39,646.56. If the remaining three months pay on the same average there will be over $36,000 for the year. This is about double of any return ever made in this city. A comprehensive tabulation of forty-nine cities which in 1880 had populations ranging between 10,000 and 63,000, and in 1890 between 18,000 and 85,000, shows the gains made in two decades: Cities— 1900, 1890, 1880 Worcester 15,842 14,955 18,521 New Haven 10,421 10,436 14,981 Fall River 10,436 14,981 Lowell 9,496 77,696 58,475 Cambridge 9,186 70,028 52,698 Portland, Ore. 9,042 46,385 17,577 Atlanta 9,032 65,334 74,696 Grand Rapids 8,754 60,278 32,244 Seattle 8,071 42,837 3,533 Reading 7,861 58,961 43,788 Camden 7,505 88,313 41,658 Atlanta 7,435 88,313 41,658 Lynn 8,518 55,727 32,244 Oakland 6,590 48,082 34,555 Lawrence 6,559 44,654 39,151 New Bedford 6,242 46,003 36,848 Milwaukee 6,124 50,003 36,848 Springfield, Mass. 6,205 44,179 34,555 Somerville 6,163 40,152 24,303 Utica 6,283 40,007 23,934 Sheridan 6,238 39,116 23,934 Birdie 5,753 40,284 27,725 Harrisburg 5,016 39,285 30,762 Population East and West Norfolk 46,624 48,711 21,915 Holyoke 45,712 35,657 21,915 Unglewood 35,657 36,294 12,986 Upton 40,083 17,294 13,908 Salem 39,956 38,001 27,566 Binghampton 39,647 38,001 27,563 Altoona 38,972 30,237 19,710 Lotifah 38,972 30,237 19,710 Haverhill 37,175 17,451 18,472 Terre Haute 36,673 30,217 26,942 South Bend 35,996 21,818 18,328 Inglefield, Ill. 35,996 21,818 18,328 Chelsea 34,072 27,909 21,782 Topper 30,694 31,007 15,452 Superior City 31,061 11,983 12,986 Taunton 31,061 11,983 12,986 Joliet 30,720 23,384 12,125 East St. Louis 29,665 15,169 9,185 Jacksonville, Fla. 28,429 17,201 9,185 Newport, Ky. 28,301 24,918 20,432 Michigan 28,201 19,028 14,023 Passaic 27,777 16,038 10,914 Bay City 27,628 27,829 20,685 Lexington, Ky. 26,399 21,567 16,056 New Britain 26,399 21,567 16,056 County St. Louis 26,392 21,474 18,093 Carlaps 25,566 18,020 18,014 The greatest gain is in Portland, Ore. (44,041), which nearly doubled its population in ten years. Worcester gains 33,726 over the total of 1890; Fall River, 30,438; New Haven, 27,793; Grand Rapids, 27,287; Atlanta, 24,339; Bridgeport, 22,130; Lawrence and New Bedford, 22,000 each; Somerville, the great Boston suburb, 21,491; Duluth, 19,654; Oakland, 18,278, and others in proportion. With the conclusion of the work on all the larger towns it is found that eight cities have been added to the class having 100,000 and upward—Columbus, Fall River, New Haven, Paterson, Scranton, Syracuse, Toledo and Worcester. The cities of Albany, Atlanta, Cambridge, Lowell, Nashville and Richmond aimed for the 100,000 point but failed to reach it. It is remarkable in this connection that no far Western town has joined the 100,000 class in this census. Another remarkable fact is that the most rapid growth of cities has on the average been in the old Eastern states. The reverse was the case in 1890. This change is attributed to the great depression in agricultural and kindred interests in the early part of the decade, the Eastern states not so wholly dependent on one branch of industry suffering less than some of the states of the Mississippi valley. Many of the latter have made great gains during the last three years, but not sufficient to overcome the early losses. The next census will in all probability again reverse the order of growth. The West, which, between 1890 and 1896, was either at a standstill or going backward, has been prospering since the latter year at such a rate as to leave no doubt that in the next decade it will feel practically the same impetus that raised scores of places from hamlets to cities between 1880 and 1892. A good deal will depend, of course, upon the permanency of the era of prosperity that has now set in with full force throughout the entire valley of the Mississippi. This prosperity may be suddenly checked, as in 1892, or it may be given a fresh impetus, as in 1896, by the political action of the people—Inter-Ocean. R. B. Bryan, Republican nominee for state superintendent of public instruction, was born in Hancock county, Ohio, August 1, 1842. His father Dr. E. L. Bryan, almost always conducted a farm to keep the boys out of mischief, so that young R. B., when not in school, spent most of his time wielding a hoe or guiding a plow. In 1852 Dr. Bryan moved with his family to Iowa, then a new and undeveloped country, and here the subject of our sketch continued to reside until the breaking out of the civil war, when he enlisted as a private in the Third Iowa infantry. He took part in the campaigns of 1861-2 in Missouri and Tennessee, and in the autumn of the latter year was mustered out of service in con- sequence of serious pulmonary trouble, induced by a sever attack of measles, which he had in December, 1861, while out on a winter campaign in Missouri. After going home and partially recovering his health, Mr. Bryan enlisted in the Seventh Wisconsin infantry—one of the regiments constituting the famous Iron Brigade—and in this regiment he took part in the campaigns of 1863-4-5 in the army of the Potomac, being wounded three times in the campaign of 1864. It may be worthy of note that his regiment, according to the records of the war department, had more men killed in battle than any other infantry regiment participating in the civil war. Mr. Bryan was educated in the public schools of Ohio and Iowa, and in West Mitchell academy, and after the war he, took a course in the New Hampton normal school. He began teaching in 1867, and has continued in educational work ever since. In addition to the apprenticeship which he served in country schools at the beginning of his career as a teacher, Mr. Bryan has been principal or city superintendent in the following schools: Buckingham, Ia.; Osawatonie, Mound City and Pleasanton, Kan.; and Montesano and Aberdeen, Wash. He has also had six years' experience as a county superintendent of schools, and was the first superintendent of public instruction of Washington. In that capacity he had the office and the school system of the state to organize from the ground upward—a more difficult task than is likely to confront any other state superintendent for years to come. That he did this work thoroughly and well is attested by the fact that he has the hearty autograph indorsements of most of the leading educators of the state at this time. Owing to some very disagreeable complications that arose in the Republican state convention of 1892 Mr. Bryan declined to enter the convention as a candidate for renomination, and soon after his retirement from office in 1893, he became city-superintendent of the public schools of Aberdeen, where he has remained ever since. WASHINGTON IRON WORKS COMPANY FOUNDERS. MACHINISTS AND BOILERMAKERS HOISTING AND LOGGING ENGINES A SPECIALTY SEATTLE. WASH. SEE OUR 5c WINDOW IT IS ONLY A SAMPLE OF WHAT YOU CAN GET INSIDE A : : : NICKLE BUT IT DRAWS THE PEOPLE LIKE A MAGNET ... Only 5 Cents-A Small 5 Cents But BIG VALUES Coon Bros. 1417 Second Avenue. GRAND OPERA HOUSE JOHN CORT, MANAGER GALA OPENING, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8 With the Famous Comedian, FERRIS HARTMAN And the entire Tivoli Opera Company, from the Tivoli Opera House, San Francisco, presenting the musical far- cial comedy. "SHIP AHOY" Fifty people in the Company. Special Scenery, Costumes and Effects. PRICES—Night: 15c, 25c, 35c, 50c, 75c and $1.00, Matinee—10c, 25c and 50c. Seats on sale Thursday morning, October 4, at 9 a. m., at Lee's Pharmacy. Matinee Wednesday and Saturday at 2 p. m. THE NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE H. C. HENBY, Pres. R. R. SPENCER, Cashier SAFE DEPOSIT YAULT A Clean New Bath... Mrs. Turney, of the Battle Creek Sanitarium, formerly on Columbia street, has moved to 612 Third Av. Where she has fitted up the finest bath-room in the city Seperate apartments for ladies and gentlemen have been prepared. MRS. TURNEY 612 THIRD AVE. 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, Oh! Be Happy! IF YOU LOVE YOUR WIFE BUY HER A GAS RANGE SeattleGas&ElectricCo. NEW ENGLAND MARBLE AND GRANITE CO. Telephone Gre n 881. Cor. Sarth Ave and Pike Street, Seattle Waist. WANT BETTER HAIR? If so, your kind of hair can be found ... MME. BROWN'S 1332 Second Ave, Seattle, Wash. Meydenbaner's Bakery, 305 COLUMBIA STREET. BREAD, CAKES AND PASTERIES. Cakes supplied to order for weddings and parties. Corn Bourb bread retains its moisture and is especially adapted for steamboots. Jct. Main 445. THE PUGET SOUND NATIONAL BANK OF SEATTLE Capital Stock paid in . . . $528,000 Surplus . . . . . . . 35,000 Jacob Farth, President; E. C. Neufalker, Vice- President; R. V. Ankey, Cashier Correspondence in all the principal cities of the United States and Europe Coal all Coal The Best Coal NEWCASTLE Seattle Republican's 712 THIRD AVENUE MAIN 305 CALL US UP WHEN YOU HAVE A LEGAL NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. IF OURS, YOU WILL DIVIDE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT PATRONAGE WITH Alexander Wilson Our Millinery has the merit of originality coupled with servicable quality and reasonable prices. This season's gathering will strengthen our well worn reputation, won by years of study and hard work for presenting to our patrons Hats that are both elegant and economical. Our Street and Walking Hats are also of best quality and latest styles, and marked at quick selling prices. STITCHED HATS, "LADYSMITH," in grey with polka dot trimmings..... $1.75, $2.00 WIDE BRIM STREET HATS, with ribbon trimming, in grey and castor. ..... $1.50, $2.00, $2.25, $2.50, $2.75 WALKING HATS, in fine fur felt, gray, brown and castor. ..... $1.75, $2.50, $3.75, $4.00 FANCY STREET HATS, in grey, brown and castor, with silk trimmings. ..... $2.50, $2.75, $3.00 FANCY DRESS SHAPES, in felt chenille and velvet, all the new colors. ..... $1.75, $2.00, $2.50, $3.75, $4.00 TRIMMED HATS, a splendid display at any price from $2.50 to ..... $25.00 FANCY FEATHERS, in all colors and styles, from 25c to ..... $8.00 each BUCKLES AND ORNAMENTS of every description, and FANCY TRIMMINGS in all the latest styles and materials CHILDREN'S CAPS, in plain and fancy colors, great variety of styles..... 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00 CHILDREN'S MEXICAN HATS in all colors, stitched and plain felt..... $1.00, $1.25 MISSES' CAMEL HAIR TAMS in all colors..... $1.00, $1.25 1219 to 1223 SECOND AVENUE --- Tel. Main 305. Repub NEW OFFICE ROOM IS THIRD AVE THE TELEPHONE NUMBER IS AIN 3 IN YOU HAVE A LEG PUBLICATION. Friend u? YOU WILL DIVIDE YOU EMENT PATRONAGE W The Seattle The Seattle Republican 712 THIRD AVENUE nder 'M MILLINERY. the merit of originality coupled ing will strengthen our well w work for presenting to our pa king Hats are also of best qua rices. DYSMITH," in grey with polka dot tr ATS, with ribbon trimming, in grey g THE NEW OFFICE ROOM IS POLITICAL POT-PIE Se ee ‘ial campaign he made in 1396 and the kind he is making at present, in his mind the citizens of one of these oo localities are ee ‘are not, then he himself is — the upper story of his ‘anatomy. During all of Mr. spasmodic efforts to be ‘president he has never for once ‘one bit of his time to the San. from whence he at lest ex “pects three-fourths of his electoral vote will come. Does Mr. Bryan think that the Souther folk are @uch unchangeable fools that they Sain for his idiosyncracies every ‘time he calls upon them? If he does an think that, then he would seem yimply ax much, Now. if the above is not true, then Mr. Bryan must go ‘on the theory that the citizens of ‘the North are complete ignoramuses, ‘and for this reason he confines his eamipaign speaking solely to the in that section; or is it that he ‘is trying to convince enough of them ‘they do not understand the po- situation as well as the bul- Bourbons of the South, and . Northern men can be in- to vote for a ereature picked u the wilds of Nebraska with : I ideas, who, as their tool, is tobe forced on the other nine- f of the voters of the North? in heaven's name, does not Mr. visit the South and let those ‘Yolers hear from his own mouth just this government is going to the wows at the hands of the Re ’ in “rebels?” How remarkably ge that the salvation of this ry now rests solely in the hands ‘ef the men who shot the flag to , or who tried to do it for four Tong years, and are perfectly willing s0 ai present. | Believing that the state of Wash- m was lost to the Democrats, ing to the numerous blunders by the party leaders, James Hamilton Lewis has gone East to Wash his hands clean of the whole mess. In St. Paul, on his way to ashington City, Mr. Lewis admit- that the Democrats had lost the state and that McKinley would rry it. {Since I have taken an interest in Washington state polities 1 have rer seen the prospects for Repub- n. success at the polls look more forable a month beforehand than E present. If the Republicans do ‘ot roll up a majority’ for each of jeanidates on the. state ticket between 10,000 to 20,000, then ‘of the times in that direc- m count for naught,” said Chair- Sehively one day this week. “1 iow that it is customary for all irmen of campaign committees to im everything until the last. vote counted, but what I say at this 1¢ is based on reports sent in from ery county in the state, not from wdidates, but from conservative ‘iness men, who speak after a most €areful consideration of the local po- tical situation in their respectve ities.” Just why Seater, the furniture Aealer of this city, should be taking fuch a lively interest in the election of Ed. Cudihee as sheriff of this county is a question that puzzles quite a few persons just now. Is it more love for ‘Cudihee, less for Van De Vanier, or does Seater have to make that kind of a grand stand play because Cudihee knows more about Seater than he would like for him to know? Seater is one of those beings that has no love for any man from whom he cannot skin a few dollars, and per- sons who are acquainted with both Cudihee and Seater say that Seater ordinarily has no more love for Cud- ihee than any one else, nor does he particularly hate Van De Vanter, barring the exception that Van never bought any “second hand” goods from him. “Now, the last proposition must be the one that prompts Mr. Seater to bet $1,000 that Cudihee will be elected on one day, and offer the next day to put up that much more for the delivery of the colored vote of Newcastle to Cudihee. Some time ago in the store of Seater & Co. there occurred some very mysterious fires, from which heavy insurance money was collected, ‘The insurance companies demurred at paying the damages, but no evidence of foul play could be brought to light, so they forked over the amount, "At the time of the fires Ed. Cudihee was city detective, and it is said that he knows more about those fires and theif origin than Seater eares for the public to know, which prompts this undue love on the part of Seater for the election of Cudihee. It is no less of love for Van De Vanter nor real fondness for Cudihee, but self- preservation, At the time of those mysterious fires there was a man in the employ of Seater & Co. who shakes his head knowingly when they are spoken of, which is said to seriously annoy Tom Seater. eR tre Little Billy White is no weaker candidate than any of the other nominees. He is a rock-ribhed. Re- publican and one of the most loyal Republicans that ever wore a hat, and is deserving of every Republican vote in King county at the polls next November. No true blue Republi- ean voter will cut Billy White for prosecuting attorney>and_ in lieu thereof vote for Walter Fulion, an extreme and uncompromising Dem- ocrat. Because Walter Fulton does not openly advocate the lynching . POT-PIE | | 7 “ EDGAR C. RAINE. Bellevue postotfice, has been a resi- dent of that locality for the past six years and is universally liked. Should he be elected as a member of the next legislature he will interest himself chiefly in agricultural and ‘ducational legislation. ae disfranchising of American citi- zens, as do a great majority of Dem crais, it is by no means a good and sufficient reason for Republicans t vote for him. He is a Democrat and Republicans should remember that it is their duty to vote for Re- publican nominees and not Demo: cratic nominees, because said Demo- cratic nominees are _ pronounced “nice fellows.” There is no reason why any Republican in King county should ‘vote for either Cudihee or Fulton over A. 'T. Van De Vanter and W. I. White, the Republican nominees, sae It is the duty of the Republicans to give Cushman as large a vote as they do President MeKinley, that they may get an inereased represen- tation in the next state convention. Two years from now this state wil have ‘to elect three instead of two members to the lower house of con- gress and one United States senator, and <hat election will be of far more importance than the present one. If Cushman should run behind the ticket it will work to Seattle’s detri- ment in the way of representation to the etate convention. Jimmy Goldsmith's business men’s meeting, non-partisan, to have the candidacy of J. ‘T. Ronald indorsed by the Seattle business men, fell as flat as sea foam ona windy day in the briny deep. ‘There were not over three men at the meeting, and they did not dare to discuss polities Goldsnith is a Democrat, and it is perfectly natural that he would want the Republicans to help him elect a Democrat to office. Because Mr Goldsmith is at the head of a great wholesale firm in this eity it does not follow that it is the proper thing for Republicans to follow him, into the support of blatant mouthed Demo- erats beeause they hail from Mis. ee Two men made a het at the Yaki- ma fair as to how Yakima county stood politically this year, and the way they decided to settle the bet was for each of them to stand at the grand stand and count the men wear- ing MeKinley and Bryan buttons, and the presidential candidate that zot the greatest count would be ar ndication as to how the county stood ind that would decide the bet. Of the men who came by the grand stand stand wearing buttons of pres- dential candidates up toa certain time numbered just 100, and of these, strange to say, ninety wore McKinley buttons and ten wore Bryan buttons, ‘The MeKinley man won the bet and the Bryan man ad: mitted that MeKinley wound carry the county by an overwhelming ma- jority, for he said that he had previ- ously made something of a personal canvass of the visitors and he found that the most of those attending the fair were for the re-election of Presi- dent McKinley. Hon. Edward B. Palmer attended the Yakima fair last week, and while there thought he would kill time bs feeling the public pulse on the presi ential question... He saw a man sell ng presidential buttons, and s0 he thought him quite a fit subject to work on. “I want to buy a Bryan iutton,” said Mr, Palmer, whicli he zot ina holy minute. “Now, you Jo not know me and certainly do not know my politics, and I therefore want to ask you of whose button do vou sell the greatest number, Bryan ot McKinley?” “Well, stranger, let ae tell you T have been to every fait in the Northwest this fall selling but- tons and other trinkets, and T have sold ten McKinley buttons to one Bryan in every place that T have heen, with the exception of Mon- tana, and even there I sold more Me- Kinley buttons than Bryan ones. I believe the Northwest will vote for the Republican ticket, and it is al because the citizens favor expansion. [sold buttons four years ago, and the result was just the opposite tc what I find it ‘this year as to the nese ae ‘Two weeks ago the Seattle Bee published a report made by some committee appointed for that pur- pose, which was to the effect that in the neighborhe d of 4,000 colored percons had? 1 lynched in the Uni- ted States s.ace the emancipation, whiek: & aut ‘ue, How many of Wiel Gitte. {1 'Bhe eee teen PIANOS possibte deat to be made on 'a plang unl You have visited our-piamo ‘department. TES Gn"eaeellent “showing. of 'standar | makes and beautiful nines at really’ ex [tratrdinary prices, Credit in given “on {terms to suid your convenience. SHERMAN, CLAY & CO. 711 SECOND AVE. by Republicans? How many of that number, Mr. Bee, were lynched in states that go Republican? Is it not a fact, Mr. Bee, that every Negro that has been lynched in this country has been lynched by Democrats, and that, too, in the South? Talk about kissing the hand that smites you the hardest, but if, when colored men support such a party is not a true cease of it, then please exeuse the Pie- maker. “What have you to say for yourself, Mr. Bee? In a round-about way it has come to the Pie-maker that the former editor of the Bee, and who now owns a controlling interest in it, has been ‘most liberally helped in his newspa- per efforts by Judge Cann, and yet that paper came out this week and gave him a most unkind ent. Worse could not have been said against a man that had been a life-long enemy than what the Bee had to say against its old friend Judge Cann. ‘The coal miners of this state have reason to remember what the Me- Kinley administration has done for them in the way of giving them steady employment. Four years ago the mines were running but from two to three days in a week,and the coal taken ont in that time was a Jdrug on the market, so little was the demand. How is it today? Every mine in the state is calling for more men at wages a hundred per cent. better than four years ago, and for the citizens to get coal in any amount they are compelled to order it a week ahead. It is said by the mine operators that they could. sell every pound of coal they take out to California if they would do so. ‘They also declare that they could sell every pound of coal mined in this state in the state, if they could give up their outside contracts. Men are wanted at the mines, is the daily ery. Bryan said four years ago that such a State of affairs could never exist unless he and his prineiples were elected to the presideney, but Me- Kinley and his principles were elect- ed, and so the latter has the eredit of bringing good times and the coal miners should show their apprecia- tion of that fact by voting for the re-election of Mr. MeKinley, which they undoubtedly will do. pretended enthusiasm given Rogers jand Ronald completely in the shade. eres ‘There are but four more weeks of jcampaign work before the final day will be on tis, and all parties are straining every nerve to do as effect- ive work as possible to bring things round their way by that time. In the opinion of the Pie-maker the voters, for the most part, have al- ready made up their minds as to how they will vote, and tniess the unex- pected happen they will vote that way when the time comes round. Of course those men who are waiting for some one to shove something in their hands before they decide as to whieh is the great party of this eoun- try are not to be considered in this, jand should not be considered when it comes to the election, for such men, were it possible, should be dis- anehiaed Will those colored voters in this county who are going to support the Democratic ticket locally point out what either the Democrats or the fu- sionists, who have been in power in this county for the past four years, have done for the colored men in the way of giving them political recog- nition? If you propose to make a change, genflemen, then, for"heav- en's sake, change to some party that has either done something for you or some party that has not been in power and you do not know what they will do should they get in power. Another Negro burned at the siake down in Alabama last Tuesday by William Jennings Bryan's main supporters, and notwithstanding the fact that Bryan is a champion of human rights he has not had one word to say condemnatory of it. How about it, Democratic colored aaean® “T have never posed as a political prophet, and have serious doubt of my abilty fo absolutely control the vote of any man, save myself, but [you can put it down as coming from me, that no considerable number of colored voters will support the Democratic candidates in this cam- paign,” said Attorney J. E. Hawking, when asked hy the representative of ‘The Republican as to the disaffection among the colored voters throughout the country generally and King ‘county in particular, “To begin with,” continued Mr. Hawkins, “it certainly puzzles my ‘brain to find a single reason for any WE ARE RECEIVING DAILY the very latest | things in Dress Hats from the fashionable cities | of the east and also from the best makers in paris, and our stock is very complete. We also have a large as- sortment of the cheaper grades in Walking Hats, Etc. oo = We are making an elegant display of Furs this week. Come in and we will be pleased to show them. 716 Second Avenue jeu man to vote against the Re- publican party. It is not necessary |to review the record of that organiz ation. From the time of its birth in [1s55, which was so fittingly com- memorated last June at Philadelphia, down to the present day, it has stood for liberty and right, and in carrying ‘out these principles the Republican jparty is now extending liberty and civilization to the islands of the sea. ‘There never has been a time since the war when the success of the Re- publican party meant more to the colored people than now. ‘This opin- ion is shared by all thoughtful men of the race, Bishop Turner to the contrary notwithstanding. We de- sire Republican success to mitigate a: far as possible the unjust and cruel treatment of the colored man in cer- tain sections of the country, a condi- tion which the good bishop claims, through some unknown process of reasoning, ean be bettered by the election of a Democratic president. Bishop Turner has either lost his mind or a mereenary greed for gain has come over him, and my intimate acquaintance with him causes me to helieve that he is not a fool. ‘Turner lives in a state that has been under Democratic rule since 1876, and is competent to testify as to Bourbon Democracy, a thing to delightful and pleasant to the Negro that he wishes it extended all over the country and Bryan placed in the White House to make sure that Democratic prosper- ity and happiness would reign throughout the length and breadth of the land. Well, it just so hap- pens that every colored voter has an intimate knowledge of what white Democracy stands for. It stands for ‘mob law, it stands for jim-crow cars, it stands for Negro disfranchisement and it stands for everything tending toward the degradation of the Negro. No one should or ought to know these facts better than Bishop Tur- ner, for he has lived all his life right in the midst of it and enjoyed those Democratic blessings. “The colored voters of King eoun- ty are not unmindful of their inter- ests and believe that they will be best subserved by the stecess of the party of progress and prosperity, and ean be relied upon to stand by their col- ors on election day.” Following is a denunciation of a false report which has recently been jcurculated concerning a meeting held at the A. M. E. church Wednes- day evening, September 12, 1900: A call was issued by D. W. Griffin, editor of the Seattle Bee, and in pur- suance to that call nine of the promi- nent gentlemen of color of this city responded to the call and in good faith assisted in perfecting a branch organization of the Afro-American Couneil. ‘The paramount object of this /gathering was to organize this coun- ‘al for the purpose of bettering our condition as a race, as it is an undis- puted fact that this is a racial organ- {ation and non-political. ‘Therefore if it has gone out that we met there and formed the organization in the interest of any political party, I take pleasure in branding and stamping At in the face as a malicious false- hood, and that of the very deepest dye. “Lam not here to seli my peo- ple at any price, for they are as dear to me as my heart’s blood, but to use my efforts to break asunder the shackles of oppression and declare the captives free. And now a word to the business men of this city. We as members of a civilized race and nation need and use groceries, dry goods, hardware ‘and everything else that is consumed by a civilized people. Now, if you fellacaltsin square with us, 1 ‘promise to use my influence to have ny people concentrate their trade with any two grocery men, two cloth- ing stores, one or two hardware firms, or just as the case may be, as long as such firms will do right by us, and when you fail to do that I wil tel ‘them fo go where they can get full value for their dollar or dollars. I will: persuade them to cease buying any more of that old rot-gut whisky, so that they may be able to buy the daily and weekly newspapers, in order that they may be more able to keep pace with the times and know how to act as citizens. | “The Bee, I understand, was chocan.as the organ of the council.” Tt was, but against a very strong op- position. I opposed it then, and do now. But the Bee was only to pub- lish the business transactions of the ‘council as pertaining to the race. I am not in politics. I am here to as- sist my people from a Christian, mor- al and financial standpoint, and_to aid them in bettering their condition in life, along the Ines of which I have spoken. I said that T was not in polities, but 1 trust that Tam a politician." At least, I should be, and if a man is a good citizen, he is a politician and must be in order to be a good citizen, and if all were we would not make so many political blunders as is daily done, and such as ‘were made in the election of Buchan- an and Grover Cleveland. Now, I would like very much to have the hearty co-operation of every man, woman and child, and the way you can help me is this: If you have ‘any work that you want done, let me know it, and I will try to find you just such a man or woman as you want, My telephone is Pink 1155 and is at the service of my people at any and all times. Respectfully yours, ©. ©. HOLFORD, Pastor of the A. M. E. Chureh, 1522 Lith avenue, Seattle, Washington, Hermon W. Craven’s “Prosperity and Politics,” issned_in_ pamphlet form, is one.of the uniqne as well as valuable campaign documents of the present political fight. Mr. Craven is a most exhaustive as well as con- vineing writer on economies and this, his last effort, seems to be his best. Before the citizens of this com- ‘monwealth feel free to vote for J.T. Ronald to represent the state in the next congress, they desire him to rise up in meeting and frankly an- awer this question: “Who cut the stick?” for that stick caused Seattle to loose many thousands of dollars, and it was cut under the Ronald ad- ministration and by his henchmen; therefore he must know the man that eut it, Who cut the stick, Mr. Ronald? Who cut the stick, Mr. Ronald? Who cut the stick, Mr. Ronald? Who cut the stick, Mr. Ronald? HON, STEPHEN A. CALVERT. ‘The political giant of the North- west counties is presented to our readers. Like the rock of Gibralter, he stands for his honest convictions, jand though occasionaly completely overwhelmed by spasmodic upheav- als, he remains the same and succeeds in th end, and will therefore be elected state land commissioner next November. sae JUDGE HENRY G. MeDRIDE. Washington's next lieutenant goy- lernor is one of the able and foremost men of the state. As a superior judge of the distriet in whieh Mount Vernon, the home of Judge McBride is situated, he earned a reputation for public uprightness that eannot be surpassed by any man, go where you will or may. It is to the everlasting ‘credit of the Republican party to put forward so able and conscientious a leandidate to duty as Judge MeBride, Gcuumienmisinan’ &. <<: wee Was elected county commissioner of King two years ago and so well did he serve his constituents that he was unanimously renominated at its last convention. Mr. Smith is a farmer by profession, and is as honorable and upright a man as was ever elect- fed toa public trust. He has zealous- ly looked after the very best interest of the county, and what more need be said. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SEATTLN, PAID-UP CAPITAD ceeeseenee e800 JAMES D, HOGE, JR, President. eSTBR TURNER, Cashier A generat banking business transacted. Latidee of credit Sold on ail” prnelpa cities. or the world,” Spec taeilites for Soilecting ia British Golomb polnts WE HAVE A BANE AT CAPE NOME. 3 \ R = 2) y 2) &, SICIES ‘ TWO TRAINS DAILY To the East NORTH COAST LIMITED Short Line via Billings and Bur- lington Route to Kansas City, ee ene Points, with Through Car Ser- ioc Vike aiven bak Gikela; eal oa ox eke: New Groceries —0O. KNOX Fresh Vegetables —0. KNOX What You Want —0, KNOX Come and See 0. KNOX 813 Third Tel. Black 1971. —0. KNOX Lloyd's Wood Depot Several E. A. GARDNER LEGAL DETECTIVE WORE stistaetion Guarantot. Bebaia sik Fomene ating Hats Cleaned, Dyed and Retrimmed by Practical Hatters SEATTLE HAT FACTORY A Full Line of New Hats at | Factory Prices. | a 1009 FIRST AVE. Phone Green 1821 At Prices that Appeal to Your Pocketbook. ‘The Very Latest Styles at the Popular Prices of $2130 to fs.00, See then RAYMOND & HOYT, oul Second Ave, - SEATTLE, WASH. Osborne, Tremper & Co. INCORPORATED Abstract Office and Title Examiners m4 Cherry St. Phone Main 548 DRESSY SHOES Does your truss hold you? Tf not, call at Guy’s Drug Store ALBERT HANSEN JEWELER AND SILVERSMITH Dealer in Diamonds, Watehes, Clorks, Jewelry, silver | ware, Rich Cut, Glaus Ete Why Not, Have Your Work Laun- dered Properly ? “DOMESTIC” Inthe latest nah machine, Cascade Laundry Company Phone Matn @% 07 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 #:(11 Come and See Us When in Need in Our Line. UG Skis Raa eNO Money to Joan on watches, diamonds and all kinds of collateral at low rates G7 Second avenue, between Yester and WE ARE FOR And we propose to Ex- pand as we never have before in order to catch the: Z ; i : HOLIDAY TRADE Thing are coming our way and it will pay you to read our weekly report every Saturday in THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN E. W. NEWHALL & GO. RIALTO BLK. Second and Madison. SEATTLE. J.F.ADAMS SEATTLE'S GREAT CASH GROCERY WISHES TO AN NOUNCE HIS : : : REMOVAL OF HIS STORE TO 1428 SECOND AVE. | inna] Rail Seattle & International Railway | Short Line to All Points BRITISH COLUMBIA Zan Nef oooh, Anna, St. ile Sal sce gt, ee seciet Sonee hs enact [State Vancouver Gaypan 1 POumes east arrest HEB aa ie i i. & “Daly, exons Sunday” lesen SSncale Wall hShtaie™ aBe Eee sche wee eet oes Se eta name De rain No, “Bs (hp onl,” Suma an | AtrivenSumeelQp et urives Suriee gs | Pietga ee a "te co Acer enti | HB wasrz,G.P.A.. seautie war, x. misc | oes rte t,t Soe atin aia want Soa | ‘516 Second Avenue, Seattio, Waa. THE | NORTHWESTERN’S FAST MAIL THE NORTHWESTERN ANE Have sided two more trains (the Bast Mail) to their St. Peul Chic Goer ning ight tan BETWEEN MINNEAPOLIS ST. PAUL and CHICAGO Wetmakiog ohmectioue, “°° ‘Theanth Centary train, ibe dnest tay in thesearstiope me FW, PARKER, ae First avenues Peatiie Wash, “A REAL aror.! . 5 We :_€Zaa Oe Smale mee ocx ee oe S vane, a INO BOTHER, MUCH FUN, | Al the Wonders ad Peasare of Meeienced aie actine fe etodard Regen Sood order and money [COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH CO. Dept. 30 NEW YORK, 545 Bonny “CHICAGS, 88 Wabash “Ara, OU EES recn at rananiieton eae worn a eae em tonateareamce™ af | 35 Cece [Washington Dental and ‘Pictograpbic Supply Company | Kodaks and High Grade Cameras, 211 Columbia street, Bente Kindly remember our advertisers when you buy. Also speak a good word for tae Ravonkacans Graham & Moore tin Seve ah seated meta Second sewn Seat, West Do, SPELEMAN Fates emacs Snate ae ‘Telephone Black Tosi ree canny ocamwior | UNDERTAKERS, oe THIRD AVE, and COLUMBIA ST Catia asia peer = I _ Sereasioe saci a i , “ ae he Sy, oS «9 " a bs ‘¥ — FON 6/9) 2 5 ge = “Le _— ey AS a Cy eve FF Veaaeee (1h ® eerie Mrs. Amanda Smith, the noted evangelist, is again in Seattle, and holding a series of meetings at the First Methodist Episcopal chureh. Mrs. Smith is one of the most sue- cessful evangelists in this or any ‘other country. She has recently built a home hear Chicago for home- Tess colored children. Bessie, the younger daughter of Mrs. D. A. Johnson, continues in very bad health. Rev. G. A, Bailey, of Tacoma, was in the city one day this week. Minstrelsy, as presented by the West Company, ean always be relied upon as being a high-class, dignified entertainment. {t is therefore agree- able news to Seattle theater-goers to chronicle the advent of this organiza- tion, which will appear at the Seattle theater for four nights and a Wed- nesday matinee, commencing Sun- day evening next. It has not been so very long since Mr. West and his incomparable organization last. ap- peared in this city, but in the mean time he has equipped and organized an entirely new organization of such splendid merit that all his previous companies are said to pale in com- parison. Indeed the present com- pany is enthnsinstially’ pronounced hy the press everywhere as the finest and most superl minstrel organiza- tion this country has ever witnessed. A few of the big favorites of last sea- son have been retained, including ‘that phenomenal singer Richard 'T. Tose and the eminent baso J. P. Rodgers. Mr. West has added to his vocal contingent a new and superb tenor in the person of Manuel Ro- main and a fine baritone, William Wallett. With a large and efficient chorus the inviting musical pro- gramme promises much real enjoy- ment to our musie-loving’ public. ‘he comedy features of the show are more pronounced this season than has ever been the rule with the West minstrels, ‘The ends are oceupied by such famous funmakers as Billy Van, Ernest ‘Tenny, Raymond. Teal and Charles Whalen, while the olio fea- tures present an array of fine and ex- pensive acts, including last year’s fa- vorites, Waterbury brothers and ‘Ten- ny, the high-class musical artists, in addition to the Rios, in an entirely new and novel net on the flying rings. the Detimar trio and Teal and Wha- len, AT THE THEATERS. There is a certain magic in the yery name Siberia, and when it fig- ures in'a play the theater-goer is as sured at least of thrilling situations and picturesque. scenical _effeets. “For Her Sake,” the play which comes to the Third Avenue theater next Sunday, October 7th, is an at: traction of this <ort, and the promise is for one of the gentine novelties of the season at this popular theafer. THE NORTHWESTERN’S FAST MAIL THE NORTHWESTERN LINE Have added two more trains (the Fast Mail) t0 their St, Paul-Chic cee service, king eight tan BETWEEN MINNEAPOLIS ST. PAUL and CHICAGO hip sogures_ passengers from the festaaking afin heath Conse tray. the Se Eyhiesarscon ee ee PARKER, (6 First avenues eattie Wash, fol all Coal | NEWCASTLE Lump Coal “PACIFIC COAST 0. Quite a few of the “boys” from the mines find ease of mind about the Rainier-Grand hotel these days, Mr. George H. Grose has returned from Nome Kinily remember our advertisers whe you buy. Alko speale a good wont fi Tue Revuntican, FALL MILLERY Open for Inspection, A Diplay of | HATS, NOVELTIES, TRIMMINGS, ETC, Unexcelled in the City. About October Ist Our Cloak and Suit Opening will Take Place. M. D. PEASE 60. 1310 SEGOND AVE. (ke rn ond + FOR--- F $5 Wes ZOO cae, & is echerlon oa ae Durable Com — NO BOTHER, MUCH FUN. eer ae te eee ete ee ee coLusia PuoNooRAPu C0. Dept. 30 Se IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Ruste ot Waaitngton, for ‘ing County Stra Anum Hail, palntitt vs.'Stes. Mary The Watton and W.'B Wottons her hus band, HO. Morgan” Jolin ‘Langer at we Changer, his wife, and A 8 Honk, assignee of Mars 8. Watton ant JE! Wotton. a all persons tninown iany. having or elalming an interes br eniate Invand to the hereinafter de Strihed ‘Feat property, defendants. No Sen Notice an nominone Binte uf Washington to Mrs. Mary B Wotton ‘and WF Wotton, her husband TO. Storkan, gouin Langer and Tanger, hi wife, and A. 8. Hoxka, ax fignce of Stary Be Wotton’ and AW. “P Watton, who are the owners, OF reputed Owners’ bf and il ‘permons “unkown clnininig oF nating’ an ineerest or estate in “and tothe heremnarter dexeribed. Fea PrYou ahd each of you are hereby notified that" die. “above-named plaintit Mes ‘Nn aut, fe the alder of detent tax ‘ertitteate ‘No. 1h ahi, inated bythe coun: 1 Geasurer sic King county, Washington, embracing the following teal prowess Situnted in "King county, “Washington fia, More ‘partientarly Weseribed as" fol ‘Tat No theeg G2) tn block No. elght (8) of Bagewater Secon Aduition to the city of Beatie ‘That ‘said certificate, was txsued on the 24th day of August, 18) for the sun’ of HL for the detinguent axe for the vest Hoe, ama for: the further sum of Stor the: delinquent taxes: for the prisr: years Of 186," NSH and Ts, "making. the “Total Amount of the said certificate the sum at SIIB for the year INw and the jrior Sears BE IG, Ts ind “chat the ‘plain on the sith day of August, to) "paid taxes tor the “subse uent sears at follows, to-wite For the Year 160, $E0G: for the Senn IK SHR aed for the sear 166, $031, which several sims Dear inierest at the rate sof 9 per cont ber annum from the sald date of pay: ent’ ‘You and cach of vou are hereby directed and ‘summoned to appear within sixty aye ‘after the service of thir notice aid ‘Sginmons upon sou, exclusive of the date Of service, in above entitled ‘court, ‘and Merend the action or pay the amount due foxether with the costs: In case of Your faflure a0" to dow plaintift wilt apply tor Sisdgment, and Sudement will be fendered foreclosing the en for sald’ tases tnd fete aan fhe real property. nde ad BIBS. ANNA HALL, Plaintft. By Ready Gay, her attonieye. acting inher behalf, “and ‘pon Whom all Brocess maybe sered, Office address” rooms 10 to. 1 Roxwell Building, Seattle, Washington. Date ot first pribliertion, October 5, 1% IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE ‘tate of Washington, tor King county Mrs! Anna Hall, plaintive. George B. Haines. and "Haines, his wife Ra all Persone onkknown if am, ht ing or claiming an interest or estate, find “to! the hereinafter, describe! rer Broperty, ‘defendants No." Notice nd Sumimons State of Washington to George B Haines ana ——""Hatnes, ‘is vite: whe Jare ‘the ‘owners. or reputed ownere, “ut and “alt ‘pereona ‘unknown. inning. Raving’ an interest or ‘extite. in and t the hereinafter. decribed real’ property You 'and each of sou are hereby. notified that the! ioe’ Tamed plain. Mrs ‘Ania Han," the holder of Melinuent ts Sertinente” No Baia, tesued by th County treastirer of Kiar comnts. Wash: Inaton, “embracing. the = tollowiiig Vt pias ciate in Ripe county wa ington, and. more. particularly, aleseoa 36 follows, to wit: : Lat No. eleven GH). In lock No. tive G@. of Waxewater Second aaaition to te city “or Sean, That the sald certideate way fasued on the “Zith “day “of August, "ith, “for the sutm af $220 for the delinauent: taxes for the, gear an Cor the farce nm of a8 for the delinquent taxes. for the Irior years of Ie, 1G, IS0 and 18, taking the total amount of the wild Cer” tileate the eum of $1470 for the year 1am. and the prior Years of 18, 16, 04 and The plaintite on the 21th day of August, 199, pid taxes for the subsequent years as follows, to wit:: Por the year 1s $1.90; for the year 1°. $1.09, and for the Heat Jb, BEY oot a one Pee eres ee See ena fee ar rns ae ay. See Sete wearer ae ee oe ches a Se ete eee es aes ANNA Hatt, Pau Go a ee IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Mate ut Washington, for King county Bits: Atma Hall, plathtit. vs, Charles c Lawrence and "Lawrence, his ‘wits 4nd" Hater’ Johason “and Johnson her husband, and all persona unknown, {any hang or ‘clalming an interest Or ‘entity In and to. the herelnatter We- | Strlbed teal Property, “detendants. No Se Notice and Summons, State wt Washington to Chastes G. Ltwrence and —~ Lawrence, Mis welfe, Ether Jon tnd "Johnsen, her hus: and who, are the owners. on. reputed Owners) of, “und” all "persons "unknown, ‘latminis oF having an Interest ‘or estate {nando "he" hereinafter described rea Bhoperty TYVolL and each of you aro hereby notined “that the above named plalntitt, Mrs. Anns Hath de the holder of delinquent tax cer ese So. Bg, este bythe et Cinbractig "the following. feal "property Situated in Kink counts. Washington an hoe “particulary” descrtbed as folios (LDC No, even G), tn block No. two (2), of Wagewater Seeoid addition to {he elty of Seattle, ‘That the sald cortiicate was issued on jhe 2th day of August, 19, for the sm (of $237 for the delinquent taxes for the Sear oM"and forthe further stm SE cathe Muu ann fo te rio Sear ISG, "making ihe total amour 0 the said certificate the sun of S482 £0 the sear i and the prior Fear 186. ‘That the plainufl on the 2th day. of August, bo! paid. taxes. for the “subse ‘Quent sears’ ag follows, to wit? For th /Sear isi, sim for the year IS, $0, amd forthe ear, Io. $l "which several [cont per annum ffom' the said’ date’ ot Payiaett [You ‘tna each of you are hereby at rected aid Summoned) to appear witht RG" atts after the serece of he no {ice and ‘summons: upon you, exelusive” 0 [the ‘date of wereice, In” above. ‘entities |Court, ‘ahd’ defend the aetion or pay the Amount due. toxetter with the coms. I \ase ot Soir failure $0. to. do. plaintth [will apply” for judgment, “and "judgment {Will te rendered foreclosing the Hen fa ald ‘taxes ‘and costs against the "rea | Property, lands and premises herin named AIRS” ANNA HALL. Plaintit. | ny Brady i Gay, her attorneys wetlog j/ Tn ther ‘behutt' hia ‘upon whom all bro ess may. be. served. Giee"adaress, roomie 10 to 14 Roxwel Dvatiding, Seattle, Wash. Date of rst pabhcation, October 6, 1900 IX THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Satttoe Waehinuton top Kits Cougts.= Gi clartenneain ig eos ene fant JO: Sore Sane a Goon eee State of Washington to Mary B. Wotter gee epee keene GE eee ee Sencear ete ee ee ee ee eeces aa Cen e meeee ee ane ere Deter Paoee cee on ore ee aes “prior years of ISG, 18M and 18%, Sree So ea fe Re cay ee eee Ce a ee eee oe ae eae ee ea ee, Hee in her behalf, and pon eho all, pro- Le etc nl oc shee oS JN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE "uate of Washington for ing County. Mes* Anna Hall plait, ys. Mrs, Skary 1 Wouton and W. P. Wotton, her hus Vind, HO. Sloman and ALS. Hosa, Assignee of Mary'B. Wotton and W. P: Wotton, ind ail persons. unknown, i ny, having’ or clalming an interest oF eatite i-and to the hervinatter- describe teal "property, defendants: "No. Nouce of Summons. : Suite’ of Washington to Mrs." Mary i Wotton ind W. Bb. Wotton, her husband, HOO" Morgan and A. 8. Hoska, assigmes of Maiy. i Wotton and W. P! Wotton, Who are the owners, of reputed owners Of ind it persons unknown Salming or haw: {ng an Interest or cataie in and, to the Hhegelnatter deseribed Teal property. You und Gach of you are hereby nott- fied that the above hamed plaintit, Mex ‘Anna’ Hatt, f= the holder of delingwent tax ertiieate ‘No. Haas iseued hy tie county Geasurer of” King county, "Washington: ‘inbracins the following reat property. sit uated: in ‘King county. Wastington. "and ‘more mardlarly described ax follows, to Tot No, nine (Im block No, two 9, of Ealgewater’ ‘Second "addition to the ely of Beate. “That the aid certificate was issued on the 3 day" of August, lio), for the ‘sum SEES forthe elingient ats. forthe Bear toe and. for the further sum of SIM" forthe delinquent taxes for” the Dpulor sears of Tk, ISSt and IN, ‘makin the tial amount “ofthe sad. certificate the Sum of 41208 for the ‘year Ine, and the prior years of 18, 10 and 28 "That, the plalntif on’ the Ath. day. of August, “igh paid taxes. for the ‘subse- Guent fears af follows, to. wits” For. the Sear ii, $130: ‘tor the. fear. 18 $1.1, Ana’ for the year’ ie, fi, whlch Rew" eral sums hear interest’ at’ the rate of ver cent. Ger anh from the said date ‘You and cach of you are hereby: airect- ed: and: mimmoned to appear ‘within sixty Siy#atter the service tf this notice and sttmmons upon you, exclusive of the date of service, in. above entitied ‘court, ‘and derend the action or pay the amount duc, iorether with the coats, Tn cite Gt yur lure mo" to-do. piaintie will apply” for Judgment, dnd Jadkment will be tendered foreclosing. the lien for sald taxes. and Costs against the real property, lands sind premises korean ammed ny BRAD GANS. HALL, Paina. y BRADY & GAY, her attorneys, acting Tn het benai¢ and Upon whom alk pros Geet" 'may be ‘eervwd, “OMiee” adarens, Foome 10 to Ti Roxvvell butlding, Seattle, Wash. Date Of first publication, October 5, 1900. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Te Nos ten 9, te Rack Na: re of Tt om oath carlicats wee sesel on ae paar et Sepeettaar te Sree et Oe see ae ae a eee seat tag fore ani et AE Fear ING and for the further sum, of Fears of 1802, 1s. 186k and 1206, oo eee te eelreialt esaeieed a EE see a Sant oe Ge tan ee ei Tore ee a a So a aco oe Tere een on a cae See pace Gn IX THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Suite of Wassngton, tur fing County: Mra Anna Hall, plalntlil, ys. aes Magy E. Wotoon and’ W. b Wotton hee hes, Band: th Oe Morgans, John Leiner Lanner, ie wien and AS Homci, assignee of Stare B. Watton an Web. Wotten Sd alt Bersons kon Itany, having ‘or clalming aa interet fr eatite in and to tte heredtiagter ee Stribed ‘real ‘property, devendantss No SP 'Nouee und “summons. Sime of Washington to Mrs. Mary 1 Wott ind WB Wostin her tan HO. Morgan, Solin Leung ang Hanger, ti wife, and" A'S. Moska asc signee “of! Mary. B.'Wotion” and W. 'P Watton, ito tire the owners “ot revit Getiers, Gt, and all” person’ “tnkeowy Slatmini or having ‘an! interest ur estate In’ dnd to” the hereinafter’ described eet Hou atid each of vou are hereby notified hhat the above-sumed plaintft: Sex Anns Hal ts the holder of Welingucnt tax tae iiteaue No. 13613, Issted BY: the ‘county Feanurer Gf) King county,” Washington, mbrating the Following real properes ae ‘tein iging counts. Washington at ‘more parUcuarly. Wescelbed “as follow hot two @) In block No. eight () of Saigewater ‘second audition ts the ety ot Beattie ‘That the sald certineate was jesued on ‘She 2itn day-'at August. ai for the sum WE S181 for” the delinaiont taxes for the ear 189, and for Ue farther stim of $a ie ant eae Yor he sears "of std, IN and. 16, mein the lat amount of the sald vertifieate. the ‘im of 81112 Tor the year 1a a the lor ‘ectrs of 185, TSN a IS ‘That the plaintim onthe Bb day of August. or pald taxon for tte stlbse Went Sere ae follows, teewit: Kor ah eat Ii. $1.08: for. the sear IS, SS an {oF te eur Te, st, whieh neverat xis ear Interest at ‘the rate of 16 pet See ser anmim. from tie sald date’ of ts Fou and each of you are hereby: dl seeted ‘ind Summoned! to appear. withts sty day after the service BF this ttt ‘uid’ sumone. upon you exelulve of ts Inte ji aera. above emitted out Ie, tietber th the eat tn cae a ‘oui failure oy do, plalntift Wl a (oF dudainent. and ‘pudgment will be ree fered foreclosing the tien for aiid tasen thu costs auainst the real property, kun find premises heceln name MES ANNA HALL, Plaine Date of first publisation, October Si Dy BEADY @ GAY. Her Attorneys acting in hee behalf si upon whom all process taay ‘oe ere filer address, rooms I ta. Ronwel vali "Sentehe, Wash, MBiate oF Ahn oe, COPRT OF THE wie otc eee aa se ae Sa tig ilete SP aaed eM seta” de MBit ennai "Hogs 0 a ak sate 6 2remilses hereby bamed. ie GE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Suaie of \astungton. for icing County Ann Tally pualntim, va. Mrs Mary Bt | Wotton anid We Warton, her nusband HO Mngin’ and A0'8. Honlga a ince of Bury B.Woiton and W. ib Wottsn, and all porvons uakwown, i sen5. Maine’ or elatiming an interest ot cate ato the heminataer dese ‘reat property, und John anger an Fecalaineer, Ms we. Getendants, No Suite of Washington to Mrs, Mary B. Wotton shod WW. "Be Wotton, het husband: 1G. Morgan and A.'S. Hoska, assigns aj Mace He Svatton ‘ana W Wotton Tr and all persens Usknowhy claiming of ining am creat ot rata in and ot Joba tanger and “Langer tes’ wie ‘You and cich oF you ate hereby: notitied hac ‘the dtuve. gamed’ plaintit. Anne ahs the Belder ot delinquent tax cer tiieate” No. US Sut, ‘tested By" the: county treaturer "ot" Keine ‘county, Washington. smilie sowing peal property a aited Jn Ming counts. Washingtone an inowe, particularly” descelbed as follows x, No. one (i block. 0, Signe at Edgewater Second addition io the ety ‘That the sald cortiNeate was issued on che iu day at Atigust, lial for the sum Mid for the delinquent taxes forthe Zoot tS fn forthe further im OF for the delinquent taxes for the prior Seturs of As INS and FS." mang the toxal amount of the sald certifieate. the sum a. $UL12 for the year" io, andthe pilor gears of IN. Tt and 186 “hai ‘the platutier onthe 8th day’ of August, Ito pad taxes. for. the subse: itient Years ae follows, to-wit! Kor. the Fein 887. $1.06; for the Your INS, 8 cents and tor ihe year Is i" cents, whieh sev" oral Sums Lect interest at the rate of ot cent. per annum trom the ‘aid date oeipscymertt ‘You and ach of you are hereby dirvet- ed and cummed to appear: within sisty ays after the service of tls notice ara situmctis wlth Vou, exclusive of the date of service. ia above ented ‘court, ‘and Jefend the action or pay the amount due, loxether with the cexte: In case of youe fatture ted fy WE will Apple tor judgment. ‘nit Judemens will be: Rendered forvelucin the tiew for said’ taxes ‘and costs axlnst the real property, lands ad poumises Nexen epic. AIRS ANNA UALL. Phaintift iy brady a Gag. her attorpeys, acting thor beh and pon whom il process Gites Address, Rooms 10 to 14 Roxwell ullding. Ses ttien Washington, Date of frat publication, Oetober: 6; 100: IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Bute of Washington, tor King Counts SSirs."Anna Hal,” pinintite vs. ai Sarg Wotton and WP Wotton, He Aushond: YE.'O."Mongan, Rather Johnson ind "=~ dJohrxon, her hestatd, an X S"Hoak, aaaignet of Mary B. Wotton fod WP. ‘Wotton, and all persons tn evewn, if any. having or claiming an In forest on etaie in and to the hetenatt ty desoribed feat property, detendants Notice ana, Sommone. Slate of ‘Washington to. Mrs Mary Woiton and W. Ee Wotton, her husband He Ge organ, ‘Esther Johnson am ihnwn, Her bustaund, ani As 8. Hose, ascent Mary. Be Watton and Ws Fe Watun, who sre the ceners, or repated awners: of and. sil ‘persons ‘unknown, ciuinag: oF having an interest ‘ar estate in'and to" the hereinafter described” real prepests Vir and cach of you are-hereby nv tea cnt ive nbore naaped plain Ms Ane ta Hail, ‘ie the holder of delinquent tae certitoai! Nou Hd aed Wythe ah iy treweurer Of King county. Washington, embracing the following real property sit: inter in King counts Wastington. and pfs, Dartieasly deserted as follows. ose “Lat No. elght (@. in block No, two @, of Eagewater Second wadition to the cy ot Bente. E Aald certificate was Iasued on pean da ot Su Sl ont Peak fo, ths further sm oF ee erat i ao Aer ee So he ty Si NOTICE.—NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN ‘tnd extered to any And al peswuria fh Any way Interested in or concerned: wilt the Tongue ‘Trading Company a core poration, that a megting' af the, stock Rotders "of xaldomzans Trading ome any will be held at the office amd pace bf buniness of said Tongase’ ‘Trading Companty. at* rooms Ta) Sate, Deposit bing. iy" whe" 'Chiy of Bentite" Kina Counts Washington, on Monday, the ound of December, 0 De ison it the hour of ten o-clock. in ihe forenoon of ald) day. ie object "and. purpose ot when meting fs to Increase the capital Nock of Tuigam” ‘Trading “Company fram sinjwoo, which fe ite present cap fal mock. to Saas, at whieh time ad place ‘vote of the stockholders will be Wad" for “the spurpeme of” determining Wheider or not sald capital stock shad ero Increased. Xn taether any apd all persons, tnter- ected in much proceedings ate Featated to Selpresent them and there Dates at Seattiee Washington, this Oc- tober sthy the Way of the Hest publieatton thereat E.G JOHNSTONE, BU Wiis 3 W, STHUMAN Trustees of sald ‘Tongue Prading Com- pa PROBATE NOTICE IN THE SUPE Tint Court of the State: of Washington, for the County” of King. “State Washington, “Counts of Kings ss in the matter” of the estate oF Cart Ewenman, deceased, Nor 2 Notice of Settlement of "Acrount Notice is nerdy given that J. MM. & Atkinson, “adminiatrttor ‘of the tatate of Ghe''Swensons deceased, bas rendered to, Sand. fiva in sald court’ his nal account Ae auch administrators and that rida. the ath day" of October, HM, ut #9) fm Af'the court Toom of the probate depart: Ment of our ‘salt superior court, ti tit iy of Seattle, in sald King county, has teen duly appsinted by ald court or the Sst aan ie at which Sxtach may appear and fle his exceptions oniing "ala “ASeoun, and conten Witness the Hon, BD. Benson, dud ofall sopertt Gouri, and the a Skid court hereto allied ths 190 day’ Stutember, Hee. Sa “Go. a. noutoway, a ay as a Spe RY THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE ay See Selma ee Seer Pea eR eel eter a oreteetay eepee caaty ae fey cane raise nae suas ae ee ee ere ee a ee Poti p anced geer tig tigi RED I PETERSON, iia’ sesisa Coed ‘Washington, me ie s sents Of multe to favor of the plain ee ee ae ent el cee uate ot Washington for tie County of Millfam I, Curtis, deceased. Now 2 Grader to Show Cause Why Distribution Shouia Not Be Stade. Clarence Curtis, administrator with the wil annexed of the estate of Willam 2 Surus, ‘deceased, having led in” tl Sourt a petition’ setting forth. that, sald Sstate Is how In a condition to be closed tha Heady sor slstebatin oe the rest {tie thereat among the persons entities dy iaw thereto, atid it abpearing” to the SQure that sald petition wets forth tacts Sufieient to authorize a distributlon 0 ite residue of the gald estate: 1 is therefore’ ordered’ by the court that i ald Wala i, “Curtis, deceased, be and appear before tie Salt superior court wf Kiy County, State of Washington, at he cout room of the probate depart sf'aaia court in the City of Soattis, on tne Uah'day uf October, Laon at the hour of EM) o'clock, a.m. of sald day, then and there "0 shiow cause, it any’ they have, Shy an order of disieibution should. not Go imade’ of te Fesidue of sald. estate shone the’ heirs af persons i aid pet fitm mentoned, avvording to 1a. it sg further Grdered that a copy of this order be: published once a week for Cour Successive weeks before the said 12h day aE october, lay, 1h 'The Sealtle Republi cho, a newspaper printed and. published {in Sala King County, and of general clr- Shiadon therein. Done i open court this dist day of August, kon WAL HICKMAN MOORE, Judge. (X THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for the County of King, “W.D. Fle and Annie At. Feit, fis wife, Plaintis, vs Donald Ross sn Mrs" D. A. Ross, hls wite, Defendants, Xo. — Summotis for Publication. The State of Washington tothe sald Doapaid Hs Sn Dies Be Xe Ho You are hereby” summoned. to, appear within ‘sists days, after the date of the Hirst publication of this summons, to-wit: Within sixty days atter the Teh’ day” of September, 1900, and defend the ‘above: entitied action in the aboverentitied court, fd answer the. complaint ‘of the. plain: tis,“ serve cov our ahaer Upon the undersigned “attorney. for pialiae Ue af nls of "belo ate and tase a your failure s0°to do, judgment will te fendered against you’ according to the demand of the complatnt. Which has been ted with the clerk of” said ie gbsect of sald action Is to obtain the Judgement and decree of the shove: tnticled court that pisintiits are absolute owners of that certain teal property sits ded in the County of King and State of Washington particularly. described 9s follows! Ail Af block numbered five Gh contatning twenty (2) lots numbered one Gag twenty (2), Sut alle Mock uma fred elt G), containing twenty. lots numbered. nie Q). to twenty (3), oe the Green Lake Hleetric addition othe Clty of Seattle, ig County, State of Washington, In’ fee simple absolute, as le community ‘property -and that. the defendants and tach of them be requlted | convey the sald. real. property: to. the piaintife W. D. Wleld:” that” upon thelr failure’ ta so convey a commissioner be appointed to mako such conveyance! that aint have judgment. for thelr. coats and alebursements fn sald action and for hall be egultaile: ee a » iy EyRURNER, Pigtntite: Auorner. 0. address, room 22 Haller Building, ‘Beattie, King County, Washington TIMBER LAND. ACT JUNE 3. 1673—No- Hes oe pani Ae OR ass egha fncts Mistie” wash aug qNatlce be hereby. given that in comptt ae ie ole A Be ior the hale of nba tate ts tne aks t-caligenta’ Orqpons Neva at Wash into Roritong Gs Sciences at PADI aid aiken se aSt'St Aucune Ree Samey_ Christian, gt “else county Of Kine! ate St Waatiaglon this day" tied in this offies "Mis. sworn ogtien Neots pra BeOS oP acilon 0, Ne Bes RO. Sage No 9b and wil oe Niet shew Une theron te Hore valuabie oss oe Stone toa for" agrialtral pufpoten aa ts eat {eh Be Ste Setar eens creat rand Pecater ot ue ofies at SAR Wan oe Rhntags ne AP Uay of Ne Seats, un Heit ae winenien:, Sonor, Emery: of Boteninte Wicks aes amy Showtiale Wash Mie Winer Sint Stair" Waa rank’ Wolesd oF Laie ee ta oemacne/ aoa Sica cae ns acne, Hie halts uth cies ae ate Sitiar aoe Moun a ee NE ee NOTICE SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL Beiuie: ‘Sista of Wastingion’ Coun GPRM, sa Sacha oie ee aeeaics oyrnay ae Tord Ui clei there, 4 ine Se ripoceats Or Cece ee hati vars BR Ca ee iment ha ae Souk RRC and tlie itech wie, S: we Reet ana Deus Pat Tienle whee? SE, Yohncon and” Jat Tos anion nls wed he bes arains Bi nproremaes Sooaes, a eames Mod, SRBSe"Hinba eaeaee” at “Bees tie 2 ne ae Gane gen Eitan, FT nares ern Pathe hdl" Mesh Ste Cah ilinige: Man Dex tate ulate, Meaty Sanda faventanen errant See ccna eras ee STR ch Tate Lesa, Che Ro scesheace nat sonnei Ge OF dean einai dee Re Habe ueine ie ea, Saks First, Cte ote he Se oe Pinter itn 2 Davie 8 Gey Retey Fuses, aba ose Per E'Midursner aD peng Wate Bag WW" slomotoe lie Caan Bagee asartiee Catia actin has SEE Foo Blsae etna Eibes Be wide We eas Cement as ata Gil’ Gate cece ie wie be fides i Ginter ana tane. Bese ater. Hele: Lett Mla und Wikaneln Hin fetes te aha car eee Ae ett anata? SH Cea ee eesti ol Re peta Maun vo (ane Serbian fon Sines wit the tore see seeibet the cherie salon tore STAN ‘o'clock a. m.. on the Zith day of October, Se i eee ie co eee a BP ici estes is Seana ae tae fon her le a Inept AE ei deratantis i eects os ali ie Gee ens neo a i ee ce wresalteten Set the ee pear ee cake cae tas Susierel ons Git tes eg andar oe ee mutha Sea es re ee tanee ete ces arts ee eee era iat ee Ee acniane an ibe tarts see [che sa achibery' wiles at ai Hist aghtreatncee timers Ceneiae be Azhar eto aha ce tetera at space atin spear est sebreoet, ners oie Beers Eine Counts, Washinanon, Uerwite tok Baa aliad tne a tntanive gf mets ute 2 Ae aratehe Bese 3: 190 b Sd Bk Bee sce te tae Shed he yee fe Ie Fi Wet ie asi Sots Ae and Biode 21." he nnd ie Bock Be Sha buat foal, Sas an Wetocetee es tae and ae hoe Ie: Oe ee eg Sida eek Fa ass Re utah Boer a Bet Ream baa Nae e WE at Bae a Tote bad i, Bu iB Hates Wena a eiock Ska Rcitt Lagat Mats Po a oth inch [ace atoen fois is 1 sea, Bn Jeeta tats aati, Blok eee Fe ea aie eet ethane i Bias Sind Cobar a! is 8 Ta ghee Wining, Wk i ant Sanat Boh cla 8 aa a an Tithe tia 5 ha, hose aoe ate 8 Sas and te Mas gts ef ks a bloke Tote a site ok tie ca as the prowett SP dein, “arate” sen oats of gull, in favor of the plainet SuSE Guy ae" of apolar ie CRANE SASF Britt yf BORE: Dopaes By te Pe aca a Wheelers PROBATE NOTICE-IN | THE | SUPE- Hor Court of the State of Washington, fur'the County ot King. State o¢ Wash Ington, Geanty Of King, ss. tn\the mat= ter of! the extate of William B, Curtis Deoesed, Now 325 Notice of Settle: ‘mune of Account Notlee is hereby given, that Clarence artis, administratot, with" the eil ane eked of the estate of Willlam Curtis, Heceased, ‘has rendered. to, and fled in Sed cout his final account as such ade ainistrater. and_that Friday, the. 1st Aignat October, Yam at 2:3) o'clock a.m, At tie court room of the probate depart: iment of our said superiot court, in. the Elis of Seatite, In sald King’ Couity. has Set ly appsinied hy ma court fo the Settlement of stid secant, at wehieh me tha ‘place ey person Hortated sala estate may appear and Mle hie exceptions in Writing to"'said aeooumt, and ‘contest tthe samen joka the Han Wm, deka Moore judge oF sald superior court, sand the. seal head cour oto fixed thi Sat dy “gui GEO. M, MOLLOWAY, Clerk, | BP EARLE ft JENNER, Deputy Clerk. LN TAP SUPERIOR COURT, PROBATE, Vince Cou, tae Beate of. Wasding bap it the anaice of tne gonzon Tunowa, uerieude 1B, stanson and Ol sorrie abmun, miter Nor ae Simon D. Sher sun, guardian, of the paid tas etic ot Unter ae, Banana, SaPabe Wn Sst ut epteameer i, me sie pec a pa et SENG ail Glvet 2" Hanon mm ‘aud to Se Si "otang an warned County, tae State Of Wasnington, and better aiiown Sut Sscncribed us ne“eaut oe BaiC Otte truest econ an tne can owen Shentj-oue, aha the worinwest quacver ce SSeaom‘twentyseaght, ait im tomaship dhurtecht hort es rae rorty-two Ber We Sor une (purpose Samed in maid peti Toa tnd for tke apposmement of com iaituonce ‘in Garneu County "to" maxe “Saud male to en made by said commis- ‘orth’ wighest/biider for chan, suipet to ciuldltit' edb Wand BE ‘owt to sald ward. and that none has SHOE bine tate! posueseon’ or nu tetge SEEala wuattian! Sad that the rentnis 9t ihe teueatate ceattibed us aforceaia are ‘io, hatcient’ copa the aes. theresn etate tore! purpeses named Sus Pitts therefore considered and, ordered ay he Cure thal Pasa October ty ‘oko, at the hour of 10 o'clock a m,, at tne Soke hse im King County, the Seace ot Graasnugton, "ia tre” eau? “department SERIE! Sour, bo ad dhe same te nereay Sec"iyine: Sour ‘ag_ the fine and pace Tor, 27 heating on ad petition, and the Sila" sttmon D Sherman, gudrdian ‘as Movesald tha ait other perstn interest” sansa ence bead they are hereby se itet' fo ter ana appear at said Une GMOS. aa "Now Gao, We any, Way aie creat OF aun ward inthe AbOre Stserted rear esate Should net beso (ie Suughese blader tor cash, subject to ‘udriicon, ot his courks Sald amterest Seine an unalvided onecaghth Interest on Tee Hott duacriowa ent tate. ii ia furaher considered and rdered. by ne curt thst Gils omer be pubrisnedl £0F ING Conseeteetimeay prior said time xed" herein for hearin" om eand peus iby nie Seattle Republican, Weekly eweyaper peated, and-publsed ty the Gynt Sabie, King County, the Sate ot Wwaanington, ‘Dave Uhenbch day of Beptember, 20, Wil HIGKMAN MOORE, Sludge of Superior Cou 8. G. Cosgrove ad SS Russel, attor- nye for Guardian: Vomeroy, Washinton Baie or in publicartone Bape 7 190) sar yeaa eal aa ee iene oar atta oie mia a el i ie eee ee ase ew GithGe sous, toa SRE Se EE AMES B. SARK, I THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE ‘uate of Washington, or Ring Gost BE oun pitied es Sitice Pac ao al persons avy Tay In-and to the hertinatter deserived reat property defendants Nor" oti State of "Washington. to Moore, Land Coy who aro he owners, or Fepued Sa fi san ail etwon uti pate tofake noreotter described teal property iYoty and euch of you ame hersoy go fed that tae above raed’ pln RL Younis the holder of a Reliance eet, "Se sue Sh einbrating” the: following. ‘real_properts Sued fh ine county. Washington a inorepatticulaniy’ described ase falta eee ‘ieutining 25 feet trom northeast cornee of i thes to sn a hip tweniy-tote 4) north, range a\e ant; thence uch 10 Tout, thence wan to Lake” Wadhingtont ‘thence northerly long the Meander ive ot sia taker the’ orth ats a ft thee (then abe to" lace’ of beginning pane of Noses &. "iat said certieate was lasued on the Gh Gay ely forthe an $25, “ioe the’ aglinguent taxes for” de deste 1s and 18 hae the taxes forthe iGilowing, ‘Years have. tesnpuld” Oy th RAL hoa th gum Year 180, the sum’ of dn which sear Sim ar heres at tie’ ates Bc ake et eont: per annum frm said ‘date Yeti each of you are Wereby direct se dnd’ suoumoncd 20 anpeat with a hse aco he Raia tha ete Sifiinons ‘upon $y exclusive ofthe da Sty seetiee. in. above faulted ‘Court ai together ‘with the outs, Im ease af youl faatuce te doe che piste wut ee {Gr judgment ad Judgment will bo fen crt tredlning ie Ne for au a ie conte again che real pooper aa and premises herein named Hot YOUNG, Paine. PALMS OWE Atjorness for Pinte Ufice tadeens Lijomneys for FIAInUM files address 6 18 THB CPBRIOR COURT OF KiNG ee faut att rt Sines tena ad atten Sioa th Sete rate Pr baie ence St eta State of Washington. y fe 2M hao, tees Pate of frst pudeation IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE “"Sulte Washington for the County. Ring. “SH. Vineent, plaintia va. Lev | Bote sons, ‘a corporation, slay doing Usoineas “aa “Wartern Laundry “Stu chinery”” Co. defendant. "No." sas gumnins toe Fullleation 2 The, State of Washington to. the sal Levi’ Booth @ Sone, a corporation, isn ‘ising business as Western’ Laundry Sta Shinery ‘Co.y defendant You are "nereby summoned to. appear within ‘sists "days after the date of tie est publlestion of this summons, to-wit within. slaty days from the fae’ day" of Sepcember,. 1aah, and defend the above Sutiea action in the uperion out ui the state! of Washington for the Count Sf King, which county. the plainuft des ‘Enates as the place of triait answer the SSmplaunt’ of the plaintiet in si action ‘ind serve ‘a copy’ ot your answer ‘upon the undersigned attorney" for plaints a his Oilice “and postobice ‘uadrese below stated: and Is case of your failure sot 4, Judument will be rentlered nyuinat you AScavaing to the demand of the compkain Sb the paint which has been fled with the letk ot said" cour ‘The nature and object of sald action tol recover a Judgment. awainst. you. th Saud'defenaani, In the sum ot $00, for reach ot contract. for’ the falure ‘fou, he said defendant, to-sell-and de vee Yo the plainumt oe certain xtra Four Holl" Hagen” Stangie, at the agreed brige of sia. and that ‘by reason four fare to’ so sell and ieliver’ said Extra Four Roll’ Hagen Mange, “the piuintin’ has been damaged tn the sim of Hiilon’ and algo Go rocover the costs of Dated ue Seattle, Washington, this 2s aay" of September, io, the day Of the Ha pubalcation hevect. IRA BRONSON, Attorney for Sald. Plaine Oitice and” postotiee. address: Rctns FEaiSate Deposit Sullding, Beattte, King Sonate Waeeeica, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Butte of Washington, for the County of Ring. "'klvira "C, “iyler, plain, vs George ‘A "Tylor defendant. "No! Suugons” for Pibieation: The Stace ‘af Washington to the sald aces A rer ena You"ars hetely’ summoned to appear velatan sixty QW) aya ter the date ot heitst publication of sie summons, to wits wikhit sixty” (0). days after the sist ‘iy of September, tay, ad defend the ‘bdveentited action in. the abuve en ‘iia tr ad amie he complaint 0 the"piainelit, und serve copy of Your Jinswer apni “the “undersigned attorney Gor ‘piaintltl, at’ his oitiee ‘below stated: jana ‘incase, ‘oe "your failure. so to a SUdigment’ wil! be “rendered. wgainst so itceouting, to the demand. of the came iiaint, "whieh “has “been led. with the Stee of" sald) court. The “object of the ‘ove fengited action to aBtain a Sree of aivoree, annuliing and dssotving he” Bonds "ot" matrimony’ between the Dinintitt and detendant, ‘and declaring. al the ‘property mentioned in the complaint o'pe.the sole und. Separate property the platnuft and awarding her the care fina "custody ‘of, che minor ‘children of laine and defendant, ahd for furehe 1, 1 WHEELER, suorstumyse yy “unod sup, o1HiN98 P. Gn Address’: 68 New York ‘Blocks | teomtony SDR. Sate “Ok Washingion” to. the above ARS sical eet rteecits, SEER SRO fu sy ae Staats Meal oc wasttesitas the ea Sclinghent tax “ceruieates having, bea ee, ie tae oe ona a Bi ua eee ct ates eh SEP BAAS ine ae Eh ey gas ating GENE Sites and 5-1 dot seg Saat pala’ Shame tor neta SE’ SP liad earibicats tesoer Sainte Seo Sane Snir stan a ish uate? palsy sth boa es a Ay BRT Bae eas oe at ee Pasa eas, Tae Sia aie ak tease” ale ec Bar Pb asia, fal ha Get irae ms sues bse meee sts Sf‘ "pagaanc etal aie Poa the sald net Llewellu, ae th etc ot an vacates Comes itor apace aay fou an hel oF canost ant tealed ty apt Sats ate age eee athe SE Sous Ga Joan aestia eect aes case ieRiga "aad dette hl alla GY Seuteeee ena tases es atnatan SE yout aut oe toda soaps Pet rere the here oe sete een ea eis ea arise Te oycerien naceesaer tte Sele Jey 1 as gue Owner of the above descrived certiticute ES AE corners YS aaireee ee wae Anat Tie buliding, Seattle, Wash. ot sate IX THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Suite of Washington, for King Countee aly k, Waketild, ‘Plaintit vs. Oscar G. Waketild, Deténdant, Sor Ose Bostic Summons ‘the Suite of Washington’ to the said Os: ie Wakil es You ute heteby summoned to appear within ‘sixty days after the date of the rst publication of this: summons, {oewe Benin sixty days after the SUN aay tt September, ish tnd defond the above ebt ied action In the above entitied, couse and answer the complaint of the plage sind Serve a copy of Zour answer dpem the UUndersisned “attorneys tor plaintite “at hele ome below sated: and iy ease of your fallure so to-do. Judgment will be Feniiered against you’ aceseiing wr the emand of the complaint. wien has been ied with the clerk of sald eoure ‘X pref statement of the object of the seild action Is to distolve the ponds oF uatrimony existing between the platnelft find the defendant, "on" the grounds. OF Shandonment for more than one year and failure ‘on the part of the Gefendan. ty make suitable provisions for the support Of hie "family: Sul the further object to five the ‘eaté amd custody "oC ‘tae: tue, minor chnaren 0" the pial BRADY & GAY, Attorneys for Pluintft P. 0. Address: “Rooms. i0 to 14 Hoxwell Buuiding, Seattle, King County, ‘Washing AE OECAN _COCRTY COMasr sae ORGANIZATIONS FOR WASH. INGTON, | pddame-Chaleman, W. XK. Kennedy, | Ritzvilie; Geerctars, We WS" zent Hute? ile stde committeenan, "Wek. Rene nels, Riteynte ‘Asotln—Chalr@an, J. W. King, Asotin; scoretary, Ge ution, ‘soto state Gommiiiceman, i, ‘aumelater Anotin Chihulte-Chatrman, Danlet Gilles Abe eens secretary. Sonn tug, Wentnoee: SE886"ommmitteemiany Hl {2 Sagar Cone Chelan—Chatrman, , D, Schebte, Wee natcheer secretary.” W. Xt Sutntnge Wer fatehee! “state comuiticomane Chaos Sohne, Kakesias Clatam—Chatemsn, ,%_Audwell, Port Angeles secretary. WJ. Ware, BOpt Ate ales, Site Commitee He Je Bogs Clarke—Chafrman, A, J. Cook, Vanéou= wiry secretary Te At Wander Vancouver, Aitfe"commicteerany, BM Raney Vane ‘Columbia—Chairman, 3. Ta, Mobundro, aston secretary Wali Raden Dae: {ous sate commliteema, ke Maun, Covtle—Chateman, WP. Ely Kelas cermgatttcemnin, Fa" Biyden, Castle DotigiosChatrman, Ia, B, Kellons, Wan serie secretary Mi. is Analogs Waters ‘ile: singe: commitcecma, Ske alloys Water Ferry—Chatrman, Andrew i, Burlelgy Repabite + retary, “GG tearucum tee Tbe: state commaittccman, We Ge MOR eons z Franklln—Chaleman, Praderil, “Berni, pico; secretary ke’ Hy” Runt, asus stiie‘comulticeinan, “Briere” Berm Gariicld—Chatrmun, M._#. Gose, Pom qroyy necrotarye =e Ee Gores, SOS Sonuiulteeman, & & Russa, Pomeroy Inland chaltman, Chas, ‘eres. Coupe: ville: seorctarg, Do Cart Beatson, Coo | sis: Se Sea a | Jeffetton—Chairman, Dr. L. T. Seavey, ort Townsend, wecteiary: Warey Hage dest Port Tomnoends suite comic, ‘Nekton We O-Rear, Hurt Townsent ‘ing Chairman" Rtekesbocker dalgn committer, WHI H. Morris, Seattle: Sectcansr Es Gs Wiltaker Seat state | ctmmitteemany a. 1 Sehiveys Beattie: ‘Kitsap—Chatrman, R. W. Condon, Port Gambie secretary,” GW. Clausen’, Burt | Grehara; “Sate” 'Sominltteemany i, Ge ‘Xmesy Bort Gamble. | kituenchateman, De. x. c, stogaute, | burg’ stats committeemam, Austin Bites, Hilenshurs Kilckitat-Chatrman, RE, Stewart, agoietiate; Rectan, De Stag Goldevanie: state committeeman, Ge Baker Gotdendate ‘Lewis Chairs, Jona, Gabel, Cheha- uss" Secretary, Ac Le. Cotman, Chehall; | tice SSankitetinan, Henry” Urauhar | Lincoln—Chalrman, 96. 1, Hay, Wilburs | sectetarg, “in Davia, “pavenporus tate Simmiticems, Ac SE! abaesaony, Sua Mason—Chalrwan, W. G. Rex, Shelton: | sctretars. ie"J Shunsons Bhettons tate | Scminticenn, Grant Co Angie, Shelton: ‘Oxanogan—Chalrman, G. E. Noslen, Pac tcrost seeretars, Geo. A. Blackwell, Cone | Somalis” sate’ “evimmictoemany. ned | Staesig, Concomully Pacife-Chalrman, Hl, W, B. Hewen, | sous “ents accteury, “at at. Hanan [South tecads' state cominticeman, Ce 8 | Dutton twa | Plerce—Chalrman, GW, ¥ Davin, Ta: | coma secretary He): Caipbcthy ecomay | site Sommntieeman, Wather ‘Christian '] Sam Juan—Chairman, M. R. Noftsger, | esiuay” Huron secretary: Ga ier, | Eras harbors alate comsauttéemin, WHE | km siutts, Boone itarbor. | Skasit—Chaleman, R. Thomas, Ana || cortes: ‘secretary, ‘John Polson, La Con Sere siate commnittceman, J. Heary Saath, | Seto Waotte: | Seaman Chalrman, C. H Moor, Siew | se tee anomaa || Snohomish—-Chairman, Peter Leque, Ey= {| crete eccrelarys als Mt ‘Allen Mverett; | State commitecinan, sn. Smith, Maryse (| Spokane—Chalrman, F. K. Pugh, Spo- | natty ncereiary’ dt MC “Sibdre,Spokamed Stite’committeemaa, C. 2. Hopkin, Spor [ie : 5 Stevens Chairman, Jacob, Sttzel, Col wile sterotary, WH dnskgony Coles tule commiticemas, Le Sievages Norte || ‘Thurston—Chairman, E.G. Keeler, | oismpias "wccretry', Ke: atoude Oly Pact teie” commtioceiahy AA Shades Sata Wahkiaium—Chatrman, ¢. Ta. sitvar | mane Skamaksveas seretars, JC Rene | neg. skamokawa; “state” Commliteemay 35a" sinetee ih Walla Walla—Chatrman, De. ¥_ € Bla | tock Wate Waite; mceretaryy G9. Bly Watia Walla’ state commitcenay 1 De | Seekers Wate Wane | Whatcom—Chairman, Geore B Gage, Neve Whatcom mecretanys Cana, 1 | New Watsons stace coelinitoemany Geet | "hacon'New Whaccon ¢] _Wtman—Chaieman, W. J, Davenport, +] cotta stereuaty dainen “AY” Heya. Cok ag Sia Scmnatceeman, Wo. Daven | Yakima—Chaltinan, Dr, Gs A i] Norah Sakina; secretary, Gee. 8 Htougns :| Sorin Yitkima! state conamtetceman, Bae | ara Whitson, North Naima al ees i i on Sake Ue Wasiuugiut Uo Wamaua ave, ance crane ee cai ir Bi ct ae oeaeiag Une. iullowing” Fel Boe Sed pe Ny ot SW 4 of 8%, Bee TB yuatt “atin Certitteate was sssued on the are) Savas Ves eater Se ee Fitts tal cranes te es oe = ee ee Sect 2a aes cer eae re eee ee MPSS, Gaye ance Ser pote eel eee rou gana. each of you are hereby direct ee eee ere nears Se eae ae sot egy ie aa feicete ceath Dea tnt el, ica “hake ad oe ce a nt, Louse, MEtic LYMAN, KNAPP, Fac put omnes ute lie al ace eatate, Btule at Wai oe Estate, State of Washington, County of King. as. Sherltes oiice By'virtue of-an order of hale tsaued out of the honorable Superior court of King county, on the 25th day of September, 1908 hny'the' Glerk thereof, In the ease: of Seat® te ‘Trust Company, a corporation, plain Ut, "vs. Joseph W." Gregory, Ande C. Gregory, cUat, defendant No! Sieh and tothe, ag sherifl nected: and delivireds ‘Notice ty hereby given that wil pros ceed to sell at pute agetion to the ge SSUbiider for cush, within the hours: pee= Scribed by ‘law for sherit's sie to-wit? ‘AU o'clock a.m. on the aed day of No= Sembee, A" D, is, etore the courthouse oor oF sia te ‘une, in he state of Washington all the right, ite and tnter= eof the a deondnnts tm nd he Rng county, state “or Wastington. toe wit) Lot numbered nite (e-book thirty: Hive G3), ofA" Pontius “ARaition to the Chis Gf Seattie, aa 'shown on the supple ental plat of guid “addicion in Volume OF Plats, page 3 of the records of Kine Sounty asaresaid’ levied on as the prope Sry" de defendants wo satisfy" Jugmene Ambunting. to Sh, What Interest and oats of suft, Ht favor of the plaingt Diuted this ith day of September, 190, AOE VAN Di VANTER ‘Sheri By T. 11, BURKE, Deputy Aorneyat PHers @ Powel Do. SPELEMAN Hracricl Mombes and Guenter, | sanitary Telephiwe Hinck Tet, BONNEY & STEWART UNDERTAKERS| PARIORS THIRD AVE. and COLUMBIA Sr} Preparing bodlesfor shipment a specialty: Ten Mala is