Seattle Republican

Friday, December 28, 1900

Seattle, Washington

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The SEATTLE REPUBLICAN LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON APR 28 1952 VOL. VII NO. 28 Of Interest, Importance and General Information. Government's Gigantic Appropriation for the Rivers and Harbors of This Country—Rare Bits of History, Scientific Notes and Statistical Reports. Congress is to expend $60,000,000 for water ways in the United States. This is the largest appropriation that has ever been made by any congress of this country. The following will show the distribution of the funds appropriated by congress for government water ways: The appropriations and contracts over $25,000 for the Western states and the largest Eastern items shown by the same are: Harbors—Boston harbor—New project, cash, $600,000; contracts, $3,000,000. New York—Butternilk channel, cash, $300,000; contract, $1,500, 000. Buffalo—At Erie basin and Black Rock harbor, cash, $200,000; contract, $614,643. Georgia—Savannah, new project, contract, $1,000,000. Louisiana—Southwest pass, Mississippi, cash, $550,000; contracts, $2,950,000. Texas—Galveston harbor, cash, $560,000; contract, $1,000,000. Ohio—Cleveland, cash, $600,000; contract, $2,200,000. California—San Diego, cash, $50, 000; contract, $217,850; San Luis Oisco, cash, $50,000. Oregon—Tillamook bay and har Oregon—Tillamook bay and harbor, cash, $25,000. Washington — Olympia harbor, cash, $25,000; Tacoma, cash, $30,000. Rivers: Pennsylvania — Delaware river, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, cash, $600,000; contracts, $2,400,000. Florida — St. Johns river from Jacksonville to the ocean, cash, $35,000; contracts, $950,000. Texas — Trinity river, cash, $150, contracts, $600,000. Ohio — Ohio river, cash, $400,000 at Cullom's ripple, cash, $100, contracts, $950,000; locks, $150,000; contracts, $750,000. Michigan — Detroit, cash, $500,000; contracts, $1,250,000; West Neebiah, cash, $500,000; contracts, $4,000,000. Mississippi river reservoirs at headquarters, cash, $300,000. River from the head of the passes to mouth of the Ohio, cash $2,500,000; contract, $5,000,000 between the Missouri and St. Paul, cash, $1,300,000; contracts, $2,600,000. Missouri river, general improvements from Sioux City and mouth, cash, $200,000; removal of obstructions above Sioux City, $40,000. Oregon—Columbia river at the Cascades, cash, $30,000. Mouth of Columbia river, cash $400,000; contracts, $1,500,000 lower Willamette and Columbia rivers below Portland, cash, $225,000 Willamette river above Portland and Yamhill river, cash, $70,000; Coquille river, general improvements $40,000; Suislaw river, mouth, cash, $26,000; examinations, surveys and contingencies of rivers and harbors, inspection of bridges, etc. cash, $200,000. Hon. W. J. Bryan, the Democratic candidate for the United States presidency, has decided to establish a weekly paper in Lincoln, Neb., in whose columns he can keep his ideas before the general public. He himself says that he expects to lecture occasionally, especially in college towns, to students, but his principal work will be done with his pen. The paper will be called the Commoner, and will advocate the principles set forth in the Kansas city platform. A vote has been taken by the public school children of Mississippi on the selection of a state flower. Some 25,000 children voted in the contest, which resulted in the Magnolia being adopted. Close on to the Magnolia the vote showed a decided preference for the Chrysanthemum. Forty-two different flowers were voted for. The revenue surplus last year in New Zealand was $3,000,000 over the expenditures. The public debt of the colony stands at $228,715,000 and the financial statement proposes that parliament should authorize another $4,866,000 loan, to be expended chiefly on railways. Recently there was sold in Paris for $2,000 a costly piece of lace, which it is said, caused the fatal quarrel between Prince Napoleon and his wife Josephine. It was, a very costly piece of work, and it had been taken home by Napoleon to his wife, but she not valuing its real worth, had it cut to suit an idle fancy of her own. Napoleon walked in her room about the time it was being cut and exclaimed "cannibal!" and walking up to her slapped her jaws and turned and walked out of the room. General Ageja was quite a famous leader in the insurgent army in the Philippines under Aguinaldo. In 1896 Aguinaldo gave her command as a general and she had 2,000 soldiers under her. She fought desperately and won many honors on the field of battle, but after the Americans occupied the country, she laid down her arms, and is now conducting an immense woodyard close to Manila and using a great many of the old soldiers that were under her command. Mrs. Laura Alderman, of Harley, Turner county, South Dakota, owns the largest orchard in that state. She has 150 acres planted with 8,000 fruit trees of various kinds, two acres being of plums. There are 1,000 gooseberry bushes, 1,000 current bushes, 500 grape vines and three acres of strawberry plants. One the landing of Paul Kruger in Marseilles 18,000 snap shots were taken of him every minute. Before he had been in Europe five minutes, every motion that he made, every shade of expression that passed over his face, were written in the minutest details for the inspection of the people yet unborn. Ex-Queen Ranavolo, of Madagascar, is now in exile in Algezi. She was dethroned by the French and banished from her native land some ten years ago or more. It has been decided by the French government that she is to never again hear her native tongue, nor see one of her own race. There are 310 vessels in the United States navy. According to reports not more than 150 of that number are actually in service at present. Of these 100 are in commission. In the year ended June 30, 1900, over 100 vessels were sent to the several navy yards for repairs. Unlike the Spanish, the Americans are making herculean efforts to educate the Porto Rican children and to that end 100 American teachers are now employed on that island teaching the native children's minds to shoot. The relief fund on the Pennsylvania railway lines east of Pittsburg and Erie, shows that benefits were paid to members and families of deceased members during the month of October, 1900, to the amount of $60,698. Nashville, Tenn., has furnished a colored colony consisting of 200 colored men for the Hawaiian islands, who have already sailed, and when there will work on the sugar plantations, taking the place of the Japanese. It now tran-pires that at one time Senator T. C. Platt, of New York, was an architect, and he points with pride to a $50,000 building which he erected in Hoboken, N. J., in proof of his former occupation. The wheat crop of New South Wales this season, it is said, will be 12,000,000 bushels, an excess of 4,500,000 bushels over that of 1899; of this 8,000,000 bushels are available for export. France imported from Italy during last year 4,000 fox skins. The Italian fox is quite plentiful in that country and the French furriers are using them to a telling advantage. The commissary department of the Chinese army is very scant. The Chinaman does his fighting for the most part on rice and cabbage, not even being given salt pork. Suciding in Germany during the year 1899 was quite a fad, as there were reported 10,700 persons who committed suicide during the year. It is reported that London alone has 100,000 pickpockets, men, women and children, who exist on what they can relieve others of. Engineering statistics claim that there are now 100,000 railway locomotives in use throughout the United States. Useful Xmas presents for father brother or friend KLINE & ROSEBERG. SEATTLE SUMMARY Of Local News for the Past Seven Days. Court News Suppressed—The Editors Thrown in Jail—Office Leighton's Trouble—Frisch's Exposure—Criminal Outlook—Other News of Importance. COURT NEWS SUPPRESSED. More than a month ago The Seat the Republican issued an edict to the chief of police and the policemen in general, as well as to the mayor of this city, to suppress the vile and vilious sheet published in this city and known as the Court News, but the edict was not obeyed, and because at the time the police were enjoying the fun found in its columns on the other fellow. There is always a day of reckoning, and the viper that is placed in the farmer's bosom to prevent freezing when warmed will strike the farmer just as quick as it will an enemy. So the Court News that was being indirectly encouraged by the police, soon began to strike at the very men encouraging it and tell things on them as well as on other people. Then at once the emergency arose on the part of the chief of police and his detectives to destroy the paper and its plant, which they did last Saturday morning. It was a most excellent piece of work, however, even if the devils did it, for no publication that has made its appearance on the streets of any city of the United States was so deserving of extermination as was that Court News. Its editors were arrested, thrown in jail,ailed out by men of their kind, but re-arrested by the prosecuting attorney, and they now languish in durance vile, just where they should have been months ago. It struck The Republican as being rather remarkable that such a paper could be printed, published and distributed on the streets of a city of the United States in which there were a hundred different churches, and yet it was done. The citizens of any respectable mining camp in which there was not a single woman living would have resented the distribution of such a paper among the miners. For once in the history of the Seattle police force, it has done a meritorious deed. IS LEIGHTON GUILTY? This paper does not intend either by inuendo, intimation or otherwise to implicate Officer Leighton as acting as a go-between between robbers and the persons robbed in this city, but it does intend to call the public's attention to the fact that in its last issue it made reference to a similar state of affairs said to exist among the policemen of this city; and in view of the fact that the Leighton affair had not then been spoken of, it is rather remarkable that the exposure should follow so fast on to the article made public in The Republican's columns last Friday. Officer Leighton may be just as innocent as the chief of police, after a thorough investigation, as he declares, has pronounced him to be, but there are some strange things attached to the proposition, owing to the great amount of speculation that has been indulged in by the citizens of this city in about the same strain, that Officer Leighton, the chief of police and Merchant Patrolman Bert Taylor will have to explain very fully before they will stand perfectly fair in the public's eye and mind. MR. FRISCH'S ACCUSATION. A few days ago Mr. Frisch lost about $2,000 worth of jewelry from his store, which was entered during the night by thieves with a pass key. The stock of jewelry being burglary insured, Mr. Frisch was giving himself no great amount of trouble about the return of the stolen property. He had laid the matter before the city and county officials, and, if they apprehended the guilty parties, all so well and good; but he showed no inclination to offer a reward for the return of the property. If Mr. Frisch is to be believed, and his word is certainly as believable as Mr. Leighton's, this was not pleasing to the persons who did the stealing, nor to their accomplices, and so they sent the police officer to him to learn if he would offer a reward for the return of the stolen property. The proposition was made flat-footedly to Mr. Frisch by the officer, to which Mr. Frisch demurred in no uncertain language. The matter was at once made public in the papers by Mr. Frisch, and an investigation of the acts of the officer was ordered by the chief of police. The SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1900 officer denied any intention of wrong-doing through the columns of the public press. He called on Officer Bert Taylor to verify what he had said, and this was most elaborately done by Taylor, and finally an exonoration on the part of the chief of police was made public, so far as Officer Leighton's wrong-doing in the Frisch matter was concerned. Nevertheless Mr. Frisch has neither denied nor modified his first statements of being approached by the officer of the law to act as a gobetween between Mr. Frisch and the crooks who turned the trick, if only a reward was given by Frisch for the safe return of the stolen property. If Officer Leighton feels and knows that he has been unjustly treated and accused by the merchant, who is of excellent financial standing in this city, he should seek redress at the hands of the courts in the shape of a damage suit, but evidently both Leighton and the chief of police have wisely considered this an unwise step, as things might come out that were not wanted. OTHERS HAVE DONE IT It appears that the above, if it be true, is not the first instance where the officers of the law in this city have approached persons who have been robbed and offered to see that the property was returned, if the persons robbed would offer a sufficient reward, and the following from the Saturday Mail Herald will to some extent bear out the assertion: "A few days ago one of Seattle's prominent citizens was held up, near the business center of the city, and relieved of all the valuables on his person, including a watch. The watch was of particular value to him, being in the nature of an heirloom. He hastened to the police headquarters, but instead of turning his case over to that august and slow moving body, he paid a detective $15 to take up the case at once. Before midnight (within three hours' time) his goods were restored to him. The peculiar part of the situation is that no arrests were made, and no one was called to account for the robbery. The next question is, who was the hold-up? " OUTLOOK NOT FLATTERING The citizens of any city that is overrun with thieves, thugs and murderers, as is Seattle, at present, do not have much to look forward to in the way of being protected from such a class of humanity, when the officers of the law that patrol the streets are guilty of acting as accomplices of the criminals, to the extent that when the criminal relieves the citizen of his valuables, if the citizen will only offer a sufficient reward in gold coin for the return of the same. Such a state of affairs existed in the city of New York for a number of years and was only up-rooted and driven out of existence after a legislative committee investigated and exposed the entire workings of the police of that city in connection with the criminal classes. For a citizen to be held up on one corner of the street and relieved of his money and valuables by a footpad, and to be approached on another corner by an officer of the law with the proposition that if he will only pay a sufficient reward in gold coin both his money and his valuables will be safely returned to him is a state of municipal affairs that is verging close onto anarchism. Such a condition may not exist in Seattle in reality, but a great many of the citizens of this city really believe that it does, and it is the duty of those in authority to show them that they are mistaken by having the city's policemen and sleuth-hounds to ferret out crime without the citizen or the person who has been robbed by the footpad to be compelled to offer to the officers and sleuths a side reward to get their valuables returned. HE WAS TOO CUTE. Though the Christmas festivities have raged in Seattle during the entire week not one murder, strange to say, has been committed for a week or more. This, however, did not seem at all pleasing to some of the imbibers, and so one Charles Felmer thought he would break the record and drink himself to death. Having filled himself up to the brim with vile drinks, he at once began to exhibit to his fellow seamen his acrobatic qualifications. Being near the water, he fell overboard in the bay and before he could be rescued was drowned. D. B. SPELLMAN Practical Plumber and Contractor Nantucket Nantucket 212 "Diamond" Road BROTHER IN BLACK Finding Favor Among Owners of Leading Journais. Professor Booker T. Washington Writes of the Rise of the Negro- A Plain Everyday Communication -Negroes Go to Hawaii to Work on Sugar Plantations. COLORED LITERATEURS. It is noted that Prof. Booker T. Washington is now a regular contributor to the San Francisco Outlook, which is said to be one of the leading journals of its kind in the West. The Negro race is to be congratulated in finding the columns of leading journals open to its members for regular contributions, and it is especially to be congratulated on them being thrown open to Prof. Washington. True it is that the articles contributed by Prof. Washington are plain statements and facts concerning the race, which he is endeavoring to elevate and make good citizens of this country, and for the most part practically without literary merit; nevertheless, they are eagerly read by the Caucasian race, and especially those that are interested in the same cause as is Prof. Washington, because they tell the story of a race that is being led from slavery to the higher planes of civilization in a plain, matter-of-fact way. Prof. Washington are like unto the early stage performers among the Negroes, inasmuch as they tell only of the characteristics of the colored race, which for a number of years will be highly appreciated by the white race of this country. The hardships of any race, their toils and their ups and downs of life, when told by one of their number, always elicits sympathy, pity, and in a number of instances, real meritorious appreciation, and this has prompted the Outlook, in connection with a number of other leading periodicals of this country, to ask colored men of literary ability to contribute articles touching the condition of the race to which they belong, and for which articles they pay liberally. MUST BROADEN OUT Speaking about colored men of literary ability writing for magazines, and the fact that they do not write on any subject save that about their own race, reminds the writer that the literary field has not yet attracted many writers among the Negro race. As said above, when they have written at all, they have written mostly concerning their own race, but they have not made any effort whatever to furnish purely literary articles for publication. The story of how they are oppressed down trodden and humiliated may be a splendid one to gain public sympathy on, but it is an awfully poor one to gain literary fame on. In order to become one of the literary lights of the country, the colored man must discuss the questions of the day, irrespective of his race, the same as any other of the leading writers of the country. He must write about those things and the effect of those things that transpire even though they may be opposed to the race of people to which he belongs, just the same as if they favored it. For one's articles, thoughts and opinions to live in the future, they must possess that deep and profound literary merit that will attract the attention of mankind through all ages. NEGROES FOR HAWAII A few days ago the Associated Press dispenses told of a number of colored men who had left the South to go to Hawaii to farm on the sugar plantations of those islands. Certain men of the United States who have invested many thousands of dollars in the sugar business in Hawaii do not feel that the Japanese labor that they are compelled to use on the islands gives satisfaction, and believing the Southern Negro better adapted to the raising of sugar, propose to experiment with a small colony of them. Just what effect such a move, if it should be extensively carried on, would have on the Hawaiian islands is a question that is hard to solve at present. It will be remembered that a majority of the persons living on those islands at present are native Hawaiians, who are to some extent racially allied to the Southern Negro. They are not exactly Africans, but they are Malays with dark skins, and frequently with crimpy hair, so much so that they impress the average Caucasian as being a distant cousin of the American Negro. Now, if the American Negro is transplanted to those islands, and should the two people miscegenate, what effect that would have on the conditions there is a problem. Delegate Wilcox, who represents the islands in congress, does not approve of the move, and will make some effort in congress during the coming session to prevent it, but this is impossible, as it is a part and parcel of the United States and every American citizen in the United States has the right to go to any part or place within its domain. SPINDLE IN HAWAII. The state of Washington has contributed a very interesting Negre emigrant to the islands of Hawaii in the person of John H. Spindle formerly an engineer at Roslyn. For the past twelve years Mr. Spindle has been an engineer at this camp and during all that time he has been a hard and faithful student in the work in which he was engaged, and took a special course in some engineering school in the East, which guaranteed him a paying situation as soon as he had finished the same. The opportunity came to the school when there was a call made by the sugar planters of the Hawaiian islands for colored help of all kinds and classes that are used in perfecting such a crop. At once Mr. Spindle was ordered to the islands as one of the engineers to accompany the 200 colored men that left Nashville, Tenn., for the same destination. He was accompanied by his wife, and they are of the opinion that they have found a spot that they have been so long looking for. CUT IT DOWN. The white Democrats in Mississippi do not want their representation in congress and the electoral college cut down, although only 57,459 votes were cast in the late election. Secretary of State Power shows that there were 96,291 votes cast in the Democratic primary and 137,000 voters registered. The state spends $1,600,000 for education, but the claim that it is equally apportioned between the two races is a falsehood. Gov. Longino is one of the strongest men who was ever a governor of a Southern state. He has our entire confidence, because we feel that he wants to deal fairly with all the races of the population of Mississippi. He has largely the character and the independence of the late Gov. William Yaney Atkinson, of Georgia, who was one of the best and strongest men the New South has produced.—New York Age. GOMPERS ON COLOR LINE. Apropos of the grave situation and under the title "No Place for Color Line," President Samuel Gompers, in his annual address before the national convention of the American Federation of Labor, said the following, the sincerity of which is unquestioned and the spirit of which should appeal to every fair-minded person: "Realizing the necessity for the unity of the wage earners of our country, the American Federation of Labor has upon all occasions declared that trades unions should open their portals to all wage-workers, irrespective of creed, color, nationality, sex or politics. Nothing has transpired in recent years which has called for a change of our declared policy upon this question; on the contrary, every evidence tends to confirm us in this conviction; for even if it were not a matter of principle, self-preservation would prompt the workers to organize intelligently and to make common cause. In making the declaration we have we do not necessarily proclaim that the social barrier existing between the whites and blacks could or should be felled with one stroke of the pen, but when white and black workers are compelled to work side by side under the same adverse circumstances and under equally unfair conditions, it seems an anomaly that we should refuse to accord the right of organization to workers because of a difference of their color. Unless we shall give the Negro workers the opportunity to organize and thus place them where they can protect and defend themselves against the rapacity and cupidity of their employers; unless we continue the policy of endearing to make friends of them, there can be no question that they will not only be forced down in the economic idea and be against any effort made by us for our economic and social advancement, but race prejudice will be made more bitter and to the imjury of all." Arkansas Baptists, at their state meeting held at Little Rock, November 20-25, raised $6,140. In a letter to Samuel E. Huffman, of Springfield, O. Gov. Thomas, of Colorado, makes a direct charge against a sheriff in connection with the Porter atrocity. COLLINS GOES OUT Of the Gas Company January First Next. Has Done a Rattling Good Business for the Company-Chamber of Commerce Roasts the CityAdministration — Ringing Resolutions Passed by the Body. HE WAS A RUSTLER. Mr. C. R. Collins, who for the past five years has been business manager of the Seattle Gas and Electric Co. of this city, will retire from office next Tuesday and enter into private business for himself. The Gas company loses a most valuable man in the retiring of Mr. Collins and his place will be hard to fill, it matters not who tries it. When he took up the business in this city it was as low as it could be under the circumstances and still live. He adopted as soon as he took charge novel devices and plans to advertise the use of gas, not only for lighting purposes, but for heating and cooking purposes as well. When he took charge of the plant there was not over a dozen cooking ranges in use throughout the entire city. At present it is roughly estimated that there are five thousand cooking ranges in use in the city and gas for lighting purposes has supplanted the electric light usage in very nearly every residence in the gas district, and all this has been brought about by the untiring efforts of Mr. Collins and his peculiar ways of advertising. During his management of the company he has made as many friends, perhaps more, than any other business man in the same length of time. He has always been pleasing, affable and accommodating to all persons dealing with the company and that has brought many patrons to the place of business that otherwise would not have gone. In the future he will not be connected with the gas company in any shape, form or manner, further than a consulting engineer, which is practically an honorary position. He will be located in the New York block, where he has fitted himself up an excellent suite of rooms and will do a general engineering business from a practical standpoint. He is at present directing the construction of the gas company at Everett in which he is personally interested, and a number of other business concerns will employ him in a consulting capacity to look after their business and works. His successor comes from the East and will take charge of the gas company's affairs next Tuesday. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE The carnival of crime that has reigned supreme in this city for the past three years, growing worse each year, each month and each week, has moved the Chamber of Commerce, the largest, most influential and most united body of men working for the best interests of this city to be found in the city, to demand of Mayor Humes in a ringing resolution that he take some immediate steps to prevent further crime on the public streets of this city. The resolution offered by Mr. Knox and unanimously adopted by the Chamber of Commerce is as follows: "Inasmuch as crime has become so prevalent in our city that our citizens are unsafe in going from their places of business or work to their homes, and inasmuch as some effectual means should be adopted to afford our people the security they deserve; therefore be it "Resolved, By the Chamber of Commerce of Seattle, that the city council be requested to take such measures as in their judgment seem best and most effectual to check crime and to secure the enforcement of the law for the benefit of the city." When a conservative body, made up of business men of all parties, factions and conditions of mankind, of all kinds of religious beliefs as well as unreligious beliefs, is moved to censure an administration as did the Chamber of Commerce one day this week rebuke the Humes municipal administration, it is very evident that something is radically wrong with such administration. Perhaps Mayor Humes and his city officials are right in their way of doing and their way of running this city, and then perhaps the Chamber of Commerce with its 600 members, is wrong in censuring the administration for its way of running the city, but such is not believed by a majority of the citizens of this city regardless of their past or present party affiliations. It is not the intention of either the newspapers or PRICE FIVE CENTS the Chamber of Commerce of this city to advertise it as a rendezvous of thieves, thugs and murderers, but unfortunately they are here and some way must be devised by the city officials and the business men to rid the city of them. The mayor and the chief of police do not seem inclined to want to free the city of this very objectivable class of humanity and they have become so bold and aggressive in their operations on the streets that the business men who are compelled to go to and from their places of business and their homes, have been moved to take some steps in that direction for their own protection. In many instances they have been moved by the footpads themselves, not only moved, but touched for every cent and every valuable they would happen to have on their persons while en route to their homes after a hard day's work had been done. It is time to begin to look at this matter from a practical business standpoint and every citizen in the city unite in trying to rid the city of its oversupply of genuine bad men. A unique as well as useful souvenir has been sent out by President James D. Hoge, Jr., of the First National Bank of this city, which will fill a long-felt want to the desk man in an office. Mr. Hoge has frequently sent out useful as well as ornamental souvenirs either on Christmas or New Year since he has been president of the bank, but his last is the "latest" and beats anything that his advertising mind has heretofore brought to light. Mr. S. Colridge Taylor, of London, the semi-African musical prodigy, stands alone in his class as the foremost operatic writer of his age. The race can well afford to feel proud of Mr. Taylor, and rejoice in his splendid achievements. Magic lantern or printing press presented with Boys' Suit or Overcoat KLINE & FOUNDERS 251 First Avenue R. J. Reynolds, the well-known tobacco manufacturer of Durham, N. C., has subscribed $5,000, one-half of the sum needed, for the construction and operation of a hospital for Afro-Americans. The hospital will be located at Winston-Salem, N. C. The Afro-Americans of North Carolina have raised the other $5,000 among themselves. The hospital will be operated in connection with the Shater industrial school. Our line of Smoking Jackets will please you. $5 to $5. KLINE & ROSENBERG. 625 First Avenue. The size and shape of the tower of Babel have just been determined by M. des Mely, a French archaeologist, from a Greek manuscript. According to these measurements chronicled by the old Greek scribe, the tower would have topped the Masonic temple in Chicago by just five feet, as in its pristine proportions it stood 219 feet above the levels of Babylon. As examined by experts of the French Academy of Inscriptions this old manuscript gives a good description of the tower. Its base was a little over fifty miles from Babylon, laid in the sands of a desert plain. Its outlines were square 6.2 feet each way, and the ceiling of the ground floor was seventy-five feet high. Above this six stories towered, one above the other, forming a sort of central tower, square in outline. The top floor was the sanctuary, and was reached by a flight of 365 steps on the exterior of the tower. These 365 steps marked the days of of the year, and of the number 305 were of silver and sixty were of gold. The seven stories were to represent the seven days of the week. Elisha Francis certainly had a different Christmas than he had figured out. Does the new century make you feel and different than what you did in the old? Constable George L. Johnson spent the most of Christmas week in the city, returning to his home at Newcastle last Thursday. Mr. Matthew L. Brown, of Newcastle, passed through the city last Wednesday en route to Franklin to visit his mother at that place. The ball and entertainment given by the Rainier hotel waiters was a rather brilliant affair and was attended by a number of the leading Afro-Americans of the city. Rev. C. C. Holford is visiting his old home in California and is expected to return the first week in January. The report that Mr. Holford had resigned his charge at this point is without foundation, and so far as he knows at present he will serve out his full term. The Seattle Republican The Republican Pub. Co., Publishers OFFICE 714 THIRD AVENUE H. R. Cayton, Editor Susie Revels Cayton, Associate From the looks of Paderewski's master's picture, it appears that the master is just as crazy as is the pupil. That is, so far as general observation goes. Seaton, the South Seattle murderer, may be crazy, nevertheless he should be hanged so that there would be one carzy devil less in the world. The pay roll of the Roslyn coal mines of this state is the largest of the entire Northwest, and pay days there always mean an abundance of free silver in circulation. New Year and New Century can be enjoyed next Tuesday. Crookedness among Seattle's official blue coats has begun to slowly but surely leak out. "Murder will out." Time will celebrate its nineteen hundredth anniversary next Tuesday. It may seem to plod along at a distressingly slow gait, yet no one will deny the fact but that it gets there. The annual swear-offs and the century swear-offs can join issues and next Monday the century swear-offs can swear off for a century, and next Tuesday the annual swear-offs can swear off for another day. A merry Christmas has been enjoyed by the world and its family during the present week, and now a happy New Year is quite in order, which The Seattle Republican hopes you and yours will have to your heart's content. If it be true that "the Bear is with us," then we are in danger of getting badly hugged. It would be much better for the United States to have the Bear stay in his place around the polar seas than to try to introduce him into equitorial society. A woman curfew, if the Times is to be believed, is the desideratum for the morals of the Seattle women. It strikes us that there are a very few women in Seattle that stand more in need of a curfew ordinance than the dope fiend that directs the destinies of the Times. That "We violate no confidence in announcing that Senator Towner, of Minnesota, will retire early in the new year" paragraph seems to have hit the country press hard, as more than a baker's dozen used the very same article last week, and neither quoted from the other. Although the political pile-driven dropped on Adlai Stevenson's toes rather hard at the last election, still he has not had a word of complaint to offer. Unlike Mr. Bryan, Mr. Stevenson has no explanation to offer in the matter. It simply is, with him, and so be it. Liberty and Uncle Sam may be synonymous terms, the one may mean the other and the other may mean the one, but neither the Southern Negro of this country nor the Hawaiians have been able to fathom out their inseparableness. However, we know they are all right. Mr. Zimmerman, the Cincinnati multi-millionaire, after much trouble and worry, did finally succeed in getting a real duke for his daughter to marry, but he has had to pay the duke's creditors over a million dollars for him. Royalty comes high, as do all things that are scarce, but in most cases it is awfully precious. It is gratifying beyond measure to the citizens of Seattle to learn from an official source that work on the great Lake Washington canal is to be begun. This work has been hanging fire for mouths, yea, years, and now that it is soon to be begun it is proof sufficient that perseverance is the chief ingredient of human success. Building in Seattle during the past year was the closing wonder of nineteenth century. No city in the country, barring New York, which has in the neighborhood of 4,000,000 inhabitants, can boast of as great a building record for the past year as can Seattle. Seattle is not only the Queen City of the Northwest, but it is the captain city of the United States. Representative Copeland, of Walla Walla, has added his name to the list of eligibles for speaker of the house of representatives of the seventh legislature of this state. He has had experience, he has some pull, and if it be true that Ankeny is backing him, he has the wherewith to make a vigorous campaign, and we rather think that he will. Spokane's Republican politicians are "about facing" and are getting in line for the 1902 campaign. Republicans in Spokane know how to get together, though they may sometimes get badly skinned, as in the late campaign. Meredith and Wappenstein are just the men to investigate an official "go-between" proposition, for, if all reports be true, both of them have been there many times before. Uncle Sam took Turkey to taw Tuesday in a way that time only can heal the breach. No fool was reported killed on the football field Christmas day, which, to say the least, was remarkable. When Officer Leighton called on Bert Taylor to verify his denials of offering himself as a go-between, it appears to us like unto a wizard calling on a witch as a witness to clear him of witchcraft. Kidnapping millionaire's children to hold for ransom in large sums is a new industry which is finding favor with the "knights of the jimmy." No class of crooks in this country is so deserving of summary justice as the one who will steal another's child and hold the same for ransom. At last Seattle has had a sip of Cedar river water, and so exhilarating was the effect on those who were so favored, that it is reported some of them stood on their heads Christmas day. The Republican never suspected that the waters of Cedar river would produce such an effect on the officials of Seattle. The Seattle Republican hopes that the 57th congress, if not the 56th congress, will take up the Southern elections as soon as possible, if not sooner. It hopes that Congressmen Jones and Cushman will be among the first to champion the measure which reduces the number of representatives, and especially from those states that have now disfranchised a number of their voters. As has been repeatedly said in these columns, the Southern states do not cast one-half as many votes as do the Northern and Western states, and yet they get a representation in congress just the same as though they did do so. The principles of our fathers who fought the mother country on account of "taxation without representation" have been reversed in this instance, and the South is getting representation without taxation. The one is as objectionable as the other, and for that reason congress should see to it at once that no state in this union of states gets representation unless they bear an equal amount of taxation. If such states have persons within their limits who are unfit to exercise the right of suffrage, then certainly those persons are unfit to be enumerated among the citizens of such state. No vote, no count, should be the watchword of the Republicans in congress. While the newspapers of Snohomish county are combining to hold up the rate for publishing legal notices, the papers of King county are striving to see which one of them can publish legal notices the cheapest. Though the law says legal notices must be published in newspapers of general circulation, still we see quite a few notices being published in papers not of general circulation, but rather simple advertising dodgers thrown about the streets. One would-be paper that carries six or seven columns of legal matter has been refused admission into the postoffice department because the paper itself has advertised the fact that it has no subscription price, but would be distributed promiscuously about the streets. It is utterly impossible for newspapers with subscription prices and having offices to maintain to compete with any such publication, and we don't believe that either the spirit or the letter of the law has been carried out when notices are published in such spurious publications. Summons for ordinary tax liens in the Snohomish county papers will be $10 and sheriff's sales $7.50. For the same class of notices the King county papers only $2.50 and $3 are being asked, and sheriff's sales $1.50 and $2, the proprietor of one paper going so far as to advertise that he will do the legal work and publish tax sale certificate notices for $3 and other notices in proportion. KLINE & ROSENBERG. 625 First Avenue. Swellest line of flats in the city. KLINE & ROSENBERG. 625 First Avenue. Train No. 1 for nohomshi, Arlington. Train No. 2 for nohomshi, Arlington. attle 9:6 a. f, m, arrives Sumas 2:35 p. m, connecting with Canadian Pacific railway for all points east; arrives at Vancouver Train No. 2 leaves Vancouver daily at 11:45 a. f, arrives at Vancouver daily at 11:45 a. f, arrives Seattle 5:10 p. m. Train No. 4, daily, leaves Woolley 600 m a.; arrives Seattle 10:10 a., m., connecting with Everett and Snoqualmie branches. "Daily, except Sunday." Time is here. We have everything needed lor HIM, from a Box of Handkerchiefs to a Smoking Jacket. Our strong line is $10.00, $12.50. $15.00 Suits and Overcaots GUS BROWN, Corner Second and Yesler Show of Toys Is as large as most stores. We have nearly everything known in the line. If you will do your shopping in the morning you will save yourself and us much trouble. HOUGHTON Christ Gifts Christ A Watch, or a Toilet Set or elties suitable Holie GOON BROS. 1417 Second Avenue. Coal all Coal The Best Coal NEWCASTLE Lump Coal Only at the Bunkers of the PACIFIC COAST GO. Phone Main 92 Have You Then get CHRI GIFT N BROS. Second Avenue. ave You a Bo Then get him one of our CHRISTMAS GIFT SUITS and he will be both pleased and benefitted. This store is not SUITS. as well as it suits for men. Our store is open nothing to show you Kline & L 622 Fl this store is noted for its NOBBY as well as its elegant and hand for men. our store is open evenings and we ing to show you our goods. Line & Rosenber 622 First Avenue This store is noted for its NOBBY BOYS' SUITS, as well as its elegant and handsome suits for men. Our store is open evenings and we charge nothing to show you our goods. Xmas Gifts The Best W The Best Si The Best Le To Sult Small Best Watches, Best Silver, Best Leather Go To Suit All Purses Small or Large, at the New Jewelry Store A. GOLDM The New Jewelry Store. M. A. GOLDMAN. BABY CARRIER The Cheapest House in Seattle for FINE GOODS. special for Christmas Fancy New Grade Walnuts 15 cents a pound. Fancy Mixed Nuts, 16 cents a pound. Fancy Japanese Oranges 2 dozen for 25 cents. Finest Christmas Gelery 10 cents a bunch. ADAMS GROCERY CO. Phone Main 482 1428 SECOND AVE. Opposite Bon Marche HOUGHTON has Christmas Gifts for Christmas A Watch, or a Diamond, a Toilet Set or Silver Nov- elties suitable for Holiday Presents W. W. HOUGHTON, 704 First Avenue. Holiday Goods Toys, Dolls, Notions, Novelties Seattle Racket Store 804 Second Av. u a Boy? one of our TMAS SUITS for its NOBBY BOYS' elegant and handsome venings and we charge r goods. osenberg Avenue atches, ver, other Goods 1 Purses large, at 901 Second Avenue Burke Bldg. FOR 30 DAYS WATCHES, Diamonds and Jewelry SILVERWARE, NOVELTIES, ETC. UNCLE JOE 517 Second Ave. near James St. 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 Separate apartments for ladies and gentlemen have been prepared. MRS. TURNEY 612 THIRD AVE. NORTHERN PACIFIC YELLOWSTONE PARK LINE R U N S Two Overland Trains Dally from Seattle to the East with Pullman Sleeping Cars Elegant Dining Cars Finest Tourist Sleeping Cars TO SPOKANE BUTTE HELENA DULUTH ST. PAUL MINNEAPOLIS THE SHORTEST LINE by twelve hours or more to Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis, etc. Through tickets to all points East and South-east. For information, maps and tickets, call on or write to: L. A. NADEAU, General Agt. Seattle, Wash. A. D. CHARLTON, A. G. P. A. Portland, Or 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. THE NORTHWESTERN'S FAST MAIL, THE NORTHWESTERN LINE Have added two more trains (the Fast Mail) to their St. Paul-Chi- cago service, making eight trains daily. BETWEEN MINNEAPOLIS ST. PAUL and CHICAGO This assures passengers from the wet making connections. The 20th Century train, the finest in the world, leaves St. Paul every day in the year 8.10 p.m. F. W. PARKER, General Agent, 606 First Avenue, Seattle Waah. PIONEER Mrs. K. F. Brown, Manager. 81-83 COLUMBIA STREET Home Cooking French Dinner from 5 to 7-50 cents BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH A SPECIALTY From 11 A. M. to 2 M. P. 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 Tel. Main 305. Ale Ladies' Alexand Ladies' Jackets Thi Alexander Wilson The past two weeks during which we have made this special offer have shown a most marked success. Over eighty jackets have found satisfied owners, when most needed, and we have so many less to sell in January. The reason of so many buying is doubtless the knowledge that what we say we do here is always done. The "one-third" off is allowed on prices you see for yourselves in plain Dressing Sacques and Bath Robes Ladies' Eiderdown Sacques and Kimonos in cardinal, pink, blue, gray and helio, trimmed with satin ribbons, $4.00 frogs, etc., 98c, $1.75, $2.25 Fascinators and Ice Wool Shawls Ladies' Wool Fascinators, hoods and squares, plain and mixed colors, beaded, etc., 25c, 35c, 50c, 75c, $1.00 $1.25 1219 to 1223 (COR. 1219 to 1223 (COR. --- Repub NEW OFFICE ROOM IS THIRD AVE THE TELEPHONE NUMBER IS AIN 3 IN YOU HAVE A LE PUBLICATION. Friend u? YOU WILL DIVIDE YOUR EMENT PATRONAGE The Seattle nder W kets and Car Third Less 223 SECOND (COR. UNIVERSITY) SEATTLE, WASH 305 GIVE A LEGAL NOTICE FOR ATTION. nd IVIDE YOUR ADVER- SIONAGE WITH seattle Republican 714 THIRD AVENUE r Wilson d Capes at One- Less figures-- prices that sold us more jackets than in any previous season. Nothing is added on to make the reduction come easy. The offer embraces every jacket and cape we own. They are made of kerseys, beavers, pebble cheviots; every garment new and of the most approved styles. Making, finishing and linings are of the best, and every garment fitted to your satisfaction as carefully as if sold at full prices. Eiderdown Bath Robes, plain colors, all best shades, handsomely trimmed, with satin and heavy silk frogs, $5.50 $3.98. Ice Wool Squares, in white and black, 85c, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75, $2.25. $2.50 COND AVENUE (RSITY) WASH. THE Now that the legislature will soon be in session, quite a number of measures are being discussed by various persons and organizations to have passed during the coming session of the seventh legislature of this state. Already the statute books of Washington are overloaded with useless laws, passed for the express purpose of meeting some personal emergency, and from appearances it would seem that after the coming legislature has adjourned there will be quite a number of more worthless laws on the statute books, and especially worthless so far as the general public is concerned. The state needs some wholesome laws enacted, and it is hoped that the legislature will enact them. It also needs quite a number of unwholesome laws which have been enacted heretofore, repealed, and it is also not overlook them. To pass some law because it meets the approval of some half a dozen or more citizens in some remote locality of the state is absolutely silly, and it should not be done, even though the representatives from such districts should refuse to participate in passing necessary legislation for the entire state. candidacy do not state from whence he expects his support, but they declare he has a united delegation from Walla Walla county at his back. This is not saying very much, but it is saying that Mr. Copeland will not only have the united delegation of Walla Walla at his back, but he will have the united effort of Levi Ankeny's barrel at his back, and this is a pretty strong delegation within itself, judging from the past, when Mr. Ankeny used it as a leverage to have himself elected to the United States senate. In the last issue of his paper it was thought by the Ple-maker that there would be but one candidate for the speaker of the house from Eastern Washington, * * * Speaking about the coming legislature, the speaker of the house of representatives embroglio seems no nearer a settlement than it did a week after the election was over, and to add further complications to the already complicated affair, the Hon. Grant C. Copeland, of Walla Walla, has shyed his caster into the contest and will make a fight to secure his election as speaker of the house. He, like others that are candidates for Speakership, has been a member of the house on previous occasions and expects his legislative experience in the past to lend him aid and strength in the coming contest. The papers announcing Mr. Copeland's and that would be the Hon. Harry Rosenhaunt from Spokane. It is will believed by the Pie-maker that he: Rosenhaunt will have a great majority of the delegates from East-Washington in his combination, and will either be elected speaker or be able with his combination to name the man that is elected. Who the man is that he will name is hard to say at present; it may be Mr. Copeland, or it may be Mr. Falkner, or, perhaps, Mr. Albertson, of King, but the indications at present are that it will be Mr. Rosenhaupt, of Spokane. A friend of Mr. Albertson, of King, remarked to the Pie-maker one day this week that in his opinion Mr. Rosenhaupt could never be elected, and that he would realize that early in the fight and would come to Mr. Albertson for the sake of getting at the head of one of the prominent committees, but the friends of Mr. Rosenhaupt declare that he will ask no quarter from any candidate and will go in the fight for the purpose of winning or losing. If he loses he will ask no mercy of the successful candidate, nor will he ask to be placed on any special committees for his or his friends' personal influence in the election of such successful candidate. There is one thing that he will do, and that is abide by the decision of the caucus, and will have no ill-blood against the members of the legislature who do not vote for him in the caucus. He declares he is in it to win, but if he should lose he will be right side up with care just the same. Realizing that there are two dangerous factions in the Republican party, that is, dangerous so far the future success of the Republican party is concerned, a number of the leading Republicans of this city are bending their every energy toward uniting the party in King county, and toward uniting the party throughout the entire state. It was only last week that the Pie-maker quoted from a number of leading Republicans to the effect that a Republican club be formed in King HOUSES AND LOTS FOR SALE AND TO LET WHALLEY & EASTMAN PHONE MAIN 611 5-6 COLMAN BLD 17 Per Cent. NET This small amount of money will secure a piece of real estate producing $300 per year on rentals. Simply one of these chances that seldom comes to the real estate buyer nowadays. John Davis & Co. 709 Second Avenue PIANOS You don't know what is the very best possible deal to be made on a piano until you have visited our piano department. It's an excellent show at standard make and beautiful finishes at really extraordinary prices. Credit is given on terms to suit your convenience. SHERMAN, CLAY & CO. 711 SECOND AVE. county, and the leading spirits therein be taken from both of the two great factions in King county, and that those persons that have so bitterly antagonized each other in the past step aside and allow the party to get together for future harmony and party success. This has met the approval of the most of the leading Republican politicians and many amens have been said during the past week to the spirit and purport of the article. Now, let those gentlemen make the first effort and call a club meeting at an early date of the coming year and century and let them start the Republican party off on the right foot in the new century. When properly organized there is no reason why the Republican party cannot win in King county and the state of Washington in general for the next quarter of a century. The sentiment of the state is overwhelmingly Republican, and grow as it will or may, it is bound to continue so for the next two decades or more. The spirit of getting together which has prompted the move in King county seems to have struck Spokane county about the same time, and the politicians of Spokane moved with the spirit, as the following from the Outburst of that city, speaks for itself on this point of of party reorganization. It is herewith commended to King county Republicans: The political event of the week was the organization of the Spokane County Republican Club on last Wednesday evening. It was the subject of heated discussion before the meeting, of warm debate during the meeting and of decided differences of opinion since the meeting. Some believe the motives of the promoters are selfish and bad, others are convinced the originators desire only what they claim to want—"harmy." The meeting was well attended. Some, however, came only to object. They can not be convinced it is not organized to promote the interests of certain of the prime movers—to be plain—to put certain people into office and to put others in a position where they can secure nominations in the future. Some say as soon as the executive committee is published it will be seen who the men are who are to be favored. On the other hand, the originators find it impossible to name an executive committee which is satisfactory to the different factions. They had about as much trouble to choose officers. To get a man prominent in either faction would never do, and it was almost impossible to find a politician of recognized ability who had not been identified with the factions if he had been a resident of Spokane for any length of time. So finally the choice settled upon Mr. Charles T. Uhlmann of the Palace market. He is a man of unlimited political acquaintance in Spokane and not prominently identified with any faction. But he is an old-time Republican of Tacoma and a man of recognized political ability. If the organizers of the new club could have named their executive committee then and there it would have strengthened their position, for the men they had selected were certainly fair representatives of the factions. Whom the president will name as the executive committee is HOLIDAY GOODS, Denny-Coryell Co., 716 First avenue. Finest Line of Triplicate Mirrors in the City at Lee's Pharmacy not known. The ten men have been selected, but the list may be changed before the next meeting. The men who would have been named at last Wednesday's meeting had they been called for are C. B. Hopkins, A. M. Murphey, J. Z. Moore, Jake Blake, A. S. Wells, M. T. Hartson, Harl J. Cook, Governor Black, W. S. McCrea and Dr. Morrison. One or two of these would be to be left off the committee, therefore there may be changes. But this list of well-known Republicans is the best evidence that has been offered to prove that the whole affair is on the square." The legislature of the state will convene January 14th, and already the members thereof are securing places to stay during the term. The respective members of the legislature are being importured almost unprecedentedly by persons who want to serve in the legislature as clerks and helpers in general. Each of them it is said has received large numbers of letters every day, either from applicants or from persons indorsing the applicants for this and that place. That it has become approving in the extreme is seen on being introduced to one of the members, when he at once asks you if it is a position in the legislature you want, and, if so, you had better file your application and it will be considered in the regular routine. There are instances where persons holding splendid positions that last the year around who are anxious to leave them and go to the legislature to get a position which lasts not to exceed sixty days and more often not more than fifty days. For this they get from three to four dollars a day, sometimes five, which, to say the least, does not not them over two hundred dollars, and out of this they have to pay board and lodging while there, which will take the most of a one hundred dollar bill to cover. It will thus be seen that the person getting fifty dollars a month steadily loses money to quit their position and get work at the hands of the legislature for two months, though they may get at the rate of five dollars per day. Monday, January 14th, will mean a grand change around among county officials at the county court house, not only in King county, but at every court house in the state of Washington. On that day the officers elected last November will take charge of the respective offices they were elected to fill, land they, for the most part, will install new deputies in the various departments in those offices. In King county there was but one county official that was relected to the position that he has filled for the past two years, and that was Assessor Bailey. There will be no changes in his office and things will move on after the 14th just the same as before. HOLIDAY GOODS, Denny-Coryell Co., 716 First avenue. Plenty of clerks to wait on you at Kline & Rosenberg's, 625 First avenue. You are welcome at this store. Kline & Rosenberg, 625 First avenue. J. I. PRINK, President WASHINGTON IRON WORKS COMPANY FOUNDERS, MACHINISTS AND BOILER MAKERS HOISTING AND LOGGING ENGINES A SPECIALTY SEATTLE. WASH. Seattle Paint & Varnish Co. The Only Grinders of Lead and Manufacturers of Paint In Seattle. Rainier White Lead Creosote Shingle Stains, Varnishes, Lacquers and Painters' Materials. FACTORY: Cor. STEWART Street and HOWARD Ave. PHONE UNION 53 The San Diego Fruit Company Hats Cleaned, Dyed and Retrimmed by Practical Hatters SEATTLE HAT FACTORY A Full Line of New Hats at Factory Prices. 1009 FIRST AVE. Phone Green 1821 FURNISHING GOODS, HATS and GAPS. MEN'S, BOYS, and CHILDREN, S CLOTHING F. W. Merrick THE AMERICAN CLOTHING 709 First Ave. Seattle, Tel. 304-365 Pike Street's Leading Grocer Wants Your Trade Gor. Sixth and Pike SEATTLE Manufacture and Sell LUMBER For All Purposes SEATTLE - - - WASH. RUPTURE Does your truss hold you? If not, call at Guy's Drug Store Osborne, Tremper & Co. INCORPORATED Abstract Office and Title Examiners 114 Cherry St. Phone Main 548 E. A. GARDNER ...SOLICITS... LEGAL, DETECTIVE WORK Satisfaction Guaranteed. Room 316 Pioneer Building DRESSY SHOES At Prices that Appeal to Your Pocketbook. The Very Latest Styles at the Popular Prices of $2.50 to $5.00. See them. RAYMOND & HOYT, 918 Second Ave., - SEATTLE, WASH. Gem Meat Market HOME MADE SAUSAGE All Kinds of Fresh and Cured Meats TEL. MAIN 505. Cor. Seventh and Pike St. SEATTLE ALBERT HANSEN JEWELER AND SILVERSMITH ..Desler in.. Diamonds, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver ware, Rich CutGlass, Etc. "The Minneapolis" Cor. R. R. and Yesler Way W. H. HENDERSON, Prop. ALL KINDS OF TONSORIAL WORK EXECUTED WITH NEATNESS AND DISPATCH Headquarters for Hotel and Railroad Men WHO'S SCOTCH TW WORTH : : HERALD WHO'S YOUR TAILOR? SCOTCH TWEED ENGLISH WORSTED WORTH : : : : $30, $35, $40, $45 FOR THIS MONTH ONLY HERALD TAILORING CO. 811 FIRST AVE., Colman Block. Daylight light arrives late and 1 early these days ELSBAC Is the cheapest artificial light on earth Bright White Light Handle Power, one-half cent per We Deliver It. LITTLE GAS & ELECTRIC 214-216 Cherry Street Gen. Manager. RAW G. B. K SEATTLE Real Estate Daylight arrives late and leaves early these days Bright White Light 60 Candle Power, one-half cent per Hour We Deliver It. SEATTLE GAS & ELECTRIC CO. 214-216 Cherry Street GRAW & KITTEN Room 6 Bailey Building McGRAW & KITTENGER Room 6 Bailey Building The Kind You Want VISIT OUR HOLIDAY ANNEX OLYMPIC HALL 1108 Second Avenue For Toys, Dolls, Games, Children's ture Books, Manicure Sets, Toilet Smokers' Sets, Animals, Steamb Banks, Railroad Trains, Wagons, Telephones, Etc. PIC HALL second Avenue Games, Children's Pic- nicure Sets, Toilet Sets, Animals, Steamboats, Trains, Wagons, Toy OLYMPIC HALL For Toys, Dolls, Games, Children's Picture Books, Manicure Sets, Toilet Sets, Smokers' Sets, Animals, Steamboats, Banks, Railroad Trains, Wagons, Toy Telephones, Etc. We show the largess collections of above lines in Olympic Hall ever displayed beneath one roof in Seattle. E. W. NEWHALL & CO., Seattle Convenient Country Home IVE ACRES IMPROVED WATER on Port Orchard Bay, directly facing Government Dry Dock. Good b wards, etc. One and one-half mile from Sixteen miles from Seattle; three m s daily. Fare on all boats, 25c. Twent Dry Dock where the government pa ooo per month, affording an excellent m inds of produce. A splendid location, g every day. The buildings are almost w e asked. For further information address MILL & GO., Seattle. nient y Home... PROVED WATER? FRONT d Bay, directly facing U. S. y Dock. Good buildings, and one-half mile from County from Seattle; three round-trip boats, 25c. Twenty minutes e the government pay-roll is, ordering an excellent market for A splendid location, growing in buildings are almost worth the $1,000 ation address E. W. NEWHALL & GO., Seattle. Convenient Country Home.. FIVE ACRES IMPROVED WATER FRONT on Port Orchard Bay, directly facing U. S. Government Dry Dock. Good buildings, orchards, etc. One and one-half mile from County Seat. Sixteen miles from Seattle; three round-trip boats daily. Fare on all boats, 25c. Twenty minutes from Dry Dock where the government pay-roll is, $75,000 per month, affording an excellent market for all kinds of produce. A splendid location, growing in value every day. The buildings are almost worth the price asked. $1,000 EMMETT CLARK Care THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN we are moving this week to our new building, BIRD & MAIN STREETS Uptown Office, 817 Second Ave. Telephone Main 493. ASCADE LAUNDRY COMPANY. a week to our new building, BRAIN STREETS e, 817 Second Ave. Brain 493. UNDRY COMPANY. We are moving this week to our new building, THIRD & MAIN STREETS Uptown Office, 817 Second Ave. Telephone Main 493. CASCADE LAUNDRY COMPANY. No Expansion Here Simply because the material in the suit made by : : : &CANNON IRVING & CANNON Is too durable to either ex- pand or contract. Winter Suits No IRVING & CANNON, COLONIAL BL Second and Columbia St. Suits Now. NON, COLONIAL BLOCK and Columbia St. IRVING & CANNON, COLONIAL BLOCK Second and Columbia St. Anchor Printing Co. 712 THIRD AVE. rouR-- ti«*d BIG | CATALOG | FREE | e f a To Out-of-Town Folks Sido Furi Gungay, AT THE THEATERS. At the Grand Opera Houne. A veritable feast of good thing: will be offered at the Grand Oper Honee all next week, beginning Sun- ay matinee for those who haye » penchant for combining the dramat ie with the vandeville, when F. A. Wade's new “Turkish Bath” com- pany will be the offering. A corps of high-grade farceur ciave been engaged to interpret the play and they will introduce musi cal numbers, dances and character impersonations, concluding one ac with well rendered selections from popular authors. Fach member of the east, has heer especially selected for their ability for the part assigned them, and thi comedy will be handsomely mounted and appropriately costumed. In addition to Mr. Wade the com pany includes Miss Etta Merris, th versatile soubrette, Mr. E. 1 Graves, the laughable comedian, ani ten others, to aid in making the fus fast and furious. = See Commencing Sunday, December £80;for four nights and a special mat. inee Tuesday, January 1, the story of “The Duke's Jester” deals with the life and love of Cecco and hi hidden ambition to scoure a los birthright in order to win the lady with whom he is in love. Also of his sufferings and degradation, hid. den under a mask of wit and humor to gain his purpose.; of love, ro- mance, adveture and frolic. The in- teresting story itself is environed with the amusing and mmsual situ- ations which migh occur daily in the CE. . i ed &? we So NES) ee ZU, Z Ox TA) (MOS HARRY CRO" Conk e “TOMKINS” life of a court jester, and is as re plete with fun and humor as it i with interest, ‘The play is conceded to be hy far the best in which Fred. erick Warde has ever appeared and i believed to be his most complete pro: duetion. Mr. Warde is now under the management of Clarence M. Brune, and is meeting with the mos snceeseful season of his long career Mr. Warde’s repertoire will consis of standard plays, “Richelieu, “Othello,” “Hamlet” and “The Dike’s Jester.” At the Third Avenue, Commencing next Sunday with 2 matinee performanee, the stage of the Third Avenue theater will he oe- cupied by Russell & Drew's com- pany with a grand revival produe- tion of “Quo Vadis,” the best reli- gious historieal play of modern times, depicting in a vivid manner the persecutions of the early Chris tians by Nero, the tyrant emperor of Rome. Among all of the religiou- plays of modern times none ha= met with such signal favor as “Quo Va- dis.” It makes men and women het- ter for having witnessed it, and holds rank among the classies of the ‘A special matinee will be on New Year’s day, Pe Our... | Holiday Stock | | Isthe Talk | | Of the Town | pean | more thsn others ask you i Seen {GRAHAM & MOORE % Jewelers and Diamond Merchants 3 705 Second Avenue “A REAL esate eer BaP tence Sag sai, ee aration INO BOTHER, MUCH FUN, ll th Wonders an Pleaseres of rheo accompanied by a Recoiger tha IGraphophone can be used to make Records, fsctndard ecndn sd ocerand aon | COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH CO. Dept. 30) muita eee ee es NOTICE ts hereby given that ie a Wastington, wil Be held at the ote o the company. Room 2 Sullfran: Sulidicg Saree yas Monsey yah ith, 90, for the Purpose of elcciing yt ihe trunmtction or suck other business shail Tepally Come before said wating DAVID WHLLOGG A. H, WINTRODE Brien NOTICE.—SHERIFE'S SALE OF REAL ‘Batato. State of Washington, County of King, ss. Sheri’. often By wirtue of an order of sale Issued out of the honorable, Superior court of Xing county, om the Isth day of November, 150 bythe ‘clerk thereof, in the ease ot A. Biles, piaintit, ve. We. B, Clowe: Auste B Glower He Hotmes, ‘Kate "R. ¥tmes Jeeeph 1 Dawson, receiver of ‘the. Firat Niomal anh ge tatoo, HO hucy, Fecelver of the Beattie Savas Dank, ai Handall Chase, executor of the estate 0 HE'S Chane," deceased, defendants, No Bue. and to'me, am ster, divested ne Notice ie heroby given, that I. wil olive ie hereby given, that T will pro. ceed to seit at pubic auction to the bla: Sst bldder for cus, within the hours bee Scribd: bylaw for’ sheriffs eutes to-wit ‘ALU ib o'clock a. tm. on, the fh” day of January. AT), ‘Tt, "before the cour! Hote deo ald King ns on State’ of Washington. sil ths righty" And interent of the said defend n'a Ja ‘and {othe following described property ft ‘ied in Rng county. Washington, to-wit locks one Gi}, twe (2, four (ve (>) gn ine of South Heh ‘AGation fo the Gus’ of Seattle, excepting ‘heretrom the following dencrited 1 th, 10 Mie Lots wight. 'Coe nine.) ten“ leven (i), twelve (1), thirteen’ (a). our {een (,” Seventeen "th, eigitees Us) Finetesm (a9), ewenty. (3), twenty-one (2 twenty-two. 0. twents-thies (2). and twenty-four {2)' of sald “Hioek, nine Ievied’ on ns the property” of defendant: or satisfy a Judgment’ amounting to Soot, with Incerest and costs of out, In favor of the plain Dated this Hth day’ of November, 190, "A. T. VAN DE VANTER, Sherif. By 7. H. BURKE, Deputy ie Cate & teen. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE ‘State of Washington tor the County 61 King. “James Patterson, plainutl,” v= Emma Patterson, defendant. No.’ Summons. by’ publication. The Blate of Washington to the said ‘Emma Patterson, defendant: fou are hereby. summoned. to appeat within sixty Gays after the date of the first pablleation of this summons, to-wit within sixty days atter the sth day of De Comber, A, D. 190), and defend the bow. ntitled detion in the above entilled eourt and anawer the complaint of the plainta and Serve a copy of your answer up the undersigned attorney tor plaintit, a his office below stuied; and In. cass" 6, Your failure so to do, Sadgment will be Rendered against you decording to the de Mund of the complaint, whieh has beer filed with the clerk of suid court. "The ob Ject Of the sald: action, eat forth tn the Complaint, is as follows: “To dissolve the bonds of matrimony existing between th: pisinuft and. the defendant and ware the community property to plaintia SP. BALL di Attorney for Palatine, 10, Address: Roomy 1,1 ac Ih Hx Washington. ‘ . “i Date of frat publication Dee. 7,180, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for ieing Countye= Sete ee le etre the “deceased ‘Henry. ‘Cooke above men- ee Of said’ Henry Cooke, deceased, at th Bs tacit sso ly Seer Sein 8 ae ing Sh West EDGAR He BUTTERWORTH. saunas SEES ate wo the a Andrew Rosburg. detentiant: dint Sener dues anlar ake uate Sree Rest publication of this summons, to-wit Upon the tindersigned attorney, at his ot. sh tt itStn"e nt ie and for general ee a ae Lee Asean fr eg me eifice address, Beatties County of Eins, we ene ie, County of Rise, NOTICE POR PUURLICATION. athe Ce TB mapas, Steg tice Been rate ita Mitta heh Ba sais pin mn, pun SE ee coe ta ee te i weed at gomtagetiae IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF KING Tesh Rea Naat Oa Se Aare, eae atc Oh a afar eis ade ae ty te mites en Saas teata ae ates eters aS ee eae eee es Boao an ate comma Seater meas carey, iM RAWSON, Maloy Aone, algae ett are, eStitg Bit Nation Eo, : sam earl am Vat ate MAY se apr ri ata i aia Set Sime GE eae (ot i reel Se i, pata d aes eee ere se eran tare papa ear ee a ee oes eta el ps caer et sass Oe tem ota de ene, Be earn Bhat A of tah tata SPSL iy ade Sina Se aber ainda ote SoRigai tata hate a a | ft uate a alike Ah alli ro, sare sec Se seaSaceees ce ay Ee kis qrreRion corer gr. mu sie, WER GUE ko Re Sneha 8 See cia are aa Se Gata eat ee a Bie eal ye ie Heat Sian Sr APE LaG Ga sett Ge eae Be tenses Ey SNe Pa al dine ere oe SAI Se ti ral teh ia aie a ire saa a eae failure a9 to do, judgment will be ‘ten- Gr aps ea aeeetic Tt fm sd SP Sante haste ‘ite tte ase ae etic ala htc os ere Gerace eres saan eer te Se di ae a et Mat gaa ae Be tah sneha a ieee det tty, hte Sa bt bit iad at ‘oaue bopmtion eget RIN tei ge all Pai Baan age SUE © SER ie, nee con Ea Nase ao a meat iaaee aaa te i iermeont ae suum dee at ae cea See ence site iar A Mace Sen peat ite igre, ee apo, 2 scons aon A Sone annures aang Gem Pat (Oe ei ue set tet haere te Prtteh Haag Sie Siebert te Salon eae Sake ah i er i ete ie fea eae one a ate es ahd Sara St sincratat saat ea Sr atin ature canner ne Hie ee ee ana ‘NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS’ MEET- se Sake Catsioh eind a Se Sears ane ac Seis nt Bane Sari et nee at oe fee ee 6 See coat Sagres arene ae tite tae gee ates ee me ees, oe eee ee of the Boara ot trusices, ‘TIMBER LAND ACT, 8 ‘Rho ate the Owners Gr reputed owhety 6 ee ie ai ees aterm fo. oe Potridiee oS ‘certificate ‘No. BoTi, issued. county ra eee Lot No. nine () in block No. two @ of se eee ae a i il eas ae fe aa at a ee oe ee os ee ee me ee aa ee Sete ae os |Site borane a es ee eetaa wie unre aociees pee apm ae Yoe aegis dt Star aren a aang fier cee ilar Jt tee et eee eee ee seen ANNA HALL, Plaintift. nearer aa Dai nan AN rare el ae mcr ane es at en en ee ee IN THE SiPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Wastington, for king County. Ary Anna Hail plait, vars Stay BAeouon ana WB Wott, se hte ind HO. Morgan, Joh Langer ‘and angen his wite and A. Homa, asalunoe ot itary Be Wotton and Wilt Wotton, and all persons uniinowey Mf any, ‘having or claiming’ an interest ‘Or eatits in nd to. the herelnatier dee Strid ret ‘roperty. defendants,” No Biate ot Washington to Mrs, Mary 8. Wotton nd W.'P Wotton, her husband HO. Morgan, Sohn Langer ana Langer, ‘My Wife, and ALS. Howea, aa: signee ‘of! Mary H'Wotton” and We Ey Wotton, who aire the owners, or reputed owners, Of.and~ all” persons unknown, Ciaiming ‘or faving ant 'interest or estate Inv and "to" 'the hereinacter destrlied fal “Fou ad euch of you are hereby noted bat ive abovernamed plaintit, Mes Ania Hall ts the holder of Welinqucnt tax cer. iieate No. 1363, ewe Uy. the county Ureastrer of King county, "Washington, simran, the tollowing real property tated in icing ‘counts. Washington. an More. partieufurly’ deseribed "as" allows tose! rehatyite, Gin Black io, leh gewater ‘second addon tor the eiSy oe Seattle, ‘That the sald certificate was issued on the #ith day of Augunt, toh for the sutn of $181 for” the delinquent tases for ‘the Year IN, and for the Curther: sum of $82 for the delinguent taxes. for ‘the spetor Sears" of ING, 190 and. Wb, making Ue total amount’ of the sald Certificate, the Sum of $81L12 forthe year Iie and the Dior ‘vers of M6, INA and tsa ‘Tha? ‘the plalntif, onthe 2th day of August. Tio bald. iaxes forthe ‘suber Quent” Sears’ ae follows, tocwit: Bor tk Year as. SLs for the year TNs, SS. and for ime Seur hid, st, whieh severat inns bear Tnterest at tive rate of 1 pret cent ber’ annum trom the sald date’ of pay You and each of you are hereby. dt ected ind summoned. to appear. with Sixty ‘days after the service BE this Holes and sumons. upon you, exclusive. ofthe Ante ‘of service, In ‘above entitieg court land defend the action or ‘pay the moun es, Tagan th the et Sa ‘your fathure soto do, plain ‘ann for Judgment: ‘and ptdynent will be ren ered foreclosing the len tor said use and costs against the real property, land and promises herein. wanes MES. ANNA HALL, Palntift Date of tirst publication. Gclober $. Hak iy BRADY © Gay. Her Attorneys netinig in ber behalf’ ghd tipon whora "ull profess may be served Office address, toot Ml to It Roxwel butting, “Seattic, Wash, PRtate of Wat eos roe wate ot Washington, or King county HES Sha det Ai rrgnce. and > Lawrehtes Ber wi fat iTunes ana He iting. having: ot ‘cabtage an ian or ‘eee und to. the Rereltadtet de | Merlbod feat raperts aeterinntee” So Sais aay atl Sim - _Bitie of Washington to" Chartes Lawrence, and = Lawithed ni wie ‘Etthee Jonn and —\"Sohunon, tite Bae Band, who "are ie. owners be seputad Elif sia tte a {n'a Si"ite heteinatter deatelbed fas Property A Worth cach of you are nereby.notiid gute above pamed platntite Sire Aue tah, IS the holder of aelfuguént wax Utes No; But, inane by the cous Areas “oe Hing, County. “weshingto siabraciig “tne. folowing’ reat “"prosert tuned ty iink county Wachinghon nd iborg “particuariy” described" as" foliowe, JDL No. seven C), tn lock No. two @ of agewater Seid addition to {he ety ot Beaute: “that te sald cortieaie was tesued on ane 34h cay of August, io) for the aun SRE for che delnavont atts for the Year oh “and dor the further atta ‘of S25 cor the’ deunquent vases for the pri year i “making” the total amount of ine" aaid “certteate the stim of RUE 4 tie year iS and the prior year $e "Put Dig. plainUdl ote Sith day of Atgust, aw! paid axes for the “adhe ene jears-ab (lows, to wit’ “Forte Pear a Sia, oe the feat Bs sil, an {or che ear’ two $.3i “which "several sins beat terest, atthe rate ot Is per Sant. per anim’ frora the sald” ate’ PYou thd cach of you are hereby, ai rected und Summoned to “abpeat witith Sixty" gaye: after the service of aiy nee ‘ice’and ‘summons upon SG. cxclualte of ihe ate of gereieg tn 'above entities Sour ahd defend the ‘action ‘or pay the fmonint dues topetner with the toni, “hs Stee or Gour failure Loto. Woe plaintt STUY abi" for. Judgment, “and "judgment SHH rendered: opeclosing the len for “a Taxey and. costs aginst" the" real property anda aid premises herin bamed atts." ANNA. HALL Plaine Oy mrady Gay. her “attorneys nett Tn her behait sd upon whom all pro- Ghee"adarestTuemis 10 to 14 Roxwelt baling, Beata, “Wash. ‘Date of first publication, October 5, 1900 "Sats Waste Ge Sty Goats eee oe eee ee So ee Wotton, and all persons unknown, 1 Ang, hiving oF claiming an interest o Soe ee eee See eae a eee inverer "or entate ian {0 the here ‘Hants dhe holder of Welinguat tix eee He ond tates Oc el ere Sf $181 for’ the delinquent taxes for the Sa ee co te eee ee ears ia allows, to mts Bog the peat er tae ine reer ee ee ete eter ee after the service of this ‘notice and’ suse oe eee eee mee oe Bete ars rama mane ae inuher bepaig and Upon.wheay a prae ae ‘Date of first publication, October § 1800, oie — Plus onovathe superior cour ef King ae her Sui aay ot Sesombe ie elo thereak, eh? Boi W. Restraint verte Jose armor ana ‘korge Weatraty ee ba Ripa eer berlex ac Beprt Rian “Bertie anf Beetle hl wil defendant Say, tice te hereby glven, that wl pro stb to can wti the oe ‘Scat ye fr set nue wi eltck i mth a day Of No ‘Mower Abin! Shoe ci hots jest of the said defendants in and to. the [ghstrine’ desis propery aitatea i [Ring Canty Wasalagton” wre La [mumber at” black one’ Gin so [Zaye oeenycnine” "noc amb ce see 0 i J | Bitch ah dae de de in Re EAN BB ASHER Shortt | ay ohn Neck Depots IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Sue te Washinton, for Ring. County. Sais, “haa Ht an det aetna Meare, tls atte HE} ai pang, unknown ay, Rat” fiat Or etain ao ate ox tate ta Hic tae Eecclnattoe deat fest ghee? deat” Semmens sa Se Stiie of Washington to John MeCarty eed“ scorn waa who arerten Shar: a Segue anes, ke an ferson ckkagiens ciation hati Sm een ext fn andthe heel Sheree sd Neal property: “niet Of yc We Hereby moti “um“uie’abase suited Pinte Mis me ithe a detent ta Posie oa Sab etd by The Sous Gite oc king count, Washington [Siti atte counts washings and [more jie desea ftom iu Xo, twetye G2, back Xo. Ave sof Hagia Ben ‘ation othe [Stat the sald certineate was Issued on tyeldn se Sino oe ta [nea Ga de Wengen te oe th Phat the plolntift on the 21th day of Area, “aut yard tases toe tes eibee Ate vcare: Crees Foe the vot ait Jas whtehrsun Cetra interest at the fat ects tee cat perenngee tooo the oni tue 0 pagent” iu ait anhce you are hereby dleected jan utter the eects af ths eotie and see api feu cuctunive of the Gat Br save is stave eatiien coart tease Pent Gis ation os gar te seseunt ee tchetr ei ted. Oh fate at Yu HENRY SST Cs age Satu it avo or | idement, and. Jhdement. will be rendered jteretg® te We tr Sala "tases “a Slt the eu propers nds and |Prms P ERR nadte Pin iy Beaty ss Gass her sttornoy Jitter Beka ant ipon whom ai yroce [Pee Cede, gum 9 to 24 oxwel piluins’ atta” Wushisetons [Piste St first pabilcation, October 6, 1000 IX THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Seats oc Wanttunton, for Ring County Stirs Anna Hs pint vs Se Binge af Wonen'aoa W" Pe Wotton hes Asien: He Morgan, mathee Johaage ana = adn her hesbanets Shoah, ‘gaiemet of Mary Wotton fed Won, nd persone iivruny tf any” having or Sad terest or estate In and to the hetelnatt: Ge doscribad eal’ propera‘aevensats Moiles and sumone” Biate of Washington to Mrs, Mary 2 pieiton nd WE Wout her uabend 4} or"kotgan"Beiner dohiaon and Scone Ber iunba, A Soak, testenee a'Mang i Wotton ana EME Wolke who's the Owner, or ropied henetey 32 "and it “porsows unico limp, faving an Berea estat in'and to we eveinattcr doneribed ea Prone "Yew and each of you are hereby notiied cont tite nbose faaped plains reat tidal, i°Ohe halder"ot dettiquent ts Serene Nov dah atued bythe sou {F"teaturer ot King coun, Washington, Shinn ie cotowine eal propery a tinted inking counts Washingcons Bogs, martculaly"devcrbed ‘a follows, “int No. eight (in block No. two of Biigehnter Seto adaton to the cy of Sone “rh the sald cortfoate war taaued on perdi das ot Supa al forthe ta SEES for che ‘Gelingsont tats tort Eexr asad forthe further’ um ‘et it, foe tne deinguent taxes for the Dri Seah ott Holand Meer soaking te USGI dmggny” oft eld ceftineas, the Suet ot G2 for the" gear aw and th ele Sots of a hand “Tha? Ge plang on the Sh day of Atartst i! "pal tates forthe “nose anti Sete a ugme ri oFar dhe {Gr ie Vest Bid, $22 which several xams Boar interest at thevrate ot i tae See fc! annum rum! the said date" of | iu pind cach. you are here drat. it ated turctnoned Gs aeeae wits ae ays rier the service of this notloe and Scnmons opts Sou excluale of the dat St sence, in: agave eutiied court, an ecoea the actin on pS the amount die tine th fie Com se at Se are todos Slane wil apply ta Judigmens, ad fagment will be rendered Tortclomj te len for "ald takes ost seat de real property, tanda ad i ae fins Ea ae a. iy rudy ae Gay, her attoriors act eotaeat cn ecitcas Bag be served Ones dies, Meoma 2 to 1 Ttoxwel buildings Seattle Washington” Pott ne teat pebbicatton Cotsber &; 280. ase anata lara! Nea xicaed olan aud pene Se ceo ser ante a ig Reno eee oe pe ier maser et ee Hace eae aa Berita te Sh eaiee e Sata tonal ct te Soa fetes tnt "or gata a eens Smee Sti Seis oben atta ep eeke ss ae eae iis nat Ets Ecce! irae eect ah pas neg ortaenesaeun oath Erna ofl ali Ease at anda poe ne be present then and there. ae ected an, ae Oe ser Ea Ser oe ll & dopNaron EG ner i SME mentee o¢ sue Feat ON gs 1X THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Satelge Washitson top Kine Gout = Haines and —" Haines, hie wife aa al sons unknowar if” any,” having 0 fins‘, nereat of state ans {ol the ‘hereinatter” deacried real pp Stuy, delendaata:” Sor NGtee whi | Sitkimone Suite of Washington to George B. Halnes jand<"" Hales, his wife, who are the hihers, oe fepsted owners and, al rson unkown ‘claiming ot bavi. a Ricreat or eatate in and tothe herelnatier Seetbe reat proper ‘teil that the above named plainuil, Stes ‘Annas Hal fs the Holder of delinquent tax eerlicate No, Ha tue ye sour ‘Reasurer™ of” King” county, Washington hibracitg the following real property st bin le coutty Waskington, and those parcieulary deseHbed as Qollows 9 “ot No. ten (i), in block No, five G) of Euewater Secund addition to'the thy Sf Saute “That'the sald certincate was tesued on ine, Bn diy of Aigun a or tem S2et for the ‘ellngtcnt faces for the Yih Ish and for the further sum ‘ot HE oF the'delinguent taxes for the brit Sears of i818, KS and 185, making he ota amount of the sald. certineate the sum of SL for the yeat IA ad the Iilor Years’ of 18 fs, Wb and is “Thad the plane ‘on the: Ste day of August, 190 pal taxes for: the ‘adbaae aducnt'Yoapa ad toliowe to wes spat tes Sear wt, Skah for the year Wh S100 ara for ibe sea Big, 1.2, when several aus thar interest at the’rate of" per care Br anti Wom the’ bal date? BASE ‘You and cach of you are hereby. at rected ‘and ‘Summoned. to appear: ities cinta alter the service gf ta Bled and ‘summons upot you, exeluaive of the ave au serve in Save ened Cours and detend the'action of pay the’ asoent due, together with the costs. ‘In ease of pa aac te day altace wil apoty sere) fori the len or aud taxes tn} comts against the real peoperty, inads and Seer ee ets x SNNAHALL, Plante BE BRADY £ GAY. her attorney geting Bet beni and poo, whom “ail pr a ‘tice aaarees, “it Roxweit vuiding, Seattle of first pedlication, Ootoder 6 1900, No. ‘ses Tana Wass Avr. ian Notice ts hereby given that in compl ance tt {he prtisione a deat of fonaress of June 9,18 ented Art ac for tale Of Her tds nthe lates ington ‘Reritiony:* as extended to all the PERN Fat tion ty" act of Au Seung. of eine, state oe Washington, had {his day died ig this’ oaice hie nivorn Hitgnes No, Fatt for the purenase a Gio Swi of section Ivo, Th, fn townsnip No, 3X, range No. 9b ‘and wil nite vot te show wat thor land ausnt “i ‘Bore value gr ft ener a stow than fo agricultural purposes, ad toes lish ins lat to gaid land werore the reg ietor and reauiver of uns office at Seat ‘Wash og Toursday, the 22d day of No- Yember, tot Hig ames as witnesses: Joseph Emery of Sucguatmte, “Waste Ge brane oi Shoquaimtg: Wash.s"hiax Winter of Sno Atualmdes Wah Brank Welend; of Sho- ‘tuaimte, Wash ‘And ail peragna claiming adversely th abotendenctibed “lands "are ‘Yequestea ite the siting tg" thin oie’ oF berate sala gar day or Movement ps ae ee eae fe eee ee eee ee ea Sas, ee Eas Pee roe oT mae ra ide ta Sah egress a Mh liane, Reus Mar ie alee oie oe eae Senay cP aaah Latte, St Re esate eect eat aoe ee a ae aS ee ce res ae yee ee Eo dere ie cre Bene enter seme ea eeeee ere ora meee Sree eet ene tanner eee Ge ae ey iennewescte cere et ioe teen a eee Beco oh comer ans ees ee Se eeee ort ans aero een nas ae saneeea ees ree Be ee aera me wal Reece tarts Geet ee eeeen encase ets eee: ee eee mee eee at re ee es renee escent Serna Bae eat een Seta Ei ieseie Semin Wea # Foie Entei eitadie Bat 2 Boake ber tated att 308 ects soca Paria shee bea Ent SE a ang! Bites § EELS eS est Be ee arts Shoe, ek a ns Pais haath Pie elt Earhiaet wath caste Ges Sher riark eka eee se Sieg oe eet eas ee ae ies eee eres Diock 6; lots 1, 2, 7, 5, % 10, 11, 12, 38 an Re dc oh Meal ne Boke a: Se Sis a to eet eee Settee ears eee ee, eeecetce laces Soe Setaieetanatica oh tuners Seeee eee rece Bia Gites Ayres he OE GE CEST nice wy dine aa By TH. BURKE, Deputy. PROBATE, NOTICE-IN THE | SUPE- for the Gounty Of Ring: State of Wash fnuvon, County of King, #3. in the mate fer ofthe exiate or Willlam I, Curtis, Beotiaed “Non3a "Notice of sett Notice la hereby_glvon, that Clarence Carts, adininistrator” with tho, Willan hexed of the estate of William Curtis, deceased, has ‘rendered’ to, and~ fled th Sti ‘court is final accouft as such ad- iinistrater, and that Friday, the 1th day of October, 1a, ut 9:30 d:clock a.m, at the court room of the probate depart Ment of ur aad superior court, th City of Seatuc, in sald Hing County, has been lly appointed by sald: court for the Sctiloment of said acevunt, at which time and place any ‘person interested tn sald estate may appear and file his exceptions ipiwriting tala "account, and. conten janeys the Hon, Wm. tckman Sours judge of sald superior court, and the seal St Said court hereto afiixed’ this Siet day Of August, 100. (Seal) GEO. 8, HOLLOWAY, Clerk, SEARLE R JENNER Deputy Clerk. Sy Tae aUEnarOR COURT OF THE TS SN fe ng One) SOUP aw See Ae aie ies punta er iia HB Wetton an alt erste nko, cease rane Sie See” Sh oe WORN Me any See tend SRE thane a eat cick aN ee ie ain Sree aa te ee ee claiming of having an interest or estate SMe etter ae at tot ena ra ‘i ln the le en aah Hemant aerate irene ghee cat oat ice te acer caine Secs Rett, Seedene Pa eh a a oe To, Wahrs tn Mk ght feats Oat UES, ete SES acorn wan iret on a aurat Xacti! ao as Aiba ean See atl ea cede nee Teper ons ee Set TE SAS on ea aay addi iat ot ata ne er oe er ere ce perioral a Ioretes tat Ee te berintetet Merce ta Beant ht Be Eh od cacho aoa Dry art ieee ne ate ctr fe Sudament, and jadgment will be Fendered casei ita es, Sad Bi A wars, pane in ‘her’ behalf, “and ‘upon whom all eect ates oat Bae aS So tne IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF KING County, State of Washington, John Martin, Puainein, vx Bhigabeth Martin Defendant. "No: "Summon by Publication, ‘the State of Washington to the said ‘elizabeth Startin, defeniant ‘You “are hereby, summeaned, to appear wthtn‘sisiy"(on” dave ater ‘the. date of thelr poblcatioh ot hls sumtaons: ta wits wilbieaisty. Qe days atter’ dhe Ith day of October, A.D. ion ana de= ena “the “anowe “enitiia action “Es the above. crultiod courts and’ antwer the complaint of the plaiatif and serves Sono” of your apawer pin the unter giged audorney for plant at his atic Below stated: and in’ case M Sour tatuce 40 510 “ao, sdument will bo. “rendered agalnat ‘vin’ according Yo the ‘demas of te plaints complaint whch as beet flea? with the clerk of fal court ‘Pho object af aaid action to tala aivoree covering the bond oc mattinany which "have:Rerecfore and. Sow ene icon the piantit and the detenaae “Ann B GRieIN el | SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION. cat, Maar oe Rie eee ‘Goumig, Slate og Washingion." Gea Sets cdg ta, Se erie Nice ae ae Slip ioe bagi a le ze trans Mae oe cn BOE Gr WEEE oe ai ge ie Ramin. eal oe AER ek ene siecle, tee thie Se See tay rice eens ae een Spee te ceaataar sas see ante ad nat ‘leet Selanne ene fi: Re ea Shai mite ana tio RR ro eyes wie tt oad Recetas as ts eniheuad “ihe’ Baa TES CP oes eat overeat See ecut cite a iinet te ai ea nae Serie iene are Sold ‘and asigned to the plaintif = 8 Rae othe a cna mahehes thins, tend ter ee SRGer atoraee CDRS Bene stores Se BSE olat St eg ERICH cea ante Merk aur G4 ot Maiti sary ee rere tien a SA bl eae eats SPR ate te a he te ae el mi oo ee eae aire ee Te i Big San ac sta a ee acca Soares AS eo eee ae ee ee ree incerta it a ein er Oe S Shama paetar ie Meera Serer as a aur, AUN Sate rane aaah print ea Benet Was SHERIFF'S SALE. NOTICE-SHERIFE'S SALE OF REAL Hetate. State of Waattngton, County 0 King, ss. Sheria's Notice. By virtue of un order of sale fssued out of the honorable Superior court of King County."on the ith day uf. December Tot, bs the clerk thereof, tn, the case Mulia’. Hubbard, plaintie, versus Mary EE Marquis and Sire SS Bullock, Mrs € 8.'Diokand aire. A” Watson, eles Taw of Andrew Marails, deceased, deter ‘ante, No. Sa), and to me as sheet, dh Feeted and delivered ‘Notice ts hereby given that 1 will pro ‘cen to seit at_publie auetion ta the high: fest bidder for dash, within the hours pee ‘Scribed by ‘law for sherit's sates, to-wit: AUD o'lock’ a mon, the HN day 0 January, AD: Tai, "petore the cour Hote dor of Said, King’ County. in th State of Washington. afl the right ut ‘Sod Interest of the said defendants inant tothe following described property, ait ‘Med! In icing County, State of Washing ton, to-wit: “Lot nine @), tn block ewe GB according tothe pie af Latona Ad ition. to the: city ‘of Seattle, as” shows lupon the recorted plat thereof, levied or 48 the property. of defendants’ to ‘atte A sudement “amounting to. gulc, with It tedeatsand costs of suit, In favor of th biasnuit Baie hts 2h dar of December, 10 ‘A. T. VAN DE VANTER, Shortt By TH. BURKE, Deputy. tomes: BL. Blatt. plesitn oni TN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Suite of ‘Washington for King County Tn the matter of the estate of Freferick C Weyntner, decenaed." No. aot Orde {6 show aise why letibutton shovk Gn heating and Ming the final accoun and) petition of N. HMhedingn, execute te ine wl il estar ea Staged, wherein sald Thedings. prays tal Said ehuate be distributed to. the person ie thera. and Ht aopenr to th fition to be closed and that sald. petition {and final aveount te suficlent to authori the distribution thereof. cis therefore ordered by this court that al’ persons interested In sald. eatate be ‘tha! appear betore this court In the: cour Foor ck the probate department. theteo inthe icing County. court honse, Seattle Ring’ Counts, "Washington, on "the tit yor Jamu, et, a0 30 a hon wis"an’ order of @isiefbution shoud no be maite partitioning and” disteibuttng ‘eae to the parties lawfully entitle els further ordered that a copy of thi ‘order be published once a. week for fou consecttive weeks prior tothe 11th ta ‘of January, WL in'The Seattle: Republ ‘ean, a newspaper printed and. publishes fea County fina ot generat lreulaton Bone’In open court this sth day of De comb, 2 Wal HICKMAN MOORE, Judge. First wublleation, December 14, B00 Se on eng PE ne, RUPSRIOR. COURT OF ‘THE Butte of Washington, fon. the County of King. “Probate notice. State of Wash: ington, County of fing, se. tn the mat fer of the estate of eedevicle C. Hist ther, deceased. "No. ike Notice of set Uonient of final account. Notice is hereby given that XN. HL ‘Thed- Inga, executor of dhe last will and testa meni of Brederiek G. Rhylner, deceased, has’ rendered to, and filed In said court His’ final aecount we auch executor. and that Friday, the Mth” day “of January: Toit, at 33th’ o'clock a. ta at the court Foom ‘of the probate department of Our tld 'ciperior court, in the Clty of Seattle in sald! King ‘Counts, has been aly ap: Bolted by sald court for (he settlement Sr sald account, at which time and place any mere interested tn ed estate ay Appear and le his exceptions in. weit tamald Account, and contest the same. ‘Witness the Hon. Wm. Hickman Moore, fudge of sald superior court, and tite seal Of auld court hereto affixed this Sth day of December Tats ‘Seal) "GEO. M. HOLLOWAY, Clerk, Ey EARLE R JENNER, Deputy Clerk, Flest pubileation ‘December 1h, 2am, ae gelenioiien! 1X THD SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Suite ac Wamhlueten for ing Counts bee a ib a eng So oetene AS one Se ce Sear ean aae ee Be tea as oe Eris Ge Uae tha Ban eae Hi Soacoae cametiet ort Bee ree omar ete See ee ee es he ee aa, serra tatoet Loe an ten ot ee tine San eh ene Bots oe tele a ie oe a a eee eee Soe ener ee a erent eae oe rh ee ete SPS a Ser ona Seed canens, ons Ge ene oe PR tao on on Bechet tanee, am oo amg Sa i att aa atten ve ode ee a iain Ge oats Steele oe setae 5 Suny At te Sa Sve eae eae eae ods bee ae se eras a ead pies ale Rev ora ae eee fer ete ire ora ee ae eee Pac ea tte at tec aren Seeger ea as Fae ieee area a as peta ay oie teh eee one SO Ee a eae eee, crue Seas Seca el renee eae Sa Senne cate a a gece eae ia cate ee oS ee Be ee eee ceria 2a gaa ee? Ma hae ES te ee eed Picea cat came i it ane Eerie Wa wou a each yous days after the: : See ene ee Your ‘allure: so" @ ieapeenes i cain ee | CLise © ING | auontit eae 1 tae, SUPamion COURT OF il wl Set, aguas ese ae lth a oageer ha? set) die aoe he 24h ay. SED | cember, uh and defend the above ent ottice below sate, and in ease of Yo of aici aaes Sal sae Snore aie eee ue Bite NOTICE TO cRaenrrons in County, Beale of Washed Si Ae eee ae senna dee age oh Gorter a oe anette ee Pie Administrator, with he, weal annexed Date of Are publleation Dee, 14, sence ro cunmevons: yg fueron coun or {nthe matter of the entate of Doth Aotiew is hereiy” given to. the ered Soe Soeur etee Sy archos ce ie ii sede ht ae Soe ee ey etn ate a Aéninatnioso¢ Sette One “GREENE & GRIFFITHS, At EPS S Gs fe eee a Connty" of King. eG, Steuve, SES USTiaMh he Sonne ata severe le Ge Abe ria Hogan tne ae aaa Sa oR do aad ata aha sabe eka teatime anaes! aeoat atan Berta tec eae ‘Sh isin ae ae dee Selina Eaiea to Su ee ee Terai ec a te a ESSE Oe ee 5 eh Rai ate Sa HREM nome « Mek, fasitie a ere eaaiag a ab ease Shs. dr Sino etoae see cone etd oP anaas shu eiant eae peat 2 le iii erat a ees Sheet eae ee Cilldren at" said. deceased, and" that Sle Ace eee Sidow (ated minor chil "and top ee ae oo ee are eee ee {ethene ta the Coady there ‘to show cnuse, it-any they Peoea toed aoa" inne eee re fein cer cies Seah ee niacin se ae [of kenetal circulation thereln. NAL JCRMAN. Noone, ie ean NOOR, 1X THE SUPERIOR COURT OF Sue, gain, fe ig aunty iivman 1 Rape ana’: ogee fen under the Ret nose of Rea Foote "Vision. Bite Ouse Se oe Ome sale df Washiatan he OE a ie Sete : 06 ‘ake "hereby eummoned, to sil, gO ale ae ne ee The ata pubucation SE thir aatnae we elle sty hy aus ana a day. Oe Novteabon hana deren bd nile acim tn tne abate ea Sorte vt oneeer ike eee ae Halal and setea': Se oe Hor pci" wadersietel alloc ‘he pinluti at thease beige au toa Sch our fatte atte ora ont" Tented neti Sd ording to he Mee of ta eo ieruin® scuch® ar" Boee’ aes SEE Seeman : i blest Sf sla action ts to obtain sutacht Se ea acta, te hte Aine chan ohare so SINGH on ‘Wahall Of icfenasee tM KNAPP & FOOTE, | adtoratys tir Bioetta Room 10 Hales MeltiRe, Seataee ee Bere se Hate cease, ene ae ae * ee 1 THE SUPERIOR COURT oF ‘ate ot Wannlngton fer ts coun Hine. “ould Biekeae, Sluthe oe Uae rf Stevens, Defosdant. (No, Sia Gane cae ee oe Srire Reels summoned to app ihin Sheet daa afer te hea” abe Hon''o¢" this “summons, "to-wit: ‘witha sity tage accreted" ae NB er tate ote Miao" coma ae tal Understand attorney Cot plata ee Se piace low aie” a eth fap fa againet on" avcording to the deeasaed with the cerk of atid cour ‘Pee aaah Seu Scilte e Sates gains ae Soret (Omer wi the CaMtSE a he - FREDERICN ae ROH, "ict oa tence ‘Bus King County, Wesningtoa,