Seattle Republican
Friday, July 5, 1901
Seattle, Washington
Page text (machine-generated)
The SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
VOL. VIII., NO. 6
IN BLACK
Under Critical Eye of Observing Men.
BORROWED THOUGHTS
Negro Business League to Meet in Chicago — Colored Girl Wins Highest Honors in Denver — Colored Soldiers Have Returned From Philippines — In Splendid Condition — Hon. H. C. Smith is Defeated for Re-n nomination.
BUSINESS LEAGUE.
The National Negro Business League, which is headed by Booker T. Washington as president, has been called to meet in Chicago August 21, 22, and 23, inclusive, and as in the past it is hoped that this meeting will prove a splendid success and will do much toward harmonizing the differences that exist between the white and the black folk of this country. The citizens of Chicago are reported enthusiastic over the prospects of the League holding its next session there, and everything possible will be done by them to make the delegates comfortable while attending its session. The call says any person engaged in commercial enterprises or properly delegated to represent any individual engaged in commercial enterprises is entitled to membership under such regulations as may be adopted. A striking feature about the League is that women as well as men are entitled to seats in the League. So successful was the session of the League which was held in Boston last year that the proceedings have been published in book form, and the same is finding quite a circulation. The call is issued by Booker T. Washington, President; T. Thomas Fortune, chairman executive committee, and E. E. Cooper, Secretary.
COLORED GIRL WON
At the industrial training school in Denver, Colorado, one Miss Ziporah Josephs the daughter of a Negro brick layer, won the highest honors and of course was the valedictorian of the graduating class. When it was learned that she had stood at the head of her class it caused a commotion among the more aristocratic white students, and they refused for a while to take any part in the graduating exercises, but the school board would not hear to such proceedings, and gave the young ladies their choice of either not graduating at all or to take their places at the commencement exercises, which they did. Miss Joseph is said to be one of the brightest pupils that has ever graduated from that school, and the Denver papers have sung her praise in the highest. This young lady was formerly from New Orleans, where four other sisters took the highest premiums in the Southern University, which is conducted for the benefit of colored students.
BLACK BOYS BACK
From the San Francisco Examiner it is learned that the Forty-eighth regiment and the second and third battalions of the Forty-ninth regiment, which have been fighting in the Philippines, have just returned and are now quarteted in that city. Both of these regiments are made up wholly of colored men with the exception of the commissioned officers, and they have been doing service in the Philippines for the past year or more. The Examiner is responsible for the assertion that these troops returned in better condition than any other troops have returned from the Philippines, and Colonel Duvall, who has charge of them, is responsible for the following: "On board of the transport there were 2,108 persons, all of whom belonged to the regiment above. The Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth regiments were stationed in Luzon in the country where Aguinaldo was captured. While they had many skirmishes with the enemy, few of their number were killed. The forty-eighth lost only thirty-six men in battle and from disease, the Fortynth, owing to smallpox breaking out in its camp, lost eighty-seven. In both of these regiments the line officers are colored men, while the field officers are white. Seven of the men of the Forty-ninth deserted and joined the ranks of the Philippines, and two of them were afterwards killed. These troops, in my opinion, stand the oli
mate of the Philippines much better than the whites, and our government would do well to send more of them over there to do patrol duty, even after the war is over.
SMITH TURNED DOWN
Hon. Harrison Smith, who has been a member of the Ohio legislature for a number of years and taken a most active part in its deliberations, was defeated for renomination last week, and William Clifford was nominated instead. Both of these gentlemen are men of color, but Mr. Smith has gone out of his way to oppose the ambitions of Mark Hanna and J. B. Foraker, and as a result he was defeated at the primaries at the last primary election held in his district.
PERSONAL
Shave at Frank's place.
What about that 4th of August picnic and outing?
Consult The Republican's business directory before you start shopping.
J. S. Graham's ad in this issue will be a revelation to the lady readers of The Republican. Read it.
Mr. Ford, of Fargo, is visiting friends in the city with the view of making this his home.
Mr. and Mrs. W. V. White, of Vancouver, were attending to business in this city this week.
Personal and social news always gladly received. Drop us a card if you have not time to call.
Mr. Jefferson, of Oakland, Cal., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harris, with whom he was acquainted in California.
Quite a celebration was held at the A. M. E. church last evening (4th), and a grand good time was enjoyed by all present.
Mrs. William Gross is in receipt of a letter from her son George, who is now in Colorado and is still working his way East. He reports much success in his business in the mountains of Colorado.
Mrs. White, while crossing the railroad track last Saturday in her milk wagon, was struck by a freight car, and she and her granddaughter were seriously injured.
The Republican has begun a business directory. As a reader of its columns will you speak a good word for it with your dealer. It will help the paper and do you no harm.
Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Harris invited a few friends to their home last Tuesday evening in honor of their sister, who is visiting with them at present. Besides the host and hostess there were present Miss Mamie Harris, Rev. and Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Townes, sister of Mrs. Harris, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Gayton, Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Washington, Mr. and Mrs. DeBoe, Mr. and Mrs. Combs, Mr. and Mrs. Anderson, Miss Kincaid, Miss Couzins, Mr. Sims, Mr. Fort, Mr. Black Mr. Brooks, Mr. Willie, Mrs. Grosse Mrs. Washington, Mr. Jefferson, Mr. Mrs. Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, Mr. Goldsboro and Mr. and Mrs. Cayton.
ROSLYN
Do not overlook the fact that The Republican is much in need of your subscription money.
Work is still plentiful in this camp and all who come can get work as soon as they arrive here.
Mrs. R. M. Gibson has removed to her large and commodious boarding house.
Deacon L. L. Smith has returned from Spokane after a few months' visit in that city.
At the installation of the Masonic lodge, mention of which was made last week, the following new officers were installed for the ensuing year: J. L. Chilsm, W. M.; J. W. Shavers, S. W.; Frank King, J. W.; R. H. Taylor, Sec.; Chas. Edmond, Treas.; Julius Johnson, Tyler.
The ladies of the Home Foreign Mission Circle held their regular monthly meeting last Sunday at 3 o'clock. The meeting was addressed by Mrs. Mattie Woodson. Scripture reading, Rev. Diggs; select reading, Mrs. Sophia Morrison. A missionary paper by Mrs. Fannie Anderson and a paper by Mrs. Donaldson on the good care of children.
The late tragedy has brought out the fact that the little twinkin * is the most cheerful journalistic lying turncoat that has ever blotted a page in Seattle.
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1901
PASSING
EVENTS
Of Men and Things in the Public Mind
THE WEEKLY REVIEW
Tom Pratt to Quit Public Life—Yale and Harvard Fight for Championship—Jessie Morrison Convicted of Manslaughter in Second Degree—New York Bank Goes to Pieces—Ohio's off Year Politically.
TOM PLATT QUITS.
Humor has it that Thomas C. Platt, the noted New York politician and wire puller, is to retire from active politics and business in general after the expiration of his present term of office as United States Senator from the State of New York. If the rumor is well founded and Mr. Platt retires one of the shrewdest and most sagacious political leaders that the present age has seen will, using common street vernacular, pass in his political checks. Almost since the mind of man runneth not to the contrary, Tom Platt's name has been prominent in political affairs of the Empire State. He at one time was the junior Senator from New York when the noted Roscoe Conklin held the senior place, and was almost the national dictator of the Republican party. When Garfield turned Conklin down by refusing to appoint his recommendation for a federal position in New York he resigned his seat in the Senate and his associate, Mr. Platt, followed suit. Mr. Conklin made a desperate effort to return to the Senate, but flatly failed, for some time Mr. Platt remained in political retirement, not daring to leave his sulking tent, but later on he got control of the party machinery and was re-elected to the senate, and for a time it looked as though he would become as strong a party leader as was Mr. Conklin in his palmiest days, who died after his defeat, but the appearance of Theodore Roosevelt and Governor Odell on the political horoscope of New York as coming luminaries convinced Mr. Platt early in the fight that he had to play second fiddle to those men or none at all, hence his desire to retire from political life.
BIG ROWING MATCH.
Thousands of excited as well as enthusiastic persons watched the inter-university rowing match which was between Yale's 'varsity crew and the Harvard team, which resulted in a most decided victory for the Yale team. Much interest is generally taken in these rowing contests between Yale and Harvard, for the reasons that the students from these colleges represent the athletic art in its completeness. Any inter-university contest between Yale and Harvard, whether it be a rowing match, football match, baseball match or a running match, is always given the greatest attention by the thousands that have the pleasure of witnessing it, and even by the thousands that can do nothing more than read of it. If there be anything in the manly art dogma that so much is heard about, it is found in these universities.
JESSIE MORRISON GUILTY.
Miss Jessie Morrison, the Kansas young woman, who took her girl rival's life, has been found guilty of manslaughter in the second degree by a jury. The first trial proved a failure, as the jury could not agree, but the second trial found her guilty as said above. It is very questionable whether Miss Morrison was guilty of any crime at all; it is also very questionable if she is not guilty of murder in the first degree, but as no one save Morrison and the woman whom she killed were eye witnesses to the terrible tragedy, it will be hard to ever get at the real facts in the case. Miss Morrison on the witness stand and by a long chain of circumstantial evidence convinced the jury that she had been invited into the home of the lady whom she slew, and was no sooner in the house than she was attacker by the woman with a razor, and in order to save herself from being killed she wrenched the nasty blade from the hand of her assailant and turned it upon her. The jury must have had some doubts in their minds as to the truthfulness of this statement or they would not have returned a verdict of manslaughter. Miss Morrison is either guilty of murder in the first degree or she is absolutely innocent
and ought to have been acquitted on the grounds of self defense, and the Supreme Court of that State will doubtless rule to that effect.
BANK WENT DOWN.
The closing of the doors of the Seventh National Bank of New York created consternation in the money markets of New York, and, if reports be true, gave the national treasury officials considerable worry. On the failure of the bank to pay its clearance house indebtedness, which was $664,109, it at once closed its doors against further business. The country banks had learned that this bank was in bad financial condition, and in order to protect themselves they had drawn heavily on it through the clearance house, and its failure to meet their enormous check was the direct cause of its suspension. It is thought that the bank will soon pull itself together and begin business as if nothing had happened.
BILLIONAIRES AT SEA.
Between Europe and the United States is a vessel on the high seas carrying ten men whose combined wealth would perhaps reach into the billions of dollars. J. Pierpont Morgan did not care to come across the waters as a common cabin passenger, so he and nine other men chartered an entire vessel to bring them home. Each of these men is a noted millionaire of the United States, and each of them has accumulated his millions during his own lifetime, that is to say, by his own ingenuity and financial ability he has started at the bottom of the ladder and has accumulated money and properties that he could exchange for multiplied millions of dollars if he desired to retire to private life and become a miser, as it were, by putting his money into some private hole. It is most remarkable how rapidly men accumulate money in the United States, and it cannot be said that they for the most part accumulate their fortunes by unfair and illegitimate means, for they do not. Some men seem to strike a pay streak in life and work it as fart and as successfully as they may they never succeed in working it out, and Morgan and his nine traveling companions now headed for the United States seem to be of that class.
THIS OFF YEAR.
Now that Ohio is in the throes of a state election which promises to be a very hotly contested one it might not be out of place at this time to give a brief political history of how elections have gone from time to time in that state and especially since 1877. Ohio is always sadly troubled with what is commonly known as "off year" campaigns, in which the Republican party seriously suffers.
In 1877, Bishop, Democratic candidate for governor, was elected by 22,000 plurality, but two years later Foster, Republican candidate, had a plurality of 17,000; in 1881 he was re-elected by a 24,000 plurality, but in 1883 Hoadley, Democrat, was elected over Foraker by a plurality of 12,000. Two years from that time, however, Foraker was elected over Hoadley by 17,451, and two years from that he was re-elected by a plurality of 23,000. Then came 1899, when Campbell defeated Foraker by a plurality of 10,872. In 1891 McKinley carried the state for Governor over Campbell by 21,000 plurality. He was re-elected in 1893 by 80,995 plurality. Ever since that time the state has been Republican, Governor Nash having been elected in 1899 by a plurality of 49,023. This being an "off year" it is argued by Democratic leaders, not only in Ohio, but in other sections of the country, that Ohio is quite likely to elect a Democratic Governor and perhaps a Democratic legislature which in turn will elect a Democratic United States Senator to succeed Senator Foraker.
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THE SEATTLE RPUBLICAN The Republican office, 714 Third
SEATTLE'S PREACHERS
Discus the Moral Condition of the City.
COMMITTEE REPORTS
The Responsibility Laid at the Political Door of the Mayor and His Wide Open Policy—Rev. Randall and Temple are Very Pronounced in Their Ideas of the Situation—Some After Thoughts Concerning the Great Tragedy.
The Meredith-Considine tragedy the week prior was the topic on which most of the preachers of this city based the sermons delivered from their pulpits last Sunday, and so far as this paper has been able to
REV. E. M. RANDALL, JR.
learn the divines were unanimous in charging the tragedy up to the "wide open policy" that has been in vogue in this city ever since the present chief executive has been at the head of affairs. Not only the tragedy of last week, but a long string of crimes equally horrifying in their details as this one can be laid at the official door of the present mayor of Seattle.
REV. RANDALL'S OPINION.
Perhaps the most pronounced pulpit demonstration along this line was that from Rev. E. M. Randall, Jr., of the First M. E. church, and Rev. W. H. G. Temple of the Congregational church. Rev. Randall discussed crime in its various forms at the outset of his sermon and showed from facts and figures that it costs our government nearly three times as much in dollars and cents to check and punish crime as it does to educate her children. The idea prevalent among so-called business men that a city in order to be a flourishing metropolis and prosperous in its bank clearings report must foster and encourage a certain amount of crime that they are pleased to term, legitimate crime, is a fallacious and erroneous one. The late census shows that those cities and towns in Massachusetts and Kansas that have for the past decade eschewed saloons and the sale of liquors in any form within their corporate limits, increased 40 per cent in their population and wealth over those cities that had granted saloons and other vices license to operate within their gates. There is no doubt but that it costs any community more than twice as much to guard and prosecute criminals where saloons are allowed as the revenues derived from the fines imposed upon them for the privilege of operating in such communities. Speaking about crime in Seattle, it is simply astoundingly, and it is growing worse every day under the present municipal regime. Though the Law and Order League has made efforts to suppress crime in Seattle, it has been handicapped in its efforts on all sides. The so-called business man has his objections, and the weak-kneed Christian, who wishes to drift with the tide, has his objections, and the officers of the laws have their objections to the enforcement of the law.
In many instances warrants for the arrest of law breakers are refused by the officers of the law; in some instances officers of the law give the law-breaker the "tip" when warrants have been issued that they may succeed in getting their law breaking paraphernalia out of danger before the arresting officer can get his hand on it. And in one instance, at least, after such paraphernalia had been seized an officer of the law re
turned the same to the gamblers when the property was supposed to be in the custody of the courts. That the recent tragedy was a most shocking one, every one will admit, but it was no worse nor no more revolting than a large number of others that have been committed from time to time since the present wide open policy has been in operation in Seattle. A long list of murders and suicides blacken the records of Seattle, covering the past five years, and they are all the fruits of the wide open policy that has been persuaded in Seattle.
It has happened that one or two law breakers have been punished by the municipal authorities for committing crime in this city, but this was done more in the spirit of spite work than for the purifying of the moral atmosphere. It is true that the low places of vice kept by the Considines was closed up by the police, but other places equally as vicious and the haunts of criminals of the same kind and class as visited the Considines ran wide open and unmolested. That it is high time that the citizens themselves devise some plan for action in this matter, goes without saying, and unless they do our city will be branded by and large as the most wicked city in the West.
REV. TEMPLE'S VERSION.
Rev. Temple, after discussing at length the great historical events as well as the great historical characters that the month of June has given to the world, closed his sermon, which was noteworthy for its historical richness, with a peroration on Seattle to the effect, that the month of June had given Seattle her great fire, out of which the Seattle spirit, phoenix-like, rose and quickly rebuilt a grander and far more imposing city on the ruins of the old city than even the most enthusiastic Seattle had ever dreamed of. It is the wonder of the West and the admiration of the entire East. Lastly, the month of June had given Seattle her late tragedy, which was shocking enough to move her citizens to take some most decided steps toward freeing it from the pernicious influences that had made it possible for such a tragedy to be committed. When ex-Chief Meredith fell and his heart's blood stained the floor of Guy's drug store some of the drops spattered the Mayor's chair, and will serve as a gruesome ghost of the policy that has brought such disgrace upon the citizenship of this city. What do the citizens propose to do? Certainly not sit idly by and permit it to go on and on undisturbed. Call a public meeting, arouse indignation, awake men and women to their sense of duty and make them besiege the stronghold of the Mayor with such force that he will find it no longer pleasant or profitable to continue such a state of affairs, and, if necessary, take legal steps to drive him from his official position. It can be done and it will be done, if you and each of you will but put your shoulders to the wheel and work in that direction with a united purpose.
CONSIDINE NOT RESPONSIBLE.
It is an erroneous idea said one of the members of the Law and Order League, in speaking about the Considine case, which has gone abroad to the effect that John Considine's testimony was instrumental in turning the tide against the police department. While Mr. Considine gave the committee some valuable testimony, nevertheless it was not taken by them without duly considering the source from which it came and the spirit which prompted it. There was other evidence equally as damaging as that given by Mr. Considine, which was given by reputable citizens, and by men of high standing in the community who had been eye witnesses to some of the crooked work that had been going on from time to time in this city under the present administration. It was on the evidence of these men that the committee and the Mayor acted after the committee had made its report, which caused the removal of two police officers. The Law and Order League under no consideration would have depended solely on John Considine or any other gambler for evidence to remove an officer of the law, but as said above, on the evidence of good and reputable men, who told what they knew and not what they had heard, the committee reached its conclusions.
The preliminary trial of the Considines has been put off until next Monday but mutual consent of both the prosecution and the defense.
LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
APR 28 1952
PRICE. FIVE CENTS
All that was mortal of the late W. L. Meredith was laid to rest last Sunday in the Lake View cemetery. Thousands of people, perhaps more out of morbid curiosity than real sympathy, attended the funeral. The remains were followed through the streets by a large concourse of Woodmen and sympathizers.
Mayor Humes has announced the permanent appointment of Chief Sullivan and he is already shaping things in the department so as to make the best of the situation. Already many of the vicious denizens of the lower end have found it convenient and desirable to leave for parts unknown. Many going to Nome and other Alaska points.
It is announced that Will H. Morris, better known as Big Bill Morris, is to take part in defending the Considines.
Admitting that John and Tom Considine have not been ideal citizens, still, they are entitled to a fair and impartial trial, and should be placed on trial for the shooting of Meredith, and not for what they may have done prior to that shooting, is street comment.
It was a rather gruesome spectacle, when the dead body of a human being is put on exhibition by his so-called friends, having no other object in view than to manufacture public sentiment for political purposes and which might have some bearing on the case against some person in the toils of law. Some men are mean, low and contemptible enough to rob the grave in order to carry their point.
If the coroner's jury was not the work of the shrewd and sagacious politician it would so appear on the face of the facts. Rattner curious that only men noted for their devotion to the Humes administration should have been selected to act on that jury. It is also rather striking that men, who were talking personal violence the day before should sit in judgment, if judgment it may be called, on the very man that they were wanting to harm the day before. This may be a square deal, but The Republican don't see it that way.
For the past week the Times and the * have had the Consumes on trial for murder in the first degree and a verdict of guilty as charged may be returned at any time by the jury that has been empanelled and sent out by Judges Blethen and Wells. It is too bad that these papers do not allow the courts to try the criminal cases in this county. Quite a few threats have been heard on the streets to the effect if the Considines are acquitted by the courts they will be murdered as soon as they leave the courthouse.
REV. W. H. TEMPLE
The Third Avenue theater will close its doors for a short time after the performance next Sunday night. "Too Much Johnson," William Gillette's pet farce comedy, will be the closing bill of the season. The performance of "Too Much Johnson" given by Russell and Drew's company, is one of the best things seen here this season. It is a clean and wholesome laugh from beginning to end. "Alone in Greater New York" has been the bill all this week and has drawn big houses. The last performance of that play will be given Saturday night and "Too Much Johnson" repeated for Sunday night only. During the closed season the theater will undergo a thorough renovation and open bright and clean early in August. The attractions booked for next season are numerous and of a higher class than ever before offered at a popular priced house.
The SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
VOL. Vlii., No. 6
IN BLACK
Under Critical Eye of Observing Men.
BORROWED THOUGHTS
Negro Business League to Meet in Chicago—Colored Girl Wins Highest Honors in Denver—Colored Soldiers Have Returned From Philippines—In Splendid Condition—Hon. H. C. Smith is Defeated for Re-nomination.
BUSINESS LEAGUE.
The National Negro Business League, which is headed by Booker T. Washington as president, has been called to meet in Chicago August 21, 22 and 23, inclusive, and as in the past it is hoped that this meeting will prove a splendid success and will do much toward harmonizing the differences that exist between the white and the black folk of this country. The citizens of Chicago are reported enthusiastic over the prospects of the League holding its next session there, and everything possible will be done by them to make the delegates comfortable while attending its session. The call says any person engaged in commercial enterprises or properly delegated to represent any individual engaged in commercial enterprises is entitled to membership under such regulations as may be adopted. A striking feature about the League is that women as well as men are entitled to seats in the League. So successful was the session of the League which was held in Boston last year that the proceedings have been published in book form, and the same is finding quite a circulation. The call is issued by Booker T. Washington, President; T. Thomas Fortune, chairman executive committee, and E. E. Cooper, Secretary.
COLORED GIRL WON.
At the industrial training school in Denver, Colorado, one Miss Ziporah Josephs the daughter of a Negro brick layer, won the highest honors and of course was the valedictorian of the graduating class. When it was learned that she had stood at the head of her class it caused a commotion among the more aristocratic white students, and they refused for a while to take any part in the graduating exercises, but the school board would not hear to such proceedings, and gave the young ladies their choice of either not graduating at all or to take their places at the commencement exercises, which they did. Miss Joseph is said to be one of the brightest pupils that has ever graduated from that school, and the Denver papers have sung her praise in the highest. This young lady was formerly from New Orleans, where four other sisters took the highest premiums in the Southern University, which is conducted for the benefit of colored students.
BLACK BOYS BACK.
From the San Francisco Examiner it is learned that the Forty-eighth regiment and the second and third battalions of the Forty-ninth regiment, which have been fighting in the Philippines, have just returned and are now quarteted in that city. Both of these regiments are made up wholly of colored men with the exception of the commissioned officers, and they have been doing service in the Philippines for the past year or more. The Examiner is responsible for the assertion that these troops returned in better condition than any other troops have returned from the Philippines, and Colonel Duvall, who has charge of them, is responsible for the following: "On board of the transport there were 2,108 persons, all of whom belong to the regiment above. The Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth regiments were stationed in Luzon in the country where Aguinaldo was captured. While they had many skirmishes with the enemy, few of their number were killed. The forty-eighth lost only thirty-six men in battle and from disease, the Forty-ninth, owing to smallpox breaking out in its camp, lost eighty-seven. In both of these regiments the line officers are colored men, while the field officers are white. Seven of the men of the Forty-ninth deserted and joined the ranks of the Philippines, and two of them were afterwards killed. These troops, in my opinion, stand the elic
mate of the Philippines much better than the whites, and our government would do well to send more of them over there to do patrol duty, even after the war is over.
SMITH TURNED DOWN
Hon. Harrison Smith, who has been a member of the Ohio legislature for a number of years and taken a most active part in its deliberations, was defeated for renomination last week, and William Clifford was nominated instead. Both of these gentlemen are men of color, but Mr. Smith has gone out of his way to oppose the ambitions of Mark Hanna and J. B. Foraker, and as a result he was defeated at the primaries at the last primary election - held in his district.
PERSONAL
Shave at Frank's place.
What about that 4th of August picnic and outing?
Consult The Republican's business directory before you start shopping.
J. S. Graham's ad in this issue will be a revelation to the lady readers of The Republican. Read it.
Mr. Ford, of Fargo, is visiting friends in the city with the view of making this his home.
Mr. and Mrs. W. V. White, of Vancouver, were attending to business in this city this week.
Personal and social news always gladly received. Drop us a card if you have not time to call.
Mr. Jefferson, of Oakland, Cal., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harris, with whom he was acquainted in California.
Quite a celebration was held at the A. M. E. church last evening (4th), and a grand good time was enjoyed by all present.
Mrs. William Gross is in receipt of a letter from her son George, who is now in Colorado and is still working his way East. He reports much success in his business in the mountains of Colorado.
Mrs. White, while crossing the railroad track last Saturday in her milk wagon, was struck by a freight car, and she and her granddaughter were seriously injured.
The Republican has begun a business directory. As a reader of its columns will you speak a good word for it with your dealer. It will help the paper and do you no harm.
Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Harris invited a few friends to their home last Tuesday evening in honor of their sister, who is visiting with them at present. Besides the host and hostess there were present Miss Mamie Harris, Rev. and Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Townes, sister of Mrs. Harris, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Gayton, Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Washington, Mr. and Mrs. DeBoe, Mr. and Mrs. Combs, Mr. and Mrs. Anderson, Miss Kincaid, Miss Couzins, Mr. Sims, Mr. Fort, Mr. Black, Mr. Brooks, Mr. Willie, Mrs. Grosse, Mrs. Washington, Mr. Jefferson, Mr. and Mrs. Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, Mr. Goldsboro and Mr. and Mrs. Cayton.
ROSLYN
Do not overlook the fact that The Republican is much in need of your subscription money.
Work is still plentiful in this camp and all who come can get work as soon as they arrive here.
Mrs. R. M. Gibson has removed to her large and commodious boarding house.
Deacon L. L. Smith has returned from Spokane after a few months' visit in that city.
At the installation of the Masonic lodge, mention of which was made last week, the following new officers were installed for the ensuing year: J. L. Chilsm, W. M.; J. W. Shavers, S. W.; Frank King, J. W.; R. H. Taylor, Sec.; Chas. Edmond, Treas.; Julius Johnson, Tyler.
The ladies of the Home Foreign Mission Circle held their regular monthly meeting last Sunday at 3 o'clock. The meeting was addressed by Mrs. Mattie Woodson. Scripture reading, Rev. Diggs; select reading, Mrs. Sophia Morrison. A missionary paper by Mrs. Fannie Anderson and a paper by Mrs. Donaldson on the good care of children.
The late tragedy has brought out the fact that the little twinklin * is the most cheerful journalistic lying turncoat that has ever blotted a page in Seattle.
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1901
PASSING
EVENTS
Of Men and Things in the Public Mind.
THE WEEKLY REVIEW
Tom Pratt to Quit Public Life—Yale and Harvard Fight for Championship—Jessie Morrison Convicted of Manslaughter in Second Degree—New York Bank Goes to Pieces—Ohio's off Year Politically.
TOM PLATT QUITS.
Humor has it that Thomas C. Platt, the noted New York politician and wire puller, is to retire from active politics and business in general after the expiration of his present term of office as United States Senator from the State of New York. If the rumor is well founded and Mr. Platt retires one of the shrewdest and most sagacious political leaders that the present age has seen will, using common street vernacular, pass in his political checks. Almost since the mind of man runneth not to the contrary, Tom Platt's name has been prominent in political affairs of the Empire State. He at one time was the junior Senator from New York when the noted Roscoe Conklin held the senior place, and was almost the national dictator of the Republican party. When Garfield turned Conklin down by refusing to appoint his recommendation for a federal position in New York he resigned his seat in the Senate and his associate, Mr. Platt, followed suit. Mr. Conklin made a desperate effort to return to the Senate, but flatly failed, for some time Mr. Platt remained in political retirement, not daring to leave his sulking tent, but later on he got control of the party machinery and was re-elected to the senate, and for a time it looked as though he would become as strong a party leader as was Mr. Conklin in his palmiest days, who died after his defeat, but the appearance of Theodore Roosevelt and Governor Odell on the political horoscope of New York as coming luminaries convinced Mr. Platt early in the fight that he had to play second fiddle to those men or none at all, hence his desire to retire from political life.
BIG ROWING MATCH.
Thousands of excited as well as enthusiastic persons watched the inter-university rowing match which was between Yale's 'varsity crew and the Harvard team, which resulted in a most decided victory for the Yale team. Much interest is generally taken in these rowing contests between Yale and Harvard, for the reasons that the students from these colleges represent the athletic art in its completeness. Any inter-university contest between Yale and Harvard, whether it be a rowing match, football match, baseball match or a running match, is always given the greatest attention by the thousands that have the pleasure of witnessing it, and even by the thousands that can do nothing more than read of it. If there be anything in the manly art dogma that so much is heard about, it is found in these universities.
JESSIE MORRISON GUILTY.
Miss Jessie Morrison, the Kansas young woman, who took her girl rival's life, has been found guilty of manslaughter in the second degree by a jury. The first trial proved a failure, as the jury could not agree, but the second trial found her guilty as said above. It is very questionable whether Miss Morrison was guilty of any crime at all; it is also very questionable if she is not guilty of murder in the first degree, but as no one save Morrison and the woman whom she killed were eye witnesses to the terrible tragedy, it will be hard to ever get at the real facts in the case. Miss Morrison on the witness stand and by a long chain of circumstantial evidence convinced the jury that she had been invited into the home of the lady whom she slew, and was no sooner in the house than she was attacker by the woman with a razor, and in order to save herself from being killed she wrenched the nasty blade from the hand of her assailant and turned it upon her. The jury must have had some doubts in their minds as to the truthfulness of this statement or they would not have returned a verdict of manslaughter. Miss Morrison is either guilty of murder in the first degree or she is absolutely innocent
and ought to have been acquitted on the grounds of self defense, and the Supreme Court of that State will doubtless rule to that effect.
BANK WENT DOWN.
The closing of the doors of the Seventh National Bank of New York created consternation in the money markets of New York, and, if reports be true, gave the national treasury officials considerable worry. On the failure of the bank to pay its clearance house indebtedness, which was $664,109, it at once closed its doors against further business. The country banks had learned that this bank was in bad financial condition, and in order to protect themselves they had drawn heavily on it through the clearance house, and its failure to meet their enormous check was the direct cause of its suspension. It is thought that the bank will soon pull itself together and begin business as if nothing had happened.
BILLIONAIRES AT SEA
Between Europe and the United States is a vessel on the high seas carrying ten men whose combined wealth would perhaps reach into the billions of dollars. J. Pierpont Morgan did not care to come across the waters as a common cabin passenger, so he and nine other men chartered an entire vessel to bring them home. Each of these men is a noted millionaire of the United States, and each of them has accumulated his millions during his own lifetime, that is to say, by his own ingenuity and financial ability he has started at the bottom of the ladder and has accumulated money and properties that he could exchange for multiplied millions of dollars if he desired to retire to private life and become a miser, as it were, by putting his money into some private hole. It is most remarkable how rapidly men accumulate money in the United States, and it cannot be said that they for the most part accumulate their fortunes by unfair and illegitimate means, for they do not. Some men seem to strike a pay streak in life and work it as fast and as successfully as they may they never succeed in working it out, and Morgan and his nine traveling companions now headed for the United States seem to be of that class.
THIS OFF YEAR.
Now that Ohio is in the throes of a state election which promises to be a very hotly contested one it might not be out of place at this time to give a brief political history of how elections have gone from time to time in that state and especially since 1877. Ohio is always sadly troubled with what is commonly known as "off year" campaigns, in which the Republican party seriously suffers.
In 1877, Bishop, Democratic candidate for governor, was elected by 22,000 plurality, but two years later Foster, Republican candidate, had a plurality of 17,000; in 1881 he was re-elected by a 24,000 plurality, but in 1883 Hoadley, Democrat, was elected over Foraker by a plurality of 12,000. Two years from that time, however, Foraker was elected over Hoadley by 17,451, and two years from that he was re-elected by a plurality of 23,000. Then came 1899, when Campbell defeated Foraker by a plurality of 10,872. In 1891 McKinley carried the state for Governor over Campbell by 21,000 plurality. He was re-elected in 1893 by 80,995 plurality. Ever since that time the state has been Republican, Governor Nash having been elected in 1899 by a plurality of 49,023. This being an "off year" it is argued by Democratic leaders, not only in Ohio, but in other sections of the country, that Ohio is quite likely to elect a Democratic Governor and perhaps a Democratic legislature which in turn will elect a Democratic United States Senator to succeed Senator Foraker.
Main 305 is the telephone number of The Republican.
Tax Lien Notices
THE SEATTLE RPUBLICAN The Republican office, 714 Third
SEATTLE'S PREACHERS
Discus the Moral Condition of the City.
COMMITTEE REPORTS
The Responsibility Laid at the Political Door of the Mayor and His Wide Open Policy—Rev. Randall and Temple are Very Pronounced in Their Ideas of the Situation—Some After Thoughts Concerning the Great Tragedy.
The Meredith-Considine tragedy the week prior was the topic on which most of the preachers of this city based the sermons delivered from their pulpits last Sunday, and so far as this paper has been able to
REV. E. M. RANDALL, JR.
learn the divines were unanimous in charging the tragedy up to the "wide open policy" that has been in vogue in this city ever since the present chief executive has been at the head of affairs. Not only the tragedy of last week, but a long string of crimes equally horrifying in their details as this one can be laid at the official door of the present mayor of Seattle.
REV. RANDALL'S OPINION.
Perhaps the most pronounced pulpit demonstration along this line was that from Rev. E. M. Randall, Jr., of the First M. E. church, and Rev. W. H. G. Temple of the Congregational church. Rev. Randall discussed crime in its various forms at the outset of his sermon and showed from facts and figures that it costs our government nearly three times as much in dollars and cents to check and punish crime as it does to educate her children. The idea prevalent among so-called business men that a city in order to be a flourishing metropolis and prosperous in its bank clearings report must foster and encourage a certain amount of crime that they are pleased to term, legitimate crime, is a fallacious and erroneous one. The late census shows that those cities and towns in Massachusetts and Kansas that have for the past decade eschewed saloons and the sale of liquors in any form within their corporate limits, increased 40 per cent in their population and wealth over those cities that had granted saloons and other vices license to operate within their gates. There is no doubt but that it costs any community more than twice as much to guard and prosecute criminals where saloons are allowed as the revenues derived from the fines imposed upon them for the privilege of operating in such communities. Speaking about crime in Seattle, it is simply astounding, and it is growing worse every day under the present municipal regime. Though the Law and Order League has made efforts to suppress crime in Seattle it has been handicapped in its efforts on all sides. The so-called business man has his objections, and the weak-kneed Christian, who wishes to drift with the tide, has his objections, and the officers of the laws have their objections to the enforcement of the law.
In many instances warrants for the arrest of law breakers are refused by the officers of the law; in some instances officers of the law give the law-breaker the "tip" when warrants have been issued that they may succeed in getting their law breaking paraphernalia out of danger before the arresting officer can get his hand on it. And in one instance, at least, after such paraphernalia had been seized an officer of the law re-
turned the same to the gamblers when the property was supposed to be in the custody of the courts. That the recent tragedy was a most shocking one, every one will admit, but it was no worse nor no more revolting than a large number of others that have been committed from time to time since the present wide open policy has been in operation in Seattle. A long list of murders and suicides blacken the records of Seattle, covering the past five years, and they are all the fruits of the wide open policy that has been persuaded in Seattle.
It has happened that one or two law breakers have been punished by the municipal authorities for committing crime in this city, but this was done more in the spirit of spit work than for the purifying of the moral atmosphere. It is true that the low places of vice kept by the Considines was closed up by the police, but other places equally as vicious and the haunts of criminals of the same kind and class as visited the Considines ran wide open and unmolested. That it is high time that the citizens themselves devise some plan for action in this matter, goes without saying, and unless they do our city will be branded by and large as the most wicked city in the West.
REV. TEMPLE'S VERSION.
Rev. Temple, after discussing at length the great historical events as well as the great historical characters that the month of June has given to the world, closed his sermon, which was noteworthy for its historical richness, with a peroration on Seattle to the effect, that the month of June had given Seattle her great fire, out of which the Seattle spirit, phoenix-like, rose and quickly rebuilt a grander and far more imposing city on the ruins of the old city than even the most enthusiastic Seattleite had ever dreamed of. It is the wonder of the West and the admiration of the entire East. Lastly, the month of June had given Seattle her late tragedy, which was shocking enough to move her citizens to take some most decided steps toward freeing it from the pernicious influences that had made it possible for such a tragedy to be committed. When ex-Chief Meredith fell and his heart's blood stained the floor of Guy's drug store some of the drops spattered the Mayor's chair, and will serve as a gruesome ghost of the policy that has brought such disgrace upon the citizenship of this city. What do the citizens propose to do? Certainly not sit idly by and permit it to go on and on undisturbed. Call a public meeting, arouse indignation, awake men and women to their sense of duty and make them besiege the stronghold of the Mayor with such force that he will find it no longer pleasant or profitable to continue such a state of affairs, and, if necessary, take legal steps to drive him from his official position. It can be done and it will be done, if you and each of you will but put your shoulders to the wheel and work in that direction with a united purpose.
CONSIDINE NOT RESPONSIBLE
It is an erroneous idea said one of the members of the Law and Order League, in speaking about the Considine case, which has gone abroad to the effect that John Considine's testimony was instrumental in turning the tide against the police department. While Mr. Considine gave the committee some valuable testimony, nevertheless it was not taken by them without duly considering the source from which it came and the spirit which prompted it. There was other evidence equally as damaging as that given by Mr. Considine, which was given by reputable citizens, and by men of high standing in the community who had been eye witnesses to some of the crooked work that had been going on from time to time in this city under the present administration. It was on the evidence of these men that the committee and the Mayor acted after the committee had made its report, which caused the removal of two police officers. The Law and Order League under no consideration would have depended solely or John Considine or any other gambler for evidence to remove an officer of the law, but as said above, or the evidence of good and reputable men, who told what they knew and not what they had heard, the committee reached its conclusions.
The preliminary trial of the Considines has been put off until next Monday but mutual consent of both the prosecution and the defense.
LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
APR 28 1952
All that was mortal of the late W. L. Meredith was laid to rest last Sunday in the Lake View cemetery. Thousands of people, perhaps more out of morbid curiosity than real sympathy, attended the funeral. The remains were followed through the streets by a large concourse of Woodmen and sympathizers.
Mayor Humes has announced the permanent appointment of Chief Sullivan and he is already shaping things in the department so as to make the best of the situation. Already many of the vicious denizens of the lower end have found it convenient and desirable to leave for parts unknown. Many going to Nome and other Alaska points.
It is announced that Will H. Morris, better known as Big Bill Morris, is to take part in defending the Considines.
Admitting that John and Tom Considine have not been ideal citizens, still, they are entitled to a fair and impartial trial, and should be placed on trial for the shooting of Meredith, and not for what they may have done prior to that shooting, is street comment.
It was a rather gruesome spectacle, when the dead body of a human being is put on exhibition by his so-called friends, having no other object in view than to manufacture public sentiment for political purposes and which might have some bearing on the case against some person in the toils of law. Some men are mean, low and contemptible enough to rob the grave in order to carry their point.
If the coroner's jury was not the work of the shrewd and sagacious politician it would so appear on the face of the facts. Rattner curious that only men noted for their devotion to the Humes administration should have been selected to act on that jury. It is also rather striking that men, who were talking personal violence the day before should sit in judgment, if judgment it may be called, on the very man that they were wanting to harm the day before. This may be a square deat, but The Republican don't see it that way.
For the past week the Times and the * have had the Consumes on trial for murder in the first degree and a verdict of guilt as charged may be returned at any time by the jury that has been empaneled and sent out by Judges Blethen and Wells. It is too bad that these papers do not allow the courts to try the criminal cases in this county. Quite a few threats have been heard on the streets to the effect if the Considines are acquitted by the courts they will be murdered as soon as they leave the courthouse.
REV. W. H. TEMPLE
The Third Avenue theater will close its doors for a short time after the performance next Sunday night. "Too Much Johnson," William Gillette's pet farce comedy, will be the closing bill of the season. The performance of "Too Much Johnson" given by Russell and Drew's company, is one of the best things seen here this season. It is a clean and wholesome laugh from beginning to end. "Alone in Greater New York" has been the bill all this week and has drawn big houses. The last performance of that play will be given Saturday night and "Too Much Johnson" repeated for Sunday night only. During the closed season the theater will undergo a thorough renovation and open bright and clean early in August. The attractions booked for next season are numerous and of a higher class than ever before offered at a popular priced house.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY REPUBLICAN READERS
The Seattle Republican
Established May, 1894.
OFFICE 714 THIRD AVENUE.
H. R. Cayton ... Editor
Susie Revels Cayton ... Associate
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Year ... $2.80
Six Months ... 1.00
Three Months ... 60
Bona Fide Circulation ... 2,500
Only Paper in the Northwest Success-
fully Edited by a Negro.
A Whole Page of Legal Notices.
Always Regular, Readable, Reliable,
Republican.
Advertising Rates Furnished upon Appi-
cation.
It Carries No Saloon Advertisements.
Entered at the Postoffice at Seattle as
Second-class Mall Matter.
Our business directory.
The mills of the gods grind slow, but they grind exceeding fine.
Judge George has turned the legislature down by knocking out the slot machines law.
It would appear that The Seattle Times has at last found the long lost mare's nest.
The Review, of Seattle, the only Democratic paper of King county, is a journalistic corpse. Editor Church i snow "it" on the Weekly Times.
An exchange asks what is a Democrat? While we do not pride ourselves on our wisdom, we think that the best definition that can be given to the question is, he is a nuisance.
Such heat prostrations and the numerous deaths from excessive heat that have been reported from the East for the past week are beyond precedent.
"Great men as a rule are deep breathers," says an exchange. As to that we have no knowledge, but we are inclined to believe that they are constant breathers.
A Tacoma News poet has been telling that paper where the rhododendrons grow. Well, most any old body knows where they grow. They grow in Washington, and nowhere else.
If the weather man is not on a vacation just now we are inclined to
BUSIN
Diamond Ice is the best-lasting the longest. Telephone Main 1050. Diamond Ice and Shipwreck Co. Corner Western avenue and Union street.
Wood
Dry wood and kindling delivered to your house. Lloyd & Phillips, 1307 Seventh avenue. Telephone Green 1846.
Tents
For the community. Awnings in abundance. Canvas goods of all kinds. Feltril & Co. 117 Yesler Way. Phone Main 210
Realty
H. H. Dearborn & Co. Land King. Real Estate bight and sold. Halier bldg. Tel. Blue 271. P. O. box 412.
Studio
Crayon and Pastelle work done and taught. John Nogleberg, 1837 Second avenue Picture frames made.
Dinner
Short orders and regular dinner elegant server. Mrs. Washington. Rear 1216 Second. Home cooking
Caterer
Help furnished for dinner parties and public receptions. Job n T. Gayton, stewart Rainier club
Kodaks
Of the latest and best photography supplies. Washington Dental Co. Seattle, Wash.
Grocery
Camping and Picnic Supplies. Russler Grocery. 310 Columbia. Phone Main 1077.
Frames
Walker Portrait and Picture Co. 1343 Third avenue. Frames made to suit you. Aga wanted.
Traders
Flour and feed bought and sold. Try new good goods. A. Dillon & Co. Seattle, Wash.
Cobbler
Shoes half soled while you wait. Golden rule observed. G. H. Crawford, 413rd Avenue.
Clothier
F. W. Merrick, the Amherst Collector. Prop. Phone Blue 291. 700 First avenue.
Printing
Printing and Publishing Co. Clark & Kause Props. Phone Buff 642. 214 Spring street.
Building
R. W. Butler, 2024-8th ave. Phone Buff 1867. House building and general construction.
Regalias
Lodge Supplies, Badges, Colliold Buttons etc. Pacific Regalia Co., 825 Pacific Block.
Plumber
Scientific plumbing at reasonable price. John Main 1050. J. A. Main 510.
---
TELEPHONE MAIN 305 FOR A CARD IN THIS DIRECTORY
think he has lost his bearing in the starry kingdom, for while Eastern cities are burning up, Pacific Coast states are freezing.
It does appear that Vice President Roosevelt has taken to the woods these days, and if he has there is one thing certain, he is busy sawing wood for the presidential kindling in 1904.
With Mark Hanna and J. B. Foraker pulling together for the same thing, there seems to be little doubt but that the Republicans, off year though it be, will win with a whoop over in Ohio this year.
The Ballard Register after all is making a most commendable fight for an existence, and Editor Hitchcock is to be complimented. He is even making a better paper than his opponent, much older in years and prestige than his paper.
If Hon. W. M. Meredith had written his son the same kind of a letter some five years ago that he did of recent date, and had his son heeded its advice, there is no doubt but that his earthly ending would have been different from what it was.
While the eagle did not scream in Seattle on yesterday, it screamed with all of its might and main in the neighboring towns, and the Seattle people enjoyed it just as well as though it had been screaming up and down the streets of Seattle.
For artistic neatness The Republican's business directory has not an equal among the weekly newspapers of the entire state. Now, you show your friendship and appreciation of a worthy cause by getting in and helping along.
When an editor attempts to please everybody in the columns of his paper then he pleases nobody, and as a result of his foolish attempt a paper is forced upon the public that is not worth the ink it takes to make the letters on the paper. It is like unto salt that has lost its savour.
The census report will show that in Massachusetts those towns that have strictly refused to grant any saloon license to sell liquors have grown at least 40 per cent more than those towns that have had saloons. The same is true of the towns in
Kansas that have stood out against rum shops and saloons being run therein, which is a strong evidence that prohibition not only prohibits, but that it likewise protects.
According to an exchange Weary Willies give Kansas a wide berth now, owing to the fact that there are two jobs for every man in the state at present, and if there is anything that a Weary Willie would break his neck in getting away from, it is a job that will pay him good wages.
It is a startling fact, though true, that it costs more for police protection and criminal prosecution for a city having a wide open policy than any such city ever gets from fees and fines from those who pay for the privilege of conducting such business. In other words, the costs run away with the profit.
The Fourth of July caused some commotion, even in Atlanta, Georgia. Well, that is rather remarkable, for we never heard of any patriotism in any of the Southern states before. Time brings great changes, and if it has brought patriotism to the South it is the greatest change of all.
It is noted that the Kansas Democrats have refused to continue a fusion with the Populists of that state and will nominate a ticket of their own. That should give the Populists no great amount of worry, for the Democrats never cast over 10 per cent of the vote in Kansas, and yet they have always gotten 75 per cent. of the offices.
Our latter day civilization has produced an awful struggle between crime and the prevention of crime, with the odds in favor of the former. This great civilization of which we talk so much has some queer streaks and some streaks that do not always appear best to humanity, regardless of the many good things that can be said in its favor.
There seems to be no doubt but that the Republican party has been supplying the Democrats with their presidential campaign issues, and the laughable thing about it is that it always supplies them with issues that the Republicans could readily turn down at the polls and they have not failed to do so.
Business for inv'tm't and improvement. Ger. Am. In'stm'tn Co. 813 8d ave. Phone Main 1000
Abstracts Osborn, Tremper & Co. Mutual Life Hook. Phone 548. Accurate abstracts.
Machines Wheeler & Wilson and Domenic in Hahnen. 218 Columblia, phone BP'k 1621
Attorneys Roat, Palmer and Brown lawyers and practitioners Pioneer Hock.
Diamonds That will last a life time. Jewelry of all kinds. W. Fink. 816 2d ave.
Stationery Stylish stationery, fine printing. Donny - Corryell Co. 716 1st Ave.
Remington tvp'w'tr holds the medal. E. C. Miles Agent. 109 Cherry St.
YOUR WIFE
WILL BE HAPPY
IF YOU HAVE A
GAS RANGE
AND A
GAS WATER HEATER
Seattle Gas & Electric Co.
214-216 CHERRY ST,
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
st
un
ce
s,
Rev
h
re
e
Rev. Temple is of the opinion that the citizens should call a public meeting to discuss the situation of this city and to condemn the administration that has placed the affairs of Seattle in their present condition, and this sentiment is voiced by a majority of the citizens of Seattle, regardless of their politics, religion or former affiliations.
Even the White River Journal has come out editorially and pronounced Chief Sullivan as one of the few men in police circles "which the breath of suspicion has never reached." The Republican is quite well aware of that fact, and so are the populace of Seattle, but they never thought that the White River Journal would have editorial stamina enough to publish the fact.
It begins to look now as though the tariff will be the principal issue of the next presidential campaign. Well, why wouldn't it? It has been the tariff, which was fathered by President McKinley, that has given the country its present prosperity, and any attempt on the part of any party to overthrow this should call forth the entire opposition of every person that has enjoyed the past five years of general prosperity.
Wanamaker, of anti-Quay fame, has broken loose again over in Philadelphia, and is making the political atmosphere of that city rather torrid for the followers of Mr. Quay. We would not be surprised one of these days if Wanamaker didn't keep hammering away at Quay until he would convince the people of Philadelphia that he, Wanamaker, was right, and administer a rebuke to Mr. Quay which would result in his undoing.
A move has been made by the United States government to induce farmers to raise their own fish, which it is claimed can be as readily done as the raising of one's chickens or pork. Whenever a farmer has a pond or stream on his farm, the fish commissioners will supply him with a sufficient amount of fish to start on, and if he will use diligence in their preservation, he will soon have a sufficient supply of fish that he can take for table use whenever he desires.
Down at South Bend, this state, they have been having quite a murder trial, in which one Manuel Gates
was the principal actor in the affair, and the Willipa Harbor reviews the case as follows: Manuel Gates, convicted of murder in the first degree, November 20, 1900; granted a new trial January 8, 1901; convicted of manslaughter June 27, 1901; refused a third trial Friday, June 28, 1901; sentenced to six years in the penitentiary the same day. Now, if the attorneys down there are anything like the attorneys up here it will be six years before the man goes to the penitentiary, if at all.
JUNE 14—THE FLAG'S BIRTHDAY.
In the shadows of the scepter,
In the gloom of doubts and fears,
In the gray uncertain morning
Of the fater coming years,
The beating being,
Found its stripes of red and white
In the blood of sons and fathers
And the purity of right,
Took its field of blue from heaven,
Gemmed it with the stars that shone
And accustomed the Freedom
From the terrors of a throne.
Gone today are all the shadows,
Gone are all the doubts and fears,
And the Starry Banner triumphs
At the ages of the years;
In the vanguard of the nations,
With its gleaming folds unfurled,
Into higher paths of progress
It has led, leads the world;
It stands today to reclaim
That no other flag can claim,
And the freedom of nature
Is established in its name;
Wollen out unto all peoples
With the promise and good cheer,
Old Glory gives them through
To the far as to the near;
The patriots give their spirit
To the warriors to them through
The wilderness to glory,
And their banner still is true.
Hurrah, then, for the birthday
Of the flag that is not furlied,
And army is celebration
Extend around the world;
And may all men and nations
Know the Stars and Stripes to be
The gospel of salvation
And the freedom of the free.
William J. Lamping, in New York Sun.
DRUGS Perfectly Compounded at Pike STREET PHARMACY, 419 Pike. Tel. Main 933
FOR...
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GO TO...
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Special for Today
Best quality Eastern Fresh
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Adams Cash Grocery
Phone Main 483
1428 SECOND AVE.
PUBLIC
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FISHING
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LAWN
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SUPPLIES
GOING, NORTRUP CO,
804 First Avenue
NORTHERN
PACIFIC
YELLOWSTONE PARK LINE
TWO TRAINS DAILY
To the East, Leaving Seattle at 7.45
a.m. and 7.50 p.m.
PULLMAN, TOURIST,
DINING AND
OBSERVATION CARS
No Train Compares With the
NORTH COAST LIMITED
Fine Fresh Fruit
Always on hand at the
SAN DIEGO FRUIT CO.,
415 Pike Street
ALBERT HANSEN
JEWELER AND SILVERSMITH
..Dealer in..
Diamonds, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver
ware, Rich Cut Glass, Etc.
E. R. Butterworth & Sons
UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS
Telephone Main 949
1426, 1438 Third Avenue
SEATTLE
D. B. SPELLMAN
Practical Plumber and Gasfitter. Sanitary
Plumbing a speciality.
212 Columbia St.
BONNEY & STEWART
UNDERTAKERS
THIRD and COLUMBIA
Preparing bodies for shipping a specialty.
All orders by telephone or telegraph promptly
attended to. Telephone Main 13.
Hair Cut
AS YOU LIKE IT, STYLISH
AND UP TO DATE.
Frank's Place 807 A Rail-
road Avenue
Brockman Bros.
Pike Street's Leading Grocer
Wants Your Trade
Cor. Sixth and Pike SEATTLE
HOUSES AND LOTS
FOR SALE AND
TO LET
WHALLEY
& EASTMAN
PHONE
MAIN 611
5-6 COLMAN BLD.
THE PUCET SOUND NATIONAL BANK
OF SEATTLE
Capital Stock paid in .. $528,000
Surplus ..... 35,000
Jacob Furth, President; J. S. Goldsmith, Vice-
President; R. V. Ankney, Cashier
Correspondence in all the principal cities of the
United States and Europe
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF
SEATTLE
PAID-UP CAPITAL ..... $150,000
JAMES D. HOGE, JR., President.
LESTER TURNER, Cashier.
A general banking business transacted.
Letters of credit sold on all principal
cities of the world. Special facilities for
collecting in British Columbia points.
Moran Bros. Company
Manufacture and Sell
LUMBER
For All Purposes
SEATTLE - - - WASH.
ADERS
FI ae eS ce ga
i. POLITICAL POT-PIE
EGE ECE CER EEE ECECEETCE CEE CEETEL CER ECE CECE CEEEEEEE
‘The Fourth of July coming in the] Klickitat county and will conti
week just past and the Pie-maker not| his business at Goldendale, and i
feeling like drawing on his political] be appointed Indian agent at a |
imagination, and believing the read-| in that vicinity, the duties of |
ers would as soon listen to another / latter place being such that they
on this occasion, cheerfully gives} not interfere with his regular b
way to the Spokane Outburst, whose| ness,
Jast week's article is herewith copied ee
in full. It is the opinion of the Outh
‘The politicians and newspapers of | that the selection of Charlie Hop!
this great and good State of Wash-| for the marshalship does signify
ington have been having a most in-| inauguration of a campaign to sec
teresting time among themselves for) harmony in the Republican rar
the last three weeks; all because| but it is on a different tack ft
Senator Foster announced his inten-| that calculated in the earlier gues
tion of appointing Charlie Hopkins} Senator Foster, wants harmony
United States marshal for this com-| the Republican party of the st
monwealth, and Charlie says that he| but he wants it to be that particu
intends to take the place and is pre-| variety of harmony that will g
paring to remove his family to 'Ta-| himself and his friends the con
coma, of the polities of the state.
In all the discussion of this sub-|_ To an outsider it appears
ject there is but one thing upon] Senator Foster has awakened to
which all are united—the appoint-| importance of his position in cont
ment of Charlie Hopkins means| of the federal patronage, and t
something. What that something is| he means to use that power with
there are as many opinions as there| definite objects in view; the disin
‘are parties to the discussion. gration of the present virulent f
‘The theory at first spread broad-
cast was that a truce had been
patched up by the leaders of
the warring factions in the Re-
publican party of this State and
that this uel war, which
has threatened the future of the par-
ty in the state, was to be a thing of
the past. ‘This theory went further
and declared that Foster, Ankeny
and Wilson had formed a combina-
tion, and that this triumvirate was
prepared to rule the Republicans of
Washington with an iron hand.
All this theorizing was very pret-
ty, but in the eyes of practical poli-
ticians whose experience was gained
by hard mixing in the struggles ai
the polls, the condition pictured was
too idyllic to have any existence in
fact. “An alliance of Foster, Ankeny
and Wilson would be a fine combina-
tion, but one difficult to achieve
without remodeling the constitution
of the United States, as there are at
present only two senatorships al-
lowed in each state, and all these
gentlemen could not be satisfied un-
less there were three.
As already recited, all the best in-
formed people sniffed at the idea of
a triumvirate and at this date I think
nobody will deny they were right.
‘This general adjudication of difficul-
ties is a nice thing on paper, but it
is a pretty scarce event in every day
life.
Considerable surprise has been
expressed at the supposed turning
down of State Senator Baker of
Klickitat county. Ever since early
last year it had been tacitly under-
stood that in the Foster shakeup of
the federal brigade Baker was to
have the marshalship. To such an
extent has this fact been circulated
around that no other name has been
mentioned in connection with the
office, and Clarence Ide, the present
incumbent, did not even make a
fight for reappointment, setting his
cap instead for the equally good
berth of collector of customs of fhe
Puget Sound district.
The reasons for the sudden
change of heart on the part of Baker
is a matter upon which few policians
of the state appear to have any in-
formation. One west side paper has
suggested that in return for his
abandoning his claim inthis matter
he is to have the Republican nomin-
ation for governor in 1904. That
reads absurd, and personally I am
satisfied that it isa decidedly bad
guess. Baker is not'a bad sort of a
fellow, but he is not of the timber of
which governors are made. His nom-
ination would be a stroke of busi-
ness closely paralleling the ten-strike
of last summer, when J. M. Frink
was turned loose on his disastrous
aan
‘That, however, is foreign to the
subject. What I started out to ex-
plain were Baker’s reasons for de-
clining the marshalship. It seems
that when the time for the appoint-
ment approached Baker got to think-
ing the matter over, and it did not
take him long to come to the con-
clusion that for him to accept the
marshalship would be a decidedly
bad step from a business standpoint.
Baker is the owner of a prosperous
mercaniile business at Goldendale.
If he accepted the marshalship he
would have to move to Tacoma, and
that would necessitate the closing
ont of his Goldendale business. He
could not see the financial advantage
attached to giving up a source of
permanent income to accept a politi-
cal job that would yield no greater
profit and would not last to exceed
four years in the ordinary course of
political affairs in this state.
Baker therefore notified Senator
Foster that he no longer wanted the
marshalship and an immediate re-
construction of lines took place, as a
result of which Baker is to stay in
Klickitat county and will continue
his business at Goldendale, and is to
be appointed Indian agent at a post
in that vicinity, the duties of this
latter place being such that they wil
not interfere with his regular busi
ness.
It is the opinion of the Outburst
that the selection of Charlie Hopkins
for the marshalship does signify the
inauguration of a campaign to secure
harmony in the Republican ranks,
but it is on a different tack from
that calculated in the earlier guesses.
Senator Foster, wants harmony in
the Republican party of the siate,
but he wants it to be that particular
variety of harmony that will give
himself and his friends the control
of the polities of the state.
‘To an outsider it appears that
Senator Foster has awakened to the
importance of his position in control
of the federal patronage, and_ that
he means to use that power with two
definite objects in view; the disinte-
gration of the present virulent fac-
tions in this state and the upbuild-
ing of a federal brigade that will
give him complete control of ehe
party machinery.
| The announced intention to ap-
point Charlie Hopkins riarshal and
B. D. Crocker of Walla Walla Pu-
get Sound collector would seem to
confirm this theory. Hopkins bears
about the same relation to Wilson
that Crocker does to Ankeny; both
are accounted the first lientenarits of
their leads. What more natural
then, if Foster has a federal brigade
bee buzzing in his bonnet, than that
the two most important places at his
disposal be given to the lieutenants
of the two bitterest factions? It is
very apparent that if this plan is
continned on down through the oth-
er leaders of the factions that it will
be only a matter of a short time
when the other factions will lose
their grip and that Foster will hold
a firm upper hand. The length of
his lease upon this power will de-
pend greatly upon the wisdom with
which he makes his appointments. A
ble, but a temporary control by Fos-
ter is within the limits of probabil-
dies
I cannot believe it possible that
Foster and Ankeny have entered
into a permanent alliance. In the
first place Foster has everything to
lose and nothing to gain by such a
tie-up, with the possible exception
of the undying opposition of the
hundreds of politicians who have
sworn that they will never willingly
seat “Check” at the national capital.
It is true that there was some kind
of a combination at the late lament-
ed legislature, but my information is
to the effect that that was for some
small railroad matters in which Mr.
Grosseup was interested.
Foster holds the whip hand in
federal patronage. ‘The only man he
has to fear is John L. Wilson, whose
following is personal and extends
beyond any probability of federal re-
ward. If the senatorial fight _were
tomorrow Levi Ankeny could not
go down fo Olympia with any par-
ticular strength. He would have a
few votes at his back, but to achieve
anything the old check book game
would have to be placed again, An-
keny has nothing to deliver to a po-
litical combination. If he could fix
up such a combination he would be
a powerful factor, but the two of
them would by no means wield the
power that Senator Foster has it
within his hands to swing alone.
Senator Foster has now very few
men who. are personally unfriendly
to him. The bitterness in the Re-
publican ranks is principally be-
tween Wilson and the Ankeny fac-
tions, with some minor troubles
thrown in to provide good measure.
Should the junior senator tie up
with the Walla Walla banker he
would simply assume the Ankeny
end of the row and the difficulties
with the party would be complicated
inatead of adjusted.
Senator Foster has it within his
power to do much toward settling
the differences between the warring
factions, but he can never do that
by taking sides in the controversy
and drawing upon himself the op-
position of the strongest and most
pugnacious of the serappers.
It is generally conceded that E. H.
Guie, of Seattle, will succeed Will
R. Gay as district attorney. Mr. Guie
is well remembered as speaker of the
house in 1899, and also was can-
didate for governor last year. He
made a good fight in his King coun-
ty canvas for the governorship, be-
ing recognized as the Foster candi
date for that honor.
Personally, Mr. Guie looks like a
boy just turning his majority, bui
he possesses considerable legal abil
ity and has a large personal follow-
ing in King county. Mr. Guic
‘would sake an ideal leader foe the
Dee a be ny Se a fe eae oe me
; AT CRAHAMS !
'
A_REAL BARGAIN:
;
an m a
‘
;
; IN JACKETS ©:
Onaccount of being overstocked you will
have the Chance of the Season to get a First |
Class Summer Jacket at asmall proportion ‘
: of its real value. We have the Very Finest |
stock of Cloth and Silk Jackets in the City; |
. in alljthe newest styles, and in all shades of |
» Tan an Gray as well as Black, Thiselabor- «
} ate stock will be placed on sale on Saturday ‘
: in three lots according to value.
> r all gar- all gar- | rf
STDs S| SOMBIE | SSeS
to $15.00. | to $20.00, | to $25.00. 4
} J. S. CRAHAM !
ie sEconD RUE.
REE pee MER 5 2 a,
young Republicans of the state, if
their long discussed organization
ever comes to pass. He is, by the
way, an enthusiast in all movements
fooking to the advancement of the
young Republicans.
‘The old occupation of counting
John .L. Wilson a dead one is still
followed by some politicians, with
about as much warrant in fact as us-
‘ual. John L. Wilson will never be
a dead one as long as he continues
to mix in the polities of this state.
He is too busy a worker to allow
himself to be counted out. At the
present writing he has better than a
fighting chance of controlling Spo-
kane and King counties and with
backing like that any man is formid-
able in state politics.
It is within the limits of possi-
bility that Senator Foster may gain
the control of Spokane county poli
ties, if he chooses to play a. peace-
maker’s hand, but if he comes into
the game with Ankenyism as the
card up his sleeve he has a pretty
hard task in front of him.
The fat federal appointments be-
longing to Spokane county are not
many, and unless they are placed
just about right the federal machine
will fall considerably short of con-
trolling the county delegation. ‘The
acquisition of Charlie Hopkins alone
will not secure for Senator Foster
the control of this county. Neither
will the services of any other one
man. It is possible that by organiz-
ing a federal brigade out of the pres
ent political leaders a winning ma-
chine will be constructed, but the
task cannot possibly be considered
snap. :
‘The three best places left in this
county are the two berths at the land
‘office and the postmastership.
| After an heroic fight against
police methods in Seattle The
Republican, of that city, now that
the chief of police has been forced
to resign, is quietly ignored and the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, that kept
comparatively mum upon the sub-
ject until Editor Cayton was arrested
for his utterances, now comes for-
ward modestly and takes all the
glory. If this doesn’t show gall of
the highest order the Chronicle does
not know what would. If there has
been any honor in this fight against
the Seattle police, Editor Cayton is
entitled to it, and the Post-Intelli-
gencer should have manliness
enough to so accord it—Elma
Chronicle.
Mr. J. Edward Hawkins, a prom-
inent citizen of Seattle and a very
influential member of our race in
every walk of life, having suecessful-
ly practiced law in the Queen City
of Washington for many years, and
now holding an important place on
the Republican Central Committee
of King county, has been in the city
during the week, engaged in the
work of organizing a lodge of new
degree in the order of Negro Ma-
sonry. Mr. Hawkins has met with
excellent success -in propagating a
camp of Mystic Shriners for Wash-
ington and Oregon, many members
of the local lodge of Colored Ma-
sons, Enterprise No. 4, enthusiasti-
cally allying themselves with the
new organization of Shriners. Mr.
Hawkins is a very able and popular
man, and he leaves no doubt in the
minds of those who meet him that
his heart is in the work in which he
is now engaged—New (Portland)
Age.
ee
Will make special rate of $81.25 to
Detroit, Mich., and return on ac-
count of National Educational Asso-
ciation meeting. ‘Tickets on_ sale
2nd and 3rd. Our famous “North
Coast Limited” wil ltake the teach-
ers there.
To Pan-American Exposition,
Northern Pacific make rate of $86
the first and third Tuesday of each
month. Be sure to go East that
route in their splendid train “The
North Coast Limited.”
Are Not Carried
In the Columns
OF:
The Seattle
| Republican
Office, 714 Third Avenue
CES, ES CaS CaO CaS CoE CIES aR aT CoE’ CgIT
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN.
F REDUCED RATES
Are now in effect to Buffalo, Nes
York.
Do you expect to attend the Pan
American exposition?
If s0, do not buy your tickets un
a you have investigated the servic:
of the Illinois Central Railroad.
Our accommodations are the bes
that can be had, our trains are al-
ways on time, our employes courte
ous and accommodating.
‘Through tourist cars from Pacific
coast to Boston via Buffalo.
Tf you will send 15 cents in stamp:
to address given below, we will for-
ward you, by return mail, one of our
large 4x40-inch wall maps of the
United States, Cuba and Porto Rico.
Any information regarding’ rates,
accommodations, service, time, eon-
nections, stop-overs, ete,” will be
cheerfully furnished by
B. H. TRUMBULL,
Com’l Agt., 142 Third Street, Port-
land, Ore.
Christian Endeavor Convention at
‘Cincinnatl. =
‘The Northern Pacifie has made
special rate of $78.50 to this conven-
tion. ‘The Endeavorers of Washing-| at
ton travel on the famous “North
Coast Limited.” Tickets on sale},
July Ist, 2nd and 3rd. For partieu-|
lars call on or write to I. A. Nadeau,
Gen. Agent. N. P. Ry., Seaitle. oe
Ween
Wall Paper
NEW
ARTISTIC
DESIGNS
from 10 cents up, (double roll.)
STOLTING'S
- 816 Third Ave.,
Next to First M, E. Church
IRON WORKS C0,
Founders, Machinists and
* Boilermakers.
HOISTING AND LOGGING
ENGINES A SPECIALTY
3
J. M. FRINK
PRESIDENT. |
Seattle, Wash. |
DRESSY SHOES
At Prices that Appeal to Your
Pocketbook.
Mipalcea of Bg0 & F5ison See thee
RAYMOND & HOYT,
iar Ge A= mgr ee
Time Tried
Fire Tested
: Once Tried
Always USED
OurMaxim
After two years of use in Seattle it stands alone
oa t i C I
Favorte IOMESTIC COA
Tel. Union 24 Tel. Main 588
For deliveries north of Pike Street For deliveries south of Pike Street
Spey
eect Summer &
all Coal ‘Warm days ought to arrive soon.
‘They mean thirsty throats, which in
a eee tara moan now and then & glace of
sees. refreshing to drink. We
have a full line of the most desirable:
kinds, including Bartlett Saris Wa-
ter, plain and carbonated, Apollinaris
Water, Cantrell & Cochrane's, Birch’s
: and Puritas Ginger Alles, Ross’ Lime
aum ‘uice and Raspberry Vinegar, Puritas
i P Coal aoe niet eae Beer, Pamela frase
rom the grape fruit), Welch's Unfer-
Goleige ee Een ee mented Grape Juice end a full, assort-
PA CIFI C ¢ 0 AST 0 ment of imported German Fruit Syrups.
.: Louch, Augustine & Co.
‘Phone Main 93 815, 817 Pirst Avenue
‘Warm days ought to arrive soon.
‘They mean thirsty throats, which in
turn mean now and then & glass of
sees. Peter 3 to avin. We
have a full line of the most desirable
kinds, including Bartlett Saris Wa-
ter, plain and carbonated, Apollinaris
Water, Cantrell & Cochrane's, Birch’s
and Puritas Ginger Ales, Ross’ Lime
Juice and Raspberry Vinegar, Puritas
and Hires’ Root Beer, Pomelo (made
from the grape fruit), Welch's Unfer-
mented Grape Juice and a full assort-
ment of imported German Fruit Syrups.
Louch, Augustine & Co.
815, 817 Plest Avenue
MISCEGNATION IN NEW
YORK.
Increasing Number of Unions Be-
tween Whites and Negroes.
During the past five years there
has been a decided increase in the
number of marriages in New
York between white and colored
people. In 1895 there were 729
such marriages, 369 Negroes hav-
ing married white women and 360
colored women having been
married to white men. Last year
there were 1,846, in which 920
Negro women were married to
white men and 926 Negroes mar-
ried white women.
One man whose position has
enabled him to make continued
and thorough observations of
conditions in the lives of the other
half of New York's population,
has this to say on the subject:
“I have met scores of these
mixed couples and so far as the
principles are concerned I do not
believe that they are as a rule
either more happy or more miser-
able than their neighbors who
have wedded like with like. They
have as few squabbles and as few
divorces proportionately as. cou-
ples that are wholly white or
wholly black.
“The children, however, are
not so fortunate. It is difficult for
the little tots to place themselves.
They are outcasts from both
white and colored flocks and when
members of the same family are
ranged on different sides of the
color line, as is frequently the
case, their situation is the more
pitiable.
“My observation has” further
taught me that a colored man
makes a better husband for a
white woman than a white man
for a colored woman. The rea-
son of this is not far to seek. The
former seems to feel that he has
been honored beyond measure
by being accepted by a white wo-
man_and he will willingly work
his fingers to the bone to support
her and her children in good style.
“The white man, on the other
hand, figures that he has degrad-
ed himself by marrying a colored
woman and he vents his displeas-
ure over the situation by letting
his wife bear the burden of sup-
porting the entire family. It is
such despicable fellows as these
that are at the root of the trouble
whenever the woes arising from
a mixed marriage are aired in
court,
“So far as I can find out nine-
tenths of these mixed marriages
result from coemployment of the
races. The selection of servants
without regard to racial charac-
teristics is common in most city
families and public houses, and
men and women of all shades of
black and white are thus thrown
together. If this close acquaint-
ance reveals congeniality of tem-
per the question of color is elim-
inated from the matrimonial dis-
cussions, and for the time, at
least, each appears to lose sight of
the other's complexion.
“Another thing worth noting is
that the white partner in these
combinations is usually a for-
eigner. People from other coun-
tries have not the save aversion
to the Negro that is implanted in
the American breast, and the man
and the woman new to our cus-
toms see nothing out of the way
in a union with a person with a
swarthy skin. If you come down
to statistics you will see that the
number of English people mar-
ried to colored people in New
York exceeds any other nation-
ality two to one.
“As to the residences of these
hybrid families, they are _scat-
tered around all over town. There
is one little colony of thém over
on West Thirty-sixth and Thirty-
seventh streets and another up on
the east side. To speak of their
social life is not easy because it
is something that they have very
little of. Still they manage to get
as much enjoyment out of living
as most other people in their en-
vironment, and were it not for
the uncertain status of the chil-
dren I should not be prepared to
say that mixed marriages are at
all a bad institution.” —Ex.
Beautiful Swiss and Italian
From the earliest times Switz-
erland has been famed ‘for the
majestic grandeur of its moun-
tain scenery, and Italy for the
ravishing beauty of its many pic-
turesque lakes. The very names
of the Bernina Hospice, St. Mor-
itz, the Jungirau, Lake Como,
Lake Maggiore, the Lake of Lu-
cerne call up entrancing visions
of marvelous valleys, peaks and
glaciers, frowning mountain
passes, castled shores, and gleam-
ing stretches of glassy water un-
der soft azure skies. To see
these enchanting sights even in
pictured form is to introduce a
broadening influence and a wider
outlook into one’s life. Ina forth-
coming issue of The Ladies’
Home Journal a vivid idea of the
Engadine Valley and of some of
the Swiss and Italian lakes will
be given in a double-page of the
most remarkable views ever se-
cured of the more wonderful and
loyelier portions of these world
renowned regions.
An Author as Well as an Artist.
George Gibbs, whose charming
picture on the cover of The La-
dies’ Home Journal for July has
so successfully caught the spirit
oi summer days at West Point, is
one of the growing band of Amer-
ican artists who are also authors.
Hitherto his special field has been
the naval side of ocean life, He
is a young man—a comparative
mngweomer in the ranks where F
Hopkinson Smith, Howard Pyle
and Frederic Remington are vet-
crans. But his early promise as
jan illustrator, as well as a writer
‘is already bearing fruit.
| ‘The Great Northwest's First
White Child
One of the most remarkable
proofs of the amazing growth of
that vast region of our country
commonly called the Northwest,
with its numerous sisterhood of
states and its population of more
than seven million people, is the
fact that it is only a little more
than eighty years since the first
white baby was born there. ‘The
child was a girl, the daughter of
a regular army officer, and she is
still living. A fascinating ac-
count of her eventful life, the
early years of which were spent
among soldiers and savages, will
appear in an early issue of The
Ladies’ Home Journal.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
TY THE SUPEIUOR COURT, OF THE
ate af Washington, for my:
ine Bauate ‘of Peter Kalberg, Desens
Nottco ts nerevy given to, all persons
aye cite weal the tate of Peter
inte, daceasea, to, Hresent. ‘Use same
fo the “undersigned ‘at ‘her. residence, at
Keemont, “Washington, within one. Yea
From the date of frst’ publication of Whi
Rolice, to-wit: Eriday Apel 1, 13, to
ether with proper vowkers, ofthe same
Frill Be barred.
ANNA ©. KALBERG,
Bxeeutrx of the ant Wit an Tentamedt
First pubileation: ASHI IN
—— 2 a. see
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for King County.
3, Graham and_A- Wison, Platntitts, v8
Sharten H, Brogden and Jane Doe Brow.
Gen, his wife, and Richard Roe, and-al
Derionsunkiiown, “If any, having, oF
Blaiming ‘an interest or estate tn and to
the herelnatter described real property,
Gefendants. No. Notice and Sum
Btate of Washington to Charles H.
Brogden and Jane Doe Brogden, his: wife
nut Richard Hoe, who are the une. 0
Feputed owners, of, and all” persona ‘ut
known, claiming of having ay interest or
state in and to the herenafier described
Feal property,
“You and each of you are hereby notified
that ‘the above nained plaintiffs, J. Gra
Ram and ‘A Wilson are holders’ of a de-
Iinquent tax certificate, No. 12 830 laste
by ithe treasurer of King County, Wash
ngtom, embracing the folowing Fal prop
erty situated. In King County, Washing.
fon, and more particularly: described
‘Lot twenty-one (2), Block stxty-nine
6,
That sald certificate was Issued on the
ih day’ of December, 180, for the Sum 0
#045 for the delinquent taxes for the year
Hest: “that the taxes. for the following
‘Years have been paid by the platntit™ to
Wit: the year 1s the sum ‘of 4285,” the
Year 200 the sum of $2.40: the year it
the sum of $25, whlch several sums beat
ineraat. af heat of tteen, pet cent
per annum from sald date of payment.
“Fou and each of you ate hereby direct
fed and: mimmoned 29 appear within sit
Gays after the, date of the frat publics
Yom of this nétler “and ‘summons! exch
sive of the day of sald first. publication
focwit “ri abnty days atten Che st
Gay of June, oil, and defend the above
niitiea action in the above entitied out
fepay ho umount due together wit
Costs” Ih ease you fail’so to do Jugemen
will be: rendered. foreclosing ‘the lien fo
Said taxes and costs against the real prop:
erty, ands and preinines Herel, named,
‘SU GRAHAM and ‘A. WILSON,
Plaintitis,
C,H. Martin, Attorney, for. Plalntifts
Office ‘and’ Postatiice “Address, Ballard
Washington.
Wirat Putlicwtlon, Sune, sth.
wove TaD SUMMONS.
TN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for King County
5. Graham and A. Wilson, plaintifts, va
Jacob. Hansen and’ Jane’ Boe. Hansen
hhis ‘wite, and Richard Toe, and ail per
sons unknows, if any, having or claim
ing an Interest or estate tn and to th
hereinafter described teal property de
fendants. "No. ‘Notige and Sum-
Biate of Washingygn to Jacob Hansen.
Jane Doe Hanent Wis wite, and ‘Richard
Roe, who are. the owners, “or reputed
owners of, ‘and "all "persons. unknown,
Claiming or having an interest or estate
invand to the hereinatter: described. Yea
property.
"You and each of you are hereby notified
that the above named plaintiffs, J. Gra:
ham and A. Wilson, are the holders of
Gelinguenie tax ceriifeate, No. Bo), ty
Sued ‘bythe treanurer of" ing County
Washington, cmbracing the fo lowing rea
ington, and’ more particularly. described
Broperty” situated In King County, Wash:
BS follows, to-wit:
‘Lot ten {i0), Block seventy-eight (79),
That sald certificate was issued ‘on the
rd day of December, "190, for (he suim
Of U3) Or the delinquent taxes for. the
Year 17, which sum. bears interest a
the rate ‘of fifteen per cent. per annum
from said date of payment
‘You and cach of you are hereby dircet
ed. and summoned to appear within sixty
Gays after the sate of the frst. publica:
Uon of ‘this notice and ‘summons? exclu
sive of the day of sald first. pubiteation
ovwit: within sixty days after the sth
Gay" of Sune, 10h, and defend. the “above
entitled action in the above entitled court,
of pay the amount due. toxether with the
Sosta. In ease vou fail’ao to do judgment
Weill be rendered foreciosing the lien for
Sald taxes and costs against the. rea
Property, Iands and" preinises "here
‘3. GRAHAM and A. WILSON,
Plaindtis,
C,H. Martin, Attorney for Plaintitia,
Qffce and P.O. Address, Bollard, Wash
ington.
‘First publication, June 28th,
NOTICE AND SUMMONS.
Been eres
ee
See ae wee
—e
a ee
Ege ee nce
ee
Hee fe eee
Bee ee ee
a
corre
serait, diner Seg
Sicat publication, June 2th,
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.
THE Board ot County Commisstoners of
King County, Washington, ‘will recelve
Separate sealed proposals at thelr oftles
Up to 2 o'clock p. m., July 42th, Ill, for
the erection of a wink to King County
Court House, and the plumbing, heat nk
and jail work for same, according to
Plans ‘and spectiieations by and with
Saunders @ Lawton, architects, sis-ats
New. York. block. Propesals must be
Accompanied by ‘a certified check for
per ent of Amount. of the, proponal
and made payable to the Chalrman
Board of County. ‘Commissianers.. The
Board reserves the right to eject any
oe an Gane
G. N. GILSON,
YC gait,
Bs. Sire,
County Commissioners,
Dated June 2nth, i901.
iN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
‘State of Washington, for King County—
In" the. matter “of the petition of the
Burns-Sullivan Liquor Company, cor:
poration duly" organized and. existing
Under and by virtue of the laws of the
State of Washington, for an. andar ds
Solving’ and, disincorporating said com-
pany “No, 32,003,
Notice g"nereby given that the Burns-
Sullivan Liquor Company have ited tn
the above entitled Court a pelition pray
Ing for ‘the ‘dissolution and disincorpor-
tion of said Company: all persuns inter
ested’ or objecting thereto are notified that
gp the Mth day of September, a
tite ‘Hour. ot ‘8:30 O'clock “A. ‘B., before
the Honorable Boyd J. Tallman’ one ot
the Judges of the above entitied Court,
ala petition will be heard, "and fe watt
fied that the Burs-Sullivan Liquor Com-
pany’ have taken the nocessers" preltinin
Ary" steps and. obtained the necessary
ole to dissolve stalt ana that ail claim
Against ‘the Corporation sare. discharged
sh gider wil be entered declaring ts a
solution. GAS KOEPELI,
Clerk of above entities Court.
by 3. Mt BREWSTER,
ROOT, PALMER & BROWN,
‘Atiorneys for Petitioner.
in woo
Il, THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
“Suite or Washington, for icing County.
Florence Mc Burk, plainum, ws. Come
Hus a" Burk, “detendante No, 300
Summons.
‘Tho Beate Gf Washington to the sald Cor.
osine tke ei
Gu are hereby summoned, to appear
within Sixty days after the date of the
frst publication of this summons, to-wlt
Sethah alsty (days afer the ith Ua
Of June, 190, and defend. the above et
titied aétion in’ the ‘above entitied court
And answer the complaint of the plain
ana ‘serve ‘a copy "ot sur, answer up
the undersigned attornées for plaints
their oftice below stated” and in case
SouE Ealste so to" doy Judgement, wil
Fondored sat You scoring to the de
thand’‘of the complaints ‘which ‘has ‘beer
filed: withthe: elork of sald court
‘The "object for: whieh suid’ action.
brought is to secure by, the. plalntift from
the defendant, divorce for" neglecting
fina ‘fefusing ‘of the detendant’ to mak
fultabie provisions “for the support 0
hls famuye
ROOT, PALMER & BROWN, ,
Atorners or APlatnait.
Postoftice Addrese: 68 ‘Plomeet Hu
ing, Beattie, Washington.
‘Riest ‘pubiication, June’ 14,
‘Gemialae Diveace.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
‘State of Washington, ‘for King County.
Jeseon Conigio, blalnum, vs. dosephin
Conigllo, defendant. “Np. ———. Sum:
‘Stute of Washington to said Joseph Cont-
‘gto:
You are hereby summoned to appear
within sixty (0) days atter the date of
the first publication of this summons, to-
Bit: sixty GO) aga after the Tith day 0
June, is, ind defend the above entitled
‘action in’ the above entitied court: and
‘answer the complaint of the plaintift, and
Sere a copy cat om, amen una he
Undersigned attorneys for platatif at thelr
office below stated: and In case of your
failure so to do, judgment will be render:
ed against you’ according to the demand
of the ‘complaint, which has been Med
with the clerk of said court.
‘Thevobject for which said action. fs
brought Is to secure a divorce upon the
Rroulds of abandonment.
ROOT, PALMER & BROWN.
Attomays for Plain
Postofice Address: 56 Ploneer Bulla.
ing, Seattle, Washington.
First publication, June Tt.
iaenT awa:
Uplate of Wreskington. ta Gua for, the
Bitte of Washington, th and forthe
Sia” oF EE tl Sate
Site, Se, Hue 3 St ete
ERO "al bool Oy is
Ticats of Wasingion, 10. the al
ase Mattar aad
Hee te MR adn wo apron
sith Sshiar aan nds aie
SN PE Otte the ac
Fee iN ee ee Eh
SE thant, Ba at aa uta
Se tae a eee oe
SRS vara Diba Bia
ee
Sear away geese me
sede atin atone” 1 tae
ies ual ale shad a
1 Steer ete
sai i tira iat eaten
oer tee er ner a
reat anicreP at a
Schone Yael eric
aes intl ltd a
sore can aa a
wen te
atin eae
Petoctes aioe Sit Bate Cay
nae Aca
Pee a HET AS A
PR Rae gente Tata a Sean
NQFICH OF SALE OF ‘TIMBER ON
Capital Land.
} Notice: Is hereby given, that on, the 6th
day of July, iia, at the hour of 2 o'elock
fn the afternoon, on sald day, at tie door
of the court house in King County, Wash
ington, the timber ‘on the following. de-
Scribed capital land, Will be sold at public
Auction Te the ‘highest bidder therefor,
SOW, 14 oF SB te Seotlon 21, Town,
silp 36, Range i 1 40 acres; Value’ of
Huber, 306s
‘Said "timber on sald land will be sola
tor not less than the appraised value as
Appraised by the ‘Board of State Land
Ummisaioners In the manner provided by
law, a stitement of whieh is how on tle
in the office of the auditor of sald county.
"terms of saie are: Cash, to be pald on
the day of sale.
‘The Umber on the above described lands
are offered for vale uy virtue of an onder
Of the Board of State Land Commission:
frm, made on the sth day" of May, 190),
uly certified and on file in the oftice of
sald county auditor,
‘Geo. B. LAMPING,
County Auditor.
Per J. P. AGNEW. Depeuty.
Dated ai Seattlo, Wash, this ist day of
mae ee
NUTICE OF SALE OF “TIMBER ON
‘Sehiool Land.
Notice is hercby given that on the znd
day of June, Joi, at the hour of 2 o'clock
inte aftertoon, on aad day, at, the door
Of tite coure house in King County, Wash:
ington, ‘the Umber on the folowing de
Sefibod Setoal land will be sold at pudti
Suction “to the iughest bidder, therefor,
toowte:
N_E. 3 of N. E, ¥ Section 16, Township
4 Range PE: value of umber, RORW
‘Said ‘umber on said land Will be oid for
not leas than the appiaised value as abr
praised by’ the Board of State Land Cum
fnissioners in the manner provided 0y"lavw,
a statement of which is now om tle ia the
Sic of the auditor ot aid county,
“igrmis of sitle wre: Cash, to be pald on
the day of sale,
“ithe timber on the above described tands
‘are offered for sale by virtue of an order
Gfthe Board of Siate Land Commission:
fs, "made on the sth Gay of May, 190
duly Certified and on ‘file in ‘the oitice uf
Std county auditor.
GEO. B. LAMPING,
County Auditor,
4, P. AGNEW, Deputy.
Dated at Seattic, wast, this 18th day of
Muy, A.D. Il.
GeewanGial Mowat:
AN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
Bate of Wasumnston, tor King County.
Billa Cottingnam, Puunuim, var Cora A.
Hall and JSsept! W. Hall; Derenaanis
0. Suminons,
‘The Stats of Wasnungion to the sald Cora
‘A. Hall and Joseph W. Hall, detendants:
You ‘arg hereby. sumiaoned to appear
within sixty" (oo) days afer the dave of
the “first. publication “of tals. summons,
to-wit: within sixty (W) days “after the
ath day" of “May, 1901, ang defend the
above entitled action in the above entitled
Court, and answer Uo complaint of the
blaintit, and serve a copy of your answer
Upon the undersignea atiorneys for
plaintim, at thelr office below stated, and
tn case of your failure so to do, judgment
Will be rendered against you, accoraing to
the demand of the complaint, whieh ‘Wil
bg'iiled with the clerk of said court,
“The object of skid action Is to Loreclose
4 certain mortgage, dated July J, Invi, and
Which was flleq tof record’ in the oitice of
the Auditor of King County, Wastungton,
August 19,1897, wad recorded in. Volume
iis Of Mortgages, at page 46, morteaxing
the following describes. property in King
County, Washington, to-wit: Lots: nume
Dered dno G), two td), three @), four Ud),
live @), six (®, seven (@, eight (), nine
(9), and ten (10), in Block thirty-five (85),
THE SEATTLY REPUBLICAN
‘eng all of ald block, and Tat numbered) J
| Pee fa a tstock ngimbated forkyewe |
ail in” Walitngtoea's Par etsion sot|
| Gren ane Allon Co the City oF See
| se 2
ROOT, PArateR & BROWN, |
|| Pustoftice Address: Git Moneer Building,
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Wun Calvert piaintin var Auguste
Biodinger und Pauline ‘Rledinger. he
Wise; “core “Land Company's “Syndi=
ale A, 4 corporation; Richard D. Ba
ker aiid’ J. 8. Hichards,. copartners as
Baker & Richards, and Joseph i. Berry
and Thomas Berry, copartners as Betty
Brounen and ail portana unknown, i
Any, ‘having or clalmming an, interest” oF
eatute in and fo the hereinafter descrlD=
i Feal property, deseudants, No. S06,
The State of Washington to Auguste 7.
Bledingss (and | Pauline.” iediager, Ms
wife; Moore "Land Company's Synileate
4, a corporation: Richard: D, ‘Baker and
3,8. Rlchards, copartners as Baker &
Eichaeds, “and” Joseph “H. “Berry and
Thomas” perry, “ copartners as” Berry
Brothers, wlio are the owners or reputed
owners of, and ail persone unknown hav-
Ing oF ting ant terest or catate. tn
aind to the herelnafter described real prop-
‘You and each of you are hereby notified
ERat "ihe ‘above ‘named platntise” William
Calvert, ss the holder of"a delinquent tax
cectlcgee No. Laih issued ty he reas
rer, of ing” County, Washington, em:
bracing the following’ real property,
uated th Ring County, Washington and
mote partictlarly described as follows
(oawit? Lot a, Block’ Moorland: that ad
certicate ‘was issued onthe ‘Isth day of
Maron hse'for the Sum of Wo. for den
‘quent taxes on sand property for the yeas
Hise: that ‘on. the following dates plaints
paid taxes on sald property for tne tol
lowing’ yours) in. the following amounts
fo-wit: ‘March 1a, tis," the sum of $059
eins the timount of dellnawent. tax ‘cer
Wieate No. 6,8, with gecumulated inter
est, ‘penalty “and costs, for taxes forthe
Rene AE oeretotore” ued ta ce
Mounty-and thereafter assign sal
County to plaints March i, Ts gt
Ddeing “the” amount o¢ delinquent tax ‘cer
Uliesie Now Sua, with accumulated Inter
est; penalty “and costs, for taxes for 18
and ISG, Uieretofore issued (o King. Goun
{y and thereafter wstigned by auld iging
County ‘to plaintit: April. 3° ise, "Sod
gages for tS: April 3369, $018 taxen fo
oH, "suue 1, 10, 9.22 taxes for 160, whlch
‘sums ech” beat ‘Interest at Is per ‘cent
ep annum Grom sald dates of Payment
oly tnd) each” OE ott are hereby di
rected ‘and “Summoned to. ‘appear’ withtn
Sinty days after the service af this notice
and suimmons ‘upon you, exclusive. of ths
Gato ‘of service,” In” the above entited
court, and defend sad action or pay’ the
mou, Router th the cota, “tn
‘case of ‘your tatlure so to do, 9
Pano "tor Judgment, “and. jlagment
unl be’ rendered, foreclésing th ten fr
Said taxes and Costs agalnat the “real
Bopetty, lands "and “premises here
WILLIAM CALVERT, Plaintitt
Blccue «McClure: ltorneye for plain
Luft Ofte: and postotfice address, room
& Dexter Horton @ Ca. nank, Building
attic, ‘King County, Washington.
Date Gh Best subline Moke aa
DIVORCE suMMONS. ~
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington in and for the
County’ of King Charles A. Bates,
Blainuift, ‘vs, Violette Bates, defendant.
No. 31.61. Summons by’ Publication,
‘The’ State’ of Washington to the sald
Violetta Bates, defendant:
Nou are hereby “summoned to appear
within ‘sixty (Gy dara after the date of
the first publication of this summons, to:
wit: ‘within sixty days atter tho th day
of ‘Avril, 1901, and defend the ‘above en-
titled action in the superior court of the
Stato Of Washington, for the county of
King, and answer the complaint of plain:
Ut, “and serve n ‘copy of your answer
upon ‘the undersigned attorney. for piain-
Uf, at his ‘oflles below stated; and. In
case of your failure so ty do, Judgment
Will be rendered against you according to
the demand of the complaint, whieh wil
be filed with the clerk of sald Court,
‘The object of this sult ts to procure an
ausolute divores by the plaintift from’ the
‘defendant on the ground of desertion.
W. H. BUTTNER,
Attorney for Plaintift.
Postoffice Address: “Beattie, King County,
Washington, 51g ‘Third Avenue.
Date of first publication, Friday, April
5 Il.
pee ge oie ware “OD
HOMESTEAD PpRoor.
Npirtonent oe ine PELICATION, (DE-
Partinent of the ‘iuerior, Land. Ofties
AL Seattle, Washington, April wind, Tl
Notice is ‘hereoy given that the follow:
ing-named suttlor has filed notice of ‘is
miendion to make inal proof In support
Of is lain, and tut. sind proot Wit be
Rade Defore’ the register and Tecelver at
Seattle,” Washington, on June ith, 19il,
Yur Robert Jonnsoh, “Homestead. Entry”
No; 11,904 for the SWik of NEM and Lots
4,2 atid 8, of Sec, 34, Township MN. Kes
Be MO eae a 3
‘He’ nahies the following witnesses (0
prove ins continuous Testaence upon ana
Culuvation of said fad, Vie!
Frunas CG. Yury, “ot Snoqualmie,
Washington.
Yuvia” Acenton, of Snoqualmie, Wash-
ington.
uA Thompson, of Snoqualmie, Wash-
ingion,
James Liddle, of North Bend, Washing-
ton
EDWARD P, TREMPER,
Regie,
April 26; Atay 31.
JOMN POLSON, DECEASED.
AN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
‘Slate of Washington, for King Couaty.
tn Probate,” In'tuo matter of the estate
‘et Joun “Polson, deceased, Nov
‘Rotice tor ‘Publication.
Rotice Is hereby given by the under-
signed, Katherine Hilzabeth Polson, ex:
ecu of the will of John Polson, de-
ceased, to the creditors of and all pefwons
having cwwims against suid deceased, Uo
CXHIBIL them with the necessary vouchers
Within one year after the first publication
OF Unis notice, to said execute at Room
%, Boston dlvek, inthe City of Beattie,
‘ising County, Wuatington, the same ‘be:
ing Tne pidee’ for the transaction of bust:
nets of’ the suid estate in sald. King
County. ‘
waved this 3rd day of May, 1901,
KATHEAUNG ELIZABETH POLSON,
saccutnx of the Will of Joba Polson, De-
Geasea,
BENSON & AUST,
“Attorneys (or Executrlx,
Die or ust publeauon, May 10, 190,
SUMMONS BY PUBLACATION.
Hy THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
Susie of Wasaington, for the County. of
ing. “Steven A. ‘b¥ler, palalft, vs
Haitiet “A. Tylee, detenasnt, "No. 21
Stinusons by Pubtteation.
‘Tie 'Btace of Washington to the sald Har-
Hot A. ‘Tyler, dofendants
You Gre hereoy summoned to appear
witinn sixty dave aftwe the date of the
Itst‘puoheduion ot ‘this summons, to-wit
itain siacy Mays after tho seta day”
Absit, AB. Toul, and defend the avove
‘Suttied ction in tie above entitled court
kha Ahawer the complaint of te platnuce
Sth ‘rye a "copy. of Your answer ‘upon
lite undersigned attorney for plaintlet, wt
iis Gitico eelow ‘stated? and'in cass 0:
Jour tauure wo"to do, Judgment will” be
ioinuerea against you acootting to the de-
aiid! of the ‘complaint, walen ‘hasbeen
luted with the Glurk of said court. The ob-
Gece Or the said “action, set forth the
<ouplainy, is as follows: “To obtain a de
‘See of tie court above named alvorcing
piatulite ffom ‘the bonds of anatrimony
Wich sald “defendant onthe grounds of
abandonment and eruol weatment,
g Joa WinStLING,
Akitorney for Piainuitt.
Postottice address; av Washington
Huslainy, Seattle, Bing County, State of
Wasnington,
Wate or ist publication. Aprit 29,
NOTE 10 STOCKHOLDERS.
TO THE STOCKHOLDERS OF THE
Hidden ‘treasure Gold Mining & Milling
Route it hereby given th ting
Notlce ts. hereby given that, a meetin
of the stockholders Of the Hidden Treas:
Ure Gold dining. & Milling Company.
Hereby called tobe held on the Zist day
of Mav A.D, 1h, lat the hour of four
O'cleck p, tn, of sald day, at room 423 Pa-
fic blvck, Seattle, Ising county, Wash
ington: the object’ of said mesting is. to
Inereasn, Ihe ‘capital stock "of the, said
Hidden" rroasure Gold. Mining & Suiting
Company from $00,000.00 to" $200.08
i. ke BAYLIS,
> EB q@uicn,
ii, B. HAYNES,
‘Prastees of Hidden Treasure Gold Mining
Milling Company.
First pub., Slaten 3; last, May 27,
zetia 4. opm
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. — DE-
‘partment of the Interior, Land Office at
Seattle, Wash, May 17, ial:
Notice 'is hereby given thai the follow-
jng-named settler fas filed notice of his
intention to make final proof in. support
of his claim, and that said proof ‘will be
made before'U, 8, District Land Office at
Seattle, Wash, on July llth, 1901, vis:
julia Le Odell, Homestead Entry, No.
WOE, for wes. W. KBox. 1 TD. No,
She hames. the following witnesses, to
prove her continuous residence upon an
Euilivation ‘of said tends vis “Anassw
Hyertoos, Jonn Martin. Ernest Schwarz,
Abraham Jackson, ail of Redmond, Wash.
BDWakeD i THEMiERS”
IX THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
‘Suate of Washington, for King County.
W. K ourtia Bintiay va be A. Serna
and “Stary Dos. Strout, iis wife, John
Gitoon, Jr and'S. C.Calderhead,” Re
Seiver of “Guarantes” Loan and ‘Trust
Gompany, @ corporation, _ Detendants
No. Sait Nodies' and Summons.
‘The Siate of Washington to the, above
named defendants, EA, Strout and Mary
Boo Strout, his. ‘wite, John Gibbon, dr,
ind S.s0. Galderhead, as Hocelver of the
Gtarantee ‘Hoan and’ Trust Company, a
Corporation, “who ‘are the owners, oF ‘ree
puted owners, "ot and all "persone. un
own, clasming or having af Interest oF
estate ‘tn oF to the hereinafter: described
Peal property
‘Voit ahd each of you are hereby notified
that ithe above. nkimed. plant, We
Curtis. fs ‘the owner “and elder of four
fertain delinquent tax certificates, to-wit
umber Sf, nugnber Si, number “A 0
Sad Sumber Aah, tasued by the "reacties
of King’ County, Washington, for taxes,
Penalties, interests and conta, on the fal
(owing ‘diecribed reat property situatet i
sald ‘King County, Washington, and more
particularly described aa follgins, to-wit
he southeast quarter (4) of the south:
Nest "quarter Gu of section twenty. (20)
Township twenty-nve (G5) north ot rang
five @) east of, the W. My" sald cert
Gites numbers Sof, A eit and AT being
{for taxen “penalties, interents and cok
om the ‘Whole of sata southeast “quarto
(iy ot the southwest quarter (iy and
Sala thx’ certifeate number ‘Med beg fo
‘he’ delinguent tax, penalty, Interest’ and
Coston an undivided one-hit G2) of sal
ested qutrcr Gof southwest uae
“Tat sald cortieates wore respectively
iscued ou the dates and’ for the sums
find for delinquent. taxes, interests, pon
allies “and ‘costs for" the: years. following
that"uto Say? Said eettineate. numb
Sit om the gist day of January, 188 fo
the Si of $88 or the dann axes
ste, forthe year ING; said! curtiieat
‘usiber i0 on'the sad tige day” of Jum
{irs 10s, for the sum oF $2.84, for Ue de
Unguent taxes, eto. for the year 180 and
Isis sald cortifeate number ‘Agi on the
SUK day’ of Marehy ety for ‘tho. stim o
Edo, Tor "tne dolitquent taxes, ete. fo
ths ved ise: and certificate number 'A
on the igth day of March, sia, for the sur
Of Sse Yor ‘the delinquent: taxen, ete
ioe The year wet
"Phat ay fees and éosts for each of sal
fas eprint numer, ht and num
of ‘Atay pisintit paid” eald “Coun
roasicer’atty cents, and hat tho sum
for ‘which ‘sald tax” cortieates. respect
Wey" Were Issued and above mentioned
fave Deen paid by" the plaintif to. th
said) County "treasurer theretor, and tha
ttle taxes! fof the. following ‘yearn. hav
‘boon ald Uy the plalutift t0 said’ Counts
‘Treasurer, to-wit: Por the year si th
Summ OF $91, and for she Jear JS th
sum of $8.11 ll of “which” above. men
tied several stims respectivaly bea in
teres arate oF sper conc Be
‘unum from tne date of payment theres
By plaintit as aforesaid,
“you and each of you ary hereby dirsctes
aid “summoned, to appear’ withit six
days ‘after the service of this notice an:
Suinmons upon you, exclusive of the da
St ties, the ‘above ended cour
hd" defend unls” action, “or pay th
Amount due, together with the coats, an
in" case You fatl ao to-do, plaintig! Wi
Apply" for Judgment, ‘andJugment wi
bol rendered foreclosing the len of aa
{tices ‘and costs ‘againot. the. Teal prop
erty, lands “and “premises "horsinabo
ehiioned, and the pisineite will appl
or and have suck Yurtsor tnd tbe
judgment and decreo in tho. premises a
shal" be secocdiai to law.
GREENE £ Grierrras,
“Attornoys for Plaine
OMice Address, sis Washington. Bullditg
Seattle, Washington.
Date ak Seek pisiiabliia -agoth 6: sesh
PROBATE NOTICE.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
Slule OF Walingion, Tor the County” of
ing. “Sake ot" Wadhingtom, Coungy of
-RIng, sit “in dle matter of the estave of
sunt’ Ctunow, Deceased. "No. alga No-
ee, of Settlement or” Finil’ Account
Probate ‘Notice
Notice is “hereby given, that Frances
Clulow, administrate ot the estats of
Sunn "Ciuiow, deceased, ‘has ‘rendered to
ha ‘led ‘i ‘sad court hor fimal aecount
fs puch admuniiris and that Friday, tne
Ah day oF Bay, IW, At 4:0 o'clock, a. me,
At the gourt radu of the probate depart:
Ment of Our sald superior ‘court, ti the
iy" of ‘Beattie, in said King County, has
bech Guiy appointed by suid-court for the
Selome isai account ‘at which ume
nd place Sny person tnveres
fice may “appear and tile his exceptions
in “writing. (9 "said “account, and ‘contest
tHe "sames
Witness the Hon. Bora J. - Tallman,
Judge of the ‘superior court, and the seal
Of said ‘court hereto afixed this ith day
of April i
(seal) S.A KORPELE, Cteri,
By BH. SICKEES, Deputy Clare
WB. Wnite, “attorney
First publication, april 12,
NOTICE FoR PUBLICATION,
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR,
Hand Once at Seattle, Wash, Apt tf
Notice ts horety given that the follow.
Ing-named settler fas fled notice ot hl
UeSGRLIOR mai, nao in auppor
of his claim, "and that atid proot wit i
Bade ‘uoldre “togister “and receiver a
Beattie, “Wash., On dune l2wh ia,” vie
David Reonton, “homestead entry, No’ 180
for the Lota § and 4 and ‘ty of SW of
Section 2 Township a N., i. 6 EY
He, tates, te follow "wincaes
prove his continuous ‘residence upon a
eaiibasin BE oat Tan a rosin
Francis. 'P. Wury,” of Snoqualm!
Wasth ss
‘overt Jonson, of Snoqualmie, Wash,
D. A. ‘Thompaoti, of Suequalmie, Wash,
Sammes Liddle, of North Bends Waste
EDWARD'P. THEMPEIR, Register,
Remon 30 Sakai
“Plate of Weak. ee, OF THE
Stato of Washington, for the County of
ing, un the setae ge tee COUN. 9
Nictolas Lang, ‘unecraest ‘Re, SiN fh
Prowate Notte te ere
Nouoe te hareby elven Wythe under:
signed admusinealoe SE thy Mey
Miia ote Sostan, the Sao
eeaant alt petbons ton eat
Saud econ 6o betas cuenta
{Receasery touched within oh ya a
the date of this totoe Ve tats aenuatee
oe at he pigce af” Ranga
Bice Bulding, Seattle stig" tae
Washinton, the uate WilagRE COUNE
The‘ trunsecion® of tie” ea ae
ea
Dalba chia Uth day of Juve, A. ©. 190
) RoR Wie Bat
/Agmtnimentor of uae Bae ar HONS,
feng Deecaok
) Long. Deceased
UY THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
Suats o¢' Washiagton, for King Comte
Wiliam Calvert pisintr, vee Sopa
i Rledinger and Pauliue ielciueee he
write, "Motre “Land” Compass *Synul
SUG" A, a corporation: Richurd B? Ba:
lee aaa, Br Richatas conasupes a
Baker & Richards, and Joseph H Berry
fd “Thomas: Berry, copertters as Berry
Brochers "ana ail perwons unkown,
ay, living or lading" an intesest” ar
sefaefin aa fthetsaunes dene
So reat broparty detondatite Nos Sin
Bar Suet Weaution to Ange
Mie Siate 0 on, to Auguste 7.
Rlodlager'* ana” Pauline iedhagee
Wife; Moore, Land Company's Syudtcate
3) corporuuoat nechatd BD, weer aa
HB Wchaeds, ‘copartnony ay Maker's
Hichards: usd’ Sobsyi Gh. “betta
Thomas” Berry, “coparincre as’ pete
Brothers, wh are the omicrs of repetel
Owners of."and iil petaors unknows eat
ing'or glaining ant intereat ‘of estate: ta
ad to the horcinafter described Sat soy
ang
‘You and each of you are horaby notned
tat the above ‘named palgne? Witla
Calvert ta tho holder ota daimguent ose
ertitiekte, No. Let imueu hy the troas
tro 'of aking” Gouriy WaathogtSn, att
acing. he following’ real property, i
titan icing County," Wagiiagtog” an
tore. particutaly deterlved “as falc
(ori: tet ao toe Moora aa
Stid 'Gerttieats was lsucl” on ng ‘th
fay of Atareh, 1s, tor the Stim et #8
fee otha’ ante oan, Sroperty fa
the year ise; that om the following dates
PIG paid. takes Ga ‘sual proper ts
tho followin ‘Yours “ig tue. Yohlewing
outs, orld Navel 19", he was
of Sus "belie the atsuunt of linac
Uiateeritieats Nor Sus wich cecunbine
Sa interest, penalty "and Sunts for tases
fer dle grad ie crevore iu"
ing Gouiy, and’ thereafter aauigued by
Suid" Counts” 'co guainte Mash See?
iis, Going tne’ atment ot Uelinguatie Sak
ertineate’ Nov sain, wit acumntiaiea Si
foreau penaliy ad Coster tae tases
IGF and ine, eretofore lashed ts ies
County and uheresicar assigned Gy a
Kihig County to piaintic; Apes: 88, $4
faxes for At Apel a Tigh Bui cance’ er
Nib June I, iM, gil ists.” for ish
which’ summa etch’ pear’ intorast tt as!
Sent, per uum ttont auld dates ‘of pes
mien.
You, and each of you. are neroby
cotied, ad “nammonel to ‘ppear ius
Sixty days after the service uf this hoties
ind summons upon Fou, exclusive of the
Gas of waviness tee ie
WILLIAM CALVERT, Plaintiff,
taco Mer are
sic ROE
See ree a aise te te
Sishan’ctuasy "afta ana Se
ivonmeiix mivonce,
Te mm suretion Goce, cougey
Eagtha aS ad at BOS
ee re
niece See &
eo akees oarieate
coo y ee ce
sere See ie
Hatidiras Suet ae seta
ee
eee Bate ay
Aes
repo ana Ma? a
ieee Warne
nie, SUreMON cocRR oF mH
Se eas
ce eed eee sar
See mae
ieee eee een
ee
Seite tomatoe
Retiheepayamenntat, lh
ae ee eae
He Dial dtl Tellin
Sian acre tina’ Te
ee ere
Pia SRS wnatn oe
Pedr s
a a
ie ERS IED
See
Thorson Degeatnd ny
TIMBER LAND NOTICE.
‘TIMBER: LAND, ACT JUNE 3, 1873
Notice for Pubileation.
‘United States Land Office,
Seattle, Wash., March 16, 1901,
Notleo is hereby given that tn compil-
ance, with, the ‘provisions of, the acto
congress of June ‘entitied
‘act for the salo of timber lands in the
States of Califurnia, Oregan, Nevada and
Washington Territory," as’ extended to
ali the public land states by act of Aue
Sust 4, Ise, John B. Rutherford, of Pal
Sty, County’ of ising, Sate of Wisning-
fon, "his ‘this day fted in this oftice his
Sworn statement, No. 26, for the pur-
phase of the Sig of Section "No, 2h tn
Township ‘No. % N, Range No. § 0, and
Wil offer proof to show that the’ land
Sought is more Valuable for its. tmber
Or stone ‘than for agricultural purposes,
ahd to eatabliah his claim to said land be-
{ore ‘the Register and Recelver of this
Oiliee “at Seattle, Wash., on’ ‘Thursday,
the th day of June, 100k
He names as witnesses:
3.8, MeLain, of Snoqualmie, Wash.
EA. Cooper,” of Snoqualmie,” Wash.
Dalton Prescott, of Wall City, Wash.
ALL. Rutherford, of Fall Clty, Wash
‘Any’and all porsons claiming adversely
the above-described lands are requested
fo fle thoie claims In tus office on or be-
fore said veh day, of June, 1901.
EDWARD P. TREMPER, Register.
Date of first publication, Mare 23, 1001
PSS
SHERIFE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
Suate of Wasningion, County ot King.
Ss! “shersts Oitce,
By virtue of an order of sale Issued out
of the Honorabie Superior Court of ing
County, ‘ou tie 1th day’ oe April, 10, by
the Cidek thereor, in tue cage ‘ot red
Rex, paint, versus W. Sd. Maynor
Chai i Deptiman and Chiisiite M- Depp-
{uta tis wate; wank N. uiote and ai
K iihott, bis’ wife; Joseph A. Dean and
Mua Gi Dean, his vite: amen fn Walt
Ing, S.A. Coolego"and i'd. Parkins,
detcnnite, Now 6 and to me an anes”
int “directed, ana delivered:
"Rouco ig hereby given that T will pro-
eved to seit ut public auétion ty the high
Ge bidacr tor dash, wituin the hours pee
Seribed. ty taw for sherin’s sales, to-Wit
-SUD'S-cdexcn mon the ats day or ay,
2. D.Sim, betore’the court house door of
Sid icing’ County, im the State oc Was
igton, ail of the right, title and interes
ofthe said detendants above named, I
Sha to. the following descrived "proverty,
Situated in che Couut” of Kung ana State
Sf: Washinwn, tonwit:” The northwest
uarice OF the southwest quarter of Bec
Hontion “Tnirty vin “Rownship —"Tweaty
tres Hort, of Hinge Three Base, Wi
Hamels Meridian, tevied on as the’ prop
ery of the derendant, We i Raynun, t
Hundred, Sigmty-earee ana 2-tW Dollars
satiny “& Juugitont amouming ta Thred
‘hal aa, atcoruey’s feo of Uwenty-ive anu
how Doliges. and cost of sult, in fave
G2 Bred'ox an againat the sald’ Ws
snr f
Dated this 48th day of Avg, 101,
Bo. CODE ions
By Wak” COMCUKAN, “Deputy.
Solon 2. Willits, attorney Yor Pian
ult Beattie, Wane
Firat publicusion, Aprit 39,
aaeanes Seat ea aetnatis
TOEBER LAND, SCE SUM) 2, 158 —
United Sites’ Gina “Orace, “seattl,
Wasi, Abril &, 1
Noted iW'hereby given that tm complt
aus. mi the protislans. of ie “aet 0
Songreas of und 3,80 entitled “An act
for the sale of timber thads inthe States
St California Oragon, Nevada ‘and: Washe
ington ‘Rerritory.™ ag extended tall the
puoi inh sien by" act of August. 4
fist “George “A. Brooke," of tuunquait
Gointy "ot King, Stato of Washington:
fasts day led in this otton his Swort
fiicrend a kfaedhe pora,
he Si NEW anata Sib oF Section
No, 3, i Townatiy 51'Ne Hange Nore 8
nd wl otter proot to slow that the land
Sebi la mgee valuable Zr is Umber 2
sicng ‘haat for agricultural purposes,
ig‘estabitsh ‘his claim to nail and Bofors
the'Fepister ana receiver of thi otfee at
Seales Wash, On Feiday, tho th day: of
Tine, is
"He’ names ax witnesses:
ANH Beisel, of isosguah,, Wash;
BG; Dickscny of Iashauahs Wash,
Franke Stephan, of issaguahy Wan:
Jee Wukchen “of assaquany Wash,
‘Any, and ail persons claiming auversely
tute veve-desctibed Tana are. roqucsted
Lovie theie claims in this office onor be
fre sald 20h day of June, Hoi,
EDWALD P TREMPER, Resistor,
First publication, beh
PUBLICATION SUMMONS.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, Zor Ring County
Vetere! Peterson," Christens Green,
Plainilits We Aten 'at Sekels, J. ac
Naugut, Defendaniae ‘Now dts@, "Sum
none tir Publication.
The Slate of Washington to the sald. Mrs
Bi, Nickels, Soir McNaught, Doce
You are, hereby, summoned to appear
within ‘Sixty (8) ‘daya alter. the dite o
tho’ publication o¢ tua sumamin t
wits Within siaty 1) days after the sth
Tay of Apel, 1h, and ‘defond the above
ntitiod action in ibe above entitied court
hd anawor the complaint of he pati
ahd Serve a copy of Sour answer upon the
Undersigned attorney for plaintids at his
$flice below tateds api fy casu of yout
fate goo’ do Judgment ‘wil So em
ered against you according to, the do
fand Of the complaint, whlch has ‘pean
fied with. the clerk of’ said court, The
object of the above entitled action ts to
clear title to, plaintiffs of the north % of
Joh block A, A Denny" "nadition
to the town now city of Mattie.
W. H. WHITE,
Plaintiff “Attorney.
P.O. Address, Bailey Building, Seattle,
‘king County Washington.
Wurm publication april & i001. May 3%
TIDE LAND SALE.
NOTICE OF SALE OF SECOND CLASS.
‘Bae Land, | Apilication No. a
Notice is hereby given that on the 3rd
day of August, ‘igi, at ‘the hour of =
giclock in the afternoon, on sald day, at
the "door. of. the. court” house “in Kin
County,” Washington the following dee
scribed’ tide land will be sold. at public
fiuction to" the highest “bidder ‘therefor,
‘Ail the tide lands of the second class
owned by the State of Washington, situ:
ate in front of, adjacent to or upon that
portion of the government ‘upland dee
Scribed 4s follows, to-witz, Lots Sand iy
Section 2, ‘Township 2 North, Range §
East, W. M.—iz.00 lineal chains, appraised
A310 per chain, oF $4,
‘hid ‘ide land’ will be Sold. for not Jess
than the appratsed value and subject to
ihe Tumpeevermenty stunted theron, and
as apptaisul by the Board of State
Commissioners” inthe ‘manner. provided
by lw, a Statement of whieh Is now. on
fie inthe office of the auditor of said
county.
‘Terms of sale are: Under contract,
one-tenth to ‘be palit on the day of saler
nd one-tenth axinually thereafter: on the
fest day of March of each year, with c=
cfued ‘interest on. deferred” balance at 6
ber cent, per annum: Provided, That any
Putchutser tas make ull payment at any
“Phe purchaser of said Tand will be re-
quired to pay at the time of sale the ap-
Praised “value “of any improvements Or
Valuable Material on sueh land it full in
addition to the one-tenth of the sale price.
"The above described. tide lands are of-
fered for sale by Virtue Of an onder of the
Hoard “of State" Land” Commissioners,
muide on the 2th day of June, Til, duly
eruiied and on ile tn office of said coun
ty audhtor.
Go. B, LAMPING, County Auditor,
Per J.P. AGNEW. Deputy.
Dated at Seattle Wash., this tat day of
duly, A.D. 1h
Tints chests. Belcan an
SCHOOL LANDS,
NOTICE OF SALE OF SCHOOL LAND.
‘Rpnlication Sora
Notice’ fs hereby ven that on the ard
aay" oF August, adh at the four" of
Grclock inthe acternoon, on sald day at
{the door of the court” house an Ring
County. "Washington, the following dee
Seribed’sehoot land will be sold at pubic
Suction “tothe “highest ‘bidder ‘therefor
emit
Northeast quarter of northeast quarter
Seotlon se ‘Township 24 'Range s Basted
Acres, aphrained at gam Catclutng: ine
ben)" timber appraised at Sit
Northwest quarter of northeast quarter,
game section, 4)" acren, appraised “ak
EN dneludlng Umber,” thar aperais
Bhat son
Southwest quarter of northeast quarter
ssime section. W acres. appraised: st R00
Gncluding “tinber); timber appeased at
‘ean.
Southeast quarter of northeast quarter
ame, gecinns ere Apprataed at 8B
including tiinbery: timber appraised at
eon
Northeast quarter of northwest quarter
sare gucton® i acrow, Appeal. at Ry
(including tim et)? timber" apprataad at
Fon. f
‘Norihwest quarter of northwest quarter
same soetion, Mt acret, appraised At 88)
(including timber): dumber appraised at
$0
Southveest quarter of northwost quarter,
same section, W acten, appraised: at $0005
Ghcluding tiauerys timber appraise at
fl.
Southeast quarter of northwest quarter
seume sccton, 40 acres, appraised: at 880.
Gieluding timsery: danber appraise at
‘Shoot
‘Northeast quarter of southwest quarter,
sanie sections 0 acron, appralied at BNO}
Gncluding tinder; timber: appenised at
Eat 5
Norihveest quarter of soutawest quarter
‘sting section, W eres, appralsed at $e)
Gucluding timuer); thnber appenised a
Sas
Southwest quarter of southwest quarter,
same section, 40 acces, appralacd at $b
Gneluding: timopers; timber appraised at
South € southwest quart
Mpouthcast quarter of southwest ouatier
satine suction, #8 cron, apprated’ At 86.05
including timber): timber’ appratsed at
Saun
‘Noriheest quarter of southeast quarter
same Sactiony @ acren,appenined a FEU
dncluding ‘tlinber): timber appraised at
ioe,
Norihwest quarter of southeast quarter,
same section. io acres, appratecd At BO8.09
Gneluding ‘Uiasen timber appratsea at
Soon
|__Bewthowest auarter of southeast quarter
same section, 4 acres, appraised: at SnD
Gheluding timver): tioer appeained at
Southeast f southeast. quarte
rutheast quarter of southeast. quarter,
samo sections i ncron appratsed At R20
Geeluding Minter)? timber appraised at
ion
Bald schoo! tand will be sold for not
less than the appratzed value and subset
{othe Impruvements situated thereon aid
48 nppraised by the Board o¢ State Land
Comfatasioners in the manner provided by
law, a statement of which Wy now oh fe
Inthe oftice of the autor of sald county
"Terms of sale are: ‘Under contract, one:
tenth to ‘be paid wi, the day of sale; and
‘Gnestenth anally thereatter onthe’ frst
‘ay of March of tach year, with accrued
interest on deferred balanee at € per cent
fer annum: Provided: hat any purse
fe! may “make full payment at any tn
Shd ‘obtain a: deed.
‘The purchaser of said land. will be re
aquired pay” at the time Of sale the ap
Dralsed value “or! ny" Improvements 6
Naluable Material on suet and i ul
Addition Cov'the. omestenth "of the Sale
Drees :
"The above described schoo! lands aro of
fered for sale by vistue of an order oF te
Boara."of State’ Land” Commissioners
ade on the ath day of June, ol, duly
certified and on fie in offee of sald cou
iF mnaitor
GEO", LAMPING, County Autttor.
Per dP. AGNEW, Deputy.
Dated at Seattle Wash, thle Ist day of
July, A.D. 0
Tey ae agi -gh
1X THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ‘THE
tate of Washington. Taane Rees,
ert Wilus, ‘Rand MeDonald, James 8.
Winiams.” Pat MeGonigal, James 3:
Scott, B.C. Rog, Prank Jansen, Robert
Barbee, atike "Wanons om Corhshy
icharil Alusgrove, George "Olive ant
George Watson, "Plaintiis, vs. The
Danville Coai ‘Company, a corporation,
| and ‘Phe Centra ‘Trust end Save Deposit
Company, a corporation, Defendants.
Sato of Washington County of Ki
ato of Washington, County of King, 1.
pint see, oF agnington to the bald
panvule Coal Company, a corporation,
and the Central ‘Trust and’ Safe Depa
Gompany, a corporations
You ate ‘hereby summoned to appear
thin ‘sixty "days atter the date of the
Hest Mubliggiom ot thin summonsy Coit
After the bth day of July. ana detend te
ove entitled action In the ‘above entitled
Soure and. anawer the complaint of tie
ilainusts therein, and serve copy ot yous
Answer upon the undersigned attorneys
for the plaintitts at. their office: below
Saved, and In ase of your failure 30 to
do Judgment will be residered against you
According to the demand of the complain,
hich its been ‘ted with the cletk oi
Paid court,
“This action Is brought to foreclose a
‘numberof Hens, held-by the plaintifts 1h
Unis" action ‘respectively and fo" obtain
Judgment "decree estabitshing and. fore=
‘lowing ‘said Hens, and to have said lens
declared, bes rs ‘and prior labor
lien Upon at the real and personal. prey
‘rig ahd earnings, and all cooks, ralleege,
‘lgnts o¢ way, bunkers, rolling stuck’ and
iii ropenty whatever used tthe
Speration of the Danville Coal Company's
mine; that the ame be foreclosed and
Sold’ in ‘the manner provided by law, and
tie! amounts "adjudged to be due the
Plaintiffs and een ‘of them be paid. aed
Kutisied theretrom, and that all the tight
litle ana. interest of the. defendants and
each Of them, “and. all persons: claiming
fy. hroguh and unaer them oF shen
them, be forever forecloned. and wagres
tn om any neta in oe to said
Droperty’ oF any’ part thereof.
HICHARD winson,
mk noRei
Ationieys for Piainums,
Postoriice and often address: i Mie
yan" block, Seattle, King County, Wash
ington,
First pub., July 5; last, Aug. 16
CORCORAN NOTICE.
IN THE SUPERIOR CovRT or THE
Stato of Washington, for the County of
King. “Anthony Corcoran et uxe Phalne
nts va. Exieiman-Corcoran Co.) a cor
pordtbon, et al! Defendants, “No. 33th
Notlce to Creditors,
‘To, the Creditors of Eshelman-Corcoran
Go,."and to" all others 'whor It may
all "persons "having claims. against the
Fenclman- Corcoran, Co. to present thelt
claims duly Veriied, xs requir law,
Within ‘tei days. from" dhe date ot this
Rotlee, to kzdwara 0. Burdon, Receiver of
Said. oheiman-Corcoran Coy at’ oom 205
Washington Bullding, in the City of Be=
aie, King County, State of Washington,
Dated this 7th day of June, Wil, the day
of the fist publication hereot.
EDWARD 0, BURDON,
Resetvar of Ueshelman-Coreman to.