Seattle Republican
Friday, May 9, 1902
Seattle, Washington
Page text (machine-generated)
The SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
POLITICAL POT PIE.
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VOL. VIII, NO. 50
Tomorrow (Saturday) the Republic can state central committee will be in session in Tacoma for the purpose of fixing the apportionment as well as the date for the next state convention. The call was issued some ten days ago and a full meeting is expected by the chairman. Much comment as to the time the next convention should be held has been heard on the streets during the week, and it seems to be the consensus of opinion that the day of the convention be fixed about the first or second week in August. If it is fixed at that time the various counties of the state can in the meantime hold their respective county conventions and no county need hold but one convention this year. A majority of the party leaders favor the one convention idea and they favor the state convention being fixed for some day in early August in preference to some day in June or July for should the date of the convention be fixed for some time in June it would mean that a majority of the counties in the state would be compelled to hold two conventions, which does not meet political approval a little bit.
. . .
From dispatches from Washington, D. C., it is learned that Ide's confirmation will not be opposed any further by Senator Foster as the charges which he filed against him have fallen flat and the president refuses to entertain them any further. If Mr. Ide succeeds in getting confirmed for the position for which he has been named he can compliment himself of having won the hardest fought battle from a political standpoint ever waged in the state of Washington, for the reader will remember that the entire congressional delegation from the state of Washington with the exception of Senator Turner, who is a Democrat, and could do him no good, was practically against him. While Cushman may have favored him to some extent, yet such an appointment was beyond his reach and he could only use side influence one way or the other.
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Notwithstanding the fact that Senator Foster openly admitted to the Associated Press a few days ago that the only serious charge against the appointment of Jesse Frye to the United States district attorneyship was that he was incompetent, yet it seems highly probable after all that the president has finally concluded at the earnest solicitation of Senator Foster to appoint Mr. Frye to the position, his incompetency to the contrary not withstanding. Mr. Frye if he succeeds in getting the place will remember that he has been on the gridiron quite a while, and he, like Mr. Ide, will remember of having waged and won the hardest political battle of his life. Senator Foster has stood by Mr. Frye perhaps more because Frye became a traitor tothe Wilson cause than anything else for it is characteristic of Senator Foster to not stay by one man very long at a time.
Later—Mr. Frye has been appointed
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When confronted with the statement that it was their intention to deadlock the next legislature, the Preston push made no denial of the charge and they now go on record at their own request as preferring to deadlock the next legislature rather than see anyone save Haired Preston elected. The Piemaker does not believe that this is the Seattle spirit nor any part of it. He believes that the Seattle spirit wishes Harold Preston elected to the United States senate and will move heaven and earth to accomplish that, but he does not believe that the Seattle spirit wishes to see the state of Washington crippled at the national capital because forsooth, it cannot get what it, the Seattle spirit, wants at the hands of the next legislature of this state. If the Preston push is wise it will not persist in putting such an issue prominent before the Republicans of King county less it serve as a boomerang to their own cause. There is no denying the fact that King county is dead crazy, using a vulgar expression, for a United States senator and will vote for a yellow dog in order to succeed, but it is not so married to that idea a sto be willing to prevent some other yellow dog or reputable citizen from being elected if it is apparent to her that her yellow dog or reputable citizen cannot be elected.
Historical Grief
SPOKANE POLITICS.
SPOKANE POLITICS.
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And now comes Judge W. H. White commonly known as Warhorse White, and announces his intentions in the future to support Republican nominees at the polls. What has brought this wonderful change over this lifelong Democrat is not explainable at this titme. "What does all this mean?" said a well known citizen on the streets one day this week; "Colonel Blethen is supporting Harold Preston, and Warhorse White has announced his Republican conversion, and yet both of these men are warm personal friends of Senator Turner, who is a candidate for re-election at the hands of the coming legislature, which will be in session in less than eight months from now. It would seem to me that these well known Democrats have some kind of a joker in their sleeves, which they propose to play at the proper time."
. . .
The friends of Judge R. A. Ballinger are still urging him to announce himself as a King County candidate for Congress and he has the same under adviseemt and it is highly probable that his candidacy will be officially announced within a week or more.
Hon. John E. Humphries having twice saved his friend, Will E. Humphrey from almost certain political defeat, now feels that Mr. Humphrey should aid him in his candidacy for supreme judge instead of himself being a candidate for Congress. Turn about is fair play.
Mt. Zion Baptist church, (old University Grounds) Rev. J. Gordon Pherson, pastor. Preaching 11 a. m., subject, "Heaven"; Sabbath school 12:30; Young People's Bible Class and Praise Service 3 p. m.; sermon 8 p. m., subject, "Gamblers and Gambling." Let every good citizen come and hear this sermon.
SPOKANE, May 7.—Are the candidates for the United States senate from the different parts of the state afraid of Spokane county? Why are none of them, except John L. Wilson, making any attempt to secure support from this county? It certainly seems strange that they do not look to Spokane for aid, for there always has been an element in the county which is opposed to the ex-senator. But this opposition seems to be little more than mere opposition. It is against one man, but not for any one. Perhaps the opposition to Mr. Wilson would be more effective if it had some one to fight for as well as to fight against.
1
It is said that Senator Preston, of King county, expects material support from east of the mountains in his fight for United States senator. But it is not certain that his hopes will be realized. His stand for railroad legislation was very gratifying to a large portion of the people of Eastern Washington, but this is all they know about him—this and the fact that the governor of the state seems to be putting forth every effort to secure Mr. Preston's election. But it has been demonstrated that neither the governor nor Mr. Preston knows the people of the eastern side of the state, and up to the time the governor went into office both of these gentlemen knew scarcely anything of the politics of Eastern Washington. The governor made some acquaintances on his recent tour of the state, but in so brief a trip he naturally was unable to learn but little of the politics and to become acquainted with but few of the people. As the would-be senator from King county, the people east of the Cascades never have been honored with his acquaintance, and of him and his record only know that he stands with them against the railroads. The result is there are but few Preston men in Spokane county, and there are no organized efforts in his behalf. Nor does the governor think any material aid can be given his favorite candidate by throwing to Spokane any plums in the way of appointments. Whitman and Walla Walla counties seem to be of more interest to him. But if Senator Preston expects to have no votes in the legislature from Spokane county he certainly can have but little aid from Eastern Washington, for there are only three other localities east of the mountains where there will be any Republican votes to speak of. One
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1902
ROSLYN BUDGET
Wanted—A first class barber in Ros
lyn. Address P. O. Box 142.
Rev. S. S. Freeman, pastor of the A. M. E. church, spent a week in the city of Seattle, the guest of Rev. M. Scott.
The Baptist church is still gathering souls. The pastor baptized four last Sunday, one by immersion, three by sprinkling.
The G. U. O. of O. F. will have their thanksgiving services Sunday, May 11 2 p. m. at the Baptist church. Rev Beekem of Spokane will preach.
The Gem Restaurant, the leading restaurant of this city, is owned by Mr. Chas. Wesley, and is doing a prosperous business. Nothing succeeds like success.
It is an ill wind that blows nobody good. Hold your breath and wait. Did you hear the latest? A double wedding is to take place soon. Watch The Republican.
Langston Lodge No. 1, K. of P., has three goat riders for the near future. The wives and daughters of the Knights of Pythias have banded themselves together as a club, which means another society. Roslyn has five lodges for the men and two for the women.
Last Sunday was a beautiful spring day and the churches were all well attended. Rev. J. P. Brown of the Baptist church has made an addition to his church services by organizing a young people's meeting, with Mr. Richard Plesant president. We feel safe in saying it will be a success.
Rev. Freeman brings good news to us from Seattle. He says if we don't hurry to meet Seattle, the way Seattle is building she will come to us. Young men, a hint to the wise is sufficient. Seattle has the young ladies, and smart ones at that. Who will dare to go?
Mother Nature hereabouts has swept the hillsides, and garlanded the villages with green herbs and flowers. The dark and dreary scenes of winter have disappeared, and the mountains are bedeeted with sparkling gems lit up by the glorious sun. "Oh the sunshine, blessed sunshine."
POLITICS.
of these is the Walla Walla country and the senator from King county is not deluding himself with the hope of capturing Levi Ankeny's stamping grounds. Another spot where there are two or three Republican votes to be had is one of the districts of Whitman county, and the governor and Mr. Preston are making a big effort to capture this district. The Yakima country is the only other place where they can hope to have votes from east of the mountains.
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Mr. Ankeny is but little better off in Spokane county than is Mr. Presson. He has been in the field longer, but he has so far no particular following here. In the past even the men who have been opposed to Mr. Wilson have seldom been for Mr. Ankeny. Yet Mr. Ankeny is making some effort to do something. B. D. Crocker of Walla Walla, has made a number of visits to the city, and at the present time J. B. Wilson, also of Walla Walla, is in the city looking over the field and making an effort to secure a working basis for the Walla Walla man. What he will be able to accomplish remains to be seen.
It is probable that Congressman Jones, of Yakima county, has more friends in Spokane than any of the other men who are spoken of for United States senator and who do not live in this county. Yet it is the understanding in this city that Mr. Jones is in no sense a candidate for the senate, but will ask and receive a renomination for congress. But if later matters should change and the senatorship should go his way, Spokane would be as willing to see Mr. Jones secure the place as to have it go to any other man outside of Spokane. Another man who also is well thought of in Spokane and who is occasionally mentioned for the senatorship is Miles C. Moore, of Walla Walla. If the senatorship can not come to this city, there is a strong feeling that Mr. Moore would be a better choice than Mr. Ankency or than any man west of the mountains.
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But there is a general feeling through the eastern part of the state that it would be very dangerous to the interests of the people to permit the west side to have both senators. The west side has the big end of the vote.
but there is no reason why it should have both senators; and the very fact that the west side has the biggest vote is the very reason for the belief that it will never do to permit both senators to come from the other side of the mountains, for if the Sound once secures both senators it will be very difficult to get one back, and there would be nothing which would so strengthen the desire for the formation of a new state east of the mountains as to be without a senator from this side. The people east of the mountains are as proud of their state as are those who live on the Sound, and the talk of a new state never has been gratifying to us. But to lose both senators and to feel there was little chance, at least for years to come, to get one of them back would certainly induce many people to call for a division. It is this feeling of fear which gives Mr. Ankeny his strength in the Walla Walla country and which gives Mr. Wilson his strength in the northwestern counties of the state and which will prevent Mr. Preston receiving many votes from east of the mountains, and which may unite the forces of Mr. Ankeny and Mr. Wilson either for one of these two men or for some other Eastern Washington candidate. The people believe that it would be a great injustice to the rest of the state to have both senators living within forty miles of each other, and they will unite against anything of the kind. There is a belief that if Seattle wants a United States senator she should wait until Senator Foster's term expires and then if the people of the west side say give it to Seattle, well and good. But one of the senators belongs east of the mountains, and the people always will demand it. It is true that Spokane once had both senators and one congressman. But every one recognized the fact that this was an accident, and that it would be absolutely an impossibility for the city to keep even two of them, say nothing of three. One of the senators was certain to go to the west side at the very next election. Every one knew it would, and it did. The fact that Spokane chanced to have both for one term was no danger to any other part of the state. But if the west side should get both, the people know it would be very difficult to get one back.
At the present time Spokane has at least one, and possibly two, prospective candidates for congress. William M. Ridpath has announced himself as a candidate, and is making a fight to secure Spokane county's delegation to the state convention. At the present time no one is opposing him. Alonzo M. Murphy in the past has been a candidate for this position and probably would like to again seek the nomination. Both Mr. Ridpath and Mr. Murphy are anti-Wilson men. Among the opponents of Mr. Wilson there is a strong belief that their cause will be helped if they can present the name of a good man as Spokane's candidate for congress. Mr. Murphy and Mr. Ridpath are not the only men whose names have been spoken of in this connection. Frank T. Post, Judge James Z. Moore and W. J. C. Wakefield are among others mentioned. The men who wish to beat Mr. Wilson think they would succeed if they can first secure the nomination of a Spokane man for congress. But they are having some difficulties to overcome. They cannot agree among themselves who to support for the position. Col. Ridpath, it must be acknowledged, is not a strong candidate. He has returned too recently from the ranks of the Silver Republicans and from among the followers of Senator Turner to make a desirable candidate. On the other hand, if another candidate is brought out against Mr. Ridpath it divides the forces of the anti-Wilson people and enables him to defeat them the more easily if he chooses to do so. Further, to support a Spokane candidate for congress is a direct threat to Congressman Jones, who comes from east of the mountains and who will not want his chances of renomination endangered by a candidate in the field from Spokane county. The result is that to bring forward a candidate for congress from Spokane is fraught with danger to the people who desire to defeat Mr. Wilson. A shrewd politician might manage it, but the question is where is the man who is capable of doing it.
One of the prettiest political fights in the Republican party this fall will be in the Eighth Senatorial District, which comprises the southern part of Whitman county. This has been inclined to be a Wilson district in the past, but Mr. Ankeny has had a strong following there. Mr. Preston and Governor McBride have now come in and are supposed to have captured the district for the Seattle man by securing State Senator Oliver Hall, who has been one of Mr. Wilson's strongest friends, and by appointing Mr. J. W. Arrasmith as grain inspector. But the question now is can these two men turn the district against the man it has been for in the past to another
who is so little known. Will it be a three-cornered fight? If it is, no man can name the winner now. Or will two of the factions combine against the third? If so, which two? It would seem that Mr. Preston and Mr. Ankeny could scarcely unite, for if there is any one candidate for senator whom Governor McBride is unalterably opposed to it is Levl Ankeny. On the other hand, would the governor and his friends consent to unite with John L. Wilson much more willingly than with Mr. Ankeny? As to an alliance between Wilson and Ankeny, this is as improbable as the others. Therefore it would seem that the Eighth Senatorial District is to see a battle royal between the three senatorial aspirants.
Spokane and Whitman are the only counties in the northeastern part of the state which sent Republicans to the last legislature, and there were only seven members in both houses from both these counties. The Republicans see many reasons for expecting better results this fall. In the first place, four of the five districts of Spokane county are Republican and the cause of the Republicans has grown materially in the past two years, while the Democrats of the city of Spokane are badly divided. These four districts will elect ten members. In Whitman county one district is safely Republican and will elect three members, and the Republicans hope to carry the other. Another fact is expected to contribute to increased Republican majorities this fall. This is the influx of Eastern people which has been going on for the past two years—not those who have come in the past few months, for they will not have been here long enough to vote—but those who came last year and the year before. There are several thousands of these and there is every reason to believe that a considerable majority of these men are Republicans. This will materially and almost certainly increase the majorities in Republican districts, and will assist the Republicans to obtain legislative votes in such districts as Senator Hallett's
Continued on page 4.
Matthews is a star, but if reports be true he has made a few cracks since
PASSING EVENTS
PASSING EVENTS
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A court martial, which has been looking into the orders issued by General Smith in the Philippines, which were to the effect to kill everyone found in certain villages, from the cradle to the grave, and leaving such villages razed to the ground, after hearing all of the evidence, both pro and con, has decided to exonerate the general under the pretext that he did not go outside of the law in such cases, and the Post-Intelligencer suggests that General Smith be lost sight of and the rules and regulations of the war department be scored in the future. Because the rules and regulations of the war department permits officers to do things in the excitement of war that is extremely barbarous under other circumstances is no justification for General Smith doing as he did when fighting savages. Mercy instead of retaliation should be the watch-word of civilized nations, and yet General Smith, representing one of the most advanced civilizations in the world, issues an order that for cruelty and barbary would have made a Hottentot blush, and still he is not censured by a court of inquiry simply because the order was in the bounds of the rules and regulations of the war department. It never occurred to the people of this country that they were sending a lot of savages over to the Philippines and that one class of savages were combatting against another, but they did think they were sending Christian gentlemen over there to teach and civilize the people without using undue cruelty and barbary on them.
President Roosevelt has twice used the veto power since he has been president, and in that he has used it just as frequently as did President McKinley during the entire time he occupied the presidential chair. The veto power is one that has not been often resorted to by the presidents, because when exercised it showed that the president believed that he had more judgment about what should and should not be done than the entire congress, and therefore all presidents have used the veto power with much discretion. The first six presidents of the United States used the veto power but nine times; Jackson, twelve times; Lincoln, three times; Johnson, twenty-one times; Grant, forty-three times; Cleveland, 343 times; McKinley, two times; Roosevelt, two times, making a grand total of 498 times that the presidents of the United States up to the present day have used the veto
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AFRO - AMERICANISM
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The people of the North have once more surrendered to the people of the South, and as in the past the Negro has been the sacrifice offered up by the North to the altars of the South. When the Women's Federation of Clubs in Los Angeles a few days ago adopted the Georgia platform, which virtually meant the exclusion of all colored women from becoming a part of the national organization, the Northern women displayed a weakness like unto that which led up to the great civil war. Either all that the North has done for the elevation of the Negro is wholly wrong or the actions of the women's club at Los Angeles was sinfully wrong. The women coming from the South are poor judges as to the rights of a people whom they have struggled to make brutes instead of human beings of ever since the mind of man runneth not to the contrary. To see Massachusetts and Mississippi joining hands and issues for the suppression of the Negro is a pittable sight and one that won't meet public approval when the representatives from Massachusetts return to their homes. This organization of women's clubs was set on foot for the purpose of elevating women, and yet it declares in open convention that it has no intention or desire to elevate a certain class of women, and for no other purpose than because their skins are darker.
Seattle has recently imported a Presbyterian preacher from Tennessee who for eloquence and pulpit oratory is hard to beat. Dr. Matthews, who is pastor of the First Presbyterian church of this city, is the man referred to and his regular Sunday services call for an outpouring of Seattle's leading citizens such as has no other preacher since the creation of the First Presbyterian church. In the pulpit Dr. Matthews is a star, but if reports be true he has made a few cracks since
power. In further commenting on this it might be noted that though Jackson was a powerful, self-willed man and had many disputes with congress over public measures, he only used the veto power twelve times. Johnson, who was president at the time of the reconstruction, and who came within one vote of being impeached and who, by the way, is the only one of our presidents that was ever put on an impeachment trial, felt called upon to use the veto power twenty-one times, and of those twenty-one times fifteen of them were overridden by congress. Grant, who followed in the wake of Johnson, differed in many instances from congress and vetoed forty-three different measures, but none of the measures vetoed by him were passed over his veto. Cleveland, as has already been observed, used his veto power more than all of the other presidents combined, having vetoed 301 measures during his first term and forty-two during his second. Representing, as he did, the Democratic idea from a Southern standpoint, he attempted to favor the South by vetoing many of the bills passed by Northern congressmen and succeeded right well Washington, the father of his country vetoed but two measures; John Adams none; Jefferson, the patron saint of Democracy, none; Monroe, none; Var Buren, none; Lincoln, the emancipator three, and Arthur, four.
The government has recently issued orders for one of its revenue cutters to proceed to the shores of Russia and
Continued on page 4
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ERICANISM
he has been here concerning the way we going to put him under a cross fire less he uses more judgment in future. Recently, so goes the story, the doctor was terribly shocked at seeing some colored children attending the public school, at which the majority of the children were white. Now we all know that the white and colored children do not attend school together in the South, and we know that such it quite objectionable to Dr. Matthews and all other Southern people, but Seattle is not in the South and it has none of the Southern ideas, and when a divine starts into making a warfare on the way public affairs are conducted in a new city in which he has been called to preach he is going out of his way to hunt trouble. The people of Seattle feel that they are just about as intelligent as Dr. Matthews, and if they want Negroes to attend the public schools here it is none of Dr. Matthews' business, and The Republican takes this opportunity of serving notice on Dr. Matthews that the journalistic hell hounds will be turned loose on him if he goes to meddling into the public affairs of this city, and especially such affairs as touch the race question. The members of the First Presbyterian church did not import Dr. Matthews here at a salary of $5,000 per year to teach them anti-color ideas, but to preach Christ and him crucified, and it is suggested that he go to work at that and stick to his text or the devil will be to pay.
The Republican sees no cause for alarm in President Roosevelt's removing a few colored men in the South from federal offices and appointing in their seated white men. The conditions may warrant such a change and whether the conditions warrant the change or not it does not mean so very much after all to any race to boast of a few federal appointments. If the removing of colored federal office holders will mean that the men removel will be driven into business channels instead of political channels as they have been ever since they have been enfranchised it would be a God send to the Negroes of this country, for one successful business man among the colored folk is better than a dozen successful politicians. The Negro race of the United States, as has been so frequently said in these columns, want business men first of all and then politicians will follow in their wake. When the race gets better supplied with business concerns business men and business firms and factories, mills and mines and the like then it will be in a better condition by a thousand fold.
One of the most creditable special numbers that has ever been issued by a colored journalist was the Florida Sentinel, which was sent out a few weeks ago. From a business standpoint it surpassed anything that has yet come this way issued by colored talent and it was full and overflowing with well written articles bearing upon the colored race and its condition in the various Southern states. When colored journalists seek to issue more creditable publications both regularly as well as special they will be more credit to the race and will be a steping stone to a higher industrial state which the Negro is struggling to reach in order to compete with the efforts and successes of the members of the white race throughout this country.
The notable dead of the week are Rear Admiral W. T. Sampson, who died at his home in Washington City last Tuesday evening after a lingering illness covering a number of months. Archbishop Michael Augustin Corrigan, one of the notable bishops of the Catholic church, who died in New York City last Monday evening. F Bret Harts, the well known American author, died in London last Tuesday evening. Mr. Harts was probably one of the best American writers of the age; and Hon. Amos T. Cummings of Baltimore, Maryland, one of the most notable members of Congress.
A Great Purchase That.
The Daulton Carpet Co. purchased the stock of the John Schram Co., consisting of Steel Ranges, Stoves, Graniteware, Tinware, etc., at 65c on the dollar.
If you want a stove or range now is your opportunity.
DAULTON CARPET CO.,
1020 First Avenue.
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Witte el
The Seattle Republican
Established May, 1894.
H. R, Cayton...............-.. Editor
Susie Revels Cayton.......Associate
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Year... .ececeseseeeseee $2.00
Six Months... ..cscssceseee 1.00
Three Months ...-.....-0s..1. 60
Entered at the Postoffice at Seattle
as Secondclass Mail Matter.
Bona Fide Circulation..........2,500
Admiral Schley should feel su:
premely happy he has succeeded in
Killing Admiral Sampson,
Seatleites are determined to make
saloons pay $1000 per year sensational
Griffin to the contraray notwithstand-
ing.
Billy Hearst is continuing to estab-
lish daily papers, Denver and Salt
Lake being his latest flelds of opera-
titon. Hearst certainly has newspa-
‘ten on die ake
He or she who waists valuable time
trying to prove the Negro is not just as
good a citizen and equally as deserv-
ing of every right and privilege as any
other American, is himself lacking in
those very qualities.
‘That deposit of asbestos found in
Skagit county will prove a useful ar-
ticle for Governor McBride in order
to shield himself from the hot shots
that is going to be sent his way dur-
inig the next two years.
ee
Lo! the poor red man has been get-
ting in his graft on congress just like
the other fellow, as $50,000 has been
appropriated for the Puyallup Indian
school and $20,000 more for the erec-
tion of new buildings on the grounds.
‘The mere fact that John L. Wilson
was responsible for there being such
@ personage from the state of Wash-
ington as Governor Henry McBride
does seem to worry Hon. Henry Me-
Bride in the slightest degree.
We surmise when all of the federal
appointments for this state will have
been made President Roosevelt will
be ready to remark: “I have had the
devil's own time filling them and have
not made very much of a job of it after
an?
‘That peculiar animal down at the
police headquarters, labeled John Cor-
ett, became powerfully incensed the
other day because a Idwyer laughed
while he was trying to talk. John evi-
dently did not realize the awkward.
ness of the situation,
Already Snohomish county is ready
to turn over $550 as its part of the $10,-
000 that is to be raised for preliminary
work to get together the state exhibit
for the big St. Louis fair in 1904-5.
She, however, has nto sent the money
down as yet and thus far it is only
talk,
If Spokane will funish the various
delegates to the state convention with
round trip tickets it will stand a good
show of getting the next state con-
vention, but under no other circum-
stances will it be able to land the
plum even though it has not had a
state convention since ’94.
Lead by Senator Waburton of Ta-
coma, Governor McBride has already
thrown down the gauntlet to the rail-
roads of this state and if his idea
prevails at the polls next November
drastic anti-railroad legislation may be
expected to be enacted by his legisla-
ee
The News-Recorder of Pasco, this
state, makes a ten strike when it
says, “Just because a man’s name Is
Money it is no excuse for his trying
to ride on his face.” We believe even
Mr. Money is now aware of the fact
that to ride on a street car in Washing.
totn City he must have money.
With the Times supporting Preston
and White declaring himself a Repub-
ican and both of them having been
strong advocates as well a9 admirers
in the past of Senator Turner, it be-
gins to look as though The Republl
can’s story about Turner and the
‘Times turning Republican has more
truth than poetry in it.
The friends of Frank Cushman
would like to know of the Yakima Re-
Public, if it is fighting Cushman at the
solicitation of its own townsmen, who
is also a candidate for re-election as is
Cushman. The Yakima Republic if it
has Mr. Jones’ interests at heart is
making a mistake trying to stab Fran-
cis Cushman in the back.
Over his own signature a Tacoma
reader of the Seattle Republican rises
to remark: “The amateur sheet styled
“The Spectator,’ known in Tacoma as
the ‘knocker,’ has no following, and
no truth is attached to its weekly sen:
sations. They are all false alarms,”
All the same “Commonwealth” of Se
attle, one-half blackmail and the other
hait graft.
Editor Clayson of the Patriarch says,
“A woman in Seattle can have eighty
legal husbands between the ages of
eighteen and sixty providing she work
the divorce mill and the marriage mill
successfully during that time.” Just
how Editor Clayson knows so much
about such things without having ex-
perienced any of them is what puzzles
the editor of The Republican,
‘The friends of Hon. Levi Ankeny of
Walla Walla are ordering the Com-
monwealth, which was started by An-
keny money, discontinued because the |
editor of the paper has found greener
fields in Harold Preston's senatorial
camp. We predict that before another
year will have passed there will be
others doing just as Mr. Ankeny’s
friends are now doing.
—_—_
If Walter Fulton, prosecuting attor-
ney of King county, is not between
the devil and the deep sea than he is
not very far from it. He cannot afford
‘to prosecute the gamblers and he can-
‘not afford to turn a deaf ear to the
wishes of the Anti-Saloon league as he
would loose many votes which ever
course he pursues. No wonder he is
trying to wiggle out of doing either
one of them.
Before Hon. Thurston Daniels laid
down his editorial pen and retired
from the newspaper world completely
he should have stopped and considered
what effect that would have had on the
general public. Mr. Daniels in the ex-
citement of the moment seems to have
forgotten that the people of this state
would absolutely go to the eternal
bow-wows if he did not editorially ad-
vise them every week. We appeal to
= Daniels to reconsider his rash act
and again take up his trenchment pen
‘to enlighten the benighted citizens of
‘this commonwealth less they drift into
‘heathenism.
The Seattle Republican
WILL MOVE
to
DENNY BLOCK
1414 Second Ave.,
SOON
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, tn and for the Coun-
ty'of King
HA, Strout, plaintim, vs, Charies Myers,
Jane Doe Myers, ls wits, and ail’ persons
unknown, If any, naving oF claiming fo have
aan Interest or estate in or to the herein:
After described ‘real property, defendants.
Notice and Summons.
‘State of Washington to Charles Myers,
Jane’ Doe “Myers: and ail persons ‘unkuoway
if any, having or claiming to have an inter:
08 estate in on to the hereinafter de
setibed eal property !
‘You and etch of You are hereby noted
that the abuve named plalutit, EA. Stroue
{the owner and holder of eertiicnie of de
Hoquency numbered B. 11,204, issued by the
‘Treasurer of King County, Washington, on
the "tly day ot November? 1001, for. tases
on te following Gencribed real pfoperty. it:
ated in King County, State ot Washington,
Lot lx. block forty-nine, of 3. J. Moss!
Pust Addition to the City of Seatile.
‘That said certificate was issued. for the
um of $64.75 for the delinguent taxes, in:
fered ennile tad cots gu ad eal Bro
Gry fOF the years 1882-85-84-80-86S1-88°90-
81-02°98-04:05 ana 1806,
‘Post on the same day, to-wit, November
Zen, 2001, pint. in order to Grenerve his
Fights under sald certificate of Gelingueacy”
‘to aald County ‘Treasurer, the gum of
Bizo, being delinquent taxes ‘ant Initest
pen, sald read property for the years 1807°
98-99 and 1000, belng segregated as follows,
For the year 1807..........$1 83
Bor the year 1898 022222.2.52 $8
For the year 1800222222111 1 68
Fee nn ee ee. 163
id to satarate Of Interest on the amounts
pald fo sala’ County Treasurer for sald eee
Uitcats and’ said cubsequent payments afer
Bald ta Ub percent per auauen fon te
‘ate of atch payments,
‘nat Charlee Myers and Jane Doe Myers,
his wite, are the owners of sald teal Seen
“ag ou, are hereby gieted and am.
moned apnear within sity dave aie
diate of the est ‘peblication of thes Soaee
Hath Gayot earn apo <atyeattt, the
f a excloatve
ay” of anid tr pubecuons and. Seeeed
tRk set ithe, ove en oat oe
fay, tout due cy forecia and fe
fave ot your failure oto ds Jouieaont i
ie rendred herein, Toreiosng the Hen’ of
Said faxes and. cons agniuet the fands'asd
Bretnves. aforesaid, whith will be wade ae
Ratinty "te “samme,
porns & “pdWwEhia “ations
intailG, rooms 4 to 8 Boxter Hortse Beak
Baliding, ‘Seattla, Washington, peat wien
Ail procter ay ‘be ered
March ia, April 26.
NOTICESheri's Sale of eal Patate,
‘Slate of Washington, County of Klug, ts
Sherie’s Omee:
By’ virtue of ‘an execution layued out of
tesa dnersle Sunil Coat ee
ounty, onthe Sti day’ of iat, $5034
the ‘ler thensof, In the case of Flege Ne.
Lyon, and dob Be ean eg
18iGe.ana'to me, ax cherie, ase aa Ne
iivered
Sotlce te hereby given that 1 will pro-
ged to sell at publle auction to the nighest
Bis cy hin the hore reid
Sige a.m. on the Tehtday of ake, A, Ho
0 tore the our iter apr tel
ng County, tm the State of Washingt
ail Se the sight, Wile and meee ae ae:
‘ald’ defendant, ‘Joun E "Deng Sea's
ihe, following ‘dectbad. property, atoneek
in'xlng’ County, Stave of Washingt a
wits "fot by ia’ Bock 23, of weet Ae
ition io! Nézth Remi, vid an as
Droperty” of defendant. ‘JohnH. Deny, 3s
fathety & fodgment, suiounting to mine hus:
ted. thee aad. T3100" dolla, wie ates
er aie, gee cent persanauth Bitte se
Shr, all cont ot ule favor of a,
ated this 8th day of May, 1002,
BD. CUDITER, Shore.
By R; CUDIHER, Sherif, _
V Btate of Washlagiea, Ge ting tone
tate of Washington, for King County.
Fills Marrison, Plalniif, vs, Corneltus 3:
Ryan and Jane Doe liyah, his wifes whtoas
{Fue given name to unknown, and all per.
Sons,S It any, having “Of “clelatag Pn
Interest in and’ to the hereinattce de.
scribed retl property, Defendants: Notice
‘The State of Washington to Cornellus J.
Ryan and Jane Doe Eyan, his sues J.
If your teeth are dirty If you want them clean |
That's your business That's our business
<_ FREES
‘Teeth Cleaned and Examined Free
Teeth Extracted Without Pain, and without charge when other |
work is ordered. :
Full Set of Teeth «....sese.cccesceseeseeeesees 84.00 :
Gold Crown, 22K Soiid Gold Top... 8.00 :
Qed Fling Cc cccias se TD :
Silver Fillings... s-ss 50 3
Gomnent FiMingS 6-2. sliecasccceneee, 8D ;
Seattle Dental Parlors
Dr. F. H. SMITH ;
717 Second Avenue 11, 12,18, 14 Hinekley Block. 3
Hours: 84. m.to8 p.m. Sundays, 10. m.to2 p. m. 3
i a a ee eae Nie ere gr a
panels Gomlentownee cotee ait oe
Owners ‘or reputed owners of, and all per
sons ‘unknown having “or claiming an in-
terest’ Or estate. In and to the hereinafter
Geseribed Feat property
You"and each of you are hereby notified
thatthe above named plaincif, Hille” Mor
\eeua.” te: the holder of ae
tiftcates Ne. B. 12050, B. 12051, B. 12052,
B. 12033, B. 12034, B.” 12055, B. 12006.
B. 12097, B. 12038, B: 12030) B. 12060;
B. 12061, B. 12062, B. 12063, B. 12068
B. 12063, B. 12086) B: 12067, B. 12068,
B. 12060, B. 12070, BL ison oo 12g8s.
‘Kite Coasts. State of Wann
King County, ‘state of Washington, embrac-
Inge folleigg geal proper’ toed a
lhe Gounty Wtshingn, ad ure par
tary denctben ‘tn foo, tore
Tote tandeh 8 bee SO Tn, 12,13,
1418 ese tae i0s fo. 30 20 20'and 3
tn isa, Math & ats Addon ta a
Gag et
at sa éruteates were inured on the
det dny of April 90 acs forthe
S11 Yor ihe dengiest iter toe tie
Sear 1305, which ‘stint Sehr atten the
Bate of 15 "per cents ber antuin from the
Bit of alapayinet,
Sou! and each of Fou are herety directa
snd minohe io pet with ayy
tert the date ot {Reheat pbhiatio 2
thir nummootexiasre of dais oF
few "puetion orgie. this Gor ase
ter the tik yf Sin, Taba ac
fhe above entitiea actin tn tie abate oa
tied court ae bag the uta
eile Su the edu inneabe Sp
Fillore foto do Jedpinent wulthe. Sedge
foretoning the en tor sid tases ant Sen
funtnat the real property lands’ an ane
te iain ome”
ELLIS. MORRISON,
alain,
epwarp vox TOBE!
| iieaty Yor hati,
P. 0, aaa, oft Stata Cice hag
seni: Rise" Soames, Washlagton.|
tee oe ag ae
NOTICE OF SALE OF SCHOOL LAND—
Notice ts hereby given that on the 7th day
of June, 1902, at the hour of 2 o'clock t
the’ afternoon, on sald day, at the door ot
the ‘Court "House ‘in’ King’ County, Wash
Ington, ‘the following deseribed school and
Will be sold at publte auetion to the highest
Bidder therefor’ to-wit:
The AW of NW Sec. 16, Tp. 25, N.
BGP appraised at "$480.00," Inciuaing
Higher ; timber appraised at $217.00.
al eho! ahd wll be abd foro te
than the appraised value and subject to
Improvements situated thereon, and as. ap
Praised by the Board of ‘State Land Com
Missioners in the. manner provided by
law, ‘a statement of which Is now on fi
In the office of the Auditor of said county.
‘Terms of sale are: Under contract, ‘one
tenth fo be pald om the day of sale, and one
tenth ‘annoaily:thereatter om the’ test day
of March of euch year, with. accrued inter
est on deferred balance at 6 ‘per cent. per
annum: Provided, ‘That any. pirchaser” may
make fall paymene at any tne wad obtals
‘The ‘purchaser of such land will be re
quired fo pay at the ‘time of sale purchase
Price of ans improvements or valuable ta
feriat ‘on stich land in full. In addition te
the one-tenth of the sale price.
“he above “described ‘school lands. are
offered for sale by virtue of an order of the
Hoard of State Land Commissioners, mand
on the 24th day of April, 1003, duly’ cer
{ited "and fae in efi of sald ‘Counts
udltor.
GEO. B. LAMPING,
County Auditor.
Fagg AGNEW, Deputy
Dated at Seatite, Wash, this Ist day of
May, 1902.
NORE ee aa Eh eee oe
ended fo any’ and all person in any’ wi
inte concerned with the Dnt
& Pendleton Company, corporation, tha
4 meeting’ of the stockholders of sala ‘i
Dimock & Pendleton Company will be. hel
Benieencms et ne Digock Fendt
Company, in the City of Seattle, King Cow
toy Rats Jot Washington. on ‘Monday. ah
th day'of duly, A. 1003, at the hour o
40 'elock inthe morning of sald day. th
object and purpose of which meeting’ ist
Inereage te capital Stock of ani "he
Dimock & "Pendleton Company. ffum ke
44.00, which ts ts present capital, to $10.
400.00, Re which tlhe and place Yode
the ptocolders Of al company Wil
hv. for the urpote of decermnng hethe
or pot stld Capital stock shall be increased
And ‘further, any_and ‘ail persons inter
ested. In such proceedingy ane’ required
te Present then'and there
ated at "Seattle, “Washington, this, the
sun “day of May, "i002, the day" of th
irst ‘publleation’hereot,
BC. DIMOCK,
PiNINPAS PENDLETON, Jr,
TENOS "J. RICKARD,
‘Trustees Of the said The Dinek & Pendle
tom Cite.
See ite ae, a
ES ie aa ar Na
ieee orotate heed
No. "38050,""Notice nd’ Susimous.
Baar hits It wn
Simian ie cat nt
ty meta
You and each of you ate hereb notised
ica aa, Ri, dt
aes wip Sieh
tee uh Sh ei!
Bont ie due eat haat
ae
piace ean hake
‘Phat the sald certiteaics were lasued._ as
sone hanna ie yer
ear io oe hac
salad ak thane
for the years 1803, 1894 and 1505, respec:
iio dade (eatin a
San ds et ar chee
25 Ghceaet are
fe ies es ates gar
sare tied Gate ela
fe ode aay eat cat
is (a nie Sarnia ds Se
tat fg ita ete
he enon tal ar td
ia gta tit cal Sale
ee eae ine ieee
Sate eatin Shi
Sr atean file PSY ac
gaa gree es
of sald, date, ‘inthe’ above entiied court,
ada ati ae
i fae tee ee
i, ee de ae
ate nat oy Sa
oats a alt ces
premises heel ‘ngied) ad" dicecting the
eras
te
oe
Le
IN, THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THR
‘State of Washington for ‘ing County.
Bills Morrison, ‘plaiaeim va. HM. Me:
Entire, Margaret Kerl, 8. C. Calderhead,
as Receiver of the Guaranty Loan
‘Trust Company; Waiter Crockett, and all
persons unknown, If any, having 9: claim-
ing an interest of estate In and. tothe
herenatter described Teal ‘promerty de
fendants. No. 35148. "Notlee and’ Sum:
State of Washington :
‘To R. M. Metutire, Margaret Ker! and
Walter “Crockett, who are the owners oF
reputed owners of, and all persons” unc
iowa, claiming, oF Maving ‘an’ interest or
estate in and to the hereinafter described
real property.
Jonah each of you are hereby noted
that the above named plaintif Ellis Mori
gon, Is the holder of ia certain delinquent
tax’ certificate, ‘No, “B10803,.isaued. by the
Treasurer of King County, Washington, em.
bracing the following teal property. ‘sion.
cathe iiek Sa lt
rae alae Aaa Wa RE
TE Oa NT, ea oo
sneer Sea, SY
she ail arama
BRP Seat Shak sual Medd a
Bie ias abe
BAPE yan of November, 101,
puna te Cad ren
Sear
seh rene aries ie
=
Sat Cah ne eM Ay
Ge Saeed
Bute eet
Sta wher art
SEMPRE Ra ea
IO a letra A
Renan edage sates
ee Ger ee eee
ee ee ee
Si elt ade ea
Eu hte Sat tui rat py
Soe
ones get at a hie
EST SS sits seebes Ske n
ee pee ae
pElee persia! "for counts notices Inserted
ee eee ee
Gi acca ieee
apd aa
vere "Sie
000 and Coal ese
Bau Yard Unt
Seattle Clothes Pressing Go.
Tadles’ and gents’ clo
‘leaned, dyed and sepaied
We call for and deliver promptly.
Phone Red 4484. 1007 Third Avenue
D. B. SPELLMAN
Practical Plumber and Gasfitter.
Sanitary Plumbing a Specialty,
212 Columbia Street.
ALBERT HANSEN
JEWELER AND SILVERSMITH
Dealer in
Diamonds, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry,
Silverware, Rich Cut Glass, Ete.
YOUR PIANO
OUR PRICES
TERMS
ARE THE LOWEST
$6.00 Per Month
, Sherman, Clay & Co.
Sign of the Big.
Coffee Pot
Coffee |
OUR 25e. CREAM BLEND |
COFFEE SPECIAL FOR
Rhodes Bros. Co. |
Tea, Coffee and ‘
Crockery House
1214 Second Avenue |
Newcastle
LUMP coat.
Only at the Bunkers of the
Pacifie Goast Go
Phone Main 92. ;
ie Sa teeN dias, ts
Telephone Main 1101, |
neers’ Supply Coy Ine,
Engineers! Supply Co. nc,
GENERAL ENGINEERS’ |
eurpiigs, |
110 Railroad Avenue
Between Yesler Way and {
|
2S
Washington St, ’
SEATTLE, WASH. :
5 SOR CRCRCREAEREROR
§ Every One ‘
‘ Who is fond of music (and ¢
E there are few who are not) j
: doubtless intend to get a 3
é P
’ ° :
> Plano |
. ‘
y 3
J some time, and all of whom wo.
g desire to remember. that we
carry the largest stock of best ;
| makes at attractive prices and é
a ;
3
3 4
,, S, Johnston Co, :
903 SEC. AVE, BURK BLOG.
E ts «6
ee ee
; HH. DEARBORN & CO.
Estate >
BOUGHT AND soLD
TIDE LANDS ‘
A SPECIALTY
Room c
HALLER BLDG. SECOND Av,
AND COLUMBIA sT.
BANKS
SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT
The National Bank Of
Commerce
H.C. HENRY, Pres,
R. R. SPENCER, Cashier.
’s Savingings Bank
People’s Savingings Ban!
Second and Pike. |
Capital $100,000.
Deposits received from $1 to $10,000;|
Tos cea laren aloud
ee
B.C. Neufelder, President,
Ta eer eer,
| Se deer any Gussie
THE PUGET SOUND NATIONAL BANK
OF SEATTLE
Capital stack paid ie $838.00
Be
Jacob Furth, President; J. 8. Gold
emith, Vice Praidents Reve
eas cae
ition of the United Buster
es
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF
SEATTLE, WASH.
Paid up capital ..............$150,000
JAMES D. HOGR, Jr., President.
LESTER TURNER, Cashier.
MAURICE M'MICKEN, Vico Pres.
R. F. PARKHURST, Asst. Cash.
A general banking business trans-
acted. Letters of credit sold on all
principal cities of the world. Special
facilities for collecting on British Co-
jumbia, Alaska and all Pacific North-
west points.
We have a Bank at Cape Nome.
James A. Murray J.P. Gleason W.Y. Lawlor
President, View Pres. | Cashier.
N. E. Corner Second Ave. and Madison
Street, Seattle, U.S. A.
Gapital Stock $200,000.00
4 PER CENT. INTEREST PAID ON
DEPOSITS.
Accepts and Executes All Legal Trusts.
ra I “HE CANADIAN BANK
OF COMMERCE
With which ts amaigamatea
THE BANK OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
Head Office Toronto. Established 1867.
Capital paid up.........$8,000,000.00
(Bight Million Dollars.)
Surplus ............ ....$2,000,000.00
Assets May 81, 1901... .$67,553/578.13,
pe
Accounts of Banks, Corporations, Firms
and Tadividvats solteted.
Drafts Issued avatlable {a any past of the
world.
Interest allowed on ‘Time Deposit
Having established branches at DAWSOX,
WHITE HORSE, SKAGWAY ‘ull ATLIN,
this Hank has "exceptional facilites {oF
ape cep Sa
‘A General Banking Business transacted,
Seattle Branch. A. Cameron,
Cor. See, Ave. and James St. Manager. |
THE NEW CENTURY
TYPEWRITER
The Newest Machine by the Oldest
combens.
The Official Typewriter of the Pan
‘American Exposition.
Used Exclusively by’ the ‘Charleston
ain
Exclusive Award, 300 Machines, by the
Louisiana Purchase’ Exposition Co,
St. Loule, 1908; fifteen machines is
competition
Ball Bearing — Long Wearing
United Typewriter & Supplies Co,
708 Second Ave., Seattle.
Phone Main 865
_J. M. FRINK, Pres. and Supt.
Washington
FOUNDERS
MACHINISTS
AND BOILERMAKERS.
‘Telephone 94.
Works, Grant Street Bridge
Seattle, Wash.
MORAN BROS. CO,
Manufacture and Sell
LUMBER
For All Purposes
SEATTLE - - - -- ~~ wasn.
PHONE BUFF 642
“The Printer” |
214 Spring Street Seattle, Wash.
AR R
<a U
ou} N
SICIEY s
Ts
TWO TRAINS DAILY
TO THE EAST
Leaving Seattle at 7:45 a.m. and.
PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS:
SUPERB DINING CARS
TOURIST SLEEPING CARS
pare
Southern Points, with Through
For information, Time Cards and
Tickets
POINTS EAST
a
SHORTEST AND QUICKEST LINE
The Short Line
To Chicago
and East
IS THE
North-Western Line
All Trough Trains from North Pacific
Coast connect with Trains of this Line
IN UNION DEPOT, ST PAUL.
THE....
NORTH-WESTERN LIMITED
IS THE
FINEST TRAIN
ENTERING CHICAGO.
FW. ce Gen, a
151 Yesler Way Seattle
DON’T GUESS AT IT
but if you are going east write
us for our rates and let us tell
you about the service and accom-
modations offered by the Illinois.
Central Railroad. ‘Through tour-
ist cars via the Ilinois Central
from Pacific Coast to Chicago and
Cincinnati. Don’t fail to write us
about your trip as we are in a
Position to give yon some valu-
able information and assistance.
5319 miles of track over which is
operated some of the finest trains
in the world.
For particulars regarding
freight or passenger rates call on:
or address:
J. C. LINDSEY,
T.R& PA,
142 Third Street,
Portland, Ore.
B. H. TRUMBULL,
Com'l Agt.
Goal...
TIME TRIED
ced
rine Teste
Altcr to year ween. Seatte
stands alone the favorit
Demet att
Phone Union 24, Deliveries Worth of
rite
Phone Main 588, Deliveries South of
Pore
Fire and Marine Insurance
Blue Serges From - - - $17.00 Up
Tweeds " - - - - $15.00 Up
Thibets " - - - - $10.00 Up
Black Clay Worsted - - - $18.00 Up
A Large Variety of Trousers - $5.00 Up
OXFORD
711 THIRD AVE.
TAILORING CO.
We will show you in plain figures how we do it. We buy our goods for cash, so we get a discount from the factory of 10 per cent. It takes to collect accounts..... 5 per cent. And the losses on accounts are.....10 per cent.
If you get prices at other stores, come and convince yourself. You will always find our goods marked in plain figures in the windows. We have a complete line of carpets, curtains and furniture, and we also handle pianos. We can save you a lot of money on a piano. We handle the old reliable Charter Oak range, the longest on the market, and made of the best steel; one will last you a lifetime. We give you a guarantee from the factory that at any time you are dissatisfied your money will be refunded.
We will give you $32.50 for any Royal Charter Oak Range you have for sale
You, and each of you, are hereby directive, and summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the occasion of this notice and summons, exclusive of the day of said first publication, to-wit within sixty days after the 2nd day of May, to the extent of the above entitled action in the above entitled notice, the amount due, together with the costs. In case you fail so to do judgment will be rendered, recessing the lien for tax taxes and property, lands and premises herein named.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Office and P. O., Address: 616-102 The
Mutual Life Building, Seattle King County.
Washington.
IN JUSTICE COURT FOR SEATTLE
Preduct, T. H. Cann, Justice,
State of Washington, County of King—ss.
In the name of the State of Washington you are hereby notified that O. T. Peter son, N. F. Freeman, N. L. Lander and A. R. Reagan, of Seattle, will be appointed and style of the Kelley Institute, have filed a complaint against you in the above court which will come on to be heard at my office. The Court will be held on Block, on First Avenue, in the City of Seattle, King County, State of Washington, on Friday, October 19, 1902, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M., and at your appear and then and then answer the same will be taken as confessed and demand of the plaintiffs complaint granted.
The object and demand of sald complaint is the (£30,000) balance due plaintiffs as such co-partners from defendant for board, lodging an more detailed complaint to the letter rate from April 1, 1002, and the costs and disbursements of this action; and you are further notified of the amount of the complaint the National Bank of Commerce, a corporation doing business in the City of
Complaint filed in the above cause and
court April 7, 1962. H. C. GANZ
and H. C. GANZ
please.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
You are hereby summoned to appear in court on the first publication of this summons, to-wait: within sixty days after the 4th day of trial, before the above-mentioned action in the above entitled complaint, answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and in writing, under the undersigned attorney for plaintiff, this office below stated; and in case of your failure to answer the complaint against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the court, you are hereby set forth in this action, set forth in the complaint, is follows: That the above action is instituted against the plaintiff for the defending the ground of habitual drunkenness and for the resumption of her malden name. P. D. HUGHES, Attorney for Plaintiff. P. O. address, 533 Burke Building, Seattle, Washington.
DIVORCE SUMMONS
IN THIS SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
Washington in and for the
County of King, Washington son plan
tie, vs. Matilda Jones Dewson, defendant
The State of Washington to the said Matilda
In the Superior Court of the State of
Washington, the King county,
Lucy M. Reynolds, William Renee,
defendant, defended in Washington to said William
Renee, defendant, above named:
Greeting: You are hereby summoned to
appear before Washington to date the
first publication of this summons to
within sixty days after the 2nd day of
1902, and defend the above entitled
complaint of the plaintiff, and
swerer the complaint of the plaintiff, and
swerer the designed attorneys for plaintiff, at their
office below stated, and in case of your
defense, you are hereby sworn against you according to the demand
of the complaint, which has been filed with
the above entitled action is to obtain a
decree of the above entitled court in this case,
and herefore exists between the plaintiff and the defendant and on the ground of non-support of the plaintiff by the
defendant.
BENSON & AUST
Postoffice and office address, 22 Boston
Block, Seattle, Washington
Date of first publication Friday, May 2,
1902
REAL ESTATE and Marine Insurance Room B, Bailey Building MAIN 695
5
WE ARE NOW ABLE
To show you the Swellest Selection
Goods Ever on Exhibition in Seattle
AND PRICES ARE RIGHT
Sales From - - -
“ - - - -
Worsted - - -
Variety of Trousers - -
PERFECT FIT ALWAYS GUARANTEED
OXFORD
711 THIRD AVE.
TAILORING CO.
forms of All Descriptions a Special
CAN SAVE
YOU MORE
We will show you in plain figures here.
We buy our goods for cash, so no
count from the factory of 10 p-
aces to collect accounts... 5 p-
the losses on accounts are... 10 p-
Total 25 p
you get prices at other stores, con-
fuse yourself. You will always fi-
nished in plain figures in the w-
ave a complete line of carpets, o-
niture, and we also handle piano-
have you a lot of money on a piano-
e the old reliable Charter Oak ran-
est on the market, and made of the
one will last you a lifetime. We
guarantee from the factory that
you are dissatisfied your money
held.
I give you $32.50 for an
after Oak Range you have for
GO FURNITURE AND STO
you the Swellest Selection of Spring
ter on Exhibition in Seattle.
PRICES ARE RIGHT
- - - - - $17.00 Up
- - - - - $15.00 Up
- - - - - $10.00 Up
- - - - - $18.00 Up
Trousers - $5.00 Up
FIT ALWAYS GUARANTEED
OXFORD
1 THIRD AVE.
FLORING CO.
All Descriptions a Specialty
SAVE
YOU MONEY
Now you in plain figures how we
our goods for cash, so we get
the factory of
collect accounts..... 5 per cent.
on accounts are.....10 per cent.
25 per cent.
prices at other stores, come and
self. You will always find our
in plain figures in the windows.
complete line of carpets, curtains
and we also handle pianos. We
lot of money on a piano. We
reliable Charter Oak range, the
market, and made of the best
last you a lifetime. We give
me from the factory that at any
dissatisfied your money will be
you $32.50 for any Royal
Range you have for sale
FURNITURE AND STOVE CO.
To show you the Swellest Selection of Spring Goods Ever on Exhibition in Seattle. AND PRICES ARE RIGHT
Uniforms of All Descriptions a Specialty
SECOND AND UNION
---
Total
Geo. B. Kittinger
Preparing bodies for shipping a specialty. All orders by telephone or telegraph promptly attended to. Telephone Main 13.
Organized by leading busi-
peals to the pride and pa-
can, and especially even
Seattle.
It is an all-American
Bay on the southern coast
to Rampart on the Yukon
gold, coal, timber and a
that great territory.
The company is com-
vey this summer by mea-
the sale of preferred stock
stock is $50 per share, but
quickly for the expenses
are being sold at $5.50 ap-
t.
It is the aim of the co-
vey completed by the first
and some construction we-
position to float bonds and
to a rapid completion.
The day the bonds
stock, now selling at $5.50
$50.
This is an investmen-
t in Seattle.
The substantial charge
behind the enterprise is g
will be honestly expended
company managed to the
stockholder.
Put in your applica-
sible date.
Show your public sp-
struction of an all-American
best of interior Alaska.
Call at the office.
Alaska Central
6-15 DENNY BLDG.
edging
Action Plunger Pump is On.
The BEWSHER direct action plunger
world that successfully pumps gold, a-
members without injury to its working par-
ets, sand, gravel and boulders, in fact
be pumped up from the greatest dept-
ied a distance of three miles or more.
Our eight-inch gold dredging pump wi-
lds of sand, gravel and water per min-
ute of the granular material. The maxi-
tom to sluice boxes, will not exceed three
miles of water ways with millions of
values from twenty cents per yard to hui-
very low and conservative figure of tw-
even the Chinese cannot make a livi-
will do for us in a 24-hour run. Here
Solid matter pumped, at three yards p
Value, at 20 cents per cubic yard.
Cost to move at 3 cents per cubic ya-
Central Railway
leading business muni-
de and patriotism muni-
specially every American.
American route from
southern coast of Ame-
rica to the Yukon river, the
ober and agricultural
factory.
Many is completing it
by means of mo-
neried stock. The
share, but in order
expenses of the s-
tat $5.50 apiece.
Sum of the company
by the first of October
construction work done
bonds and carry
relation.
The bonds are floated
at $5.50 per share
investment that can
essential character of the
perprise is guaranteed
expended and the
engaged to the best in
our applications at
public spirit by an
all-American railway
Alaska.
The office for Pro-
tection is Only Perry.
Plunger plunger pump
pops gold, and all of
working parts. Gold
is, in fact anything
latest depths and dis-
or more if desire
gump will move,
or per minute, carry.
The maximum cost
exceed three cents per
millions of cubic yard
yard to hundreds
figure of twenty cents
take a living on it,
un. Here are the
three yards per minute
yard.
Fugal pump, but
with a suction suffi-
cient the market for g
ery practical miner's
view of gravitation,
small crevices and de-
fore scrape the re-
mainning some of the
cavities and pocke
Section One
article of detached
cracks or cavities
. The tremendo-
per second under-
eadily as fine sand
cost and in less than
the buckets of the
gold being dist.
But there can be no
caused by our s
S THE MOUTH
likely carried into the
is saved by the Be-
lal.
CONSTRI
The Alaska Central Railway Co.
It is an all-American route from Resurrection Bay on the southern coast of Alaska due north to Rampart on the Yukon river, through the richest gold, coal, timber and agricultural resources of that great territory.
It is the aim of the company to have the survey completed by the first of October or November and some construction work done, so as to be in a position to float bonds and carry the entire work to a rapid completion.
The day the bonds are floated the preferred stock, now selling at $5.50 per share, will be worth $50.
behind the enterprise is guarantee that every cent will be honestly expended and the business of the company managed to the best interest of every stockholder.
Dredging for Gold
With Direct Action Plunger Pump is Only Perfect Method for Sub-Aqueous Mining
The BEWSHER direct action plunger pump is the only apparatus of its kind in the world that successfully pumps gold, and all other granular matter, through its chambers without injury to its working parts. Gold, fine, coarse or in nuggets, lead bullets, sand, gravel and boulders, in fact anything half the size of the suction pipe can be pumped up from the greatest depths and discharged through the pump and be carried a distance of three miles or more if desired.
Our eight-inch gold dredging pump will move, easily and surely, twelve cubic yards of sand, gravel and water per minute, carrying in suspension twenty-five per cent of the granular material. The maximum cost of handling this matter, from river bottom to sluice boxes, will not exceed three cents per cubic yard. There are hundreds of miles of water ways with millions of cubic yards of gold bearing sands, running in values from twenty cents per yard to hundreds of dollars per yard. Let us take the very low and conservative figure of twenty cents per cubic yard, a figure so low that even the Chinese cannot make a living on it, and see what one pump of our pattern will do for us in a 24-hour run. Here are the figures:
Solid matter pumped, at three yards per minute, 4,320 cubic yards.
Value, at 20 cents per cubic yard.....$864.00
Cost to move at 3 cents per cubic yard.....129.60
Net profit, 24 hours run.
Remember this is not a centrifugal pump, but a direct action plunger pump and the only pump in the world with a suction sufficiently powerful to lift gold. All other apparatus now in use and on the market for gold dredging purposes are of the endless chain bucket pattern and are cumbersome and unsatisfactory and utterly inadequate for the purpose. Every practical miner knows that gold, being heavier than other matter and obeying the law of gravitation, finds its way to the lowest levels and becomes imbedded in the small crevices and cavities of the bed rock. The endless chain bucket dredges may therefore scrape the rough bed rock and bring to the surface the gravel and sand containing some of the finer gold, but the richer deposits of gold remain untouched in the cavities and pockets and are lost.
Remember this is not a centrifugal pressure only pump in the world with a suction pump or apparatus now in use and on the market. Less chain bucket pattern and are cumulate for the purpose. Every practice matter and obeying the law of gravity becomes imbedded in the small crevice in bucket dredges may therefore scrap the gravel and sand containing some gold remain untouched in the cavities of a newster Perfection. Tags to the surface every particle of deformable suction pipe, and all pockets or holes allows nothing to escape. The time of fifteen to seventeen feet per second lift the nuggets of gold as readily as fled. And all this at half the cost and our method now known to man. The disturbance caused by the bucket then results in great loss, the finer gold be water and is carried away. But there a trap is used. Any disturbance caused by the flowing flow of water TOWARDS THE MAIN gold disturbed is immediately carried away. Every particle of gold is saved
The Brewster Perfection Gold Dredging Pump
Brings to the surface every particle of detached matter coming within reach of its powerful suction pipe, and all pockets or cavities are emptied instantly. This suction pipe allows nothing to escape. The tremendous rush of water, moving at the rate of fifteen to seventeen feet per second under the powerful strokes of a plunger, will lift the muggets of gold as readily as fine sand, and the whole rich harvest is secured. And all this at half the cost and in less than half the time consumed by any other method now known to man.
The disturbance caused by the buckets of the endless chain dredge when in operation results in great loss, the finer gold being disturbed is caught up by the action of the water and is carried away. But there can be no such loss when our direct plunger pump is used. Any disturbance caused by our suction pipe is always due to the strong flow of water TOWARDS THE MOUTH OF THE PIPE, and every atom of fine gold disturbed is immediately carried into that suction and is brought to the surface. Every particle of gold is saved by the Bewsher pump.
GENERAL CONS
4601 Seattle,
Seattle, Wash.
---
Write for prospectus, or call.
Frank's Place
84 West Madison Street
Near Western Avenue.
Gold
Sub-Aqueous Mining
of its kind in through its nuggets, lead suction pipe pump and be twelve cubic twenty-five per liter, from river are hundreds lands, running. Let us take figure so low pump of our pat-
$864.00
129.60
$734.40
lower pump andaft gold. All sizes are of the and utterly in heavier than lowest levels. The endless going to the sur-cher deposits
aging Pump
reach of its This suction moving at the of a plunger, harvest is se-umed by any when in oper- the action of direct plunger is due to the every atom of brought to the
CO.
1510 Second Avenue
And now comes Judge Griffin and decides that the high license law is unconstitutional, and he nullifies the proposition from a to z. Judge Griffin may be correct in his prognistication of the law, but The Republican feels like remarking on this point that Judge Griffin has rendered more peculiar decisions since he has been judge of the superior court of King county than all of the other judges of King county put together. If he has not been systematically advertising himself, then is would so appear. Every sensational case and peculiar decision that has been rendered for the past two years you will find Judge Griffin's name mixed up in it at some stage of the game. It is rather peculiar that Judge Griffin should always be so situated as to get his name in print in connection with all the sensational cases that bob up in King County, and yet such is a fact. He may be a poor newspaper advertiser from a business standpoint, but from a sensational standpoint, notwithstanding his affected reticence, he is a howling success.
There is a daily paper being published in this city about which a peculiar story is being told just now. Some time ago the Star made a heavy onslaught against the Seattle Gas and Electric Company for "dollar gas," and on the surface it would seem that the paper was a great champion of the people's rights; but a story is being told now to the effect that the paper refused to touch the proposition until a number of gas consumers had made a jack-pot to pay for every line that it published in opposition to the gas company and the advocacy of "dollar gas." Whether there was any truth in the story or not cannot be verified just now, as the whole thing is a dead issue with dollar gas thrown in. A more recent story is going the rounds of the city concerning the Star and its championship of the cause of the common people, and it is to the effect that before the Star began its fight for the city to own its own electric light plant, power furnished from Cedar river, a number of petitions were circulated among business men asking for contributions from each of them for the Star to make the fight and this was pretty generally done until it reached a certain firm and the manager of that firm point-plankly to contribute a single cent, and both the firm and the manager were blackmailed by the Star in every conceivable way in its endeavor to drive them to terms. So bitter was the fight made by the Star on the manager of the firm that he was cartooned in every conceivable shape and accused of being a complete tool of the Seattle Electric Company and almost a bribe-taker, but it did not drive him to terms, and yet the public was led to believe all the time that the management of the Star was doing what it was doing on account of its great love for the people, when in fact it was being paid for every word it published and absolutely refused to publish anything until it had been paid its money in advance. It begins to look now that this little daily twinkler is to be the prince of grafting sheets of the Northwest, as it has two or three more things that its working on out of which it expects to make quite a few dollars by the grafting route, and its editor the most pronounced journalistic hypocrite in the state.
A fight between the Times and the labor unions of this city as to whether we have a regular Fourth of July celebration in connection with the laying of the keel of the battleship Nebraska by the Moran Brothers' firm is an amusing as well as interesting one. The Times is being fought by the labor unions of this city almost to a complete standstil and wincing under their sledge hammer blows it has taken the Moran Brothers' cause up to help it bolster up its fight. The fight on both sides will be watched with much interest, as it will mean the almost undoing of either the Times of the labor unions to fail in their attempts. Strange to say that the Times, in spite of the fact that it issues a Sunday edition, has troubles of its own these days and none of its troubles are doing it any real good. Some times for a paper to be fought means a better medium for its advertising columns, but unfortunately for the Times the fight that is being made against it in many respects in this city at present is doing it no good.
It would appear that the city authorities have about decided to allow the various parks at the lake and in and about Seattle to become drinking resorts and places of vice in general. If this is done it will be utterly impossible for decent persons to visit the various parks without bumping in to vice in its worst forms, and wowen, whether old or young, who visit the parks will be spotted by their friends however good their intentions may be in visiting said places and they will be spotted simply because those places will be branded as dives and assignation resorts, and women that frequent them will be considered a part and parcel of the outfit. It is to be regretted that the city authorities will allow drinking in any form or manner to be publicly licensed or tolerated at the lakes, where families should feel perfectly at ease to visit for an outing with their children, or where young ladies could go in the afternoons and be perfectly safe in spending a few hours among them-
A Splendid Dresser Special Arranged for readers of this paper only for just one week from date of this paper.
STANDARD
Standard Furni
L. SCHOENFELD & SONS
Our Big Catalog Free to O
D. BUCK & CO.1
NEW STORE
D. BUCK & CO. 1404 SECOND AVENUE Times Building
Men's, Boys' And Children's Clothing, Furnishing Goods, Hats, Caps And Shoes. . . .
POPULAR
D. BUCK & CO.
GRAND CUT
MILLINER
Prices Cut in Two Pre
Chance of the season. Beautiful Tr
$1.75. Handsome Stylish Hats, worth $5.
ons, worth $10.00, only $4.25 Chance of a
Cut-Rate Mill
1010 First
D. BUCK & CO. 1404 SECOND AVENUE Times Building
Prices Cut in Two Previous to Removal
Chance of the season. Beautiful Trimmed Hats, worth $4.00, only
$1.75. Handsome Stylish Hats, worth $2.00, $2.50, Superb, Stylish Chiffons,
worth $10.00, only $4.25 Chance of a lifetime. Come quick.
Cut-Rate Millinery Sale
selves or their gentleman friends without being considered as questionable characters.
In order that the Elks' carnival be a success it has been given out by those having charge of the affair that the merchants and business men in general of the city would be compelled to raise in the neighborhood of $40,000 that the necessary preparations for the same could be made. This is a whole lot of money and a good deal more, in the opinion of the writer, than will be realized from the proceeds of the carnival, Tacoma's financial success in a similar carnival to the contrary notwithstanding. Because Tacoma had a successful carnival one year ago does not necessarily mean that Seattle should have a similar carnival in order to prove it is equal in every respect to Tacoma, for there are other things that Seattle could do which would be equally as commendable as the Elks' carnival, and yet The Republican is ready and willing to do everything within its power to make the carnival a success if those having charge of the same deem it advisable to push it as they are now planning. If in the meantime the fair be made a part of the carnival and if also the Republican state central committee, which will be in session tomorrow (Saturday) will set the state convention for the same time and hold it in Seattle, then the carnival would be a huge success. The Republican suggests that the men having charge of the carnival meet the state central committee next Saturday and make an effort to have the convention sent to Seattle for that time.
Hon. R. W. Jones, who is doing quite a bit of lecturing and free talking on the streets concerning the primary lection law advocated by him before the last legislature that failed of passage with the view of making it an issue in the coming campaign, is the principal in an amusing story that was told by a well known Seattleite one day this week. It will be remembered in the McGraw-Snivley fight for the governorship of this state, quite a bit of rivalry cropped out between Seattle and Tacoma and after a hard-fought campaign it will be remembered that Seattle won and John H. McGraw was elected governor. The closing rally Monday evening prior to the election on Tuesday, and Mr. Jones, who is something of a poet, wrote quite a parody on Tacoma, which made a hit with the Third ward boys at once. Campaign music was fitted to the words, and after considerable practice on the part of the Third Ward Glee Club they were invited to sing Mr. Jones' wonderful campaign song at the grand Republican rally. Incidentally it might be mentioned that that rally was the largest political rally ever held in Seattle and the overflow meeting was a good deal larger than the one in the Armory and that was saying a good deal. The Third Ward Republican Club was out in mass, and for the express purpose of singing Jones' campaign song, which was a
---
A Solid Oak Dresser
Special Price for the Week.
A splendid solid oak Dresser,
Eastern made, nicely finished,
shaped top is 19x42 inches,
heavy French plate mirror,
beveled, 18x20, top drawer is
nicely swell shape, Regular
value is $12.00—special price
for the week only $8.95.
Furniture Co.
1012-14-16-18 First Ave.
to Out-of-Town Folks.
O. 1404 SECOND AVENUE
Times Building
NEW GOODS
R PRICES
0. 1404 SECOND AVENUE
Times Building
CUT RATE
ERY SALE
Previous to Removal
Paul Trimmed Hats, worth $4.00, only
with $5.00, $2.50, Superb, Stylish Chiff-
fe of a lifetime. Come quick.
Millinery Sale
First Avenue, opposite Globe Block
stunner against Tacoma. Judge McGilvray had been selected as chairman of the occasion, and at the proper time on the program the judge arose and announced that "the Colored Glee Club of the Third ward will now sing," but no one came forward; not a move was made. Again the judge called out: "Will the Colored Glee Club from the Third ward come forward and furnish the audience with music?" and still no one made a move. The embarrassment on the part of the boys from the Third ward was painful in the extreme. Mr. Jones looked for a crack in the floor to creep through, and the other boys felt equally little. The embarrassment of the situation was relieved, however, by the announcement that the Hon. John H. McGraw was at the door, and the house broke forth into wild spasmodic cheering such as was never before heard in Seattle, and the singing on the part of the glee club was forgotten. It, however, was not forgotten in the minds of the boys from the Third ward, and after the meeting was over they cussed blue streaks, and if Judge McGilvray's ears didn't burn it was not because the cuss words that they uttered was not hot enough to not only burn his ears, but to burn him up completely. However the judge was never informed of the mistake that he had made to the effect of branding the elite of the Third ward as members of a colored glee club.
Considerable agitation is going on in the daily press over whether Seattle is to have a new jail or not. A damage suit, which has been on in the superior court for the past week, in which R. Noblett is suing for heavy damages against Castens Brothers for false imprisonment in the city jail, which perhaps is one of the vilest and most damnable dens in the Northwest, is responsible for starting the agitation. If civilization will permit such a hole as Seattle's city jail to exist then there is no use saying that civilization is a whit bit better than the civilization that permitted Calcutta's black hole or Russia's dark dens where men are thrown into and never see daylight. The city jail in Seattle cannot have an equal for filth and not brutally practiced on the prisoners in any other city west of the Missouri river. Flither, slime and vermin are as common to the inner parts of the Seattle city jail as sunshine is to the outer parts. Not only are these things common there, but if reports be true, the men arrested and placed in jail are treated more like brutes than human beings. This tale is not told by this one or that one, but it is told and verified by everyone that is placed in the city jail by the police. In order to make supposed criminals confess to crime the police throw the men into dark cells, starve them for three and four days at a time, either sweat or freeze them to death and then when the men confess to the crime to avoid further tortures whether guilty or not, such purified testimony is used against them. Never in the history of the country was a police force more deserving of being completely turned
---
$8.95
out than the police force of Seattle, and this is true almost from the top to the bottom.
SPOKANE POLITICS.
Continued from 1st page.
in Spokane county, the northern district of Whitman county and in Lincoln and Stevens counties. In the latter two counties the Republicans expect this year to carry a part of the offices and to elect some members of the legislature.
In Spokane county, an old-line, middle-of-the-road Populist, who has much influence with others of the same belief, said the other day:
"Among the forces which united in 1896 under the Democratic banner and swept Spokane county and the entire state, there will be little unity of purposes this fall. There is little or nothing left for them to unite upon. The result will be most of those who came from the Republican party will go back to it. The old-line Democrats will stay with the Democratic party, and with George Turner and the Socialists will put up a ticket of their own."
"Will the Populists also put up a ticket of their own?" I asked. "No, they will not," he said. "They will vote for revenge," and he walked away.
There is a general wish in Spokane county that an early Republican state convention be not held, though it is understood both congressmen wish it, in which case it is supposed it will be held as they desire. But an early state convention means early county conventions and a long campaign, and of such the people, and especially the candidates, had enough two years ago.
Senator Wilson, as well as Marshal Ide, are in Washington City in the interest of Mr. Ide's confirmation as collector of customs.
In the city hall, if there is any change in the political situation, it has been a strengthening of Mayor Byrne's position against Councilman Fred Baldwin. It is said the Republican members offered to support Baldwin for president of the city council if he would make them certain concessions. He declined to do it, and the Republicans at once made the same offer to his opponent, Mr. Hand, and had it accepted. It is said Mr. Baldwin has since offered to grant all the concessions the Republicans asked for, and more, too, if they will support him; but they have decided to stand by Mr. Hand. It would seem therefore that Mr. Hand, with Mayor Byrne and John Coffeen, have the whip-hand over Mr. Baldwin and his Turner backers. The story further goes on to say that Mayor Byrne and Mr. Hand will only consent to let Baldwin have the presidency of the council on condition he will agree to change his vote in favor of the confirmation of John Coffeen for chief of police, and that Mr. Baldwin is so anxious for the presidency that he is about ready to give in. Furthermore, the mayor declares he will continue to send in the nomination of John Coffeen for chief of police until he is confirmed or until his (the mayor's) term of office expires. Further, if Mr. Baldwin will not yield and vote for the confirmation of Mr. Coffeen the mayor will not nominate a man for any of a number of other offices which are now held by Republicans.
Attorney T. D. Rockwell has been appointed Spokane County's member of the State Republican Central Committee in place of Marshal C. B. Hopkins, who has resigned because of the position he holds. Mr. Rockwell was appointed by Chairman J. H. Schively. He is a prominent Wilson man; in fact is one of the most conspicuous and ardent of Mr. Wilson's supporters. He is likely to be a candidate for the lower house of the legislature from the third senatorial district which last session was represented by W. W. Tolman in the upper house and H. D. Merritt and Dr. C. G. Brown in the lower. The latter is a Republican and the other two are Democrats.
PASSING EVENTS.
Continued from 1st page.
there buy a number of reindeer for the Alaska country, in order that they may be used for both food and for traveling over the snow in the winter in Alaska. Already the reindeer mail service is cutting quite a figure in the Alaska country, and during the winter of 1901 the mail was taken over from the Kotzebue country to the interior, a distance of 250 miles, and the reindeer made the trip in fourteen days. January 1 last the reindeer mail service in Alaska covered routes aggregating 7,000 miles, and it is argued from this that the transplanting of reindeer in the Alaska country is a gigantic success, and it will grow as the country advances, providing Sheldon Jackson be kept in the states instead of sent to Alaska. There are now in Alaska 3,332 reindeer, against 143 in 1892, 110 in 1896, 2,837 in 1899; and it is reported by the government agents that the reindeer bred in Alaska greatly excel any quality of those bred in either Lapland or Siberia, and they naturally develop into larger and stronger animals than the Siberian reindeer.
From a recent report sent out from Baltimore, Maryland, it is learned that sixteen cotton factories are being built in the South at present, and at a cost of $2,437,800. The manufacturers are learning that it is cheaper to utilize the cotton raised in the South than to haul it to Massachusetts and other
Eastern states and then manufacture it. Money can be saved by handling it at home by placing the factories among the various cotton plantations. Already cotton mills on the most extensive order are well established in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina and Tennessee, there being a total of 79,384 spindles and 1,628 looms, representing an investment of $1,587,680 in those states. The Southern states of this country raise more cotton than any section in the world, and it seems perfectly absurd for the North to haul the cotton from the South to other sections of the country and then manufacture and ship it back to the country where it was raised. That double hauling can be avoided by placing the mills in the South, and the sooner it is done the better for the entire country.
Speaking about the cotton plant and the manufacture of cotton reminds the writer that already a great amount of cotton is passing through the city of Seattle, en route to the far East, which is utilized very extensively both in China and Japan. Since the establishing of a line of steamers by Jim Hill to the Orient from Seattle thousands of bales of cotton have been loaded on those steamers and sent across the ocean for the purpose of the Japanese and Chinese utilizing in their peculiar articles of wear. Southerners who for years were accustomed to handling and seeing cotton handled often see a familiar sight at the wharves of this city in thousands of bales of cotton stacked along the water front, awaiting shipment to the Orient. Perhaps no other market along the Pacific coast is dealing so extensively in Southern cotton as Seattle, and this is so because of the fact that the Chinese and Japanese can utilize so much of our Southern fabric.
PERSONAL.
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Harris will leave for Dawson City within the next ten days.
A specialist in optics is in charge of Goldman's Optical Department, 901 Second Avenue.
Julius Galland of the Galland-Burke Brewing Co., of Spokane, was a visitor to the city this week.
Mrs. George H. Grose will soon leave for Los Angeles, California, to join her husband. Mrs. William Grose will probably accompany her.
Rev. S. S. Freeman returned to Roslyn last Saturday after a week's visit in the city and was highly pleased at the treatment accorded him by Seattle's citizens.
Mr. A. I. Bell, a well known Everett shoedealer, did business in the city last Monday. Mr. Bell formerly lived in Seattle and married he widow of Mr. George Washington.
Mrs. Purnell, daughter and son, are late arrivals to Seattle from North Dakota. Mr. Purnell has been in Seattle for the past month or more. They are at 611 Twenty-seventh ave.
Some objections were made to our criticisms of the Ranke hall affair last week, given by the choir, while the complainant claims the criticism was fully justifiable, but that the management and not the performers were to blame. It is a relief to know that it is so, for many of the little ones engaged in that affair have proved themselves capable performers, and in the future let capable ones lead, and the incompetent ones get in the ranks, where they belong.
The May Pole Drill given by Mrs. Ben Williams at Ranke Hall was a decided success, the little folks doing themselves proud, while marching around the pole to the music of Miss Threat's rag time, it was indeed laughable to notice those little tots keep time as though they had been trained. The chorus was good, also the sash drill. The recitations were good, but were heard to a disadvantage on account of some one happening to "get busy" and open the door or cross the hall or some studied effort made to disturb the speaker. Misses Hazel Thompson and Lillian Balley for that reason were handicapped and the audience not permitted to enjoy two of Seattle's best elocationists. Miss Mabel Dixon was heard to a better advantage, and recited "The Maniac" with considerable force which drew a hearty round of applause. Refreshments were served and after the allotted time allowed Mrs. Williams had expired the hall was secured and dancing was indulged in.
SPOKANE.
Friday evening, May 9th, Miss Caudace Parker and Mrs. Chas. S. Paraker will give a children's concert at Oliver hall for the benefit of the Cavalry Baptist church.
Mr. Robert Lusher, late of company M. 24th U. S. infantry, has returned from service in the Philippine islands. Mr. Lusher is not favorably impressed with the islands and thinks he will settle permanently in Spokane.
Mr. George E. Anderson has returned from an extended trip in the East.
If you have a bit of news for publication the Spokane correspondent would be glad if you would hand it in by not later than Monday.
Good political information can always be had from The Seattle Republican, and if you are interested in politics you should have this paper sent to your address at once. Kindly let us hear from you.
County, State of Washington, W. H. H.
Mrs. W. C. Calhoun, wife, W. Gerlo-
mus W. M. C. Calhoun, yian, the lesser Wood
Coal & Lumber Coal and all persons unknown, if any, having or
to have an interest or estate in and to the
daemonies. No. 33054. Notice and
Summons
State of Washington to W. C. Calhoun and Mrs. W. C. Calhoun, his wife, who are the owners or reputed owners of, and Geraldine Wood and her brother, the Lester Wood & Coal Co., a corporation, who as judgment creditors have an interest in, and to all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming to have an interest or estate in, to the herenafter described real property.
You and each of you are hereby notified that the above named plaintiffs, W. II. L. L. L., have been issued certificates Nos. 183, 184, 244, issued by the treasurer of King County, Washington, embracing the following described real property, situated in King County, Washington,
That said certificates were issued as follow: August, 1897, for the thirteenth day of August, 1897, for the sum of $1,887 dollars ($1.88), the delinquent taxes for the four dollars ($1.88), the no. 424 on the seventeenth day of December 1897, for the sum of $8,100 dollars ($8.10), the delinquent taxes for the years 1893, 1894, and 1895, respecting the taxes for the following years has been paid for the loans, to-wit: For the year 1897, the sum of one and 48-100 dollars ($1.48); for the sum of one and 51-100 dollars ($1.79); for the one and 91-100 dollars ($1.70); for the one and 70-100 dollars ($1.70); and for the year 1900 the sum of two and 5-100 dollars ($1.90), the sum of three and 5-100 dollars bears interest at the rate of fifteen per annum from sald dates of payment.
All papers may be served on the attorneys below named.
W. H. LLEWELLYN.
By SHANK & SMITH,
Attorneys for the Plaintiff.
Office address, 525 Bailey Building.
Last pub. J.6
Sunset Oil an
t Oil and Refine
ANNOUNCEMENT.
The Sunset Oil and Re
posed of its first block of
shares, at 15 cents per sh
puts upon the market 50,00
ury stock at the advance
share, 10,000 shares of the
attle. Persons desiring st
do well to act promptly a
the basement of Mutual L
ELLIS MORRISON
Mutual Life Building,
The New
The Convenient
The Old
Delays. Matches.
Sunset Oil and Refining Company, its first block of treasury stock, at 15 cents per share. This compares with the market 50,000 more shares at the advanced price of 25 or 30,000 shares of this being allotted persons desiring stock in this company to act promptly and apply at its moment of Mutual Life Building.
MORRISON, Assistant Manager,
Eng,
New Way
Convenient Electric
Old Way
Matches. Smoke and
The Sunset Oil and Refining Company has disposed of its first block of treasury stock, 40,000 shares, at 15 cents per share. This company now puts upon the market 50,000 more shares of treasury stock at the advanced price of 25 cents per share, 10,000 shares of this being allotted to Seattle. Persons desiring stock in this company will do well to act promptly and apply at its office in the basement of Mutual Life Building.
For the New Way
The Seattle Electric
907 FI
Seattle Electric
Year Fruits and
By the Car Load
SAN DIEGO FRUIT CO.
415 Pike Street
State of Washington for King County.
Foran, and all periphit, vs. Patrick Foran, and all periphit, for having or claiming an interest or estate in her hereafter described real property. No. 34194. Notice and Summons.
State of Washington:
To Patrick Foran, who is the owner or operator of the property, unknown, claiming or having an interest in and to the hereafter described real property.
You and each of you are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff, Ellis Morrison, is the holder of two certain delinquent liabilities, respectively, 19258 and 19259, issued by the Treasurer of King County, Washington, embracing the following real property situate, King County, Washington, and more particularly described as follows:
Lots six (6) and seven (7), in block one (1) of White Brothers' Addition to West Seattle, King County, Washington.
That said certificates were issued on the 24th of January for the following sums and for the delinquent taxes for the following years, namely:
Certificate 89258 for $6.33, for the delinquent taxes for the years 1895, 1895 and
Certificate IB259 for $11.03, for the deli-
mentary store, 1985 years, 1890, 1891,
1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896.
That on the 24th day of July, 1901, the
county treasurer of King
County admissal, County Treasurer of King
County admissal, County Treasurer of King
subsequent to the said year 1896, the fol-
lowing:
On sold lot 6, block 1, 38 cents for the
inland market for the year 1898: 23
cents for the year 1898: 24 cents for the
year 1900: On sold lot 7, block 1, 38 cents
for the year 1898: 24 cents for the year
1900: 23 cents for the year 1898: 24 cents for
the year 1900: which several sums be-
tained from said date. You and each of you are hereby directed
to appear within sixty days after the date
of your sale, to wit; within 60 days after
the 12th day of July, 1901, above entitled action in the above entitled
court, or pay the amount due, together with
the judgment so formed, to do,
benefit for said taxes and costs against the
property, lands and premises herein
named.
ELLIE MORRISON, Plaintiff.
BALLINGER, RONALD & BATTLE.
Office Address: 501 Mutual Life Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
Refining Co.
defining Company has dis-
of treasury stock, 40,000
share. This company now
1,000 more shares of treas-
ured price of 25 cents per
this being allotted to Se-
tock in this company will
and apply at its office in
Life Building.
N, Assistant Secretary,
Seattle, Washington.
U Way
Electric Light
Way
Smoke and Odors
Electric Co. 907 FIRST AVE.
ear Nutsuits