Seattle Republican
Friday, August 12, 1910
Seattle, Washington
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THE PUBLISHER'S NOTICE.
The Seattle Republican is published on Friday of every week by Cayton Publishing Company. Subscriptions, $3.00 per year; six months, $1.50 postage prepaid. Subscriptions to all foreign countries included in the Postal Union, $4.00 a year, postage paid. Sample copies, free. Single copies ten cents. Advertising rates made known on application. Special rates to publishers. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at Seattle. Address all communications to The Seattle Republican, 307 Epler Block, Seattle, Washington. Make all checks, drafts, postal orders, etc., payable to "Cayton Publishing Company." CAYTON PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC. Telephone: Main 305. Publication office, 307 Epler Block.
HORACE ROSCOE CAYTON - - - Publisher
SUSIE REVELS CAYTON - - - Associate
THE SHOOTING OF MAYOR GAYNOR
Nothing is more responsible for the attempt of assassinating Maynor Gaynor as he stood talking with friends on the eve of sailing for Europe than the graft spirit so common to the United States. The villian who shot him was one of the petty grafters of that graft ridden city, who had been discharged in Mayor Gaynor's clean up, and so enraged did he and his criminal associates become at the mayor for robbing them of their soft snaps, that after brooding over it he concluded that he would be rendering his associates in crime a very great service by killing the man responsible for their condition. Parties and cliques get control of the government and to keep control of it they create new offices, plan new public works and devise new ways, from time to time, of getting more money from the public crib in order to care for the political bosses, who deliver up the votes to the leaders. Deny it as much as we will or may, it is nevertheless a fact that graft is one of the fundamental principles of this government, or at least of those who direct the affairs of this government. If those in control are honest in handling the actual cash that come into their hands they make it possible for some public service corporation to get favors from the government, for which they should pay millions of dollars or should not be permitted to have at all as an individual, and if a man goes into office and sets himself against such he is pronounced a crank, and an obstructionist and steps are taken at once to turn him out and if he cannot be gotten out in any other way he is killed by some alleged crank. The man who shot Maynor Gaynor ought to be buried alive in quick line and that too, whether his victim lives or die.
There is much being said and written concerning women as principals of schools and colleges. There seems to be considerable uneasiness among the masculine element lest having been given the voting power and trustee power in educational affairs generally, because it was held that women at least had as much interest in children in the schools as in children in the homes, these powers together with agitation have developed a hunger on the part of women for larger power and enlarged ballot power. It is as impossible to give partial personal liberty and yet declare freedom as it is to grant partial voting powers and prevent the voter from desiring to become the party voted for. The fact that women are seeking and being sought by other women to become presidents of universities is but the development of natural events in the old line of cause and effect. There are many men who believe that a capable woman is as efficient as president of a university as a capable man. However, the balance has been suspended in the national contest between men and women as to the control of American education and the choice of a male successor to Miss Haszard as president of Wellesley University is considered as a lowering of the scales towards the masculine side of affairs.
It is said that it takes people of many kinds to make up a world and to those who pause to observe their fellow men a bit, the statement seems true.
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON. FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1910
Some men work for fame until it is won, others have it thrust upon them whether they will it or not; but there are others who are not willing to work for it and their fellow men do not deem them worthy to do any thrusting for, yet they feel that fame they must have, so begin to get before the public by making startling statements or sensational announcements. Such books as "The Clansmen," "The Leopard Spots," etc. which enlarge upon and misrepresent the weakness of the Negro can never become monuments to literature or make mankind better or baoader inasmuch as they were not conceived in that spirit which inspires to lofty heights or appeals to the best that the soul is capable of—they simply call attention to the fact that the author, a man disgruntled by refusing to see the brighter side lives on this continent, leaves a bad taste in the mouth as it were, and that's all. One Dr. Max Baff, a professor of Clark University, has publicly given notice that he also has accepted the short cut to fame. He writes that women are no better than savages. The fact that they love bird feathers, hang ornaments to their ears, wear bracelets and necklaces and effect gaudy colors proves that they emulate him. He declares that they further demonstrate their weakness by arranging their hair in fantastic shapes by artificial methods, are given to the use of the paint and powder box, prone to religious hysteria and impressionable. Man he claims has put such fads and fancies behind him long since.
EDITOR SCOTT IS DEAD
Slowly but surely the men, who developed the great Northwest and made it one of the beauty spots of the United States, are passing to the Great Beyond. Harvey W. Scott, the veteran editor of the Portland Oregonian, is the last to succumb to the Great Reaper's call, he having passed away last Sunday evening in Baltimore, Md., whither he had gone to undergo a delicate surgical operation and from which he never recovered. Few men in the world have carved for themselves a more distinguished and historic name than Harvey W. Scott. He did not do so by controlling the voters of his state, ride into political power and therby become a great man, but by working, working, working almost until the very day he died. In early manhood he found a business, at which he believed he could achieve success and he took it up as his life work and he died in the harness. He was a man of great mental powers and as editor of the Oregonian he made his paper famous and it has been the guiding star of the Northwest for the past fifty years. He made politics instead of politics having made him and hundreds and thousands of men both in the states of Oregon and Washington were responsible to a very large extent to the directorship of Harvey Scott on public questions. Despite the fact that financial success came to him in later years he was always very modest over it and though worth perhaps a million dollars he worked on and on the same as if he were compelled to do so to earn his daily bread. Not many years ago a Populist politician in criticising the attitude of the Oregonian in a campaign inquired of Editor Scott what he had ever done that he had the audacity to advise laboring men how to vote? and it was then that Mr. Scott reviewed his life in Oregon and the struggles he had undergone in order to attain what he had, and so touching was the review that even the Populist never again felt inclined to criticise the veteran old Republican editor though he occasionally roasted their doctrines to a queen's turn. Harvey Scott had a purpose in life and he never lost sight of it. If in the United States there ever lived an "ideal American" he was one.
Unless Crippen is started for London soon some of the "yellows" will be up a tree for something to say.
Bishop E. W. Lampton of the A. M. E. church died in Michigan a few days ago after a lingering illness. It was Bishop Lampton that was forced to flee from Greenville, Mississippi, because he demanded of the telephone girls that they address his daughter, who had recently graduated from Oberlin, as Miss Lampton instead of by her christian name.
LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
APR 29 1952
UBLICAN
VOLUME XVII, NUMBER 11
EDITORIAL EDICTS
Uncle Sam has ninety million children and Colonel Blethen.
Victor Murdock of Kansas is said to be coming to Washington to fight for Poindexter. Victor need not think because Kansas is a damphool Washington is of the same breed of dogs.
An English earl arrived in Chicago a few days ago and it is said he actually resembles a man.
Mosquitoes attacked a sea captain off the coast of Florida and though he escaped from the hungry horde, yet they pursued him for forty miles, which he made without food or water. Great.
Unless oil be poured on the troubled waters it begins to look as if Senrtor Gore's alleged expose will result in the spilling of gore.
The girl who went for a dish of ice cream and got a husband might have done better.
If it be true that the coming apple crop of the Northwest will be worth $29,000,000, why not use the "big red apple" as a mekium of exchange.
Of course that's an office seeker turning the corner two blocks away for he has his mit out for fear some one will pass who he will not see, and it is necessary to make a bluff at seeing everybody these days, when votes are needed.
Grand Father travelled a rather rocky road down in Oklahoma the other day and it is thought he went down for the count.
When a fellow is a failure at everything else he goes into the newspaper business which accounts for the suffering public having to read so many most excellent (?) country weekly papers.
Before Frank W. Baker goes into another campaign we suggest that he either buy or establish a first class daily paper in order to keep up with the procession.
That's the way to silence the man that cleans up your city, shoot him down, then proclaim the culprit crazy, send him to the asylum and then have a friend elected chief executive and get him pardoned.
Bishop Bowman of the Methodist Episcopal church celebrated his nine-fifth birthday July 15th ultimo. He had been a licensed preacher for seventy years.
The statute of General Robert M. Lee clad in confederate garb should be thrown out of the national capitol by main force and violence, if there is no law making it possible to throw it out in the streets. Gen. Lee was a traitor of the deepest and most damnable type and his memory merits nothing but curses from the patriotic citizens of the United States.
Joe Gans, for many years the lightweight fistic champion of the world, went the pace and at the age of thirty-four is no more. Like all men, who fight men in the ring and boose at the bar, Gans soon went down not for the count, but for eternity. The Negro pugilists, who have attained fame and fortune in the ring, seem to have all travelled the same road and Jack Johnsonis following in the footsteps of his predecessors.
Near Wenatchee a Mrs. Totten shot and instantly killed James Sutton, who persisted in going through the former's farm after having been warned against it. Mrs. Totten is in jail.
The Knight Templars in session in Chicago have decided to hold their next conclave in Denver, Colorado, in 1913. William B. Melish of Cincinnatti was elected Grand Master.
Senator Wilson says he will get a majority of the Republican votes cast in the coming primary election, which should entitle him to the support of the Repnblicans in the legislature.
CURRENT COMMENT
2
A QUEER WORLD
A pin has a head, but has no hair;
A clock has a face, but no mouth there;
Needles have eyes, but they cannot see;
A fly has a trunk without lock or key;
A timepiece may lose, but cannot win;
A cornfield dimples without a chin;
A hill has no leg but has a foot;
A wineglass has a stem, but not a root;
A watch has hands, but no thumb or finger;
A boot has a tongue but is no singer;
Rivers run though they have no feet;
A saw has teeth, but it does not eat;
Ash trees have keys, yet never a lock;
And baby crows without being a cock.
—Chistina Rossetti.
KENTUCKY STATESMAN DEAD
Father Time has claimed John G. Carlisle, a Kentucky Democratic statesman, who made himself famous in the United States senate and subsequently as secretary of the treasury under President Grover Cleveland. That he was one of the foremost men of the country, when in his prime, cannot be denied and that he was a thinker of the most profound type cannot he denied and for those reasons his death, despite the fact he has been sick for a long, long time is to be regretted. While his life was thrown among the financiers of the country, that is the men who manipulate legislation in favor of themselves and their associates, nevertheless he was a man of a broad-guaged and liberal mind and did many things in the interest of the common people of the country.
One of the surest ways to kill a movement is to hold it up to ridicule. Lawyers often adopt this method successfully, newspapers revel in it, and when opportunity permits, politicians use it unsparingly. The men of China who are in our country have felt and are feeling the same sting on account of their queues and costumes. Men of other nationalities smile when the Chinaman's long queue bobs up; and this has caused American Chinese to keep them, for the most part, neatly tucked away under their caps. The queue was forced upon the Chinese as a badge of submission about 260 years ago by their Manchura conquerors who affected this style of head dress. Later the Chinese grew really proud of their appendage and elaborated it with bright ribbons. However, having become conversant with the customs and manners of other nations they become dissatisfied with their queues or rather unwilling to longer make themselves ridiculous from civilized men's view point. Hence, the Chinese of the Pacific coast have sent a petition to the Emperor asking permission to cut off their queues. If the custom of cutting them off were adopted in China, it would create patriotism in the Chinese themselves inasmuch as the adoption was a badge of submission, and outsiders would look upon it as another one of the signs of awakening with which China has in the last few years let the world know that she also is to be counted among the civilized nations of the world.
The purchase of the picture of Frederick W. Freer, one of Chicago's most noted painters and long an instructor in the art institute, has been held up by the Art Institute purchasing committee on the grounds that it is immoral. Mr. Freer represented himself with a cirgarette in his hand. Although the Institute contains drinking scenes, fighting scenes, pictures and statues of disrobed men and women, the picture of a talented man regardless of the beauty of the work savored too much of the sporting element. Mrs. Freer, the widow, who was forced by necessity to offer the picture to the Institute for purchase, is rather disappointed over the nature of the opposition. She told with much feeling how her husband had worked long and secretly on it and finally presented it to her as a surprise. She has refused to allow the cigarette to be painted out. The question of the immorality of the picture is unique. The fact that the artist selected a cigarette as an adornment or embellishment for his handiwork is a departure and yet there are with it as many pros as cons. If nude pictures are admired for the superiority of the workmanship of their creators regardless of the fact that, looked at from some view points they might inspire unholy thoughts, the picture of a master painter with a cigarette between the very fingers which created it should doubtless appeal from more than one view point. The question brings forward another thought: the inconsistency of so publicly indulging in a habit when the evidence of the same in a picture stamps it as immoral
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THE PREVENTION OF FOREST FIRES
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FRIDAY August 12. 1910
PERSONS TALKED"ABOUT
Jack Johnson, the heavyweight fistic champion of the world, sails for Europe next week to begin a forty week vaudeville engagement and for which he is to receive $3,500 per week and expenses. He is the highest salaried theatrical star on the stage.
Powell Clayton, editor of the Little Rock State Republican of Arkansas, says, over his own signature, that something like thirty-eight per cent of the white voters of Arkansas have been disfranchised by the Domocrats of that state, which to his mind is carrying a good thing too far. The white Republicans permitted the Democrats to exterminate the black Republicans without protest, hoping to profit thereby, but instead of profiting, they too, are being consumed, so take your medicine.
William F. Gude is heading a movement to make Washington City the convention hub for not only the United States, but South and Central American countries. Mr. Gude is president of the chamber of commerce of Washington City, which is a very active organization. His idea is to raise sufficient money to give such conventions free halls and to an extent entertain the members while in the city. To perfect such a movement would give that city a world wide advertisement and make it the center of attraction for all America.
Francisco I. Modero, who ran for president against Diaz, is now in jail in that country, charged with having made use of seditious utterances in his late campaign. The seditious utterances that Madero made use of however, were to the effect that Diaz had used the office cf president of Mexico for his personal aggrandizement, which Diaz would not stand for. Evidently Madero had been reading Hearst's syndicate news.
N. B. Broward, is the name of one of the senators of Florida and it is said of him that, he started life as a steamboat deck hand. Senator Broward may have at one time worked on a steamboat as a deck hand, but if he did, those in Florida, who elected him to the senate, did not know it at the time or they would never have done so. The average white man of the the South is too darn lazy to work himself and he has no use for any other white man who will make even a bluff at work.
Mrs. Catherine Van Voorhis, who has the credit of having made the largest flag that ever surrounded the capitol building at Washington, D. C., though eighty years of age, recently attended a suffrage meeting at Washington and was received by President Taft with special ceremonies. She lives in Rochester, New York.
J. C. Spooner, a former Michigan United States senator, is out with a statement to the effect that, the United States is governed to death. What called forth the remark was the move on the part of a number of physicians to have a department of public health established in our government. He thinks such is absolutely uncalled for and would do no good if established, except to give a few fellows soft snaps at the tax payers expense. The theory might be applied to the various state governments, where all kinds of commissions have been established in order to give a few ward clacking politicians good places at the expense of the public.
Rev. Charles Stelzle, a New York divine, is of the opinion that the church is losing ground and the preachers and those who conduct the churches are directly responsible for the condition. He argues there should be less building up of church edifices and more building up of men, and he might have added, there should be more building up of Christianity, of the kind embodied in the Golden Rule and less of church hypocryacy as was exhibited in the World's Sunday School Convention recently held in Washington City
Lyman Abbott, the well known New York editor, says the paramount issues in the coming campaign in those states where the direct primary law is in vogue is already on are: Direct Primaries, Congressional Organization, Railway Regulation and Conservation. On these issues the Republicans are almost as badly divided among themselves as they are from the Democrats and to settle the vexed questions a great many Republicans will go out of their party and for the time being affiliate with the Democrats.
Because Paderewski did not need the money he sold a Seattle property which he bought for speculation at a profit of $2,000. If he had been dead broke and owned that lot and offered it for sale in order to get out even on it, he would not have been able to have disposed of it at a light loss to say nothing of a handsome profit.
maaan
FRIDAY August 12, 1910
Bishop A. Grant ofjtheJAfrican
Methodist | Episcopal {church %is
holding the Puget Sound confer-
ence of his church in this city
this week. The Puget Sound
conference from a_ territory
standpoint is the largest of any
district in the United States, but
froma numerical standpoint is
the smallest. Bishop Grant in
connection with his conference
work is doing muck toward the
building up of the Quindaro col-
lege, which is the only school
the connection has in the West.
Rey. W. H. W, Reese, of the
First Methodist Episcopal church
of Seattle, has tendered his res-
ignation to take effect at the end
of the present conference year.
Dr. Reese for the past four years
has been one of the notable di-
vines of the Northwest.
It is almost a foregone conclu-
sion that Dr. M. A. Matthews of
the First Presbyterian church
will also resign in the near fut-
ure or as soon as he has had time
to look over his prospective field
of labors in Philadelphia. It
will thus be seen that Seattle is
to soon lose two of her ablest
divines.
Plans are being perfected just
now among the property owners
of Seattle to compel the tele-
phone companies as well as the
electric light companies to put
all of their wires underground,
and that should be the para-
mount issue of the next munici-
pal campaign. The legislature
should pass a law giving the rail-
road commission of the state of
Washington the same control
over telephone and elec.ric light
companies that do business in
different cities of the state at
one and the same time and by
transmission wires as the com-
mission has over railroad com
panies.
When one stops to think of the
present telephone rentals in Se
attle and then learns that the
companies are going to increase
those rates at least 25 per cent it
is almost impossible to figure out
any profit for the oneowning the
Dusiness. Just think of it, a
small business office being com-
pelled to haye two telephones
and having to pay a monthly
rental of -fifteen dollars therefor.
If the telephone companies are
able to make such a hold up as
that run the gauntlet there will
be an uprising among the voters
at the next election for munici-
pal ownership of telephones that
will make that talking trust set
up and take notice as it never
has before.
There are not near so many
vacant houses in Seattle as re-
ported about a month ago and it
is hoped the worst is over, but it
is further hoped that the land-
lords have profited by the experi-
ence of this year and will cease
selling their places every month
and still own them. Rents have
been and verily are in the down
town districts still outrageously
high and should be scaled down.
ee
Despite the alleged hard times
in Seattle the building boom is
still on and tenement houses as
well as homes are being erected
ITEMS MORE OR LESS INTERESTING
by the scores. There areadoz- A strange religiousfrenzyhav- A trackless trolley has been di
en or more large business blocks ing taken possession of one Jo- proposed for use on the streets re
in the course of erection and seph Zucal, an Italian laborer, of of Leeds, Eng. sk
equally as many more being con- Wallace, Idaho, he declared that * _ pe
templated. The Hoge bluck, a blood sacrifice was demanded Hat See eee oben be
which is to be sixteen stories of him and proceeded to offer it ; ‘ co
will be begun early next year by placing his left hand on a . The baby’s chances of life are 9,
and the Leary block which is to splitting block and sacrificing his '7PTOvIne the world over. co
go to twenty stories will also index finger. Government telephone service is
start upwards next year. Just Rey. Louis C. Stumpf, pastor is not a success from the sub- as
how a city that is doing so much or Congregational Ghitirel: of Scriber’s standpoint in England. ra
building as is Seattle can be hard New york, has issued an appeal Ostrich feathers, valued at $8,- °
pressed is more than can be ex- +4 antomobile owners for the loan 000,945 have been exported from Pr
plained by the average business oftheir machines for an after- the Cape of Good Hope in one ™
man. EPI TP Bier am ee tio
Speaking about gambling in
Seattle it is being bruted about
the streets that Chief Wappen-
stein’s effort to have the North-
ern Club be exclusively police
protected was due to the fact
that he is financially interested
in theclub. Frank Clancy ‘‘hol-
lered’’ to the prosecuting attor-
ney and the Chief was informed
that Claney’s game in the De-
troit would run or there would
be no gambling in Seattle.
Clancy’s is running and so are a
number of joints.
AMUSEMENTS
“The Old Clothes Man’’ will
be the play at the Seattle Thea-
ter next week, starting off as
usual next Suaday with the mat-
inee, Oh, how the company will
revel in this play, and how the
audience will enjoy it. It is one
of the best comedy dramas, high
class, middle class,or any class
that has been sent out for years,
because it furnishes amusement
and quite as much heart interest
as the ‘‘Music Master,’”’ further-
more. instead of holding the
Hebrew race up to ridicule, it
displays their good qualities,
and the ‘Old Clothes Man’’
while creating plenty of laughter,
displays the fact that he isa
game sport, a loving father, a
kind friend, and that he had
learned a trick from the Japs
that would have stood Jim Jeff-
ries well at Reno—this will be
demonstrated in the play, in the
boxing bout, where the villian is
knocked out by the.‘‘Old Clothes
Man’’ at the Seattle Theater
next week, and the audience is
soglad to see the trick turned
by the old Jew, when the villain
gets whats coming to him, that
were the theatre not so
strongly built, it would be shaken
asunder by the tremendous ap-
plause.
TAKE NOTICE
Mrs. Stella Kester having left
my hoard. and bed on April 5,
1910, I will pay no bills she con-
tracts.
J. KESTER.
Seattle, Wash., Aug. 12, 1910.
ITEMS OF INTEREST
Assuming the heart to beat
sixty-nine times a minute at or-
dinary pressure, the blood goes
at the rate of 207 yards a min-
ute or nine miles an hour, 220
miles a day, and 80,000 miles a
year.
Brooklyn, New York has a
unique public official—a commis-
sioner of weeds who draws a
regular salary of generous size
for making note of all suburban
streets where the weeds need at-
tention,
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN.
A strange religious frenzy hav-
ing taken possession of one Jo-
seph Zucal, an Italian laborer, of
Wallace, Idaho, he declared that
a blood sacrifice was demanded
of him and proceeded to offer it
by placing his left hand on a
splitting block and sacrificing his
index finger.
Rev. Louis C. Stumpf, pastor
of a Congregational church of
New York, has issued an appeal
to automobile owners for the loan
of their machines for an after-
noon from 2 to 6 o’clock to take
fi55 of Chicago’s poor children
for an outing. Mr. Stumpf be-
lieves that at least fifty persons
will respond.
Seventy-nine cases of amateur
polimyelitis a form of infantile
paralysis, have been reported in
Springfield, Mass. All sufferers
of the disease are isolated. Par-
ents are warned to keep their
children at home and away from
picnics, excursions, Sunday
schools, theaters, playgrounds or
other places where children are
apt to congregate.
The jaw bones of the largest
whale ever caught by Japanese
whalers has arrived in the states.
The bones weigh fifty-five tons—
110,000 pounds. They are forty
feet long and were transported
from the steamship pier on a
large truck drawn by twelve
horses. It was caught off Moji,
Japan, and was more than 200
feet long.
A New York bargain sale was
so liberally responded to that
police reserves had to be called
out Five hundred women push-
ed, pulled, screamed and fainted
while the rain beat unmercifully
upon them. They were packed
tooclosely to raise an umbrella,
The show windows were in great
danger when the reserves arriv-
ed and established lines.
Wm. Walker who wasjremov-
ed from service as superintend-
ent ot public buildings fand] of-
fices in Manhattan, N. Y., about
three years ago was recently
reinstated by the appellate divi-
sion of the supreme {court.
Whereupon he reported for duty,
was assigned to his old position
for twenty-four hours and then
proceeded to resign and immedi-
ately collect his back salary for
three years at the rate of $5,000
a year, with interest.
Builders who were construct-
ing a reservoir at Cripple Creek,
Colorado, have been hindered in
their work for three months by
the enterprising animal known
as the beaver. In order to pre-
vent the creek tearing out the
big dam of the reservoir a tem-
porary dam was built and the
water turned into a ditch con-
structed to carry the water
through the dam in pipes. for
three months the beavers night-
ly closed this with their dam af-
ter which time they emigrated a
mile further up the stream.
SCIENCE SCINTILATIONS
The average Russian smokes
150 cigarettes a week.
Canadians are rapidly annex-
ing the Northern ice.
Italy has about 5,000 deported
criminals, who are maintaineded
on eight penal islands.
of Leeds, Eng.
From 60 to 70 per cent of insan-
ity is due to heredity.
The baby’s chances of life are
improving the world over.
Government telephone service
is not a success from the sub-
seriber’s standpoint in England.
Ostrich feathers, valued at $8,-
000,945 have been exported from
the Cape of Good Hope in one
year.
Nineteen Southern cities as-
sisted in building rural telephone
lines during the past year.
Under modern conditions it is
possible to drive 12,000 three
quarter-inch rivets in ten hours.
Weather variations have a
marked influence on the efficien-
ey of electrical wires.
It was not until 1903 that the
motor industry of this country
assumed any degree of promise.
During the course of her life
time, a Persian woman is some-
times married forty or fifty
times.
In 1888 Canada had open for
traffic 13,200 miles of railroad
line. In 1908 there were being
operated 23,000 miles of line.
Russia has the highest death
rate of any European country,
but Spain and Austria-Hungary
are also high.
Massachusetts has 5,671 elec-
trical manufacturing establish-
ments, with a product value of
$1,364,431,255, representing a
gain of about $240,000,000 over
1906, or 21.38 per cent.
No direct correspondence can
be traced between the fluctation
of the marriage and birth rates
respectively.
Antelope are still found in four-
teen western states, though the
total number is approximately
only 17,000.
It appears that while the rate
of increase in the population of
Massachusetts has apparently
declined in recent years, there
has been no decline in the rate
of increase in the valueof the
manufactured product.
For many years the French
birth rate has been steadily de-
clining, but in 1909 for the first
time in French history, the births
and deaths during the year were
practically equal. The figures
were: Births, 770,000; deaths,
756,500.
Ordinarily on boiler work,
where the rivet must be steam
tight and well driven, 1000 or
1500 rivets might be considered
a good day’s work, while on
structural work, such as girders,
3000, 4000 or more are generally
driven, and on such irregular
work as trussles, probably 2000
or 2500
In 50 years the foreign trade
of the United States has sextu-
pled in value, that of Austria-
Re ee oe ER a we
distant date, of the American
railroad from Suediap on the
shores of the Mediterranean,
penetrating 1200 miles to Diar-
bekz Bitla and Van througha
country which is rich with min-
eral and othor possibilities. The
company asking the concession
is ready to proceed with work
as soon as the details can be ar-
ranged, and the Ottoman goy-
ernment looks with favor on the
proposition so that it is likely to
materialize, despite the opposi-
tion which has been made on the
part of German representatives,
The project will represent an ex-
penditure of $100,900,000 and no
subsidy has been asked for ex-
cept the exclusive right to work
the mineral deposits along the
line’ It has received official ap-
proval and now has but to be
ratified by the Turkish Parlia-
ment.
Great care is now necessary in
the selection of wood in order to
meet the diversified demands and
requirements of the industries
making use of lumber. Not so
long ago, a casual and superficial
inspection of the wood sufficed
in making the selection for the
different purposes for which it
was selected and occasionally the
more particular consumers
would make use of an ordinary
haud magnifying glass in order
to determine it structural charac-
ter. This is regarded as entirely
inadequate at present The com-
pound microscope is now used
for the minute and careful ex-
amintion of longitudinal and
tranverse sections of a speci-
men of timber the commercial
and the proper industrial employ-
ment of whichit is desired to de-
termine. Fine grain and thick
walled cells assure the solidity
and resistance which are requir-
ed in carpentry. and these are
incompatible with with an abun-
dance of parenchymatous tissue
fillued with starch.
The estimated figures of the
steel business of the past six
months seem to indicate the
probability of the present year
being a record one. At least it
is safe to say that it will not be
far behind that of 1906 which
was the banner year. Estimates
on the tonnage of structural
steel placed in the United States
in the sixmonths to end June 80,
places the total at about 780,000
tons, or at the rate of 1,560,000
tons a year as against the total
of 1,500,000 tons for the record
year 1906. The figures on which
the estimate are based are very
conservative and do not inclued
several large contracts which
have been let, but which are not
for delivery this year. The six
months total represents slightly
less than 90 per cent of the max-
imum capacity of the structural
and fabricating plants of the
country. The value of the six
months’ contracts, including fab-
ricating costs, is about $30,000,-
000.
The intimation given out from
Oyster Bay to the effect that Mr,
Roosevelt has it in for the rascals,
has caused a panie in the Colon-
el’s party.—Charleston News and
Courier,
ALBERT HANSEN.
Eyes Carefully Examined and
Properly Fitted With Glasses.
Phone, Main 268. Seattle Washington.
First and Cherry.
POLITICS AND THE POLITICIANS
4
For trying to do the impossible that Fish at Olympia that wants to be secretary of the state must be a sucker.
According to the Times "Lieutenant and Acting" Governor Hay is without a political friend. Evidently "Kunnel the Kulprit" is measuring Hay's corn by his half bushel.
Mr. Frank Baker denies being in a newspaper controversy and yet he has been saying, "I didn't," for the past ten days.
Tenderloiners and their satellites in Seattle are to a man for Hodge for sheriff and Griffith for prosecuting attorney, and with Gill as Mayor and Wappenstein as chief of police, if that is not a hell of a line up, then whati n hell is it?
Judge Burke's nomination for United States senator is dependent upon him getting 14,000 majority in King county over Senator Wilson. That is such an absurd proposition that even Judge Burke himself takes it with a grain of salt. Enumclaw enjoyed her annual picnic last Saturday. Speakers had to cut out politics and that may account for Judge Burke not caring to participate in the festive ceremonies.
If Bob Hodge and Charley Phillips continue to bid against each other for the Republican nomination of sheriff pretty soon they will be offering the county commissioners $500 in cash and the salary thereof for the honor of being sheriff.
With Ed Cudihee, the well known Democrat, laying dead for the Republican nominee for sheriff, the question is, what will it profit either Hodge or Phillipps to get the nomination?
C. A. Moran, who was quite active in political circles in St. Louis, Mo., his former home, but who is now a resident of the eighth ward of Seattle, is doing the front office work at the John L. Wilson Senatorial Club headquaters. Mr. Moran is a pleasing and affable young gentleman and it is predicted that he will become quite a favorite in Seattle political circles in the near future.
Thomas P. Revelle, councilman from the seventh ward, has filed for representative to Congress for the First Congressional district. He is not exactly an Insurgent, but he is so near that it would take a Philadelphia lawyer to define the difference between his and the Insurgent's platform. Tom, however, is a hustler from way back and until the primaries there will be things doing between Humphrey and Revelle.
J. Henry Denning, who has filed for prosecuting attorney has an eighteen-foot sign under his window, which overlooks Pioneer Square. He may not get the nomination, but if he does not he will get a bunch of advertisement that would make a Dr. Ratcliff sick with envy.
Former Lieutenant-Governor Charles E. Coon is reported as having come out for Burke. What else could he consistently do? He is anti-Isurgent and has always been violently opposed to Wilson. It was a true case of Hobson's choice.
With such men as C. C. Ramsey in the legislature the taxpayers can feel assured that the legislature will not bankrupt the state by wild and extravagant appropriations such as was indulged in last session. He would not be measly and small, but under no circumstances would he sit idly by and see the state's funds voted away to official grafters.
Robert S. Terhune, chairman of the Republican central committee, having put in such a strenuous time preparing for the late state convention, has been taking a deserved vacation for the past ten days. He returns today and will begin an active John L Wilson campaign. He is an untiring worker. Dr. Beach the Mason county fog horn, who is a standing candidate for the legislature and who seems to have no higher aim for going to the legislature than to rob the state out of its oyster lands, was a delegate to the late Tacoma convention, and as on all public occasions championed the cause of the graft interests.
"The hope of the white race" in the Thirty-seventh senatorial contest has a sufficient number of "interests" with him to make an interesting campaign for his opponent that's on the square and in the open. Gentlemen, money talks.
Fearing that he was not tall enough to knock the senatorial plum George W. Jeffries dropped out of that contest and has filed for the house. With the vote of the district cut up as it will be, owing to five other candidates, he figures that he will win in a walk for the house.
Out of the eight senators King county is entitled to, it begins to look as if the county unit optionists are
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
going to divide the delegation with the wets, and while the drys are not much on concoctions they are not averse to having a "half and half" for the senate.
From the number of candidates for the legislature in King county they must be convinced that, the election of United States senator will be decided after a hot scrap in the legislature, and that if Judge Burke "jarred loose" to an extent in the campaign it would be nothing to what he will do in the legislature and they need the money.
Of course the Hon. John L. Wilson wants to go to the United States senate, and there are something like a hundred thousand other men in the state of Washington who would not object to doing the self same thing, and, by the way, it seems to be a laudable ambition.
Requisites for office under the direct primary law are money and publicity, neither of which the average man with the office itch, is well supplied.
Sissy A. S. Burrows, superintendent of the public schools of King county, might be more to his calling if he would take an elevator job in one of the down town blocks, and the fathers of the county would have better schools for their little ones if they nominate Miss Mary Simmons, the feminine applicant, who has asked for the Republican nomination of county school superintendent.
J. W. McConnugahey has filed for county treasurer, and Bill Hanna, the two-bit clerk, who has filed for the same place, now knows that he has a man to run against.
It begins to look as if the Republicans of King county are thoroughly satisfied with Judge Ronald for superior court judge as only weaklings have filed against him.
Henry W. Lung, who has filed for senator of the thirty-sixth district, objects to taking the pledge. In view of the fact that Mr. Lung has no more show of being elected than a snowball to fly through hades, he has no scruples of refusing to do what the general public expects every good citizen to do.
Filing for nominations closes Saturday 13th and you have one week more to get your name on the roll of the county's army of office seekers. The grafters need the money and it is hoped that enough will file to sufficiently swell the exchequer so that the retiring grafters will have something to take with them.
Mont W. Gay, brother of Judge Gay, has filed for the nomination of representative in the thirty-first district. Politics seem to come perfectly natural to the Gay family.
Now that Senator Nelson B. Aldrich has practically ruined the Republican party he says he is going to leave the senate. Let us hope that he has purchased a ticket for the place where fires need no kindling.
"Republicans Should Pull Together," is a caption to a word of warning by Seaberry Merritt of Spokane candidate for Congress. Republicans do pull together. It is dirty Democrats, wolves in sheep's clothing masquerading as Republicans that are causing all the trouble among Republicans.
Thomas P. Revelle is now a full-fledged Insurgent candidate for the house of representatives of Congress to succeed Will E. Humphrey, and it begins to look as if Mr. Humphrey has the fight of his life to succeed himself. In the local fights in which Mr. Revelle has participated, he has always demonstrated that he was exceedingly popular and he says those fights will be nothing in comparison to the fight at the primaries September 13th. "I will beat Mr. Humphrey in every county in the district and will beat him so badly in Seattle that he will be the laughing stock of the community. I will be nominated and elected, and if I do not make good and be able to succeed myself, I will take my medicine like a man. I am not running as a kite to any one's seratorial campaign and I am not a disgruntled Republican. I will not vote for Joseph Cannon for speaker of the house, but if I go into the Republican caucus and am beaten I will not join hands with the Democrats to prevent necessary legislation." While Will E. Humphrey is perhaps the most classic debater of the Washington delegation in Congress he has not made friends and cannot be considered by any means popular and his line up with Speaker Cannon will cost him hundreds of votes, but even at that, Mr. Revelle will have to go some to beat him. It is reported that every Woodman in the district has resolved himself into a committee of one to work for Revelle's election. Before the filing time closes others may get the habit and THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN will wait and see.
FRIDAY August 12, 1910
The most of the delegates to the late state Democratic convention of Texas must have come from the lunatic asylum as they endorsed Joe Bailey for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1912. What damphools we mortals be.
"When thieves fall out honest men get their own," is an old axiom, but in the results of the late Alaska election it would seem that the axion does not apply. Whether Orr or Wickersham won honesty had no show.
JONES SHOULD TAKE THE STUMP
When a man has served the people of a state faithfully for twelve years and during that time has so conducted himself that even has enemies are forced to admit that he has at all times been a representative of the whole people and not of any special interest or hobby, the utterances of that man are entitled to weigh heavily with his constituents on any public question.
Senator Wesley L. Jones in his speech before the Republican convention at Tacoma asserted that more legislation demanded by the people had been enacted during the seventeen months of Taft's administration than during the seven years immediately preceeding.
This assertion was a simple statement of fact well known to any man who has followed the record of the last Congress.
Collier's Weekly and the other disreputable muckraking journals to the contrary notwithstanding.
It should detract none from the fame of Roosevelt to give his successor due credit for what he has accomplished, but we have in this country a bunch of dissatisfide two by four agitators and penny liners who have found that a certain populistic tendency among many pretended Republicans demands noise instead of action, hence since Taft is a quiet man not given to brass band pronouncements, they have proceeded to pander to this crowd and have lied about the president as only a muckraker of the Joe Smith type can lie.
Senator Jones should deliver his convention speech in at least twenty-five of the larger cities in this state between now and the 13th of September.
If the word of Senator Jones is not better than the voice of the insurgent to the ear of any Republican, then Washington is in a bad way politically and should be given a dose of Democracy's best astringent if nothing else will save us from the festering sore of Insurgency as represented by Poindexter, La Follette and their gang of party traitors.—Washington Saturday Review
SECOND CHOICE ADVISED AGAINST
In convention assembled in Tacoma last week the Republicans went on record as opposing the second choice in the direct primary law, which, in our opinion, was a serious mistake. With the second choice cut out no candidate need get more than twenty-two percent of the vote cast to get the nomination and that is not the majority ruling. If the second choice is to be cut out then the candidate for office in order to be declared the nominee should get sixty per cent of the party vote cast. With the second choice cut out it will be just as easy a matter for the "interest", to control the direct primary elections as it was for them to control the convention and we are inclined to think even easier. Instead of cutting out the second choice for state office the second choice should be applied to county and city offices. We do not believe the second choice is the elixir for the aches and pains of the direct primary law, but it is better than anything else that has been suggested. Leave the second choice as it is, but amend the law so as to make every one registering to vote in an election declare the party he intends to vote for at the time he registers and you will go a long ways toward preventing the Democrats from deserting their party at the primary election and then returning to their party in the general election. It is conceded by both Republicans and Democrats that in the primary election to be held September 13th next that practically every Democrat in the state will call for the Republican ticket and vote for Poindexter or Burke, but more especially the former, because they believe Poindexter is more of a Democrat than a Republican. If we are to continue to have parties in this country party status should be fixed by law. A man knows when he registers what party he wants to affiliate with and he has no right to go into another party in the primary election and two months thereafter return to the real party of his choice. The man who does it is a perjurer, a thief and a corruptionist and as much a criminal as the highwayman in stripes.
FRIDAY August 12, 1910
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
THOMAS P. REVELLE
NOTICE OF REFEREE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County, George Michael, Schweizer, Wiley demand, Fagolina Frei, Jacob Schweizer, Katherine Kobl, Jacob Schweizer and Christina Kasper, plaintiff's vs. Lorenz Schweizer, M, Schultz, agent of Lorenz Schweizer, and the unknown heirs of said Lorenz Schweizer, if the said Lorenz Schweizer demanded, and albeit, persons or parties unknown, claiming any right, title or estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein, defendants.-No. 71128.
Notice is hereby given that the Secretary of a decree of the House of Washington, for King County, entered on the 22d day of July, 1910, in the above entitled action, I will proceed to sell, at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. on the 20th day of August, 1910, before the Court House door of the Court House of King County, having described property belonging to the plaintiffs and defendants, situated in King County, Washington, to-wit:
The East forty-four (44) feet of Lots
Two (2) and three (3), Block two (2),
Dean's Addition to the city of Seattle,
such sale will be made for cash.
Dated this 22d day of July, 1910.
Charles A. Scott.
Referee Appointed by the Superior Court
of the State of Washington, for King
County.
First publication 22, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for King County,
Goldie Skentzr, Plaintiff, vs. Samuel
Skentzr, Dependent No. — Summar-
ment of Publication.
The State of Washington to Samuel
Skentzr, Defendant.
You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit, within sixty days after the 12th day of August, 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court and answer the complaint of the plaintiff herein and serve a copy of your answer upon the address below stated, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint herein, a copy of which has been filed with the clerk of this court.
The object of said action as set forth in the complaint is to obtain a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony now existing between plaintiff and defendant upon the ground of neglect and failure of the defendant support plaintiff.
EDWARD VON TOBEL
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office adn Postoffice Address: Rooms 603-5 Mutual Life Bldg., Seattle, King County, Washington.
Date of first publication, August 12, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of New York, in the County of
Eastchester, in Erie, Pennsylvania.
In the Matter of the Estate of Elizabeth George, Deceased.—No. 10233. Order Fixing Time to Hear Final Account and to Show Cause Why Distribution Should not be Made. Frank Wood, administrator of the estate of Elizabeth George, deceased, having filed in this court his final account and petition setting forth that said estate is now in a condition to be closed and is ready for distribution of the residue thereof among the persons entitled by law thereto, and it appearing to the court that said petition sets forth facts
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington in and for King County.
Seattle Electric Company, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs. Mrs. J. H. McLean, also known as Fanny McLean, and also known as F. M. McLean, Defendant.—74347. Summons for Publication. The State of Washington, to Mrs. J. H. McLean, also known as Fanny McLean, and also known as F. M. McLean, Defendant. You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wait within sixty days after the 24th day of June, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer on the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at the office below stated, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you, according to the demand of the complaint, which has defiled with the clerk of the said court. The object of said action is to recover judgment against you in the sum of $171.80 and costs on agreement signed by you in the form of the plaintiff, and writ of garnishment has been issued against the National Bank of Commerce, corporation.
WILLIAM WRAY,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office and P. O. Address,
657-8 Empire Building,
Seattle, King County, Washington.
June 24-Aug. 5, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Emile Marx and Louis Marx, copart-
nents doing business under the name
and firm style of Marx Bros., Plain-
tiffs, vs. I. Freedman, doing business
under the firm name and style of I.
Freedman & Co., Defendants. No.
74315. Summons.
The State of Washington, to the said
I. Freedman, doing business under the
firm name and style of I. Freedman &
You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days of the first publication of this summons, to-with: within sixty (60) days after the 17th June, 1910, and defend an action in the Superior Court of the State of Washington in King County after Plaintiffs, answer the complaint of the wer upon the undersigned attorneys for and in case of your failure so that judgment will be rendered against you according to the command of the complaint, with which has been filed with the office of said Court.
The above entitled action is a suit for the recovery of One Hundred and Ffty-five dollars and Sixteen cents ($155.16), due the Plaintiff from the Defendant as commissions for the sale of merchandise.
TWOROGER & WINKLER,
Attorneys for Plaintiffs.
10 Prefontaine Triangle Building, Seattle, Washington
July 1, 1910.
JUNE 11
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Marie D. Tonjes, Plaintiff, vs. Paul Tonjes
Defendant—No. 74116. Summons
for Publication.
The State of Washington to the said
Paul Tonjes, Defendant:
You are hereby summoned to appear
within sixty (60) days after the date
of the first publication of this summons,
to-wait, within sixty days after the 24th
day, in 1910, and defend the above
entitled action in the above entitled
court, and answer the complaint of the
plaintiff and serve a copy of your an-
sufficient to authorize a distribution of the residue of said estate:
It is therefore ordered by the court that all persons interested in the estate of the said Elizabeth George, deceased, be and appear before the said Superior Court of King County, State of Washington; at the court room of the Probate Department of said court in King County, Kingston on the 10th day of September, 1911 at the hour of 9:30 o'clock A. M. of said day, then and there to show cause, if any they have, why said final account should not be allowed and an order for distribution be made of the residue of said estate among the heirs and persons in said petition mentioned, according to law.
It is further ordered, that a copy of this order be posted in three of the most public places in King County, for a period of four weeks prior to said hearing of the case, and for a period of executive weeks before the said 10th day of September, 1910, in the Seattle Republican, a newspaper printed and published in said King County and of general circulation therein.
Done in open court this 9th day of August, 1910.
WILSON R. GAY,
Huge.
State of Washington, County of King, ss.
I. D. K. Sickles, County Clerk of King County and ex-officio Clerk of the Superior Court of the State of Washington, for the County of King, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of an original order to show cause, made by said Clerk on the day of August, 1910, in matter of the estate of Elizabeth George, deceased.
Witness my hand and the seal of said Court this 9th day of August, 1910.
(SEAL) D. K. SICKLES,
Clerk.
By PERCY F. THOMAS,
Deputy Clerk.
Aug. 12—Sept. 9, 1910.
REPUBLICAN Aug. 10
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King County, Aurora Land Company, a Corporation, Plaintiff, vs. Unknown owners, and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, Defendants.—No. 74885. Notice and Summons. State of Washington: To the above defendants and each of them: We each of you, as owners, claimants or holders of an interest or estate in and to the hereinafter described real property, are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff is the holder of one certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the Treasurer of King County, State of Washington, dated the 1st day of June, 1909, and numbered as follows, for the delinquent taxes of the following year, in the following amount, and upon the real property situated in King County, described as follows: In Davis' improved Addition to the City of Seattle, Lot 2, Block 2, Certificate No. B55369, year 1906, amount $0.79.
That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, to-wit: Lot 2, Block 2, Davis' Improved Addition to the City of Seattle, $1.07, for year 1907. Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property. You and each of you, (including said persons unknown, if any), are hereby swer upon the undersigned attorneys for plaintiff, at their office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complainant which have been filed with the clerk of said court.
The object of this action is to obtain a dissolution of the bonds of matrimony now existing between plaintiff and defendant, and the grievance against the plaintiff by defendant, and the care and custody of the infant daughter of plaintiff and defendant, and for an attorney's fee of $100, and costs and disbursements and general expenses.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County, Fanny V. De LaVille, Plaintiff, vs. Paul V. De LaVille, Defendant. State of Washington to Paul V. De LaVille, Defendant. No. 74510. Summons to Publication. You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, towit, within sixty days after the 8th day of July, A.D. 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the court of coroner and answer the complaint of plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer thereto upon the undersigned attorney for the plaintiff at his address below stated; in case of your failure so to do judgment will be rendered against according to the prayer of plaintiff's counsel that has been filed with the clerk of said court). The object of the above entitled action is to obtain a decree of absolute divorce from you on the grounds of failure to support plaintiff and cruel treatment rendering life of plaintiff burdensome. Date of first publication, 8th day of July, 1910.
HOWARD O. DURK,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Postoffice and office address: 535
Henry Building, Seattle, King County,
Washington.
July 8, August 19, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King County, Alice E. Hart, Plaintiff, vs. William Hart, Defendant.—No. 74752. Summons by Deputy Justice. The State of Washington to William Hart, Defendant.
In the name of the State of Washington, you are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days from and after the date of the first publication of this summons, and to appear within sixty days from and after the 15th day of July, 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled Court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned, the attorney for the plaintiff, at his offices below stated; and can cause a failure so, that judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of the above entitled Court. The object of the said action set forth in the complaint is as follows: To secure a divorce from the defendant in favor of plaintiff on the grounds of non-support, cohabitation and personal indignities, and desertion.
P. O. Address, 422 Boston Block, Seattle,
King County, State of Washington.
First date of publication, July 15, 1910.
Last date of publication, Aug. 26, 1910.
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
further notified and summoned to be and appear within sixty days after the date of first publication of this notice, exclusive of the day of said first publication, to-wear within sixty days after August 2, 1911, to the above entitled court and action; and defend this action and answer the complaint of said plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer on the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. In case you fail so to do, judgment will be rendered herein, foreclosing the lien of said taxes and costs against each parcel of said real property for the sums and amounts due upon and charged against each, for said taxes, interest and costs ordering a sale of above parcel of said property for the satisfaction of the sums charged and found against it respectively as provided by law, and as prayed in plaintiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court.
AURORA LAND CO., a Corporation,
Plaintiff.
F. J. CARVER,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
AURITHER
Northern Bank & Trust Co. Bldg,
Aug. 12—Sept. 23, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for King County.
Aurora Land Company, a Corporation,
Plaintiff, vs. Unknown owners, and all
persons unknown, if any, having or
claiming to have an interest in and to
the herelinafter described real property,
Defendants.—No., Notice and
Summons.
State of Washington. To the above
defendants and each of them:
You and each of you, as owners, claim-
ants or holders of an interest or estate
in and to the herelinafter described real
property, are hereby notified that the
above named plaintiff is the holder of
one certain delinquent tax certificate
issued by the Treasurer of King County,
State of Washington, dated the 1st day
of June, 1909, and numbered as follows,
for the delinquent taxes of the follow-
ing person, upon the real property situated in said
King County, described as follows, toow:
Davis' Improved Addition to the City of Seattle, Lot 28, Block 1, Certificate No. B55367, year 1906, amount $0.76.
That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, to-wit:
Lot 28, Block 1, Davis' Improved Addition to the City of Seattle, $1.07, for year 1907.
The general sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property.
You and each of you (including said persons unknown, if any), are hereby further notified and summoned to be and appear within sixty days after the date of first publication of this notice, exclusive of the date of said publication, to-wit, within 60 days after August 12, 1910, in the above entitled court and action; and defend this action and answer the complaint of said plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer on the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. In connection with the notice to-wit, will be rendered herein, foreclosing the lien of said taxes and costs against each parcel of said real property for the sums and amounts due upon and charged against each, for said taxes, interest and costs, ordering a sale of each parcel of said property for the satisfaction of the sums charged and found
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
State of Washington, County of King-ss. Sheriff's Office. By virtue of an execution, issued out of the Honorable Superior Court of King County, on the 23rd day of June, 1910, by the Clerk thereof, in the case of Aurora Land Company, a corporation, plaintiff, versus D. A. Hatfield, defendant, No. 73333, and to me, as Sheriff, directed and delivered;
Notice is hereby given, That I will proceed to sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, within the hours prescribed by law for sheriff's sales, towelt, at 10 o'clock a. m. on the 13th day of January, 2014, in the House door of said King County, in the State of Washington, all of the right, title and interest of the said defendant, D. A. Hatfield, in and to the following described property, situated in King County, State of Washington, to-wit; title and interest of the said defendant (28) to repaint of East Seattle, and block 166 C. D. Hillman's Lake Washington Garden of Eden Addition to Seattle, Division No. 3, and an undivided one-half interest in the east one-half of the southwest one-quarter of the southeast one-quarter section of the city range, range 18 and lots 18 to 22 inclusive, block one (1) Gillman Park First Addition, Seattle, all of said property being situated in King County, State of Washington levied on as the property of said defendant, D. A. Hatfield, judgment, and costs to three hundred and seventy-seven 47-100 ($377,47) dollars, and costs of suit, in favor of plaintiff.
Dated this 28th day of June, 1910.
ROBERT T. HODGE, Sheriff.
By J. STRINGER, Deputy.
July 1. July 29. 1910.
Jos. T. Greenleaf Casner
Incorporated Dec. 19th, 1889
Commercial Savings and Trust
General Bank and Exchange
Cor. Second and Pike St. Seattle, Waist
IN JUSTICE'S COURT
Before R. R. George Justice of the Peace, in and for Seattle Precinct,
King County, State of Washington.
F. H. Hurd, doing business as F. H.
Hurd & Co., Plaintiff, vs. A. S. Graham and Jane Doe Graham, his wife, whose true Christian name is unknown, Defendant—No. 20223-4. Summons: Publication of Wake County of King, ss.
State of Washington, County of King, ss.
The State of Washington, A. S. Graham and Jane Doe Graham, his wife, whose true Christian name is unknown:
You, and each of you, are hereby notified that F. H. Hurd, doing business as F. H. Hurd & Co., has filed a complaint against you in said Court, which will come on to be heard at my office in Room 210, New York Life Building, Seattle, King County, Washington, on the 22th day of September, 1900, by the plea of the clerk M., and unless you appear and then and there answer, the same will be taken as confessed and the demand of the plaintiff granted. The object and demand of said plaintiff is to recover $65.65, a balance due for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered to the defendant by the plea of the clerk M., and has been issued out of this cause against the Mutual Adjustment Co., and said Mutual Adjustment Co. answered $14.75 due and owing to the defendant. Filed August 6, A. D. 1910.
R. R. GEORGE,
Justice of the Peace, in and for Seattle Precinct, King County,
Washington.
Aug. 12-Sept. 23.
against it respectively as provided by law, and as prayed in plaintiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court.
AURORA LAND CO., a Corporation,
Plaintiff.
F. J. CARVER,
Attorney for Plaintiff,
Northern Bank & Trust Co. Bldg.
Aug. 12—Sept. 23, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Aurora Land Company, a Corporation,
Plaintiff, vs. Unknown owners, and
all persons unknown, if any, having
or claiming an interest in and to the
hereinafter described real property,
Defendants. No. ——. Notice and Sum-
mons.
State of Washington: To the above defendants and each of them:
You and each of you, as owners, claimants or holders of an interest or estate in and to the hereinafter described real property, are hereby notified that the above-named plaintiff is the holder of one certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the Treasurer of King County, of Washington, dated the 1st day of June, 1909, and numbered as follows, for the delinquent taxes of the following year, in the following amount, and upon the real property situated in said King County, described as follows, to-wit:
Davis' Improved Addition to the City of Seattle, Lot 25, Block 1, No. 585364, Year 1909, amount $92.
That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, to-wit:
Lot 25, Block 1, Davis' Improved Addition to the City of Seattle, $1.43, for year 1907.
Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from sale of the property, and are all the paid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property.
You and each of you (including said persons unknown, if any), are hereby further notified and summoned to be and appear within sixty days after the date of first publication of this notice, exclusive of the day of said first publication, with valid sixty days after August 12, 1910, in the above entitled court and action; and defend this action and answer the complaint of said plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer on the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at this office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and payment. If the same amount will be rendered herein, foreclosing the lien of said taxes and costs against each parcel of said real property for the sums and amounts due upon and charged against each, for said taxes, interest and costs, ordering a sale of each parcel of said property for the sums and amounts charged against it respectively as provided by law, and as prayed in plaintiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court.
AURORA LAND CO., a Corporation,
Plaintiff.
FILL CARRIER
Attorney for Franklin,
Northern Bank & Trust Co. Bldg.
Aug. 12—Sept. 23, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for King County,
In the Matter of the Person and Estate
of Evelyn E. Duckering, a Minor.—
No.— Order.
The guardian of the person and estate
of the above minor having filed his petition herein, asking for authority to sell
at private sale the undivided one-eighth
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of Seattle.
Capital Stock $300,000
Deposits $8,250,000.
Jacob Furth, President.
R. V. Ankeny, Cashier.
F. K. Struve, Vice-President.
O. W. Crockett, Asst. Cashier.
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ORDER A
OUT TO YOUR
PHONE SIDNEY 526
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS.
Notice is hereby given the Equalization will be in session MONDAY, AUG At the Auditor's office at the purpose of equalizing the tax claiming abatement of tax are or before
Notice is hereby given that the King County Board of Equalization will be in session three (3) weeks, commencing MONDAY, AUGUST 1st, 1910,
At the Auditor's office at the King County Court House, for the purpose of equalizing the tax roll of 1910. All taxpayers claiming abatement of tax are hereby notified to appear on or before
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20th, 1910.
County Auditor and Ex
County Commission
ington.
Dated at Seattle, this 2nd d
County Auditor and Ex-officio Clerk of the Board of County Commissioners of King County, Washington. Dated at Seattle, this 2nd day of July, 1910.
Attorney for Plaintiff
or be forever barred.
RIDAY August 12, 1910
interest of the minor herein in and to
the property hereinafter described; it is
therefore
Ordered, that all persons interested
therein appear at the hour of 9:30 A. M.
on the 9th day of September, 1910, before
the Honorable R. H. Lindsay, Court
Commissioner, at the King County Court
House, in Seattle, King County, Washington,
to show cause why said order
should not be made. A copy of this
order shall be issued for at least four
(4) successive weeks prior to said date,
in the Seattle Republican, a newspaper
printed and published in Seattle, King
County, Washington.
Lots nine (9), ten (10), eleven (11) and twelve (12), of block two (2), of Bloom's Subdivision of Ayres Addition to Olympia, Washington.
The east one-half (E $\frac{1}{2}$) of lots one (1) and two (2), of block three (3), of Henderson & Lyberger's Subdivision of block fourteen (14), of Ayres' Addition to Olympia, Washington.
The northeast quarter of the northeast quarter (NE $\frac{1}{4}$) NE $\frac{1}{4}$), section twenty-six (26), township eighteen (18) north, of range one (1) west of the Willamette Meridian.
Also a tract of land, being part of D. R. Bigelow's Donation Claim No. 39, in township eighteen (18) north, of range two of the Willamette Meridian, more particularly described as follows, to-wit:
Commencing one hundred and eighty
(180) feet west and one hundred fifty-
four and five-tenths (154.5) feet north
and northeast corner of land sold to
Welshman, recorded in Volume
22 of Deeds, page 9 (1.5%) feet of
county Town, Washington; thence north
sixty (60) feet; thence east three hundred
eighty-three and three-fourths
(383%) feet; thence south one hundred
twenty-four and five-tenths (124.5) feet;
thence west one hundred seventy-three
and three-fourths (1.5%) feet; thence
north four and five tenths (4.5)
feet; thence west sixty (60) feet; thence
north sixty (60) feet; thence west one
hundred fifty (150) feet to point of
commencement.
Done in open court, this 2d day of
August, 1910.
WILSON R GAY,
Judge.
Aug. 12—Sept. 9, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
In the T. Mitchell Died.—No. 12,020.
Notice to Creditors.
By order of said court made herein on the 8th day of August, 1910, notice is hereby given to the creditors of, and to all persons having claims against said deceased or against said estate, to present them with the necessary vouchers estate, at 314 Northport Bank & Trust Building, Seattle, Wash., the place of business of said estate, in Seattle, in said county and state, within one year from and after the date of first publication of this notice or same will be barred.
Date of first publication, 12th day of August, 1910
BLIJAH B. MITCHELL
As Administrator of said Estate
As Administrator of said Estate.
F. J. CARVER,
Attorney for Estate,
314 Northern Bank & Trust Bldg.,
Seattle, Wash.
Aug. 12-Sept. 9, 1910.
TO OUR CUSTOMERS
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Let's Bust the State Dental Trust.
Take a trip to Seattle and let me save you the price of your trip on your dental work. You save two dollars and the State Dental Monopoly will lose two dollars when I do your dental work. Have your dental work done now while the dental war is on. My offices have been established at 713 First Ave., in the Union Block, for low-compay with cheap dentists, but with the high-compay dentists for half their price. Open evenings until 8 and
Take a trip to Seattle and let me save you the price of your trip on your dental work. You save a dollar, I make a dollar and the State Dental Monopoly will lose two dollars when I do your dental work. Have your dental work done now while the dental war is on. My offices have been established at 713 First Ave., in the Union Block, for 18 years. I do not compete with cheap dentists, but with the high-class dentists for half their price. Open evenings until 8 and Sundays for 4 people who work.
EDWIN J. BROWN, D.D.S.
713 First Avenue
Seattle, Wash.
Read my article in Sunday's P.-I. and Monday's Times and Star.
ORDER A CASE
OUT TO YOUR PLACE OF
Rainier PALE BEER
FRIDAY August 12, 1910
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County,
Georgia Cramblet, Plaintiff, vs. Edward
Cramblet, Defendant. No. 74982. Summons
by Publication. The State of
Washington to the said Edward Cramblet, Defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first petition of summons from within sixty days after the 29th day of July, 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at a below stated; and answer of your failure to comply with judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The object of the above entitled action is to obtain a divorce on the ground of your failure and neglect to support plaintiff at one year prior to commencement of this lawsuit and for a restoration of the maiden name of plaintiff.
P. O. Address: 535 Henry Building, Seattle, King County, Washington. July 23—Sept. 9, 1910.
NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS OF CANNEL GOAL CO.
To the creditors and stockholders of the Cannel Coal Company, of Washington, a corporation: You, and each of you will please take notice that on a Saturday, the 17th day of September, 1910, at the office of said company, No. 314 Colman Building, in the City of Seattle, Washington, at the hour of four o'clock or as soon thereafter as said matter may be taken up, will be held a meeting of the Cannel Coal Company, of Washington, for the object and purpose of reducing the capital stock of said Cannel Coal Company, of Washington, a corporation, from Five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000.00), which is its present capitalization, to the amount of Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($250,000).
You are hereby notified to be present at such meeting and to cast your vote upon such subject or present such object as you may have, to any such reduction of capital stock aforesaid.
Dated at Seattle, King County, Washington, this 29th day of July, 1910.
Majority of Board of rTustees of Cannel Coal Co., Washington. July 29 - Sept. 23, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, in and for King County: James B. Andrews, Plaintiff wif. Lucy A. Andrews, Defendant. No 74958, Summons-State. Washington to the said jury. Andrews, Defendant: You hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the first publication of this summons, to-wit, within sixty (60) days after the 29th day of July, 1910. In the above entitled notice the complaint of plaintiff and serve a plea of answer upon the understaff attorneys for the plaintiff at their office below stated, and in case of your failure so to do judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of said complaint, which has defiled with the clerk of said court. This action is brought for the purpose of obtaining on the grounds of cruelty and personal indignities, and that the parties cannot live together.
Orfice and Postoffice address: Room 25 Union Block, 713 First Ave., Seattle Washington.
Washington, July 29, Sept. 1915.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. In Probate. In the matter of the estate of Franklin L. Powell, Deceased. No. 10308. Order to show cause why distribution should not be made, fixing time for hearing final account and giving notice thereof. Maud E. McLeod, formerly Maud E. Powell, executrix, and Edward Van Tobel, executor of the estate. Franklin L. Powell, deceased, having this day presented and filed in this court their final account as such executrix and executor of said estate and forth that said estate is now dition to be closed and is ready for distribution to the persons entitled by law
And it appearing that the facts set forth are sufficient to authorize the dis- estate.
It is now therefore ordered by this court that Saturday, the 6th day of August, 19*0, at the hour of 9:30 o'clock in the forenoon of said day be, and the same is, hereby appointed as the date for hearing the settlement of said final account and petition for distribution at the court room of the probate department of said court, at the court house of the city of Seattle, in said King County, and it is ordered that all persons interested in said estate appear be performed said court, at said time, and place, then and there to show cause, and they have, why said final account should not be approved and why order of distribution should be made of the residue in said estate to the heirs and person in said petition mentioned according to law.
It is further ordered that notice of the time and place of hearing said final account and petition for distribution be given by posting a copy of this order in three of the most public places King County, Washington, at least four weeks before the said 6th day of August, 1910, and further with a copy of this order be published once a week for four successive weeks before said 6th day of August, 1910, in the "Seattle Re-publican," a newspaper printed and published in King County, Washington, and of general circulation therein and the posting and publishing of this notice as set forth is proper and adequate notice in the premises.
Done in open court this 8th day of
July, 1910. ROBERT H. LINDSAY. Court Commissioner. July 8. July 29. 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for the County of
King,—Emma Amelia McCandlish, Plaintiff,
vs. Robert J. McCandlish, Defendant.
No. ..... Summons by
dification. The State of Washington to
the saint Robert J. McCandlish, Defend-
ment. You are hereby summoned to appear
within sixty days after the date of
the first publication of this summons, towit, within sixty days after the 29th day of July, A. D. 1910, and defend the entitled action in the court of the entitled court and serve a complaint of the诉警 and serve a copy of your anplaintiff at his office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be renedered against you according to the demand of the court, which has been filed with the clerk of said诉警. The oblief of the said action and relief sought to be obtained therein
is fully set forth in said complaint, and is briefly stated as follows. To obtain a judgment of said court granting a divorce to plaintiff from you and to dissolve and sever the marriage relations now existing between plaintiff and you upon the grounds of your abandonment of plaintiff from you and to pay any other failure to make suitable provisions for plaintiff for more than one year.
J. P. BALL,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Postoffice and Office Address: 201-203 Burke Bldg., Seattle, County of King,
State of Washington.
July 29th, Sept. 9, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, in and for the
County of King.
Lola May Ellis, Plaintiff, vs. Mark Walter Ellis, Defendant. No. 73913. Publication Summons.
The State of Washington, to Mark Walter Ellis, Defendant.
You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of service, to-wit: within sixty days after the 27th day of May, 1910, the date of the first publication, and defend the above entitled action in the Superior Court of King County aforesaid, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for the plaintiff at his office below stated, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to demand of the complaint, which has been with the clerk of the above entitled court.
The object for which this action is brought is to secure an order annulling the marriage of the above entitled parties and to dissolve the bonds of matrimony now existing between the plaintiff and defendant herein.
REVENUE AYLMORE, Jr., Attorney for the Plaintiff.
Post Office Address: 200 Colman Building, Seattle, Washington, for the County of King.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for the County of King.
Hannah Abbott, Plaintiff, vs. Joseph H. Abbott, Defendant. No. 73972. Summons by Publication, The State of Washington, to the said Joseph H. Abbott, Defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, on Wednesday, July 24, 2014 day of May, A. D. 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled Court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. The object of the complaint is that a warrant be obtained therein is fully set forth in said complaint, and is briefly stated as follows:
To obtain a judgment of said court granting a divorce to plaintiff from you and to dissolve and sever the marriage relations now existing between plaintiff and you upon the grounds of your alimony plaintiff for more than ten years, and also your failure to make suitable provisions for plaintiff for more than twelve years last past.
J. P. BALL,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Post Office and Office Address: 201-203 Brke Building, Seattle, County of King, State of Washington. May 27—July 8, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF KING County, State of Washington. Department No. —
Josephine Aleks, Plaintiff, vs. Joseph Aleks, Defendant.—No. 73784. Summons for Publication.
State of Washington, to Joseph Aleks,
the above-named defendant:
You are hereby summoned to appear
within sixty days after the first publication
of this summons, to-wit: within
sixty days after the 20th day of May,
1910, and defend the above entitled action
in the above entitled Court, and answer
the complaint of the plaintiff, and
and custody of the minima child, issue
of the marriage of the parties to this suit,
for alimony, costs of suit and other relief.
J. E. McGREW,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
P. O. address: 419-420 Pioneer Building,
Seattle, Washington.
May 20—July 1, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for the County
of King.
Elva R. Baker, Plaintiff, vs. Thomas
Baker, Defendant.—No. —
Summons by Publication.
The State of Washington To the said
defendant:
You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, towit, within sixty days after the 10th day of Jure, in A 1919 and defend the two胜诉 Action in the same Court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. The object of the said action and the relief sought to be obtained therein is fully set forth in said complaint, and is briefly stated as follows: obtain a judgment of said court granting a divorce to plaintiff from you and to dissolve and sever the marriage relations now existing between plaintiff and you upon the grounds of incompatibility of temperament, cruelty, and failure to make proper provision, or any violation for plaintiff's support and maintenance.
Post Office and Office address: 201-203 Burke Building Seattle, County of King, Washington. June 10—July 22, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. J. M. Enyeart, Plaintiff, vs. name of Defendants, and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an interest in and to the hereafter described real property, defendants.—No. — Notion and Simmons. State of Washington to the above defendants and each of them:
You and each of you, as owners, claimants or holders of an interest or estate in and to the hereinafter described real property, are hereby notified that the tax certificates issued by the treasurer of the city of Seattle and tSate of Washington for King County, dated August 5, 1908, and numbered the delinquent taxes for the years 1908 to 1917, 1918, 1919, in said city of Seattle in King County and State of Washington, described as follows, to wit: Lot, Block 6, Rainier Boulevard, addition, amount, $60.91; Lot 23, Block South Byron Grove, addition, $60.91; Lot 23, Block South Byron Grove, addition, $28.15; North 30 feet, Lot 8, Block 40, Central
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
addition, $56.86; Lot 13, Block
8, Byron addition, $28.73; Lot 4, Block
7,rainier Valley addition, $15.41; Lot
Block 2, Fautanelle addition, $41.80;
Block 4, Block 4, Cedar Grove addition,
28.24; Block 2, 25, Block 4, Central
Seattle addition, $21.73; South
12% feet Lot Jock 46, Central Seattle
addition, $20.5; Lot 10, Central addition
to Columbia, $29.72; Lot 3,
Central Seattle addition, $ 39; which
the several sums bear interest at the
rate of 15 per cent per annum from said
sum of paid and unpaid taxes upon
unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon
and against said real property. You
and each of you (including said
persons unknown, if any), are hereby
by further notified and summoned to
and appear within sixty (60) days
of the notice, exclusive of the day of said first
publication, to-wit: within sixty (60)
days after June 3, 1910, in the above
entitled court and action, and defend this
action and answer the complaint of said
plaintiff and serve a copy of your an-
nounce, exclusive of the day of said first
publication, at his office, No. 1115 Madison
Street, Seattle, Washington, or his post-
office box, No. 403, or the amount due,
together witt, interest and costs; in case
you fall so to do, judgment will be
rendered herein, foreclosing the lien of
the property, and the lien of said real property for the sums
and amounts due upon and charged
against each for said taxes, interest and
costs, as provided by law.
Plaintiff
Residence. No. 1115 Madison St. Seattle.
Washington.
103
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF Real Estate. Sheriff's Office.
State of Washington, County of King, ss. Sheriff's Office.
By virtue of an Order of Sale, issued out of the Honorable Superior Court of King County, on the 21st day of May, 1910, by the Clerk thereof, in the case of W. H. Willard, R. H. Steely et al., & Intervengers. Plaintiffs, versus Estella M. Anderson et al., Defendants, No. 70133-70276, not to me, as Sheriff, directed and delivered:
Notice is hereby given, that I will proceed to sell at public auction to the highest bladder, for cash, within the hours prescribe by law for Sherl's sales, to obtain a Volunteer on the 9th day of July. A D. 1910, before the House door of said King County, in the State of Washington, all of the right, title and interest of the said defendants Estella M. Anderson, Acme Building Co., a corporation et al., in and to the following described property, situated in King County, State of Washington, tow
Lot (11). Block (3), H. S. Turner's Park Addition to the City of Seattle, levied on as the property of said defendants Estella M. Anderson, Acme Building Co., a corporation, et al., to satisfy the obligation for forgiveness of a mortgage and liens amounting to One Thousand Nine Hundred and Thirty-four and 19-100 ($1934.19) Dollars, and costs of suit, in favor of plaintiff.
Dated this 27th day of May, 1910.
ROBERT T. HODGE, Sheriff.
By A. HUTCHESON, Deputy.
May 27-June 24, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for the County of King, In Probate.
In the Matter of the Estate of Mattie J. Cole, Deceased. No. 9485. Order to Wow Cause on Sale of Real Estate.. Wow Cause on Sale of Real Estate of Mattie J. Cole, deceased, having filed his petition in this Court, duly verified, praying for an order of this Court togage the estate of which the said deceased died seized, for the purposes therein set forth;
And it appearing to the Court from said petition that the personal estate of the said deceased in the hands of said administrator is not sufficient to pay the claims against the said estate and the administrator is not required thereof, and that it is necessary to mortgage all or a portion of the real estate of the said deceased to pay the said claims and expenses of the administration. And it appearing to the Court that said petition conforms to, and is made admissible in the requirements of law in such case made by the Court is ordered by the Court that all persons interested in the estate of the said deceased appear before said Superior Court on Saturday, the 11th day of June, 1910, at the hour of 9:30 o'clock in the forenoon of said day at the Court-room of the Superior Court, in the City of Seattle. In said King County, then and there to show cause, if any they have, why an order of this Court should not be granted to said administrator authorizing and empowering him to sell the said real estate on said deceased, or so much thereof as may be required by the claims and expenses of administration.
It is further ordered that a copy of this order to show cause be published at least four successive weeks before the election of the president, an attack Republican, a newspaper printed and published in said County of King and of general circulation therein.
Done in open Court this 11th day of June, 1910.
ROBERT H. LINDSAY.
State of Washington, County of King, ss,
i, D. K. Sickley, County Clerk of King
County and ex-officio Clerk of the
Superior Court of the State of Washington,
for the County of King, do hereby certify
that the foregoing is a full, true
and correct copy of an original to show
cause, made by said Court on the 11th
day of May, 1910, in the matter of the
estate of Mattle J. Cole, deceased.
Witness my hand and the seal of said Court this 11th day of May, 1910.
(Seal) D. K. SICKELS, Clerk.
By PERCY F. THOMAS, Deputy Clerk.
N THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Roger S. Green and C. D. Hillman and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, Defendants.—Notice and Summons.
State of Washington. To the above
State of Washington: To the above defendants and each of them:
You and each of you, as owners, claimants or holders of an interest or estate in and to the hereinafter described real property, are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff is the holder of one certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the Treasurer of King County, State of Kentucky, on the date of February, 1910, and numbered B61733, for the delinquent taxes of the years 1905, 1906, and 1907, in the following amount, $4.92, and upon the real property situated in said King County, described as follows, to-wit: Lot 18. Block 13. Hillman City Division No. 2. Block 13. Hillman City Division No. 2. The plaintiff upon and above described real property, to-wit: in the sum of $1.81.
Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against real property.
You and each of you (including said persons unknown, if any), are hereby notified and summoned to be and
ap
of the
public
this
nice
exclusive of the day or a first publication, to-wit, within sixty days after May 15, 1910, to the court for the attained court and action; and defend this action and answer the complaint of said plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer on the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at this office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. The plaintiff be rendered herein, foreclosing the lein of said taxes and costs against each parcel of said real property for the sums and amounts due upon and charged against each, for said taxes, interest and costs, ordering a sale of each parcel of said property for the sums charged and found against it respectively as provided by law, and as prayed in plaintiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court.
L. H. CRAVER,
Plaintiff.
A. C. MacDONALD,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office Address, 524 Bailey Bldg.
Seattle, Washington.
May 13—June 24, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington in and for King
County.
Frank D. Black, et ux, Plaintiffs, vs.
Blanche A. Primrose, Defendant.—No.
—Notice of Sale.
To Blanche A. Primrose and to Zellemma A. Primrose, as guardian of said
Blanche A. Primrose, and to all other
members.
protect You, and on each of you, will please take notice that on Saturday, the 25th day of June, 1910, there will be sold at public auction at the front door of the King County Court House, in the city of Seattle, King County, State of Washington, at the hour of 10 a'clock A. M., or as soon thereafter as 10 a'clock sale can be held on said date, a sale of the one-thirty to be longseconds(13 w h i 5 shrdl hudlpply long to Blanche A. Primrose, defendan in the above entitled cause, of that certain property known and described as Lot Ten (10) of Block Thirty-one (31) and Lot Ten (10) of Block (30), all in Seattle Homestead. Hugh McAleer, proprietor of city of Seattle, long the sale of shhrdgfgr, when time the sald done-thirty-second (1/32) interest will be sold to the highest bidder for cash.
You, and each of you, are hereby notified to be present at said sale to protect whatever interest you may have in and to said property and to purchase the sofa if you may so desire. Dated at Seattle this 19th day of May, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King County. In the Matter of the Disincorporation of The Oregon & Washington Navigation Company, a corporation. No. Notice is hereby given that the Oregon & Washington Steam Navigation Company has filed with the above entitled court its petition to dissolve and disincorporate itself according to law which petition shows that the stockholder of the corporation is the forerunner on the 10th day of June, 1910, in the Equity Department of the above entitled court.
to an order of the above entitled court
said application to disincorporate will
Witness the Honorable Mitchell Gilliam, Judge of said Superior Court, and the seal of said Court thereto affixed this 7th day of April, 1910.
D. K. SICKLES.
D. K. of said Court.
By G. A. GRANT, Deputy.
Date of first publication April 9, 1910.
April 8—June 3, 1910.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
State of Washington, County of King—ss. Sheriff's Office.
By virtue of an order of sale, issued out of the honorable superior court of King county, on the 27th day of June, 1910, by the clerk thereof, in the case of Sschwabacher Bros. & Co., Inc., a corporation plains owners, Fred J. Leconard and Olga P. Leonard, his wife, defendants, No. 73918, and to me, an officer, directed and delivered:
Notice is hereby given. That I will proceed to sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, within the hours prescribed for sheriff's sales, to-wit: At 10 o'clock a.m. on the 13th day of August, A. D. 1910 before the courthouse door of sale of King county, in Washington, all of the right, title and interest of the said defendants, Fred J. Leonard and Olga P. Leonard, his wife, in and to the following described property, situated in King county, state of Washington, to-wit: The east fifty feet of lots thirteen and fourteen in block twenty, Sea View Park, West Seattle, Washington; also, lot sixteen in block twenty, Hillman's Pacific City Addition to the city of Seattle, division No. six, as the plat of same is now recorded in the office of the auditor of King county, state of Washington, levled on as the property of said defendants, Fred J. Leonard and Olga P. Leonard, his wife, of a foreclosure of a mortgage to satisfy a judgment amounting two thirds eighty and one hundred 2820.76) Dated this 29th day of June, 1910. ROBERT T. HODGE, Sheriff. By J. STRINGER, Deputy, July 1—July 29, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, in and for the
County of King.
In the matter of the guardianship of
Francis Baker, a minor, in probate, No.
10988.
Notice is hereby given that pursuant
to an order of sale made and entered
herein by the said superior court,
in this proceeding on the 22d day of June,
2010, the baker, will, on or after the 25th
day of July, 1910, sell to the highest and
best bldder, subject to confirmation by
the said court, the real estate belonging
to the said minor, to-wit, the south
twenty-five (25) feet of the north half
(½) of lots fifteen (15) and sixteen (16).
in block five (5), of Madison Park Addition
to the City of Seattle, King county.
Washington, or part city, will hold
four or part cash, the balance
not exceeding one-half, to be secured
by first mortgage on said premises, to
run not more than three years.
All bids should be in writing and may be presented to me at the office of John E. Carroll, Esquire, Room 210 New York Block, corner Second Avenue and Cherry Street, Seattle, King County, Washington, said office being the place for the transaction of the business of said estate on or after ten o'clock a. m. o. 1910 Dated at Seattle, King County, Washington, this 24th day of June, 1910 J. B. RICKERT, As guardian of the person and estate of Francis Baker, a minor. JOHN E. CARROLL, Attorney for Guardian. July 1, July 22, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for King County.
In the Matter of the Estate of Anna
Shaughnessy, Deceased. — No. 11412.
Notice to Creditors.
By order of said court made herein
on the 8th day of June, 1910, notice
is hereby given to the Registry to
all persons having claims against said
deceased or against said estate, to present
them with the necessary vouchers
to the undersigned executor of said
estate, at 960 Empire Building, Seattle,
King County, Washington, the place of
burial of said estate, in Seattle, in said
county and state, within one year from
and after the date of first publication
of this notice or same will be barred.
Date of first publication July 1, 1910.
CHARLES C. SMITH
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. In the Matter of the Estate of John S. Kulp, Deceased.—No. 11624. Notice to Creditors. A order of said court made heron on the 24th day of June, 1919, notice is hereby given to the creditors of, and to all persons having claims against said deceased or against said estate or against the community estate of said deceased and Zoe Worthington Kulp, to present them with the necessary vouchers to the undersigned administratrix of said estate at Rooms 428-429 Lumber Exchange Building, in Seattle, of said county and state, in Seattle, in said county and state, within one year from and after the date of first publication of this notice or same will be barred.
Date of first publication, July 1, 1910.
ZOE WORTHINGTON KILLP.
Attorneys for Estate.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
In the Matter of the Estate of Elizabeth
In the Matter of the Estate of No. 10790. Notice
of Sale of Real Estate.
Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of the order of sale of the Superior Court of the State of Washington for King County, made February 26, 1910 will sell, at private sale, an undivided one-half interest, an undivided one-half interest, the following described property situated in King County, Washington, to-wit:
Commencing at the southwest corner of Lot 7, Section 28, Township 24, North Range 14, East W. M., running thence 15 rods northwest right angles south 40 rods, thence at right angles east 40 rods to section line, thence north on said section line to place of beginning.
The sale will be made on or after the 18th day of July, 1910; bids will be received by the undersigned at the office held on Von Nobel, No. 604 Mutual Life Bank, Kinder City, Washington. Terms of sale are cash, gold coin of the United States, 10 per cent of bid to accompany bid, balance to be paid on confirmation of sale by court.
Dated this 25th day of June, 1910.
JOSEPH KUENSTLE,
Guardian of the Estate of Elizabeth Heitzmann, a minor.
July 1—July 15, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, in and for the County of King.
Hattie Wilcox, Plaintiff, vs. Charles H. Wilcox, Defendant. No. Summoned by above. The State of Washington to the said defendant, Charles H. Wilcox, greeting. You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit, within sixty (60) days after the last publication (10) and defend the above entitled action in the court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judge and render against you according to the demand of the complaint which has been filed with the clerk of court.
The object of said action is to obtain a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between the plaintiff and the defendant by forcing the plaintiff from the defendant.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
State of Washington, County of King,
ss.—Sheriff's Office.
By virtue of an order of sale issued out of the Honorable Superior Court of King County, on the 24th day of June, 1919, on the deck of the boat, in the case of the Bowles Company. By virtue of a Prittiff, versus J. A. Fraser and L. E. Fraser, his wife; J. A. McBee and Ella McBee, his wife; Paul Richards and Roweno Richards, his wife; and Charles Clarke, his wife, his wife, Defendants, No. 71806, and to me, as Sheriff, directed and delivered;
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
STATE of Washington, for King County,
L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. A. B. Kaufman and J. A. Hudson, and all persons
unknown, if any, having or claiming an
interest in and to the hereinafter
described real property, Defendants.—Notice
and Summons.
State of Washington: To the above de-
serts and each of them,
as arranged, now
Plaintiff.
Office Address: 457 Arcade Bldg.
attle, Wash.
April 15—May 27, 1918
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FRIDAY August 12, 1910
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