Seattle Republican
Friday, October 21, 1910
Seattle, Washington
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CAYTON PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC.
Telephone: Main 305. Publication office, 307 Epler Block.
HORACE ROSCOE CAYTON - - - Publisher
3USIE REVELS CAYTON - - - Associate
SEATTLE AND THE MAYRORALITY
There is no longer any doubt but that those opposed to Mayor Hiram Charles Gill will secure enough signatures to their petition to order a recall election, but the important question is, who will be nominated against him? If Austin E. Griffith is pitted against Mr. Gill then it will be but a repetition of the last spring campaign, and hundreds and thousands of men who are bitterly opposed to the Gill policy, will vote for him again rather than vote for Griffith. Mr. Griffith is perhaps as honest and straightforward as any other man in the state, but he is not the kind of man that the public wants to see at the head of affairs, and the voters just will not stand for him. While Griffith is honest and upright he is close, contentious and given to splitting hairs over trivials and would be the veritable bull in the china shop in the office of mayor of the city of Seattle. The names of George H. Walker, L. H. Gray, W. P. Trimble or some similar business man would come nearer meeting the public's idea of a fit candidate for mayor than Griffith, and unless the name of some such person is nominated, Hiram Charles Gill will be re-elected, even if he is recalled. While the tax payers and voters do not want Gill they do not want a Griffith-Bouillon rawhide and bloody bones man for mayor of Seattle.
Because Mayor Gill has done as he promised he would do, the Kent Advertiser thinks he should not be recalled. While Mr. Gill has done all of the things he declared he would do in case he was elected, yet he has not only done those, but he has done twice as many more. Candidate Gill declared on the stump and in the newspapers he would never permit open gambling in Seattle and yet gambling has been wide open ever since the very day he took his seat. He excuses himself by saying, "I do not know that gambling is being run contrary to law," which is so thin that you can see through it without even looking at it. Those of us who lived through the notorious Tom Humes administrations heard the same old chesnut. You have not seen open gambling because you looked the other way, when you ran up against it, just as so many policeman of the city are charged with having done. Gambling has been run contrary to the law ever since Gill has been mayor and both he and the entire police force, and especially that part of them that is responsible for wide open gambling, should be indicted as accessories to the crime.
WOMAN SUFFRAGE IN WASHINGTON
Nothing coming before the voters of the state of Washington at the next election should be given more consideration than that of woman suffrage or equal suffrage rights for women. THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN has never wavered on this subject and it has always been for the giving of the same rights to women as those enjoyed by men. It believes that women on the whole are more deserving of the ballot than half of the men, and if the women had the right of suffrage there would not be a hundredth part of the political corruption in the country that is to be found from one side
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1910
of the land to the other and from the top to the bottom. The women share in the burden of taxation and they should be given the right to say how that taxation be applied the same as the men. It is argued that the women do not take any interest in politics and would not vote even if given an opportunity, which is all common rot. The reason they do not take any interest in politics is because they are shut out by the drunken wretches, who know they would not have so many opportunities to sell their votes if the women could cast a ballot. When a man argues that his mother has not got sense enough to vote he talks like a fool ane really is a damphool. The child that grows to maturity without the guiding hand of a mother is for the most part the penitentiary subject and sooner or latsr they all get there. If your wife desires to vote contrary to your views she has as much right to her opinion as you have to yours. When she goes to the polls to vote she will. for the most part, return to her home and will not spend the night in some neighboring saloon telling the other fellows how it was done.
ALASKA COAL LAND FRAUDS
The recent arrest of tow of Seattle's prominent attorneys and likewise some of her prominent business men as well as some from other towns in the Northwest in connection with extensive coal land frauds in Alaska, causes the man, who thought himself a good honest citizen, to set up and take notice, lest he is grossly deceiving himself. While Charles F. Munday has been considered a more or less successful attorney-at-law, no one has ever looked upon him as possessing any of the adventurous spirit, and yet the federal grand jury finds a true bill of indictment agaiast him, and he is arrested on the charge of trying to defraud the government of a million dollars worth of coal lands, and in commenting on his arrest, he gives it as his opinion that, rival syndicates in the East have prompted their arrest. The men who listened to the evidence against Mr. Munday et al, are Washington men and perhaps born in the state and share none of the prejudices of the eastern man against the western man, and say what you will or may, there is some excuse for the arrest of these men, and it is safe to say, whether Mr. Munday is or is not mixed up in crooked coal land grabbing in Alaska, somebody is and the grand jury evidently believed that Mr. Munday is one of them, his previous good character and reputation to the contrary notwithstanding.
WHO PAYS THE BILLS?
A circular letter from some one, who seems to be personally interested, has been sent to this office, telling some of the reasons why the bonds should be voted for King county at the coming election. At every bond election some person or persons are always ready and willing to spend their money to advocate the voting of more bonds, and we surmise they do so for only patriotic reasons. It takes thousands of dollars to print all of the circulars and pay the postage sent out in the interest of educating the voters up to voting these bonds, and just how these philanthropists can stand such a drain of money from their tills with no hope of reward is more than the public can fully understand. It occurs to us that, the interested parties are those, who expect to make a fortune out of the propositions, and all of their philanthropy is nothing more or less than another clandestine way to get their fingers in the public crib as the regrade contractors are doing from time to time. The property owners are now bonded to death and there is no excuse in the world to vote the bonds being asked by either the city or the county. All this bond voting business is on a par with the padding of the census returns such as many of the cities are charged with.
Tuesday's New York Times shamelessly declared that ofgabcrdby T'ndep * S shr sh sh sh sh s s, although no hint of the contents of Colonel Roosevlt's speech was supposed to be made known until after delivery. —Ohio State Journal.
LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
APR 29 1952
UBLICAN
VOLUME XVII. NUMBER 21
HIS COLOR HIS CRIME
Nathan Bledser, the Fort Lawton soldier, charged with having attempted to assault a woman living in the neighborhood of the fort, was found guilty last Saturday, and from the bits of evidence that was heard, it is safe to say, that he got his, but with such a counsel as he had he could have been convicted of treason, high crimes and misdemeanors just as well. The case is one that thinking men should stop and consider, with the view of guarding against such a repetition in the future. From the time the man was arrested until the moment he was convicted his color and not his criminal act was on trial. The prosecuting attorney in order to convict the man did not hesitate to recall the horrors of Brownsville despite the fact fact that the man on trial had never seen Brownsville and was not even in the service when the shooting up of Brownsville was committed. The defendant's own counsel, while making a feeble effort to prove an alibi for his client only plead for mercy for him on account of his color, and on that point, if Bledser had had a spark of manhood in him he would have arisen in court and demanded that the attorney say no more, and if he had persisted, then appealed to the judge for protection from such misrepresentations.
Any person charged with having committed a crime, and whether guilty or innocent should try to beat a case by taking advantage of every legal technicality known to questionable law practices, but should a thousand times over prefer to be burned at the stake, rather than beg for mercy on account of any racial or human imperfection differing from the accusers. When a person commits a crime he or she should be tried for the crime committed, but under no circumstances for the color of his skin. There was no more use of dwelling on Bledser's color than on his religious belief. Twelve seemingly honest men, a jury of his peers, had been selected and were in the jury box to listen to the law and the evidence, and for an attorney to intimate that they would not give a human being a fair and impartial trial, because forsooth, such human beings differed from them in complexion, was either branding the jurymen as ignoramuses or criminals. To ask a juryman. "would you believe a black man as quickly as you would a wite man?" is but asking the juryman, is he a damnphool or a liar. Judges should not permit this racial question to be injected into courts trial. The man who is so predjudiced to another race as not to give such person charged with crime a square deal will perjure himself to remain on a jury in order to do the despised race an injury, and such a question therefore is absolutely superfluous.
Wellman's failure to fly across the Atlantic ocean and reach Europe by the air route instead of the water will prove a greater incentive for him or some one else equally ambitious to sooner or later turn the trick.
It begins to look as if the attacks on the regular nominees of the Republican party for members of the supreme bench of Washington on the part of the Star of Seattle is prompted more by personal animosity than in the interest of the dear people.
Perhaps that ball of fire that was seen all aglow in the sky near Portland, Oregon, was a red hot shot containing the census fraud of that city, which will return again within a few days in the shape of a boomerang.
Senator Aldrich has at least been commended by the Republicans of his state, but the convention was small and perhaps it did not take much mezuma to fix the fellows.
Chicago's baseball cubs are getting a drubbing from the Philadelphia colts that they will never forget. Out of three games (Thursday) the cubs had lost every one and made very few points.
It begins to look as if the Lexow Committee of Seattle will find that a great many higher up are mixed up in the graft game that has been going on in Seattle since H. C. Gill has been mayor. Some time ago the question wss put up to the editor of the Seattle Daily Times by THE SEATLLE REPUBLICAN, if he had any interest in the Arcade dance hall, but he still has it under advisement.
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EDITORIAL EDICTS
Walter Wellman came back all right.
It would be a great joke on Wellman if his airship should drift on to Europe.
Seattle's forty-two story building will make even the mountains set up and taks notice.
Throughout Alaska the stillness of death prevailed while the remains of Heney were lowered to the tomb.
Of course L. C. Smith is able to build big blocks for he has such a confounded big family of Smiths to help him.
If Julia Warde did not show the women of the world Howe to do things then women have never been shown.
In the prostration of Senator La Follette and the death of Senator Dolliver is Nature trying to even up things?
If Chief Wappenstein is not guilty of wrong doings in office it would seem that he would go after the P.I. on criminal libel, but he don't.
Mayor Gill now knows what it is to have a Negro as a friend as one almost swore himself into the penitentiary one day this week trying to protect the Gill administration.
From the evidence in the Crippen case it looks as if both Crippen and Miller found they were not happily mated and made efforts to get each other in touch with his affinity.
No, Constant Reader, voting the bonds now under consideration for King county and Seattle would no more to satisfy the bond fiends than to defeat them. Vote these and another job lot would be presented at the next election.
Tacoma has been placed in an awkward light by the census men and the citizens of Tacoma are making mighty efforts to get, what they are pleased to term a dirty wrong, straightened out. Instead of 116,000 inhabitants as she reported, the census men say she has but 82,000 and the other 36,000 citizens, which Tacoma claims, are myths or spirits of those who have been dying in Tacoma for the past fifty years.
APPORTIONMENT OF REPRESENTATION
Which party will be the greater gainer by the reapportionment of representation among the states, which will be made this winter, based on the count of inhabitants of 1910? This question is beginning to be asked by politicians of both parties with a good deal of earnestness. These successive allotments determine not only the weight of each state in the popular branch of Congress, but its strength in the electoral college. Tna Constitution of 1787 declared that there should be one representative in the House from each state for every 30,000 of its inhabitants, and made a provisional allotment on the best estimate of population then practicable, and it provided that there should be a new apportionment every ten years subsequently based upon the actual count of inhabitants. Each state, however, is to have at least one representative in the House. The first enumeration took place in 1790, and they have come in every decennial year since then. Here is the aggregate number of members of the House on the allotment made after each ten-year count of inhabitants and the number of persons selected as the unit of representation:
Census years Membership of the House Units of Representation
1790 106 33 000
1800 142 33 000
1810 186 35 000
1820 213 40 000
1830 142 47 000
1840 232 70 680
1850 237 93 423
1860 243 127 381
1870 293 131 425
1880 332 151 911
1890 357 173 901
1900 591 194 182
As Democrats as well as Republicans are desirous of keeping the House from going above the 400 mark in membership, the unit of representation may have to be placed as high as 225,000. On this basis the states of slow growth would lose some seats, while those which have made considerable gain in population would get additional members. The former class of states would, of course, oppose any apportionment which would cut down their representation numeric-
FOR JOBLE RESPONDING
ally, although proportionately their membership is certain to come down. On the basis of the present unit, New York City would be entitled to seven additional members, Chicago to two additional, with a large fraction left over, and Philadelphia would get one additional. On such a basis of increase, however, the House would become unwieldly and be far more difficult to manage than it is now. The unit must be advanced a long way above the present line. Moreover, most of the increased representation will come to the section which is ordinarily Republican. So far as is indicated at present, the only Southern and normally Democratic states which have made large gains in population the past decade are Oklahoma and Texas, and the increase in New York city alone is probably greater than that of the entire state of Texas. New York, Illinois and Texas each increased its representation in the House by three members as a result of the reapportionment under the census of 1900. Under any new allotment which is likely to be made this winter, New York will probably gain more than three members.—Leslie's Weekly.
POLITICAL POT-PIE
The Insurgent element of the Republican party having completely captured the organization there is nothing left for the Standpatters to do but become Insurgents and thereby recapture the party organization.
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Judge Black says, "I carried the county of Sohomish against three Republican opponents, getting 1,500 more votes than all of them." If he does as well in the next election he will give Mr. Humphrey a good hard tussel and yet he will hardly be able to win out in all of the counties.
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Stanton Waburton, the Republican candidate for congress from the second congressional district of Washington, has felt the heavy hand of the Post-Intelligence and it begins to look rocky for "Warby," who is charged with having been a warbler when he was in the legislature.
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Joe Smith is now a Democratic candidate for the same place he was beaten for in the Republican primaries. Joe explains his position by saying, "In the campaign for nomination I declared I was an Insurgent and stopped right there, which meant I was either a Republican Insurgent or a Democratic one." That's awfully cute, but not very manly.
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Since the P. I. has begun to set up and take notice of the legislative records of the candidates for congress from the state of Washington, it seems that it would not go amiss to look up the record made by La Follette when he was in the legislature. It might be the means of electing three members to congress from this state, but a little thing like that does not count for much.
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Should Senator W. L. Jones accept the appointment as judge of the federal court in Eastern Washington he would gracefully step down and out of the political whirl, whereas, if he does not, he will be knocked down and out of the political whirl. Senator Jones ought to be able to see as far in a mill stone as the other fellow and he doubtless sees the impending political storm that will confront him four years from now.
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Should Senator Jones conclude to accept the federal judgeship and do so before next January, Gov. M. E. Hay could call an extra session of the legislature to elect a successor to Senator Jones, or he could make a temporary appointment and permit the next legislature two elect two senators instead of one. It is the consensus of opinion, however, that the governor would convene the present legislature in extra session to elect Senator Jones' successor.
PERSONS IN THE PUBLIC EYE
L. C. Smith the owner of the Smith Premier typewriter company is to build a monument to his machine in Seattle in the shape of the tallest building in the world.
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Mrs. Russell Sage, who was eighty two years of age Sept. 28th, has given more than $4,000,000 to educational institutions and $1,500,000 in religious causes, besides other special gifts.
Julia Warde Howe, the noted song writer, died at her home in Long Island last Monday. She was in her ninety-first year. Her most noted song was the Battle Hymn of the Republic.
FR DAY October 21. 1910
Isaac N. Stevens is a candidate for Congress in the state of Colorado. We mention the name because it is the same name and initial letter as Washington's first territorial governor, whose memory is held in such profound reverence by every old timer.
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When Colcnel Theodore Roosevelt went up in the flying machine he never took his eyes off the crowd, and some one has been mean enough to say he jeopardized his life to play to the galleries. Trust the colonel to always work the publicity end over time.
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Chaplain David H. Tribou, of the United States Navy, having served thirty-eight years, seven months and eleven days, retires at the age of sixty-two years. Chaplain Tribou was appointed by President Grant on February 5, 1872. He has served longer than any chaplain in the navy.
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Stanley Ketchell, the well known pugilist, was shot last Saturday and died from the effects thereof that evening. He simply had one too many scraps or had a scrap with the wrong man. With the pugilist it is soon ripe and soon rotten; and if they do not go one way they go another, but they always go prematurely.
To Miss Ella Flagg Young, superintendent of schools in Chicago, is due all credit for the fact that the first time in the history of Chicago as a city it can accommodate its entire school population. Chicago's 300,000 school children can now attend school every day and have a seat, and there is no need of half day sessions.
Edward Whitson, U. S. district judge at Spokane, who was stricken with paralysis early in last week, died last Saturday after a brief illness. He was born in Salem, Oregon, and spent the whole of his life in his native state and Washington. He was appointed to the federal bench some six years ago and made a most brilliant record.
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Johnathan P. Dolliver, Iowa's senior United States senator, who but recently gained almost world wide fame on account of the part he played in the Insurgent movement in the Republican party, died at his home last Saturday. He had been more or less indisposed for some time, but had never been considered dangerously ill until a few days prior to his death. He was considered one of the ablest men of the senate of the United States Congress.
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Manuel of Braganza, recent King of Portugal, has thrown away a throne for a fascinating young woman who was his mistress, but in doing so, he has done no more than did Great Caesar and Mark Anthony, the Roman generals, who wrecked their own rule of Rome to consort with Cleopatra, the beautiful Egyptian queen. Men just as foolish about women with no higher aims in life than Manuel's mistress are to be met in all walks of life and, its nothing strange, it happens every day.
Eugene Zabel, a noted German writer, says, "The women in Russia among the lower classes are merely tools in their husbands' hands and regarded as so many domestic animals, Men have almost unlimited power of punishing their wives. They beat and starve them, and make them do the lowest menial work. The young girls are exposed like cattle in the markets to await those in want of wives, and yet," he argues, "the Russian woman is a noble and heroic creature." She must be. It is just such conditions that make the Russian government the most non-progressive one of all the world.
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SEATTLE SPIRIT IN MEXICO
Seattle's fame as a hustling city has become world and away down in sleepy old Mexico some enterprising Seattle man has laid out a resident section to the city of Guadlajara and has named it "Colona Seattle" or the real American colony. That is the famous Seattle Spirit abroad and hitting the high places as it were. Colona Seattle of Guadlajara is a most thrifty suburb and it is filling up with most magnificent homes and persons from the United States feel almost like back in the states when they get into the settlement. Evidently those Americans preach one thing at home and paractice another abroad. It is argued by all citizens of the United States that it is the worst thing foreigners can do to colonize when they come to to the United and yet those self same Americans go to Mexico and colonize even worse than the foreigners that come to our states.
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FRIDAY October 21. 1910
THE COUNTRY PRESS
George Drumheller of Walla Walla is reported by the papers as having received the largest check for farm products of any farmer that has ever operated in the Northwest. He recently sold 107,000 bushels of wheat, for which he received $84,860. The lawyer's fees in the John Sullivan estate did not beat that very much.
We do not wholly agree with the Snohomish Tribune in its statement that, "the trouble with the milk trust is its greed to get all the cream." Just what it does with the cream is what we have not been able to figure out. It gets all the money and yet none of its customers ever get a single drop of cream. It seems to sell all of its output as cream and yet the cream never shows up. Does it really throw the cream away just to get a chance to sell the skimmed milk?
Recently Sunnyside City held a local option election and, according to the Sun of that city, it came as near being unanimous as an election could be expected. Some 90 per cent of the votes being in favor of continuing dry. The Ranier Valley Record is doubtless not on the exchange list of the Sun.
In the Olympia Chronicle we read the following; "The discovery is now made that shark's meat is palatable and nutritious and the discovery is offered as a solution to the high cost of living." Well, Mr. Editor you can tackle the Wall street sharks whenever you like, but we will have none of them in ours. They are entirely too dirty a dose for us.
Cowlitz county is in the throes of a big county seat fight and the Bulletin of Kalama declares the chunk of land that Kelso has offered for a court house site and grounds is a big bunco game and the other aspirants for the county seat honor have taken the matter into court. Some day towns will learn to quit fighting over county seats and make the best of the town they have whether court is held therein or not.
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"Democrat Duties," is the caption of a well written article in the Olympia Standard. It seems to be the duty of Democrats to damn everything Republicans do whether good or bad. They make it a rule to damn it as soon as it has been done and if it turns out good they say it was inspired by Democrats and if it turns out not so good they say its like every other thing the Republicans do. If the Democrats would come to the conclusion that, it his duty to jump in the bay he would be doing the country the best service that he as a Democrat has ever been known to do.
It would be just as well to argue that the only decent way to commit murder is to do so within the bounds of decency as to say, "the only safe and effective revision of the football rules is to keep the game within the bounds of decency," as says the Davenport Tribune, If its football how can it possibly be played within the bounds of decency?
"It is a fact that the Poindexter forces are active for Humphrey," declares the Ranier Valley Record. If the Record is telling this story for truth then Editor Gill has better touch wood.
Despite the fact that the Ranier Valley Record lives in a town that is wet and has had no experience with a wet town gone dry, yet it says, "those towns that have gone dry have repented of the act as the business men have found that the going dry of their respective towns has greatly injured them from a financial standpoint," all of which may be true, but how did Editor Gill find that out? Had you not better touch wood again, Mr. Editor?
Boiled dinners must be greatly to the liking of the readers of the Mason County Journal as that paper seems to serve more boiler plate by a hundred times over than anything else. If that kind of service meets the favor of the readers of the Journal it is their funeral and not ours. However, it seems to us they would tire some time of boiled dishes.
The editor of the Republican-Bulletin of Prosser has purchased seven acres of land near North Yakima and will build a commodious residence thereon, and he and his family take up their permanent abode on that bank of gold. Running a newspaper in eastern Washton must be a private snap, such as the weekly publishers on the Sound never get hold of.
Economic and labor conditions in Dayton were never more satisfactory. Business men state that collections are unusually good and laboring men declare that never was the opportunity to work at good wages
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
better than it has been during the last year or two. Laborers of all classes are in demand. The full dinner pail is a reality in Dayton.—Dayton (Wash.) Dispatch.
Seattle's commercial bodies, the Chamber of Commerce and the Commercial Club, with J. D. Lowman president of the former and J. W. Maxwell president of the latter, are doing splendid work for Seattle just now, and if it is possible to push the city along commercially, they will do so.
The Newport Miner is delighted over the prospects of Newport having a match block plant, a box factory and a shingle mill all to be started in the near future, which means a healthy boom. Its the bucket brigade that makes any town grow.
Believing that the country is now the place to operate instead of in the city, the United Cities Trustee Company of Seattle, according to the current number of the Mabton Chronicle, has purchased the Sandbolt ranch near Wapata, paying for the same $65,000. It contains forty-one acres of bearing orchard.
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"Pigs is pigs and hogs continues to be hogs. The price of pork is bound to stay up and Pacific county is the place to raise them. The sooner our farmers find this out the sooner they will have automobiles," says the South Bend Journal. There seems to be no doubt but that 'hogs,' at least political ones, thrive in Pacific county and we have heard that 'blind pigs' are so numerous down there that you can have one for the asking.
It is learned from the Blaine Journal that the city of Blaine from a financial standpoint is having hard sledding just now and its troubles are all due to the town having been voted dry some time ago. So hard pressed is the city for funds that it is proposed that the city light plant only run until midnight and the balance of the night the city sleep in total darkness. If its a wet town they want the winter rains will soon set in and then the town will be wet enough for any old body.
In these days of strife between two great political parties we must remember that after all we are just a band of brothers here on earth, traveling from the cradle to the grave. We live side by side, our children attend the same school and after the smoke of the battle has cleared away, we still will be friends and neighbors. Let the bitter things go unsaid. At best life is short, and we get out of it a full measure of sorrow. Let us in our little city live as one big, good-natured family.—Wilbur Register.
The city of Cle Elum, located in the fastness of the Cascade mountains and tapped by two transcontinental railroads, the center of the largest coal and gold mining district in the state, is rapidly assuming city airs and the Echo of that city in its last issue spoke as follows, "Without question there is more permanent work initiated with the view to vastly improve Cle Elum at the present time than ever before, and each new cement sidewalk and each new permanent building contribute to make things look more as though we were here to stay."
[Picture of a man in a suit with a tie and a white shirt. The background is a plain, light color. The man's face is centered, and he has a serious expression. The image is oval-shaped.]
WESLEY L. JONES Washington's Junior United States Senator, who is being mentioned for the federal judgeship in Eastern Washington made vacant by the death of Judge Edward Whitson. Senator Jones is now campaigning in Illinois.
HENEY LAID TO REST
Hundreds of Seattle's leading and best citizens attended the funeral ceremonies of the late M. J. Heney, which took place last Tuesday and as many more stopped to drop a tear of regret while all that was mortal of Mr. Heney was being consigned to Mother Earth on that day. Few men have done more to have their names written on the book of Success than M. J. Heney, and few men have observed the golden rule more closely than did he, and for that reason he was loved by multiplied thousands and respected by even those who did not love him. Wagon loads of flowers were sent to his residence as tokens of respect and in fond remembrance of days when he always extended a helping hand to his fellow men. Peace to his ashes.
WISE AND OTHERWISE
In Mr. Roosevelt's speeches the "I's" have it.—Wall Street Journal.
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Bryan couldn't even lead the mule to water.—Bede's Budget (Duluth.)
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It's our theory that Maine went Democratic as an advertisement.—Toleda Blade.
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Theodore Roosevelt has a wonderful faculty for choosing the right enemies.—Chicago News.
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The more interest a man takes in his business the more is he likely to take out.—Wall Street Journal.
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In the political conventions the keynotes are sounded on wind instruments.—Chicago Evening Post.
"I havn't a word to retract," says Mr. Roosevelt. Not at a dollar a word, anyhow.—Washington Herald.
The city of Wilkes Barre wants to get a copyright on its name. Seems an unnecessary precaution.—New York American.
Outside of Kansas City and St. Louis, Missouri has lost population in the last decade. She evidently needs more Folk.—Chicago Evening Post.
It may be because Woodrow Wilson has gone into politics that Yale has raised the salaraies of its professors.—Washington Herald.
A metropolitan newspaper devoted two pages yesterday to describing New York's police force when one word would do it. Pittsburg-Gazette-Times.
Outdoor schools now being the rage, the Old Guard probably won't mind doing a little studying on the outside.—New York American.
Speaker Cannon asks that Republicans stand up and be counted. Possibly he entertains doubts as to there being a quorum present.—Philadelphia Public Ledger.
A gun invented that will bring down airships. Up to date the aviators have been able to come down without the aid of a gun.—St. Paul Pioneer Press.
New York may have the greater number of inhabitants, but how does it stack up against Chicago in culture now that it takes second place in baseball and postal receipts. —Chicago News.
Department of the Interior says there are still many wealthy Indians in the country. How careless in the attorneys to overlook them. —Wall Street Journal.
Roosevelt is gratified to have Taft's support and Taft is gratified that Roosevelt asked for it. Therefore the two are hopelessly estranged. —Indianapolis Star.
Joseph C. Cannon spoke for almost an hour. The convention adopted a progressive platform.—From the New York Sun's report of the Illinois Republican Convention.
In spite of certain captious criticism of his work with the stick, the Colonel still heads the Republican league in the matter of batting averages.—New Orleans Times-Democrat.
The Federated Labor party in adopting the emblem of Atlas carrying the earth on his shoulders lays itself open to charges of infringement of personal patent.—New York World.
The winning candidate in New Hampshire is Bass and in Pennsylvania Tener. Some day if the suffragettes get their way, the sopranos and contraltos will have a show. —Philadelphia Gazette-Times.
Give the Automobile Fair Play
4
Comparisons of the automobile with the horse drawn vehicle are consistent. Statistics show that there are 21,000,000 horses and colts in the United States. There are about 900,000 horse-drawn vehicles sold annually. This is exclusive of farm and delivery wagons, of which there are, in addition, about 400,000 sold annually. The daily average use of the horse drawn vehicle can be safely estimated as an average of four miles per day. There are in daily use in the United States 7,000,000 horse drawn vehicles. It costs to maintain these vehicles, figuring the horses' keep at $12.50 per month each, at present prices of grain and hay, and without depreciation, $150 each per annum. Therefore, the 7,000,000 vehicles, using 10,000,000 horses is not less than three cents per mile. It, therefore, will cost to drive these 7,000,000 vehicles $840,000 per day, or $306,000,000 per annum. Adding the cost of driving the vehicles to the cost of maintenance of the horses, we would have a total expenditure of over $1,356,000,000 per annum for the 28,000,000 vehicle miles. Let us figure how we would come out by using automobiles for these 23,000,000 vehicle miles per day, using a runabout as an illustration, for the expensive touring car class of users is such a small part of what makes the automobile industry and the
ITEMS OF INTEREST
An official return for the year ending March 31, 1910, shows that the total income of persons resident in the United Kingdom has for the first time exceeded $5,000,000,000 in one year. For six years there has not been a single case of robbery or burglarly in Montenegro. It is astonishing to think of how far back those dear people are in the scale of modern civilization.
A prominent New York bootmaker declares that the hobble skirt has not ruined the American women's feet but has betrayed what is an open secret among men who makes shoes to order, namely: that the average woman wears shoes made for a foot a size or so smaller than her own.
An English woman who is some what of a critic says that the French match is expensive and nine times out of ten it will not light at all. "Possibly," she continues, "they are intended to stimulate the minor virtues, such as patience, hope and the control of the tongue." It is not difficult to guess at the quality of the matches.
A reliable writer says of the Chinese: "They are orderly, law abiding and well behaved; they have a strong sense of right and justice and are fair minded; they are reliable in commercial dealings, pay their debts and keep their agreements, whether verbal or written; they are dutiful to parents, fond of children and mindful of etiquette and punctilious about returning courtesies or favors; they are respectful to elders and superiors; they honor and respect character and intellectual ability." These are some of the strongest
money they spend is less of an economic waste than if they did not spend it:
Per mile Per day
Cost of tires 1 1/2 c $420,000
Cost of labor 1 1/2 c 420,000
Cost of gasoline 1/2 c 140,000
Cost of oil 1-10 c 28,000
A total operating expense of $1,008,000 or $359,050,000 per annum, against the cost of $1,356,-000,000 if by horse, making an economic saving of $997,000,000 per annum in favor of the automobile. The above figures are somewhat large and perhaps hard to grasp.
Let us use as a comparison a one-horse buggy and a small automobile runabout, say, one retailing at $600. If we figure that a horse and buggy average four miles a day, this means a yearly mileage of 1,460. A conservative estimate of cost of this mileage would place it at not less than $150. A small runabout ($600) can be operated for 1½ cents a mile for tires, 5-10 of a cent a mild for gasoline, 1-10 of a cent a mile for oil. Allowing 2-10 of a cent for other expenses, we get a total of 2 3-10 cents a mile. It will cost, therefore, to do with the runabout $33.58 what it costs $150 to do with the horse. Is this economic waste?
Now, if these men can figure how any economic waste takes place by the use of the automobile rather than the horse drawn
requisites for national greatness and popular welfare and the nation which can boast of the same is indeed fortunate.
In the mad rush for country homes in Seattle, commonly called small ranches, the question of how many acres ought to comprise the farm is a weighty one. Here is the opinion of one who has been a successful farmer and ought to know: "One can start on twenty acres; forty acres will do; eighty acres are enough; 160 are an abundance; 320 a misfortune, and 640 a calamity.
Queen Mary goes to great lengths to imbibe her children with simple tastes. Recently an elegantly dressed Teddy bear which was presented to little Prince John was returned to the donner with the request that it be exchanged for a much more unpretentious one. Now the prince lovingly hugs his inexpensive Teddy as he takes it to bed with him each night and the mother smiles that the precept is given. Great old world of mothers. Each sure that her way is just the thing which children need and yet what would this busy, wicked old sphere do without their tender care patience, and loving forethought?
The popularity of the phonographs and automobiles has greatly hurt piano makers while the popularity of self-playing pianos has hurt the music teachers. Why put in tedious hours of practice-grinding when a self-player will bring about better results with no efforts on your part. Why labor for years in search of vocal ability when you can treat your friends to the very best in the land by simply winding up the phonograph and, after all is said and done, would you not rather have your own
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
vehicle, we would like to see how they do it. We cannot see but that we are occupying a field of great economic usefulness in making and selling automobiles, and it hurts us to have economists say that which sounds as though we were charges upon society. We do not think this is fair nor can it be supported in any way by the facts. The American people have never been accused of not knowing their own minds. They are buying automobiles because they find them useful, every-day working tools. They are returning dividends in health; they are returning dividends in actual cash when used in a business capacity. They are not, in a larger sense, a luxury. The automobile industry will grow larger and larger, and as it progresses it will develop more and more in to a significant factor in the nation's prosperity. We must not forget that the automobile is now looked upon as an indispensable aid in the world's work. Benjamin Briscoe President of the United States Motor Company.
Informing Son
Little Willie—Say, pa what is an Indian Reservation?
Pa—An Indian reservation, my son, is a lot of land on which the Indians are allowed to live until the white men want it.
automobile and take a spin over the country as fancy may dictate than to own a piano and have to constantly expend your energy to derive any pleasure out of it? This seems to be about the philosophy most in use at this time.
All Kinds of Bells
It is rather remarkable to what an extent various bells enter into the lives of the ordinary mortal. It has been said that the whole routine of modern life is set to bell music. In one way or another their voices accompany man's footsteps from the cradle to the grave. Babies in their nursery have their coral and bells; at school, at meals, on shipboard, the railway stations, factories, telephones, in the households, clubs, our theaters, people are rarely out of the sound of their voices. They ring at weddings, they toll at funerals; even cows, horses and other animals have their bells, and the music of the sleigh bells adds exhilaration and enjoyment to sleighing. Bells have often been compared to human beings. It is true they have their moods and voices, their tongues, throats, lips and other organs, like their lords and masters. They can be loud and angry; gentle and persuasive; joyous and sad. Alas, they also sometimes resemble ourselves in being irremediably cracked.
A Railway Item
The Delaware Lackawanna and Western railroad has entirely dispensed with the telegraph for train dispatching purposes and supplied the telephone in its place. The company has 271 stations equipped with telephone outfit and claim that a great saving of time has resulted from the innovation. In addition to phone stations and towers there
Wilson's Turkish Bath
The Turkish bath house operated by T. E. Wilson at 112 Columbia street has recently been put through a complete renovation stunt and new equipments added to it until it is now one of complete bath houses of the city. Mr. Wilson has made a thorough study of the Turkish bath business and treats customers from a scientific standpoint. He has recently installed the largest electric body vibrator in the city and also has the electric light appliances for removing pain and soreness in the body, and these, in connection with his elegant sweat and steam rooms, put him in a position to treat patients suffering from skin or internal complaints in the latest and most up to date manner. If you are suffering from a cold, or some internal ache or pain a few treatments at his place will bring you around in good shape. It is quiet and the patient will find it a splendid rest resort where he can be treated and then take a restful sleep. His place is open day and night, and the number is 112 Columbia street.
AMUSEMENTS
Starting next Sunday afternoon at the Alhambra Theater the stock company, further augmented for this special occasion, will present Clarence M. Bennett's wonderful biblical drama, "The Holy City." The scenes, dialogue and incidents deal with
are sliding phone booths from which train crews may communicate with the dispatcher which gives them the advantage of immediate instructions. "The telephone for train dispatching," says L. B. Foley, the Lackawana superintendent of telegraph and telephone, "is an established fact, and the indications are that it will be rapidly extended and in the end supplant the telegraph system throughout the country.
New Rules for Dogs
During the last summer past the district government at Washington, D. C., ordered that all dogs allowed by owners to run in public places without leash must be muzzled by wire. It is now the consensus of opinion that muzzling dogs is a most reliable way to help stamp out rabies This was enforced in England, contrary to public sentiment at first, and the disease immediately began to decrease in a marked manner. The public Health and Marine Hospital service, during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1910, administered the Pasteur treatment for the prevention of hydrophobia to sixty patients and of that number not a case was lost.
Write Addresses Clearly
By careful practice of a few minutes each day even a man of sixty years of age can learn to write or at least sign his name so that the one his letter is sent to can figure out to whom he is obliged for the favor. Some of the worst scribblers, who either cannot write or persist in weaving their letters around each other so that they cannot be deciphered are the most sensitive about having their initials and names rightly written. For such men
FRIDAY October 21. 1910
the time of our Saviour, and the characters are all scriptural with one exception, that of Marius, the young noble Roman in love with Salome. The play is one of the most reverential ever written in the history of the drama. It will appeal to all classes of people on account of its historical value and it will certainly have a tendency to elevate respect for religion whether a person is a christian or not. The play will be given a very extraordinary production. Russell & Drew demonstrated years ago with their production of "Quo Vadis" that they are adepts in presenting religious plays of a historical character.
X-Ray Tests for Tuberculosis
The X rays are producing good results in London hospitals in their screen tests of affected tissues. The patient who is undergoing an examination for suspected tuberculosis of the lungs placed before a prepared screen and the rays turned on. The bones and tissues of the chest become visible on the screen. The difference of color of the lungs as the patient breathes deeply locates any abnormal portion. This does not do away with the need for the physician's ordinary means of detecting consumption, but by the old methods the disease can often be suspected only, whereas, the X-ray show undoubted proofs of an abnormal and therefore a diseasd part of the lungs.
it is well that they generally use letterhead paper. The stenographer's appendum often serves as a help in the way of furnishing the initial letters of Christian and surnames. One man whose business obliges him to do much corresponding, says when he runs against the impossible in signatures he simply cuts its off from the letter and pastes it on the address side of the envelope and lets the other fellow do the work.
The surgeon general of the army has given out the statement that a left-handed cadet may not properly be classed as physically disqualified from joining the army. It is considered certain that there have been cadets at West Point who were left-handed, but this fact seems never to have occasioned comment. They probably acquired the use of the right hand so essential to the uniformity of movement necessary in military organization.
GILHAM-LYSONS REALTY CO.,
General Offices: 411 Lowman Bldg.
Loans, Investments, Insurance.
H. E. Gilham. J. W. Lysons.
Main 3044. Ind. 1588.
BUY THE BEST
If you want a safe which you know Has No Superior, buy one of the Hall Safe & Lock Co.'s manufactured by the Herring-Hall-Marvin Safe Co., for which we are the sole agents.
PURCELL SAFE CO.
Prefontaine Bldg., Prefontain Place and Yesler Way
DENNY-RENTON CLAY &
FRIDAY October 21. 1310
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
[Portrait of a man with a beard and a suit, looking directly at the viewer. The background is a plain, light color. The portrait is oval-shaped with a black border.]]
JUDGE MARK A. FULLERTON
Who is the regular Republican nominee for one of the members of the supreme court bench of Washington. He has already served twelve years as one of the supreme court judges and every one gives him credit of being one of the fairest as well as the most exinent jurist ever on the supreme bench.
Who is the regular Republican nominee for one of the members of the supreme court bench of Washington. He has already served twelve years as one of the supreme court judges and every one gives him credit of being one of the fairest as well as the most eminent jurist ever on the supreme bench.
[Image of a man in a suit with a bow tie and a mustache, facing slightly to the right. The background is a plain, light color. The portrait is oval-shaped with a thin border.]]
JUIGE FRANK H. RUIKIN
Is a candidate to succeed himself on the supreme court bench. It is said of Judge Rudkin that he has developed into one of the most profound jurists in the Northwest and his opinions are conferred by attorneys and law school authorities. His services on supreme bench is highly commended by all.
Is a candidate to succeed himself on the supreme court bench. It is said of Judge Rudkin that he has developed into one of the most profound jurists in the Northwest and his opinions are considered by attorneys and law school authorities. His services on supreme bench is highly commended by all.
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IN THE SUPENIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for the County
of King. In Probate.
In the Matter of the Estate of James J.
Lynch, Deceased. No. 10927. Order
to Show Cause on Sale of Real Estate
Mortgage of the estate of the adminis-
trator of the estate of James J. Lynch,
deceased, having filed his petition
in this Court, duly verified, praying for an
Order of this Court for the sale of all
or a portfolio of the real estate of which
or a portfolio is 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 expenses of the administration thereof, and that it is necessary to sell or pay the said estate of the deceased to pay the said claims and expenses of the administration. And it appearing to the Court that said petition conforms to, and is in accordance with the requirements of law in such case made and provided. It is ordered by the Court that all persons interested in the estate of the said deceased appear before said Superior Court on Saturday, the 8th day of October 1910, and the hour of 9:30 o'clock in the forenoon of said day at the Court room of the Probate Department of said 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 of said property or such property may be necessary to pay the aforesaid 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 October 18th. In The Seattle Republican, a newspaper printed and published in said County of King and of general circulation therein, in open Court this 7th day of September, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, in and for King County. Summons by Publication. James Henry, plaintiff, vs. F. B. Huntley and Jane Doe Huntley, his wife, whose true christian name is unknown, defendants.—No. 74840. State of Washington to the defendants, F. B. Huntley and Jane Doe Huntley, his wife:
You and each of you are hereby summoned to be and appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wit: within sixty (60) days after the 30th day of September, 1910 and defend the entitlement in the case of the titled 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 you fail so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the rules of the plaintiff complaint which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The object of this action is to recover the sum of $105.95 together with costs and interest due from you to the plaintiff herein for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered to you during the last past three years. A writ of attachment being issued out of this cause and court and lots 26 and 37, block 8, of Green Lake Reservoir Addition to the city of Seattle have been attached thereunder.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Notice to Creditors.
In the Matter of the Estate of James
McCarthy, deceased.—No. 11951.
By order of said court made herein
on the 29th day of September, 1910.
Notice is hereby hereby creditors
of all persons having claims
against said deceased or against said
estate, to present them with the neces-
sary vouchers to the undersigned ad-
ministrator of said estate, at 416 Globe
Building, the place of business of said
estate, in Seattle, in said court
state, within one year, and after
the date of first publication of this
notice, same will be barred.
Date of first publication Sept. 30,
1910.
LOTTA McCARTHY.
As Administratrix of said Estate.
H. B. CLISS.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Louise Ashen, Plaintiff, vs. Lester Ashen,
Defendant. No. — — Summons
for Publication.
The State of Washington, to Lester
Ashen, Defendant.
You are hereby notified and summoned to be and appear in the above entitled court and defend the above entitled action within sixty days after the date of the first publication of the mons, exclusive of the date of the said motion to-wit; within sixty days after the 7th day of October, 1910, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer upon the attorney for the plaintiff, before named, at his office, below indicated, in case of your failure to do judgment or your own expense against you according to the demand of the complaint of the plaintiff which has been filed with the clerk of the above entitled court.
The object of this action is to secure a divorce on the ground of desertion for more than one year.
A. C. McDONALD,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office and P. O. Address, 524 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash.
Oct. 7—Nov. 18, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of WASHINGTON for King Coun-
publication
ty. Summons by Publication.
Maud A. Boschert, plaintiff, vs.
C. Boschert, defendant, No. 76217
The State Hartton, to the said
Charles C. Boschert, defendant:
You are hereby summoned to appear
with sixty days after the date of
the first publication of this summons,
today, within sixty days after the 7th
above entitled action in the above en-
titled court, and answer the complaint
of the plaintiff, and serve a copy
your answer upon the undersigned at-
torneys for plaintiff, at their office
below stated; and case of your failure
against you according to the demand of
the complaint, which has been filed with
work of said court.
Briefly stated the object of this action is to dissolve the bonds of matriomyexisting between plaintiff's defendant and to grant plaintiff a divorce and to defend the plaintiff on the ground of abandonment of the plaintiff the defendant for more than one
6
year last past, and for the failure of the defendant to support the plaintiff and his family, and to award the custody of their minor son, Robert E. Boschert, to the plaintiff. For further particulars reference is made to the complaint now on file in the office of the clerk of the above entitled court.
Suite 1308 Alaska Building,
Seattle, King County, Washington.
Oct. 7-Nov. 18, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Summons by Publication
Elizabeth J. Marston, plaintiff, vs. Richard K. Marston, defendant.—No. 76271
The state of Washington, to the said Richard K. Marston, 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 7th day of October, 1910, and defend 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 has been filed with the clerk of said court.
The object of the above entitled action is for an absolute divorce on the grounds of non-support, and custody of two minor children.
JOHN R. WILSON,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
P. O. address, 539 New York Building,
Seattle, King County, Washington.
Oct. 7—Nov. 28, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE of Washington, in the County of King. Order fixing time to hear final account and to show cause why the complaint was made.
In the Matter of the Estate of Charles Robinson, deceased.—No. 10075. Martha A. Robinson and Harry T. Price, executrix and executor of the estate of Charles Robinson, deceased, having filed in his lawsuit, their petition petitioning 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 sufficient to treat that residue of said estate; It is therefore ordered by the court that all persons interested in the estate of the said Charles Robinson, deceased, be and appear before the said Superior Court of King County, State of Washington; at the court of King County, deceased, be and appear before the said court in Seattle, King County, Washington, on the 5th day of November, 1910, at 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 of distribution 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 hearing and published once a week for four consecutive weeks before the 5th day of November, 1910, in the Seattle Republican, newspaper printed and published in said County and of general circulation therein.
Done in open court this 6th day of October, 1910.
ROBERT H. LINDSAY,
Court Commissioner.
Oct. 7—Nov. 4, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, in the County of King. Order fixing time to hear final account and to show cause why distribution should not be made.
In the Matter of the Estate of Mary Mountjoy, deceased.—No. 10629.
William L. Lovejoy, administrator of the estate of Mary Mountjoy, deceased, having filed in this court his final account and petition setting forth that said estate is now in possession of the residue thereof among the persons entitled by law thereto, and it appearing to the court that said petition sets forth facts 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 Mary Mountjoy, deceased, be and appear before the said Superintendent of King County, at the court room of the Probate Department of said court in Seattle, King County, Washington, on the 5th day of November, 1910, 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 account distribution be among the residue of 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 heirs and published and published for four weeks before the said 5th day of November, 1910, in the Seattle Republican, a newspaper printed and published in said King County and of general circulation therein.
Done in open court this 6th day of October, 1910.
ROBERT H. LINDSAY,
Court Commissioner.
Oct. 7—Nov. 4, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County,
L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Thos. Eaton, and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an interest in and to the hereafter described real property. Defendants. No. 75684. Notice and Summons.
State of Washington: To the above defendants and each of them:
Yu and each of you, as owners, claimants or holders of an interest or estate in and to the hereafter 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 25th day of April, 1910, and numbered B61750, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1906, with an amount $165, and the real property situated in said King County, described as follows, towts.
Beginning at a point 165 feet east and 33 feet south of the N. W. corner of the SW 1-4 of Sec. 10, Tp. 26 N., R. 5 E., W. M.; thence east 60 feet, thence S. 120 feet, thence west 60 feet, thence N. 120 feet to the place of following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, to-wit.
For the year 1907, the sum of $1.36; for the year 1908, the sum of 87 cents; for the year 1909, the sum of 28 cents.
Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 5% on the sum of said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property.
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
You and each of you (including said persons unknown, if any) are hereby furnished aided and compounded to and appear within sixty days after the date of first publication of this notice, exclusive of the day of said first publication, to-wit: within 60 days after Sept. 30, 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 case of 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 each parcel of said property for the satisfaction of the sums charged and found against it respectively as provided by and as prayed in plaintiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court.
A. C. Mac ALLY
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office Address: 524 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash.
Sept. 30—Nov. 11, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County.
Relinda Higdon, Plaintiff, vs. Ira Higdon, Defendant. No. — Summons for publication.
The State of Washington, to the said Ira Higdon, 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 September, 1910 and defend the opinion in the above-titled 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 above entitled action is to obtain a divorce from you on the ground of non-support, drunkenness and cruelty, and care and custody of minor child.
ELLIAS A. WRIGHT,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
P. O. Address, 629 Burke Building, Seattle, King County, Washington.
Sept. 9—Oct. 21; 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County.
L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Preston Mill Co., and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, Defendants. No. 75685. Notice and Summons.
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 herinafter 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, Wash. Washington, died the 25th day of April, 1910, and numbered B61756 for the delinquent taxes of the year 1905, in the amount of 90 cents, and upon the real property situated in said King county, described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at S. E. cor. of N. E. 1-4 of Sec. 32, Tp. 24. N. R. 7 E. W. M., thence west 420 feet to School Dist. No. 76, thence north to N. P. Ry., thence easterly along R. N. R. to N. E. 76, thence S. 235 feet to the place of beginning. (Part of S. E. 1-4 of the N. E. 1-4 Sec. 32, Tp. 24 N., R. 7 E. W. M.)
That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, to-wit:
For the year 1906, the sum of 57 cents;
for the year 1907, the sum of 72 cents;
for the year 1908, the sum of 44 cents;
for the year 1909, the sum of 27 cents.
When the total 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 day of said first publication, to-wit: within 60 days after Sept. 30, 1910, in the above entitled coars and tendered the complaint in said and answer the complaint of said plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer on the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his offire 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 or the sums and amounts owed to the offire below, for said taxes, interest and costs, ordering a sale of each 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.
L. H. CRAVER, Plaintiff.
A. C. MacDONALD.
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office Address: 524 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash.
Sept. 30—Nov. 11, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King County.
F. H. Harkins, plaintiff, vs. Elizabeth Brunner, Benedict Brunner, her husband, James McNamara, William E. Holmes, doing business under the name of the Holmes Plumbing & Heating Co. H. C. Keller, doing business as Keller & Sons, and the American Luxfer Prism Co., defendants.—No. 75397.
Summons by publication.
The State of Washington to the said defendants, Elizabeth Brunner, Benedict Brunner, her husband, and the American Luxer Prism Company, a corporation:
No. 101. Each of you, are hereby summoned and required to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wit: within sixty days after the second day of September, 1910, and defend the court and answer in the court titled counsel and answer the complaint of the plaintiff herein and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff, at his address below stated, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you, and the complaint of the complaint herein which has been filed with the clerk of this court.
The object of said action is to recover a judgment against the said Elizabeth Brunner and Benedict Brunner, her husband, for the sum of Fifteen Hundred Dollars, together with interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent per month for the 3rd and 4th of 1907, less the sum of Fifty-four ($64.00) Dollars paid on account of interest, and interest on deferred interest installments at the rate of ten per cent
per annum; also the sum of sixteen dollars for insurance paid by plaintiff and the sum of $170.00 attorney's fee and costs and disbursements herein and to foreclose that certain mortgage given by the plaintiff and Benedict Brunner, on the 23rd day of October, 1907, to Osner & Mehlhorn, Inc., to secure said amount upon lot 6, block 3, Market Street Addition to the city of Seattle, King County, Washington, and to foreclose all right, claim on equity of redemption of each and all of said defendants in and to said property.
Said mortgage was recorded on the 23rd day of October, 1907, in Vol. 330 of mortgages, page 566, of the records in the auditor's office of said King County. The said mortgage, and the sum secured thereby, was, on the 24th day of October, 1907, assigned, in writing, to said plaintiff.
EDWARD VON TOBEL.
Attorney for plaintiff.
Office and post office address, rooms 603-5 Mutual Life Bidg., Seattle, King County, Washington.
Sept. 2, Oct. 15, 1910.
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTE BY
the Treasurer of the City of Seattle,
King County, Washington.
To Patrick O'Connor:
You are hereby notified that the undersigned, L. H. Craver, is the owner and holder of one certain certificate of purchase, No. 934, on Lot 17, Block 2 of Columbia Terrace Addition, in said Issue of City Treasurer of the said City, August 21st, 1908, for the sum of Seventeen and 30-100 Dollars ($17.30) under ordinance of the said City of Seattle, No. 13320. Said Certificate of purchase was recorded in the office of the Auditor of King County, Washington, on Nov. 9th, 1908, and the undersigned paid the said Auditor his fees therefor in the sum of $1.00. That since the said August 21st, 1908, the undersigned has paid other taxes and assessments on said land and follows with it, on October 26, 1908, the sum of $9.28 and May 12, 1910, the sum of $144.08.
And you, the said Patrick O'Connor, are hereby further notified that at the expiration of Sixty days after the date of the first publication of this notice, exclusive of the day of the first publication, to write sixty days after August 26th, 1910, the said L. Crawley will demand of the said Treasurer of the said City of Seattle, that he execute and deliver to him a deed to the said real property, and unless you, the said Patrick O'Connor, redeem the said property by paying to the said Treasurer the sums hereinbefore mentioned with interest per annum from said dates of payment, the said Treasurer will make and deliver to the undersigned a deed to the said property.
L. H. CRAVER,
Office and P. O. Address: 524 Bailey Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
August 26—Oct. 6, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County.
Wyman, Partridge & Co., a corporation, plaintiff, vs. James Fitzgerald and Julia Fitzgerald, co-partners, as Fitzgerald & Fitzgerald, defendants.—No. 74735.
Summons for Publication.
The State of Washington to the said James Fitzgerald and Julia Fitzgerald, co-partners, as Fitzgerald & Fitzgerald, defendants:
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 2nd day of September, 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled action in the court of the plaintiff, and serve a copy your answer 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 complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The object of the action is to provide a judgment against said defendants upon a claim by plaintiff for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered to said defendants by said plintiff in the sum of Two Thousand One Hundred Twenty-seven and 10-100 Dollars ($2,127.10), with interest thereon from the 2nd day of May, 1910, besides action in suit, and in which said action an attachment has been taken out and levled.
LEOPOLD M. STERN, and
J. M. RUSSELL.
Attorneys for plaintiff.
Office and postoffice address, 705 Low-
man Building, Seattle, King County,
Washington.
Sept. 2, Oct. 15, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Empire Furniture Manufacturing Company,
a corporation, duly organized
and existing under the laws of the
State of Washington, Plaintiff, vs.
Thomas F. Lee, Defendant. No. 75667.
Summons for Publication.
The State of Washington, to Thomas
F. Lee, 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 9th day of September, A. D. 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the court aforesaid and serve a copy of your anewsworth and the original court order for the plaintiff at his offices below stated; and in case of your failure so to do judgment will be rendered against you according to the demands of the complaint which 1 as been filed with the clerk of said court.
The object of this action is to foreclose the payment of the hotel lion for $375 on personal chattles described in plaintiff's complaint located 1400 Ewing street, Seattle, Washington, in possession of plaintiff, the subject matter of this action, in which defendant has or claims an interest and in wholly excluding defendant from any interest therein.
HENRY S. NOON,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office and Post Office address: 703-4 New York Block, Seattle, King County, State of Washington.
Sent. 9—Oct. 21, 1910.
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE
by the Treasurer of the City of Seattle,
King County, Washington.
To Charles McDonald:
You are hereby notified that the unbound
holder of one certain Certificate of
Purchase, No. 1172, on Lot Nineteen (19)
of Wheeler's Third Addition to the City
of Seattle, in King County, Washington,
issued by the Treasurer of the
sold City on August 24th, 1908, to one
Mrs. C. H Weed, for the sum of Six
dollars in the ordinance of the said city of Seattle,
No. 13320. Said Certificate of Purchase
FRIDAY October 21, 1910
was recorded by the said Mrs. C. H. Weed, in the office of the County Auditor, in King County, Washington, on October 19, 1908, by the Office of Doels, at page 127, and there was paid to the said Auditor his fees therefor in the sum of of One Dollar ($1.00). That since said last named date, to-wit: on Feb. 15th, 1910, there was paid by the undersigned to the County Treasurer of said King County for taxes on said property the sum of Ninety-four Dollars and forty cents ($94.40). That on Feb. 14th, 1910, the said Mrs. C. H. Weed, for a valuable consideration, sold and assigned the said Certificate Purchase to the undersigned L. H. Craver and the said L. H. Craver is now the owner and holder of the said Certificate of Purchase.
And you, the said Charles McDonald, are hereby further notified that at the expiration of Sixty days after the date of the first publication of this notice, exclusive of the day of the said first publication, to-wit: sixty days after September 9th, 1910, the said L. H. Craver will dmeand of the said Treasurer of the said City of Seattle, that he execute and deliver to him a deed to the said real property, and unless you, the said Calis Mosley McDonald, redeem the said property by paying to the said Treasurer the sums hereinbefore mentioned, together with interest thereon at the rate of 15 per cent per annum from said dates of payment, the said Treasurer will make and deliver to the said L. H. Craver a deed to the said property. L. H. CRAVER.
Office and P. O. Address: 524 Bailey Building, Seattle, Washington.
Sept. 9—Oct. 21, 1910
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, in and for King
County. Summons by Publication.
Frieda Marshall, plaintiff, vs. Joe Marsh
shall defendant.—No.
The State of Washington to Joe Marsh.
You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wit: within sixty days after the 7th day of October, 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court and answer the complaint of the defendant and a copy of your answer on 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 the demand of the complaint which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The object of this action is that the plaintiff, on the premature hibernation darkness of the defendant and the neglect and refusal of the defendant husband to make suitable provision for his family, be granted an absolute divorce from the defendant herein and the custody and control of the child of the plaintiff and defendant herein, and such other and further relief as the court may direct.
F. J. CARVER.
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office address:
314 Northern Bank & Trust Bldg.,
Seattle, Wash.
Oct. 7—Nov. 18, 1910.
IN THE JUSTICE'S COURT BEFORE
John E. Carroll, Justice of the Peace,
Seattle Precinct, King County, Washington.
Summons by Publication.
R. J. Eichler, plaintiff, vs. Cora Lowe and John Doe Lowe, her husband, whose true christian name is unknown, defendants.—No. 18209.
To Cora Lowe and John Doe Lowe, her husband, whose true christian name is unknown.
In the name of the State of Washington you are hereby notified that R. J. Elchler has filed a complaint against you in said court which will come on to be heard at my office in Seattle, in King County, State of Washington, toowit, 210 New York Block, on the 4th day of November, 1910, at the hour of 9:30 o'clock A. 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 demand of the demand of this action is to recover the sum of the welco Dollars ($12.00), being a balance due for material furnished and labor performed by this plaintiff for and on behalf of said defendants within the last past three years.
Complaint filed September 14th, A. D.
1910.
JOHN E. CARROLL,
Justice of the Peace.
Oct. 7—Oct. 28, 1910.
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Take a trip to Seattle and let me save you the price of your trip on your dental work. You will have two dollars and the State Dental Monopoly will lose two dollars when I do your dental work. Have your dental work done now while you have been established at 718 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 until 4 for 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.
FRIDAY October 21, 1910
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Summons by Publication.
Charles Pfeffer, plaintiff, vs. Mile Bennett,
Clerk, Clay County, Missouri, husband,
Charles W. Newberry and "Jane Doe"
Newberry, his wife, whose true given name is to plaintiff unknown, William Grenner, D. A. Hatfield and "Jane Doe" Hatfield, his wife, whose true given name is to plaintiff unknown, and Charles W. Flsk, F. M. Hatfield, Ida M. Barton and Aurora Land Company, a corporation, defendants. No. 75263.
The State of Washington to Charles P. Newberry and "Jane Doe" Newberry, whose true guilty name is unknown, D. A. Hatfield and Jane Doe Hatfield, his wife, whose true given name is unknown.
You, and each of 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 16th day of September, and before the above entitled section in the above entitled court and answer the complaint of the plaintiff and have a copy of your answer served upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his office below stated and in case of your failure so to do judgment will be rendered to you by acknowledging to the demand of the complaint which has been filed with the clerk of said court.
The object of this action is to foreclose a certain mortgage executed and delivered by the said defendants Millie Bennett and Walter C Bennett, her husband, to one S. Campbell and by the said S. Campbell assigned to this plaintiff dated the 28th day of June, 1899, dated the same day in Vol. 407 of mortgages, page 39 of the record of mortgages in the office of the auditor of King County, Washington, which mortgage was given to secure a promissory note of $500.00 with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per annum and was given upon Lotts in the city of Seattle, King County, Washington, and to obtain judgment for the said $500.00 together with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the 28th day of January, 1910, and an attorney's fee of $75.00 and costs of suit and to order and deed on the suit title and interest of each and all of said defendants in and to said premises and every part thereof.
EDWARD VON TOBEL
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office and postoffice address:
Rooms 603-5 Mutual Life Bldg..
Seattle, King County, Washington
Sept. 16, Oct. 28, 1910.
State of Washington, for King County. Summons. A. L. Weaver and Ella May Weaver, husband and wife, plaintiffs, vs. Peter
The State of Washington to the said Peter E. Nordin, 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 17th day of Sept. 1910, and defend the appellate court entitled court and answer the complaint of the plaintiffs and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiffs at his office below stated, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment and decree will be rendered against the appellate court, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. And all right, title and interest in the lands described in the complaint claimed by you likewise in the contract, and payments described therein will be foreclosed, forfeited, and the title of the plaintiffs as to all claims you may have or claim.
J W. BROWN,
Attorney for Plaintiffs.
1324 Alaska Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
Sept. 16, Oct. 28, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Antone
Kaas, and all persons unknown, if
any, having or claiming an interest
in and to the hereafter described
real property, Defendants. No. 75305.
Notice and Summons.
State of Washington: To the above defenders 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 one certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the Trustee of King County, State of Washington, dated the 5th day of November, 1908, 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:
West 260 feet of $1/2 of $1/2 of NE1/4 of SE 1/2 Sec. 4, Tp. 21, N. R 4 E, W. M. certificata B54644, year 1906, amount $1.23
That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, to-wit:
Amount $1.40 for year 1907; 76 cents for year 1908.
Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 5 percent per annum from sale to deposition, 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 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 pub-lylulation, to-wit: within sixty days Aug. 19, 1910, in the above entitled co-ord and action; and action, the complaint of said plaintiff and answer the complaint of said plaintiff and reserve a copy of your answer on the undersignedattorney for plei- tiff at his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. In case of your failure 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, ordering a sale of each parcel of said property or of each parcel of said property 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. MAC DONALD,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office Address: 524 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash.
Sept. 23—Nov. 4, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for the County
A. C. MAC Summons
You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of the summoned document within sixty days after the 23rd day of September, 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 attorneys for plaintiff, at their office before the court, and answer and 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.
This action is instituted for the purpose of dissolving the bonds of marriages for plaintiff, at their office and defendant, for the reason and upon the grounds that said defendant has failed, neglected and refused to make suitable provisions for the support and maintenance of said plaintiff; and for the degree awarding to said plaintiff, at their office and property situated in the County of Clallam, State of Washington, particularly described as follows, to-wit:
Lots twenty-two (22), twenty-three (23), twenty-six (26) and twenty-seven (27), in section seven (7), township thirty, in section seven (7), township Clallam County Washington; and also the following property situated in King County. State of Washington:
The west half of lot twenty-five (25) and lot twenty-six (26), block eight (8). Bucklus Addition to the City of Seattle; and for such other and further relief as to this court may seem just and equitable.
IN THE SUPERIOR COUR8, KING County, Washington.
Elizabeth Turnbull, Plaintiff, vs. George Turnbull, Defendant. No. ____. Summons.
The State of Washington to the said case. Turnbull, defendant:
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 7th day of October, 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court and answer the complaint of the plaintiff and serve an answer upon the assigned 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 the demands of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The complainant in this action prays for divorce and that the bonds of matrimony between the plaintiff and defendant be dissolved.
H.E. FOSTER
Attorney for Plaintiff.
P. O. Address: 606 Marion Building, Seattle, King County, Washington.
Date of first publication, October 7, 1910.
Date of last publication, November 18, 1910.
IN JUSTICE' S COURT—BEFORE Fred C. Brown, Justice of the Peace, and for Seattle Precinct, King County, State of Washington.
California Wine and Cordial Company,
a corporation, Plaintiff, vs. John Doe
Matijasevich and Richard Roe Glo-
vich, copartners, doing business under
firm name and style of Alaska Liquor
Company, No. _____ Summar-
ation of Publication.
State of Washington, County of King, ss
The State of Washington: To John Doe
Matijasevich and Richard Roe Glo-
vich, copartners, doing business under
firm name and style of Alaska
Liquor Co:
You each of you, are hereby notified that California Wine and Cordial Company, a corporation, has filed a complaint against you in said Court,
which will come on to be heard at my office in Room 210, New York Building, Seattle, King County, Washington, on
the 20th day of April, 2014. At 8:30 o'clock a 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 action is for the sum of Eighty-
two Dollars and Twenty one Dollars, being balances the plaintiff on account of merchandise sold and deli*ed to the defendants during the year 909.
F. ed September 15th, A. D. 1910.
FRED. C. BROWN.
Justice of the Peace, in and for Seattle
Precinct, King County, Washington.
TWOROGER & WINKLER,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
10-11 Triangle Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
Date of first publication Sept. 16. 1210
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. Notice to Creditors. In the Matter of the Estate of Allen P. Minter, Witnessed—No. 11658. By order of said court made herein on the 8th day of September, 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 under the written executors of said estate, at 1308 Alaska Building, 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 September 23, 1910.
1910.
SARAH H. MITTEN,
FRED W. WEST,
HENRY BLACKWOOD,
As Executors of said Estate.
BRADY & RUMMENS,
Attorneys for Estate.
1308 Alaska Building, Seattle, Wash.
Sept. 23—Oct. 22, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County,
L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Frank H. Renick,
Anna farmer and Hanna farmer,
and all persons unknown, if any, having
claiming an interest in and to
the hereinafter described real property.
Defendants. No. 74379. Notice and
Summons.
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 that the one certain delinquent tax certificate is held by the owner of King County, State of Washington, dated the 15th day of October, 1908, and numbered B54379, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1906, in the amount of $2.02, and upon the real property situated in said King County, described as follows, to-wit: $ 1.7% of the value of the land, $ 2.0% of Tp. 24, N, R 6 E, W, M. that the taxes for the following subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, to-wit: For the year 1907, the su mof $1.78; for the year 1908, the sum of $1.24. Which set the interest at the rate of 15 per cent per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and redeemed taxes upon and
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
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, to-wit: within sixty days and entitled court and action; and defend this action and answer the complaint of said plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer on the undersignedattorney for plaintiff at his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs.
In case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered herein, foreclosure will be rendered against each parcel of said real property for the sums and amounts due upon and charged against each, for said taxes, ordering a sale of each 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 Court.
L. H. CRAY, Plaintiff.
A. C. MAC DONALD.
Office Address. 524 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash. Sept. 9—Oct. 21, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Caroline L. Burke, Pleasant, Person, Unknown any, having or claiming an interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, Defendants—No. 75301.
State of Washington: To the above defendants and each of them:
You and each of you, as owners, claims 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 is issued by the issuer of King County State of Washington, dated the 2nd day of September, 1909, and numbered B61042, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1907, in the amount of $4.86, and upon the real property situated in said King County, described as follows, towit: Lot 5, Sec. 23, Tp. 22, N., R. 6 E. W., M. less Right-of-Way C., M. & St. P. Rv. 50. On the taxes for the following subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, to-wit:
For the year 1906, the sum of $2.11;
for the year 1908, the sum of $0.73.
Which several sums bear interest at
the rate of 15 per cent per annum from
sale date of payment, and are all the
date of payment, and takes upon and
against 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 sale and publication within sixty days Sept. 9, 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 undersignedattorney for plaintiff at his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. In case of your answer to costs, 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, ordering a sale of each parcel of said property for the satisfaction of the sums charged and found against it, spectacle provided, and prayed in plaintiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court.
L. H. CRAVER, Plaintiff.
A. C. MAC DONALD,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office Address: 524 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
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 sued by the King County, State of Washington, dated the 19th day of November, 1908, and numbered B54857, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1906, in the amount of $2.45, and upon the real property situated in said King County, described as follows, towit. Lot 12, Block 5, Allentown Acres. That the taxes for the following subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, for the year 1907, the sum of $4.57; for the year 1908, the sum of $1.76.
Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent per annum from said date of payment, and are all the same? A tax takes 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, Julylvication, to-wit; within sixty days Sept. 30, 1910, have entitled court and action, and defend this action and the complaint, of said plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer on the undersignedattorney for plaintiff at his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. In case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered herein, foreclosing the lien of said taxes and costs against each parcel of said taxes for the sums and amounts the uap and charged each, for said taxes, 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.
I. H. CRAVER, Plaintiff.
A. C. MAC, DONALD.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for King County.
Summons by Publication.
Daisy Houf, plaintiff, vs. John Francis
Houf, lefendant.—No.
The State of Washington, to the said
lefendant.
John Frahheit, who summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, towit: within sixty days after the 30th day of September, A. D. 1910, and defend the defendant, A. D. 1910, and defend the plaintiff 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 the defendant so request will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been
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filed with the clerk of said court. The object of the said action and the relief sought to be obtained therein is fully set to be the complaint, and is hereby 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 for more than four years, and also your failure to make suitable provisions for plaintiff since said marriage.
J. P. BALL,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Postoffice and office address.
201-203 Burke Bldg., Seattle,
County of King, State of Washington.
Sept. 30—Nov. 11, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. E. K Ludvig,
and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an interest in and to the hereafter described real property, Defendants. No. 75299. Notice and Summons.
State of Washington: To the above de-
signation, copy of them:
Rendant
You and each of you, as owners, claimants, and 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 19th day of November, 1908, and numbered B54871, for the delinquent taxes of year 1906, in the amount of 21 and upon the real property situated in said King County, described as follows, to wit: Lot 2, Block 2, Hillman City, Division No. 7.
That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above described real property, to-wit:
For the year 1907, the sum of $1.783
for the year 1908, the sum of $5.15.
Which several sums bear interest at
the rate of 15 per cent per annum from
sold date, and which sums are all
upheld and undeemed taxes up all 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, to-wit: within sixty days after Sept. 9, 1910, in the district court and action; and defend this action and answer the complaint of said plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer on the undersignedattorney for plaintiff at his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. In case of your failure 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 charged and charged against for said taxes, ordering a sale of each parcel of said property for the satisfaction of the sums charged and found against it respectively as provided by law, and sprayed in plaintiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court.
L. H. CRAVER, Plaintiff.
A. C. MAC DONALD,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office Address: $24 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash.
Sept. 9—Oct. 21, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King Coun-
Helen B. Phillips, plaintiff, vs. Park D.
Phillips, defendant.
Phillips, derehoudt:
The State of Washington, to the above
D. Phillips:
named defendant, Park D. Phillips:
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 twentythird day of October, 1910, exclusive of said twentythird day of October, 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the court aforesaid, and to serve a copy of your answer or other pleading upon the undersigned attorney for the plaintiff, at his hereinafter designated postoffice address, and in case of failure so to do, judgment be rendered in salient case according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of the above entitled court.
The object of said action is to procure a judgment and decree forever severing the bonds of matrimony existing between the plaintiff and defendant, on the grounds of the failure, fusal and neglect of the defendant to waive any right to contribute anything towards the support or maintenance of the plaintiff since their marriage on the 5th day of July, 1900, and on the further ground that the defendant more than two years ago wilfully and without just cause abandoned the plaintiff to all abuses and has so continued to abstain and live separate and apart from plaintiff.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, in and for King
County, Sammons.
Lillian Holloway plaintiff, vs. James Col-
defendant No. _____
Sept. 9—Oct. 21. 1910.
The State of Washington, to the said James Collins, defendant:
You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, toowyear, maturity date, and day of October, 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 before maturity date of your behalf 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 this action is to secure a decree of divorce, dissolving the bond of marriage exiting between plaintiff and defendant, upon the grounds of desertion and failure to provide for more than one year.
H. E. SNOOK,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office and postoffice address,
527 Burke Building, Seattle, Washington
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, in and for the County of King. Summons for Publication. Laurentine E. Cole, plaintiff, vs. Anna May Cole, defendant.—No, 76580. The State of Washington, to the said Anna May Cole, defendant: 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 21st day of October, 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint 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 demands of the complaint, has been heard with the object of said court. The object for which this action is brought is to obtain a decree of divorce from the defendant, upon the following grounds:
Because the defendant without the plaintiff's fault, abandoned the plaintiff on the 9th of October, 1909, at Seattle, Washington, and that said abandonment has been continuous for one year and more.
A. J. SPECKER
Attorney for Plaintiff.
P. O. address, 309 Burke Bldg,
Second and Marion Streets,
Seattle, Wash.
Oct. 21—Dec. 2, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
In Probate. Administrator's Notice of Sale of Real Estate.
In the Matter of the Estate of James J. Lynch, Deceased.—No. 10926.
Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of an order of sale of the Superior Court of King County, Washington, dated October 8th, 1910, I will sell at private sale the following described real estate situated in King County, Washington:
Lot 21, Block 7, Wallingford's Division of Green Lake Addition to the City of Seattle.
Bids will be received by the undersigned at the office of Edward Von Tobel, 4444 West 14th Street, King County, Washington. Bids will be received for any of said parcels as above described. The terms of sale are cash, gold coin of the U. S. Ten per cent of bid to accompany bid and upon confirmation of sale by the court.
Dated this 20th day of October, 1910.
Date of first publication, October 21,
1910.
HARRY W. BRINGHURST,
Administrator of the Estate of James
J. Lynch, Deceased.
Oct. 21—Nov. 4, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. J. A. Musgrove and James Musgrove, and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an interest in and to the Summons.
State of Washington: To the above defenda and each of them:
tendency
L. H. GRAVER, Plaintiff.
A. C. MAC, DONALD.
Honorry for Plaintiff.
Office Address: 524 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash.
August 19. September 30. 1910.
1
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF KING County, Washington. Summons by Publication.
Ella Croft, Plaintiff, vs. Harry W. Barrows. Defendant.-No. 75894.
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 23rd day of September, 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 under-appointed attorney for his office below stated, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demands of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The complaint in this action prays for the annulment of a marriage ceremony entered into between the plaintiff and defendant on December 28, 1907, and that the said marriage ceremony may be cancelled and annulled, and for all proper relief.
H. E. FOSTER,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
P. O. address, 606 Marion Building,
Seattle, King County, Washington.
Date of first publication, September 23, 1910.
Date of last publication, Nov. 4, 1910.
Sept. 23—Nov. 4, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Notice to Creditors.
In the Matter of the Estate of Alonzo H. Jose, Deceased.—No. 11696. By order of said court made herein on the 7th day of September, 1910. notice is hereby given to the creditors of, and to all persons having claims against said deed against said estate to present them with the necessary vouchers to the undersigned administrator of said estate, at 1308 Alaska Building, the place of business of said estate, in Seattle, in said county and state, within one year from and after the date of said estate, for Estate, 1308 Alaska Building, Seattle, Wash. Sept. 23—Oct. 22, 1910.
N. H. JOSE,
As Administrator of said Estate.
BRADY & RUMMENS,
1308 Alaska Building, Seattle, Wash.
Sept. 23—Oct. 22, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. Notice to Creditors.
In the Matter of the Estate of Leonhard Reinhard deceased-No 11230
hard Reinig, deceased.—No. 11230. By order of said court made herein on the 29th day of September 1910, notice to be by all persons 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 Margarithe S. Reinig, to present them with the necessary vouchers to the undersigned Margarethe S. Reinig, executrix of said estate, at 309 Burke Block, at the office of A. J. Speckert, her attorney, the place of burke 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 September
30, 1910.
MARGARETHE S. REINIG,
As Executrix of said Estate.
A. J. SPECKERT.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. Summons by Publication. Avard L. Morrison, plaintiff, vs. Sarah Morrison, defendant.—No. —— The State of Washington, to the said Sarah Morrison, defendant. You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this complaint, to wit, within sixty days after the 21st day of October, A. D. 1910, and defend he 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, and so on. The object of the said action and the relief to be obtained therein are 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 ground of your abandonment of plaintiff for more than two years.
J. P. BALL
Postoffice and office address:
201-203 Burke Bldg., Seattle
County of King, State of Washington.
Oct. 21—Dec. 2, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for King County.
Summons by Publication.
M. J. Lutz, Plaintiff, vs. Charles W. Ingran, Administrator of the Estate of Richard Lehn, Deceased, and Mrs. A. Sjoequist, Defendants.—No. 72747.
The State of Washington to Mrs. A.
You are hereby summoned and required to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wit: within sixty days after the 23rd day of September, 1910 and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled action, answer the behalf of the plaintiff herein and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff, at his 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 which has been filed with the clerk of this court.
In the complaint, is to foreclose two certain mortgages given by the said Richard Lehn in his life time to the said plaintiff, the first one being dated the November 16, 1906, to secure the sum of $1,200.00, with interest thereon the rate of 7 per annum from said date until paid and the second one dated October 8, 1907, to secure the sum of $300.00, with interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum from said date until paid, and to recover judgment for said amounts and interest and $26.98 taxes paid by plaintiff and torney's fee of $140.00 and costs on slots both of said mortgages being on slots 1 and 2, block 3, John J. McGilvra's Second addition to the City of Seattle, King County, Washington, and to foreclose and determine all the right, title and interest of said defendants and each of them in and to said property.
EDWARD VON TOBEL,
Office and postoffice address:
Rooms 603-5 Mutual Life Building,
Seattle, King County, Washington.
Sent. 23—Nov. 4, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County
In the Matter of the Estate of Florence
H. Lutz Deceased. No. 11821. Not
to Creep. No. 11821.
By order of said court made herein
on the 9th 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 or
against the community estate of said
deceased and husband to present to them
the deceased's possession of the un-
derigned executor of said estate, an
1211 American Bank Building, the place
of business of said estate, in Seattle,
in said county and state, within one year
from and after the date of first pub-
lication of this notice or same will be
HARRY E. LUTZ
1211 American Bank Bldg., Seattle, Wn.
August 26—Sept. 23, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, in and for King
County.
Edith Rash, Plaintiff, vs. John F. Rash
Defendant. No. 75369. Summons
Publication.
State of Washington to the said John
F. Rash, Defendant:
You are hereby summoned to appear
within sixty (60) days after the first
publication of this summons, to-wit
within sixty (60) days after the 26th
day of August, 1910, in 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 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 com-
plaint which has been filed with the
clerk of said court.
This action is brought for the purpose of obtaining a decree of divorce from the said defendant on the grounds of abandonment, non-support and personal indignities, the same being causes of action specified in the laws of Washington, for which services of summons by publication may be made by PARKER BROWN, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Office and Postoffice Address: Room 25 Union Block, 713 1st Ave., Seattle, Washington, August 26—Oct. 6, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Etate of Washington, for King County. Summons by Publication. Viola Estella Small, plantist, vs. Joseph Small, defendant. The State of Washington, to the said Joseph Small, 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 14th defence the above entitled action in the defend 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 the 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 said action and the relief sought to be obtained therein is fully set forth in the 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 alimony or your failure to make suitable provisions for plaintiff since said marriage.
J. P. BALL.
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Postoffice and office address:
201-203 Burke Building, Seattle,
King County, Washington.
Oct. 14—Nov. 25, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King Coun-
ty. Summons for Publication.
You must be hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit: within sixty days after the 14th day of October, 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of the above motion to 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, who is oblige the above motion against said defendant for the amount due upon two promissory notes for $150.00 and $40.00, respectively, made by said defendant on the 30th day of July, 1907, and payable, the one, two months after date, and the other three months after date, respectively, together with interest the other, the agent, and the costs of this action, and have an attachment issued and levied on the defendant's property.
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Postoffice address 705 Lowman Bldg.,
Seattle, King County, Washington,
Oct. 14—Nov. 25, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, in the County
of King. In Probate. Order fixing
time to hear final account and to show
cause why distribution should not be
mad.
In the Matter of the Estate of T. J.
Blordan, deceased—No. 5656.
Malcolm K. MacRae, administrator of the estate of T. J. Riordan, 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 thereto and because both sides had there, and it appearing to the court that said petition sets forth facts 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 T. J. Riordan, deceased, be and appear before the said Court of King County, St. John of Wash. and jail room of the Probate Department of said court in Seattle on the 14th day of October, 1910, 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 of distribution be made of the residue of said estate among the heirs and persons in said petition mentioned, accord-
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 be obeyed and work for four consecutive weeks before the said 14th day of November, 1910, in the
ATTORNEYS, ATTENTION!
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN is looking for your legal publications, and if you are looking for your own business interests you will see to it that no publication is sent from your office without first talking with CAYTON about it. It is an indisputable fact that there are but two weekly publications in Seattle that publish lawyers' legal notices and give the lawyers no trouble on account of errors and prompt "returns" of publishers' affidavits, and THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN takes cases that he has not the time to look the paper over every the lead. In this day of busy, bustling activity, the lawyer's time is so much absorbed in the preparation of his voluminous week to see if his notices are being regularly published, nor to read over his notices to see if they are absolutely correct. It often happens that even lawyers make errors in getting or calls the lawyer's attention to them before going to press up their notices for publication, which errors are very annoying to the lawyers if not detected and corrected before going into the paper. If, therefore, the lawyer feels absolutely certain that the publisher gives his personal attention to notices sent to his paper and either corrects small errors in notices it's a great relief to his mind. The publisher of THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN has had so much experience with legal publications that he can detect a faulty publication almost as readily as the lawyer himself, and, if not a grievous one, corrects it then and there, but if a grievous one, the lawyer's attention is called to the same before going to press. Returns on publications are promptly made, so that lawyers do not have to worry about the publisher's notice after his case has been called in court.
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
Seattle Republican, a newspaper printed and published in said King County, and of general circulation therein.
Done in open court this 7th day of October, 1910.
ROBERT H. LINDSAY,
Court Commissioner.
State of Washington, County of King
D. K. Sickels, 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 court on the 7th day of November, 1910, in the matter of the estate of T. J. Riordan, deceased.
Witness my hand and the seal of said court this 7th day of October, 1910.
D. K. SICKELS,
Clerk.
By PERCY F. THOMAS,
Deputy Clerk.
Oct. 14—Nov. 11, 1910.
J. J. Frantz and W. J. Winters, defendants.
Globe Electric Company, Cox & Gleason Company, and J. K. Witherspoon, intervenors.—No. —
the State of Washington, to the said
Celestine J. Sullivan, Evelyn Sullivan,
his wife, and H. W. Fisher, defend-
ants:
You are hereby summoned to appear
within sixty days after the date of the
first publication of this summons, to-
wit: sixty days after the 14th day of October, A. D. 1910, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint in intervention of the Intervenor J. K. therspoon, and serve a copy of your answer to the Intervenor for intervenor 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 said intervenor's complaint in intervention which has been filed with the clerk of said court in the subject of the action set forth in the complaint in intervention. is as follows:
To foreclose a laborer's and materialman's lien upon lots 19 and 20, block 24, Edes & Knights' addition to Seattle, King County, Washington.
C. H. WINDERS.
Attorney for Intervenor, J. K. Wither
spoon.
Office and postoffice address:
712 Lowman Building,
Seattle, King County,
Washington.
Oct. 14—Nov. 25, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Notice to Creditors.
In the Matter of the Estate of Lavina
Christine Rudberg, deceased.—No.
11877.
By order of said court made herein
on the 4th day of October, 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
to the undersigned administratrix
of said estate, at 328 Northern Bank &
Trust Building, Seattle, Wash., the place
of residence and 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 October 14,
1910.
ELMA LOUISE RUDBERG,
As Administratrix of sald Estate.
GORDON McGAUVRAN,
Attorney for Estate.
327-8-9 Northern Bank & Trust Bldg.
Seattle, Wash.
Oct. 14—Nov. 11, 1910.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for King Coun-
ty. Notice to Creditors.
In the Matter of the Estate of Katherine Schulver, deceased.—No. 11830.
By order of said court made herein on the 12th day of October, 1910. Notice is hereby given to the creditors of, and to all persons having claims against
FRIDAY October 21, 1910
sald deceased or against said estate, to
present them with the necessary vouch-
ers to hold designated estate of said
estate, at 229 Burke Block, Seattle,
Washington, 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 Oct. 14, 1910.
FRED L. RICE,
As Administrator of said Estate.
FRED L. RICE,
Attorney for Estate.
229 Burke Block,
Seattle, Wash.
Oct. 14—Nov. 11, 1910.
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