Seattle Republican

Friday, August 25, 1911

Seattle, Washington

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State Library The Seattle Republican CURRENT COMMENT TAMS Single Copies, 10 Cents. JUDGE HANFORD BUTTS IN That the people of this country do not become completely exasperated, take things in their own hands, turn rioters and the whole country be thrown into a chaotic state is the wonder of all persons, who look the situations which arise from time to time wherein the people are on the side and the corporation trusts backed by the courts are on the other, squarely in the face. For months the Seattle-Renton and Southern street car system has been in the courts with the view of the differences between it and its patrons being properly adjusted, and it has gone up and gone down in the courts, and after the last decision of the state supreme court it was thought the matter was finally settled, but Federal Judge Hanford always bobs in at the wrong time and of late to always do the wrong thing at the right time. When he interfered in the recall of Mayor Hiram Charles Gill and was administered a rebuke by the people and the Post-Intelligencer, such as no judge has ever before received in the Northwest, it was thought he would take warning and keep his hands off of local affairs, but he is at it again and issued an injunction against the people one day this week preventing them from interfering with the street car system charging double fare, which puts the difficulty back into the courts to be gone all over again and in the meantime the officers of the street car system in question go merrily on robbing the people. Whether or not Judge Hanford is partial to the corporations is not known, but his decisions from time to time impresses the student of affairs that he is. The people as a whole believe they have been outraged by the decisions of Judge Hanford and they believe this man Crawford is able to continue to rob them because Judge Hanford issued the injunction and while no particular violence was done by either side in the set-to between the people and the street car operators, yet another injunction like the one granted by Judge Hanford last Monday afternoon will be the ENT COM cause of bloody riots that it will take the federal troops to put down. VOTE FOR NO BONDS. With the property holders tax ridden to death The Seattle Republican is inclined to advise its readers to vote against every bond issue that is now before the people, which is to be voted for in September. There may be some slight need of voting the bonds for the purchase of the watershed about Cedar Lake for the protection of the water supply of Seattle, but there is no excuse in [Name not visible in the image] C. H. Handford. the world for voting the art bonds, the bonds for a new court rouse, nor any of the other bonds asked for. It is a fact that there is no more excuse for the expenditure of $500,000 for an art museum site than there would be to expend that amount for a flying machine, in which the pompered city officials could fly from their homes to the city hall in the forenoons, their usual time of getting to the city hall, to do a couple of hours of work each --- VOLUME XVIII, NUMBER 16. day and then draw princely salaries for the same. Whether or not the plat of ground offered for the museum site is worth $500,-000 is more than we can say, but we would hate to have to give that amount for it. The museum if established will be in the interest of a few and the common people would reap no more benefit from it than they do from the $300,000 worth of automobiles the city has purchased for the comfort of the various city officials. There is no doubt but that it is more expensive a hundred times over to own a home in Seattle than it is to rent one, and that condition is due to the fact that, millions of dollars worth of bonds have been voted for this and that unnecessary improvement and then a great big slice of that money was squandered and reached only the hands of the favored few. If Mr. Taxpayer, you will study you tax roll you will come to the conclusion that you will vote for no more bond issue, however meritorious they may seem to be. If you had any assurance that the bonds for the watershed would be conservatively handled it might be well to vote for them, but already certain great concerns are being offered ten times more for their property than any jury of sane men would ever allow them for it and that exorbitant price is being rushed through by the people elected to protect the interests of the taxpayers. AN IDEAL CANDIDATE. Eugene W. Way has filed for Harbor and Port Commissioner from Seattle and this paper has no hesitancy in saying, no better man in the city could have filed for the place, and it is the hope of those citizens who watched Mr. Way's career in the city council that, he will be elected, and if he is, Seattle can be assured of a business like administration of the commission. Mr. Way is one of the foremost business men of Seattle and that too in many respects. He is not only prominent in real estate and insurance circles, but he is prominent in manufacturing circles, he being at the head of one of the most prosperous manufacturing concerns in the city. His real estate holdings in every section of the city are quite extensive and to make him one of the commissioners would simply be putting a man at the head of the whole commission that would look after the general good of the city, if for no other reason than the protection of his own property interest. He is well versed as to the needs of the city, so far as the improvement of the harbor is concerned, as he gave that feature of the city government special attention, when he was a member of the city council. In his candidacy for the harbor and port commissionership he is being backed by many of the most substantial business men of the city and all because they know that he has the best interests of the city at heart. SOME SMOOTHE SCOUNDREL. George H. Parker, the wireless convict, has inveigled the federal authorities into sending him to McNeil Island for incarceration instead of to Atlanta, Georgia, where the other wireless convicts were sent. Parker is a wise old guy and it is a cold day when he can not pull the wool over the eyes of those with whom he has dealings. He wanted to come to the McNeil Island prison because he wanted to be near his attorney, who is as cunning and perhaps as unscrupulous as Parker himself, if not more so, who will direct the workings of the Parker interests in Seattle which, it is said, amounts to millions. With Parker in a prison where he can communicate with his attorney every week, the people whom he gulled into putting their hard earned cash into his wireless fake, will have little or no show to get any returns for their money. Perhaps the punishment is severe, but until such unprincipled scoundrels are taken out and hung this faking of the unsuspecting public will go bravely on and still be looked upon as a legitimate business, and even when one of the whelps are sent to prison he will serve his term and then come out and enjoy his stolen goods. The attorney who protects such thieves ought himself to be sent to prison for life. FOOLISH AND FALSE. The same committee that conducted the recall election in Seattle last spring against Mayor Gill is reorganizing to fight the recall of Mayor Dilling. Evidently it makes a difference who is being recalled. A lot of people did not like the way Mayor Gill ran things. They started a campaign and worked up enough sentiment to recall him. Now a lot of people, who have fully as much right to their views as the other lot, are dissatisfied with the administration of Mayor Dilling. They have just as much right to work up a fight as the crowd that put him in. As a matter of fact the recall of Gill had as much politics back of it as the effort to recall Dilling. It is a fair sample of the actual workings of the recall and if the principle is right there is just as good grounds on which to work it on one man as another, and the only grounds on which it will ever be invoked is personal or political dissatisfaction, concealed by trumped up charges of some kind or character, designed to conceal the real motive.—Vancouver Spokesman. The above excerpt is more notable for what it does not say than for what it does THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN say. It generalizes but refuses to specialize. The principle of recall is all right and if a sufficient number of voters desire to sign a petition for the recall of Dilling, though he has done nothing any sane man can see to be recalled for, then the will of the people should be acknowledged and the election ordered. Instead, however, of the Dilling recall being based on equity and justice, which prompted the passage of the recall law for recreant officials, the recall against Dilling has been brought about by the men, who supported Gill as against Dilling. The money to work up the Dilling recall was furnished by the Gill sympathizers and the recalling of Dilling is but the fine Italian hand of the gamblers and thugs. Dilling has absolutely closed up the hell dives of Seattle and the thugs know they can not lose anything by making a change and so they are working for the Dilling recall. No one knows better than the editor of the Spokesman that the administration of Hiram Charles Gill was the most notorious that ever ruled a municipality and of the kind that should be relegated to hell instead of operating in a civilized community. THE CONGRESSIONAL PLAY ENDS. The special session of Congress has adjourned and no one is sorry. President Taft may have called Congress together in good faith to pass the Canadian reciprocity bill, but he ought to have known that, when those fellows got together they would play horse with each other for political purposes and they did so to a queen's taste. With LaFollette in the senate trying to trim his sails to light in the White House and Champ Clark in the house trying to do the same thing and President Taft trying to watch the bunch of them it was a monkey and a parrot time from start to finish. It can be said without fear of successful contradiction that, Congress has spent six months making political bombast for the presidential campaign next year. LOCOMOTION BY AVIATION. The remarkable feat of flying from St. Louis to New York has been accomplished by Harry N. Atwood, a daring aviator, which was done with ease and grace. This seems to be the dawn of a new method of locomotion and if improvements along that line continue as rapidly as they have in the past two years the day is not far distant when the aviator will span the continent and go from town to town in the aviating machine with far more ease and a great deal less time than the fastest train now takes him. Within the next twenty-five years, or perhaps even less, the aviator from present prospects will be sailing from San Francisco in almost a day and the Atlantic ocean will be crossed in about the same amount of time. Of course there are many to yet lose their lives in perfecting the machine, but just so many always have to give up their lives in adopting innovations, and therefore the killing of a few need not worry any one as there are plenty more to take their plices. "Be careful, the game laws are severe," admonished the Pt. Angeles Tribune-Times. Yes, be very careful or some hunter will kill a cougar instead of a man and that would be too bad. FRIDAY. Aug. 25. 1911 IS HE MISTAKEN? A Filipino, who works in one of the blocks in Seattle, bitterly complains of the treatment he and other members of his race receive at the hands of the white folk of the city, which he says, "is simply barbarous, and so different to that they were promised to become American citizens. Using some of the spokesman's words, "I have been forced from the sidewalk by white rowdies and frequently roughly handled while passing up and down the streets of Seattle, and in no way giving any one any offense except breathing the air." The Filipino, Bolima by name, to our mind has either been misquoted or he has flat-footedly lied. That there is prejudice among the whites in Seattle against darker races, is not denied; that the restaurants run by white folk refuse to accommodate the darker races the same as the white man is not denied and that these damnable race prejudice proscriptions are extremely annoying to the darker races is a well known fact, but we do not believe any darker race has suffered violence at the hands of white folk in Seattle. So far as the American Negro is concerned for a white man to push him off the sidewalk and one of the darndest fights you have witnessed since the battle between Jack Johnson and Jim Jeffries would be the result. In fact the black man takes nothing in the way of imposition from the white man, and when he defends himself, instead of other white men doubling up on him, they will see that he gets a square deal. If he is refused admittance to places of public amusement or accommodations, he has the law to resort to and he comes pretty nearly getting a square deal from the judge and the jury. The Filipino, it occurs to us, has expected some one to receive him with open arms and accord him privileges and favors that others as good by nature, and far better by practice, have been denied, and who, slowly but surely day by day are trying to overcome the situation. It strikes us that the Independent of Olympia is making a mistake in advocating "Olympia for Olympians," that is to say, the citizens of Olympia must trade with Olympians, whether they get as good bargains as they would by trading other places or not. That is rot. There are already too many big towns in this country built up by that kind of rot, and the working man should trade wherever he can get the best bargains, whether that is in his home town or some other town. A dollar saved is a dollar made. SEATTLE THEATRE. The five act comedy drama, "Adrift in the World" will be the bill at the Seattle Theatre next week, starting with the matinee Sunday. The plot is strong in heart interest and never lacks for excitement. It is a play that will hold the audience from start to finish. It abounds in good comedy that will amuse and the interest is kept up throughout. Miss Ann Phillips will be seen in a strong part, that of a girl of the streets, and will be the particular bright star of the cast. Mr. Verne Layton will have a prominent part as well as all the old favorites. Mr. Forrest Taylor and Miss Ada Daniles, two new members, will make their first appearance in "Adrift in The World." The Publisher's Notice. The Seattle Republican is published on Friday of every week by Cayton Publishing Company. Subscriptions, $3 per year; six months, $1.50; postage prepaid. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at Seattle. CAYTON PUB. CO. INC. Publication office, 427 Epler Block. Telephone Main 305. Horace Roscoe Cayton - - Publisher. Susie Revels Cayton - - Associate. aries and they should be cut out, and if the regents and the faculties do not cut them out then it ought to be done by legislative enactment. If in after life the fraternity student proved to be more successful than the anti, then there would be some excuse for not only encouraging them, but to make them a part of the curriculum. The fraternity fad and the football fool so common to universities and colleges do more to degenerate the American youth than the drink habit. Edward Clayson, editor of the Patriarch of Seattle, has announced his intention of becoming a candidate for the Republican nomination of secretary of state and of course I. M. Howell will be a candidate to succeed himself. With only these two avowed candidates for that important office the public is wondering why some good man does not announce his candidacy. Clayson will not get 500 votes throughout the state and with only him as an opponent Howell will never admit, only by filing as the law requires him to do, that he is a candidate to succeed himself. The Seattle Republican would like to see a real good man run for that office, inasmuch as it has been kinder drifting along for the past twelve years. Lou C. Smith, four years commissioner of King county and subsequently four years sheriff of the county, has just returned from Alaska, where he has extensive mining property, and it is said by an old Alaska prospector that within the next year or two Lou will be back in Seattle, a millionaire. There are hundreds of persons who will be glad to hear of his good fortune because they know he will run for an office again, and they will then get some of his cash. He expects to go back to Alaska before the snow flies. Judge Stephen J. Chadwick, of the state supreme court, was a Seattle visitor this week. He is one of the most popular judicials in the state. This seeing America first advice, which is going the rounds of the press just now, makes one tired. Let the man with the money see America or any other country he darn please first; it is none of the other fellow's business. Of course the fellow with an ax to grind wants everybody to see America first because he can make a piece of money out of it. John W. Gates left the bulk of his fortune to his dutiful son and before the old man had been laid away it was learned that young Gates is to squander it on a woman, only she is to be his wife. THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN ```markdown ``` CULLINGS OF COUNTRY PRESS. The people are determined to have their own way, declares the Aberdeen Herald. We found that out some years ago and we wondered why you did not take a tumble to yourself all these years and quit trying to make Democrats out of Republicans when they did not want to. It took you a long time to find out that the people are going to do as they darn please. The Monitor-Transcript of Monroe has bloomed out into a daily and the editor of the weekly patted himself on the back at a great rate last Saturday for having undertaken the publishing feat. Someone once said, "Never trouble trouble until trouble troubles you," and unless we miss our guess, here is an editor that has troubled trouble when trouble was not troubling him. Will the Monroe Monitor-Transcript bear in mind that that California-Puget Sound summer resort excerpt it ran last week was taken from The Seattle Republican verbatim et literatim, and the taker forgot to place the proper credit mark thereafter? We know it was a splendid article and we hope every paper on the Sound will copy it, but for heaven's sake do not forget the writer. According to the editorial version of the Blaine Journal, Clinton W. Howard is largely responsible for the local option-prohibition waive that is now passing over the state of Washington. He, having launched it for the purpose of making political capital for one Albert E. Medade, who desired to succeed himself as governor of the state. Howard did do that very thing, but the state was ripe for such a waive and if Howard had not have done it, someone else would have. The people felt about as did the old woman who was praying for bread and was overheard by some bad boys, who threw a loaf into her door, but not unobserved by the old lady, who merely looked up with, "I thank you, Lord, it is good, though the devil brought it." Perhaps the Observer of Sunnyside has properly observed things when it says, "A little hard times does not hurt anybody, just makes a fellow careful." But what's the use of this country with its untold resources to ever experience hard times. It is declared that the state of Washington will raise a twenty million dollar wheat crop this year, and her fruit crop will be almost as extensive and yet Mr. Hard Times is starking about the state just as big as life. Some- --- FRIDAY, Aug. 25, 1911 DETROIT The Twenty Fifth Annual Session of the Wa thing is wrong and whatever the wrong is should be righted. "Truth forever on the scaffold, wrong forever on the throne," says the Ellensburg Dawn. Is this the wail of a pessimist or is it an actual fact? If an actual fact, then the theory advanced by the Bible that God created man in His own image seems to us absolutely false. If man was created after the image of God and if God is truth and justice, then how could He implant wrong on the trhone as the master of Himself? For a long time after the city of Everett went "dry" it was argued that she had cut off her nose to spite her face and that in future she would find it difficult to get sufficient revenues to run the city as it should be done, but now comes the Everett Herald with "The Local Option Law is a Success in Everett." Who is wrong? "The summer season in Gray's Harbor country has just commenced and it cannot be equaled anywhere on the green old foot stool," says the Gray's Harbor News published at Hoquiam. It's nice, all right, but it occurs to us you are spreading it on just a little bit thick. A ten million dollar power plant is to be erected at Priest Rapids on the Columbia river, which, when completed, will be the largest plant of its kind in the world, so reports an exchange. It is estimated that it will take eight years to complete the plant and when completed it will furnish power to the greater part of that section of the state. The Columbia river is to be damned, and we suspect the people will be in the same fix when their "juice" bills come in. This is the age of publicity and communities heretofore as unknown as the wilds of Africa are now making strenuous efforts to let the other part of the country know what that particular section is capable of producing and to that end the Shelton Journal is responsible for Mason county holding a fair, which is now being extensively planner. One thing is certain, Mason county is a splendid place for ducks and fish and if you have a good boat you can reap a harvest in that line. From the Washington Standard it is learned that hay leads the forage crops of Oregon. This must be hay's year, for it begins to look as if Hay is leading the political crop of Washington. The farmers of Eastern Washington are making hay while the sun shine, as hay will be hay before the coming winter season will have passed. In other words, HAY is the central figure, --- PUBLIC FRIDAY, Aug. 25, 1911 MILK n of the Washington State Press Association. whether in the barn yard or the state house. The Enumclaw Herald is now being published by Davis and Ashmun, both old time publishers and printers, and they seem to know how to get out a live country weekly. If one expects to make a success in publishing a weekly paper it must always be a live one. "If there is a scarcity of farm labor in Eastern Washington, it must be in some other section than the Palouse," says the Colfax Gazette, and it adds, "there are plenty of farm labor in this section and for the most part of the best class." In the Palouse the farmers are wealthy and always pay the highest prices for laborers, and as a result they get the cream of the land, but in other sections, where the farmers are just getting on their feet it is hard for them to get competent labor. That was a most excellent account of the twenty-fifth annual session of the State Press Association, which appeared in the Pt. Angeles Tribune-Times, from an Hoquiam-Aberdeen advertising standpoint, but the article was remarkable in that it was intended to give an account of the doings of the association, when in fact it never mentioned one thing the association did except the election of new officers and the next meeting place. If the association did nothing, no one is more cognizant of that fact than the editor of the Tribune-Times, as he was the secretary of the same. There is need of a live press association in this state among the editors, not so much for the purpose of combining into a newspaper trust, but to devise ways and means to give the reading public better weekly papers, and at the same time make them more remunerative to the publishers. Hunters these days do not wait to see what is in the bushes, but shoot first and find out later, and frequently that it is a man instead of a varment that has been slain, but the killing of one man does not amount to very much, and why rob the hunter of the pleasure of a good shot. "Truth flies in a straight line," says the Northwest Progress. Are you speaking from personal knowledge or quoting some foreign language. We suspect that the editor that knows anything at all about the movement of truth is more rare than hen's teeth. The Sun of Sunnyside is to the front with the following bit of philosophy, "A useless man is one who can neither command nor obey." There is no rule without its excep- --- --- THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN THE SERVICES RECEIVED Wm. Pitt Trimble. tions, and if the Sun will look over its list of men a bit more carefully it will find that there are some pretty good fellows that seem to find it impossible to do either of those things and for that reason they paddle their own canoes and attend strictly to their own business. Such men seem rather queer to the world of association, and yet they are to be found and they seem to enjoy themselves in their own peculiar way as much as the fellows that can both command and obey. When a newspaper devotes columns after columns of its valuable space in trying to browbeat the merchants into advertising in its columns, it is nothing short of blackmail. If a newspaper merits advertising patronage it will get it without blackmailing the public into doing so. If an article appearing in apaper is worthy of rehashing, it is worthy of being copied and due credit given to the same. Two weeks ago The Seattle Republican commented, at length on the crooked work that had been going on in the management of the county ferry across Lake Washington and likewise on the extravagance of the city authorities buying automobiles, and the Green Lake News, though not on the exchange list of The Seattle Republican, rehashed both of those articles and tried to palm it off as original matter. Perhaps many of the readers of the News never see The Seattle Republican, hence they are none the wiser, but God hates a deceiver. Yes, of course, "labor is honorable and ignoble are those who will not work," as says the Puyallup Herald, but what puzzles us is, how did the Herald find that out? The man who does the least labor can always read the best lecture on the good results of honest toil. A Socialistic editor in Pierce county has been arrested charged with sedition. The man may or may not be guilty, but we have our serious doubts if the deputy prosecuting attorney that issued the warrant can himself define sedition in the light the editor was arrested. When officers of the law start out to stamp out the spread of Socialism by throwing its advocates into the county jail, then such an officer is simply making converts to the cult. We are not advocates of Socialism, but we are not only admirers of, but advocates of fair play for the person who has Socialistic ideas, the same as those who have Republican and Democratic ideas. In a divorce proceedings filed against Eugene Lorton, editor of the Spokesman at Vancouver, his wife alleges that they have accumulated $8,000 worth of real estate. Just to think Gene actually associated with the editors at their recent annual meet in Hoquiam (his picture may be seen in the accompanying groupe), and yet he was at that time worth all that money. You can not always some times tell when you are entertaining a millionaire editor unawares. Wm. Pitt Trimble. The acompaniying picture is of the twenty-fifth annual session of the Washington State Press Association recently held in Hoquiam, taken in front of the Elks' hall, which is one of the most commodious as well as elegantly furnished Elk Homes in the Northwest. On the extreme right hand corner is the picture of Wm. Pitt Trimble, who was a guest of the association, and was subsequently elected an honorary member thereof. At his side is L. H. Gray, who was also made an honorary member of the association. Mr. Trimble is being spoken of for governor of the state, and from the hospitality shown him by the members of the Press Association he will be well treated by them in the columns of their respective papers if he ever enters the gubernatorial contest. Mr. Trimble is a most pleasant and affiable gentleman and would make an ideal governor. New York female hotel habitues, according to a recent rotel order, will have to either sleep alone or go to the basement, as no dogs will be allowed above the ground floor. Always after the women. If you have ever spent very much time in Eastern Washington in the summer time you can thoroughly understand why the citizens of Wenatchee prefer shade trees to cement sidewalks; the former is refreshing while the latter is as hot as hades. The reading public does not give a tinker's dam if Miss Ethel Cleveland is going to get married, and it is curious to know why such an unimportant piece of news would be sent out by the Associated Press. Who the devil is Miss Cleveland, any more than Miss Hodcarrier? Not enough names as yet have been secured to demand the recall of Mayor Dilling, but the crazies are working day and night on the foolish piece of tommy rot. There is no law under which such peace disturbances as the publishers of the Seattle Star can be arrested and sent to prison for a term of years, but there ought to be. The publishers of the Star are a disgrace to the white race of the world. "Nervy man saves his wife from the flames and then himself." He perhaps did so because the woman insisted that neither would be saved unless she was saved first, and that reminds the writer of the couple that were walking by a cemetery at a late hour of the night, when some mysterious noise was heard, the man made a leap for life, but not before the woman made a leap for him and seized his arm, whereupon he turned to her and exhorted her not to be alarmed as it was nothing out of the ordinary. "I am alarmed alright," she exclaimed, "and so are you, but you are not going to leave me here in my alarm." 8 from the northwest corner of lot one (1), block thirty-seven (37), Maynard’s Lake Washington addition, thence south one hundred (100) feet, ‘thence east thirty- five (35) feet, thence north one hun- dred (100) feet, thence west thirty-five (35) feet to the point of beginning, be- ing a part of lots one (1) and two (2), eleven (11) and twelve (12), block thirty-seven (37) Maynard's Lake Wash- ington addition to the city of Seattle, in the county of King and state of Wash- ington, of record in the auditor's office of said county. Attorney for Plaintiff. Office and postoffice address, 323 Cen- tral Building, Seattle, Wash. , ‘August 25—September 8, 1911. Mary Carpenter Daull, plaintiff, vs. Al- bert Prince Daull, defendant.—No. The State of Washington to the said Albert Prince Daull, 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 18th day of August, 1911, and defend the above entitled action in the above en- 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 com- plaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The object of the above entitled action is to procure a divorce from defendant upon the grounds of desertion and non-support, and for alimony of fifty dollars per month. FRED L. RICR, Attorney for Plaintiff. Postoffice address, 229 Burke Block, Seattle, King County, Washington. ‘August 25—September 8, 1911. IN. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE “State of Washington, for the County of King. Summons by Publication. Jessie Luckerath, plaintiff, vs. Fred Luckerath, defendant.—No, 81946. The State of Washington, to the said Fred Luckerath, 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 4th day of August, A, D. 1911, and defend the above entitled action in the above en- 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 com- plaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. The object of the said action and the relief sought to be obtained therein is fully set forth in said complaint, and is briefly stated as follows: An action for divorce on the grounds of habitual drunkenness. J. M. WIESTLING, Attorney for Plaintiff. Postoffice address, 314 Bailey Building, Seattle, County of King, State of ‘Washington. IN'THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. L. H. Craver, plaintiff, vs. BE. M, Roberts, and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, defendants. 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 prop- erty, are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff is the holder of 1 certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the Treasurer of King County, State of Washington, dated the 13th day of June, 1910, and numbered B-66124, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1907, in the amount of 87 cents, and upon the real property situ- ated in said King County, described as follows, to-wit: Lot 18, block 1, Allen- town Addition. That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above de- scribed real property, to-wit: For the year 1908, the sum of $2.07; for the year 1909, the sum of $2.05, Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon’ and against said real property. ‘You and each of 7°74, (including said persons unknown, if any), are he 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- lication, to-wit, within 60 days after July 7,'1911, 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 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 pro- vided by law, and as prayed in plain- tiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court. L. H. CRAVER, Plaintiff, A. C. MacDONALD, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office Address, 614 Bailey Buildin: Seattle, Wash. July 7, August 18, 1911, THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE In case you fail s State of Washington, for King County. be rendered herei Summons by «Publication. of said taxes ar Lulu Morrison, plaintiff, vs. William A. parcel of said r Morrison, defendant.—No. 81879. sums and smov Whe State of Washington, to William A. charged against Morrison, defendant: interest and cost You are’hereby summoned to appear each parcel of § within sixty (60) days after the date satisfaction of t of the first publication of this summons, found against it to-wit, within sixty (60) days after the vided by law, an 4th day of August, A, D, 1911, and de- tiff's complaint, fend the above action in the court afore- cause and Court. said, and answer the complaint of the L. He plaintiff, and serve a copy of your ans- A.C wer upon the undersigned attorney for A the plaintiff at his address below stated; . Office Address, in case of your failure so to do judgment Seattle, Wash. will be rendered against you according July 7, Augus' to the prayer of plaintiff's complaint, which hag been filed with the clerk of said court. gies The object of this action is to obtain IN| THE SUPER a decree of divorce ..om you on the | State of Washir grounds of non-support, cruel treatment L. H. Craver, and personal indignities, and the custody Moore, and all of Ethel Morrison, the minor child of | 20Y, having or plaintiff and defendant. in and to the HOWARD O. DURK, see DrQveney Attorney for Plainti, ,,State of Wash 685 Henry Building, Seattle, King Coun- defendants and e: ty, Washington. each of you, as > holders of an int IN_THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Catherine Collins, and’ all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, defendants. 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 prop- erty, are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff is the holder of 1 certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the ‘Treasurer of King County, State of Washington, dated the 6th day of December, 1909, and numbered B61615, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1907, in the amount of $2.35, and upon the real property situated in said King County, described as follows, | to-wit: H. % Lot 32, Block 7, Hillman’s Lake Front Addition, Division No. 1. That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above de- scribed real property, to-wit: For the year 1908 ‘the sum of $6.59; for the year 1909 the sum of $8.90. Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property. You and each of you (including said persons unknown, if any), are hereby 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- lication, to-wit, within 60 days after July 7,'1911, 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 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 pro- vided by law, and as prayed in plain- tiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court. L. H. CRAVER, Plaintiff, A. GC, MacDONALD, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office Address, 514 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash. July 7, August 18, 1911. IN_THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. lL. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Catherine Collins and’all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an_ interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, defendants. 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 prop- erty, are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff is the holder of 1 certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the Treasurer of King County, State of Washington, dated the 6th oy of December, 1909, and numbered B61616, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1907, in the amount of $4.20, and upon real’ property situated fin said King County, described as follows, to-wit: Lot 38, block 7, Hillman’s Lake Front Addition, Division No. 1. That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above de- serlbed real Property, to-wit: For the year 1908 the sum of $13.20; for the year 1909 the sum of $17.79. Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property. You and each of 78 inolngine 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- lication, to-wit, within 60 days after July 7, 1911, 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 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 umounts 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 pro- vided by law, and as prayed in plain- tiff's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court. L. H., CRAVER, Plaintiff, - A, C,. MacDONALD, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office Address, 514 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash. July 7, August 18, 1911. IN |THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. L. H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Louis J. Moore, and ‘ali persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an_ interest in’ and to the hereinafter described real property, defendants. 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 prop- erty, are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff is the holder of 1 certain delinquent tax certificate issuct by the Treasurer of King County, State of Washington, dated the 17th day of October, 1910, and numbered B67566 and B67567, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1907, and each in the amount of $1.29, and upon the real property sit- uated in Block 11 of White Bros.’ Ad- dition to Kirkland, in said King County, described as follows, to-wit: Delinquent tax Certificate No. B67566 on Lot 1; delinquent tax Certificate No. B67567 on Lot 2. That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above de- scribed real property, to-wit: On each of said lots the sum of 48 cents for the year 1908; on each of said Jota the sum of 50 cents for the year Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property. ‘You and each of you (including said persons unknown, if any), are hereby 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- lication, to-wit, within 60 days after July 7,'1911, 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 plaintiif af his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. In case you fail so to do, judgment will be rendered herein, foreclosing the lien of said taxes and costs against each parcel of said real property for the sums and amounts due upon and charged against each, for said taxes, interest and costs, ordering a sale of each parcel of said property for the satisfaction of the sums charged and found against it respectively as pro- vided by law, and as prayed in plain- tiff’s complaint, now on file in this cause and Court. L, «. CRAVER, Plaintiff, A. GC. MacDONALD, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office Address, 514 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash. July’ 7, August 18, 1911. IN_THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. L._H. Craver, Plaintiff, vs. Ernest A, Boatman, and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an_ interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, defendants. 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 prop- erty, are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff is the holder of 1 certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the Treasurer of King County, State of Washington, dated the Ist day of June, 1908, and numbered B53646, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1905, in the amount of $6.48, and upon the real property situated in said ene County, described as follows, to-wit: N. E, 4 of N. W. % of Sec. 18, Tp. 20 N., R. 11.5, W. M. That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above de- scribed real property, to-wit: For the year 1906 the sum of $4.14; for the year 1907 the sum of $4.40; for the year 1908 the sum of $0.58; for the year 1909 the sum of $0.53. Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property. You and each of ee Cincluaing said persons unknown, if any), are hereby further notified and summoned to be and appear within sixty days after the date of first publics of this notice, exclusive of the day of said first pub- lication, to-wit, within 60 days after July 7, 1911, in the above entitled court and action; and defend this action ai answer the complaint of said r and serve a copy of your answer on the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. In case you fail so to do, judgment will be rendered herein, foreclosing the lien of said taxes and costs against each parcel of said reali property for the sums and amounts due upon and charged against each, for sald taxes, FRIDAY, Aug. 25, 1911 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 pro- vided by law, and as prayed in plain- tiff’s complaint, now on file in this cause and Court. L. H. CRAVER, Plaintiff, A. C, MacDONALD, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office Address, 614 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash. July 7, August 18, 1911, IN_THE SUPBRIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for Gortcene ey L. H. Craver, pees, vs. Unknown Owners, and all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an_ interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, defendants. State of a earnerans 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 prop- erty, are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff is the holder of 1 certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the Treasurer of King County, State of Washington, dated the 17th day of October, 1910, and numbered B-67558, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1907 in the amount of $2.38, and upon the real property situated in said King County, described as follows, to- wit: South 100 feet of north 368.5 feet of Tract 14, |W. H. Taylor's Piqt, Snoqualmie Prairie Acre Tracts, That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above de- scribed real propersy: to-wit: For the year 1908, the sum of $1.21; for the year 1909, the sum of $0.98. Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property. ‘You and each of tay (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- lication, to-wit, within 60 days after July 7, 1911, 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 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 th 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 pro- vided by law, and as prayed in plain- tif's complaint, now on file in this cause and Court. L. H. CRAVER, Plaintiff, A. C, MacDONALD, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office Address, 514 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash. July 7, August 18, 1911. IN_THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. Le eer aver , Plaintift, ve. B. M. Roberts, and'all persons unknown, if any, having or claiming an interest in and to the hereinafter described real property, defendants, 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 prop- erty, are hereby notified that the above named plaintiff is the holder of 1 certain delinquent tax certificate issued by the Treasurer of King County, State of Washington, dated the 13th day of June, 1910, and numbered B- 65700, for the delinquent taxes of the year '1907 in the amount of 87 cents, and upon real property situated in said King County, described as follows, to- Wit: Lot 17, block 1, Allentown Aadi- tion, That the taxes for the following prior and subsequent years have been paid by the plaintiff upon said above de- seribed real property, to-wit: For he year 1908, ‘the sum of $2.07; for the year 1909, the sum of $2.05. Which several sums bear interest at the rate of 15 per cent. per annum from said date of payment, and are all the unpaid and unredeemed taxes upon and against said real property. You and each of you (including sald 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- leation, to-wit, within 60 days after July 7,'1911, in’ the above entitled court and action; ‘and defend this action and answer the complaint of said plaintif and serve a copy of your answer on tne undersigned attorney for plaintiff at his office below stated, or pay the amount due, together with interest and costs. In case you fail so to do, judgment will be rendered herein, foreclosing the lien of said taxes and costs against each parcel of said real property for the sums and amounts «ue 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 pro- vided by law, and as prayed in plain- tiffs complaint, now on file in this cause and Court, L. H. CRAVER, Plaintifr. A. C. MacDONALD, Attorney for Plaintift, Office Address, 514 Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash. July 7, August 18, 1911.