Seattle Republican
Friday, April 4, 1913
Seattle, Washington
Page text (machine-generated)
state library
The Seattle Republican
SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1913
their rights end. If the law can not make the motorcyclists respect the rights of the other fellow, then the other fellow ought to have a convenient gun as a gentle reminder.
It's hard to keep a good man down, thinks J. M. Layhue, who was recently retired from the office of state superintendent of public instruction, as he has been elected superintendent of the schools of Centralia. Layhue in years past, was a familiar figure in King county politics.
Seattle was not destroyed by an earthquake as was predicted by Rev. Bryson and heralded by Mrs. Miller and sensible people should not have taken any stock in the rot, but they did, and it therefore caused a good many heart aches. The asylum is the proper place for all such fanatics.
It's a new phase of the Western avenue complication, if the city of Seattle paid for the hauling and dumping of fresh produce in order to keep the market from being flooded and the prices go down. If this phase of the investigation is established then the guilty wretches ought to be sent to the state prison.
No, dear reader, the money trust has not exactly been bursted, but it has been badly jarred—so badly that, antagonistic legislation, not only in Congress, but in state, county and city law-making bodies will handicap its future movements. The recent investigation in Congress was the beginning of the end.
Ohio's flood losses are no greater, so it has been estimated, than the losses in the San Francisco earthquake and fire, and no national financial or commercial distress is expected, and there should not be as this country is too large and should be too prosperous and progressive to let a single calamity disturb its onward march.
While the women's parade, their appeal to the President, and the promise of unprecedented activity on the part of the Senate's Woman Suffrage Committee have combined to give Washington exceptional prominence in the franchise news of late, the most tangible gains for the cause continue to be made in the individual states. In addition to the nine where women already enjoy the same voting rights as men, there are five states in which a woman-suffrage amendment has successfully run the gauntlet of the legislatures and now awaits only the final test of a popular referendum. In three states the amendment has passed both houses of one legislature, but must repeat this process in the next, before going to the voters. In five states the amendment has passd one house. In fact, the record in the various legislatures moves "The Woman's Journal and Suffrage News" (Boston) to comment with some amusement on "the eagerness of members to make party capital out of the question." We read:
"It has been new and cheering to see politicians in several legislatures pulling caps for the privilege of introducing suffrag measures. In one legislature ten different members offered their services to the women to bring in the bill. In various cases, when an influential member of one party was on the point of introducing it, a member of another party stepped in ahead and got the start of him. 'Let us get the party the credit' has been the cry in legislature after legislature; and still more keen has been the wish to avoid getting the party the discredit. In past years the women have had to keep tab on the record of their opponents. Now each party is keeping tab on the other. In Maine, every vote against the amendment in the House was cast by a Democrat. The Maine Republicans will never let them forget it. In Massachusetts, the Republican leaders have used the party lash to keep Republican members from voting for the suffrage amendment. The Massachusetts Democrats will keep them well reminded of it. The secretary of the Woman Suffrage Committee of the National Progressive Party has sent to the president of every State Woman Suffrage Association a letter asking for the record as to how the party members in the legislature vote on this question. In the states where all the parties put suffrage planks in their platforms, those who did it first are calling attention to their priority. Altogether, it is clear that after the advent of equal suffrage, there will be efforts on all sides to persuade the women that 'Codlin's the friend, not Short.'
"Meanwhile, the suffragists smile, and continue to gather in' state after state."
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SINGLE GOPIES 10 GENTS
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
Is published every Friday by Cayton Publishing Company.
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Victor Murdock is to run for speaker of the house of representatives and he perhaps will be sure of getting one vote.
Twins are born six weeks apart, comes a report from London. And there are liars in England as well as in America? We never suspected it.
If you want your notices published at hard-times prices, then call Main 305, The Seattle Republican, and you will be surprised at what you can do with a little money.
Suppose the expenses of King county have been boosted a half million dollars, there should be no complaint registered, as times are harder now and it takes more for one to live than it did last year.
As was predicted, the Seattle Giants were were ponds for the Chicago Giants, who were put down and out at the sweet will of the "shines." Some sweet day the public will demand that such teams be recognized.
May perhaps the European powers themselves will have to do a bit of fighting before the fighting feathers of the Balkan allies are smoothed down. Turkey sues for peace, but the allies are still fighting for a piece of Turkey.
An ex-Congressman in St. Louis has been convicted of fraud and faces a term in the penitentiary. No, constant reader, Missouri has never elected a Negro to Congress. We do not know the combination of the convict congressman.
May perhaps Charley Hefner prevented Hugh C. Wallace from being a member of President Wilson's cabinet, but Wallace is to be minister to France, just the same, which is another striking illustration of you can't keep a good man down.
Let's hope that Dr. Edward Rosenhorn of Chicago has captured the rheumatic germ and that he will safely bottle it up. If the doctor will only get the effects of the germ out of our right shoulder we would have a great deal more respect for his claim.
Had the Allens been sent to prison for life and without hope of gubernatorial elemency instead of to the electric chair their punishment would have been a thousand per cent more severe, but that would not have been an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.
It occurs to us that President Wilson is rather late in taking up the study of the tariff. We understood from his campaign speeches that he had mastered the subject years ago and only wanted to be president to put into execution his splendid theories.
In sending Mrs. Pankhurst to prison for three years the British government has helped rather than hurt the suffrage cause of the women. Administering undue punishment even to culprits attracts attention to them and they at once become martyrs.
Whoever was responsible for the arrest of Dr. Holcomb for arson should themselves be arrested for criminal libel. In the preliminary examination no evidence was introduced which in any wise incriminated the doctor, and some one should suffer for the blunder.
Motorcycleclists have rights, we admit, but when their rights interfere with the rights of the commonweal then
WOMAN-SUFFRAGE STIRRING THE STATES.
VOLUME XV. NUMBER 1
YOU CAN LIVE LONG.
We should all live to be a hundred if we would only avoid friction. Just as with machines, our loss of vitality, of force, is due to the senseless scraping of body and mind against their environments. And to lack of sleep, the right kind of sleep, is due the most of our mental and physical friction and therefore of our premature aging. Every person should sleep calmly, dreamlessly, for a full eight hours out of the twenty-four. If he does this it means that during one-third of life consciousness is suspended—in short, he is not living in the sense of expending vitality. And then we are given a perfectly simple little mathematical problem. If, all told, the years of such a man's life number one hundred, then when he celebrates his hundredth birthday he is not really a day older than sixty-six and two-thirds years. That is the actual term of his active life, and no one considers that decrepitude.
You must not only sleep eight hours, but you must wake from sleep with a laugh. That not merely makes you feel youthful and happy, but if you laugh at yourself so early in the day you are sure to get ahead of anybody else.
I believe that a beautiful and yuothful mind is absolutely essential to a beautiful and healthy body. A really intelligent person will want to be in good physical condition and will be sensible enough to take care of his body.
THETELEPHONE TRUST.
You, dear reader, have heard much about the hard lines of the telephone company from the monetary standpoint, but to set you absolutely correct as to the financial earnings of this particular trust in the United States, the following is page forty-five of the annual report of the company:
Earnings:
1911. 1912
Dividends $20,844,398.53 $24,247,430.02
Interest and other revenue from associated companies 10,462,786.70 12,523,084.45
Telephone traffic (net) 4,979,231.92 5,472,812.66
Other sources 683,812.62 474,665.62
Total $36,970,229.77 $42,717,992.75
Expenses 3,668,984.00 4,810,348.49
Net Earnings $33,301,245.77 $37,907,644.26
Deduct interest 5,567,980.30 5,844,698.86
Balance $27,733,265.47 $32,062,945.40
Dividends paid 22,169,449.79 26,015,587.76
Balance $5,563,815.68 $6,047,357.64
Carried to reserves $2,800,000.00 $2,800,000.00
Carried to surplus 2,763,815.68 3,247,357.64
$5,563,815.68 $6,047,357.64
THE ROAD.
(By Berton Braley.)
I sing you an ode
Of the country road,
The lumpy road
Any the bumpy road,
That jolts the wagon and spills the load.
Mud to the hubs when the rain comes down,
Flooded wherever the creeks run high,
Filled with ruts when the fields are brown
And the sun is hot and the air is dry.
It's clogged with gravel and packed with sand,
So built and grade and laid and planned
That it takes a team,
And sometimes two,
To do the work one horse should do.
It racks the wagons with jolts and jar.
It ruins horses and motor cars,
Keeps back crops from the market place,
Piles up debt on the farmers' place—
The old-time road is a plain disgrace.
But the modern road is a different thing,
A worthy theme for the bard to sing:
Put together
For every weather,
Smooth and dustless and good to see,
And graded right, as a road should be;
Useful always and muddy never,
A thing of beauty—a joy forever.
PERSONS IN THE PUBLIC EYE
2
George Turner, a former United States senator from Washington, and otherwise prominent in public affairs, has been summoned to Chicago to testify in the case wherein the government is prosecuting A. C. Frost and others for trying to defraud the government out of Alaska coal lands. Senator Turner is charged with having tried to spirit witnesses out of the country to keep them from testifying in the case now in progress. Few men in the Northwest or anywhere else in the United States have enjoyed any greater amount of public confidence than Senator Turner and it is the hope of his hundreds of friends that the alleged compromising letter said to have been written by him is not genuine.
J. Pierpont Morgan is dead and the world has lost one of its shrewdest financiers. Despite the fact that he was worth billions of dollars and had more ready cash than the United States government, yet he was an absolute detriment to the country. The life of Morgan demonstrated to what extent one mind can take advantage of its fellow minds and it also demonstrated that, the mind can do just so much and retain its activity and though it does not go to pieces until the owner thereof is in middle life, yet when it does start it goes with a rush.
M. E. Hay, recently retired from the office of the governor of the state of Washington, left one day this week for Yucatan, Mexico, and was accompanied by his brother Edward. Some six years ago the Hays bought 100,000 acres of land in the state of Texas for eighty cents per acre and they sold the most of it for ten dollars per acre. It was a splendid pick up; but they saw another opportunity to make money out of land so they bought equally as much in Yacatan, and they are now preparing to put that on the market. They would have done this long ago had it not been for the revolutions in Mexico.
Dr. Crichton seems to be blameless so far as the graft charges in the health department are concerned, and not only Dr. Crichton, but everybody else seems to be blameless, and the whole affair seems, to have been trumped up by a lot of renegades looking for pelf. The members of the city council as a whole look upon the investigation as spite work and office seeking.
Henry Lane Wilson, so comes the report from Washington City, will not be removed for some time yet to come, if at all, owing to the fact that, it has been thoroughly demonstrated to the President that Minister Wilson has done his whole duty, and the ugly charges made against him came from a Democratic paper for no higher motive than to make place for some Democratic office seeker. Mr. Wilson tendered the President his resignation, when he was inaugurated, and the President is at liberty to appoint his successor whenever he likes, but being a hardheaded business man, he will not do so until the present conditions in Mexico become more settled. Mr. Wilson has the situation down there well in hand and the President knows that it is not wise to swap horses in the middle of a stream.
John E. Humphries, one of the superior court judges of King county, is a patriot from the top of his head to the tip of his toes, and he proposes that the county commissioners shall partake of the same amount of patriotism as himself. Some time ago he asked them to have Old Glory hung up in his court room, but they refused, on the grounds of economy, which he construed into contempt of court and cited each of the members of the board to appear before him, and show cause why they should not be punished. The patriotism of the judge is to be admired and it is hoped by all patriots that he will succeed in compelling the commissioners to buy the flag, but that hangs on a point of law, and the prosecuting attorney is with the commissioners in the fight, which has been taken to the supreme court for adjudication. The flag of the United States should be hung up in every court room in the United States and not only every court room, but in every school house and public place.
M. M. Godman, who was recently appointed chairman of the utilities commission, was a member of the legislature in 1907 and in many other ways has served his state in an official capacity. A few years ago he was captured by the golden glare of Mexico and with his family moved south, where he had previously bought a large slice of acreage. He succeeded in getting it pretty well under cultivation, when along came a Mexican revolution and he and his wife left for Seattle, but his two sons remained on the farm. While absent the Mexicans killed his older boy and did considerable damage to the plantation. He has never returned to his Mexican holdings. It is the concensus of opinion that he will make an ideal commissioner.
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
Albert E. Mead, who recently died, was the only living ex-governor of the state of Washington. That is to say of the five persons elected to the governorship of the state of Washington all are dead. On the other hand, however, two persons elected to the lieutenant governorship and became governors on account of the death of the governors—Henry McBride and M. E. Hay—still live and are among our foremost citizens. Elihsa P. Ferry was the first governor and died two years after retiring from office. John H. McGraw, the second, lived until a couple of years ago and died at his home in Seattle. John R. Rogers, the third governor, died in office as he was beginning his second term, and Henry McBride became governor. Albert E. Mead was the fourth governor. He served his full term of office and died a few days ago. The fifth governor was Samuel G. Cosgrove, who though he went through the form of an inauguration, his official acts were very few. He died a month after his inauguration and was succeeded by M. E. Hay.
L. B. Andrews is dead, and Seattle and the Northwest loses one of their most striking pioneer characters. During his long and eventful career in Seattle he always stood high in the minds of his fellow men and he leaves a public and private record that his children may well feel proud of. He accumulated a vast amount of property in early days, which has become exceedingly valuable. He
was prominent for years in Republican politics in the county and state. Last fall, before leaving for California to spend the winter, he said he was in splendid health and felt that he would live for a number of years. He was a member of the fifth and sixth senates of the Washington legislature and voted for the election of Levi Ankeny.
James Hamilton Lewis, who was recently elected to the United States senate from Illinois, was once a familiar figure on the streets of Seattle, and was known by everybody as Dude Lewis. He was elected to the house of representatives of Congress in 1896 from Washington, at the time the "three ringed circus" captured the state, but was defeated two years later by Frank Cushman of Tacoma, who proved to the voters that he, Cushman, was a greater political freak than Lewis. Lewis, however, made a valiant fight for re-election and would have probably won had he not attacked President McKinley, charging him with being responsible for rotten can goods fed to the Spanish-American soldiers. The campaign was one that you read about, so far as Lewis and Cushman were concerned, and the battle raged until the very last night. On election day Lewis reached Seattle looking battle scarred and careworn, but he spent the entire day campaigning from voting place to voting place. When the results began to come in he was with the crowd. Toward midnight he lost hope and went to his room and was soon sound asleep. Then it was that a crowd of Republican enthusiasts and a few Democrat disconsolates decided to have a bit of fun at Lewis' expense, and about 4 o'clock in the morning they went to his apartments, aroused him from his slumberings and told him the tide had turned in his favor and he had been elected by an overwhelming majority, and that he should dress himself and go to the public square, where a large number of his friends were in waiting to hear a speech from him. Lewis was delighted and did as he had been told and did not learn that a huge joke was being played upon him until he got up and began to speak. The crowd listened for a few minutes and then gave him the horse laugh and told him it was only a joke and that Cushman had beaten him so badly that, he was not even in the running. It was the "most unkindest" cut ever administered to him and he broke down and wept. The perpetrators of that joke never felt very proud of it and none of them would ever assume the responsibility of having fathered it. The joke was so raw
that Lewis became disgusted with the town and a few days thereafter moved to Chicago, and Seattle's loss was Chicago's gain.
John W. Considine is home from California and is telling of the game of blackmail that was attempted to be played upon him in San Francisco. The fellow failed to turn the trick and now he himself is to be tried for blackmail. Considine is one of those men, who will help an enemy, if such be in actual need, as quickly as he will a friend, but he is as stubborn as an English bull when a blackmailer makes demands upon him. Speaking about Mr. Considine helping an enemy reminds the writer that recently he did all he could to have Charles W. Wappnstein pardoned, and if there is a man that he looks upon as an enemy it is Wappenstein. As has been often said in these columns, John W. Considine is one of Seattle's foremost men and is one of the most charitable the city boasts of.
Naturally.—Jane—"Would you marry a man who was your inferior?"
Mary—"If I marry at all."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Reluctant.—"Remember, Arthur, you are the son of a gentleman. Try to behave like one for just one day."
"All right, mother, but it will spoil the whole day for me."—Life.
Poor Rules.—"You say you're so good. Why didn't you enter the amateur broad jump?"
"Rules didn't suit me."
"Why not?"
"They wanted to start us off with a pistol shot, and I do my best jumping when I hear an auto horn."—Washington Herald.
Clever Daughter.—"Mamma, don't you think Schiller quite out of date?"
"I certainly do." "I'm so glad. I just smashed his statuette in the drawing room."—Meggendorfer Blaetter.
A Real Husky.—“Is that big risk you took a good one?” inquired the president.
“Positive,” replied the local manager. “The man has just been pardoned from a Federal prison because he hasn't much longer to live.”—Puck.
Criminal Sarcasm.—Ex-Hero—“Ah, my boy, when I played 'Hamlet' the audience took fifteen minutes to leave the house.” Vicious Ex-Comedian (coldly)—“Was he lame?”—New York American.
Wrong Above the Ears.—Owner of Car.—"Why did you leave your last place?"
Chauffeur—"The guy I worked for went crazy. Started shingling his house when his car needed new tires."—Puck.
Dad's Destination.—His Dad—"Johnnq, where will you be when you are a middle-aged man if you keep up this kind of conduct?"
Johnny—"Dunno. I know when you'll be, but I ain't a-goin' to tell."—Judge.
Comforting.—Dauber—"Podgers, the art critic, has roasted my picture unmercifully."
Friend—"Don't mind that fellow. He's no ideas of his own; he only repeats like a parrot what others say."—Boston Transcript.
BONNEY-WATSON COMPANY
UNDERTAKERS
Preparing bodies for shipment a specialty. All
orders by telephone or telegraph promptly at-
tended to. Telephone East 13
PACIFIC COAST COAL CO.
MAIN 8040
Seattle Washington
PUGET SOUND TRACTION COMPANY
CARBON LAMPS ARE SUPPLIED FREE
to consumers of our current
ELECTRIC BUILDING
Seventh Avenue and Olive Street
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IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State, Nation or Creditors.
ty. Notice to Creditors
In the Matter of the Estate of Robert
McCullough, deceased—No. 15250.
By order of said court made herein on the 27th day of March, 1913. No one is ever my attorney of and to all persons having claims against said deceased or against said estate, to present them with the necessary vouchers to the undersigned administrix of said estate, at 408 Boston Block, the place of business of said estate, in Seattle, in said county and after the date of first publication of this notice or same will be barred.
JENNIE S. MITTELSTADT,
As Administrator of said Estate.
IRVING T. COLE
Attorney for Estate.
401 Boston Block, Seattle, Wash.
March 28—April 25, 1913.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King County. In Probate. Notice to Creditors. In the Matter of the Estate of Bertha McCullough, died on 12/27/1913.
By order of said court made herein on the 27th day of March, 1913. 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 administrator of the building at No. 714 Lowman Building, Seattle, King County, Wash., the place of business of said estate, in Seattle, in said county and state within one year from and after the date of first publication of this notice or same will be barred.
Date of first publication March 21, 1913,
SAM BROWN and ISAAC BROWN,
As Administrators of Said Estate.
LEOPOLD M. STERN,
Attorney for Estate.
714 Lowman Building, Seattle, Wash.
March 28—April 25, 1913.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County, German Savings, Building & Loan Association, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs. Henry O'Brien, Charles O'Brien, a minor, Robert O'Brien, a minor, Thomas O'Brien, a minor and August Mehlhorn, Jr., administrator of the estate of Lena O'Brien, deceased, Defendants. The State of Washington to the said
minor, and Thomas O'Brien, a minor: You, and each of you, are hereby summoned and required to appear within sixty days after the date of the first court, within sixty days after the 21st day of February, 1913, 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 the address below stated, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been made by the object of this action is to obtain a judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the said Henry O'Brien for the sum of $1,01.00, with interest thereon at the rate of 12 per cent, per annum on each defaulted installment provided in said note and mortgage, together with an attorney's fee and costs and disbursements and to foreclose that certain mortgage made by the said defendant Henry O'Brien, and Lena O'Brien, his wife, to the same effect, on Lot 6 and the North half of Lot 7, Block 13, Plat of Rainier Beach, King County, Washington, which mortgage is of record in the Auditor's office of King County, Washington, in Vol. 433 of mortgages, page 434, record of mortgages in said office, and for the sale of said lands to satisfy the amount that may be adjudged by the court to plaintiff, and to bar and to foreclose all right, title and interest of each of the said defendants in accordance with the said lands and premises and every part thereof.
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Office and Post Office Address: 604-5 Mutual Life Bulloing, Seattle, King County, Washington.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington in and for the County of King.—Publication of Summons.
Simon P. Hoxler, plaintiff, vs. Stella P.
Boxler, defendant—No. 92377.
Boxier, defendant. The State of Washington to the said defendant. BEECHLER & BATCHELOR,
Attoneys for Plaintiff.
P. O. address; Suite 211, New York
Blk., Seattle, King County, Washington.
January 31—March 14, 1913.
By virtue of a Writ of Execution issued out of the Honorable Superior Court of King County, on the 28th day of March, 1913, by the Clerk thereof, in the case of Seattle Merchants Association, plaintiff, versus Kegus the Bristol Store Inc. et al., defendants, No. 85675, to me, as Sheriff, directed and delivered.
Notice is hereby given, that I will proceed to sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, within the hours prescribed by law for Sheriff's sales, to-wit: at 10 o'clock, May 1913, before the Court House door of said King County, in the State of Washington, all of the right, title and interest of said defendants Kegley's Bee Hive Store Inc., Frank E. Horthume & Sadie Horthume, his wife, and as a community member, having described property situated in King County, State of Washington, to-wit: Lot 24, Block 19, Capitol Hill Addition to the City of Seattle, Division Nouumber Two (2), known as No. 957 158 Ave. North, Seattle, Washington, to-wit: residents to satisfy a judgment amounting to Fifty-one hundred seventeen and 05-109 ($5,117.06) Dollars, and costs of suit, in favor of plaintiff.
Dated this 29th day of March, 1913.
EDWARD CUDIHEE, Sheriff.
By BERT C. THOMPSON, Deputy.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
Notice
n1 the matter of the estate of Elina Nilson, Olson, deceased.-No. 15186.
By order of said court made herein on the 29th day of March, 1913, 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 witnesses to the undersigned executive of said tate, at 65-08 New York 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, April 4th, 1913.
JOHN OLSON,
As Executor of said Estate.
REVELLE, REVELLE & REVELLE,
Attorneys for Estate.
605-08 New York Block, Seattle, Wash.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington for the County
of King.—In Probate.—Notice of
Sale.
In the matter of the estate of Thos
K. Ensinger, Deceased—No. 13719.
Notice is hereby given, that pursuant
to an order of the Court made
and filed on the 4th day of February,
1913, in said proceeding, the under-
signed, executor and executrix of the
estate, and testament of the
Bumlmer, and deceased will sell at private
sale, for cash, the following describe
real estate, or so much thereof as may
be necessary under said order of Court,
to-wit:
The West % of the North ½ of the
Southeast ¼ of the Northeast ¾ of
Section 5, Township 25 North, Range 4
East, W. M.
Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 Block 94,
Denny's First Addition to North
Seattle
Lot 12 Block 49, D. T. Denny's Third Addition to North Seattle;
Lots 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 Block 11,
D. T. Denny's North Seattle Addition;
All in King County, State of Wash-
and bids for the same, or any port
portion thereof, must be in writing and
may be left at No. 320 Epler Building,
Seattle, Washington; or delivered to the
executor, or the dealer, the
Katherine D. Anderson, person-
ally, or may be filed in the office
of the Clerk of said Court.
Said sale will be made on the 3rd
day of March, 1913, or within six
months thereafter. The unassigned reserve the right
to accept or reject any or all bids.
Said sale will be made subject to
the confirmation of the Court.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King County. Osner, & Mohinorn, Inc., a corporation. Epiphants, vs. W. W. Eggert, and H. D. Allison, Executor of the Estate of Marie C. Eggert, deceased, H. D. Allison and Elizabeth E. Allison, his wife. Defendants. Summons by Public
The State of Washington to the Above Named Defendant, W. W. Eggert: You are hereby summoned and required to appear within sixty days the date of the court's order to appear within sixty days from the 7th day of February, 1913, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court and answer the complaint of your answer upon your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff, at the address below stated, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand which has been with the clerk of this court:
The object of this action is to recover judgment against the defendant W. W. Eggert for the sum of $5,000 and foreclose a certain mortgage given by the said W. W. Eggert and the Eggert. W. W. Eggert, 44th day of August, 1908, to secure the said sum of $5,000.00 with interest at 7 per cent per annum, together with attorney's fees, costs and disbursements, upon lots 7 and 8, block 2, of Flint's Addition to the city of Seattle, King county, Washington, and to foreclose a determine and right, title and interest of each and all said defendants in and to said lands and premises and every part thereof.
EDWARD VON TOBEL, Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office and Post Office Building,
604 Mutual Life Building,
Seattle, Washington.
February 7—March 21, 1912.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, in the County of King. In Probate.
In the Matter of the Estate of Frederick Carlson, Deceased, No. 12,549. Order Fixing Time to Hear Final Account and to Show Cause. Why Distribution Be Made.
August Sandgren, administrator of the estate of Frederick Carlson, deceased, having filed in this court his final account and petition setting forth that said estate is now in condition to be closed and is ready for a distribution of the residue thereof among the persons entitled to the meriteto, 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 further ordered by the court that all persons interested in the estate of the said Frederick Carlson, deceased, be and appear before the Court of Washigton, State of Washington, at the court room of the Probate Department of said court in Seattle, Washington, on the 3rd day of March, 1913, at the hour of 9:30 o'clock a.m. of said day, then and there to show cause, if any they have, why said final account should not be allowed and an order of distribution be made that residue of said estate among the heirs and persons in said petition mentioned, be to law.
It is further ordered, that a copy of this order be posted in three of the most public places in the City of Charlotte and published weeks prior to said hearing and published once a week for four consecutive weeks before the said 3rd day of March, 1913, in the Seattle Republic, an official newspaper published by said King County and of general circulation therein.
Done in open court this 30th day of
January. 1913. A. W. FRATER, Judge.
January 31—February 28. 1913.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF Real Estate.
State of Washington, County of King.
—ss.
By virtue of an Order of Sale issued on the Honorable Superior Court of King County, on the 6th day of March, 1913, by the Clerk thereof, in the case of Ferry H. Cole, plaintiff, versus Margaret J. Gallagher and Catherine E. Gallagher, and James B. Bradshaw and Dawson Bradshaw, copartners in business under the firm name Bradshaw Brothers, defendants, No. 88101, and to me, as Sheriff, directed and delivered.
Notice is hereby given, that I will proceed to sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, within the hours prescribed by law for auction, two-wheel drive M. A. on the 26th day of April, A. D. 1913, before the Court House door of said King County, in the State of Washington, all of the right, title and interest of said defendants in and to the following described property, situated in King County, State of Washington;
All of Lot Twelve (12) in Block Thirty-two (22), Supplementary Plat of Pontius' Second Addition to the Acts thereof on file and of record in the office of the County Auditor of said County. Together with all and singular the tenements, hereof and many appurpurate belonging, or in anywise appurtenant, levied on as the prop-
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
erty of said defendants to satisfy a
judgment of a foreclosure of a mortgage
amounting to Four Thousand Nine Hundred
Thirty One and 62/100 ($4,931.62)
Dollars, and costs of suit, in favor of
plaintiff.
Dated this 11th day of March, 1913.
EDWARD CUDIHEE,
Sheriff.
By BERT. C. THOMPSON,
Deputy.
SHERIFF'S OFFICE.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF
Real Estate.
State of Washington, County of King
By virtue of an Order of Sale issued out of the Honorable Superior Court of King County, on the 27th day of February, 1918, by the Clerk thereof, in the case of Osner & Mehlhorn, Inc., a corporation, plaintiff, versus William F. Scheer, Jennie L. Scheer, his wife, Roger Payne and Holmes Lumber Company of a corporation, defendants, No. 89308, and to me, as Sheriff, directed and delivered:
Notice is hereby given, that I will proceed to sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, within the hours prescribed by law for Sheriff's sales, to wit: at 10 o'clock M. on the 26th day of January 1913, in House door of said King County, in the State of Washington, all of the right, title and interest of said defendants in and to the following described property, situated in King County, State of Washington, no. 11 block 2, Smith's University Addition to the City of Seattle, King County, Washington, together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging, levied on as the property of the King County, in the State of a foreclosure of a mortgage amounting to One Thousand One Hundred Ninety Nine and 00/100 ($1,199.00) Dollars, and oests of suit, in favor of plaintiff.
Dated this 12th day of March, 1913.
TEDDY OLIVER
SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION.
JUSTICE'S COURT.
Before John E. Carroll, Justice of the Peace in and for Seattle Precinct, King County, State of Washington.
National Grocery Compay, a corporation, plaintiff, vs. S. B. Householder and manager partners doing business as Householder & Miller, defendants—No. 26046.
State of Washington, County of King
—ss.
The State of Washington to S. B. Householder and A. Miller:
You, and each of you, are hereby notified that National Grocery Company has filed a complaint against you in said Court, which will come on to be heard at my office in Room 602 Prefontaine Bldg., Seattle, King County, Washington, on the day of March, A. D. 1913, at the hour of 9:30 A.M. and answer you appear, and then and answer, the same will be taken as confessed and the demand of the plaintiff granted. The object and demand of said complaint is to recover price of goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered of value of $50.43, with interest and costs.
Filled January 11, A. D., 1913.
JOHN E. CARROLL,
Justice of the Peace in and for
Seattle Precinct, King County,
Wash.
January 31—February 28, 1913.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, in and for King County—Summons of Publication. Ed.
Lois J. Waterhouse, plaintiff, vs. Edward L. Thorn and Anna E. Thorn, his wife, and Bowles Company, a corporation, defendants.—No. 92213.
The State of Washington to the said Edward L. Thorn and Anna E. Thorn, his wife, defendants, Greetings:
You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first notice of this notice, to-wit; within sixty days after the 21st day of March, 1913, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, answer the complaint of the plaintiff and serve a copy of the complaint to 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 court and paid out.
In the above entitled action the plaintiff is seeking a judgment against said defendants and each of them for the full sum of $700.00, together with interest thereon from $120.00, to the amount per annum until paid and for $75.00 attorney fees and for the sum of $6.30 insurance premium and the sum of $2.50 for foreclosure statement and the costs of said action; and that said judgment be decreed to the real estate described in the complaint here-to-wit;
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County.
In the matter of the estate of Maria
Knight Coarum, deceased. Joseph
Knight Coarum, administrator.—No.
19472
Now on this 20th day of March, 1913, the above entitled estate coming before this court on the petition of the administrator herein, to sell the land of the estate or some of a sale of the sale, and the matter having been heard the court advised, and it appearing conclusively that there are no assets, money or personal property or income in the estate from which the debts, expenses and taxes of the estate can be paid without a sale of the estate, it is hereby ordered that all persons interested herein shall appear in this court, in Department of Probate, at the King County court house, Seattle, Washington, on the 21st day of April, 1913, and show cause and answer to the court to the administrator to sell the real property of the deceased, or so much as may be necessary to pay the debts and expenses of the estate at private or public sale. It is further ordered that this order shall be served in the Seattle Republican, a weekly news paper printed and published at Seattle, Washington.
A. W. FRATER. Judge.
March 21-April 15, 1913.
The Seattle Republican
$2 PER YEAR For All 1913
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, in the County
of Washoug
In the Matter of the Estate of Mary D.
Currin, deceased—No. 13679.
Hugh L. Currin, administrator of the estate of Mary D. Church, deceased, having filed in this court final account and petition setting forth that said estate 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 of 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 D. Currin, deceased, be appealed to the Court of King County, State of Washington; at the court room of the Probate Department of said court in the city of Seattle, on the 21st day of April, 1913, that the said estate be made a 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, according to www.
It is further ordered, that a copy of this order be posted in three of the most public places in King County, and a copy of this order be posted in hearing and published once a week for four consecutive weeks before the said twenty-first day of April, 1913, in The Seattle Republican, a newspaper printed and published in King County and of general circulation therein.
Done in open court this 15th day of March, 1913.
IN THE JUSTICE'S COURT BEFORE
John E. Carroll, Justice of the Peace,
in and for Seattle Precinct, King
County, State of Washington—Notice
for Publication.
John Guerrierl, plaintiff, vs. Sadie Apple-
lson—No. 26836.
To Sadie Appleton.
In the name of the State of Wash-
ington, you are hereby notified that John
Guerrierl has filed a complaint against
you in said court, which will come to
be heard at my office on October
Bldg. Bldg. Seattle, King County,
State of Washington, on the 28th day
of April, 1913, 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 de-
sign and demand of said complaint is to
recover the amount of a personal check.
Complaint filed March 6, A. D. 1913.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington in and for the
County of King. Summons for Publ-
lication. Thomas E. Lague, Faintip, vs. Jannette
Tague, Defendant.
The State of Washington to the said
County.
Jannette Tague, Demandant.
You are hereby summoned to appear
within the court to offer the date
of the first publication of this summons,
to-wit: Within sixty days after the
21st day of January, 1913, and defend
the above entitled action in the
above entitled court, and answer the
complaint of the defense in the
name 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 court.
The object of the above entitled action
is to secure an absolute decree of divorce
on the ground of desertion and abandonment.
OLIVER ANDERSON,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office and P. O. Address, 414 Mural
Life Bldg, Seal Court, Wn.
January 31—March 4, 1913.
January 81 - March 14, 1953
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King County. Summons for Publication.
T. Woodard, defendant—No. 92989.
The State of Washington, to Robert T.
Anabell Wodard, plaintiff, vs. Robert
Woodard, above named, defendant;
Woodard, above named detainant:
You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the publication of this summons or, to-wait, within sixty days after the 7th day of March, 1913, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff, at his office below stated; and in case of your failure so far, you are required to serve a copy against you according to the prayer of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court.
The object of this action is to obtain a decree of divorce on the part of the plaintiff from said defendant, on the ground of defendant's failure and neglect to make suitable provisions for the support of the plaintiff or for the family of plaintiff and defendant.
C. A. RIDDLE,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Office and postoffice address, Suite 655 Colman Building, Seattle, Wash.
March 7—April 18, 1913.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King County. In Probate. Notice to Creditors.
In the Matter of the Estate of James Edward Lilly, deceased—No. 15269.
Notice to the Creditors of, and all persons having claims against James Edward Lilly, or his estate, to present the same with the necessary administrator, with will annexed, of said estate at his office, 004 Mutual Life Bldg. Seattle, King County, Washing-
ington, from date of first publication of this notice, to-wit, within one year from the business of said estate, within one year 7th day of March, 1913.
EDWARD VON TOBEL,
Administrator of the Estate of James
Edward Lilly, with Will Annexed.
March 7—April 2, 1913.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF
Real Estate, Sheriff's Office.
State of Washington, County of King, ss
By virtue of an order of Sale, issued
out of the Honorable Superior Court of
King County, on the 5th day of March,
1913, by the Clerk thereof, in the case
of Calista R. Payne, Plaintiff, versus
Brian Hulman, Defendant. No
91273, and to me, as Sheriff, directed
and delivered:
Notice is hereby given, That I will proceed to sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, within the hours prescribed by law for Sheriff's sales, to-wit: at 10 o'clock a.m., on the 19th day of April, A. D. 1933, before the courthouse door of King County in the State of Washington, all of the right, title and interest of said defendant Benjamin Tillman in and to the following described property, situated in King County, State of Washington, to-wit: Lot Seven (7) in Block Two (2) in Commercial Addition to Kirkland, in the Country of King and State of Washington, to-wit: added in property of said defendant to satisfy a judgment amounting to Four Hundred Eight and 65-100 ($408.65) Dollars, and costs of suit, in favor of plaintiff.
Dated this 5th day of March, 1913.
EDWARD CUDIHEE,
Sheriff.
By BERT C. THOMPSON,
Deputy.
March 7—April 2, 1913.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington, for King County,
Summons by Publication. No 92957
Sidney May Wolf, Plaintiff, vs. Alfred
Wolf, Defendant.
The State of Washington, to the said Alfred Wolf, Defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear with you upon request after the of the first publication of this summons, to-wit, within sixty days after the 7th day of March, 1913, and defend the above entitled action in the entitled court, and answer the court, the defendant, and the 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 to the proper of the complaint which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court.
The object of the above entitled action is to obtain a decree in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, dissolving and annulting the bonds of ground on expropriation over the grounds that the plaintiff have a decree of divorce from the defendant upon the grounds of cruelty, and fraud and deceit committed upon the plaintiff by the defendant in inducing the plaintiff to enter into sald marriage, and on the ground of expropriation by the plaintiff to support the plaintiff by the defendant; that plaintiff recover her costs, and for such other and further general orders as may be just and equitable, and for general relief.
AMES M. GEPHART,
Attorney for the Plaintiff.
Post Office and office address: 502
Bailey Building, Seattle, Wash.
March 7—April 18, 1913.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
State of Washington in and for King
County, Summons for Publication,
Northern Bank & Trust Co., a corporation, plaintiff, vs. Harry Davies and Oliver Brynsvold and Jane Doe Brynsvold, his wife, whose true Christian name is unknown, defendants—No 91519.
State of Washington to the said defenders Harry Davies and Oliver Brynsvold and Jane Doe Brynsvold, his those whose estinan name is unknown; defendants:
You and each of you are hereby summoned to be and appear within sixty days after the service of this summons upon you by publication, exclusive of the day of first publication, with the sixty days after the 17th day of January, 1913, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer on the undersigned notice of the complaint below stated, and in case of your failure so to do judgment will be rendered against you according to the demands of the plaintiff's complaint which is on file with the clerk of said court. The object of this action is to receive the plaintiff's payment in sum of one hundred and fifty dollars ($150.00) together with interest from the 31st day of July, 1912, at the rate of 12 per cent per annum, and twenty-five dollars ($25.00) attorney's fees for the plaintiff's attachment. A writ of attachment having issued out of this cause and court and all your right, title and interest in and to lot 7, block 10, B. F. Day's First Addition, and lots 15 and 16, block 1, Hillman City Addition to the City of Seattle, Division No. 1, attached there-
F. J. CARVER & JOHN SLATTERY,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Office and postoffice address, 314
Northern Bank & Trust Bldg., Seattle.
Wash.
THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN
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OLD GLORY
Is the flag we love because we were born under its protecting folds and for that reason it will ever be the emblem of our highest respect as well as admiration. That it might flutter in the breeze and continue to watch over the proud sons and daughters of Uncle Sam thousands of brave men have died on the battle fields; father has been arrayed against son and brother against brother. It's a noble want of any citizen to have the flag of his country always over him, and, doubly so, if such person holds a public office, in which the common weal does business, and such is the position of John E. Humphries, one of the superior court judges of King county, who contends that the county commissioners should purchase a flag for his court room that those who do business therein may become more patriotic, and whether his contention be good law or not, it is most assuredly good citizenship.
WASHINGTON
MPHRIES
Krause
JOHN E. HUMPHRIES
Humphries boasts of having descended from a long line of patriots, who would not hesitate to sacrifice their lives for the preservation of their country. He himself is not only loyal to his country, but is equally loyal to his fellowmen, and during his twenty-five years' residence in Seattle he has lived and practiced loyalty and patriotism to such an extent that he has attracted the general public. God bless the man who stands up for his country.
One of the superior court judges of King county, who has recently had a war of words with the county commissioners over the purchase of a flag of the United States to be hung in his court room. The refusal of the ocommissioners to obey his judicial order in this respect prompted him to give them twenty-four hours to comply or be sent to jail for contempt, but the supreme court intervened and the case will be heard on its merits April 11th. Judge
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OLD GLORY
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