Seattle Republican

Friday, April 25, 1913

Seattle, Washington

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The Seattle Republican State Library The Seat SINGLE COPIES 10 GENTS SEATTLE THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN Is published every Friday by Cayton Publishing Company. Subscriptions, $2 per year; six months, $1.00, postage prepaid. Entered as second-class matter at the post-office at Seattle. CAYTON PUBLISHING CO., Inc. Main 305 422 Epler Block Seattle, Washington HORACE ROSCOE CAYTON - Publisher SUSIE REVELS CAYTON - - Associate "To sin by silence when we should protest Makes cowards out of men. The human race Has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised Against injustice, ignorance and lust, The inquisition yet would serve the law. And guillotines decide our least disputes The few who dare must speak and speak again, To right the wrongs of men." PATRIOTIC PRESIDENTIAL ADMINISTRATION Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States, seems to have forgotten that he is a Democratic president and, according to the precedent of a hundred years or more, must serve his party in preference to serving his country, and is really serving the republic first. It has been a great many years since a man has been elected to the presidency of the United States, that was able to see any good whatever in any measure that was brought forward for the betterment of the affairs of the country unless the measure originated within his party lines. Many of the issues advocated by the Populist some years ago were ridiculed and hooted down because a Republican or a Democrat did not originate them, and when absolutely killed was hunted up and passed by the dominant party and is now a law of the land and doing yeoman service. President Wilson seems to have the good of the country at heart and if he can control the unruly members of his party, who still eling to the idea there is nothing good outside of the Democratic party, then the country may be the beneficiary of a truly patriotic presidential administration. CALIFORNIA'S ANTI-JAPANESE WAR. The hulabaloo that California is kicking up over the proposed alien land law is a burning shame and disgrace. If California wished to prevent aliens from owning land in the state se has a perfect right to, but the law should affect the Englishmen the same as the Japanese and Chinese. Every man and woman that are permitted to enter the United States should be eligible to citizenship and should be encouraged to become a citizen of the republic, and the Orientals should be no exception to the rule. We believe a majority of the citizens of any country have the moral right to say whether or not a certain race or nationality shall enter the ports of the country with the view of living therein, but we do not believe this or any other country has the moral right to deny any person, who comes here to live, the right to become naturalized citizen, if he or she likes. As to the work of the Japanese, they are making of Western Washington a veritable garden and the lands that they clear and put in a high state of cultivation, have increased in value a thousand fold. The land owners in the White river valley, on Vashon island, and other sections, where the Japanese have developed are not a hundredth part as fearful of the yellow peril as the members of organized labor, who labor more to cut down the time for work and increase the amount of money they get for the few hours they pretend to work, than they actually toil. The Pacific Coast would be the beneficiary if a million Japanese and Chinese farmers were permitted to land and lease the lands along the coast. RICH MEN AND YOUNG GIRLS. There is no doubt of the fact that "rich men who take advantage of poor girls" and bring about their moral undoing are the most despiceable whelps that ever drew the breath of life, but they have done so SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1913 since the mind of man runneth not to the contrary and they will continue to do so for generations yet to come. The higher ups seem to take a fiendish delight in preying upon the ones lower down. Because, however, this has been and is being done is no reason why those caught in the act should not be punished and the more severely they are punished the less keen others in the future will try to do so. Men however seem to look with complacency upon other men who rob young girls of their virtue and it is only once in a great while that the officers of the law can convict one guitly of the heinous crime. Let's hope that the entry of women into the body politics will bring about a radical change on this question and that no case of white slavery will be tried unless at least half of the jury be females. PERSONS TALKED ABOUT: G. W. H. Davis, secretary of the Brewers' Association, has been in conference with the representatives of organized labor for the past week endeavoring to adjust threatened labor troubles. The representatives will reach an amicable agreement. Editors Bone and Blethen, respectively of the P.-I. and Times of Seattle, are both in the east, whither they went to attend the meeting of the Associated Press, and, according to dispatchs from New York, they were permitted to put their feet under the "big ones'" table. Judge Macintosh is now holding court in the attic and while he may not develop into the attic philosopher, yet there is no doubt of him being the attic jurist of the Northwest, at least for the present. Judge Macintosh is the state's only native son on the bench and he is making good. Frank McDermott, president of the Bon Marche, is making preparations to have the store celebrate its anniversary within ten days and great are the preparations he is making. Those connected with the Bon Marche do things with a hum. A. B. Ernst has been reappointed a member of the park board and he semes as well pleased over the appointment as if he had been made postmaster of Seattle by Prident Wilson. He is devoted to the park work and gives up a great deal of his time to its needs. Judge John E. Humphries of King county, who had the county commissioners arrested because they would not provide him with an American flag with 48 stars on it, has plenty now. Since he made the war he has been presented with three. He is still camping on the trail of the commissioners, however, as one wall of his court room is still bare.—Chinook Observer. Dr. Adna W. Leonard leaves for the east April 28th to be gone five weeks. While in the east he will lectur in many of the larger cities. He has been in Seattle about two years and is considered one of her foremost divines from the point of ability as well as zealousness. George Turner, Washington's most noted Democratic politician, who was popular with Republicans, seems to have incurred the cold shoulder of the Wilson administration and he is not only not to be consulted as to appointments in the state, but he is to likewise lose the position to which he was appointed by President Taft. John T. Gayton, who was messenger of the federal court in Seattle under Judges Hanford and Howard, but let out when Howard failed to be confirmed, has been reappointed and is now on duty. In speaking of his appointment the P.-I., for the first time in many months, told about it and neither quoted Mr. Gayton as using "nigger jargon" nor did it bring out the fact that he was a Negro. "The sun do move." --- VOLUME XV. NUMBER 4 R. V. Ankeny, one of the Seattle bankers charged with accessory to the failure of the Schricker bank, who was to be tried in May will not be tried until some time in June. Senator Poindexter practically has gone over to the Democratic party, judging from information which leaked out recently. During the special session of the senate Poindexter went to Democratic leaders and asked them to provide for him on committees, fearing the Republicans would treat him badly because he left their party. The Democrats as a result of his appeal, gave Poindexter a small chairmanship, but that was all they were willing to do for him, and it was given, it is understood, on his promise to vote with the Democrats on the tariff bill and on other close party issues. He therefore appears to have dickered himself back into the Democratic party, though openly professing still to be a bull moose.—Tenino News. H. R. Cayton, of the Seattle Republican, was in the city this week on business. The rumor is out that Cayton is to sell his Republican and devote his time to a magnificent apartment house. If Cayton disappears from the journalistic field, the cause will have lost one of its brightest and most scintillating writers.—Tacoma Forum. Jesse S. Jones is to retire from the public service board May 15th, after a continuous service of six years. Mr. Jones has made an excellent servant of the people and it is too bad that all of his experience is to be thrown away and the whole board placed in new hands. John H. Schively seems to be a hoodoo to insurance companies as the two he has connected himself with have gone into the hands of receivers. He went east soon after retiring from the office of insurance commissioner and accepted the management of a large insurance company, and he had hardly been installed into office before the company was placed into the hands of a receiver. Judge Cushman, in order to relieve the crowded calendar, has been holding court in Seattle for the past week. The appointment of Judges Ronald and William Hickman Moore is said to be out of the question and it is also said Judge Chadwick has no show. Rumor has it, Judge Ronald's connection with the Krug affair has hurt his chances and rumor has it that Moore's testimony in a case in which he was financially interested, has blasted his chances of appointment. Judge Chadwick is reported to have been too outspoken in some campaign, which blasted his opportunities to go on the federal bench. New men are now being considered and an appointment may not be made for months. Hugh C. Todd, chairman of the Democratic central committee, who managed the late campaign, is developing into a great publicity agent. It is reported that he does not even intrust his publicity work to a lieutenant, but does it all himself. He is working to be the big Democrat of the Northwest under the Wilson administration. PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. MAIN 8040 Seattle Washington PUGUE SOUND TRACTION COMPANY CARBON LAMPS ARE SUPPLIED FREE to consumers of our current ELECTRIC BUILDING Seventh Avenue and Olive Street BONNEY-WATSON COMPANY UNDERTAKERS Preparing bodies for shipment a specialty. All orders by telephone or telegraph promptly attended to. Telephone East 13 2 The friends of Jacob Furth in the Northwest and they are legion, are standing firmly by his side in this his hour of trouble. Those who KNOW and have had dealings with him and the Puget Sound National bank, will require more than a jury of twelve ordinary men and women to shake their confidence. Jacob Furth and the Puget Sound National bank, are pioneers in this country and their names are nearly synonymous terms. The Puget Sound National bank is built on honor and its chief cornerstone is Jacob Furth. Petit juries may come and go like Tennyson's babbling brook, but the monument that Jacob Furth has built in the hearts of his countrymen for honor and integrity will live forever.—Tacoma Forum. Jacob Furth was found guilty of complicity in connection with the failure of the Schrecker bank at La Conner, undoubtedly much to the surprise of a majority of people who have been watching the proceedings more or less closely. Of course the case will be appealed, if not tried again, and the final outcome will be in doubt for some time to come.—Anacortes Citizen. We do not believe much in penitentiary punishment at best. It seldom accomplishes any object and, in this case it will certainly accomplish none. The farmers of Skagit county will be as far from regaining their lost money as they were on the day of the bank failure. If Furth has been rightfully found guilty of a criminal offense, he deserves some punishment, but it is rather a pity that the law governing his case and the cases of others like him, for there have been many Jacob Furths, has no distributive feature. We have no criticism to make of the verdict, but we do deplore most heartily the apparent unwillingness on the part of the banker's friends to bow to the edict of the court. When business men, even former judges of the supreme court, admitting their ignorance of the evidence and the facts in the case, take it upon themselves to criticise a jury, it is little wonder indeed that the seed of contempt and disrespect for courts and court procedure thereby sown in the public mind blossoms forth later in the scarlet flower of anarchy.—Bellingham (Labor) Journal. The Conviction of Banker Furth. Had the news gone out from the Whatcom court house that Banker Furth, of Seattle, had been murdered in cold blood, instead of having been convicted of a crime conected with the failure of the LaConner bank, probably such announcement would have created no more consternation in the Queen City than did the news of his conviction. The general surprise and regret at the unexpected outcome of the trial is joined in by the editor of the Courier, knowing the kindly and benificent instincts of Jacob Furth. It would seem that some subtle or uncanny condition of things in Whatcom county had conspired to humble the rich because of a prejudice COUNTRY PRESS ON JACOB FURTH Hundreds and thousands of good men and women worked for the success of the court house bonds last fall because they wanted King county to have a new court house and because they believed that the architect, who had planned the proposed building knew what he was talking about, when he said $945,000 would be sufficient money to build it, eight stories high, fronting on four streets. It now transpires that that amount is not more than a quarter enough and that the amount is subject to petty grafts to the extent of some $50,000. It does seem that men would try tomake a pretense at being honest and on the square and in the open in their dealings with their fellow men. Evidently nothing is planned by officials that is not subject to a side graft by "experts" or "scalpers." King county is sadly in need of a court house and the said court house should be on the plat of ground lying between Third and Fourth avenues and James and Jefferson streets, but she does not need a court house bad enough to permit alleged "experts" and grafters to appropriate a tenth of the amount it will take to build it, for their own private gains. Whether or not there is anything in the newspaper stories, which reflect very severely on the integrity of the architect of the proposed court house building, we know not, but enough has been brought out that the matter be given a thorough investigation even if it takes a court proceeding to bring out the facts. Architects come pretty nearly knowing what a proposed building, for which they themselves draw the plans, will cost and we can not see how an architect could under-estimate the cost of a building to such an extent as that for the proposed court house. While a great majority of the citizens of the county favor the Yesler site for a court house, yet they do not want to be robbed because they favor that particular location. The fight over the building of the new court house for King county is becoming more bitter each week. The county commissioners recently passed a resolution to proceed with the construction of a three story building covering the entire block. However, the municipal League of Seattle enjoined the commissioners from the sale of bonds. So the fight continues.—The White River Journal. existing among the class of people predominating on the jury of conviction.—Skagit County Courier. "Guilty as charged," declared a jury of farmers and workingmen sitting in judgment in Bellingham last week on Jakey Furth, accused of aiding and abet- Hundreds and thousands of bonds last fall because they waived that the architect, who has when he said $945,000 would be streets. It now transpires that the amount is subject to petty graft to make a pretense at being honest fellow men. Evidently nothing perts" or "scalpers." King county should be on the plat of ground streets, but she does not need to appropriate a tenth of the Whether or not there is anything integrity of the architect of the brought out that the matter be to bring out the facts. Architects they themselves draw the plans, estimate the cost of a building to majority of the citizens of the city to be robbed because they favor. The fight over the building each week. The county commission of a three story buildingattle enjoined the commissioner River Journal. ting the failure of a bank in Skagit county. And immediately the sob artists on the Seattle papers got busy. In language that would melt an asbestos firebox they denounced the persecutors of Seattle's "most respected citizen." told of his long and hon- --- THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN PRESS ON JA orable career as a business man of in the West, voiced the indigna- tion of Seattle's leading business men at the indignity put upon an honored name. As a sob story ed it was a great success, but it was g-read with deep disgust by many thousands of plain, ordinary, ev- ery day citizens throughout the state. Furth is possibly as near COURT HOUSE. of good men and women worked for the wanted King county to have a new court. He had planned the proposed building king be sufficient money to build it, eight that amount is not more than a crafts to the extent of some $50,000. The honest and on the square and in the open king is planned by officials that is not the county is sadly in need of a court house and lying between Third and Fourth and a court house bad enough to permit the amount it will take to build it, finding in the newspaper stories, which are proposed court house building, we have given a thorough investigation every effects come pretty nearly knowing what means, will cost and we can not see how to such an extent as that for the property county favor the Yesler site for a court or that particular location. king of the new court house for King county missioners recently passed a resolution covering the entire block. However, others from the sale of bonds. So th to prison bars as he will ever get but the conviction has given the banking methods a jolt which may be beneficial in the future.— Labor (Everett) Journal. The people of Seattle are greatly exercised over the conviction --- of Jacob Furth, their leading banker and financier, who was accused of abetting another in receiving bank deposits when the institution was known to be insolvent. He has been a mighty factor in the upbuilding of Seattle, and no effort will be spared to keep him out of the penitentiary.—Ellensburg Capital. the success of the court house court house and because they be- new what he was talking about, stories high, fronting on four quarter enough and that the story does seem that men would try seen in their dealings with their subject to a side graft by “ex- house and the said court house venues and James and Jefferson alleged “experts” and grafters for their own private gains. It reflect very severely on the know not, but enough has been seen if it takes a court proceeding in a proopsed building, for which now an architect could under-es- posed court house. While a great court house, yet they do not want County is becoming more bitter to proceed with the construc- ter, the municipal League of Se- e fight continues.—The White The Furth Verdict. Every right thinking person must deplore the miscarrage of justice of which Jacob Furth has been made a victim. Convicted on appeals to passion and class prejudice that would have done credit to the inflammatory hatred of a Goldman, one of the foremost constructive financiers of the Northwest has been declared guilty of a violation of the banking laws of the state. From an admitted set of facts, from letters simple and frank, a classconscious jury has seen fit to draw inferences that have no warrant in common sense. It is a triumph of demagogy which will not be without its reaction. Too many people have known Mr. Furth, day in and day out, for the better part of a lifetime to accept the word of an emotionally biased jury. Too many men in this city and in this state owe their financial existence to him to believe for an instant that he is a violator of any banking law. Too many men have found him their last refuge from ruin to believe that he would jeopardize his untarnished name for a few dollars. Mr. Furth, like every banker above the pawnbroker class, loaned more money on character than he did on tangible security. All over Seattle there are business men who, in their time of need, had little more than their character to offer him, and these men do not hesitate to asy that they do not feel that their receipts for repayment square their obligations to Mr. Furth. But this was not part of the trial. The jury was appealed to as poor men to convict a rich man; as farmers to convict a banker. To Mr. Furth, in the closing years of his long and honorable life, the result cannot be but crushing. It is not in human nature, certain of innocence, to find complete consolation in the unabated confidence and the additional esteem of those who know. There still remain the pain of injustice and the resentment against the wrong. But Mr. Furth stands today as he has always stood, a big man, fair dealing, right-thinking, honorable in all ways, a credit to Seattel and the Northwest. Seattle Post-Intelligencer, April 19. Creditors of the defunct private bank of W. E. Schricker & Co. of LaConner, how do you like the above? You who have keenly felt the financial loss; you widows and orphans, who were practically left penniless when the Schricker & Co. bank closed its doors, does it help to alleviate your financial circumstances or help heal the gaping wound produced by this banking fiasco? Not by any means. Is the above editorial in keeping with the true facts in the case? Those who attended the trial as witnesses or spectators, say the evidence produced by the state was convincing and overwhelming in its nature. Why, then, all this commotion and going into hysterics over what appears to be a just verdict? The Post-Intelligencer tries to make its readers believe that it was a triumph of demagogy; that the jury was biased on account of Jacob Furth being a wealthy man. The jury, twelve men, or more accurately speaking, eleven men and one woman tried and true, after hearing the evidence, the Continued on page 4. ‘IN, TH SUrmRIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King Coun- ty. Notice to Creditors, ‘Inthe Matter of the Estate of Robert ‘McCuilough, deceased.—No, 15250. By order of said court made herein on the 27th oe of March, 1913. No- tice 1s hereby given to the creditors of, and to all persons having claims against said deceased or against said estate, to present them with the neces- sary vouchers to the undersigned ad- ministratrix of said estate, at 408 Bos- ton Block, 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 no- tice or same will be barred. JENNIE 8. MITTELSTADT, As Administratrix of said Bstate. IRVING T, COLE, Attorney for Bstate. 401 Boston Block, Seattle, Wash. March 28—April 26, 1913. IN_THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King Coun- ty. In Probate. Notice to Creditors. In_the Matter of the Estate of Bertha Brown, deceased.—No. 12027. By order of said court made herein on the 27th day of March, 1913. No- tice 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 youchers to the undersigned administra~ tors of said estate, at No. 714 Lowman Building, Seattle, King County, Wash., the place of business of said estate, in Seattle, in said county and state with- in one year from and after the date of first ponieegen of this notice or same will barred. ie of first publication March 28th, SAM BROWN and ISAAC BROWN, As Administrators of Said Estate. LEOPOLD M. STERN, Attorney for. istate. 714 Lowman ft Seattle, Wash. March 28—April 25, 1913. IN_THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of OnE oe for King County. German Savings, Building & Loan As- sociation, a Soper Plaintiff, vs. Henry O'Brien, Charles O’Brien, a mi- nor, Robert O'Brien, a minor, Thomas O'Brien, a minor and August Mehl- horn, Jr. administrator of the estate of Lena O'Brien, deceased, Defendants. The State of Washington to the said defendants Henry O’Brien, Charles O'Brien, a minor, Robert O'Brien, a minor, and Thomas O'Brien, a minor: You, and each of you, are hereby summoned and required to appear with- in sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wit: within sixty days after the 2ist ony ot February, 1918, and defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court and answer the complaint of the plaintife and serve a copy of your an- swer 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 com- plaint, which has been filed with the clerk ‘of this court. 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 $1,001.00, with interest thereon at the rate of 12 per cent. per annum on each defaulted in- stallment 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, on the 23rd day yof March, 1909, upon Lot 6 and the North half of Lot 7, Block 18, Plat of Rainier Beach, King County, Washing- ton, which mortgage is of record in the Auditor's office of King County, Wash- ington, in Vol. 433 of mortgages, pee 484, 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 and all of said defendants in and to the said lands and premises and every part thereof. EDWARD VON TOBEL, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office and Post Office Address: 604-5 Mutual Life Builuing, Seattle, King County, Washington. REPUBLICAN LEGALS --whw 4-14. NOTICH OF SHERIFF'S SALD OF REAL ESTATE, State of Washington, County of King, 88. Sheriff's Office, ‘By virtue of a Writ of Execution, issued out of the Honorable Superior Court of King County, on the 4th day of April, i818, by the Clerk, thereof, in the case of ‘Andrew Morrison, Plain- tft, versus ‘Thomas Donald, Jr and Nettie Donald, his wife, Defendants, No. 93222, 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 24th day of May, A.D. 1913,” be- fore the Court House door of ' said King County, in the State of Washing- ton, all of the right, title and interest of ‘said defendants, in and to the fol- fowing described property, situated | in King County, State of Washington, to- wit: West half northwest quarter’ and northwest quarter southwest quarter and west fifteen acres of southwest Quarter southwest quarter, section 34, township 24, north of range 5 Bast, King County, Washington, levied on as the property of said defendants to sat- isty) a judgment amounting to Sixty- five and 90-100 ($65.90) Dollars, and costs of suit, In favor of plaintift. Dated this Sth day of April. 1013. EDWARD CUDIHER, Sheriff, By BERT C, THOMPSON, Deputy. April 11, May 9, 1013, IN. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington for King Coun- 3 F, Heyalauft, plaintift, ys. John 3. Bow: ‘dish, and’ Blanche’ A.’ “Bowdish, his wife, John R. Bowdish & Co., a cor- poration; Hi, Pe, Sauthy and Nellie Smith, his wife, A. Hambach, and Mrs, A. Hambach, his wife, J. D. Mol- ligon, and Mrs. J. D. Mollison, his wife, defendants. "No, 92546. Sum- mons_for Publication. ‘The State of Washington to John R. Bowdish, Blanche A. Bowdish, John R. Bowdish’ & Company, a corporation; J. D. Mollison, and Mrs. J. D, Mollison, ‘defendants, ‘You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after, the 1th day of April, 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 attorne for plaintiff at, his office below stated and ‘in case of your failure so to dd Judgment will be rendered against, you according "to the demand of the com: Plaint which is med ‘with the clerk of fhe court, "phe object of this action is, to ob: piain a judgment of sald court foreclos: ing. a. mortgage upon the following de goribed real property Jn the County of ing, State of Washington, : ee A and the ST talt lot 20, block 2 of Motor Line Addition to the City of Seattle, BH, W. HOWBLL, Attorney for Plaintift. Ofticg, 402 Upler Block, Seattle, Wash. ‘April 11, May 23, 1918. fete NOTICn OF SHBRIFF'S SALE OF ‘Real Bstate.—Sherift's Office. Btete, of wWeaninaton, County of King —s8. eobY wirtug of 8, Walt, of, Rxeoution fs: gued out of the | Honorable” Superior Goure"of King County, on the 28th day of March, 1913, by the Clerk thereof, in the case of Seattle Merchants Associa- tion, plainti, versus Kegley's Bee Hive Store Inc. et’ al, defendants, No, 85675, and to me, as Sheriff, directed and de- livered: Notice is hereby given, that I will proceed to, sell, at public duction to, the ‘ighest bidder for cash, within the hours prescribed by, law for Sheriff's sales, to- Wit: at 10 o'clock A, M., on the i7th day of May, 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 Kegley’s Bee Hive Store Inc. Frank H. Horthume & Sadie Horthume, his wife, and ag a community, and Ada Hamilton, in’ and to the following described prop: erty, situated in King County, State of Washington, to-wit: Lot 24, ‘Block 19, Capitol Hill’ Addition to the City of Seat- tle, Division Noumber Two (2), known as’ No, 957 18th Ave. North, ’ Seattle, Washington, levied on as the property of said defendants to satisfy a judgment amounting to Fifty-one hundred seven: teen and 06-109 ($6,117.06) Dollars, and ocats of sult, in favor of plaintify, ‘Dated this’29th day of March, 1918, EDWARD CUDIHER, Sheriff. By BERT C. THOMPSON, Deputy. INTHE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE ‘State of Washington, for King County. —Notice to Creditors. ni the matter of the estate of Wina Nil- son Olson, Geceased.—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 sald deceased or against said estate, to, pre- sent them with the necessary, vouchers to the undersigned executor of said es- fate, at 605-08 New York Block, Seattle, Washington, the place of business oi 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. repate of first publication, “April 4th, JOHN OLSON, As Bxecutor of said state. REVELLE, REVELLE & REVELLE, ‘Attorneys for state. 605.08 New York Block, Seattle, Wash. IN. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of ase for the County ea King.—In robate.—Notice of ie. In the matter of the estate of Thos K. sousminger, Deceased.—No. 13719. Notice is hereby given, that pur- suant to an order of the Court made and filed on the 4th day of February, 1918, in said proceeding, the under- signed, executor and executrix of the last will and testament of Thos. K. pee oe deceased, will sell at private sale, for cash, the following described real estate, or so much thereof as. sire be necessary under said order of Court, owit: ‘The West % of the North % of the Southeast % of the Northeast % of Section 5, Township 25 North, Range 4 Bast, W. M. Lots 1, 2, 3, 4 5, 6 and 7 Block 94, D. ‘T. Denny's First Addition to North Seattle; " ‘Lot i2 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- ington. ‘And bids for the same, or any por- tion thereof, must be in writing and may be left at No. 320 aot Building, Seattle, Washington; or delivered to the executor, Wm. BF. Epler, or the exe- eutrix, ‘Katherine D. Anderson, a sonally, or may be filed in the oi fice of the Clerk of said Court. Said sale will be made on the 8rd day of March, 1918, or within six months thereafter. ‘The undersigned reserve the right to accept or reject any or all bids. ‘Said sale will be made subject to the confirmation of the Court. ‘WM. F. EPLER, Executor, KATHARINE D. ANDERSON, Executrix, Of the last will and testament ‘of the Estate of Thos. K. Ens- miger, deceased. IN. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE pists ‘of Washington, for King Coun- y Osnér & Mehlnorn, Inc., a corporation, Plaintitts, vs. W. W. ‘pager, and Dp, Allison, Executor of the Estate of Marie C. ger deceased, H. D, Al- fison and Miizabeth B. Allison, his wife, Defendants. Summons by ‘Pub- lication. The State of, Washingsoe. to the Above Named Defendant, . W. Eggert: defend the above entitled action in the above entitled court and answer the You are hereby summoned and, re- quires to are ‘within sixty days from the date of the first publication of this summons, to-wit: | within oy. days from the 7th dey of February, 1913, and EDWARD VON TOBEL, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office and Post Office Address, ; 604 Mutual Life Building, Seattle, Washington. 7 February 7—March 21, 1912. RL D—Republican ec NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE oF Real Estate. 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 6th day of March, 1913, by the Clerk thereof, in the case of Ferry H. Cole, plaintiff, versus Mar- garet J. Gallagher and Catherine E. Gallagher, and James B. Bradshaw and Dawson Bradshaw, copartners doing business under the firm name Brad- shaw Brothers, defendants, No. 88101, and to me, as Sheriff, directed and de- livered: Notice, is hereby given, that Twill proveed to, sell, at public, duction. te the igheat bidder for cash, within the hous pees ‘by law for Sheriff's sales, fo-wit: at 10 o'clock A. M. on the 26th day of April, A. D. 1913, before the Court ‘House door of said ane 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 Wash- ing. to-wit: il of Lot Twelve (12) in Block, Thir- tyctirg (33), Supplementary Fist of Don tus" Second Addition to Seattle, accord. ie to the official plat thereof on file ‘and of record in the office of the County Auditor of said County, ‘Together with all and maper the tenements, hereditaments, and appurt enances therunto pelenging, or in any- wise appertaining, levied on as the prop- THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN erty of said defendants to satisfy a Judgment of a foreclosure of a mortgage { amounting to Wour Thousand Nine Hun- dred Thitry One and, 62/100 ($4,981.62) Dollars, and costs of suit, in favor of plain Dated this 11th day of March, 1918. EDWARD CUDIHED, ‘Sheriff. By BERT. C. THOMPSON, amet. "On SHERIPES Su NOTICH OF SHBRUS SALH OF _ Real Estate. State of Washington, County of King —88. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued out of the Honorable Superior Court of King County, on the 27th day of Feb- ruary, 1918, by the Clerk thereof, in the case of Osher & Mehlhorn, Inc, a cor- poration, piaintim, versus’ William P. Scheer, Jennie L. Scheer, his wite, Roger Payne and Holmes Lumber Company. of Seattle, 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 duction to. the ighest bidder for cash, within the hours prescribed by law for Sheriff's sales, to- Wit: at 10 o'clock A. M., on the 26th’ day of April, A. D. 1918, ‘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 deseribea property, situated in King County, State of Wash- ington, to-wit: ‘Lot 12, block 2, Smith's University Addition "to the City of Seattle, sing County, Washington, together with all and singular the tenements, heredita- ments and appurtenances thereunto be- longing, levied on as the property of said defendants to satisty a judgment of a foreclosure of a mortgage amount- ing to One Thousand One Hundred Nine- ty Ning and 00/100 ($1,199.00) Dollars, and ocsts of suit, in favor’ of plaintiff. Dated this 12th day of March, 1918. ~ EDWARD CUDIHEE, ‘Sheriff. By BERT. C, THOMPSON, ‘Deputy. — SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION. JUSTICBE’S COURT. Before John W. Carroll, Justice of the ‘Peace in and for Seattle Precinct, King County, State of Washington, National’ Grocery Comapny, a corpora- tion, plaintiff, vs. 8. B. ‘Householder and’ A. Miller, copartners doing bust- ness a3 Householder & Miller, defend- ants.—No, 26046. State of Washington, County of King. —ss. ‘The State of Washington to 8, B. House- holder and A. Miller: You, and each of you, are hereby no- tified ‘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, Washing- ton, on the grd day of March, A. D., 1913, at the hour of 9:30, A. M., and unless you appear, and then and “there answer, the same Will be taken as con- fessed ‘and the demand of the plaintiff granted. The object and demand of said gomplaint is to recover price of goods, Wares and merchandise sold and deliver- ed of value of $60.43, with interesst and costs. Filed January 11, A. D., 1913. JOHN “ib, GARROLL, Justice ‘of the Peace in and for Seattle Precinct, King County, ‘Wash, January 81—February 28, 1913. IN, THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THB State of Washington, in and for King County.—Summons of Publication, Lois J. Waterhouse, plaintiff, vs, “Hd- ‘ward L. Thorn and Anna B. ‘Thorn, his wife, and Bowles Company, a corpora- tion,’ defendants,—No. 92218. ‘he State of Washington to the said Hd- ‘ward L. Thorn and Anna 8. Thorn, his wife, defendants, Greetings: You’ are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first. publication of this notice, to-wit: within sixty days after the 21st day of March, 1918, and defend the above en- titled action’ in the above entitled court, answer the complaint of the plaintiff and serve @ copy of your answer of other pleading upon the undersigned attorneys tor 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 com- Plaint, (which has been filed with the lerk of said Court, Th the above entitied action the plain- tuft is seeking a judgment against said defendants and each of them for the full sum. of $700.00, together with interest thereon from’ June 21, 1912, at the rate of per cent per annum until paid and for $79.00 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 be a first lien upon and against the real estate de- Beribed in the, complaint here, to-wit: ‘A plece of land in tract 4 ‘of Robin- son's Cottage ‘racts, beginning at the ‘West corner and Lincoln Terrace, thence ina northeasterly direction 90 feet along the dividing line between tracts, and 4, thence 34 feet in a southeasterly direc- tion in @ parallel line with Lincoln ‘Ter- tace; thence 90 fect in a southwesterly direction along a line parallel with the dividing line between tracts 3 and 4 to Lincoln, ‘Terrace; thence 34 feet along the northeast side of Lincoln Terrace in a northwesterly direction to the point of beginning, in King County, State of Washington, and for a decree foreclosing plaintif’s mortgage covering said de- Seribed real estate and directing same to be sold under an order of this Court by the sheriff of King County to satis. fy the Judgment of plaintiff, and the the purchaser be, let immediately intc possession thereof, and for other relief SIMPSON & MOSER, ‘Attorneys for Plaintitt. Office and ‘post office address: “1 Haller Building, Seattle, Washington. “March 31—-May 2, 1913. 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, Now on this 20th day of March, 1913, the above entitled estate coming beforé this court on the petition of the admin- istrator herein, to sell the land of the estate or some of it at public or private Sale, and the matter having been heard and’ 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, ex- penses and taxes of the estate can be paid without a sale of some of the real property, now it is hereby ordered that All persons interested herein shall ap- poor in thus court, in, Department, of robate, at the King County court house, Seattle, Washington, on the 21st day of ‘April, 1918, and show cause, if any, why an ‘order shall not be granted, to the said administrator to sell the real prop- erty of the deceased, or so much as may be necessary to pay the debts and Gxponses of the estate at, private, oF Public ‘sale, 11 ts, further, ordered that his order shall be published four suc- cessive weeks in the Seattle Republican, a weekly news, paper printed and pub- lished at Seattle, Washington, AW. PRATER, Judge. March 21—April 16, 1913. The Seattle Republican $2 PER YEAR for All 1913 IN, THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State: of Washington, in the County of King.—In Probate. Order Fixing ‘Time to’ Hear Final Ac- count and to Show Cause Why Dis- tribution Should Not Be Made. In the Matter of the Hstate of Mary D. Currin, deceased.—No. 13679. Hugh ‘,, Currin, “administrator of the estate of Mary D. Church, deceased, hav: ing filed in this court finial account and petition setting forth that said estate 1s now in a condition to be closed and 1s ready for distribution of the residue thereof among the persons entitled by law. thereto, and it appearing to. the court ,that sald petition sets forth facts sufficfent to authorize a distribution of the residue of said estate: Tt is therefore ordered by the court that all pergons interested in the estate of the said Mary D. Currin, deceased, be and appear, before the. dald | Superior Court of King County, State of Wash- ington; at the court room of the Probate Department of said court in the city of Seattle, on the Zist day of April, 1918 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 ot distribution be made of the residue of sald estate among the heirs and persons {n said petition mentioned, according to law. It is further ordered, that a copy of this order be posted in three of the most public places in King County, for a period of four weeks prior to said hear- ing and published once a week for four consecutive Weeks before the said twen- tw-first day of April, 1018, in ‘The Seat: tle Republican, a’newspaper printed and published in said King County and of Reneral circulation therein, Done in open court this 16th day of March, 1918. A. W. FRATER, Judge. March 2ieApril 18 1913. IN THE JUSTICE’S COURT BEFORE John ©. Carroll, Justice of the Peace, in and’ for Seattle Precinct, King County, State of Washington. —Notice for Publication. John Guerrieri, plaintiff, vs, Sadie Apple- ‘ton, defendant.—No. "26836. To Sadie Appleton: In the name of the State of Washing- ton, you are hereby notified that John Guérrieri has fled a complaint against you in said court, which will, come on io be heard at my office, 602 Prefon- taine Bldg. in Seattle, ‘King, County, State of Washington, on the 28th day of April, 1918, 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- Mand of the plaintift granted, | The ob- ject and demand of said complaint is to Focover the amount of a personal check Complaint filed March 6, A. D. 1918, JOHN EB. CARROLL, Justice of the Peace. March 21—April 15, 1913. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington in and for the County of King. Summons for Pub- lication. Thomas B. Tague, Plaintiff, vs. Jannette Tague, Defendant. The State of Washington, to the said Jannette Tague, Defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this sum- mons, to-wit: Within sixty days after the 3ist day of aaa, 1913, and de- fend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve @ copy of your answer upon the under- pienee, attorney for pee at his office below stated; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be ren- dered sgeiust you Srcoraae. to the de- mand of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. ‘The object of the above entitled action 1s to secure an absolute decree of divorce on the ground of desertion and abandon- ment. OLIVER ANDERSON, ‘Attorney for Plainttt. Office and P. O. Address, 414 17 Mutual Life Bldg., Seattle, King County, Wn. Sanuary 81—March 14, 1918. & IN, THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THB ‘State of Washington for King Coun- ty. Summons, for Publication, ‘T. Woodard, defendant.—No, 92989. The State of Washington, to Robert T Anabell Wodard, plaintiff, vs. Robert ‘Woodard, above named defendant: You are ‘hereby summoned to, appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this summons or to-wit, within sixty days after the 7th day of March, 1913, and defend the above entitied action in the above en- titled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned at- torney for plaintiff, at his office below stated; and in casé of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered 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 plaintif from said defendant, on the ground of defendant's failure ‘and neg: ect to make suitable provisions Zor, the support of the plaintiff or for the fami- ly of plaintif and defendant. C. A. RIDDLB, Attorney for Plainti¢, 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. Summons by Publication, No. 92957. Sidney May Wolf, Plaintiff, vs. Alfred Wolf, Defendant, The State of Washington, to the sald Alfred Wolf, Defendant: You are hereby summoned to, appear within “gixty (60) days after, the date of the first publication of this sum- mong, to-wit, within sixty, days after the 7th day’ of March, 1913, and de- fend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy, of your answer updn the under- signed 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, th prayer of the complaint which has been led with, the Clerk of sald Court. The object of the above entitled ac- tion is to obtain a decre in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, dis solving and annulling the bonds of matrimony existing between them, and that the plaintif have a decree of di- vorce from the defendant upon the grounds of cruelty, and fraud and de~ celt committed upon the plaintift by the defendant in inducing the plaintii to enter into said marriage, and on the ground of abandonment and failure to support the plaintift by the defendant that plaintif. recover” her costs, and for such other and further general or. ders as may be just and equitable, and for generai relief, JAMES M. GEPHART, Attorney for the Plainti¢r, Post_Offiec and office address: 503 Bailey Bullding, Seattle, Wash. March 7—April 18, 1913. IN, THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King Coun- ty, Notice to Creditors, In_the Matter of the Estate of A. B. Burns, deceased.—No. 15262. By order of said court made herein on the 14th day of April, 1913. No- tice is hereby given to the’ creditors of, and to all persons having claims against said deceased or against said estate or against the community estate ‘of said deceased and against said es- tate to present them with the neces- sary vouchers to the undersigned ad- ministrator of said estate, at suite 211 Now 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. qobate of first publication April 25th, FRANCES PLANK, As Administrator of said Wstate. BEECHLER & BATCHELOR, Attorneys for Hstate, Suite 211 New York Block, Seattle, ‘Wash. NOTICR OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF _,Real Estate, Sherift’s Office. State of Washington, County of King —S8. By virtue of an order of sale issued out of the Honorable Superior Court of King County, on the 15th day of April, 1918, by the clerk thereof, in the case of Osner & Mehlhorn, Inc., a corpora~ tion, plaintiff, vs, atl W.' Milton and Annie Baxter, defendants, No. 90507, and to me, as sheriff, directed and de- livered: Notice is hereby given, that I will proceed to sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, within the hours preseribed by law ‘for sheriff's sales, to-wit: at 10 o'clock a. m., on the Bist day of May, 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 de- fendants in and to the following de- serlbed” property, situated | in King County, State of Washington, to-wit: Lot 15, Block 6, Osner’s First’ Addition fe the’ City, of Seattle, King County, Wash. together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and ap- purtenances thereunto belonging, levied on as the property of said defendants to satisfy a judgment of a foreclosure gfe mortgage amounting to Six ‘Hun dred and Fifty-two and 74-100 ($652.74) Dollars, and costs of suit, in favor of plaintiff. Dated this 16th day of April, 1913. EDWARD CUDIEGE, jerif. By BERT C. THOMPSON, INTHE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington, for King Coun- ty, in Probate. Notice to Creditors, In the Matter of the Estate of Hllen Davis, deceased.—No, 15358. Notice is hereby given to the credi- tors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, or her es- tate, to present the same, with the necessary vouchers, to the undersigned executors of said estate, at the office of Edward Von Tobel, 604 Mutual Life Building, Seattle, Washington, the same being the place’ for the transaction of business of said estate, within one year from the date of the first publication of this notice, to-wit, withi none year from the 18th ah of none 1913. EDWARD VON TOBEL, GEORGE COOPER, Executors of the Estate of Ellen Davis, Deceased, Dated April 18th, 1913. Date of first publication April 18th, 1918, INTHE SUPERIOR COURT OF THR State of Washington for King Coun- ty, Iu, Probate, Notice to Creditors, In_the Matter of the Estate of James Edward Lilly, deceased.—No, 16269, Notice is hereby given to the credi- tors of, and Bil peracng having claims against James ward ee or his es- tate, to present the same with the neces- sary vouchers, to the undersigned ad- a en ia neh 7th, 1913. EDWARD VON TOBEL, Administrator of the Estate of James Edward Lilly, with Will Annexed, ‘March 7—April 2, 1913. True Temperance Seattle Brewing & Malting Co. (Continued from Page 2) pleas of opposing counsel and listening to the charge given by Judge Hardin, rendered an honest verdict. How could they have done otherwise? This stigma cast on the jury by the P.-L. and the Seattle Chamber of Commerce is deeply resented not only by the creditors of the Schricker & Co. private bank, but by the people of LaConner and Skagit county generally. And, in conclusion, isn't it fair to presume that the citizens of LaConner and Skagit county who suffered so severely and acutely from this bank failure, have, or at least should have, as much rights in the premises as the select friends of Jacob Furth among the "higher ups" in Seattle? We think so. If not, why not?—LaConner Mail. SLANDER. One night as the devil sat musing alone, In the midst of his cozy warm fire, Trying to figure the difference in guilt 'Tween a thief and an all-round liar. His memory turned to the scenes of youth, And his eyes filled with hot boiling tears; So he looked down his ledger and turned to a page. Dated back about six hundred years. Sea DOES NOT mean prohibition, but moderation, and applies to eating as well as drinking. A good beer is a temperance beverage, and its moderate use cannot but result beneficially. Is a light bottled beer, and is especially adapted to the family trade. It creates an appetite and aids digestion. It's daily use on your family table means good health and good cheer. If your dealer cannot supply you phone M. W. POYNER, Mgr., Roslyn and Cle Elum Agencies. For my business denotes a continual increase Every since the creation of man. I have cribbed a good harvest of six thousand years. And should now be content with the yield. And give my opponent permission to have, The gleanings I leave in the field. I have gathered a very diversified crop Of merchants and lawyers lore; I have bound politicians in bundles until The ends of my fingers are sore. I have fiddlers, gamblers and insurance men; I have murderers, forgers and liars; I have filled up my furnace with green goods men Till they actually put out the fires. I have railroad conductors and doctors to spare, Horse traders and preachers to spend, Republicans, Democrats, Tories and Whigs, And two or three newspaper men. I THE SEATTLE REPUBLICAN But there is one class, I'm happy to say, Can never gain entrance here; Their souls are so dirty that I'm sure they could Demoralize hell in a year. I refer to that thing; muckraker depraved, The carrion crow of the earth, The hypocrite why by slander enslaves His soul and curses his birth. A million of years in my warm- est of rooms His slanders could never atone. So I give him a match and advise him to start A select little hell of his own." —Exchange. SEATTLE THEATER. For the week commencing Monday night, April 28, Bailey and Mitchell will present "The Fortune Hunter." It was this play in which Fred Niblo, Josephine Cohan and Frank Bacon were starred and, it was presented here at the Metropolitan Theatre last season. It is a comedy wherein strongly contrasting characters are met, mingle and make a tale of absorbing human interest. The play ran for one solid year in New York, and will be presented here with all of its elaborate scenic equipment and the rural features that won it fame and success in its original production. Nat Duncan, a young man who Rainier BEER has come to the end of his rope, has a good friend in a rich broker. The broker has staked Nat time and again, but he has always been a failure in the city. As a last resource, the broker puts a proposition to Nat, which, the broker thinks, will put Nat on his feet again. He tells Nat to go to a small town, be a model young man and marry some rich man's daughter. Nat agrees to try and the broker finances the scheme, starting Nat out with $1.-500. HELPING THE WITNESS A Swede was being examined in a case in a Minnesota town where the defendant was accused of breaking a plate glass window with a large stone. He was pressed to tell how big the stone was, but he could not explain. "Was it as big as my fist?" asked the nervous judge, who had taken over the examination from the lawyer in the hope of getting some results. "It bane bigger," the Swede replied. "Was it as big as my two fists?" "It bane bigger." "Was it as big as my head?" "It ban about as long, but not so thick!" replied the Swede, amid the laughter of the court. Apropos of winter charity, J. G. Phelps Stokes, the New York capitalist, told a story at the recent convention of college societies. "Two shivering urchins," he said, "stood on a bitter January morning before a picture shop. An Alma Tadema was in the shop window, and one of the urchins, studying it, said: “‘Who was this Nero, Tommy? Wasn’t he a fellar that was allus cold like us?’” “No,” said Tommy. “That was Zero, another feller altogether.’” Mrs. Jones—My son’s six feet in his boots. Mrs. Smith—Six feet in his boots? Whatever will you try to get me to believe? You might as well tell me that he has six heads in his hat.” IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Saint Swithin, Knight Country, Notice. Creditor. In the Matter of the Estate of John A. Plum. Deceased—No. 15323 Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, Ida A. Plum, has been duly appointed executrix of the estate of said John A. Plum, deceased, by the above Court, and that she is now the duly acting and qualified executrix of said estate and all person whose creditors of, or who have claims against, said deceased or his estate, or against the community estate of said deceased and Ida A. Plum, are hereby notified to present the same with the necessary vouchers, to the said executrix at room 28, Downs Block, Seattle, washington, the place of business, said estate, within one year from the date of this notice and the date of the first publication thereof, or the same will be forever barred. Date of notice and date of first publication, April 25, 1913. IDA A. PLUM. Executrix or Said Estate. W. W. FELGER. Her Attorney. 28 Downs Block, Seattle, Wash. April 25—May 23, 1913. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of Washington.—In Probate.—Notice of Publication. In the matter of the Estate of Emil Oscar Martin, Deceased.—No. 15476. Notice is hereby given to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased, or his estate, to proclaim the name with the necessary vouchers, to the undersigned executrix at the office of Edward Von Tobel. 604 Mutual Life Bldg., Seattle, Washington, the same being the place of the transaction of business of said estate, within one year from the date of the first publication of this notice, to-wait; within one year from the 25th day of January 1913. HENRIETTE OTILLIE MARTIN. Executrix of the Estate of Emil Oscar Martin, deceased. April 25—May 23, 1913. ce