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THE ATTLE STAR, ALLUSIONS 0 SALARY ene | Woven Into a Pas-. tor’s Sermon. FINALLY PRECIPITATED TROUBLE Congregation Felt the Thrusts and| Finally Got Fighting Mad = | —Civen « Vacati | | OAKLAND, Cal, April 15.—The Becret im the resignation of the Rev, BL. Burnett as pastor of the Union chureh at San Lorengo loak- ed out today and has created a sen- sation in religious circles, When Rev. Mr. Burnett came to California | neatly three years ago to assume! charge of the pastorate of Ban Lor- | enzo his salary was fixed at $60 per| month. His predecessor had recetv-| ed 31000 per annum; but the drought | came along, grass became short and} money likewise, so the church true tees declared that $6) a month would be the limit. However, should th chureh grow, the salary would be/ inervased proportionately. The new pastor had brought with him bie family. comprising bie wife and five daughters. They were soon | ensconsed In the comfortable par- | sonage adjoining the church edifice, and during the family’s sojourn they have drawn around them a large circle of friends, The daughters are very popalar. Peace aml harmony was the rule in thepastorate until a few months ago, when Rev. Mr. Burnett began losing hopes that his salary would | ever increase, The amount was a) very material drop from what he had recetved while in charge of a Presbyterian church in Binghamp- tom, N. ¥. At taet losing all pa-| tence, Rev. Mr. Burnett finally wove Into his sermons allusions to his small salary, and early in Janu- ary last a clash came. During the same month Robert Watson, one of the church trustees, passed over to the silent majority, and a month later another trustee, C. L. King, fottlowed him to the grave. About this time a meeting of the remain- ing trustees was called and Rev. Mr. Burnett presented his resignation, to take effect May 1 On Palm Sunday the pastor preached @ sermon on “Proportion- ate Giving.” The church was crowd- ed and his words “reached home.” Since then neither he nor any mem- ‘Der of hie family has entered the church building, There was no 4) play of bonnets on Easter Sunday, and yesterday there was no regular worshipping. What Rev. Mr. Bur- | nett uttered during the course of his last sermon is best told by Mra. C. L. King, widow of the inte trustee: | “The whole affair is the result of ® misunderstanding,” said = Mrs. King today. “You see Rev. Mr Burnett has looked for a raise in his) palary, but the church trustees did hot see their way clear to grant this. So on Palm Sunday the pastor took eccasion to gcorch the congrege tion. He reprimanded the society, and stated that God had punished 0c | community for its lack of int by removing two of the main pil } of the church—my husband and) Mr, Watron. He said he had bees | deep in debt ever since coming | here, owing to his small salary. | “Of course he had been worrying over the matter until he nearly was | driven crazy. He is a very com-/ petent, highly educated man, and his fam‘!> is large; but he kept on referring to his small salary in his sermons until It really became un- desirable and unbearable “So I understand the trustees met and decided to give the pastor | month's salary in advance—for April) ~to give him @ month's vacation, so that he might look after his future | welfare.” | went AMUSEMENTS wTEN, THIRD AVENUE THEATER— Richard Foote in “Don Cacear de Bazan.” GERMANIA HALL nue and Seneca stre Second av- t—Dog Show. plowed through the calf of hie This te Lehn's story Mra, Curtice says that Lehn, ap parently infatuated with her we trying to foroe his entrance to her room him co desist, tolling bim #he had a loaded gun for intruders, Lehn did not dealst. "He to the kitchen and returned with a knife, with which he cut the cord fastening the folding doors, 1 again warned him to go away, but he kept on, and then I shot through an opening tn the door, I did not try to kill him and aimed only at hi hand, The building struck the ainscoting and deflected, so that it had not much force when it struck Lehn. The only reason I kept him was because he paid for hia board and room regularly, and his daugh- ter was a companion for us.” ‘This morning Lehn, who had pre- viously told Sergeant Scanian that he would not prosecute, as he wished to aveld notoriety, appeared at the police court and charged the widow with assault with a deadly weapon, There were no witnesses to the shooting, and consequently no evi-~ dence except the testimony of the love-lorn bagwageman and the wid- ow, — —— When a Man Stops Jumping. “Henry,” she said, and there was what a novelist would call tears In her voice as she apoke. “I don't be- Meve you love me He took the cigar from his mouth and looked at her in surprise over the top of his newspaper. “Maria.” he said, “don't be fool- ish, “There!” she exclaimed. “There's evidence of the truth of what I said. “Don't be foolish!" Did you ever speak to me that way before were married T™ “No, my dear, I did not,” he ad- mitted. “Then,” she said reproachfully, “my slightest wish was law; then lyou never sat like a dummy, amok- ing « cigar and reading « paper, when I was in the room; then you seemed anxious to please me, and were ever on the watch to do some little favor for me.” “It ts true,” he admitted. “You were never lazy then.” she went on. “You were full of life and spirits, you were energetic.” “My dear,” he errupted in that calm, dispassionate tone that makes the average wife want to get the poker or a broom, “did you ever see a boy trying to get an apple or 4 cherry that was Just a little out of his reach?" “Certainly,” she answered, “but— “He keeps Jumping and jJumpl until he gets it, don't he? “Of courre, “But does he continue Jumping af- ter he has got itt “Certainly not. There te no need of it.” “Well.” he said, as he turned to his paper again, “you're my cherry, and I don't see the slightest reason why I should keep on jumping, any more than that boy.” She didn't say anything, but she thought and thought, and the more she thought the more undecided she become as to whether she ought to be angry with him or not. LOCAL FLASHES. J. 8. Elliott was this morning gtv- en @ judgment in the superior court against John G. Barnes. for $491.40, on & promissory not Mra. Lydia Demorist. Grand Sec- retary, and Mrs. J. McLean, Grand Matron, of the Order of astern Stars ot Washington, are guests at the York hotel. A lecture was given this afternoon at the chamber of commerce by E. O, Schwageri, on “Public Parks and Improvements, The attendance Was quite large, and Mr. Schwager! made some very interest remarks. Miss Estelle Fisher entertained the following friends at her home last night by giving a small danc- ing party: Miss Gene Graham, Mins C. Bruns, Miss Irene Graham, J. P. Hauaman, KR. G. Force, Reginald Kaylor, J, A. Preston, Lewis Rack “rts and Charles Scurry. Hullding permits were issued to- day to Moran Bros. for a sawmill to be erected on the tide flats, to cost $2500, P. H. Nelson for a reni- dence at 40% Bellevue avenue north, [to cost $700; John Willow, aitera- | tions to hin residence at 1401 Twenty- j second avenue north, to cost $200 jPa *t Sound News company for r . to Columb OAKLAND, April 15. — Johanna preg edgier ont joe; 8B. ‘Cal: Hisgal died tm the Altenheim Ger-|joway for a cot man home three years ago, and th shy Beal eared , : , and the} The . distribution of h re ee F estate has Just | aiterations to his residence at 1401 been ordered by the courts. All twenty-third avenue south, to cast this time a search has been going on | gsn9 for Christian Beck, a nephew of de- ¥ " a ceased, who bas just been located in| Steamer Cottage City sailed this Onio, and who, under the will, wit }morning for Alaskan ports with 137 come in for a greater part of the |Dassensers and 500 tone of freight. estate valued at $5000. | The board of public works award- ‘The deceased left no father, moth-}¢d the contract this afternoon for er, husband, or children, and athe construction of a sewer on Sev- search was instituted soon after her |enteenth avenue from Eeast Marion death for legal heirs. After long |#treet to Yesler way, to Thomas J. correspondence with German author-| Peterson. His contract price was ities Beck was located In Ohio, and | $4111.90. Judge Hall signed an order today| Frank Smith was fined $9 this for the final distribution of the es- . tate. FOUND AFTER A LONG SEARCH teh received this morning from Wellington, Wash., states that at 1.80 o'clock yesterday afternoon the rotary which was clearing the Great Northern track between Mad- ison and Wellington, was struck by THE WIDOW - And She Was Not Afraid to mountainside on to the rocks helow, a distance of 1000 men. At Use It Either. the time of the accident there were seven extra men on the plow, be- OAKLAND, Cal, April 15.—Mre. L. | sides the regular crew. The follow~ E. Curtice resents the ardent love-|ing are the victims: George Hart and A. Lundgreen were injured and will ™m Pacific baggageman. reason #he gives for today and put in the city prison. Mra. Curtice Is a widow, and yens- ing of Charles Lehn, a Southern That is the being arrested probably die; Jerry Moriarity, fire- man; Thomas Grant, George Adams and Thomas Sullivan w linjured. The injured men w en to Hverett. Jerry Moriarity was terday aftern she had oecasion, |prought here this morning, and is she says, to shoot at Mr. Lehn. The | pow in Providence hospital, bullet lodged in bis leg, and as he —— - fears blood poisoning and possibly Health Officer MeKechnie filed his death he had his assailant arrested. | set for March today in the City Lehn and his 18-year-old daughter Jodge with Mrs. Curtice and her | Clerk's office. There were sixty daughter at 1068 Twelfth avenue. |deaths during the month and fitty- Mrs, Curtice is an attractive widow | three births There were three cases of middle age, Yesterday noon Lehn |of diphtheria, and elght cases of went to his lodgings, desiring to|scarietina. The number of houses have @ conversation with the widow. | inspected, were 162, She deelined to recetve him in her oe room and told him to leave or she| while Dr? Albert J. Forrest ts in would #boot, He did not leave at| Now York, hia dental practice will be once, #0 the lady opened the door | attended to by Albin & @mith, den- slightly and fired at him. The bul- | tists, Room 10, Bullivan Block. —— OBJECTS T0 EXPANSION Says Americans Are Breaking Faith. |HOT LECTURE BY GEO, D. HERRON Delivered Before the Christion Citi- wens’ League in the City ef Chieage. CHICAGO, April 16.—"American Imperialism” was the subject which George D. Herron took for his lec- jture last night before the Christian Citizens’ league, He dealt rigor. ousty with the question and called the Americans « nation of liars, He sald that because of our betrayal of the Cubans and Filipinos our hon- or war a byword and a thing to | aoeer at among the peoples of Ku- |rope. We could no longer be be |Meved, he said, and in Germany and France the promise of an American was not worth the breath it took to utter it, Central Music hall was filled with imirers of Herron’s sentiments, and the heartiest applause greeted his denunciation of the nation's present course. “A few months ago,” he said, “this nation had the chance of the age; a chance to initiate a new kind of ‘intenational politics and diplomacy | Tt had an opportunity to appear asa Trinity Parishy chureh—Corner of Righth avenue nd James street, | Rev. H. HM. rector, Morning jwervice by the . J. Bastin, of |Lytten, BC. Evening service by bg Rt, Rev. Bishop Rowe of Alas- First Presbyterian Church—Cor- evangeliat Evening. “The Seas of the Corner.” oe First Mw. E. avenue and M win M. ing subject, ation.” Evening Turning Point of Destiny.” eee Chureh of Our Lady of Geed Hetp —Corner Washington street and Third avenuy south, Rey. ¥. X. fontaine, Mi sermon, 10.39 a m, and sermon at § p. m. eee Church of Ifmaculate Conception —Corner way and Madison street, Rev. A. Bwere. Morning ser- mon at 10°90 o'clock, and evening sermon at 8 o'clock. eee Seattle Ta! (Baptiasth— Corner Jett street and Boren avenue, Rev. C. Ohram, pastor. Preaching ew at ia m. anda pm cee ‘Westminster, Presbyterian Church —Corner of bia street and Broadway, HM. W. Gitebrist, pastor, Morning, Noy of the Lord.” Bvening, “A Solemn Decision.” see Meetings are held every Sunday evening at 7:29 o'clock in the Chris- tian Mental rooms in the Bigelow block. bject tomorrow | sort of Messtah among the nations, but {ts course has been only one of | betrayal and falsehood. The nation has chosen darkness when glowing |light comes from its political tradi- | tone. | “War came. Every appeal to arms In the history of the world has | brought a new tyrant, and the con- | filet with Spain was no exception. | War came. In opera bouffe and) [spectacular language we called it | \‘war for humanity,’ We stood plede- | ed to disinterestedness, pledged to simply free a burdened people. What is the result? We stand before the nations of the world as perjurers, as la people whose word cannot be trusted tn anything. In Europe American honor is @ soandal; it in| ja thing to sneer at In Germany land France an American's word | will not be accepted tn anything, | land we deserve the shame. | “The war has been simply a dress, rehearsal of the tragedy of greed) that is apparent in every industrial | leenter in America, It is a war of) changers, and this adminis- 's promises will never be kept |This administration will never set \Cuba tree; it never intended to. Its | whole object i# to stir up civil strive jin the island, that it may have an excuse for annexation. | “Let us consider the Philippines: We found the people almost on the verge of victory. We invited their lextled patriots to return and co jured them to help us In whipping Spain It has been argued that the Filipinos are unfit’ to govern themselves. Why, in the Filipinos we found a people far better qualift ed to master the intricactes of seif- government than were our fore- |fathers when the fought the fnglish for liberty | The Filipinos had the beginning of s worthy national life, yet we have murdered ther by wholesale Not content with slaughtering the men, our soldiers Rave shot down scores of women around Manila. We have shamefully treated their en- | voys, Our commission scorned them lin Paris, and the Pilipino represent- ative had to flee practically for hin life from Washington. Flussia of |fered no worse treatment to the em- issaries from Turkestan, This na- \tton has been outrageous, infamous, tardly War Eagle of this camp is now making regular abipments, and will probably send 2000 tons a week to |the Trail amelter Robert Moran and Pa-| Judge Jacobs iawued an order to cite Coast company appeared be-|day declaring the bond given by fore Judge re this afternoon and | John Bergstrum and C. Berbatrum asked that @ receiver be appoint-|forfelted, John Bergstrum forged ed for the Puget ind Dredging |@ check on the foston National company, and Jay C, Alien was ap-| Hank for $42.00 last October. Me was plonted receiver arrested and was released on $600 — bail He then left the eity, and al Chas, Nordstrom has again been | though search has been made for w#iven a stay of execution of sentence | him, he not been found until next Wednesday, Mr. Den ee omemennemaeeen nings appeared for Mr. Lewin (hia) Loulsn M. MoClelland has brought morning before Judge Jacobs, and mutt in the Superior court for div- stated that the latter had been un- | orce rfom her husband, John G, Me avoidably detained on account of Clelland, because of cructty and non- the washouts thern Pa- support eifle and Great North: TWO SUITS TO ENJOIN . n rallroads. Marion judgment for #1 against MH. Henkel and wife, et al. Judge Benson this morning gave A. Two injunction suite involving thousands of dollars were filed in ~ powerep the Superior court this morning, . Mamie H. Poster has brought suit Bach case is practicatly th wan for divorce in the Superior court an the Moran Bros.’ sult fied last aeainat her husband, Geo, H. Foster, night, and each ts an On the ground of non-support order restraining the board of pub nr lic works from letting the contract | Leander Lodge has commenced a the for the construct River Water system n of A restraining order in all three of ¢ - sults has been issued by Judge DIENIVIOR, April I. — Ex-United Moore States Senator Tabor was buried Messrs, Thompson, Little and here yesterday with military honors. | Youngs, comprising the board of (aecangineciarateetbaliniinni | public works, have been cited to) ©. L, Wayland and Geo. P. Linn, appear next Monday and show cause post inspectors, left this morn. why & permanent order should not ing on the Cottage City for Alaska. be given restraining them from let- ‘They will inspect the posto ces in ting the contracts to Smythe, Wake- the seaport towns of Southwestern feid & David, or the Pacific Hridge Alaska, after which Mr, Linn will re company fterrett, Goetz & Co. bid under subdivision No. 2 which in May and travel through to | was the lowest made, and it was ac- Eagle City. So far as Alaska is companied by a certified check |concerned, Mr. Wayland is postmast- | Their complaint alleges that Bmythe, | or Wakefield & David's bid, under same subdivision, was not for whole of the work, and that the omitted material called for in specifications F. MeLelian's bid, under » teton No. 1, was $991,081.90, accompanied by a certified check $48 000, the lowest which nformed to provisions of the city charte Prid bid of the Pacific @i4 pot answer the Specified in the n ment. St. Clement's Epti Twenty-fourth aven ington street. Rev, ¢ reetor, Regular Sun jopal Chure and Wa Chureh of Seventh a English Lutheran Holy Trinity—Corne submitted a He claims that his bid was fe against David J. Pierce, et al a. ary tunr, Mr. Wayland will join thi pro tem, as he t t ppoint postmasters soos that it will be benefictal bid the Ray ©. Lichty, a farmer Yakima who received internal in the The today and taken to Providence hos pital for treatment. like clreus posters. Josure sult in the Buperior court Abercrombie party at Valdes some | has been em-/ ed to establiah postoffices and | wherever he North juries by being thrown from a horse first of the week, was brought to this city on the Great Northern train The world may be a fleeting show but it doesn’t attract the small boys |her of Third avenue north and Har- rison street. Rev. W. A. Major, h—|pastor. Morning: Reception of new ah-|members. Evening, “Harden Not | ie, | Your Hearts.” eee the | church ve-| Bast Cherrg. Rev. Elmer E. Thom Third ae Presbyterian wy ty-tecond avenue near nue and Union stree}, Rev. James | gon, 6 F. Beates, pastor; resftence, 610 Pike | rote Pa, ee ne ae street. Sunday servic} at 1 lo'clock ee a. m. No evening sefice. Sunday! yastery Street M. E. Church—Cor. school at 9:99 o'clock a. m. . Plymouth Congregational—Cor Third avenue and Un’ eraity street, ner Third avpnue and Battery street. | rown, pastor, Morning | from Luke 23:31, “The Crucifixion Rev. HM. D. sermon taki cvening #ubj t, ner Rev. W. H. G. Tempid, pastor. Ser-| oe the . viegs at tha. m. and Sbclock p. m.,|°* Be Savior’ by RB Mr. Wine . oO | ome. ee inchesttr, of 8n0-| «saree &; iaeeved ome eae avenue betweeh Seneca and Spring @acread Heart church — Services| "treet. Rev a D. Lawyd, rector. r Morning sermon by the Rt. Rev. tempora: otherhox ern) wily heid | Brotherhood Bishap Rewe. vening sermon by bullding on Sixth avjoue, near F street, Rev. Father Bi wn in charge. | tell | | the rector. | eee | . | Special ev: Nietic rrices are African M. KE. Chureh—1220 Four pecial @ se teenth avenue. Re& Geo. A. Batley, | being hetd the First Baptist pastor. Gervices af 11 a. m. and 6|chUrch. Rev. Alexander Blackburn, o'clock p. m D. D, of the) “White Temple” at . Portiand, Ore) has charge of the Madison Street E. Chureh- Corner Madison sthet and Twenty- | morning will ‘Christ, Our Gav- third avenue. RX. A. 8. Grege, |'0r-” and ae aa ee a < , an,\1 Ought, 1a.” rer Preaching A 11 a. m. and ie erik o aaeeel patel, eee has charge of the music and will Gis ie Chureh—Thirtieth |“™e both morning and evening. avenue south, near King street, | naa Rev. W. H. Selleck, pastor, Sery-| North Seattle Baptist—Corner of foes at Il a. m and § p. m Third aven ind Cedar street. Rev “* |. J. @awyer pastor, Morning sub- Calvary PresbytAjan Church—|Jeet, “Hindeters of the Gospel.” Twenty-fourth avenuA south, n King street. Rev. Donald Koss, p tor. Preaching at 1) a m. and D. mM Second Preaby GOLD AT prian Church—Cor. |vening subject, ' oe 18 Market Street Baptist—Twenty ldwin, pastor. and Thomas ata m Dp. m. An Emperor's Death. | Emperor Charlies Vv. “Klymas of Beattie.” fourth a\yenue south near Main. Rev. Preaching of Spain brought about his death by rehears- | “STEINWAY” DEALERS ated wii aaah ing his own funeral, For the last two years of his life, after resigning: the scepter of Spain and the Nether- lands to bis son Philip, in 1856, he retired to the monastery of Yuste, in Eetremadura, and there lived a life of the cloister in close intercourse | with the mbnks, devoting much time MANOOK The Seattle-Yukon Transporta-/|to religious exercises, During this tion company haa received the fol-|pertod, prompted it may be by the lowing letter from C. R. Peck, the |example of Cardinal De La Marck, - who for several years before his ampart ¢ company's agent at Rampart City, | 400%) in 1598, had annually re- under date of January 4 “Good reports are beginning to come in, and there is enough gold now to aafely say that the camp will not go to pleces next summer, Lit tle Manook, as far as No, 9, is turn ing out even richer than expected McGraw and Carr, on ‘No. 8, are | favor going away ahead of what they | (that year, the grim farce was figured on. They are working about ried out with the most elaborate forty men, and I do not think they monial. ‘The impertal domestias will get all worked out this year rehed with black tapers In their “Good prospects are being found rds, and the emperor clad in sa- on Big Manook, and it ix generally | ble weeds himself followed wearing hearsed his own obsequies, the em- peror, in the summer of 1558, formed the resolution to celebrate his own funeral before he died. The priests ured him--what the superstitious element in his cha r readily in- clined him to belleve—that the act | would surely merit and win divine Accordingly, on August 30 of believed by every one here that the | his shroud. While the solemn mai creek will prove to be a rich creek, | for the 4 was being sung before and if it has gold in it to pay for!the high altar in the cathedral he the working, it will give @ lot of men gave up his taper to the priest, typl- @ chance. fying thereby his resignation of life, “There is no question about Idaho mniy laid in his coffin ony clowed with sprinkling Bar, th ia gold there, but the |The cer trouble is in a lack of water with|holy water on his body; then, all the which to slutce the dirt. As long|attendants retiring, the doors were an the gold is there, they will find |shut, and Charles rose from his nar- some way to work It. Some of the | row and withdrew to his private ‘pups’ leading into Little Manook|apartment. The dampness of the are also turning out some gold, 1t| «rave cloths induced a chill, which, is the general theory now that the|aided no doubt by the mental de gold on Little Manook car pression caused by the greweome | Idaho Bar through the ‘pups’ lead-| ceremony, induced a fever which in from the bar to the creek, which | ended in his death three weeks later, | would account for there being no|on September 21, 1688, gold above 9 and 10 on Little Man-| j ook. BS ig pow Rocky mantis Aety | Acme Publishing Co. made on Knapp's Knapp is from Beattie, and was in the coun try last year, | “These ar the only creeks on which, with the exception of Munt er, that gold is being found In pay-| p,, Alley. Telephone Red 1064 ing quantities. If it ia being found on any of the other creeks, it ing kept quiet, which Is so times the case Good prospects BONNEY & STEWART e consing from the other creeks, Funeral Directors and Embalmore pide prevcregd y Parlors, Third Ave, and Columbia Bt and I look for some good finds be Telephone Main 13, Beattie, Wash, * ve spring.’ ——ariBARGAIN EVENT=en—— IT’S THE LOW PRICES Attached to Desirable Spring Dress Fabrics that Attracts the Economical Inclined to this Department. Best ited Room in the City Matching Colors. | Pretty New Novelty Dress Checks, made to sell, at 16c and the while they last, go at 12\%e @ yard. Drees Fabrica, fl they leat, only 360 yard. in. All- Wool French Serge, black and eolors, actually worth 3%, while they last go at 26c a yard. 4-in. Black Brocades, splendid wearing, pretty patterns, cheap at Se, only 2c « yard. @-in. Imported French Vigoreaux, Beautiful fine firm fabric, 950 value, only 18 a yard. | |45-10. Imported All-Woot French |! Serge, cheap at We, whiie they last go at adc a yard, 45-in, Imported Black Brocades, es- pecially desirable for dress skirts, Wc value, while they last go at Se a yard, 200 Ladies’ Linen Dress Skirts, well made, at material cost prices, Hc ch. 1 Ladies” Linen Dress Skirts, 4 rows corded fleuncing, enly Thc each. Dress Skirts Made to Order on Short Notice 'O. W. PETERSON & BRO. | 206, 208, 210 Pike St. Our Rental Plan—< Enables every home tm the etty to 'Piano or Organ ‘Sherman, Clay & Co. APPLE FINecsT =. Mountain Spitzenbergs and iti Privo The Ramaker Music Co. Pho end FRR, Sagitin 5 GG SAN DIEGO FRUIT CO’ 415 Pike Street. You Want A Bargain In a New, Slightly Used Second-hand PIANO or ORGAN Remember we have the Largest and Most Com- plete Stock in the City. Call or write for prices and terms, D. S. JOHNSTON 903 Second Ave, Burke Builéiag At Germania hall, Second avenue and Seneca street, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, April 13, 14 and@ 15, at 10 a. m., 3 p. m., and & p. m.: Thursday, 8.29 p. m: Exhibitiea Rat Killing Contest. Friday, 10 a. m.: Judging of Spe- clal Competitions; 2 p. m., Exhibi- ltion Rat Kiting Contest; § p. m, | Prize Retrieving Contest. = | Saturday, 10 a. m.; Grand Parade of Prise Winners; 11 a. m., Award. ing of Prizes; 2 p. m., Final Prive Competition Trick Dogs; 7 pp, m@., Final Price Competion Rat Killers. Admission adults 38 cents; @hild- ren 0c. Just Received See Our Windows for Prices H, LEWIS & CO. First Avenue and Cherry Sts. Headquarters for Alaska Views, =m La Roche Up-to-D Gro Fleer Stedle Cor, Second Ave. and Union &,, Beattie Spring Dress Goods |