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AEE FRR . Pee oe ee : Come and see me; Um whirling, Dm jnimply @ commentary cn the various upon the 2 THE SEATTLE STAR. ; "BAL WELLS & 00, Puminers | uN . 4 Lt | 4 attest, while crased with drink thie | Dai to Admiral Dewey and his x AD i Ki § Every afternoon except Gandey — - ene, ge a A tanec ay ‘The latter part of the lecture was yi. WELLS, )m r€ bron. ns Woerne SaNaorn AX Cents per wook per month delivered by ewrriery always ih advance, cop Telephone Pike 160° OMces No 110T = = Third A Fntored at the postoffice al Seattle, Washing ton, as second-class matter nue ee |ferk of Balw Our Canadian neighbors, the younger population, have worked themselves notably Nove | exceeded into & most beliicose state of mind. _ Battles constitute thelr chief of conversation, and dreams herotc ‘The rattle of the drums has become | the most entrancing music, and the ot gorgeous trappings of war seem to | be in constant demand, The Do- minion Rifle association ts demand- ing the rehabilitation of the mili and Major-General Hutton, tn com- mand of the Canadian forces, ts urg- ing the necessity of every man learn- Ing how to shoot. Altogether, ac- cording to the reports, there is a Tegular upheaval of warlike senti- ment, although no foe is in sieht, and no war cloud as big as a hand) is seen. There is, however, nothing arming in the existence of the above described state of affairs. ‘The Dominion authorities, who want an increased military appropria- tion, have simply adopted the meth- od usually followed by the Kaiser, who whenever he is about to ask for an enlarged army and navy Ddudget, stirs up the German popu- lation by proclaiming the invinc!- Dility of the Empire and the prowess of its sons. —_—_—_—_—_—_ The special committee of council appointed to investigate the actions of the Snoquaimic Falls Power com- pany In connection with the recent ‘Cedar river injunction suits against the city, met last night, decided that it had no authority to compel the at- tendance of witnesses, and adjourn- ed. It was evident from the outset that the Snoqualmie people had no intention of obeying the summons to appear. The reason does not ap- pear clear as to how the city coun ctl was led into making such « mi) take as the appointment of a com- mittee without power to act. The fact is that the Investigation was a asco of the worst sort, and the city Placed in a ridiculous attitude. One question to be settied now te as to ‘Who is to Blame for the condition of affairs that makes the city powerless to investigate alleged abuses, or ease of rascality in public matters. Under the latest interpretation of ‘the law there is at present no power ‘vested in the city authorities to Probe into municipal scandals. It ‘would look as thoggh such an “over- Sight” was purposely permitted. The it public demonstration {in Boston tm favor of Aguinaldo has brought the hub again into promin- ent notice. Expansionist news- papers throughout the East are lambasting the Bostonese aod are hinting that the center of civiliza- tion has shifted three points to st Board of the city of culture and deans. This insinuation has raised | @ tumult throughout the length and Breadth of Massachusetts, and the anti-expansionists deeds perturb their sleep. |t copper they want to rei | | Belle Singtehurst, News from Brie, B.C, says The properties which have been working the past winter have #o far the fondest hopes of the owners that everybody who has a surface showing of any merit will do more than representative work upon them the coming summer, With & first-class wagon road to the north n river tt will enable the prospectors to reach their claims ement of the Dominion | With provisions and tools at a much reduced figure in comparison to pre- vious years, Many of the ol ospectors anticipate shipping su: face ore this summer, As the prin- lelpal value of the ore of this camp tiful harvest while copper Is at no [high a figure, Ore will be shipped this summer from the North Fork, Helle, Rosa, Jupiter, W. Eva, Armatron, Antonia and the two regular ship- pers—the Second Relief and the Ar- lington The Princess Maud at Republic is reported to be strictly in tuck ain. The report is that valu yesterday across the whole face o: the drift ran over $100 per ton. News comes from the Little Cari- boo claim in Camp McKinney, B. C., that a crosscut has been run from the bottom of the shaft showing up @ ledge 12 feet wide with ore of the same character as that found tn the shaft just before it passed through the vein. Values are not yet report- ed. At the point where the vertical shaft passed through the vein values of about $60 per ton were by the management, ‘The shaft on the Good Luck Con- solidated, at Republic, ts being sunk the rate of three feet per day The shaft In a little over 70 feet in reporte depth, It ie not being sunk upon the ledge, but to the went of It, At the depth of 100 feet ahere will be a crossout run to the ledge, Until thie in done there will be no knowledge obtained Of the real value of the claim, The phenomena! values that were obtained in the crosscut at the -foot level lead to the belief that when the 300-foot level in reached the ledge will become id so that ite real merits can be determined Where crossed the ledge was broken up, being 4 mixture of quarts with porphyry and a volcanic con. glomerate, — The Alexander Dilley mine in the Slocan country, B. C., ix raid to be doing well, A shaft ba % feet, all in Ore, showing seven and @ half feet at the bottom. Three fret of the ore averages $15 per ton tn) sliver, lead and a little gold. From the mouth of the shaft he has drop ped down the hill 286 feet, run and ha after running #7 feet The ledge at this point of cutting is only @ feet from the surface, but 6 fort wide. He has drifted in on the ledge 40 feet and says the ore is getting | better every foot he dri Bo! picked samples from the property have given high assays. Four prom- inent Spokane business men hold a_ Afth of the steck and the balance been sunk! erogpecut tunnel, whieh cut the! is in Rosalia and surrounding coua j try Advices from Spokane that & recent strike has bee ade on the Collateral claim of ore which runs $2 per pound or $4000 per ton, | the richest ore that has yet been {found in the claim, The © jJoins the fan Virtue mine, b properties now owned by Montreal com| in which O. G j Laberee, of this city, In largely in lterested, ‘The Collateral was bond ed by Capt, C. MH. Thompson |aummer and was later dispone by him to Mr e and his aeno Mr, Laberee said Jant even rike had been made in | the 400-f¢ el in the Collateral while making @ raise, A drift from 4 from nto eet |the tunnel which was extend | the 600-foot level of the tap th within about 2% feet of a point di- rectly f Virtue under where thia dince to, Mr. Lab that the average of the ore [Collateral is about $50 per ton, and that no euch chute as this has ever |been encountered. ‘The paystren ts reported by the superintendent to be about 16 inches wide A shaft has been sinking on a , vein on the San Juan claim oar | Republic for some time, At a depth feet samples were taken and a large sackful w shipped the of flee here, Several testa were made | yesterday and the average of all of | them * shown by rtifeates at the office of the company showed alues of $23.96. YOUNG WOMAN'S ASTRONOMICAL DISCOVERY WASHINGTON, April Fieming, a young lady assistant in the astronomical observatory at Harvard, has recently discovered a new star of the Afth magnitude in the constellation of Saggitartus—th Archer. It w EE ternational map of the entire heay-~ eos, Miss Fleming hae charge of the work at Cambridge, and her sharp eye recently picked up a new star io & photograph of the constellation of cither Invisible or Saggttariue that was taken only last overtooked by everybody before. | August. It t# not marked on any This ix the most important astron- of the charts and does not appear omsteal discovery ever made by a wo-|in any of the photographs previous man, although Miss Marta Mitchell, ly taken, But its position has since ho was a professor at Vassar col- | been verified and the new heaveniy lege, contributed @ great deal to the being has been cata! 20.—Mias | they will Be put together for an in-jan honor In scholarship at the Parte |untversity, Her graduating (heats was on “The Mathematical Theory of the Rings of Saturn which gave her #0 great a reputation that she as Invited to take a pe ant in the national Paris, where she has been pro at moted until she is now chief of the division in charge of the taternation- al photographic chart of the heay- ens I, ‘There are several other women mers to promise to win reputa world's knowledge. Miss Fleming \s employed to meas- ure, compare and put together the other American girl by the astron- photographs of the heavens that have been taken during the last 12 years by a syndicate of observator-| California, and after graduating | by writing @ few in Europe, the (United States, Russia, Japan, India, Australia, the Argentine Republic and Peru. The A duty similar to that of Miss ® One is Mine Charlotte A Fleming has been intrusted to an- | Scott, of Byrn Mawr college, Mins Whitney, at Vassar, has also a high omers of France. Mer name is Mixes standing and Miss Mary Hyrd haw Dorothy Kiumke, She was born injaiready won an eviable reputation from the Stanford two of her sisters, who tremely talented, she took a course leading astronomers entered Into an in the university of Paris. One of agreement by which they divided up| her sisters took & degree in law, the work and by which each has | while she took @ doctor's degree in| been making his share of photo- astronomy and mathematice—the graphs. When they are completed only woman who ever won so high | thematician. HOUSTON, Te: 0.—ThL + April lelty will celebrate next Friday and the sixty-third anniver-— Saturday, sary of the battle of San Jacinto. Last year the occasion was cele. brated in a highly satisfactory man ner, but the programme hae been en larged greatly for this y: and this celebration may be made a perman- jent feature of the city’s affairs Throughout Texas the day is ob- are declaring (served in some form or other, but through their newspapers that the particularly here, which sbears the fighting editors of the opposition name of the gallant frontiersman who led the final charge against the ‘turn from leaf to bud and to flower, | {fought April 21, 1894, in Southeast |General Santa Press could make an enviable record siexicans and made possible the re- | for themselves if organized ° “flying column” and sent to the Phil- | public of Texas. At 11 o'clock next Friday morn- ippines, as Aguinaldo would never | ing there will be a great civic par- be able to overtake them. cruel badinage stirs men to wrath, Sucn |@4e. During the a noon, at the a convention hall in the south, A speech will be delivered by Con- | Laboratory Manual One of the chief mputers employed upon the nau- tieal almanac at the naval observa- tory at Washington is Mra. Hrown Davie, She has been engaged on this work for more than ten years and has remarkable taleot as « ma- Among the features of the fire- works display, to take place on the might of April 21, te @ portrait of General Bam Houston in fire set in) a frame of magnolias, which will ‘There will aleo be a nificent fire picture of the Hattieehip | Texas. The battle of Sai Jacinto w Texas, near the junction of the Ban Jacinto river and Buffalo Bayou, near the Guif coast. It wam the last battle of the war for Texan independence. Marrisburg, then the seat of gov- ernment, was abandoned April 1% The inhabitants fled eastward before the advance of the Mexican army) under General Santa Ana. He had and it is quite possible that @ thir-| gressman Joseph W. Bailey. At the 1536 men. teen inch war cloud will soon hover evening entertainment there will be over the state, blotting out all of feasting and freworks. the sunshine from heaven and cast- ing gloom over the commonwealth. | *T* —_—_—_— When wireless telegraphy become: well establiahed, it will no doubt Prove a troublesome thing for monopolists. It may be necessary to form an atmospheric trust, something of that sort, in order to corner an electric business that Go wires or other visible assets. —_—_—_ In Chicago they are talking of dis- pensing with the street cleaning ¢ Saturday morning there will be a n@ flower parade, managed and ticipated in by the ladies of the elty. General Sam Houston, the leader of the Texan forces throughout the war, of April 18 and he was competied to had only 700 men. The Mext-| cans burned Harrisburg on the night) THE LONE STAR STATE TO CELEBRATE Then commenced a long march. The two armies took almost paral lel routes. Houston determined to make a stand on the San Jacinto and hold the ferry there. On the 20th there was some lively skirmishing and on the day foliowing the battle took place Mex! was | Every man tn the jwho was not killed Anna was caught soon af Texan soldiers clam Decaure of the many an army captured. aped but rward, The for bis lite atrocities hi | had committed or incited, but mild er counsel prevailed. He agreed to use hie influence to secure the in |dependence of Texas and was pa roled by President Burnett Anna lied but the power Santa of Mexico in that quarter was broken, and| Texas became a free country. The republic was then formed and an nexation to the United States took place a dozen years later This was the bi Jeoldiers were ure ember the Al It would be inconvenient, the least, if London were some day | markings are found, to say|atood at the height at which these or more than partment, the discovery having been %00n to find itself at the bottom of | a thousand feet higher than at pree- made by municipal economists that the Lake Michigan winds possess «x- cellent sweeping qualities. —_—_—_—_—_—_ Aguinaldo will purchase a bicycle | what with colliding comets, in order to pines more quickly and new capitals. Running on foot ha proved too slow to suit his tastes. —_ One dollar dinners seem to be ail the go in the East. The fifteen cent t around the Philip- establish | deluge, | restaurant men had betier keep an) eye out ahead for breakers, _—_-___ Schoolmates Were Sisters TOLEDO, O., April 20.—Seventeen years ago John and Susan Bandent, living in Frenchtown, near here, died, leaving three girls and two boys. The children were adopted in to several of the families and two of the girls, May and Elizabeth, were taken Into the St. Vincent's Orphan's home here, Later Mr. and Mrs. P. Haggerty, of Delphos, adopted M and Elizabeth was taken into t family of William Schmelz, of Ot- tawa The two girls have gone to school together in Delphos and have been close friends, and not until yesterday did they know they were sisters their identity was brought to light by a nun in the orpans’ home here. Nicholas of Russia shakes hands with no one but a fellow-monarch Relatives he kisses on the forehead, PIGOTT & FRENC H Co, 4 West Washington street, Dexter Horton Bank building, have the only Linotype Job printing machine fn the entire Northwest. Catalogues, pamphiets, ¢t at specially low prices. SAVE "MONEY by giving them an opportunity to figure. e iss tli ti iia ii tin iia lh ii kc hs at Ak it a la cna ans hi rm several miles of water. Yet some geologists assert that ent. Where has this enormous mass of such a thing is not at all beyond the | water gone? range of possibitity, and that the event may happen at any moment are toppling into the sun, and « record the present generation ap- ark destined to see things. If they come through it all safely it will be a source of general satisfaction, But about the coming deluge. It in the great Antarctic ice cap, it ap- pears, that threatens to engulf the greater part of the continents of |!n detail, showing how the water has Europe, Asia and North America | literally ru off from the northern) under miles of water and make new continents in the southern hemi- sphere. How is it going to do it? | 1 | [hemi Some geologists say that it in at present in the grip of the Antarctic fee As the cap grew and arew it gradually displaced the center of the earth's gravity to the southward until it 1s now two or three miles from the position it occupied before this sinister growth began forming. It would be easy, declares one of the sctentiats, to trace this process ually submerged the continents and islands of the southern, but it would require a volume to do ® As soon as the great Antarctic ice! What is the situation today cap commenced forming tt began) Here is what one authority sa pulling the waters of the ocean over |The development of the great al the equator Into the southern hemt- | | the sphere. At Mount Desert, Maine; at Glen Roy, Scotiand, and all over the northern hemisphere there are an fent sea margins which indicate be- that yond question the ocean once! Hons of cuble cler at the South Pole has reached point which immediately p ceden ite sudden breaking up into fragments, At any day or hour the abrupt disintegration of these mil- miles of ice may let here, and how it hae as grad-| loone all the accumulated waters of four-fifths them north the southern hemisphere of the and start lward on their dreadful destruction. whole mission baal | The giacters of Greenland and other northern lands will at once become terribly potent to attract these loonened and floating betes and waters, and they will come pouring across the equator in a wall a mile high, bearing on thelr crest the gigantic fragmenta of the ice hich will hurled againat lying lands of Europe, Asia and orth Americ burying them hundreds of fathoms deep before anyone can do anything more than utter a last appeal for mercy.” How do you view the outlook? There may be, of course, some flaw in the theory of the savants, and perhaps one of the three exploring parties at present on the way to the | Antarctic regions may discover it The Borchegrevink expedition takes on a new Interest now, In the jtime timid Londoners will prob leonsider the wtedom of keeping life belts and boats handy in case of any lemergency.—London Daily Mail. PLANS FOR THE PHILADELP EXPOSITION PHILADELPHIA, April 20.—Thia)a deiphia Commercial museum and city is to give a great exposition thin fall. It will open on September 14 and close on November 30. The plans of this exposition on which the Qua ker City is spending $1,000,000, differ from those of any fair which has ye been held in this country. It Is sole ly in the interest of American manu- facturers and producers, It will be junder the Joint auspices of the Phil- ® e the Franklin institute, and, confin- ing itself to the specific purposes of its organization, will display manu- factured products of the United States expectaly sultable for export, and, for the purpose of comparison, collections of samples of goods 1 in the commercial countries of Mu- rope and successfully sold in the markets of the world, Following promptly upon the beginning of an era of unprecedent ed commercial activity and national expansion, it indicates that Phila deiphia is rapid in some respects at least, Congres# has approriated $950,000 in ald of the exposition. The city of Philadelphia has given $200, 000, the state of Pennsylvania $50, 600 and the citizens af Philadelphia, Individually, $60,000, | | ral | | very |and sent money for the family « declares | port regularly in the |remarded here | ' Commit These to whirling,” she erled in gleeful ton to the horrified spectators, A ment later she #ank unconscious jn the midat of the flames and expired BOTH THOUGHT HIM FAITHFUL Two Women Wept Over the Grave of Elliott Smith. MACON, Mo., April 20.—Two wo- men, each claiming to be the widow of Eliott Smith, stood by the grave In the little cemetery north of Buck lin today, as his body was lowered into the ground. Smith left Bucklin eight ye “ago Collateral lead te salt to be |leaving his wife and several children there, He visited home frequently up: y month. He w model husband, Accompanying his body w wo- man with a child, She said that she and @mith had been married and lived happily in 8t, Louls for four years. Smith was a carpenter and was killed by falling through @ skylight on the Missouri, Kansas & Te: | freight dom. in Gt. ob cans DRESS DON'TS. jemory; They Will be Useful. Don't be dashing—be dainty, Don't sacrifice fitness to fashion. Don't let “smart” verge oa “loud.” Don't hold up silks and display rage gods use pine where stitches ought Don't wear a smart hat and burat shoes. tness to artistic Don't spoll the gown for a yard of stuff. Don't, if you are September, dress an May. Don't wear tan shoes if you have large feet, Don't dre more fashionably thaa becoming. Don't negtect quality for the sake of quantity, Don't wear a white petticoat un- jens it is white. Don't look a trump because you cannot look a swell, Don't trim good material with a common trimming. Don't imagine that beauty will atone for wAtidiness, Don't forget that long credit often brings discredit. Don't make your own dresses un- less you can do | tweill. Dont expect great turn out great savings. Don't Jump Into your clothes and jexpect to look dreased. Don't dress your head at the ex- | pense of your hands and feet. Don't dress to startle people's eyes, but to satiafy them. Don't be grotesque while attempt- jing the original | = WILL CITY OF LONDON BE BLOTTED OUT (existing Dent wear a fur or feather boa with a cotton dress or skirt. Don't put cost before cut. Corded silk won't cover a clumsy fit. Don't buy cheap {mitations If you n't afford the muine article, Don't forget that dress was made for woman; not woman for dress. Peculiar $ GALBSBURG, DL, April 20.—Miss Mary Carlson cut off the head of a box of phosphorous matches and at fF ht swallowed the heads dry. She |e soon in great agony and her ries aroused the house. Physicians were called and worked on her until after noon, when she died. THEY FEAR A POISON PLOT Mysterious Bottles of Medi- cine Sent to Teachers. COLUMBUS, 0., April 20. bus school teache: the receipt of a mysterious medi- cine, which carhe to almost every teacher of the force last week. = It is prepared in nicely labeled vials, and is stamped with the mark of a well known pharmacy macists, however, deny any knowl- edge of the medicine, or ite distrity tion, and the fear is expressed that an attempt Is being made to imitate the Molineux poisoning case of New York Colum- » stuff has been analyzed, and thus far no poisonous properties have been found. ‘This fact has not satisfied the teachers, however, who fear that out of the 100 or more vials which have been distributed, the poison may have been contained in only one AMUSEMENTS. It in seldom that a Beattie audience ha an oportunity of listening to as entertaining a lecture as that given at the Seattle theater last night by Douglas White Mr. White talked entertainingly on conditions in the Philippines and with the ald of stereopticon view: took the audience through th of Manila, He-scarred country. The first part of the evening was taken by Mr. White in relating the conditions in the Philip- or strolling along the bat- roads leading into” the \eolored and pure white views as they appeared jacreen. The different companion in laction, and especially the Washing jton boys on the firing line chasing the insurgents, was heartily ap plauded, ‘The pictures of Dewey and of Captain Fortson, who was killed while facing the enemy, were flash ed upon the screen lecture several mper a by artists, ‘To |night Mr. White's lecture will be on "Dewey's Vietory and the Land It Brought Us.” In view of the inter sting nature and the historical im portance of the lecture, the price of admission has been reduced to Me and 26c, in order to enable students f the schools and Uni wity to at tend, ‘Tomorrow night Stuart Robson and his excellent company will « for three performances at attle theater, “The Meddlers” be the bill for tomorrow night, the Saturday pany cle a Romance,” Saturday night. pleces will be presented with the | original exactness which have char- | acterized the eastern productions. At the Third avenue theater, yr ano de Bergerac’ and Pianka and her lions continue to draw good houses. The lions are fed on the) at every night. On account of | the length of the program, the cur- tain rises prompt at § o'clock. Clara Stood the Test. His arm, that had been resting on the back of the little settee on which they sat tn the gloaming, slipped the Se- will and down and encircied her slender waist. “Clara,” he whispered, “we shall be very happy, n't wer” A soft sigh was her only audible response, but she nestied closer to him, and he appeared satisfied. The meliow haze of the golden Or- tober day still hung over the dark- ening ‘andecape. The volce of a tree toad somewhere in the neigh- borhood lifted itself up and called) insistently for rain. A faint odor of fried ham from some kitchen to the windward of them pervaded the air | A thought seemed to strike the young man. “Clara,” he said, “we ought to have the clearest understanding in| regard to everything that affects our future, ought we not?’ “Yes,” she murmured. “Clara.” he asked again, after a long pause, “can you cook?™ There was another long pause. Then she straightened herself up, looked him squarely in the eye, and proudly answered: “Reginald, I can cook potatoes In 15 different ways. Then she put her head down where 512 Second Ave, ‘Phone Main 482 24 Cents Yer pound for fancy fr handmade ch the 4 and Saturday day 3 16 Cents wolate ere nd, for Por pound Fri day for choc a sold exwarly for % to 30 cents per 12 Cents pound, Per pound for broken taffy candy, worth 20 cents per pound. ‘ n S 13 Cents Per pound for taney full cream California cheese. » ~ 24 Cents Per pound for fresh lowa creamery butter. 5 Cents Per quart for fresh roasted peanuts. 10 Cents Per dozen for fancy é = 36 Cents Friday and Saturday we will sell Adams’ best 40 cent Java and Mocha coffee for % cents per pound. There t# no better coffee roasted than Adams’ best Java and Mocha. —e— J. F. ADAMS Wholesale and Retali Cash Grocer No. 612 Becond Ave., bet Yener and James Bt lemons. Public and Parochial School Pupils Helped ; it was before, and into her pink, shell-like ear he warbled incoherent | outpourings of joy. NEW FANCY WORK. |°r"ces- The old fashioned Mignardise braid has reappeared, and is used to outline patterns with very good re- sults, ees Sachets componed of moire often have the wavering lines of the wa- tering traced out in tiny spangles of beads. eee Pretty candle shafes are made of bargains to | vegetable parchment painted with i> colors and brightened with gold. eee A novelty in photograph screens Is made of three sheets of glass, bound and connected with straps of ribbon and decorated with bows, ee Exe cozies are made tn the form of a water lily turned upside down, the stalk forming the handle. The petals of the Mower are of white and yellow satin and the leaves of green. eee Narrow pieces of silk that are too amall for any other purpose are transformed into charming sheaths for folding fans. Silk cord ts sewed round the edge and a loop of the cord left to carry it by. eee For the side tables in the dining room handsome Fayal towels are taking the place of linen covers de- corated with drawn work, ete. The long lacy ends of these towels are made by women in the islands of yal, and are exquisite in design, requiring no other ornamentation. nee The tea cloths made of gold-col- ored linen—once poptlar—have given place to the delicate cream- linens, no matter whether they are to be em- broidered in colors or simply orna- mented by drawn work and fringing. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Real estate transfers filed yester- day were Sarah Fitzpatrick and husband to Edward Bussey, $500, lot 3 bik 22, Denny & Hoyt's add. are excited over |containing 5 The phar-! streets | bik Nisqually Farm company to John Kjelson, admr. estate Charles Pear json, $500, 8 % of se & of nw of} Ine % ot ned e of W. M., acres. | Charles F. Whittlesey, county \treasurer, to C. L. Andrews, lots and § bik 108, Denny's first add C. W. Ferris to Sarah Hunt, $800. 8 40 feet lots 4, 6, 6 bik 14, Squire | park add | GW. Ferris to George H. Berry- |man, $600, lot 9 bik 14, Squire park add William Gyar to James FE. Zook, |$125, we % 256x100 feet lot 20 bik Gliman park | David B. Wilson and wife to H. Kay Kerr, $1000, an undivided two- thirds interest in lots 4, 11, 13, 14, add 16 bik 4, B. FL ‘Day s first . Otis Harlan to Abbie A. Red- | eld, $300, an undivided % interest in lot 3 bIk 4, Heirs of Sarah A. Bell lfirst add.; an undivided % Interest in lot 6 bik 42, D, 8. Maynard's plat | 8. V. Ballard to Clark Pletcher, $250, lot 49 bik 2 Union depot add to south Seattle; lots 5 Oand 51 bik 2 Union Depot add, to south Seattle. Charlies W. Carkeek to Minerva 8, Blaine, $1, sw % of nw \& lot 3 se For over an hour |2 tp 23 nr 3 e of W. M, containing | |96.50 acres, Rank of British Columbia to F. | Richardson, $15, lots 18, 19 and 20 2, Hagleton Helghts add | Viademir Alexandrof and wife to Rev. Tihon, $850, beginning at a pt 60 feet n or sw cor lot 85 bik 9 of D. T. Denny's Kast Park add the: view A © 50 feet to margin of Lake avenue, thence sw J) REAL along said! To Make Advanced ", Ask no Greater em < Favor of = Prospective WA Patrons = Than That They Visit Our School. Day and Evening Sessions Collins Block. "Phone Main 416 avenue to se cor said lot 35, thence w 31.14 feet to sw cor said lot 35, thence n 60 fect to beginning, being the # 0 feet of lot 35. Selden G. Marvin and wife to J. C. Smith and wife, $2, lot 5 and s % lot 4 bik 9 in B, F. and F. R. Day's La Grande add.; also undivided % lots 3 and 4 bik 5, in Third motor line add, John C. Smith and wife to Selden G. Marvin, $2, undivided \ lots 1 and 2 dik 9, in B. F. and F, K. Day's Le Grande add. Srnest R. Cheedle to Abott A. Pore ter, $1, lots 7 and § blk 3, Hazlewood add., supplemental to cl Some of the newest book covers ure made of tinted linen, painted with gold and colors, »>2$WELL Top Goat T'S the finish to your dress—you lack some- thing without one. WEIGHTS SUITA- “| ABLE FOR THIS TIME |OF YEAR just arrived. Look them over. Nothing |so real tony and stylish in |top coats has ever been shown heretofore. Indeed, they are garments worthy of criticism — flawless in style, fabric and workman- ship, and the price, that is flawless, too, Qualities ranging from $SIO.0O $12.50 $13.50 To $20 J. REDELSHEIMER & Co Strongest Top Coat House in tho State. First Ave., cor, Columbla St, % \ *