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ae ~ — — - —— — - ° ° ° or A TYpP TW = THE SEATTLE eney Ie to Walk in a circle and even \ do not have to repert when they ually to return about to the start met back int. ‘Th monatrates th Miller planned to make an excuse : tact alo that one foot walks fests to change « pillow on @ cot, and a 3 H, WELLS & D,, Publishers. jer than the other thus go to the bedding room, He de “very afternoon except sunday, | You can try an interesting expert. | olde d to do thin a fow minutes be sume ment in this way if you will place ‘ore the men filed in to be put in 2. M, WELLS | BP. CHASE two stakes in the lawn about eight thelr cells, In the shuffle he hoped Ebrron, | usin Sawseen | feet apart, and then stand off about | he would not be missed, and would — }80 fect from them, allow yourself » in the bedding room with easy Tne cent per copy) eX cen on toenty ate conte per month Uetivered tO be Dlindfolded, and endeavor to | re ta * to the yard and walls by carriers, always advance. Ro tree | walk between them. You will find re would «till be the cell in ee. [that 1 is almost an impossible adh. | fon, Instead of the striped Telephone Pike (60 |" aure One foot will go a bit faa i figure and well known featu of Pr than the other, either the right or | 0 onvene In on- Convict Miller standing before the ‘Oftices N ° : vi pBrorer id ‘Thied AVORUe | the toft. Now, which ene of your | cell door, the guard would see only Entered at the postoiiice at Seattle, Washing | twot walks faster _thap the other? vacaney, and instantly an alarm Se seen ~ ; ON ON JuNe 26, wssisbs tern WiLL MAKE | LAWYE | Miller dec that he must he ow that the job of appointing and me sort of a representative to take instructing the nation’s commission-| ‘The proposition to a oabamtial @ kaw | sremiyprreananne hia place at the cell door whe ; the | era to the peace conference is (ine department at the University will Inmpection was made, and he decid | yy » 4 cture dum lahed, the United States government be brought up at a spectal meeting | AMERICAN LEADERS WILL ATTEND |°4,(° "anutact dummy. | wi i btes | The dumr must have a he can turn attention again to the work |! the board of regents tonight at | and, what was th hardest of of wagin, fare on the Filipinos, |*P’ chamber of commerce. The pro SCR ae and, at wan the ait, e Ipino®. | Kosition is looked on favorably by the * “ must have i atures nat ~ sage 7 most of the regents, and undoubtedly sufficiently resem those of Con The presence of the Raleigh and |i. ae partment will be established. ts for the Largest Gather. vic! Miller to decive © @uard wlan her crew on this side of the earth | ing ef tte Kind That Wes ing not more than two feet away will do something toward restoring To solve this dimeulty Convi True Value of a Ceremony. | Ever Boon He | Miller hit wpon the device of making the equilibrium of the world, which recently has been rather top-heavy on the Manila side os The great strategic advantage en Joyed by Aguinaldo ts that the more often he ta routed and takes to fight, the more difficulties he poses on the enemy. im | Pessimiam may be defined as that school of thought which trains a man to expect It to rain on the partic holiday he has set aside for wheel- ing. lar There may be some men who would rather be right than be President and there may be others who would rather be Dewey than either. Some one has a fortune awalting him who can invent a summer with- Ut street-sprinkling attachments In the fleld of up-to-date politics the evening dinner seems to be mightier than the stump speech. NEW PATENTS. ag will have difficulty in dis- wiy designed hook from ‘their path when once hooked, an auxiliary barb being placed on the point opposite the barb now In use, | and lower down on the shank. see A folding step ladder has recently come into use im which the legs and step supports are hinged at the cen- ter to close up when not in use, al- Jowing the ladder to be stored in about half the space of the old lad- ders. eee In @ new bicycle tire the resilency is obtained by hollowing the face of the rim deeply and stretching a #t!p | of fabric across the face, with a ting of rubber or other fiexibie ma- terial suspended in the center of the fabric. see A pneumatic axle bearing for ve- Bieles has been patented to take the place of inflated tires on road wag- ons, being less lable to puncture, the weight being carried by pnea- matic rings placed inside drums surrounding the ax} see ‘The recoil of field cannon is de- creased by a new German device. a horizontal rod being placed at the end of the trafl, with a spur to be forced inte the ground. « spiral spring surrounding the rod to break the force of the discharge. see To prevent bicycle wheels from throwing mud and water on the Tider's bask a new device is formed of two arms pivoted on the rear axle to support a small roller in a pos!- tion to take up the mud before it can be thrown off. eee Runners and wheels can be easily Brought into use on @ new vehicle, the runners being carried by rock shafts operated by levers to lower them below the line of the wheels or Hift them and allow the wheels to support the load. Ice cream can be shipped without Melting in a new delivery package, a| Non-conducting material being used ae @ filled between the inner and outer walls, the cream being placed in a tight receptacle in the center end surrounded with ice. “ee Vetis are securely attached to the hat by an Engiishwoman's device, consisting of a flat plate with a safe ty pin at the back for attachment to the hat, with corrugated plates to grip the ends pa Was Knocked Out. “Say pa,” said little Johnnie, “my teacher sayr one should have «a ‘sound mind in « sound body.” What does that mean? “Why, it means just what it says, I su % But mean?” “It means a good strong Intellect, you know, a mind that has noth- ing the matter with it. A clear thinker. Then such « mind in a body f the veil. what does a sound mind that is healthy means ‘a sound mind | in « sound body.” “Have you got @ sound mind in a! sound body, pa” “Why, yes, I suppose so." “Well, then, if your mind ts in your body, what is your for?” “Why, why, to hang my hat suppose. Now go to school.” Which Foot Walks Faster? You may think this is a very silly down head on, I question to ask, but is it? ‘There is |!!! smite our soldiers in the Phil-| no catch about it. It is a simple, |ippines with a fearful and over- | demonstrable fact, which you can|whelming defeat,” has caused a ove te your own satisfaction in a| wonder what he really meant very few minutes | . a 1f you will take any pavement| 1” Stephens explained sae that in clear of other pedestrians, no |*t#tement was not a hasty or chance that there shall be no interference, |one, but that is the result of and walk briskly in the center, you much thought and consideration. I will find that before you have gone | maintain that the United States haa a hundred yards you will have veer-| no right in the Philippines, and I €4 very much to one side, You must n «tate that I sincerely hope not make any conscious effort, of the ¢ t Vengeance will de course, to keep in the center, or you goat our troops may do St, but if you will think of Mot that I am anxious for any something and endeavor to walk | ious of life, but simply because the naturally it is @ hundred to one you|tinited States im trespassing. The cannot keep in a direct line |Filipinos have just as much right The explanation of thin ia the pe-|¢o fight for thelr country as we did cullarity of one foot to walk faster | ror ours.* than the other. Or to be more co FEE ERE rect, perhaps it should be sald that one leg takes a longer stride thar Received Half Pay. the other, and this, combined with| DES MOINES, April 21.—In the |< the quicker movement, causes one al of ex-Secretary of State Me to walk more to one side than the|Farland, the testimony “gi by other. hree clerks state that they divided | It ia well known, for inst |part of their wages with the ex-sec one be lost in the woods th [retary for political purposes, spring | DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, CLOAKS, MILLINERY. WILSON Items of Interest to Men. 10 Dozen Percale Negligee Shirts; regular price 50c, Saturday's price 3! EY SR EY MUST TELL - THEIR AGES ‘Uncle Sam’s Order to the Women. |IN CONNECTION WITH THE CENSUS ‘i+ Falsehoods Will Subject the Offend. t} ors to Fines of $100 Apiooe Other Regulatio jan minister had just & plaster of Paris mask of his own couple. ‘The registers face and to do this he set about get SR ee 1 and nothing remained |ting some plaster of Paris. This] but the giving and taking of the fee. aii |was not so very diMcult. The arti . % , The bridegroom, a strapping young | N2W YORK, April 21.—A distin~ |cie is kept in the Jobbing room and) WASHIN April 21.—Next fellow, asked: “How much tn it?’ Sulshed party of women will leave | several convicts have access to It year © new census of the United The parson glanced slyly at the|the United States for England early! One of these Miller took Into his States will be taken, and this time smiling te rag Nn pated : in June, “Most noted among them |‘ nfidence to oe ox ve and | the territory whieh will be tnelud- ever you think it Is wor (soon had several pounds he mae | 44 dye om a és t should have been worth a good bbe Meee B. Anthony, In her | origi. He knew he must have some a in the enumeration wil t a deal, as the girl was young and » Making her second trip | crease on hin face when he applied | "erably larger than at the last cen- pretty abroad; Mra. May Wright Sewall, /the plaster and this he obtained by "U8 The Hawallan islands will add I reckon {t's worth about 60 ¢x-president of the National Coun- | getting vaseline from the apothecary their population to the total, and nts,” said the swain, holding out cil of Women andone of the leading *hop from time to time on various uld the dition of things be two quarters. The clergyman look- | oqucators of the dey; the Kev, Anna Pretexts and carefully hoar etna i, satisfactory ‘orto Hico and the d blankly at the colina, then turned | toward @haw, the well known le When all was ready he mixed the | Philippines they also will be includ- to the fair one. plaster of Paris in hin cell wash ket Together with our own incre “1H leave it to you, madam,” he |*™rer and the only ordained woman |tie with water and worked it to numbers they would carry our sald What do you thing it i#|miniater in the Methodist denomin-|about the proper consistency. Then | total up to about 90,000,000, worth?” The blushing bride reached tion, ccompanied by her private he pressed his greased fa town in Many novelties will be introduced tout, took the cotr handed one of | #ecretary for ten years, Mies Lucy to the mass, leaving @ well-defined in this coming census, and 7 the quarters to the minister and put ©. Anthony; Mra. Rachee! Foster | mold. questions and Investigations attemp- her into her pocket A thrifty Avery, who has been corresponding ‘ext he scraped the vaseline from ted in the eleventh will be omitted wit said the Canadian, with a|secretary of the National Woman his face, and with that and what he/|in the twelfth count. Such personal |sigh, “ls her husband's crown.” Suffrage association for 2 years, had left, greased the mold itself, In-| questions as to whether one is a ————— and Mrs, Fannie Humphreys Gaff- to this he pressed more plaster of | pauper, cripple, prisoner, convict, Iney, president of National Council | Paris, and when he tfted the cast | homeless, deformed, deaf, blind, or MINING NEWS. lof Women. Resides these there will away the result was a perfect repro- | otherwise diseased will be omitted pes ala number of women emin- | duction of the features of Convict Experience has shown that such ae jent In the literature, the reforms, | Miller questions are answered very inac- The Princess Maud at Republic |*® Philanthropies and the various! It was, of course, of a ghastly |curately and indicate nothing. All continues to show rich ore and there |public enterprises of our country olor and Miller got a number colored people will be denignated as lie every reason to believe that the |The destination of all these Ameri- 4 pencils. He had only gone | black without deference to whether laritt te encountering « fine pay |°*"* '@ London, and the object the ao far as to make large black pupile they are quadroons, octoroons, mu- International Counell of Women, for the eyes when his plan wae die- lattoes or puré negroes. ‘The average of the assays ross a face five feet by seven of solid quarta was $74. The whole face of the drift is quarts, from top to bottom and from side to side, and netther wall shows. The width of the ore body Is to be de-| termined by a cross cut at once. The drift has 275 feet to run to get under the shaft, which is down 102 feet, If it should prove that the are chute is continuous from the face of the drift at the present point to the surface the value of the Prin- cess Maud will be immense. The drift is running at a depth of} 275 feet and there is therefore a fae back of ore above | chute. made today ' There ts a mining company in |Spokane which own four claims tn | Gold Hill at Republic, The group | omprises four claims, the Gold Hilt, ung Eagle and American Chief on | the same vein, and the Hagertown adjoining the Gold Hiil oa the solith- east. The vein Is a contact between porphyry and slate and is said to be traceable for more than 3900 feet The width varies from 25 feet to! nearly 100 feet and contains a fine iron sulphide, scattered throughout | the vein formation, sasaying, it t| jsaid, on the surface from $1.80 to $2.22 per ton in goid On the Mark Tapley claim, near) Republic, @ large body of quarts} has recently been di The veins of the Mark T tensions of the Iron Mask claim. On the Idaho claim on Sophia mountain near Northport, and this side of the line on the same mineral belt aa the Velvet, Victory-Triumph | and Douglas mines, a body of ore has been uncovered which consists | principally of iron and copper pyr ttes, ‘This ore waa encountered on a new shaft just commenced on the center of the claim. Sample the ore have been sent to Seattle to be tested as to values. Similar ore found on this claim last year gave | returns of $69.65 in all values, about one-third of the value being in cou- per. Athabasca mine has fiaeied out, worse but the managers of the The strike at the near Nelson, B. C., and nobody t# the |etrikers. Today the | Athabasca received a telegram from |the miners’ union in Sandon, Slo lean, disavowing the strikers and of- fering (o send up a8 many union miners as were waunted. The strike was disapproved of because there was no threatened cut in wages, and the men were only asked to work | the usual the 10-hour shift, j at union $3.00 per day. The! tm d, wiring for 10} ners, who are now on the road matter seems likely to end at that, as the government has public- ly announced {ts intention of sus- pending the eight-hour law until the | mining districts has} sense of the been taken WOULD SEE US DEFEATED | A Remarkable 7 Talk ‘About the, Philippines. | MEW YORK, April 21.—The pray- er of George Frank Stephens, of Phi Iphia, at the Manhattan’ Sin- gle Tax club dinner in New York 1 night that “the God of battles MA et ce I A MD At i la dd ah aR aN ah tc le ier, |Cotumbian exposition. the largest city of the | Jobe; prominent women from every know anything about jctviliged country which will hold ite second quingye nial session from June 2% to July 4 ‘This will be undoubtedly the most important convocation of women ever held, not excepting the won- it will an semble ti i take part in ite proceedings, and its programme wilt include every branch of the | great work of the world with which NCTEME ToEscapeFrom Sing Sing Prison. IS FOILED BY A MERE ACCIDENT Had Made s Plaster Cost of His Face Deceive } au » wed were issued yes- = Oe. Prt Lae Ny Giton Mrartup, Found Beside Railroad Track nd Ad y, 2% both of Be Checking OMe: a2, an 4 Adah Bailey, 28, both of 8 With Skull Crushed, — oa ao . CORRY, Pa., April 21.—The body } Influx of Farmers. lof an unknown man was found ly- SING SINO, April 14—Warden| grGENE, Ore. April 21.—This ine beside the Pennsylvania railroad Sage. of Sing Sing prison, has Just section has be 4 by quite aj tracks, about one mile west of this nipped in the bud one of the most) number of homeseekers fr the | City, early this morning. well dw one of the most Pant the past few weeks. Some aro| The back of his head had been attempts at escape e¥er jooking over th country; others |crushed tn, and although Deputy made by @ Bing Sing convict Ihave come prepared to locate, and a|Coroner Truesdale, who was called, ‘The adroitiy concected plot, how-|eoodgty number have bought farms. \declared an inquest was unneces- ever, which the Warden succecded | 41; seem to be looking for farm land |*ary, a8 the death was accidental, only by the merest chance in spotl-\ and city property t in demand. Many people believe this to be a case | ing, has demonstrated that, com- |inquirien from the East for inform-|of murder and wish the police to plete as the system of watching the arion neerning this country are | take the matter in hand men, locking them up and account-|far more numerous than usual, | The unknown man was about 35 ing for them tn their cells w posed to be, there ie in it through which « particularly alip- pery convict might wriggle his way out to iberty. The sharp eyes of Convict Jar covered and his work of months un- | done ™ ment the to « Miller * wald "4 thint of what Miller was at is @ se- of the prin | landlady. |plucky woma wir,” wal eret Made th th NILES, Mich. applied for use Mra. he would beat After the ime a meal yenterday er had not the remotest suspl clon that anything was wrong up to jthe m dertul congress of women during the evening Warden Sage sent for him | me to the prison office blow fell, Karly or the warden, “do ye 4 Miller or anything about fron workT Tramp Work. —A tran Fow! omised th on Aprit at and p Charles White carpets in payment the al waa finished blacksmith If a householder, one will be s#im- ply asked whether he owns or rents | his house or whether it is free from incumbrance, These simple questions will be sufficient to determine | where the tendency t# to own rather }than to rent homes. Women who refuse to tell their ages or inaccurately state them | Will be #ubject to a fine of $100 upon | convietts m for such an offence, as will all others who shall refuse to reply to questions or make false oy women are directly connected. “Ob,” naaid the warden, Indifferent- | statements. ly, “I didn’t know but you did. It's Hesides questions as to age and { BA of no ¢ ence, ‘That's all.” color, the enumerator will it | Bo wwlidered, Was con-|you are m or female, married, |ducted to hia cell, and when be went |single of widowed or divorced; |to look for his precious face cast| whether married during the census jt and all his other treasures had/ year; whether @ mother—if so, of disappeare jhow many children; how many of Just how Warden Sage got Dis| these are living: place of birth and that of your parents; number of years in the United States; whether naturalized and if papers have been taken out; profession, trade or occu- pation; attendance at school during the census year; whether you can read or write; whether you can speak the English and, if not, what language; the number of families and of persons in your house and number of persons in your fam- dd or ne » refused to do the work, and poser ph Sten Whitstone took |2¥. Some other questions may be masher and broke it to |*44ed later. Mths fel aoe ere his work for t 4 for merey and ¢ wo hours, VIOLA ALLEN | | | NOT IN LOVE while th stood guard over him. a DEATH OF AN UNKNOWN years old and was @ traveling um- breila mender. A passbook contain- ing the mame “John Frowe was found on the body. A Hatpin Wielder. Milter, after a residence in the pris Di agp oe on of only @ few months, detected TRENTON, N. J., April the exit to the outer world, and the northern section of this city is ter- sharp wits of Convict Miller at began to work on the problem ot how he could take advantage of it. | She Wants $20,000 From an ' Editor for Saying So. wised b a mysterious female who smuses herself after dark by stab. men with a hatpin, Last night a well known citizen, while passing The method of putting men into! xpw YORK, April 21.—Viola Al their celle at aight and accounting | °™ bd gr i . . an alley, Was attacked by the wo- fon nach ome after he te in is eo aime [em the star of “The Chriatian,” has|man, and received @ severe yound been aroused to action by the tin the arm. Two other pedestrians ple and Involves such conditions of pass to go to the bedding room and |them an opportunity to figure, attacked by the woman last inepection shat the idea of a con ublication an alleged love affair , Were vict sipping through the fingers of n herself and “Jack” Mason, | "&>t such a system would seem on {t® who is aleo with the company, now| PRE BOLLD MURS! | face ridiculous. hss yaseas tab hp | THE E GOULD NURSERY. The men are marched in from the a Soe what sos fae nish’ thine ” e t ne story was to the effect tha prison yard in groups, each with | TMC Rory wae OO ee eles with | Where @ Band of Little Millionaires his hand on the other's shoulder, in > ‘ ey Se yyy the shuffling prison lock-step, An |the charming actress an that the ro Nurtur: the groups pass through the portals latter returned (hw toa ler passion. | mhoy are delightfully interesting of the great dormitory they file off |!t happens that Mr non Is still) cnideen, these little ones of George in different equads to the respective |Married to Marion Manola, and Miss | y qouig, An afternoon spent in the tiers of cells where they belong Allen, whom ru sed to | lay rooms in Georgian Court, Lake Here they are liné@ up, each one |*most every pr ‘lor, 14¥ | Wood, the winter home of the fam- before his allotted cell, and when | °F Professional, determined upon he- | iy nag jett the happiest sort of im- they step inside the combination |"e Stor {pression on my mind. jon fentaniog a whole row os cate Through Lawyer “i a. © ay Miss rey juve, thaw was rather a at one turn of the key, in thrown, | Allen has instituted sult for | rormidable array of governesses and and the men are bolted in for the |AAmases against on pts) ibs \. white aproned nurses in evidence, night See ees & ce and the exquisite daintiness of the After the locking up comes inapec- | {ributed mont ¢ “an ae on little girls’ frocks and boots made tion, It is not enough to see the | Publication In ies Plaak ch childish frolic quite an impossibility men go into the cells, They munt “ticle appear Yet they are gracious, affectionate he seen, each one erect, ready for in- |, 1M her complaint Miss Allen porlt- | iittie podies and must surely develop lapection and Identificatt thia |!vely denies being at all in love with |intg women of charm and beauty. | end the prisoner, as soon as the lock nies any knowl- |whey have the same dark, glorious | in thrown In required to atand at at in love with her. | oyveq and hair that their mother has tention in front of his cell door un and a grace of movement one rarely til the guard has passed and tallied Venezuelian Tre sees ta children him WASHINGTON, April 21. ‘The! Such playrooma as they have! The Convict James Miller, who oceu- | tyited tes Postoffice department | entire floor of one wing Is given over pled cell No. 180 on gallery 4, saw | haw concluded an agreement for a|to them, and there ts no end to the through this elaborate aystem @ hole, | parcel postal treaty with Venezuela, | Pretty, childish things that go to The idea would have been hopeless phe treaty will be forwarded to the | make It a perfect fairyland, Little had he not been what t* called al yoenezueian government for ratifies. | Marjory Vivian have dolls the haliman,” which ig @ convict who | tion, and th urrangement will | size of re bies, ‘They were born keeps the galleries clean looks | Urdoubtedly be in operation within | OM Christmas eve they told me, and after the beds and does not h to | three four months. ‘The rate to bave Just recently been put In short march in lock-step with the rest be charged will 6e 12 + pound |clothes, ‘Then there i Lady Wash- He must enter his coll, however.|andg the number in a{ington, with the most when the others do, and stand erect | Hackage will be limit even. — | White colffure and long before hia cell door and be inspected - » - robes, besides a dogen or more in by the guard after he j# locked in teresting specimens of dolinature, The weak «pot which Miller dis-| PIGOTT & FRENCH Co, ofboth boys and girls, There are th ored in the system was that there st Washington xter |daintiest of canopled cradles for xisted a certain laxity in allowing Bank bulldir have the|them to lie In and exquisite carri- \the hallmen to go and eome from the jotype Job printing machine | ages to take the air in he where the bedding t# kept in |in the et Northwert, Cat ulOK 108,| Marjorie is just & years old and nother part of the prison pamphlets, etc. at «pecially ‘low | Vivian 6. They find giving hom The halimen do not have to get a | prices. BAY VicsY by ‘giving natinees about as much fun as an j thing. This is how they arrange | 10 Dozen Negligee rts in Latest Checks and Stripes; regular prices 50c and 6c, Satur- day's price 45c. A Bargain in Neckwear. 20 Dozen Bows and Tecks regular prices 24¢ and 85c; Special Price 20¢ Eeach, or Three for 50 Wervander Second Avenue and University Street. them, The governess plays the pl- ano while they dance in and out be- tween chairs and draperies. Bome- times there is an audience, some- times there is not—though the en- |tire family of dolls invariably occu- |ples the orchestra chairs or smiles down from the tier of boxes ar- ranged atop the plano and over the window ledge 1 Young Geor jr, whose third | birthday has just gone by, has | playroom full of imported animais| jand choo-choo cars; & real engine | pulls a balf a dozen coaches, and a trolley car, fitted with gong and con- | ductor’s bell, bowls miyly along | when his chubby fingers touch, the button. He does not like to have h picture taken and ran from our lcamera like a frightened rabbit. Kingdon and Jay are 11 and 10. ‘They are out of doors from early ti) late, playing marbles, shinny and baseball. They are quite clever at polo and have some very hand- some mounts. All the children are fond of books land music, their evenings being spent in listening to French and German stories read by their gov- erness. ‘CHURCH AND CLERGY Over % per cent. of all foreign missionaries are women. “ee The services of the Lutheran church in America are held in twen- ty different languages oe ‘The next Episcopal church con- gress ix to be held in St. Paul, Minn., October 10-13, 1899, “ee A number of ministers of Phitn- delphia of Various Genominations have organized an American citi- genship alliance, and arranged a course of weekly lectures on living insuce. eee ‘There is a Japanese Christian who | put on his door the following notice levery morning before he starts for |his day's work: “I am a Christian, and if any one likes to go In and read my good book while I am out, he may,” ere Bishop Dwangee, @ South African ecclesiastic, is trying to raise funds to establish a theological seminary in his diocese in the dark continent. He is of heathen parentage and ran | wild in ¢he Jungle until he came un- der Christian influence. eee The Howard Divinity school facu- ty today consists of nine professors, of whom one ts a Baptist, three are Orthodox Congregationalists and five are Unitarians, and one in- structor, who is an Episcopalian. The five preachers to the university | for the current year include one | Baptist, one Episcopalian, one Pres- byterian, and two orthodox Con- gregationalists. see The old question of a reunion of the two great Presbyterian bodies | in this country, the Presbyterian | Church North and the Presbyterian Church South, has been revived in a number of journals representative of both branches. The separation | was made at the time of the Civil | war, Repeated efforts have been made since that time to bring the Jenominations together again by the aid of committees appointed by the general assemblies and other means but no apparent advance seems to have been made toward this end. | RUNAWAY BOYS; | Clyde Smith and Herbert Wells, aged thirteen and eleven years re- spectively, have disappeared from | their homes, and the depart ment has been notified to look out} for them, Smith lives at 225% Fifth and Wells lives at 116 Terry pol avenue, pnue. 'This Store. ways pleased. We're showing another bate Breasted Suits, Middys and Sailor $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, | Pupils jlives at Portland, | by | the | pearance. A little money for a Boy’s Suit goes a long way here. always have the right thing for him at the right place. _J.,F. ADAMS Wholesale and Retall Cash Grocer. we ads Rn nage Avenue, between and james. Public and Parochial School Helped |To Make ~~ ss Advanced *, a Grades. se x Po} ¥ 7) & Day and Evening Sessions Collins Mock, ‘Phone Mata 416 +040 F025 Sparkman & McLean FOR BARGAING IN REAL ESTATE "Phone Red 1798. 605 Bailey Bidg. PARLOR GROCERY "Phone Pike 125. 1329 Second Avenue Wem. J. DEAN & CO. PaRS. KAHALEV Mrs. Etta M. Kahaley died yesters day afternoon at the Seattle General hospital, of appendicitis. Mrs. Ka« haley had been ill for some time and had two operations performed. The second was thought to have been successful, and it was belleved she would recover, but she suffered a res lapse and died. Mrs. Kataley was the wife of exe Fire Commissioner John L. Kahaleyy She leaves one brothers, Grant Bail« ey, who resides at Wallula, Washy and mother, Mrs, B. A. Baugher, whd Oregon. New Process of Photography To be in the swim one must hav@ one’s photograph taken by the new process, which gives a raised sure@® face like bas-relief. For the lover who yearns to carry his sweetheart's picture always with him, these new photos may be small locket. reduced to fit into @ The newest fad in these locket off watch photos is to have a small magnifying glass set in the cover, which wen opened releases the glas# means of a spring and enlarges portrait to a most lifelike ape It’s a Wise Boy That Never Forgets We He's als h of S$ at $3.50, $4.00, 5.00 spri patterns in Doubles J. REDELSHEIMER & CO. Best and Biggest in the State 800-802 First Ave., Cor. Columbia. eS ahdn aici en ia a ee en