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* disregarded his warnings and urged filling ordinarily used, but maious effecting: the #ixe, welght, or vance of the shoe, ‘Thin ¢ ater PURCHASED BY THEA. P. oeeemneconstaon t Deed From S. & P.R.R.. Has Been Filed. © le moulded tn the form of t Verse grooves and ribs placed alt ately over each other, so that when the insole upon by the fot | the ribs sink into the grooves, Stretching the thin central web of rubber, «0 as to form a spring, whte n| thus throws the ribs back Inte post Nand expands the sole when the foot ts lifted In conjunction with the ¢ center role tiny valve in the front part of the heel, having a flap which admits the alr when the sole ollapsible is a expands, drawing It in, but which closes when the alr presses outward lly against it, A row of perforations as n leather Insole from toe to heel under the hollow of the foot, permits SPOKANE, April %.—The old Se-/tne air locked by the Lad, sagt the attle, Lake Shore & Kastern rai grooves to pass up around the between Medical lake and Daven stocking when the welght of the has been purchased by the N body on the foot collapsps Pacific Ratlway thy : os, thereby expelling the . being Aled with the eo There is thus assured a constant ‘The deed was executed March } ping in and pumping by the Spokane & Seattle Ral! ah alr, keeping the company, which js a sub-corporation |qry, and prev thelr natural | of the Northern Pacific. The con- moisture from impregnating the sideration is stated at $1, but the |jeather provence of $100 In revenue stampa — indicates the actual sate price was @ considerable sum This to but a partion of the form et property of the Spokane @ Se- attle Railway comp: This lat ter company still owns the right of way from Spokane to Medical lake, @ portion of which is now used by the Great Northern, under lease, Tale portion of the read is used by} the Great Northern to get out of | Spokane to the west, unttl such time as it shall lay track on its own right | of way, EXPENSIVE LUXURIES a indulged in by Different Countri and Poople of the Wor! PREDICTED HER OWN DEMISE Warned pa an Apparation the Day She Would Die. HILLSBORO, Tex. April 22.—Mre | Ney Brooks Sunday predicted that! she would die today, though she was | then apparentty in good health. She talked calmly of her approaching |death and husband and children. cause her death she knew not, ave her directions to her! What woutd | but an) “BELIEVE IN WHTCHORART A Peculiar Case in North Carolina, INVOLVING THE “WITCH DOCTOR” @ Mog, t Knife and the Smith Family of Lin- eoln County THE SEATTLE STAR. | toward the middle of the car bawket at her fe and trap. The conductor ef the car wa ( va tof a chap yr hung & buneh of miatiotoe to the lamp that \ iapended from the the mil of the car, It tribut eason and an raravation @ fare to young " when a pr girl stood be the fat n san's head Presently the conductor came in to collect th woman's fare h 1 in her pockets for a vom nis for her nickel, A your n looked up and observed There's the chance of your life, ndu h 1. "She's right un Hut everyone did look and burst into uproarious laught The con luctor grinned foolishly and — pre tended not to hear, The old woman still fumbled for her nickel Don't you see she's giving y the chance?” said the young ma You're no man to take it, I'd like to see the girl that would stand inder a mistietoe for me like that There was more laughter, and the id woman ing so much merrl ment, smiled and happily h id the kel and dropped It Into the box, und the conductor sneaked back to he platform. As the laughter con tinued the old woman looked around the 1 wai Ah don't know what you all's laughin’ at, but 1 reckon It's a good joke on the eonductah en abe | 4, ate everyone laughed the conductor, It wasn't of a Joke—tt was Just the com | RALBIGH, N, C, April 4—The |daye of belt in wheheraft are not | yet ended, as ie shown by a case | which was tried recently in Lincotn jcounty Christian Detter waa on | trial for embeasiement The chief witness was Martin Smith, who j@wore that Dette claimed to be a witeh doctor,” and info 1 him jthat Miss Detter, a #iater, was ti witched, Detter was paid to give special treatment, and after son weeks’ time, assured Smith very cranny and trey in the [house was full of witches, and that burning the house was the onty means of riddance, Smith agreed to this, and the house was burned, while “Dr.” Smith stood near with A pretty penny is the est of more |. nacition ehe had seen the night be. |@ club to kill the witches a» they things thang are dreamed of in Pett ara, the said, had told her she was |'Ti#d to encape. Detter and his sis Philosophy. For example, simply . r ter were deeply int ed ppectator® to salute the rising and the setting | to die. Detter asked if the hed wer sun, costs Uncle Sam $20.000 a year; Sunday she went to church and |kitied, but Smith rep fo"; that gy eg ys one or pre each 4ay.\ taught her Sunday-school class. |they had gone up th y and ‘or the pleasure of maintaining &/ arose earnestly she read from the aped into a large bh of Det royal family, the United KeeOm | vipturee = uhow that death is bet . but that if the hog were kijled Cracks roger expe rere | cura IN line beginning of life. So terribly |PY & dlow between the wyes th the neighvarood of 79000 weekly, | irnest was she that the children |Witches would be slain also. Smith, te pace £ Sar Pot even Sundays) row away, and clasped trembling |Under Detter's instructs geen ing exghuded the hog on the head with a club. [hand togeth ; ‘The Prince of Wales does not have gre tee lessons? end she told the | TH how was tied and Detter the privilege of franking his mai,| omen! ol } and his stampts, stationery, and telegrams cost him $5000 per annum. ‘The maids of honor in attendance upon Queen Victoria receive an an- nual allowance of $25060, but nearly the entire amount i# spent tm drew make: bille; je an unwritten but mapdatory regulation of the court that the same drese shall pot appear more than twice In the royal presence. The total cost to Russia of the im- die, The children began to ory. Mra. Rrooks quitted them and kissed each tear-covered face Then she went home and spent the time reading the Beriptures and in prayer, surrounded by her husband jand children. Rverything seemed all right until at 7 o'clock last night Mra, Brooks became itl, A doctor found her disease meningitis. She | died at 6 o'clock this morning. Some Honest Rats. children of the class that she would | jits mouth open with a large butet | knife. that certain portions of the hog, it eaten by any of Smith's family would cause instant death Hmith, therefore, took the head and shoulders, and Detter the rides and hame. The Smith family, at that time (last autumn), lved tn Burke county. Detter, after the fre land hog episodes, told Smith that to [be entirely rid of the witches he } would have to leave that section and advised him to go to Lincoln county Me agreed to buy & plece of land for Detter’s next statement was | Kansas COLLEGE BOYS MAKE BUTTER ®: beet, 6%; spot oa | Ftour, « . sf | cellent, PULLMAN, Waah., April The | (bakern’), Warhing ri 4.10, corn meal, “<r Jn nicety, Ibs tn 10-1b sack of the school Is ob r tiff creamery at ‘The college pays exprens- | 9-1b sacks; or age on the cream fr ax, man- | 100 Ibs tn & ufactures the butter and eahips (the butter and whey back to Colfax This wa nh for the creamery, which getw an excellent quatity of butter without laber or t, but tt te the way in which cream for the use of the school can be obtain ed. Many fMattering compliments have been passed upon the quatity of the butter and cheese made by the school by those who have used thone producta. GUARDING THE BANKS. Precaution Taken to Insure the Of all the queer animals which |him, charging 82 commission, and tn | i RS man has found, there are none more|* few days appeared with a deed | Watchman’s Vigilence. ‘lourious than a kind of rat found In | from himself to Smith, in which $240] Some people think that time-locks, The Japanese pay dearly for the}. Rocky Mountains. Though for | Waa named as the price of the land. | burglar alarms, and Pleasure of having & mikado rule! , jong time well known to trappers, |*aying that he had bought it from | windows, with & watchman awake over them, something: like $2,900,000), i." uniy tately that any one has| William Baker, wha would take no lor asleep inside and the police out ® year, and once upon « time it Was) udied these busy little fellows, |less. Smith, therefore, paid him the |side, might afford protection In @ crime, punishable with death. even) sitnough called a rat, this little |$200. Later he discovered that Det-|pienty for a bank. A Visitor In a to mention the name of Bis majesty. |, vimai is larger than a common rat, | ter had paid only $175 for the tand| district messenger office the other The funeral of President Pex iin a body eight inches long. It is it is alleged, ewindied him | day found that bank authorities do Faure of France cost the govern-| 2"... pretty creature, With @ soft ‘This led to the suit for [not hold to this opinion leray fur and a squirrel-tike tall, expended. even in France. for such | asiiy tamed, and a delightful pet thing without putting something in jite place. ‘Two young women, camping in the | mountaina, left the lid of their bis- Leult bow off one night. In the morning all the biscuits were gone, and the box was filled chips, scraps of leather, sticks, bones, dried beans—in fact. every- The Civil Court and Land Of. | nine erarabte near st baad. ve au fice Decide Differently. | sirut nen. more agi tiful nest, sometimes two feet in Nez Perce farm. Levi Dixon {# con- Bcd hy coanty Jat eve wine ATES ADVANCED Freight rates between San Fran- over him. . He shot and probably | fatally wounded Ollie Linke. a4 -isey and coast ports have been ad- vanced 26 cents per ton, and a fur- ightiy wounded Alvin Linke. The aftray took place on the home- | ther increase is expected. The rate stead the title to which Is in dispute. | on ¢reight to Honolulu has also been ‘The case has been in the courts for | inoregsed 2% cents, making the rate lam every ton of const freight $4.2 OVER A FARM. — some time, and & contest is now | pending before the land office, Dix-| saa ptenolulu $6.75 on won ‘tp the courts and had the) ‘ne reason for the increase ts said Links family elected by the sheriff, /to be owing to the scarcity of ships = on fe bpm ails | Rossension-| at the Golden Gate city, and also on Alvin Linke, father of the boys shot. Dixon plowed and fenced part ot wo laree Yearly all of the service- the land thy Pas Einkes on able vessels have been put on other Thursday started to seed the plowea |"°"'** land, when Dixon met them at the ww gate and ordere dthem awas, The» |Seranium as a Winter Plant The geranium te still our best winter flower plant for general cul tivation. It may be “common,” but it te none the worse for that. It will flourish where many other plants do not, and its brilliant blossoma wil! brighten up the window as effective- }iy as those of the chrysanthemum. | Plants from which flowers are de- sired next winter should be started now. I am aware that an impres- sion prevails that geraniume for the winter should be started the team forward. Dixon then be- an shooting. Three bullets took effect in the body of Ollie Linke, who was driving. Alvin Linke Jumped from the wagon and rushed et Dixon, when the latter fired again, and Alvin received a bullet through his arm. Oie Linke was hurried to the nearest physicians, where he w given prompt medical attendance. It is feared his wounds will prove fatal Dizon was arrested and /summer, but this ts wrong. Late bound over for trial, ball being fi jstarted plants are never satisfactory ed at $2000. They will be small and have but two eee Jor three branches at most—general- VENTILATED SHOES. lly but one—consequently but very dibaiaies ilittle flowering surface. Planta be- a m in the early spring can be A Now Patent Which Keeps the frown into fine specimens by next winter, with an abundance of blos Feet Perfectly Healthy. |sorm points, if trained as advised A shoe that breathes is the newest |ahove. Put the young planta from invention in hygienic foot lthe cutting dish into small pots at account of the freight traffic being | during the | } Montreal genius, John ©. first—never into large ones if you is the inventor. jwant them to do well and shift) Mr. Kennedy says that the chrome them to larger ones as their roate or mineral tannages of leather, | Mi the olf ones. They will require which have almoat entirely disptac- | about three shifts during the sea. | embesalement HELD THEIR FIRST MEETING CHENEY, Wash.. April 24.—The new board of trustees of the Cheney state normal school held their first formal meeting Friday in the norm al building. J.J. Browne was elect ed temporary chairman ant J & | Alien temporary secretary. The per manent organization of the was postponed. The action « old board in re-electing Pr W. B. Turner as principal Rose M. Rice Turner as t the training department was approv ed by the aceeptance of the last minutes of the old board He Got the Job. A boy once applied for a situation. “We don't like lazy boys here." said the manager, “Are you fond ot work?” ir,” responded the boy, look other straight in the face aren't you? Well, _" maid “There ain't an: dogredly. ‘Oh, yes, there are. «a dozen of that kind be the boy We have half this morn ing to take the place we have Hew da you know they are? asked the boy “They told me 4 “So could I, but I'm not a tar and the lad said it with such an air of convineing energy that he was engaged at once. Kipling’s Error. l.wrote to Kipling soon after, tell ing him that a man who could write as he cc id should go home to Eng- | « ‘The visitor noticed when he enter- #4 the office that the manager seem- hea to be watching the clock with * teotleitude. Without any warn- ling the young man Jumped up from hin desk, grab d hie hat and dash ed out The stranger's curtosity wan aroused and he waited until the manager came back | “What was the matter?” he asked. “The bank watchman was tosting me.” he said, and then went on te jexplain the system. At every hour land half hour the watchman inside [the bank pushed @ button that rang a bell in the me office. Thin button was at the rear of the bank At a quarter before and a quarte every hour he touched @ but n front of the bank that i in gn entirely different measenger office ‘The manager of the telegraph office took down the minute when the bell bell at the back of the bank failed to ring within fve min utes of the hour or half-hour, tt wa: }the duty of the tnanager of the om }to make all epeed to the bank. Wher he got there he must actually the watehman and speak to him it within five minutes after reaching the bank he did not see the watch- n, he was to call the police. If |x the manager failed to go to the bank stly when it was his duty to the watchman pf report | elving a reward there object of having the bank con neeted with two me nger offices |was to lensen the possibility of col on between the watchmen and managers But this was not all. An outside I watchman was also employed H |wan the regular special watchman who was employed by the property where of the neighborhood. Tt was his duty to meet the inside watch nan at the front door every hour, cnd then go to the back door and [meet the inside man. Then there , as burglar alrms on every | Guatemaia, 2c; ground coffee, 160) 2c; Lion, 100e, $11.75; 65a, $11. Be, | nega, Monday quile day eonatuft, caulifiower expected on the in due fe dealers for deliv this afterno: The following pric to the produ Mo T but and ing — Went atre he market in bi plenty of « anparagus, ete Han Francisco, ¥ mare bein r by the round to! yt wf" MARKET ‘QUOTATIONS in of bbager in which x of looal ta on dock or In the ear at Seattle, whe $96 shor May Hantern 4%e drensed, live, Hides, Nene cows, le Oats, ohicken s16. sget alfalfa, eee — Strictly fresh ranch, 1f@ stor large, 4¢ Petts pound, ra, Frei 22q8s “hick ize. Chotee beef cattle, c “0 dr large, @ amall 66. nd Wool — Heavy round waited steers, over 60 pr sound, all weights, bulls and oxen, (be; Te; calves, per pound, Be; green hides, lens than salte ary jsummer deer, winter low, dee ", M@IM\e. zl 26; feed, barley, $19; sound, $7 per rh ranch, 10 ens, live, 19@ enned, 64) amall, & pound salted dry hides, onethird eull per pound, 26: ary, Quotati Te; ata m4; bran, ton; Washington timothy, $11.60 Mile; 1940; %e; calves, » per} le papery Breen : Bastern Warbington , Western Washington wool, ; dirty or timber burned, 100; tal- The jobbing quotations today were an follows: Sugar Qobbing)—Golden C, tn boa, | %e xtra C, in bbls, 4%e; powdered, | dry granulated, Bes od cube, Sie; | | Geubinay Patent hex. $3.25; Novelty A, $300; Star corn im $2.76; Caltfornia brands, etlow, $1.80 per 100 white, $1.65 per 100 lbs in 10-1b sacks; buck wheat flour, pure, $3.50 per 90 ibs in per 100 Ibe in 10-1b snack: Der 100 ibn tn 6-Ib sacks; ateel-cut oat meal. era! sacks; | $2.25 per 100 Ibe in 10-1b sack penn, 100-1b sacks, 82.50; 3 per 100 tbe in 25-Ib box $2.50 per 100 iba in 10-1b sacks m flour, $1.76 per 199 Ibe in 10-1b whole wheat four, $1.85 per 100 Ibe tn 10-1b sacks; rye meal, $2.10 per 100 Ibe in 10-1b sacks; rye flour, pli split ' 5 pear! barley, 94.25 per 100 Ibe in sacks; fakes, pe Wheat | whe Th-ib boxes, $2.89 per bbl in &-Ib sacks: meal facks. per bbl Wheat, 14 per DbI In W-Ib eacks: ateet | cut oat meal, $4.40 per bbi tn 5-Ib) white, $2.90 per bbl in buckwheat flour, pur in marke, $2.10; flakes, $2.00 per case of 26 2-1b | fancy rolled oats, $2.85 bale, in Ib sacks; corn me per yellow, | © Gacat corn ry ib aches ‘aack®; graham four, $2.90 per bb! in| Oth am whole wheat flour, $3 per) «ap. m bbl in S-1b sacks; rye meal, $3.75 per bbl in &-lb sacks; rye four, 4 per! bbt: fanoy rolled outs, 180 Ibs net bbls, | $5.45; fancy rolied oats, %-Ib sac! rolled oats, per case, | $2.75, Coffee (jobbing)--Green — Mocha, | pert, 29g a10; Java, per Ib, Er; Conta Rica, choice, per Ib, Roasted—Arbuckle's, in 100-Ib cases, | ‘t., $11.75; @-1b cases, per ewt, pe Butter — Ranch 10@120; », faney “Ib cases, per ewt, £ ee tins, per Ib, 6c; sack, S4c; Aden Mocha, 37%; Caracola, te; 1S@19e. | 11.93; fancy | dairy, in squares, 15@1Tc; Washing. | ton Creamerios, 1-4b prints, 246@2#c, Eastern, cme om gin, 26@26. Cheese ¢ ~ Native Wash | ington, ule: Kastern, 1240 130; California, ie. Gobbing) — Strictly fresh ranch, 180, Comb honey — Calfforpia, 124@ ie: Poultry—Dressed chickens, 15@16¢; | live chickens, 14c; live turkeys, 4@ | Ibe; dressed geese, 13@14c; dressed | strained, te. turkeys, 16@1Te. Wuts. Walnuts, per M@1ie; hickory, The; popeern, 4c per Ib. Hay, Grain and Feed. 4@20c; almonds, peanuts, 180; cocoanuts, per dozen », Imona: Te; pine, Hay Gobbing) — Puget Sound, per ». $169; Eastern Washington tim- othy. S19@14; alfalfa, $19. Rarley }Corn feed meal Feed shorts, $30@22 Oats Gobbing)- ‘er ton, $28, Rolled, $27. Whole, Wheat, middlings, $18; Se per Ib; lOc. | 10%e; hams, chopped dairy chopped feed, $16; Fresh Meat (obbing)—Cow beet, cor beef, 8c per mutton, wether, 9¢ per Ib; pork, Tie | per Ib; veal, large, 8o per Ib; small, 22.50; cracked, per ton, $22 oll cake meal, $21; s21@23; feed, bran, seed Prices. Provisions (Jobbing)--Hama, lar, small, sacks, 12@14c, Eastern black walnuts, 100; pecans, 12@ 130; Hiberta, Me; | moft shell, $20¢p22 Ie; | $17; oats, Ib; bacon, 11; dry salted sides, 7Kc. Lard (jobbding)—Mome-made, per ib, Ke: White Star, Se; Coin Special, | S\c; lard, compound, terces, 6140; | Rex, 8%: ih Fish Gobbing)-—Talibut, S@%e; salmon trout, 12440; | Mounders, 34; solen, 40; rock cod, be; | 12g@ be: shrimps, 100; shad, 7 aimelt, Columbia river 6@7c; smelt, 4@5; herring, 3@40; town rod, te; oysters, Olympia, $2.50 per cack, $1.80 per gallon; clams, $1.60 per sack; Dungeness crabs, live, $1.10 cooked, $1.20. Potatoes Rurbanks, $97@40; Island Barly Rose 296 \ima land, to London, where fame could! door and vault door be won; but he replied, in a char-| ‘The stranger went to a bank off teristic letter which may be pub r and asked him whether all these lished some day nutions were ssary for the “You ought to know better at your ction of robh time o' life than to knock a t for detection,” he sald, “but youngster off his lege in this way.|for prev ‘ The burgiar who How do you expect any one will be | tries to break into this bank at night able to hold me after your letter? |j« insan@. He has not the slightest “Would you be astonished if I told | chance tn the world, and he knows you that I leok forward to nothing |\; Then, too, we are sure no fire \but.an Indian journalist's career? | can gain any headway in the build Why should 17 My home's here: my |ing while the watehm: are kept ® people are out here; all the friends T phoroughty ake Of course, we know are out he and all the § sre fireproof, theoretically, but we terents T have are out h \ do not even trust that.” should I go home? Ar put up rhyme and the market Is Retr ibution. full of boys who could undersell me {terature red in the villa idon A villager, having UNDER 7 THE MISTLETOE. property consulted with bh » where they «bh Md hide Ly oe mon other the a The Conductor Was Dared and | cise to place it in infant's cot, Didn't Take the Chance. ee sie neseide tent ke tH A car on the northeast electric lager had the money In his py jogeing along comfortably o ight|sion, broke Into his houne ‘ last week. The weata were all full|being Inturrupted by .the erying of and two men were standing There |the child, carried the cot bedily out is a Jolly Christmassy feott ir leat the inmate din the alr and ever one wa in turbed, and foll their The about ttle things, It is astonish-|[ mother, ho woke up, and ing how free and friendly atrar r heartr the « # orles, rushed out become at Christmas time. If alwith he husband. The robbers neighbor's bundle of turkey legs dig | mean wer continuing their one In the ribs there is no complaint, | sear house, when the build and the inconvenienced one amiles jing ¢ burying the three mar amiably and node when the turh suders in its ruins —Calro Al-Mokat lege are removed and an apology is |tam — | hes nh OPLEASUR This was the state of affairs when ron ns nt . car stopped and @ fat and cider-|suy Clipper Bicycles, For exercise ly negro woman with a basket on her F. M. Spinning, agent, | ne old-fashioned bark tannages, son, until they are In seven-ineh given us finer and more dur- | pots, wisic ill be large enough for votwear at the expense of t lany year-old plant to bloom tn. Ger- aniume bloom better when thelr Magen, representing prob-| roots are somewhat cramped for ably 99 per cent. of the total, are! room than they do if given larger said to be waterproof and at-| pote, pots are conducive to} proof, but they are also practically |the production of branches rather airproof, like a rubber overshoe than flowers. During the summer The result is, that the moisture keep all buds picked off. It In folly generated in the shoe from perapir- | to allow a geranium to bloom at will] ation stays there, cannot be evap-|all eummer and expect to keep It orated, and hecomes absorbed into | do » ail winter. It will not do the insole of porous leather, and in oy it has exhausted itself by its to the center sole, or customary | summer's work, and It must have a Mling of k du cardboard, or resting spell. Therefore grow some ferap leather. Thene act as geraniums each year expressly for sponge or blotting paper would In| winter and t depend on the retention of moisture and plants m the n, a8 many via, becoming the breedingplace of for your winter flow Har myriads of disease germs, which act! per's Baz ’ upon the foot an an Irritant poison - The inventor how devised a elev A litle English girl died the other air-pumping aetion which ia part of \day from a peculiar clreumetance the shoe iteelf. ‘The air-purr Having fallen and burt her knee, tion ix effertod by the uae of a col-|eho applied a plece of postage stamp lapsible center sole of. pure rubber, paper to t ind, which Induced between the leather insole and the blood poisoning, in turn resulting in Outaols, cccupying the place of the | pneumonia, which caused her death, | i! ver skin onions, $18 $25490 per ton; 40; an Isla a ¢ ‘Jor nd orem Whit beets, ine PIS natly ton; per Yakima silver skin, fancy. ~ White River Yak sil Ore- $1.25 per sack; pat per sack; rutabagas eo turnips, 65¢ per foe 240; parsnips, %o@Sl py uliflower, %e@$1 per dozen; green peas, 6c; artichokes, | Goo per dozen; garlic, 90; celery, California asparagus, 4@5e per Ib rhubarb, 3@4%e per 1b; tomatoes, : per ease, seedling, Frull Green Fruit (obbir s2@2.50; lemons, $2.60@4; per be box boxem, $1.50; 2be navels, apples, fancy, cooking apples, AnAnaR, neh; California black figs, ) — Oranges, $2.75@ per 20-1b cartoons, $1.26; Smyrna Ib; new datos, 740; | nweet apple ‘ yo vor eats moc| Pavitic Coast Steamship Company pueden ond Building Material : Cs 5 fir San Francisco Logs—Hupertor quality, per M, No. 1 fir, 867; merchantable fr, $4.00@) | tha ‘domibaiiv's 67 1 codar, $6@7; common, per| | out ean M, #5; spruce logs, $6.60; codar| | ; Walle, shingle bolts 2.09. H Acard ir Lumber—Nough, $8; thick fin stile 8 -. vis inh, wurt one or two aides, %, 19! port ‘Townsend and V March and 12 inches wide, $15@20, lenxths| 6, 10, 15, 20, 90, April 4 , 19, 2, 2 to 16 feet; special lengths, b0e per| 29, May 4, and every fifth day there- M extra; one-inch finish, $19@14; all arter, Leave vertical gr 4 per M extra . oe Dring, dremed and matched, $17@| San Francisco ; stock boards, s-Inch, $9@18; 10-| For Seattle 10 a, m., via Victoria and h. HOM 18; 12-inch, $18@19. Wene-| Port Townsend, March % 7, 12, 27, ing, No, d'or 6-inch finish, #9; No. 2,| April 1, 6, 11, 16, 26, May 1, and $9; V or channel rustic or dro; every fifth day thereafter ing, welmht 2000 Ibs, S11@14, Wie vin FOR ALASKA ber joists and scantiings, rough.| phe ot it steamships Cottage S4.00m@16, HI BD Weis, 4 City, Clty Topeka and Al-Ki leave * Box boar¢ 2-inch and Seattle 9 a. m. March 1, 6, 11, 16, 26, #15, | 41, April 6, 10, 16, 20, 25, 20, May 6 Washington Red Cedar Lumber and every fifth day thereafter Rough, $#8@9; bevel siding, weight 70) or further formation obtain Ibm, $14€715.00; ceiling, weights Nos. 1,! gorg 2 and & inch, 1300 Ibs; Now. 1, 2, ‘The company reserves the right ta and 4, we-inch 700 Ibs, $1327; wains-| change, without previous notice, coting $0014; runtic, $2528; *A*! steamers, sailing date, and hours of gles, $1.25; standard shingle, | gating l-inch flniah, 12, 14 and 16 ¥ J TROWBRIDGE, 4; thick fintsh, $28@36; cedar! puget ga. fupt., Ocean Dk, Seattle, em, 7, & 9 and 10 feet, $24630;| Uptown ticket office, 68 First Vig plekets, $12 ttle; Goodall, Perkins & Co. Gen, Kiln-dried, $1 in advance of green. | Agents, Ban Francisco. Droyage, We. A shell fish of the Mediterranean Washington & Alaska has the power of epinning a viscid ik, hich, in Sielly, de in a vny hmastet "the wi ie, STEAMSHIP COMPANY. spun by the shelifigh for the purpor of attaching ile to the rocks. This Alaska Lightning Express |, and cardea Salle from Vester Whart Tuesday, April 25, at 10 PM. FOR -—— Skagway and Dyed DIRECT ent Saitin ay Sand 15 G. F. THORNDYKE, Agent. one Main 470. = 116 YESLER WAY MEN'S AND BOY'S tet CLOTHING. nro Pa Empire Line Boston Clothing House : | 1431 Becond Ave, - Near Pike All Water Ronte to Alasta. | | Furst Salling Wo St. Michael on or About June 15,1899 Own © Only This Week, Sale Ends Saturday. Remember w Are Allowin: Ticket Office, #2 First ave “Phone Main 117 Daily Arrive Everett. 645 | she Vemmam' So te Connecting with Compan: Fioet of Kiver Steamer | Dawson City And All Intermediate Potnts on the Ppok ene: Mow: #t. Paul, ¢ vaste | JAPAN-AMERICAN LINE Carrying U. & Mail to all Oriental Points | “Riojun Maru” Will Sail, For Japan, China end All Asiatic Ports About May i7, Yukon River. EMPIRE LINE 607 First Ave. « - SEATTLE Or to any Agent of tho Interna- thom BONNEY & STEWART Funeral Directors and Kinbalmers | Parlors, Third Ava and Columbia st [al Telephone Main 1% Seattle, Wash. | IT HURTS! IT HURTS! The installment plan and bargain counter: doctors cry for help. Cheap doctors and cheap medicines, like cheap labor, cheap clothes, cheap shoes, cheap groceries, mean a total. lass to the purchasers. Honest doctors use only the highest grade of reme- dies. The best that money can buy. Charge only fair prices, and complete cures are the result. The of The incompetent “so-called specialist"’ and slanders, The cowardly ‘‘so-called specialist becomes ami assassin and tries the knife in the dark, All Chronic “All men seek happiness, without health.” highest good of secret Success is Success. whines stands without a peer in his pro+ treating with assured . Diseases which is impossible Specialties are demanded for the suffering humanity. fession, That thousands suffer for a series of years (and waste a life designed useful) who, with proper treatment might not only be restored to themselves, but contribute to the happiness of others, is toa ident a fact to require argumentive proof. o man can b ne expert in every branch of the HEALING ART, hence specialties are demanded for the highest good of suffering human- ity, and thus {t is that progressive minds in this country and Europe are devoting their best ene s to the study of spectal diseases, and to them patients are looking for retief in all cages that Rave baffled the skill of general practitioners. The time is not far distant—in fect the day is dawning even now, when every, legitimate physician will de vote his attention to one or more particular branches, or, in othe words, will have his specialty in medicine or surgery. A physician who is constar attending to acute and febrile diseases at the beside cannot have an enlarge nee in the treatment of chronic disease; nor can anyone who remains in his office treating chronic diseases exclusively, have any experience of value tn treating Ccute cases, These are axioms or self-evident truths that require neither argument nor demonstration, Now, while MAYO Is willing to acknowledge that he who confined himself to the treatment of fevers ar aful in such cases than b patment of s of years. diseases should be «8 leave te claim whith he has di he t mor ke voted himse Medical suec superiority in the t if for a Etiquette MAYO, standing upon strict medical etiquette towarde hie medical brethren never @ a himeelf to speak ill of the fraternity nor offs clously engage in dissuading a patient from » vice from any physician, who may be his ce. This being untry MAYO hold that any man has a ht to consult he pleases and think for himself, and form his own conclusions. Hence, if a patient consults him and does not feet disposed to take his treatment, he does hot volunteer gratuitous advice as to whom he should or should not consult ‘There is too much of this ungentlemanly conduct among the profess sion, but from which MAYO intends to hold himself, in the future ag in the past, entirely aloof. MAYO has decided to loca rmanently In Seattle, and in the near future Intends establishing the finest and most complete sanitarium on the coast Y spital Is at hand, ‘The location has been decided upon, and the plans are in the hands of an architect MAYO'S English Remedies are the latest, best and most expensive known to modern therapeutic His offices are at presont at the Occts fental Hotel j CONSULTATION FREE. Don't Wait, But Call Today ais ile ial abo lai Ao aAlehbla Re Adin, 8