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am Panama-Has Filed Vigorous Protest an phall } re deal e MINISTER OBALDA SAYS GovERNOR GMVERAL DAVIE, EX- | CEEDED HIS AUTHORITY—WANTS NEW TREATY | ° e | ¥ | My Seriops News Ass'n.) land not onty the afpension of = r na, but WASI@ETON, D.C. Now @ ‘ peace Be te The toxt of the protest 1 by t @ he Qights | © Republi ’ ‘ cm r protect | an © Prevent ad . a ° the conal . oe e SY | BRAKEMAN KILLED ON THE Washing It js tn tb oe the NORTHE PACIFIC RAIL © , we Y bata atrip| BY s Jay, and under 4 | ROAD August 2 r Obalda| TP at the] charges General Da or of « tablish-| 9 the zon , warra A usurpa t¢ United . and violation of} States ally in| (Special to The Star) the Hay-Varitta | comme ma, Hel | ra that Davie pro-| closes ¥ appeal to the | BUCODA, Nov, 6-5 Herry le Mor-| Suntenable assump-| tary to nd the objectionable | ion. of Tacoma. a we o tion that the UnttedeStates acquired | regulatt aposed by Davis until | we well Eneqwe Brake~) absolute sovereignty over the canal | a and satiefactory ag man on the Northern Pacifie rail strip mer be reached by tt This position he assalls vigorously’ vents, road, was killed la night by o freight train near the Bucoda sta ‘ ‘DUG-O0UT PE TE’ ’ SA A} tion, Morton's body, cut im two, | wae fou on the track by (fe crew e of his train. evening at 9:15, Morton had been on top of the train leaving the station. Soon he was missed by the Jother members of the crew and the PROPHET SPRINGS UP IN EAST ERN WASHINGTON.WITH A &0- | train « + i : nein om: reh brought to Mght the muttl- LUTION OF THE PROBLEM OF HOW TO BRING ON THE | ated body tying on the wack. Ap- parently Morton had missed his MILLENIUM footing on top of the care and had fallen under the wheels. The body e will be sent to Tgooma to be pre- ° pared for burial (Special to The Star) man when he lies \s perfectly aware Morton was about 53 years of age . of the fact that he lies, and that QM) ang pad been employed by the COLFAX, Washb., Now 5.—Dowile/ understanding of these conditions| and others of the newer brand of) wiil result in the abolishment Of | was well known on the division, He | proghets have a rival in the perso®/jies, and from then on truth Will/jeaves a family amu ’ of “Dug-Out Pete,” herald of the/ reign universal and the millenium | pacific ave millenium and apostle of the truth, ‘whose real name is Henry Blot and claims Roslyn, Wash., at his home. “Dug-Out” was in this gection| lately and dug into the people with a lengthy tale of his search for) truth and the final discovery of the squrce of this much abused and lit-/ tle used article. Like a true prophet | he began bis researches carly— 20 Jong years ago— and, according to his story, he is now 26. Naturally his was no common childhood, for at the early age of 6 he percelved will come. Self-satisfied with those | deductions he has written several) tracts and essays and like all true! prophets has started to write | biography of bis life im order that it may serve as an example to the undefiled and be preserved for the veneration of the coming genera- tions “Dug-Out” said he would go from here to Roslyn, where more cred- ence will be given his words than was given here. At Roslyn he will also do a few stunts such as curing that there waa something wrong/|the insane, giving a child the un-| 4 with the world and he immediately | derstanding of # man and so on. | = inept wien oft wes ‘XK mous began to look for the cause and to/“Dug-Out” is smooth shaven, has| PIA. - atonntad : oman. seek to rectify it. The search was|dark hair and brown eyes and is | 4" and his wifi rand Mrs. continued for 20 long years and not until a few weeks ago did he dis- cover that nature is truth. Filled with joy and excitement over the discovery he set out from Portland, thence to Pendleton and then to Colfax and here, being fully con- vinced, he decided to thare his dis- covery with the world. | “Dug-Out's” theory is that ail/ men are liars, that cach man knows that the other is a liar, that every ENBS IN TRAGEDY HONEYMOON CULMINATES IN ATTEMPTED MURDER AND SUICIDE about 6 feet tall, He wore a brown | hat, corduroy coat and vest and! overalls and looks itke a man able| to do a good day's work tn’ the field if induced to quit teaching the} wicked world the truth. He is a smooth talker and seems pretty | well informed, quoting many of the | standard authors in advancing his theory. While here he distributed promiscuously one of his essays on “The Millentum, utes later Braman's lifeless body was found on the floor of the res- taurant. He had shot himself throtgh the head. Mrs. Braman was removed to the Seattle General hospital last night. | DEB OF EXPOSURE From exposure due to a train) wreck, Mra. Malinda Orr, mother of | Mrs. H. L. Rochelle, of 1115 Seventh lavenue west, died yesterday wt that [residence. She was unable to sur-| } Vive a cold contracted at that time. |The wreck occurred near New Or-| leans. The passengers were conr- | pelled to put up with terribie hard-/ ships for many hours and Mrg. Orr | never got over her experience, but | ~ (Special to The Star.) BULLETIN.—Mrs. Jas. C. Braman died at the eSattle General hospital at 12:30 o'clock this afternoon, of 1 who Vy | remains to be seen, oon r ampate wid be judged by the pail haracter of the two mer m he t ba In 60 Northern Pacific for a long time and HUSBAND AkD WIPE ARE RUMMBG FOR THE SAME OFFICE pecial te The Star.) TIFFIN, Ohio, Nov. 5—In Betts- ville, a little village noar here, there in a situation that might have been Henry Fry, are candidates for mem- bership on the village school board on opposite tickets. This has di- vided the Fry house against itself politically, but as yet no family strife has resulted, and the cam- paign is being carried on in a good natured way. It ls impossible for both husband and wife to be elect- od, an the suecesa of one means thi defeat of the other. Both hare ap- DELAY IS | QUEEN i ANNOYING ANNE DRIVEWAY COMPLAINT AMON@ EFFECTED CAUSES PEOPLE The delay in the paving of Queen the of a veing made to at ita yunetl pde his Anne driveway comp urd meeting tht man ( ton wa catine orning by The lator onslaught on the ataly of after th number d a tions for extensions of time mgde by other contractors by gaily r ferring them to Assittant City Ba gincer wott Dr, Crichton sceeed: ed in impr he upon Zhe members of the board the seriousness of tae case to whieh bh 1, with the result that the decided to hold a m f r@iative to the mat ter next Wednesday Morning. At that time the advisability of taking th act away from thi ontracte Markey, will be considered, Assistant ineer Joft rey having b n instructed to bring in @ report on the matter at that meeting. DP, Crichton declared that the delay was causing a loss of $500 a day, The fact that the driveway is the only thoroughfare on which heavy loads cgn be brought @ the people living on the plateau, was pointed out by him, He stated that to take fuel and other merchan@ise up the hill at the present tle, four and six-horse teams were regular ly employed to assist in wagons up Queen Anne avenue. At the present rate of progres Dr. Crichton said, the present com dition would last eight or nine months. In a week he was’ positive that Queen Anne driveway would be blocked by a sea of mud, He thought immediate action was nee essary, averring that the board shoudl show Markey how to do the , we h 4 as it had stewed Contractor Erickson how to do it on Second avenue The board dectded to tn@atignte the matter, bus referred a number of applications of contractors for @xtension of time to Engineer Scott with a langh. The contractors had their excrtses penned briefly on the printed forma which the board has gotten up for the purpose. So eure. however, were they that ¢he boart would never refuse their requests that they never even took the trouble to personally appear before. the board to explain their delays. The only excuses offered by any of the contractors were that there was too much rain, too little ma terial, or that the other fellow wag to blame. William Stanley explain: od his delay tn grading Linden ave- nuo by allegigg that the city in spector had falled to report the fact that he had finished in time. Stfr ratt & Goetz apologized for the de- lay In the construction of the First avenue south water main by claim peared in public speeches and Mra. | Fry t# conducting bcr campaign in |a way that proves her no tyro at the game of politics. It is a matter of conjecture as to which will win out, bat whichever way the election foes, the Fry family will have something to do in educational mat tera. #0 interesting simélarity in the -situation to that pictured by Hoyt in “A Contented Woman” is that the whole netghborhood ts left to figure out the motives of the hus- band and wife.ig running against each other. It ts understood that the candidacy of the wife sprang out of a tiff with hor spouse, Whether or not the story will run parallel to the plot of the celebrat- ed play to the end ls a matter that ut the odds are op on the election of Mra. Fry and it ts not unlikely that she will de- the wounds inflicted by her hus- band at Bremerton yesterday. Her son and’daughter in Ohio ha notified of her death. BREMERTON, Nov. 5.—J. W. Braman, proprietor of the Delmén- feo restaurant, tn this city, yester- day shot and fatally injured his wife and then killed himself. The shooting occurred on the main street of the city and was witnessed by a number of people. | Braman and his wife were married in Wisconsin about seven weeks ago, and, immediately upon thelr marriage they removed to Bremer- ton, where Braman bought the Delmonico restaurant. It was a losing ventere and thie, it is stated, made him quarrelsomeand irritable. Family quarrels followed. They cnlminatel. yesterday, when Bra- man beat his wife unmercifully. She ran out onto the street and he, with his revolver in his hand, t-llowed her. He fired one shot at her. The bullet entered just above the hip and penetrated per intestine, in- flicting what is believed to be a mortal wound. Braman returned to the restaur- ant and about six minutes later an- eather shot was beard. A few nsin- NOTICE STEAMER FLYER Change of Time. 115 and 11:50 A. M. 3:15 and 7:00 P. M. IN EFFECT NOV 7th, 1904, PHONES Main 176. Ind, 176, been | was an invalid from that time on. | She was 73 years of age. The body Will be shipped east for interment. BAKER 6QES EAST Business {ri connection with the organization of the Seattle-Tacoma Power company, the successor of the Snoualmle Falls & White River Power company, has called Charles H. Baker, the prime mover in the reorganization, out of the city, He left.yqsterday for Dayton and Pitts- burg, Says Parke Lied | ROOSEVELT ISSUED STATE- MENT BRANDING DEMOCRAT- IC STORIES AS FALS® (By Serippe News Assn.) WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 5 President Roomevett Inst night in- |mued a statement over his own stg- nature branding the statement of | Judge Parker to the effect that Chairman Cortelyou of the nation! | republican committee and Pre: Roowevelt had sold’ out to the great |corporate interests of the country “unqualifiedly and atroctously The statement consists of some- thing more than a thousand words, and in it the presider® severly crit- | Jetses Judge Parker and his methods an well as those of the democratic campelgn managers, He lays the charges Airectly at thé door of Judge Parker, #@4 in another paragraph of [the statement stigmatizes them wicked falsehoods.” Continuing, he “1 atn content that Mr, Parkes or at her husband, and fn this case she widl have to do to close the| jal | matter strictly according to Hoyt | will ba to resign In favor of her de feated better half. SETTLE THE STRIKE | (iy Beripps News Ass'n) FALL RIVER, Mass., Nov. 6. }After a week's effort prominent} | business men have arranged a con |ference between the cotton milt jowners and representatives of 26,000 |operatives, now on strike. The owners and strikers meet today to make @ final settlement of the dif- ficulty W. T. Thomas, of 311° Federal ay- enue, was awakened carly this | morning by « thief who was oper- lating in his home. Valuable ab stracts and other papers, besides clothing, was carried off. The burg: Jar made his escape and it was so ark that Thomas could not see the | man. An entrance was effected by | forcing a bedropm window. Tho | matter was reported to the police. Other burglaries are reported from | Seventh avenue and Olive street. | City Detective Adams is jnvesti- j=ating the reports. KELSO, Nov. 5.—Albert EB. Mead | addressed two republican meetings here last night. © | cai , “A Look Is All We Ask. | The quatities and prices of our | men's underwear are not equaled jin the city, Just enll—tt will pay you. Brooks & Co., 1331 Ind ave. o ampere Save Ten. Save the ten per cont. & day and Monday papers. Miles & Piper Co, ing that they had been obliged to send ‘way back east to get some gate valves. The excuse was 0 palpable that the members of the beard could not supprees a hearty laugh. The procrastination of other con- éractors conseted with the work and lack of sewer pipe was ascribed by George W. Walker to be the source of his trouble. The lapse of time over that séipulated th the paring of Queen Anne avenue was laid by the Barber Asphalt company to the Seattle Electric company and to sewer construction. C. J. Cable said that private persons had delayed him on his contract on Bighth ave- nue by constructing bulkheads. None of the applications have been sent to Mayor Hallinggr for approval. The applications are not as numerous as they were a few months ago. This is not because the contractors are hurrying more, but because the board is allowing! heen interrogated as to his inten-| them more-time for the completion of thelr contracts. The board has alxo diminished the size of the pen- alties that are supposed to be Lm posed for delay. ‘ in his complaint against the Seatdle Electric company te the effect that it had tot performed its part of an alleged contract for planking Mas- sachusetts street, and tabled the communication The board awarded to Stirratt & Goets the contract for constructing the Thirty-third avenue uewer. Bids were opened for the grading of Sum- mit avenue and the construction of concrete walks on Nineteenth ave- nue and Nineteenth avenue north. A petition asking for the paving of Olympic place with asphalt signed by George N. Gilson and others, was presented to the board ALL ARE HAPPY Superior Judge Taliman thi morning granted the following l- vorees Francis Davie from Mrs. Elizabeth Davis, on round of cruelty; Mra. Mary Raynor from Joseph Raynor, on ground of deser. tion; Mrs. A. K. Flanigan from Thomgs Flanigan, on round of cruelty; Mra. Amelia Schull from Jobn G. Shull, on ground of nom- support; Mrs, Alma Meyer from Julins Meyer, on ground on non support; Mrs. Alma Turner from De Witt Turner, on ground of non- support; Mrs. Virginia Lanning from Frank W. Lanning, on ground of cruelty. WASHINGTON, Nov. Becre- migration inspectors. had} hauling) REPUBLICAN PARTY LEAgtns SAID TO HMB ovencookeo age IMA@ARTANT FACTORS | IN THE CQMPAIGN 8 ° The Strength ef the Gonservative Swerve in @> E@t From Roose ° Sam 6am Bue Dould Yoke PARce® AWD Ayes (pay the HY I. GILSGN GARBMB. Social Correspondence to the Sem tle Star ° CHICAGO, Nov. 6.—Are the man agers of Theodore Roosevelt's cam paign in for an enormous surpria party? Is the republican confidence based on false grounds? And will Alton B. Parker awake November 9 to find himself elected prowident? There are some well-post shrewd students of political affairs who answer these question the affirmative. They find that the republicans have overbooked several very im portant factors in counting thelr chances of success Moreover, strange things like this have bap pened. In 189 the republicans were taken entirely by surprise when the democratic candidates for congress were swept in, and took control of the lower house, two to one. Evem that griseled veteran of many a bard fought bettie, Uncle Joe Cannon, was numbered among the missing And he, too, was surprised There has been a general dispost- ton to see the presidential eam- paign from only one aide. This very | fact may be responsible for the apathy which ts everywhere appar. ent, and which the democrats wel eqme as making for thelr interests. If Roosevelt is defeated, the fol lowing are a few of the reasons, to- gether with some of the facts which have misled the republican man- ore In the first place republican hopes and expectations are based on the performances of the party in two national campaigns which have no points of similarity to the pres- ent one. Because Wisconsin gave 100,000 plurality for the republican electors four years fa taken as a basis for a reckoning that the atate will probably give a similar pluraly this time, or even « larger Now, matter of fact, con eonsin, and the figures of years ago are of no more account fn making a forecatt for next week than are the figures of the plural- ity by which Artatides was banished from Greees some years Cc. Con- ditions In Wisconsin are changed ‘They are #0 changed, and the party lines are so obliterated, that no man ean tell what the outcome may be. Roosevelt votes are being trade for LaFollette votes and Parker votes for Stalwarts. Hundreds and thou- sands will forget the electoral ticket | entirely in the bitternew of the lo- cal faction fight. Wisdonsin might very easily turn up with Parker | electors; and 13 electors from that ate might very easily turn the neale, There is no great certainty about | that. »Repubdlicans are basing thelr hope of carrying New York and other #tates in the vicinity on polls which assume the regularity of party lines. No one claims that each voter has |tions. ‘The managers take it for granted that a man who voted the/, | republicar ticket four years ago in- | tends to do so this fall. | "put again the calculation fails to| The board decided that Franchise | take account of the fact that there | Inspector Wheeler was away “off” | aro two conservative candidates this | yocg ltime, while there was but one be fore. Four and eight years ago all lithe conservative influence of the sntry was solidified and driven ltogether, by the ffict that the ope position candidate and platform were of a character to alarm the business interests. Every stor keeper, every owner of stock In a |railroad, every taxpayer or holder laf real estate, every employ cajlroad or big industrial combina facturer enjoying @ tin, ev tariff protect were masse the republican candidate And yet McKinley did not win by h great margin. Today these forces are not mass- ed in favor of the administration lparty. There are two conservative |oandidates, The business world is | tt alarmed at the possibility or the |prospect of democratic success. | With a republicin senate in power |the presidency for the next four yours is to be a matter of execu- | tive management anyway ldtection of Alton B. Parker would lpéhult merely in preserving the |“status quo.” There would be no | trust legislation or agitation | The forces of conservatism, as lthey might be eailed, the moral in fluence of the vast railroad systems jand of the banking and commercial | world, are divided in this campaign They are quite as willing to entrast their future for four years to the democratic party managers as to the Roosevelt-dominated republican jaby st 5 administration. Perhaps they prefer Stanford. | tary Metealf today gave out the an-/the former. Republican control of] sfome comforts and hotel conve-| nual estimates for the appropriation | ai} pranches of government gives | * combined, newly furnished, of the department of commerce and | too much power. Only hotel on American plan in | labor for the next fiseal year, They| gubtract from the republicans’! qttie. 904 Third avenue and Marion. | egnte $14,289,5 This is an|aswets half of the conservative tn- | eee |increase of more than $4,000,000! fiuchce in pol'tics, and what cer . | over the expenses of the current} tainty have @hey left? In states like! Save Ten | year, The increase provides for|New York, which went republican/ Save the ten per cent. See Sun new lighthou@s and incgpased tm- by a meager 142,000 four years ago day and Monday papers, ZC. (a loss of 120,000 over four years &% wo Pade Bt Appreciated—| De ee nee ELT M le PUDEUERPUREOUEEOTIVOEOD® | Now Jogpy, Connecticut and Whode 1@ . hi nd o are with their total |® SOME FACTS WHICH MAY TRIP THE vot@ nnd there in a working REPUBLICANS AT THE VERY LAST in the east of 227 electoral |e Their expectations are t 1 th a Vor the som that the republie- \* in 1896 and 1900, which have t « » not As] them it in | ® campaign g , B to put Colo Nevada and \* For example, the £0,000 + n plurality # ® |Montaeg {fo the democratic Mat, ® In 1900 in taken as & basin of re K. wher t condi- @ |whicd brigBage total up to 238, |® tions have entirely changed in ry @ i whicd ie on o@e vote short of d \« The republicans are basing thelr i" York and @- © denough t t of }® facent states on © majoritt rf * 4 a | Indiana and Wisconsin bs le me one conservative aidate, th nee left out of the reckoniftg, “@ ® tsm in 1900 massed bet ® votes of Indiana 7 © servatigm loans either way, it ts 1 Park ® Jor tht n#in ean be counte o hough it might be honed t tive rte ° ed e p ern, s DO * nw like New York will be nly vi- @ [ed 6 ary ali oe : amar o, Senase tat misah more than Reif wit 4 the republicans | @ | states or any of the intermountalm : Poem aig ogre wid to, Montana .» | Possibly of 2s the chances are much Sg eee ee oe ‘ @ | better for Parker than for Roose > Counting either L problem, the @ tS alia been anid, aan > ehamete are qumb ‘fetter = . [cially by the republican organs, ‘ a eS a . about the defection of the radical | S9FOOS 299 2949004 S990 OOD 44-0006000590000006606069 | Voto from the democrats: but Sob previously), what does t@¢ subtrar- (platform were on the opposite side, | about the accretion of the conserwa- tion leave? ‘The lows of 120,000 | what ab be said of this tive vote to the democrats. Amy jbetween 1896 and 1900 was the| when half, perhaps, of the cons forecast which leaves out the latter | silent falling away of the conserva-|tive infleence of the party has factor, is likely to go wrong. And |tive business interest vote. There|taken away? How about Delaware | !t i* not impossilge that the general noes that in this campaign, | with a bare 3,000 majority holding| neglect to consider this factor has © with much less in the republican |it in the republican column? Will; paved the way for the big surprise @- |garty to hold that element injthere not be 1,500 conservative | party suggeste jline, the lapse of this element|cifanges? How about the 56 000| 1 do not wish to be understood as |has been much grester nd | republican plurality in w Jersey| Venturing the prediction that the |more papid than in the previous|out of nearly 402,000 v« east? election of Alton B, Parker is the jfour-year period, What does this) As matter of percentages, how big|thing which will happen, but 1 do spell for the republican cause? }@ per cent of change would be re-| believe that an fmportant element @ | If New York goes democratic for|quired to swing the state? |has been neglected in making the |the reasons above set forth, it is| Maryland is now classified with | forecasts which are reflected in the — | | futile to talk of anything different |the solid south. It takes no great | betting odds, aga in case the repub- 4 jfor New Jersey, Connecticut, Dela-|feat of credulity to see West Vir-|lican ticket Is not elected I shall | ware and Khode Island. ginia already in the democratic col-|not be mong those who sfe With but 28,000 republican plu-| umn, This is a total to begin on of |Stunned by surprise, And for the rality four years ago in Connecticut, | 166 democratic votes in the electoral | reasons 1 have stated. jwhen Bryan and the Kansas City’ college, To this add New York, | weeny | had been completed and the corner- 7 south. However, he classed Mon-| *tone laid, 4 tana, Missour!, Maryland and Dela-| With the money derived from the ware as doubtful, with Montana and | *ale, together with $4,000 secured | Delaware favorable to the republic-|from the carnival given by the jans and Missouri and Maryland| Western Central previous to the favorable to the democrats. last one, it is the intention to buy « rama new site on a car line and to erect @ frame building on ft sufficient to accommodate the central body for aaemen several years. If this amount ia not sufficient a littl more money ® CAPTAIN RICKMERS GAYS can be raed. The Western Central MANY BAB REEFS ARE UNLO- CATED IN ALASKA WATERS Capt. B. C. Rickmers, of the Alas- ka Commercial company’s steamer Saidie, which sank as the result of striking on an uncharted reef while attempting to make the harbor of York, Alaska, some time ago, has been acquitted of all blame for the accident. : Capt. Rickmers’ case was tried before Mar! Inspectors of Hulls and Botlers Whitney and Lemmon. of Juneau, Alaska, who found that the accident was entirely un- avoidable. Capt, Rickmers says that it was impossible for him to tell that a reef of such a dangerous mature wean in the path of his ves- sel. He also stated that no attempt would t® made to recover any of the machinery, adding that the ex ANAGERS | pense of raising it would be more than it was worth. “Owing to the remoteness of the . “to attempt to raise her, or to recover the machinery would be footbardy. At the present neither Nome nor any of the towns in that vicinity have any facilities for wrecking, and to bring wreck- be impracticable. “Too much care cannot be exer- ised in the navigation of vessels & the coast of Seward peninsu- continued Capt. Rickmers. The very extensiveness of the country has rendered it impossible for the government survey vessels r the ground in the time have been working at it so far. In the future, of course, it is very likely that all of the reefs which are likely to be dangerous to the ® navigating those waters will | probably, be located | | the | “At the present time, however, | there are many re and reefsalong the coast which, until they are| |defintely located, will always be a source of worry and annoyance to |the masters of vessels. The gov-| jernment has so far done some ex-| cellent in regard to the, geo-| detical survey in those waters, but jit seems to me that in view of the increasing coastwise traffice which {has marked thé past season a great deal of extra work lies before the government in that line.” | CLAIMING VICTORY QBy Beripps News Ass'n) CHICAGO, Nov, 5.—The western republican headquarters finished | its campaign work today. The of-| fi will be kept open until after Tuesday, but most of the managers left toda Before leaving, Harry New issued | his offictal claim of Indiana. He) said the state would have asafe re-| publican plurality, Secretary Dover made an official forecasg in whieh he predicts that! President Roosevelt will carry all the | states not embraced tn the solid . * Miles & Piper Co, ing apparatus from Seattic would |- Se N FOR already has options on sites. The project to erect a labor temple was started 10 years ago. Dissensions arose, with the regult that the Carpenters’ union with- drew from the Westen Cental. It has since remained separate from the central body. It has been able to buy a site and th build a hall upon it, however, the property be- ing worth now at least $30,000. It is said to be the most wealthy trades union in the United States, The property is owned entirely by the members of the union. The Western Central has for a long time being obliged to get along with inadequate accommodations, If is now believed that a new hall Will soon be built. neni Edward Shields, 50 yeara of age, while falling trees at Ba | was instantly killed yesterday. A tree fell upon him. The body wag brought to Seatele. . CL, U. MAY BEGIN WORK BEFORE NEXT SUMMER For the handsome sum of $31,000 the Seattle Labor Temple associa- tlon has disposed of its building site, on Pike street and Seventh ay enue, which bas been a white ¢ phant on its bands for years. W. Hughes, the local the purchaser. { 4. merchant, is It is said that be intends to erect a store building on the property. The foundation of what was to be the Seattle labor temple ts already constructed. Be- ause of dissension and entangle- ments, construction on the temp eased as soon as the foundation Dr. Chartes Ox. 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If you can't call, write for Question Blanks and Booklet. ORIENTAL DOCTORS 201 SECOND AVE. 8.,, CORNER WASHINGTON STREET, SEATTLE WASH.