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eR on if PROPOSED iP ROUTE ne me LAKE WASHINGTON CANAL ( ‘gives (OF CANAL IN MACH ane PRATEY COND ETEO th Camas Lon QUEEF: WN ANNE ATLL fon of locks at |bottoms, will be raised and lowered in quick order. Land excavation to complete’ the proposed route of the canal will be and all along the shores of Lake /000 for the const Washington and Lake Uni the entrance of Salmon Bay. Why Looks Are Needed. If there was no lock mont of the The channel will average 26 feet water would run out of the lakes in depth and will be 75 feet in width inte the Sound, made at Ballard, Ross, Fremont at the bottom and from 126 to 150, When a ship steams up to Sal-jand the Univ y district, Com feet wide the surfac Hecause mon Bay, it will have to pans siderable dr the level of Lake Union, Lake through a lock, which will be 825 also be p Washington, Union Bay, and Sal. feet long and 80 feet wide be complet mon Bay is considerably higher There will also be a smatler lock eers, about 114 than that of the Sound, particularly for smaller vessels. The water in is paying for the construction of at low tide, the United States gov. these locks, that may be compared ing for the rest of the work, ermment has appropriated to bie bath tubs with their concrete |ing for the rest ofthe work At the Theatres When the Lake Washington canal fs completed, ships even as big as the Minnesota wil) steam smoothly on from Puget sound into Salmon Bay, and then through a part of what is now Rallard and Fremont and Ros* to Lake Union, and from there through a portion of the Uni Yersity district into Union Bay, and to Lake Washington, They will be ready to unload cargoes on top of Capitol bill, and at the University government Miss Alice Corning, 16, daughter, of C. A, Corning, died at the fam ly residence, 1024 Fifth av N, yew terday commission 27 and 28! hotel. The 11 o'clock National monetary will hold sessions Oct at the Washington meetings will begin at Friday. William McAdoo f# a good deal of an Xer. Exlegistator — that's him ex-con gressman, ¢@X commis of New City, ex assistant secre tary of the navy and lot more thin But * he exed job did credit to self and glory to his country. Now he's head of [the police magistrate’s bench down }in little ol’ Noo Yawk, and the best @ | friend in the town of the New York a cop. You guessed it; he's been an % | trishman for 58 years. Phi Alpha, an honorary Greek letter society for women Inte! ed in advanced chemistry, made {ts fnitiat bow at the university yee terday Pe eel out a but that he with} him. | E. E. Brown, former Yukon navigator, sent to South America to Investigate the type of boats best sulted for the rubber trade on the Amazon, bas returned to Se ttle, after spending three rs in the region -of the big river. Fourteen steel boats are being bullt at Pitts burg for this work, and Cap Brown has employed 25 Ls mer Yukon navigators to oper ate the Mees Capt. eeteeeene . ve | Queen City club will give a sou «| venir dance at the Renton Hill club % | Thursday evening, *| : aha allah F. E. Seixas, who owns some | |property near Dex Moines, Wash.,| beste al pth oll eer tel wants to sell 200 acres to Seattle Brat’ 10,000 aquare feet of floor park purposes. His offer to including a mezzanine floor, Of it for $40,000. was yrs} at 14151417 Fifth av. yesterday referred to the committee |i, The space will be used for exhibi-| public grounds pose in the song hit of “The Par “There's Something About You, Dear, That Appeals to M. Moore Thursday. Seteeeeeeeeeteee * » » * » * » * TeTerrrrrr TTT Reet aneenne At the Moore Tomorrow. Seer eer seeeeeee Grace Van Studdiford ts the st The Paradise of Mahomet ns at the Moore theatre] w evening for a run of three She starred in “Red Feath | The Paradixe of Mahomet” is | brought here, the press agent says, }just on it was presented in New e * | for | dispose terday on harbors and The Week at the Theatres. Moore—"The Flirting Prin etropolitan—Mirsi The Spring Maid Seattie—Hiliy Clifford, tn The Girl, the Man and the Game Lois—“The Clansman Ajhambra—Dmark Orpheum—Vaudeville Empress Vandeville Pantages—Vausdeville Grand—Vaudeville and tion pletures Hajos. which tome ST. JOSEPH, Pleading guilty Mo. the Oct. 25-— charge of the sign a dent. © court te mo UNITED 25, 1861, just 50 years 88°/ LANDER, Wyo., Oct. 25.—Cessa Gen Sterling Price of the! tion of work on governm Missouri state/tion projects and failure of crops guard delivered |has brought the Shoshone and himself of a In| Arapaho Indians to the starvation tonie remark) point, and outbreaks are thre that is still fa- {ened a the whites. mous at least among soldiers Early that day a confederate com mand near Springticld had been surprised by the union! troops and many of the confeder- | mates fled iy — . ca po ; £ ont of the 2,000 New York million them were on horseback. Late See ge Se “ Ted day Price, burfving to reluforce|ayrer oe ne pew Beste the attacked command, met a staff /the Knickerbocke Heswae betel ee er Hoe Ses ted | Hut there are 140 more on the wait confederate handful had won the| ing jist dag. ‘Then it wan that Price toned |" Gisgustedly at the mounted strag-| giers who had been unable to get away fast enough afoot, and ex claimed: “Dn a man with six legs.” « mute, ¥ here yesterday Oct. today, seeteteeeeeeee eee ee | ee ee = Washington Monument, Tallest in World, Crumbling at Its Base WASHINGTON, D. ©, Oct on the banks of the Potomac memorial to the father of his country, the tall jest monument in the world is slowly crumbling to The outer wall of the towering shaft ix becoming spotted with numberless deposits of sedi ment which have oozed from the vitals of the strncture _ The Washing monument was bullt in two | sections, the first 190. feet 1848 and in 160 tional was added a the “fill | ing the first 0 that is the trou according to Prof. P. Mer rill, head curator of geology in the National muse om The vacant pace betweet the two walls wa filled with manner of rubb GAN FRANCISCO, ear Jackson, being t rtland police, has te i a cellmate tell of a $300, 00 He will be taken to Portland to identify the prisoner who made the ement Oct. dh The great white marbie reared to last with the Pyramids, shaft * NEW YORK, Oct. 25- pieces, ATLANTA, Ga, Oct. cause she says she to walk her “nighth f Pullman car to another, while curt ous ‘drummers looked on, Mra. | Mary Burnhell has sued the Pull Seattle Lodge, No. 6, 1. 0. G. T.,|man company for $10,000 entertained friends at Good Temp. lar hall last night with a program of music and oratory 25.—Be- | ITHACA, N. Y.. Oct. 25.—Proe perity in the coffee industry is given as the reason for the increas- ed attendance of students from Brazil at Cornell. Last year there were two, this year fifteen, $175,000 DEAL The Nest ing, Westlake av between and Olive sts. owner, T. J Alaska miner, and cap approximately $1 cond ta real estate month, the being of the property occupied ceum th ee ee eed % Steamship Seward, Alaska Steamehip Co., is bring ing the largest and most val nable shipment of salmon ever brought down from the North. The shipment consists of 120, 000 cases of salmon, valued at approximately $600,000. of the in feet causing ble, has been » the for the this See ee eee EE EK ee ee ee ed Perkins Gilman, woman nomist, will » the Labor T ibject Charlotte note liver a lecture this ev “The the utre on Sec »jond av r ha yunced that he in e the triangular lot Westlake, Sixth and and 8 as those ch cement used in days, in d of solid ma y. The best and most endur ng material is in the upper por arrived in da by wa crews of | Virginia st A Steamship port yesterd the Shakan neries CITY MAKES MONEY RAIDING GAMES Raiding Chinese fan-tan ¢ the most profitable business the city has engaged in up to date Yest afternoon contributed to the city treasury after @ trial lasting less than three | SAVED BY Japanese were fined $25 each fox SBURG, Oct. 25.—Hight hun gambling, while Ah Sem paid $100 dred persons stood on the Point for the privilege of conducting the | bridge and cheered as Capt. Frank game. Another $80 was taken by | Lier, famous ae a tarlat the cops at the time of the raid. |thrower, dramatically | 1 ator Dan Landon plead: |drowning man and saved his life, | the Celestia The | Harry Cow, aged 28, an employe of | turning over the ced the sentences and | the packet Lorena, accidentally fell| for Calvin made the pigtailed gamblers smilingly joverboard. Lier cut loose a skiff| bill for . Jeft the court room. }sn4 lassoed him. | hire, Dolphin with the nd Santa ean on BOYS DISAPPEAR Marion Price, 12 Na 11, disappeared at Oak Harbor ago tod: wen or heard fr h Dark spot is distintegrating material of interior of base, oozing from marble shaft. Sheriff Wants to |SHOULD BE LIKE BEES Make an Easy $150 20", iaamer Dy Congregational | Who has kept Ernst m their nbridge id have since tion i a Ww = been " » look peas ‘ 16-foot entertained that | been drowned i dory | they oan ines ™ and fear might have in nieae minister jreat Barrington, Maws., for ye If society w con principle of the bee ould be no millionaires, nd no criminads, everybody would work the community as the bees do. TACOMA Frank Calvin Oct Althe accused of shooting |Mrs. Vivian Irvine at Hatonville six weeks ago, voluntarily himself up to Lewis county, after a week, Uruquart claim for the by the county capture. The commissloners rs sald here tuted on the hive there no panpers $420 iff Uruquart of a man-bunt of put in a $150 reward offered | at the time for seg The Result. Jawback—I married you be I pitied you, No one else are averse to} Mr money. The hunt | cause up a big expense | Would extra deputies and auto| Mr. Jawback Well, [does now everybody Seeteseseetessenese FREDERICK & FURNITURE DRY GOODS Store Closes Dally at 5:30. FURNITURE DRY cooeus NELSON, Inc. BASEMENT SALESROOM ANY economies can be effected in your shopping by keeping in fre- quent touch with the excellent values featured in this popular Salesroom—the | standards of service and satisfaction are 600 Yards " Serpentine e Crepes Special 10c Yard re the durable crepes that are in such wide for and They are HESE demand making up into pretty s ‘mall pres from 2 to 10 yards long jues kimonos. We to sell at, special, have (00 yards in all--many desirable 10¢ yard. patterns Women’s Hand-Bags Special, $1.00 AND-BAGS in velvet and leather, shapes and well-made, popular sizes, with gun-metal, gold- or silver ! frames, Handles styles. Special $1.00. te ROI ALP PD Outing Flannel Gowns 50c and 75c OMEN’S Outing Flannel Gowns in blue or pink and fini» in regulation and bracelet Basement Salesroom, WwW Hubbard style, white and made aly in at 50¢. stripes, cut with ample fullness with double yoke. Excellent Well-made Gowns in Hubbard style, of blue or pink and white striped outing flannel, trimmed with tucks, feather stitching, linen pattern lace or embroidered allops Basement Ralesroom on the same high plane as elsewhere throughout the store. The following ad- vertisement points to some of the at- tractive values featured for tomorrow’s selling. Fancy Taffeta Ribbons _ Special 25c Yard ANCY Alb-silk T. floral designs. Es, I ble hes wide, in eff for ‘affeta Ribbons, 7% bective faneye work purposes and unusual value Bane Children’s Cashmere Hosiery Special, 15¢ Pair HLLDREN’S Ho and he ribbed wea y and Pt ay in fine fashioned ring the cold, Black Cashmere iery styles. Just the Stock wet winter days Women’s Waists Special, 35c WV Fh 1 Flannel V Striped Outing wo N aists in a full range of sizes, also broken sizes in Tailored Li Waists, Special for clearance at 35¢. Basemen nene and Lint gerie t Ralesroom, Women’ s Black Petticoats Special, 50c ACK Percaline Petticoats in a firm, fine quality, madé with full 16-inch tucked flounce and deep underlay, Special 5O¢. B« Well-made and finished. —Varement Saireroom, Women’s and Misses’ Coats SPECIALS and nights make the t ce JOLER days « are well-tailc new and pleasing Special $5.75— Well-tail and tan, semi-fittir Special $ 12. 6 Long Coats in semi red, the fabrics are a the prices are un red Long Coats of mixed and fitting styles, also polo model two-button reversible coats, double-faced fabrics, tweeds, + diagonals. Sizes 14, 16 anc 34 to 42 and VOMEN’S I Vests with hi Women’s Knit Underwear Values ne l neck VOMEN’S \ garment with low ne 15¢. Untrimmed Shapes Special Smart large and small Velvet Shape with soft brims and crowns, also shapes and black, gray, green, old Featured f hatters’ plush, velour, — felts Color , cardinal and navy at $2.95. an exceptionally-low « i * price Pasement Balesroc Short Lengths of Toweling Special 10c Each SE Towelings are from one yard to two yards long useful lengths for kitchen use. Some are all-linen, others part-linen, others cotton at 10¢, Choice of any length in the offering Basement Salesroom | Mail Orders Carefully Filled ae | iF a se: | E I< mi with Sizes ck '$5.75| |$12.75| ($16.75 p coat a necessity. These Coats 1 serviceable, the mod nitings Iso plain black in gray, collar. Sizes 341 | Special $16. 75— Polo Coats in double-faced ma ose, boxy models, with raglan sleeves, and large Colors, gray res, brown and_ purple, green j and 16, and Hars and tan gray brown with. plaid. 34 to 40. —Masement Saiesroom LEECE ck Pants AND colon. } PANTS i shed with crochet edge drawn _— ia The garment, 35¢. | I LINED VESTS and long in ecru sleeves, fir ankle in length. MEDIUM-WEIGHT VESTS AND PANTS ohen sizes, in knee or ankle 4 The lesroom. and short Basement Se | opportunity to buy in good grade Brocades, Ji and Reps. They n each 25¢ ¢ hack ‘Curtains, Special, 95c Pai A“ ae Curtains are 2! a good ortment of patterns suitable living-roomsy There are allover lace design} dotted centers with borders t Salesroomm/] yards long, and there is for dining-rooms and bedrooms plain centers with borders, and in white and ecru, The and the well-finis 1 95¢ pa lace in all is of good quality, edges insure wear in laundering. Specia =