Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PO3SE CAPTURES STRIKE RIOTERS West Virginia Miners Are Surprised While Asleep. Union Leader Arrested for Tearing Down Injunction Notices. THACKER, W. Va., t men went to the Kentucky side 1g River this morning and captured ners, who are charged with terror- izing the miners of the West Virginia side of the river for the past ten davs by thooting at all who could not give the proper strikers’ signal as they passed and repassed along the raflroad. They were=surprised in their sleep. with eir Winchesters under their pillows, d surrendered with but little resistance. Even their zuard was captured, asleep on duty. They were brought to this place end held under heavy guard awaiting the | ke them before a Kentucky remanded them to Judge t Parkersburg, W. Va. n the day Charles Burke, presi- ocal union of United Mine America, wgs arrested. He en to Parkesburk to appear be- sdge Jackson on the charge of tear- ir down the notices of the injunction nted by Judge Jackson. = generally believed that this will hting end of the strikers’ their differences will ed in a satisfactory ABCHBIéHOP CONFIRMS SAN RAFAEL CHILDREN Large Number of Candidates for the Sacrament Participate in the Ceremony. The occasior was bishop Riordan conducted the expected that the Arch- a The following were con- Watson, Louis John Dris- er, Peter Toldavini, den, Maurice Driscoll, Milton Henry Marshal, Rafael Duffy, Ed- niel O'Connell, Thomas Meenan, Victor Gillardin. Manuel An. Margaret Agnew . Frances Bett er. Mary Pareda, Florence Far- Turner, Hattle Marryat, Pearl Hun- Duffy Edith McGarry, Robert . Walter Walsh, Ed- Burrows, Edward Pow- Thomas Toldavini. Dion Rose Martinez. Theresa Margaret Collins, Mary Joseph Aguirre, Alfred . George Agnew, Rose_ Foerini, Annie Rosa erini, ie McBride, Florence Kearne; Louisa Botterini, Eth t Marrvat, Margaret Bren- Alice Sullivan, Alice . Grace Marron, Lizzie ed Claim Settled. {DON, July 1—An Egyptian expe- Las occupied Bahr Ghazal, says the | i | | | | June 30.—A posse | 30.—St. Raphael’s | was crowded to the | arge class of candi- | James | Theresa Lamperti, Christine | 'DEATH SUMMONS A. L. HART, ONCE ATTORNEY GENERAL at a Sanitarium Career of the Brilliant Lawyer Comes to Its Close After a Long Period of lllness in Alameda County -+ NEY GE TERDAY AFTER LONG ILLNESS THE LATE A. L. HART, BRILLIANT LAWYER AND FORMER ATTOR- NERAL OF CALIFORNIA, WHOSE DEATH OCCURRED YES- IN A LIVERMORE SANITARIUM. ) ACRAMENTO, June Attorney General A. L. Hart died at Livermore to-day. He had been failing for several years and his condition had so rapldly grown worse within the past few months that his death was not unexpect- ed. His brothers, Judge E. C. Hart and Dr. A. C. Hart. and his father-in-law. W:lliam Beckman, were informed by tele- graph of the passing of the distinguisked lawyer. No arrangements have yet been made for the funeral, deference being made to the wishes of Mrs, Hart in this respect. General Hart went to the Livermore Sanitarium from San Francisco in of last year. During the last few w of the action brought by Mrs. Emma Ster- 30.—Former 4 rett against the estate of the late Gustav Walter, former proprietor of the Orpheum Theater, Hart was called into the case as counsel for the plaintiff, and it was sa'd that his constant appiication in that case | has ended in his death. When his condition became such tkat an immediate collapse was expected, ! Colonel Beckman of Sacramento, Hart's father-in-law, urged him to go to the sanitarium. Colonel Beckman stated at |-that time that Hart's condition was due to excessive cigar-smoking and overwork. 11t was hoped and believed that a few weeks’ rest would result in his recovery. Luminous Legal Career. General A. L. Hart was born in Indiana fifty-one years ago. In the fifties, accom- panied by his father and other members of his family and Judge A. L. Rhodes of San Jose, he came to California. He was STATEMENT | STATEMENT —OF THE— CONDITION AND AFFAIRS —OF THE— Springfield Fire 2nd Marine Insurance Company F SPRINGFIELD, IN THE STATE OF Massachusetts, on the 3ist day of Decem- A. D. 190, and for the year ending on @av. me made to the Insurance Commis- of the State of California. pursuant to provisions of sections 610 and 11 of the Code, condensed as per blank fur- the Commissioner. CAPITAL. of Capital Stock. paid up in o by nt of Loans secured by piedge ocks and other market- as collateral.. onds accrued « and Loans + due and accrued on Bonds LIABILITIE! Yosses ad 4 and unnaid Ineses in process of Adjustm in Suspense nsurance 50 per cent.. «s premiume on Fire Risks run- ne more thar, cne vear, $1732, 72 05; reinsuranie nro rata......... 885,508 00 Commissions #nd Prokerage due and o become GUe..-n....... 78,300 52 Total Liabilities | INYoME. + cash mctually recyved for Fire A for interest o Bonds and tzages et Sor S Ronds, Stocks $1,942,320 35 est arf dividends - Loary and trom all other sonrces Received for Rents $1,142.707 20 Tividends to Stod re. 150,000 00 Psta or allowed for Com: Rrokerage ... ; 264,910 29 Paid for Falaries, Fees oharges for officers. clerks. ete. 110,745 57 | State, National ard 92.9% 18 212.817 51 Total Expenditures Treses Incurred Auring the year. —OF THE— (CONDITION AND AFFAIRS —OF THE— National Fire INSURANCE COMPANY F HARTFORD, IN THE STATE OF CON. necticut. on the Zist day of December A D."1900. end for the vear ending on that day. a5 made T the Invarines Comminmrr or 10 State of California. pursuant to the provis ona ot sections 610 and 61 of the Political ., condensed as per bla: o ol nk furnished by the CAPITAL. Amount of Capital Stock, patd Cash : padots ASSETS. | Real Estate owvned by Company. $331,784 9¢ Loans on Bonds and Morteages. 708,815 00 | Cash Market Value of all Stocks and | _Bonds awned bv Comnany. 3,175,981 00 545 33 206,59 15 488,971 35 Total ASSets ........................$4,992,692 3 LIABILITIES. Losses adjusted and unnald. 84,7 Loaser in process of Adjustment or T % = in Suspense ... W 129,908 22 Losses resisted. includl; 2272 3 Groms premiums on Fire % asgiag l’ll{!l one year or less, $1. reinsurance 5 per cent. Gross premiums on Fire R b Ei’]"ll:fi mfl:‘fl than one vea: £ %0 reimsurance ATl other labilities. 55508 o4 Total Liabilities $2.458.812 67 INCOME. Net Pnlsh actually received for Fire premiums 32,735,587 12} Rereived for interest on B o sosived tor in onds ‘and Received for inl nds boe on Bonds, Stocks, Loans, and from all other sources 149,127 8 Recelved for Rents 2.026 0 Received from all other sources 2,781 75 Total Income 478 89 | EXPENDITURES. Net amount paid for Fire Losses of {including _ $184,196 45, previous vears) .. Dividends to Stockh: Paid or allowed for Com Brokerage ... Paid for Ralaries, Fees, losses charges for officers. clerks. o Paid for State. National and Tocai oo % taxes ... = 94,541 63 All other payments and expendi- i tures ....... 355,248 17 Total Expend} TF Losses incurred durine the vear......$1.561.517 0§ isks and Premiums. | Fire Risks. | Prejiume. i i Risks and Premfums. | Fire Risks.| Premiuma. 1 t of Risks! the! Net amo: written yesr .. Net amount of Risks| sxpired during the| PO i o0 Net amount in force| December 31, 1900.....| ring | 202,670,908 | 2,158, 667 | 3.111.241 Net amount of Risks! written during thel vear I Net amount of Risks| expired during = the| | - : 300,568,177 | 2,984,245 16 1 401.467.507 | 4.013.046 22 i $280,426,541 ; 3,601,385 98 A. W. DAMON, President. W. J. MACKAY. Secretary. Subscribed and £worn to before me, this 234 €sy of January. 1%L P. §. BAILEY, Notary Public, PAC:! S. E. Corne SAP GEO. D. DORNIN, Manag City Agency, H. ~ £ 3 ae 2 | nE JAMES NICHOTS, Prasident. < B R, STILIMAN. Seoretnsy. Subscribed and rworn to before me, this 14th ¥ of Tammarv, 1801 FRED B. SEYMOUR, Notary Public, RTMENT, and Sansome Sts, S1ISCO, CAL. A 1E°me. sxet, 8an Franciszo, £i & CO., Agents. GEO. W. DORNIN, s’t Manager. resulted in the nervous prostration that | — graduated at the San Jose Institute, a Wwell-known college of the early days, but long since out of existence. For a time thereafter he taught school in Sutter County, but the life of a pedagogue was not the field in which he longed to cast his fortunes and he returned to San Jose to enter upon the study of law undet Judge Lawrence Archer. When 21 years of age he was admitted to practice. His father having removed to Colusa, he followed him to that county | and began there the practice of his pro- i fession. At the age of 24 years he was | elected on the Republican ticket to the position of District Attorney, although | Colusa County was overwhelmingly Dem- | ocratic. In i879, when he was only 29 | years old, he was nominated by the Re- publican State Convention for Attorney | General and was elected with Governor | George C. Perkins at the head of the tick- | et. The youngest man who had ever oc- | cupied that important post in this State, | his term of office was the first under the | newly adopted constitution, a he was | obliged to handle numeréus ¥mportant | questions growing out of the introduction | of the new instrument. An important event in his official ca- reer was his going to Washington to ar— &ue the celebrated railroad tax cases be- fore the United States Supreme Court. Notable Effort in Washington. | . He had as his adversaries befors that tribunal United States Senators Roscoe Conkling and G. F. Edmunds. 30 bril- liantly did the young lawyer piead his cause that George C. Gorham in 'As paper complimented him and recorded/the fact that Senators Conkling and Edpunds and even members of the Suprerie bench themselves had spoken in prsise of his remarkable efforf, Hart was nominated for Attornev General at the fime M. M. Estee was nominated for Governor, but the whole ticket was defeated. After the expiration of his term General Hart opened law offices in Sacramento in part- nership with Clinfon L. White and con- tinued in the practice of law here until he removed to San Francisco in 1896. Among the memorable cases in which General Hart figured while practicing here was that of George Jeffries, charged with the Olga Ayres murder at Brighton, for whom he secured an acquittal. His acquittal of Daniel M. charge is historical in legal annals. He cleared every one of the rallroad strikers f,”“‘ d*at Woodland with murder in 1894. e w whom he did uot defend, was the ¥ one convicted. For three months he was engaged at Fresno in the cele- brated Poly, Heilbcrn & Company land case, and won it in the Superior and Su- preme courts. Generat Hart leaves a wife, the daugh- ter of Banker Willlam Beckman of Sacra- mento, and two sons, graduates of the State University, now in the law college. In this city he leaves two brothers, Supe- rior Judge E. C. Hart and Dr. A. C. Hart, a prominent physician. @ lesilomiforifrioefufosloorirododo’ FLAMES DESTROY 10N OF PRUNES Herbert Fruit - Packing House at San Jose Burned. SAN JOSE, June 30.—The big fruit- packing house and dryer of George N. Herbert, situated on the western out~ skirts of the city, was destroved by fire to-right. The loss is placed between 350.- 000 and $60,000, with insurance of about 30 per cent. The big loss is largely made up of prunes, of which 450 tons were burned. Five carloads of these were packed in five-pound tins. Of the total amount of fruit destroyed, 250 tons belonged to the Cured Fruit Association; the remainder to Herbert. The origin of the fire is not known. It was discovered about 9:30 o'clock and was under good headway. The plant being ment and neighbors could only gather and watch the entire property be destroved. The establishment was one of the larg- est and most complete in the valley. Near- ly $50,000 worth of materials and supplies for this season’'s business had just been purchased, all of which was lost. STREETS ARE THRONGED DURING THE FUNERAL Thousands Gather to Witness March to the Grave With Rcmains of Ex-Chief Meredith, SEATTLE, June 30.—Funeral services over the remains of the late William L. Meredith were held to-day in the First Methodist Church, the Rev. Clark Davis officlating The exercises were held un- der the auspices of the Woodmen of the World. of which deceased was a member. Probadly no more impressive funeral was ever held in Seattle. The church and streets in every direction from the church were filled with people for blocks away. A platoon of police led the march and in the procession were numerous city and county officers, including Mayor Humes and Chief of Police Sullivan. Hundreds of carriages and other conveyances fol- lowed the body to the grave in eview Cemetery. Will Wed the Princess Cecile. LONDON, July 1.—“It is reported in St. Petersburg,” says a dispatch to the Daily- Telegraph from the Russian capital, “‘that the Czarovitch is betrothed to Princess Cecile, daughter of the late Grand Duke of Mecklinburg-Schwerin.” Burns on a felony | their counsel and Salter D. Wor- | outside the city, there is no fire depart-, KILLING HEAT STILL PREVAILS But Little Prospect for Relief in Hot Wave Territory. Intense Suffering and Many Deaths in the Poorer Districts. A WASHINGTON, June 30.—Intense heat prevailed here all day and far into the night. . Reports to the Weather Bureau from points throughout the hot wave ter- ritory show remarkably high tempera- tures, with little or no rainfall and but poor prospects for any relief within the next forty-efght hours. At New York the meximum, 98 degrees, broke the record there for June, and at Philadelphia the maximum, 98, equaled the highest tem- perature previously recorded there. MATTOON, Ill, June 30.—Edward G. Walsh Sr., president of the Mississippl Glass Company and the St. Louis Ter- minal Company and prominently identi- fieq with leading St. Louis enterprises, died this afternoon from heat prostration on board the Knickerbocker express of the Big Four road between Gays and this city. BURLINGTON, Iowa, June mercury touched 100 here to-day. F Dunham, for the past ten years chief clerk for the Hurlihgton division of the rallway military service, died from heat prostration. LINCOLN, Neb., June 30.—For several days the State has suffered from drought and south winds. Crops have been gen- erally damaged CHICAGO, June 20.—The heat in Chi- cago to-day broke all records for June since 1882. For three hours this afternoon the Government thermometer registered 97. In many places on the street it was 104 and 106. At 1l o'clock to-night the mercury was soaring around There was intense suffering, especially in the poorer districts. CINCINNATI, June 30.—Henry Meyer, president of the St. Bernard Shooting Club, swooned while delivering his annual address at the meeting to-day. He died soon afterward. His death is said to be due to heat prostration. NEW YORK, June 30.—The relief from the_ killing heat which was promised for to-day did not realize. There was less breeze than the day before, and what lit- tle air did stir was scorching with heat. There was an increase in the fatalities re- ported to- over vesterday. Nineteen deaths were recorded and twenty prostra- tlons. PHILADELPHIA, June 30.—This was | @he nottest June day Philadelphia has ex- | perienced since 1577. The maximum tem- perature was 98. One death from heat and twenty-five prostrations were reported. | PITTSBURG, June 80.—Between mid- | night Saturday and midnight Sunday | eleven deaths directly traceable to the ef- fects of heat and fifteen prostrations are { recorded. In addition to this many chil- | dren_have succumbed, as is evidenced by the burial permits issued. In the past forty-eight hours fiftv-nine permits have been issued, three-fourths of which are for children under 4 years. The normal | death rate is sixteen. The maximum | temperature to-day was 04. | L e e e e e e e el DISCARD THEIR ARMY CLOTHES —_— Continued From First Page. in soliciting the soldier trade and many of them remained open all day for “the Lenefit of the soldier.” | The four regiments that were 8ischarged | yesterday were the Thirty-elghth, Forty- fourth, Forty-ninth . and Forty-elgh Great_preparations had been made af Presidio for the event. Every precaution was taken to insure protection for the paymasters who were responsible for the large sum. Forty-five picked men escort- ed the men of the pay corps and their treasure wagons from the sub-treasury building to the reservation. The guards were from the artillery companies and batteries at the Presidio and were men known to be good soldiers. Eight wagons were required to trans- port the gold from the treasury, each wagon being under the charge of a pay- master and clerk. When the reservation was reached two | of the wagons were driven to the camp of one of the regiments to be mustered out and there relieved of its valuable con- tents. Mounted Men Guard Coin. In the houses reserved for the paymas- ters were stationed armed guards. The regimental muster roll was spread out on the table and when the coln was dumped | out of the sacks and piled in rows the | work of mustering out commenced. As each company was called an officer of the company stepped into the mustering-out | room and stood by the side of the pay- | master. As each man of the company came in in answer to call he identified him and witnessed the payment of his traveling pay, clothing account balance and any | saving the soldler may have been able | to make from his pay. The soldler left tl.e | building and was fréee to go where he | pledsed. Majors Rochester and Schofield paid oft | | THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, JULY 1, 1901. STRANGLES IN A TREETOP BEFORE HIS BRIDE’'S EYES s ake Professor ' Franci Birtwell of Boston Is Choked to Death by a Rope Used in Quest of a Bird’s Nest on the Rio Pecos Special Dispatch to The Call. LBUQUERQUE, June 30.—Profes- sor Francis J. Birtwell of Boston met a horrible death on the Rio Pecos yesterday. He was high up in a tree after a bird’s nest when the rope he was using caught on a limb, the loop tightened around his neck and he was slowly strangled to death before the eyes of his bride of a month, who, with two men, stood at the foot of the tree, unable to help the unfortunate man. Professor Birtwell had climbed the tree by the aid of a pair of lineman’s spurs and reached a point seventy-flve feet from the ground when he called for help: His wife called two men who were near HOBART BUYS A PONY ¥ BRED BY BORDER BANDITS Millionaire Will Ride Silver Dick in Contests on the Polo Field. DENVER, June 30.—Silver Dick, the fast quarter horse belonging to L. C. Williams of the San Luis Valley, has been sold to Walter S. Hobart, the millionaire polo player of San Francisco. To-day a tele- gram was received by J. H. Shields in- structing ‘him to purchase the horse if the price were not over $1000. That figure meeting the views of the owner, the sale will be closed to-morrow, and within a week thé fast animal will be on its way to the Pacific Coast. Silver Dick was bred by the Caviness brothers, notorious outlaws of New Mex- ico and Texas. He came by his running qualities through heredity, as his sire, Billy Caviness, was one of the fastest short-distance horses that ever ran a race in Texas. He was taken about the coun- try by the brothers before they got into trouble and won numerous races. One of the boys said that they had won 10,000 head of cattle on the little stallion. The gang is now broken up, one brother being in the hands of the authorities, an- other dead and a reward of $500 being of- fered for the capture of the third. and they made quite a long rope by tleing shorter ones together, throwing the rope up to him. He was getting down nicely ‘when one of the knots on the rope caught in the forks of a limb, preventing it slip- ping up or down. In attempting to free it Birtwell jerked one of his arms out of the loop and the rope tightened around his throat. He was unable to lift his body to loosen the rope and before the eyes of his voung wife and the two men he strangled to death, they being powerless to render ald. A ladder had to be ob- tained to get his body down. Mr. and Mrs. Birtwell were married here a month ago and were _spending their honeymoon on the Rlo Pecos forest re- serve. X L e 0 0 2o a2 3 2O e e e i WRECKED ON LAKE SUPERIOR DURING A HEAVY STORM Crew and All of the Passengers but One Rescued by a Passing ' Steamer. * | WINNIPEG, Man., June 30.—Word reached here to-night of the wreck on Lake Superior of the steamer Preston, Captain Barlow, of Toledo, Ohio. On Sat- urday. rorning the steamer Athbasca, Captain .dcDougall, sighted the Preston, which was showing flags of distress and at the Tmercy of a severe storm. She was water-logged and twelve men and two women were clinging to the rigging. After great difficulty Captain McDougall suc- ceeded in reaching the vessel with a life- line, thrown by a rocket, and after four hours’ kard labor rescued all but one man, named William Eckert. of Algona, Mich., a wheelman, who was badly crushed and sank. The remainder of the crew were landed safely at Fort Willlam. The Preston was loadea with lumber for Mackenzie and Mann snd Canadian Pa- cific points and is reported to be a hope- less wreck. e e eaerd Generzal Butterfield Dying. NEWBUEGH, N. Y., June 30.—The con- dition of General Butterfleld remains criti- cal. The end seems near. AEFUSES T0 6 BACK T0 PEKIN China’s Empress Dow ger Again Defles the Powers. Notifles Council That the Future Capital Will Be Kaifeng-Fu. SHANGHAT, June 30.—Marquis Tsen has received a dispatch from Singan-fu t the effect that the Empress Dowager, fearing a trap to capture her, declines to return to Peking. and has notified the Grand Council that the future capital will be Kaifeng-fu in the province of Honan. & TIENTSIN, June 30.—The City of "l'larh& tsin is now more crowded than ever. Of- ficers cf all nations are here en route t their homes and the hotels are placin cots in every available piace. Apartment: have been prepared at the University Tlentsin for Prince Chun and his suite forty, who will remain there for t days before leaving for Germany to mal formal apology for the murder of Bar von Ketteler. Mr. Denby, who, when the foreign troo) arrived was appointed by the China Me chants’ Company to protect their proj erty, says the company in its claim aginst the United States Government did not use the word “loot”” against the marines, but merely held them responsible. o greater part of the company’s property consisted of rice, which was afterward distributed under orders from the Britis! and American generals to assist those 1 need. Mr. Denby believes the company” clalm should have been added to the in demiity as legitimate expenditure. Othe: merchants say the company never ha 300,000 taels’ worth of property here. ST. PETERSBURG, June 3).—It is as. serted that M. de Witte, the Finance Min. fster, will leave for Manchuria durin July. Challenged to Fight a Duel. LONDON, July 1.—As an outcome o Saturday’s squabble in the Italian Cham- ber of Deputies during the debate on th conflict at Ferrara, June 27, between agri. cultural strikers and soldiers, the Min- ister of War, Count San Martino, accord. ing to a special dispatch from Rome, ha challenged Signor Ferrara. one of the So cialist Deputies, to a duel. | | the men of the Thirty-eighth, which was the first regiment of the four mustered | out. Some of the men of this regiment | received as high as $500. Quite a_few of | the soldiers were in debt for clothing, ! having overdrawn their account, and bad | nothing coming to them but their travel | ay. | Pfhe Forty-fourth Regiment was paid | off by Majors Belknap and Keleher. The | men of this regiment were a saving lot, most of them. having money on deposit, | and a balance due them for clothing they had not drawn. Quickness and dispatch were displayed by the paymasters in handling the men and they were set free early in the afterncon. \ Forty-Eighth a Happy Lot. The colored men of the Forty-eighth | Regiment, received their coin from Majors | Ray and Gambril. They are a happy-go- lucky lot and kept those in the neighbor- hood of the camp in roars of laughter by their funny comments on the benefits of possessing ‘‘dough.” The Forty-ninth Regiment, 2lso colored, wus the richest regiment of the four. The men of this regiment, which came back from the Philippines crowned with many laurels, were paid by Majors Kilbourne and Newbold. The savings of few of the men of the Forty-ninth were less than $300, the majority of them receiving in the neighborhood of $400. L i e v ol EX-VOLUNTEERS O SPECIAL TRAINS B Continued From First Page. ere the 1200 men were on board the fer- ry-boat San Pablo. ‘When the signal was given for the boat to start, it was estimated that she had 1400 ex-soldlers on board. The run to Point Richmond was made without mis- hap and the travelers were quickly trans- ferred to the twenty-seven tourist cars comprising the two sections of the Santa Fe's special train for the East. Clerks of the Southern Pacific and Santa Fe passenger offices were busy yesterday afternoon and evening selling tickets to the departing_ soldiers. As soon_as the latter received their pay at the Présidio they proceeded to the offices named for the purpose of making reservations to re- turn to their homes.. A staff of fifteen clerks was kept bu;ly in each office to ac- commodate the soldfers in securing trans- portation. The roads had made a speclal rate to Missouri River points of $37 50, to Chicago of $437 and to St. Louls of $41 25, with correspondingly low rates to all Eastern points. The Santa Fe kept its office open unti] nearly 10 o'clock, when it had disposed of 180, tickets, while the Southern Pacific 80 ). Many of the shoe and clothing houses yere kept open during the day and the; were well patronized by the departing soi- diers. Venders of souvenirs were also out in force and did a_thriving business in front of the ticket offices. we A giance at our win- dows will always .prove interssting, | whether you need clothes, hats or fur- nishings. dren’s Department. We want the of the mothers. priced suits to interest them: Boys’ price. assortment. agree with our talk. Suits Sack suits in cheviots| of light patterns and blue serges in fall and summer weights; sizes to fit everybody, even| the shert and stout: prices reduced from $8.50, $10.00 and $12.50 $6.65 The shades ed down to Saving Sale of SummerSuits We are right in the midst of summer, and the hot weather of the past week emphasizes the need of light fabrics in clothing. You know the comfort of light weight clothing in light patterns at such a time and you know the value of saving all you can on'a purchase. Our special sale now going on Car supply you with the clothing you need at a savin- overcoats cdverts in three stylish| swell patterns of check of tan. brown and olive; the price for- merly was $10.00; every one of the overcoats this lot has been mark- $6.65 Consider this carefully as to whether you wa one of the suits, but don’t wait too long, for th eager and thrifty buyers are getting the cream: of the The clothes are all union made and fully guar anteed. They are money-backed; it would not pa us to give you your money back if our suits did ne ; . | [Overcoats Trousers are| Worsted trousers i and stripes: . sizes fromy 30 to 44 waist, and up to 36 length; good fz wear with coat . vest of darker color; reduced from $3.00 to $1.85. in might. Particularly is this so in our Here are a few $1.85 a suit $1.358 a suit 10 years, '250. . 718 Market Street. Strong Values in Boys’ Suits 1 - We always prefer to sell clothing as lowas we can rather than as high as Chil- trade low- E sailor suits, varied patterns variously trimmed, ages 3 to 10 years, Boys' vestee suits, striped worsteds with dou- ble breasted vests, ages 3 to 8 years, Boys® fancy vests, ages 6 to I2 years, special for this week, 50€ each. _ Rough Kider suits;’ages 3 to 10, special for this week, 81.10 a_suit. Washable suits, 2ges 3 to prices from now on to close out the line. Silk-front golf shirts for boys from 4 to 10 years, 35¢ each. Boys’ and children’s summer underwear, 25¢ and 50¢ a garment. Boys' hats, all styles, 90€ each. Boys’ golf caps, 15€ each, or 2 for Youths’ white duck pants, week, 85¢ a pair. SNWO0DS reduced special for this i MW‘ Out-of-town orders , filled. Werits us for anything in men’s elothing, furnish- ings or hats.