The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 9, 1901, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1901 FLEET OF STEAMSHIPS AND SAILING VESSELS ARRIVE FROM MANY PORTS The Imogen From Japan and Dovenby From Valparaiso Reach Here in Ballast, and Both Will Load Wheat for Europe---Acapulco From Panama and Belgian King From Hongkong Also Come In FLEET of steamships made port vesterda Among them was the g from Hongkong via Honolulu ané e Acapulco from Pan- ports, the Pomona from Rosa from San Diego from Japan. Besides 1 bark Dovenby arrived o in ballast and several of fleet arrived. Belgian King has considerable for this port, but she brings mo E The Acapulco brought up bout 300 tons of freight, nearly all coffee, and $14,00 treasure. The following ssengers: B. Hopkins and wife, Gil Ma: a—Mre ry Moizant and four on. " Acena, Ratfael s—Eugene de Sabla and wife. - n—H. L. Burleson, George W. She _come: for Europe. araiso. but her freight is not will not get off until The Colu and will probably sail to- 4 T | TRCUBLE ON DUMFEREMLINE. | Crew Is Mutinous Because There Is No Chance to Desert. umfermline arrived ralia, last Mon- lors have been n. They as- of them has de- | and when it was disagreeable. put the men got ey i to have some y called it. They cut the run- spilled the oil and paint and W ard signaled for the e Officer Henneberry went out to in would not were mo ar- of the men ited the cap- went to the po- udge Mogan for Thy 1 he went Honor was too >t natter. Finally was cornered and he is- Passing of “Bil sealers, Bowhead lost Dur- | ustry he and lost | em. On top of | wife, and then | ff Clay-street is son Bendrt | became afilicted which he suc- o News of the Overdue Fleet. oint arises in the case ch was burned at he was from oal, and last such 2 poor were paying While rday morn the question r will the fire osted as overdue port. One was the Brabloch. on 188 . and g nd_the ew York for Val- per cent is offered, 10w offering. - Water Front Notes. > s heid a short d whaling bark y from her an- cond street. She £ times and is pping in Mis- r submitted an esti- of getting the foot of cet ready for the fioating docks. matter was taken under advisement. Whalen da last Wednesday sen left her on the Captain _ Gilbert r and his great Ensenada. hurt in an ele- " The Weaver schocner Julia E. got_back night rom Ense Captain coast and t her home. Wea copper syndicate burst at herles Grey got badly seventy-three days | , fog bank that | also in | imogen to wheat. | vesterday was The Acon- | for Central | bia for Port- | their quar- | liquor | N X sailors—he | 1 among them had a ere in th saloon b Matters of Interest to Mariners ard | ecic . — g59f51 1985\t i \ow/ i/ - SHIP IMOGEN FROM JAPAN MA BRITISH BARK DOVENBY FROM V. ALPARAISO AND TRAMP STEAM- KING PORT. BOTH COME HERE IN BALLAST TO LOAD WHEAT FOR EUROPEAN PORTS. vator accident on the front yesterday. He was looking down the shaft when the cage came down and knocked his head against a rail. All his front teeth were knocked out and his lower jaw dislocated. After being treate t the Harbor Hospi- | tal he was taken to his home, 112 Shotwell | street. NEWS ;F TEE OCEAN. | Shipping Merchants. The Melanope will load lumber here for Ade- | aide (owners' accou Cargo for British Columbia Charters. The steamer Umatilla sailed yesterday for | Victoria with a general cargo valued at $12,068, | Including the following merchandise: 39 cs arms and ammuniticn, 5 cs axle grease, 1057 s bread, 431 Ibs cheese, % cs canned goods, 3164 Tbs chocolate, 20 bbls cocoanut oil, 4 cs drugs, 16,140 Tbs dried fruit, 8 bales dry goods, 3 cs electrical goods, 2321 pkgs fruits and veg- bles, § . 15 pkgs groceries and pro- Tisions, 175 cs hardware. 71 Tbe- ham. 300 Tbs hops, ft lumbe: 635 1bs 16 pkgs , 19 ll: addition to above the steamer carried 201 crs cnions and 75 cs canned gogds for bris- bane, Australia, valued at ¢ e ; Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Thursday, August §. Stmr Santa Rosa, Alexauder, 45 hours from San Diex g L r Acapulco, Russell, 25i3 days from Pa- nama, etc Stmr Gipsy, Leland, Leland, 5 hours from | terey” Stmr Pomona, Shed 17 hours from stmr Belgian King, Weiss, 56 d: via Yokohama 35 days, , via San Diego 41 hours. nr Imogen, Smyth, 18 days from Moro- Fegan, 73 days from Val- Repeat, Olsen, 7 days from Columbla General Banning, Bennewitz, 7 days Grays Harbor. % llenge, Bresser, CLEARED. Thursday, Cousine, from 17 days from Port Auguet 8. Stmr Umatilla, Victeria; Goodall, Perkins & Co Stmr Columbia, Doran, Astoria; Oregon Rail- road and Nav Co. Chil_stmr Aconcagua, Sorensen. Valparaiso and way ports; Balfour, Guthrie & Co. Schr § T Alexander, Ipsen, Kahului; Alex- ander & Baldwin. ATLED. Thursda: Stmr Umatilla, Cousins, Townsend. TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBOS, Aug 8. 10 p m—Weather thick; wind SW, velocity 14 miles per hour. DISASTER. Jap stmr Kinshui Maru, from Seattle June for Hongkong, stranded on Quilpart Corea July Vessel at time of stranding was hold 265,000 barrels) Schlitz brewery. Schlitz, Milwaukee famous. "Phone Main 447, Sherwood & Sher- wood, 212 Market St., San Francisco and an even temperature of 34 degrees. Fermentation is a process of months. No green beer ever leaves the If you wish to be certain of an aged beer, get the beer that made The beer that causes biliousness is “green beer” — insufficiently aged. It is hurried from the brew- ery to the market before it 1s half fermented. Drink it and it ferments in your stomach, and the result is biliousness and headache. . Fermentation is expen- sive. It requires immense refrigerating rooms (ours » : FOR THE BLOOD.LIVER.LUNGS. DR. CREEN, Specialist, BISEASES OF MEN QUICKLY CURED, Emms Spreckels Building, Rooms 418-419, Offics Hours: 10 A M. 03 P. M., 7to 9 P. M. Sundays, 10A. M. 10 2 P, M. 1 l\ — bound from Moji for Shanghal. and crew saved. SPOKEN. lat $31 N, lon 105 W—Ger_ ship July 16, | Schwarzenbek, from Cardiff, for Santa Rosa- ia. Aug 3, lat 49 N, lon 6 W—Br ship Langdale, from: Livervool, for Honolulu. July 22, lat 13 N, lon 26 W—Fr bark Dug- ueselin, from Hamburg, for Portland. MISCELLANEOUS. Bark Empire, from Newcastle, Aus, arrived off Mahukona July 24. On July 26 the cargo was found to be on fire and before it could be extinguished the vessel burned to the water's edge. Crew saved. DOMESTIC PORTS. SEATTLE—Arrived Aug $—Stmr Despatch, Xrgm ;.HJ\P“" tmr Farallon, for Skaguay. ailed Aug S$—Schr Volunteer, for San Francisco. EUREKA—Arrived Aug $—Schr Azalea, from San Pedro: schr Transit, hence July 29; schr onde, hence July 27; schr Abble, hence PORT GAMBLE—Salled Aug 7—Schr Volant, for San Francisco. —Salled Aug 7—Schr Lily, for San il|cd Aug 7—Ship John Arrived Aug 8—Schr Maggie C Russ, from alinas Cruz. MARSHFIELD—Launched Aug 7, 5:50 p m— Schr David Evans. BANDO! Z?rrl\'zd Aug 8—Schr Corinthian, ISLAND PORT. -Arrived July 3i—Ship J B v . via Tahiti; U 8 . and was to sail m HONOLULL- DELAWARE BREAKWATER—Passed up Aug_7—8hip Arthur Sewall, from Honolulu, for Philadeinhia. NEW YORK—Arrived Aug 6—Stmr Allianca, from Colon. Sailed Aug 6—Stmr Advance, for Colon. FOREIGN PORTS. HONGKONG—Sailed Aug 6—Stmr Tacoma, for Tacoma. _Arrived prior to Aug 7—Br stmr Tartar, from Vancouver. ‘APE TO’ -Arrived July 12—Swedish ship Thessalus, from Oregon. yJ—Ship Great Ad- us. CALLAO—Arrived July Ger stmr Memphis, miral, from Newcastle, Sailed Aug Frareisco. HAMBURG-—Sailed—Ger bark Christine, for Santa Rosalia. MELBOURNE—Arrived Aug #—Danish bark Ingeborg, from Pacasmayo: 120 days. VANCOUVER—Arrived Aug 7—Br stmr Em- from Hongkong; Br stmr Australia and_Honoluju. 1 Aug 6—Stmr Orizaba, from for San a, from OLON—An New York. Sailed Aug 6—Stmr Finance, for New York. FALMOUTH—Arrived Aug 7—Br ship Col- ony, from Portland. YOKOHAMA—Sailed Auvg 7—Br stmr Em- press of China, for Vancouver. ADELAIDE—Sajled Aug 3—Bktn Jane .L Stanford, for Newcastle, Aus. NEWCASTLE, Aus—Arzived Aug 7—Bktn Jane L Stanford. from Adelaide. OCEAN STEAMERS. IVERPOOL—Arrived Aug 8—Stmr Common- wealth, from Boston; stmr Rhineland, from Philadelphia. CHERBOURG—Arrived Aug 8-‘Stmr Fuerst Bismarck, from New York, for Hamburg, and proceeded. ROTTERDAM--Sailed Aug §—Stmr Maasdam, for Boulozne. NEW YORK—Arrived Aug $—Stmr Pretoria, rom Hamburg and Plymouth. Safled Aug_S—Stmr La Normandle, for Havre; stmr_Deutschland, for Hamburg, via Plymouth and Cherbourg; stmr Barbarossa, for Bremen, via Southampton. LONDON—Arrived Aug $—Stmr Brazilian, Montreal. rom HONGKONG—Sailed Aug 6—Stmr Tacoma, for Tacoma. GLASGOW—Sailed Aug 7—Stmr Livonia, for Philadelphia. QUEENSTOWN—Sailed Aug $—Stmr Noord- land, for Philadelphia; stmr Oceanic, for New York: both from Liverpool. S GIBRALTAR — Sailed Aug 3—Stmr Aller, from Genoa and Naples, for New York. LIZARD—Passed Aug $—Stmr La Cham- pagne, from New York, for Havre. Time Ball. Branch Hydrographic Office, U. 8. N,, Me chants’ Exchange, San Francisco, Cal August 8, 1901 The time ball on the tower of the new Ferry bullding was dropped at exactly noon to-day- 1. e, at noon of the 120th meridian, or at § o'clock p. m., Greenwich time. C._G. CALKINS, Lieutenant Commander, U. S. N., in charge. ———— Sun, Moon and Tide. United States Coast and Geodetic Survey— Times and Heights of High and Low Waters at_Fort Point, entrance to San Francisco Bay. Published by officlal au- _thority of the Superintendent. NOTE—The high and low waters occur at the city front (Mission-street wharf) about twenty-five minutes later than at Fort Polnf the height of tide is the same at both places FRIDAY, AUGUST 9. Sun rises Time Time, Time| Ft. Pt L W H W L W 1 14| 4.1) 12:36] 2.9 112 8 44 1:400 209 204 06| 4.6 2:42| 23| :81-0.6) 10:51] 4.9) 3:37) 2.6 2-0.5| sl 51l 425 23 14(—0.3( 12:08( 5.2( 5:16[ 2.0 0.0] 12:46 53] 6:01™ 3] NOTE—In the above exposition of the tides he early morning tides are given in the left nd column and the successive tides of the day in the order of occurrence as to time of day; the third time column gives the last tide of the day: except when there are but thres tides, as sometimes occurs. The heights given are in addition to the soundings on the United Passengers | SANTOG-DUMONT ESGAPES DEATH Airship Rent by Winds and Dashed Against a Building. Daring Brazilian Aeronaut Is ,Offered Deutsch Prizs to Stop Dangerous Work. —— PARIS, Aug. 8.—Santos-Dumont started for the Parc St. Cloud at 6:30 a. m. amid hearty cheers. His initial movements were favorable, as the balloon turned around the Eiffel Tower 9 minutes and 30 seconds after starting. Just over the Avenue Henri Marien, however, a strong gust of wind struck the aerostat, which wavered violently to one side, almost simultaneously bounding backward a dis- tance of fifty yards. The hydrogen gas was forced from the front to the back part of the balloon, creating a sudden expansion, which caused the machine to dip. Her screw touched the steel cords and broke them. M. Santos-Dumont im- mediately stopped the motor and the hal- loon began to descend. U the cover of the aerostat struck the cor- ner of a six-story building. A report like a shot from a cannon foliowed. ~The bal- loon c¢ollapsed and fell rapidiy. Luckily the frame caught on the coping of the building and the balloon remained sus- Fended, otherwise Santos-Dumont wouid have been killed. Narrow Escape of the Aeronaut. As it was, the aeronaut hung in a most dangerous position in midair for half an hour, until by a great effort he succeeded in catching the iron bar of a window, to which he clung until Tescued with some difficuity by the use of ropes. The bal- loonist escaped without a scratch, ho ever. g The ‘explosion of the balloon attracted ! enarmous crowds, and the reception of M. Santos-Dumont upon reaching the street was most enthusiastic, many ladies clinging to his neck and kissing zdm re- peatedly. As M. Santos-Dumont superintended the removal of the machine he said he was quite ready to recommence operations. M. Deutsch, who offered the prize of 00¢ francs for the rounding of Eiffel Tow=r and the return to the starting point within a_given period of time, was o affected by the. danger that Dumont passed through that he told him he would rather present him with the prize at once | than to see him kill himself with his ex- periments, but the balloonist replied that e had rounded Eiffel Tower in such a short time that he considered the result too satisfactory to permit the relinquisn- | ment of his attempts in the futare. Explained by Santos-Dumont. Santos-Dumont gave the following ac- count of his trip: This time it is not the fault of the motor, which worked admirably. It was the balioon which caused the accident. I rounded the Eiffel Tower with admirable speed, as I had a | favorable wind, and was already returning over the Bois de Boulogne when the wind freshened suddenly and struck me sidewise, like 2 p in a storm. The balloon pitched and rotied, now and then recovering its normal | position. ‘Another sudden veering of the wind | caased the front of the balloon to pitch dow: | wards and the ropes connecting it with frame caught in the propeller, which struck the balloon wires. They broke. I saw the | danger and my only thought was to descend as quickly as possible. This T was doing suc- cesstully, but 1 was driven by a congary wind in_the direction of the Eiffel Tower. Again the breeze veered and threw me against a bulld- ing. The balloon burst like a toy gas balloon' and the fragments fell, completely covering me. The rest you know. T am unhurt. I have not a scratch and will soon recommence. The motor {s uninjured. 1 have worked it for 10 minutes. I will now send it to St. Cloud and set to work repairing the balloon. piy a matter of sewing the pleces together. The cause of the accident was that the bal. loon was insufficiently filled, I knew this. The | ventilator -also worked badfy. M. Deutsch. who was present at the | start, in an interview said: I am afrald the experiments will not be con- clusive, @s his balloon will always be at the w merey ‘of d, which is not the kind of alr ship w e ‘dreamed o PRIVATE PHINEAS FOUTZ MUST HANG FOR HIS CEIME| President McKinley Confirms the | Sentence Imposed by the General Court-Martial. WASHINGTON. Aug. 8.—For the first time since the outbreak of the Spanish war President McKinley has approved | the death sentence in the case of an en- listed man. The case is that of Private | Phineas Foutz, Company K, Nineteenth | Infantry. This soldier was convicted by a | general court-martial at Cebu, P. I., for the murder of Genevieva Torres, a native | Fillpino girl, oy stabbing her to death | with a sword cane in her home at Man- daue, Cebu. November 15, 1900. The court sentenced the accused to be hanged. The | | case being one requiring the action of the President, he confirmed the sentence and directed its execution at such time and place as may be designated by the com- | manding general of the Department of the Visayas, Philippine Isiands Savages Punished for a Massacre. | BRISBANE. Queensland. Aug. S.—The German punitive expedition sent to avenge the massacre of Dr. Mencken and other members of the first German South Sea_expedition on the cannibal island of St. Mathias landed from the German crui- ser Cormoran near the scene of the mas- sacre, killed eighty natives and captured seventeen. @ i States Coast Survey charts, except when a minus (=) sign precedes the height, and then the number given is subtracted from the depth given by the charts. The plane of reference fs | the mean of the lower low waters. Steamer Movements. TO ARRIVE. | Steamer. [ From. | Due. Progreso. .. IAIXS. 9 Arcata. 3 Zealandia...... | Honolulu . Aug. 9 Mackinaw Aug. 9 Wellington Aug. 9 Ban Mates |Aug. 9 Asuncion Seattle . Aug. 10 City of P China and Japan. Aug. 10 Walla Walla..., Puget Sound Ports.....|Aug. 10 E Humboldt .... Aug. 10 Valparaiso & Way Pts.|Aug. 11 Sydney end Way Ports|Aug. « |Humboldt .. iAug. San Diego & Way Pts.|Aug. 15 .| Valparaiso & Way Pts|Aug. 16 Portland and Astoria..|Aug. 18 | Panama & Way Ports.|Aug. 18 | San Pedro & Way Pts.|Aug. 18 TO SAIL, Destination. Augast 9. Point Arena.. Point Arena 2 pm|Pler 2 Aconcagua... | Valparalso & Way|12 = m|Pier 10 City Sydney..| Panama & Way...[12 m|PMSS Mandalay.... |Coquille River...... 4 pm/Pier 8 Columbia. Astoria & Portland|11 am|Pier 2¢ August 10. ‘oos Bay. 10 am Pier 13 eattle & ...|Pler 8 Mexican Ports China and Jaj Honolulu Pomona. Humboldt August 11. G. W. Elder..|Astoria & Portland|il am|Pier 24 Santa Rosa...|San Diego & Way.| 9 am|Pler 1 August 12. City Puebla.. | Puget Sound Ports.|11 am|Pler 9 Rainier....... |Seattle & N. What| . | P g & Puget Sound Ports| August 16. . | vaiparaiso & Way. FROM SEATTLE., ‘Walla Walla. Peru. Pler 10 | Steamer. Destination. Sails. Conemaugh.... [Nome & St. Michael..|Aug. 10 Bertha... Valdez & Way Ports.. Aug. 10 Centennal Nome & Teller City....|Aug. 10 Cottage Ci Skaguay & Way Ports|Aug. 13 YVictorlan Skaguay & Way Ports/Aug. 13 Humbold! Skaguay & Way Ports.(Aug. 14 LK1 Skaguay & Way Ports|Aug. 14 | City of Topeka |Skaguay & Ports|Aug. 18 | y Chas, Nelson.. [Skaguay & Way Ports.(Aug. 18 City of Seattle.|Skaguay & Way Ports.|Aug. 18 i @ CAST RO IS RESTRAINED FROM WAR - BY THE SENTIMENT OF THE PEOPLE Masses of the Venezuelans Refuse to Take Stock in the Alleged Invasion, and the Country’s Dictator Is Afraid to Begin Hos- tilities Against the ORT OF SPAIN, Aug. 8—The sit- uation in Venezuela is Impossible to define in detail. There are no further reports of invasion. Offi- cials of the Government are si- lent. There has been no engagement since July 24. The public now belleves that President Castro hoped to give through the press false news of the Colombian invasion in order to influence the country and obtain the support of the masses. The people are not stirred, however, and remain incredulous and indifferent. President Castro, without the support of the people, dared not declare war on Co- lombia and assist General Uribe in the latter's effort to overthrow the Govern- ment of Colombia. Officials Are Abducted. PANAMA, Aug. 8.—The train which left Panama for Colon on Tuesdag morning last was held up at Matachin Station for half an hour by a band of revolutionists. Twenty-five armed men boarded the train and abducted four Government officials. They did mot fire any shots or injure the raflway employes or passengers. On_the train were passengers en route for New York by the steamship Finance. There were also on board fourteen Sisters of Neighboring Special Dispatch to The Call. Charity, who recently arrived from Cauca, and several other women. After seizing the Government officials the revo- lutionists went in the direction of Em- ire Station. Their present whereabouts s not known. Dr. Aristides Arkona, Secretary of the Government at Panama, has arranged that every passenger train leaving Pan- ama and Colon be guarded by fifty sol- diers for the protection of passengers and to insure free transit. This procedure will be followed as long as the Panama Rail- way Company deems it necessary. No further trouble has taken place on the railway line. Traffic is going on in a nor- mal way. It is reported that 150 Govern- | ment soldiers will arrive from Buena- ventura next week to reinforce the isth- mus troops. The Colombian converted cruiser Na- mouna, with General Alban on board, is expected to arrive at Colon from Carta- gena on Sunday. Guerrillas Raiding Towns. NEW YORK, Aug. 8.—F. A. Drake, sec- retary of the Panama Railway Company, sald to-day that the communication which | J. Edward Simmons, president of the | company, sent to the State Department. expressing apprehension of trouble along the isthmus of Panama. and suggesting | that an American warship go to the Pa- cific side at Panama, as well as to the| Republic of Colombia Atlantic side at Colon, was sent largely as the result of the pressure which resi- dents of the isthmus of various nationali- ties have brought to bear on the com- pany. Since Wednesday night officers of the company in New York have received mail advices from the isthmus showing in- creased activity on the part of the insur- gents in the shape of depredations by bands of from forty to fifty gu las. As yet these guerrillas have no organiza- tion. They have raided outlying towns in the neighborhoed of stations of the rail- road, such as Bohio and Gatun, looting property and capturing citizens for ran- som. The largest body of them is near Chorrera and the Government force there is said to be not strong enough to leave | the town. The company’s superintendent has not reported the destruction of any of its property, and the uneasiness felt in this city is due rather to the statement of the United States Consul General and to pri- vate citizens. Traffic, however, even in the absence of any reported depredations along the rail- road line, is clearly tending, in the opin- ion of the officers, to become unsafe, and the significance of the movements of the rebels, they think, is that they appear to be a revival of the insurrection that Was suppos to have been suppressed last year. TWO PEOPLE KILLED BY A HEAVY WINDSTORM Large Shed Collapses on Seaverns Island, Burying Several People in the Debris. PORTSMOUTH, N. H.. Aug. 8—A dis- astrous windstorm passed over here this afternoon, causing the death of two per- sons on Seaverns Island and injuring a half-dozen others. Those killed are: MRS. L. M. MEALEY of New York, wife of a member of the band at the navy vard. NOEL PEARSON, a stonecutter. The greatest force of the wind was ex- erted on Seaverns Island, where the big shed of Contractor John Pierce, who is constructing the new drvdock at the navy | yard, was wrecked. Those killed or in- Jjured were in or near the shed at the time of the storm. . Priest Goes to New Station. SANTA CRUZ, Aug.8.—The Rev. Father Gerald P. Gay, who for eight months has been assistant priest of the Catholic | church, has been transferred to a Fresno parish_to be assistant to Father McCar- thy. Father Gay is popular ameng all classes here, irrespective of creed. Ends His Life With Laudanum. POMONA, Aug. 8—Charles Dolliger, a prominent rancher, tcok laudanum last night with suicidal intent and died this morning. He leaves a wife and one child. The reason for his suicide is not known. SHERIFF VAINLY ATTEMPTS TO STOP A PRIZE FIGHT Promoters Pull It Off on a Sandbar ‘When Driven From a Kansas Park. LEAVENWORTH, Kans., Aug. 22— This afternoon Deputy Sheriff Tom Brown notifiled the managers of the prizefight scheduled to come off at Korman's Park that the fight could not be held. Ar- rangements were tuen made to pull it off on the sandbar in the river, where the ring was formed and a ten-round bout fought between Joe Curtin of Chicago and Pat Early of Boston. The fight was a fast one and resulted in Early being knocked out in the tenth round. About 1000 persons witnessed the fight. Suits $7.85 so slow. can have the privilege of a yea emphasize the fact that everything is as we claim. who thinks that the clothes are not worth their former prices (let alone the present selling prices) can have his money back the minute he asks for it. P il Box Coats - $6.45 The suits were recently made by us to sell for $12.50 and $15.00. The box coats have sold for $10.00 and the pants for $3.00. The above headiines and the above values are the full story of this sale. you our reasons before for these reductions—we must be kept busy while business generally is These values are doing it. The reductions are so great and unusual on such good, up-to-date clothes that we want to We prove it with this offer : Any customer r’s repairing free. economical 4 A glance at our windows will al- ways prove inter- | esting, whether you need clothes, hats or furnishings. and ends in boys’ suits. More suits added We have added some more suits to our sale of odds The goods are quite well represented now and demand the attention of every Odds and ends from various lots worth from $4.00 to $8.00 are now to be had fot mother., $2.55 Boys’ white unlaundered shirts, sizes 12 to 13%, linen bosom, reinforced fronts and backs, 50¢ each. Elegant line of boys’ and children’s neckties in many styles, 25¢ each. Wash suits at closing-out prices. Boys’ and children’s straw hats, worth from 75¢ to $2.00, reduced to 45¢ each. Boys’ golf and sailor caps 15¢ eaeh or two for 25¢. SNW0O0D 5 (0 718 Market Strect. Those customers who are satisfied Pants . $1.85 We have told Out-of-town or- ders filled — write o us for anything in " men’s orboys’ eloth- ing, furnishings or hats.

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