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1 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, ADGUST 16, 1901, STEIM SCALS = THE TRANMEN Explosion of a Locomo- tive Injures Three Persons. Front of Engine Blown Out and Boiling Water Escapes. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN BERNARDINO, Aug. 15—~The boiler on engine 219 of the Southern Pa- | Head | cific road exploded last evening. Brakeman Johnson was probably fatally in; A and Engineer McCarty and Fire- man Cole were badly burned. The accident occurred between Bloom- ington and the San Sevaine switch. The east-bound through freight, drawn by one of the large tern, was pulling to reach Colton ahead of the Los Angeles and Riverside passen- ger, wk without the least warning the ]m;l‘t:r exploded, blowing out the front end of the gine or any of the cars leaving the track. At the time of the explosion the head |\\;’a was in the cab with Engineer Sprang to the engineer we fireman es ground. The brakeman and very badly injured and the ped ‘with “severe but it is dangerous burns from the es- steam and water, s cut from the engineer and showed that they scalded, most severely from n. They were deluged in oil the effects of the burns as le and wrapped up in blan- ough suffering excruclating bore unfiinchingly and The fire- but he had ially escaped the ng water into ions were plungs BUZZ-SAW CUTS AWAY THE FINGERS OF A BOY 0 attended to been fortunate and dreadful steam Lad Suffers Accident Similar to One | of Which His Father Was a Victim. SANTA ROSA, Aug. 15.—Philip Simp- son, son of W. B. Simpson, a well-known afternoon by a son_& Roberts’ planing the boy’s father Aug. have already been carried ento Canyon for use in re- iron bridges. So reports T. §. who is in charge of the riveting Sims for e Southern Pacific er says the work is pro- ¢ he now has facill- CHILD SLEES. MOTHER DI Woman Hangs Herself While in Room With Daughter. each which is Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 15—In a fit of ncy Mrs. R. Y. Templeton hanged self in her room at the home of Mrs. Morris, where she had been living for the past two ars and a half. Her dead d this morning suspended by a napkin from the bedpost. Death had resulted several hours previously, but so i ntly had the deed been done that the dead ear-old daughter of the 1 had been a confirmed v months and subject to . Last evening she was better spirits than usual, Morris left her she was and showed her a copy of she expected to send her «<ompanion, an elderly 1 ed to her room was in bed room. Mrs. Cole knocked n’s door to wake her re was no response, and he t she was seen on lookin hangire moned and the awakened. She knew her's death and as she as taken outside: woman and securing the around her bed- t with a safety-pin her head through the @eath Coast Line to Bz Reopened. SANTA BARI Ng. ported here in c will 15.—1It is re-! ircles that the reopened for through middle of September. now laying heavy rails at be completed end of the coast 1 be th he [ line has been thoroughly testéd ‘ately by the run- ns with as many sugar. With the into Ventura the 0 to Los Angeles line from will have been Santa Cruz Natives Busy. SANTA CRUZ, Aug. 15.—The Native Sons of Banta Cruz have made great preparations for the Admission day cele- ration at an Jose Thy have char- The Naval Reserves are to at- celebration and will participate ion tend th § Nobody ever will sell a good thing more wisely. Fels- cer’s; your money back if you Vaptha soap at your gro- want it. Fels & Co., makers, Philadelphia. BAJA CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters 152 GREAT RESTORATIVE, INVIGORA- Nervine. "i’arh--:sdmt ‘wonderful aphrodisiac and Special wronic for the Sexual Organs, for both sexes. Fhe Mexican Remedy for Diseases of the Kid- neye and Biadder. Selis on its own merits. NABER, ALFS & BRUNE, 825 Market st., § F.—(Send for Circulars.) engines of the Mogul pat- | ine. but without either the en- | the fireman, and all three | several fingers | 15.—Two hundred car- | evidently | angling | 2 train and wiil conduct a big ex- | PROTECTS THE CHICKENS AND SHOOTS A PLAYMATE Little Robert Easton Stops the Bullet That Otto Young Fires at a Poultry-Loving Rat. g — 5 . UNLUCKY SMALL BOY WHO RE- T CEIVED THE BULLET INTEND- ED FOR A LARGE RAT. OBERT EASTON, five years of age, who lives with his parents | | at Twenty-third and Florida | streets, was accidentally shot and | wounded yesterday by Otto | Young, 13 vears old. The bullet, which | was fired from a 22-caliber parlor rifl was extracted by Dr. Maher at. the City and County Hospital, where the tiny pa- tient is now confined. The rifle was the property of S. Maria a hardware dealer, doing business at Twenty-third street. Mariani uses a va- cant lot at the corner of Twenty-third and Florida streets and opposite his store | as a poultry vard. Vagrant cats, rats of | | vicious disposition and doves with healthy | appetites have of late made heavy in-| roads on his chickens and chicken feed. Otto Young came into his store vesterda:; morning and informed him of the appear- ance near a flock of newly hatched chick- OFFICERS SEUE ~ THEWET 60003 Ten Thousand Gallons| of Liquor Stopped at Dawson. Special Dispatch to The Call. TACOMA, Aug. 15—Dawson telegrams | received at Skaguay state that 10,000 gal- | lons of liquor which the Northern Com- | mercial Company of San Francisco ship- ped up the river without first securing a | permit to land it has been seized by the officials at Dawson and will be confis- | cated. - For two days the company kept the wire | hot in an endeavor to purchase a permit owned by Robert Lowe, a liquor dealer | of White Horse, who formerly operated a saloon in Dawson. Lowe would not sell his permit, though hg was offered a very large sum to even permit its temporary use. Lowe told friends of the matter, and | | in this manner-the story of the great ef- | fort being made by the Northern Com- mercial Company to save its wet goods first became public. The shipment consisted chiefly of case goods, which were shipped from San Francisco to St. Michael in June. It was sent up the river on the steamer Sarah. A great deposit of sulphur has been found in _the Skeena River, British: Co- lumbia, above the Kitsilos canyon. There is reason to_believe that the Puget Sound country and possibly the entire Pacific Coast will hereafter be supplied from this ource. A number of Victoria men have ecured control of the deposit. The existence of sulphur beds was told |to Peter Herman, a British Columbia salmon canner, who organized the syn- dicate to develop them. The steamer Mocking Bird of Tacoma has been pur- chased to transport the sulphur down the Skeena River to a point wnere the Vic- toria-bound steamers can pick it up. The Victoria Chemical Works, one of the argest users of sulphur in the North- west, imports large shipments from South America every year. \ | cCLOUDBURST DESTROYS WIRES AT TEHACHAPI Several Washouts Are Reported and Trains Await Repairing of the Tracks. BAKERSFIELD, Aug. 15.—A terrible cloudburst occurred late this afternoon at Tehachapi, doing an immense amount of | damage. Al connections by wire, tele- phone and telegraph are severed and it Is impossible to obtain particulars. Four or five washouts resulted and the Southern Pacific and Santa Fe Railroad trains are detained here until the track is in shape for traffic. Crews of men are at work repairirg the damage. It is reported that twenty inches of rain fell in half an hour. PHOENIX, Aug. 15.—A heavy rain of balf an hour's duration occurred at Mesa City, eighteen miles east of here, late this afterneon, which was accompanied by a heavy fall of hail, an unusual occur- rence in this region. The hail was large and irregular in form. The wind broke down trees and unroofed small buildings. A washout on the Maricopa and Phoenix road at the north bank of the Gila River threatens the bridge and passengers and mail are transferred. It is feared the bridge will go to-night. The indications are for more rain. et Child Tries to Save Brother. NANAIMO, Aug. 15.—In spite of the brave efforts of his brother, aged 14 years, to rescue him, 10-year-old rge Fielding was drowned in the Nanaimo SHLMON CATCH Lto a close at 12 o'clock to-night. > —3 ens of a big rat. Mariani loaded the par- routing of the rodent until he had waited on several customers. Mrs. Young says that the hardware dealer delegated to Otto the work of pro- tecting the chicken yard, gave him the him to spare neither cat, , Mariani denies. When he was busy with his customers, he says, Otto picked up the loaded weapon and sal- lied forth on his own account. He did not know, he declares, that the youngster had the gun until told that little Baston had been bowled over by one of the bul- lets intended for the big rat. At any rate, Otto stationed himself in the vacant lot and had been there but a hort time when he found 1 the trigger. Robert Easton was playing in the street with some other little fel- lows and was unfortunate enough to lo- cate himself in the line of fire. The bul- let struck him in the back and penetrated quite a distance. Robert’ reams notified the marksman that his bullet had found an uncxpected billet. Otto dropped the fifle and carried his baby victim to his home near by. From there Robert was moved, to the hospital, where the bullet was femovi and the wound attended to. Otto is ver penitent and Mariani will leave no more loaded rifles within. reach of juvenile rat hunters. BREAKS REGORD Columbia Season Closes With Remarkable Results. Special Dispatch to The Call. ASTORIA, Or., Aug. 15—One of the most remarkable salmon fishing seasons In the history of the Columbia River came Esti- mates of the pack differ slightly, but a carefully compiled statement shows that it has been 254,500 cases. This does not include the salmon handled by the cold storages. Up to July 20 not to exceed 75,000 cases of fish had been packed. The scarcity of salmon from the open- ing of the season to the date named was alarming and packers and fishermen alike expected the season to be a dismal fail- ure. On the night of July 19 a great run of fish entered the river. The fish were of unequaled quality and size and on the morning of July 20 every packing house and cold storage was blocked. fish toid the story of the great 1 from hatchery work. 2 s o The run was without precedent, but the scarcity of labor made it impossible for the packers to take more than one-third the fish that might have been offered. and then gradually fell off. During the run fishermen made as high as $200 in a single night. The pack of the cannerfes is_as follows: Union Fishermen’s Company, 25,000; Co- lumbia River Packers’ Association, 100,- 000; George W. Sanborn, 22,500; A. Booth, 24,000; Pillar Rock Packing Company, 22, 000; J. G. Megler, 15,000; F. M. Warren, Cathlamet, 11,000;" F. M. Warren, Cas. cades, 7500; McGowan & Sons, Chinook, 14,000; McGowan & Sons, Cascades, 7500; Seufert, The Dalles, 6000. Total, 254500 The cold storages handled 2100 tons of fish, equivalent to 53,000 cases. The pack- ers paid out for raw material about $1,200,- 000, 21,950,000 pounds of fish in all being handled. In lmticlPatlon of a big run hereafter, due to hatchery work, new can- reries wiil be built for next season. SEATTLE CONDUCTORS INCUR WOE FOR FLIRTING Twelve Ticket-Takers Reported to Have Been Dismissed for Ex- cessive Gallantry. SEATTLE, Wash., Aug. 15.—If a pretty nowadays she receives a regular ice- man’s glance. The days of the glad hand and reciprocal smile are past—buried in the grave with the official heads of twelve conductors who were really too glddy for a great corporation like the Se. attle Electric Company. It is said that a railroad official was so mortified when a maid from the aristo- cratic suburb of South Park, just above the tide flats, reported that a conductor had attempted to flirt with her and that a woman ‘‘spotter” was immediately put to work. When the “spotter” got through work flirtind had been eradicated and there were twelve new conductors at work. PN Y Amateur Stops Lighting Current. VALLEJO, Aug. 15.—The attempt of an amateur electrician to take a light from the wires of the electric company Wed- nesday evening caused the burning out of one of the company’s large transform- | ers. At Dillons Point it caused the blow- ing out of the fuses at the electric light River to-day, where his uncle perished a year ago. works, and also the extinguishing of the lights in this city and Benfllh. oceasion to pull | Marked | This fine.run continued for eleven days girl looks at a Seattle street car conductor | 1T LDIE'S D00 Mystery Shrouds Cause for a Young Man’s Death. Leaves Home to Visit His Sweetheart and Soon Ends His Life. —_— Spectal Dispatch to The Call. SALINAS, Aug. 15.—Coroner H. V. Mul- ler was called to Deep Wells, four miles from Chualar, yesterday afternoon, to conduct an inquest over the remains of Ed Pihl of that place, who is believed to have committed suicide Sunday night. According to the testimony young Pihl was last seen alive Sunday evening. He had been working with Talbott & Bar- low’s threshing crew and Sunday went to the home of his mother near Deep Wells, | After donning his best clothes he told | his mother that he was going to see his sweetheart. He did not return Sunday | night, but this caused no alarm, as it was supposed by the mother that he had | tarried overnight at the home of his friend. | Monday night approaching the mother ! became uneasy and asked the neighbors if | they had seen anything of the young man. About this time some of the threshing crew made inquiries of her as to the | whereabouts of her son, but nothing could | be_learned in regard to him. Early yesterday morning the mystery j was’ solved by one of the threshers, who i was walking through the stubble field a !short distance from Mrs. Pihl's home, | when he discovered the body of the miss- {ing man.. The top of the skull was torn joff and by the side of the body lay a re- | volver with one shell discharged. Ap- | pearances indicated that he had been i dead for some time, and it was not be- {lieved that there was any foul play con- | nected with the case. The deceased was the son of Mrs. An- | nie Pihl, a widow, and was 25 years of jage. It is reported that he d o love affair and conjecture has it that some up- | setting of his plans made him despond- | ent. | MYSTERY SURROUNDS | SUICIDE IN THE SOUTH Well Dressed Man With Jewelry and Money Kills Himself in Los | Angeles. | LOS ANGELES, Aug. 15.—Lying in an | unfrequented spot in East Lake Park the { body of E. D. Bright, a surveyor, was found this morning by two small boys. | Near the body was a revolver, with which Bright had shot himself probably two lor rifle, but was obliged to postpone the | hours before, as at that time a pistol shot | Make your $$$% count Qur sale of good, up-to=date cl hi i ~ makes your dollars do double duty | | | had been heard in the neighborhood. Tbe { suicide had purchased the pistol and a box - of cartridges early this morning. He was | about 40 ye: of age and came here from | Trinidad, Colo., two munths ago. | The reason for his self-destruction is a ! mystery and he left no message to ex- | plain if. The deceased was well dresscd, { wore jewelry and had $15 in his pocket. PLENTIFUL COIN . FOR PRUNE MEN Santa Clara County As- ; sociation Members i in Luck. 1 Speclal Diepatch to The Call. | SAN JOSE, Aug. 15.—The members of | the Prune Association will have a divi- | dend without an order of the court. To- | day the directors in sessfon set aside $300,- {000 to be appertioned immediately among the members of the association pro rata. This makes a total of $1,484,000 that has been paid the members on the 1900 crop. | The present prospects are the brightest | since the association was formed. Twen- [ ty-six cars of prunes were shipped to- | day and the orders were scattered, show- | ing that the demand for the prunes is | general. They were sold on the 31 cent |rate and the directors give it as their 1 opinion that there will be no trouble in i selling all now on hand at this pri { before the time for delivery of the grow | ing crop. | The money ordered apportioned comes {as the result of the large sales made | three weeks ago on the 8 cent basls. price of green prunes and fresh peaches and apricots is going up every day. The directors have been able at this session to settle all vital differences between them- selves and the packers, so there will be on hand. Unsettled points of dispute re- main, but they are not such as affect the sales and delivery of the fruit. This will be good news to the growers as well as the information of the dividend, for they | are sadly in need of money with which {to move the growing crop. | | SENDS CHILDREN AWAY | AND THEN DISAPPEARS Relatives of Indrnesident Puzzled by Her Mysterious Actions in Los Angeles. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 15—The relatives | of Mrs. Charles Hughes, wife of the rail- | way section boss at Indlo, are much exer- | cised over her mysterious disappearance { In this city two weeks ago. She came to | Los Angeles with her three children to pay a visit to her own and her husband's relatives. Her relatives failed to meet her at the train and she went to a lodging- house for the night. The next day she sent the two oldest | children to the home of her husband's parents in an express wagon, saying she would follow with the baby. Since then | no trace of her has been found and do- | tectives can find no clew to her wher | abouts. Her husband declares their r ! lations have always been pleasant and re- fuses to credit the idea that she may have eloped. He is inclined to think that the heat of the desert at Indio has unsettled her mind. Her pass from Indio was also good from here to Sacramento. but the railway authorities declare the pass from here to Sacramento has not been used. STy LUMBERMEN PROTEST AGAINST RATE ADVANCE ‘Western Trunk Lines Will Be Asked to Refrain From Changing a Schedule. | SEATTLE, Aug. 15.—An important | meeting of the lumber manufacturers and wholesalers _operating on the Pacific Coast_and Northwest was held here to- day. It was called as a result of the pro- posed action of the Western trunk lines in advancing freight| rates on lumber and_shingles. The proposed advance is at the rate of 3 cents a hundred on lines east of Chicago and St. Paul. On con- tracts already made a heavy loss would fall ‘upon the lumber manufacturers in this section of the United States should the proposed rates be put in force. At the meeting the proposition was dis- cussed and a resolution adopted that a telegram be sent to the various lines con- cerned in the change, protesting against such an advance. e . . Union Men Leave the Mineola. PORT LOS ANGELES, Aug. 15.—The colller Mineola cleared to-day under diffi- culties. All union men on board were or- dered to quit this morning. Eight men promptly went ashore. After some trouble the captain succeeded in filling their N SUCIDE LAID The | laces. Later in the day the bark Tidal Gane left without interference. - SCHLEY’S COUNSEL TO PUT ON ON THE DEFENSIVE Will Insist on the Rear Admiral's Presence at the Coming Court of Inquiry. Special Dispatch to The Call. s i ALL BUREAU, 1406 G STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, Aug. 15.—~Rear Admiral Schley will be in Washington to-morrow for consultation with his attorneys on his case for the court of inquiry next month. He will be represented by former Judge Jeremiah M. Wilson of this city. Another. of his attorneys will be Attorney General Isidor Rayner of Maryland. As- sociated with these two gentlemen is Captain James Parker of South Amboy, N. J., formerly an officer in the navy. tain Parker has already famlliarized himself with the documentary evidence, and with this knowledge and the advice of Rear Admiral Schley the course to be ursued before the court of inquiry will ge mapped out at to-morrow’s conference. SAYS HE DESERTED TO AID THE FILIPINOS Colored Soldier in Jail at Los Ange- les Makes Some Damaging Admissions. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 15.—General S. M. B. Young, commander of the Department of California, has issued orders that a careful Investigation be made into the case of John Fegan, alias Rube Thomp- son, the young colored soldier in the County Jail awaiting trial on a charge of stealing a bicycle. Fegan confessed to Sergeant Demmer of the local recruiting station that he is a deserter and that for more than a year he was a soldier in the ranks of the Filipinos, fighting agamst his country. Last April he deserted from the {nsurgent army, stowed away aboard the transport Tartar and arrived in San Francisco June 29. If acquitted of the charge now pending Fegan will become a Government prisoner immediately. If convicted he will be ar- rested and tried on the desertion charge when he leaves the penitentiary. The ex- treme penalty for desertion is forty years’ imprisonment. —-—— Barber May Have Ended Life. SALINAS,” Aug. 15.—Thomas Hart, a barber employed at Paraiso Springs, has been missing since August 1. On that day he purchased a pistol at Gonzales and told friends that he was tired of life and would soon end his troubles. Rear Admiral Sampson has not yet been notified to hold himself in readiness to appear before the court of inquiry. It is certain that Rear Admiral Sampson will be called if his physical condition is such as to make it possible for him to appear. If the judge advocate general does not ask to have him summoned Rear Admiral Schley’s counsel will insist on his appear- ance. They will endeavor to put him on the defensive from the start. It is probable that the cqurt of inquiry will assemble in one of the new buildings at the Washington navy yard instead of fn a room at the Navy Department, as was at first contemplated. A building is Jjust being completed at the navy yard which will afford ample accommodations to the court, representatives of newspa- pe{s and a considerable number of spec- tators. = i et e @ DISCIPLES OF SWAMI IN A MOUNTAIN RETREAT Santa Clara County the Locality Where a Hindu School Has Been Established. SAN JOSE, Aug. 15.—Swami Abbedanan- da, a distinguished Hindu teacher and philosopher from New York, is in this city for a few days after a visit to a school of his disciples who dwell in a retreat in a pretty spot back of Mount Hamilton. The school is under theé di- rect charge of a friend and disciple of his. The pupils are American and Eng- lish, fourteen in number, who have been attracted to take up their dwelling there and study the philosophy known as Ve- dantaism. Brush Fires Destroy Fences. REDDING, Aug. 15.—The forest and brush fires which have raged throughout the county since the beginning of the long continued dry season have done much damage. The latest big fire :south of Kennett, along the Upper Stillwater and down that stream, proved very de- structive, and only the strenuous efforts of residents prevented much greater loss. A public road from this city southward to the county line is flanked by a burn- ed over area. A part of the fence sur- rounding the County Hospital grounds was destroved. The railroad company has lost considerable fencing. DENUNCIATION OF THE TRUSTS Virginia Democrats Deal With Them in Their Party Platform. Convention Adjourns After Declaring Its Admiration for Bryan. FERENI M. NORFOLK, Va., Aug. 15.—The resolu- tions committee of the Democratic State Convention, after being out forty-eight hours, presented it report at 6 o’clock to- nigkt. ¥ The platform deals largely with State issucs. The first plank reads: ¢ The Democrats of the State of Virginia, in convention assembled, reatfirm their allegiance and unfaltering evotion to the Natiomal Dem- ocratic party and declare their admiration for its leaders, from Jefferson to Bryan, who have borne the party standards in victory and de- feat. The trust plank follows: We declare unalterable opposition to the criminal trusts and to every illegal combination. of capital. We denounce such trusts as a se- rious menace to public welfare, restricting the opportunities_and absorbing the substance of the people. They are the direct product of par- tial and unjust legislation, and a reckless mul- tipiication of corporations without suitable pro- visions for their control. The rights of Amer- lcan freemen must not be sacrificed in the interests of corporations banded tozether for their destruction. We #rraign the Republican party for both its failure to enforce existing laws and to enact laws against the trusts. The concluding plank of the platform is a declaration in favor of The principle of the selection of party can- didates by primary election, believing this to be the surest method of arriving at the will of the people and maintaining democratic insti- tutlons. We accordingly direct the State Cen- tral Committee to provide a primary election for the cholce of party- candidates for the United States Senate and for all elective State offices, and for members of the House of Rep- Tesentatives of the United States: for mem- bers of the General Assembly, and for couniy and municipal officers, except where no party nominations are made, and in the case of county and municipal otficers where for several reasons the county officials shall deem it in- expedient. The ticket was complcted by the nomi- natton of Major Willlam Anderson of Rockbridge for Attorney General. The convention adjourned to-night. | trade. regardless of profits. { '1I§ ciated by the customer. Il $7.85 quite a while. every lot. now priced at 25c¢ each. A glance at our windows will al- '§ ways prove inter- esting, whether you need clothes, hats or furnishings. Our workshops have over-produced—we increased our output consider- if ably, thinking that we would have even more than our usual big summer and fall We, of course, did not foresee the present labor controversy, which has affected business all over the city. As a result the store is daily receiving large shipments from our workshops—these goods are piled high on our counters. We cannot keep ahead of the workshops if we sell these goods at their, regular or intended prices—we will be overstocked and crowded for room. To overcome these difficulties—to keep the aggregate of sales up—'o keep [} the store busy—to dispose of these new goods, we have reduced the prices | Suits, made up recently in our own workshops to sell at $12.50 and $15.00, E have been marked at $7.85. 1l c.o:hing, well made and fully guaranteed. no delay in the movement of the prunes | ! This sale is most opportune—i} comes at a time when a saving is appre- He must make his dollars count. This is the store |}!] where his doilars will do double duty. \ If any customer does not think that the clothes are worth the former prices (regardless ‘of the selling prices) hs can have his money back instantly. You can beiieve what we say when we take the risk of your liking the clothes. Suits Box Coats| Pants. $6.45 More Odds and Ends in Boys’ Suits ! This will no doubt be the last sale of odds and ends in boys’\suits for || We are cleaning out everything in incomplete sizss and ‘stvles of | These odds and ends comprise sailo-s, vestees, Norfolks, Russian blouses and two-piece suits, formerly selling from $4 0o to $8.00. Each suit is | $2.55 Boys’ fine madras golf shirts, <izes 12 ?O'Ifi, special for one week, 80¢ each. Boys’ neckwear—nstwest effects in imperials and grenadine windsors, Boys’ blue darby ribbed fleece lined underwear, 50c a suit. | Boys’ wash suits at closing out prices—extremely cheap. Extra value i1 boys’ golf caps, 28¢C each. All boys’ straw hats worth from 75c to $2 00 raduced to 45¢. SN-WOO0D § 718 Market Street. Overcoats, made to sell at $10.00, are reduced 10 $6.45. Trousers worth $oo are priced $1.85. This is all good, up-to-date = = thing $1.85 Out-of-town or- ders filled — write o us for anything in men’s orboys’ eloth- ing, furnishings or hats,