The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 20, 1902, Page 3

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. THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1902 CLEVELAND DETANDS HARIONY; HILL ARRAIGNS REPUBLICANS Former Leaders lleet at a Democratic Love Feast and Sound Keynote of Party’s Doctrine. FTER a parting of six years Grover Cleveland and David Bennett Hill met night.at a Democratic love feast. Cleveland made a speech pleading for harmony in the ranks of en arraignment of the acts and policy of the present administration. | | the party, while Hill sounded the keynote of Bourbon doctrine in the next Presidential campaign— i and shook hands last | EW YORK, June 18.—Democratic unity was the keynote to-night | of & great gathering of repre- | tative Democrats, who hnd‘ to attend .ne opening of se new quarters of the Tilden esses were made by prominent | and afterward a collation was banquet hall to the distin- | s of the evening and a buffet | in the basement for zhe‘! the event was one of the | for many a day, as| hd David B. Hill met ng to draw the factions together. It was the first appearance of the ex- ve years and his first meet- in six years. Bryan had been invited to to speak, but no reply om hum. ved at the clubhouse, ac- | H. D. Hotchkiss, Dr. Jo- t and John C. Cainoun. He got into_the buiiding when B. Hiul, accompanied b; came in. Hill's ey .d as soon as he had en- b foyer and a mo- cordially shaking tous clt they wer hand. prolonged applause greeted as they entered the assembiy Dowling of the club soon and in introducing ex- nd said: 4 us here to-night the g Democrats. The first or of introducing candidate of two ex-President Grover | campaigns, tremendous applause as cended the smail platform. wound up with three cheers | When quiet was restored dent began speaking. He CLEVELAND'S SPEECH. d to participate in this oc- se who have assured me that this | to be dedicated to-night the reconstruction of r the inspiration of days of emocratic was honored by ev- Such an assurance hearty devotion | Tilden when living, career &nd Democratic to overcome ps there are those who one of banishment st this I shall not fAcient for me in | wed in matters of | the teachings and | in whose name harmony -night invoked. f party sin should therefore be e none to make; nor do I slution. I am here to take rers professing the same party he Democratic situation. I nced that this situation and some of us may think undermined. Whatever the t may be, our condi- cannot be improved r harsh names, nor by in- of arbitrary proscription The members of a business ment should not sit er's face in mute y regain financial dence of the business mination and gquarrel; mnor y_an angry insis- e business meth- mbarrassment. SOLVENT. very far from po- hould be pital and d serious injury since Mr. ident. Then and after- tates were not rare Senators, now ADVERTISEMENTS. Good enough for anybody! fLL Havana Fi LLER | plan of practically_extinct, were quite numerous, and Northern Democratic Governors, now almost never seen, were frequently encountered. If this state of impairment exists, an instant duty presses upon the managers of the Demo- cratic establishment; and one which they can- not evade with honor. Those of us less prom- inent in the party-—the rank and file—are long- ing to be led through old Democratic ways to old Democratic victories. We were never more ready to do enthusiastic battle than now, if we can only be marshaled outside the shadow of predestined defeat. Is it too much to ask our leaders to avold paths that are known to lead to disaster; proven errors be abandoned, and that we be delivered from a body of death, and relieved from the burden of issues which have been kill- ed by the decrees of the American peopl=? Ought not we to be fed upon something better than the husks of defeat?. are met in an honest, manly fashion, I belleve | is it too much to ask that | it will be productive of the best kind of Demo- | cratic harmony, In dealing with new issues we of the Demo- | cratic faith are fortunate in the simplicity of Democratic standards and the ease with which new questions can be measured by those stan- dards. A party based upon care for the inter- ests of all the people, as their aggregate con- dition demands, with no unjust favoritism for | any particular class; a party devoted to the popular government as our fathers ordajned it and for the purposes which they sought to establish; a party whose conservatism opposes dangerous ments and vet puts ne- barrier in the way of genuine and safe progress, ought to be able to deal with new conditions In & manner quite consistent ‘with Democratic doctrine, and stim- ulating to Democratic pulses and instincts. NO GAUDY ISSUES. Let us not forget, however, that it is not in the search of new and gaudy issues, nor the Interpretation of strange visions that a strong and healthy Democracy displa; its splendid power. Another party may thrive on the ever- shifting treatment of the ever-shifting moods of popular restlessness, or by an insincere play upon unreasoning prejudice and selfish antici- pation—but the Democratic party never. Demo- cracy has already in store the doctrines for which it fights its successful battles, and it will | have them in store as long as the people. are | kept from their own, and just as long as their rights and interests are sacrificed, by favoritism in government care, by inequality of govern- ment burdens, by the encouragement of huge industrial aggregations that throttle individual enterprise, by the reckless waste of public money, and by the greatest of all injurles as it underlies nearly all others, a system of tariff taxation whose robbing exactions are far be- yond the needs of economical and legitimate government expenditure, which purchases sup- port by appeals to sordidness and greed, which continually corrupts the public conscience. What but infatuation with the visage of de- feat can explain the subordination of these things by Democrats when they prepare for battle? If we are to have a rehabilitation and a realignment of our party in the sense sug- gested, it is Important that it be done openly, and with no mystery or double meaning. Our people are too much on the alert to accept poli- tical deliverances they do not understand, and the enthusiasm of the Democratic rank and file does not thrive on mystery. DEMOCRATIC HARMONY. The Democratic harmony of which we hear £0 much cannot be effectively constructed by mathematical rule, nor by a formal agreement on the part of those who have been divided, that there shall be harmony. It grows up natu- rally when true Democratic principles are plainly announced, when Democratic purposes are honestly declared, when as a result of { those, care and enthusiasm stir the Democratic blood. It was such harmony as-this, growing out of such conditions, which with the battle cry of ““Tilden and Reform” gave us the Democratic victory of 1876 against odds great enough to discourage any but a harmonious Democracy and against an opposing force brazen and desperate enough to take from us by downright robbery what the voters of the land gave to us 1 belleve the times point to anotfer Demo- cratie opportunity now at hand, but I be- lieve we shall reap the fruits of it only by following the line of conduct I have indicated. In any event, 1 have a comforting and abiding faith in the indestructibility of the party which has so many times shown its right to iive and its power for good, and I am sure the ve of patriotic Democratic wisdom will at the same time declare itself in the rescue of our country and of our party. My days of political activity are past and I shall not hereafter assume to participate in party councils. I am absolutely content with retirement, but I still have one burning, an: fous political aspiration. 1 want to see before I dle the restoration to perfect health and supremacy of that Democracy whose mission it 1= to bless the people—a Democracy true to itself, untempted by clamor, unmoved by the gusts of popular passion and uncorrupted by offers of strange alllance—the Democracy of patriotism, the Democracy of safety, the Dem- ocracy of ‘Tilden and the Democracy that de- serves and wins success. At the point in his speech where Cleve- land announced his absolute retirement from politics the crowd yelled, “No, no, no..” Ex-Senator -David B. Hill, who spoke next, was recelved almost as enthuslas- tically as Cleveland. Dowling ‘in intro- ducing him said: “Mr. Hill is to-day the recognized lead- er of his party in New York State, and under his guidance and leadership we are confident of victor: SIGNS OF THE TIMES. Hill said in part: The signs of the times point unmistakably an awakened interest in the promotion of “ FLORODORA ™ BANDS ars of same value as tags from “STAR,” * HORSE SHOE,” ~SPEARHEAD," ' STANDARD NAVY,™ * OLD PEACH & HONEY.” = SAW LOG,” ** OLE VARGINY™ or “MASTER WORKMAN"" Tobacco. VIM, VIGOR, VITALITY for MEN ON ~BISHOP'S PILLS over fifty e been in use by the leaders of the Mormon Church and their followers. Positively cure the worst cases in old and young arising from effects of self- e, dissipation, excesses or arétte-smoking. Cure lost Manhood. _Impotency, Power, Night Losses, Insom- nis, Pains in Back, Evil Desircs, Lame Back, Nervous Debility, Headache, Unfitness to Mar- ry, Loss of Semen, 50 Varicocele or Con- Stop Ner vous T;vnchln(l of ids, Effects are immediate. Im- Vizor and pore CENTS 10y 4 every tunc- Dor't get despondent, a cure is at hand, undeveloped organs. Stimulate 8 for A written guarantee to cure or ney refunded with 6 boxes. Circulars free. tion. Restore small, ihe brain and nerve centers; 50c a bo £250 by mail. Lost | cess of Democratic principies of government. These manifestations, howe: are not con- fined within strict par but renewed activity in political affairs is displayed as well among those of independent vroclivitles and among the peovle generally who are not satis- fied with existing political conditions and d: sire a chanze of the public policies now pre- valling. There is especially a deep conviction among_thoughtful people that there is some- thing radically wrong In the foreign policy of the present administration. Hill here referred to the recent speech of Mr. Hoar in the Senate upon the Phil- ippine question, and said that it had made a profoupd and lasting impression upon the heart and consclence of the country. Hill continued This great and patriotic spe or onswered by the partisan address of Presi- dent Roosevelt, delivered on Decoration day in violation of ‘the proprieties of the occasion, wherein he purposely or inadvertently confused the well-recognized distinctions which exist between the administration and the Govern- ment—between the army and the Government, and between all the other officials of the Gov- ernment and the Government itself; and assumed to question the lovalty of . those who have ventured to criticize the cruel acts of a few officers of the army, who, 1f semi-official reports are correct, have undoubtedly disgraced the uniform which they wear. This confusion of the state jtself with the ruler thereof is not new in history. It was Louis XIV who once made the sarae mis- take when he assumed to be France and uttered the famous declaration: *I am the state,” a remark which might have lost him his he: in later times of less despotism; and President Roosevelt in another sense seems to have al- ready lost his head when he forgets that this country differs from both ancient and modern France in that here it is not a_crime to cri cize the army or the Presidentfor any other servant or servants of the people, and he needs to be reminded that it.is a_government of law; a government under a written consti- tution,’ wherein the right of every citizen to freely exvress his sentiments upon administra- tive questions is expressly guaranteed—and that loyalty to the Government does not con- sist in loyalty to individuals or to the policies of those who happen to hold official positions ARRAIGNS ADMINISTRATION. Loyalty to this Government consfsts in at- tachment to our free Institutions—in the faith- ful observance of constitutional provisions—in respect for its flag as the embiem of civil lib- erty—in support of the authorities of the United States against the attacks of our for- eign or domestic foes; but it does mot con- sist in ostentatious professions of Americanism’’ nor indifference to the preserva- tion or spread of repub'’ican forms of Govern- ment anywhere, nor in suppressing free speech nor in conguering the free people of any and distant lands, who desire to govern themselves, nor in unla®fully sending accredited repre- sentatives of this Government abroad without the consent of the Senate, to witness the coro- nation of a King whose monarchical govern- ment, to its shame be it sald, has just suc- ceeded in crushing’ the two struggling repub lics of South Africa. And right here I may be permitted to suggest that the administra- tion of President Roosevelt will be particularly noted as the one during the existence of which the republics of those brave and gallant peo- ple were destroyed—destroyed without one word of protest or one effort to save them or one kind word of sympathy for them in their unequal struggle, expressed on the part of this —the greatest republic of the world—whose ch was not met Address BISHOP REMEDY CO., 40 Filis St. Ean Francisco, Cal. GRANT DRUG CO., &nd 40 Third sf | infivence should always be exerted on the side of_free institutions, In contrast with that supine attitude we and _un-American experi- | “intense | | ject of Cuba,, dealing first with the ad- If these questions | | criminal or military law. should not forget the vigorous and patriotic action of that Democratic President who honors this club with his presence 4 when that same mighty empire of Great Britain in 1895 attempted to crush the republic of Venezuela, promptly sent that famous mes- @ saved from destruction. GOES AFTER GENERAL WOOD. The ex-Senator chen took up the sub- ministration 0f General Wood, whom he bitterly arraigned. The use of money for partisan and lobbying purposes in aid of administrative measures pending before Congress,” ne declared, “'served to emphasize the irresponsible and aanger- ous character of arbitrary military rule anywhere, whether temporary or perma- nent. Continuing he said: The subject demands the investigation of Congress and the prompt punishment of the offending official if he can be reached through The history of the of DEFENDS POLICY Exhaustive Speech by WASHINGTON, June 19.—The cq:'eningi day of the week's debate on the Philip- pine bill in the House was signalized by | speech by Cooper of Wisconsin, chairman contended that the problem of the Philip- pines should not be a party question; that both political parties brought on the war wit{) Spain and the votes of members of both made the islands American territory. The | an able presentation of the Democratic position, but he ylelded the floor speaking about an hour and will resume to-morrow morning. These were the only speeches made to-day. CROWNINSHIELD'S COMMENT I'TAY CAUSE COMPLICATIONS Italian Embassador Protests Against Charge That Americans Suffered Indignities. IN PRILIPPINES Representative - Cooper. s 77 S A E 5 - EAR ADMIRAL CROWNINSEIELD’S caustic comments on the arrest of American naval officers at ’ Venice are likely to lead np to international complications. The Italian Embassador at Washington Contends That the Problem called at the State Departrent yesterday and entered a protest against Crowninshield’s statement r Should NO‘,“ Be a Party i that the Americans recently imprisoned by the Italian authorities suffered “revolting indignities.” | Qu- sticn. e Stk o o : i X | Special Dispatch to The Call. Chicago court of ‘inquiry was concluded. These officials felt that it would be best | ‘While the Embassador admits that the JL BUREAU. 1406 G STREET.N. Wa W A ! jails in Italy are not as sanitary as the remarkably strong and exhaustive | W., WASHINGTON, June 19. sage to Congress which electrified the country, S cs ly has taken umbrage at the | llow the incident to drop out of sight, | ©fes in the United States, he expresses e e sl flos foset Botunne 2;‘:‘1&2 ot ffl:!é"fiéfi'&‘“fif&" — i::{c,nment ille 1. Mo putiithed | s 1 s ‘agreed by Secretary Hay | the opinion that if an offense was com- boundary dispute, € seize Verszuela without | 81ven close attention by both sides of the disapproval by Rear Admiral | yna¢ the report of the proceedings of the | l’fi‘é‘3‘&.‘3&“2f.'o’iu'x“&'n'é'r“‘l'h”é"‘c’.,,'fi,',",.’l first submitting ine alleged difference to ar- | House, Much of the speech was a gen- | crowinshield of the findings of the court| court of inquiry should not be published. | e s s s bitration, or else this Government would inter- | cral defense of the policy pursued by the | of inquiry in which he said that the offi-| \hile the Embassador agreed that noth- | 3¥ local punishment | pose its slr(»nf frmtrn& the paut;c‘uun of that uflmmlsxlratlm;“ anlv.}i drrew) repeated ap- | fng should be made public in Italy bear- | The publication of the text of the dis- republic. And Great Britain finally concluded | plause from hiseside of the House. He Frae e A il = v n ! to arbitrate the dispute and Venezuels was suffered ‘“revolting indignities’” while im- approval from London has undoubtedly CH S o h civil court :a';grog: ‘!V‘;lelcrl)lni;ieefllA":ng:rl’c;r: e flcers were | €mbarrassed this Government, ard Rear convicted. The Embassador says that the [ Sdmiral Crowninshield will- probably be record of the civil court, a copy of which | ‘”bfl ‘01:’*9 ain how t] ehmauer bl“ar:“ he showed to Acting Secretary Hill to-{ PuPHe. was rumored that a cable has [ already been sent to Crowninshield re- | prisoned. Signor Mayor des Planches, the Italian Embassador, called at the State of | Department to-day and requested an ex- Which | o anation of the publication. He declares parcies ratified the treaty. p 2 v vi self-defense ains the s statement of most_telling portion of his bill was the | that his government will in sel day, contains the sworn s parallel he drew between the present attl- | probably publish the record of the trial| many witnesses that the officers were in- | 1UeStng (his Information, but it bocsen tude of the opposition and the attitude | in order to show that the officers were at | toxicated and provoked trouble in the | ° tion. T retary in o s from the Navy Depart: this evenin; of the opposition during and immediately | fquit. Signor des Planches talked with | cafe. Now that the text of Admiral fe Volmiions mir et e T succeeding the Civil War. = 5 - A P s s Sones of Virginia, the fanking member | DF: D J. Hill, acting Secretary of State, | Crowninshield’s comment has been pub- | 2_Voluminous mam He has not made up his mind whether cr not he will make it public. Rumors are current to-night that Cap- tain Dayton of the Chicago, president of the court of inquiry, will request a court and Secretary Moedy, who a: red him that the publication had been made with- out authority from the Government. The‘ Embassador has cabled the facts to his government, and is awaiting advices. It is feared the matter may take a more lished, the Italian government is likely to | retaliate by publishing the record of the | civil court to show that the trial was falr, | and by furnishing evidence to show that | the officers were not subjected to ‘‘revolt- ’ ing indignities.”” The Italian authorities cers of the Chicago arrested in Venice} | | | the minority of the committe, made | 1 after | ' a country does not furnish a more flagran; : = serious turn o account of the apparent | have recelved letters from the United | O s omuge o I Dreach ofaofficlal duty as well gs of officlal | MANAGUA, Nicaragua, Juné 10.—All the | Gioiation by the United States of its side | States Consul at Venice expressing satis- Crowninshield’s sharp eriticism of Dayton nor rebuked nor censured, nor called to ac- | pleted. < made with Secretary Hay soon after the | ficers were treated. in behalf of the imprisoned officers. count by the administration, but gpublic at- | tention to the scandal was sought o be divert. o ed by the sudden interposition of a epecial message to Congress imperlously demanding | the passage of a miserable compromise ‘‘twenty per cent”” measure-of ‘‘justice to Cuba.’ | Discussing the Cuban tariff question | || Hill sald the present controversy in Cuba | J | over that subject served to illustrate the “hypocrisy as well as the unsoundness of the whole Republican position on the subject of the tariff. Proceeding on this | topic he said: The whole system of governmental favorit- ism, whereby the constitutional power to tax for the purpose of providing revenue.for the needs of the Federal treasury s improperly used to build up one man’s business at the px- pense of another's, by discriminating in f&vor of one industry as against another, Is a viclous system which has long afflicted the country and ich has grown more and more intolerable with years, and against which the Democracy has ever protested. It is utterly indefensible | | upon any just and proper principle of govern- ment. There s no justification for the exer- clse of power of legisiation to make miilionaires of one class of people and paupers of another. FRIENDS OF CUBA. The country is just now aroused to the in- justice and ‘enormity of the Dingley tariff | (which it should not be forgotten was passed by a Republican Congress and approved by a Republican President), especielly in its appll- catlon to the sister republic of Cuba, and pub- lic sentiment is apparently demanding that the 1 whole wrong should be righted, but instead of | J that being proposed to be done, the subject is being juggled with In the Senate and a tub fs proposed to be thrown to the whale in the shape of an unsatisfactory compromise with injustice, whereby four-fifths of the official robbery shall be permitted to remain, not in the interest of the country, but solely in the interest of the ‘‘preservation of Republican | harmon: | It is not believed that it is the province oli the Democrats In Congress to assist In the consummation of any such inadequate and ques- tionable scheme. Let the injustice be wholly | or substantially righted, not by plecemeal legis- | latio but by a complete and comprehensive | measire based wpon sound Democratic prin- | ciples and along right lines. A ‘‘reciprocity’” measure is a misnomer which does not contem- | | plate at least 50 per cent reduction of the ex- | isting tariff burdens. ‘When the people of | Cuba are asking for bread we should not offer them a stone. I If the policy of protection is to continue in | whole or in part to be tolerated by the coun- try it may be well to consider whether it were | no. better that its evils should not be at- | tempted to be mitigated by plecemeal or pop- 8Bun legislation, but that our efforts should be reserved until the country has become so sur- | felted with its monstrous injustice that it fs | prepared to destroy the whole system of pro- | tection and to return to a constitutional and | Just system of taxation for purposes of revenue only. Neither are we Insensible to the appeals of Cuba for relief from the tariff exactions im- | posed by the Republican party. We were the | friends of Cuba when she was suffering from | Spanish oppression and when a Republican ad- | ministration was reluctant to interfere in its behalf. We are the true friends of Cuba to- | day and we are prepared to mete out to her ! not merely a paltry “‘20 per cent,” but the full | measure of justice to which she Is entitled and which the administration now refuses to concede to her. ALLEGED TRUST BREEDER. Hill asserted that the logic of events had demonstrated the soundness of many Democratic contentions of recent years. He recited that portion of the Kansas | City platform which condemned the Ding- | ley' tariff law as a trust-breeder and sald that this measure had not only sucoeeded in creating more trusts than ever before in-the history of the country, but it has also succeeded in stifling competition to a | greater extent than was ever known. He ! declared further that it had succeeded in | unnecessarily raising the cost of living | and had caused more strikes on the part | of workingmen than at any period of our | history. He added: That there has existed for some time a poy- lar gentiment demanding reliet in some torm | irom these exactions is quite apparent. Acting | upon the assumption that the trusts should be | prosecuted by tneir friends and not their ene- | ‘mies, the national adminmistration has at last | constrained fitself to institute some civil suits | to test the etfica of the Sherman act. Whas | has been the net result? A few temporary in- | Junctions have been ubtained, with the t t consent of the trusts themseives, or at least with little or no oppositian, which in general terms restrain the trustd from violating th: Sherma act (which they expressly deny they have violated or are now violating) and littie or nothing else has been accomplished, and the | courts will soon adjourn for the summer; the business is continued and prices remain the same. Tt is a sufficient commentary on the whole proceeding to say that no criminal pros- as been Instituted; no arrest has been made and no indfetment found anywhere, ‘What the people nt is immediately reliet from h prices extorted from the; More relief can be obtained by the up- | plication of a gpeedy and effectual remedy in the repeal of all tariff duties upon productions controlled by the trust, It has unrcasonably increased public taxation for the benefit of pri. vate interest and finally it has promoted dan- gerous speculation to an extent which the bol est business gambler ne dreamed of, where- by millions upon mililcns of worthless stocks have becn unloaded upon a deceived publie, upon the promise and expectation of dividends whiet cannot be earned and never be realized, | creating an_ alleged prosperity, which must necessarily be and fictitious; and when the bubble bursts—as ere long it surely must— it will {nevitably bring disaster to the business community, and the public will have learned to | thelr so v that lesson of political economy which teaches that people can never get rich by simply taxing themselves, ON DEMOCRATIC UNITY. There I5 substantial accord among the Dem. ocrats of the country upon the timely {ssues which are now engrossing public attention, We are all united in tavor of the preservation of constitutional liberty wherever our flag floats. We are opposed as the permanent policy of the Government to the maintenance of dependent onies to be governed outside the pale of the constitution. We are all agreed that the civi] hould always be superior to the military ower, : We all concur in the principle that taxation should be imposed for public purposes only. We all favor freedom of commerce, and ther fore favor genuine reciprocity with forelgn na- tions, but are all opposed to sham Republican reciprocity, which is only another name for Republican hypocrisy. There is no division in eentiment in our opposition to corporate com- binations of capital which create monopolies, stifle competition and unreasonably enhance prices for the necessarles of life. We all stand for free trade In all articles con- trolled by the trusts. We all desire justice for | Cuba and justice to the consumers of the Unis- | ed States also. We All stand where Jackson, Benton and Tilden stood—in favor of hard money as opposed to an Irredeemable paper Currencs. We all recognize the dignity of labor and its | right to demand just and adequate compensa- | tion. We are all opposed to an immense Stand. Ing army in times of neace. We are all in favor of the constitutional re- form involved in the election of United States Senators by the people rather than by State Legislatures. We all adhere to that doctrine declared by Jefferson as follows: ‘‘Peace, commerce and Continued on Page Five, The suits we sell for 500 Many otherwise wise men waste money in buying their clothes. They go to high- priced stores and pay well for the privilege. If they can afford it, then, very well, but nine out of ten men appreciate saving all that is possible when they buy their suits. In our store you get full and fair value for every dollar spent—-the value fies in the materials, workmanship and style of the garments. The value is there, as you buy direct from the makers, and the middleman’s usual profits go into the making of the clothes. Here you get better value for the same money or the same value for less money. Our $9 suit is what many men want. It comes in solid blue serges and mixed tweeds and cheviots. It combines style and value. Men'’s striped worsted trousers, variety of patterns, $2.50 value, for $1,95. Sailor Suits—=$2.00 Every mother thinks that her boy is the hardest on clothes of any young- ster she ever saw. To clothe him at a small cost is a constant study. watching for bargains and picking out good values. We can help you on this clothes question. We make the garments ourselves and sell direct to you— this means but one small profit, which is a saving to you. Suppose you see the sailor suits we are selling for $2.00. They are all- wool garments in a number of swell, stylish patterns; actual value $5.00; ages ) 3 to 12 years. It means All sorts of outing togs for boys at all prices. Bring the boy up and we can outfit him. # Imported Mexican and 75¢. Baseball and bat or fitting department. straw hats for boys, children and ladies, 15¢, 25¢ explosion cane free with every suit in the boys’ out- To mothers frée: A set of six beautiful pastels. Out-of-town ";. 3 Write for orders filied— gs’ our new write us. - catalogue. 718 Market Street

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