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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1902. GANAL-ROUTE i GOOD AS PURCHASED Final Negotiations for Panama Concession Are Begun. Treaty Will Be Ready to Be Acted Upon When Con- gress Meets. : State Department Is Assured That | . GAUSE BIG 1033 Nearly All the Streams in State Are Out of Their Banks. Bridges Are Destroyed, Crops Ruined and Livestock Swept Away. DES MOINES, July 9.—The Des Moines River reached the high water mark of 1892, which twenty feet at midnight. At this hour the levee on the north side of town broke, flooding a large residence section. Most.familles removed earlier in the evening. A small break occurred in the Raccoon River levee just after mid- France Will Not Interfere With Transfer of Title. e Special Dispatch to The Call ASHINGTON, July 9.—The Panama ready ms good as ncessions from Col il whole negotiations Wi he p before the close of the year and the treaty with Colombia sent"to the beginning of the short term the Co- ) the tran company grant of | it by surances | ere with the new Panama t nec- 1 to be Govern- this The Spoon omise befor was called a com- a law by act| long s an act for the ma canal. There Nicaragua route The a ad F s are setfled. PAPERS ARE EXAMINED. The fi negot for the conclu- definite_tr between the bia, which is to of the Panama Departm ing the Pana- Colombian e settleme with property transfer of t to this ncurren! betwee it is said that a ce was made toward the end 0 ce must be had with | , but tnis it is believed be signed within a we i 'COLO}-JBIA ACTS PROMPTLY. | Co: Colombi Minister e, de hat k. the m the Govern transmitted to the > the effect that the | q to s et ® ADYT 3 for new elections i be elected and t bl xt four months and the bc proceed at once to ratify the 2 which is to be concluded ent that be- party Is which will terminate the ich has now lasted more the special attorney of Justice, who has to proceed Par t of the new Panama Canal left here this afternoon for At- where he will hold a with Attorney General K elegate ell probably will sail w 3 ance. The date of th parture of the Attorney General, who will i ell in Paris to make the final tion of the title, has not yet been fixed, but it probably will be Supreme Judges Are Renominated. SPRINGFIELD, Mo., July 9.—The Dem- ocra ate Judicial Convention s work at o’clock this n continuous session t night, nominating th Justices of the Supreme Court Burgess of Chillicothe, Chief y B. nt of St. Louis Fo; of Fredericktown. Judges Burgess and Valiant are members of the present court — e DE. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. ~8Shut your open your moutn and see what luck will bring you.”” The mother smiles at the childish gawme, and doesn’t realize that it is_a game she as a woman has perhaps played for a\great many years. Many a woman is weak and sick, mervous and di ed. She suffers from headache, backache and other ills. She wants to be well, but all she does is to shut her eyes and open her mouth for medi- cine and trust to luck for results. month after month, often in this same blind, hap-bazard fashion, and re- ceives no perma- | nent benefit, Women take | Dr. Pierce's Fa- | vorite Prescrip- | tion with their ) eyes open to the | fact that it cures womanly ills. It cures irregularity. It dries debilitating drains, It heals inflammation and ulceration and cures femele weakness. There is no | trusting to luck by those who use | “Favonte Prescription.” " My disease was displacement and ulceration | of the uterus, and 1 was in & terrible condition | with pein and weakness and bad given up all hopes of ever being well aguin ” writes Mrs. Har A. Brown, of Orono. 'nobscot Co., Me. | ~Had doctored with four difierent doctors with- | in four months, snd instead of getting better was wegher all the time. 1 decided to try your * e Prescription.’ ‘Golden Med- ical Discovery,’ and ‘ Pleasant Pellets’ as 1 had heard of the many cures resulting from their use, I bought five bottles and felt 8o much bet- ter after taking them that I kept on until T am =5 well as gver in my life, and to Dr. Pierce all the praise is due. 1 atnot say enough in favor of bis medicines. Before I began taking your medicines 1 only weighed one hundred and tmenty pounds: 1 Dok weigh one hundred and sixty pounds, I gain ode in six Foptta. 1 dhal x"fl"m ze Tadre with home . a5 i\is only waste of money. 1am now iz perfect health, &lnks to Dr, Pierce.” to ex- | She “doctors” | year after year, | | extent FLOODS IN IOWA [LEGAL TRICKERY ON PART OF GAGE ; - PREVENTS HEARING OF LIBEL SUIT| Judge Fritz Is Estopped in Trial by Writ of Prohibition and With Exception of R. M. Fitzgerald, None of Sub- penaed San Quentin Officials Answer Law’s Mandate night, and a large force of men is at- | tempting to hold the flood in check. Two Rock Island eastbound passenger trains | due here to-night are held at Commerce, | twe miles west of here, where the | tracks are covered with water. Trains | \ other roads, though late, keep in mo- tion. The Des Moines River dam is weaken- ing. If it goes out it will endanger the four cityy bridges and all the railroad bridges. The false work of the new Sixth-avenue bridge, which went out last | night, to-day swept away five spans of the Chicago and Great Western Rallroad bridge over the Des Moines. South of the junction of the Des Moines and Raccoon the river is three/miles e for many destroying crops and drown- rains streams destruction have from forced nearly all banks, and the livestock and other property suming immense proportions. It is im- possible to estimate the damage from the indefinite reports received. The dam- age is especially great in the central, western and southwestern parts of the State. The valleys of the Sioux and Ma- ple rivers are flooded, and Woodbury and Monona counties are under water. The Iowa is as Iowa River at Marshalltown is the high- | est singe 1881 Many country bridges have been d. Cattle and- hogs have in large aumbers in At Cedar Rapids 5.4 inches Towa Valley. of rain has fallen since July T The Ce- | dar Rapids River is out of its banks, and many_ families their homes. Numerous bridges have been swept away in Linn County. The Skunk River and Squaw Creek are out of their banks, and near the confluencé near Storey County thousands of acres are flocded and crops practically destroyed. The continuous rains are paralyzing business at Fort Dodge, and the railroads | The west end | are almost out of business. of the city is inundated and families are Des Moines River is point. Because of the e insulation on the electric power has been shut off, the town is in darkness. ar Oxford, in Johnson County, in a storm last night Jacob Burkhardt was crushed to death by the falling of arn on the farm of Wesley Prush. f a dozen barns were destroyed in borhood. Near North Lib- ence of Jacob Neidhiser was nd the family had a narrow e: ills and barns. The dam- is estimated at $50,000. ted the town of Exira last trains on the Audubon destroyed windm >-day. The town is under four ter. oon River at Adel, after be- Rac ing stationary all day, began to rise rap- y to-night. It shut off the electric light plant, and is doing great damage. -— CLOUDBURST IN COLORADO. Great Damage to Railroads and Mines in Fremont County. PUEBLO, Colo., July 9.—Accounts are corming in to-night of a cloudburst which swept the Wet Mountain Valley, the Grepe Creek region and other portions of y. Water was four feet deep in a portion of Florence. The Santa Fe Railroad lost two iron briages and 1500 feet of track. It is re- ported that Chandler Creek ran into the | Chandler coal mine and filled it, but this | may be exaggerated. Crops in the Wet Mountain Valley were washed out. It is feared that Grape Creek, the most dan- gerous stream in the country in time of freshet, has damaged the fine irrigation system there, which supplied orchards d nurseries around South Cannon. The Arkansas River rose six or eight feet here, but has done no damage as yet. — NEBRASKA’S LOSS BY ¥LOOD. Conservative Estimate Places It at More Than a Million Dollars. | OMAHA, July 9.—A conservative esti- mate places the losses from floods in Nebraska at more than $1,000,000, and some | estimates exceed twice that sum. { The rainfall that began last ontinued up to noon to-day. Reports received to-day show the conditions in the flooded districts to be worse than at first reported. At Superior, Neb., the Burlington/Rail- road lost 1000 feet of track, which siid into Republican River, and the Santa Fe s blocked last night by a foot of water running over the roadbed for a mile west of the town. At Biair, a quarter of a mile of the Northwestern's track was washed out, and the town of Herman is still in the midst of a lake. MISSOURI RIVER IS RISING. Eain Continues and the Danger Point Is Near at Hand. KANSAS CITY, July 9.—The rainfall at | K City thus far in July is four inches in excess of the normal fall for the whole month. Rain fell generally to-day in Kansas, Nebraska and Western Mis- sourl. ‘Many trains arrived here late be- cause of inundated tracks. The Missouri River is rising steadily to-night and will reach the danger point before morning. Rain is falling to-night. When clear weather comes the river will fall as rapidly as it rose. The only dam- age done so far is by the flooding of cel- lars in the bottoms, Andrew Wrickson, a farmer, was drowned in the Kaw River at St Marys, Kans., to-day. | TRAIN GOES THROUGH BRIDGE. | Fireman Is Killed and Engineer Fatally Injured. PEORIA, Ili., July 9.—A terrific electric and rain storm swept Peoria and adja- cent country last night. A Lawrence and Western freight went through a bridge at Harmdale, six miles from here. The engine and six freight cars are piled in the bottom of Farm Creek. The engineer was fatally injured, and the fireman lies dead beneath the engine. The Toledo, Peoria and Western passenger train due here last evening struck a landslide twelve miles east of here, and the en- gine was deralled. The damage to the timothy and oat crop is very heavy. 2 S e b Ancient Dams Washed Away. MONTEREY, Mexico, July 9.—A special from Parras, State of Coahuila, says: A cloudburst covering an area of fifty square miles to-day did damage to the of $400,000. The big Pataglana dam, the largest in Northern Mexico, broke with all the floodgates open and was destroyed. The San Lorenzo dam, which had been standing for more than 3% years, also was washed away. This dam was built of solid masonry about B s o e Fields of Grain Destroyed. EASTON, Pa., July 9.—A cloudburst in the Upper Bushkill district of Northamp- ton County last night did a vast amount of damage. Only meager details are ob- tainable, owing to washouts and the de- struction of telegraph and telephone lines. Charles Abel, a farmer, was killed by lightning. The Bushkill Creek overflowed Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets clear the munddy complexion. its banks and many fields of grain were destroyed. . their | of crops, | the | have been forced from | Johnson County the storm | evening | R.T1 EITZGERALD PRESIDENT OF THE PBOoARD,OF PRISON DIR E-CTOR S | | 3 3 Mr. District Attorney, a% to the time? Mr. Whiting—Well, T suppose as the writ is returnable on Friday, the chances are there will not be a decision for four or five days after that—two or tkree days at least. The matter had better be continued a week from to-day. The Court—A weel from to-day. Mr. Whiting—Monday, Tuesday or Wednes- day. Mr. Campbell—A week from to-day. The Court—A week from to-day o'clock, at 10 Mr. Campbell—If ycur Honor please, there | row to ratify the action taken Lo-night were a large number of subpenas issued for witnesses in this case. A great number of them have not been found, some have. I would like to have those who have been re- turned found called and ordered to return here one week from to-day ‘at 10 o'clock. The Court—Very well, if you will gave the rames to the bailiff. Mr. Campbell—There ‘is M. Fitzgerald—' all those who have been ced, Mr. Bailiff. I A, Edgar. Here is the other one, Hunter, Burns. (Bailiff Dougherty retired to the courtroom door and called the witnedses.) Bailiff Dougherty—None of these gentlemen answer. Mr, Campbell—Mr. Mr. Oliver, Mr. Bailiff— Bailiff Dougherty (interrupting)—Is Doe Oliver in court? Mr. Campbell—Well, we will take an order on the witnesses that are present, if your Honor in court. John rald is | ONLY OFFICIAL CON: | OF LIBEL SUIT AND SCENE SCTED WITH SAN QUENTIN PRISON VHO OBEYED SUMMONS TO ATTEND TRIAL | IN COURT WHEN ATTORNEY CAMPBELL ASKED THAT WITNESSES BE l' INSTRUCTED TO BE PRESENT WHEN THE CASE IS NEXT CALLED. — % OVERNOR HENRY T. GAGE, taking advantage of legal tech- nicalities, succeeded yesterday in preventing the trial in the court of Police Judge Fritz of the libel sult filed by Attorney Board- man against John D. Spreckels and W. S. Leake, the owner and the manager of The Call, respectively. By means of a writ of prohibition, se- cured on’ Tuesday afternoon from Supe- rior Judge Murasky and served a few hours afterward on Judge Fritz, Governor Gage temporarily blockaded the track of justice and prevented the immediate in- troduction of the evidence that will lay bare the regime of forgery, fraud, theft and falsification of records at San Quen- the prison under the administration of Warden Martin G. Aguirre, the bosom friend of Gage. The Governor of California by a legal makeshift has blocked the wheels of the engine of truth. Though he has blatant- ly proclaimed that he desires to vindi- cate his character and prove himself in- nocent of the charges of being a bene- ficiary of the crimes committed by the San Quentin ring, his Excellency refuses to air his grievances in a competent court of jurisdiction, easy of access to the many necessary witnesses and the pro- duction of requisite documents. Asla matter of “sentiment,” Governor Gage desires to have a hearing of the criminal libel suit in_the court of Jus- tice Downing of San Pedro, half a thou- sand miles from where witnesses and records are to be found. Judge Fritz was served with the writ of prohibition on Tuesday evening, while he was taking dinner at a restaurant. ‘When the case of the People vs. Spreck- els and Leake was called by Judge Fritz yesterday morning neither Governor Gage nor Attorneys Moore and B. Foote, repre- senting the Governor, put in an appear- ance. . S. Leake and Business Manager Martin of The Call were in the court- room, and Attorneys Campbell, Preston and Barnes were on hand to defend the interests of thé proprietor and the man- ager of The Call. Judge Fritz ascended the bench and announéed that, having been served with a writ of prohibition in the criminal li- bel suit, he could take no further steps in the case until the writ had been argued in the Superior Court. Attorney Campbell, for Messrs. Spreck- els and Leake and Assistant District At- torney Whititlg for the people addressed the court and asked that the matter go over for a convenient time, and the case was set for next Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock. , Attorney Campbell desired that all the witnesses who had been subpenaed shouid be instructed by the court to attend next Wednesday morning. WITNESSES ARE ABSENT. R. M. Fitzgerald, president of the Board of Prison Directors, was the only wit- ness summoned who was in attendance. Warden M. G. Aguirrg, his brother, J. A. Aguirre, general ove¥seer; Commissary Francis Foley, Assistant Commlssng Victor Gilardin and Shipping Clerk 3 McDougall, all officials of San Quen- tin prison, who had) been served with subpenas, falled to put in an appearance and treated the mandate of the law with- contempt. The arguments on the writ of prohibi- tion secured by Governor Gage will take place to-morrow morring before Superior Judge Sloss. A decision is likely to be given within a few days, and a ruling is also expected from Superior Judge Car- roll Cook as to the resldence of Governor age. ‘When these decisions are handed down the wheels of justice will move more rap- idly. Governor Gage is of opinion that the only court in which his reputation can be vindicated is the one situated in the town of San Pedro, in Southern Cali- fornia, where it will be almost impossible to secure the attendance of witnesses and the production of the public records. The Governor has used the machipery of the law to prevent the hearing of the evidence possessed by The Call on which the charges agalnst the administration of San Quentin prison and Gage are founded. The people of the State of California demand that the suit for criminal libel be speedily tried. The people are the real judges in the suit between Governor Gage and The Call, and as judges they will form their own conclusions as to why Governor Gage refuses to come into a court of competent jurisdiction, where witnesses and public records can easily be presented. CASE GOES OVER. The following is a report of the pro- ceedings before Police Judge Fritz yester- day morning: 'l'l”\e Court—Any motions, Mr. District Attor- ney? Mr, Whiting—None, so_far, your Honor. The Court—People vs, John D, Spreckels and W, 8. Leake. I suppose you gentlemen are aware a writ of prohibition was issued in that matter and tbat I have already béen served. Mr. Campbell—I presume, that being the fact then, the care had better be continued until such time as wé have reasonahle cause to sup- pose that the Superior Court will render a_de- cision upon that question. What do you s: 5 please, The Court—I will make the formal order, the same to apply to all witnesses, in order to have them here. All witnesses in the case of the People vs. John D. Spreckels and W, S. Leake will return to this Courtroom next Wednesday, July 16, at 10 o'clock a. m., without further notice, | | | | | which they were employed. This was one | IMPORTING NON-UNION MEN. | Union Pacific Slowly Replacing Cheyenne Strikers. CHEYENNE, Wyo., July 9.—The Union CHIGAGD STRIKE 10 END T0-0AY Curran Agrees to Terms Proposed by the Railroads. Settlement Is Hastened by Lukewarm Attitude : of the Men. Special Dispatch to The Call. CHICAGO, July 9.—The strike of the freight handlers is virtually setiied. Meet- ings of the strikers will be held to-mor- by President Curran of the order. Inas- much as Curran said to-night after a con- ference with the general managers of the railroads that he had agreed to their terms because the majority of his men were “going back” on him, there is little -ubt the terms will be accepted at the mass-meeting of the strikers. P By the terms of the settlement the strikers accept the schedule of wages of- tered them by the raliroads on July 1 This schedule was emphatically refused by the strikers at the time it was made. It offered an average increase of 20 per cent for all classes of labor connected with the Freight Handlers’ Union. The demands of the men would have made an average increase of about 30 per cent. The railroad companies at the time of offering the increase on July 1 said that under no circumstances would they recog- nize the union of the freight handlers to the extent of allowing the officers of the organization to make terms for the mer: with the officers of the rallroads by of the chief reasoms for the strike, the men insisting that the union should be fully rccognized. The railroads have won a complete victory on this point. The at- titude of the roads toward the Freight Harndlers' Union is the same as that maintained toward all local.organizations of railroad men. The freight handlers demand something that no other organi- zation of railroad employes in Chicago had asked, and the managers announced that under no circumstances would they agree to this. President Curran of the Freight Hand- lers' Union said after the meeting with the general managers to-night that he practically had been compelled by his own men to accept the terms of the roads. ‘““Two-thirds of them would have gone to work in the morning anyhow,” he said, “and it was simply a question of doing the | best possible under the circumstances. The railroads agree to take back all the strikers who will apply.for their old posi- tions by noon. to-morrow.” | The action of the teamsters was a pointed factor in settling the strike. They tcok issue with the freight handlers, and intimated that no assistance could be ex- pected from them, inasmuch as the freight handlers had struck against the gd\’i(e of the Chicago Federation of La- or. Pacific is slowly importing non-union ma- | chinists for .its Cheyenne shops and now claims to have 275 men at work. The strikers say the figures are exaggerated in the hope that they will grow disheart- ened. So far.the strikers have offered no violence to the non-union machinists, and leaders say the new men will not be mo- | lested. GALESBURG, IIL, July 9.—The Ch! cago, Burlington and Quincy Railway has ipped 140 cars of mixed freight from | “hicago to be sorted here and reshipped | to different parts of the country. A | squaa of extra men Is assisting the di- vision force in assorting the freight and reshipping it. S TR Strikers Gain an Advantage. | CHARLESTON, W. Va., July 9.—The | cause of the strikers was strengthened to-day when the agents of the operators, were advised by the Chesapeake and Ohio Company that it could not haul the coal offered pending the settlement of the strike. The Brotherhood of Locomotive | Engineers will not transport coal taken | out of the mines while the union men are on a strike and has so nofified the com- pany. el Strike Without Knowing Why. | BEAUMONT, Tex., July 9.—The em- plo of the Santa Fe machine shops | here have walked out on telegraphic or- ders from the heads of the union. The leaders of the men here declare that they do not know why they were ordered out unless it is in connection with the griev- ances complained of by the strikers at | Cleburne, Tex. There has been no trouble of any natur —_— Apply for Old Positions. | PAWTUCKET, R. L, July 9.—The street | railway employes, who I night de- clared their strike off, to-day applied for their old positions and signed contracts agreeing to work eleven hours in twenty- four at the rate of 182-3 cents an hour. The strike was for a ten-hour day, with pay a cents an hour. i New Things in Cameras. | New cameras, new films, new plates, | new pavers. Full lines of fresh goods at | correct prices. Also printing and develop- | ing. Sanborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market. * el Morley Signs a New Pitcher. 1LOS ANGELES, July 9.—Manager Mor- | ley of the Los Angeles ball team has | signed Pitcher James St. Vrain, at pres- | ent with the Memphis club of the South- ern League. St. Vrain commenced the season with the Chicago American League team. | vanced into acute DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. . IS IT AN EPIDEMIC? Vital Statistics Show an Alarming Increase in an Already Prevailing Discase—Are Any Exempt? At no time in the history of disease has there -been such an alarming in- crease in the number of cases of any particular malady as in that of kidney and bladder troubles now preying upon the people of this country. To-day we see a relative, a friend or an acquaintance apparently well, and in a few days we may be grieved to learn of their serious illness or sudden death, caused by that fatal type of kidney trou- ble—Bright’s disease. Kidney trouble often becomes ad- stages before the afflicted is aware of its presence; that is why we read of so many sudden deaths of prominent business and professional men, physicians and others. They have neglected to stop the leak in time. While scientists are puzzling their brains to find out the cause, each indi- vidual can, by a little precaution, aveid the chances of contracting dreaded and dangerous kidney trouble, or eradicate it completely from the system if already afflicted. Many precious lives might have been, and many more can yet be, saved by paying attention to the kidneys. It is the mission of The Call to ben- efit its readers at every opportunity, and therefore we advise all who have any symptoms of kidney or -bladder trouble to write to-day to_ Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a free sample bottle of Swamp-Root, the cele- brated specific which is having such a great demand and remarkable success in the cure of the most distressing kidney and bladder troubles. With the sample bottle of Swamp-Root will also be sent free a pamphlet and treatise of valuable information. Don’t make any mistake, but remem- ber the name, Swamp-Root. Dr. Kil- mer’s Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. BUSBELL SHGE' QUEER BLUNDER Figures as the Plaintiff Against Himself in a Suit. NEW YORK, July 9.—Russell Sage said this afternoon that the use of his name in connection with the proceeding at Newark against the United States Steel corporation was unauthorized. “I am one of the company's largest stockholders,” said Mr. Sage, ‘“and I would not attack my own property. I gave my pro; and voted for the bond conversion plan and so_cannot appear as a complainant in an action to prevent it."” Later Mr. Sage was in conference wit Abram S. Elkus, his attorney, for m than an_hour. At the close of the con- ference Mr. Elkus gave out the following statement: " With reference to the statement that Mr. Sage did not authorize my firm to have him intervene as a j defendant in the action brought by Mr. ge and others against the United States Steel Corporation, Mr. Sage in- forms me just now that he did authorize us to take the proceedings, but finds he gave his proxy fo Mr. Morgan to vote for the issue of the bonds, and, therefore, has requested m to take the necessary proceedings to withdraw his name as plaintiff. The instruction to in- stitute the proceeding was given to me per- sonally by Mr. Sage and he confirms it. Mr. Sage has written me the following letter: “Dear Mr. Elkus: Yours of the 9th inst. received, informing me that I have been made a plaintiff in the suit brought by Hodge and others against the United States Steel Com- pany, enjoining the issue of 000,000 bonds. There seems to be a misunderstanding in re. gard to this matter and I seem to have misied you. I know that you acted in good faith, be- lleving that I fully authorized you to act as you did. I find that I gave my proxy to Mr. Morgan to vote for the issue of these bonds, and, therefore, do not want to be a plaintiff in a suit. I hereby request you to take the nece essary proceedings to withdraw my name as a plaintiff. RUSSELL SAGE.” LIEUTENANT HICKMAN TO BE COURT-MARTIALED Accused of “Ducking” Filipincs as 2 Means of Obtaining Information. MANILA, July 9.—General Chaffee has ordered Lieutenant Edward A. Hickman of the Tenth Cavalry to Manila for trial by court-martial on the charge of cruel- ty to natives of Tayabas provinee. It is asserted that Hickman “ducked” two na- tives in a stream in order to obtain in formation. He is further charged with having “ducked” a third native, who died from maltreatment. The defense of the Ryan court-martial closed to-da: The arguments will be heard Saturday. The defense offered much testimony and many documents to | show that a state of insurrection existed at Jiminez, and that Captain Ryan was justified in using force to obtain infor- mation, protect his command and pursue the enemy. bSPEER S Sculptor Sues Mrs. Stanford. SAN JOSE, July 9.—Rupert Schmid, the sculptor, who is now engaged n prepar- ing the McKinley monument for San Jose, has brought suit in the Superior Court against Mrs. Jane L. Stanford to recover $19,325, alleged to be due for extra labor performed upon the frieze of the memorial arch at the Stanford Univer- | sity. Either way you look at our $10 made-to-measure suits, they are satisfactory. From a value standpoint they are most remark- able, for suits as good as ours made to your measure cost elsewhere from $12.50 to $15.00. From a style standpoint, they are all you could wish for. They are cut in the very latest styles fit like high-price garments. and We could go on and tell you about the all-wool material, the patterns, the workmanship and other features, but you may count on their being all right when we offer you your money back if you are not pleased: Every suit is labeled “Yeargood,” which means, “Good for a year.” Cloth samples free for the asking. Out-of-town ords_rs filled—write for self- measuring blank and samples. SNW00D 218 Mar®er 3t ano Cor Powen & Eddy Sig