The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 6, 1902, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1902. TEXANS FIGHT VIGTORIA POLIGE WITH WEAPONG ARREST COLEMAN Three Men Killed in a Shooting Affray on a Street. City Marshal Murdered While Escorting His Pris- oner. ORANGE, Tex., Nov. 5.—Jeff Chenault, City Ma Jordan and Tony Jones | were killed in a shooting affray here late | to-day. Bad blood is said to have existed be- | tween Chenault and Will Harris, a well- known young man, for some time. To- dGay the two met and after a war of | words Harris secured a douhle»barreledi shotgun and killed Chenauit. Harris ran ult’s brother, Marshal officer was conducting young il he was snot and killed and r escaped. It is mnot known Jordan, although there were a mber of people on the streets at Will Harris was d in jail. At this 3 e brother, James Harris, started for a nearby store, declaring that 1d procure a weapon and take part t Tony Jones handed which the former 1 and, as he was driv- rs appeared on the scene on Jones, Carrie Nation in the Debris. NEW YORK, Nov. 5.—The west-bound nond express on the Lehigh road, which left Jersey City wrecked east of Newark Rail 20 p. ss seriously injured, one coach ine being overturned. The ex- 3 siding and collided with an One of the passengers hurt was ie Nation of Kansas. Her hand cut and her arm badly ADVERTISEMENTS. GRA[N- THE PURE Do you know that three-quarters of GRAIN COFFEE 1l the world’s headaches are the result ing tea and coffee? k will satisfy you or us. We a single article go out ess it has had the most s to washing, starching requisitey and ironing. m e every patron a satis- We'd 1l to put you on o saw edges. o | UNITED STATES LAUNDRY | INVESTT Office 1004 Market Street, Oakland Office—54 San Pablu Ave inflicting | m which he died a few mo-| m. Fifteen persons were | But the Best| | W. | mother, | row morni; | | | | { Burdell, an old ploneer, | decree of divorce i | | { | Near Powell. | 1 | For Stomach Disorders, Cout and Dvspepsia, DRINK VICHY Best NATURAL Alkaline Water 220 Brosdway, N. Y. 1 i T DB D DO DRV visir DR. JORDAN'S crear EUSEUK OF ANATOHY 1051 MARZIT 7. bet. 62 2Tek, 8.7.Cal, The Largest Aratomical Muser: World Weuknesses or any con: dusease ely cared by the Speaialist on DR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN Consultation free and stiictly private. .. A Wite for Book, PRILOSOPRY of MARBIAGE, MAILED FREE, (A valusble beok for mes) ! . | 4DV § D2 HALL'S REINVIGORATOR s in 24 hours. Five secret Impotency, hoea, Gleet, Lost Man- wasting ef- excesses. I bottles, $5; guaranteed address orders I or STITUTE, 855 Broal- STITUTE, 1073 L IN al. Also for sale &t Send for free book. BAJACALIFORNIA STORATIVE, INVIGORA- tor and Nervive. most wonderful aphrodisiac and Special c for the Sexual Organs, for both sexes. he Mexican Hemedy for Diseases of the NABER, A 3 223 Market st.. 5. F.—(Send for Circulars.) DE. JORDAN & CG6., 1051 MarketSt. 8. F. & | n na Bitters f | Cartney, Los Gatos, § | | Cuba, Alleged Kidnaper Will Fight Extradition Proceedings, Tells Wky He Stole His Daughter From Her Mother. Special Dispatch to The Call. VICTORIA, B. C., Nov. 5.—Captain John Coleman, a retired master mariner, who has been running a creamery in San Francisco, was arrested at the outer docks this morning by Detective Perdue, charged with kidnaping his 7-year-old Gaughter, Katherine Coleman. The child had been given into the custody of her who is divorced from Coleman 2nd remarried, by the—San Francisco courts. Chief Langley of the.city police receiv- €d a dispatch from Chief Wittman of San Francisco asking him to arrest Captain Coleman, who was traveling on the stegmer Umatilla from San Francisco un- der the alias, of John W. Campbell. His description was given, and on the arrival of the San Francisco liner Detective Per- due arrested him. Coleman and his daughter are held pending further ad- vices from San Francisco. Mrs. E. V. Smith, the diverced wife of Coleman, is now en route from San Fran- cisco, accompanied by an officer armed with extradition papers, to take Coleman and the young girl back. Coleman re- tained Frank Higgins, who is taking ha- beas corpus proceedings to obtain his re- lease, and the case will commence to-mor- g. Mrs. E. V. Smith, through a friend in Victoria whom she telegraphed from the Golden . Gate, has retained George E. Powell to watch her interests. It is claimed by Captain Coleman that | when the divorce was granted two years Ago on the ground of incompatibility of temper the custody of the child was awarded to him. Later his wife married Captain E. V. Smith and she was then awarded the custody of the child on cer- tain conditions. Coleman says the mother neglected to carry out these conditions and this induced him to carry off the child and come to Victoria. Chief Wittman received a dispatch yes- terday morning from J. M. Langley, Chiel of Police of Victoria, B. C., stating that, John M. Coleman had been arrested there and had engaged counsel to fight his ex- tradition. Coleman had with him his 6- year-old daughter, Kathlynne, whom he is accused of stealing. Mrs. Edwin V. Smith, Coleman’s divorced wife, who swore to the warrant for his arrest before Police Judge Cabaniss Tuesday, was at once notified, and she wired to an attor- ney in Victoria to look after her interesta. Mrs. Smith is the daughter of Dr. Galen and under the granted to Coleman, whom she married about eight years ago. | when she was 16 years of age, she se- cured the custody of the little girl, but Coleman was granted the privilege of see- ing the child every Sunday. He took her for a walk last Sunday, but failed to bring her back. OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST ;Chnnges Made in the Postal Service and More New Pensions Granted. WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 5.—Fourth- class postmasters appeinted: California— Louis Shilling, Cuyamaca, San Diego County, vice Benjamin Lippman, re- signed. Washington—Marcus Lowenthal, Benston, Pierce County, vice W. B. Con- | mell, resigned. These pensions were granted: Califor- nia (original)—Hardy Rasher, Turlock, $8; | Bertram 8. Lewis, Palo Alto, $ (war with | Spain). Increase, reissue, etc.—Francis P. Fraser, Santa Ana, §10; Paden A. Mc- ‘Widows, minors and dependent relatives—Helena M. Mc- Mahon, San Francisco, Jane E. Wil- son, Paradise, $12. Oregon—Widows, minors and dependent relatives—Mary J. Thorn, Cottage Grove, 5= Washington (original)—Edward A. Hud- son, Vancouver, $. Increase, reissue, ete.—Alexander Cameron, Tacoma, $12; James Sullivan (dead) Winthro) Widows, minors and dependent relatives —Louisa_ Sullivan, Winthrop, $. s e il GATION BEGINS IN YOUNG CUBAN’S CASE Commissioner at New York Hears Arguments Relative to Tinsley Immigrants. NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—A rehearing of the case of the eleven Cuban children, en route to Point Loma. Cal., who were held at this port for special inquiry, be- gan to-day before the Commissioner of Immigration and the special board of in- quiry has voted to exclude the children. The rehearing was ordered at the request of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children to give that organiza- tion a chance to present further evidence | that the children should be deported. Both sides to the controversy were rep- resented by several persons, but the lead- ers in the arguments to-day were EI- | bridge T. Gerry against admitting the children and A. G. Spalding in favor of it. A telegram from the Mayor of Santiago, was read demanding that the children be released. Gerry Cross exam- ined Spalding and asked him numerous | questicns about Katherine Tingley's early i vhich Spalding replied: “I don't The case was adjourned until afternoon for further evidence and Professor George Husmann. NAPA, Nov. 5.—Professor George Hus- mann, a native of Germany, aged 7 vears, died this morning. He was a noted pomologist and had been a promoter of horticultural and viticultural interests for years. For three years he filled h alr of pomology and forestry in the University of Missourl. With Parker Erie | hie founded the American Pomological So- ciety. 1 | | MINERS PROTEST |ROOGEVELT |CORONER SAYS T0 ARBITRATORS Coal Strike Commis- sioners Hear Some Complaints, Tour of Observation Ends and Witnesses Will Now Appear. R S Ly MAHANOY CITY, Pa., Nov. 5—The coal strike Commission ended its tour of observation of the coal fields in the Pan- ther Creek Valley to-day and the mem- bers of the party will return to their homes tomorrow and will meet again at Scranton on November 14 to take the tes- timony of the miners. The biggest day’s work of the entire trip was accomplished when the commissioners made a complete investigation of the two collieries and the region lying between Mount Carmel and Berlin. Six days have been consumed in-trav- eling from place to place in the anthracite coal regions, and the arbitrators feel that they are now qualified to sit in judgment on the controversy between the mine em- ployers and their, employes. The com- missioners were lowered into mines of varying conditions and went through sev- eral breakers. They met the general su- perintendents, the mine superintendents and the foremen of the various collieries visited and also personally talkéd with the grimy coal diggers in the dark gang- ways and hundreds of feet below the earth’s surface. They will be able to un- derstand questions and ask questions where they would not have been able to understand if they had not been under- ground, The commissioners’ special train left Mount Carmel at 7:30 a. m., and first vis- ited the Potts colliery in Columbia, which is owned by the Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Coke Company. The breaker of this colliery is different from those seen by the commissioners at other places. They went all over the building and were much interested in the workmen em- ployed there, among whom were many boys. From the Potts colliery, the train pro- ceeded through Ashland, Girardville and Golberton to the Maple Hill colliery of the Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Company, in the Mahanoy valley, a few miles from Shenandoah. From the Maple Hill colliery the com- missioners’ train was run down Mahanoy City and Tamaqua to the Panther Creek valley. There the arbitrators visited .the No. 8 colliery of the Lehigh Coal & Navi- gation Company of Coaldale. As the members of the commission passed along the gangway on mine cars drawn by mules, ' they went under worked-out chutes, from which the water flowed in streams. While going under one chute the mules stopped and the water fell into onme of the cars, thom- oughly soaking all its occupants. It was an uncomfortable position to be in and the commissioners in the other cars took it as a good joke on their colleagues, who were directly under the chute. The party went to the end of two long gangways about a half-mile in length and up into a very steep chute, where they saw miners at work. In order to get into the chute the commissioners had to climb a ladder and crawl over broken coal through a small opening., Their hands and faces were smeared with coal dust when they came out. After leaving the mine a number of.idle. mine workers crowded around Chairman Gray of the commission, and told him they had been discriminated against by the company in the matter of getting their old places back. They said Superin- tendent Behner would not take ‘them back for some reason unknown to them, and that other men had been given their positions. On the other hand, the com- pany officials claimed that they have not enough work at this time for all the men, on account of repair work now be- ing done in the mines. Judge Gray lis- tened to them, but made no comment. The commissioners arrived in this city at b o'clock and spent the night at a hotel. To-morrow morning they will leave for Pottsville at about 9 o’clock, and will de- part from the latter place for their homes during the afternoon. ~ The commis- sioners’ special ¢ars will be run to Wash- ington by way of Philadelphia, and from the latter city some of the commissioners will go to New Yori. $2,000,000 Suit Against the Na- tional Cash Register Company Dismissed. CINCINNATI, O., Nov. 4—The United States Circuit Court, holding session in this city yesterday, dismissed the suit btrought by the Hallwoocd Cash Register Company of Columbus, O., against the National Cash Register Company of Day- ton, O. The Hallwood Company claimed that the National Cash Register Company interfered with its business by certain al- leged unfair and illegal methods and set the amount of damages at $2,265,000. The suit was filed on August 9 under the Sher- an anti-trust law and it was argued cn a demurrer yesterday. At the close of the argument Judge Thompson immedi- ately sustained the National Company’s demurrer and held that the National Company’s defense was good, in that the Sherman law did not apply to the sub- ject matter of the suit and also that the United States Court had no jurisdiction over the matter in controversy, nor over the parties to the suit, i i) 5 WAGES HIGH ENOUGH SAY THE ARBITRATORS Decision Rendered in France Against Increased Compensation for Miners. PARIS, Nov. 5.—The arbitrators in the{ miners’ strike in the Department of Pas Ge Calais to-day gave a decfsion against an increase of the present rates of wages, holding that the rates are proportionate to the selling price of coal. Annexed to the decision was a written declaration of the representatives of all the companies in that district to the ef- fect that old age pensions for miners would be raised. The delegates of the miners are dissatisfied with the decision and expect to carry'the matter to the Chamber of Deputies, highest rank of modern fiction. 8t. Elmo Macaria Beulah Vashti The Best and Most Popular Novel of the Year A SPECKLED BIRD By AUGUSTA EVANS WILSON » Author of “St. Eimo,” Infelice,’’ “At the Mercy of Tiberius,” [tc. 100,000 Copies Sold. 25,000 in Pr'es.s. Hundreds of testimonials pronounce it as standing in the A new uniform edition of her other works, cloth bound, per volums, $1.50. OVER A MILLION COPIES SOLD. G. W. DILLINGHAM CO., Publishers, New Yo ‘Beautifully Bound, $1.50 Infelice Inez At the Blercy of Tiberius vk | to Spain, delivered the. concluding ad- LADDS NS 0F WSONRY President Sbeaks at an Anniversary Qele- bration, 2.5 T e Washington’s Entrance Into {he Fraternity Com- * memorated. — e Chief Executive Counsels His Hearers to Not Only Preach but Prac- tice the Lessons of Worth- 4 iest Citizenship. AR s PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 5—President Roosevelt was the principal guest to-day at the sesquicentennial anniversary. cele- bration by the Grand Lod;e of Free and Accepted Masons of Pennsylvania of George Washington’s apprenticeship into the Masonic fraternity. The President was also orator of the occasion. He ar- rived in this city shortly after 11 o'clock. Carriages were in waiting and the Presi- dent was escorted to Masonic Temple, where the exercises began at noon. The celebration was exclusive, - being limited to one representative from each subordinate lodge in this State, together with the members of the Grand Lodge and its committees. Presidént Roosevelt said in part: It seems tome that, that which this country needs most is not to preach only, but to prac- tice the virtues we try to realize through Ma- sonry and to show to the memory of the great- est Mason that ever lived—Washington—the homage of deeds—not merely words. One of the things that attracted me so greatly to Ma- sonry that I hailed the chance of becoming a Mason was that it, really did live up to what We as a sovernment are pledged 4o—of treat- ing each man on his merits and as a man. When Brother George went into a lodge of a fraternity he went into the one place in the United States where he stood below or above his fellows, according to the official position in the lodge. He went into the one place in the United States where the.idea of our Gov- ernment was realized as far as it was hu- manly »ossible for mankind to realize a lofty ideal, and I know that you will not only un derstand ‘me but sympathize with me when I cay that, great though my pleasure is in meet- ing you here as your guest in this beautiful temple and in meeting such a body of men as this I am now addressing, -1 think my. pleas- ure would be even greater in going intg some. little lodge where 1 meet the plain, hard- working men—imnen who work with thelr hands —and ineet them on a footing of genuine equality, not falsc equality, depending on each | man to be a decent man and fair-dealing Ma- son. BROTHERHOOD ESSENTIAL. Each one of us naturally is intesested es- pecially in life as he sees it from his dwn standpoint. Each one of us that is worth nis salt is trying to do his share in working . out the problems that are before all of us now at the beginning of the twentieth century, and 50 aoes any man in public life, whatever his position be. If he is interested at heart he has the desire to do some kind of substantal service for his_country. He must realize that the indispensable prerequisite of success undesr our institutions is genuineness in the spirit of brotherhood. Masonry should make and must make each man who conscientionsiy and understandingly takes up its obligations, the best type of | American citizenslifp, beeause Masonry teadls- es him his oblgations to his fellows in a prac- tical fashion. ' It k _to T g‘j Declaration: of Fe July; it is a good: to talk of t Washington and his, fellows did for us. But What counts most.is how we live up to the lessons that we read or that we speak of— the lesson of brotherhood. First and foremost .is to learn that lesson With a full heart on the one hand,-and with- out a weak head on the other. The lesson of brotherhood—that is the lesson that has got to be taught and got to be learned and .applicd to us as a people if we are to solve the great industrial and social problems of to-day. It we could get wage workers and employers in any given occupation or in any given distriot | in 2 lodge together, I guarantec the result. I | suarantee what will happen. Is not that true? Do you not think s0? (Cries of “‘Yes, yes. ) | Exactly. T will guaranfee it. If that thinz could happen we could come always into tha lodge, each respecting his brother and each wanting to do what was good for his brother, cach recognizing that in our government every man of us has to be his brother's keeper. Masonry not only bids us and teaches us in this diréction, but makes care for the brethren that' stumble and f1l, and for the wives and little ones of those who are beaten down in the harsh battle of life. Of all things it does not teach us to make believe that there are not any obstacles; it does not teach us to make believe that life can somehow be made soft and easy for every one; it cannot be. For many of us life is nothing but very hard.. Bach one of us who does anything fs going to have hard stretches in it; otherwise men_would not do anything. If & man docs not meet with difficulties; if he does not put himself in a way where 'he has to overcome | | them, he would not do anything that is worthy of being done, LESSONS OF MASONRY. Masonry teaches and fosters more than the qualities of self-respect and self-help—the qualities that make man a man fit to stand by'himself—and yet it must foster in every one who appreciates as it should be appreclated the beautiful and solemn ritual; it must foster in him a genuine feeling for the rights of others and the feelings of others. Masons help one | another in a way that is free from that curse | of self-condemnation. Help given in a spirit of arrogance does not benefit any one. Help must be given rationally, with a feeling of cordial good will. Now, in our life of to-day—in our great complex_industrjal centers, what do we need most? We need each to understand the other's viewpoint; to understand that the other man is at the bottom like himself. Each of us should understand that. and fry to approach | the subect at issue or any problem that arises with a firm determination not to be weak or foolish. That is helpful to your neighbor. ‘Weakness aud folly and ‘timidity are nol helpful to yofr neighbor. Timid endurance of wrong-doing may often be to commit one of the greatest evils that one possibly can com- mit against one's fellows, but we will acknowl- cdge that while Insisting upon.that, that thers must be no yielding to wrong, and yet it is ever necessary to remember that you cannot appreciate the rights of the case until you are able to see how your nelghbor looks at it; how he is affected by it. You take any lodge where, as in the case of our own little lodge, you séc the capitalist and wage-workers, men of all classes, men of every kind of social po- sition and wealth, and see them meeting to- gether as Magons in the fullest sense of theword, With a feeling for one another that goes with Masonry, when one sees a lodge such as that, a meeting such as that, one sees how a certatn small fragment of our industrial problem is to be solved. It is mot possible to vresent the idea that I would like to bring out—to have all the best of all classes represented in Ma- sonry in every district, but it is nossible for each of us to go out into the world trying to apply In bfs dealings. with his fellows the fes- =ons of nry as they are taught in the lodges and as they are applied in the brother- hood. And so we can so practically learn from ‘Washington how to deal with problems of to- day. s Stewart L. Woodford, former Minister dress. The President was escorted to the railroad station and left for Washington at 3:49 o'clock this afternoon. _——— FPOLICE LEARN. MORE OF MASON’S CONDUCT Eastern Capitalist Suspected of Hav- ing Murdered Women Is Hel 2 in Jail. 3 CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 5—Alan G. Mason, who was arrested yesterday on suspicion of having committed an assault upon Miss Clara A. Morton in Waverly turday night, causing Miss Mor- ton's death, nlte-dl;:y was held for further hearing on the cha It was undnntoodr‘;i!t night to be the intention of the police to Telease the man to-day, a - [T WAG CRIME Responsibility for New. " York Explosion to Be Fixed. Many,of Those Injured Are in a Very Serious Conditicn. P Lo e NEW YORK, Nov. 5.—Complete revised lists to-day of the dedd and injured, vie- tims of the explosion of fireworks in Madison-Square . Garden last evening, sHow that twelve persons were killed and about eighty injured. Several of these are slightly hurt and many, others are to- day in a seriéus condition. The following is a revised list of the dead: - POLICEMAN DENNIS SHEA. WILLIAM R. VARCLE, aged 15. NATHANIEL DINGLEY, aged 13. HAROLD ROBLEE, aged 12. JOSEPH HEBER. UNIDENTIFIED MAN, aged 20. ALBERT KAMETIF JR. WILLIAM FEENEY, aged 12. W. S. McAVOY, aged 15. CAMILLE GUISSANTO. GEORGE LANDAU. JOE WEINER, aged 15. An' informal inquest wasg held to-day preparatory to the formal inquest set for Friday. The ten persons arrested in connection with the calamity, ingluding the men in charge of the fireworks, were arraigned to-day. The charge against them was homicide and the men were remanded to the Coroner's jury. “It is a case of absolute criminal neg- lect,” said the Coronor. ‘One of the mor- tars was set off and it was pointed at a row of other mortars in a line. There was a defect in the bottom of the mortar and it leaned toward the others, which were set off by the fire ball thrown toward them.” Seven legs of victims of the fireworks explosion were amputated’ at Bellevue Hospital to-day. Besides the amputations there were dozens of minor operations on FAMILIES SAVE LIFE BY FLIGHT Few Casualties Reported Near Guatemala Volcano. Country for Miles Around the Peak Is White With Ashes. NEW YORK, Nov. 4—Details of the re- cent eruption of the Santa Maria volcano show that there was little loss of life, says a Herald dispatch from Guatemala City, Guatemala. When the earthquake shocks began the day before the eruption the inhabitants of the surrounding country fled, leaving about all of their possessions behind. The country for a radius of fifteen miles around the volcano is covered with stones and ashes several feet deep. Fully 100,000 mules, cattle and sheep perished. The || Breat coffee crop, ready for picking, was completely destroyed, and so also were many coffee trees. » . A second crater has beeh discovered on the side of the volcano. A strong odor of sulphur permeated the atmosphere for a radius of thirty miles. The explosions and earthquake shocks continued four days and were heard and felt all over the republic. The country {s covered with a mantle of ashes resembling snow. i e @ hands and feet and for burns. Many of the patients underwent several operations and some lost both hands. The Coroner held John Craig in $18,000 | bonds on a charge of manslaughter in the first degree. Craig, it is alleged, was in charge of the explosives at the time of the accident. Two boys who were carry- ing boxes of explosives were sent to the House of Detention by the Coroner as witnesses. All the rest of the ten prison- ers were discharged. The Coroner said there were seven bombs. An attempt to shoot off the first failed, he said, but it detonated and thus caused the explosion of the other bombs. There were ten bombs and four mortars, weighing 150 pounds each. BOERS HEAR KINDLY WORD3 Former Leaders Listen to Chamberlain in Commons. Colonial Secretary Says Brit= ain Will Be Mag- nanimous. LONDON, Nov. 5.—Generals Botha and Delarey and ex-President Schalkburger were witnesses of to-night's debate in the House of Commons over the civil ser- vice bill placing the additional amount required as a grant to aid the Transvaal and Orange River colony during the pres- ent financial year at $40,000,000, which ended in agreeing to vote the sum in question. Colonial Secretary Chamberlain in re- sponse to criticisms of the measure from the opposition deprecated pessimism over South African affairs. He said the ‘fact that ske Boer prisoners would all be re- patriated this year exceeded, the . most sanguine expectations. Chamberlain displayed an unsually con- cillatory spirit in his speech. He said the imperial Government would compensate liberally the loyalist residents of Natal and Cape Colony who had suffered by the war, quite independently of the pres- ent vote, and that if the $15,000,000 voted for the Boers proved insufficient for this purpose, he would not hesitate to ask Parliament for more money. The de- feated party in a war could not expect to be replaced in the same position as be- fore hostilities, but the Government de- sired to set a .new precedent of magna~ nimity in the history of the world. The Colonial Secretary would not com-~ mit himself to the principles of the set- tlement. Hg declared that his sole desire in going to South Africa was to bring to- gether a kindred people; that he wanted to go with an entirely open mind and that his earnest desire was to get free from old animosities. WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.—The Census Bureau issued a report to-day showing the amaun of cotton of the crop of 1902 ginned up to Oc- tober 18 to the 5,925.872 commercial bales for the entire United States, which is estimated to be 60 per cent of the entire crop. 4 Any style suit made to your measure for “For a limited time we shall make to order for $13.50any style of these suits you desir -Single breasted sack svit Single breasied derby sack suit Single breasted square cul sack suil Dovble breasted (two bufton) sack svil Culaway frock suil - You can have your choice from a great quantity of fall and winter materials comprising solid colors and fancy and mixed patterns in cheviots, tweeds, cassi- _meres, serges and clay worsteds. We would be pleased to give any one desiring thema number of samples. Remember, in ordering a suit like this, made up in any style for $13.50, you are getting an unusual value. Oi ccurse our guarantee Ao : Qui-of-town customsrs can order’ write for samples and measuring blank. goés with each Suit—a guaranteé covering making, fit and wear. through ‘our. salf-measuring sysiem—satisfaciion guaranteed— _ Cor. Powell and Eddy, at Market.

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