Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL., TUESDAY, MAY 24, 190a JAPANESE SHIPS REPORTED CAPTURED;, LOSS OF RUSSIAN CRUISER CONFIRMED DISASTER ON SEA IS RUMORED Viadivostok Squadron Is Said to Have Taken Three War Vessels. —_— y 24.—The St. Petersburg ndent of the Matin says: is rumored that the Viadivostok iadron has captured three cruisers by Japan from Chile.” May 23.—The St. Peters- of the Central News re was a new explosion to-day the battleship Orel at Kron- that ten stokers were killed. vessel, the correspondent says, | and it will take weeks to | The explosion, accord- | spatch, was the result Olr f gas in the bunker G, May 23.—The re- | 1 Jessen, finding E the protected Bogatyr, which went ashore re- | fog off Viadivostok, blown up is confirmed. The Bogatyr we emoved be- d. No loss of 1 ¢ na be of the the bat- | sunk at on the T accord- | ves being | de by the au-\ recent attempts to| e vessels of the Bal- | 4t has resulted in | Japanese spies, “hOI ‘a\» escaped detection e uniform of naval cadets, | ng admission to the navy | access to the ships without | It is believed that they are | also for the fire started | qg near the naval maga- | £ opening of the sea 1. The authorities here a:‘anpse have been har-| chists. s s S JAPANESE ROUT COSSACKS. Russians Lose Twenty Men in a Brush With Brown Infantry May 23.—A com- routed a with all I s nt from Feng g £. LG TR Warships Arrive at Hongkong. NGTON, May 23.—The Navy ised by cable gon and Alex- they have flagship of der-in- The Hongkong has been ad the Well Equipned for a Siege. {OW, May of 1hP Liao there e g f the AR —————— ADVERTISEMENTS. | 67 has an individual flavor that pleases the most critical coffee drinker. There is no substitute. If you have been deluded into the belief that you must have a substi- tute (cereal), drink cambric tea—hot water sweetened to taste. Colden Gatg is sold by high grade grocers. 1 and 2 Jb. aroma-tight tins. J. A. Folger @ Co. San Fra Importers of F kY Two kinds of goods an trade; a bargain’s a bargain and. moneyback. One maker friends, and the other lose: ‘em. Schilling’s Best at your caused | ¥ | made by the Russians that they | for selling | slan interm RUSSIAN CONSUL REPORTS GREAT BATTLE' AT PORT ARTHUR ST. PETERSBURG, May 23.—It is reported that Foreign Minister Lamsdorff has received a mes- sage from the Russian Consul at Chefu, saying that l.he Japanese have made a land attack on Port Ar- thur and that in doing so they lost 15,000 men killéd or wounded. The Russian loss is placed at 3000 men. The ultimate outcome of th he fighting is not stated. Similar reports have reached the Russian headquarters at Liaoyang from Chinese sources. The Chinese declare the Japanese made a desperate at- tack on Port Arthur, but were repulsed with enormous losses. No news of the reported battle has come from an official source, other than the message from the Chefu Consul, but this is explained by the fact that Port Arthur is cut off from communication. ‘ — Lz General Kuropatkin Is Preparing for a General Retreat of His Forces to the Siberian Frontier. LONDON, May 24.—A dispatch to the Daily Mail from Yinkow says: “A third Japanese army is mobilizing at Hiroshima. A change in the Japa- nese plan, arising from the naval dis- | asters, involves the utilizing of the sec- und ar m) for the reduction of Port Ar- therefore the first rmy is ntrenc hlng at Fengwangcheng.” The Morning Post's Shanghai corre- | :pun\i‘r says it is reported that the; are removing stores and pr ons to Harbin, and that 100 locomo- cars are collected at Liao- S to convey passengers and goods. Therefore, he says, the con- on is that the Russians are pre- 1g, to retreat. iSpatch to the Daily Telegraph from and Japane governments are com- peting sharply for the purchase ° of transports in Holland and Belgium. As Russia has acquired almost all the large ships which were for sale, Japan will have to be content with the small- (>r v els. The dispatch adds that Japanese agents purchased at Antwerp yesterday several vessels of from 2000 to 3000 tons, and It is supposed that these will be converted into armed cruisers. | The correspondent of the Standard at Shanghal says reports have been re- ceived from Mukden that the Chinese there are alarmed because of threa‘lfi wi | burn Liaoyang and Mukden ‘before re- iring to Harbin. The correspondent that the Tartar Viceroy at Muk- den has ordered a brigade of Chinese troops to occupy that place after the Russians retire. | R TRAITORS AWAIT DEATH. Russian Officers Sell Supplies of Pow- der to the Chinese. BERLIN, Mav 23.—A correspondent of the Frankfurter Zeitung, writing from Harbin under date of April 15, gives striking detalls illustrative of the | conditions of the Russian army and | | the relations existing between the Rus- sians and Chinese. He that two Colonel Korl and _Staff Captain Ignotowich, are in the Harbin | Prison sentences of awaiting the carrying out of death imposed upon them rge supplies of gunpowder The officers charged the Chin r 36 pounds, but, their suppl low, th filled the boxes and placed a layer of gunpowder me time they raised The Chinese me! i at the swindle, caused to be made known in high- er quarters and a watch was set, re- sulting in the detection of the officers in the act of selling gunpowder to Rus- | iaries. At the price By similar means the robber bands" are well supplied with the mst mod- | ern rifles plenty of ammunition. Although the sale of arms to the Ch nese is prohibit every mative v ular arsenal containing the best it is well known that | peating rifles, including many of the German model of 1900, The robber bands have grown bold- er and more active than ever. Within few weeks of the date of the letter | to the Frankfurter Zeitung a band numbering many as 2000 men at- | tacked a well-guarded railway station. The Russians asserted that they cognized Japanese assailants. pos officers in | hm: rness Chinese ns. prevails population He then related ughout the following incidents in explanation | xh. reof: After saying that the Russian | ers regarded the natives as being | er than dog: i the correspondent i assured him-that settlers tested their new rifies by taking a native as a larget. | ‘One engineer with whom 1 trav- | he asser ‘did not salute a known officer because the latter had shot down eight of the engineer's best laborers in mere wantonness. His complairt remained unanswered.” In consequence of such conditions, | the correspondent erts in conclu- sion, the entire laboring population are longing for the moment when they may dare to fall upon their torment- ors. B RETURN HOME WOUNDED. Three Hundred Japanese Enter the Tokio Military Hospital. | 2 —About 300 sick and | of General Kuro- drll\nd at the military hos- to-day, with several guns, and ambulances, captured at the Yalu River, which wiil be presented m th Emperor. Empr of Japan, the court! ladies and the ladies of the foreign le- gations visited the Red Cross Hospital here this morning. Inspected the ar- | rangements and talked with a few| wounded and sick soldiers. Dr. Anita McGee, who is in Japan in connection | with Red Cross work, was received by her Majcity and compai.ied the party. The Japanese landed at Takushan report having been engaged in two scouting gkirmishes, during which ten | Russians were killed. I.. the first af- fair two Russians were captured, and in the other General Kuroki reports the capture of an officer and a man caught making reconnaissance in the rear of | Kuroki's army. Three splendid horses captured at! the Yalu battle by Kuroki and pre- | sented to the Emperor reached Tokio to-day. They were taken to the palace, where they were inspected. Two of them are Russian bred and the other is an Arablan. People who have visited Matsuyama report that the Japanese are exercising | great care with the food and general treatment of the Russian prisoners thege. The rations include liberzl al- lowances of meat, bread and tea daily. The prisoners’ quarters are clean and sanitary. The majority of the wounded are making good progress. —_— CHINESE GROWING BOLDER. Japanese Instructors Said to Be Or- Bandit Toulisan’s Forces. LIAOYANG, May 23. — General Ma, commander of the Chinese troops, is in comstant communication with Toulisan, the chief of the Chinese bandits, who are effecting military organization under Japanese instruct- | of Mongols, | element predominates are | Burt, ! ing in the Orient, ’ ors. Toulisan's district is the granary of Manchuria. He is a great organizer and built seven immense granaries, which are strongly garrisoned. Toulisan ordered the inhabitants to bring in their surplus grain, forbidding them to sell it to the {ussians and ordering | them to receive the ‘n for the | Chinese armies which are cofming from | the northwe: Hundreds of disguised soldiers are coming up the river, styling themselves working men. They remain idle and are well fed, while the Russians are | unable to get food. The Chinese of- are obsequious to Toulisan, who the es of the district. Swarms of sed Chinese soldiers in the vicinity of Liaoyang, and are guarding the Shan- haikwan-Shinmintung Railway. The Russians are having the greatest dif- ficulty in pacify the inhabitants, i who apparently are anxious to rise against them. Toulisan, General Ma and Viceroy Yuan Shi Kai are partisans of the Ming dynasty and are openly planning a revolu with the aid of the Japane | vantage of the quar partisa of the Tai Sing and Ming dynasties. The former is championed by the bannermen, or privileged class who hate the Chinese. The latter are headed by Yuan Shi Kai and the whole Chinese nation. The provinces and cities where the Chinese invariably pro-Japanese. = The Russian sympa- thizers are to be found only among the bannermen Mongols. el RECRUITING AMERICANS. | Chinese Reformers Enlist Men for Revolutionary Army. OMAHA, Nebr, May 23.—Nine thousand Americans are wanted as’of- ficers of an army of a half million men which is being raised in China to overthrow the present dynasty. The nephew of the Dowager Empress is at the head of the movement. Edmond F. English, a veteran of the Civil War, who has been working quietly in the Middle West for three montk ys he has been flooded with applications for commissions. It has been understood that the of- ficers were wanted for a reorganiza- tion of the imperial army of China. A week ago General English gave out atement, in which he said: A reform movement is going on in every branch of the govern- I have been”solicited ure applications from Americans of military experience to officer the Chinese army. The object is to se- cure the best talent possible and to put the army on a level with the rest of the world.” The matter was brought to the at- tention of the Chinese Embassador and he has written that the enlisting of recruits is wholly unwarranted by his Government. He means t a secret effort to revolutionize in the Chinese empire by unseating the ty. Colonel Engl confirm s statement of the Chinese Embassador, and adds that the plan is headed by the nephew of the| Dowager Empress. number of young men have re- | ceived commissions during the past few days in Omaha and nearby points. It is estimated that fully 1500 appoint- ments have already been made. - FOLLOW BURT. JAPANESE Railroad Official Complains of Espion- age During Trip Through Orient. OMAHA, Neb.,, May 23.—Horace G. former president of the Union | Railroad, who has been travel- has written a friend in this city that he was followed by Pacific | Japanese detectives until it became so irksome that he was forced to appeal to a United States Consul for relief. | Shortly after his arrival in Japan the newspapers all over the empire pub- lished an article to the effect that Burt | was about to be placed in control of the Trans-Siberian Rasilway. He was at once placed under espionage and de- tectives followed him from place to place until he was forced 'to appeal to an American Consul.. The Consul se- cured a retraction by ghe press of the story that had caused ®he trouble. o Bk |, JEWS FIRE UPON POLICE. Anti-War Demonstration Occurs on the Streets of Gomel. GOMEL, Russia, May 23.—A band of | an anti-war | fifty young Jews made demonstration in the streets here last night. They carried’a red banner bear- | ing afh inscription reading: “Down with the war,” and scattered an in- flammatory proclamation. The police interfered in the interest of order, whereupon the Jews fired upon them. The police answered with two rounds ey ADVERTISEMENTS. “FORCE” does please your palate, but it treats your stomach right, too. At I n-w-(a. hn General | into the air. TAe Jews then dispersed. No one was wounded on either side. One Jew was arrested. The population. is considerably excited by the event. AL TR QUIET AT THE FRONT. General Kuropatkin Reports N Change in the Situation. ST. PETERSBURG, May 23.—The following dispatch, dated May 22, from General Kuropatkin, has been received by Emperor Nicholas: “All is quiet in the direction of the Finchowling Mountains. It is report- ed from Siuyen that on May 21 a Jap- anese force, consisting altogether of about one regiment of infantry and tgvo regiments of cavalry of the guard and of the line, was observed moving on the broad front from Habalin to- ward Salitzaiputz. There is no change inithe situation along the shore of the Liaotung Peninsula RMY CAMPS. CHOLERA 1 Heavy Mortality in the Japanese Army iz West of the Yalu. LIAOYANG, May 23.—According to the latest reports the Japanese ¢amps are infected with cholera and there is an average of 100 deaths daily. e | military - situation is , comparativély jquiet. Russian patrols are success- | fully harassing the left of the Japan- ese advance. ARREST CHILD AND HER AUNT Miss Meeker and Mary San- ders Taken Into Custody by Police of Indianapolis e INDIANAPOLIS, May 23.—Taken from her father's home in Los Angeles, Mary Catherine Sanders, the 7-year-old daughter of J. M. Sanders, a telegraph operator, arrived in this city to-night | with her, aunt, Miss Henrietta Meeker. Both the aunt and niece were taken into custody by a policeman. At police headquarters the child was forced to leave her aunt and go to Mrs. J. Wein- land, another aunt. Miss Meeker said the child had been neglected since the death of Mrs. San- ders and that her sister told her to care for the little girl. Mrs. Weinland said to-night that the child had not been neglected, and said Mrs. Sanders did not tell her sister to] take the child. Mi: Meeker went to Los Angeles April 28. Mary was sitting on the front porch when her aunt was driven to the front of the house in a carriage. Miss | Meeker savs she called the child to her and then drove to the station to catch a train for San Francisco. JUSTICE BENSON WEDS BELLE OF SAN JOSE ]nfldc Well Known in Tegal Circles, Having Been Admitted to 1 Practice Law. | SAN JOSE, May 23.—Frank H. Ben- | son, Justice of the Peace of San Jose, and Miss Lillie E. Alexander, a popu- lar young lady of this city, were mar- ried this eyening at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Alexander, at 316 South Seventh street. The wedding was a quiet affair, only the immediate relatives of the young couple being present. Rev. Dr. E. Mc- Clish performed the ceremony. For a number of years Miss Alexan- der has been one of the official stenog- raphers of the county and a few years| ago was admitted to the Supreme Court to vractice law. The groom is the son of S. G. Benson, a well-known news- paper man of this city, and a promis- | ing attorney at law. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Benson left on a late train this evening for San Francisco. | Their honeymoon will consist of a two | monthe' trin to Seattle and Alaska. After their return they will make their home in this city. Bullds Aeroplane on Ship. | CLARKSTON, Wash, May 23.— Charles Winslow, first officer of the | steamship Spokane, has invented what is believed to be a practical aeroplane. The first trial will take place within two weeks. The body of the machine is sectional, with transverse planes to be regulated as are the “shutters” of | a bird’s wings, and is flanked with an- other set corresponding to wings. The machine has been built on the steamer. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS EEEP YOUR HEAD UNCOVERED. The Constant Wearing of a Hat Propa- gates Dandruff Germs. There are many mer who wear their hats practically all the time when awake, and are blessed with a heavy, shock of hair; yet if the scalps of these same men once became infested with dandruff germs, the parasites would multiply all the quicker for lack ofi air. Baldness would ensue as the final result. New- bro's Herpicide kills these germs and stimulates unhealthy hair to abundant growth. Herpicide is a pleasant hair dressing as well as a dandruff cure and contains not an atom of injurious sub- stance. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c. in stamps for sample to The Herpi- cide Co., Detroit, Mich. . SOZODONT Tooth Powder Good for Bad Teeth Nd‘\&!fi"@wfl Teeth™ Gives the Toeth e Pearly Lustre BIABOX % 26e ToP WARSHIPS WILL AID IN ATTACK - e Japanese Ready to Make Desperate Onslaught Upona Port Arthur. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. CHEFU, May 2.—During a cruise round Liaotung Peninsula, from which it returned this.morning, the dispatch- boat Fawan discovered signs of re- newed nraval activity on the part of Admiral Togo’s fleet near Port Arthur and Dalny. A flotilla of nine torpedo- boats and destroyers was seen proceed- ing in the dirgction of Port Arthur. There are indications that the entrance to the harbor is only partially block- ed. Many Chinese junks are reported to have been blown up by the mines which the Russians have floated out into Liaotung Guif and Liaotshan channel to the great risk of all ship- ping. General Oku’s preparations to attack Port Arthur are steadily progressing. The Japanese troops are occupying | main spositions commanding the ap- | proaches to the Kinchou Isthmus. Th Second ‘and Third army corps are co operating in driving Kuropatkin's de- tachments out of Liaotung Peninsula. The operations for the seizure of the isthmus ‘will be assisted by warships lying in shore on both flanks of the land forces. It is not expected that great diffi- culty will be experienced in capturing the most northerly line of the Russian works, but the defenses on the semi- arcle of hills some three miles from the dockyard present a more serious problem. They consist of permanent works connécted by intrenchments not open to egmbined military and naval assault. ARE PROCEEDING CAUTIOUSLY. ‘While the Japanese desire to re- duce Port Arthur with as little de- | Jay as possible, they have no intention of proceeding in a headlong manner. | They do not regard the situation as| calling for such haste as might in- volve disaster to the besieging or as saulting army. The only thing likely to bring matters to an immediate cli- | max would be the appearance of the | Baltic fleet on the scene. Heavy bom- | bardments followed by assaults are | the tactics to be employed against the fortress The captain of a Russian merchant- | man, who left Port Arthur on May 20, is among the recent arrivals from Dalny. He says that the whole of the Japanese fleet had not returned to Port Arthur since the 15th inst., when, besides the battleship -Hatsuse, an- other big vessel struck a mine and | was towed away disabled. Gunboat: and torpedo-boats returned off th port on the 20th inst., when the Rus sians succeeded in sinking a small gunboat and two torpedo-boats. The Russians are now confident of holding Port Arthur with the 30,000 men tioned there, exclusive of the navy and the crowds of mer‘hamcs working on the damaged warships, al of which, except the Cesarevitch and the Retvizan, are ready to rejoin the fleet. These latter vessels \\xll be ready for sea serv une The entrance to the harhor san' the Russian mariner, has been cleared and small boats now pass in and out | freely from Port Arthur to Dalny. The forts on the land side of Port Arthur have been completed and are now prepared for a severe contest. | REPORTS JAPANESE DEFEAT. l Of the few soldiers left at Dalny the majority have gone to Port Aurthr | and the only defenses left there now are the mines in the harbor. The attempt of the Japanese to land | troops in the Gulf of Kinchou on the! 16th inst, failed, owing to insufficient water to float the boats. There has been no fighting in the vicinity of Port Arthur up to Satur- day last since the Kinchou fight on the 15th, when two squadrons of Jap- anese cavalry were practically anni- hilated, only eight men escaping. Several unsuccessful attempts were n'rde by the Japanese to land troops alfenwan last week, it is said. On the way over passengers on the junk just arrived heard firing in the direction of Port Arthur last night. *The Japanese have reported to the Consul here that a wreck in the Liao- tung Gulf is dangerous to navigation, and it is possible that this is the other ship damaged at Port Arthur on the 15th inst., as the Japanese fleet is known to have entered the gulf after the disaster to the Hatsuse. | tarrh of the bladder and kidney trouble, ADVERTISEMENTS DESPERATELY ILL WITH KIDNEY CATARRH PE-RU-NA ° DOCTORS AND FRIENDS DESrAIRED— AVED HIM. MR. GEORGE KING. fl Only recent medical investigation has revealed the fact that catarrh 1s respansible for most of the diseases of the kidneys. Many people don’t get well because they fail to use the catarrh cure Peruna. R. GEORGE KING, Deputy Sherift of Rensselaer Co., N. Y., for years was a_well-known merchant of In a letter from No. 45 King St., N. Y., he writes: “Peruna cured me from what the doc- tors were afraid would turn into Bright's Disease, after 1 had suffered with ca- great pain and discomfort. At times the pains in my back were unbearable. I would have a peculiar dizziness in the head, and altogether I was miserable. After trying many remedies, I finally took Peruna, and the way it took hold of my trouble was marvelous. It eured me so quickly that I am glad to be able to write you of it, and I _certainly will speak a good word for Peruna whenever I can. . G. Martin. Catarrhal Inflammation of the mu- cous lining of the kidneys, also called “Bright's disease,” may be either acute or chronic. The acute form produces symptoms of such prominence that the | serious nature of the disease is at once | stepected, but the chronic variety may | come on so gradually and Insidiously | that its presence is not suspected until Troy. Troy, “Peruna is a blessing to a sick man. Eight bottles made me a well man and were worth more than a thousand dol- Jars to me. I cannot Speak too highly of it. It is now four years since I was | troubled, and I have enjoyed perfect health since."—George King. Catarrh of the Kidncys Cured by s | after it fastened itself thoroughly Pe-ru-na. | upen its victim. Mr. J. G. Martin, 1229 St Denis St.| At the appearance of the first symp- tom Peruna should be taken. This rem- edy strikes at once at the very root of Church, write the disease. “I contracted a heavy cold last winter | A book cn catarrh sent free by The which settled in my kidneys, causing me ' Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O. PRESBYTERMNS : o | to Butler Bros. were ruthlessly shot Knock Out Recnmmondatum T That Ministers Refuse to| mule men, who have declared war on sheep driven into their ranges. It Marry Divorced Persons | s part of the great Southeastern | Oregon sheep war. The herder heard the shooting begin and knew that his sheep were being slaughtered. He heard the rifle shots and heard the sheep bleat as they sought refuge. When morning came seventy-five Clerk in the Custom ist Notre Dame Catholic SLAUGHTER SHEEP OUT OF REVENGE Defenseless Herder Powerless to De- fend His Herd Against Enemies. FOSSIL, Ore, May 23.—While the PR Haa T BUFFALO, N. Y., May 23.—By a vote of 262 to 244 the General Assembly of the Presbyterian church of the Unit- ‘ ed States this afternoon wiped out | that part of the report of the special | dead, sheen were found and another committee on marriage and divorce | PR SAECH WETE oA A Injured which advised Presbyterian ministers | fhat tnev died or had to be killed. to refuse to marry any person whos; piaroal viSe podba e, marriage is forbidden by the church o which that person is a member. The | The finest coffees in the world are in rommittee had formulated this pro- | e s vision to* help promote the work of the BILL OF EXCEPTIONS FILED.—George D, interchurch conference on marriage | Collins yesterday filed in the United States and divorce which takes in thirteen de “;:“!:l.l“(‘o"u'f!“r::u,\.?po;ll[:':::‘Ih‘ckf ?S;\ch‘fi ::; nominations and this action of the as- | U (U 80 006" T N Mint. sembly, it was declared to-night, might | | prove a setback to the conference. The |+_______—+ remainder of the report was adopted. | The General Assembly also approved the partial report of the special com- mittee on forms and services which provides an order of morning service and an order for the baptism of in- fants. Both orders are to be option: —_—————— MINERS ENGAGE IN DUEEL WITH KNIV Dispute Between Two Austrians at Oat Hill, Napa County, Has | Serious Ending. | NAPA, May 23.—A telephone mes- ' sage was received this morning at the Sheriff’s office stating that two Aus- trian miners, emplcyes at the Oat Hill mine, got into a dispute at-one of the roadhouses a short distance from the mine Sunday evening. Knives were drawn and as a result of the fracas which followed both men were badly wounded. The Deputy Sheriff at the mine immediately placed the two com- batgnts under arrest. This morning as socni as communications opened over the line he notified Sheriff Dunlap here in Napa. It is thought that one of the men was fatally wounded and the oth- er dangerously so. Sheriff Dunlap and District Attorney Benjamin went up this morring to Oat Hill where they | will make an investigation. The Sher- iff’s office has been trying to commun- icate with Oat Hill this afternocn, but | the attempts failed owing to some de- fect in the telenhone system. ——————— INTERESTING EXERCISES AT DOMINICAN COLLEGE SAN RAFAEL, May 23.—Examina- | tions in the various departments of Dominican College, San Rafael, have been brought to a successful close and | honors will be conferred on commence- ment day, Wednesday, May 25. | During Avril and May the series of fortnightly lectures included the “Mer- chant of Venice,” by the Rev. F. Har- vey of St. Patrick’s Semlni “St. Thomas” and “Dante,” by the Rev, J. W. Sullivan; “Cardinal Newman,” by the Rev. Thomas Hevgron; the “Russo-Japanese War,” by the Rev. J. Gleason. f A musical programme in honor of the Prince Ratibor and Princess Ratibor . and the Baroness von Schroeder was given by the Cecilian Club, a practice game between the Lowell High School and the college basketball teams, an elocutionary recital by Miss Alice May, a May-day picnic. and an open meeting- of the Newman Literary Club, complet- ed a calendar of interesting events the students of Dominican College, San Rafael. i I i ADVERTISEMENTS. irts at 75¢ Go into any fur- nishing goods store, pay $1.00 for a shirt, and you will get the same quality gar- ment which we are selling to-day -and to-morrow for 75¢. The materials are Madras, Cheviot and Percale, in light gray, tan and blue grounds, with fig- ured and striped de- signs. The shirts are cut full size, in a variety of sleeve lengths, with neck measures from 14 to 17. Cushion collar but- ton protectors; double sewed seams; separate cuffs. These shirts will fit, wash and wear to your entire satis- faction. Lay in a supply—buy three or four—75¢c each. <4 Out-of-town orders filled—write us. SNWOoO0Ds (1 740 Market Street