The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 8, 1904, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 8, 1901, BIG ARMIES SOON TO RENEW THE BATTLE Japan Determined to Crush Ku- ropatkin There is little news from the Far East, either from Russian or Japanese sources. world watchers of the great tragedy the curtain has been dropped and all is conjecture. Not even an expression of opinion comes from Japanese sources, but from St. Petersburg it is indicated that the authorities are confident the critical stage of the Russian retreat is past and that Kuropatkin no longer is in danger of losing any part of his forces to the pursuing Jap- The Russian commander has arrived at Mukden, and it is given out in St. Peters- burg that the bulk of his army is near there, while a dispatch from Mukden, filed on Thurs- the Engagement Will Be Fought Near | Mukden anese. newspap East is that arrival at Muk- / known. Far KUROPATKIN REACHES MUKDEN. day, says that the main Russian army is pushing northward and evacuating that place. indicated that the Japanese are still harassing the Russian rear. An absolute news silence prevails. For It Further than this nothing is is | problem of rws[ Kuropatkin that the the are mereiy olossal conflict loom- St critics domh T ST :RSBURG, Thursday, Liac n,-x.q battle at' n: : orhood. 2:02 a. m.—The General S Lo displaying great anxi over the alarmist reports that General Kuropat- kin is in serious danger of being cut off, but if they had any information from the front on Wednesday they! have not revealed it. The members also decline to say, even if they know, whether General Kuropatkin purposes | taking his army north of Mukden. An| officer of the General Staff said last night: “I believe it is safe to say that Gen-| eral Kuropatkin's army is now out of danger. Our advices since Monday in- dicate that the fighting is of an insig- nificant character and I do not believe that the tired Japanese troops are ca- pable of seriously threatening the line of retreat. The greatest difficulty our army is now having to contend with is the terrible roads, owing to the rain of Monday and Tuesday. “Our information is that the bulk of the baggage has already through Mukdeéh. This is the usual procedure in case of any retreat.” Kuropatkin’s movements, after all, must depend chiefly on the tactics of the Japanese, with whom lies the ini- tiative. If the Japanese continue to press northward in the hope of cutting off the Russians and bringing them to Day, then Kuropatkin will be obliged to move northward to circumvent them. But both armies already are terribly exhausted and if they again come into grip the resuit will depend largely upon which of them is able to throw most fresh reserves into the fight. If there is a race northward it is ap- parent that the greatest danger will come at the narrow defile of Tiehling, north of Mukden, seem fairly well satisfied with the sit- | uation and are confident of its ultimate outcome. that neither | desecrati ited < risk the ombs by the very prev- contin- for the confes- ituatio Japanese of- that General ossed the Hun Mukden. Other the Japanese Tiehling as a ph's Seoul corre- 1n unconfirms Japanese h divisions of Possiet hay B ians — hOREA IS FREE. ymat Says Japan Advisory Cap: Acts Only ty. Korean | said on” ent- struc the rec cen Ja]lan “that Japan protect over He ppointment diplomatic be under- advisers McLe FLTE TR RECOVERING FROM FRIGHT. St. Pctersburg Press Cheered. by Latest News From the Front. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. Russian newspapers begin to realize more fully the catastrophe which | General Kuropatkin avoided at Liao- ng and the skillful manner in which upset Field Marshal Oyama’s plan surround the Russian army, they take a more cheerful view of the resuilt and are beginning to bestow upon Kuropatkin great praise. it is now apparent thz pose in pressing the R ian positions front ¢f Liaoyang was to hold Kuropatkin's attention while the Japa- right wing was thrust around the Russian rear to block the Russian line | of retreat. But Kuropatkin, at its very | inceptio d his eves upon this flank- | simply M JAPAN BUYS ST PLATES. Order With the Car- | Pittsburg. 7.—Agents to-day Larg he Con - at 500} steel | on Jap- | e order will keep 84 inch mills of busy Oyama’s pur- re fc s Kinchou to Trade. China Opens "he T Chefu cor- | Telegraph ared Kin- Kinchou ce of from ng his main army to the k of the Taitse River, chang- ing his front to meet and hold General Kuroki in check while General Zarcu- bajeff's corps Liaoyang crossed, burning the bridges behind him nnd placing the river between him and Gen- n tre provi de. Liao- N at | eral Oku 3 ; Both the Russian and Japanese ac- Ser —Chinese re- | counts scem to agree in saying that effect that thousands being forced to con- ’Ilfihlang where | make h until the withdrawal of the main Rus- sian army from Liaoyang commenced, | nese assauits in front of Liadyang and that the Russian commander-in-chief’s first mcvement against Kuroki also Randolph Monro a m | was measurably successful. | No further details of the losses suf- fered by days’ fighting have been received. How {long the roll of casualties ultimately will be can be estimated by the official | report of the number of officers killed | or wounded between August 26 and Au- gust 31 in a single division. This di- vision, that of General Kcndratsvitch, which is under General Zaroubaieff, jand which formed part of the Russian right below Liaoyang, lost twelve offi- | cers killed, thirty-five wounded and one missing. en killed but nce of Monro, DR. PIERCE'S \ PR S SUCCEEDS VON PLEHWE. | Russians Hail the Selection of Prince Sviatopolk-Mirsky. ST. PETERSBURG, -Sept. | Prince Sviatopolk-Mirsky has been se- lected to succeed the late Von Plehwe ent combines of capital | as Minister of the Interior. casured in money are The Prince is a military officer of figures sink into insig- | the rank of general. Formerly he was 4 1o the money: | Governor of Penza and Ekaterinoslav the Brmers of @nd occupied the post of chief of the «d $300,- | 8endarmerie and Assistant Minister 3 a single year. | of the Interior under the late M. Sipia- ature will bring | guine. He is 47 vears old and is con- vous 3 e “‘*’: sidered an able man. He has not been red for that Nature | identified with harsh measures and his In the same 'appomlmem nrobably will be hailed ;as the inauguration of a mild regime. S PGP SELLS STEAMSHIPS TO RUSSIA. is the greatest man } y b«.u-e be is master of products are increasing in James J. Hill Disnoses of Two Mon- ster Vessels. i i i y makes rich red | NEW YORK, Sent. 7.—From a the Russians during the ten | Sept. [-the late movements of General taff is not | roki has been received, but the K | min says it learns on good authority | l passed | | distant future and exhorting care and | patience. the | but the authorities | | afternoon in the engine-house of the | As the | } . and countered by early | Kuropatkin had beaten off the Japa- | 1 | | had just been purchased by the city for ,ZZ".-‘,":}Q e -e‘g | trustworthy source The Call has re- L 1% {ceived information that two of the p the red b‘°‘:: biggest st=am vessels ever buiit on this s 1 side of the Atlantic—the Minnesota t stimulates the in.ld the Dakota—had been soid by fecds the {5 5. Hill to the Russian Government. heart ‘r“ | Samuel Holmes, the well kaown than any shipbuilder, is said to have received a ted States, | commission of $35,000 for conducting 1ce’s Golden, Me the sale. He admitted as much to- night, 2lthough Hill made a denial. PRSI RUSSIAN GUNS CAPTURED. Large Ouantiiy of Stores Also Taken by dJanancse at Linoyang. TOKIO, Sept. 7.—No official report of pay for mailing only stamps for book ia ;r clotk-bou: Russian General Staff Confident That the Manchurian Army Is Out of Danger. that Kuroki, after taking.the heights | hear Heiyingtai, about fifteen miles northeast of Liaoyang, occupied a line from Yentai to the mines through hot pursuit of the Russians on September | |4 and 5. The Russians, who were said | | to be concentrated twenty miles north of Liaoyang, are now retreating in the direction of Mukden. The pursuit was obstructed by the high millet. The Russians destroyed | their stores, but a number of guns and quantities of ammunition and other | supplies were cantured in the fortifica- lions and near the railroad station. Nichi Nichi says tiie Japanese casu mes may exceed thcse of the Russians, owing to the ldtter having occupied fortified positions; in superior ; numbers. The Mikado has congratulated the forces on their brilliant vigtory in the| face of tremendous difficulties, adding that the end of the war is still in the The report that Lieutenant Teraou- chi, son of Lieutenant General Teraou- chi, Minister of War, was killed in the fighting before Liaoyang was denied to-day. B o A RRS e ok FIRE DAMACES’ BAKERSFIELD BAKERSFIELD, Sept. 7.—To-night three cntire blocks of the city are in ruins, two men are dead and a third may not recover and the loss finan- | cially will probably reach $250,000, with | about $100,000 insurance at the outside. The fire started at 2:10 o'clock this | Bakersfield Fire Department. William Silver. a brick mason, w#il known in the city, entered the pln ce in an in- | toxicated. condition and lay down to | sleep. It is supposed that he was smok- | ing and he started the fire €rom his | cicar. His charred remains were re- | red after the fire.* They were ut- terly ynrecognizable. | The engine-house was a frame shack, long since condemned. The Trustees | had received bids for its sale and re- | moval preparatory to the erection of a brick building. It burned like dry\ tinder. It was surrounded on all sides | by frame shacks—veritable fire traps— and in a few seconds these were all | ablaze. The flames spread north and | south on K street to Twentieth and Nineteenth, and in the rear to Jap ai- | ley. cov HORSES BRAVE FLAMES. With great presence of mind and | courage the drivers of the hose wago! and engine saved the horses by dri ing them right through the doors ol'| the building after hastily hitching one engine and hose wagon. The other, a new engine, recently purchased at a cost of 35000, was lost, also the hook- and-ladder chemical engine and the greater part of the hose. An extra sup- ply of hose was obtained from hem] and assistance called for from Fresno. Then the electric power was shut off | and the water supply gave out almost | entirely for lack of power for the en- gines. With their single engine the firemen did their best, but their efforts were unavailing. In a few minutes the entire row of brick buildings on Nineteenth street | were ablaze, including the fine three- | story Midland block. Leaping across | Twentieth street the flames seized two brick buildings and from there at- | tacked a row of frame buildings, all of which were totally destroyed. The heat was terrific and the flames quickly attacked the Windsor Hotel. This was a frame building and from it the fire attacked Riche's Opera- house, a brick building, belonging to the Bank of Bakersfield, and not used | for several years. Both these wers destroyed. From there the fire seriously menaced the large department store of Hochheimer & Co. and the Conklin block on Chester avenue. The fire| burned itself out by 4 o'clock and the request for the Fresno engines was countermanded. CHINESE LOSSES HEAVY. A large part of the burning district is in Chinatown. The untire block be- tween Jap aliey, Twentieth, K and L streets except the engine-house and the property immediately adjoining, which the new fire department, was owned by | Cheo Li, the richest Chinaman in the city. His loss is about $15,000, about one-third insured. The loss to Chinese | merchgnts and restaurant keepers with small stocks will reach $8000. The loss | in the Midland block is about $60,000, mostly insured. Charles Cohn loses about $15,000, with very little insurance. Gee Fong, a Chinaman who entered one of the buildings to rescue property, | ‘was overcome by smoke and suffocated to death. EdWard Baldwin, a musi- cian, who was lying in the Midland lodging-house, jumped from the sec- ond story. He will probably die from his injuries. Silver, who is believed ln. have caused the entire conflagration, ! was not missed until the engine-house | was a roaring mass of flames. The heaviest losers are W. H. Hnrrl-l son of San Francisco, owner of the | Midland block, $35,000, fully Xn’ureq.’ Choo Li, ncarly all Chinatown, $15,009, | ance | sian troops. | of | ing through the station for Mukden. = SE GROW RESTLESS. Become More Anti-Russian as the Japanese Advance. MUKDEN, Sept. 7.—A correspond- ent has just arrived here after a jour- ney covering a distance of 120 miles, from Sintsintin, east of Mukden, and says that during the latter part of his | Journey he could hear the fighting at Liaoyang. The correspondent says: “The whole country is aflame with the wildest and most contradictory ru- mors. The principal interest in the | situation is in the fact that the Chi- nese population is becofilng more anti-Russian with the advance of the Japanese army. “Mukden itself is overcrowded and it is almost impossible to get food or a place to sleep. Everywhere there is the greatest uproar and confusion and many families are leaving in the direction of Harbin.. The soldlers, however, are not at all disheartened at the result of the fight and they say that the Japanese losses are. so tre- mendous as to seriously weaken them. They declare that they have made the Japanese pay infilntely more for Liao- yang than it was worth.” S G TR RETREATING SLAVS IN PERIL. Part of Kuropatkins Army May Be Cut Off by Pursuers. MUKDEN, Tuesday, Sept. 6.—Part of the Russian army which is coming to Mukden by the wagon road is In danger of being cut off. All day and ht on Monday the Japanese in the hills on the east road shelled the Rus- In one instance the Jap- anese infantry attacked a large force Russian infantry and artillery which had taken to the hills, running parallel to the Japanese in protecting the flank of the retreating army. Troops, guns and transports are pouring into Mukden by train and road. ~ Considerable transport was left behind. The roads are in a frightful condi- tion, owing to the heavy rain Monday. The main Russian army, pushing northward, evacuating Mukden. e T ‘WOUNDED ME; CRO“D CARS. Many Russiars anrcnmh ‘While Being Taken to Hospitals. LONDON, Su=pt. 7.—The Daily Mail's Kupangtse correspondent, cabling un- der date of September 7, says: “Fail cars at the rate of eighty a day, loaded with wounded, are pass- CHIN The shrapnel injuries are frightful and | a majority of the men succumbed onl the journey to the hospital. “Correspondents arriving here keen- Iy resent their treatment by the Jjap-| anese and declare that they see nulh-‘ ing of the war. They are treated as| | though spies, while native cnrrespond- ents are permitted to see the fighting. and telegrpl: freely.” The Daily Mail's Chefu correspond- ent says that Rear Admiral Uriu has been ordered to remain outside Shang- hai with his'squadron until Port Ar- fl‘\ll' falls. MKEE SETILES WITHL HIS WIFE Epecial Dispatch to The Call. PITTSBURG, Sept. 7.—Another chap- ter in the Fhipps abduction and di- vorce case has been closed. A. Hart McKee of Neéw York, named as one of the corespondents by Lawrence | Phinps, in the latter’s Denver suit for divorce, has made a settlement with his wife, Lydia Sutton McKee. Dy. Sutton, father of Mrs. McKee, {had an attorney prepare an action for divorce and another suit for $500,000, after his son-in-law had been named in" the Phipps case. The latter suit was to have been filed in New York. The| attorneys for Mrs. McKee, however) ef- fected a settiement by accepting $300,- 000 from McKee. Mrs. McKee is to retain the custody of the children, but McKee is privileged to see them at intervals. On the set-! tlement with her husband she rented a cottage at Southampton, L. I., where zhe is residing. Gossip says that Mrs. McKee has be- come a meighbor of the family which has caused the estrangement between herself and her husband. Dr. Sutton was dissatisfied with the settlement., He wanted his daughter to obtain $600,- 000. The settlement of the difficuity be- tween Hart McKee and his wife, it is said, indicates that Lawrence Phipps! and his wife have reached an agree- ment that the divorce sujt brought by Lawrence Phipps will be withdrawn or not contested. —_— P o about one-third insured; city of Bakersfield, $10,000; R. McDonald and the Tibbet estate, $4500, insurance $2300; Bank of Bakersfield, Riche’'s Opera-house, $10,000, insurance about $3500; Mrs. Samuel Haley, Midland lodging-house, $300, no insurance; Charles Cohn, $15,000, very light insur- ance; Clement E. Borsi, $5000, insur- $1500. i +| cause of the fierce fir: poured in upon Brave Port Arthur Garrison Again Victorious. Japanese From Captured Positions. Driven| CHEFU, Sept. 7.—1It is is now ap- parent that the heavy fighting re- ported by numerous Chinese refugees as having occurred before Port Arthur between August 27 and 31 occurred chiefly on the first two days mentioned, the Japanese thereafter directing their | efforts almost entirely to holding the positions .they had obtained. That these positions were of considerable im- portance is evidenced by the fact that the Russfans risked the lives of valu- able men in open fighting in their ef- forts to dislodge the Japanese from them. As has been previously reported in these dispatches, the Japanese troops retired from nearly all points on the { morning of August 31. The Novi Krai of August 31 devotes considerable space to an account of a small Russian reconnaissance which | started from Palungshan and reached a voint near Shushiyen without en- countering any Japanese. Returning to their own lines on the night of the 29th, thfs party came upon a trench in ‘an open field garrisoned by a solitary Japanese soldier, who abandoned his rifle and fled upon seeing the Rus- sians. The Russians captured some trenching tools, but they discovered | the Japanese in force behind = barrier thrown across the Mandarin road and returned swiftly to the fprtress. Another reconnoitering party found the Japanese vanguard trenches at Shushiyen to be unoccupied. The Rus- sians remained in the trenches a while and presently discovered a company of Japanese troops. There was an ex- change of rifle fire, during which a number of the Japanese, who had been surprised, were killed. The remainder retired. On the evening of the 29th the Japa- nese opened a heavy fire from Fort No. 3 and other points, directing their larger guns chiefly at the Russian posi- tions on a hill called the Small Eagle's | Nest. At Shushiven the Japanese re- | moved the roofs from a number of Chinese houses, strongly constructed of mud and stone, znd corverted them into excellent redoubts. At 9 o'clock of the evening of the 26th a Russian regiment made a sud- | soo, den onslaught on the Japanese trenches and at the point of the bayonet the Japanese were forced back to redoubt No. 2. The Russians were unable to proceed farther than this redoubt be- them by the Japanese. According to the comment by the Novi Krai this redoubt had evidently .been greatly strengthened during the previous night. On the east flank the remainder of | the night of the 29th was quiet. Noth- ing occurred on the west flank during the night of the 29th. On the morning of August 30 Rus- sian artillery dispersed a small l)odyl of Japanese cavalry. A Japanesc torpedo-boat recently fired on the Tiger's Tail fort. She was found by searchlights and repulsed by Russian batteries. She appeared to be | somewhat damaged. —_—— WILL CAMP FOR THREE DAYS.—The outing committee of the Caiifornia Camera Club has arranged an cuting for three days at Camp Vacation, on the Russian River, com- menciag to-morrow. Those desiring to go on | the trip are requested to send their names to the committee =o it can make arrangements. The follow.ng commitie wiil lock out for the outing. W. J. Street, H. B. Hosmer, W. E. Palmer and W. E. Dassonville. | i 1 ter as follows: | treaiment and feel a natural delicacy | attend to my daily duties. | myself, but finally my attention was | | to-night the State Board of Equaliza- | hereby made for the support of the reg- ADVERTISEMENTS. ‘GRATEFUL, HAPPY WOMEN Thank Peru-nae for Their Recovery After Years of Suffering. Miss Maria Ducharme of Montreal. Can.. who has been a great sufferer for years, writes a grateful and gracious let- “I am satisfied ttat rflmm of women suffer with troubles peculiar {0 ther sex because they do rot realize how bad they really need n consulting a physician. *‘I folt badly for years, had terrible pains at times and was unable to 1 tried, with douches and washes, to cure caled to an advertisement of Peruna of a case similar to mine, and | de- cided to give it a trial. My improve- ment began as soon as | started to use Peruna and soon | was a well woman. |/ feel that | owe my /ife and my heaith to your wonderful cine and greatly acknowledge this fact.”"—Miss Maria Ducharme. Female Weakness Is Pelvic Catarrh. Always Half Sick Are the Women Who Have Pelvic Catarrh. Catarrh of any organ, if allowed to progress. will affect the whole body. Ca- tarrh without nervousness is very rare, but pelvic catarrh and nervousness go hand in hand. - ‘What is so distressing a sight as a poor, half-sick, nervous woman, suffering from the many almost unbearable symp- toms of pelvic catarrh? She does not consider herself ill enough to go to bed, but she is far from being able to do her work wtihout the greatest exhaustion. This is a very common sight and is al- most always due to pelvic catarrh. It is worse than foolish for so many women to suffer year after year with a disease that can be permanently cured. Peruna cures catarrh permanently. It cures old chronic cases as well as a slight attack, the only difference being in_the length of time that it should be taken to effect a cure. Peruna cures catarrh of the pelvic or- 155 MARIA DUCHARME, \02 Jt Elizabethdt, flontfienl Can, gans with the same surety as it cures catarrh of the head. Peruna has become renowned as a positive cdre for female ailments simply because the ailments are mostly due to catarrh. Catarrh is the cause of the trouble. Peruna cures the catarrh. The symptoms disappear. Noted Women Who Use Pe-ru-na. Belva Lockwood, Washingtofn, D. C.; Mrs. Lucy Clark. Farmington, Utah, Viei President Utah State Council of Weomen; Mrs. Verona E. Roach, wife of late Sen- ator Roach, of Larimore. .; Mrs. Gridley. mother of Captain Gridley of the U. 8. Cruiser Olympia; Mrs. H. A. 8. Marsh, President Woman's Benevolent Association, 237 Jackson Park Terrace, Chicago, Il1l.; Mrs. Bobb-Maher, Attor- ney-at-Law, of Kansas City, Kan.; Mrs. Col. Hamilton, Columbus, Ohio, and hun- dreds of others equally prominent. If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruna. write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad- vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. e e e e e FEQUALIZATION BOARD FIXES THE TAX RATE SACRAMENTO, Sept. 7.—At 9 o’clock tion met and officially fixed the State | rate of taxation for the coming year at 53. A resolution was adopted recit- | ing the basis of the assessment as tul-\’ lows: i 1t appearing from the returns made by the | Auditors of the several counties that the total assessment of all property assessed by the County Assesso f the Slll! nd as equalized by the board is $1,480,719,075, and that the Tallfoad assessments made by this board are 669,566, making a total of $1,550,389,541, and whereas, after deducting 5 per cent for | delinquencies’ and cost of collection of taxes, | 519,477 from eaid total, there remains as the sum on which to calculate the rate State tax the sum of $1.472,870,064, and where- the board is directed to levy such rate of jon as shall raise for the fifty-sixth fiscal For the general fund School fund Interest and sinking fund . Total . Now, th Tate of 50 coats on each $100 of the texable i property of the $tate be and the same Is here- by fixed as the rate of State tax to be col- lected for the fifty-sixth fiscal year, and that | the sald rate of taxation be apportioned as followe: For the general fund.. School fund Interest and sini 31.2 cents 17.8 cents Total .. It is also Orflel’ed that a levy of 2 cents on each $100 of value of the taxa- | ble property be and the same is hereby made for the support of the University t of California. It Is also ordered that a levy of u,| cents on cach %100 of the value of the taxable property be and the same is ularly established high schools of the State of California, making a total tax rate of 53.5 cents. CAUSES STOPPAGE OF SANTA CRUZ CARS FIRE SANTA CRUZ, nt. 7..—No electrie cars were operated in Santa Cruz to- day. The heat is intense and the sky is overcast with smoke. Several flerce forest fires are raging in the moun- tzins near Santa Cruz. The one at Big Creek has burned out nearly half a mile of flume that carried the water from the Big Creek dam to the power- house which furnishes the electric pewer for Santa Cruz. It has been ascertained that Pas- qual Sonognini, who lost his life, was not dro‘\{md, but burned to death. D T YOSEMITE VALLEY. $20.00 Round Trip From Merce:l. Travelers passing through Merced may | obtain stopover and visit Yosemite Val- ley for $20 99 round trip. the way. street. Santa ¥Fe is Ask about it at 641 Market . ITED RAILROA! ay brought two suits from a Llrkur!lreel car v\'l September 9, at he was injured phys cally and sustained the loss of some effects, among them being a case of SUrveyor's instru- ments and a steel tape line —ee———— Good Points to Remember. We are seiling agents for “The Water- man Ideal Fountain Pen” and sole agents for “The Marshall.” the best $1 fountain pen ever made. Sanhorn, Vail & Co., 741 | Market street. e —_———————— TWORKED DISABLED HORSES.—A. B. Mo foreman for Charies Warren, con- \was arrested in Baden yesterday by Secretary Holbreok of the Society for the Pre- ventlon of Crueity to Anfmals. Morris has been working horses that were in an unfit condi- tion. He was taken before Justice of the Peace D. E. Cunpingham and the case was contjnued for two fweeks. We szil a hat ior $3 which is identical in every way with | the hat, exclusive agents ask $5 for. Sze our windows. ADVERTISEMENTS. Our stores close tomorrow to commemorate the fifty-fourth anniversary of the admission of California into the Union. Open to-night. till 10 To-morrow is Admission Day. You should have a new suit for the occasion. The time is short, so the best way is to come here, look over our hundreds of patterns and select a ready-to-wear suit in a style and color just to your liking. Ten dollars a satisfactory suit. in our store will buy We guarantee fit, style and wear. Money back is your privilege and protection. Sp:cial for to-day - 30-cant suspenders for 25c Good elastic, fine w:b,st-ongly made. Two pairs for oaz price.

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