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4 THE SAN FRA NCISCO . CALL, FRIDAY, NOV 'EMBER 11, 1904. JAPAN WANTS PEACE; RUSSIA IS FOR WAR Japan has made represeniations fo the Russ.au Government with a view of ending the war, and have been rejected The (zar is determined that hostilities shall ccntinue until Russjan arnds triumph. Grea’ Britan is endeav ring to induce America to take the lead in interven;)on, but this Goverrment will not interfere, except at the request of both belligerents. ét:Pétefsb_firg i?ejects a Peace From LONDON, Nov Japan, unoffick 1 representations to Russia This action has re- d such representa- , are not likely to Japan s made gestion of a pacific was made unofficially, it behind it all the weight the Japanese Govern- ade directly to Russia. an intermediary. was put forward ten- cially, that the ment would be in a po- y any report that it was The failuré of these ns, however, resulted tervention within a by iay evening at the t is taken here to be a to the United States e time is approach- s must take some itely stated that his speech with - Japanese would tion looking to powers (the and Great hr France impression here come from Pres- though the action nt. It is mooted that Lord enty yesterday he.had good re Mr. Roosevelt, if 1 making an ef- igerents to dis- s remarks are held enc® to mean that of France known, how- Cambon, who juously to bring ent, hopes for the three powers. regarding the fore- hi, the Japanese event be surprised tossee the two of them, sted.” CZAR MAY YET ACQUIESCE. Still Professes Loyalty to The Hague Arbitration Idea. BURG, Nov. 10.—In of- Lord Lansdowne's veiled that the Russo-Japanese ed by arbitration echo. The senti- ongly than ever be vin- ST. must of peace can e fact that the Britain's ioes not tend to its here. P kindly Hoy ss as is the idea of bringing the war to a conclusion it seems, how- ever t there are those in high quar- ters v consider that there is a bare possibi At the conflict to & close on the basis of arbitration if | ADVE TISEMENTS. In a Restaurant. A physician puts the query: Have you neve ticed in any large restau- | rant at h or dinner time the large | number hearty, vigorous old men at the tables; men whose ages run from 60 to 80 years; many of them bald and all perhaps gray, but none of them | feeble or senile? Perhaps the spectacle is so common | as to have escaped vour observation | omment, but nevertheless it is an | on which meens something. will notice what these hearty old fellows are eating you will ob- serve that they are not munching bran crackers nor gingerly picking their way through a menu card of new fangled health foods: on the contrary, they | seem to prefer a juicy roast of beef, a | properly turped loin of mutton and even the deadly broiled lobster is not | altogether ignored. 4 | The point of all this is that a vig- orous old age depends upon good di- | gestion and plenty of wholesome food and not upon dieting and an endeavor to live upon bran crackers. There is a certain class of food | cranks who seem to believe that meat, coffee and many other good things are rank poisons, but these cadaverous, sickly looking individuals are a walk- ing condemnatiom of their own theo- ries. The matter in a nutshell is that if the stomach secretes the natural di- gestive juices in sufficient quantity any wholesome food will be promptlv di- gested; if the stomach does mnot do ®0 and certain foods cause distress one or two of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets after each meal will remove all dif- culty, because they supply just what every weak stomach lacks, pepsin, hy- dro chioric acid, diastase and nux. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets do not act upon the bowels and in fact are not strictly a medicine, as they act almost entirely upen the food eaten digesting it thoroughly and thus giv- ing the stomach a much needed rest and an appetite for the next meal. Of people who travel nine out of ten use Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, know- ing them to be perfectly safe to use at | such proposition came directly Lansdowne’s plea | | of the San Franciscans toward the | alleged hostility toward Russians. The any time and also having found out by experience that they are # safe- guard against indigestion in any form, and eating as they have to, at all hours and ail kinds of food, the travel- ing public for years have pinned their faith to Stuart’s Tablets. All druggists sell them at 50 cents for full-sized packages and any drug- gist from Maine to California, if his opinion were asked, will say that Stu- art’s Dyspepsia Tablets is the most popular and successful remedy for any &tomach trouble. Proposal Tokio. | from Japan. Indeed, it is even intimated that Lord Lansdowne’s suggestion may have been inspired from Tokio. | ussia has announced again and that no proposition from an un- sted power would even be an- , but that any proposition from ' Japan direct, no matter through what ! intermediary, would be considered.. A | proposal from Japan to arbitrate the controversy would appeal strongly to Emperor Nicholas. He is extremely proud of being the author of The Hague conference and in spite of the difficult position in which Russian mil- itary prestige would be left by a ces- sation of hostilities at this juncture, those competent to judge actually en- tertain the belief that such an offer | on the part of the Japanese now would not be in vain. e T 0 AMERICA NOT TO ACT. No Intervention Unless Both Belliger- ents Request It. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.—Careful in- quiry fails to develop any change with- in the last four weeks in the attitude of this Government toward the Far| Eastern situation. It was stated sev- eral weeks ago that the President was | only awaiting a suitable opportunity to | do what he could to terminate the pres- | ent war. He was restrained at the time, and is now, by the iron rule of the State Department that under no cir-| cumstances or conditions shall this | Government make a formal offer to| bring the belligerents to peace terms | unless both of them shall signify a will- | ingness to avail of his good office That point has not yet been reached in this war. [ It is known that Japan is willing to| entertain an offer of good offices from | the President or King Edward, looking | toward the termination of the war, but | o far no such intimation has come | from Russia, and the slightest sugges»} tion of an intention to urge peace upon Russia has aroused both private and | public resentment on the part of the| Russian officials here. Emphatically, but with all courtesy, | Russia, through her Embassadors | abiroad, has several times informed | the neutral powers that she would | breok no mediation at this time in her | war with Japan. It can be announced | that Russia expects that her wishes | will be respected by all the powers to | which she has views. Count Cassini said to-night: | “I have very good reason to announce that my Government’'s emphatic op- | position to any mediation at this time | will be respected and observed by all neutral powers.” Of the Br suggestion made in Great in that the United States head movement for intervention, the Em- ador hgsitated to repeat what he b has announced so many times, that he b positive assurance that this Gov- ernment, while at all times ready to offer its services, has not the slightest | intention to fake a step toward media- tion unless ifvited by both belligerent The Russian Government is fully| aware of the views of this Government on the subject and it is deemed un- necessary at the Russian embassy here again to announce that it is confident this attitude will be strictly adhered to. AP =V Sy PRAISES FRANCISCO. | Letter Written by an Officer of the Russian Cruiser Lena. ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 10.—A letter from an officer of the Russian auxiliary cruiser Lena, which arrived at an Francisco on September11 and was ictained there under the neutrglity laws, is published here. He expresses the highest praise for the cordiality officers and men of the vessel. The writer also assures his countrymen that he has not seen any evidence of San Franciscans, he adds, are doing everything in their power to lighten the tedium of the Russians’ detention. The officers are literally showered with in- vitations. b e s SHELLS START CONFLAGRATION. Japanese Bombard Port Arthur's Mili- tary Warehouse. TOKIO, Nov. 10.—A report from General Nogi's headquarters before Fort Arthur, dated November 9, says: “The enemy's military warehouse, situated in the northern part of Port Arthur, was bombarded on November 6 with heavy siege and naval guns, The bombardment caused a conflagration. “On the afternoon of November 6 the magazine of an old battery on Sungchow was exploded by our shells.” s ‘RUSSIANS FEAR MASSACRE. Eelieve Port Arthur’s Garrison Will Be Annthilated. ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 10.—The suggestion made by way of Tokio that the Russians are maltreating the wounded is deeply resented in military circles here, where it is considered that the idea may be put out as an excuse for the liklelihood of a repetition of a massacre such as followed the taking of Port Arthur during the Chinese- Japanese war. RPN Raise Funds for Red Cross. AMSTERDAM, Nov. 10.—The Rus- sian Consul General has received $10,- 850 for the Russian Red Cross, con- tributed by commercial and manu- ' facturing establishments in Holland. | The contribution will be handed to the Dowager Empress of Russia. aissdos gy Russian Attack Repulsed. TOKIO, Nov. 10.—Manchurian headquarters, reporting on November 9, says: “On the night of November 8 two companies of the enemy at- tacked our outposts, but were com- pletely repulsed. -All is quiet in other directions.” ST SR, Trains From Seoul to Fusan. TOKIO, Nov. 10.—It is officially an- nounced that the Seoul-Fusan Railway is completed. Traffic will begin De- cember 1. The time between Tokio and Seoul will then be fifty hours. OYAMA’S MEN TAKE AND LOSE Vicious the Shakhe Barren of Results. NEITHER ARMY GAINS GROUND LR {Russian Attacks Upon| Japanese Lines Repulsed. v MUKDEN, Nov. 10.—The Japanese to-day assumed the offensive on the left bank of the Hun River and occu- pied three villages'! The Russians, however, attacked and drove them out and again established their lines of defense. LONDON, Nov. 11.—The Daily Tele- graph's correspondent with General Oku cables under date of November 9: “‘Last night the Russians made sev- eral determined attacks upon Lamunt- ing and Sinchinpou, but they were re- pulsed with heavy losses. The artillery laid the villages in ruins.” HUANCIAN, three miles south of Mukden, Nov. 10.—The weather to-day was warmer, with slight rain. Along the eighty miles constituting the front of the Russian army everything was quiet except for occasional skirmishes and artillery duels on the center and | left, where gunners fire occasionally for the sake of practice, so as to have the range of the Japanese. When the Jap- anese jocularly display a white disk, indicating a miss, the Russian riflemen reply by raising a shirt on a bayonet. The Japanese are continuing: work under cover of darkness, constructing immense ditches in which to deflect the water from the Shakhe River. Zye et BY THEIR OWN MINES. SLAIN' Heavy Russian Loss Due to Japanese Marksmanship, CHEFU, Nov. 10.—Etz mountain, ac- cording to Chinese who arrived here to- communicated her |day from Port Arthur, is proving a|nual report of the Board of Ordnance costly obstacle to the Japanese.. On the morning of November 5 and 6 fierce assaults on the position were made by the Japanese, who were re- pulsed. During the second assault a shell soaring over the other hills from Pali- chuang, dropped on Etz Mountain and demolished a land mine and the mine- controlling station and exploded other mines. The Russians were holding the trenches on the boundary of the mined section. Six or seven hundred were killed or wounded. The Japanese, not having reached the place, were un- | hurt. Etz mountain owes its strength to the | peculiar topography of the surround- ing country, which prevents a direct artillery fire, The Japanese advanced in both instances from behind distant hills, with the fullest force the ground would allow, but in the long distances which they were compelled to traverse in the face of machine guns their ranks melted away. Both times the Japanese broke the wire entanglements in places. One soldier with a leg torn off was seen trying to bite the wires. Cige T e S KING’S BIRTHDAY OBSERVED. GENERAL OKU HEADQUAR- TERS, Nov. 10.—A spirited Russian nsm(-k on an advance post on Tuesday night was repulsed after a half hour of musketry fire. The scouting of po- sitions is progressing. The birthday of King Edward was celebrated by the military attaches yesterday. The camp was en fete through the hospitality of Oku. Prince Nashimoto, Field Mar- shal Oyama and the correspondents participated in the celebration, which was succeeded by primitive dances and wrestling. the congratulations on behalf of the British. et Russian Ships in Suda Bay. CANEA, Island of Crete, Nov. 10.— The battleship Sissoi Veliki, with Vice Admiral Voelkersam aboard, and the battleship Navarin, the cruisers Izum- rud and Almaz, a number of torpedo- boats and transports and the volun- teer steamer Yaroslaw of the Russian Baltic squadron have arrived in Suda Bay. FETN T S Alexieff at St. Petersburg. ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 10.—Vice- roy Alexieff arrived in St. Petersburg this evening. B — ; Demonstration Leads to Riot. - TRIESTE, Austria, Nov. 10.—A demonstration here last night in favor of the establishment of an Italian uni- versity at Trieste between the oppos- ing factions resulted in a collision and counter-demonstration. A dozen per- sons were injured, ghe police inter- vened and a few arrests were made. —_—— Artists’ Materials. £ ‘We are agents for’ Windsor & Newton, makers of the best artist materials in he world. New stock of pyrograph ‘of)ds and new things to burn. San Prn!' . ail & Co., 741 Market street. —_— FREE FREE FREE WITH SUNDAY CALL SMALL ADS. Your choice of A CLEAVER —Or— AN EMERY STEEL. Both desirable articles and un- ly big values. Free With Every Small Ad in SUNDAY CALL. See Small Ad Page for Further Fighting oni original | General | Colonel Tulloch received | ADVERTISEMENTS. Fre | | l Parlor Furniture I Mahogany Davenport, beauti- fully carved, upholstered in French velour, $250. Re- moval Sale Price.... $|50 Mahogany Parlor Set (3 pieces), in krenrh cut velour, artistic workmanship, $150. Removal Sale Price. $123 Mahogany Parlor Set (3 pieces), in, Oriental Moquette; fault- Re- moval Sale Price.... §1035 Carved Mahogany Davenport, nagnificently upholstered in French velour, $8s. | Removal Sale Price..- $6s ahogany Divan, Dutch inlaid, upholstered in tapestry, $00. Removal Sale Price... $58 Overstuffed Sofa, inlaid carv- ing, very artistic, $50. Removal Sale Price... $35 Overstuffed Sofa, beautifully upholstered in silk tapestry, Removal lessly constructed, $140. —— | Turkish Chair, old style, large and comfortable, $80. Removal Sale Price $6° Carved Mahogany, Grecian de- sign, _ $7 Removal $5° damask, $60. Removal ;legant workmanship, $; | in silk tapestry, $45. | $35 { any, beautiful, $35. Re- $24 Sale Price.. , in satin Sale Price . Re- moval Sale Price [4 Remova] Sale Price... moval Sale Price Arm Chair, mahogar $42 Arm Chair, mahogany, Arm Chair, carved nmling\ny, Window Chair, carved mahog- FREDERICKS dericks REMOVAL TIME IS FLYING. ONLY 22 DAYS MCORE TO SECURE FREDERICKS’ MATCHLESS BARGAINS IN DRAPER IES and LACE CURTAINS Draperies Red Silk Portieres, flowered, $18.00. Removal Sale ‘Price.’. .. .« 513.50 Blue Embroidered Silk Por- tieres, $30.00 Re- s]z 00 moval Sale Price. Silk Tapestry Pogtieru, $12.00. Removal ale BHet ... 5 . 39.00 Olive Ti$nsel T:{)estry Por- tieres, $12.00. e- moval Sale Price.. 59-00 Gr;en CordedsEdge Tapestry ortieres, 10.50. Removal Sale Price 58-50 Blue Corded Edge Tapestry $8.50 Portieres, - $10.50. Removal Sale Price. Gold Silk Tapestry Portieres, $12.50. Removal Sale Price.. “.00 Blue Silk Tapestry Portieres, $12.50. Removal g Sale Price . $6.00 Silk Drapery Cords Fringes and Trimmings 50 per cent discount from our regu- lar prices. ce Bed Sets Full line of ruffled lace Bed Sets at 25 per cent off regular prices. French Tapestry Seats and Backs. Magnificent specimens of the weavers' art. 331-3 to 60 per cent reduction. Purchases may be held for delivery <Lace Curtains —_— Arabian Lace Curtains, $23.50. Removal Price Arabian Lace Curtains, $16.00. Removal Price Marie Antoinette (white), $13.00. Removal Price Marie Antoinette (white), $9.00. Removal Sale Price. §2.25 ‘White Irish Point, $8.00. Re- moval Sale Price... 56'00 ‘White Irish Point, $7.00. Re- moval Sale Price.. ss_oo Wall Papers A selected stock of exclusive patterns of Ioc to 20¢ papers. Removal Sale Priee ......... 9¢ a10c Dainty Bedroom Papers in {f'!urzl strilpes and cretonne ef- ects, all 35c papers. Removal Sale Price... 1€ Tapestry Papers closely resem- bling the woven cloth—for dining rooms, libraries and halls, soc. Removal Sale Price............. 39C All Imported Papers of French, German and English make from 20 to 30 per cent reduc- tion. $r.00 papers. Re- moval Sale Price Z5¢ up to and during the holidays. osfredericksz(g 649,651 MARKET ST « oPe, EARNY Furniture, Carpets, Draperies @ Wall Papers In a few weeks we shall move to our new store at. 34 to 52 ELLIS STREET, near | Market,, with an entirely new stock of the standard productions in furnishings THREE TOWNS CARPETS Body Brussels, the highest grade of this superb make carpet, $1.65 yard. sl 35 Removal Sale Price. Bigelow Axminster, an excel- lent weave in all the newest atterns, $2.00 yard. Removai Sate Pr $1.25 Tapestry Brussels, a fine tap- estry, none better, $1.20 Yyard. Removal Sale Price $1.00 Rugs oxr2 Wilton, $45. Re- moval Price Sale. $34.00 9x12 Axminster, $30. Removal Sale Price. $22.50 ox12 Body Brussels, $30. Re- moval Sale Price. szs 00 ox12 Tapestr: Brussels, $25. Removal Sale Price . 519-50 Oriental Rugs Complete line the newest and most bes 1l Anatolians, Kazaks, Shirvans, Sennas, Ferraghans, Kurdistans, Per- sians, Antique Irans, Belooch- istans, in_all sizes, reduced 30 PER Iron Beds —_——— Black and Brass, neat and sub- stantial, $45. Removal Sale Price............ B39 Gold. Cream and Gold, brass trimmed, $40. Re- moval Sale Price..... $30 Green and Gold, brass trimmed, $37.50. Removal Sale Prke . oonic hvionse, 3O Green and Gold, brass trimmed, $30 vlf%‘mn\'n! s;.le\szo Price FREDERICKS RECOMMENDS SMALL GUNS FOR COAST DEFENSE WORK Ordnance Board in Annual Report Asks for Medium Caliber Rapid- Fire Armament. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.—The an- |and Fortifications, headed by Major | General Gillespie, shows that only| | seven 12-inch guns out of the total of | 100 guns contracted for in 1901 re- main to be completed and the last of | these will be made by August of next| year. The board renews its recommenda |tion of last year for the immediate procurement of medium caliber rapid- | fire guns for coast defense to the ex- | |tent of 200 semi-automatic high ve- locity, 6-pound guns on pedestal mounts, 200 semi-automatic guns of a caliber large enough to fire shrapnel, mounted on fleld carriages and 200 | automatic machine guns of .30 caliber. | The board also wants a reserve supply | of ammunition of at least 100 rounds | for the large guns and mortars and | 260 rounds for rapid-fire guns, as| without a sufficient supply of ammuni- | tion the coast defense armament is | useless. An abundant supply of ammunition for target practice is also requested and other measures are recommended locking to" the installment of range finders, searchlights, telephone lines and other necessities of a modern coast defense system. The board sub- mits an estimate of $50,000 to carry on its work next year, which is only one- half the present allowance. ————————————— WOULD KEEP: THE SUBWAY FREE FROM GAUDY POSTERS New York Art Soclety Declares War Upon Advertisemnents in Public Places. NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—The Mu- nicipal Art Society to-day decided to g0 Into the courts to secure, if pos- sible, the removal of advertising post- ers from subway stations. The society as been advised by counsel that the apid Transit Commissioners have no | right to give advertising privileges in | the Subway or elsewhere and says that action might also be begun to enforce the removal of signs from the ele-{| vated railway stations. —_————— Californians in New York. NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—The following Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—J. Hunt, at the Park Avenue; H. S. Howard, at the| Herald Square; M. J. Kaufmann, at the | Imperial; M. Lowenstein and wife, at the Wolcott; B. Marshall, at the Marl- | borough; D. Marx, at the Hotel Im- perial; J. McDevitt, at the Hoffman House; F. Mier and N. S. Mullane, at| the Hotel Imperial; 8. Newman, at the Herald Square; Miss F. Perrin, at the Navarre; M. J. Shilly, at the Herald! Square; L. S. Simons, at the Grand| Hotel; . Sommer, .at the Hotel Im- | perial; . H. Vincent, at the Herald Square; F. S. Walsh, at the Hotel Im- perial; M. Alexander, at the Marl- | borough; F. J. Baker, at the Hotel ! Cadillac; H. E. Bellis, at the Herald | | Square; Miss M. E. Blume, at the Con. ! tinental; F. S. Chase, at the Nethe: land; T. M, Crawford, at the Ashland; D. G. Curtis, at the Hotel Navarre; A.‘ de la Lowe Jr., at the Ashland; E. R. | Derry, at the Continental; B. F. Dur-| phy, at the Hotel Navarre; Mrs. T. Hall, at the Hotel Albert; Miss M. H. | Harding, at the St. Denis; W. P.! Hickie, at the Cadillac; A. R. Adams,; at the St. Andre; M. J. Lowenstein, at | the Marie Antoinette; H. 8. Shelton, at the Marlborough; Mrs. R. H. Vande- man, at the Hoffman; F. M. White, at the Martha Washington, and W. M.| Williams, at the Navarre. ! From Los Angeles—H. W. Clarke, W. H. Denker and C. H. Fowler and wife, at the Grand Union; L. T. Garnsey and | wife, at the Normandie; H. K. Hull at the Park Avenue: F. Morengo, Jr., at the Marlborough; Mrs. A. Reeves, at | the Grand Union: Mrs. F. B. Silver- wood, at the Woodward; Mrs. Sinnott, | at the Holland; S. Storrow,at the Hulel’ Astor, and H. Williams and wife, at the Park Avenue. v b STEP IN FIRST POLICE BEFORE SHOT IS FIRED Arrival of Gendarmes Prevents Duel Between French Officer and Na- tionalist Deputy. PARIS, Nov. 10.—The police to- day arrested Gabriel Syveton, the Na- | HEAVY FALL OF SNOW IN NORTHERN NEBRASKA Storm Assumes Proportions of a Blizzard. OMAHA, Nov. 10.—A fierce snow- | storm which began last night con- | heated discus tionalist Deputy, who struck War |tinued all ever the northern and Minister Andre in the face during the | ncrtheastern portion of Nebraska to. debate of November 4 in the Chamber | day. A dispatch from Norfolk says of Deputie: up his posi General Andre and who is supposed to represent him. | as he was about to take | that it increased in fury, reaching the on for a duel with Captain | proportions of a blizzard. Cail, who is an intimate friend of | perature has fallen considerably be- low the freezing point. The tem- ———— The arrangements contemplated the NICTIM OF MELANCHOLIA use of pistols and two shots each. | Syveton’s arrest begins the criminal | prosecution for Andre. —————— Los Angeles Claims the Banner. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 10.—Brander | W. Lee, chairman of the Republican County Central Committee, claimg| that Roosevelt’s total plurality in the couhty and city will be something in excess of 22,000 when the official re- turns are made and that Los Angeles Mrs, Professor Henry R. Donaldson of the | al zone seems to | University of hanging by a rope from a rafter to-| brate the arrival here of Secretary of day in the basement of the Donaldson | War Taft and his friends. residence. ENDS LIFE WITH ROPE assaulting General | wyso of Professor of Chicago Univer- sity Hangs Herself in Base- ment of House. CHICAGO, Nov. 10.—The body of Henry R. Donaldson, wife of Chicago, was found It is believed she ended | QUESTION OF COMP ATION | NDS BALDWIN FROM FAIR | Temperature Drops Rapidly and| Aeronaut Packs His Airship and Leaves Exposition After Heated Discussion With Officials. LOUIS, Nov. 10.—Following a ion with the aeronautic | officials over the question of compen- tion, past and prespective, for air- I on ! ship flights at the World's Fair, Cap- | - tain T. S. Baldwin, inventor of the only aerial craft that has succeeded in complishing anything of importance at the exposition, has packed the di gible California Arrow for shipment to ac- San Francisco, Cal, and left the | World's Fair grounds himself. ————————— | Preparing to Greet Taft. PANAMA, Nov. 10.—Any ill feel- [ing that may have exifted between | Panama and the United States on ac- | count of the difficulties over the can- be disappearing. | Panamans are preparing to cele- It is the | desire of the Government that the is the banner Republican county of | her life while deranged from melan- | Taft party be the guest of the Gov- the State. cholia. | ernment quring its stay here. ADVERTISEMENTS. This Suit and extra pants 52.95 We have the largest and finest boys’ and youths’ outfit- ting ‘department west of Chi- cago. We want every mother of boys in San Francisco to know this by seeing it for her- self. This is-why we offer such unusual values for Friday and Saturday. This week we are selling two-piece suits as pictured and ‘an extra pair of pants in the same material for $2.95. Five pretty patterns lect from in ages 8 to 15 to se- years. If you have a boy who needs a school suit you can save $1.50 at this sale. We have made up a splendid fine of suits for young men from 14 to 19 years. -Boys' and Children's Caps Sailors, Yachts, Norfolks ani Autos at. 25¢, 45¢, 73c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 ana $2.00. You had better see them. 740 Market Street Boys' Sweaters All-Wool striped effects and plain shades in nmavy, gar- net, black and gray. Special at, 85¢./