Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
" Aol THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY. MARCH 10, 1905. DETECTIVES INTER ROGATE EMPLOYES Ah Wing and Nora Hopkins Are Questioned by Police Continned From Page 1, Column 7. but her replies ¥ nery tforw nd 9 p. m. of anford drank narrowly es- hnine poison- over twenty- , to which all cess. Some sehold in the be dur- ing time. The same tedly put poison in the a bottle. s made to rehearse is supposed to at S@anfqrd Honje. case have not yet coilected evidence | encugh to warrant an arrest being | made. ‘We do not-contemplate makihg any arrests at present,” said Captain Bur- nett’ decisively. “If we do we have every one we want within reach.” it is thought that an | veral arrests will"be made | - WILL NOT SERVE Iliness of Russell J. Wilson Will Pre- vent Acceptance ‘of Appointment. It is not likely that Russell J. Wilson 1 act as one of the & Stanford’s estate. Ill-health will prob- ably prevent his acceptance of the ap- pointment made in the will, Mrs. Stanford took the precaution 14th, both before Solitntat to name six executors for her last will She could at would place suspi- and testament. They are Charles G. one Lathrop, Timothy Hopkins, Joseph D. hiegmatic Ch se were ques- Grant, Whitelaw Reid, T. G. Crothers the same lines in hope of nz down the suspicions held jetectives to some one per- and Russell J. Wilson. The last named is a brother of Mountford Wilson and his law partner. But it is und stood that Russell J. CHINESE QUESTIONED. Wilson has indicated his purpose as interpreter Detective | B0t desiring to take part in the admin- i the Chinese as|iStration of the big estate, ill-health ot permiting him to engage actively in business. The duties will therefore devolve on the other appointees. There could be no new appointment of an He is the best ietective force ories. he servants were as_were all of Particular at- o the apartment of istress of the house. the supply of Mrs. Stanford d examined. g from cel- thoroughly 1 by The tion took several h uestioning censumed n k € e time All the de- t ves sked questions of he wit- nesses on points in the case that im- upon c which we k n arrest?” re still wait- inquest,” replied t tive When that comes we - resdy Was this ation made in re- poisoning ied the captain in ti minds of strvchnine was arbonate of soda at he Poland water was TEST OF BICARBONATE. nate of soda found in t e > Stanford s by the City Chem- to be entirely pure n it urnett says that the local act until the result of the death of Mrs. Stan- is expected hour- will “show ing manner of strychnine or executor by the courts, unless all those nominated in the will were incapaci- tated or dead. ko= O RS Ry POLICE DETAIN WOMEN. Must Await Arrival of San Francisco Detectives. HONOLULU, March 9.—The fact that Bertha Berner and May Hunt, secretary and maid respectively of the late Mrs. Stanford, will not leave Honolulu on the. Pacific Mail Com- pany’s steamer China to-morrow, but will remain until the saiiing of the Ocearic Steamship Company’s vessel Alameda, is due to police instructions to the women. Attorney General An- drews suggested that they should not , to justice.” AS EXECUTOR. | | with his son. DETECTIVES QUIZ SERVANTS AT MANSI BEVERLY ALSO “AWAITS CALL He andMi§s Richmond Not Through |® With "Sweating” for Clews. PEASANT. ARMY |KIRKMAN GIVES | IS PILLAGING HIS VERSION trong Military Force Sent|Army Captain Tells of "His to\ Check an Invasion| Conneetion With Suicide| of - the Kieff District| of Mrs. Bessie Chandleri Continued From Page 1, Column 5. back here with the body of Mrs. Stan- ford, for with her will come Miss Ber- ner. Then I suppose the detectives will be able to get down to work in: good earnest. “I shall never have a peaceful mo- | ment until we are entirely cleared ofl the awful suspicion that hangs over us. I cannot sleep at night thinking of it. My positions in England have | always been with the very best of peo- ple, the nobility in faet, and I hate to drag them into this affair by even giv- ing their names as references. 1 want! the criminal férreted out and brought | g | Albert Beverly, “the ex-butler of Mrs. Stanford, spent@the day fishing | He cani¢ home: late. this | | evening bronzed andfitired from the! cutors of Mrs, | | to the city again at any moment. This | | E. Downes, whose home ‘is near Ukiah, | gave to-the authorities to-day an ante- | mcrtem statement which they know {dying on the sidewalk by members of |He had been shot in the back. be allowed to leave before the arrival of the detectives from San Francisco on the Alameda, which is due here at | dawn to-morrow. High Sheriff Henry continues to hold out positively against the theory of suicide. Miss Berner remains in her rooms at the Moano Hotel, which she has left! only for attendance at' the - inquest | since the death of Mrs. Stanford. | —_—— CLAIMS HIS HORSE CAN | TRAVEL ON SNOWSHOES | Swede Wil Attempt. to Transport | Mails Through Deep Snow in Wyoming. ARATOGA, Wyo., March 9,—Great | difficulty has been experienced by the ! mail contractor between Saratogh and | Dillon, a. mining camp at an altitude of 9000 feet, in getting the mail through to the latter place regularly on account of the deep snows. To-day | X the contractor engaged Ola , a] 2 & ra Swede, e latter = t se that he has to wear snowshoes, which he | will use with a sled of special design, the roads and trails being impassable WAITS WORD FROM REYNOLDS. Burnew Says He Will Make No rests To-Day. verdict found at Ar- the death of Mrs. Stan- 1 st night: be nc sts made to- nigt none to-morrow, so far as 1k s verdict was murder. Well, t to have word from Detective or Captain Callundan to- Rey morrow.” This would indicate that the detec- e been working on the Chas. Beilus & Co Exclusive | fiigh-Grade Clothiers No Branch tores end No Agents. THE SELECT PATTERNS| AND MODELS WE SHOW| ARE SIMPLY SUBLIME.| | STUDIED CAREFULLY| i THE PROGRESSIVE WANTSZ OF TASTEFUL DRESSERS.| | HENCE THIS COLLECTION. | | The English Walker, H coat of “and a character usefulnes for the business ma: Styles resdy now. to ordinary vehicles. | People here are anxiously waiting | to see a horse that can travel on sno shoes. Nelson insists that he wi prove his statement. ——— FURTHER REDUCTION | OF LONDON BANK RATE | Now Placed at Two and a Half Per Cent, the Lowest in Seven Years. LONDON, March 10.—The reduction of the bank rate to 2% per cent, the lowest in spven years,is the subject of intense satisfaction as expressed in most of the newspapers this morning as showing that the country at last recovering from the strain imposed by the South African war. Such an indication of soundness of the coun- try’s chief finances is expected to have a stimulating effect upon trade and in- vestments. ———— BILL BIMITS HOURS FOR THE TRAINMEN Measure Passed by the Missourl Legislature and Sent to the Governor. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., March 9. The House to-night passed and sent to Governor Folk for Ris signature the Senate bill prohibiting the railroads from working their trainmen more than sixteen consecutive hours, with- out eight hours' rest. —age MERRY LEGISLATORS. Members of Assembly Enjoy Them- - selves Between Debates. SACRAMENTO, March 10.—At 1:30 o'clock this (Friday) morning the at- tendance in the Assembly had dwindled away until there was -no quorum to pass a few remaining bills. A call of the house was resorted to and the Bergeant-at-Arms was sent scurrying about the city to bring in recreant members. During the intervals between the consideration of bills_the members of both houses gave tHemselves up to levity. Files were thrown about, songs rendered and felicitous addresses made. It was nearly 2 o'clock before the Assmbly passed its last bills and the Senate had received its final messages. ——— Masonic Degrees for Fairbanks. INDIANAPOLIS, March 9.—Vice | President Fairbanks will come to In- | diznapolis the latter part of this month | to take the intervening degrees in Ma- | sonry between the Blue Lodge and the Thirty-second Degree. “He was Initi- ated into the Measonic order on Decem- ber 27. ———— Census figures just published show 1852 Gearny Street Thurlow Rilock! two years. {he did not know who had shot him. {It developed that his wound was very | =erious and to-day an -operation was | performed and thirty inches of his in- {partially. from the anesthetic he de- | fired at him, but more than that he | would not tell. {the streét and heard her scream. | the grading of the Oregon red day’'s outing. He said: “1 wish this matter would be brought ! to a focus. Miss Richmond and myvself are waiting here expecting to be called - e | naturally upsets me. I know nothing BURNING - AND LOOTING:HOPED TO MARRY HERV‘ of the case further than that I was i once in Mrs. Stanford’s service. All this talk of graft amuses me. I got my commissions, when I was acting as courier to Mrs. Stanford, same as any other courier does, and that was all there was to jt. - “Any one who has traveled and knows anything of the world knows that every courier -gets commissions, that is if the courier has any sense. It is a general custom abroad, nobody will deny it. I want this thing ended. I don’t want to be compelled to be hanging around here every day. It:is getting very monotonous. I am not spending any ‘lee less nights, how- ever, ‘over' this “affdir as my wife will tell you.” . Charles G." Lathrop said this morn- ing that he could not understand the delay of investigation in Honolulu. He felt that on the arrival of Professor Jordan matters would be brought to a focus. He was anxlous to have the matter probed to the bottom. He did not want any suspicion to rest on innecent people, Also States”That It Was His: Intention to Take His Life When She Killed .}{erself | Special Dispatch 10" The Call VALENTINE, Neb., March 9.—The | alleged causes of Mrs. Bessie Chan-| { dler's suicide were explained to-day in | F.| Three Thousand Russians Despoil Estates and De- stroy Government Factory | Special Dispatch to The Call. LONDON, March ;10.—The corre- spondent of the Daily Mail at Kieff, Russia, telegraphs: “An army of 3000 peasants from the!a statement by Captain George ‘ Orlovka district, with carts, is advanc- Kirkman of thé Twenty-fifth United | ing southwesterly, burning and looting | States Infantry, whu’se\ name has been | as it progresses. The peasants have al- | prominent in connection with the trag- | ready sacked eighteen estates, burning | edy. whatever they could mot carry off. |~ Spe nad told him, he declares, all the | Thes nass ?}‘;‘:nee:l;‘:;g:rn‘:g“isrzaarufi‘circumslnncel of the differences that | robbed a 3 { ported they have burned the Dernigen- | :zd Bt:h?:“eo re:zu.n;ngemem of her h:nlly finery, belonging to the crown. | | s'c'yflr:eere h?as been no resistance to! My mother and I have fallen 'out | them, as there are no troops at hand, | forever,” said she, “and I have been but a strong military force has been|gorhidden to return to my home in| TELLS UNTRUTH | THOCH DTING Wounded Man Swears to Ante - Mortem Statement Police Know to Be False —————— Bpecial Dispatch to The Call LOS ANGELES, March 9.—Know- ing that he is dying and that no hu- man agency can save his lile, Charles ! to be false. Even when Downes was told that it was known he was lying he refused to correct his statement, saying that he hoped his slayer would never pe captured. Downes was found Monday night a hose company returning from a fire. He was placed on the hose wagon and teken to a hospital. He stated that teéstines removed. When he récovered chned to say who had shot him. His | statement was that he ‘had met four | men on the street and oene of them ! The detectives have found persons who saw Downes accost a woman 02 man approached and called Downes by name and then shot him. The man and woman then disappeared. When found Downes admitted that he knew who fired the shot, but he soon changed his story and professed ignor- ance of the man’s identity. He will go to his grave with the secret untold be- cause he will die before morning. It is believed he is trying to shield the woman. —_— e CBASSIFICATION OF OREGON WHEAT UNDER DISCUSS TON ! Chicago Trade to Decide Whether It | May Serve for Speculative Contracts. CHICAGO, March 9.—An important meeting- that will have a bearing. on the fate of the big May wheat deal on the Chicago Beard of Trade was: helc to-day at the rooms of the State Rail- road and Warehouse 1 Every branch of the wheat tradé was represented at the meeting, The. hear- ing was jn response to a call to the trade from the commission to present testimony bearing on the admission of Oregon grown red winter wheat. to 'the The commission has ‘been permitiing ussian. wheat as “Red winter’:, at ‘Bast.-St. Louis, while in ‘Chic: spection authorities have béen fdllow- ing the precedent of the last twenty- five years and have classifi he Far Western wheat' as “Colorads,” ' It {s expected a decision in the matter will be given soon by the cammission.. . ACCEPTS OFFICE OF CHIEF .\ SECRETARY | FOR' TREEAND Appointrment g, ‘Balfour Walter Hume Long's May Be Announced To-Day. LONDON, March:10. alter Hume Long, president of ‘the Local Govern- ment Board, has accept 'the office of Chief Secretary for Ireland, It is ex- pected that Premiet . Balfour will formally announce thé appointment to- day. It is still possible, however, that a hitch may oceur, iy s stated that ‘War Secretary Arnold Forster, who is in bad health and dissatisfied with the constant criticism ‘of his work, has de- termined to resign, in which c Bal- four will be faced with ne¥ diffitulties and may be obliged to have recourse to a reshufiling of the cabinet seats. In the divigions taken in the House of Commons yesterday the Govern- . ment majorities were again danger- ously small & e M g Her Ideal. “Oh, ves,” said Miss Dolly Vassa- gurl, “of course I have my ideals as to the kind of man my future -hus- band must be. Of course he must be strong and handsome, but not at all stuck on himself; he must also be ““Mrs. Chandler also confided to me,” MEMORIAL SERVICE AT ONIVERSITY Continuned From Page 1, Column 6. was maintained during the services. The music was most exquisitely ren- dered throughout. Miss Cooper’s love- Iy voice was heard to great advantage and the delicate playing on the violin by Mr. Savannah added much to the beauty of the services. The closing number of the after- noon services was of unsually impres- sive character. It was Mrs. Stanford's favorite hymn, “O Mother. Dear, Jerusalem.” The programme of music for the morning services was as follows: Vorspiel to Wagner), air for viol'n _(Bach), Savaunah; contralto arla. “God Shali Wipe Away All Tears'" (Sul- Tvan), Miss Pearl Cooper Elizabeth's | Prayer’” (Wagner). Ro from violini con- certo (Gade), Mr. Sava mateh, “Erolque” (Beethoven), andantine appassionato (Lemaire); organ finale, “In Memortam The afternoon services were: Paul Hath fa: Invecation, chorale from delssohn): - contraito solo Seen’”” (Gaul), Miss Pearl Cooper strains (a) “Oh. Divine Redeemer () “Du Bist die Ruh" (Schubert) for the Wings of a Dove (Mend “Elsa’'s entrance to the Cathedral - " (Wagner); Memorial Ch * _(Mendelssohn); eoratorio a e Thou Faithful Unto Death’; (b) Men t “Thea BISHOP FAVORS SALOON TRST Prelate Would Have the Government Monopolize | the Trafic in Liquor ard Ay sent to check the invaders.” Baltimore.” ST. PETERSBURG, March 9.—A tel- | #gram from Ekaterinoslav, South Rus- ' agcerted Kirkman, “that her husband i !hnl}: m;} 'm;m:.,u. Shine”"; organ finale, sla, says that five miners have been|,yeq everything to the influence of | Mother Dear. Jerusalem killed and fifteen Saunded 198 Conflict | her relatives. Henry Gassaway Da- | 2 between strikers of e | vis, Senator Gorman and Governor | : P I 7 mines and theé Auerbach quicksilver | wg feld procured Chandler's elevation | BR[E[" (,l | Y N EV\« S mines and soldiers in the district 0!‘ from the volunteer service to a lieu- | Bakhamut. | tenant in the regular army. Never- . . p. Colonel Progouldbitsky, Governor of | {joicel ' Mre ‘Chandler informed me, | e P v S T A D ek the Provinde of Kutais, has béen the wpno ho wag drawing full pay while | sald she lived on Hancock strest was arrested objéct of an ‘attempted assassination |, the Philippines he only contributed | Under suspicion of insanity as she sat by two men at Sukhum. The would-be g5 to her support within the vear and | 420=ie0 with an infant lia her arme at 5 murderers fired six shots from revol-| that her relatives paid his debts. Rank- | possession. 0 o 0 0€ She bad 340 in her vers at the Governor, but he was not | jng oficers at Fort Crook know that| CHARGED WITH BURGLARY.—Edw hit. | while he was there with the Thir-| Hines was booked at the City Prison yester Fetropa e | tieth he compelled Mrs. Chandler to do | by Detectives Harper and Armstrong on & | PASSING OF THE CHINESE | the work of a common domestic serv- | charge of burglary. He is accused of breakins ONLY A MATTER OF TIME | ant. | “I met Mrs. Chandler about the time Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, March 9.—“The great- est blessing would come to our Amer- ican public it a monopoly could be made of the liquor traffic by the Gov- emment and all -hope of private gain be taken away from the saloon-keeper and brewer,” Bishop Burgess of the dlocese of Long Island declared to-day in an address on “Temptation.” 1 hope that the saloon, like the post- office, can be controlled and utilized by the Government, v “Much good could be accomplished by a Federal law on marriage in this country. Indeed, we are not one na- tion until we adopt it, and the consti- tutional difficulties which are so often urged are no greater than were those against the Interstate Commerce Com- mission,” ————— MOTHER AGNES DEAD. How Nature Is Solving for Hersell that théy were going to Fort Riley. | the Question of the “Yellow | Not long after this my hereditary men- | Peril.” ltal troubles compelled me to enter a In fifty years—perhaps less than fifty | Sanitar'um ‘“hB";’ok‘”l‘l- N. Y., and my | if the present laws remain in effect and | énemies at : ort l;l "|l l:“fl:ihedt up are rigidly executed—the Chinese popu- | the charges of unsoldierly conduct on g hich 1 am now being tried.” latlon of the United States will begome | W practically extinct. From 1890 to 1900, ~Captain Kirkman admits he asked | they fell away from 126,778 to 119,050, a | Mrs. Chandler to mdrry him, but ex- doc)r’eaie of nearly 8000, or more than 6| Plained that the proposal, whiafll:_l w; per cent. In the fiscal year ending June in writing, would be given to f‘: 30, 1903, more than 4000 voluntarily left | and was not tohbehs\rll m\lled tot drs. the port of San Francisco for the land Ch@"‘“’: ‘m“t:e. > - Roes grasind ¢ of their birth, the total deported and | divorce from her husban: L TH Bciared returning voluntarily being 5020. A | that his attempt to commit suicide was | | very large majority of these Chinamen simultaneous with hers and due to| 3 5 despondency over not having heard ':\oe:;e‘endvnnced in years and went home o yesg Hhste e Wik i He concludes with the statement that | A generatlon g0 here e I hira: | he will later have stlil more sensational oo Chinese Conaul General there | disclosures to make and names to, give fold me that, counting men, women |Of other people who are directly re- and children, there are now not 10,000. | SPonsible for Mhrs- Chandler’s death, The same proportionate decrease is|and that when he has done this he is | seen in other places. It sho be borne ; determined to follow her to the grave. in mind that the total number of Chi- | WASHINGTON, March 11.—Secre- nese now in the United States includes | tary Taft has declinea to accept the | Passes Away in Kansas After Illne: " ‘of'a_Year. 196,767 in Hawali and 3116 in Alaska, so | {glsrllg:‘*:l"f",r:e‘mf_“fl';'l;‘“mg:‘;;;” 2 CHICAGO, March.. .9.—The Rey. | that at the beginning of this decennlal; ' "0 1™ be™ court-martial at = Fort period there were living In the United |G,y ,r, Neb.; on charges of scandal- f;:tet;eflm;.:r: nn‘: lfi:@is:.o:(:nemuonlaus conduct. The court nas taken a | Nccording to the most liberal esti- |Fecess untll May 10 fo await the ar- | Mother Mary Agnes, 'lmperlqr general of the Congregatien of St. Agnes, died yesterday at Hays, Kans., after an ill- ness of one year. She founded the | mate there are not more than 150 lega!:g;’;;‘l‘mgfn:;_"“" Suiduies ” front - the order in 1870 at Fond du Lae, Wis, | Chinese wives In San Francisco. But! o RN T T O TR Mother Agnes was also the founder of | the mber of Chinese women is esti- | Headaches and Neuralgia From Colds. | the Leo House in New York, which is a home for immigrants. —————— AGED PIONEER DIES. mated at between 1000 and 1200. Ofl such femalé children as are born to the | lowest class a large proportion are sold for immeoral purposes by their parents, thus still further reducing the possikili- ties of an incréased population. Laxative Bromo Quinine, world wide Cold and | Grip remedy, removes cause. Call for the full | panie znd look for signaturé €. W. Grove, 25¢. * | ———— A writer in an English automobile | paper claims that roads could be kept | The main adult population is male, is| permanently clean by the application | unmarriéd, or at least wifeless in Amer- | of strong solutions of calcium chloride | jca, and is rapldly approaching old, or magnesium chloride, and that this age. Thus by 1930 or 1940 the main| would be cheaver than oils and with- Chinese life in_America will have be-;out their objectionable odors. come extinct.—World's Work. I st o it o e Inventor of Remarkable Farming Im- plement Dead in Stockton. STOCKTON, March 9.—John Cun- nirgham Hoult, inventor of the first combined harvegter ever used in the United States, ~died to-day. Hoult i | | into the room of G. P. Harrison, 12 Masan street, on March 14 and stealing & violn and overeoat, which have been recovered. Harri- son is a musicign at the eircus. PERSONAL PROPERTY SOLD.—By bid- ding in open court against the administratrix of the estate of John Halsey Burke John W Truesdeil received the persoaal property of the decedent, consisting of letters patent, for the eum of $4931 85. The award was made by Judge Coffey after papers flled by the admin- istratrix confirming the sale of the property to H. B. Sherman for $1100 had been received. ALLEGFS UNDUE INFLUENCE—After attempting to have her sister, Isabella V. Pomery. removed as administratrix of the as- tate of her father, Aristide Paul Heltzebers, Mary Strehl yesterday started proceedings to contest the will, alleging undue influence, She also alleges misrepresentation by her sister of the value of the property left by their father and bases her action princtpally on this fact. —_——————— British Averse to Cremation. The slow progress that is being made by cremation in this country must be | disappointing to its advocates as well as surprising to the student of human affairs. Twenty years ago the pioneers of cremation naturally met with a | good deal of opposition, for we ailter our ideas-on the subjeet of “pomp of death” a good deal more slowly than on the mere question of how to live. But it was reasonable to expect that in two decades sentiment would have capitulated to reason to a greater ex- tent than has been the case. Unfor- tunately, as we think, the law courts early stepped in and stereotyped that séntiment before it had had time to steady itself. Dr. Tristram decided in 1594 that unless explicit instructions | had been left in the will an executor is not competent to cremate his testator. The ground of this decision was one that already reads strangely, viz.: That every one Is entitled to Christlan burial and that cremation is not Christian burial. Thus it is that only those an- trust; for hygiene who make the stipulgtions themselves come to be cre- mats London M 8. —_——— came to this county in the early '50's. He was 73 vears of age and leaves We always have to sprint after suc-| Tom Lawson is not attracting much cess, but misfortune will meet a man | more attention now than Mrs. Chad- half way. wick. The mercury in a thermomeéter isn't Commission. |} grade deliverable on spéculative - con-: |'tracts on the Chicago Board of Trade. || 0 the State in.f| shrewd and practical, but poetical and artistic withal; he must be able to the population of France last year was | foolish; in fact, he must be 39,119,095, an increase of only 157,150 in | and = spiritual y make lots of money, and be generous and unselfish, and sing tenor and be a deep thinker, and perfectly straight- || forward and truthful and a political leader; he must be always thoughtful of the rights of others, and own a rac- ing automobile, and he must never touch liquor and be .a. thorough yachtsman. I want him to belong to the clubs and societies, to be a man among men and always be home nights; and he must oves me for myself alone, and r talk ‘mental ‘affinity, no dreamer.”—Puck. nine children. always an early riser. ADVERTISEMENTS. 2 . If every mother knew what many mothers do know about . our valdes in boys’ clothes, we would have the entire trade of ‘. San Francisco in juvenile clothing. -~ Many mothers have found out that thsy can save in our store from $2 to $4 on suits, according to the quality of the suits purchased. That’s why we are growing—that's why we are soon to open another store with a biz juvenile department. We are‘manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers of clothing, selling at wholesale in almost every State in the Union, but retailing to the public direct through our stores in San Fran- cisco. ‘With these advantages we of course can undersell other /merchants, as they do not make their goods, but buy from'o'th‘ers, which adds a profit to the price you pay. = The mother who buys her son’s spring suit here will save enough to buy the boy a pair of shoes. For eximple, take this little norfolk which we picture. It sells for about $6.00 else- where; here the price is $4.00 It is made in double-breasted style with knickerbocker pants and the patterns are simply beautiful, comprising several _ different gray mixtures. You can also get the norfolks in biue serge with plain pants at the same price. The ages inboth suits range from 7 to 13 years. You had better see the suits in the windows along with You will likewise find quite a display of novelties for the little chaps. It matters not the 25 per cent. ‘This Stylish Norfolk Onl ‘age of your boy, we can outfit him with the latest clothes and save you fully L y $4| the other spring goods. “ Mail orders filled for any- thing in boys’ clotlies—wri;te to-day for 1905 catalog—it will make buying by mail easy. . We carry a full line of fur- nishing goods, hats and caps for boys at the very lowest prices. Manufacturers Wholesalers and Re of Clothing . 740 Market Street tailers