The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 12, 1905, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1905. *FEAR OF MUTINY KEEPS BLACK SEA FLEET AT ROUMANIAN PORT OF KUSTENJL Crews of Warships Resent At- tempt to Punish Kniaz Potemkine’s Men. REFORM PROGRAMME IS DRAWN UP| Measure Providing for Popular| Representation Awaits Czar's Sanction. KUSTENJI, Roumania, July 11—The Russian squadron seems to be delaying here, owing to the fear that another mutiny will bresk out should the vei scls put to sea. The fact that fifty-five sailors from the Knlaz Potemkine who surrendered have been imprisoned om | board the different vessels of the | squadron, awaiting trial for rebellion, has caused intense indigmation among the crews and as @ consequence there are fears nother mutiny. ST. 'RG, July the committes of Min- discussion of th® Bouli- project occurred to-day. now go immediately v has been proclaimed in fct of Tiflis, Caucasia. —A dispatch to 8t. Petersburg to- that Vice Admiral Biri- eppointed head of the Ru ¥ in succession of Admiral resigned bt Bt S BOUGOUIN’S RECORD AS SPY. Counts Upon Which French Resident ture of a certain mili- | by rail was to the same reached its ther div were re in Paris, the French | of guns there were ted to| v army regi- to the front | regiments | which, | giments from h from Tokio in Nagoya were the same man- of certain military reported to De reported to him cabled jonal infor- rgoes of the letter. that Bougouin Maki, to ascertain »ops and that Maki | es that the infor- | s two and three of , after rtress and pre- of Mukden. The de- refore, the infor- portant military ward movement of Port Artl hat e MUTINY DURING THE BATTLE. Evidence That the Crews of Rojest- ¥'s Ships Refused to Fight. 1.—An investigation m the guns of terned at this a few shots ring the engagement with | t in the Sea of Japan, of the result of | states that the tinous con- nd that | s, were in order to only ficer here says 1 never know the in- he defeat CAPE NOTORO OCCUPIED. Japanese Seize Saghalien Promontory ding the Straits. 1 The N Depart- ived the following re- al Ketaoka: | nd four torpedo boats n July 10 with sol- the purpose of pying Cape Notoro. | dment the place was and buildings Four prisoners the most southerly Island, on La Pe- directly facing Cape | panese coast. It com- | — CONTINUES CRITICAL. SITUATION Populace of the Caucuses in the State Great Unrest. « July 11.—The streets ©s are occupied by troops, but »een quiet since the proc- law. The Official publication. The out the Caucasus The people are in gitation. 4 ons have been arrested large quantities of d. Bombs have been the quarters of an em- the arsenal here. R & TY KILLED OR WOUNDED. Bloody Encounters Between Troops and Strikers in Warsaw. WARSAW, July 11.—Three bloody encounters between troops and striking shoemakers, in which about twenty persons were killed or wounded, oc- 11.—The | a | | patrolling your beat,” | curred to-day. The strikers were | marching through the city from house | to house demanding the loweripg of rents by 20 per cent. Many proprietors out of fear complied with the demands of the strikers AL S 3 e 2 ITO hAS DECLINED. |Marquis Not to Be Member of the | Peace Commission. VICTORIA, B. C., | were receivea by Empress of In- | dla to-day that Marquis Ito has clined to accept the commission | peace plenipotentiary, demonstrations against him. When it | was announced that he was to be of- fered the commission a postcard was received by him threatening assassina- fon if he accepted. The anonymous | writer signed himself as one of ten | concerned about Japan’s policy in the forthcor Marquis Ito that he had agreed to .ae retrocession of Liaotung after the cam- paign of 1894-95 against the will of the nation and should have no part in dic- | tating terms now. The Tokio police and secret service men are making every effort to discover the writer. July 11.—Advices the JAPAN OFFENDED BY CHINA. | Peking Presumptious in Asking for a Volce in Peace Conferenmce. WASHINGTON, ment, o July 11.—By appoint- Kogory Takahira, the Japanese will call on the President at Oyster Bay next Friday morning for ce regarding the peace ne- is heard here of e represented at the n on the parf of pleased Japan. hetic to “hina's re- diplomatic circles Japan it is declared quest was made at the instance of Rus- | sia, but t confirmation. statement lacks official | —_— Loan Will Be Oversubscribed. LONDON, charged with th anese loan of $1 rushed with apj The indica- tions are that the loan will be heavily oversubscribed. The rush is even greater than on the occasion of the last oan. REFUSES TO DRINK AND LOSES HIS JOB Po]i’coman Dismissed for Not Gathering Evidence Against Resorts. Special Dispatch to The CalL SPRINGFIELD, Mass., July 11.—His re- fusal to buy or drink quor in the per- formance of his dut) S a member of the Springfield police department cost John F. Donoghue. his position Inability to obtain specific evidence against the dives by ordinary means caused Chief of Police Stebbins to decide to close these resorts by means of evidence he believed could be procured by visits of “plain clothes™ men in the guise of patrons. Donoghue was one of several patrolmen selected to visit a Willow street resort, which Chief Stebbins intended to close by convicting the proprietress of fllegal liquor selling. Donoghue asked to be excused on the ground of consclentious scruples. “This is police work, jus: much as sald Chief Steb- bins. “I never tasted a drop of liquor in my life, and I'm not going to begin now,” responded Donoghue. Chief Stebbins re- garded Donoghue's attitude as insubordi- nation and said curtly: “Report to Cap- tain O'Malley and tell him you are dis- missed.” Ir disgust, Donoghue wrote his resig- nation. Chief Stebbins says that it has been accepted, but Donoghue has not yet recetved notificatien of the fact. ALLEGE THAT THEIR BABE WAS POISONED Hriof—(,‘razed Parents Want a San Jose C(ase Reopened. Epecial Dispatch 1o The Call. MILWAUKEE, Wi July San Jose, California, miles—to get a lawyer to help prove that their baby was murdered, was the trip just concluded by Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Gunther, who are visiting relatives here. When they return to San Jose it is likely that they will carry documents with them which may cause the officlals of that California city to reopen the case and make an investigation that will establish whether or not murder was committed. Gunther says that San Jose lawyers and officials alike refused to act. SAN JOSE, July 11.—While In this city about a month ago the little child of L. B. Gunther and wife dled of spinal meningitis. Gunther became possessed of an hallucination that the child had been poinsoned and made this charge against the attending physician. An investigation by the District At- torney showed that death had resulted frora spinal meningitis. The Cornner, after consulting a number of physicians, refused to hold an inquest. It was proved beyond doubt that the polsoning was simply an hallucination of a grief-crazed father. ————— ONLY THREE OF ESCAPES ARE NOW ENJOYING LIBERTY Two More of the Party of Eight That Cut Way Out of MecNeils Island Prison Caught. de-| of | owing to the | ing negotiations and reminded | B 11.—From | to Milwaukee—2469 | PR | — NA\&}L OFFICER CHOSEN BY EMPEROR THE RUSSIAN ADMIRALTY, IN SUCC WHOSE RESIGNATION HAS BEEN ACCEPTED. NICHOLAS TO BECOME THE HEAD SSION TO ADMIRAL AVELLAN, i CREAT DAACE DUE T0 FLOODS People Driven From Their | Homes and Crops Are De- stroyed in the Far South CALEXICO, July 11.—The flood situa- tion here is serlous, but improving. Both the New and the Salton rivers have spread in great streams over the valley | equal _in size to navigable rivers. The New River here is about fifteen feet deep and one-third of a mile wide. The Bal- ton River is narrower but swifter and deeper. Both together empty great vol- umes into Salton Bea. There has been much damage to crops, ditches and other property. The Colorado River is falling half a foot dafly at Luma and is being shut out from the canal In-takes by the al- ifornfa Development Company with two pile drivers. The New River has fallen a foot this side of its source at Volcan Lake and Is falling slowly here. public bridges are left in the valley and the water {s about one foot below the | Southern Pacific raflroad tracks. | The rallroad company is placing 20,000 sand bags to protect track and Is ofling the water to stop its dashing against the embankment. Considerable grain has been destroyed in the fields and some peopie | have been driven from their homes. The danger appears past as the water seems to be receding, though still threatening at | Salton Sink. |HEAVY SWELLS POUND Immense Waves Cause Great Deal of Damage in the South. Special Dispatch to The Call. | LOS ANGELES, July 1lL—Although there has been not the slightest indica- | tion of a storm and the seasonal trade i winds have not been as strong as they | frequently are, the entire southern coast | has been pounded for two days by heavy swells. They have come as great rollers, | indicatifg that they have traveled far | and they are supposed to be the breaking waves of a severe storm far out to sea. It was this condition of the ocean which | caused a baby to be washed to sea and drowned yesterday at Long Beach and to-day the waves caused property loss to the amount of several thousand dollars. The pleasure pier at Huntington Beach was demolished, and the strand littered with broken timbers and piles. The de- struction of that structure had been ex- pected since yesterday when two bents were torn out and no persons were al- lowed on it. To-day it went down with a crash. The new wharf at Long Beach, completed -only a few months ago at a cost of $100,000, is seriously . threatened to-night and all pleasure seekers are kept off it. The outer end may be demolished before morning. At Terminal Island several small crait of the South Coast Yacht Club were dashed against the beach and wrecked, and the surf at most of the beach resorts has been much too high for safe bathing. —_—————— The housewife who always buys in the best market—who reads the ads. TACOMA, July 11.—K. Takouchl, & | and saves a dime here and a dollar Japanese, and one of the eight con- there on her purchases—really, in ef- viets who escaped from the Federal | fect, “raises the salary” of her huspand. —_——————— penitentiary on McNells Island, was captured to-day near Gig Harbor. Matt Moor, also a Japaness, was captured | to-day had al last night. This leaves but three of | him the escaped convicts at large—Wade, Castle and McCarthy. CHICAGO, July 11.—John Alexander Dowie against dismissed In_the United States District Court by Judge Bethea none of the ted with the Dpetitiona No | BIG PIER TO PIECES AMERICAN SHP ILLEGAL FISHER chooner North Is Captured { by Canadian Revenue Cut- ter Off Vancouver Island Special Dispatch to The VANCOUVER, B. C., Call. July 1L—The Canadian Government revenue cutter Kestrel arrived in port this evening, having in tow an alleged American fish- ing poacher, the North, a schooner from Seattle. The North was on her maiden trip. It is charged that the North was fishing for halibut inside the three-mile limit from the west coast of Vancouver Island. It was last Saturday morning that the Kestrel sighted the North. The latter had four dories out fishing. The schooner picked up two of them and then took to her heels. Captain Newcombe of the Kestrel put on all speed and overhauled her four and a half miles off shore. A crew was put abroad the North and ehe was towed to port with a British ensign flying at her masthead. After | the schooner was caught the Kestrel re- | turned to shore and there took aboard | the two remaining fishing dories. i | Captain Jensen of the North claims | that he was never within three miles of | the shore and charges that he was illegally arrested. He had 8000 pounds of halibut aboard when captured. He was placed under arrest on a second for- charge, that of violating the | Canadian custom laws. He had no mani- | fest, no clearance from any port, no crew list and no log. STRENUOUS VAQUERO - NOT A GOOD FIREMAN | mal Lassos Apparatus and Up- sets It Within Block of Blaze. pectal Dispatch to The Call. VANCOUVER, Wash,, July 11.—Aided by a cowboy and his pony, the hook and ladder company made record time to a fire in the outskirts of town to-night, but the apparatus will need considerable re- pair befare it can be used again and a number of volunteer firemen are nursing | bruised bodies. Fifteen of Company A responded to the alarm and hustled truck out of the fire- house at the same moment that a chemi- cal engine drawn by horses was started. Clad in chaps and other real cow togs, a vaquero sat on his pony a spectator till moved to action by the appeals of the panting volunteers. With a quick throw of his lariat, which encircled the end of the truck’'s tongue, a turn of the rope around his saddle-horn and they were off. ‘Within half a block of the blaze the cow- boy swung his mount around a corner, the firemen lost control of the truck and the unwieldy affair made three complete | somersaults, throwing the men in all di- rections and. rendering several uncon: sclous. — e A Bottle of Ink 1s mighty unhandy when you are going about. A ‘vacation necessity 15 & Waterman Ideal or a Marshall fountain pen. One filling will last you two weeks. Simple in construction, e+ s yau. gut. Bdtbing Tut setistaries e sat 100" 52.50 and up. Sanborn, Vail & Coo. er Market street, : e MBS EHR P e S VANA, July i1.—The efforcs made b To induce the bakie and butchers to join In a sympathetic stril bas not been successful & g SECRET PACT WITH SULTAN Germany Said to Have Ar- ranged for Acquisition of Two Moroccan Ports| DEEP DIPLOMATIC GAME| Coming Conference Designed Merely to Tie the Hands of the Other Powers e oy PARIS, July 11.—The acceptance by France of the invitation to take part in the international conference on Morocco was dispatched by special messenger to the Sultan last night. The messenger is expected to arrive at Fez on July 19. Plans are being matured whereby simi- lar instructions wiil be communicated to the French and German representatives in Morocco relative to the Sultan's prep- aration of a programme for the con- | ference. The successful termination of the Fran- co-German negotiations continue to be widely discussed. The tone of the press is generally favorable. The incident serves to strengthen Premier Rouvier’'s prestige, as public opinion, including that of the influential financial element, is gratified that he succeeded in averting a grave crisis with Germany without sac- rificing the national dignity. Jean Hess, the well-known traveler and author of an important work in Morocco, who 1is credited with great personal in- fluence over the Sultan, is authority for the statement that Germany has passed a secret agreement with the Sultan for the construction of two ports on the Mediterranean coast, which will directly menace Gibraltar. The international conference, Hess de- clares, will by arrangement between the Sultan and Germany be brief and amount to nothing more than a confirmation of the Sultan’s political and commercial in- dependence and the integrity of his em- pire. As soon as this result is achieved the Sultan, in the exercise of his independ- ence, will grant to a German company, subsidized by the German state, a con- cession for the construction of the two ports in question, and the powers will | then be unable to offer any opposition, being bound by acquiescence in the de- cisions of the conference. Hess belleves, however, that the fear of | provoking a European war, which inevit- ably would result in the conquest and partition of his own empire, may in the end prevent the Sultan striking this dan- gerous bargain with Germany. ot 2 5ok ey TOASTS TO ANGLO-FRENCH UNITY. British Admiral the Guest at a Banquet in Brest. BREST, France, July 11.—The festivi- ties in honor of the united French and British squadrons are proceeding amid great enthusiasm. The squadrons of | | the two nations are elaborately decor- ated with flags, presenting an imposing | spectacle. The French admiral entertained the British admiral at luncheon at noon. One hundred covers were laid and the toasts expressed the cordiality of the two countries toward one another. OFFICERS TAKE GROOM FROM BRIDE'S SIDE Forgery and Bigamy Are Charged Against Man on { His Honeymoon. | Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, July 11—C. de | sautelle, an accountant and member of a well-to-do family of St. Louis. and Mrs. J. C. Crouch, the divorced wife of a Seattle attorney, went to Santa Ana | and were married. Upon their return | | De Sautelle sent his bride to her rooms, | | while he went to his office to get some | papers. There detectives were watting | for him and he was taken to jail on a charge of forgery. He had forged a | | check for $350 and depositing it with the Menchants' Trust Company had | drawn various sums from that deposit. | He acknowledged his guilt, but said | | nothing about his marriage, and his wife knew nothing of it until midnight. To-night the detectives assert that they have obtained information to the effect that De Sautelle is a bigamist: that he | has one wife In Indiana and another in Las Vegas, N. M." His third matrimonial | venture was that at Santa Ana. | The shock of this announcement has | prostrated his bride. She had ordered | an $800 trousseau from Chicago and | it remains in the express office with | charges unpaid. A $500 piano which | her husband presented to her has had | only one payment made upon it, and there is a two months bill for office and room rent whih he has not paid. The furniture which they selected to furnish a five-room cottage has been | taken back by the dealer because not | {a cent was paid upon it. Most serious | to the woman is the fact that she had | | been receiving alimony to ..e amount of $65 a month from her former hus- band, and there is danger that this, will be stopped because of her marriage. De Sautelle positively refuses to ad- mit or deny that he has other wives living. JAILED FOR MISUSING UNITED STATES MAILS “@et-Rich-Quick ” Scheme Promoter Is Arrested in Reno. ® Speclal Dispatch to The Call. RENO, July 1L.—United States officers arrested Rouland Dockham, a young man of Scranton, Pa., in this city to-day on a charge of promoting ‘“get rich quick’ schemes through the United States mails. He was followed from his home in Scranton by United States Secret Ser- vice men. He could not furnish the $2000 bond ‘asked by the court and is now in the State's prison at Carson awaiting to be taken to Scranton, where he will have a hearing in the United States court. - It is alleged that Dockham, who is only 23 years of age, has been an officer in a ‘‘get rich quick” company for several years. The company of which he was a director in Scranton went to the wall more than a year ago, and the United States officers have been looking for its officers ever since. According to the charges m was the proprietor of the company and solicited business through the United States mails. —_—— Gibson’s Body Found. SEATTLE, July 1l.—Searchers to day found the body of H. Franklin Gibson, the druggist who last Thursday was drowned with Mrs. Minnie Mitchell in Lake Washington while the couple were enjoying a secret fishing trip unknown to either of their families. Mrs. Mitchell's body was found Sunday. DEVLIN ESTATE TROUBLE OVER \CUEST DROPS OUT OF SICHT Plan Set on Fdot to Have|Harry J. Knerr of New York Separate Receiver Named for the Illinois Property MINES TO REMAIN OPEN All the Employes Retained ! and an Effort Made to Get New Ones for Fields! TOPEKA, Kans., July 11.—The present difficulty, which is facing the receivers of the Devlin bankruptcy case, is the attempt on the part of the Illinois cred- itors of Devlin to have a trust company | in Chicago appointed as receiver of the Ilinois properties. Cyrus Leland and J E. Hurley, who have been appointed receivers of the Kansas and Missour! properties, are combating this attempt. A conference was held this afternoon between Cyrus Leland and J. E. Hurley, receivers in bankruptey, and their attor- neys, Clifford Histed and A. A. Hurd, regarding the effect of placing the prop- ertles in Illinols of Devlin under the one recelvership. Other matters of im- portance relating to the management of the property, which has been vested with the recelvers, were discussed. There will be no attempt to cut down the number of miners employed on the Devlin coal properties. On the contrary, sufficient employes cannot be secured | and every effort is being made to increase the number carried on the payroll. There is a heavy demand for coal and the flelds will be worked to full capacity. Judge F. 8. Oldham, who is advising Recelver Bradley of the First National Bank, refused to give his opinion upon the preferred creditorship of the State, which has $500,000 in the bank. “Until they make some move in that direction, I shall not go into the mat- ter,” he said. “I don’t care to cross & river until T come to {t. As a general proposition neither the State, the county nor the city is a preferred creditor in a national bank. That is simply taking it from its own nature.”” CHICAGO, July 1l.—Attorneys for the creditors of the First National Bank of Topeka, which falled on July 3, appeared to-day before Judge S. H. Bethea In the United States District Court here and announced the postponement of & pro- posed attempt to Institute Federal bank- ruptcy proceedings here against Charles J. Devlin, who owns two-thirds of the stock of the Topeka bank. Judge Bethea had previously announced that bank- ruptcy proceedings would not be consid- ered by him unless a showing was made that Devlin has property within the jur- isdiction of tbe Federal Court of this district. Tt s sald that’ Devlin owns property in a number of Illinols counties. WASHINGTON, July 1l.—Acting Con- troller of the Currency Kane has about determined upon the appointment of Bank Examiner J. T. Bradley as perma- | nent receiver of the First National Bank | of Topeka, Kans., which closed its doors on July 3. Bradley is the temporary re- ceiver. Conflicting interests have brought out at least a dozen candidates for the place. e gl Baaker May Glves Bail. BOSTON. July 11.—C. C. May, former president of the Big Pend Natlonal Bank of Davenport, Wash., under fn- dietment by the District Court of Washington charged with misappro- priation of $115,600 of the funds of the bauk and making false returns to the Comptroller of the Currency, appeared before United States Judze Dodge and furnished bail of $5000 as security for his appearance at the September term of the United States District Court at Tacoma, Wash. ST. LOUIS. July 11.—Receiver S P. Spencer of the United States Peoples Bank was to-day directed by the Judge of the St Louis County Circuit Court to pay depositors on demand. The br- der was issved at the request of Re- ceiver Spencer. On Spencer’s sugges- tion, also, the bond of the receiver was increased from $250.060 to $1,000,000. — e FIVE HUNDRED CHINESE ARE DROWNED NEAR CANTON Collapse of am Overcrowded Mat Shed Brings Death to Great Many Coolles. VICTORIA, B. C., July 11.—News was received by the Empress of China of the drowning of more than 500 Chinese as a result of the collapse of an overcrowded mat shed on the banks of the West River, near Canton. Outside Szuil City, north- west of Canton, a large gathering had as- sembled to witness the dragon boat festi- val. Dense crowds flocked to a mat shed built over the river. The structure gave way and precipitated all Into the river. A few saved themselves, but the others were drowned. ! Mysteriously Disappears From Occidental Hotel FEARS FOR HIS SAFETY Manager Hooper Is at a Loss for an Explanation of the Young Man’s Absence Deep mystery surrounds the sudden and strange disappearance of Harry J. Knerr, until recently a guest of the Occidental Hotel. Knerr is about 20 years of age. He arrived at the hotel on June 23. He engaged a good room, which, according to the management of the hotel. he occupled only ome night and then dropped out of sight. He reg- istered from New York, but :t is un- derstood that his family resides in Jer- sey City Heights, N. J. The day following his arrival at the Occidental young Knerr was seen about the hotel and told several new acquaint- ances that he had been making a tour of the city the previous night and had spent considerable money. He ap- peared to be possessed of plenty of funds, but his manner suggested that he had not had much experience in the ways of the world. The following day the chambermaid on the floor on which Knerr’s room is situated reported that it had not been occupled the previous night, but nc heed was paid to the fact until the following day, when a similar report was made by the maild. Manager Hooper and the chief clerk instituted an Investigation that re- vealed the fact that Knerr had dropped out of sight the day following his ar- rival at the Occidental. He ga no one the slightest intimation that in- tended to leave the hotel and the com- dition of his apartment plainly sug- gested that he had made no prepara- tions for his departure, for his trunk and valise were partly emptied and his articles of apparel were scattered about the room, just as they had been care- lessly thrown by their owner on the day he had unpacked them. “I am at a loss for an explanation of Knerr's disappearance,” sald Manager Hooper yesterday, “and I have some fears that he may have met with some accident or was spirited away. He owed the hotel only a few dollars and there was no trouble here that would prompt him to leave the place without letting some of the clerks know of his intentions.” Several of the guests of the Oecci- dental Hotel, who have become inter- ested in the strange case, are inclined to belleve that Knerr is being re- strained of his liberty somewhers, or possibly may bhave been shanghaled. Since his departure a number of let- ters and telegrams address to the miss- ing young man have been received at the hotel, but owing to the fact that they cannot be opened no information as to Knerr's family connections can be obtained. The appearance of the young man and his property found in the room indicated that he is a member of a well-to-do family. The hote] peo- ple would like to communicate with the members of his family, but they do not know their address. During a conver- sation with one of the guests of the hotel Knerr let drop a remark that sug- gested that he has relatives in Jersey City Heights, whom Manager Hooper is now trying to locate. —_—————————— DEMAND FOR MORE PAY MAY RESULT IN RAILROAD STRIKE It Is Expected That Operators om Twe Northeran Systems Will Walk Out. SPOKANE, July 11.—Operators identi- fled with the Order of Railway Telegra- phers on the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern systems are expected to strike at noen to-morrow unless a final conference in St. Paul changes the situa- tion. The men demand an increase of 5 in the minimum wages, which here are $55 and $60 a month; some concession in respect to hours and the reinstatement of men discharged on the Northern Pacific. The latter demand is probably the most serious question to be settled, as the com- pany claims discharges must stand to en- force discipline. —_———————— COLORED ORATOR IS STRUCK ON JAW BY A POLICEMAN SAN DIEGO, July 11.—Police Officer George Cooley was arrested this morn- ing on a charge of assault preferred by Rev. G. W. Woodbey, a colored preacher and socialist orator. Cooley claims that Woodbey called him a lar. While the two were in the police station Cooley landed two hard swings on Woodbey’'s jaw and drove the orator out of the place. Straw Hats formerly $2 and $2.50 Now 85¢c¢ We are closing out all our | odds and ends in straw hats. Just note the values here mentioned. Men’s straw hats in Op- timos, Fedoras, Cowboys and Dented Crowns as pictured with brim that rolls up in back and turnsdown in front. Materials areroughstrawand Milan braid. The former prices of these hats were $2. 50 and $2.00. ing sizes will be closed out for 85¢ each. The remain- Odds and ends in men’s 5oc crash outing hats, now to be closed out for 25¢c. Children’s straw sombreros |5¢ and 20c¢. Boys’ cowboy hats with leather strap $1.25. On Sale at 740 Market Street Store Only SNWO00D ManufacturersWholesalers and Retailers of Clothing Two Largm? Corner Powell and Ellis “Stores 40 Market Street

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