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“ ny 4, nf + ‘* \®, 1° | v) . with Between Forty and Fifty as 1 te a hin » ny 5 = a JAPS REPORT FIGHTS NORTH OF MUXDEN Tokio Hears that Engagements Have Taken Place Between the Russians and Gen. Kuroki’s Advance Guard at Tieling—Announcement Significant. TOKIO, Sept. 23—1 P, M—An official despatch given out here reports fat fights between the Russlans and the advance guard of Gen. Kurokl's @rmy have taken place at Tieling and at Sanglungku, eight miles north of Tleling. Tieling ia sixty miles north of Liaoyang and thirty miles north of Mukden, The announcement that thero has heen fighting at Tieling is regarded @@ most significant, as It was not belleved that the Japanese had gone north of Mukden, and thought the attack on Tieling would not be made unti) efter the Russian army bad heen driven out of Mukden and had retired to Tieling, where it was plunned to spend the winter. JAPANESE REPORT SMALL LOSSES. The information given out says that the fights took place on Sept. 20. The Japanese attacked the Russians, whose forces consisted of one com- pany of infantry, some cavalry and a machine gun at Tieling. The Rus. slang retired north to Sunglurgku, Hore there were 500 cavalry, efx quick- firing and one machine gin. Again the Russians were defeated, retiring further to tho north,| leaving nineteen dead on the fleld. The Japanese reported smal! losses,’ Some spolla were captured. The Russian troops spent last winter at Tieling. It les between the mountains and will be extremely difficult to attack. It was Kuropatkin's Plan to move on to Tieling after geitlag his main body out of Mukden, The information given out here would indicate that the Russian army ‘Will not be allowed to reat for a day, and that the Japanese will continue their offensive tactics until the Russians have been driven from every Ss THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, | stronghold south of Harbin. In case the Russiana are compelled to desert Tieling, as they 4:d Liaoyang, and as they are expected to do Mukden, they will be compelled to make & march of 2% miles to Harbin. The Manchurian Railroad {s still running, and ot last reports it was in the hands of the Rus- sians, but with tho Japanese scoiug parties already north of Mukden and even north of Tieling tho traMe ta expected to be interfered with. VLADIVOSTOK FLEET | MAKES DASH SOUTH | ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 23.—Unconfrmed rumors have reached here | to-day that the ships of the Viadivostok fleet ave sailed out and started south. If these rumors are true it Is belleved here that they have gone toward Port Arthur to effect a juncture with the Port Arthur fleet when the latter, acting on the Czar's orders, makes a breuk for the open sea, Outside Port Arthur ts Tcgo'’s heet. Shells are being hurled into the elty at Intervals, but I: is evident, according to the best information re- ceived here, that the Japanese flect is only waiting for the Russian vessels to come from the protection of the land guns, when the Japanese will swoop down upon them and sink them or capture them, If the Port Arthur fleet escapes to the open seas and starts toward Viadivostok, it {8 sald that the Vladivostok flees would form a juncture with it. The Czar'a orders for the Port Arthur fleet to make the sortie were made known yesterday, and it was sald then that the attempt to escape would be mado by the Russtun vessels this week. The delay is believed to be due to messages sent from Vladivostok that the fleet there {a coming to the ald of the hemmed-in vessels. of coal and water, It is believed, howover, that there {s sufficient coal on hand to supply the war vessels that wil! run Togo's gantlet of ships, There has been some severe skir-, eastward of Benslaputee, mishing about Mukden in the past few A despatch from Harbin announces days, The Japanese operations against that another Japanese regiment is Mukden are rapidly developing. Gen. moving further eastward, but it Is re- Kuropatkin announces that the Jap- garded as improbable that the Japanese anese army at Bentataputze ts begin- ¥i!l move In considerable force. trom Dalantchan along the roads lead! ¢ Mukden, Fuahun and Bintsintin, Severe ple | succeed In reaching the Hun River, Gen, Kuropatkin telegraphs that the Japanese continue thelr attempts to turn the Russians’ left, without suc- ning to advance northward, The out- posts Wednegday tried to capture Kaoutou Pass, commanding the road to Fushun, The Russians are offering a stubborn resistance, which Is likely to retard decisive operations. Russians Hold Passes, Kuropatkin has placed strong forces astride the Mukden and Fushun roads) to Bentslaputze, The Russians are also holding all the passes of the Da rangn, | cess, According to the Inteat Information re- celved by the War Office Field Marshnl Oyama's advance forces are still thirty miles south and southeast of Pushun, The War Office does not expect a battle at Fushun until after a series of rear- guard engagements, WE ING HBAS BLONS Her Skull Not Only Is Fractured, but Mrs. Murphy Is Suffering Scalp Wounds. Mrs, Bertha Murphy, twenty-nine Years old, of No, 418 East Fifteenth street, Is dying in Bellevue Hospital from & compound fracture of the skull @nd over forty scalp wounds, inflected by her husband. The doctors say she hae no chance of recovery. Peter Murphy, thirty-one years old, the wor.an's husband, ts under arrest in the East Twenty-second street ata- ton. The Murphys occupied a flat on the) fourth floor of No. 413 Fest Fifteenth | street, They have no children, and, ac-| cording to the neighbors, they quar- Pelled frequently. Murphy came home late, and the couple began to quarrel, The woman's | eoreams were heard by Policemen Daly | and Krams, of the East Twenty-second | treet station, and they ran up to the flat. | As they broke in, the woman fell un- @onscious in front of her husband, In) his hands he held a monkey wrench with which he had been beating her, As he saw the policemen, he turned and ‘ran at them with the monkey wrench upraised. Daly and Krams @ubdued him and placed hin under ar- rest. ‘At the station he showed no aigna of having been drinking. Dr. Richards, of Bellevue Hospital, attended the woman, and found a com- pound fractufe of the skull and be- tween forty and fifty scalp wounds, Bhe was removed to the hospital in a @ying ¢ondition. Murphy would give no explanation @t the station as to the cause of the quarrel. WARVER WEATHER FLLOMS COLDSMP Weather Man Promises a De- cided Rise in the Temperature and Overcoats Will Not Be in Such Demand. illions of dollars When you buy you the label. at $2.00 any new design in the country. supervision, ‘The weather man promises to be bet- ter to-day, after giving New York the coldest September day seen here in thirty-¢hree years. It was in 1871 that the #@ degreee of yesterday was last equalled in September, Wermer weather fs promised for to-day. The sudden cold snap has left Its traces tn the red noses and puffed eyes of victims who caught cold. Dilatory straw hats went to the ash heap in @ hurry, and « few feminine pedestrians seized the opportunity for showing the neighbors thelr furs. The odor of moth balla and camphor was apoarent In the elevated and surface cars, and the envy clothing of last winter was dug “wp with much alacrity, Not onty in the city was the cold felt, but ip the surrounding country) the suburban dwellers watched their garden truck and flowers wilt away in the frost and began lo figure on the eost of coal, In many places tn New England, Pennsylvania and Northern New York | the temperature dropped below the Fiat point. Dantage to crops and} | responsibility, e guarantee Sphinx hat,on our shelves. annually wasted on hats, half pays for unnecessary profits and the label inside. if the Sphinx Hat you buy is not the equal in every detail of any $5.00 or $5.50 hat you ever bought, if it disappoints you in one particular, bring it back and we will refund the money. Step into any one of our four New York stores, Examine carefully any You'll find every stylish shape, every fashionable shade— blacks, grays, browns, including the new and popular Pecan, We have every model carried by the most exclusive shops. we have special Sphinx designs and shades, PHINX TAT # SP CT FROM MAKER 70 WEARER FOUR SPHINX HAT STORES IN NEW YORK 421 Broadway, Near Canal St. + le deme tea ati The Secret ofthe Sphinxis out It is about hats— Sphinx hats, ’ They are made in Danbury, Conn., the hat center of America, by the Sphinx Hat Company, one of the largest hat factories in the world. The Sphinx Hat is a $3.00 hat in every detail of material, workmanship and style, and it is sold for $2.00. are annually spent on hats. Millions of dollars are One-half of the money pays for the hat, the other a Sphinx you pay for the hat and we give The Sphinx Hat is made in exactly the same manner as the best $5.00 hat —all operations, from the assembling and sorting of the fur to the sewing of the binding, being done in one factory. Our styles are designed after models that set the London and New York. t in every detail of shade and shape. In less than one week we can reproduce hat fashions of he Sphinx Hat duplicates $5.00 and $6.00 models placed on exhibition in the most exclusive hat stores This $5.00 system makes possible our $2.00 price. We buy our furs direct from London and Leipsic for spot cash in enormous quantities when the price is at rock bottom. We employ only honest and expert workmen, who are under our own No waste of material or time is possible. Our hats go direct from our factory to our own stores. Three distinct profits have been cut out—the retailer's, the jobber's and the “ buckeye shop's,” Three-quarters of the hats sold in New York City are products of these “buckeye” factories, which occupy about the same position in the hat industry that sweat shops do in clothing. “ Buckeye shops” buy hat “ in small quantities and on! of the original cost of the fur. Inferior, cheap labor whips these raw hat bodies into shape. Then they are bought by the jobber, who sells them to the retailer ; he sells them to you. And what do you get? A. hat for which no one is willing to take the i bodies,” or hats in the rough, They purchase when necessary, often paying prices far in advance hats. We know what goes into them, In addition c 825 Broadway, Near 12th St. Apprehenaion is felt hero over the report that Port Arthur is short | ts probable before the Japanese ee iS as sy adil yn aD de gate ll SEPTEMBER 9%, 1902, | DISTINCTIVE Suits, Topcoats & Raincoats for Men $15.00 $20.00 $25.00 For the sake of defining our position in the clothing craft we would indulge in a little brag. It may help | you to a better understanding of our shop, its purpose, | principles and importance. First you must know that we tailor in our own shops every garment which the Saks label identifies. Our records demonstrate that in the last two years we have designed six hundred and seventeen models of suits and coats for men, each with \}some specific feature to make it distinctive and indi- \I vidual in itself. The average clothing manufacturer presents about ten in a season. Do you not think that | ‘es us the right to define our stock as exhaustive ? tcertainly does reverse the old order of things in which \{the manufacturer was arbiter and dictator. With us \fyou may assume that attitude. In designing the models for a new season's service we are governed by the law of averages. Suits at $15.00, $20.00 and $25.00 have become with us a manner of specialty. All the talent, Fintelligence and power of our organization of master craftsmen find expression in these garments. Suits, Topcoats and Raincoats at $15.00. Single and Double Breasted Sack Suits of excellent fabrics in brown or gray mixtures, black or blue. Topcoats, 32, 34, 36 or 40 inch box models of covert, whipcord, twill or vicuna in tan, gray, brown, oxford or black, Raincoats of cravenetted cheviot or covert in mixtures, Suits, Topcoats and Raincoats at $20.00. Single and Double Breasted Sack, English Walking and Chester~ field Cutaway Suits and high-grade domestic fabrics in brown or gray mixtures and solid colors in blue, black or brown. Topcoats, Box, Paddock and Paletot Models of covert, whipcord, twill, vicuna or cheviot, many of which are silk lined. Raincoats, box models of cravenetted worsted, cheviot or covert. Suits, Topcoats and Raincoats at $25.00. Single and Double Breasted Sack, English Walking and Chester- field Cutaway Models of exclusive imported and domestic fabrics, in brown and gray mixtures and solid colors, Topcoats, Box, Paletot, Paddock and Tourist Models of covert, silk-mixed twill, whipcord, vicuna, cheviot, finished worsted or rough worsted, Raincoats, Box, Paletot or Paddock Models of imported wool and silk mixed fabrics, shoulders silk lined, —_————_————————— Suits and Topcoats for Young Men. Fall Models for Business and College. So that it may afford garments for every taste and purse, we maintain an exhaustive collection of suits, topcoats and raincoats for the young men in distinctive and impressive models at eight to twenty dollars. Per- hapsits strongest claim toyour recognition has its source in our models which cost ten and twelve dollars. They are infinitely better than the average in tailoring and fabric. Sizes 14 to 19 years—second floor. ' Single and Rouble Breanted Suita of fancy cheviot, cassimere Thibet, bl le or ribbed cheviot. or tweed, black et, blue serg Wood a si200 { covert or whipcord in tan or olive shades, 32, Tenens 96 iach, box models. $10.00 and $12.00 asoats of worsted, in light or dark colors, shoulders lined a with Venetian cloth. $10.00 and $12,00 feof medium or heavy weight striped cheviots, Lang Eeentete ot or browns. Value $3.00, special at $1.95 $$$ Miniature Suit Cases for Children. It is physical torture to a child to stagger to school with an armful of books. You need not inflict it upon your youngster, Provide a case--the cost is trifling. Miniature Gases of light bass- Miniature Cassa of solid sole wood, covered with leatherette, leather over a light steel frame; bound with brass corners and | reinforced corners, brass lock clasp; absolutely waterproof, | and catches, swivel handle. Size 9 x 15. $5.50 | Size 1134x16, $3.50 pte, aneemanar— area” gine Tmaranmmmal Furnishings and Hats for Boys. t these departments as though they were he i ypesteore very life of our business. Perhaps that explains their thoroughness and the low prices. ishings for Boys: Hats for Children. Furnishings for Boys. |, Hate for Schlieren Blounga of fine madras in new of felt, plush, velvet, cloth, silk Fall designs, with neckband of | and leather in Continental, Na- Byron collar, 48 poleon, Hussar, and Colonial. Golf Cops, large, full del Nedlides Shitta of madras with ii }erge, LUN Sop models attached or detached cuffs, 75¢ serge. Special at 65¢ Imperted Patent Weather Hats made over felt bodies to insure softness and pliability, $3.50 Genuine Beaver Hate of long nap beaver in navy, cardinal, green, brown or castor; sailor or “ middy " models. At $2.95 Value $4.00 Paijaman of madras in white or colors, large pearl buttons, 75¢ Suspenders of lisle elastic, 25¢ Scarfs in four-in-hand, club and Windsor shapes, in the new Fall colors, 25¢ and 40c Soap Haale 352 Sixth Ave., Near 23d St. Scouring (12 yrs on the mkt) A Scourieg Sosp—A Metal Polish—A Glass Cleaser come | Saks & Company bes]! of wool fabrics, lined with silk Hunting Requisites At Very Low Prices. Standard arms and ammunition ui h may) ; pon which you depend to bring down your quarry at prices which, though “regular” with us, are infinitely lower than any’ of our contemporaries offer. For instance: (as Stevens Crack Shot Rifle, .22 | St calibre. Listed at $3.50, $2.50 | ne ete Oe Single Barrel Shotgun, 12 gauge. I Value $5.00, At $208 aan Sls, eee : Winchester Repeating Rifle,| Box of 25,- takedown, .22 calibre, | Black or semi-smokeless Listed at $16.00, $8.65 der. Box of 25 ! 1 Syracuse Shotgun, double bar- * rel, 12 gauge, Hunting Capa of canvas or core Listed at $40, $16.00 |duroy, , Se. Parker Shotgun, double barrel, | Hunting Goats of canvas, leather hammerless, 12, 16, 20 or 26g, | bound, $1.00 Listed at $50.00, $30.25 | Hun’g Trousers of canvas, $1.28) Football Requisites for Young Men. At Very § . We have everything whic’ possibly demand at prices that sromise a saving of al- most one-third. Trouners of white canvas, heav-|Shin Guarda....... ily padded...., eese++++++++506 | Morell Nose Guards. Trousers of white canvas, with| Helmets......- padded knees and reeds+.«+75¢ Regulation Rughy Eee! Jack@ta of canvas.o++s.,...25¢/tested bladder... While we concern ourselves with the extreme and exe! clusive novelties, it is the standard suits and coats which we have established our position. The two which have contributed most to garn for the Sax garsi ” ment the recognition of the discerning, are those at $3.75 and $5.00, Universally five and six-fifty are the pric for garments of their character. Bex Plaited Russian and Double-Breasted Sailor Suita, or serge in colors, or cheviots in plaids and mixtures; extra linen collar, silk scarf, bloomer trousers, Sizes 2% to 10 years, ~ $3.75 and $5.00 Narfalk and Rouble- Breanted Suits of fancy cheviot, worsted or tweed and blue serge or cheviot, Sizes 7 to 16 years, $3.75 and $5.00 ~ Top Conte and Reafers of covert or Venetian cloth, in tan or olive, or blue cheviot, Sizes 7to 16 years, $3.75 and $5.00) Suits, Dresses and Waists for Girls.) Exceptional Values. a | Garments which define the cleverest of the new season's". ' models for school wear and more formal occasions at) prices which discount those that prevail generally, Dreases in an extensive variety of models and colors. Sizes 6 to 14 years. Value $5.00 and $6.00. At $3.50 Rain Coats of cravenetted cloth in tan, olive or oxford, belted back model with cape. At $11.50 Tailored Suite of zibeline in brown, red or blue mixtures or small checks, double-breasted box coat, braid trimmed, Junior sizes 12, 14 and 16 years, Special at $12,00 is Shirt Waista for Girls, 12, 14, 16 and 18 years, plaited models. Of Wool Albatross, at $2.98 Of French Flannel, at $3.50 Serviceable Shoes for Girls At Extremely Modest Prices. Shoes in which the foot may follow its natural tene dency in absolute comfort, so perfect are the lasts o ? which they are made. Neither do they lack grace nor style. Our variety of models and leathers is twice) | greater than most shops afford; our prices much more modest. ; Children’s Button Shoes of vici | Misses’ Button of Lace Shoes fl” kid, with patent tip, first heels, | of vici kid, with batent tip, orf hand-sewed roles, wax calf; hand-sewed soles, i Sizes 4 to 8, $1.00 | Sizes 6 to 8, $1.75: 84 to 11, Children's Button or ease Shoes | $2005 1174 to 2, $2.50 of vici kid or with cloth or kid | Girls’ Burton or hace Shoes top and patent leather vamp; | yicj kid, with patent tip, t first heels, hand-sewed soles. | sion soles; first hee exten a Sizes 4 to 8, $1.50 | Sires 24 to 544, $2.09 Mises’ Button or Lace Shoes of patent leather, vici ki@ or box Girls’ Button or hace Shoes of} calf, Sizes 6 to 8, $1.35; 8'q | Patent leather, kid or box calf, spring heels, extension soles, ’ j to 11, $4.65; 1124 to 2, $2.00 | sp i Misses’ Button Dress Shoes of | Sizes 24 to 574, patent leather, cloth top, spring | Girls’ Button Dress Shoes heels. Sizes 844 to 11, $2.00; patent leather. Cloth fore; eee 1134 to 2, $2.50 | heels. Sizes 214 to 544, See Coupon in Next unday’s World A Chance to Win $1,000 in Gold, Men's Suits, Fall Overcoats, Raincoats, Boys’ Clothing. CLOTHING?” Ladies’ Fall Suits, Separate Skirts, | Cravenette Coats, Silk Waists, Per Week Opena an Account, ILL 9 O'CLOCK ON ing coupon tn NEXT SUNDAY’S WORLD. iF fingers’ euda-the tacts rege: nancial declarations of parties when you have the Campaign or ten of reach.