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Show tub uoitxixa 2 Ermtn E Sill in mru were tdiniliiiiis. Their live were anted. "The vruleer ma obliged to tight on j her r.ixr board vide with six Japanese eruiacrK. whiih came up. Having pirk-o- il up her boat. Ihe Hiijau regained the harloir. filtering no damage nr loss, uf although col rre.l wi'li fragment , ' CASE j That Church Major General Inutiye won hi in Gvil Matters. firM lYavhinpioa, April II. The witness today iu ilic Smoot caM wa Judge O. W. Power, bo was appoint- "The rrttiver Diana ami five and hastened to her at Ihe same lime the other cruiser, i he list l loll ip Pet ropai Jin vk mud loliuva and home Uetru)or came out from the roadstead and the other battleship left the harbor, lu column formation oith the Bayaa at the bead and the destroyers on the flank. Vice Admiral Makaroff proceeded to the scene of the Rt rash uj a fight, whither Jaiwuese destroy era and cruiser were approach- e ALEXIEffS 8EP0RT OF DISASTER w d n y Japs Will Rush Three Armies to Three Different Points to Cross the Yalu. St. Petersburg, April 22. The text of Viceroy Alcxlrff'a report to thd emperor, concerning the letropavlovak disaster nod the torpedo lioet engagement, which preceded It, (an abstract of which waa given In these dispatches yesterday), reads as follows: "I respectfully report to your majesty, that on April 11, the whole effective squadron at lort Arthur nailed out six miles to the enulhward to maneuver and toward evening returned to port. On April 12, n flotilla of eight torpedo boat destroy ers went out to Inspect the Island, having received orders to attack the enemy should he be encountered la the course of the night. "Owing to the darkness and n heavy rain, three of the destroyers became separated from the flotilla, two of which returned to Port Arthur at dawn. The third, however, the Btra-shn- i, having, according to the evidence of her seamen, encountered several Japanese destroyers, took them la the darkness for Russian ships and, giving the algnal of recognition. Joined them at dawn. Rhe waa recognised by Ihe enemy, and there was n tight at close quarters. In which her commanded, midshipmen and engineer and most of her crew were hilled. Malnleff, her lieutenant, although wounded, continued firing on the enemy. At dawn on April IS, the cruiser Bayan went out and hurried to the rescue. About 16 miles from Port Arthur, the Bayan saw the destroyer Rtrashnl engaged with four Japanese destroyers, Shortly after an explosion occurred and the Rtrashnl sank. Driving off the enemy's destroyers by her Are. the Bayan approacheJ the scene of ibe fight, lowered her boats and had time to save the remnant of the destroyers crew. Vnfortusately only five r Siairnl THE SUCCESS MARKET 2366 WASHINGTON & ri O O E AVE. "Live and 1st Llvs" Is our motto. We do not promise to sell you something for nothing. Our Meats ars fresh. We endeavor to pieass everybody who patronizes the SUCCESS MARKET. The LILLIE BRAND LARD not made by a TRUST OUR no compound or LEADER, EASTERN LARD mixed with It. Ask your GROCER for It. Phono orders given special attention. FROXK & BLRGI Phono 227 Y. re-tal-u Mews Remit. April 19. via Shanghai. The belief Is general here that no attempt will he made in cross the Vain river before the end of ibis week, at which 0 q laur- Ju on lauded at Chulsau, The troops be i (near the mouth of the river) canmore forwarded easily to Wiju. not than twenty miles away. Wiju is to be He Thinks Roosevelt Had the Japanese ha iu northers Korea. aud the cavalry The McKinley Murdered. the weak jaiint iu the Jaiiese army. The horsea are not welt truTued, nor are they strong, and although the Japanese tavalry behaved splendidly, in recent skirmishes with suiierior Salt Lake City. April 22. Frank numliers of Cossacks, it is possible that when the first lot of trained horses is Rose, who murdered his wife on last exhausted, the employment of a sec- Christinas day. was idiot to Jeath la ond consignment of raw animals will the yard of the slate penitentiary at lu:09 this morning. Rose was strapped lie sent. to the same little wooden chair in mines which Ifeier Mortenseu met Ms death Tien Tslu. April have been seen off the Shan Tung n few months ago. Five prison guards, much-use- d Fairway concealed behind a heavy curtain, proniuntory in tho followed by vessel bound to and from formed the executing squad. Ona of rifles held a blank cartridge. Roae (Shanghai, and Che Poo and Tien Tsin (he and other northern porta This Is ex- went to the death chair with the same and coolness that had marked bis cseduct tremely dangerous to shipping since he surrendered to the police. probably will cause an investigation. Death was instantaneous, the four bulhis New York. April 22. The Japanese lets lodging In or very close to are reported to have lainibariletl New heart. Rose's crime was peculiarly atrocious Chwang. says a World dispatch rrom Kt. Petersburg. They are rumored to and cold blooded, in that it almost rehave landed troops who probably will sulted in the death of hla son from starvation and cold. Roae. endeavor to effect a Junction with the forces supposed to have landed near who claimed his wife was consorting the mouth of the Yalu river three days with other men, shot her on Christmas ago. There 1 no confirmation of the day while she waa lying in bed. He Mt and talked with her until she died story. of the wound, then went away, leaving Si. Petersburg, April 22. The cor- bis boy in bed with his dead mother Rose says he respondent is authorised to announce and soaked In her blood. received returned four times in the next two that the government has climbing nothing to confirm the report of the days to feed the rhild, and over the dead alleged bombardment of New Chwang through nhlawindow wife In order to get Into on the landing of Japanese troops in body of the house. At the end of that time he that vicinity. went to police headquarters and gave Archangel. Russia. April 22. Two himself up, stating that he had shot wife. suspected Japanese were arrested on hisRose sorrow never expressed any the railroad near Vologla, In Northeastern Russia, 302 miles from Mos- for his deed, and asserted a firm becow, with plans in their possession of lief that it all wfis predestined. Archangel and the famous monastery on the island of Rulovetski, in the Balt Lake, Utah. April 22. Frank P. White Rea. Ruse, shot today for the murder of hla wife last Christmas day, confessed Paris, April 22. Inhirmalkm reaches yesterday to other murders, said to the officials here to the effect that number no loss than tea. Rose declarRussia ia negotiating with Greece and' ed he had spent the last fourteen years Argentina for the purchase uf war- In committing successive Crimea, varyships. ing from robbery to murder. Robbery was his first crime, according to hla :39 Rt. Petersburg, April p. m. story. From that he launched Into Lieut. Jeuls, one of the survivors of murders of every description, and rethe Petropavlovsk disaster in a tele- lated instances where ne had killed men for n little money. Rose declared gram to his mother, says: "I was in the ward room when the he had committed a murder In Ban There were occurred. three explosion Francisco, where he quarreled with a expkision. The ship sank In n minute companion who was working with him 1 n without a on the Ranta Fe terminals, across the half. and escaped scratch, and am now on shore in bay from I ha city. The man's body was charge of the battery at the electric found in the bay and Roae aaya ha searchlight plant under Lieut. General murdered him. Rioesxel.'' In Rt. Louis, according to Rose's Vice Admiral Skrydloff goes to Sebhe was guilty of a number of astopol next week am thence to Port crimes, Including murder. Arthur. There is some doubt at the penitenshout the truth of Rose's confestiary NO DISPOSAL TO RETURN TO sion, but be has furnished names and WORK. . dates and other details to such a degree that his story has gained general Budapest, April 23. The railroad credence with the prison officials. strikers are now showing Utile disposition to return to work unless their DEAD MAN'S CONFESSION. demands are conceded. Premier Tisza as diet in Ihe a result that amiounrnd Rose Recounts His Daring Deeds te of the conference, there appeared titHis Death Watch. tle prospect of a settlement. If Kioto's confession, mads to Guard NEW YORK SUBWAY. Ttigslcy, la true, he was mixed up In ANOTHER tT number of murders aud hold-up- s In New York! April 22. Work will St. laiuls, Oklahoma Territory, and la probably lie started on another rapid California. The confession was given lu New York before out shortly before noon yesterday by transit Ihe cud of the year. The plan and Warden Pratt. It seems that Rose did scope commlllee of the rapid transit not confide In any other guard except commission has decided to report Pugxlny, To him he began the story next week in favor of a new sub-waof his crimes on Wednesday. In and Incorporated its views as to Ihe niieiiing his statement, he said that proper mule. It is said to lie likely he always did Ixdleve that President thal Ihe committee will report' in fur- Roosevelt hired an assassin to kill Me or of tho route proposed liy Ihe Met- Klu ley. lie further said he had seen ropolitan street railway interests. the Ifnte when he would do a trick of This starts at Third avenue and 138th that kind "for a little piece uf money. street, where seven of (he companies His first crime, he said, was committed converge, exlcntla up the Harlem river when he was 17 years old, when he to Lexington, extends down that burglarized a store in Middleton. Mo., thoroughfare past the Grand Central and secured $182.85. He then robbed a station to Fifteenth street, slung Fif- drugstore at Montgomery (lily and was teenth street, passing under the pres- resiionsilile for a utimber of lesser robent al Cnlon Square, under beries there, lu 8t. Louis he was mixed Broadway to Chambers street, along tip in n number of ctiiling scrapes, the Chambers street to Williams, street, first of which occurred ou Sixth street. Al that time he was only 20 years of passing under the existing sub-wsand the proposed bridge loop, along age. Three men Jumped onto him, he William street to Hunovcr square and said, in that fight, and one of them thence to Ihe battery. was killed. Rose said he sianed'to Ibe , The company proposes to round the police station to give himself up, when haitery with a bmp and continue the the thought struck him that he would line back northward in Figlilh avenue have to make up some kind of a story to Thirty-fourtstreet, thence east to get out of the trouble. to a Junction with the main line. He met a boy and borrowed a knife About will he Involved from Mm. With the knife he Inflleted In the second system or underground a wound upon himself, and the boy linns. sounded the alarm which resulted In Rose lietng taken to the station as n NOTED CONFIDENCE MAN DEAD. suspected would-b- e suicide. His wound New York. April Cole-ma- s. was tressed aud he was taken to n better known as "Colonel.' and hospital, where be soon recovered. He tinlll 10 yenrs ago regarded as one of was released wiihimt ever lieing chargthe shrewdest confldenra nina" in the ed wilh the murder he claims to have world. Is dead In Bellevue hospital conimttled. His next crime was comfrom pneumonia. He was penniless, mitted at Bowling Green. Mo., where but friends raised n purse to bury him. he rnblied n man in a saloon. At Rose's ranch, near Hannibal. Ilo.. Coleman, who was highly educated, began to achieve notoriety 35 years a rendezvous was established for all n sorts of criminals. Here Rose made ago when he followed a circus. He became known as a most his headquarters and lived for some fastidious dresser and seldom wore time with a girl who was not bis wife. the same suit of clothing more than a Oue night three men came to call on few days. In the early eighties he went the woman and Rose engaged in a to Ettroiie, remained several years, quarrel with them; shots were exand was accused of particiMting In changed, and one of the men fell over many swindles, some of which netted IMl.OtHi. Con tinned on Page 4.) time tho arrangements for a concerted movement, a simultaneous rush toward the river from three distinct point a, will have been perfected. The second Japanese army I Kitpimsed to have left Japan on April IB; It probably will attempt tn lau.l near Port Arthur. Parr of the general advance will be toward Liao Yang, and a division of two-year-o-ld 22.-4- coa-fessio- n, sub-wa- y y sub-wa- y y h 22.-Fr- ancis well-know- 23. inni BIG STEEL FOUNDRY FOR CHI CAGO. aling ers and two torpedo cruisers. They turned toward tbs left, but when approaching the mouth of the channel, the destroyers were signalled to return to the harbor and the cruisers to proceed. Maneuvering with the Petropnv-lovs- k at their hea l, the squadron turnthe ed to the east, making toward enemy on tlielr right. "At 9:42 a. in. an explosion occurred at the right side of the Pet rope vlovsk; then n second and a more violent excolplosion under her bridge. A thick smoke was umn of greenish-yelloseen to tIvs from the ship, iter mast, thrown funnel, bridge and turret wereover her up and the battleehlp heeled starboard side. Her poop arose from the water, showing her screw working lu the air. The Petropevlovsk was surrounded by flames and in two minutes sank bow first. "Some of her crew escaped. The cruiser Gayadamak. which was a cable length away, lowered boats and In rescuing Grand Buko Cyril, seamen. The destroyand forty-seveer and boats from the Poltava and Askold also picked up some of the crew. Altogether seven men were officers and seventy-thre- e saved. The Poltava, which waa following the Petropavlovsk two cable lengths astern, stopped her engines and remained on the scene of the disaster. "At a signal from Admiral Ouklora-skthe other warships made for the entrance of the harbor, maneuvering towards the Persevlet. tn line. A mine exploded under the starboard aide of the Pobicda. Rhe listed, but proceeded end entered the harbor with ell the other ships astern of her. The enemy remained iu sight until S o'clock and then disappeared. The night preceding the sortie of the squadron llghta and the outlines of shls were seen In the distance from the roadstead, end the commander of the fleet kept watch in person until' dawn from the cruiser Diana, stationed In the outer roadstead. He left her at 4 o'clock tn the morning. "In concluding I take the liberty to nnnounco respectfully that despite tho 111 success which has attended the Pacific fleet, the crews of the ships their morale and are ready to perform all duties required of them. The gracious words of your majesty addressed to tho seamen at thts ptilnful hour of trial, serve as a consolation and n support to all the force in their efforts to overcome the enemy, to the glory of their beloved sovereign end their country. Uao Yeng, April I2.Provislonal skirmishes with the Japanese along and the Yalu rlrer unimportant clashes with small bands of bandit alone very the monotony of the perpetual move men Is of troops to the seat of war. Military traina endlessly go up and down the line; Infantry, cavalry, and artillery are passing by dally. The troops which have reached their allotted atattons are hard at work preparing tn receive the enemy. Wayside stations have been organized everywhere to give the soldiers on the march hoi meals, warm shelter and romfortahle beds. The torrential rains which fell during the first fortnight of April dhl not afreet the movement of troops. A Red Cross hospital haa been established here and a flying Held detachment has been sent with park horses and trained nurses to find wounded men. The hospital work Is under the personal supervision of M. Alexandrosky, formerly Russlau commissioner to the 8L Jgmla exposition. A large temple for the use of the Red Cross society hat born donated free of rharge. The foreign military altarhefi are at Gen. Kumpatkiua headquarter A military newspsiier will be published by General Kuroiwlkin's field staff. APRIL MORNIXfi, ROSE RECITES con-siiin- ie ing. "After a short fusillade at fifty cable Cleveland In IS", ed ly distance tone thousand yards) a an aeuK-ialJustice of the supremo lengths off. court of Cl ah. At that time, prouecu-- t the ships Jrew "A njiianion of nine Japanese battle-shi- p inns under the Edmunds act were appeared at 4 a. m. and our ahiim juft beginning and during hi Incum- returned toward Pori Arthur, lu the been alniut bad he said there bency the juu iierson prosecuted for polygamy roadstead they were rejoined by and polygamous cohabiuilou. among battleships Pobieds. Peresviet and which were coining out them being Lorenzo Snow, then one of was the twelve apnatles, who a:terwards through the channel. The squadronAskwas elected president of the church. drawn up in the following order: Diaun. I'ctropavlovsk. old. Bayan. Mr. Snow was convicted and sentencPeresviet. Pohleda. Novik. five destroyed. Judge Powers said he had examined persons who applied for naturalization. In regard to an application by one. Noil Hanson, Judge Powers said he waa informed by Hanson that he would obey the laws of the church rather than laws of the land If they should run couni er to each other." The application for citizenship was denied. in regard to prosecutions Judge Powers said most of them bad been for polygamous cohabitation. few proseeinuins were had for polygamy. He aald, as there was then no marriage law and marriages were secret, polygamy there waa hard to prove. Judge Powers reviewed the political history of Utah to show the close relations of the Mormon church with political affairs, also the Intimate association of the church with the local and municipal government. He showed that the church controlled In civil as well aa ecclesiastical affairs, in one rase it w aa shown that a man waa disciplined and was summoned by Abram O. Smoot, president of the high council of the Utah Stake of Zion. It waa not shown that any relationship existed between Senator Smoot and the man mentioned. nvi;i xaanoniihA v Mari h IX. shell. Controls the guards. Itism strong, under Major ba the first General liiimye, will troop sent against the Russian at Chiu Titat Cheng which U opposite Wi.iu u the Manchurian side uf the Sain. els in the lighting at Cbcug vii-io- Claims EXAMixiiR. outlook for general trade la this section Is very encouraging. In Canada the inridenr of chief imChicago, April 22. A ateel foundries portant has been the Toronto bill providing for ttu. arllqlf lL Are. to 01 8X00,01X1 cost between and plant The property lose, although estimate 1 labor disputes applicable to rtu- $700,000 is smm to be erected In Chiat I10.IKi0.000, Is not likely to reach ploy as. cago by Joeeph K. Schwab, former that figure. Railroads are becoming president of the American Rtrel Founrelieved of embarrassments TENQGRAPHEWS' UNION. dries company, who resigned from that gradually Incident to winter blockade, and earnoffice April 16. The plant will cover ings ia consequence are improving. New York. April 50 acres and It is the intention to seThe woolen Industry is somewhat de- and typewriters here arc 2 cure a long option upon 50 acres more, iakii,i-sowtng to the preferential tarila which to make extensions to the pressed ff. The largest plant tn the dominion earnest the formation of a or three meeting alrea.iv plant when required. Plans have been wa offered for sale this week. held nnd .t the next oneuft!' prepared and the preliminary work ia well in hand. be elected for local No. 1." AGREEMENT. NEUTRALITY JOINT Mr. Schwab intimated that at presAbout 70 young women ent he Is practically alone in the proNew York, April 22. According to will be charter members. OrgIa. ject. from Stockholm, cabled by tatimvhed to the Amet1.au The plant will give employment to a telegram Times the at Berlin, ne- of labor are Interest.! tn the correspondent from 1,500 to two thousand men. and view a with to s conjoint meat. Some of the girl who the capacity wjU be from 3.00b to 2,500 gotiation of declaration neutrality by Norway. the second meeting declared their steel casting a month. Sweden and Denmark have reached a object was to better their nmdiiiZ. satisfactory conclusion. The agree- and stop the flood or In. . null NESVY CHICAGOJIOID-II- P ESCAPES ment will be published toward ths end stenographers from various agen ie There are about 45.004 stenographers of the month. male and female, la New Vork ami q Reba a State Senator and Two they ahould become thoroughly orgum COAL FREIGHT RATES. , ized they might play an Important Friends of $200 in Cash and $200 mi conduct of business. 22. Owners New Y'urk, April Worth of Jewelry. of in the coastwise vessels and brokers acting Chicago, April 22. Bute Senator for them have put into effect stringent Michael J. Butler, with his bartender on the trade and two friends, has fallen n victim to regulations by sa association recently adopted senn lone hold-u- p man, who left the formed. Freight rates from ports beators saloon with $200 in cash and tween Norfolk. Va., and Maine have, Jewelry valued at $400. is uaderelood. been raised 10 to 15 it The robber, apimrently 28 years old cents a ton. Shippers generally are ELECTRIC LIGHTS STEAM HEAT and unmasked, walked in while the said to have acquiesced CENTRALLY LOCATED. In this advanca bartender, Albert Manley, (was count- because of higher wages; but, they are 371 Twenty-secon- d ing the day's receipts, most of the strongly opposing a demand from the Street money being on the bar. The intruder veaaelmen that all boats shall be un- MRS. & H. ELWOOD Prop. ordered a drink and when Mnnley plac- loaded inside of 10, 12 or 14 days, aced the glass on the har the man sud- cording to tbs size of the vessel. NEWLY FURNISHED THROUGH-OUdenly drew two revolvers and cried "hands up." MODERN EQUIPMENT MINISTRY RESIGNS. Senator Butler and the two men Beard by day er week. with whom ho was conversing were in Rates Raasenabls. Melboura, April 22. The' general front of the bar and nil obeyed the Telephona 530 K. robbers commands. The bartender ministry has resigned. The resignation waa ordered from behind the bar and all were told to atand against the wall. The robber then took the money the W,' bartender had been counting, looked and in the rash register for more, searched the men, securing a diamond Mick diamond and two ring pins. The police any the diamond ring was taken from Senator Butler. the saloon, The robber ran from boarded an elevated train and ear raped. . j. 111 kSE an3 THE coal-carryi- ELWOOD ' AUCTION NO Each Day DECIMJETORE NOHE Supreme Court Will Not Give Opinion Before Then In Colorado Strike Case. Denver, April 22. No decision ia expected from the supreme court before next Monday on the question of whether Charles H. Moyer, who ia held aa a military prisoner under orders of Governor Peabody, shall be released on bail pending a decision aa to the governor's right to declare martial law; and the other points involved In the case. Meantime Mr. Moyer has been removed from Denver in custody of the troops and will again be Imprisoned at Telluride. Governor Peabody has given no assurance that he will comply with the courts order should the Judges decide to release Mr. Moyer on Ball.hut thus far the governor has not openly defied tho supreme court, although he denies its jurisdiction over military prisoners. William Haywood, who breams Involved In a fight with the military on their arrival In Denver, wllh Mr. Moyer yesterday, is now In custody of Sheriff Armstrong on the warrant Issued In this city charging him with desecrating the flag. m. DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, ETC 8 Elegant Presents Given Away Free at Each Sale. CHAIRS PROVIDED FOR LADIES Every article sold guaranteed by C A. BEGHTOL 2463 Washington Ave. Colorado Springs, April 22. President Moy?r was taken to Rsllda today on the train leaving here at 10:30 a. m. In custody of General Bril, Captain Biilkelry Wells and twenty troopers. The party will remain In Sal tils tonight and proceed to Telluride morrow. at 2:30 and 7:30 p. to- A SENT ON APPROVAL to itiroRiuu norta 1 Laughlin Fountain Pen Goarmtecd Pbitt Grade 14k. SOLID GOLD PEN To tw. V THE EXAMINER. MwMlld wc odvr ywr choiot of ftfcMla MUYCIilMUf CONTINUED PROSPERITY. In Spring Trade ie Notwithstanding Unseasonable Weather. New York. April 22. Advice to the International Mercantile agency Indicate continued prosperity of general trade notwithstanding net backs due to unseasonable westher. Conditions In the south are particularly eatlafectory. Jobbers reporting excellent sales with orders considerably In excess of a year Is noteago. This improvement worthy in dry goods where spring business is promising. Conditions in and about Rt. Louis are specially favorable and continue to reflect the exposition demand, which Is contributing great, activity to varied lines. Excellent spring trade Is noted In hats, caps, hoots, non, clothing, and kindred branches. The outlook for iron anJ steel is not as bright as it was a week ago. owing to depression existing In some lines. Failure of Ihe United Stales Bteel corporation to exercise its option on pig Iron has had a depressing effect on that, market. In billets Ihe demand la good for early work, few contracts being made for business delivered Inter than July 1. In finished products prlres hold firm. The market In gen-erhowever, rests on a solid basis, but affords little promise of thorough spring revival until railroad buying begins Reeding throughout the northwest is a fortnight late, but actual work Is now well under way. Merchants generally are prosperous, making little complaint concerning the backward spring. The Improvement Noticeable, alj Or aafSian wU nan Mb sf fimst Quality mfetar. Is few steyto parti, kN fitM with vary hltktat Hoi Sf laiMilHUk.icU Mnl-- m vic perfect. Either style (ns. pn.nyflca-IMOt- y Mlf x Richly Geld Meeated (hr ymeshSoa (wpai.lMtem . Grand Special Offer Yea Bey toy the yes a week. It tn fcf ufor tdrae time die yeedonet Silly price any eiberuiatcM.ltentml nty sathfSctofy Is avtiy SMpect.re-di- m Head ftr ft. (he ereMtnijnJUf uPi Mr. t to war CL AeefcahiwrfMwManlemdW v, ear eenMcece M Htt Lmftn (Not oae cuttoaiir In tPOt ft fcave aeked tar their Booty bach) MnOedea os Ml leMletetef I Lad In' etyles etyit. Uythli Payer as rlgM, f leva ul Gentle-aw- s'i Write NOV hi Haider ea hat of charge trttk tack Pew SaIVty Packet AOOSC11 Laughlin Mfg. Co. 171 OrtonM K., KTI01T. tUCfi. SPRING MOVEMENT OF SHOES At Prices Just as Enticing as the Shoes Themselves A This is a trade movement out of the ordinary. It is not a sale of a single lot of shoes but a comprehensive gathering of many best sorts to identify an event thousand pairs arc included Men's, Ladies', Boys', Misses' and Children's Shoes, and Something like twenty-fiv- e you have come to recognize as unusual. average a saving of JO to 25 per cent. Better yet, they are absolutely new styles for Spring wear. We are located in building which was formerly the old Stratford Furniture Store building north ofZ.C.M.I. Phone 343Z. CHRISTENSON SHOE CO, Wri. Avt |