The evening world. Newspaper, August 6, 1904, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

} ; | ' | t ‘BOMBS ADDED TO REIGN OF TERROR “Members of Foreign Secret So- | cieties Introduce a New Form of Frightening Those Against Whom They Hold a Grudge. HOT WEATHER HELPS ON EPIDEMIC OF CRIME, | ‘Physician Attributes Spread of Violence in the Greater City to the Humidity, Last Straw to Load of Depression. ,. ‘Two outrages with dynamite bombs ‘dy members of foreign secret societies of the lower grade during the past fe sness of this class of foreigners, and seem to indicate an increasing Ddoldnes® on thelr part which only the harshest methods will successfully curb, The assassins who so long stuck to the knife and revolver seem to have taken to the dynamite bomb in the set- tlement of their private grievances now, and the blowing out of a grocery store on Mulberry street because its pro- Drietor refused to submit to outrageous blackmail, and the destruction of a barber shop at Passaic, N. J., because of a feud between the owner and others shows the deadly accuracy with which these men are using thé dangerous ex- Plosive. a lus Rarely Caught, The outrages are attributed by some fo secret societies like the Black Hand and the Mafia, by others to private feuds, but what Interests the general Public Is that such scoundrels can ope- rate successfully and never get caught. It is the rarest thing in the world for one of these assassins to get in the hands of the police, and on the few oc- casions that they have got in the tolls lack of evidence has resulted in their speedily being set free, For a year now persons who settle Private grudges in this fashion have been holding a veritable carnival of crime, and the two recent bomb throw- ings, coupled with the systematic hold- ups of laborers in the Crotom dam re- gion by an organtzed gang of Itallan bandits, shows to what lengths immun- ity from prosecution has encouraged these men to go. Whether it is the hot weather, or whether there {s something contagious fn’crime, It 1s a fact that a wave of crime and violence is sweeping over the city now. A recklessness is prevalent that !s arousing among serious thinking people the query as to the real cause of it all, The police do not assign any reagon for the epidemic of violcnee. Inspantor George McClusky, when asked, sald! “Do not ask me to assikn a cause, My work {s to-detect crime.’ A prominent physician speaking on the subject, sald “A desire to take life ts {nolptent and toa suddenly brought. crisis. by hot weather, or by an ng that toys the last straw on the camef's back of depression, An examination of vital sta tia shows that crimes of this kind are always on the increase during hot and humid days.” The police records for the past five @ays show how the statement ia car- rled out, He Used a Kalfe, James Connolly, a boy of fifteen, the Ud, avenue, stabbed his brother John, a few days ago. He had been fighting with a companion when John tried to separate them, With a curse ‘of rage James whipped out his Knife and stavded hia procner revearedip. John Stadtmuller. a special police- man at the Riversige Casino was shot down by a crowd of roughs whom he tried to eject. He is dying at J, Hood Wright Hospital Hundreds of persons passing through Grand street at Mulberry saw a man murdered, He sank down in the great throng and died while his slayer es- caped. He was Felice Aurrenance, a Mostunian, viewing tr is in giis cit A desperate man, armed with two ri yolvers, attempted to mutler two di fectlves at the Bartholdi Hotel. I was James EB. Cutter, and the det tives wanted to arrest him Kid 1 an ex-prize fighter, was shot on the Howery by thugs who had insulted a girl he was with. ihese are but a lew of the casey re- corded, ere have been a dogen ani cides during t , ane this record ts repetition of that of last week. Andrew Polozzi, a wealthy tallor of No, 570) nard street, Brooklyn, is the latest victim selected’ by the Black Hand Soclety for blackmail, Unless he pays to the representatives of the organized gang of cutthrontes, murderers, black and highway to f business will to the latest them. He has received six letters in all and fo in fear of his life. He carries a big loaded revolver with him. constantly and barricades himself in his roon: at night. CONGRESSMAN FLACK DYING Friends Fear He Cannot Survive Through the Day, MALONR, N. ¥., Aug. 6.—Wilham Ht Firck, Congressman from the Twenty- sixth District, who has been sertousiy {Il with heart and lung trouble for ws eral weeks, is reporte! to-day to be fall- ing rapidly, It is feared that he cannos survive through the day. Poic L THEY Mist GET THE TENANTS. #*\X/ ORLD WANTS.” 11,287 Houses, Rooms and Apartments advertised in The World last month— 880 more than in corre- sponding imonth last year |ietter to the Lord Mayor of Cork re- | Ecene TRIG TENANTS SAVED FROM HEAVY EXTORTION eS os Thirty-three Years the New Land Ac (Special Correspondence (From # Regula press. enormous extent, and that the tenant able time the owner of his property burden until the third generation. ” Purchase Plan of t Has Been Scouted| by Press and Public—Davitt Tilts at O’Brien—Big Irish Festival in Dublin of The Evening World.) ® Correspondent.) ‘ DUBLIN, July 27.—An open letter has been {ssued from Mr. Michael | Davitt in reply to those which Mr. William O'Brien has addressed to the} It will be remembered that some months ago Mr. O'Brien retired Edith, last from political fe owing to the disfavor with which his eulogy of what is| burglars who were seen on the roof of | popularly known as the “Dunraven act" was regarded in this country, Mr,| the summer house of Merwin Johnson O'Brien declared this act to be a final settlement of the land question, but! ' Monroe, Conn., was called up on the he found practically none outside the landlord party to join in his praise of telephone to-day and told her | the act or to advise the tenants to avail of its provisions. The United Irishman on the one side and the Freeman's Journal on the other pointed out that under this act the tenants were rendered infinitely worse off than before; that the purchase price of land was inflated to an so far from becoming in any reason- would be crushed down by a heavy Both journals pointed out that the falr price of land was seventeen years’ purchase, while the act in operation raised it to thirty-three, and they further pointed out that every person in Ireland would be taxed to make good to the landlords any failure of the tenants to pay—, e, presum- | ing a tenant farmer, eager to get his land at any price, agreed to pay | thirty-three years’ purchase for land, the fair price of which was seventeen, | found after some time that he was unable to pay the exorbitant price he | had agreed to, the taxpayers of Irelan | pay the landlord in his stead. landlords. ‘The campaign carried on against the adoption of the act by the two jour- nals named saved the farmers from | being rushed Into purchasing thelr iand at an exorbitant price, and Mr, John Dillon, MP: Mr, Andrew J. Kellie nd Mr. Michael Davitt also did great service by thelr letters and speeches in preventing the country from belng \ Slundered in the Interests of the land- owners. Mr. William O'Brien, who was, with Lord Dunraven, a Munster landlord ainly responsible for the act there- upon retired, but has since been gerding at those who opposed him. In the Freeman's Journal Mr. Davitt) writes sarcastically of what Mr. O'Briea terms "My silence and self-effacement:” Mr, O'Brien's ‘silence’ began in, I believe, October last In a letter of near three columns to a respected clergy- man In Cork. It was continued on Nov. 6 in a letter of three columns, addressed | to the Irish people through the agency of the English Press Association, On) Nov. 12 two columns and a quarter of } further silence Was read and heard, On the 18th, or the day following, a depu-) tation appealed to and obtained a further pronouncement of silence. On Nov. a a letter, near a column in length, still reminded the public of an euforced reticence, On ‘Nov. 7 a dec- laration of equal length told the same story, On Dee, dl a letter, two columns long, ended the year with so mueb more self-denying silence. Five Columas More, “On March 2% last five columns of a minded the early year of 194 of the rigid reticence of the closing months of is, Here I find a break in my diary of Mr. O'Brien's silent activities, as 1 have been absent from Ireland most of the time from February last until a few daye ago, But [ snow that on or| ibout the Isth of the present month a turee columos and a half in Appeared from him as the | ‘uid of @ series of furthor letters—ail ating to his allence and effacement— | the first of which, over four columns in| length, made Its appearance in the It will thus be seen that @ most serious prospect was opened up for the son of a policeman, and living at No. | whole country, In addition, what is known 4s the Irish Equivolent Grant | money supposed to be devoted to the education of the children of the poorer lasses—-was by this act diverted from its purpose ana handed over to the THE TENANT FARMERS SAVED. d of all classes would be compelled to Press on Wednesday last if to all this matier, written for and addressed to the public, be added the ten or twelve columns of ‘similar matter written or inepired by Mr. O'Brien in the final Issue of his paper, The Irish People, We have a record of more than thirty columns of controversial tributed to an absolutely one-sided dis- chaston of the Land Conference, and of its contentious bearings on polities and Dersons, by Mr. O'Brien during the nine months of self-suppression alluded to in the letter from which I have quoted above. Mr. Davitt quotes Mr. O'Brien's decla« ration that this Land Act “mis ses | most successful victory 4: d for cen- tures," and adds that Mr, O'Rrien thanked the British Government, Dubdiin Castle and the Irish landlords for it in terms bordering on the slobbering Sycophancy of nerfrrvid lovalty O'Brien's New Scheme. An English paper gives currency to the statement that Mr. O'Brien, regog- niaing there ts no further place for him tn bh iererian fleld of Irish politica contemplates returning to political lite the leader of an “IPeh’ Contes ty ‘whieh will inciude Uniontata su h Sir Horace Plunkett and Sir John tting, Aas well as moderate Home Rulers. This party will agree to take no action for or against Home Rule, but gonfine Its efforts to securing other re: forms. The story, however, 1s not gene erally oredited in ‘Ireland The Papal Leeate Cardinal Vannutettl was in Ireland last wi was the guest of Arohbishop Wals! lin, Who tt In rumernd in pocieatie circles will in the Cardinal's hat day proceeded ear future receive tits Emironce on FP p 0 Armagh, whe! was the guest. feCardinal Laws he consecration of the new cathedral :n that elty took place during his visit.” taltors and delegates from all parts of the country and from remote coun. trles flocked to Dublin for the O tas, which has just ¢ d. The Gite tas Is the annual gathering of Gaelic Leagu fn Dublin, and sooslate of a congress at which the work «f the cre eanigation is reviewed. ‘There were @ vast number of com) fons tn the ip of the Irish lan- 4 in Irlai, Trish the week a ser! speaking and writing 0 guage, si &e. Duri concerts was held and key seed. The delegit were receivid | by the Lord Mayor of Dublin, and the Prosident of the League, Dr. Gourlas Hy a pee d Among the dele. Rites from abroad were Senor Wills Buiten, Editor of the Southern tse Buenos Ayres; Senor Frank Rath, Rot cario, Argentine Republic, and Mr. JJ, | Collins, Kimberley, South Africa, ”' FIRE DAMAGES BIG HOTEL, ved from in the city were brought to the scene, and the fire was soon under control, There were more than 300 suests Galt House, Loutevill: Destruetion. ' LOUISVILLE, Ky, Aug 6—Pire} broke out in the basement of the Galt and 1,283 more than any other New York City morning newspaper. House, one of the largest hostelries ‘a the city, at an early hour to-day, and for @ time serious consequences Were feared, All of the fire-engines {n the hotel, all of whom w: re awak. topics con | THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING: AUGUST 6, 1904, OUTRAGES COMMITTED BY THE MURDEROUS BLACK HAND SOCIETY, WHICH HAS RESORTED TO DYNAMITE IN WORK OF REVENGE, GALS STORY OF ATH HUNT How Miss Wales and Her Sister Took Shotguns and Went in Pursuit of the Burglars at the Johnson Summer Home. Ethel Wales, who. night with her sister went gunning for ory of the bunt and attempt to capture the two men who had peen discovered by & member of the Johnson household. Miss Wales is twenty years old, of light complexion, and is conaldered one of the very pretty girls of Bridgeport, which 1s but a short distance from | Monroe, “Yes, of course I went out to get the burglars,” said Miss Wales, “I know how to tee a gun and if 1 had had a chance them I would have shot. We first heard the ery of ‘burglars’ while we wero sitting on the porch of our home, whlef is but a short distance from that of Mr. Johnson, where the burglars were first seen. They Took Shotgans. “My sister and myself were reading at the time, It was just before supper night. ‘Come, Edith,’ I sald, ‘let us get the shotguns which stand in the hall and see what is the matter.” I then rushed into the hall, Edith follow- Ing close behind, and the two of us lett the house armed with shotguns, Mine | was a double-barreled gun and it shoots straight. The one Edith had was a singte-barrelled gun. “When we reached the Johnson ‘house thera wege several peoplo there all excited. We were the only ones who had guns an¢@ we held on to them, tov, for we couldn't tell when ft would bo necessary to use them to get the | burglars “They said the two burglars were | standing on the roof when we came up, but we couldn't see them and they must have escaped, I went scurrying around but couldn't see them. The men then went into the house and we | waited for a long time and then we too, went in, The burglars could not be found.” Congratulated for Thetr Pluck. All Bridgeport was atirred up over | the report that the two women, who are well known in society, had taken part in the burglar hunt, and to-day the Wales home has been the scene of many a@ congratulatory party, the cen- | tre of which has been Edith and Ethel Wales. Jo far no trace of the thieves has been found, A friend of Miss Fthe! Wales asked her: "Would you have shot the burglars if you got a line on them?’ “ure I would,” sald Miss Wal }“and I was looking for them all the | time, too,” WIFE ADMITS FALSEHOOD. For Revenge, She Said, Hosband Kicked Their Child. Upon the withdrawal of the charme against him by his wife, Margaret, who told Magistrate Whitman that she had sworn to a ile, Thomas ( er, of No, 27 East Seventy-third was discharged in Yorkville I up since time and the day was changing into| ns, alabor. | SWED HIS WIFE. ~ FROM CHB HORSE /O’Connell Was Knocked Down | and Run Over by the Vehicle, | While His Wife Escaped In- jury--Were to Sail To-Day. In saving his O'Connell hurled young wife Willlam himself in front 4 fast-moving cab, threw the wife to safety and then, when the horse hit him, fell to the street, and the wheels | of the vehicle passed over his body. O'Connell ts in St. Vincent's Hospital to-day and his wife Is at a hotel, They live in Detroit, ‘They had expected to sall for Ireland, the old home of the husband, to-day The O'Connells wera going to the Broadway Central Hotel from tho ratl- road station, They alighted from a Hroadwey car at Third street and were j making for the sidewalk when the cab came rushing upon them, Forgetting O'Connell selaed his wife and pushed her from in front of He was not quick enough, | horse ran him down, trampling ; upon him and then dragging the cad | over him | O'Connell was picked up unconsctous and tuken to the hospital, His shoulder was dislocated, three of his ribs. were fractured and he was cut and Bruised about the body In many places. | The physicians say it will be a long time before O'Connell is well enough to sail. In the mean time his young j Wife will live at the hotel and he will be treated in the hospital In investigating the decident the po- lew arrested George Ferguson, the driver of the cab, who lives at No, #2 fast Thirty-seventh street He was char with reckless driving. He was arraigned 'in Centre Street Police Court to-day, —————— ENDS HIS LIFE BY LEAP FROM BRIDGE —. Compositor Out of Work and Despondent Jumps Into Har- lem River After Waving Farewell, Polsed on the bronze railing at the north side of the Washington Bridge Oscar Segall, twenty years old, a com- Positor out of work, waved adieu to a policeman who was trying to overtaka him and threw himself Into the Harlem Hiver, 140 feet below, Death was apparently instantaneous, did not appear on the surface. The po- lice believe that the body from the aw- ful foree of the fall be embedded in the mud at the bott f the rer and {s lodged there Before climbing up to the ralling Se wall left his black felt hat on the pave ment. Pinned to the inside of it were! two notes, Intended for public to-day. | He had been lock Monday, On that day ble wife told the police that he had kicked thelr six-y ‘Md duvgater, Kat ¢, Suring a quarrel with her mother on Saturd last, and that the girl had been taken afterward. ‘The girl was taken to t Presbyterian Hospital, and now the hos- pital authorities ce ened and escaped to the s None of the guests was injured far as! known, rai thousand dollars, j —— SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS, suffering from tonsilitis, Mra, Gibbons said thac In thelr quarrel The damage will amount to saturday her husband had blackened {the police station ier axe Vhen the girl oecame Ill Mon- awa chance \ get even with ale thouzht. and told the police hat-in attempting to kick her his ioot bad missed and struck the daughter, ' ty she was only |ond note's contents and the other for David a brother, who lives at Eighty-second street. The e was as follows | ‘I am a cempositor, out of work. I have tried to find employment for two months and have failed, 1 am twenty years old, and am tired of Iiving. 1 { avd t i t for me. Bo | that there may be no mistake, 1 desire It to be known that I have thrown my |self from this bridge. I do not care what becomes of my body The letter was written in a steady, legible hand in pen and ink, The se re not known by the police, but are believed to be of the same nature as the note to the public David Segall was notified, called at and Identified the hat and the handwriting as thore of his brother Oscar. Policeman Muller was walking along the bridge when he saw at the centre of the structure a young man dressn fa ‘k climbing up on the north rail- for after striking the water the suicide! DEATH WATCH B SOE OF EMCEE Clara Sulzer, Daughter of Man Who Was Once Powerful in Harlem Politics, Dying in the German Hospital. WEDDING DATE SET FOR SEPTEMBER 7. William Gibson, Young Man to Whom She Was Engaged, Learns from Physicians After Operation There Is No Hope. Clara Sulaer (s dyingin German Hos pital. Her wedding 1s set for Sept. 7 Her flances at by her bedaide all last night, When the physicians, with faces grave, turned from the cot on whioh the dying girl lay to-day young Gibson walked with noiseless tread to them, “WII she live?’ he asked, ‘Bhe is dying.” they replied. canot survive the day.” The young man took a chair by the side of the Clara Sulzer is the daughter of the late Herman Sulzer, and lived with her mother at No, Ul West One Hundved and Tenth street. The girl, after her father's death, when her mother anc her brother and she were brought Into notoriety by the appearance of Mrs Ida Weiman, who claimed part of Her- | man Bulses estate, continued her “She riendship with friends of her father He had been powerful tn politice in Harlem, and the girl seemed a bora etter, She Was a friend of Sen- v rawley and other State and city ator and Miss Suleer met three months ago, when Senator Frawley brought them together The meeting tipened into a. friend. ship, and then the attentions of young Gibson became marked, He made no secret of his attachme Miss Sul- zer the rhces one after. noon stopped at the Bulser ome. HORS you are going to the races?” the girl lav “Can you piek a winner?” ahe continued “LT have pieked one.” he replied. “I think [ can plek Another to-day,” “re vou can Twill make you & pres- ent,” broke in the girl { plek Lord Badge. Now what will eaent he TT ee,” laughed. Miss Sulzer, lord Badge won the race, and a few days later Mrs, Sulzer_announced daughter's engagement to Gibson her “Lord Badge is @ great horse,” sald Gibson's friends The marriage was to have taken place In St Andrew's Protestant Epis- opal Church on Sept, 7, Miss Bulser's trousseau Was completed, and all waa in readiness for the ceremony when a few days ago she was taken fll with ppendicitis. An operation waa per. but the operation has not been as tial ASPHALT LEI QUICKLY SUBDUED The boiling over of a atill In the mix- ing department of the Barber Asphalt Company, in Long Island City, to-day started @ firg that threatened the whole piant. Quick work by the private fire department of the corporation held the flames in check until the Long Island Clty Fire Department arrived, when the blaze Wus subdued, pithe Bar plant covers a square lock, fronting on the East Rt - (ween Fifth and Sixth Mpls ning back to West ay heart of the Long I facturing district. The employees are trained in a fire drill and were throwing sand and water on the fire within @ min« eo after it started. An eatima damage places It at $5. wail ccs Ing. Muller yelled to started out on a run The young man tumed end, waving hi dal roach= Ing policeman, sprang into space” Mats ler ran to the side of the bridge and saw the suicide strike the water head tat Boats put off to body was not foun¢ David Segall sald had been jiving with the =m towar Around cal th miy him, the acene, but the that his broth, him. He was witt and for toe last two months had he streets of ¥, {odking fOr: work We ly “rimmina, of the Unto a single shell, had a marae de- «! been travellin, every day ook Harr; club. In escape from being struck by the seending body of Segall, He wi ing up the river, and the body the water five feet astern of h A Chat About Food, “Speaking of tood,” says a Chicago woman, “I am 61 years of age and was an {nvalld more than 14 years, “Was 5 years in the Presbyterian Hospital on diet most of the time, |Ilad an operation for a dilated stomach, @ very serious operation | Performed by a famous physictan | “After the operation, of course the {doctors ordered Grape-Nuts as the most nourishing food and easiest of digestion, That's how I know the stomach wil! digest Grape-Nuts when jit will absolutely refuse all other {kinds of food. It has also done won-| ders for me to brighten up and strengthen my nerves, and made me |teel a desire to live, for I can enjoy life. What seems so strange to me ts that I havé never tlred of this food! ince, but I!ke It better all the time, [| find it especially good !n any kind of soup or broth “T have a sister who is an {nvalid from Indigestion, and she has been greatly benefited by Grape-Nuts, which she eats three times a day, and a bow! of milk and Grape-Nuts just before going to bed; tn fact, she lives on this food, ind IT also tave two nie who used to be trouvnled with indigestion, but used Grape-Nuts with grand results, and so [ could go on and name many others who have been helped In the same way.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek Mich Grape-Nuts food {8 used by hospi tals and physicians very largely, for no food known is so ealy and perfect for complete digestion, while at the same time it {s a concentrated form of nourishment of the highest grade. and the stomach will handle it when everything else ia refused, “There's a reason.” Get the little book, “The Road to Wellyille,” in each pkg. HEIRESS DYING IN HOSPITAL WITH FIANCE BY BER. § way wl TRIES SUICIDE BY. STARING TO-DEATH | Prisoner in New Haven Jail for Ten Days Has Refused to Eat, Drink or Take Proper Exercise. MRS OTHE ROWLAND Mysterious Woman in While Starts on Return Voyage to Antwerp—Still Persists in Wearing Evening Gown, Locked tn room No, 834, of the second cabin on the Kroonland, Mrs. Constan- Une Phelan, the mysterious woman In white, started to-day on her return Voyage to Antwerp, ‘The secon! cabin stewardess said that Mra, Phelan was Sull sleeping when the sip was ready to sail “She sleeps late every morning,” sald the stewardess, “and when she retired last night she gave orders that she should not be awakened witli 11 9 clock this morning. By that (ime we will be Well on our way to sea.” Mrs, Phelan has been aliowed the free- dom of the deck while ihe ahlp wea in port, but was constantly under airvell- lance as long as she was vut on deck, When she retired at night her state- room door was locked (rom the outside and the key kept by the steward. Ho sald to-day that Mra, Pholan has a trunk, two baskets and @ hatbox in her stateroom now, but he would rot ex- plain where they came frou, He sald that notwithstanding the fact that she now has other eloching, she sull clings to her original cosivme of a white evening gown in which she came over and which attracted such marked attention on the trip. NEW HAVEN, Conn. Aug. 4—tn @ ft of remorse for having been found ite ' | toxtcated, arrested and sentenced to ~ thirty days in New Haven County jail, ‘Theodore Daenekindt, of Meriden, will not eat, drink or even leave his’ edi, © He adopted this coursg ten days ago, after having been in the Jail ten days, Unless something can be done before tho expiration of his sentence in tem days more physicians say Daenekind® _ will starve himself to death, This he © is determined to do, even fighting @t tendanta who try to feed him. } At the jafl, officials are of the that the prisoner is insane, rolatives and friends say he fs in right mind, Sheriff Dunham la now P. ing to have the remaining. ten ot the sentence remitted. The police 6B. ject, fearing the man might beeame violently insane if allowed (p ao 4 As the case is one of punishment ’ intoxication It 1s probable that the : will be given into the custody of family. R. H. Macy & Co.'s Attractions Are Their Low Prices, acys B'way at 6th Ay, Mth to 35th St, Monday next we start our great August Furniture Sale, an event involving Housefurnishings of every descriptio and “Glassware, Kitchen Utensils, Bedding, Housekeeping Linens, holstery Fabrics, Floorwear and like lines of merchandise, We have arranged for these sales on broad lines in keeping with this greatest of retail stores, and we expect to create new selling rec ords during the next few weeks. WORK For Make Your MONEY c Your MONEY | WORK For YOU. Know How Much You Spend— —% And for What You Spend It. Our DEPOSITORS’ ACCOUNT Dept. affords You Every ECON. | OMY of The MACY CASH System And EVERY CONVENIENCE 4 of Any CREDIT System, AND YOUR MONEY IS EARNING INTEREST WHILE iT IS WITH US. You can as much or as little as you please and have your purchases for out of this sum. Every month we will send you a detailed statement showing what you have bought and how much money remains on deposit. On such balances we allow 4 per cent. interest annually, compounding the interest every three months, EVERY PENNY AND EVERY DOLLAR BARNS INTEREST FOR YOU DAILY UNTIL WITHDRAWN. YOU CAN TAKE YOUR MONEY OUT AT A MOMENT'S NOTICE. We run no banking business; there is no drawing of checks, with the temptation te spend money promiscuously, Macy sells only for cash, AT MACY'S THE MAN WHO PAYS HIS BILLS does not make up for bad debts by higher prices, He is not called upon to pay for the expensive machinery of @ CREDIT DEPARTMENT. You kno that no store can sell goods as cheaply in to quality as a cash store. (No argument ts required to probe that the castomers mus! pay the store's expenses, including tls vey bad debts—ITS_ PREMIUM DEVICES, ITS TRADING STAMPS and ALL OTHER SCHEMES.) Thousands have opened deposit accounts with us, realizing thé value of this “up-to-the-times” saving method, Start Your Account at Once. YOU Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year. The GEST HOT WEATHER MEDICINE

Other pages from this issue: