Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Da. FREDERICK CLARK DEAD. GuURCH HAS BOMB SCARE eran te Ay’ nder of Richmond| OM Hana’ Heeman: Inve x , Medteal Society. pre utterly useless.” ‘There was a small bomb soare late ko easily’ na pes" founders and a Hichmond County Medical soclety,| Yesterday at the Reman Cathotte| ied ie Gestiva A a RAT "at ty at the plant since six o'clock fast night, and Indiana, for $25,000. later. ‘The police say Kurts told them |) CO onde Dt. Clerk was | Drive, near to 114th Street ’ TO LEND $2,500,000 (SILK MAN HELD i vanniar ‘prs of tne ttng ae | TO HOME BUILDERS; ON ARSON CHARGE bee Ngratay alge ad anor Elias my told the police he had not been on FIGURES HIS Metropolitan. Life to Help Situation Police Say Gasoline Was Found in }at tat ‘ . t ed it two witnesses are repo! ave " Here and In Jersey, Ohio | Paterson Building Insur' said they saw him leaving the piant | Maman’, Comily tand Hospital ai| Church of Notre Dame, in Morningside A In an effort to relieve the howsine| Couls Kurts, owner of © alik warping |"! thauranes was $36,000. seventystwo years old. and a graduate! An old handbag was mistaken for « situation, the Metropolitan Life In- and winding plant at No 9 River Inapector © 7 on Vacation. of the Physicians and Surgeons College, far hee BR te hte oy we ‘surance Company has authorized 367 Street, Paterson, N. J., was held with-| wiiiam J. Lahey, Chief Inspector |New York, 1873. His home was at No.) yo5th Street Station and Patrolman ‘at about Out ball by Recorder Young today tole the New York Police Department |% Elliott Street, New Brighton John Reilly approached the church steps separate loans for a total of Khe ation 9 of the Grand Jury on] ¢o.. Bnd left for Atlantic City on a]4DF.. Clark, was widely known a hile a crowd watched, Relllj $2,500,000 on low-priced apartments « enw twenty days vacation. In his absence ihe Beaten Mistend’ Clue, and’ tne Sochan’" una teaes ft to be neout Renters Gy tea Former Judge | ana smati houses. re was started in the plant fate inst Borough Inspector Thomas J. Murpky Gounty Country Club He Ry ri pain was relegated to an oom Is Gouging — He Says Pg hh ap pot bea nat and quickly put out The police!of Brooklyn will be Chief Tnepector. Tived by his wi wae over \ lew Jeréey, indiana an 0, peers ————- “Will Go to Court.” for the most part are fifteen-year loans which must be reduced semi- annually by small amounts, Queens County gets the greatest number In any one section. There 200 loans of $4,600 each were made on condition that there shall be a ‘Twenty tenants of Nos. 427 and 483 Dean Street, Brooklyn, met former Judgo John Palmiert, owner of the Premises, last night in an effort to eettie upon a fair rental. Negotiations ‘Were broken off When the tenants told cock in they pt + ge Judge Paimiert they would not pay the! 144 made property on Riverside increases he demanded. Drive north ot Tourn Street. For a three-room apartment now renting for $83 he want# #45; for four Tooms now bringing #0 he asks $60 Is Philadelphia and for five rooms, bringing #45, he Slow? ‘wants $75. It certainly was ‘The tenants have as thetr lawyer Harry A. Redmond of No. 45 William quick in apprecia- tion of Scrapple. Btrost, who told Judge Palmter! i) Philadelphia serves he Power ofan “plate Clients thought the new rentals de- manded were exorbitant, but that } they were willing to pay a reasonable Merenase if his accounts showed he ‘was not making enough on the house. Judge Palmieri refused to give the (epants any data on his expense of the amount of his investment, but told them he would take the matter to seourt, ¢ “We aro going to sit tight,” said Mr. Redmond, “and figbt this thing wo the last ditch. We are sure wo are in over 356,000 cy Figb, Doctuse ach outrageous in- tions of Scrapple af . are not warranted. Under the every day. ha landlord all rents were ralscd $8 " t year, which was fair enough, but these exorbitant demands are be- ’ yond reason, “We are going to stay and let the|} Judge do what he sees fit. He will have to tell us what it costs to run this building and what his investment des, before we Or The Gillette Safety Razor Com- These men tried out the Gillette .- pany—largest of its kind in —found in it what they were | wd aa. wen a pal the world—was founded looking for. fevestmenty but wae fur, demand upon an idea, An idea so atl SL vice ene AR RR : fundamental that it has They found that it gave them changed the personal habits the service they had always of a generation of men. expected of a razor and had never received. sf It was the idea of a personal “ rr shaving service—of putting They talked about their discovs = into a man’s own hands a ery. They passed ontheidea, razor that would shave him to their neighbors.. They better and quicker and more gave it their outspoken satisfactorily than he had approval. i ever shaved before. : 200 Sees es How We Care For Your Meat Cars When you see a Swift Refrig- erator Car going by in a train, it seems & simple thing that it should be carrying fresh meat up and down the country. Like most of the packer activities which contribute to your welfare, you are so used to having this going on uninterruptedly, day in, day out, throughout the year, that you are likely to take it as a matter of course, 7 8 @ bd q s %, s : | j Today twenty million men ofall , Out in the lumber camps of classes, in every country on © Michigan, downinthecotton earth, are actively standing | _ fields of theSouth, in theheart behind the Gillette—coming : of the big city, in the coun- out publicly in favor of it— try village—the first Gillettes making it an issue in their found their way into the personal affairs. SS See But it is not a matter ofcourse, Every car you see going by means long hours of minute, scientific, painstaking care in prep- aration for what it is doing. Every time a car comes in it 1s washed out thoroughly with scalding water. If any taint, any foreign matter, were present, this would get rid of it. Even the meat hooks are taken down from the racks and scalded eth water End live eteani: ‘ hands of men who were on 4 When the car is thoroughly cleansed we the lookout for better things | They are men of conviction, of 1 Ui aun fee one se —men who were not con- ideas—who believe in the . i Ga sone Saeeere Wy bor tent with all the habits their Gillette for what it does and , this first ice is melted. More is then fathers and grandfathers had what it has done for other = ° i Oe in te np ea passed down to them. men—and who refuse to Then the meat is hung on the’ sterilized hooks and the load of focd is ready for its journey. It arrives as it leaves, clean, fresh, wholesome, appetizinjy; and your meat supply goes on unaffected by seasons or weather, This is only a part of the service which Swift & Company furnishes, at a profit to itself so small—averaging a fraction of a cent per pound on all products over a period of years—that if the profit were handed on to the consumer, it would make a difference of less than a nickel a week in the meat bill of the average American family. shave os be shaved with any others kind of Razor. te ee re em 8 tee er ee No Strepping- No Honing Racer Outspoken approval on the part HI | of users isthe greatest power | : in business today. | ns The reason, perbaps, why more ; chi than a quarter of a million’ mre yillette Kei ; y ANOWN THE WORLD OVER Swift & Company, U. S. A. Beventeen Wholesels Distributing Markets im Greater New York Centra! Otfice, 32 Tenth *venue G. J. Edwards, Disuict Manager pie ee merchants iw this country Boston prefer to be known as “Gil- lette. Dealers” rather than by ee ee i] ond Syd © Ric de Janeiro Fy vagy cd rm pls ae. ae fmerergem fete |. Beet coals. Taare any otbexr tithe, , Montreal, Quebec San Francisco Milan Copenhagen Buenos Aires Singapore Post Elizabeth. Saale. a , eee : *) Ms ) ‘ % » o . : re ee retest et wp deem