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New-York tribune. [volume] (New York [N.Y.]) 1866-1924, September 19, 1920, Image 2

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""""" ~ ~ I
Tw? bUcksmitns yesterday examined
the hind ?hoes und hoof* of the horse
at Police Headquarters. These two
shoes were almost new and had the
union marks of the farriors still on
them. The two front shoes were old (
and had no such marks. One of the
blacksmiths, whose name and address
the police refused to divulge, after
iooking nt the new hind shoes, said
he was almost sure that he put them
on nbout two days ago? referring par?
ticularly to the size, shape and mark?
ings.
Kxpert inspection showed, however,
that the shoe? had not been used more
than two- hours. It was assumed from
this that the animal had not been em?
ployed for work, but was merely held
in readiness for his last job of drag'
ging the bomb wagon to the heart of
the financial district.
Quest Leads to States Island'
There is a tendency on the part of
detectives to concentrate on Staten Isl?
and and Brooklyn for more definite in?
formation as to the owner of the death
wagon. They point out that the wagon
was seen coming up from the Wall
Street ferry and that the H. S. I. U.
i Horseshoe? r. International Union)
marks on the shoes were most fre?
quently used in Ststen Island, where
horseshoers abound in fairly large
numbers.
The identifying blacksmith was taken
up to West Ihirty-ninth Street, where
the body of the horse is. It is not
known whether he found anything to
identify it as the horse he shod. He
has told the police all he knows about
the man who brought the horse to his
shop, if it is the same horse he has in
m i-id.
Mr. Lamb said that a piece of the
wagon had been found on the ledge of
n window on the twenty-fourth floor of
the Bankers Trust Building. The frag?
ment shows that the \va;on was at
least ten years oid and rirobably was of
the type used for small stores' de
iiver> of such things as butter and
eggs, because of i*i peculiar width. The
harness, it was said, had been traced to
a maker in Kingston. N. Y., but was so
old that it had undoubtedly changed
hands scores of times before it fell
into the hands of its last owners.
Department of Justice officials know
nothing ot the report that portions of
tin rontair.ers that had been used for
scoring gasoline and kerosene were
found in the neighborhood of the ex?
plosion, which wns taken to indicate
*h". the p otters had intended to cause
;, general conflagration in connection
with the detonation. Bits of these cans
rre in the possession of the police.
It was learned yesterday that three
bundles which were taken to ho bales
o * rags were seen between the statue
of George Washington in front of the
Sub-Treasury Building; and the easterr
end of the structure shortly after the
blast. Several persons who come upor
the scMie shortly after the explosion
nie said to have u-ed two of these
holes as head rests for some of the in
jured. Police heads say that if the
presence of these bales can be con?
firmed it would indic?te they had beer
used to wrap the infernal machines 6C
th?ir true nature would escape the eye?
nf those who might look into the wagon
The Department of Justice people
can hardly believe the iron slugs thai
were showered upon the neighborhood
wen on the outside of the bomb, point
in : oui ?.here were not enough of them
lo ever the entire surface of a .inmt
o' the s?/.e this one is believed to have
In 'n. They fcH the slugs were part
of the internal mechanism.
Flynn Clings to Red Theory
Chief Flynn, who ;s in charge of th<
'".! val investigation under the direc
ion of Attorney General Palmer, wai
: - ''. ii. ' i> t that the "American Anarchist
htr-i-'-"' were responsible for the dis
'er. That the same crowd who per
nted the bomb outrages of June
'?'.). were also back of the present ex
osion, he said, could bo seen from th<
milarity of circulara found last yeai
"1 'hose placed in the mail box withir
(> and n half blocks of the detonntior
i'ow minutes before noon on Thurs
"Wo had solved the mysteries of las
ye.ir's bombs." he remarked, "but were
frustrated in bringing the criminals t(
justice when Alfredo Salsedo. whom wi
were detaining in Xew York, jur.-.pc(
from the fourteenth story window o
the Department of Justice office nn<
committed suicide. That tipped ou
rund, and the crowd got safely out o
?he country before we could nnb them
"Now in this case wo have mud
more to work upon at the start. Th
"?milarity of the circulars make
"b'e all our knowledge of th
(.-i.ii. ,vho committed the outrages las
>!.;?. Most of this information neve
has been made public, and it woul
'?a' be vise to reveal it now. W
even established the identity of on
?tnarchist who was killed by his ow
bomb in last year's outrages wit
much ?ess evidence than we have i
the ;:resrn! ease. Now we have whol
circulars dropped into a mail box, pr<
sumi'.bly by the nmn who set off th
homo, half an hour after a letter c?;
rier had emptied the box. In additio
there are the horse and the broke
bits of the wagon upon which th
bomb \vn'; placed."
Two Men Sought by V. S.
From other sources it was learne
that seen! service oj.-erHtives are ,ool
inf.- particularly for Carlo Tresen, wh
for years had boon prominently ident
lier! with certain anarchistic group
The man higher up among the ai
nrchlsts, for whom an alarm has als
been sent out, is Gnlliana, a pupil r
the famous anarchist Malatestft. Thee
anarchists arc organized in sma
groups ol ten or fifteen men and hs
their headquarters at Lynn, Mass.
hi this conn action the authorities ?
Mi'.wau' ' Miking for a man the;
wlie ill iient with some pcrsoi
about the ? rinciples of the I. W. \
is reported to have said: "Somethir
will bust in the Fast this week th
will open your oyes."
That the authorities, however, w
not proceed indiscriminately again
radicals here because of the explosii
wns indicated by Superintendent Lam
He sai'! no arrests or raids were co
template?, because there was r.othit
definite yet to pioceed upon.
Palmer Leaves Flynn in Charge
Attorney General Palmer left tl
cit> for Stroudsburg, Pa., at 6 o'cloi
In the afternoon, placing the Feder
Doe? every man wan! more ?hu?? o
?vuntnti? "O:\fl for one" s?\9 "'Wi
.?????a .-??M.' tu h Si. Theatre, today so
to nlKhl A.l\ '
phase of the investigation entirely in i
the hands of Chief Flynn. The author- |
ities, he said, may experience somo dif- !
ficulty in bringing Edward Fischer,
who forewarned friends here of the !
explosion, from Hamilton, Ont., to
this city. He understood that Fischer
had retained counsel to tight extradi- I
tion to the United States, but he ?
I pointed out that in view of the fact '
i that Fischer had been detained at a ;
| sanitarium in this country some years :
! ago as a mentally incompetent person, -
! his deportation on the ground of lunacy j
will be asked.
The September grand jury will ox
I anriine three witnesses to-morrow who :
\ say they saw u wagon of the du Pont
I firm in the neighborhood a short time !
I before the disai-ter.
Dr. Otto H. Schultzc, medical exam
I iner for the District Attorney, after i
an examination of a number of the
i victims' bodies, said they all met death
by slugs and metal fragments which j
j did not resemble parts of automobiles.
There was no addition to the thirty
three so far reported dead. The sev
enteen-year-old boy also found among :
the victims has not yet been identi- ,
! fied.
|-.
Crime Expert Says
Powerful Band Is
Back of Bomb Plot
Foster Declares Many Weeks
Were Required to Prepare j
fortblast Here; Appeals to:
All Ageneies to Hunt Gang
Declaring it to be his belief that
J the most powerful and daring band i
ever organized for the perpetration of
bomb outrages is in existence and was
responsible for the Wall Street blast,
Captain Robert J. Foster, one of the
country's foremost crime investigators,
yesterday called upon all detective I
agencies in the world to make an inde- I
pendent investigation, without retainer,
of what he termed "the crime of the
century."
"It took weeks and perhaps months
of careful planning to carry out this!
terrorist demonstration," Captain Fos-j
tn said. "The explosive unquestion?
ably was carried bit by bit over long
periods and was stored until a sufficient
; quantity had been hoarded to satisfy
those pulling off the job.
"There is absolute proof, I believe,
thai the largest organization ever
known for the perpetration of such a
; crime is in existence. It is a chal?
lenge to the brains of the United
Slates Secret Service, the Department
of Justice and the Police Department
of New York City. It is a direct chal?
lenge to the city, state and national
j government.''
Says Government Is Too Tolerant
Captain Foster, who was the chief
investigator fot the National Erectors'I
. Association of the dynamite plots dur-I
j inp the labor wars of 1010, 1911 and I
1912, charged that the government hnd j
; been too tolerant in its dealings with i
individuals who "have shown by their
conduct and speeches and literature,
that they are against American insti?
tutions and government."
"Sedition has been openly preached
on the streets of New York," he con- '
tinuetl, "and the destruction of public]
'property has been publicly advocated." i
The investigator said he was con-!
; vinced that the experts were correct :
i in their contention that the bomb had
j exploded in the wagon, but there 1s
i no doubt in his mind that it was a
time-clock bomb. He said that the
terrorists would not use a fuse be?
cause of the danger of its odor at
I tracting attention.
Believes Expert Supervised Plot
i "In my judgment," he said, "three
or more persons aided in the trans-?
I portation of the exnlosive, and there
must have been an expert electrican !
or an A-l machinist supervising the
plot. I believe it Wf?s brought from j
Long Island, chiefly because the bridges ;
over the Fast River offer sn easy ap-j
proach to the financial district."
When Captain Foster was asked;
whnt he thought tho bomb cost, he
said the actual exnlosive in it was'
worth about |-i00. but that In point!
of time and work spent in making it
an estimate of 16,000 would not be
too high.
ER?DORF
OODM AN
616 FIFTH AVENUE
PRESENT THEIR COLLECTION
OF NEW PARIS GOWNS.
SUITS, WRAPS, FURS,
BLOUSE^ AND NOVELTIES
Red Warning in Wall Street
Facsimile of one of several posters found in letter boxes in the financial |
district after Thursday's bomb disaster. They were printed with I
a rubber stamp.
Military Funerals
To-day for Soldier
Victims of Blast
Eight War Veterans Among
the Dead ; Double Services
To Be Held for Two Who
Were Killed Together I
Many of the funerals of the dead in ;
the Wall Street bomb disaster arc to I
be held to-day and to-morrow. Fight j
war veterans were among the victims !
of the explosion, and military honors ?
are to be shown at the funeral of sev- j
eral of these men.
From Campbell's Funeral Church,
Broadway and Sixty-sixth Street, there
will be funeral services this after
noon for two of these veterans--'
William F. Hutchinson and Harold L.
Gillies?-who were standing at Broad'
and Wall streets when the explosion i
occurred. Hutchinson had been with |
the Equitable Life Assurance Society j
for twenty years. He was a Spanish i
war veteran and a member of the 7th !
Regiment. Gillies was junior member
of the brokerage firm of George H. '.
Burr & Co., 120 Broadway.
Reginald J. Ellworthy, a bomb vic?
tim, who died in the Broad Street Hos?
pital Friday, will be buried in Rose
dale Cemetery, West Orange, this
afternoon. The guard of honor at the
funeral will be from B Company, 114th
Infantry, 29th Division, with which he
served in France. Ellworthy was em- |
ployed by the Marine insurance Com- |
pany.
The funeral of T. Montgomery Os
prey, twenty-four years old, of 136 .
Chestnut Avenue. Flatbush, will be ;
held to-morrow morning. Burial will
be private. Osprey's body was not
identified until Friday. He served ;
with the 27th Division on the Mexican !
border and in France. He was em- !
ployed by Johnson A Wood, stock
brokers, at 115 Broadway.
The body of Colonel Charles A. No?
velle, V. S. A., will be buried with full
military honors at Washington. Cc?onel
Nevelle served as a brigadier general
overseas.
Franklin G. Miller, who died in the
Broad Strex-t Hospital, will be buried
this afternoon from his home, 700 West
179th Street. He was a lieutenant in !
the naval air force during the war.
U. S. Groups Represented
At Conference of Red?
WASHINGTON. Sept. \H. -Represen- I
tatives of politic.il and labor groups in
more than a score of countries at- j
tended the second conference of the
Third Internationale, which opened at
Moscow last month, according to ad?
vices received here to-day in official
circles. Groups in the United States
represented, the advices said, included
the American Socialist party. Com?
munist pnrty and Communist Labor
party.
Other countries from which repre?
sentatives were present were Great
Britain, France, Hungary, Germany,
Austria, Poland, Sweden, Latvia, Fs
thonia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Turkey,
India, Corea, China, Armenia, Persia,
Egypt, Azerbaijan, Georgia and
Afghanistan.
Believes Reds
Aimed to Kill,
Not to Destroy
U. S. Engineer Insists Bomb
Was Designed to Sacri?
fi?e the Greatest Possi?
ble Number of Victims
Job Planned by Experts
Amount and Location of Ex?
plosive and Hour Chosen
Cited tc Support Theory
From The Tribune'? Washinpton Bureau
WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.?The pur?
pose of the explosion in the heart of
the New York financial district was to
kill rather than to destroy property, in
the opinion of George S. Rice, chief
mining engineer of the Bureau of
Mines. Mr. Rice returned to Washing?
ton to-day after making an investiga?
tion of the explosion.
"Every indication is that the explo?
sion was intentional and that the men
who are responsible had a practical
knowledge of explosives and their
effect," said Mr. Rice.
"I do not think th? intention of the
perpet. atora of the outrage was to de?
stroy property. They did not use the
explosive in sufficient quantity nor
with the proper preparations for this
purpose.
"From their use of scrap cast iron
in connection with what I believe was
dynamite, I am pretty sure their in?
tention was destruction of human life,
especially the force in the Morgan of?
fices. If so, they certainly could not
have planned better.
Hampered by Police Lines
"I was in a New York subway at the
time of the explosion, but arrived on
Wall Street within a few minutes af?
ter it occurred. I had no authority to
pass the police lines for investigation
at the time, so was hampered some?
what in my work.
"When I did get to work I first tried
to fix the place of the explosion. This
I was readily able to do. From th<
angle at. which missiles entered the
walls of the buildings I was able tc
find the point pretty accurately.
"This point was in the street, at t
place about twelve or fifteen feet frorr
the west jamb of the Assay Office dooi
and about one-third of the distance be
tween this building and the Morgar
offices, across the street.
"Now, it is pretty generally knowr
that there #hs a hole in the street a
about the point where the explosion oc
curred. I examined this hole, and I an
of the opinion that it was not causei
by the explosion. It looked more as i
it had been dug up with a pick an?
shovel. From witnesses I heard tha
this hole had been there previous ti
the explosion, as a result of street re
pairing, and that it was at the tinv
full of water.
"By a queer coincidence the point o
the explosion must have been nimos
directly over this hole. The hole, how
ever, had none of the appearance of a
explosion crater. The bottom was fis
and there whs no d?bris around th
edges, as is the caso when a crater i
caused by explosives.
40 Per Cent Dynamite Used
"I think dynamite was used. Th
quantity was probably between twent;>
five and fifty pounds of 40 per rei,
dynamite, certainly not enough to da??
are buildings of the character of th
Morgan offices and other buildings i
the vicinit;-. This dynamite, I thin]
was in n package; not in a metal cor
tainer. The package was probably co\
ered with a heap of scrap metal, mostl
cast iron window sash weights and th
like.
"The men who arranged the explc
sion placed the wagon containing th
dynamite on the opposite sido of th
street from the Morgan offices with
very definite purpose. They knew tin
the missiles hurled by the explosic
would travel in an arc so as to crus
through the windows on the lower Hoc
of the Morcan building and create t)
greatest possible amount of destructio
within. But I think it was not .?
much destruction of property as d
struction of life that, was planned.
"Cast iron was largely used for mi
siles. Cast iron is the ideal iVetsl f<
shrapnel use, as it fractures into shai
missiles readily.
Force of Blast Horizontal
"The force of the explosion was e
erted in n horizontal plane, rather tht
up and down. The sidewalks bare
were Inuched, and the missiles seenn
concentrated within a height of abo
three to eight feet above the wall*
Of course, a number of fragments fir
up, but they were relatively few.
"Then, too, the hour chosen was oi
when the greatest number of peop
would be on the street. Luckily t
i missiles were not placed so as to rn
? the streets lengthwise, or the numb
! of casualties would have been double
i It is a surprise to me that there we
; not more persons killed and injured.
j "Everything seems to point to t
I fnct the explosion was the work
terrorista, who sought to create wtrola
?ale disaster.
"I should not be willing to swear
to the fact that dynamite wa* the sola
explosiva. Further investigation may
show that ?ither picric acid or TNT
was used. But whatever the ejo'osive,
I am pretty positive that the 1 ntion
of the users was about as have,
stated."
' ? ?
Wife Sues Race Tipster;
Says Love Was Alienated
Monte F. Jacobs Tells of Losses, I
but Is Ordered to Pay $50
a Week Alimony
Supreme Court Justice Gtiy awarded
$50 a week alimony to Effie Elizabeth
Jacobs yesterday in her separation
suit against Monto F. Jacobs. She said
that her husband dealt in race track
tips as the Toco Information Service,
selling tips at $5 a day or $20 a week
and having from twenty to sixty week?
ly subscriber: and at loast five daily
buyers on et iverage. His minimum
income she f gured at $550 a week.
In his reply Jacobs averred that the
business was lea? profitable than his
wife imagined and pretty uneven. His
net Income for t!.e week ended April
3, he said, was $430, and in the suc?
ceeding week he suffered a loss of
$195. From May to August, he said,
his weekly losses averaged $45 and
to offset them he became "cashier of
an individual occupied in horse rac?
ing," a position he had to relinquish
because of his wife's criticism of it.
Mrs. Jacobs asserted that her hus?
band could eliminate one considerable
item of his expenses if he would cease
to invite May M. Croke. of 127 Ash
ford Street, Brooklyn, out to dinner,
She is suing Miss Croke for alleged
alienation of her husband's affection,
demanding $100,000 as damages.
Routine of Morgan
Banking House Not
Altered by Blast
Bandaged Clerks and Scaf?
folding in Main Room Are
Only Apparent Departures
From Normal on Saturday j
The normal Saturday quiet prevailed
at. the offices of J. P. Morgan & Co.
yesterday. Not all the partners were
down to business, and many of the
employees had taken tho full day off at
the suggestion of the firm. A few em?
ployees, with heads or arms bandaged,
j offered about the only evidence of the
explosion of Thursday, aside from the
i scaffolding set up in the center of the
I main banking floor to support the re
j mains of the dome which was shat
I tered by the blast.
The story that the Morgan firm,
, is conducting an inquir>, with its own
I detectives working on the case, was de?
nied. One of the officers of the bank
. ing house reiterated the statement
; made by one of the partners on Friday
j that the" investigation isa public rather
I than a private matter,
i "We are getting most of our infor
I mation about the whole affair from the
' newspapers," said a spokesman for the
i Morgan Arm.
Members of the firm late Friday
i visited the home of T. W. Joyce, one
? of the employees of Morgan & Co.,
! who suffered persons' injury and whose
! son, William Joyce, was killed by a
I slug as he sat at his desk in the rear
of tho Morgan offices. Mr. Joyce, it was
! said, was rapidly recovering from his
j injuries.
It is not expected that J. P. Morgan.
j head of the firm, who is in the north of
! Scotland on n hunting trip, will re
I turn before early December. The firm
! has been in communication with him,
I but. it is not believed he will change
j his original plans.
j Jury Inquiry On To-morrow
; Other Cases Will Not Interfere
Willi Explosion Investigation
Afternoon sessions will be hold by
: the September regular grand jury if
necessary, in an effort to establish the
cause and fix the blame for the Wall
Stiegt explDrion. This was announced
? yf.fterday by Judge William M. Wad
; hams in the Court of General Session?.
Jutlpe Wadhams said that he would in
' struct the District Attorney to divert
to the additional grand jury ea?es
; scheduled for tho regular grand jury.
? The soj?ion to-morrow will be taken
| up by the examination of three wit?
nesses, who told of having seen in the
?neighborhood of Wall Street on the
day of the explosion a wagon which
they supposed to be the property of
the du l'ont Powder Company.
' " u Police Search Vainly
1 or Clews to Exchange Blast
GENOA, Sept. 18. The police and
carabineers were engaged all last night
; in a searching investigation of yes
I tcrday's bomb explosion at the Stock
Exchange here. Several suspects, in
c uding six Hungarian Communists,
were arrested, but no definite clew has
beet', found.
The explosion did some damage to
i the exchange, but caused no casualties.
I In hive dwindling between you? Takr him
to "'Way Dnwii East," 44th bt. Theatre
I to-day and every ?av. ~-Advt
Exclusive
Ncu?^?brk6Kop
f?r'Wboltex
Tailormadcs
.A Shop aPQailor-mOedcs
A Practical Service of Untold Value
to New 'ork Women
EVERY woman ha own the inconvenience of
going through art c.^ess assortment of miscellan?
eous clothes to find the few modela of a simple type
that meet her particular needs.
A visit to this shop will convince her that she can
enjoy selecting refined clothes from collections con?
taining only models of the simpler character.
COATS SUITS FROCKS
BLOUSES and SKIRTS
SWEATERS
Good style, good quality, good taste and fair prices?
these are the principles upon which THE TAILORED
Woman, Inc., is founded.
V
622 Fii%Awnue^at50th ?treeu,
-1- ? -.?-1
Fischer May Have Go? Mental
Radio on Bomb, Says Expert
Head of Hyslop Institute Declare? Similar Cases
Have Been Known When Mind Was
"Tuned" to Proper Pitch
Psychic knowledge of an impending I
disaster is as feasible as though it )
wore a "pick up" by a radio operator
whose instrument chanced to be |
"tuned" or within receiving range of a j
wirelessed message, according to Dr. :
Walter F. Prince, acting director of j
the American Institute for Physical ?
Research, four.Jed by the late Profes?
sor James S. Hyslop.
u:. Prlnaa declared that the aflier
tion of Edward R. Fischer, detained at
Hamilton, Ont., that his postcard
warnings to frie:.d:; here of the Wall
Street explosion last Thursday were
inspired by psychic phenomena, "were
highly within the realm of possibility."
Dr. Prince cited two striking cases,
a train wreck and n woman's suicide,
premonition of which, he sail, he had
received in dreams and which were
borne out in detail the following day.
Dr. Prince said the mind of Fischer,
whose brother-in-law, Robert A. Pope,
declared he ha possessed psychic
powers for a-nur >er of years, evident?
ly v.af "tuned" o those who plotted
the explosion, r ?>.< elving telepathic im?
pression? of th tragedy that later oc?
curred. He sa the expressions or
thoughts o? . _? conspirators thus
could have been registered on the
abnormal mind of Fischer.
"It is reasonable to suppose that
Fischer's mind, being 'tuned' in har
mony with the workings of the minds
of those who planned the disaster, re?
ceived the important fact that such an
oci urrence w?s '.. happen," he said,
"hut misread the signals as to the ex?
act time, .?hi';h accounted for the fact
mat his . v''' ? Ts fixed the
tirno of t. ? d - ' - ab. i -venty-four
hours ah?.., I f \t/ act . ??. pening.
"1 regard it as a. pruveu fact by a
lar|,e numb - of authenti : instances
known to me by persm 1 inspection, or
other good evidence, that there is
such a thing as prediction of future
events. 1 regard these instances as
usually of the nature of supernormal
reasoning. As the intention to commit
the Wall Street crime was undoubted?
ly in the minds of some persons for
days previous, it ia conceivable that
Fischer got his information by a
quasi-auditory process, whether or not
it was intended for him. It likewise is
possiblo that he got it by telepathy
from living minds/'
Banks Guarded After Threat
LYNN, Mass., Sept. 18.?Receipt of
an anonymous warning that two local
banks would be blown up to-day caused
police officials to throw jruards around
banking institutions and elsewhere in
the financial district. The precautions
caused excitement.
Internes Are Commended
For Aid to Bomb Victaa?
A citation for raloroua work v?
conferred yesterday on the whiten
internes of New York's hospital^^?*
responded to the call for aid after tt
explosion, by Henry J. Fisher, eat?*
man of the executive committee of *i
United Hospital Fund.
"Few people realize," Mr. Fisher aril
"what these yount: doctors contriW'
to the relief of suffering humanit" a<
ter two or three yearn at college' ?pi
four long years at medic?! school t??,
serw approximately two yeart in ?!,
hospitals, mostly without a cent of re?
muneration."
Of the seven hospitals to which bosb
I victims were admitted, the interne fie
'. ures are as follows:
Bellevue, 80 internes, pa- $59
month; Gouverneur, 12, no pay; ??
York. 18, no_ pay: Volunteer, 6. $5fr ?
month; St. Vincent's 16, no nay; Brota
Street, 7, $50 a month; Post-Gradual
23, no pay.
"These hospitals offend the pub!::
, the services of 162 ;. ount; doctors." lf
Fisher said, "and the in-, me .i ?ate anj
splendid response should not be for.
gotten as long as this catastrophe i ? re?
called."
No Members Hurt, Exchange
Replies to London Traders
! In reply to a feble message sent by
W. Atlay. chairman of the London
; Stock Exchange, expressing that orj?a.
1 ization's "regrets at the terrible dis?.
ter in Wall Street." the New York
! Stock Exchange, through its president,
W. H. Kemick. cabled its appreciation,
? tion, adding that "nothing hut slight
' scratches occurred to any of our mea
bers cr employees."
Consider the False Economy
Of Baking Bread at Home
First you have to buy flour, sugar, milk and all
the rest of the ingredients used and which cost
three and four times what they did a few years
ago.
Then consider the cost of fuel used in baking,
whether it be gas, coal, wood or electricity.
Consider your time and the long, hot, hard
hours of bread baking labor.
Consider the waste of costly food material if
you have a baking failure.
Consider, too, how home baking adds to your
worries on the servant question.
Consider all these things and compare your certain expense and
doubtful results with the alternative of buying from your dealer
fresh and fragrant every morning
Mother Hubbard
the milk loaf with that fine, wholesome wheat flavor which brings
back to mind your mother's kind.
WARD'S MOTHER HUBBARD BREAD is truly a loaf which
will recall all the good things about home-made bread days and
satisfy and nourish every member of the family, minus all the
trouble and worry.
Slices, butters, eats well, keeps moist and MAKES THE MOST
DELICIOUS TOAST YOU EVER TASTED.
1
Wrapped and sealed in waxed paper to bring it to
your table fresh and clean.
Your choice of two sizes?large and small loaves.
LONDCN TAILORING
The latest type? of CHEVIOT, FLEECE,
DIAGONAL AND ELYSIAN OVER
CjpATINGS exclusively stocked in the
piece, also made up READY FOR
IMMEDIATE SERVICE.
I
SERVICEABLE and FASHIONABLE Men's
Wear ?de to measure by Expert London
Tailori a few DAYS from Receipt of Order.
1 mmm*m"?"?""?"????? ????"
At present exchange rates your dollars almost
double in value when you buy London tailoring.
Order when you come over, or write for
PRICES, PATTERNS & SELF-MEASUREMENT FORMS
THE HOUSE WITH 40 YEARS' REPUTATION
CHAS. BAKER & CO.'S
STORES, LTD., LONDON.
HEAD DEPOT, EXPORT AND LETTER ORDER DEPT,
271 to 274, HIGH HOLBORN, W. C. 1
41 and 43, Ludgate Hill, E. C. 4
137 to 140, Tottenham Court Road, W. 1
256, Edgware Road, W. 2
27 to 33, King St, Hammersmith, W. 6
5 to 9, Seven Sisters Road, N. 7
CROYDON BRANCH: Whitgift House, North End

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