The evening world. Newspaper, October 5, 1911, Page 15

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‘ wees w tHE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTORER. 5, 1911... - hints 33 i There Was One Suit He Forgot To Take Along. LY V'C i Doccone it! 1 GOT “To DOPE ' - — y se | iT GEE , BUT.(M & SAPHEAD | wily - — @ a Avec eee ay Keer LL | CONT. | THINK OF IT BEFORE? | HATE “TO ‘TALK ABouT ) a (t's A suave to Rene P OVE Tem ECU OWING ME VL COB Ws CLOTHES AN one | [MyseLe, guT “THis iDeA BAT Cs) He eccre Quince 1m 89] +4 S"| THE B008 STICKS TO ME TAKE ‘EM WITH ME (SHOWS BRAIY-woRK | eG] ALL DAY, BUT 1 cANT| LiKE A PLASTER | a » Ny CAUSE WE ‘ 4 S\SAtT GET ——~S +] EM FOR, 5 \ NOTHING | u i i vein . ; “No, I don't, The man I have now! rien had been caught or had been un-|such an hour the penalty mi h n r ght belinto the north with nothing to stop| rece some timg this fall a that Le can pick out) game wes plared at South Mel js stupid and lazy enough without myjable to penetrate, he had passed in|death, And Max loved life as only @) before the middie of ‘suly?—and Im top| ts eet fnen for nis crews palletes} sh Manders: wt stiented, I Y T taking on another.” safety, Unsuapected, he was in the|boy who has lived in the great Out- | on! ’ | a seniors : 5 a only one who can get the news to our) ‘The Kentucky Put MAX, HE BO SCOU He made as though to go into the/heart of the Confederate Army; at the|doors can love it. Yet he nightly played | lines!” . | wienee, was mee house, but Maz checked him, very threshold of Lee's headquarters.| With death by creeping to the close- (To Be Continued.) pod th vant versity onew hae “Please, air,” whined the BY “Ive! tie was the body-servant of one of Lee's | Suarded veranda and lying there until want own staff officers and was looked upon|!ong after midnight. At such times It to recognize the | TED FRIED WINNERS. Announcement of the first week's soarenen and alresay ro took such a Iilting to you. And to be where I'll ge* three meels a Gay.las a harmiess fool. What better could | Would have been h Let be your ‘soma t won't beth Ty any spy ask?” alert, keen-eyed lad as the shambiing, | can cook fine and deots and metal) gin boy's clevi foolish boy who the dally butt of| and do the washing and tend horsee | nrc fuituine amd sch tashe come Awork: | the canp-followere’ Jokes. And at lant! | wrmere im the BOW SCOUT PEEES 4 mend clothes and”’—= betraying nim than did anything else|°M@ evening he learned what he had | x will ve made I tell you I can't asford a second eer-| ong was the marvel of the other hang- |"%Ked Ufo to learn. Saturday's EVENING WORLD. interrupted the Captain, flattered. | orson, But it was readily explained by |, The knowledge, when It came, turned nevertheless, by the lad's alr of slavish | 114 supposed mountaincer life and, af-|™ momentarily dizzy and sick, Not eR | | Seedeeaeaemaaamamaanananonemeooneemsen eee NCIS Prizes for Boy Scout Essays Gevotion. . Cotonet| 7 day or ao, cauned no comment." |'RE feeting that the whole tate ana tve|WIDENER OFFFRS PURSES | pleaded Maze" won't ask any pay pare | Fe OF 18 Hear country depended now) FOR OWN RACE MEETING. 1 x 7 but my food and @ corner to sleep in,|%% seltom, he spent his whole spare | upon him alone. Were he to fall to THEE EVENING WORLD will award weekly a series of val- 3 |11'l! be better than starving be:hetbe ond \time wandering about np, blundering | carry his tidings safely to the Unton uable prizes for the best essays (not over 250 words long) writ- 3 | having to hoe corn all day. Give me a|OPenly into all sorts of places where bh litnes, the Union might be forever dis- I CO Cree beer. Be doubly sure---ask partigularly for A Great Civil War Adventure sor Young People By Capt. Cordon Parker By defeating the Lav in the sertes of held by the Don't take it for granted that you're going to get the best every time you just“ask for : - 4 i |had no business (and often getting cuffed | solved. For a geventeen-year-o! ten by czy schoo! pupil on the lessons taught by the sx pre- $ [wee tt ah Bote Om Please do TH eo, ‘ity intrusion), trying to talk on| the thought of such responsibility ee ee ee with such high: | eurely enough turn the heart cold. fore ex-Governor Hughes put the ceding insta'men' i A RP terms of perfect equali & insta'ments of this story. Read cach week’sinstalments; The officer paused, trresolute. The 5 sged'to bec and | te weel& tuntenee of two fron, Kibosh on the game in this State, J. E. n writ i ‘ 4 ®| rank officers as he ch then write the impressions you have gathered from them. Do Hee e ee aie varlie. Minto the ex: wondering at the laughter or rebukes fone of Lee's visiting generals Widener, the railroad magnate of Phil- not write the plot of the story, as some contestants have done; § | was a boy foolish enough and willing {BIS freshness and stupidity: excited. Max the secret, this backed adelphia, will give @ series of races s pleced together fro oP | ¥ but describe such lessons in manliness, pluck, patriotism, clever- } jenough to work for him like a slave—| He was jecmed an ubiquitous, medate in the study a con ‘ Adah cog eyeT | some Idiot, of no more Importance than s you have gathered from the narrative. The teacher § | 824, for nothing SERHY fel Cote ers amp dog, Put not even the uikins . will donate $2, wt # tn money ss. A major-gen- —— BARBAROSSA CC Lo A healthful, thirst quenching. beverage rent of each competitor is asked to write a line to the effect begged the boy. | most suspicious Secret Service man took ° dent Davis's ca | ie programme calls for four races that it is original and written without assistance. aad the Captain ater |Sim fOr B ADY. | the bie grouni not left the hot potking in low tones (on the flat and four steeplechases, one Penman ship, punctuation, spelling and composition will be § |¢,5 Deriorcke'e garters: vee ‘you | floor room which Gen, Lee used as o| and sinking thelr voices to whispers | open, ono for qualified hunters, one for considered in making awerds. Essays based on each week's $ |a trial” study, the Hghts burned late. Night the sentry passed. {bona-fido hunters and one for horses! r night @ council of officers sai] Max pressing his slender body against 8, instalments should reach this office during the following week. “Oh, thank you, sir!” babbled Max. |?! SR Rig GLY a ci MaRS | : ~ @ and upon the porch Just outside| he inner surface of the wistaria vines, | United States Army. The latter event Addiess “BOY SCOUT EDITOR, EVENING WORLD.'? } |, "s,thambied acrost to the hut which ine open windows, talking tn low tones | at theta feet, Hekennd And Mand) 4 the feature of the card aud woven | EAM a food. Pure and whole a, . . ey ty . ”) a At after night, division comman a long a he two wel cans face the starter. The dis-| ; A i > fengoid watches and ten silver watches wiil be ry roke's. When the Captain arrived there 4, ee he ain. he lay movetess, Then, as the| horses will fa ihe r he dis: ss : a a i 5 ; & i beawarded each week @ half hour later he found the place in| °°! bans 3 Beat hannlietat jotted! Sgt troved toward the other end ot | Maee of the race will ‘be ‘about two some. . Sparkling and so satisfying to the : ‘ pick and span order, his clothes brush- |“"\'.4 Vent after night a lean, noiseless| his beat, Max glided silently from che | and one bill miley KORE thirst Family Trade Promptly: Supplied j Roaprient, 1911 \isiieg Co “But I don't want to enlist, Colonel. [@) his Deote shining. Max was tolling \qgure would wriggle Its way throus! | denser ws, crossed the iawn by) cia! hte friends to attend, and «| ‘ j The | “That's nothing to me," snapped the | fd over the rust on pI ae orem eon ren ee ee a ee Phone or postal to your dealer'talls a case. 3 | etc “It you didn't want to enlist, ‘e, the vine-covered porch foot. Silent as| another, and made for his own quarters, | *Puckl’ - r NG CHAPTERS, | what are you fe . yw officer a Httle)q snake, Max Clark made his perilous] As he went, he murmured brokenly to 3 WOULiwaLe ULnLiAs i seem to be addled way; sometimes creeping within a foot or | himself: t diepl rosa and . i ecrow, Rut he's|two of a pacing sentry: sometimer| “It's even a bigger move than Gen | wot Pancet ters rowing | National Export hee a 's Draught Beer slot the w: 1 ta eas & eiray dog ching for hours, ‘1 Hooker thovaht. Up the Shenandoah, | tk i | price teh reyes wa) night. And he is @ wonder at working. veranda tatt » vines | brushing aside our defenses there—then | > if KARL VILL Cc a5. -Nahmmacher } i. N.Y. 52/ West 29th Street ening to] nto Maryland—and up Pennsyl- | He hardly stops enough to eat.” | never onoe rustied), ‘Max Clark was even more delighted |the interminable talks that went on|vanta—while pur armies are to thi Phone 760 Brvant Phone £305 Chelsea with the bargain than was his now em-! above him. he's moving against Washington—cloar ployer. Where older, more experienced Were he caught In such a place at ‘around the army of the Potomac and ()---$5 PANTS FREE TO Tit iiiEN Heinisch 7-inch Tailor Siears FREE to the Ladies I am Mitchell The Tailor frorm Boston, with 17 other stores in New England and upper New York State, and I am located here at the corner of 40th Street and Broadway. I have spared no expense to make this Store the finest tailoring establishment in New York, and I want you to call this Saturday, Monday or Tuesday, whether you buy or not. At 277-279-281 Washington Street, Boston, Mass., 1 have one of the finest wholesale woolen plants in the country, and buy direct from the mills on a cash basis, and when you realize that 70 per cent. of the woolen mills of the country are located within 75 miles of Boston, you can understand my position. I open here Saturday morning, Oct. 7, with a line of woolens, worsteds ard coatings second to none, and I want to meet the mothers, wives and sweet- hearts of the economical men of New York City. It is my irtenticn to interest the women folks, and with that end in view to om, every [ody who celis with a customer I present FREE a pair of Heinisch 7-Inch 9) Elace Tailor Sheers as a souvenir of my ‘Get Acquainted’ Sale. @ ¢) I want you to tee the Guaranteed, No. 265, Elack Wanskuk ‘ Unf aished Worsted Overcoating that | will take orders, silk to $15 00 at a price cf ‘ e I wan you to see the Pl for et a price of ois sr ar ete re orders £15.00 Seo the Standish Worsted Suitings, Mabbitt Worsteds and Globe \Vorvsteds on which I am making prices of.............eseeeee: $15.00 ? A THOUSAND ST LES TO SELECT FROM. To the man who doubts—who having never tried, doesn’t know; who never looked and who never proved, but who, if he looks and proves, becomes a good customer, I send this message. Lee's clean cut face I need you—you need me. If I don’t do anything but keep the other fel- low’s prices down where they belong, every city needs me. vo rise in the 1 to the coloneley u. Did you as It a 1 one sho 1 offer you this week incontestable proof—plain, manifest, palpable proof of my ability to provide cloth- ing values under the market. Sub- tract from my _ statement the exaggeration that you think all| advertisers are given to, and then I'll surprise you. men whose bore the ned to apeai to Subtract from my statement the nienadeut. # tenthusiasin and the confidence that f {my knowledge imparts to me, and revponeibiities, ha & supposed moun soften tho blow fered. siecle linn chai, hav poss of the mani Aud wy itimoosstie| {then I'll surprise you. Subtract from ck, Flue exd Crey Kerteys trem the famous Johnsen Mi'ls of New England. ‘ SAA ‘ashamed to, be «mv. [my statement all the scepticism, all : These are tke rey war $38.00 Oy ercoatings, and | will make then $15 00 ‘ ath Mant, | : rary : i Nat ang many anomer selene {the doubt, all the misgivings with : i aes: te up, in any style, singie or dcul ie treasted, to your order for.... Ard during my ‘‘Get Accuainted”’ Sale | will include a PAIR OF TROUSERS thing at their country’s need. But all/ at ence he felt he cmld not take ad- | vantage of Lee's kindliness, So he stood dumb, with hanging head, unable | to go on With his chosen role. | Lee, glancing down at him, turned and gave a brief order to an officer who | ‘ode at his left. Then the General and | the etaff dismounted and trooped Lato | the house between the saluting se:.ti-| nele, The officer to whom Lee hat spoken alone remained He wee «4 gtout, lazy looking fellow in captain's uniform. Coming over to Mex, be aaid eruffiy: “The General wants me to see you get something to eat after your long tramp, and & chance to enlist, Take this note," scribbling @ line and handing it to the hoy, “over to that tent, where you see the stove, You'll get something to eat | there and they'll tell you where to en- | dnt.” | He turned toward the house, as if his mission was quite accomplished, | Max, whom experience had taught to read faces and actions as easily as he had sized up thie fat| captain’ rat a glance. From the man’s appearance, as well as trom his siipshod way of obeying Leo's kindly order, Max gnthered that he was Iagy and unwilling to make any vinnecessary exertion. And this know: | e mavg the boy an idea. Running efter (ue Meparting-ofMicer, he said: which you are saturated, and then ri surprise you, 1..2E. There is nothing new under the sun, but when I sug:st FREE Trousers to each customer, and Shears to the !adies, they either get the Trousers and Shears or the equivalent. ‘this cfier should bean inducement to lawyers, doctors, 6 peciecsional men of this city who have occasion to wear their clothes day in and cay out, as the extra trousers can be kept pressed ai! the time. MITCHELL «E TAILOR FROM BOSTO NO OTHER NEW YORK CITY STORE SATURDAYS TO 10 a 1431 Broadway, Cor. 40th St. EVENINGS UNTIL 9

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