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+ “It was better when they were going YouRE A FINE LOOKIN WHITE HOPE AINT CHA? | 1 SEND! YA AWAY “TS TRAIN OFF “THAT FRONT PORCH AN WA ‘GET A Job INA’ BREWERY AN’ Come! HOME FATTER THAN ven! Just wen You OUGHTA BE IN SHAPE TO FIGHT WOHNSON TO ORANGE N.S, CAMPS NEAR THERE THEYS SEVERAL TRAINING You CAN LOCATE ONE AN’ TRAIN WITH WHOEVER (8 LocaTe:“@” Goby CAM AxeL’— pon'T Go AN TRAINS WITH SOME J SECOND RATE BANTAM ‘ ~SeE? ar an a ENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1912 Weli—He Shows Mighty Poor Discrimination rote _ ————————— in Selecting His Training Quarters. GEE=| CANT TRUST THAT SAPHEAD “To BO ANYTHING 9 BY HIMSELF ('M Goi’ TO 1 TAKES THE NEXT “TRAIN OUT TD ORANGE AN SEE Bb. WHAT HE'S Doin AN SEE IF AXEL 5 . ———— Here's JIM SAVAGE'S Came ! LU SNEAK UP = To THE BACK wiNbow | \S WORKIN There ee ee ee - HELLO, BROADWAY! (TO FLY ACROSS TOWN LOOKS GOOD,| ATLANTIC OCEAN VACATIONS OVER| IN THREE DAYS Here They Come, All the|Bronx Inventors Profess to Mountaineers and Mermaids, | Have an Airship That Will by Train and Boat. Make the Trip. Two expert engineers to-day told an Evening World reporter that they were nearing thé completion of an hydro-biplane that would make the transatlantic trip in three days. The BUT OH, YOU SCHOOL! Tons of Baggage Pouring Into . inventors, C. A. Allen and John J. Terminals, and Fall Styles |Meckier, are botn young men. ‘They ; live at No. 863 Hewitt place, the Are in Order. Bronx. The biplane is being con- structed at Clason Point in a large shed. It is now being covered with ® special preparation of cloth, and in two weeks, after its engines are in- statied, will be ready for its trial filght down the East River to Gover- nor’s Ialand. The aeroplane weighs 6,000 pounds, New York is home again How d'ye do, New York! Back from the mountain and beck from the shore. Down from the rust- Ming trees and up from the shimmer- ing seas. From the Adirondacks and |its framework being constructed of from Atlantic City, the girl of the|ectt etesi tubing: it 1 10 fet iong| trail and the maid of the boardwalk, fathers, mothers, sisters and brothers be This weight in- judes the complete equipment, the all came home thie morning by train) gasoline tanks, which have « capacity ang boat. of 1,600 gallons, provisions for the “For vacation te ever. The joys of trip and the two engineers who will the summer outing are things of the|operate the machine. past for the great multitude of New| The engine room, as well as Lhe sleep- York, The serious business of the|ing apartment and the oporating room, city has been taken up again. School are all inclosed and will be finished ‘opens next Monday and the kide must|With the luxury of @ steam yacht. As) be ready for the fall term. New books /a#n illustration of the monster must be had, new clothes, new lots roplane, @ largo f things to worry mother’s mind and|could be con 's wallet came home this morning | sieht fm Groves with the rest of vacation] chine, humanity from the forest and stream| The power plant on the plane con- and from beach and bungalow. They|#ists of five engines. Four register 125 came in from all quartera, from Kan-|horse-power and the fifth, an auxiliary kakee and Muskogee, from Kalamasoo| to be used in case of accident to the tak kana. Ueied a, teeth, cont, is @ 65 horge-power motor. | east and west centred in New York. WAS. SOR Ae Sinoleas AF The Grand Central station swarmed| the other Se eee tbs centaae cad a ability. cepa plsaiparionty Lge eig al drive the machine at the rate of four- motor boat Jed in this inclosure, 8 well as the driver of the ma- «@ Frenchmen. Most prominent of the new features and which, insures ite safety @n hour, The average speed ‘Wrongs were so great that they crowd-| contemplated 1s 66 miles an hour, but) ed the mosquito off the map. the inventors say it will be able to| BONY AD A LOT OF ian ec se che: newall prepared clo(t o jo BAGGAGE ALONG. in use on ordinary aeroplanes, this ‘The rainy morning brought bus! machine will be clothed in a specially | tw the porters, the express companies, | prepared duck. It has first been treat: | the transfer agente, the taxis and the|ed with linseed oll to give it protec. automobiles, And the rainy morning|ton against moisture, and then coated | also drew business away from the same Saddell quarters, The home-cumers sloshe: through the mud and others more cheerful ylelded their bags and sult cases, glad to get rid of them. Special (rains almost hid the rails from the Adironda Saratoga, Lake George| six by and the Thousand Islands, It im estimated that in the last two x feet, can be operated in con- Junction with a third plane at the tafl of the machine, an entirely new de- days 30,000 pieces of bag parture in aeroplane building. Their ‘Gestred 1 usefulness {a illustrated in a dozen handled at Grand Central station alone. | ily important waya. They can be| ‘The baggage was shot up he ‘an tore from the lower train floors to the surface of the street and the transfer compantes did the rest. Additional bag- wagemen were on the Job and the porters with their red caps Were as busy as the kinds will be next Monday in sobvei. But most of the porters looked Mack under the wea caps—ihat Is, blacker than usual, for the tips weren't coming as speedily as when the great exodus for vacation began in June “Getting much?” John James Brows; accident operated automatically much | lke the safety controller on a subway | train, adjusting themselves to permit a safe descension, Should one or both of the propellers! on either side of the machine become useless, and the machine therefore have & tendency to xwerve to the right or | use it was being driven with tmablement of the and avgines on the other st ‘ak the balance plane on the disal ine | ed wide, thereby causing @ resistance o was asked. the air, this trouble ts entirely eradi- “No, sab! was the answer, “Dey! cated. ‘This o la pigo @Ailts wem gone broke BUT SOMEHOW THE TIPS WERE SCARCE. There joy among the colored brethren at the Pennsylvaina tepot where the inrush began at in th morning and was still in progress at the hour of 10. “Lots of tips this morning?” was sux- ne at the n with two rudders, the other at the tail, Hoth are used steering. either or both of t should ome disabled the planes can be ised In thelr place. n gested to George Washington Dock- stader, “Tips! Ah should say not Patyry cents from s'em o'clock, call wastin’ time.” DOO WAL AM! 1 sou fonk belght and chentful—es you should—when you get up in the | morning, do you feel like you have had fa good night’s rest and like doing a full day's work; or, do you get up with that “down and out” spirit and feel just as |tired and sleepy ax when you went to bed? away on thelr vacations?” “Well, only des fayeh," conservative George. Long Island was deserted by its sum- mer residents, Atlantic City gave up the majority of ite bathers and prom- Cog tn on bee fron sp IR, | If you have that ‘tired all-the-time’ day before. It is estimated chat 9,00 | feeling go to your druggist—right this ¢ handled at the Grand Cen- | minute-get a bottle of Coops New during the di Discovery, Take three do: Teplied the jany trains carry he | than jag Dut baggage. Fain had kept back all those who could | |, After taking 0 few dose of this medi at uD ’ flord to remain a day or two longe: bet be jocal travel, | Will not feel the effects igeoted but this Was made Up iy She Jocal travel, hy ieee sv Geno liad of | hi Every mechanical device will be out of |!0 reserve in the determination to keep controlled by the driver or in case of | ¥ ropulsion on one side owing | ¢) propellers | ¢ balance | teent 1 STOMACH TROUBLES ENDED | NO MORE SICK HEADACHES Seemed vith qa | win on the etghteenth and missed by ert Hunter, Chicago, 3 up on D. less than two inches. Cards: | Sawyer, Chica; Albert Seckel, Ch! Wober ‘ Sr cago, 2 uf on C. W. Insles, New York, | i, coBSdeilih tte HUNTER = OUTCLASSES HOW.| Vike nee HILTON FIVE DOWN if $3 g3oos sich bene ih ls HL Bog ‘ ite a ; Fi fy + 54454456 4—40- " y Announcement was made at ire Kerr was 3 up on Edwards on the Pte ae the od Of cimnteen holes! enird, but thelr match was squared on| Headquarters of the gift that Is to be last half: IN THE FIRST HALF; putting did not better a bit the further he went, nor did his direction. The Pi inly bothered him, _o 85464 64 & ¢-s0—5 Waldo Springs Big Surprise in Qualifying Round of Na- tional Tournament. £5 Ft tobe §:o tent Won the first hole by laying Kirkby a stymie. Lee Their cards: 4375 4 8-88 3 4-30-14 ame one eae eee 4 343 In ‘ 4 5—88—81 Chick Evans led A. W. Tillinghast, | Phitadelphia,by only one up at 18 holes, WHBATON, Ul., Bept. &—C. G. Waldo) toward Lee, the Detroit collegian, waa Jr., the young Brooklawn player, took | six up on O#wald Kirkby, Englewood, the measure of Champion Harold Hilton | N. J., champion, on the morning round, links of the Chicago Goit| Jerome Travers was two up on Sher- tad beh half of the raring und rit Sherman for the morning. Walter 0D 2 GRO Tet HAS round | -pravia was two up on Harry Legg at of match play for the national amateur ig hole championship, The Bridgeport youth! Haznilton Kerr, Ekwanok, led Kenneth played én par, having the English mas-| Edwards, Chicago, three up. ter one down at the turn and five down! Paul Hunter, Chicago, led W. I. How- at the home hole. land, Jr., Chicago, six up. ‘Waldo showed signs of etrain, how-| Oswald Kirkby was going indifferently ever. “I wish it was over,” be said, | While Lee who has been runner up in Hilton was silent as he left the green} #*veral ble tournaments this season was putting like @ streak, 16TH HOLE A JONASH FOR CHIC KEVANS. Evans and Tillinghast were never more than two hol Chick was not putting well, right on his game, except for ¢ few holes where he had a fondness for the rough. Evans lost the 16th hole, which he hasn't won once for the last week. He pulled his iron there this time Cards: for @ noon reat from the hot sun. His round of 7 wae a good one, but Waldo, with @ two on the ninth and @ three on the thirteenth was unproachable. Throughout the morning the champion was wild. He shied and booted his drives time after time, only saving him- self by his expert work with the iron clubs. “Chick” Evans, starting out in excel- lent form with A. W. Tillinghast of Philadelphia, ran up against an obstaice that may give him trouble He finished the morning round one up in 87-37-76. Hilton's astonishing weakness non- pulsed everybody. almost stupified. The weather. was spondent. thought to be mainly responsible for! from London when they heard of is sudden alump, for his general form | 6 down. They dropped their rday was superb. At evory point nd were speechless at first, he showed that he was keeping himseit | ft must be a mistake. Hilton, when one of them, a close personal the title, instead of shooting his bolt| friend, asked him for a word of com- in attempting to gain the comparative- | mont, begged leave to be excused, say- ly unimportant low score medal at the |ing merely that he “felt badly." same time: | Walter Travis etarted badly halving ‘Phe intense heat has almost pros-|the first and losing the next two holes trated everybody, but this afternoon it/on the fourth. Legg pulled his second 4 cooler, and ‘Hilton, along with the | into the mounds, failed to get out and other stars, as Evans and Kirby, then lost his putt, taking 6 to 4, That were expected to do better. If they do was the turning point. Travis squared net several fortunes will change hands to-night; several bets of $1,000 are up on matters on the eighth and did not lose the lead from the ninth, ‘Hilton, | On the tenth Travis cut par four a WALDO'’S DRIVING CAUSES A stroke, while Legg put his third into SENSATION. jthe bunker and took 5. ‘The veteran : vas on the eleve: > Hitten started out by slicing nie| WS! 2 UP on the eleventh, but 1d only have the next five the He dropped by being so bunkered that he t hole was halved Grives and won 3 down to Waldo on the first half, He got into the bunker on the first hole, which was halved. Hilton sliced in on the second and 7 that too was hi Hilton bet 5544663 8-3 third and that go Was 4463 $ a H $ i fourth was finely halved | ‘ ‘aldo lost the fifth by 5 to, $2843 4 3 Siw the regulation 4 by topping into tho| unker. On the sixth Hilton took three putts, which caused the Britishers in| wc. Fownes jr. the gallery to gasp. It was Waldo’s 41. 4. Flaeger, Chicago. RoC. First round reseults: Warren Wood, Watson. hole, 6 to 6 Going out of bounds cost | Wesetbrook, Long Island, 2 down to Hilton the seventh in 6 to par 4 The Norman Hunter, Edinburg, 8 - CG English Jove nodded again on the, jiiiton's chum, W. P. Smita, eighth by missing an ebay putt for al pains up on Addleon Stillwell q in Use For Over 30 Years on a perfect four, Waldo then! Heinrich Schmidt, Worcester, ™ Li mv, 77 ai STAEET, NEW YORK Ci caused a sensation by laying his drive! up on Knowlton L. Amos, Chicago dead to the pin on the short ninth (190 ds), and took a 2 againat par three. Chicago, led C, B. Devol, Chicago, 4 up. | ri sburgn, 2 up on | ade to the F partment on Wed- | nesday of next week of the Thomas 1. Crimmins medal for bravery, to be awarded each y for. conspicuous | bravery in the mance of duty. With thp, medal will pass a trust fuAd of $2,000, which {s to be a permanent en- dowment for the supplying of one or more medals for gallantry on the part | the fitth. Kerr won the sixth, and the | next three were halved, leaving Kerr one hole up at the turn. He had gone out in #7 to # for Edwards. Coming home Edwards was 4 down at ti... four- teenth and 2 down on the seventeenth, but lost the last hole. Kerr was home in 38, Edwards in %. Total: Kerr, Edwards, 79. Paul Hunter outclassed W. I. How. land jr, who, but for nearsightedness, | of the firemen. i would have been one of the greatest of| Mrs. y M. Rurke, the daughter of | Yale players a few years back. After|the late Thomas E. Crimmins, Is the) aquaring the match on the second hole Howland dropped back altaost steadily, ending six down, Hunter was 73, a stiff pace to the 81 for his rival. pete andl SUBWAY TRAFFIC TIED UP. Accident to Local Train Causes Half-Hour Block. The breaking of a draw-bar on a down-town local train in the ubway at the Sixty-sixth street station, shortly before 9 o'clock this morning, Ued up traffic for half an hour aml caused general inconvenience. White “block- tickets” ere issued to those on the platforms of the subway stations and the belated passengers hurried to near- by elevated station: were the tickets elved for fare. The extra rus joames the elevated stations, throwing hat time 1s washed away and a all trains off schedule, until traMc in| large area is under water. The canal the subway was resumed. will be out of service for a long time. donor, She has written Fire Comm! sioner Johnson that she is moved to es- tablish the Crimmins medal fund be- cause of the great Interest her father took in the Department and his close | friendship with many of the city’s fire | fighting force. Ten other medals for bravery are already within the power of the Departn ibute, ALL TRAFFIC STOPPED. ROCHESTER, Sept. %—The Erle! Canal went out five hundred feet west of Bushnell's Basin early to-day, at the! same spot where the break occurred a year ago, All the new work and re- Inforced concrete put in by the State Children Cry for Fietcher’s CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signas ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his Pornoant supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and 4 Just-as-good’’ are but experiments, and endanger the health of Children—Experience against Experiment. | What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare ‘oric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Iplu Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It de- stroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the reliei of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troue bles and Diarrheea, It regulates the Stomach and wels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. «| The Kind You Have Always Bought, > Bears the Signature of Tha ne left Hilton three down turning for ome. Card, Wot half: Hilton— Out ree 6-466 6 5 B B39) Waldo Out ne @ oo a Bae 88 Mason Phelps, Midlothian Club, a | former Western and Yale led L. J. Maxwell, Exmore, first round by 7 up. Phelps had fast card of 39—38—77, While Max- | well took 43—41—84 | Harold Weber, pledo, on morning round was 2 up on Eben Byers, Pitts burgh, ex-national champion, Weber has been a national campaigner a dox- en years and once reached the sem|- |fnais. They were square at the fif-| Ryers made a desperate at hole @ thirty-foot putt for a tempt te food in the stomach which causes heart- burn, sick headache, or dizziness, and your food will not ferment and cause a pad odor to your breath, ‘The bad taste in your mouth will disappear and you will be so much improved that your con- | dition will surprise you. | Cooper's New Discovery #8 from your stomach, cleanse tines, and besides, will prepare the for assimilation into the blood, the sar asa sound, healthy stomach should do. You will notice a big improvement in your condition as soon as you begin ta! ing this medicine, Don't putit off. Re- member, if you do not feel better aft three doses, go hack and get your money After using a full bottle of Cooper's New Discovery you will hardly know your: | For sale at all druggists, Se me tee tenes Every Particle Pure. No flies—no dust CRIMMINS FIRE MEDAL. | MURPHY BREAKS RULE, | Goes to Iroquois Club Affair at Charles F. Murphy has consented to] you that half break a rule he made when he was first appointed leader of Tammany Hall, This rule was that he would refuse to any Tammany district outings 6 it he attended one he would have to at- tend all. rule in order to attend the festival of Iroquois Club of the Twenty-fifth Assembly Casino | Joseph Prendergast, leader of the ‘Twen- ty-fifth, is respons'ble for Mr. Murphy's change of attitude, to persuade Manhattan Casino affalr. ernor's agents permit Mr. will try to show his guests the Demo- cratic nominee for the Presidency, TRIMMINGS. CORSETS. Sold in Germ-proof Packages Only Something new in Sugars (79 Fine enough for use with berries and cereals (3) equally satistactory for cooking [J Takes the place of powdered and granulated sugars, Weighed, filled and hermetically sealed by machinery [ZjNo hand touches this sugar from refinery to pantry. No flies—No black specks Sold in 21b,, 4" Ib. and 5 1b Seated Packa, Guaranteed Weight THE AMERICAN SUGAR REFINING CO, Addresu~New York City “Wel T real corn cu! CONSTIPATION REMOVED BY PARTOLA Ask any physician about the dai gers of constipation, and he will tell the ills that flesh is heir to come from Constipation. Partola, the peppermint candy laxa- tive blood purifier, is the best means by which the poisons that accumulate in the body of constipated people can be removed. Partola gently cleans out the most desperately poison-loaded system, in @ natural manner. Partola is friendly to the human body, and for that reason is rapidly taking the place of the old-fashioned Prendergast has also been trying! “slung-shot” carthartics, and that’s why Gov, Wilson to attend the|most good are selling it If the G This delicious tasting remedy comes Prendergast |in boxes at 25c., 50c. and #1. Free sample and 100 page, book sent om re- quest by Partol. Co., f60 2ad Ave. YN. a =o James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street WILL ATTEND FESTIVAL. Manhattan Casino—Gov. Wilson Invited. end He has agreed to break the District at to-night. the Manhattan Deputy City Clerk On Wednesday, September the 4th. In Both Stores. Exceptional Values. Rhinestone Edging. UCR LOS EUTES 35c and 48c a yd. value 65c and 75c Chiffon Rose Trimming. .48c a yd. i] value 75c Metal Bands and Edgings. cies 25c, 35c, 50c, 75c a yd, value 35c to 1.25 In Both Stores, | Bien-Jolie Grecian-Treco. The fashionable new mesh Corset,— soft, light and pliable, which gives the freedom of being uncorseted—yet hoids the figure in firm contour. 5.00, 7.50 and 10.00 23rd Street 34th Street Corn Cure Pierce’s Corn Plasters are not merely claimed to cure that E palatal corn of yours. They are guaranteed to remove it quick and stop the pain almost instantly. [f they don't, the druggist gives you back your money without quibble or question, Pierce’s Corn Plasters Give immediate relief and remove corne of long-standing in 5 days, In ordinary cases a cure is usually effected in 48 hours. The whole corn comes out--it's cured to stay cured, Apply the Plaster in a jiffy--just as you woulda piece of court plaster. Unlike thick felt plasters, there is no irritat- ing or rubbing in the shoe. For more than 11 years Pierce's Corn Plasters have cured thousands of corns. They will cure yours or they cost you nothing. But if they aren't the gea- uine Pierce's, they aren guaranteed, 10c and 28c a box At all Druddists (or z me ) THE A. F., PIERCE CO., Springfield, Mass, A thin plaster No ero rubbing in HE Sunday World’s Want Directory makes more “Offers of Positions” than any other two mediums in the universe,