The evening world. Newspaper, October 4, 1912, Page 22

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‘a Dit handy with my fists and I thought | Bi Le Katvnnn aay Rage ai maf Be soe Nye | punch ike a champtot “Sam. « what I named the ape— ot to be too blamed good a boxer, and las he krew bigger it was about all T The climax came one fine when we were sparring alon landed one in the pit of th th an Ape as His Man Fri- y, Tramp?’s Second Mate Lives Like a King. that sent me to dreamland for ——_ —eE-AVEWING—WoELT GREEK BISHOP HIES HIM TO AMERICA TO AVOID A WAR The Rev. Elias Mojaes Arrives From Beirut in Search of Peace. OP OF GREE: CHURCH WHO HAS NO LOVE FOR WAR. While hundreds of Greeks are rush- hour, When I came to he was a- t CHES SAM TO BOX.| aitting on the ground beside me blub- —1—— bering as though his apish heart wa: breaking. After that I tied Sa hands up tn the sleeves I had ripp to Be IRescued Because ing Tcihacco Doesn’t Grow on His Island. out of my pocket so he couldn't hit so hard, but even then he could put over @ wallop that made me feel silly | when he landed right, “Sam had great possibilities In him | as a boxer. I made up my mind that) if I ever got away from that island, —-_—_—_— | it was Sam who got the firewood an goapel trea, every word of Ml i opt things going. This statclment t@ made uP) HARD TO TELL WHICH WAS authority then the solemn word) SAM, WHICH PI Mate iteter Hayes of th®) «twas on that island about four steamer Tuschn, just In from the months. My clothes had fallen to African trac. Furthermore, tt pieces and I was going around like be said that Wecond Mate Hayes I had made up my mind that 1 wn as Pious Peter to such f the rest of my days, Not t I'd enter Sam in the prize ri all comers, Talk about your cham- | pions! Sam could have eked @ dozen | easil | “Sam was a great mate. He fetched | me my drinking water in a gourd,! caught birds and picke it, at just sat back like a king. would light a big fire on the @o that it would attract some shi for ing to New York from all parts of tho United States, eager to return to their native country in anticipation of war, ast ono of their countrymen has 4 the ocean to avold the war.| He is the Rev. Ellas Mojaes, Bishop of the Greek Orthodox Church of Bel- rut, who arrived yesterday on the steamship Madonna, “As soon as the situation became #0 in my poor country,” sald > Mojaes, who attracted consider attention by appearing in his "I found I could be of Bish he has fri missionary 8 goes to Utica, Five-Day where} He plans to do some! ork, and hopes before he} fulfils the engagements already mad») Pinned and oo by o high hat of came to America in the steera) he Mi “I wanted to be wit! aboard the ship," he said to an Eve ning World reporter to-day. “Al my life my work has been among the very Doorest classes, and it is with them that I feel at home.” Posies) er ASKS NO FUNERAL IN WILL. Pinney Also Requ Or . Lucien V. Pinney, a retired newspaper owner of Winsted, Conn., died yesterday morning following an operation for ted and Mre. ai tor of the Winsted Press from 1873 to 1888, the paper being an ardent greenback ad’ Because of ite | Christan ‘sentient Mr, Pinuey. was sixty ‘years od and sald to be wealthy, patrendrwerh ~rohindenl TWO FALL FIVE STORIES. Patients, nurses and physicians in the! Willard Parker Hospital saw two men fall five stories to the ground to-day ffold platform on which they work on the new pavilion for | Fitteenth and way. John Eagan of No, 810 Pacific street, Brooklyn, and Ricco Gatti of No. 29 Bleecker atreet. Thoy were taken to Dellovue IMospital in @ critical conditio J. Henry Dick, and William Kingsland Macey of New York were married at noon terday in the home of the parents at Istip, L. 1. The was performed by tho Rev. ( rector of the Lutheran Chur ‘Trinity, New York, assist W. H. Garth, rector of St. Mark's lip. Lord & Taylor Founded 1826 cee EER Te Macy’s Bureau of Home Furnishing Salesmen and of Interior Decoration on the Fourth Floor, 35th Street side, appeals to every buyer of Rugs, Furniture, Draperies and Bric-a-Brac. The Bureau was instituted to give the customer expert guidance in the laying out of one room or an entire home, and to aid in the se- lection and assemblance of the correct thing to express the temperamental preferences of the owner and yet to accord with the well-defined principles of interior decoration. F you are spending $100.00 or $1,000.00, is it not worth while to have the thing right? Is it not worth while to have plans and blue prints so that you may know in advance that the resu!t will be the artistic and practical conclusion of yoru idsas? no charge for Special Values in Women's Boots and we 1 fellows as dare ‘presume on friend-! minded the life «0 much, for I had} SWANSEA, Wale: 4. — The ere thi ble I Balkans | ‘The yarn Sede with the mate's|Sam with me, but I had run out of | Minerg Federation of ‘the United Kin Te hare BISWE eran Eeablet ie and h co after I'd been there |dom adopted y & resolution in f M as Robison Crusoe, | Shoat & week, and T-couldn't vor of & five. As is customary among the priests of The Bven|ng World reporter) without it. 1 chewed leav. will be submit @ heavy everything else as a substitu’ in all the mines, wy) HERE sistance given by our Bure Furnishing Salesmen. O not bewilder yourself with catalogues ne fine afterncon I was asleep the cave while Sam was out getting the supper grub. Suddenly Bam came rushing fn all excited and yammering away in ape talk. Hi dragged outel to sea. T! ton I saw smoke. the while, leaves on @ high spot ne ‘and Jumped up and down and howled Uke an idiot. fter a bit they sighted me and steamer hove to and sent off x Vhen the first mate and th boys in the boat saw me and Sam on the shore they were for turning back to the ship. You seo, it was hard to tell which was man and which wa: '@ bit and it suddehly began to grow I took one louk back of me and one of those fife tropical storms I was scooting aking over the water & torpedo boat. the storm hit me in the beck peck and I fust made up my ‘he and then I piled into the boat and wor | dei ‘Sam would do. He didn't a thea Load clog ly rapid heaitate a moment, but piled in too, and scan. ot half praying and bait} “They had given mo up for lost and holdisig on with both /!t was just by chance that they came; * tit ‘would never end, | Across my island and ake. : marr Sam certainly was th : jel that the boat wae NOt) 11, was interested In ‘hey so he could almost do a bat THEN, BANG, HE BUMPS INTO| “But, poor Sam, he took sick one night and we gave him croton ofl and every- thing else in the medicine chest, but It 4i4 no good. He just curled up and died, I felt an if T had lost the best friend on earth. I certainly lost tho {best ttle two handed fighter that over doubled up his fr overboard in ape. “I {ntroduced all the boys to Sam!,; S\RUP OF FAGS” FOR INDIGESTION, BILIOUSHESS AND CONSTIPATION. Better than castor oil, calomel or cathartics to cleanse your stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels. Harm- less Laxative for men, women and children. I means and waste matter jern people are different. We er ise too little, eat little fruit, and our foot ‘We simply can't have our ten yards of leah r choked with s that the food and waste retained in the stomach and thirty feet of bowels ferments— The decay creates poisons, posed entirely of luscious aromatics. Don't think you are ging yourself, Syrup of can be es and acit nd those poisons are sucked into the blood through the very ducts intended to suck in the nutriment. Then we have sick head me dull, bilious, tongue coated, vous, meals don’t digest, and we feel miser- able all over. So we must make our choice. We must live like primitive constantly used without harm. Ask your druggist for “Syrup of Figs ‘ir of Senna,” and ses th i i prepared by The California Syrup Company. ine—the old reli . tempt, the so-called Fig Syru tions cometimes offered to ive you. 2 44, Gnally, on my hands and on a sandy shore, and I kept on on aj) fours until I was well in- Then I curled up and went to Whiskers, but 1 was tired. ‘was almost noon—sun time—when A.@ame to my senses and saw that 1 Shipwrecked good and proper on.an I started out to have a look @nd to arrange for @ place to for 1 made up my mind that it] § be @ fow days anyhow before I'd 1 found Well, about two up my residence I @ funny noise in a piece o my cave. It sounded for Mfke a youngster bawling. I im to investigate and there on ground holding its leg and crying One Dollar + furnish @ reem jer the geods promptly VEEKLY PAYMENTS. arms he put up a bit of « fight, T gave him a clout or two on the and he surrendered. I took him }phe cave and looked at his leg. It ®roken. I made a it and tied broken leg with strips of cloth shirt and the 1 for the attention that jted to kiss me. COULD CLIMB TREES AFTEN ~ ed to RA His leg improved in he would follow along after me ya I went food hunting. And that | ‘Was some help, I can tell you, for) he would climb the trees and bring | the grub in good shape. | fell, sir, that was certainly a brignt I taught him how to throw stones he got to be such an expert that fhe could hit birds as they sat on the trees. He became the official food pro- vider after that. I have always been Conta Avoided by Tyree's Powder | For the treatment of all catarrhal and | {infected conditions of the mucous mem- there is nothing so effective as a Antineptic Powder. Not only fa it positive in its action, but it is ab- safe in the hands of any one no poisons, thus making it the | " sterilizing agent. ‘ a powerful germicide and anti- 'yree’s Powder is for general use cially efficacious for prickly heat, oak, hives, insect bites, sunburn, ive perspiration, tender feet, itch- Unsurpassed en used as a A twenty-five cent box will| two gallons standard antiseptic Strongly recommended by ns. Sold by druggists every- Send for booklet and sample. J. Chemist, Washington, D. C, A th Block 8thAv.363. tore, 49 and 51 Market Street ( OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 10 O’CLOCK a AY ONE DOLLAR, Select anything you need nletely and we will to your home, and OU CAN PAY THE BALANCE IN SMAL/ ACCOUNTS OPENED F ROM $5.00 to $1,000 ON SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS SMALL ACCOUNTS ESPECIALLY INVITED NT” America’s Greatest Furniture House $3 Imitation Mahogany Rocker, braced. ¥ 7 N to Oftes Batra Charges of Any Kin ADVERTISED ARTICLE MAY IN- ED IN YOUR OUTFIT AT THE ADVBR. ‘D PRICE (OUT ANY EXTRA COST. for a Complete ow: Room Outfit! ‘eee Red 3 L A e Double Stamps Single S Mane” OG ino WE GIVE FREE INSURANCE In caseof thedeath of the wage earner of your fam reeled Lili in full eb your neateet Our Stove Department Is the Largest in the City Hate glare ata aE Te Se ND HE in the Per RS eee Rakes 310 Daisy Oak Heater, $6.95 Extra large | Nickel, trimmed wit! and fine R Ranges at $15.95, $19.95, $4.95, ‘ities and $50. Oil and Gas} 1 fteat qual fronds et Evening Walking and Dress Boots Now marked $5.00 and $6.00... Evening and House Slippers Now marked $5.00 and $6.00... A selettion from several lines of trimmings will be put on these slippers free of charge. Special_for Saturday Only A Good Assortment of Women’s Walking 8 Dress Boots at $3.25 Growing Girls ’ Boots. according to size Special Values for Saturday Infants’ & Fall Wearing Apparel Corduroy Velvet Coats Braid trimmed, suede or moire silk Belts, lined and interlined... Cloth Coats. A variety of materials in plain colors or mixtures, all lined, belted or box models. . Tailored Hats of Silk Plush with cockade feather Slippers * | $3.95 # | $3.95 $1.50 to $2.75 Children’s $8.50 $3.95 Three Piece Sweater Sets Knitted. Gray, red, tan and white...... Girls’ Coats & Dresses (4 to 14 years) Coats Of plain colored cheviots or mixtures, tailored box or belted models, all lined... Coats Of cheviots and mixtures in lined with flannel... Two Piece Norfolk Dresses With contrasting collars and belt Special Lot of Children’s Dresses } Serges and fancy plaids in all colors. Broadway & 20th St.; 5th Ave.; 19th St. HE Sunday World’s Want Directory makes more ‘‘Offers than any mediums in | $9.50 all won $4. 95 $5.00 Values to $7.50 of Positions’’ other two the universe. |fous and bunches of samples. It is so much waste of time, and is seldom, if ever, satisfactory. Our stock affords a splendid choice of every article needed for the complete furnishing of the home, carefully chosen in the manufacturing centres of this country and Europe. Our Bureau of Home Furnishing Salesmen is there to help you select from this vast stock those articles best suited to your needs and to your tastes. BGevsian Rugs are sold by the weavers in Persia. ens of weaving of the hgh»st grade the heart of the Province of Azerbaijan, The -ugs are typically Persian in every respect; in the designs which sow allegorical figures of birds, flowers, trees, leaves and branches, 2s well as the bolder medallion and pendant; in the nature of the weave, which is close, very hard and absolutely un- doctored: and in the richness of the colorings. Several of the more expensive rugs differ in no way from museum p'e:cs except that they are not as old as are similar rugs in nv sums. vere at prices at which they Extraordinary. | from the city of Tabriz, 8 ft. 3 in.x5 ft.4 in 8 ft. 6 in.x5 ft. 4 in. 10 ft. 8 in.x7 ft. 7 in 10 ft. 10 in.xé6 ft. 7 in. 11 ft. 1 in.x8 ft. 2 in. 11 ft. 5 in.x9 ft. 3 in 11 ft. 6 in.x9 ft. . 12 ft.x9 ft... 0... 12 ft. 1 in.x8 ft.9 in 12 ft. 1 in.x8 ft. 10 12 ft. 2 in.x9 ft. 12 ft. 2 in.x9 ft. 12 ft. 3 in.x8 ft. 12 ft. 5in.x9 ft. . 12 ft. 5 in.x9 ft. 12 ft. 6 in.x9 ft. 13 ft.x8 ft. 7 in. 13 ft. 2 in.x8 ft. 13 ft. 5 in.x10 ft. 7 i 13 ft. 6 in.x9 ft. 13 ft. 6 in.x9 ft. 13 ft. 8 in.x9 ft. 10 i 14 ft. 2 in.x8 ft. 11 in 14 ft. 10 in.x10 ft. 8 in. ; Shirvan Rugs Ash'p1ent ji st received from cur hezdquarters in Constanti+ nopte. I the colors, which include rcse, brown, blue, tan and mahog ny, are soft and lustrous. Macy's prices are 14 to 4% less then ct any of the few other stores that carry rugs of this character. ny $ One size —Approximately 3 {t. 6 in.x 5{t. 6 in, ) $14.94 $17.74 Axminster Rug Special An excellent grade in a choice of Oriental and floral patterns: One size only. aken from our rug stock and marked tor quick selling, 9x 12leet. Macy's regular price $22.74, Macy's x12feet. Macy'sre jee $22.74, ae "$17.48 Jute Velour Portieres from France Heavy reve sible curtains, in deep rich shades of red, brown, olive, ros? and myrtle green. Imported by us. Plain colors only. Ed:es overlocked. Every one complete and ready for use. rove eats bers cated to arte f1ESS hore, id have been Hed te charge $16.50 rea” Macy Spach Pee 10.74 Brass Bedsteads That Stay New Solid first-quatity Bedsteads, made of heavy 2-inch continu: posts. Finished in the new lasting lacquer, in a chvice of Bright or Satin effect. 4 sizes, viz: }fitlom Macy's Usual Lowest-in-the-City Price, $20.24 Macy's Special Price Leather Lounging Arm Chairs Built first and principally for comfort. The deep seat, broad arms and Hoping back are covered with Tobacco Brown Spanish leather. at has steel automobile cushion-springs. Mec/s Ural Lomein chy Pie, B25 * GY 24 Macy’ I Price » Macy’s Upholstery Workrooms are now prepared to take orders for an and every sort of upholstery woris, "1, Putting up Lace Curtains Reupholstering Furniture Making Slip Covers and Shades Making Draperies and Hangings 260.00 * 330.00 . 370.00 +. 460.00 * 430.00 “485.00 4 feet long 4 feet 6 in. long

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