The evening world. Newspaper, October 18, 1912, Page 23

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OOTOBER 18, w —_ By VIC AMERICANEAGLE FLIES } aril er INTO SHIP. BRITISHERS Quick AxEL " How's Lone Oana ee = A ‘ ) ’ TAM We ” “lt a bird of good f Se suenortes| (ie'Ree , | NAME HIM “JOHN BULL’ Pate on a there was the eagle, the | SOAKED ME. TSO |, stalking around the 1S STANDING DOWN Ot CORNER ft THE EV&iNING wonky FRIDAY, AXEL'S LIE WAS RATHER JUSTIFIED 1912, ana a Arad, ¥ eeecented one. be seed ‘bird fluttered weakly againat the toretsest and descended slowly to the deck, Capt, Crink rushed toward tt. “My eyes!” he ejaculated, “Hit's al 2, fi ry \LAREL ENTRIES. to RACH TRACK, LAUREL, Md, Oot BR | “The entries for to-morrow's: @e ‘| as follows RST RACE ‘OE Won't Go Aw’y,” Captain Says, So He’ll Be Chicago City’s Mascot. LATONIA ENTRIES. said Capt. Crink,} sae ory f 8 6 entries gazing on tho] UVATONIA, Ky. os 18, —Th hire 4. “John Bull, | fr tomorrow's opening are we call "im, Hawt LAUREL RE RESULTS. It was a stormy night at se FIRST RACE — Maiden two-yonrs night, and the gallant ship Chicago City, Bristol, England, for New York, |: selling: six furlongs.—Sand Hog, Non 101 (Ferguson), § to 1, 3 to Land § to Capt. Crink, was laboring in the trouth| 5, rat, Mary Ann K.. 107. (Rutwell), off Nova Scotia. On the wings of the wale the lookout in the crow's nest made out g etrange form approaching, | to 1, “Aeroplane, hol” he cried, and (he strange call brought even the sleepy | Frank watch below to the deck. But it was| Pribe ae i fet ees J - ies! om ce 3081 Chai op 1 and 4) wn, ‘ iG 225. “Lan tne | ete 1 nary atl Mohawk Hoy, t, Skibbereen, : a Menetie it a! Mockier, “100; ee ore git selling; two-year- | 10s i ent ~halt furkongs—Star @, 9 to 6, 9 to 10 and! Woe Mee vii tots Main, 106 (Mar. | 10 not an agroplane. As the object came closer it askumed the shape of a bird] ° strange (to the stundy British seamen of the Chicago City. “It's a cross between a froufrow bird "da M. inte A RACK-—Selling: three-year.o ond | yg ane ant ones Ihiles ted ge @ GUY IN A STRIPED nd 3 Latent, ae seen ei 30 wi, Ww i and ibs." Ts tad ioe, My Kalow, tote fi 3 SWEATER i-| @BuT AY COULDNT | FIND Him “Clothing at Less Than Wholesale Prices” DN pe Se ae a —MOE LEVY. "ROWORED THAT FOL ML SELL HS STOCK x, IN PLADELPHA CLUB ‘There !s a well-defined rumor that , Horace Fogel, president of the Philadel. phia National League club, will step down and out within the next day two and sell his stock to local capitalists, It te said that the American League has verely disciplined Fogel, and it is be- leved that the reason for the club being | put on the market is the result of pres- sure being brought to bear upon the | Slowtown magnate. The other saven league magnates are very bitter ageinst Fogel for making charges recently that the race was alt fixed for the Giants to win and that the umpires threw many games the Glants’ way. Fogel was on with a satchel and he eald that when the proper time arrived he would “wash a lot of dirty linen.” Secretary Heydler was delegated to draw up @ copy of the charges against oF answer them. The Board of Directors will meet in this ety Nov. 2%, when a. decision will be rendered. However, tt declared that it will sever allrelations |is likely that Fogel will have disposed with the National League unless It se-|of his club by that time. Fogel and he will be given ae days to | Mrs. {FOREIGN WAR IDEAS NO AID. Capt. Moseley, Back from Manocu- vres, Says Conditions Vary. Capt. George Van Horn Maseley, Capt. ay B, Malone and Capt. J. M. Palmer, S. A., of the General Staff, who have been observing the manoeuvres of the French and German armies, returned on the St. Paul yesterday. Conditions were so different abroad, Capt. Mosc- ley said, that in hig opinion there were few new ideas in use by foreign armies that could be adopted here with profit. Others on board the St. Paul were Mrs. Brayton Ives, Miss Winifred Ives, ‘8. De Lancey Nicoll and daughter, si A scold MISS RUTTER WILL RECOVER. Physicians at Bellevue sald to-day i | taken there Wednesday after drinking poison at the foot of West Twenty- third street, will recover. Miss Rutter, or Mrs, Hiting as her father, a car- penter at No. 47 Leonard street, Jersey City Heights, says she ts, though sepa- rated from her husband, was first be- Meved to have drunk fodine when she saw Louts Le Forge, superintendent of the Anchor Line pier at the foot of West Twenty-fourth street, in company with another woman. Later the physicians learned that she had taken lysol, a disinfectant of no reat corrosive power. Information as to the relations between Miss Rutter and Mr. Le Furge were refused yester- day at the Anchor Line pier and at his home, No. 16 Palisade avefue, West Here is an opportunity to buy your clothes and save both the wholesaler’s and the retailer’s profits—not merely a generous share, but the whole hog, so to speak. Last week I announced the sale of a surplus lot of the finest garments ever made up for my wholesale trade. Several hundred suits remained on hand after I had completed shipping the epening orders and I offered to dispose of them at less than wholesale prices, just to make new customers for my store. The offer still holds, et! are plenty of suits still left. that Anna Rutter, the young woman Forced to Open! Since we made our first phenomenal offer—ahout one x ear ago—to make to measure any $40 to $60 pure wool suiting or Overcoating for $14. 75 in our merchant tailoring store at 1847 Broadve ay, Manhattan, we were so'besieged with orders and requests to open new stores in closer proximity to our customers—stores where particular dressers in the Bronx and Brooklyn, on the east side, west side and downtown cqpld call at any idie hour through the day—we have been practically forced to open FIVE NEW STORES in response to this great public demand. ie : OUR 6 BIG TAILORING STORES: 2331 Eighth Avenue, One Door Above 125th Street 1514 Third Avenue, Near 85th Street 408 East 149th Street, Near Third Avenue 155 William Street, Corner Ann Street 251 Eighth Avenue, Near 23d Street Hoboken. $30 Suit for $15 Not one of these suits ever sold for less than Shae wholesale—many sold as high as $19.50 and regularly retailed at $30. e entire range covers the season’s most popular models, most distinguished patterns, most dependable fabrics. There is not every size of each style, but any size in all styles—a veritable snap for the man who wants individual styles. Come to Walker Street. It's just a little way off the beaten path, but thousands of satisfied customers find it worth while to buy here. I guarantee to save one-third of your clothes money at all times. ‘This is a chance to pocket a clean saving of one-half. Ask for this special W holesale Suit at $15. Evenings Until 9 Moe ( evy ~ Saturdays Until 10 (MY ONLY 119-125 Walker Street, N. Yu. (MY ONLY STORE) STORE) 3 Blocks East of Broadway and One Block East from Canal St. Subway Station FI ISHER BROS. COLUMBUS AVE. BET. 103 & 104 STS. | 15/20 NO, MONEY DOWN Weekly Delivers This Davenport | GRAND RARE rear a" FURNITURE MICHIGAN PE TeRE co. | CREDIT TERMS a, We Furnish A; LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS Jsceacrar S eg vere g59 $75 P5100 $10°er"S150 oft a one $5 Pere 75 [559 to 3500/9153 "s0'$200 BETINB £1 sts. OPEW EVERY EVENING UNTIL tad 1347 Broadway, Bet. 35th and 36th Streets | THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS: 500 IMPORTED $40 BLUE MIXTURES— IMPORTED $40 to $60 Values, 363 IMPORTED $50 ENGLISH "THIBETS— 5 IMPORTED $50 GENUINE CASSIMERES— OR 225 IMPORTED $60 GERMAN FANCY WEAVES— OVERCOAT §@B™ All Goods Marked in Plain Figures. “@Big THE SOONER YOU CALL The Greater Variety of Patterns ALL STORES OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9—SATURDAY, 10 P. M. 215 IMPORTED $40 SCOTCH i TWEEDS— S U I T 165 IMPORTED $55 PARISIAN NOVELTIES- NOVELTIES— Without exe option ¢ this i is the greatest line of cw Fork we have ever eflered Those matesials are of the purest o You Will Have From Which To Choose! John W. Mitchie a

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