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HAL OF BOMBS HURLED BY ARMAN “ON TURAS FORT Terror in Janina as Greek Avi- ator Spreads Death and De- Struction From Aeroplane, ARIS, Dec. 19.—A veritable hail of nbs was thrown into the Turkish fortress of Janina by the Greek military airman and an accompanying comrade who yesterday flew over that city In an aero According to official advices rete!’ here. the airman whose name was Moutous- sig took a large supply of bombs with/| in his biplane and he and the Greek r with him hurled these explosive | missiles down onto the principal build- {nge to which they caused serious dam- ‘The population was terrorized. Q@ONSTANTINOPLE, Deo. 1%—The ‘Turkish and Greek forces began another 1a$@ battle to-day in Epirus, according | tolespatohes received here from Bizan!, which is in the midst of the operations. Te was aki that the Greeks assumed the offensive when they turned @ bat- tety on the Turkish fortress. Many Killed and wounded were reported on both sides, and the issue was in doubt. An incident of the fighting was the execution wrought among Turkish gun- ners by @ Greek aviator. In a mono- plane he soared about the Turkish ines several minutes, dropping bombs thdt did considerable dam: Despite the heavy Turkish fire dir. at the Mméchine, the monoplane was undamaged and the daring aviator eacaped. Despatches from Athens sald that the ‘Terkish fleet bas been completely bo! up in the Dardanelles, though thi Bot admitted here. INDON, Deo. 19.—The Ottoman Gov- ent bes euthorized its delegates to Peace conference to propose at the t eession that Adrianople and all ‘the other besieged Turkish towns sha! de revictualied, and if the ‘broken off, according to wency Gespatch received here from Constan- ‘tnople. ‘The peace plentpotentiaries represent- the Balkan allies and the Turkish 4 o'clock this Palace. They bad not met since Tuesday when an .1- Journment was taken for the purpose of permitting the Ottoman representatives to communicate with their Government at Constantinople on the ai admission of the Greek del conference. 1S SANG TN FOR MIX THEVES CATCHES NECHBOR Pearson Tied Baby’s Rattle to Bottle and Finds Mrs. Drab on the Other Side. Bernard Pearson, with his wi floor at No, a chauffeur, lves and child on the ground West One Hundred and street. Directly above lives Mrs, Erminte Drab. For the past three weeks the Pearson's bottle of milk has been stolen before they could get down to breakfast. Dis- couraged, they took to condensed milk, which didn’t have to be left outside the door. Still, baby needed that quart of real essence of cow, and Pearson got mad about it. This morning he stood behind his door and heard the milkman leave the bottle, He pulled the bottle inside and attached to It a red sticking plaster to which was stuck a string. The other end of the string he fastened to the baby's rattle | Then the family | in the dining rcom. sat down to breakfast, Pretty goon there was a jingle and | acrash, The baby's rattle was pulled off the table and was skimming across the floor in the direction of the door. Pearson sprinted after it, beat it to the door and, swinging the portal open, | ve. Mrs. Drab was going r ira, too. She had a bottle of milk and quite unconsciously was pulling Pearson's string. “Ana!” med Pea: tations, Hiceman follo Di mitted to put on her sealskin coat. She casried the bottle of milk to the West One Hundred and Fifty-second street police station, and Pearson gathered up the slack in the string and carried it and the baby's rattler. t was 11 o'clock before Mrs. Drab are’ before Magistrate Fresch!. en the Magistrate heard how Pear- mor I ap! wi *“ gom had got the lady on a string ho ) laughed right out, Mrs. Drab didn't Join in the laugh, No, she was indignant. Did anybody think | al a bottle of milk? No, milk stolen nearly every f, And this morning, he bottle In front of the . thought it had been left there by mistake, Magistrate Fresch! held Mrs. Drab tn| $500 ball to appear before the Court of Special Sessions on a charge of lar- ceny, to Wit: one quart bottle of milk, value 9 cents, oe ARMY CAPTAIN KILLED BY SKULKING MORO, |r on. - will MANILA, Dec t, John Watson ef the Eighth + stationed at Augur barracks, Jo! killed Tuesday night by a Moro who sneaked within tha lines of a detachment encamped at Belt Lake, nccording to reports recetved from Jolo last night. Lieut, Kinzie D, Wamunds was seriously wounded, Hear- ing the cries of the officers, Capt. Rush 8, Welle rap into the tent and killed the More. wey, ee et ANE NABER A: He couldn't help it, } NT I UES! HOt SEES FINE LACE WRAP, STOLEN ON CONEY CAR, FOR SALE IN ASTORE Mrs. Sanders Finds Proprietor Bought It of Woman Who Was Hard Up. French shop with an Egyptian proprietor, where they sell etmtues and bronzes and rugs, is @ funny place to find a lace wrap which you bought in Queenstown, Ireland, four years ago, took down to Coney Isl- and in the summer of 1910, and had | stolen from you coming home on a | Third avenue car. But Sherlock Holmes |thaen'ta monopoly on all the good sto- ries. % Mrs, Clare Sanders, an_ attractive young woman, lives at No. 821 St. Nich- Her husband te emt in Germany and her sist q Jane Guilleaume of Brooklyn is visit- ing her. The two women were shopping to- day and passed the Oriental Irench An Oriental [ome avenue. Shop at No. &0 West One Hundred and Twenty-fith street. No, they didn't pass it. Tirey stopped in front of ft, attracted by @ handsome, open-work }lace wrap, Mra. Sanders immediately recognized it as the Queenstown fabric which had been sioien from her on the \"Phird avenue car, But she was a wise woman. She and her sister accosted the proprittor of the shop, Joseph Acka- vay, and pronounced it @ beauty. It ale at $0, I paid more than that for it In Queenstow aT “Yee, but i sponded the ime fine tron: of her comment. Well, a policeman accompanied them all to Magisirate Fresc jem Police Court. ni in the Har- Askaway said that him saying that she needed She didn't come beck in two weeks and he tried to find her at the address |ehe had given, that of “Mrs. E, Wat- ers, No, 20 Manhattan avenue,” ed, nobody knew where. rate Freschi postponed further of the case until to-morrow af- when Ackaway will appear to corroborate his story, but ca. Skin trouble of the worst kind . LOUIS, MO. October 22, 1912. “I suffered awfully with skin trouble of the worst kind for about throe months. My face was #0 red and itchy that it was impoesi- ble to stand it any longer. I wasn’t able to even rest at night, ft used to get me ee nervous that I wasn’t able to speak to anybody. ; Resinol cured her “I tried several other remedies in vain, until I noticed the advertise- ment of Resinel Soap and Resinol Ointment. I sent for samples and they helped me wonderfully, Ino- ticed a change right away. used Resinol Soap and Kesinol Ointment for about three months, and then I was cured completely.” (Signed) MissA.Saltzman,1142N JeffersonAve. For over 17 years Resinol has been a doctor's prescription and household rem- edy for skin troubles, pimples, burns, sores, piles, ete. Resinol Ointment, (be, ‘and $1) and Restaol Soap (25)sold by all druggists, Forsample of each, write to Dept. 14-4, Resinol Chem. Co, Balti. more, Md. Try Resinol for chapped bands. To-Day and To-Morrow $5.00 Solid Gold Bracelets toed article article Lady's be wold that the mon of it) it they cw eat either wholerale ot ‘No mail of messen this te ™ n be ndvertising you will find nlete. REAL “CUT PRICES” we do In many inate: Bracel lamond Hracel Di ie CHARLES 180 Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Broadway, New York orm EVENINGS UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK. “| Cor. 22d St. & B’way |FIRST COST 35 VALUE the Rev. John Henry Mason, for- mer pastor of the Independent Union ’ American Methodist »pal Church, at No, 220 Kast Firhty-fifth street But Brother Mason had to go to court to prove ft. He got a judgment of $220 In Justice Smuck's part of the City Court to-day. Brother Mason ja a negro preacher WINS MANY SINNERS AND SUES FOR HIS PAY Congregation Raised His Sal- ary, but He Never Saw the Money, He Testifies in Suit. The Bible ie right—the laborer ts from worthy of his hire—take it Beodyear Raincoat(co MANUFACTURERS FOUR GREAT STORES ip) 835 Bway, S. W. Cor. 13th St. 182 Broadway, Cor. John St. N. W. Cor. Church & Liberty St. Note Name & Addrosees Carefully OPEN EVENINGS SPLENDID GIFTS FOR CHRISTMAS Boys’ Coats Girls’ Capes Direct from Maker at volumes of the ‘J Capes ORIGINAL 54 VALUE, Jeeful and etylish ala, i 4 $3 VALU In Striped Tan & Grav, $1.25 & Girls’ Raincoats With Hoods tarts The most practical, stylish coat made, Superior im every detail, guaranteed waterproof. A rare present and a good one, Will render the ultimate ‘n wear. Mathew Brady, of his life and the sacri third of the 3,800 awe: Baca rtist shown in gotten in obscure corners of the were found in old family album came from the library of Charles I A combination rain and style cet, fin- tshed with exacting care, A gift sen ble and fine — guar- anteed rain proof. Expert tailoring and New York City. of these astounding photographs home, the very same scenes of flying artillery, of bursting shell: Ame ten beautiful volumes 40,000 Am ORIGINAL 55 e_hastened to own STORY. Among them are s: Owen Wister, Archbishop Irela Mail, telephone or fed i. onal oi hy tt Wott c Keep Off Rain and Snow 65 Men’s and Women’s $10 tad douse 2.75 | sixow, newost modils in fan and olive shados U nccompanied by Check or Money Order Lea iin La Made of ake: $1 Hoods XMAS SPECIAL. MAIL ORDERS i De | F The Daring Photographers photographer, at the risk of his fortune, took fully one- spiring, inverest grinning photo- e 10 tall vo IC HISTORY OF THE CIVIL WAR. Associated with him was a little oand of pioneer photog- raphers who followed the Boys in Blue and the Gray right into the thick of battle, where shot and shell mowed them down like grain before the sickle, Lost for 50 Years For balf a century these priceless treasures lay for- been scattered at the close of the Civil War. were recovered from distant lands across the sea; some In them you will see with your own eyes, in your own men saw and recorded through the eye of the camera, 40,000 Own It Already When once’ it was made known that this great an heritage had been discovered and oound in the egie, Mrs. E. H. Harriman, General Leonard Wood, Champ Clark, Wm. Sulzer, Governor-elect of New York; Cyrus Hall MeCormick, Gen. Marcus J. Wright. HE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1! and, according to his own testimony, | ce So the parson's A good one. For months prior to April, | fi Trawing witay ahecy This te [$6 a week, 1911, he had ministered to his flock at} fold, but what he wanted was more | was to $10 @ week. He was loved by the| mon A year ago last April the true-| the c ebony-hued children and admired by b eee the sedate deacons, day evening. mas you save $15 on the PHOTOGRAPHIC $15 will be added to the cost of each set of the Photographic History when the present Wanamaker sale closes. The publishers have to pay royalties on future editions and the $15 covers these royalties. umes of the vs in world where they had Some ns; a portion of them dickens, and more than a thousand were found stored away in an old altic in The story of the taking, losing and finding again i If. is @ romance in bloody battlefields, of s, tbat Brady aad his nericans in PHOTOGRAPHIC uch people as Andrew nd, August Belmont, telegraph, The church booming until as many as aixty-si would show up for worship on a Sun Brother Mason was re- Mason had made a good show-] ¢) ing, he might be entitled to a fatter | « pay envelope pastor the FOR this CHRISTMAS A gift that will live—that will be more valuable next year than this —that will be a joy and an inspiration to yourself and family now—that will be cherished by your children and your children’s children. Before Christ- 3,800 photographs, the million words, the ten tall OF STOR CIVIL WAR A $15 SAVING TODAY 40,000 Americans Own It Already ot +. <> * EEDITT aed ay Mathew Brady to take this marvelous collec- tion of photographs. ‘This was the expense of chemicals and photographing outfit. Adding those negatives taken by the other photographers during the war, we can safely estimate that the bare cost of taking the 8,800 photographs in this set of books was ff about &350,000. Government paid for the $27,80 Brady collection alone, $2,800 of this was spent by the War Depart- $100,000 | | | i | | —what the United States Congress, $150,000 $350,000 jamin F. Butler. quarters of a mi can never be paid in human coin, have cost three-quarters of a million dollars. it cost Mathew Brady to take only one picture. Come to the store and see Do one of these things today, for it means $15 saved to you. ch ih, {fcuaf, sre Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co, Broadway to Fourth Ave.—Eighth to Tenth St.—New York ee he Prosperity church had suffered. ment to save the collection from being sold at auction. Later $25,000 was voted to Brady by ——the value placed on the Brady photographs alone (only one-third those in the Photographic History), by President Garfield and General Ben- was spent by the REVIEW OF REVIEWS COMPANY to put this valuable record in the hands of the American people, thus making illion dollars spent before a set was ready fo: The genius, the devotion, the courage, the skill that lie behind the Photographic History Simply counting in those details that can be computed in terms of money—we find that if only one set of these books had been made it would Inan earlier period only an emperor could have owned them. Now, through the wonders of modern book-making and modern business methods, every American can own the whole set for what This set of books is so important tothe American nationthat you must own it some day. Get it now, and you will have a beautiful Christmas gift for the whole family. Do One of These Things Today Send the coupon for free sample pages and the whole story. war boosted to! Iso that he size of tendance fell off until only fifteen appeared for service, The singing was \wlected, too, and they charged that Rrother Mason had neglected to visit his parishioners, This was the d the preacher ant. Only called, but It took to tell the all the other from a dutiful but the jury rdict for the fut witnesses war em two whole days the jury all they had to say, of the ‘Tho at- THE Get It For Christmas Pay Nothing Now! ik Only a Month Next Year | fF 4 nearly three- r the public. for yourself, Name «essseee Addreed ssoscssreasccgerreergesensceescess Oceupasion wvecacsssercnssncececnecetorcsonese