The evening world. Newspaper, April 7, 1913, Page 6

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co ITSELF UP WITH TTS TALL Nut Cracker Dogs ‘ker Dogs Can't Live im Jersey City, Where Nuts _.% Are Plentiful. _ SHADOWHUNTERS'DUTY Sootth Thistle Terrlers Thrive ‘on Highballs, as Well They Might. “Hark, bark, the dogs do bark!” That's what they do in most bench | @hewe-dut not in the Vegetarian Dog S that cost 10,000, and are not ‘Werth 2 cents, show their lack of class they get into.@ bench show. So! Pomeranian pups end the Homer hounds, But where does a Homer- hound figure with the Banana Where does the Pomeranian py elase with the North Pole Ding sNstt aft Mr. J. Henry Pfiffer, Secretary of Vegetarian Dog Owners’ Assocta-' WN. J mo comparison,” said Mr. fn conversation with an Evening ihe which we have to do are mamed in the same breath, moment. Of what use ts 0 DUP, or a Japanese poodle? Bei are of the same species, the No- oanil. @ the noble rum hound in the @amme company with a Pomeranian pup. } Bek? The Pekinese Chow mentioned in —<—_—$ $ ———_—_——_— |) Caew! What would the Red Popper Pup Go to a Japanese poodie? There is IED Give compasinca between these Cons than between a Chimpansee Chow and @ Chihuahua hairless dog. “Of what use are all these poodles and pup and chow? What can they do? offered that cannot only take care Rimeself, dut is of use to societyT”’ ‘With regard to the Bench Show week torun. The Banana hound, is being exhibited by Barnum & = ly the way, got into the cirous ee @ curious error. The hound wes wecioes to Madison Square Garden the impression that the Bench hed already started. The hound will be returned to Mr. Piiffer after next ore entrants are coming | It’s made in the Largest Worcestershire MICHIGAN] Sauce Factory in the World OLBROOKS WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE THE EBVENING WORLD, ime Gee Gp chow approaches mere in-| caf same of Mutt. Any information terest than ever ie being evinced. YOU @HOULO SE8.A Ki YODLE|'#t to, Dorin tne ween ale IND HIMGBLF UP, “Koeouens soe hare beara heard of the ove. Fry) ‘Todle T am quite oure that Mr. Ptitter miliar with it. I first heard of the dogs while cravelling through the Alpe. I heard the yodel for the first time in Its Bative lain Four times that morning T beard it and then learned that ano of the peasants had four of these dogs hidden and he and hie chiléren ‘were collecting tolls from the tour- dete. I managed to procure one and brought it to this country. The Ki Todle ts about the sise of @ collie and has ¢wo distinguishing peculiarities. Ite nostrils are shaped after the fashion of organ pipes, and the tall, Instead of wagging, turns around fike the lever of « hurdy- @urdy. When the dog wants to yotle he winds himself up. His principal MUSHROOM 00G. Gilet ts rags and sheet music. I think the Ki Yodle and the Bugle Beagle Ment pair, I have already made application for space in the coming Bench Show. CHARLBS J. CULLETON. New York, April 7. THE NUT CRACKER DOG I8 PROBABLY NAMED JACK. To the Kaitor of The Ki The “nut Stacker" formed like a n it te dog. The tall is long and shaped like a branch of @ tree. This he uses to knock the nutes from the trees when there is none en the Ground. They inhabit forests where nut trees of any and all saa aint are to be found. Over here in Jersey City we have plerty forests and consequently no nut cracker dogs. I have scen many of ‘them on Btaten Island, where I hall from. AVES L. MOORE. Jersey City, N. J., April 7. HOUN’” FROM A Ueno ad ‘To the Biter of The Evening W. Plesee find inclosed ‘sketch of “mushroom houn’" lost from Avenue U, Sheepshead Bay. This animal is Rot te be confounded with any of ‘the common toadstool breed, as « bite from the latter te poisonous, ‘Dut @ bite from a mushroom ts ab- eolutely harmless, and in fact ts eomewhat pleasant if dressed with Grawn butter sauce, Finder can identify this “houn'” by trying him on either the follow- ing tricks. He will fight any wild T™ushroom that ever was, and has ¢. faculty for finding lost pocketbooks, Tie him loose and if he doesn't find @ lost pocketbook within fifteen minutes, why that ain't our dog. As the owner ts a direct descen- Gant of Capt. Kidd, who had euch a “taking way" about him, he hae much goki. burtes thie wealth 4m tin cans if the garden every fall before frost. Thus when the ground freeses the batik cannot be jimmied and the simoleons fre safe until pring. The “open season” ha now taken away thie safeguard, and it {a very necessary that the “mush- room houn'” return to guard this The brute answers to the histori- forward, and here follows a whole new As the wil be gratefully received, and the dog himself én proportion. i. L. SMITH. © Broad street, New York. THE SHADOW HUNTER HUNTS @HADOWS. To the Balitor of the Hvening World The shadow hunter is neither a house- hold et nor is it running wild, but rather, as the name implies, is a hunt- ing dog kept only by the royal families ‘able bomb-throw- course, this ie interesting, but would not be of any importance to the Bench how of Mr. J. Henry Pfitter Were it not for the fact that @ pack of the shadow hounds is now on its way to New York. This has been kept a Great secret, but I am in # position to know that Commissioner Waldo has im- ported a pack of shadows for the Po- Noe Department. The Commissioner ts @ 00d sport, and ft is & cinch that he will put most of the pack in the Beach| in Show. GABRIEL N. AGY, Brooklyn, April 7. SCOTCH THISTLE DOGS ARE FED ON HIGHBALLS, To the Editor of The Evening World: My great-uncle in Scotiand owned a peculiar and rare dog, now almost extinct. It is the “Scotch Thistle” dog. The dogs were very numerous in Northern England and Scotland fifty years ago, but the clearing of @creage for golf courses has practi- cally put them out of business. The hietle hounds usually hunt in packs. ‘The hounds are well trained just defore the gathering of the thistle crop. They are fed with Scotch high- Dalle. Once, by mistake, a pack was ferved with Bushmill, and all but two of them died. You have to be that careful in handling them. They Fesemble in appearance an Airedale or wirehaired terrier, only their hair ig the color and consistency of the thistle. WILLY KAY. Hoboken, Apri 7. _—_— THREE HURT BY A BOMB. @ Bridgeport Ste: BRIDGEPORT, Conn., April 7.—Three persons were injured, one fatally per- haps, by the explosion of @ bomb in the re doorway of Jacob Kiein- berger, a Water street clothier, last night. Warren Lewis, walking down the treet with two companions, saw a fuse burning in what appeared to be a giant Grecracker. Aa he stepped to the door- way to investigate an explosion knocked him down and eet bis clothing afre. He were blown from their feet and their clothing wae tattered, Geveral stores were damaged and win- dows for @ block around were broken. The police have no clue, Kieinberger can assign no motive for the attempt to jow up hie store, LL the accomplishments of the artist—appealing to persons of exquisite imagination and musical culture—those with hearts to re- spond and minds to unders:and— “With ihe tone you can’t forget!” will satisfy your every demand. Many claim all the artistic possi- bilities’ for their player-piano, but few “make good.” Convenient Terme, Sountah, ds UrTHAvENUE MONDAY, APRIL ae he departed, “even if it was a little off in the minute details the diagnosis of the Police Department averaged right, didn't it, doctor?" a HIS LIFE ENDING AT 103. Leng with Habits. AS INFANTS’ NURSES POLICE ARE FINE, BUT A BIT MIXED ON SEX Patrolman’s “Dandy Boy” Proves a Girl; Another's “Little Lady” Is a Boy. Patrolman Campbell of the West Forty-seventh street police station walked up to the desk in Bellevue Hos Dital shortly before midnight last night and ealuted. Immediately equawks {ssued from @ tiny bundle held tn his left arm. Blushing, Patrolman Camp- bell inserted his right thumb in @ hole indie and explained: "J an abandoned baby. I brought him here from « hallway at No. 606 ‘West Fifty-sixth etreet in a trolley car. If I Gon't let him keep chewing my thumb he bellows ike @ bull-moose. He'll make a dandy baseball umpire! when he gro Judging by the voice and temper of him. Dr. Rutledge peeked into the bundle. “He's a she,” he announced, “avout two weeks old.” Ae Patrolman Campbell turned to ge, Patrolman Smith of the West Thirtieth street police station walked into the hospital office and saluted. Pointing to bundle he carried, he said: "4 jeserted beby, doctor, She ts Mttle tike you ever saw in the one hundred and third anniversary of his birth on Jan. 16, is dying in his home, No. 68 Abbott avenue, Ocean Grove, N. J. He has been unconscious tor two days, yet he shows remarkable vitality and Dr. William Robinson '* he may live several days more. condition is due to no specific dis simply his jarkable constitutio sight began to fail and since then he has gradually weakened, though re- taining his mental faculties until sev- eral days ago. “Unele” John was born near Totten- ville, Staten Island, and always enjoyed robust health. He never used tobacco, though when he felt he needed a drink he took it, His two dissipations, he often said, were playing seven up and drinking strong coffee. He often took eight cups of that beverage in a day. His only relatives are four grand. children, residents of Eo. the a your life, She has @ smile that would melt the brass buttons off your dress coat. She las Cleopatra, the Queen of Bheba and Lillian Russell backed off the boards. I've failen for her hard. If you could eee her handling her bottle you would agree with me tbat she is a Jady. She has the finest table manners child of her age 1 ever saw. Men’ s Suits to Measure Made of Strictly All Wool Fabrics *12.50, *15, *18, *20 Fornineteenyears we've been whole- sale tailors of the better grades of cloth- ing. To-day we begin making Suits to your individual medsurement at the wholesale prices of ready-to-wear suits. A season’s big wholesale business _ leaves us with thousands of yards of cloth from single suit lengths to a dozen suit lengths of a pattern. To dispose of this cloth and to hold together our splendid organi- zation of cutters and tailors we make these remarkably low prices. The cloths embrace every new effect and color combination and are every thread pure wool. In ready-made shops these suits are $18 to $30. In made-to-measure shops they are $25 to $40. It’s your chance to buy at the factory at wholesale factory prices. Factory Hours: Elevator stops at 5.30 P. M., Saturdays at 5 P. M. Salinger Brothers Wholesale Tailors, %*.2 Greene Street” ‘Two blocks south of Sth St. Twe blocks west FURNITURE CO. FREE This 100-Plece Imported Dinner Set with every $100 Purchase CREDIT TERMS: 3 or ‘50 #7s0hemt49)) 45 Pr *75 | *10°s* *150 $4 A WEEK Opens an Account Open Monday and Saturday Evenings Only 2174.-3° AVE BET. 118 °R119"STS All @ fi 8s nal, $aEe broken down at last. In 1900 his eye-, 1913. “Uncle” John Butler, who celebrated ; {ASTIKOPS Webbing and Cloth it Wl Ae TTT With Lasticurve-Back: No. 322—low hoo $3,00 No. 324—medium Over 500,000 already sold. With Limshaping Extensions: No. 406—medinm ) $ 49° No. 409—extra-long) Reduce large uppor limbs. With In-Curve Back: No. See tov bent | 08.00 No. 508-—medium Greatest REDUCING coreet. With Lastikops Bandlet: No. 523—low bust | $ 5 No. 522—medium Greatest SUPPORTING coreet, Be a Wise Woman! Ask for the NEMO and accept no substitute, (B+) KOPS BROS,, Mirs,, New Youk The Sunday World’s Want Directory makes more “Offers of Positions’ than any other two medi- ums in the universe New, fresh, sweet, delicious, |b... Print Butter, ae famous Belle Brook, fanciest creamery in odor-proof cartons, nothing finer, each. . Tomatoes Ripe, red fruit, in No. 2 cans Sugar Corn ug tender and sweet Condensed Milk Rich and Se Liberty aye Ensley Cans nal 10° Evaporated Milk & 39° A Can C 4d 3 can. tes can....-+ Belle Brook—thicker than cream, large 10c can Potatoes, 6s. 10¢ 15 po, 25° New Potatoes 6 ».. 25¢ First shipment from Hastings, Florida, and a rare treat i choicest lemon Essie Peaches, clings; large can. 17° Essie Tomatoes, ro aoa 12° Essie Sugar Corn, .2:":. 10° Essie Peas, extra sifted Early dened; choicest; can small, sweet, tender; can. 100 stains E ji Sold in the Bean or wR Ground to Suit COFFEE si755 ri dn placate and Forman Doi India- Coles, aa English Breakfast eet Dice 10 2w pu s FREE With 1 lb, Print Best Government ps | Butterine “s* 25° 20 sir. FREE butter "10 :éz,, FREE with each of these three: with each of these Violet Ammonia, toi, 15¢) Gloss Starch, hey vor, 18€ Washing Finid, vowe.. 10¢|Salad Oil, vies bot. Large package Clenewel Jor of East V' Washing Powder.. 12c! Extract of ‘Beef. Oven Fresh from Golden net the National 4 Jonmies... .;lb. m0 Biscuit Company | Grahams... AtAll 128 James Butler Inc. Licensed Stores Burnett’s Gin, Old Tom or 4 Bottle Princeton Dry Gin..... 6% Your choice Of the tinest tere "Gap Medicinal Malt Whiskey The Big Dollar's Worth: ‘| Bottle Old Monogram Whiskey, 75e) 4" § Bottle Old California Sherry... 25¢ | Bottle Old California Port.....25¢ | Port, Sherry, Claret Selected vintages, pure California grape wine; half gallon for 50° Haig & Haig xxx Scots Whisky sou. 2.15 t Haig & Haig % x Scots Whisiy on. 1.55 ‘ At All 28 James Butler Inc. Meat Markets, Sugar Cured Bacon, isa ines Milk Fed Veal, Shoulder or Breast. Loin of Roasting Pork, ' ‘Corned Spare Ribs; Extra Choice,2 Ibs,’ Fancy Roasting Chickens, i». 20° wlb. ¢ iene pointes ta sesseetenny Stina ret

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