The evening world. Newspaper, June 27, 1916, Page 2

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# tty in singing their parody on that s “been with the regiment thirty-six ® before him and his fon, George D., cad on & ment was devised, “4 fence there was a stampede of rela- a Githe araed her xe0' The ‘* raee tee e ‘ Game tank ail Fil, dear . ‘ . P Wot they were her boys ant one vally . * Wee id nd Che Conee game jot Chal ihe # . “at ame, At the slevered tation aha| crew ty ante t ' Fane in amone them when ‘hel The militia afin tet and enhraced each od that #6 , athet meiner news| wided for the that went sirsiant to the hew formed that ne they retueed t+ re “ fate the peering perapiration from boys, to kien them of to . r hand & equcers if that © ant and wae ie pporiunity offered het on . When the troops pasted the Morel) er’ ninaater Mand ail ¢ Netheriand ant the Hotel Mavoy at) ev and peer ne owe Fifty ninth Mireet and Fifty Avenue, | Abowd. The ast made we the @ucste there turned out an mans ated of t fine cowehea, thre it geemed, and Mung great grant care, « gone toaaed of Gowers tome trom wind cone a three bee care. 1 comes and fire escape shee!) moved theee oe - ledeee ae and nemiaecs com theee welll four an firet p The firw @ishers for the most part, but ahy-| tion lef ‘ fees wan forgotten in the thrill of the] pr fone werostnatels & moment |m at ’ wan i At Aixty-firet Mtreat and PITH) ¢ k ‘ n left the Avenua Gov. Whitman, # an automodile, reviewed the boys ae 1 those Who are tet waned hey went by t In deserving PRIESTS RENDER FIRST AIO TO |cnn se of Philip Whine THE THIRSTY i f Co K of the Hew At Grand Bireet the regiment inft] ent! Mr. Khin lander went among the elevated and drew up on tha] the car 1 of remihent thie street below In front of St, Alphonsus] morning at the armory and requested Churoh. Noticing that the boys were] rach to Interview hiv mon th hot and thirsty, members of the mpe in which ha was leaving hie clergy standing in the doorway soon| family. In families where help had a corps of volunteers carrying| Needed Mr, Rhinelander wt!) he not. fled and he will see that they do ne muffer by reason of the aacrifies made by the head of the hou The regiment entrained in forty nine cars, whieh were scheduled to run In thr ‘The trains will run by the Pennaylvan St, Louls, by the Missourt, Texas to San Antonio, Antonio and Aran sas Pass to Sinton, and the St. Louts, water from the church kitchen and Gistributing it through the ranks in all manner of receptacies. As the troops moved off the priests doffed their barettas and joined in the cheers of the crowd, The march to the ferry was accompanied by one Jong deafening salvo of cheers, shouts and applause, Bome twenty minutes was consumed nections: Kansas and tn embarking on the ferry Saratoga| Brownsville and Mexico Toad to and it was 10.25 o'clock when the regi- | Brownsville, ment landed at Jersey City. They] At 3 o'clock this morning Lieut marched up to the main concourse | George H. Robertson and his men fn Ished loading the last of the eighteen Ammunition and supply wagons, and they were drawn by fourteen huge! auto trucks down to the Desbrosses Street Ferry to be taken over to Jer- ney City. The Seventh Regiment when it left | had fifty-eight officers and 1,216 men.| All but twenty of the men were al- lowed to spend their last night here at home. of the Pensylvania Station and Mned up there waiting for the gates to open All arrangements there were in chargo of Lieut. Col. Cornelius Vanderbilt, Inspector General on the Staff of Gen. O'Ryan. Frank Hague, Jersey City’s Director of Public Safety, had anticipated the | gathering of the crowd which flocked to the Pennsylvania Terminal and had 100 policemen stationed In the vicinity. ‘These men had instructions to admit into the rotunda only relatives and close friends of the soldier: ‘When the men were all together the a fleld musicians struck up “Tipper- a ary” and the Guardsmen Joined heart- — 71ST BUSINESS-LIKE AS IT MARCHES FROM ARMORY TO TRAINS The Seventy-first Reviment, N. G. rousing air, tho parody which an- | N. Y., 66 officers and 1,250 men, start-| nounces their intention to “go get)ed on the long railroad journey to Carranza.” Mexico at 1.40 P. M. to-day from the George Colygr, the band leader, has | yards of the New York Contral Rail- road, at Sixtleth Street and Eleventh Avenue. They were cheered to the last by their families and friends and | thousands of workingmen of the neighborhood, while the band played| “There'll Bo a Hot Time in the Old Town To-night.” The regiment swung out of iis armory into Thirty-fourth Street at 10.45 A. M. From every window and | from the crowded pavements rose cheer after as the eager lads stepped briskly to the inspiring old air, “The Girl f Left Behind Me," as if war were a mere outing. Mothers and wives and sweethearts tives and well wishers every time the were weeping freely as they waved their gates were opened to permit somed handkerchiefs. Their sobs were lost in years. His father was in the service and his nephew, A. L. Burgess, are both in the band with him now, LAST FAREWELLS AS TRAINS ARE FILLED. When the troops first passed onto the train platforms they piled into the cars haphazard, and Col. Fisk was obliged to order them all out again and march them down near the gates while a systematic seating arrange- As the men came near the iron No Connection With Any Other Establishment in the World The Newest Dresses For Town and Country Wear THE EV ENING WORLD, TUESDAY JUNE 37, 3916," ‘TROOPS ALL OVER THE COUNTRY NOW ON THE WAY TO MEXICO | BOYS OF THE 71ST HAPPY AWAITING THEIR TRAIN ‘ TEE EEOE EE ETRER ELE TELUETEEERODEE EEE OED EM | EEOREEHM HORCEREOEROOE FOR EEE eee eed ai ; ‘ * . i > ; ’ ‘ ‘ the roar of cheering that awept out |upon the aoldiera from every quarter Fifty officers and 1,250 men were in the ranks, and 850 had to be left in the armory for a while because the!r rif_ies and equipment had not been re- ceived In time. The street and the avenue were all ablaze with bunting. Men and women| waved flags and big ‘blue pennants with a gold “ist” on each. ‘Traffic Policemen were simply unable to hold in check the men who dashed through the lines here and there to wring the! hand of a departing friend, or the women who plunged past the bluecoats to throw their arms about the necks of their soldiers. Some of these sweet- parts and wives would not be denied, but marched side by side with their men until they were led away. | Cc Bates and his staff led the’ regiment through lanes of admirers all the way to the train at Sixtieth Street and Hleventh Avenu The Woman Suffrage Headquarters, the Union and Union League Clubs and the various hotels all were full of men | and women waving farewell and | cheering as long as the command was in steht GOVERNOR REVIEWS REGIMENT | ON WAY. Tho Seventy-tirst marched the two miles from the armory to the railroad yard at Sixtieth Street and Eloventh Avenue, In three-quarters of an hour. | This was fine speed considering that each man carried fifty-six pounds of arms and equipment, and there were & few delays on the way. When the| ad of the line came up to Fiftieth Street, where Giov. Whitman stood at attention In his automobile with the State flag flying above him, the sun suddenly burst through a rift in the clouds. It was an inspiring omen. The Governor stood rigidly at salute during the passing of the regiment except when he raised his hat ™ the flaw No regiment ever marched to war amid e enthusiasm. Whether in Fifth Avenue Sixth or Eighth or in the furthest west side thoir pro- gress was a triumph, The police, ac- customed to counting crowds, say that more than 30,000 men and wo- mo: At Exceptionally Low Prices The Newest Frocks Of Taffeta Silks In all the 10.95 desired shades. Sport Dresses of Shantung. fancy Voiles and plain and eim- broidered Nets. Very Special The Newest Frocks Taffeta Silk, Crepe de 16. 50 (a Chine, Georgette Combi- | nations, Pongee Silks and > embroidered Nets. Very Epecial| The Newest Frocks Of Satin, Taffeta Silk, Georgette. Crepe and 22. 50 Frock of Taffeta and ne. ‘ ne Very Special Georgette, 15.00 Velour Coats—Newest Models The popular outergarment for Mid- summer and early Fall wear; colors gold, | ) Very Special rose, Copenhagen, green, nav nd | white; various lengths. yan 15. 00 | honor, | gave roaring blasts of the horn, mo- \tormen men turned out to do the regiment Every automobile along the route clanged the gongs of their trolley cars, and the shrill shrieks of dropped work and flock d to the win- aftor the troops, ‘Their faces wet, but | smiling through thelr tears, they ar- rived at Eleventh Avenue almost as soon as thelr men, The wuarded avento by the pe company, was roped off » Led by the avout tho regiment went | aboard four apec'al trains of fifteen | old fashioned weoden coaches each, and They will travel three men to each | pair of seats, ‘There Is one parlor car | for Col, Dates and staff. FIND CARS HAD NOT BEEN CLEANED OUT, Capt Pern Quartermaster, found re lined up for the regiment #o dusty and otherwise in need of at- Even the roofs were crowded, | y; command years ago, began to organ- ize a Depot Battalion of 600 men to hold the quarters and to get recru ugle sounded Start of N.Y. Troops to Border; Moves toCamp; Others to Line NEW YORK TROOPS FOR BORDER, ‘ Ant- Vehi- Command. Officers. Men. mals. ¢ Departure Point. Time. Seventh 1,216 68 19 Jersey City. 1,10 P.M. Seventy-first . 1,250 62 19 60th St.€11th Av. 1.40 P.M, Fourteenth ...+.....50 930 100 19 Peekskill, 8.80 A. M. TROOP MOVEMENTS IN STATE, Troops B of Albany, D of Syracuse, G of Utica and E of Rochester, First Cavalry, move from Can Whitman to Van Cortlandt Park by nightfall. PERSHING WILL GET” ORDERS 10 GO AFTER | CAPTURED TOES (Continued from First Page.) regular organizations, latitude preva A generous! far concerning the Two hundred rookles of the Sixty-ninth left for Camp Whitman to Join their regiinent. Company I, First Infantry, from Middletown, and Company H ot same regiment froin Poughkeepsie, went to Camp Whitman, TROOPS TO BORDER FROM OTHER STATES, New Jersey—First Regiment, infantry, of Newark; Battery A of Camden and Battery B of East Orange; Troops A and C of First Squad- ron of Newark; First Field Hospital of Elizabeth and the Ambulance Corps of Red Bank on way to El Paso after leaving Sea Girt last night Massachusetts—Eighth, Ninth, Second and Fifth Regiments already on way to border. The Field Hospital, Ambulance Company, Signal Corps, one squadron of cavalry and one battery of field artillery will leave this afternoon. The Bay State troops already on the way comprise 4,800 men, Connecticut—Troops entrained at Camp Holcomb, Niantic, by lu o'clock this morning. Vermont—First Regiment of infantry leaves to-day. Cregon—Third Infantry leaves for border to-night. Virginia—First and Second infantry, Engineer company and Signal company move for Texas to-night. Vola commana who ‘ing to wish the 4 Godspeed. Among them were Major FI Keck, who led his battalion up San plo put their cars In order, Mean-) Juan’Hill on July 1, 1898, and many while the band, led by Lambert Eben, others who fought In the war against | p hed the! Spain. who with his father hay furnished tne | At least one-fifth of the men in the regiment with music for generations.) resiment wore the xed, yellow, white played lively tunes, They concluded/ and green bar. the’ badge of foreign with the alr that Mexicans will he-! norvice, indicating that they had been | f s heret}]) Out In 1898, The regiment that went Neve is the national hymn, “There'll Sway to-day was a new outht, but it Re a Hot Time in the Old Town To-| was Inspired with the spirit of the old | night.” command. It was 1.80 P. M, when the last man got aboard, and a few moments later the first section of the train slowly began to move, { As soon as the Beventy-firat Rest- ment marched out of the armory Col. Bruch, who was a captain in the tention that he reported to Col, Bates, who kept the regiment walting an hour while the New York Central peo- led this morn- bo oe 47TH STILL AWAITING DEPARTURE ORDER AS IT REMAINS IN ARMORY The distribution of uniforma to the 500 new recruits to the Forty-seventh | Regiment was made this morning at their armory, Marcy Avenue and Hey- be the for the regiment as may ward Street, Brooklyn, under the jthe whistles on the xth and Ninth] eatted for. The battalion will serve supervision of Col, Ernest BE, Jan- Avenue ated cars added to the] also as militia while the regiment 18 | nicKy, Joye i i pr Thousands of men In away, “Our strength now {ts 1,270 men,” the Big factories in Fifty-seventt\| te aRFUL PARTINGS ON ARMORY |the Colonel sald, “and we will be Street and along Bleventh Avenue FLOOR, All was ready for departure long ready to obey any orders that may be sent by 8 o'clock this afternoon. We dows, where they gave cheer after! yofore the appointed hour, Most of | couuld despatch 800 men now, but we cheer as long as the soldiers were iN} the men had been home over night | want to be ready to go at full strength sieht and came back to duty at 8 A. M, but | when the time comes.” Fast as the Seventy-first marched to] tneiy families followed them to the| The regiment could muster only 760 the railroad yard, they did not out-|armory and waved flags and hand- |mon a week ayo, but recruiting was sirip thelr familtes. Men and women | ,erehiefs until 10 o'clock, when they |so prompt that !t will now be able to without burdens kept up without dit: | were allowed in upon the armory floor take the field at full war strength, ficulty, but tt was pitiful to see moth- lor twenty minutes. There were tears | The War Department has author- ers carrying bab.es or dragging Uttlo|and embraces and sobs, Then, | ized the organization of a machine| ones by tho hand os they hastened |gently, the sentinels pushed the | gun troop in the Forty-seventh, and women folk out of the house and the | Capt, Char 3H, May, recently of the men went back to thelr company | Commissary Department, has been | | rooms. appointed to command.’ ‘The troop | "Without exception each of the| Will have sixty-seven men and twolve uns, The personnel will ba a cap- twelve companies gathered in their | f, jo pare © & cap tain, one first and two second Neu- |rooms and gave as @ farowell the | tenants and four sergeants, all mount- company choer; ed, five rection sergeants, eight first ¢ypcary ayo ¥1 class and twenty-four aecond-class Ti=-N. G. privates, 6x corporals, @ farrier, two Rah! Rah! Rah! Siss-boom-ah! two cooks and a machiniat, Thon they marched down to the {cal examination of men in the main floor of the armory when the the aasembly at 10,80 rd at attention while seventh haa resulted so far in | the frefection of more than 200, One of thee chief reasons for this is that here they at the Rev, Willan F.C the men are under woight, but it Is {the Chureh of t explained that while they entored t cluplain of the regiment, invoked aj regiment at the required weight, the bloasing. Ina few 4 » the come | confinement in the armory and a re mand to march wan given, ‘There were many Veterans of the Hnqulahmont of thelr regular food has euled them down, nk | National Guard, and events occurring within the United States. The only diatinction atte pd to be made ts} botween past and future events, Things that have al are public property. pen are secret, Secretary Baker Daniela r responder clined to talk tions, The War Si would give no information location of Gen, Pershing’s force, nor | discuss reports from Mexican sources | of its withdrawal from advanced points to @ position of stronger con- centration It is believed at the State Depart- ment that by to-morrow night all Americans who wish to come out will have done so, much to the relief of the Government With the refugee problem practically dy happened Things to hap- and Seeretary ived the Washington cor- but 8 this morning, about mil settled, the only remaining handicap upon decisive action is getting Na- tional Guard regiments to the border in order to relieve the regulars for the advanced campaign, If one 1s neces- sary. ‘The American regular forces have been scattered along 2,000 miles of border, e plan now being pushed to top speed by the Army General| Staff is to rush the Natlonal Guard down to the border t uke up th patrol duty so that the regulars ean be massed in sufficient f for ad- vance into Mexico the instant the break comes Several Latin-American diplomats in Washington have telegraphed Gen. |Carranza urging release of the seven- teen American troop ee JERSEY TROOPS START | FOR BORDER; OTHERS TO FOLLOW, IS REPORT | | SEA GIRT, N. J., June 27.—All of} New Jersey's quota of militia sum~- moned to the border is now en route, the last trainioad having left the mo- billzation grounds here at 4 o'clock this morning. The First giment of Newark was the last to entrain. | Adjt. Gen, Wilbur F. Sadier jr., has received a request from the War De- partment for more troops and it is expected that the Fourth and Fifth Regiments will get marching orders soon. The Second and Third F ments probably will be brought hel re ‘from ‘Trenton and Camden when the Fourth and Fifth start Dr. Campbell's Safe Arsenfe Wafers The Oldest and Best Complexion Beautifier & Tonic Leet by Beautiful Women for 31 Years, WILL BENEFIT EVERYBODY, iL in platn cover on re ceipt of price from Richard Fink Co., 306 B'way, N.Y, | i Constipation Billousness, Stomach ‘Trouble and Tndigestion You Na MAN, about 2h seams Age, ainbitious Meee: TUM ORT Pn eas Worle: upto, HELP WANTED—MALE, | ee ee ARINE SINKS TWO BROOKLYN 1H OFF FORTHEFRONT I=: ASTHESINASES =~ re tha Pingiten « or Cardtitt jaws In High Spirits Ye uthful Regi+| he Preadh Heaane + ment Begins Journe | Madrid, with Aftytwo 6 «on ment Wegins Journey to yard, wae pure snnonaded Texas Border | hy @ auhmarine, hut escaped owen . | The Fowrnel wun a veri of 1,067 (Special from @ Stall Correepondent (0% Hull! In Glaamow int There of The Evening World.) are two [Britian steamers named the PRRKAKILD, MY. June 2-Pre| CARdiff, one of 2408 tone, and the Vourteenth Megiment is on the way] Other @ trawler, The larger boat hae Howth at ta After a long, weary, Deen engaged in the trans Atlanta aus at Gas - is ot es trade and wan last reported ner ny of waiting, a Mink of duiling| yay te mydney, CH the apirite aroused hy baing mustered! stad In and informed that they were to @o at enon tn vr. tow Beookiye FTALIANS PUSH AHEAD; boys entrained thie morning, — Ite Welln wan wundet ar cam. nnd tm] CAPTURE MORE TOWNS tr battalion wos on ite way to Roa Hook, a mile away, before 6 o'clock. | al Thre, aections made up the train) Vive Back Austrians Along Whole which hore away the Brooklyn soldmer Trentino Front, Rome Reports Jade, the last getting away soon after | Officially, & o'clock ‘There wore thirty-seven cara in the ROME, June 27 (via Londona train. Tho boye were disappointed to’ Following up their recent successes at the last moment that they on the Trentino front, the Italiane t going to New York, All day| have driven back the Austrians ettil! Jong they had cherished that delusion further, the War OMfce announced and many had counted upon a good. | to-day, The Itallans have captured by kins from the beloved ones, The Posina and Araler route that the Brooklyn boys will The War Office also announced the take to the border gives nearly every capture of Mounts Fiara, Taverle, railroad in the country @ whack at Spits, Kesserle and Cima Della Bast thom, ‘They go from here to Chicago @nd the crests on the Calderla and ‘ampanelia. by way of the New York Central and pane ~———»—_—_ ke the Chicago and Alton to FIGHTS 80-CENT GAS. Louis. Tho Frisco iines carry 1 to Dallas and they Ko tO San Company's Petition for Injunction Antonio over the Sunset route, From Saye City Owes It $250,000, San Antonio they are carried to Egburt ©. Woodbury, Attorney Gene » Tex. over the tracks of the | oral; istrict Attorney Harry FE. Lewie 8. A. and A. P. and into Brownsville | o¢ Kings County, the Public Service over the St. Louis, Brownsville and | Commission and the City of New York. Mexico line, | wore represented before Justice White jaker this morning to fight an effort of the Kings County Lighting Company to prevent the 80-Cent Gas Law from ber beans _ AQUEOUCT RESULTS. “year-olds and| coming effective v dius six fur=| This ty @ matter that concerns 78,406 atl ae i Keow), 4 to, 2: citizens.” sald Deputy Distriet Attorney 2'to Land even, second; | Edgar Bromberger, “Just why these Simplex, 104 (Mink), 0 to 2. 2 10 eure not entitled, or admittedl; exen third. Time, 1-14 2-5. To "the rate prevailing. elses Striker, Charmeuse, Malaba ¢ Brooklyn is not clea Garnet’ and Humiliation als¢ Eo coeeee te URE SiR AS NEY In its petition for an order to show For mares and cause why an injunction should not be a- fling: ds and up: ae granted restraining the offcials named me mile.—Sionocacy, | frome forcing the 80-Cent Gas Law, the 5 to 5, 1 to 20 and) company sald the city owed it §260,000 me Tne AS | for atrect Cl to 1, third, Stalwart Helen, ; wu “Ias| REFEREE HINKEL NAMED. and Dr. Gromer alto ran geet iinibbacee ——>—_—_. Cleveland Veteran Will Ja AQUEDUCT ENTRIES. ee At to-day's meeting of the Boxing Rex vee ee [Commission Matt Hinkel of Cleveland AQUEDUCT RAC RACK. N. Y.,| wan appointed referee for the Morane June 27.—The entries for to-morrow's| pilion bout next ‘Thursday night in races are as f Brooklyn.+ Hinkel is at the head of FIRST RACK—Two.yearcida; mailen | the American Boxing Commission in rad pata ymuien Glens) Cleveland and is the first out-of= 1 Neat: fh vf ‘ltown referee to be selected to handle 14: First atiot, 114; Admiration.| g Hout in. this city in the last three reclae, 114; Madeira. 114: Storm Nompti| years, Hinkel was alternate referee Imp), 114; Bubble, 114: Naney Fair, 114, Sea| for the Willard-Johnson scrap im Ware, 114; Kittenish, 114; Temptation, 114, | Havana last year. OND NACK—Fouryeare 18 and upward a mise: abot wo mile "| WILL SUCCEED CONNAUGHT. Aberfeldy Kepentant, 144; Zellwout, 150; : Amana, 1 Dake of Devonshire to Be Nex@ THIRD RACK -Thmesearcida and upwant;| Governor General of Canada, willing; one mile—Glomer, 108; "Queen of . Paradise, 104; Maifon, OT: TingaLing, 114;| WONDON, June 21.—Tho Duke of Deve Virginia W,, 104; *Dol ; dense Jt, 116. | Onshire will succeed the Duke of Cone FOURTH RACE—Threo-yearolds; Brooklyn | naught as Governor-General of Canadag party’ 185000 9 soded tat fons | the press bureau announced to-night, [gh ctete (tip, PANG, Whimaye 110s" Caue mitt ~ HAMILTON RESULTS, | FIRST RACE—Two-year-olds: pura $600; five furlongs.—Silk Rustle, 104 rd: | (Mermec), first: Isabelle H., 103 (Ensor). second; Hanvan, 109 (Jeffcott),. third, L, | Time — 1.02 3-5 Wishawey, Orlanag et| MeCorburn and Pax also ran. Mth Frit RACE Two-pear-oldp; seling: five f ht loT; *Chattertox, 0t + Doe Mea i Ronkiss (imp. eerie $2, mutuels Mas Bik Burie. strats Vale, 110; hited | $11.70, place. $4.60, show. ; Teabel 10; Lady’ Hhlling: | Fy" Paee $3.10, show $2.60; Bany show $4.20, ‘ae, POU PROFIT. Offering for Tuesday, June 27th CREA, Y | CARAMELS— pcaramel Cheam 19 ae ansort aah a fe Geile ie SC 3 Ic ‘anilla, Straw be: tary paraffin paper, Special for Wednesday, June 28 PEANUT CREAM HISSES — These are superb blendings of richest Cream Fondant and Prime Fresh Honsted Virginia Peanuts, an irresistible com~ bination, will 13¢c We Are Now Offering: ASSORTED HARD CANDIES —A choice collection of long _ Instin, sweets, known in many confeotioi erles as Assorted Counter Assorted Gl ri ed aps wt i Sativettons wud td Hock peal to candy lovers, Big Blocks and Little, POUND BOX DWAY Mt thee ARCLAY STREET cident at.10 0. 206 Bro. Be CoierL AN x Piatts Ws STREET D* eb BI cue Hervok Closes 11.90, 8. M-1 Saturday ye th and Madi lone LA, M, awelght fucludes the container in) each’ case Batts: BEGINNING TO-MORROW THE EVENING WORLD WILL PUBLISH THE STORY OF OUR LAST WAR WITH MEXICO _ PRINTED IN DAILY INSTALMENTS

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