The evening world. Newspaper, July 1, 1916, Page 3

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tinekio” Caer af he Ke tw “ comp mot \nenle esremdy of Milt var ras svening WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1018. w) Orders te the Colonels of gli the “Colonels Lede wimenle as te Ue ariiling heures The Grille teen early 4 leet eetd lary to Keep From Went the “Judy 0’ Gredys” National Guard Auxil- iamen Who Have Sacrificed Their ee. 27 “Girls Left Behind” by New York Soldiers perder ere many Bad Liquor in a Nearby Sa foit by howe Incomes to Go to the Border. hoon Gets Into the Heads oes a —-— of Up-State Boys sun li the reervite in Camp Whit By Marguerite Movere Marehati. a a0 Will Le given & thorough course ol) io the family! : " of inetrustivn before they are om Thal 0 (he sentiment shiek emimeter the hewert orgenireiioe tormed RESIDEN ALARMED. | Gaines to take care of Awerica’s helpless Bow-combetants, the --- - The “Fighting Sixty nieth” pee of the men whe ert om the wey to lin - ened 16 be an army of laborers at ° A ® aud “points south They Send Call for Help and iar puis menting unit, ation Inying ex nest tow Yes the New York Lads Are [Pits digging trenches, vusiaing ronde social standing have just formed the Active Hervice " land Unloading trains ev noe te rest Forty-Eight arrival from Mx York, be to-day Auailiary of the National Guard of New York, Al but . 10 @apend ail of ike energy im aril : owe of the seven Women have husbands who have been “ 7 2 BtoW Correspondent |! #Ae ihe Urown and bone of th called the froat The ag = of the Baecative of The Evening Wori iriet orgenigation thal made Camp Committee te Mra. Cornetive Vanderbilt, . CAMY WHITMAN, HERKMAN, Whitman bebitanie. and the enthur Le band is Lieuter Vu, July 1.—Miot callin at an early | sete lade worked Like mules unttl the F war at her home that the austliary was formally Beer this morning rouned the 12.000) arrive! of the ov siments, and oT. jus feet. Lis sole purpose ix to care for the families of in the camp | then they vewan to let it be known en cuardemen. battie at that they were imposed upe beau Another mower of the committee ie Mra John F Oyen, wite of the Mormevilic, wo mites f Moen nnn eee AS commanding officer of the National Guard, Mrs Charles 8 Whitman, wife BEE wes between mombers of the Lecuaning, capable soldiers, ‘Thw (Of the Governor, will work for the Active Mervice Auxiliary. The other ee ee net? ane recrulta of the Riaty ninth had an ad. |fOUF Komen are Mrs. Kverett Olmstead, Mrs. Franklin W, Wood, Mra, Pred- ether up-Hiute soldiers he pro. | veet guare of the BIxty-ninth Kegs | Y@0taee over those of other regiments | erick M. Waterbury and Mra, 0 B. Brig, nm All are wives of Gen, in camp b veon dritied O'Ryan aff officers — | to aay that the Mintys| fF WHORE & week In the armory De- | GUARDBMEN ARE PATRIOTS.| ——— —_ — z=... 3s Math lived up to its reputation After fore buing sent up here NOT BEGGARS OF CHARITY. | bey bg Ny a {ee armory = ‘the Aght forty-oleht of the up-Btate| The only thing in which the Bixty There has been muoh talk of punlle in, to any agency outmide the Guard, Wwe re SRN 1US VANDERBILT. Mrs CHARLES S WHITMAN ; [ninth i weking, a far aw ium and private reliet for the needy fam-| This le Mrs, Cornelius Vanderbilt Hy Brame Aven ry os Avene Belligerents found themselves under Qamertea ¥ q eruite are ned, Is rifle practice,| {him of guardsmen, Wut The Bvening: Pita for the Active Hervice Au Mary = - « © sive e om! will do better work at tie front Teeare o @ saloon at Btormaville, the | Thete 16 no ranwe on thie reservation | World has received many letters from! ithe Wil an eller work At the front POA ep OM end the only one ay able is at Pooks. " 4 fro their omly one within ten miles of camp, kill, It tn considered likely to-day ‘2 men (hemaclves an hie brevision should be a military I ag nerone the border, te be erm gale 04 1t has been a popular rendezvous, that (he Sixty-ninth 4 be given a bbiersy gig roid ye seth be 4 a ) peed as worms for asstotance that boar 4 Menioan, Hut the few days at Peokskill before taking Marded as opjects of charity ple] @ ould " : 7 for the rougher clement. Laat night fy’ duparture: However: ohould gmat ation oad mcrnething: like. tats headuuartors of the regiments. of ieeree Pelt ee ot, ae hundreds of the up-Hiate soldiers | crinin dev der the Bixty> (st any pisking my life for my country, m She Meni SeevIe’ Ate lame eu in eee eurreenyiiia and the erunte ae eae, up. [wiving §t everything that a man can t there are thousands t and they want Grate that followed awoke the village | tinonts after teaching their recruits 1 -Ateaving, for this o my! of wives of national guardemen tn ‘aathnd te — ‘The townsfolk were terrorized by the| the rudiments of A military education my wife, my children. And hag] ef¥iew and out of service who would ree. there | ther ah " « ' ain thie ere “ i purae there oth ots in Soldiers and sent calls to camp urging | Will likely be went to Peekskill to) 0 oo inte hing to give te except like to help this work tn an om / riot Bh rp mene who teach them the use of the modern |™Y y i way, und this organization has beon to met te the. Wa immediate protection iniitney cite, |the Knowledge that during my b-| started to give them the opportunity.” here the law againet shoating ame Company I of tho Sixty-ninth un- |” George t, w York brewer yence my family must eat out of t pantie reali learrying: ftearme doesn't apelin’ Gat der Capt. Joe Fogarty made up the! and brother-in-law of Col, Conley of| nand of some philanthropic society?” MISSOURI ROBS 718 = ' Jn Hicky and Major Keke ure vete provost guard, When tho first alarm the 8 inth, to-day sent word that!" s 11, eure that sore place that the KANSAS TREATS” M nish War, Bo “4 q he wi s to make a pre t of an} eto CUES ntfs — 1 fF i H I i arrived, Capt. Fogarty went Lieut. automobile to the regiinent. He will| Active Service Auailiary haw been ee Brooklyn Soldiers Not Wholly ie Jobn J. Mangin and « squad to stop give the Irish contingent @ motor bi Hack of it lies the conviction : p with oftice . m Beef ain deahcit dl Abel ocx ‘ ce ner us| formed, Back of it Iles the convictio DENISON, Tex, July 1 The} Please H e regim the trouble. When Mangin arrived oF 4 motor ambulance and leaves It to | tet ny guardamnan anould be obliged Pleased, However, With the he fight was AFTER BABYS BATH ALWAYS om the scene ho found the soldiers throwing bottles and cursing at the| top of their voices, them béfore they were released, The first regularly held the Colonel to decide which it shall be. dt, M. Baldwin of 111 Broadway ha communicated with Col. Conley say he will take care of needy fam to acek relief for through other than The lieutenant | determined to end the nuisance. reached, trouble begins, ‘The health | of the soldiers 1s one of the first con- when |*iderations of the military author- n|\tlew and they will spare no expense to fend the nulsanee, MURPH” FROM BROADWAY |: THERE, Camp Whitman is obtaining some jrellef from its energies in the person jof Johnnie Murphy, or “Murph,” as staged prize- last night have an employmen plan and am rea that Ican, It isn't have gone to fight worrled and harass | McKinney, a New York photographer, | form of an honoral At her beautiful home, No. 640 Riv~ “We shall give money where it la imperatively needed, oughly and heartily approve of the thermometer ts not climbing higher in trouble always be relied his loved ones) than the spirite of the men of the; Food They Get. | Via ne wae (ota Marie Gee military channels.) Seventy-first, who are nearing their | Rddy that they were going to make deatinatioh to-day, but may not beat, the camp Soma! from «Staff Cormmpondent of The Ke force by a squad of men from Com- way. | 0.4 ake nae you want they said. But more experiences were ahead of i] Everybody han en Vvaccinated-— thoroughly vaccinated—for he has it | (2° YouNk soldiers. There was no ‘in each arm. Fach man was vaccine | mess for thom when they got nere, of ated for smallpox and typhoid, and | course another incident of ‘he war Chaplain; and we shall) pent for I thor- night nt bureau. po on, a ash — 5 solution | ‘They had to get up thelr cook stoves | 0! nythi rom squirt guna, designed to dis- | B " vial y to do anything | from sd mosquitoes or something, | 40d Mess tents and while waiting for] gtr. ‘The bo: fair that men who for us should be} ed by the financial tho savory stew promised thein others of them had to set up their pyramid | tents and still others bad to do sentry It is understood when they recover they are to be innoculated against diphtheria, The boys gave a long whoop when verything: with ble pension, not @/men overcome by heat having en- vOkN oth He is providin, tain night and the show was postpo was re of the range : e of the best and biggest night's sleep on the ground, the dis-| looked down through the army rego escape, but the Sixty-ninth boy#| Medical authorities, have announced |to me that one of the pany 1, who swiped the kioodle while comforts and dust of the armory en-| Mition® and found that the Chaplain rushed after them and clambered that if the roads are left as they are | things that can be done for the MAN members of I were in bathing, |tirely forgotten, ‘The experience of|@,tFuy parlance |e “Holy Joe, a Beene, They GrASReA Che rotere oe eked. ae Che iat Raed bad atece [At tee trent Is to relieve bie anxiety] In Parsons Kan. the treatment of/the armory, with ite dirt ouvered|tcd him that Ne was the Chaplain, off the bus, and, forming a hollow | expected, eee aoe a bad effect |About the woman at home, So wo “Hgeaeeiinent by shopkeepers was tar floora and discase breeding dust, was|and the nearest they could et to that square, the forty-eight up-Staters to set contractors to work, assisted (have pledged ourselves to look ntlar before. They refused to take atta thing of the past, a closed incident 1 Charite’ Chaplain Farop, for. were marched to the camp of the | by the soldiers, to make the roads | the women, and we are determined gor anything, supplying postcards, | of the war an soon as the foremost of may nin aie nee e on alg Sixtycninth. Their oMlcers were |ine Bate sone leading to the camp [that no mother, wife or child of, caldy., Hewmpenery, neckties, shltts! the irooklyn lads topped the rise tol tnaily Atted him into the duties of @ gent for to identh'y the men and! i’, wonderful piece of work, but the |#uardan an whall come to mat “Take what you want and be sure| the camp soon after noon yesterday. | Chaplain, were obliged to give receipts td) moment the reservation roads are|want vhile he is « But the Chaplain ia more than w * a “rustler” besides, all kinds of en! the boys In Company K. is Koing to give them a show, and maybe there will be other nights of the celluloid the- were too tired last postponed except exception of a few A re wo tickled to get hoe is known along the White Light | neads of those at home. they crossed the border between | 4Uty: into camp they couldn't sleep. | District of New York, “Murph” is a] Anather woman greatly Interested | Oklahoma and Texas, and learned it! “How very different from the dear Vorty-seventh Regiment has typical’ lad of the streets, self-lin the work of the Active Service| WAX @ question of miles, not States, |old days of the National Guard,” n units, each company being one beduca and keen beyond belief. that money in the | Petween them and their destination, | gighed Major Albert D, Ecke, senior] and the others being the supply co \"Murph” has a friend in 8, Alton|AuxiMarv told me that money | There is no sickness aboard, the| Major of te regiment, raconteur, wit,| pany, hospital corps and the macht funster and punster of the Forty-sev-| kun company, In command of the ma- who is picturiaue the guardsmen, | charitable dole, would be given to/trely recovered. From indications, | enth. n the old times we used to| chine Kun company ts Capt. Charles H. jand decided te quit bell hopping ior ives of guardamen who are th@ Seventh will beat the Seventy- |Come here to find our tents all set up| May. He hay two Lieutenants. That's |@ week to enjoy the country air, | MARY Wiven Sow that the family (frat to Brownaville by several hours,|and awaiting for us; then We'd golaome company to command in time Somehow or other “Murph” got by | WItnhGUt Monee ey und who have 2nd be the first New York regiment | Step ‘tu the moss hull aid have the|of nction and they speak of the com- the gate at the Grand Central and | breadwinn: etl abildsen, to the border, Pedy Aon land and be werved by|mander a being temporarily ta com jaboard a Poughkeepsle train, "fudh women ought not to go out ———— eel live mand, ‘The company fires 400 or 600 tine ene, smoker | Murph’ awaited | ang work,” ane said. “Many of them | 14TH CHEERED CLEAR sit rey dian have cny. tex bullall the. suemvie. hrdiery te alseoied and worked his brain into a frenay [Cannot even do sewing at home. On ACROSS TFXAS LINE. |{hey jad tno arcmauc sunny onions| at them. In private lito Capt. May 1 trying tind @ way to get by, Finally the otmer hand, Sul in aon land sandwiches, The scent of the) Prestdent of the Eagle Iron Works tn ho had it, Four men were trying co | Ruardamen who are well to do and |Gnions foated hither and yon, and the! Brooklyn | play ds with a newspaper spread | ne a te nee TrOnt aed | BERMAN, Tex, July 1.—The re had a new kind of a sulute for Flynn is the capable First over their knees, and to them! that no Neos ee eertanee a re | "Red Legged Devils,” a name which | their superior officers, Instead of put- nt of Company A. He had the HEALS & PREVENTS [eptoauea Seeae ee ieged toa club ton waiee|has clung to the New York Four-|ting th nda to their heads, they| first tent up yesterday and his com- u “Do you want a table to play ono") If ne bale paye his dues loyalry, teenth since the Zou Civil War) put them to their mouths, and alll pany was the first to mess in the SKIN SORENESS aL on uN y a n| da ace vet, |weemed to have stiff necks when they | Cyoning. the curd players agreed that they |#ervlee, patriotic devotion—and froin | days, have received a rousing wel- | tne! Ih iM ina way with the 1 trust I'll never have any ONE BOX PROVES IT 25¢ [RRSUIIIIMmn nn |Which he should be able to draw ma-!eome all ‘along the ‘Frisco wyatem|Gmcers and their Colonel. ‘The trees| more ison duty, he sald feeling- at Murph” got down on hin hands! ‘rial rellef when in need of it, through the heart of the blooming | wera flavored with onions, the Krassl{y. his thoughts on the armory tn ait Jand Knees and crawled between thee eine ne M te will een’ | Bouthwest, but the heat is keenly | reeked with the flavor, ‘There,was aol surcy Avenue. “This Im the life, I've % pluyers, “Put the newspaper on my| With no responsibility, will prefer to | onion odor all over the camp and they] token on ten pounds overnight, buck and T'll be your table until the| Work. Many probably would lke Jobs | felt. knew in Peekskill, miles away, 4 he worked ike ant of ear TMV | conductor gets’ thro: announced | such as they had before they married,| There was a picturesque greeting tne woldiera in camp bad for Ke HIxtecRInth in Garin STR Ae “Murph.” Ard all the rellef will be administered | tn Sapulpa, Qkla., the town Carl|junch. But the huskies from the city] the Sixty-ninth in Camp Whitman @ Pec ey et tele! “For almost an hour “Murph” made | Fost scientifically, At present tive Morris came from—and hustli Gver the bridge made up for loat time| that, To-night there will Mr nt & table of hinwself, and then he arose | auxiliary is looking up the business) 9/000 Cae are aan nee sat dinner, which Was served at 6|/Prade by the regiment. Laat night jand spotled the best hand of the ges | record of each guardsman, finding out} Place. In Tulsa representatives came | Mooi! Hepa Aan tly gal Md tel wR fia 4 |nlon te stretch bis cramped muscles, | where he worked, how much hejwas|to the train from the Chamber of |* Company K had the honor of doing|tY performance of guard mount, The That's how "Murph" got to these pald, whit If anything-—his employer | Commerce and the Daughters of the frat day's guard duty In) carn et et oe a glo made very parts. snow doing for him. sural an q George A, Wilsol it und ¢ Dangle ote ne tar PE onion at: the Poughkeepsie} “A nuraber of the large firms have American Rov lution, ‘The men wero Y was the first offte syoot music in the Peekskill hills, a |atation a thick waisted and perspir- | signitied thelr intention tg give their] ¥en lunches and told to leave their Company Wl tie Ute ti! Se ee acid bereiee | tne traveller, with a suitcase in either | employeea full pay during their ab-|postearda minus stamps, for the) gay and will be until & lock to-|lain Edrop ts going to hold | rv! pee [hand and on an m, Was) sence ms the fro I But iy honestly | women had stamps for all, night. Company K in full of ale bri- ne 5 ae crowd is expected from the [frantically striving to climb aboard | impossible for certain small or strug- franc . os, but they are only & few of t +. . HEN you goon your vaca {I} (he train for Camp Whitman and way | ging establishments to treat their men| At Francis, Okla. the men were tus, Hut tity so ili fio Monday and the Fourth are going to tion this Summer hav: stations. The traveller was balancing | in this way. In such cases the whole | ken fo! ain for a twenty ne regiment is full of them, Col.|be big days In the Village of Peekae himaelf on the lower step and des-| standard of living for the family in-|minute drill for exercise, The Four. | yynont i Jannicky hopes to put up| kil. Monday is the centennial anni yeur favorite paper mailed te perately striving to ascend, "Murph" | volved 18 in danger of destruction nth's special crossed into Texas the Kets npany K|versary of the village and there are approached from behind and tapped nb aarivy ait : 1m nome of the best tna »| to be great doings. The Forty-seven you every day, BPP ye an Er eR AUXILIARY BRANCHES IN EVERY Jaat night arly, and @ big crowd met bes A Ae eae in iia alate lftegiment will probably parade; Evening World, Ge per week Stranger, with an effort, turned his} SEE Y AND TAN: There ts no illness in (he regiment, of the crack shots in K are sergt.| citizens’ committee was tn the camp Dally World, 12: per week | j, “Ut is now planned for the Guard} ono first section is due in Browne, John L. Snyder, Supply Sergt. Arthur | to-day to see Col. Jannicky about tt, me, sir, but have you a/to take cam of its own throughout] vite to-morrow A. Kline, Sergts, Harry Wohite,/and without doubt the regiment will Sunday World, Se per Sunday | inquired the trrepressible| the State. The Active Service Auxili- ao : ne Thomas Y, Carpenter, John A. Casey| march, The Colonel figu that it | The stranger almost threw | ary Is working to establish branches to Death, and Jaines Hudion, Corp. Henry L Will be @ pretty courtesy to the town 1, Papeeribe jin’ every armory in every city and! paviq Wienerman, aged twenty-nine, tf and others to rous tom: and a good thing for the men, Will. ni change “Murph” is known from end to end|town. The work will be conducted Gately ary y-nine. tion, Thomas Lrize fehter,/tam J, Bryan, who is somewhat well nae you jin camp, and i» particularly appeal- along military lines. A soldier at the threatened with consumption, Jumped a menber of Company K.| known to Voters, will make @ speech, et a es Pewndeaier where vou |t] ing to the up-State soldiers, who look | front may make application to hiv om 8, fourth sary window gery 8: was the chunplon amateur| The first armored motor battery is ET Sn ES ci upon him as @ visitor from another Sergeant for the relief of his family |Undred and norond. street, ite, wes middleweight of the New York Ath-|the only other organization In camp were t to Cashier, world. He Is teaching the country at home, and the application will beltaken in n dying co letic Club and in his professional! besides the Forty-seventh, Col, W, 4, stulltae Balding, lads Broadway sinng, and they are forwarddd at once to the ActivelHospital. His mother and wife survive career has a newspaper decision over H, Chapin of the Inspector General's eager for the education, Bervice AuxWlary. Or the wife of a him id Bert Kenne, Thomas has @ Department ts still in charge of the IT IS DRILL, DRILL, DRILL FOR THE BOYS OF THE SIXTY- ‘SEVENTH OW LAST Will Be Cared For by Their Officers’ Wives LW OF SWURNE TO TEXAS FRONT Regiment, | Hard Trip, Will ie in Camp | To-Morrow }7181 CLOSE Bilked by Missouri Tradesmen, ‘Treated’ in Kansas and Okla homa—Others kn Route RACE, SAN ANTONIO, Tex, July 1 (on | ward Meventh He mt headquar in) The Beventh Infantry on red here this morning on the lest age of Ite journey to Texas ‘The pulling out of two draw heads ayed ite grrival by four hours, but 1 oelock itm arrival was formally reported to Gen. Funston by Col Wisk Then it started southward | ih and will be in camp to-morrow night Wish was told the Seventh would not go lo Hrownaville itwelf, but “some place” along the Mio Grande re will be no mobilization of the New York division, but the New York troops will be componed by brigw colved, and Col, Fisk was able to re port the entire detachment inta | Not @ case of train slokness oven haa developed The Heventh have alteady met their firat Mexicans, They emptied their clgerette cases instead of their rifles on the grinning two hundred section han lined up when th train stopped near McAlester, Okla, The | Mexicans accepted the cigarettes and their big hate as tho train 4 out, At McAlester the men went hiking, they did again later in the day ac | Denfeon and here, Warned by Thurs: day's experience at Mokane, Mo, the men had been more watohtul of themeelves. The personal behavior ordered the mob to disperse and way ilies of the members of the Sixty-|erside Drive, Mra, O'Ryan explained) the Seventh out after all, tine World.) ikea we, Menuet Sena slant ee of the men when freed from the train lavghed at. ninth, The Friendly Sons of St, Pat-| the situation to mo. The only Missourt storekeeper who| STATE CAMP, PEEKSKILL, MY | why." . has been so good as to make folks Then blows were exchanged and | {ick bay $d uae A bring J. ae. “It was at the personal request of| did not raise prices when the troops| 1.—"Our Regiment,” ax the Forty-| “My goodness! exclaimed Chi hore wonder what sort of standard the little group of fehting Sixty-| tion wrote asking what they could do [Gen O'Ryan that the wives of the] halted along the M. K, & T. aftor| seventh Is lovingly called by Hrook-| lain P. t Karop this morning, “te | New York has set for her soldiers, Binthers found itself hemmed about for the regiment. Col, Conley has |oMcers of the National Guard organ-| leaving St, Louls, waa a man who|lyn, went to work with a will thia[™amin the tonte” | ay companies the men are continu- by overwhelming numbérs, Word) Written saying that the Friendly |ized the Active Service Auxillary,”| had sold out everything, The sight| Morning and hard drilling was the| without a shiver or the ghost 0 ing their work with the manual of was sent Into camp that Lieut. | forthe regiment Lye ahe east the [she anid. “Our work will be limited’ of olive drab never falled to send| order of the day. ‘Three hours in'the| Wait, “the Weare alwaya intense... "| fleld wervice, ‘Two recitations « day Mangin was up against it and in a|Sixty-ninth has hired its music and|to the relief of families of men in prices soaring, It wan so bad in morning and two in the afternoon! ‘The Major never Kets mad; when-| are held in outpost and patrol work, in camp only has trumpets and |agtive service at the front, We have Sedalia, Mo, the Mayor was ap- was the dose doled out to the boya,|S¥er anything doesn't suit him he! wiitam F, MeKenna of Company minute the balance of Company I . PY actl vents his vaudeville, A day tn camp turned out to a man and, halt-|{yuntiy gong Conley, pelleves the | onened headquarters in the Seventy- pealed to, and they toed the seraten lke vet-t with him would @aike Oaear Mane | &. Whose brother and law partner is a dressed and armed with pick han- the bast band Woke wenn ines firet Regiment Armory, at Thirty- It Is getting so hot the men wear orans. merstein ten years younger, and then | Lieutenant in the Sixty-ninth Infan- dies and tent poles, the command much as Victor Herbert is tts Pres-| fourth Street and Park Avenue, and only their undergarments except They were put through the heavy ey 1 grow = again tees vee Keo try, was notified to-day that a com- ed by. Firat. Sergeant. Healy [#88t: The lads of the Sixty-ninth | we want to serve as a clearing house When stops are made. Nick Gianoc- marchthy —or¢ « ered Wn gue in & new PIRC®) mission had been awarded to him in head: y First Serge: ¥ \like musle, and the idea of having ormed in other UPolus, Known in the athletic world skirmish, All th nee in : -|that regiment. If the Sixty-ninth streaked across the fields to the| thes band with them in the fleld is |fow similar leagues f ‘ harles KR. Coffin, the R aii y melee. causing considerable excitement in|cities where National Guard regl- si ue the Greek," has elected world was observed in the | mental Adjutant, ts ‘the only officer | comes to Brownaville, McKenna will . | imse regimental — barbe: 4 One day in camp had worked won. | in the regiment who holda two com. | = a the outtt, ts have headquarters, ran day p had w n | take his command there, otherwise be The arrival ot. reinforce mente} "Gimp Whitman ix a place of ‘ills paki aie FOR GUARDSMEN ON “Pred the Hair of most of the men, dere with them, The “snuffies” had | Missions, | Hew a Capaln in the| Vii return to New York. aaa nn ob willing 6 battle, [Set FoAGeTIA the world: There tad Resour OF HOME CONDITIONS. TP? Officers require some hair left disappeared trom most of them and) inixsion. merchant. ‘Phat doean't| J. L. Cox, @ negro private in ‘Troop Bere cole: tio willing to Battles ee ae rath ateee inst’ Sunday and | “© f nocteties “* ® Protection against the sun's the hot sun was medicine to them, | sound as good as it did when it was|K, Tenth Cavalry, who took a twenty- and their officers had trouble in| iio heavy trafic about the camp has} “There are plenty of #0 rays. The Brooklyn boys arose at reveillo| frst spruny, but, all credit to Major) aly suriough in time to mise the fight holding them back. Many of the/made the roads impossible, Pedes- |fonmed to do things for the soldiers, 7 fi4 Grab, the stray d Kbucws pune ine ater rele, [ keke, he didn't spring It. furloug! i Hoters piled aboard a sightseeing | trians along the dust trail are «ray |to wend them gifts and take care Of of “Company, [hae tee eat this Morning Ike @ lot of youns colt | “Chigiain Edrop has already been | at Carrisal, boarded the train at Dal- bus and were about to make their| Hosts. The military authorities have |inem when they are ill. But it seems of Company 1, has been taken by thoroughly refreshed from a «pod! made famous by the rookies. They| tas, hoping thereby to save his fare back to the border, Trainmen atarted to deal with him as a stowaway till Col, Fisk interferrea, To-day Cox is the hero of the porters, At Dallas members of the Chamber of Commerce, exasperatingly clean and cool In Palm Beach clothes, di tributed 1,000 souvenir post cards, al- ready stamped, among the men. They wot $00 of them back, addressed, in 10 minutes. The only man who cial! to have been kissed en route is Sergt. Henry O'Hearn of Company E, He declares it was a Suffragette at Sedalia, Mo. Company F has the only quartet, ing of five members, They call it e Big Four.” Privates . B and J. C. Allen, K. L, Journeay, Clay- ton Robbin and Corpl, Bur are the members, Corpl. Burdette is sub- stitute, singing tenor, baritone or base as required when one of the others is absent, There eo five bridemroome in Com- pany B, each married less than week, and each writes five lette home every day. Company E claims further diatinction for having the nly Marathon poker game aboard. Six members hate been playing since they left Jersey City for small stake: and all are losers, The money has | gone Into the “kitty” to buy food and fruit at the train stop camp and he cannot tell when orders will arrive for his relief. The motor battery is composed of young men mostly from the confines of Wall Street and ranks among its members some very fine fellows. But they, ike many other organizations, are awaiting the call to arma, though they haven't s, not even amall arms. ine haven't arrived but they have @ lot of motorcycles and some dandy riders in the lot t. H. G. Montgomery is in command and his officers are Lieut. W. L. Starr, G, W, Hubbell jr, and D, Olcott. The boys are doing sentry duty with tent pegs. No target practice was indulged in. The targets were not up, for on thing, and the regiment is a bit shy on ammunition, Eleven companies were put through the grilling Work al the drill, The machine gun company has noe gone guard duty, ‘The hospital company had ‘ty own duties to attend to, Th headquarters company had its hands full and the supply company was over in Peekskill “rustling” hard for the boys While no complaints have reached tho officers not a few of the grumbling about the board a lack of It ne declare that they did not get enough for dinner and breakfast, When the “kicks” were Drought to the attention of Col. W. H. Chapin of the Quartermaster'’s De- artment he id tha he had not heard of any complaints, but that it must be remembered that the men had hardly got settled in camp yet “We are doin the very under the conditions,” be said 7 ‘The Now Yorkers were cordially re-| Company K was on! best we can! -—--— Making Best of Expert Tells Thompson Com. mittee How Edison GC ! Offsets Efficiency, ‘ LAST SESSION 1S HELD, Probers, However, Will Hear Witnesses Willing to Vole unteer Information, ‘The increased cost of slectrig Nghe ine, both to the city of New York and individual mmition held ite last regular though it will hear vartoga Wiifhenses who are willing to volume | tee mation Henry 1 Kagerton, « gas and oleee trie Kaht engineering expert, whe Jed in the fight for #-cent gam, made (he following statement ebéwt municipal street laehting | “We find that during Mayor Gage * Administration the oity bille tm oreaned $1,086 & year between 1908 and 1912 “Mince that ime, the street lighting of Manhattan and | turniehed by the -=- ran 4s follows Yor ia For wi. For 1915 | Vor 1916, eduled 1,120,956,59 “The rr tion whieh should been mi pn account of the of the new lamps was offset economy f 4 by the Edslon Company by increasing fsx price of current “The policy of the electric panies generally han been | the advantages of the lamp te oboe ment; in the case of the private con= the more wasteful lam Mr, Edgerton said “it was a @ne Joke" that the #-cent gas law is en titled “William R. Willcox and othe | ors” va. the #as companion, aid you know that after Mr. Wil cox left the Public Service Commis- sion he appelred before the cor sion a counsel for the New Ye Edison Company” NI “Lwaw him there mynelf,” sald Mr, Edgerton, Senator Thompson annow the ‘Commjttee fe adjourned: subjeet to the cal¥ of the chair, He declared the Committees Bad been greatly aided by the newspapers of New York City, “and especially im thet branch of its inquiry Deminning with the investigation as to the Chairman of the Public Service Com- mission by Miss Sophie Irene Loeb ef The Evening World.” Sunn aeeeel , HUGHES AT WORK ON ACCEPTANCE SPEECH Has Great Lot of Material Before Him—Date May Be Changed From July 15. BRIDGEHAMPTON, L, L, July 1 Charles E. Hughes ts working to-day on his speech of acceptanc. A big portfolio of notes and letters, made or received since he was nominated, fur- nished material for the document. Several days, at least, will be requires to complete it. Mr. Hughes spent part of the fore. noon playing golf with his secretary, be nominee had no appointments for to-day. While no dofinite date has been set for the notification ceremony, there now seems likelihood of deviation from the tentative date of July 16. —_———. 23D MUSTERS IN; MAKES FINE SHOWING IN PHYSICAL TESTS, ‘The mustering the Twenty-third Regiment in the Federal service began this afternoon, with Lieut.-Col, Buf+ fington of the Headquarters Division Staff administering the oath, Out of 1,140 physical examinations of men in tho Twenty-third only forty-one res sulted in rejections, ‘This ts said to be the best showing made by any regi- ment in the State, The rejections were due to foot trouble in a majority of cases, ‘To-morrow morning at 10,80 o'clock Chaplain 8. Parkes Cadman will eon= duct services for the boys of the Twenty-third at Central Congregu. tional Church on Hancock Street. It is expected that the Twenty-third will start for the border Monday or ‘Tues, day HOW TO REACH CAMP WHITMAN FROM N. Y. TO-DAY OR TO-MORROW, Camp Whitman, where the New York National Guard regiments are cncamped, is seventy-two miles from New York, To go there to-day start from the Grand Cen- tral Station, Buy a Ucket for Green Haven, price $1.61, Tral leaves at 2.13 change al Towners at 4,17 M, and Green Haven 4.49 P.M. Cam) cne mile away, Train for York starts at 5.16 P, On Sunday: Hopewell Junction, from camp. ‘Train leay. Jentral Station 7. ing Hopewell Junction 10.47 A Returning, Sunday's train lea Green Haven 5.42 P, M, arriy! New York 9.41 P, M. sumer by offering ‘tree renewals’ of Se 5 ¥ a

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