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} Healed in Three Days by nee qror TRE BVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 6, MUSTERING IN OF THE SIXTY-NINTH 10 BE COMPL ny SIYTY-NINTH SURE EIGHT OF CARRIZAL Arerican Girl Under Fire in War Zone TO START SOUTH There Are Some Indications That It May Get Orders to Go Sooner 2ND PO-MORKOW, OF First and Other Regiments to Be Kept Within the State, ial from iW tye of The €. Bf wi CAMP WHITMAN, BERKMAN, N ¥, July @—1t can be emphatically Stated on the best authority that the Miaty-ninth Newiment will leave for the border if further troops are Meeded, The report that the Fi Infantry would be chosen rather than the Bixty-ninth is without foundation, The muster in of the Sixty. Binth was completed to-day, and tt Will begin drawing its equipment tm. mediately, Furthermore, it may be @tated that the Sixty ninth will not Go to Peekwkill, but direct from here to the border, The Forty-seventh of Brooklyn, now at Peekskill, will bike from the Htate range on Saturday and will arrive here ‘on Monday, That Regiment will ocoupy the Sixty- ninth's camp «ite, so that the Tetah Tegimont will likely be on ite way to the border not later than Monday morning. ‘The Tenth Regiment ta under orders to go to Peekskill and will replace the Forty-seventh at the Butts, The second regiment, under Col, Andrews, the first to depart from this camp, will entrain for the bor- der to-morrow, Brig. Gen, John G, Eddy, post com. mandant, went to Peekskill to-day to inapect tho Forty-seventh, after which he will go to New York, and, &s acting division commander, will co over the accumulated business at headquarters, Capt. Daniel W. Hand, U. 8. A. In expected late this after- noon, to take command of the Sixty Afth Infantry of Buffalo, Thik organ- igation will be made into a regiment of heavy field artillory—tho first in the National Guard, Tho regiment's 47 gunn are expected to arrive here in a fow days, dent | plans ~ IGTIMS FOUND IN BYNEXT MONDAY A SINGLE GRAVE Hoxties of Boyd, Adair and Six Troopers Cast Into Ditch by Mexicans, 1, VABOy Toa, July 6 of Capt, Charies T, Hoy: Lawut. Hen ry Adair and seven troopers of the ‘Tenth Cavalry, killed at Carriaal, were brought to Ki Peso early to-day Only the bodies of the two offcers Kucker bave mt Private Dewin been Mentified Hight of the Amerteans were ox- humed from a single ), the under. takers am The dead bad been wathored the field of battle and cast into @ diteh, which waa then flied up. The bodies of Capt. Boyd, Lieut. Adair and six troopers, stripped of their uniforina, Were mined” indie. y in the dirt, | ody of the ninth troopor wae two miles distant from the rently had dragged himaeif & week a » When the Carrleal pris: oners were brought from Chindabue City and turned over to Gen. George Hell jr, marked the return of the return of the American dead, In| When German Shells En- Juaren the event waa scarcely noticed, while in the ¢ twenty three troopers of the Tenth, a as ite equip for ranged,” } probably day and certain' two thereafter, its admirable pre Ing at th by chance, York National Guaed Was in ho Way responsible, he regiment je Sixty-ninth, "The firat orders from Washington The called for a camp mobilization, Sixty-Ninth was the first to get out with its full strength, an order the regime at their armor delay in the going south of the Sixty- Ninth, “Under the State Constitution at least 10,000 troops must remain in- ts which were assembled aide the boundaries of the Btate for | ita protection, It ts about decided that the First Infantry, from the central counties: the Tenth Infantry, from | Col, Charles G, Morton of Govern. !the Hudson River counties and Long ora Island, who had boon sent here Island and the to inspect the camp because of alarm- | f ing reports concerning unsanitary | conditions which reached Gen, Woods, returned to New York to-| day. Col, Morton gives the camp al clean bill of health, | Adjutant General Louls W. Stotes- Dury said to-day there was no truth im yarns spread through the National | Guard that the Sixty-ninth Regiment | would be deprived of its opportunity to go to tho front because of politi cal considerations which would give, Baby Tortured with Rash is proofandbaby’spicture “I am sending a photo of baby ford, who suffered tortures froma rai which covered her entire body, After using Com- fort Powder night and morning for three days the r b disappeared. fort Powder is not the nurses’ riend, but baby's best M. Lawrence, Flint, Mich. in talcum powder, but a highly reparation which combines healing, ‘seething and antiveptic qulitinn| sles to heal akin soreness of infants, and sick "et d and ved At Drug and Dept. Stores, 2 conta, THECOMFORTPOWDERCO.,Bosten, Mase. | QorQO Every Night; For Constipation BELL-ANS : Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package It is sho fine 0 promote the provesit. 25cat all druggists, Gruff Adve orty-Seventh shall for the present be assigned to thig | home guard duty.” aia: ‘NON-COMS,’ ARE WANTED | FOR GUARD PACK TRAIN Civilian Teamsters, Cooks Blacksmiths Have Chance to Advance. Capt, T. Harry Shanton of the Quartermaster's Corp», National Guard, was assigned the task to-day of moving the National Guard train of 250 wagons from l'eekskill to the border. This, the captain satd, would give a lot of New Yorkers a chance to go to the border as non-commis- sloned officers, There will be forty-three sergeants and thirty-six corporals appointed out of the 260 men needed, Teamsters, cooks and horseshoers are preferred, ‘They will have charge of the three divistons—-supply, ammunition and pack train, Kighty-one flat cara will wo needed and the trip is to be made direct to Brownsville by way of St. Louisa, and LONDON, July —Despathes from Sotchy, a Russian port on the Black Sea, say the former German cruiser Breslau, now renamed the Midullu in the Turkish naval service, ap- proached Sotchy several evenings ago flying the Russian flag, Subsoquenuy she hoiated the Turkish flag, tor- pedoed a transport loaded with eup- pilea and sank a sailing vessel, Authorean: OAKL. AND, Vaughan, who claims to be @ son of the Inte Mrs, Kate Compton Vaugh Orleana Writer, ey of Monroe 16 polte in chiar ‘of the coustruction of a di ar Sunol, Cal. during a card ia Vaughan was emp! ACTRESS TELLS SECRET | A Well Known Actress Tells How She Darkened Her Gray Hair Witha Simple Home Made Mixture. Miss Blanche Rose, actress, who darkened her gray hair | with @ simple preparation which she j mixed at home, in a recent interview Ill, made the following : | Any Nody or gentleman darken their gray hair and noft and glo with this simple (recipe, which they can mix at home To « half pint of water 1 on. of "bay rum, @ small box of Barbo Com- pound, and 34 on, of glycerine, These ingredients can be bought at any drug store at very little coat, Apply to the hair twice a week until it becomes the required shade, ‘This will make # gray haired person look #0 years younger. rowth , and relieves itching aod dan- | The belies a, He had been wounded, and abe dio tn the gravel waste bevund the | in aharp contrast to those of ao only a few hundred personas, quiet and subdued, replaced coring throng that greeted the ves privilege to the First Infantry, pomnmand from Kepube “morrow or Sature within a day or by Thess 1h mobiles first call brought on itself, & penalty for which Now Headquarters Then camo nd away to the front The result was a joyed as] a well-known | | ; a 4 $ Mae “ae MO OF Ons dangered Her Life in Allies’ Hospital Miss Spencer, on Mission of Mercy, Was More In- dignant Than Fright- ened Because She Could Not Retaliate. Visited Four Battle Fronts and Was in Constant Danger While Super- vising Distribution of 50,000 Dressings for the Wounded. Bo way retaliate, At first, awakened nue. visited four fronts—French, British, besides receiving a Belgian medal. And shoe has been under fire many, many times, She told me about it yesterday, with splendid nonchalant almplicity, I the jagged, rock- lke portion of shell that fell on her bed one morning, “That was in the Hospital Pilza- beth,” sho explained. “The hospital is shelled every morning for break- fast, It in nei railway line, but I suspect that the Germans know’ It is & hospital, No one has been hurt yet, but that Js just a question of time.” “In that the only time you were under fire?" I asked Miss Spencer, “Oh, dear, no," she responded, with @ beautiful flashing smile, Sho ts tall and well-knit, with curly, dark hair and a classic profile, “I went Into the trenches at halt past two one morning,” she contin- ued, "I had breakfast with @ Major, He was a nice Major, with two at- tractive little rooms built in the wall of the trench, one furnished as a alt- ting-room and one as a sleeping room. We had coffee, rolls and butter, and bullets were falling around us as wo ate, “T had dinner with an aviation corps one day. Another day a bicycle corps entertained me at luncheon, 1 went into the Italian trenches, In | England, down on the shore, I was close to @ spot where a bomb from | an aeroplane Killed 200 people, Moat | of my four months was spent in the | war zone, and of course there one Is always in range of the stray shot,” evens Bie) mise “Sidencur . rRoNT By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “When the Germans shelled the building in which | was etaying I was not afraid. My chief emotion was one of indignation, because I could in Please don't got the impression that Miss Spencer talked steadily the “I dids" in this story, They came only in response to my blunt and search- ing interrogations, And it was with lobvious relief that she shifted the | conversation from herself to some of the things she had « RICH AND POOR WOMEN ALIKE ARE BRAVE. “The women of the warring coun- tries are so superbly brave,” she do- clared, “It doesn't matter whether they are rich or poor; they give all they have, In France and Ltaly the nurses are mostly volunteers, and in | the latter country, particularly, the | Rod Cross service ts nearly all in the hands of gently bred women who never have doné hard work. Yet they by a fragment of shell falling on my bed, I thought that I would get up. Then I realized that if I went into another room I should run an equal danger of being bit. I didn't put on any more clothes, because one of the things a shell does is to strip you. | So I simply remained where I was, again, however, because I didn’t want to miss anything.” That is a paragraph from the remarkable story of an American girl, Miss Carita Spence Dressing Committee, of which Mrs. Mary Hatch Willard is International Chairman, sent Miss Spencer to Europe four months ago to investigate the distribution of the TEM MADSHALL, 40,000 to 60,000 packages of dressings the committee has been sending every week from its headquarters at No. 2 Miss Spencer {s its National Chairman, and during her absence has I didn't go to sleep! or, ‘The Surgical 299 Fifth Ave-| Belgian and Italian, She has had a! special audience with the Pope and with Elizabeth, Queen of the Belgians, Perform the most exhausting, heart- rending labor, sometimes serving for thirty-six to forty-eight hours at a streteh, “No woman weeps. Even when her man hae had his second leave she wenda him back with a smile, Yet she knows that she runs little chance} of seeing him again, for his luck | can't last ver and these big drives | must use up men, “The allied organization for caring | for the wounded seems to me very nearly perfect. And yet there Is ter- ribf® suffering. For an hour or so after a man is wounded in battlo ho doesn't feel pain, The excitement temporarily paralyzes the nerve cen- trea, But after that his agony may be intense. And though, as I sald, the organization ts splendid, the ruth- leas course of war often gives an am- bulance Atted for fifty a hundred sol- diera to care for, or a shelter with twenty-five beds, two hundred wound- ed men, “I did not see any ambulance which Jacked the proper amount of anaas- thetics, yet undowbtedly in many cases there has not been the time to Use them, And they age never used Hfor the excruciatingly painful bual- ness of dressing the wounds. ‘There | are plenty of screams and moana while that is going on. Shrapnel wounds are the worst, for they neces. | aitate the extraction of a dozen or more rocklike splinters of metal that have been forcibly driven into the! flesh. I saw the most terribin| wounds, for since I represented the) Surgical Dressings Committee the gurgeons thought they ougnt to show mo their most startling cases, It) Wasn't pleasant,” Miss Sponcer com- | mented simply. SHE WOULD INSTRUCT THE AMERICAN G!VERS, | “And by tho way,” she went on “If wish I could impress upon Amer- | lean women the fact that they ought to send to the hospitals what the bos: | Pitals want—not what the we think they want. In Franco one » of night-shirt ts used for the wound- ed; in Italy another sort, ‘The sur- | goons should have the kind of dress. ings with which they are faruiliar of the Surgical Dressing Committ No. 209 Fifth Avenue, as to what to send where, and Aw to how she reach any p Med forces desires to agony prot is ca Tn the war 2 e 4 gas mask bang! ne Sony os: PITAL EVI ZABE TH WHERE FRAG MII mMias MENT OF SHELL FELL ON SPENCERS BHD. SQUADRON A GOES SOUTH WITH REST OF FIRST CAVALRY Yonkers, Four Others at Kingsbridge. Squadron A and the First Squadron of the First day for the bordér, Cavalry entrained to- Squadron A left }eamp at Van Cortiandt Park at 11 o'clock, marehed to Yonkers, and there boarded the tratn. ho First Squadron of the birat Cavairy, which includes Troops B, D, trained at Kingsbridge station of tho Now York Central about the same hour, Tho Second Squadron is already 6 fun troop, numbering men und equipped with eight machine guns, will accompany | Squadron A, which 4s in command of ) Major W. Rt. Weight, A detachment of the hospital corps also will go with It, as will Col, De Levolse and the headquartera of the First Cav- alry, At intervals of thirty-six hours there will be eight-hour stops to ease the Journey for the men and to ex- ercise tho horses. Although not one of the alrymen had anything but praise for the conventences and benefits found ninety-one In the camp they left to-day, tt was evident the removal to the Texas ine waa unanimously acceptable “The boys have had a good time | here and have benefitted tremendous. ly," Major Wright # “but they are #0 anxious to get off I believe every one would volunteer to crawl to the trains,’ ry his bed, for the least one til, Mine ‘whiff’ makes was the regula tern; a thing like a diver's made of coarse cloth and coming down over the shoulders, with # tube ing and eyclots of isingluss. in a Luo town where just Jon of was bad been | aling night. and every | in had @ heg y indigeation. OF homme other ailm Kets a large de ngs, and tnred for days ment works. ¥ lew are now they use kt such aboginal Manhattan Troops Entrain at) F and I, on-| on the border and the third on the} 500 cay | re Pays High Tribute to Europe’s Women ‘WILLFIGHT ANYHOW, I eR NN WHERE wh COMPLAIN OFB.R.T.'S WEST END LINE SERVICE CALL IT SCANDALOUS Delegation of Sixty Demands Relief From Public Ser- vice Commission. Sixty persons who have to Went End Line of the BR, T. tne | vaded the office of the Public Service Commission to-day to complain of conditions which they characterize as reandalous, They came from Rath | Reach, Bensonhurst, Ulmer Park ang Coney Island, Commissioner Travia Hl, Whitney soughtsto placate the del. exation by saying that the B, R. T, officials promive to better the condi. tions by Saturday, Alexander Schwalbach of Benson hurst declared that he has to spend from hia business since the alleged | | improvement was made by the open. |ing of the new line, “The B, R. T,, |ho said, “haw blighted our beautiful | section, ‘Traffic Is so congested on the ne that ft Is a crime, The Public Service Commsision has neglected its duty to see that adequate transit ts provided by opening this line before They are using may wooden stairs where the contract cals for steel, Tt ia a Wonder that there has not been an aceldent." Join J, Gordon of Bath Beach and A. L, Adams of Bensonhurst, Progres- who talks like that,” erted Hodge, “will get little rhert Heevem, President of tho Hfouth Sido Board of Trade, denounced conditions on the line as indecent. lr, Jchwalbach corroborated him "We do not want any instructions,” mistlonor raus interrupted, know our duty.” xter, proprietor of Ulm told “how Commi Whitney mad ny o1 HhOHOR Dempuey of left him out 4 Dempsey went | and reated mo like @ bi exclaimed. "Rut 1 don't bh 1 10 you jon agreed to ap of three who will Jompsey and ¢ y and try to arrange « point a eommitt: confor with Burt missioner Whi a bettor plan of running the new Line, Ae Nachelor Apartments for Chelsca Noys, ‘The luxury of @ comfortable room and vod food for $4 a week ta offered to s working In t helen diatriot. ‘The sare in the new apartni house Just comp’ at No. 441 West. Twenty Velghth Streat, The Chelsea Netghbor- h vod Association t# sponsor for the en terprise, 40 the | one hour more each day going to and | it was completed. The B. K. T. of- | ficlals claim that they opposed the openng but they were overruled. sive le for Kings County, made the same complaint Adama de- clared that the Publle Service Com: | mission had hurried the opening of the line to obligo @ few people in Borough Park pobI" he | ee ETED TO-DA 4ATTH'S BRAVE WS | ompeny WAR OR NO WAR = if Not Ordered to Front | They' Never Face Their |¥ Brooklyn Friends ~ |The three wom 4 eccomd to t \, who could they bore bi Condes Oem Out Cemapentans 4 The mooning | Hn STATE CAMP, 1 KIA, w/e ¥, duly 6 The Aghiing spirit of) Y,) young American was never more At-| ao m the ymeventh # ment of Brooklyn, now in camp Weather for te ‘They want to fit as badly as do the emiling @ boys of the Aix h, They | Plenty of are aa eager as their New York | {\"Uf snd though, helgibore to mo to the front, and the op departure of the Twenty~ #ame effect on the Brooklyn "\™ did that of the Beventh oa iy the gresvons of Col, Contey, re the drtiie fared (hat he wae weil Be He has @ fine blister r; one | It has come to be « question wien pe iene oes Guy the “ 4 the ba whether the Forty-soventh is really! seagy.made bouts, he waldt going to the front, They are |1Ce quite « pastoral Joke march ows @f bere at dayb | The Major smiled sadly whem | the = ]one asked u ty bave 9 drt ‘ that je nothin form Bog Roel ge lly cg Malas | tory tile akte of Peakakil ninth on thelr way in for target prac- only spree that hae tee, Then, thelr understanding ta, |! thin ag he sald, wit they go Ia for thorough work of the] Way look, “is the eaprit de |big camp at Heekman, wihtie the | pt. Adjutant Coffin: went Biaty-ninth learns to ahoot as weil as whistling a dead march and they scrap and entrain for the border, | Loke was summoned to hold @ ‘On the frst call for National Guard martial, it was jo to The Sev Fo mente York. Twelfth, third are in and Twenty or on thelr way n the reports reach+ Whitm has desig- th and the Third and it ts not ther either the Kecond or urth has been included th been id th the to go. It the foregoing being carried out, the |nine regiments required have been | designated and the Forty-seventh is CANNED FOODS destined to be left behind, It is The World’s Best’ \ ine Siva ON ieint tae tan etial Whatever the products chance with the Second and Seventy- fourth, THEY THREATEN TO ENLIST AS REGULARS, One thit Af the Forty- seventh to Breokiya the home town will never aga! the same organisation whose ‘aepar= ture it cheered on ite way to the Btate camp on last Friday. A lot of Hrookiyn boys bave asserted that they will not go back to, the Ci Urches to. be held up ot thelr fellow Seer ecuimeat wilt dee gevalan rt from the home regiment and of- fer thelr services to the regular army. Austin, Nichols e Co., Inc., ‘That i the it wht the | 1» manutactate | tne roskiye tedac and ‘the: festing aaa, ‘concern Mma goss down line through officers, Rew h Sole Distributors. you buy they are as sweet, tasty, nutritious and délis cious as the day they left the fields and No others equal BEAM” canned foods, UNhere is a difference in quality and flavor you'll like. Try them, Comes in All Varieties oraes by Snare Bop te thea rtain, bac hon-coms. and private feeling Was intensified yesterday when it was learned that the Twenty-third had one, a the news n is the men oomnen and © two da; thy Connectlout four years ago the regi- ment mado twelve and fourteen miles a day, and it was harder going on the Connecticut roads than between | here and Camp Whitman, and the) [pack the soldiers carried wolghed twenty pounds more than that of to- ai aw recruits of the Forty-sev- onth are being rounded into shape. ‘They have proved good material and fone ts the force there to make r rs when the call to arm: throdkh the land, and the thre Vilkina, Bergeant of Company for instance, served a two-year apprenticeship in the Philippines and as many & car to remember t k-eyed, khakl-clad ladrons He was also with the Ninth Infantry of regulars at Tientsin wing the Boxer uprising in China, Of 1,000 men of the Ninth who went into Tientaia only 400 came out, With Sergt. als [gate 42r caee cae Tene LY Open Saturday Until 1 P. M. July Clearance Sales Summer Blouses J | .98 | Reduced to Hundreds of beautiful waists that before the Fourth sold at a third to a half more, On our tables for easy selection Friday and Sat- urday forenoon at $1.98. Voiles, dimities, dotted Swiss, sheer lawns, organ- dies, cross bars and shadow voiles, Smart tailored models and plenty of the fluffy, lacy kind. Dainty Garden Smocks, $1, $1.50 and $2 Over-blouses that are all the rage. ‘The over-the-holiday al mpoare cleaned the tables last Saturday, lot in white and colored combinations at each price every see. Bedell Silk-Fibre Sweaters, $5 One of our customers said she had been in every store, but could fiad no such assortment and valués as she did here, At the New Fashion Shop Nineteen West 34th Street WArsy "As