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‘ tiseptic qualities unequalled to heal $300,000 PAYDAY PROMISE NEW YORK TROOPS Men on hein Duty to Get Money Due From State Next Wednesday, “BATTLE” ALARMS CAMP. But “Rifle and Machine Gun Fire” Proves to Be Pop, Pop of Batky Engine. By Martin Green, (Opecie! Oye Correspondent ot The o Evening World MALLEN! Tex, July A balky faternal combustion engine in an tr. Pigation pumping plant south of Mo. Allen caused widespread camp alarm fast night and gave rise to a rumor! to-day that there had been a Mexican Attack on the New York militia, ! There was reason for the alarm and the rumor, for the atti! nig air wae assuredly punct by « series of feports that sounded ike a machine @un and mpany of infantry in Retlon. | Major MoLeor of the First Cavalry | and « couple of his oMvers, hearing | the notve and mistaking it for fring, went out behind t and found the expl Bineer of the pumping plant was starting up his big gasoline engine after two weeks of idleness and the engine minsed fire, He wont about locating the trouble after the man- Ber of a chauffeur who, in adjusting Ma carburetor, speeds up and slows! tposta| no ene | down his engine, The exhaust of the pumping plant, sometimes irregu- lar, at other te fairly bugging Continuous explosions, gave an exact imitation of scattering rifle and eon- tinued machine gun fire, Something like $100,000 in real money fa to be dumped into McAllen, Mission ‘and Pharr next Wednesday in the way of State pay du the New York militiamen f the time they were Galled to th . armeries on Juno 18 until they were sworn into the regular wervice, Adjutant General Stotesbury of the New York State militia will superintend the distribution of the money. This payment will unloosen within a restricted area in the Rio Grande Valley the largest sum of money ever turned out to exercise in this vicinity at one time, Each private in camp will draw from $10 to $15. Officers of course will receive larger gums. Although the departure of Dr, Thomas Darlington for other spheres next military of usefulness in the Itching, Chafing Baby’s Skin Nothing heals like Here is proof and baby’s picture an nurse says: “I am sending you photograph of a happy, healthy baby who suffered from a chafed, sore, inflamed skin and was relieved immediately by Sykes’ Comfort Powder, In my work as a nurse I have found Comfort Powder to he ‘a healing wonder’ for itch chafing, scalding and. skin soreness,"-—Muethe B. Pursel, Reg. Nurse, Berwick, Pa. Not a plain talcum r, bute highly medicated pean which combines healing, soothing and an- skin soreness of infants, children and sick people. Used and endorsed for 20 years by leading physicians, nurses and mothers. Ask for Sykes’ Comfort Powder. At Drug and Dep't Stores, 25 cents. THE COMFORT POWDER CO. Boston,Mass BORDEN’S Malted Milk IN THE SQUARE ae GRAND PRIZE PANAMA EXPOSITION ANOTHER PROOF OF QUALITY BELL-ANS bsolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit. 25cat all druggists. lost or found articles ada used in The World will be Isted at The World's Informa Bareeu, Pulltzer Bollding Park Row; World’a t 1B5th | Bley Breokirm ‘Ottiees’ aoa" Wastings fon Sts ee Begone: fs 80 0 are jowing the Sherieaot | Punitive expedition, under charges of | Fort Smith, Ar- N | revenue fraude at | some hee rendered necessary the shandonment of the bigeret — | Gem probetty wat on . O11 ope among the oMoers at ae en ond brigade Gendgmnen ther * een content between 6 be deer ond @ butideg may be brought howl The soheduied bere of the offal te & very busy young officer @he hee endeared himeelt te hie ee sociales by hie continual prociame o tiene of posite wiedge om ati oe eubjerte that « op military oF other eine A meeting of toteresied im athlon ® the camp at range & sere end fed ath the champ: Many « ne to develop & series of wonr ul contests Col ¥ pandbetia of Gen. Fun taken Up the duties of Hi M of t re y militia ‘oleae echeduled to go. Vrivates Kenneth MeDougall of K Troop, Hrooklyn, iiton Trimly, of H. Troop, Koehester, Hirst Cavalry, were sent to the base by Hrownaville jast night to be) ACCUSED U.S. SCOUT Guy Hartmann Regrets That He | Has to Go to Prison Instead of | Fighting fof Country, COLUMBUS, N. M, July 2t—Guy! Hartmann, scout for the American | Ww kansas, was taken to Santa F to-day by United States marshals to await formal extradition, J. 8, Bark- man of the revenue service, who ar-| rived from Little Rock yesterday, de- | clared that the fra charged againat | Hartmann and accomplices aggregate $385,000. ‘The soner — recognized Markman and said he wanted to re- turn With the officer as soon as pos- sible to stand trl, In a statement before he boarded the train for Santa Fe, Hartmann, sald: “A former business partner of mine is responsible for my present plight.” With this he held up two heavily manacled hands and continued: “I should have liked to have been at | Uberty just a little while longer. I might then have had an opportunity) serve my country far more tha | am about to do now. I loved my) work as scout and believed that I a 1 supp complished something during my! ayy short time with Gen, Pershing. Back | = in Leavenworth, or wherever else I) can't shall be located shortly, I can think| back occasionally of the red-blooded | men in the fleld in Mexico, and tt will afford mo a little happiness to know | that once I was one of them.” CARRANZA MEN LOCATE =| VILLA WITH THIRTY MEN here! Yorker le not suburb: Bandit Said to Be Jn Canyon Near) say that a New Yorker is anybody | ‘at I never had at home.’ There are El Paso de Penolis in who thinks that New York is the most | ‘housands of such instances," Mr. s agreeable place to live tn.” Rhodes added. “And perhaps they Durango, | 80 THEY'RE ALL NEW YORKERS (“°° the real New Yorkers, theno CHIHUAHUA CITY, Mexico, July 27.—Villa, with about thirty men, is in the Canon do las Huertas, near El) Paso de Penoles, Durango, according to despatches from Gen, Ramos, sent by courier to Mapamt and telegraphed to Gen. Trevino, Calixto Contreras, his chief Heutenant, whose death re- cently Was reported from Mexico City, deserted immediately after the Parral fight and made his way southeast with one-half of the men who at tacked that city, according to the despatches. It was reported that the Villa fol lowers are scattere hills of the Sierras in small bands. 0, people never,’ 4 . intoxication, And this liveliness is Alejandro was said to be in the Canon | Know, It thinks It more fitting that Al 5 de las Piedras with the twenty sur-|America should know something | Quite Nien Ag tg liveli- vivors of the eighty with whom he |, bout New York.” eg Be ota ork the jus participated in the Parral fight, Nic- ce of admitting that its prom- las Hernandez, who attempted to reach Hacienda Hermanas, in an ef- fort to locate buried ammunition, was met and repulsed by the Government | troops a day's march from his objec- | tive, the despatches sa tohes sald. ROOT'S SON IS ; SON IS BEST MARKSMAN IN CAMP Elihu Jr. Scores 132 Out of a Pos-! states, sible 150 at the Platts- 1 inch burg Camp. | notice, “Let Tracie, Tham soar OtOvrewtTe Baie ) (@ * claimed impatiently, agreed, New York, And they mean it. not know very well what the rest of America thinks about It. knows very little about America, you TES BVSNING WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 19 Cane tow one Onnt tom 4 AD vAKES ORAMATIC LEAVE’ Real “Native” Can't Stand the Pace, So He Leav the Outsider to Live Under the Spell of the -Harrison Rhodes Calls City Metropoli a “Shifting Camp, a Fair,” By Nixola Greeley-Smith, ‘hat 1s a New Yorker? Mr, Harrison Khodes asks this unusual and interesting qu the leading article of Harper's Magazine this month—a very witty article, which containe praise enough to soothe the vanity of New Yorkers, and criticlam enough to aseu of dwellers in outer darkness beyond the gates. Rhodes ts an author and playwright who has combined distinction with success in a degree unusual Mr. in our shores, one?" he added casually, " I admitted sadly, qualify, I was born here.” “You were born here and you live Impossible!" Mr, Rhodes ex- “The native New He except in the cannot stand the pace. to be found I owned up to a suburb and Mr, Rhodes smiled and breathed more “he added, IN THIS COUNTRY. “But that definition would take in the entire population of the United (L have these ‘ks of civic pride occasionally.) dls. “There are thousands of good Philadelphia who say that there are no homes in ‘Oh, yes, New York ts a good place to go to, but to live in, shudderingly. New York docs 1 remarked, It would not,” Mr, Rhodes in Boston and they exclaim, “And America agrees with New York apparently, one of Augustus Thomas's early playa a Loulsyille editor delivered the usual diatribe against this city of light. * I interrupted. observed @ native born, ‘t whenever a Louisville editor sells a | page ad, he hops on the first train to | New York to spend the money." Rhodes said, “that New York offers most material advantages of any city in the United And by material advantages hear opera, to see good pictures as well as to earn more money and to spend it us admit," Mr, ude the opportunity to standing, for he was born in Cleveland, ©, and haa lived among us nine whole years, “Your article merely asks a question which {t fs important to have answered,” I said to Mr, Rhodes with firmness, when we met in the drawing room of “em his apartment on West Fifty-ninth Street. ‘What is a New Yorker?” Mr. Rhodes repeated, in the low, well modu- lated accents indigenous to Harvard University. anybody who was not born in New York, ien't it? I was born in Cleve land, you know, and so I can quality as a New Yorker mysolf, m afraid? —$ _$_—____ “one might New Yorkj “In the envy He 1s, moreover, a New Yorker of long “Why, a New Yorker ts You, too, you lonely here? I asked a young woman who has recently come here and who has practically no acquaint- ances. ‘No,’ she answered, ‘I'm never lonely in New York. I go down to the docks and I watch the steamers going out all over the world, 1 see trains puffing to and from the four corners of this continent, and that gives me @ sense of humanity, a feel- ing of belonging to the whole world, | | people who hear the call of the siren City and come here to live under its| spell; people you and I have never heard of, What ts it New York docs for them?" “It gilds their anonymity,” I an- swered. “It lays the mantle of its| splendor over their little, lonely lives, It makes them bjg tn the only way they ever could be big—-in the mass.” “Of all American cities, New York is the most nearly @ metropolis,” Mr, Rhodes said, “And £ think the chief {impression the metropolis makes. is of the vivacity of its life. New York does not appear most vivacious en Broadway at night, but on Fifth Avb- nue by day. On a bright morning there Is no resisting Fifth Avenue's a centre of dissipation has York is gay, and one of ‘s to ‘What ts a New sl "might be "The New Yorker t|THE TOLERANCE EXPRESSED BY THE NEW YORK SHRUG. nd he is tolerant,” 1 amended, me tolerance is the New York- yer's great characteriath tune, ill luck, tragedy, happiness, ain, saintliness—he takes them all with a shrug of the shoulders. The Purl- tan conscience needed to have that shrug grafted upon it, and we owe it to our foreign population, It ia a great gift they brought us.” “Another cha teristic of the PLATTSBURG, N. ¥., July 27.--|to greater advantage. Admit, too, | Yorker is Ma ta r or » tr is 4 * |) Rhodes sald ‘The ohiet Intarent a ine training | that New York 1# the shifting) qoating population floating any night, cump centres now on the field cam-|camp or fair and in this sense 18) from cabaret to cabaret, and it ts not paign—the big hike that is to begin the least permanent place in the| true that the frequenters of the next Monday, This will last eight | 6,000 men across country. will be done exactly as in In the etual WAP. | 14 the of ail the] world and consequently the newest, days, and involves the movement ot | freshest, Peat ane third in @ ser can of ofr cities, | verything | sy article on New York, by the way, es of five on places are out-of-town visitors, patrons may not be old ladies de- scended from Knickerbocker families, or, professors of Colurnbia University, but the cabarets are frequented by al millions of New Yorkers." target practice American cities. ‘The first was called | §* P| a " 7 ‘Then you don't think such places regiments about half the men have | WHY Is a Bostonian?” The second, | emt te drevide: wicketnens. for the qualified as experts, sharpshooters |iwyio jg a Philadelphian? 1 have Bo ge Perie ey or marksmen, The highest score | sti11 to do Washington and Chicago.” Mr. Rhodes replied, so far is that of Elihu Root jr—| «1, there anything to be said for polis doog not adapt ts 132 out of a possible 150, Among the | njoago?" I inquired, curiously Tantiia the last thing the out of town high scores In tne Blath sreiment | +*Much," Mr, Rb replied, “I be-| visitor wants, When he comes here Fee nat oP expert: “Asrombiymun [lieve it In overybody's duty to ave) he comes to enjoy himaelf New York Fish qualified as a sharpshooter and jtived in Chicago." CL knew then Mr.) 8 Assemblyman A, Ellenbogen as a | stnodes believes In personal atonement | THE NEW YORK WAY OF SPEND- marksman, W. H. Osborn, son of ING MONEY. William Chureh Osborn, degree of sharpshooter, iia gained the | | Jecto) |for sin and 1 did not pursue the sub- | ONE 18 NEVER LONELY IN THIS| “The New Yorker," | Rhodes in our consel ous for his characteristics, "has le how to spend his money. Wh ontinued Mr, The | t the birds of the household, eo that the canary’ social engagements would never again clash with his, Lately, spectal trains were sent to bring young men from the colleges to a debutante’s ball. These are all instances of the way the New Yorker spends money.” “You mean the real New Yorker, not the native, 1 BuCpeee Te L sald, “The enough, you know" “But I've told you there are no na- tive New Yorkery,” sald Mr. Rhodes emphatically, “And you've admitted that while you were born here you live in New Jersey. The natives ail live out of town, 7 now, just to mako an experiment, I hunted up two of the oldest ho ! in New York and tried to find some one to introduce | me to the two old ladies who lived in the Mr, Rhodes paused, In that mo- ment he was unmasked, Native of veland, ©. though he may be, he 4s not, he can never be a New Yorker, No New Yorker ever, for any purpose, wanted to know an old lady. ‘And there are no old ladies in New York, anyhow. O'RYAN DENIES DYING SOLDIER WAS NEGLECTED General Says Private Healy of Twenty-third Regiment Had Every Possible Care, WASHINGTON, July 27.—A rovort from Gen, O'Ryan, commanding the New York National Guard Division on the border, made public to-day by the War Department, asserts that the death récently of Private Clinton Healy of the Twenty-third New York Infantry was not due to neg- legt, as has been charged in published rdports from the border. O'Ryan says Healy received je attention and th id pleural adhesic ) of lungs.” died from sides and tube ACCUSED BY 3Y GIRL: ABSENT. urt Orders Arrest of Brooklys Mam Who Falls to Appear. When Edward Ball of No. 369 Patehen Avenue, Brooklyn, failed to appear in the Adams Street Court this, morning for examination on a charge of disorderly conduct, Magistrate Walsh ordered @ Warrant for his arrest {asued On July 17 Ball ded a Gates A car and, rding to wit pushed and 1 Mins Jo- Koch Putnam necording, Noo sah Kuveker . the girl vile names because she would not move TO-PREACH IN ESPERANTO. to, Congress W Praye! July ANNAPOLIS, Md, ninth annual Congress of the Eape 27.—The ranto Association of North America ened here to-day and will continue ugh Sunday, A religious pro- Famine has been arrang \d St. Anne's 1 |pat Church. ‘Mo! nin prayer in Will be led Noy. James Ausiptant rector ermon in the 4 preached by Elizabeth, N. J Mustrated ' permon and a! aermo gunge will be fei foetian ot an Tanto as an Auxillary to Reli- wil PASE “Ey on 1 be delivered The chy HR ASE thee TOWN BN Fea) he dere ee une e ones pany was to-day granted a franchise| “There are perhaps nore New | pe ees ee ae atte Weta | two ld to operate an omnibus route in the| Yorkers than there ought to be," Mr.| Cn Teo wn Croesus is apt to do, Bronx, beginning at city Isiand Ave-| Rhodes resumed, "Many persona| Many of the. richest New Yorkers nue at the southerly end of City | come here-more women than men,| live in small houses, But there are Island’ Road in Pelham ark, to|perhaps—who would have happier, | ar three hosters whe buy, besea Pena a Fordham Road and along |More personal, lives {f they had re | their guests to choose after one and street. com > make an initial payment | O0o'‘and wive the city te per | ‘of Its gross receipts. Sing’ fare Ja to be Wh cents and six tickets are to be sold for @ dollar, Hundred The uonsh | these | ta mained in their home towns, they would have more human rela- New York gives to| er, less personal interest, ips. Still, volunteer New Yorkers T mean | dinner which play they would rather see, Did you ever hear of the man who discovered, when he wanted his car, that It was being used to take ®\ his wife's canary to the bird dootor? ‘Aren't! He bought @ small car especially for condition is 4, publisher of the Brook- 4 Union, has been confined to ‘0, 466 Clinton Avenue, several days with an attack of pleurisy, Mr. Berri caught @ cold while attending the Republican National Convention at Chi- cago, which into pleuriay, Ele jot serious Real ‘‘New Yorkers’’Come From Elsewhere; | 1 wat uss 0 Natives Are Found Only in the Suburbs * A Som tan When ee eg ene to “ oo he hw e a fs we i i the Wor Gay May at om wets OUT Thar We veer )\ weir OT TWO OFFICERS IN 12TH REGIMENT RESIGN PLACES ‘einbeninas Capt. Tucker and Lieut. Janes Said to Have Violated Camp Regulations, indent (Special From a Staff Corre: of The Evening Worl MALLEN, Tex. July 27,—The resignation of two office: of the Twelfth Regiment—Capt. Wentworth Tucker of Company G and Second Lieut. Edward Foster Janes of Com- pany I—were accepted by Major Gen. O'Ryan to-day, In announcing the fact. Gen, O'Ryan eaid: “The two officers referred to violated the regu- lations and resigned thelr commis- sions.” This is the extent of the official report on the matter, It has been known In the camp for several days that two officers of the Twelfth had been charged with violations of the regulations which, in the event of their being found guilty by a court- martial, would entail their dismissal from the serivce, No courtmartial was held and thelr resignations wero accepted tn accordance with @ rule in the regular army. A despatch published here under a Washington date stating that Preal- dent Wilson had written an Indiana woman, whose son is in the army, that the troops are on the border to protect the country and not for training pur- poses has created great surprise among the officers in this camp. It has been officially announced by Gen. O'Ryan that this ts a training camp and tt is understood throughout the army that the militia of all States ts in Texas for tralning purposes exclusively and not tor border patrol or border protection, If the Washington Information ts correct the White House is not ap- parently in touch with things in the State, War and Navy Building acrosa the street. The Seventh Regiment ts getting a tot of pick and shovel training these days, Yesterday a big detail worked all day digging up and grading a vide boulevard, #0 as to spoak, through the regimental camp. To- day a detail of 100 men of the Dandy Seventh is out on the main road dig- ging ditches for the new water supply equipment HAY FEVER can be greatly relieved! 1, and others, have been cured at a total personal cost of 50c and the use of an or- dinary atomizer. Suf- ferers will be fully in- without formed, charge, by addressing EX. SUFFERER, Breslin Hotel, New York City. The notice ta inserted Decause of the impoast- bility of reaching the army of sufferere by private communtoation, with stream, slipped end fell from @ leg. |! ploked myself up and when I at. | tempted to walk “rr LB) | tone Ane,” sod Mee Dim, The mtee | hap ovourred at our eamp ineever, i Mra 0 | omked if it wae true that her husband Small Groups of Women’s Apparel for IMMEDIATE CLEARANCE LIG that were $25 to TAL that were $45 to $65 BEACH, that were $35, $4 SMART OUTING SKIRTS that were $15 and $18...........0065 ite of BaCovernor Recovering From Injury Heceived After Gev Slipping Off Log. the report wee pubiiehed day that Mra Jobe A. De, the former Governor, was Coohebd to the Ihe summer home in [the Adirmdacks at Themeon, NT, 0 |eulforing from @ fractured leg sue ‘tained while on @ Jaunt through the . \* * few dave age, The Brening A] Word got Mrs nerecit on the lephone and learned ad eoourred Ave weeks ight leg wae broken, but it od nicely and L om getting Me- miles trom Thom. ne in the woods Din and, im crossing & about wae und 1 eoulda’t.” yin laughed heartily when HT SUMMER FROCKS Linen, batiste, dimity and voile, LORED CLOTH SUITS the eee cersceseeesceccoows ewes lt ror & STREET COATS ¢ SUMMER BLOUSES that were $10 to $15..........cccceccccevccesccenns st Hats ‘AILORED & RTS ST vLEs— Regularly $18 and | i BEAUTIFUL GAR TS Regularly $28 to $35 — = Some Money ‘ He was somewhat dubious of success, for his busl- ness was young. He was, as he thought, un- known to the bank. He hadn’t what might be called an Al showing. However, he met with a hearty reception. Pre- liminaries were rapidly arranged and he left the bank in a half hour with credit to his account of The Fact in the Matter ©! had been, reading hie advertising, ‘ It Was Good Advertising” his advertising campaign. the amount requested. that had as much as any one thing to do with the young merchant’s success in this instance was that the bank official whose O, K. was necessary Any competent judge would say that it could not fail to develop his business. Part of the money the merchant wanted to borrow was to continue The Establishment of Credit through advertising judiciously placed and thor- oughly well prepared and displayed is not new. It has succeeded so often that the wonder is more merchants do not benefit by it. THE WORLD’S Circulation is of such a character that the advertising it car- ties does double duty. credits in their power, 18,*25 : ren corerer ee Not Long Ago a Young Business Man Went to a Bank to Borrow It not only develope business, because it is the great HOME circula- tion of New York, but it strengthens credits be- cause THE WORLD is read by the live men of the city who have financial and merchandise ‘18! 4 6