The evening world. Newspaper, August 22, 1917, Page 8

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~ twee ee eo ee te CO ELLE LS eet, PaaS ae i ’ ___ HB BVENING WORLD, wepxeE OF 69TH | The Sixty-Ninth Settles Down to re) i we endl eave Whenever my 4 @ dently beside Mea Perher Johes — WELGOME 350 MEN | DRAFTEDFROM 230 Cets Wild Re ception at Camp Mills and Is Greeted by Col, H CAMP MILAS GARDEN ut Three neared on4 Atty men of the Twenty third I 4 to help ninth Ree Detachment erry aus fon the ramke of trained at Garden Oly just before noon t Welcomed to camp with aom thet shattered the atmosphere = | ‘The detachment from the Penney. | third « ing parked warriors of day ar en enthust @nlong the roadway lead camp between sulid lines of automobiies and the f At the head of the « n the Sixty-ninth’s band played a» it pever played before. Once tnaide the camp, the ninth bottled wp ite enthust enough to p ception to the newoomers by Col, Hine. The detachment of the Twen- ty-third lined up before the head- quarters tent and recetved the hearty | greeting of its new commander | MEN UNDER CANVASS DEFY cheering us Trinh ment Sixty lone informal re of an ‘The safe body building tonic for all the family to take is Father John's Medicine because the pure ind wholesome food elements ich it contains build new fi ind strength and by driving out the impurities restore norma) health. —Advt. ° the Bronx, were rehearsing nearby HEAVY RAIN. | Dropping their inatruments, they aped The grounds at Camp Mills wera to the scone of the accident deluged by rain all last night, but the BANOSMEN APPLY THEIR FIRST oye under canvas slept as comfort. | AID TRAINING. @bly as if they had been rolled up in| ‘The little victim was fast bleeding their own beds at home, It waa not|to death. The bandsmen applied thoir #0 with the wentries, however, Com-|first ald lessons. They quickly pany B, in command of Capt. Tom | knotted two handkerchiefs togeth ovised In @ few moments tho flow of blood stopped. The boy was carried to the fleld hospital for tem- Sixty-ninth | porary treatment and then was re to-day in| moved to the Nassau County Hos- whowe leg | pital, Major Lawrence, Surgeon of had been almost severed by a motor |the Sixty-minth, warmly commended truck. The viotim, Leonard Fisher,|tho two bandsmen-and sald of Queens, came out to look at the soldiers,. He was riding on the rear of the truck when, at the Riley, h the pleasant duty of try go,” and thoy were command when relieved Treat Diseased Gums. | ing. JA oh 7; aoe mon Two bandsmen of the ] in ‘rowns, ridgowor' a distinguished themselves d Inlays of Gold, Si- | ‘ a and Potgelate carefully made oe eee ton bor at Reasonable Prices. and with @ plece of wood in water-logred | tourniquet this morn their | prompt work had saved the boy's life. The medical officers of the com- amp en-|mand made a rigid inspection of the trance, jt stopped suddenly. A huge|camp to-day and pronounced its contractor's truck close behind | sanitation perfect. Not a man of the crashed into the rear of the halted machine, the radiator crushing the boy's left leg. McKenna. in and have breakfast.” Paddy Hogan is the cook of Corm- Sixty-ninth has reported sick as yet. The surgeons, however, have been seeing, face to face, Brigadier Gon- eral Michael J. Lenihan, when he went out to watch them drill, Gen. |Lenihan arrived im camp late last evening and found brigade quarters already set up for bim and bis staff, a litde back and to the left of the headquarters of Col, Hine. Gen, Lenihan was a contemporary at West Point of Col. Hine and Col. Bandhols, Chiof of Staff to Major Gea. fee with milk and sugar. te raid Street, and John Spink, cornetist, who lives at No. 28¢4 Harrington Avenue, Compa I's chef d'oeuvre. and Waldorf-Astoria will please tale notloe. rs PITT x letters to Camp Mills, Garden City, SO GFaripiture dale L. t. Telegrams may be sont direct ‘to Camp Mills, for the Western Union ground “We have 183. Now, come And when {t comes to being a chef, Paddy ts Biltmore | the Relatives of the men of tho Sixty- ninth in writing should address thelr has an affice with an operator on the PUTTING ALL THE COMFORTS himself, is no Lilliputian, He looked long at Capt. Reilly, then mused: “How can they miss him?” busy dealing out soothing balms for|pany 1, and he's a pirate when it| “Who?” demanded Lieut. Sherman | A big crowd gathered about the Iit-|sunburn. ‘The youngsters will go |£vmes to getting the bost to be vad. | Platt. tle victim, but those tn it seemed tol about in their undershirte and bles. | ZN Irish and near-Irish soldiers of | “The Germans,” responded the “ Nalichetieab de cind ana Company I wouldn't starve in Paris | Major with a sig have lost thor p ing Old Sol ts no reapector of persons. ! with Paddy on the job, Here's what] Capt. James McKenna of Company did nothing. John J. McCormick, the! ‘This morning the rank and file of he gave them for breakfast this|/1 with his brother, Lieut, William, basw drummer in the band, whose] ¢he sixty-ninth had morning: Prunes, fresh beef hash | Rattalion Adjutant, were at the head home te at Ne. 607, West Fittioeh ‘ y-ninth had the pleasure of (no embalmed stuff), toast and cvf-lof a team of elght which holde the world's record for wall scaling. They were all of the Seventh Regiment champions, besides the Me- Kennas, were Bill and Humphrey O'Brien, ‘“Juddy" (Kilpatrick, Jim Gabler, Charles King and “Bill Knox {| SIXTY-NINTH ENJOYS THE FIRST q BATTALION PARADE. after retreat they helt tne Last night the firat battalion parade with band at tts head. It was the parade & OF O’'Ryan, He was born in Hopkinton, | Ptabtehdilad IN CAKE wiLLe. of the Becond Battattor Major ita. . 7 5 efrigerators were pu im Opera-}ocom commanding. e rest of ne Carriages & Go-Carts Pub ANS: was a inet aetna f!eon to-day in the camp. Tt hasn't regiment turned out to witness the Wi us at ylew oa mreairy ih the Bpenisd War Later asen 9 t here nce the Sixty-| function and the edwe of the camp tea Meroe RNS hel |e campaignod in the Philippines as ived, but there haw been no} waa lined with automobiles which Captein ef the Twenty-dtth infantry er of wnybody freesing at any/drove in from ail the nd mea’ stuff is better in a rer out of one. The water have beon dug and cool Regiment. He rose to the position of Colonel and was recently made Brigadier General of the Bighty- 2inch ota, ‘owt Iacaver, Division—the “Rainbow” division, of | /°M . The shower baths are whigh the Sixty-ninth is a pai most popular BAND ACQUIRES A GOAT, TAM- Aoow they, are after drill, which, in the morning laste MANY SY NANG. from 7 to 10 o'clock, when there's a * The band has & goat, He came) mighty rush for the drip, In into gamp at rehearsal yesterday and) husky men of the Sixty-ninth there liked the warlike music so well that | @fe @ lot of trained and famed ath- and other perisbable werator than holes too drinking third Brigade of the Forty-second | W4ter Is now to be had without any mong the side. There will be no regimental pa rades while the Sixty-ainth is in camp. The Fourth Ohio Kt ta brigaded with th ment, which ninth, is canvas in Camp Mills until thing Is ready, At the noon hour to-day there was & rush of hucksters to the edge of {elarionette and John Spink the bari-|them. Ho's some football huaky and | Gam jue se hey had for Y } tone, When they started to practise | was the coach for the New York 4 au to . SALE OF iia eae | thle morning the goat looked up as|WBlversity for nx years. © | laters were offering for wale packages | y Rolrigerators | With MK r vie shell anime wanitary J | if he had heard the pipes of Pan, Or! goomall gladiator. He's as big as oe rath y i 8 ee den | mt Bavinxe of from 25% Rex, Price 68 where eh cullen Wes maybe he took them for a couple of|}a house, with shoulders as broad 48! camps, Flivver: 50c¢ a Week watyrs, At any rate, he butted into| the bes a ots battleship Major Den have come out | s the <q ovan is smaller, with a neat and trim | pressed into liv vice, and from Delivers the game and was the most playful] geure, put with the strength of an Re tke ¢ on] bof oy men woat ever seen out of Bronx captiv-| ox. Major Monyhan looked at his| charged, it. | that. tuale iv the sate jity, He made a goat gallop out of a| brother offcers this morning, and he owners have con to become fox trot the band was trying, and! SPERRY GOLD STAMPS |) Shere Dever was @ quicker cleanup We redeem Sperry Gold Stamps [| shee Mayor Mitchel made his fatal $4.50" in” merohundl 1 o'olock cabaret order, whieh they named Tammany, all right.” They have him tie The officers were up again morning and out at their sidearms, ‘ish War happened, Nothing like it oce the Regular Army, but Col. J out with the rest, goming. “Some Colonel,” remarked the offt« cers yesterday with a rin, The rank and file of the Sixty-ninth ts @ great jbunch for grinning--and bearing, This morning they wore right on their toes, and no officer had to be called when the band played the revaille, WHY COL, HINE DIDN'T CATGH HIS MEN NAPPING, When Capt, Haskell joined the |regiment a& Colonel at Mission in Texas the frst thing that occurred on the first morning after his arrle yal was @ bugle call for off be- fore reveille, And at that tims only & few of the officers were not caught napping. The Sixty-ninth has learned to be prepared for anything, We Give av GREEN & HN ott Continuous porta this reveille with Not since the Span- has anything of the kind ‘8 in Hine is nd there's no kick Dessert — PA ne ; our-Piece Jacobean Oak Dining Room Suit — **: Pr be It Desired, po “gs and Col, Hine's new order getting bry bore 1 ihe peat tng them out on deck early in the morn- 5 o #40 7 om has raised the commander just more notch in their estimation, a@y, are you on The Kveuing World?” asked Capt, James McKenna | of Company I, as a representative of | this paper was making bis early morning rounds, ‘The representative '# Greatest Furniture House wr, 135 to 36 St. man onty | BLOCK 8TH AVE responded (jratatully, and then the Tunes 4 i 9 tain sal | day npany f Aghters in it." | THE D & C COMPANY ‘Was that a mistake?’ al } ee tal & el miarted te | Food Products of B was" xeaponded Capt, T had six prize ~ &@Mpy ge- {} Market St. yT-FINE NEW COLD Dessert To make—it’s as simple as a promise and quick as a ges- ture. Served snow- cold, becomes an en- ticing meal-time habit. Six flavors. Be sure you try Nut Chocolate. At all grocers. ‘xceptional Merit Only puntry- | Y 17 Enjoy Life in Camp \=32272 due to arrive iy me, but} will nat be adm all prep- jarations for ita rec nd hous Ing are complete none of Yestern regiments will bo put| the Mary ied The tee orem enke and ple otal Aner 1 wt Mine for be ener t ape, the wtet bengan tem a ettere with a very eenety te Ok few very Bindty f having © bet oie and tna Ses ease, "ow fe before Suffering. eee ° we netierd to / : 7 ro e ' jond tt | the @ rd eediowme bee tors letter te only one of ' 1 not ted wi errifie hardship for trvdia KO Pinkh h ple, and apparently done ely continuance of sterm iron hand | fered from female tr Ive the ffiewlty herdly ge eround ute realy 1 was nerve’ jem. Mis maim | epelis, heat Mas! stopping specula- | til life was a tw eo. They | brought me a bottle of Lydia B, 1 bark crops, awaiting still | Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and © prices, and becoming more die ly nm hegen to improve | coating now free from all « hat made life « bur may wee this letter in em use and # equipment of the ratireads | way you like, for | want the worl ow short hours of labor forced |to know what a grand medicine Lydia ae oe E. Pinkhom's Vegetable Compound the output of manufac: | is.”—Mrs GO. Lowery, 011 5. Bag rett Ave, Denison, Texas ¢eengmis situation the con- | Write the Lydia F. Pinkham Vea. i Munday, promises tote | eine Co. Lynn, Mass, for free ade tween Liberalism and Reac- | ylee.—Advt i HERBERT PARSONS TO FLY {pax “NEW PROCESS. WITH ARMY IN FRANCE’) Window Shades Cleaned Commissioned Major in Aviation Equal to New! Corps and Suffragists Will , Miss Him. ALBANY, N. ¥., Aug. 22.—Herbert Parsons, New York lawyer, former Con- Kregsman and one-time Chairman of | the New York County Republican Cor mittee, has reesived @ commission Major in the Aviation Corps, according to announcement made here at Suffrage headquarters, and will soon sail for France. Five hundred thousand women en rolled in the State Suffrage Party w Degin, work at once on Chri re ents to be sent to him tn recognition of |hix work for suffrage rsona was to » been a speaker at the State [Convention in Saratoga Aug. 29 and 30. © process ts niew shade at one rae. hird ftown by ‘and. apart nese solteited. houses os One ample ‘CHARLES SEGALL ne 'T Office and Factory, 2744-2748 Broadway, New York (Telephone Academy 2214.) &: SAS SSE SSSR VAVAWS WSS WS PASS Sse RSs NS SSN SX r Ss \ Don’t fuss with hubby iS SJ about droppin’ tobacco S \ ashes on the carpet. S .. Them ashes keep |. S N the moths out an’ the S hubby in. NG NS S S S SSX SS Sy ty Ce “sys Wy > SO SV“ > SSS : NWS OU-ALL who know pipe tobacco,. won't fail to notice VELVET’S natural aged-in-the-wood smoothness. It is the smoothness that only comes from two years’ ageing in wooden hogsheads:—Nature’s Way. Liggett « Myars Tobacco Cox Itc Tlas bc Bags 1 1b, Glase Humidors

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