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! ' Ce eee Er - ~ a Sie tialectcepiieleitiniatinocien — eee CLL e eee IN TRAINING STUNTS © FOR 69TH REGIMENT Athletics an Important | New Programtr Camp Mills Resinol will heal those mosquito bites ~~ t oF Sa ~~ rote — ’ 28 ee ‘ ey tohes wp Unik @anneN ond omen ‘ ") ~ hee and . ave In the peat the Mer Hemment bee been tome + Inat Clearing them away journey dow prisingly short time + camp he would think himerit by ail druggions bs ry Noutng the moet «& Je ever atipmpted in the bie tory of the aport be @ dominant |? training #tunt for the battlefields of Sunday World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders. France The recently tnaugurated CP RePc eons framme of intensified training makes athletics a decidedly important insur It has been decided by the athi officers of the regiment that boxing &® necessary requirement for the who will shortly battle “over ther Tho Sixty-ninth, or rather the Onc Hundred and Sixty-ffth Infantry it is now designated, is fortunate having scores of experienced boxers in its ranks, Those men will act as instructors ir brethren in the manly of seit schooled a art nse, pt. James McKenna, now oom- manding I Company and shortly to be twansferred to the command of D Company, will be the general fistic supervisor, Capt. Jim, as he is af fectionately known to his fellows, is @ boxer of no mean abilit and tn bis more strenuous days he was rated as one of the best amateur welt in the game. In his days at C 1 he was the welterweight champion, and during his rowing carcer at Har- vard he held his own with the gloves with the best of the Cambridge lads WILL TAKE A CARLOAD OF BOX. ING GLOVES. As soon of the regiment can get boxing gloves the instruction will be- eights | | Page of War gin, In the mean while, however, the ' instructors will. start their charges e to work with shadow boxing. Sev- in eral Irish organ! ona have offered to furnish the regiment with sporting paraphernalia ond requests have beon i sent broadcast for boxing glov Capt. McKenna reckons that the reg- a iment will require a car load of pad ded mitts to give it a full supply. He has figured that a freight car will hold just 1,600 gets of glover. Inus- t Three Good Guesses for You in One Number By some accident or other, next Sunday's WORLD MAGA- ZINE turns out to be a Guessing Number. The Editor did not lan it so. The Editor is not that frivolous, even in Summer. It ed to grow together that way, same as Topsy just grew. Get it and amuse yourself with these 3 Good Guesses. GUESS Which well-known New Yorker signed which of those 78 Riddle Signatures on Page 2. They were not written as riddles, 78 prominent citizens signed their names just as they always sign them to their checks and letters, and the Sunday World reproduced them in “life-size” facsimile. You would know each of those names if you heard them or saw them in print. But can you read them as their owners write! them? Just to add interest to the question, the Sunday World offers A PRIZE OF $25 to that one of its readers who shall decipher the largest number of those 78 autographs. Will you win it ? GUESS Whether the war, will end on February 11, 1918. Cap'n Urquhart of Brooklyn, a devout old son of Neptune who has sailed the seven seas since boyhood, and claims no astrological or spiritual powers, has a mysterious “hunch” that it will. He bases his| prophecy on a passage in the Bible. If his impression ig carried out by events, people will hail him as the best practical prophet since Noah foretold the Flood. But is Cap'n Urquhart right ? GUESS Whether Explorer Carr-Boyd, that toy of a laughing destiny which would have tickled most men to death, is telling the truth or not. This modern Munchausen begins here a series of hair- raising adventure stories. Some of them, he says, are absolutely true. Others are not quite so true. But which is which? Can you pin Carr-Boyd down and guess where verity leaves off and “elaboration” begins ? | TODAY Other Good Features | Procrastination is the thief of | fe health: Keep yourse i" wall by " ‘ 7 the timely use and help o' { Rafael Kirchner’s Last Portrait | j and the Famous Painter's Favorite Among the Creations of his| ' Brush. A Color Page of Dashing European War Posters. Plenty BEECHAM S of the Right Kind of Stories for a Summer Sunday. PILLS In THE WORLD MAGAZINE To-Morrow | Any Moi gt =? ‘oe jerywhere: In boxes, i baled Much aa the regiment will have 8,605 enlisted men or a total of 3,700, in- Cluding officers, he docs not think hts estimate too great. ‘Major William J. Donovan, commands tho first battalion, great believer in athlet! Seeking to make his who is a and he is mmand the Pimples and Blackheads liched and Burned Badly On Face, NeckandHead, Disfigured | Face With Scaly Ereptions. Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment Healed, “My face broke ow ‘ith small red pimples and blackhead®. ‘They began to spread on my face, neck and head, and also to enlarge and fester, They itched and burned so badly that I scratched them which distigured my face with large, scaly eruptions, and I could not sleep at night. My hair was thin and fell out very fast. This lasted fornearly two months. “At last I read of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and I bought them. 1 used four cakes of Cuticura Soap and nearly two and a half boxes of Cuticura Oint- ment when I was completely healed."* (Signed) Miss Edna Siegert, Elmsford, N.Y, December 26, 1916. Nwhien Cuticura has cleared your skin af pimples and redness keep it clear by using the Soap assisted by the Ointment for every-day toilet purposes. Abso- lutely nothing better For Free Sample Each by Return Mail address post-card: “Cuticura, Dept. ." Sold everywhere. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 ane SOc in} THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, | Fair Visitors at Camp Mills Join Men of 69th BAXING DOMINANT In an Impromptu Banquet From Cracker Boxes ‘+ #8 ee teeee ere | most thoroughly trained organization 1 the army tf not in the world athletic days “ BUI” Donovan crack quarterback on the © bia eleven, @ substitute for two years i the varslty crew and croas-« | runner of no mean ability The Sixty-ninth to-day filled its iota of men when the 348 men from the Fourteenth Regiment — react np Milla, The Sixty-ninth Is now istered up regimental stand lof Franee, with 3,605 men. It is | shy some of its ninety-five of rhe contingent from the Fi in command of Lieut. Alfred J, Hook, passed out the gate of its 1mp at Bheepshead Bay Specdway ut 10.15 o'clock and marehed al Ocean Avenue, escorted by the reg | ment and the band, | were waiting to convey th jmaica and from there to |, After the lads had pa tents and equipment early this morn- ing the regiment passed in review be # | fore them and Col. J. R. Howlett made an address. yu will evidently see service in France,” the Colonel maid, “and I know that in the fighting you will uphold the honor of your old organ- jzation, with {ts proud tradit hate to see good een leave you have got to go, and may God pshead Bay turned out to join in the farewell. Streets and shops were gay with waving flags and everybody carried a small flag to wave to the sold! Among those there to bed godspeed to the boys was Mrs. Mary A ham, widow of one of the Du Zouaves in the Civil War. Mrs. Gra- ham is seventy-six and partly para- lyzed, but, carrying a tattered old nerioan flag, she dragged herself to the gate at the Speedway. It was the flag which she waved to the Fourteenth Regiment when it left for the front in 1862. She waved it again in 1898 when the Fourteenth Regi- ment left Camp Black for the Span- ish War. And this is the third time she waved it for the boys of the Four- teenth, Under the new system of intensified training just put in vogue at Camp Mills the individual soldier is being taught initiative and ingenuity, Pri- vates are called out of the ranks and ed in command of squads. They given problems to work out and initiative and ingenuity are demonstrated. Incidentally it gives the man in the ranks more respect for his non-cmmissioned officers, for he realizes that their office is no sinecure, The same system applies all the way up, Sergeants are placed in command of: platoons and lieutenants in com- mand of companies and captaine in command of battalions, Relatives and friends who have not seen the young warriors since the never-to-be-forgotten farewell day have wondrous surprises in store for them when they visit the camp to- morrow. Col, Hine has decided to throw the camp open to visitors from 2 until 6 o'clock to-morrow afternoon. The week's work has worked miracles in the ranks, and the sun bronzed them, There is nothing to daunt them now. O'RYAN SENDS THE COLONEL A SHILLELAH, | Resting on the table of Col, Hine Jis a beautiful shillelah, the gift of Major General O'Kyan, | It arrived at np yesterday and will be carried to by the regimental commander, the shillelah was @ | | Your regiment should have at least one hence orthodox weapon, accept the attached with my compliments, GEN, O'RYAN, MAJ. When word of the shillelah's arrival passed down the line Corporal Archie Reilly of © Company in a wonderful parked and it's an Irish rifle and miss fire," a OBITUARY NOTES. Tho Rev. Mer. P. M. Abbelen, seventy-four, di of Notre Dame convent and formerly Vicar General of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Mil- waukee, is dead at Milwaukee, Charles Patrick McKiernan, Viee Con- sul at Tientsin, China, is dead there at the age of thirty brogue re * shure they ne ‘ector h S. Quinn, an official of the Metro-| n Association of the Amateur Ath- asociation, 1s dead at No, 161 t \fty-fourth Btreet tad to six cars which | m to Ja The work has hardened | ¢ h von Baeyer, the discoverer of synthetic indigo and one of the best | known man ssors of organic! mistry, is dead at Starnbe: - échem Starnberg, Ger etal Aveust 25, 1917. etme Ae we dees > Adolf Rolm’'s Ballets; : . - Masicians Tuning Up ‘ the ———————————— TTT CLIMBED STAIRS ¢ | ON HER HANDS Too 1 te Wolk Upright. Operation Advieed. Seved by Lydia & Pinkham s Vegetable Compound. CER OPONORE EHO e Oe eee T Ee By Sylveeter Rowling -eecee —— role hieeone ‘ 7 “ ’ Head her t the top to Ww The doctor ‘id he thought I should have. en operation, and m friends thought t live to My, dengh- "Lydia »pound, @8 by good results Tid sd sred, | gained moved into our new nd cement work, of chickens a ich in praise Vegetable facts have rea t t a ' ' v ter asked me to try of her Margu \ t Ve ble ¢ LOSES $2, 650 AT CONEY. ! ber Wher Our old ¢ America declared war, n am Yatae of No, 466 1 bufldi and raised hundred ducks. I cannot say ¢ of Lydia I ham's ; 7 mera, and a tth th f ma sh them for “the i choral conduot qrith y Vs efit won nt Mee M. O. Dintimem Sas ! hud JOHINSE mite Dy , Rich- vee +t Albert Spalding, devotes of golf and tt wh he dt mond, Ind.--Advt. —— | CHARITY. CHARITY. |. Mr. and Mrs, William C, Reick of No, 1014 Madison Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Amy Ridgway Reick, and | Chandler Bates of No, 64 Kast Bev- | enty-seventh Street. Miss Emma Louise Stone, daughter of the late Dr. Carl Stone of Chicago, |was married to Capt. W. Sergeant Bouv! 8. R, yesterday after- | noon rectory of Bt, Patrick's | Cathedral. J. Montgomery Waterbury jr. is at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. to spend September. Mrs. Ogden L. Mills will give a lit- tle entertainment by little peoplé for the destitute children of the Allies and the blinded soldiers at her New- port residence on Sept. 1. Mrs, Charles Leicester Payne of Montclair announces the engagement of her daughter, Miss Margaret Tarr Payne, and Lieut. Douglas Tilford Cameron, Miss Payne is a grand- daughter of Mrs, William H. Payne ot No. 95 Park Avenue, LAST WEEK’S WONDER BILL SURPASSED TWO MORE SUPER-ATTRACTIONS Mr. and Mrs. Earl B. Philadelphia announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Miss Kath- erine Putnam, and Lieut, William D. Crane, son of Mr, and Mrs. George F. Crane of No. 410 Park Avenue, Putnam of Gov, Whitman will be the week-end | guest of Colonel and Mrs, Charles Esherill at Lenox. The wedding of Miss Laura Coffin Elms, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward Everett Elms of Newton, Mass., and Edward Benson Benedict, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Leonard Benedict of No. 960 Park Avenue, will take place to-day at the summer home of the bride's parents in Dux- bury, Mass. TO-MORROW AND ALL WEEK 4 BROADWAY ar 47’ ST. Official Government Pictures Present PERSONAL DIRECTION HAROLD EDEL SECOND AND FINAL INSTALMENT OF CULMINATING INTEREST ‘The engagement is announced of Miss Cornelia Delite Woolley, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs, Cornell ‘Woolley of No, 850 Park Avenue, and John Huyler Acheson, son of Dr. and Mrs. Faward Goodrich Acheson of No, 600 West One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, | | Mra, Ether Kennedy Ditson and| | Thomas Baird Reed will be married | to-day at No. 4 Enst Eiehty-fifth Btreet, the home of the bride. | j AML AUTO KILLS JACOB SHAPIRO. | to Fina intives Here. Inspector Faurot of Police Head- | quarters received @ telegram yester- | ay from George A. Wood, Acting lef of Police of Elmira, N, Y., statin, that Jacob Shapiro of Brooklyn wa Killed in an auto accident in Elmira Thursday night. The Flmira police say Shapiro was about forty-five years old and has a father and four sisters in Brooklyn, They could not find Shaptro's address and asked the Detective Bureau here help. HIT BY CHEESE BREEZE. Btapleton, 8. I. ts holding tts nose ght. No, it fsn't the much fought garbage disposal pfint. It's just che. but it smalls worse, ‘The cheese and the amell app AT THE BATTLE OFARRAS" ON THE BRITISH FRONT red alx weeks ago, There were tons of cheese Greater even than the first instalment, that held capacity audiences spellbound with amaze taken from the sunken steamer Man ment and thrilled with admiration throuenio t last week at the STIRAD : . Br, Feria akon ht aan te cedentedly wonderful pictures show the extraordinary organization of a vast arr posited on the pler at Canal Street g another vast army before it Nothing y impressive b sever bef r EEN Geen the dents complained to the Board seen y anyone, Don't fail to see this awe-inspiring spectacle, Proceeds to war relig of Health, but the board hasn't done anythin sidents yesterday signed SECOND ATTRACTION EXTRAORDINARY DOROTHY DALTON “THE TEN OF DIAMO a petition to Mayor Mitchel asking. him fo'order the cheese removed ICID "SALADA” DS.” HENRI STRAND cae Fresh DE CAUX CONCER a \ SCHOLDER Fragrant (Tenor) ORCHESTRA | (Cellist) Delicious LibbLd Matinees, 15-25-50—Evenings, 25-35-50c