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a “Rainbow” Boys i in Camp At Mineola a Prismatic Coast-to-Coast Division oo ee Wie nenialy ( Side Lights on Camp Arrivals, Who Rapidly Chromatic Harmony: | Lite and Activities cot Ring Quickly Pot | Ag Seen al Mineola the Arrival of The World's Sporting Jovepn Medilt Patterson of the Chicago Tribune ts @ Firet Liew ~ ‘ Beery Day New Blend in Sixteen-Foot Up After Evening Hi tenant, His Colonel weed to Major Gen. Mann, Now in Com. | “0"* for him Now Whe ar mand ‘ Cc ferent ii even 5 Pi ver Is Kid Williams t the welter Conducts » Review ai © | weight champion of the One Well Pleased. Missouri and South Carolina Boys a Devil-May-Care Lot, All Ready for a Fight or a Frolic. (pedal from 4 Btalt Comendant of The bre Hundred and Fortyninth 1M note Field Artillery. Boye of the Bisty-ninth please write, Corpl. Willlam J. Murphy, nephew of the Tammany Halt leader, had hie picture printed in a newspaper, and as a reeult received through the mati a pro ning Word posal of marriage from a Brook. CAMP MILLS, L. 1, Sept. 6—Tre!] Iyn girt “Rainbow” Divipion is fast taking on Old Virginta all ite colors and the camp filling up tela doo scape ad Military Police, the cops of ‘the camp. Supper last night consisted of bacon and grits, gravy and with representative soldiers of twen- ty-six States, from New York to Call fornia. Each day witnesses ite quota of new arrivals who rapidly blend tn | chromatic harmony with those who|] prunes, had come before. The consi-to-coast | Col, Henry J. Retity of the division will present « #olid front |] Tyinots Field Artillery has al- with his command. The border trouble being blotted out, Capt. Reilly returned to France. In the mean time he embodied his observations at the front in a book, which was pub- |lished under the title of “Why Pre- |paredness?” He had been strong for | preparedness for a long time, On his @ |second visit to France he went to NZ Cae | the School for Field Artillery of Fire caer Henmy K Tea ® | At Fontainbleau, and the next time he Meer atl 3 went to the British and Frenoh fronts 9.oo04 | be went as an artillery officer. When America declared war on Germany, back came the military ex- | pert to become the colonel of his reg'- ment, recruited now to its full war strength. And he has a dandy lot of officers and a fine looking body of men, They look like fighters. The two battalions of artillery are commanded by Major Curtis G. Red- | den and Noble B. Judah. Both are! lawyers. Maj. Redden js an old-time| football player of Michigan Univer sity and Capt. Thomas Hammond of! Battery C in ‘his battalion, the First, is a football mate, Capt. Hammond |\s a manufacturer of heavy electric | machinery In Chicago and 4s fond of | Hawallan music. Joseph Medill Pat- terson, one of the owners of the Chi- cago Tribune, ts a first Heutenant in Battery C. His colonel used to work the division to two-thirds of its total quota, The cold weather of the last few dayaas been felt particularly by the | ASabama troops, fresh from service | ‘on the border. The most recent arrivals at the camp were the One Hundred and Seventeenth Ammunition Train of Kansas and Companies FE, F and G of the One Hundred and Fiftieth Machine Gun Battalian of Wiscon- sin. ! Major Gen. W. A. Mann, command- ing the division, has appointed hisstaft The personnel follows: Capt. John B. Coulter, Aide sl. Douglas McArthur, Chief of Staff; Majors I. I aves | and W. M) Hughes, Assistant Chiefs \ pert aes r Fr ncis w. ; aisteny |tor him, but now he has to work for utant; Major Marion Battle, As- : Bs sistant Aajutal Lieut, Col, Blanton | 22 *®0*%424442000000000600 Winship, Judge Advocate; Lieut. Col J. L. D. Witt, Division Quartermas- | ter, and Lieut. Col. J. H. Gressinger, | ¢ Chief Surgeon ; | The One Hundred and Forty-ninth |}, | Pield Artillery, formerly the First | # | & Minols, which arrived yesterday, has | é been located in camp adjoining the| ¢ Alabama infantry and to-day took| 4 up .the regular routine of drilling. | ¢ Later the Colonel and a group of the) @Mficers stood watching a dozen air- planes in flight | “Gentlemen,” remarked the colonel 90806-3406 @ryly, “they look very interss«ing this morning; but, take mj a for it, when you those things ¢ over in France you won't be look 2 ing at them standing there in| g serovps, You'll be umbling ira = % another looking fr cyclone Company Ae Buémeend ° or 3c, The colonel knew what he ¥ ing about, for he has been 108 9942490408000-05.9: There” already. 1 if the Sixty-| his colonel, Stranj | | Strange things hi > Binth thinks it has ail the Irish fight-| wrought by the wars ee are ers in the world, the name of the col-;COLLEGE BOYS READY F onel of the One Hundred and Forty- | FOOTBALL SCRIMMAGE,” ‘ mnth is Reilly. Col. Henry J. Reiily| Maj. Redden said this morning that there wasn't @ football team in the of Chicago knows the sound of wa in comparison with the coffee you now use, and if you don't agr that “Sunbeam” Coffee is “The World’s Best” you can take it back anda ket your money, | ORDER FROM YOUR GROCER hlies ah maine INSIST ON “SUNBEAM” Nichols&@h* New york ee Tus BVEwING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 19:17, = VIEW of @ TRBHATIONAL FIL EMRVECE. CAMP MILLS, mear MINEOLA. «. Units of the Rainbow Division read) ween Over There, drilled to-day in a cold drizzling rain, peed on baby = Asrivais during the night brought meee Weer epewer - — : : =—- regiment, but that deoeeee oe as It is being fought in France and |!" and would be pleased to toe t he had the mak-| deserters, What penalty may be neted out to them has not been dis- Flanders. He's been there. He ig a/®Tatch with any football team tr sed aman may, be shot for de- newspaper man and was long with 4D. That will be “nuts” for Maj | : the Chicago Tribune, He went to| “Bill” Donovan apd giant Capt RAINBOW IS A COAST-TO-COAST France for his paper as a@ military | “Tom” Kelily of the Sixty-ninth DIVISION, expert, for he was then « captain in| Battery F of the One Hundred ar Camp Mills has been {mperceptibly his present regiment. Forty-ninth was formerly made up| stewing and people who have not THIS ILLINOIS COLONEL I8 AN) {of University of Illinois men and} ‘ sey engl Pied ze ve extent repr at’ ve country it covers, The men AUTHOR. |sixty of them are still with thetr fa-| Gr the Rainbow Division are not al When he had been there « year our |Vorite command, Capt, B. W. Bene-| here yet, but nearly every section of own trouble with Mexico occurred, | 1906 country has its representation A and back he came to go to the border | YOSE the Bove | froin sues Bian Jomain and late last night a merry bunch from Missourt went swinging nd singing through Mineola on their y out. There's a quaint bunch from South }Car‘lina far out on one edge of the camp, a merry, rollicking, fighting and frolicking, devil-may-care lot of fellows who Want to know how soon y are going to get to France, 1 npose the First Battalion of Hundred and Seventeenth En fineers and will be joined any day by the Second Battalion, which J on its way from California, These Southerners are among the best vd lot of soldiers who have here, or J. M. Johnson commands the | battalion. In private life he is civil engineer. So Is his brother, | Capt. W. F. R. Johnson. Capt. J. Roy Pennell was State Highway Engineer {| of South Carolina until he abandoned S] his fob to go to war, Capt. J. I ¢ | M. Itby, Battalion Adjutant, was + | a civil’ engineer in Charleston Poof CANALES TON | Capt. A. V. Hooks was engineer fo © OS powrion OF SUPPER y | the Southern Railra 0-9-6-6-0d-6-84-0 > SOUTHERN BOYS HAPPIEST AT MESS TIME. diet, the commander, 18 director of] ne boys of the regiment are hap the machine shop at the university, | piest at iness tir eer Tiaut They and Lieuts. Gould, H and Nieberg had bacon and gritts, gravy are all former university men. prunes; and some of them complained ; Oh eneat teom work yes (tat there was no sugar on th All hands did great work ys 1 prunes n artist for The terday in getting their tents up and World made penell 5! ome ready for the night ness shacks of them at mess time this morn were in a pretty good state of and Chief Cook W. D , | paredness, but the trucking from the/for his sketch. He learn: depot to the camp, which ts pretty |the border well out in the canvas city, was slow.|_ “Parler in the kitchen,” drooned hey have battalion incinerators in| Seret. Carey Manheim the camp, instead of the ny Ine gt. W. Jq Oakes of Company A cierators used In mar had his little experience at the borler Sergt. Frank Wittgrin of the sup-|He hails from Darlington, 8. C,, wh ply company has been here It|he was in the electric’ contracting was during the Spanish can |busineas, and which he gave up f war, and he sald this morning that|the war. Before he went to the bor the regiment was pretty near the site |der he had a book and novelty st it occupied in the o s of Camp | which he 1 to close up on accdunt Black. of being cailed to a soldier's duty The boys were delighted with the] “Oh, yes," he said. “I know The send-off they got at Harrisburg, Pa.| Evening World all right. 1 v to They reached that city at the tims/handle it before the border busine when Harrisburg was saying good-by|put my book business out of bu to its own boys of the Signal Corps, | ness," There were bands of music and] ‘There are several college boys tn the pretty girls and flags and bunting,|battalion, and there are other en and when the local goliicrs had gone|gineers too, who didn’t wait for a the celebration was finished in honor|commission to go to the war. Th: of the men from [il!nois. The regi-|there's Robert Looney of Ath ment detrained and Its band played|'renn, The pet name of his comrates in the depot, The other bands did|for Private Looney 1s “looneytic the same, and the One Hundred and|’ w, R. Turbeville of Charleston, Forty-ninth lett the with the }fore he became @ sergeant with t cheers and muste and flag and hat | enginec was a draughtsman waving of the multitude now he ts the cartoonist of the 69TH WOULD TAKE THIS FIGHT- ihe MEASURE, “Kid” champion r ‘ talion. “Chicken” Price He declares that Chicken a bug s hia r th elterweight ment and i# anx. somebody, np MIAs. ’ The y have his , wish the ath. : letic goods from the 1 which ts ‘ being raised by The bvening World : arrived tn he 1 Sixty | pinth boxing « seballs and | bats, mitts and 8, balls and medicine balla ar 8 of other athletic p 1. And they were talking this at putting up a six ump right away and havi 8 of bouts for all kinds of we Every he c Mills w nvited to t ninth is in i eball mal : the gloves Major ¢ Ma 4 accom- panted by his staf in inspec. tion of Camp. M expressed himself as well pl with all he had seen thus far much im pressed wit ce of the |eo~ 80409440486 Third B a M ahan, of the Sixty-ninth, t! Of whioh'l Hata Hui that acmetiines the. be he reviewed : call him "Ch for short he time for he men} Father Duffy, chaplain of the Sixt of the One Hundred Rintvetitll| ninth want oe ieee ware | Regiment (Sixty vive ab- | short’ visi vee sented themsels eave has] “Lh lghtful trip.’ he « expir Th m y Ps pare “T marri undertaker ame : ne . eat the por] THE CAMP'S POLICEMEN, VIF lie cities, GINIANS, ARE HERE With instructions to a:est them ag! From the bills of old Virginia pay SOLDIERS FROM 26 STATES IN ““RAINBOW’’ CAMP AT MINEOLA — BIRD’ S-EYE VIEW OF CAMP cry --GEN, MANN TsConaaaes COMMANDER SEEKING NO GAN BY WAR, GERMANY WILL TELL THE POPE Wants “Durable Peace Guar- anteed by International Treaties,” Says Berlin, Gen WILLIAM A. MANN. MOMLD STAFY METTOORADARE VESTERDAN BERLIN (via London), Sept. 6— Germany will-tell Pope Benedict the come the copa of the camp, Capt. | German people want no gain from the tenry ree, 8 fro |men from the dry belt are regulating |anteed by international treaties, ac- | the saloon traff so far as soldiers ure. coneermed, ‘roll as all other |Cording to an authoritative forecast traffi wear brassards la- | published to-day by Vorwaerts. bell d parry stout night- sti Many of the new soldiers in| The Goclalist organ added that Ger- amp don't understand yet the power of either, or both, but they will in | ™@2¥ will hold, if her enemies reruse Se ~ he al have been " sme lorhy wete at all emtet- t « he Governing = Com- --<- Probers Go Ove Tatks| n Search for Sedit Uttera eortpte of Mary speeches by map bow orators accused loyalty to the United #t presented this afte by and Hn » airtel Bookkeepers out whether—and by © sedition Tired eyes fail to grasp fin te being preached streete of | distinct aS 1 bookkeepers New York | who spend their days . " i row ff soften have need js iekh ss agltlaaell moran | less worries when they fail to pees preg! gio ’ read a num aright, or over. ae oe ee eee ess look a whole line of figt They constitute « as denen hk ts Gras You will do well to have ' pected to be fully occupied with them | your eyes examined by one of for several seasions. There are also! our Oculists (Registered Phy- many witnesses to be heard, and it] sicians) at the first indication | will probably be late next week be-| of eye-strain or ye-head fore the Grand sury w ve ule to] aches make @ report to Judge Meintyre. P Meanwhile Joba Db. Moore, national if 1--glasses will be secretary of the Frienda of Irish Free and these will be dom—the organization in whose| carefully adjusted by expert name much of the alleged disloyal] Opticians. oratory has been uttered—has sent Harris Glasses are priced at a letter to the foreman of the Grand! $2.00, or more if special lenses Jury, Alexander Konta, Inviting @ {t will do eo," writes Mr. Moore, “I respectfully and urgently ask per- Geutists and ag a | miaston, since I probably will be a | defendant, ave requi WY Stonns mplete investigation. “It the Grand Jury sees fit to in- vestigate our meetings, and I hope to appear before your hon- 64 Kast tid Bt, orable body @o that I may submit] 94 Wem 123i &. near ith Ave myself to the most searching Inquiry Hy 34 + hat: A 3 and have an opportunity to Iay be- | 442 ¢ Ave bat. Bat 82d Ste c posses= St, near John Bt. fore you all the facts In My Posse#= | d¢09 roadway, bet. 99th & 100th Sti sion. I hereby offer and agree to| 1405 St. Nich 180th d& 18tet. sign a waiver of immunity from) joo7 proadway, nr. Willo'by.* B'klym. prosecution.” 489 Fulton Bt, opp, A. & 8, B'klym. Moore saya tn his letter that he is glad Judge McIntyre instructed the Grand Jury to investigate the meet- in . 683 Broad St., next to Bedell, Newark. jow this fundamental question of free speech,” be says, “can be threshed out before a jury. And ae- ¢ition, 1f there has been any, will be punished as such instead of indirect- ly in @ Magistrate's court by the cheap subterfudse of ‘blocking the tram. * Hoe added that he would undertake to bring in as witnesses any persons that the Grand Jury might want to seo “without the service of a sub- More for the Money USTARD lasts longer than any other condi- ment. And Gulden’s Mustard is finest flavor and sure to tempt the appetite. GULDEN’S Ready h ena.” All the soap box speecher, - Tine; Unless they ate acod this sort of a peace, that the fall of | poe t np bos, " Second guleut RK. ‘Hutton of (Riga “is not to be the last success of eg ag yrs 4 been “strongly Ameri- |} (0 Use us ar ‘ anoke used to be with the Norfolk )Germat und Western Railroad, He is ono of | ~ spp, ig hava Riga." the V areca potent Natural goodness society's favorites in his city 4 ie fail of Rime,” the vorwmacete TW TRAD S EXPELLED ‘uum makes the fine ey say that he can tango like'a tor. | declared, “was expected to destroy Gulden flavor. ado. Lieut. Butts of the Second |the bellet apps el by the En- . Cornpacy wie the Mopeain’. of ROC Tie peme ar tae pda tiaeed FROM STOCK EXCHANGE Popular since adies in. Lynchburg, Va. and tbe i gabdenpphaig bee 1867. At gro- |inaids of lioancke and’ ladies of | Wishes are to be considered as a token cers aad Lynchburg stii bemoan the departure Jot weakness.” P. N. Sproule, @ floor trader with an Lee Neale eee or ana}, THO Vorwaerts recently voiced the [office at No. 120 Broadway, and Louls Capt. Tice In a civil enginter and | belief that it would be “dishonorable” |R. Hammersiough, « floor trader with poy of three in’ Roa respond | for the German people to refuse Pres- |" office at No. 53 Broadway, ~~. ‘0 the call to colors, Capt. F. B, VaF-|{dent Wileon's stipulation that they |Delled from the Btock Exchange by the ney has @ shoe manufactory In| gisraftese thelr Government's peace Governing Committee to-day. Sproule Lynchburg, which he left belind with ht aia i ‘i » has been @ member of the Exchange 4 small family to lead his boys from | pledge since 1890 and Hammersiough since = newhere in France to somewhere | COPE Sept. 6—A des- | 1908, ; patch from Lugano, Switzerland, to| Tho specific charges against Sproule Stultz of Roanoke ts ehar- but he has arriving in that he ts Seria the Vossische Zeltung of Berlin says it bas been learned from a clerical source that the report that Pope Ben- edict is preparing a second peace note is incorrect, WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.—Germany will soon make another peace pro- ; posal, diplomats in touch with foreign affairs declared to-day. The Eri berger-Scheldemann group is taking advantage of President Wilson's peace views and internal Ad to % a come fone nothing funny si the camp. He whispers thinking of more serious business. Corpls, L. Harrison and J. leard, who did great execution in the base all game on Labor Day, were ex- erts in the outfield in the old days in Washington and Lee University When not soldi¢ring Izard is an in irance agent and Harrison is agent fora coffee company A FEW PERSONAL NOTES ABOUT THE SIXTY-NINTH, An, reform Corpl. Willa urphy hew ret ‘hve Be eco ram. [further tts plans, This group 1s ex- any Hall, has just learned the value | pected to force the new proposal with f publicity, His uncle could have|tne opening of the Reichstag told him about it long ago, but maybe | e forgot, Well, anyhow, the Cor- poral is in Headquarters Company of|dier, “and I dearly love catsup my~ self.” That was a few days ago. T year-old George, who wears khaki and can salute as well as the best soldier at Camp Mills—and Col. he Sixty-ninth, and he isa fine chap, mighty good looker and a peach of boxer. All this was published tn of the papers, and this morning 1, Murphy got a proposal of mar ige from a lady in Br n. And | Roosevelt will tell you the same thing lady wrote that there was no|—had been very thoughtful till this oling about her proposal. And the|!morning. Then he told his that rporal declared that {t pays to ad-|he had been fing his money ins stead of spending it for candy, end ‘ Tom O'Kelly of Company C,|had bought a little present for Cor « Gikiyeninth, le the proud wan, he| O'Kelly, and would he please take jeorg@ Boothby, ten ye Id, | him to the camp. o has been several times in camp| The present was two bottles of cat- h his father, took aulte a shine to|sup, and when the big, fighting Cor- Tom and Tom did to him. He in-|poral opened the package, he looked ted him to lunch and the kiddie was |at the tiny khaki clad kid and cried. ten-year and Then he took into his big arms almost to death, ted, sorry I can't serve some cat- 1p with these beans," sald sol hugged him An Opportunity for New Yorkers to Buy Furniture Direct from Factory New York Display Room just opened at 41 West 40th Stre xls sold at factory prices and shipped direct from our fact ry in || Virginia, Nad cesta Visit Ww ” howroom 4 inspect the beautiful samples of solid f{ vahogany turn he i, enor ate aay sof original old pirces | Also beaut r plotures. hangt We hay usive producing fao- will bo amazed at It has ith Vath ve Write for catalogue If located out of N. ¥. “BIGGS” New York Addre: 41 West 46th St. RIS Knst Franklin Ste Richmond, Ve. and Hammerslough were not made pub- He in the notice of expulsion, they | Indigestion. One packag 0. Article 17, of the by-laws and rules of Prove! Absolutely * Removes were expelled by authority of Seotion 6 sit. 25cat all dude! Every Advertiser Should Carefully Study and Digest These Facts In August, 1917, The EVENING WORLD gained over August, 1916, in the number of agate lines of paid advertising printed, a ¢otal of 21,192 lines. For the same period— The Journal lost 4,019 lines The «Mail lost 65,336 lines The Post lost 13,691 lines The Eve. Sun lost 78,053 lines The Globe lost 72,300 lines The greater necessity advertisers feel to make every dollar spent bring returns, and the greater the extent of their general retretichment in appropriations for advertising, the more con- spicuous The EVENING WORLD becomes in their favor. There can be no question as to returns from the evening newspaper that goes into the HOMES of New York City and immediate vicinity. HOME circulation brings The EVENING WORLD increased advertising and brings adver- tisers results.