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— FREE SIL Souvenir of Lake Ronkonkoma, Long Island. FreetoEve questions below and complying E to the condition: is adver~ tisement will each LUTELY FREE AS! VERY PERSON answering the (27 How many words can you form from ‘the. letters contained inthe words “Thanksgiving tide” CONDITIONS GOVERNING ARE: . Each person SHALL compose 75 wor from the letters appearing in the “THANKSGIVING TIDE (Use English words only.) Arrange words neat rows number the jared for ® surprise? Then write the Aiatgent number of words you can. 2 Not more than one person to a family, living at the e addres LSO TRUTHFULLY ANSWER e FOLLOW! QUESTIONS, OTHERWISE NO N VERY ON = porto) io ite return write us or Ni or obligation is assumed by the ) urtes) mpany the ‘gift as above. y beyon IT WILL PAY YOU TO DO YOUR BEST! Write us before Saturday, December 28th, at 1 P. M. We § Cabcook oo. 9 East 42nd Street, New York ia FS kA ee ‘THE EVEWING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1918._ ON] HEAVY CASUALTIES IN JERSEY TROOPS BARED IN LETTERS Men of 29th Division Write of Great Losses in Last Fight- ing North of Verdun. “1 hope Preaident Wilson does something or there won't be any- thing left of the 114th.” In these words Capt. Harry Har- Company L., 114th Twenty-ninth Division, who lives in Asbury Park, N. J., Indicates the severe losses suffered by the New sin. Infantry, Jersey troops in the fighting north 12 until the The letter from of Verdun from Oct end of the war. Capt. Harsin to his wife was one of 1,400 just received from the Jersey soldiers. All these letters indicate that the 29th Division was in the thick of the heaviest fighting and that every company met with heavy casualties. The 118th and 114th regi- ments of the 29th were formed from the old New Jersey National Guard. Capt. Harsin wrote that he was gassed slightly and is in the hospiial doing well, He stated he was one of the last captains left, all of the rest having been killed or gassed, Ac- cording to the Captain's letter, the effort to depone the Kaiser was known and encouraged in the Ger- was notified that her brother, Thomas |C, 110th Infantry, formerly of No. P. Hanley, was killed Oct. 12,” Corpl. |3064 Albany Crescent, might be alive Malden B. Vunck, nephew of Mre. I".|/to-day if he bad not recovered too Vannote of nny of wounds Oct, 2%, Lieut. Robert Leroy Leighton, at- in, N, Ju Ded |fast from wounds received in battle. He was ninetecn | As late as Sept. 21, according to a let- years olf and attached to a machine !ter received by his sister, he was in | any. & base hospital, seriously wounded, vial Reve But he rejoined his company, and on Oct, 8 he was killed in action. tached to a medical corps, who lives} Wagoner Peter Hughes, one of the in Spring Lake, N, J, was wounded /eleven men who went to the war from Sept, % He had beon gassed twice} the house at No. 12 Broome Street, is teported to have died from wounds hevitante 1 on Oct. 28, He is the first of the Capt. Davis Rossell, reported dead |ejeven to of wounds recelved in action om Oct. | 18, was one of three sons of the late Brig.-Gen, William P, Rossel, \all West Point Men serving in France, Capt. Rossell was married to Miss Beatrice Sawyer, of No. 586 Pennsyl- vania Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J., two years ago. He was sent overseas as an instructor ‘and was leading ‘a machine gun battalion when he re- ceived the fatal wounds. Hie broth- jers, who are officers, are John F. jand William Trent Rossel. Lieut, Albert B. Billings, a member of Gen, Pershing’s Staff, was gassed on July 22, The family, who live at 'No, 6807 Ridge Boulevard, Brooklyn, | has just been officially notified. Lieut. Albert Slesenger of No. 626 West 118th Street was killed in action jon Aug. 4, his mother, Mra, Rose| Slesenger, has been advised. Slesen-| ger enlisted on June 27, 1917, and sent to the Officers’ Training ool at Camp Upton, He was at- | tached to Company H, 125th Infantry, jin France. | | Ldeut, Pierce MH. Butler, Company, M, S12th Infantry, a son of James! Butler, founder of the Butler grocery | stores and Prestdent of the Empire Racing Association, hax died of} wounds received in the Argonne Forest, Oct. 2. News of his death, in a letter from a brother officer, came ax a shock to his family, who had Fu out and mail the cou- ny trial of aveorsina ye. ay to app! pleasant to use Men’s Hand-Talored Winter Ove:coats Double-Breaster: Chesterfields—Ulstys Semi-Fitting Model, “30 Which Cost $40 and $45 to Produc Today OU may be quite sure we shouldyesitate to state that the production cost of yese over- coats is $40 to $45 according to preset woolen prices, if such were not the case. As it}, we are very modest about it’ Nothing could teipt us to fall into the common practice of launchg such values as a sale. There is no sale about ii They are regular merchandise. But they are fa better than regular value. There are, no two way, about that. We procured the fabrics long aheadof re- quirements, arid if .it is a crime to undersi the NTZEN Arch Support Shoes oa HEN. WOMEN ANDY CHILDREN town, then we plead guilty. There is nothin ¢lse like them for the money in New York today received a letter from him saying he ‘was convalescing. Lieut. Butler, who} was twenty-three years old, received | his commission at the first Plattsburg Camp. Last April he married Miss Maude Louise O'Brien, a daughter of former Supreme Court Justice Mor- | 4 xan J, O'Brien, Since Lieut, Butler | j went overseas, his wife has given her | § entire time to welfare work, especially in the Red Cross, Details were received to-day of the death of Lieut. Meredith L. Dowd, 147th Aero Squadron, a son of Col, z = 5 |Heman Dowd, Vice President of the { Equitable Trust Company. Licnt. Dowd started with three other avia- tors on patrol over the lines north of Verdun Oct. 26. Four German ma- chines of the famous Checkerboard Squadron attacked him, his com- | panions having got ahead of him, and | while he put up a good battle the odds were against him and he was shot down, | Private Robert D. Cousens, reported | killed in action, was twenty-two years | old and prior to his enlistment in the | old Tth, New York Regiment.now the 107th of the 27th Division, lived with his mother at 312°West 127th Street. | ¥ He has a brother In France with the| ¢ Canadians, who has been wounded | three times, and a brother Blias, who enlisted with him in the 7th, is now, recovering from wounds in @ base) man army. Two boy prisoners brought In Oct, 25 told the Ameri- cans about the movement, The first man in the division to bé discharged was Vadin Birdsall of Manasquan, N. J., who artived home yesterday, He was shell shocked at Chateau Thierry. Private William Chafey, Company H, wrote he had ben wounded in the foot. Corpl, Stan- ley Potter, Company E, was wounded Rept, 16, but wrote he expected to leave the hospital soon, Mrs. Adolph Fisher of Bel R the relaxed muscles, tendons and cramped ton ‘of flat feet and fallen arches; relieve the pressure and put the “twin servants” in normal and com- fortable condition, They are scientifically designed ‘on orthopedic lasts, in various styles and leathers, and will give freedom from foot-faults. “A Good Foot-rule for YOU—wear the Jantzen Shoe.” | Quarter or full-lined with pure dye silk in which there is no cotton whatever Men’s Overcoats *30 to #85 Hand-Tailored— Ready-for-Service AN OPEN BOOK There's no secret about h our shirt proposition. We lay our cards on the table, p —we Operate our own fac- ries. Sell direct to the con- | sumer. We KNOW HOW TO MAKE SHIRTS. And we know how to give VALUES. WHAT MORE CAN WE SAY? ) _ Finest Woven Madras Shirts—You'll be looking j for more of these shirts a long while after they are gone—quality such as this is what os customers come back, soon and often, rN The Conservation of Food and Fuel is still necessary, Waste nothing, GB. Altman & Co. MADISON AVENUE-FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street ‘FIFTH AVENUE Men’s Shops—2 to 8 West 38th Street —Street Level FRANKLIN SIMON Offers for ¢ Limited Period MEN’S Doughboy Storm Shoes A Civilian Adaptation of the Famous Doughboy Last 6” i Special $2.65 hospital in France, Solomon Fidlow, No. 548 New Jersey | AM (HAIN SHIRT SHopg Avenue, Brooklyn, was fifteen years |W YQ SPaciauisys iy AMERICA old when he decided to go to war,| = ee and in order to get into the Army he| used the name of his older brother, ye Kor ti: 1487 Bresiver Bennie, who was already in Company | qh Cee ae. #320 Bt E, 6th Regiment. Sdfomon, mas-| BS'Delancer st.” 204 We taoth querading as Bennie, got into the 0th BROOKLYN sHors Infantry, Both boys became cor-| @) 397 Fulton St. 431 Watton st, porals and both were wounded aboat ||] MES Soe three months ago. Two War Depart- ment telegrams, each reporting ‘‘Cor- | poral Bennie Fidlow” as woundéd in action, were received at the Fidlow home. ( The Men’s Clothing Department (ON THE SIXTH FLOOR) 170 Market Mt. Bridgeport Waterbury Scranton is specially featuring, at this time, Distinctive Dress Clothes (ready-to-wear) for fastidious men, Made of the best materials obtainable, and tailored with the skill and careful attention to detail that is usually found only in custom-made garments, these clothes will make a definite appeal to men of discriminating taste. meploonatens ee eons Private Thomas T. Starr, Company : _ Stamped on a Shoe Means Standard of Merit 34" St. New York ig! A Warm, Low Shoe Winter Combination CONSISTING OF WOMEN’S Heavy Oxfords, Spats and Woollen Stockings The prices: Full Dress Coats, with Trousers . $45.90 & 50.00 Tuxedo Coats, with Trousers , ; - +. 45.00 Cutaway Coats, with Waistcoat . 35.00 & 40.00 Full Dress and Tuxedo Waistcoats (a very large assort- ment), separately priced : * ’ $5.00 to 12,00 Also MEN’S SILK HATS $7.00, 9.00 & 10.00 But we don’t have to sell them for $7.50 to sell them! This shoe as illus i E : ivi ian needs. Made one an Norwegian fun in high at Bch effect, with single sole and rubber inlay t\V' render them waterproof, \ Mest shoes are going up. Thée shoes have come down. But they did not hive to come down to go over. We would publish their correct price only that we do not have to adop hurrah methods to sell them. This really is not alale. It is better than a sale, because the concession\is voluntary and not dictated by end-of-season considirations. We do not have to sell these shoes at $7.50 We are doing it solely for publicity purposes. Ant we reserve the right to withdraw the offer or to revse prices when and if we see fit. in the latest blockings This Oxford is made of Special Heavy Norwegian Calf, and is @ very com- fortable walking shoe, with military heel and broad toe; most suitable for the woman that. pre- fers o wear Low Shoes during the cold weather, Special) And MEN’S PATENT LEATHER SHOES $8.00 6.00 8.00 A shoe that will wear and wea\ and wear! Boots, per pair + ° . Oxfords and Pumps, per pair OVERGAITERS in all shades; besides looking stylish they keep the feet and ankles good and warm, 2.95 STOCKINGS of all wool, ribbed; in any shade, Just the proper weight to be worn with Low Shoes. 2.50 FIFTH AVENUE Men's Shops —2 to 8 West 38th Street — Sunday World Wants Work Monday Wonders