The evening world. Newspaper, March 11, 1919, Page 8

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vom zo ear YORK AND NEW JERSEY HOME AMONG 1,627 | TROOPS ON THE OHIOAN | and Part of AMELIA E. BARR, AUTHOR, DIES AT RICHMOND HILL Companies 348th Infantry on Transport— | Other Ships Are Due. @ transport docked at ken this morning, bringing home troops from Bordeaux the four Ohioan casual companies on two were composed of Now| men. The units of the ston. lany of these were drafted Western New majority of the rest 348th Infantry, 87th men York and New| who went to France tast ember and who were cheated out ha fight by the sudden German apse. They wero all sot for a © at Metz when the armistice | signed. ix casos of Influenza were on board there was one death at sea, that | et rivate Eugene A. Tansey of Lynn, ., a victim of pneumonia, | jong the other ships due to-day two hospital ships, the Comfort, h 406 wick and wounded, which been overdue several days, and Mercy, which has 881 sick or Writer, Who Was Eighty: Never Left Her Bed After Heat Prostration. Amelia 1. Barr, the authoress, ded last night at her residence, No, 44% Hed- ford Avenue, Richmond Hill, 14 1. ded, 259 bedridden. The Hono-| ‘str, Harr, who at the thne of her lu, with 114 men, and the Chin-|qeath lacked only a few days of being ppa, with 22, are still overdue, |eighty-eight years old, suffered from & | heat stroke last July and never com- pletely rallied from its effects, @he had been confined her bed since then. Her death is ascribed to @ nervous | breakdown, Her daughter, Mrs, Edward Munro, was at her bedside whan the death oc- Le to Permanent Grade a urred. A younger daughter, Miss Alice Colonel — Gen. Mitchell Barr, was summoned and arrived soon Succeeds Hi afterwan, Mrs. Burr's other daughter, Succeeds Him. Mary, the wife of Kirk Monroe, the FASHINGTON, Marh L1.—Afajor-| author, was with her husband at Co- William 1. Kenly, Director of |COAnut Grove, Fia., but is now on her |way north to attend the funeral, jary Aeronautics, was relieved of | oa |, in his permanent | 20th Divison Coming on Seven Big ot Colonel, was ordered to report Shipa. e Chief of Field Artillery for duty.| WASHINGTON, Maroh 1.—1') 2th ig. Gen, William Mitchell will be de. | Division will be carried from Mi. t to to command the army aviation | Boston during the first half of A,ril, hae, according to a cable from Gen. Vershing The change in the command of the| Mount Vernon, American, Von Beeubor, eau of Military Aeronauties, it was Kroonland, George Washington and at the War Department, was a/| President Grant tural development of the reduction | ed that ranch of the service. Very| Berlin Den capt COPENHAGEN, March 11.—The re- cently reported recapture of Riga on the Baltic Const, is denied in a Berlin de- spateh ived here. ‘The German troops, it is stated, are still a consider- ble distance from’ Riga. cuts already have been made in personnel of the aviation service and was considered that an oMcer in the le of Major General was no longer | to wupervie the operations of | he ‘ A i By on F ice cream with any kind of sauce ever made a hit with you, try ice cream with Grapelade and know what the real joy taste is. Grepelade is all the goodness of full ripe grapes cooked with sugar till rich and thick, It isn't jam. It isn't jelly. It is the smoothest, most delicate grape concoction imaginable. _At your grocers—15-o0z. Glass lar, 35c.; 25-0z. Enamel-lined in, 50c. Grapelade Sauce-—Mix together, without heat, two parts Grapelade and one part plain sugar syrup. Pour over ice cream, Try this recipe for Grapelade Ice Cream For each quart of sweet cream use half pint Grapelade. Heat helf ream in double boiler in which dissolve the Grepelade. Cooland add balance of cream. Freeze. The Welch Grape Juice Co, Westfield, N. Y. prepared by cooking experte. Ask the fountain man for a Grapelade Sundae A SCOUUCMUYEA DONE AANEUUREESAUOUURENAEEREAEERNOEEANENETNNU UU NENRAEN MUERTE REHEAT OUR SODA MUST PLEASE IF fer any reason, you are not pleased with a drink at ovr fountains, do us the favor of requesting the soda dis- Fenser to serve you with a second drink w shout cost. UVCLIALHADEUPRDUASDAY NAN TRSAU EAN LS POOANUU OOPS DNUOD SOUNAEUA ARENA FROM STROKE LAST JULY THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1919. 2,759 MEN OF THE 27TH HOME ON MT. VERNON; (Continued from First Page.) the Mount Vernon put to sea and there was a grim sme on the Cap- tain’s face, forbidden by the nav, knots. was made out on In thirty-six hours the the soldiers heard of it there more volunteers than could be crowd- ed into two stokeholes. A few hours later, when the Aggie was bull down, the Captain wirelessed ‘Goodby, we must leave you.” HEROES. The Mount Vernon sailed up the at Hoboken at $ o'clock. Early as wae her hour of arrival, a big crowd of friends and relatives, mothers, | wives, sisters, sweethearts, ‘and brothers were afloat on the Patrol and Correction to greet the returning | heroes. A similar reception greeted Agamemnon when it came up harbor shortly after noon. ‘The soldiers swarmed all over the |Mount Vernon from the upper decks to the port hole space on board was jammed with Khaki-clad lads from across the #6 And another great reception was waiting for them on the pier. ‘The the band greeted them with “Ifome, Sweet Home,” and the girls of the Red Cross, K. of C., Y. M. C, A. and Salvation Army met them with smiles and cheers and coffee and sandwiches and cakes. And then the band played Jazz and “A Hot Time in the Old Town To-Night,” and set the and boys a-humming and ging dancing and yelling and cry! laughing and wanting to hu body and every old thing in sight. There were ¢rowds of peering in through the tron grill at the end of the pier, but they didn't see the boys, who were speedily loaded on ferryboats and sent to Long Island City, where they en- trained for Camp Mills. In charge of the returning troops was Lieut, Col. Walter Lincoln Bell, who commands the 1024 Ammunition Train He went away with the train and came back with most of the boys he took away. It is part of the 624 Artillery Brigade !n command of Brig. Gen. George A. Wingate, who was in command of the Second Ar- tillery Regiment when our National Guard went to the Mexican border. The Ammunition Train has 35 of- ficers and 1,139 men. From Sept. 16 to Oct, 22 the train carried ammuni- tion for the big guns of the artillery, for the little guns and for every- thing shooting steel and explosives into the enemy country and hand grenades at the following engage- ments: Le Claire, Chattencourt, Le Mort Hommes (De. Men's Hill) Morre, Chamey, Cumiers, Boyes de Forges, Gercourt and Brieulles, In their second great period of en gagements, they were always under continual fire and their losses were 10 per cent., mostly from gas. The Rev. Royal K, Tucker, Rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church at Gloveraville, N. Y., was Chaplain of the 105th, with which the Ammunition Train was listed fora time. Chaplain Tucker won the D, 8. C. for his brave work of bringing in wounded men without thought of death or danger to himself. re “Don't talk about that," he sald. “It wasn't anything, Those boys were through the hardest fighting of the war. For sixty days they were under continual shell fire with motor, horse and mule and never failed, It was simply of God's miracles that | their loss was so small | Four of the train were killed and a | number wounded while bringing up 4 | mule train with ammunition at Morre jon Oct. 8. |a number of hand grenades and the explosion of a few of them spread death and destruction throughout the train. While grenades were exploding every hand and while men under Lieut. Robert Day were picking up the one am |dead and wounded, Sergt. Albert P. | | Anscombe, No, 2,095 Mohican Avenue, the Bronx, volunteered to clear away j the debris and k up the loaded grenades, He stuck to the job all day and de ated 400 of them. For his great work he got the D. 8. C. PERCIVAL E. NAGLE, TAMMANY LEADER, HOME AS MAJOR. Major Iercival . Nagle of No, 59 East h Street, famous old T many chieftain, came back with the 102d Ammunition T: He's a little wrayer than when he went away, but he looks as well and hearty as ever and says that he feels a whole better, Lieutenant r ohh moled to Ca France. ability and pro befor. 604 ENGINEERS DUE Racing of transports 18 yoigs street, Rochester, N. Y. suc- put the Mount Vernon can jog along at twenty-three aieq knots and ‘under forced draught can drive through the water at twenty-six Aggie starboard bow. Thero was lack of stokers, and when wore GREAT CROWD OUT TO WELCOME 46 reached home. |bay and river and was at her pier fathers the} relatives | The pins dropped out froin | 1 100 Canadian Wolf Scarfs, “Rie ne wid with a grin when 100 Alaska Fox Animal Scarfs, 545.00 approached by the roporters, “I'm Poiret, Taupe, Smoke and Blue colors, ° til) im th y and must abide by raise ant roruavins” "1 100 Hudson Seal Coatees, Wh Haale (hayaay isle sisty) ‘Trimmed with Squirrel, Beaver, Mole, Skunk 150 00 war, was a Lieutenant Colonel in the Malchal nit mistet se e yavate { 60 Kolinsky Capelets, $100.00 with the 102d, He was soon made a Tails and beads, very clabordte, . leaving tor He comes back a Major after going | through all (the engagements that | | decimated the ranks, of the train and made it another famous unit of the 2th Division. The boys under him say he was one of the nerviest men in the war; always on the job, always tee always in the thickest of the line of travel with the British on the road to Mount Kemmel, where they brought order out of chaos and opened the way for the troops, artillery and the tanks, Resides controlling trafic, they carried back wounded and sick and were continually under fire. In July they weer sent to work over the sector to the east of Pop- pington. Here they remained until Aug. 25, when they were ordered into Picardy for action against the Hindenburg Line, They were then back with the 27th Division and went with them in the advance on the Canal Hellecourt. On Oct they were withdrawn, ostensibly work back of the line, Instead of this, they were on hand orwell, it's a little stronger than polities,” he did say. And that was some admission, for Mr. Nagle, in his day has been in some of the greatest mixups in Tammany primary battles. wo deaths occurred on the Mount Vernon, Sergt, Charles L. Johnson, No, 928 Argyle Road, Brooklyn, and Corpl. George O. Banning, No, 105 27 for cumbing to pneumonia, shortly after 12 Banning o'clock this morning, just as the Mount Vernon/tg yojunteer as replacement troops was entering port, He had had pneu-|for thew own division, to fill the monia before leaving France and at| maps of fhe New York men rae bad reat he | fa heirs was, perhaps, the only Brest ho complained to some of his! Mivmry Police that went over the buddies of pains in his chest. But) top during the war. And the} he hid his ailment from the doctors, ring that he would be left behind | nd was anxious to go with the boys on the voyage home, Two days out he collapsed and although everything was done for him, he expired just as too! it will be remembe 27th Division never had a ment troops until long |had smashed the Hindenburg ey Lit They fled the places of their dough- boys from other of their own units. Leslie Callaghan, a private, waa killed by an airship and 14 men were wounded at the same time, Tho toughest proposition that the Military Police went up against was at Dickl eybush where preparations were be- ing made for the advance on Mt. Kemmel. The 102nd Engineers had been caught there in the entangle- ment of the many troops moving for- ward. The police got busy and cut out new roads and straightened out the traffic tangle with the ease and Y. CHAUFFEURS SOLVED TRAFFIC PROBLEMS. | The 1024 Supply Train, in command jot Major Carl H, Lobes, was another returning unit of the 27th Division. In the train were twelve officers and 443 enlisted men, made up largely of New York City drivers and chauf- fours, with a number from up State. They sailed from Newport News on June 3 and upon their arrival at Brest | received the greatest of welcomes. What they needed most at Brest at that time was chauffeurs and drivers to handle the tremendous amount of congested freight. ‘The boys who had been accustomed to the congested conditions and narrow lanes in and about West Btreet were just the men for the job and they straightened out the trafMfc there in a way that amazed the French. The train was sent from Brest to Corbie| cops clearing Fifth Avenue for the coming of the President. All the time the Military Police weer under the hottest kind of fir Six of them were cit’ and recommended for ginahed Service Cross. SIXTY - FIVE POSTGRADUATE | NURSES HOME, Sixty-five postgraduate hospital nurses who ‘had spent 19 months in France returned on the Mount Ver non, They are all New York girls They organized and maintained Base Hospital No. 8 at Savnay where, be- fore they got through, they had 14,000 4 for bravery the with the British, and just about the/ beds. At their head was Miss Amy time, to their infinite diseust, that |", Patmore. jtime, 4 + Lieut. Col. M. J. Thawton, formerly |they were ready for action, the armis-|of Bellevue Hospital, returned after tice wae signed. |having been in France since July, On the Mount Vernon was also the lia He was at Baso Hospital No. | Sanitary Train of the 27th, in com- |Divisione GA theahine doocoame ha mand. of Lieut. Col. R. P. Wadhams, | ase Hospital No. 19, most of the comprising 86 officers and 885 men. |voung women nurses’ hailing from The train saw service all through | Rochester, r hey were quar France, the members being scattered |tered at Vichy, where we took |twenty-two hotels for hospital among many divisions. Some were In | \anmedations Brest, some jn Paris and others fol-| Sergt, Fidele Denoo came back with lowed the gas cases, and some were in at the last of Argonne. MILITARY POLICE WON HONORS IN BATTLE, The Military Police of the 27th also came home on the transport, in com- mand of Capt. Juan M. Cedallos, a broker, of No. 112 Wall Street and Lieut, Orrin §, Baldwin, who lives at the 1024 Ammunition Train. Denoo is |a Belgian who fought the German hordes at the outbreak of the war and who, with his wife, was captured by the Germans and taken to a Ger- man prison camp. He escaped and made his way to this country, going to Rochester and there enlisting with the 102d when America entered the war. He fought a! through the war and never heard word of his wife the Yale Club. ‘The police was organ-|, When he was in Brest, ready to sail 2 Pe iy ror ica, he Was despondent over Wwed at the request of Major Gen.|not hearing from his wife, and had O'yan of New York City men and/ determined to return to his native country to search for her after bei were recruited from college men, the mustered out. The day before tl old First Cavalry, men who under- stood I’rench and men from the First Motor Battery, On May 80 they were sent along the he Mount Vernon sailed, on the street in Brest his wife ran into his arms. He hadn't much difficulty in. persuading the proper authorities to permit her No connection with any other establishment in N. Y. A.Ratkowsk Phone 8793 Murray Hill 435 Fifth Ave. ss. One Flight Up Means Economy SUMMER | FURS For Early Spring Wear |! Are an important addition to the well dressed woman's wardrobe. Never has so much thought been given to the manufacture of furs for ner and Summer wear, \q@ with the result that the styles this season are becom- \§ ingly beautiful. My assortment is among the largest | and most complete to be found in the world, and as 1 manufacture all the furs I sell, my prices are at least 50° lower than elsewhere. Specials for This Week 55 Siberian Silver Fox Scarfs, Animal effect; lived with Georgette. *125.00 *100.00 $35.00 15 different styles. | 50 Cross Fox Animal Scarfs, | | Animal effect; 10 different colors-—Newest shades lined with silk Georgette; very be- coming for young folks. Siberian Squirrel—Finest made Capes, Stoles and Fancy Neckwear. 575.00 Sagacity of a lot of New York traMc| Distin- | | bo Pond Passage with him on the $59 388 611 SUPPLY ‘women oT be Go) "aaa ey port. 7. A overcome by smoke, and these, Capt. Sergeast Bouvier, No. oat nearly 225 men and women employees Fifth Avenue, sGaphe witiy tbe Yan BILL IN AT ALBANY |<: the Morrison Hotel, were assisted Division until he was gassed. One baie nt em SN ST cn Cee fe started in a five ory brick annex Other Measures to Be Offered Will|to the notet which is used as a dormi- morning while he lay in a French hos- pital his wife appeared on the scene She had heard of his being gassed and | ine To tatte tory for the employees, Those over- went to him. How she secured fer Bring Total Appropriations to come were soon revived. Passage across the ocean wouldn't $90,000,000. All guests of the big hotel Iecated even tell her husband, and he was! srmany starch 11 at the southeast corner of Clark and content at secing her Without asking “The annual ap- ean Streets wei . further questions. At any rate, the|propriation bill carrying $ | Madisan Streets “were aroused and 88,611.95 soldier's wife wouldn't tell reporters | was* introduced in the Assembly this b erecadusnars, rhegeute, OF LON how she aid at ¥ ; sot pick | MOMINE by Assemblyman Machold. This|about 500 left. The fire nid_not reach In the Mount Vernon were 801 sick |i) carries $4 48.78 more than last |the hotel proper, however, The fourth and wounded. Of the %4 different | Att of the anne “ year but is not the sum total of all | and ftth catimates casual companies, three were com- |? M jm total of all) burned. The damage was estimated posed of New York men, a total of | Moneys that will be appropriated for | at $50,000 three officers and 138 enlisted men ate expenditure. ‘The total appropria- And algo on board the Mount Vernon | tions this year will probably reach $90,- | were three casual companies of| 900,000, according to Machold. ‘The Marines, five officers and 389 men. —_| total appropriations last year were $81,- | 625,271, | follows For extra construction, U.S. ARMY IN GERMANY , increased personal service maintenance and operation of ence be- $ {common schools, $500,000; diff General Will Review Rainbows Be- Page n Army pay and State pay for men 531,000; |SOREGUMS-- LOOSE TEETH military and naval servic n Federal — | $600.00, and. $420,000 to male up. a de. | And AD Germinal Irritations or Symptoms of fore They Start for Home on April 4. CORLENZ, Monday, March 10 (As- sociated Press).—Gen. Pershing will arrive in Coblenz Wednesday by way of Luxemburg on an inspection trip, which will take him over virtually all the area occupled by the American | ficiency in last year's common schoo! | Pyorthoes. hese ens Pyorigg, a medicated massage oint- ment, is now being prescribed and re ‘GHIGAGO HOTEL ANNEX FIRE itstsinssueteins.2zes's, amet, dis seased teeth and gums. It effectual DRIVES OUT IVES OUT HUNDREDS ly stops bleeding and receding gums, | Hahtens up loose teeth in a few days, corrects “lengthened” teeth, and Third Army. | > | quickly removes all aches, pain, in- Ho will review and inspect the six | More Than 225 Emplo Employees of Mor-| dammation, tenderness and irritations, divisions of the Army of Occuation,| — rison Go Down Fire Escapes whether of germinal origin or caused | including the 424 (Rainbow) Division, ~ by false teeth and dental plates, Price which will begin entraining for Ant- and 500 Guests Rush Out. —_| g¥.00,"" Experimental package 8c. ‘werp and home on April 1 CHICAGO, March 11.—Half a dozen | At all druggists. ranklin Simon 8 Co. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets ORIGINAL PARIS MODEL HATS Selected by our own representa- tives. at the authentic Peace Time P-~'s Openings. A few of the daringly different modes are mentioned — ODETTE makes a hat of bark- colored Hawaiian braid and embroideries it in bright colored filoselle. LOUISON contributes a little hat of black milan straw with the ultra smart side draped veil. MARIA GUY signs her name to a Chinese hat of black lisere straw with picot edged ribbon on tilted bandeau. CAROLINE REBOUX origi- nates a lovely hat of jade Breen milan-braid—exquis- ite in line end color. SUZANNE TALBOT sends a stunninj, Pagoda turban trimmed in a most unusual yay with coque feathers. FELIX is represented bya clever poke hat of tan colored milan straw“with a band of colored raffia. Other Hats in the Collection From—Georgett®, Camille Roger, Rose Descat, Evelyne Varon, Lewis, Lucie Hamar, Vasselin Villetard and Jeanne Lanvin. 35.00 to 75,00 ‘A limited number only of Exact Copies and Adaptations of the above Hats 20.00 to 45.00 PARIS MILLINERY SHOP—Fourth Floor SEPARATE COLOR PHOTO SUPPLEMENT | (Fine Paper) One of a Series of Film Favorites and other Color Prints to be given from week to week Di tribution in Greater New Yorte and Vicinity pana ncaa This Picture, size 8x12, with Next Sunday World Suitable for frame or for passepartouting or wall decoration. GET THE SET. ORDER NEXT SUNDAY WORLD FROM NEWS- DEALER IN ADVANCE

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