The evening world. Newspaper, July 21, 1922, Page 7

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allant 71st Will Fight “ Wi Battle’’ THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1922. 1Sx AT PRACTICE WIT APD Finn Gon sa ‘famous Regiment Wins ‘Hon- ors as “Best Yet” and Will Prove It to Folks From Home. By Charles E. Keegan. pecial Correspondent of The Evening World. PEEKSKILL, July 21.—In the six ys they have been in camp here eo Fist Infantry PF nent, N.Y. N »» has won the honors of the ‘best let. This has been said by Lieut ol. Gecrge Stewart, senior inspector Astructor, and uny one who knows Meebhe Colonel knows he doesn’t hand out ouUquets to tie undeserving, Col. J. lollis Wells, command the 71st, fares the same opinion, and by way f letting the whole wide world know . fit has sot to-morrow as the day jor the regiment to do tt t Everyone will be weleome at camp Dipo-merrow. There w A special ex Be ursic m the armory in New York ity. Veterans of the outfit and mem bers of the Tist-105th Post of the MAMA mericon I will lead the pil rimage to Peekskill. The twelve hun Bred officers and men in camp bre Beaill put on a show for them that Ly urely will bring ck memories of old Bimes. Lieut. Dick J. Kennedy, well known [eewriter and cartoonist, has put his Fenmofleur talents Into effect and the wrage js set, With the aid of Capt Lester D. Stickles and his crack ma- chine gunners in Company D a: 1 gas and howitzer specialists of the command, Kennedy will stage a battle for the It thing demonstration visitors Mpromises, to be close to the rea The regiment ather stiff training cc ea cropping by, have kept the men on edge and Made them ea hard Pyhat have been set out for them. Itt ise at 5.30 and on the go is going through a this e here constantly Rumors, U for the tasks all day ery time there's a slight rest period bird ome lets dope rator o with the latest His sister knows a phone op who keeps company with a Messenger who overheard « friend of is tell some one cls th vist yas going to be called for br some fourteenth cousin of f Ise bout for the jommand. The fact that this regi- ent has been the first every call lends “authority” to every ‘umor, But for all that the oufit goes about “its training in a cheerful! mood, ready | for anything. E “Rascal,” Col Vell’s Highland terrier, has not had a loom period. Rascal is a reveille up. He apparently never sleeps, He akes up Riley, the oldest veteran of he outfit and striker to the Colonel. hen he wakes up the Colonel and the tire staff, Everyone is convinced he is the famous long-sought pup who akes all the buglers up. Rascal has en 80 busy he hasn't had time to Pash, and that's one of his favorite Wo pastimes. Last year ~he caught the jenly ee! captured off Roa Hook dock. | The Tist, which last yesr made a “camp de luxe” of Peekskill with its electric lights, has gone one better this time. They've set up an officers’ mess that tops anything ever had in he arr... The chef and four waiters from the Tumble Inn, near here, are ishing up the chow. They have the inen, glassware and silverware from the roadhouse, and what's more they have the food and service. They call the mess hall “Tumble Inn Annex." Jt was all arranged because Capt. enkins, owner of the inn, is a former ftist man who served with the outfit in the Spanish-American war and ‘commanded Company C for some time iafter. The camp this year !s almost per- fect from a hygienic standpoint, Tle dtchens and mess shacks of the com- panies are now ,permanently in<:osed old barrack buildings and every- hing 1s screened. The Government jas apparently determined to keep eekskill ready for instant use, Per- nanent showers and lavatories also ve been installed in barrack build- and a new pistol and rifle range 4th machine gun additions has been pid out. For all the work, the men will find me to get in sume fun, Last night serious faced young man stood out- it the strike dtuy, friend Private Hoozis heard something immediate service among in AEX POR THE FLIGHT gee | INNEW poly Ot 9 ted z of y te Hero," Col and insisted = the infirmary insi secing Capt ‘orps He shank of favorite mount, he had orders not to come back with out having ‘Hero's’' tonsils removed ‘They carried the too far, how- ince the joke was played. Corporal Ed Reisner is going 9 all puffed up. Reisner somewt embles Col, Wells, in build at I night he approached th: rd tent, his 200 ponuds swaying jauntily The Corporal was mistaken for th Colonel and the guard was turned out pronto. When the mistake was discovered Reisner got a blanket toss that cost him about ten pounds. Capt. Arthur Hoffman is the proud est man in the regiment. He came up here a first Heutenant in command of Company K. His outfit showed up so well on the first Inspection that Col. Wells promoted him on the, field He says now that if he could keep Sergt. Harry Adams away from town his happiness would be complete Firat Sergt. Tim Hamman had to strap Adams to his cot so he'd be on hand for the party in honor of the new captain, and Sergt. John Will- ams passed up his daily letter for the occasion. Lieut, Boh Gels of Company E, who knows how to find a bunk where the tent doesn't leak, has been absolved of suspicion in one of the camp plots It has been found he had nothing to do with Capt. D, W. Hennen of the medical staff being aroused from his slumber at 1 A. M. by a rookle in quest of a pink pill, And Lieut. John A PHENIX' PRODUCT Salad \ de luxe Try this—crisp heart of let- tuce with chopped nuts and a luscious ball of “PHILA- DELPHIA” Cream Cheese, Um!—it's so good! Don't forget, only one Cream Cheese is the genuine" PHIL- ADELPHIA.” The brand is on the package. PHENIX Means GOOD Cheese. Archer, the most popu the Tist ever had tern problems, now and first call o every company This has Acting Supply Sergt pany K 1, has He in can Iserson says larm will %e con ever h Open a box of Tak-hom-a Biscuit. several varieties of eri Put them back in the Mak wiche: Box. Easy to carry, delicious to the taste, and Biscuit splits-in-two without crumbling. Joose-Wites Biscurr (QmMpaxy Branches in Over 100 Cities r mess officer mp. added to the burdens of Iserson of Com- the nd Soldier" ved his lan- a free hand supplies of > act- work. Roy ays all the offl- had, neat des and find all the imental to He he to collect on those éver, with, Liout Clay ing to the job; it's real hi He phoned in for transportati He js seconded by "Ol" Rao Hook, having found tt necess Hoffman, Hoffman to dine front’ the! mantle tor weve cers here must be centipe s, and some one sent him a horse.| Never saw so many boots, ‘e blames it on Lieut, Alfred doesn't know where th shan, who had been on guard dt mud they m e since his arrival . ve, and Reuter-| boots. Hoffman is getting his p shan passes the buck to Lieut, Ed]of his chest before Serty, De Dough hasn't had hack from the chance to see his girl) in Peeksti} He says when that day comes A Sandwich Box for the Picnic Tuts will be the best picnic lunch you eat, il SOMEBODY DIES [DOOMED MANDINES For Visitors at Peekskill Camp) Furey | MINUTES. |DEATHHOUSEPAL AS >, ae a : YORK STAT} CHAR WATS THE Many Preventable Deaths, but} Two Youths, One Japanese, Great Strides Against Tu- berculosis and Cancer. The State Charities Aid Association it Issued a report to-day in which says ivery four minutes, plus three of New York, During 1921 the num- state ber of people who died in this did not 29,575. Many of these necd to die when they did “The of vital statistics ts the number of premature deaths. The promise of the figures is the steadily ining death rate, Preventable or postponable diseases claimed 60 per tragedy cent, of those who died last year and till the death rate for the year in the United States and in New York State was the lowest on record “In 1907, when the State Charities Aid Association began its campaign against tuberculosis in the S e oul- side of New York Clty the aeath rate for pulmonary tuberculosts per 100,000 ion in that area was 129.4, of populd It was reduced to 86.2 for 1921. ‘The gain is believed to be permanent The lifetime of the race length- ens. he average individual is stronger and lives lo The fig ures for the State of Massachusetts 1re usually taken in computing the expectation of life because they go back the furthest and are the most complete and accurate In 1789, th ation of life of the average ehild born in shusetts wa 5 Prog- low- ng figui to 40 year to 51.2 year Of the number— w York State last ye ed, so to speak, out of Ife through down of the organic en- ies 19 the zero mark, That number who died from the cause listed ay ‘old age.’ “In other words, of all the people who died in this area in the year only that number had fulfilled the promise living until ‘worn out’ which is the instinctive hope of every vidual in the world, All the ren had been cut off short of ti t would be assured to world in which preventives against disease and accident had been orgen- dso highly as to be perfectly et- tt who dled ry only 707 was indi- inder tap. He's training John Tuts of the Howitzer Company, and Tuts expects to get the range on the third round This camp has its usual piece of scandal. It's about a daring Peek- skill bootlegger who braved the M Ps and stole into camp. He was captured before gettinr far, however, and his ware was confiscated, Major J. Wesley Lyon experimented with the stuff and discovered a sure cure for rifle rust. Now every gun js shin- ing Col, Wella {s being alded in the ad ministration here by Lieut, Col. James Eben and Majors FE. A. Robertson, Merz and Edward Thomas. er _sand- Tak-hom-a because Tak-hom-a onds, somebody dies in the State} “le Go Calmly to Execution in Sing Sing. Pletro Nunziata, nineteen, of Rrook- lyn, one of the youngest men ever ex ecuted at Sing Sing, and Salto Talzo, twenty-one, the second Ja to in the chalr there, were electro cuted last night \ fe ture of the e as a wit- eution Was the pres n of WoC. Rost of T is blind and said he wanted to kskill, who s, Vpetias the feeling in the death chamby Nunziata insisted that Taizo be his ul, and Warden guest at their last me Lawes humor “This is on me im Nunziata told the Japanese, and both selected the same ofsteak, menu toes, coffee, French fried pota ice cream and cigars. The cost was taken out of the small fund to the credit of Nunziata, who was not content until assured that 8 had been done Nunziata and three others sought to rob Prof, Wilfred Kotkoy of the Jewish Theological Seminary at Woodhaven, lL. 1, walking alone across a lonely field there Keb, 2% 1 and killed him when he re- sisted izo invited Mitaro Hara,.a Japa- nese chef, to st 1 him overn in a Broadway hotel near 65th St Oct, 4, 1921. When he discovered had several liundred dollars he Si do ohe disabled Hara by a fio jitsu trick and strangled him. | Despite their youth, neither man | down i They walked calmly to Taizo spent his last } in prayer with a Japanese Prote: minist aying that he did not like | to die, but as he had to, would dic a Christian ———— TWO BOYS DROWNED. July 21.—The ve and Carl Ha recovered last night The two Henry Mill we eleven, the lower Gen disappeared yesterd mysteriously Many women lose a great deal of the coffee they buy even though there may not bea holeinthe package. The thing they pay forisflavor; thecof- fee grounds they throw away. But unless the coffee grounds are ade- quately protected, this flavor evapo- rates in the air. Madam, if you pay for coffee aroma and flavor you are entitled to it! The flavor of Premier Coffee is insured; it is blended by an expert and its flavor is saved because it is sealed in @ vacuumized can. aoe eons Aman’scoffeeblended by a great coffee man remier Fre oar VACUUM IZED FRANCIS H. LEGGETT & COMPANY 601 West 27th Street New York, N.¥. SUNDAY WORLD WANTS | WORK MONDAY WONDERS! ! Confidence Confidence is the fundamental principle of business. Whether you pur- chase an automobile, furniture for your home, or a suit of clothes, you must have faith in your dealer. As manufacture i last 21 y and recog- nized as one of the largest Chain Store Clothing Organizations in America, we have esta lished an honorable reputation everywhere as reliable merchants. We handle clothing exclusively. We do not sell shoes, hats, or furnishings. We devote all our tim xperience and energy to one business, and when you think of your clothes needs, we feel that we deserve your consideration. We sell good clothe: ind right now at the Sal rices, our values top anything in New York. Get acquainted with Nathan Trivers Clothes Stores. Make a purchase with con- fidence. We guarantee satisfaction. Of course we are human and we realize that we are not infallible, so if any- thing goes wrong with the wear of our clothes we will be glad to make a satisfactory adjustment or refund the pur- chase price. SUT der of Trivers Clothes Stores Organization GOOD-BYE TO ALL 1-PANTS SUITS In 10 days our Broadway & 11th Street Store will be turned over to contractors for extensive re- modeling. After completion we will occupy our entire establishment of 50,000 square feet as AN EXCLUSIVE TWO-PANTS SUIT HOUSE To make room for this merchandise and prior to starting our remodeling we offer to the public OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF 15,000 SUMMER—MEDIUM—FALL WEIGHT TRIVERS ONE-PANTS SUITS Regardless of Cost!! Every One-Vants Suit must be disposed of in both uptown and downtown stores. The values are the greatest ever offered by any clothing house in Americal! SPECIAL LOT cf 1,000 Odds and Ends ALL WOOL SUITS $25.00 ss $19.75 ALL SIZES, BUT NOT IN EVERY STYLE. Small Charge for Alterations In Our 11th Street Store Only $30.00 Values Men’s and Young Men's $40 and $45 Trivers Suits Sons, G. G. G, Tip-T. H. M, Lindent fl, hedwick ‘Clothe Men’s and Young Men's $25 and $30 Trivers Suits "17 Men's and Young Men's $55 and $65 SUITS é Small Charge for Alterations Unquestionably the Greatest Values SUMMER CLOTHES Silk Gabardine Mohair and Tropical Suits Worsted Suits > 10" 16 *° AN PANTS Bott ssc White Flannel Pants, Worsteds, tweeds, herringbones— $6.50 278 ey teately yo Silk Mohair 3-Fiece Suits and Tuxedos RIGHT NOW, DURING THIS SALE, WE OFFER HUNDREDS OF TWO-PANTS SUITS AT THE LOWEST PRICES IN THE CITY i. tone Palm Beach Suits $Q.50 All Silke Lined, 1600 BROADWAY Cor. 48th (Rector’s Corner) Open Saturday Evening Open Every Evening, Including Saturday, 10 o'Clock Till 11 o'Clock STORES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES, 801-807 BROADWAY Cor. 11th St. Till

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