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Ca te KNIFE HURLED AT ROOSEVELT IN PARADE RRR EEE RE NEHER ITE ERR Weather—Showers and cooler to-night; Wednesday fair, EDITION i | “ Cireulation Books Open to All. ‘ Cireulation Books Open to Ali NEW YORK, TUESDAY, St _PRICE ONE CENT. ay Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publis! wats! Urne New ork World). ———————_— = — = PRICE ONE CENT. 10 PAGES GERMANS CLAIM SWEEPING VICTORY; * FRENCH ADMIT LOSSES AT VERDUN FOR REVIEW BY GOV. WHITMAN TE ANGER IN MEMORIAL DAY PARADE eamaennen Of the Handful of Survivors Few March Up Riverside Drive. ws 4s MOST OF THEM RIDE. Soldiers, Marines, Militia, Boy Scouts, Girls and Women Swell Number to 16,000. Of the tens of thousands ot men New York sent to the battlefields of the Civil War only a scant seven Bundred were abie to-day to join the memorial parade to honor their dead eomrades, Of these, te walk, though a score, braced by Pride and the stirring recollections of their fighting days of youth, formed fm ranks under their faded and tat- tered war fiags and kept best they could in the column which few were able step as et the Soldiers’ and Sallors' Monu- ment at Riverside Drive and Nine parade. Besides the National Guard, @howing its advance in real military effectiveness after another year of the reorganizing and practical work ‘The earnest - Guards in great masses. Dlause from tho spectators who were massed along the Drive, ‘Their ra- weption was second only to that POLIGEMAN'S KIDDIE BES FORDEATH OF FATHER'S SLAVES “I Hope They Send Men Who Killed Him to the Electric Chair,” Cries Boy of Eight. While thousands of men marched to-day to the rhythm of music and| and a great city paid ail t tribute to the country's gallant dead, a widow and two little kiddies in a flat on the top fldor of No. 722 Col- umbus Avenue awaited the body of their dead hero, Policeman Henry H. | Schwartz, who was murdered in the drum morning and died in Bellevue to-day the life of his comrade, nan Dennis Buckley stood in reserve ready to yield more of the precious fluid for transfusion into tion that he was on his post. He sa- luted an imaginary captain just before he dled. | Strikes Arm of His Secretary During Parade in Kan- sas City. SSAILANT NOT KNOWN. | Colonel Knew Nothing of Hap-| pening Until Told—Weapon Found in Street. KANSAS CITY, Mo,, May 30.—An open pocket knife wan thrown at Col.) Theodore Roosevelt here to-day as his motor car turned Into Twenty-third Street during a Memorial Day parade, ‘The knife struck the automobile and | was picked up by a member of the! American Legion, which followed behind. John McGrath, Roonevelt's secre ary, said the handle of the knife }struck hie arm, which was hanging lover the side of the car. Roosevelt knew nothing of the in- jeident until Grath told him some |time later, and the police had no re- velt wast © principal event of Kansas {through the downtown district where | hundreds of Mags had been used in orating business buildings: Hive thousand seats on Convention AN ZOQUAVEDS, COL. JOHN'S. MOSBY, h the city streets, and his best mood as he re- passed thre he viewed the p was in rade RAIDER, 1S DEAD CAPTURE Crown Prince Hurls a Fresh Division of 20,000 Men Against the French Positions, and Paris Admits the Loss of Ground. 348 PRISONERS -¢-—— ‘BIG ARTILLERY BATTLE IN DOUAUMONT SECTION. BERLIN, May 30 (via London).—The capture of French positions along the entire front between the southern ridge of Dead Man Hill and the village of Cumieres, south of the Corbeaux Wood and Cumieres Woods, was announced to-day by the War Office, Twenty-five officers, including several staff Officers, and 1,313 wounded men were captured. te GERMANY KEEPING ® Two counter attacks against Cuml- eres Village by the French were re- pulsed, along the front between La Ba: Daily Reports From Consul-General e Sergt. Alexander Knittle, sald to be City's programme for the observance tleth Street. one of the finest specimens of the of M | bay. The day's ceremontes| Skinner at London Keep Wash- | Canal and Arras, Lens again was Youth had the greatest share in the police force on the east side, gave | called for « review by the Colonel ington Well Informed. bombarded. In the neighborhood of p sixteen ounces of hia blood in an of 1,000 Hoy Scouts and a parade Souchez (Artois district) and south- WASHINGTON, May 30.—Conaul- General Skinner's daily despatch of ship sinking reports was explained at the State Department as due to the department's desire to check up on east of Tahure (Champagne) enemy advances failed, “There has been increased fighting weak to which it has been subjected in Schwa rteries H had been reserved for momber*| Germany's submarine pledge: activity between Hill 304 and the the last few years, there were the At 11 o'clock last night Policeman £ oft nd Army of the Republic! mug os ae geben = es iven| Meuse (Verdun front). South of the @panish War Veterans and Boy schwartz parted with his wife, smiling and the Confederate Veterans, that} every reason to Halate chat earn: Corbeaux and Cumleres Woods we Scouts and the Junior American and cheerful, telling her he would seo they might hear the former President |has followed and will continue te fol. | Captured French positions along the village were repelled, ast of the Meuse we improved upon our new captured line in the Rome Despatch Says Italian War- ship Made the Attack in Har- Moved before Gov. Whitman, his performance of his duty, He was shot port on the matter, No arrests were | Following is the text of the etaf and other reviewing officers {n @ battle with gunmen In a cellar at expected THE U-BOAT PLEDGE Peper’ From the War Oates: if No. 196 First Avenue early yesterday | An address by Col, Theodore Roose- ee “Artillery duels are continuing her to-day. An hour later he leaned apes e this afternoo! rior to * enti > ° ness of the youngsters in khaki knee-| on his arm, half sitting up in bed, and i ae uae Sale ae tow bh PAs _ as ma ie Hill one breeches and their alert eagerness identified Antonio Riccabone as the the guest of honor at a noonday Cumieres village Thirty-five cttionte te show their respect for the old man who kicked him while he lay on luncheon given by the Commerctal AUSTRIAN TRANSPORT including several staff offic 4 veterans and the spirit of the day,|:ne cellar floor. At 2 o'clock Schwartz club. |1,818 unwounded mer sabydie! ] brought continuous shouts of ap-| died in a delirium, under the hallucina- He was given a big welcome as he TORPEDOED AND SUNK Two counter atincien saline psy | vhite-halred ss opnaeaged aye Aad bea ee Just a few moments before he died. When Roosevelt arrived at bis hotel ede Thiaumont Wood, The advance was i was announced to-day by the po- he stopped ay he saw two acore little bor of Trieste. |in the eastern portion of the wood. i tury ago. ice, Schwartz also identified the pic- _ - = —|(> «| girls massed in the open space in : > |Here at times t ; Grand Marshal Frank M. Tiernan|turen of Giovanni Riccabone, slxty Confederate Officer Led in) Fi penuannee ROME: “May 8) (Vie Pariah A | mes the fre on both sides | le ricee Army, whe reviewed ine abone, sixty ° : i . front of the hotel desk, Each was|iarge transport steamer was tor-| reached the greatest violenc j Betas Maar: he. staring point Atl fenice i Meee ce ee cee | S. Ready to Fi ht Many Daring — Exploits | dressed in Stars and Stripes and wore| pedoed and sunk by an Italian war-| “Last night our aviatora attacked ] ; Damieo, a brother, as those of the e e Against the Uni Forces. a cap a la Columbla, The moment | ship in the Austrian harbor of Trieste | W!th good results an enemy destroyer ! Bixty-eighth Street and West End} men who had shot him. He had sum- ° ° Against the Union Forces. | they ¢ he Col uadron off O: vant. mod i x 2 hey caught sight of the Colonel, they|on the night of May 28, it was of- | squadron off Ostend, Avenue, estimated there were moned them to court several times for atns ression burst into the “Star-Spangled Ban-|ficially announced this afternoon “A British biplane crashed to earth men and boys altogether in the col-| minor violations, A description 1 3’ WASHINGTON, May 20.—Col. John| ner.” Then they sang “America, I Somes after an aerial battle near St, Elo} ] umn, in addition to women Whol order for the arrest of the men wis ° S. Mosby, the daring Confederate cav- | Love The s © |and was destroyed by our artillery,’ } marched with their fathers and] heen gent throughout the country wson ells eterans' sing aadas Hida tera t Gar.| “I've simply got to say a few words AUTO BU ’ —— | grandfathers and gitis in well drilled! schwartz would have been on the : SE eee io) thend children? tie Colonel ase] FRENCH DRIVEN BACK i detachments of Girl Scouts force five years June 15. He was a » . ar Ubla Hospitals, Binds Hunday MI Gons | ie a ‘ 1 KILLED, 8 INJURED WEST OF THE MEUSE R i sera 0 ar , 4 ais ' hel dition had been ¢ ‘ K sna Dai . MARINES AND AOLDIERGA OUSE| number before becoming a policeman. | Solemnly Calls All Citizens to! te permit their employes of suitable | Hen had been He was! you delightful persons,” he ad- _ 4 HOLD OTHER Po. ; ; ENTHUSIASM. _ | He was ambitious for advancement,| isc Aga to peg tary training. ‘Pie | eighty-throe year | dressed them, “I'd gladly have trav-| Eighteen Persons in Machine When i ER INTS. j Aa always, tho crowds showed fa-/ and his record isan excellent one, He | Set Purposes in Accord With | demand, he President said, would ! Mosby had be all the way from Oyster Bay to| _ k a E as } voritism for the regulars from Fort} jived for his little family and was with Spirit. of America | the acta test applied to the ent Sanliontion mar Kansas City simply to see this sight. | It Backs Over an Eme PAKIS, May 30.—French troope ‘Wadsworth, the marines and sailors! them always when off duty and during | oF sake atstee asm which the business men « Ve a . | Nothing could be finer or prettier.” — | bankment were driven south of the Bethincourt- .¥. ar-| i va throug the ex r te id | 7 j from the Navy Yard and the war-| his vacations. Harry, his boy, 1s elght a vn . country profess to have in favor of |" \ ‘ o former President dwelt affec-| WILKES-BARRE, Pa, May 30.-|Cumieres highway In a powerful as- ships in the harbor, Squadron A, the | years old, and Agnes is a tot of five WASHINGTON, May 20. —Presi-| adequate military preparednes e was te tionately on “the Blue and Gray" and|One man wags killed and elght others | %@ult delivered by the Germans last ®ixty-ninth, the machine syn 39 Bape It was the pollceman's greatest joy| dent Wilson, speaking to-day at the] “Ara business men to give| ra sround the i ane the fact that the nation was now|were injured to-day when a big au-|Meht on the front between Dead Man ments of the various regiments and to romp with the kiddies and to| Memorial Day cos at Arlington | Young men in their employ freedom | ¢t do when h F hinited. He Went on to sermonize on|tomobile bus with eighteen persons} Hil and Cumieres, it was admitted the apringy-stepp petly . meds wenite- | spend the day with them In the open,| cemetery, summoned “solemnly” all|'? olunteer?” he asked A 10 Federa th) necessity for preparedness to|4board backed over a ten-foot em- | to-day by the War Office clad battalion of the Naval Reserve. jn the woods or on the beach, He ‘ say we should prepare, Are busi fore being pardoned by Gen \avert war. bankment at Beam Creek near here.| The German gains represent an ad- Gov. Whitman and his staff reached was thirty years old, six fee men in the United States to set their] > . ‘ ane a r . nana y Namaauartere at thelcn » Bix feet tall and | men ready to help? [have no dou With the veteran at of hin] “Lf was in the Spanish-American | Patrick Fagan of this city, driverand| vance of not more than 120 yards, the Grand Army headquarters at the built in proportion, He never talked | Purposes In accord with the spirit oflay to how t questions will be} death his winter, Mrs, Blakely | war," he said. “It waa a small war,[owner of the machine, was pinned | On all other sectors of the northweat- Sherman sauare Hote at #30 o'clock. shop in his home never mentioned | America and gave warning that magn | anime ! Mosby and Mie three daughters. | but it was the only war just at that {under the car and crushed to death, ern front of Verdun violent German The O14 Guard was in waiting at a’-| the scraps from which he had come,| trom other s who do not think of| One principle of America, he added.| Misses Ada and Pau vid Mra./ time. If we hadn't had a navy we} The nt resulted when Fagan | attacks were completely repulsed, tention, when the carriages rolled dp/ just off duty, Only to his wife he| qnorica first “must be cast out of|'# that sinall and weak States t Stuurt Mosby Coleman, ail of this| prepared in those daya there would {attempted to change gears near the| Following an entire day of heavy fm front of the hotel, and preseated | would remark with a smile; “Neyer | *MeMce first “m RENE S many rights aa larger States ity the body will be taken to his|have been ten times the amount of {OP of # hill. He falled and the car} bombardment of the French lines arms, The small body of vete »|mind; some day I'll be a captain | our toleran The President said © President 1 that ¢ home ‘arrenton, \ td ae 4 shed that aH he amount off sarted back and went over the em-| west of Cumieres, the Crown Prince little more than half a regiment, was| Mrs. Sch went to Bellevue| that America will not submit to a 1 States pecans beAl'ppecial Wonaia Weill Here NACE dee OF LT Chen tea | baoamiams | hurled into action a new division just ranged to their right, After acknowl- | Hospital yesterday and took Harry| gression either from within or fr Slag Paba “wlth? Had 1d: ‘hie Maino: i Pe RANE SBR RN sitdantrect heed irrived at the Verdu Beer toa raluie of hel Old Guard | eile nen ie hee wan coat a | erenne? ' wi r from | an ae u nary jit the celebra. to make an appeal to the patriotiam | Tarwade KHL Three in rmemite rived the Verdin franty Se naused before the ve A . Ks 3) without human " “ al Day by ( f the great West, the Middle West : . the movernor padeed hats isa vet father was a big policeman, They areas ni gicen tanta ore | 103 ! n ter tA on next Sunday which 1 know will stand right resi | MEMPHIS. 1 May 30--Three eastern slopes of Dead Man Hill broke erans, uncovered ani k his place} told him his father was sick, but ine pers | | u arod ‘that tk A 1 ‘ Ath over Nfty hugs Lai not the one Who wilh awn, | persona are reported killed and Afty-|down under terrific French fire, Im fat the head of the line, i stinct told him something else, Per- | ate but we are re to fight asainat | ton’ he would never conse ROW Se ene ile Who will awake | tipeo injured and property amounting |the region of Caurettes Woods, the The Old Guard, the Veteran Corps| haps he heard them talking at the| agmression,” declared the President. | shenbelink allandectue that ne if 1 R . some one Will OMe} iy thousands of dollars uans lost heavily, but by repeat- of Artillery, the Federal forces and for suddenly he cried: “Ig| “We are ly to fight for our rights| would conse i Niger tatatina| u Jearly to-day when a tacks i (gh oegae P the National Guard preceded the Slnuiie ear ‘ | 3S © Mahe nGident. witht < Edda aiaind | At this, the Wolonel shook hands| over a territory covering cks last night drove the French ' t in the heart when our rights are coincident with! aitiance, one which Will free nations (Continued on with all the little girls and tough lectus apm phile |Dehind the Cumieres Road, Further Grand Army posts as guard of honor t take him in to see his| the rights of mankind." I Gulacuumainie vucpav@nuetl lantiluay ‘ ————ae | , eds Mas his = _ east, the Germans, emerging from Gen. John F. O'Ryan led the National father. It was thought there was} America, said the President, doos », the President said NeW ONTO SLE way to) bis room. Outside, however, | vottoe utenant Dead | Pswipal h s Guard in this order: little danger of death when py | not want more territory, but she ee eapernye , LENIGH VALLEY ie of & crowd of 9,000 people] police Livut. Richard A. Finn of the | CUnNeres Village, made repeated but j i ; Httle dan, r on the boy an ory, but she does | doeg not want ’ ; . cuasd' An €Cont OF Abe bore) w | a SntaEa gay . Rrone, | UASUCceSssful attempts to drive tl First Brigade, Seventy-first Infan-|was taken away. Golng ho want ali nations to realize and ” Ae not White Plains Avenue Station, the Branx ‘« 4 ak a & home, he| want all natior alize and re- | puts tof America, H French southward along the Chate try, Gixty-ninth Infantry, Twelfth In- w Wontinued on Second P. 2 said: “1 wish they get those men that shot my papa and put them In the| electric chair,” spect what she stands for \eiagen’ wt Demand was made by the President upon the business men of the country Weat zird St berty Bt Kerry, @ in Flower Hospital to-day from a plication of diseases, Finn entered|tancourt Road. Folice Departinent in April. 158% On the east bank of the Mi . h He was Mfty-tWo years old and lived at Most violent cannonading continued died No 204 East Bighty-third Street, eee