Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
@roughout last night, especially weet ‘et Fort Douaumont. Following is t+- +* sn-day’e te- Port from the War Office: “On the eft bank of the River Mouse the bombardment was continued yes- terday evening with redoubled vio- . lence between Dead Man Hill and Cumieres. Shortly after this activity the enemy directed a very strong at- tack upon all our positions in this @ector. In this fighting a new divi- @ion, recently arrived on the scene, took part. “On our left ali the assaults of the enemy upon the slopes to the east of Dead Man Hill, where our lines are established, were checked by our fire. Further to the east, in the vicinity of the Caurettes wood, the enemy, after! us to retire from some of our ad- road between Bethincourt and Cu- mieres, The Germans on our right, in| Men in line was scanty. the veterans marched as briskly as cessful in driving us away from the| they did fifty-five years ago, when they flocked to the colors, but others were content to ait in carriages and the | epite of repeated efforts, were not suc- southern boundaries of the village of Cumieres. The bombardment con- tinued witb intensity throughout the night, “On the right bank of the river there has been very spirited artillery fighting in the country to the west of Fort Douaumont.” | A staff officer who has just re-) @urned with messages res the and communications by a never ending | curtain of fire and are being killed to the last man by the attacking French. None will surrender, The casualties are simply staggering. Col. Kelley's Forces Deteat 3,000] of Darfur. Tobe LONDON, May 30.—An official Eastern Varkway, to the Soldiers’ and statement to-day gives further re-| Sailors’ Arch ut Prospect Park, three ports on the fighting last week in/and onc-h the Soudan between Kelley's force and 3,060 troops Sultan of Darfur. and » “The completeness of the victory) ¥.; over the Sultan of Darfur on May| Fourteenth, Ty 22 is confirmed by a further tele-! seventh gram by the Sirdar, All the Sultan's| artillery C best troops and commanders were | ya) present. Most of the latter were ac- counted for or have since surrendered. The disarmamen: proceeding — si thousand rifles nd a iar quantity | jed in. ‘On the morning following the bat- A dozen survivors of the Second | ] tle our aeroplanes threw bombs on a| Duryea Zouaves met at tho Sixty- large body of men fleeing from El| ninth Regiment Armory this morn- Fasher with Ali Dinar. The latter | ing and went by train and trolley to| ‘was last secn at the head of a follow- | Bedford and Fulton Street, ; NENORALPARADE. Gran BGRESTBROOKLYN HAS SEENIN YEARS Grand Army Veterans March or Ride to Prospect Park With Great Escort. The biggest Memorial Day parade eeveral fruitless endeavors in whicn| See” In Brooklyn in years started they suffered heavy losses, compelled | Promptly at 9 A. M. from the foun- tain in Bedford Avenue. vanced trenches to the south of the, Afmy poste were out in full force, but in some of them the number of A few of The Grand Before the etart of the parade the | Hanover Club entertained at break: | fast Rear Admiral N, R. Usher, U., 8..N., and his aides. partment Commander James D. Maj. Gen, James McLaer, N. G. N. ¥., retired; Col, Samuel Al- | Col. Charles O, Davis, , N. G.N. Y,, retired; Past Department | Commander Michael | BIG BRITISH VICTORY = fe They were De- Rell, Jen, U. 8. A; J. Cummings, nd Marshal Robert For- | Borough President Pounds of Brooklyn, Park Commis- Brig. OVER SOUDAN TRIBESMEN | on, Jn0G. Stacy’ ana’ tecnara'& Beckerson, | The line «f march was past the re- Natives of Ali Dinar, Sultan viewing stand at Bedford and Division Avenues, through Bedford Avenue, Bt. Washington Avenue, ‘The parade was m Ali Dinar, | ments of U. 8. infuntry, Marine ( vy; Second Division, N. ¢ Battalion Signal de up of detach Corps, enty-third and Forty Thirteenth C ps, Second Battalion, Second Regiment Field Cavalry; Gy 4 Fourth Div! of the tribesmen in| Poste; Fifth Division, Spanis isfauctorily Several | Veterans: ne; Seventh Division, of ammunition already have been | Boys’ Brigude of America and United! ha | Boy Scouts, = ing of only 300 nen. Ho was faced | Brooklyn. dy a journey of one and a half days|uniforma of fe acrons a waterless desert before he! baggy red breeches. could reach Gebel Marra.” | them was able to march. pi FBrctcent ocala GERMANS EXPLAIN " honor at the head of the Lies. “~~ INVASION OF GREECE 15,000 Berlin Declares It Was for Pro-| tection Ag: Attack by | Weve |Decoration Day Ceremonies of | Defense Command, First Imposing Nature Held McKinley Square. At 10 o'clock to-day Bronx residents fighting gathered at One Hundred and Forty- | : $ Prowct themselves againat|ainth Street and Third Avenue and | @Uatiermaster Corps: BERLIN, May 30.—-The following, Teport was issued to-day at the War Office: \ “German and Bulgarian forces, to surprise attacks, which apparently} were planned by the entente troops, x 1 dered, gray-bearded veterans as their Berunas which ean nape yan® | fast thioning line led the Bronx Dec- | Day paraders to 3fcKiniey | Square for their annual review, little group of veterans was accorded Every business house and few dwellings | 0! along the line of march were without | Walswort flag or bunting. Struma, which is an important poi tion in this connection. Our supert ority in numbers forced the Greek forces to retreat. Other Kh terri- torial rights were reape CONFESSES TO ROBBING 200 CHURCHES It MONTHS William Kupper Caught in Pater- son, N. J., After Stealing From Three Rectories. After robbing the rectories of three Catholic churches in Paterson, N. J., last night, William Kupper, ‘hirty- two years old, almost succeeded in getting away from Sergt. Halstead, who discovered him. The Sergeant saw the burglar going into the Broad- way Reformed Church. Instead of following him ‘he went around to the rear and met him in the sacristy. The burglar bolted, snapping the front door after him and leaving the sergeant locked in, Halstead got out the way he got in and chased Kup- per three blocks, when the latter dis- appeared into the hedge of a park With the aid of the searchlights of | & two @utomobiles Sergeant Halstead located his man, who threw up his hands at sight of the policeman's| revolver, Kurper confessed to hav- | ing robbed last night the rectory of St. John’s Catholic Church where he tock the gold watch presented to Dean McNulty by the citizens of! Paterson @ year ago, the rectories of St. Joseph's and St. Stephen's. He aid that in the last six months he had rifled the poor boxes and altars| unrestricted race track betting as the of not less than 200 churches In New| "Pook Room King," York and New Jersey. Three years| ago he was sent to Blackwell's Isl- | $862,890, and for robbing a church, Pi Kupper will be arraigned before Cy Recorder Young in Paterson to-mor- row. Indigestion. One package help lm carry the (wo aandurde The band which was greeted with — hen the —_— ——— IN BRONX CHEER | Tho | was decorated, the streets through wifich the paraders second division included th passed, and half that number crowded | Noth Te F {nto McKinley Square to participate | siti In tho closing ceremonies of the day, |COoPe?: Claflin, Dahigren, Andrews | Douglas | and Thaddeus Ste Attorney | The Spanish War Vet Francis Martin, County Clerk Ganly, Sheriff O'Brien, Surrogate Schulz and other county officials, will review tho | Péttallons, composed of fit in line. In tho order given followed and Navy Union, Army and avy Veterans, Junior American of the Bronx,” an organization of men | Guard, nine cadet corps and Boy who have been residents of the bor- | Scouts ough for at least fifty years, Capt. Peter Grand’ Marshal his chief of staff. A battalion of the Coast Defense at Fort Totten was in line, and there were ten companies of the National Guard, The Junior Order of United Ameri. | Rear Adratral Charles Sigsbee, U had representatives | N., retired; Borough President Marks, | Perry Belmont, George McAneny, | i | teo of Chi Many civic organiaations were as- | whe Ar signed positions in the parade. ‘This | yy division was led by the “Ol aN Timers iegel, G. A. R., wi ean Mechan: from Afton councils in line were followed by the Elton Boys’ Bri- . , Boy Scouts and Girls’ Hospital | Henry Clews, Major under Major Gustay Boy Scout battalions trom P. 12 and 32 were ulao in line, followed by the Boys and Girla' Brigade fi the Prospect Avenue Methodiat Epise Joseph B, Lord of the Grand Army copal They Lamm. —_—_—_— Lert left when he died an estate now w. according to an appraisal Der tod” yesterday | | st a R. War, FM Sons of T United wuts! WINDLETO 700 IN (Continued from First Page.) Jond Corps of ingineers, Ninth Coast Squadron A, Machine Gun irst Battalion of Signal Corps ‘leld Mo: Company, First Naval Battalion and 20D, {cheered a little group of stoop-shoul- Pehind tho guardsmen were the fol lowing G. A. I dames C Shields, Farragut, Adam ¢ ia Bixby Daugtiters of Veterans, J. 4 John A. Di Ww i, Aspinw elnwehr and ( chell, Kim Rawlins, se Posts: ‘arnham, Phil Kearney, n, Joe Hooker, Morgan, Came ns, the third division. The ing stand were, among others, Gen. Horace Porter, Col. Jacob Ruppert 8. jen, Dante had assurances that 1,600 ve ing of the parade reer, seem to come.” But Major Bornstein did not comra | Brookiyn. They made more noise _THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1916. gm the grown-up bands, and to the r of the crowd, made it better. Capt. Charles J. Murphy, a veteran the Mexican War, years old, was cheered throughout the line of the parade as he acknowledged salutes right and left from the car- » at the head of the line of vet- Mike Donovan, R who survives not only Civil War but the two years, as box- of keeping Gov. He marched over eighty osevell in’ training. with his three sturdy grandchildren. tion also for ork policemen Jin the Spanish campaign Insurrection These were commanded by Detective Lieut, Bernard Flood. Governor and His staff were decorated 1d Artil- lery, First Armored Motor Battery, tal, Third Ambulance Mit-| I, McQuade, | 4. The é and 'T. Ii, clambered out of & window to # stand on top of the ved an athrmative, ! ‘ans made up| a brief appeal for were three camps, je SEN WORK FOR ROOSEVELT AT CHICAGO BEGUN BY NAMING A COMMITTEE CITY OFFICIALS AND MILITARY G” Paul] MEN IN REVIEWING STAND. | With the Governor on the review. CHICAGO, May 30.—Active work in! behalf of the candidacy of Theodore| the Republican ination for President was begun here "(1 aawrence Graham of re in charge of the local Roosevelt|ton, Va., but he was often seen in | Washington, his white hair and strong ppointment of a commit-| Roman features making him @ pictur- consist | esque figure on the streets or lecture He had written ‘Mosby's rwell, John 8. War Reminiscences,” ‘Tho Dawn of 2d and John Kk, announced that would be enlarged to in-| & clude all Ilinots. headquarters, ago business m Frank | platform. Appleton and Supreme Court Justice | Baakes, Arthur MF Nos, | Irving Lehman, As late as yesterday Commander | Wiikle A, A. Sprague rans would be able to be in the parade, in | carriages or on foot. Their will was back of their promises, but bodily Peter De Lacy, known in the days of| "est was not, To those who Knew of the disappointment and the | forced acknowledgment of feebleness which was in the hearts of the old Pane fellows w re could not answer “pres- ue an}ent" the broken ranks of the Civil) Wcrsoatte Grenarer War soldiers brought a deepened | ccordance with the Inheritance ‘Tag | Pathos. | Major Morris Bornstein, eighty | years old, who went to tho front in ‘61 with the’ Twenty-second New York, and returned to recruit battalion after | battalion of Zouaves, stood mourn-| parnes and Murray Crane and and Arthur! k will join the Coaby of New Roosevelt forces here to-morrow, —— . RS OWN OLD GUARD OFF FOR CHICAGO TO COMBAT REGULARS. While Col. Roosevelt 1s in the West an Old Guard of his own has been York to combat ard of the regular It mobilized to- the original Old ¢ | Republican machine, day and dashed on fastest trains to , . other manipulators of the Seventy-second Street subway station until the last minute before the start- is made up "4 Qo “There aro nine survivors of my old|and the « command in the city,” he explained irst and George von Lengerke Meyer | to an Evening World repo hey SO ute mov all promised to be here, and I was! of | sure of four or five. But they do not | jst for Chicago late this h| noon Before departure Capt encouraging greater efforts and assuring then the Colonel was going ertuin victory In the C most enthustaam all along the route proves it. 25c at all druggists. | sisi sy Meoedtitea eu d Army Men Marching in Parade To-Day; ially Photographed by an Evening World Staff Photographer.) Veteran of Mexican War Taking Part in Memor tal IN AUTO CLASSIC Posh COL JOHN'S MOSBY, “CRATER WARFARE” Sr se TET ZI CARS START — SHIP TORPEDOED WITHOUT WARNING, -—ATINDIANAPOLIS BERLIN: CHARGES « —n Rockenbacher Sets Ninety-|Captain and Five Others Mile Pace in First Lap of on the German Steamer 300-Mile Race. Kolga Lost in Baltic. * INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. May 80—| BERLIN, May 30 (by wireless to Twenty-one motor cars, representing | Sayville).—Six men were lost in the the United States, England and| attack by a eubmarine on the Ger- France, were sent away in the 300-| man steamer Kolga, sunk in the Bal- mile International sweepstakes race | tic on May 17, according to a despatch at the Indianapolis Speedway at 1.80 | to the Overseas News Agency to-day o'clock this afternoon by Btarter | from Lubeck, where the survivors of George Dickson. Almost ideal race|the steamer have arrived. The @ conditions prevatied. spatch declares that the Kolga wi The Grst lap was paced by Frank | Shelled after sho had stopped and 8. Smith, a focal automodile can, | that the submarine launched a tor- and did not count in the race, pedo which sank the steamer as tho Rickenbacher’s Maxwell completed | crew was about to lower the lifeboats. the firet lap in 1.39.42, an average of | The submarine appeared suddenly ninety miles an hour. He was closely | at a distance of 400 metres from the followed by Aitken’s Peugeot, Resta’s | Kolga,” says the despatch, “the sub- Peugeot, Anderson's Premier and | marine firing a shot which went wide, Rooney's Premier in the order named. | upon which the steamer immediately Not one of to-day's starters has, stopped. Notwithstanding this, one Torta yng etedway classic. Dario: minute later a second shot was fired , e OP le peueeOt | which destroyed tha bridge. ‘The with the first four, came closest to this distinction when he ran second | crew, only half clad, rushed for the 0 Ralph c Palma last year. Resta } 7 Was one of the favorites among the | /feroats. While the captain ran into | bettors, the cabin in an effort to rescue the ourhe, Belgian, Shrigtiaens, was an-/| ship's papers. other favorite, Hig Su “The subi fete cn Pine ie coat) fired two more A cov-ected list of the driver: of which struck the steam- r ulated in the order of their start,|¢" One sailor was wounded. Imme- follows: diately afterward came a torpedo, al- Aitken, Rockenbacher, Anderson, | ¢ Resta, Oldfeld, Wilcox, Rooney, hough It could be clearly obeitved Henderson, D'Alene, A. Chevrolet, L. | ff0m the submarine that the crew was Chevrolet, De Vigne, Hatbe, Chris- | about to launch the lifeboats. The tor- |tiaens, Chandler, Franchi, Johnson, | pedo caused the ste: jo |Lewis, Alley and Mulford, {diately. the ca idisy Bote. the tale The’ money prizes alone offered | . Ptain, both the helma- sufficient incentive to the drivers to, Men, the cook and two sailors per- atop on thelr care this afternoon, The| ishing. : |Speedway offered $30,000, Various! “Th i ‘ trepliies totalled about $50,000. The je enemy submarine opened Aire Seay sGued' to the loot by offering | WiMOUt warning and continued fring | 900 points to the winner as his score | in spite of the immediate stopping of | A lin the ional Speedway Champion. |the steamer. Furthermore, the tor- AIDE, DEAD (Continued from First Pi » he rode up and down the Shenandoah Valley, capturing outposts, destroying supply trains and cutting off means of communication. It has been esti- mated that he often neutralized the force of over 15,000 Federals in the Valley. Born in Powhatan County, Va., Dec. 6, 1833, and graduated from the University of Virginia in 1852, he was practising law in Bristol, . when the war broke out and he began his career In the Confederate Army. He proved his daring with such effect that he became a scout for Gen, J.) E. B. Stuart and led the celebrated raid around McClellan's army on the Chickahominy, In Richmond a year| with boutonnieres on the grandstand | later he recruited an in opendent cav- by Mrs, Laura EB, Prisk, OPEN KNIFE THROWN AT ROOSEVELT AS HE RIDES IN ANTI (Continued from First Page.) the Federal troops. Mosby's most brilliant exploit was the capture of Gen, Stoughton, 4“ March night in 1863 he, followers, rode through the Federal army to Fairfax Court House, fifteen miles from Washington, where | Gen, Stoughton was asleep. Although | hundred miles of the battle front, or| conspired to turn our thoughts to a surrounded by an army said to have about one-fourth of the total line. | critical examination of the conditions heen 17,000 strong, the rangers calm-| One can get an idea of the number of ational life, of fi ly kidnapped the general, his staft| troops they have in the field when it| Of Our pational life, of the influences and many sentries, and turned them | js understood that they have one man | Which hay 0 threaten to over to the Confederate authorities at | to about every four feet of that dis-| divide us in interest and sympathy, Culpeper without having lost a man, Gen, Grant once later saved Mosby from hanging, and the two foes of the battlefield became staunch friends. Mosby stumped the State of Virginia for Grant during his Presidential campaign, and was rewarded with an appointment as Consul at Hongkong, @ post which he held for seven years. When he returned to the United States Mosby called on the surviving members of his rangers, and to his astonishment he found that a large percentage of them had become min- isters. In parting their old colonel “Well, boys, if you fight the there will be something to record on Judgment Day." He next became spectal land agent for the Government in jorado, and from 1904 to 1910 he was attorney in the Department of Justice. The clos- ing years of his life were spent In ve and|jecturing and authorship. His home ‘New York, who! ts “ P lay acroas the Potomac, at Warren- the Real South” and “Stuart's Cav- alry Campaign.” He was also known lar, “My military creed,” he once de- clared, “Is this: It is better to mako a good run than a bad stand.” Ponds Roan adesin JOY RIDE MAY BE FATAL. Harry Teger in Sertons Condition Harry Teger, twenty-seven years old, said to be a noted amateunr boxer, 1s | dying at Liberty, N. ¥., as the result of an automobile accident early this morn- ing. Joseph §wann, chauffeur for Charles Balz, a New York importer, had On the @ party of friends out Jo way buck at 2.30 A. M. Swann ran the car up the bank at a curve. The car brink @ little way, then went along th turned upside down In the rond below. ‘Swann crawled out and jacked up the! Teger was pinned it and fatally the others got off with bruises, They were Max Wildfeuer, car. hurt internally twenty-six years old; Mrs. Florence Po: 8, twenty-eight, and Mra. Viviat —_—~e- To Develop New Southern # and BN. Duke, militonaire tob ne, to \ | Dig Tunnels, Fire Mines and Natural Forts Are Turned “Crater warfare’ British front in France, according to tathe MONaWk grounded @ short aie. his i i sentative of the London Daily Tele- sible to budge hers A Reavy Zon’ we graph, who returned here this morn- 4} —— ing on the Cunard line steamer Or- “Our sappers tunnel out from the ee aboard and nd set off|ness in which Europe te now| into Seep w sives which | “foundering.” Aboard 7 tear huge holes in the surface of the At present, the President declared, | Newton, Cant. Commandant P. Berthol earth. The dirt falling back at the|America must avold @ spirit of divi- and Engineer Charles A. IMcAllotar at trenches,” he explained, great charges of ex brink forms a natural sloping ram- | ion and reach common ends by com- | belleve not Part, resembling the crater of a vol-| mon counsel. He was enthusiastically Our men rush thr the tun- tebe ici-imiet-i: alry troop which became famous as! nel and occupy the craters the sine | wpbiauded PY @ large gathering apenas Mosby's Partisan Rang..s. They be-|@s they would a fortress b sina pretty | the craters are eighty feet across| WASHINGTON, May 30.—Presi- | 7 ame night riders and the terror of Atel herd Peau eye Re en + HOW TO BE SLIM hove coprste usualy ane oF mation calling upon the people of the aters groups of three and] ;, On| since the German sappers bave begun United States to celebrate Flag Day, with thirty | countermining and making craters of | June 14, their own, the fighting along there| “My Fellow Countrymen: only has become pretty lively. “The British troops now hold one the same Some of and are equipped with “Head injuries among the British] that seemed likely to draw us away troops have been reduced 80 per cent.|from the happy traditions of united by a new steel casque, which has just| purpose and action of which we have It will deflect} been go proud, ordinary rifle and machine gun bul-| “Jt has therefore, seemed to me lots, though it is not proof against| fitting that I should call your atten- Adve. shrapnel which bursts hard by.” Mr. Bullen had one of the new steel| sary of the day upon which the flag # shrapnel torn| of the United States wi affair which he had picked up on the| the Congress as the embiem of the field after its owner, one of the luck-| Union and to suggest to you that it less 20 per cent., had been killed, —_—_————_ NO GARRANZA NOTE, |/Sisma.x SAYS FOREIGN MINISTER | erincinies ot’whicn wo have sougnt to Art Calendar: been supplied them. helmets with him, devil Uke you fought the Yankees Aguilar Admits One Was Under] ,,“t, therefore, suggest’ and request Consideration, but Says It Was Not Sent to Washington. MBXICO CITY, May 80.—Foreign| 6xercines, at which means shi Minister Aguilar stated to-day that no note had been nent to Washing-|our comprehension of the great mis- Ito Yetimatea | Stan oe Risertamena fustioe’to wien || FANTOMAS STORY had been| We have devoted ourselves as a peo- oftered no | Pie, our price in the bistory and our it’ had been {enthusiasm for the political pro- ton by Gen. Carranza, communication consideration, explanation as to Manuel Mendez, an attache of the Mexican Foreign | Office, Washington yesterday. Papariment ie een unofficially informed that 4 Mr Mendez was a special messenger |CompPulaion of this supreme allegi from Gen, Carranza which would arrived in its vital union in sentiment and pur- IN GRAVUI CTION Prior 10 his} pose, accepting only those as true GIANT RE SE and carried a probably renew the suggestion that American troops be withdrawn from Mex of the de facto governm COLUMBUS, y 80.—Despite|’ reports that the American expeditionary] 40, K.” QN SPRING-RICE, column is to be withdrawn from Mexico, Pershing has given orders to the military authoritles here to begin| Fore: restoring an old qraded road on the Mexican jonta Dublan, number of ¥: rojected railroad to the Mot \ in Hrooks, thirty-two, all of New York City: ning Rumor of Dip vi ° @o.d:| LONDON. May 30. tho House of Commons to-day whether) any diplomatic vigit to the United states on colonies in the State of Chihuahua. | on behalf of the British iy cing the. Iaat few duys several road | been determined upon, Forelmn. Secre- ORDER TO-DAY Magnate, are at the head of a company, | building tractors ber jonded at tary Grey repli recently organized, which will deyelop a ‘oon winter resort in Cumberland County, | ecrose the bord __. North Carelli tie! | Goa. ort. | DURHAM, N. C, May 30.—Repre- | @ point near sentative Kent, California; Walter Mar- shall of the Venderbilt Hotel, New York, bed was sury Columbus and ship. | ‘his ia the largest number of] pedo was fired ax the crew was about points offered for any race. The New| to onine the itanowie oe |Vork Spocdway ofters six hundred. | of nineteen nallore test thei ieag et ‘An electric. timing device, orix- ee PAU CTASDOMt th . sian inated here, ya prepared tc. care? |CUTTER MOHAWK OFF REEF. second. unexpected delay of about ten hours on | | | | ite way from New York, arrived here at 1.20 o'ctock this evening, in time to send is the latest de- a few naval guests ashore to attend the velopment in the fighting along the | Een Saar care banquet Mohican Hotel to-night. ee oe ‘and wireless calls brought. sey eral of the naval vessels in port to her feliet: Nothing could ie done, however, *, oO e cutter uni water, when > (Continuedigrom Hirst Fees.) {Sercutter Androscoggin gota Rewser hauled the stranded craft Secretary of the Tre: the Coast Guard. The Mohawk, it ously damaged. war veterans, ued a procl If you are too fat and want to your weight 15 or 20 don't starve and we: stem, or think y Always be laughed at on account of but go to any good drug+ ® box of Ol! of Koretp “Many circumstances have recently of forces within und forces without ae ee It costs little, 1s absolutely herm- less and a week's trial should oom vince any one that It is unneces sary to be burdened with even @ single pound of unsightly fat tion to the approach of the anniver- adopted by should, this year and in the years to come, bd given species signi! co a8 a day of renewal and reminder, a day upon which we should direct our ” boy minds with a special desire of re- Six Color Cow ite of the ideals and make our great Government the em- et ene “THE STAMPEDE” that throughout the nation, and, if - possible, in every community, the fourteenth day of June be observed as Flag Day with special A New taken to give significant exp to our thoughtful love of America, gramme of the nation, our determina- tion to make it greater and purer with each generation, and our resolu- tion to demonstrate to all the world Large Photo of the compatriota who feel as we do the us 10 Frame) ‘Let us on that day re-dedicate our. selves to the nation, ‘one and inse| rable’ from which every thought t! pOiticlals | Te not worthy of our fathers’ first SPECIAL had also received the same| Vows of Independence, liberty and information, but Mr, Mendez on hie| Tight shall be excluded and in which arrival said that he carried no note| We spall sand With Salted beara, for SUMMER RESORT d was simply on a vacation, Oronere was still another report that|Frupt, no influence draw away from divide against it- te had been sent, but it would | its ideals, no force MBER fot be delivered at this time, self, a nation signally distinguished NU mong all the nations of mankind for tion allk ing New Road From|!'# clear, individual conception alike Extra Pages duties and its privileg: tions and its right: All with Next jovernment had plea i te peaetive dence of the Government.” ‘ fi