Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| VAIFTE ‘AVENUE: NOT ‘CROWDED, TUESDAY, M vy 6, 19t BUT POLICE BAR: THOUSAN OPEN SPACES, i MARK LINE OF 77TH MARCH Relatives And Friends Eager To Honor Heroes, Held Back By City Police, T VICTORY ARCH. NONE Only Bluecoats See Parade There—Room For Many On Fifth Avenue. There were no surging, fighting coowds at to-day’s parade; amining Fifth Avenue and infpeding SPPAA SOAEDEEESSEESEEES PPOETSESS5ST5 9S ST TSTETHSTE SSO NSTTS SESESIETSESESSNOT no mobs he march of the Argonne heroes. Htut there were thousands of dis- muntled New Yorkers, who, arriving | er 9 o'clock, found all side street trances to the blocked by | nes of police. The police at Madisc yed the avenue parade immensely. They re the only ones there who could €0 it. ‘Thousands of spectators were id back on Madison Avenue and the reat triumphal arch, where the folk were ome to gather and throw ‘HOW POLICE BARRED CROWDS AT 77TH PARADE A CONTRAST Only Police Reviewed the Parade at the Vic VITTIRPSIISISTEIS IITRITISIVIRIIITD ISISIFISTSOTSDINIIISIDEDISIIENINE BESESOSENSESESOS SORRNR=ORERNRN0008 sili hbhbbddbddddaaaaaaaadandaddiebaanadnnannae Air Cline Staged as Poli WITH MARCH OF THE 27TH tory Arch To-Day | SHERIFF IN ONE PLANE GETS “THIEF” IN Feature of Meet at Al City. , ‘id ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., May Sheriff Albert Perkins, gave a dou stration here this afternoon of9e) |practical use of airplanes in work. Lieut. Eddie Stinson, pla role of a “thief,” fled in his |toward Pleasantville City. sixg distant. Perkins, accompanied followed in another plane. Stinson was t @ arrived at Ph event was the at the Pan-Am | | | | pilot, Syiray oeeees an A cronsuticalll C ra for the safety of Chari of Philadelphia were -day when word reget: rival of his plane there word had ‘been receiv plat % Davi« night night from Davis. whose piloted by Orton Hoover, WITHOUT eggs thar yon ever tasted with « them, Even Martha Tie ton never made an “Old ravi ulsite: glorious, O-Boy- is one great discovery (Not @ gelatine) Male in 9 fow pinuten—e eal een, for the whole family, several Recipes in each pac e yu m around the massive monument, looked like a@ lone light The marching fighters must have hought as they approached and! ¥ r ARCH 7 Mg x : Rebbe ie ee . sl ", va tsesroereseoes ess sessEsesOOsEOoeHeseEsesESEEEEEESS 999999 99999999995 HesssssesssssSsENIDENESSNESSSONSS Ledddddaaddaadeadahaaaaeeaaceate . : rk around it to protect spectators! 6, standing along the sidewalk | the park thoroughfares and still atiee lire heaviest, such as at the Public] Police restraint there was relaxed. one did they stop to pick up. hore: Wasa tOlld babh of palroifVecee bs Bry ear rintre barter scores banked against the spectators| Library at 40th Street where thou-| From Washington Square to © is discipline tlong Madison Square who, in order |sands came through Byrant Park and! Street, the district to which the ray Saye . to have seen the parade would have | managed to sneak into a place on the| great mass of east siders, all of AR ceca ta been compelled to glimpse it througi| sidewalk, The enthusiasm here was| whom had some one close to them sulepiiel a Pa istry field glasses or a telescope. They knew | intense, on parade, went to view the spec-| y Ti Wires: etronk “twee feet | | there was @ parade going on only ye-| Aboye 59th Street the sidewalks on|tacle, the restraint was never re-|long, and another mitrer into whic! the east side of the Avenue were crowded and the grandstands on the west side held their capacity, cause they heard the bands now and then From 23d Street south to Wash- ngton Square the crowd which lined | At 110th Street, where the parade the avenue were only three and four | disbanded, a great mass of people den al Shate was pst | Soe Harlem surrounded the troops along the curi laxed for a moment. Police arrange-| the spectator looks, The periscopes enabled persons back in the crowds C vere perfect, but do: o ments were perf t dozens of! tones perfectly all that passed along mothers and children and aged folk|the Avenue, just as a submavines sat down on door steps on side|crew, under ihe water, can survey | Bla rf streets and gave ng their heroes, up all hope of see- of the Mn The peri- | Serv — | ( pe least eight feet of tween the Curb crowd and the Poke ings, while thousands were held back | on the side etreets and not permitted to gain access to the avenue, Arguments with the police gained nothing, Spectators were told that a) inder no circumstances would those AS THEY M who arrived an hour late be per- mitted to reach the avenue, | At various points along the ave- | nue below Twenty-third Street seats Tetley’s Teas make all the difference between 6 o'clock and 8. Tired and out of All Creeds, Classes an sorts after the day’s work, you determine [in grandstands went begging, yet on ir all the side streets hundreds were not to budge from your easy chai massed, These spectators could see by Cold evening. the empty grandstands and asked y | police to let them by that they might Enthusiasm al! along the line was But after a steaming cup of Tetley’s 4 . j take advantage of the vacant grand- the dominant note among the specta fragrant refreshing tea with your dinner, | stan. The police refused to ‘et them tors, and they cured not for the wind you'll go to that movie after all! There's | buare hor the weather. ‘They cheered the A 5 Those fortunate enough to gain! marching heroes the caisson of a world of cheer ina cup of Tetley 8. Fifth Avenue*were enthusiastic and the dead had pa along through a | cheered the marching boys. line of Tetley’s Teas are gathered from the eee ee world’s finest tea gardens, and are skil- | wintsna neg gett Of building shouted fully blended. The closely sealed pack- cigarettes on the marchers, but the ages keep impurities out and strength | demonstration was nothing to what bowed heads and to friends in the applauded and laughed at their mas bared ranks and cols, for the . it would have been if the police had| The caisson dead of and fragrance in. | used more judgment and leas re-| 77th Passed over the Virgin Soil ° ‘ 8 t Victor an expanse of sand Try some of Tetley’s Orange Pekoe ett the Victory Arch northward | he icigey ATchreatlnde DelGke At Tea today. You will like the deep color | ,, syth street the crowds were larger, | that exact moment a detachment and cheering fragrance. It's different! | yet there was plenty of wasted space; fom the 805th Pield Artillery. fired jon the sidewalks and the same dis ie Pe the aS Gor i Bu ot E jc was possible for spectators to| 22 calibre cannon from Fort Ham- ‘beat’ the police lines the crowds | ton | “Baa, baa, honxed a ribbon Machine Gun Battalion That was it arch and sounding a coup f more | well done and promptly broke ranks yieRte hi west Je f h umns ro back and forth, time. | All classes and creeds were in the, Join the Carnival of Joy that our boys of the | fom tno westside, Sing Ke. trom 77th have returned. | Ronen im Ignace. Poletsh! from | J. R. Amok, a Filipin Be a Hnigat 2 of the Red Feather ct On Fifth Avenue---8 to 10 o’Clock Fireworks—Bands—Songs and Laughter blue letters dog. ‘The sma with the 205th Co. F Invest Again—and Puta Red Feather in Your Cap! | I) the second were Secretary of ai A - SIDELIGHTS ON BIG PARADE; MASCOTS PROVOKE MIRTH in Enthusiastic Crowd, Unaffected Kvery civilian who showed up at | City Hall early in the for join. the CAMP te non to official party wore the dis« tinguished variety of headgear known variously hat as a topper, high or silk with two exceptions, Goy, Smith Frank L. Dowling, Borough | at of Manhattan, had on|n $10. derbies "Tago. Dowling was out in. the corridor)” ity w Donnelly appeared in ARCH WITH MEN d Colors Represented Worker Presi. | put out friend, | their « ugh up “where's the whip?" Wind. DECORATION FOR ASTOR Captain Tells of Young Millionaire At the Victory Arch at Madison ‘ Square, the crowds were thin. The Heroie Work on Board police, under Inspector Conboy, were Damaged Vessel stationed to keep the crowds one square east and west from Fifth | Naval officers who served w Avenue, but there was practically no| Vincent Astor in foreign wat need of this provision inst’ al working to obtain for the young m repetition of the jam that marked |lionaire sailor an honor decoration from the o ym the day the 27th jthie Governm t of heroisn Division paraded | which had r F.C. Villa N day on the George Washing ° | Capt. Villard told ship nev nd naval officer It is said that se in the protest of the of other year when they ghters greeted the reached the rary. With the « und state ations @ sround, were embled veterans of the Civil and] merican War, They know| ing of war and their ap Dlauding suggested the re nee in which y reviewed these young . for liberty The wounded men at the Union| place from which a glimy we tde could be obtained, They shout and kept it up until it r came the funniest possible stunt in|o the neighborhood, ‘The chant, with| Ar all it8 inflections and intonations! without having to mph wa the trip in open bbat hoy! AH TWO U. 8, DESTROYERS AGROUND AT TREPASSEY pletor A royal w was accorded the |} ind Madd m f 4 a RG RY) During Gale—Tanke stand in ffont of St. Pa tral waa filled to capa mur) TREPA a st the dewalk in of the sembled nb iow e At te 1 Nethe 1 naelves white New York boys ‘along the sonia but The Foote and the Maddox are among etween ‘Tre iota FIRE DESTROYS. CANTEEN BUILDING AT CAMP. MILLS 00 awimnmin, ‘ontrol FESSFSS SHFIFSSIFSFSSFHSVAESFEHESS OASESESSES HES OSESESESEOAES varerroverscoverers rom New Trepassy ye ay to orga, the trans: sitardeh or the navel and the of on anic avila Azores York day You'll say they’re even the most “tired” Spring petite changes to hunger the fluffy Wheatsworth gri cakes come in. Golden and light and so to-Nature in their rich, nu flavor, every one tastes “more.” In Wheatsworth Whole Flour you get the deligh' fresh flavor Possible only the wheat grain is ground Wh | just as it comes from the field. And Wheatsworth's ground r | f¥esh daily in New York. ‘ timated at about $30,000 'F. H. BENNETT BISCUIT CO., N. i+ — in Strugture of Community ice Starts From Unknown, tuse—Damage $30,000, » MILLS, L. 1. May The Building. of the War Camp Service at Camp Mills. lo- Avenue und Avenue almost totally destroyed by tire In the building was built & year fire is not known ittempted to but it got beyond at canteen the they summone tments i. Belling at Auversacu Chocolate Cocoanut Cream kes are made of the unsurpassed Auerbath vanilla chocolate and nutritious finely grated cocoanut, mixed with rich cream-fondant--with the thought of it, you can almost taste this delicious tavorite—get one today—ask for AUERBACH Chocolate Cocoanut Cream Cakes There's an Auerbach Candy jor every occasion “Dolly” Chocolates — The daintiest morsels ever sold for asilver coin. Get some today "ABC Blocks” — Made of finest milk chocolate, a nour- ishingcandyof thewell-known Auerbach quality, Especially designed for “little ones” to help them learn the alphabet. chocolates ever made, —and these are only a few of the Auerbach products, Uf your dealer cannot supply you, write to us D, AUERBACH & SONS Finest Chocolates, Breakfast Cocoa, Candies and Specialties Eleventh Avenue, 46th to 47th Street, New York “Candy Headquarters” “Caprice” Chocolates— Tempting chocolate morsels that always taste like “just one more.” “Happy Hours” Chocolates — Never have you enjoyed such deliciously rare-flavored, eye-feasting, palate-pleasing chocolates—the finest quality From Maine lifornia AUERBACH