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The evening world. [volume] (New York, N.Y.) 1887-1931, May 06, 1919, Final Edition, Image 3

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030193/1919-05-06/ed-1/seq-3/

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X '
yFfETH- A VENUE' -
OPEN SPACES
LINE OF
77TH MARCH
Relatives And Friends Eager To
. Honor Heroes, Held Back
By City Police.
NONE AT VICTORY ARCH.
Only Bluecoats See Parade
There Room For Many
On Fifth Avenue.
There were no surging, fighting
-owils at to-day's parade: no' mobs
jamming Fifth Avcnuo and lufpedlng
'he in u roh of tho Argonnc heroes.
Hut there wore thousands of dls
! -untied Os'cw Yorkers, who, arriving
o.ter 9 o'clock, found all aide street
otranccs to the uvenuo blocked b
nes of police.
The police at Madison Square en
ajyod the parade immensely. They
err the only ones there who could
eo It. TlioUMinds of spectators wero
"lil Imck on Madison Avenue and the
rent triumphal nrch. where the folki
.tt liome were to Rather ind throw
tu,r enthusiasm around the massive
monument, looked like a lone light-
iouso.
The marching fighters niust have
thought as they approucheJ ami
rvasMM through the arch that It was
taunted, or hoodooed and th-- police
nenlcd around It to protect spectators
mm it
There was a solid Kink of patrol-
A DIFFERENCE
of TWO HOURS
Tetley's Teas make all the difference
between 6 o'clock and 8. Tired and out of
sorts after the day's work, you determine
not to budge from your easy chair all
evening.
But after a steaming cup of Tetley's
fragrant refreshing tea with your dinner,
you'll go to that movie after all I There's
a world of cheer in a cup of Tetley's.
Tetley's Teas are gathered from the
world's finest tea gardens, and are skil
fully blended. The closely sealed pack
ages keep impurities our and strength
and fragrance in.
Try some of Tetley's Orange Pekoe
Tea today. You will like the deep color
and cheering fragrance. It's different.'
TETLEY
f
Join the Carnival of Joy that our boys of the
77th have returned.
Be a Knight of the Red Feather
To-Night!
On Fifth Avenue 8 to 10 o'Clock
Fireworks Bands Songs and Laughter
Invest Again and Put a Red Feather in Your Cap!
DONT MISS IT !
HOW POLICE BARRED CROWDS
Only
men standing along tho sidewalk
which circles Madison Square aud
scores of them distributed through
S TEA
t IS) -nw..i,.t...., 7.7 1" fxaNg' THW.OUOH TM6 vii!.TOKy .arch
t -ntlMVlKIKO WOULD, TUESDAy, MAY 6( rtHf
- NOT CROWDED, BUT POLICE BAB
Police Reviewed the Parade at the Victoru Arch To
tho park thoroughfares and still other
scorrs banked against the spectators
along Madison Square who, in order
to have seen tho punulo would hnvu
been compelled to glimpse It through
field classes or a telescope. They knew
there was a parade going on only be
cause they heard the bauds now and
then.
From 23d Street south to Wash
ington Square the crowd which lined
the avenue were only threo and four
de&p along tho curb. There was at
least eight feet of open space be
tween the Curb crowd and the build-
Ings, while thousands were held back j
on the side streets and not permitted
to gain access to tho avenue,
Arguments with tho police gained
nothing. Spectators wero told that
under no circumstances would those I
who arrived an hour late be per-
mltted to reach the avenue.
At various points along the ave
nue below Twenty-third Sfrcct sent
In grandstands went begging, yet on ,
tho sldo streets hundreds were i
massed. These spectators could see
tho empty grandstnnds and naked
police to let them by that they might
take advantage of the vacant grand
stand. The pollco refused to !et them
budge.
Those fortunato enough to gain
Klfth Avcnuo 'were enthusiastic and
cheered' tho marching boys.
Thousands hung out of building
windows and showered confetti und
cigarettes on tho marchers, but the
demonstration was nothing to what
it would have been If tho pollco had
used more judgment and less re
straint. Front the Victory Arch northward
to 59th Street tho crowds wore larger,
yet there was plenty of wastod space
on the sidewalks and the same dis
satisfied, urguing men and women
held back In the sldo streets. Where
it was possible for spectators to
'beat' the police lines the crowds
It's
Red Feather
Night
AT 77TH PARADE A CONTRAST WITH MARCH OF THE 27THSWN0NEPUHE
wero heaviest, such as at the Public
Ubrary at 40th Street whero thou
sands canio through ByrruU I'ark and
managed to sneak Into a place on the
sidewalk. Tho enthusiasm hero was
Intense.
"Aboye 59th Street the sidewalks on
the east sldo of the Avenue were
crowded ami the grandstands on the
west Bide held their capacity.
At 110th Street, where tho parade
disbanded, a great mass of people
from Harlem surrounded tho troops,
SIDELIGHTS ON BIG PARADE;
MASCOTS PROVOKE MIRTH
AS THEY MARCH WITH MEN
All Creeds, Classes and Colors Represented
in Enthusiastic Crowd, Unaffected
by Cold Wind.
' Enthusiasm all along tho line was
i the dominant note among the specta-
tors, and they cured not for tho wind j
j nor tho weather. They cheered the t
marching heroes, after the caisson of
; the dead had passed along through a
lino of bowed and bared heads,
Khoutod to friends In tho ranks und ,
applauded and laughed at their mas-
co", i
. , " ', ...
The caisson for the dead of the '
77th passed over tho Virgin Soli of j
Victory an expanse of sand under
the- Vlc'ory Arch at 9.IM o'clock. At I
that exact moment a detachment
from tha 305th Field Artillery tlrnl
the salute for the dead, consisting of
forty-eight shots thirty Seconds
apart. The salute was tired from a
2.J calibre cannon from Fort Ham
ilton. "lUu, baa," hoiihed n ribbon
crowned goal that marched to tho
Victory Arch ahead of the 305th
Machine Oun Battalion. That was Its
salute to the monument to Now
York's lighting men. iteaehlng the
arch and sounding u couple of more
blejts the goat considered Its duty
well done and promptly broko ranks
Into (ho west sldo of the columns
that led to the arch. There It scam
pered back nnd forth, sometimes
joining the parade for a few feet, then
deserting until the cops tried to catch
it. It wns u merry chaso that led
all over tho square.
All classes and creeds were In the
parade. There was Mickey -MtGunc
from tho west side, King Keo from
Mott Street, Pnsquaio Amato, Solly
Itoscnbaum, Ignaco Podetski from
tho upper and lower east sldo and
J. It. Amok, a Filipino.
Ono unadorned plain milt without
a flag, a ribbon, u hcrvlce stripe or
ijompanv insignia trotted along with
tho 302nd Knglneers. lie gut u hand
too from those who saw the parade
from the building windows at .Madi
son Square.
i l wo otner uuiiKoieil dugs wearing
lervicp strliies and two goals with
the men. The liOilli .Machine dun !
boasted a hiiiiiII blai k dog with u '
blanket inscribed "Argonne" in large
i lilue letters. Tho 30t!tb had anothei
dog. The small black gnat maicned
, with the 305th Field Artillery and
' Co. I-:, 308th Infantry led another
, goat.
i At loan o'clock two automobiles1
sped up iho uvrnuo to lldth Street,
' circled and went back. In tho llrst
' were Muyor llylnn and Gov. Smith:
I In the second were Secretary o War
Police restraint there vns relaxed.
From Washington Square to 23d
Street, tho district to which the
great mass of cant sldcrs, nil of
whom had some ono closo to thorn
on parade, went to view tho apec
tacle, the restraint was never re
laxed for a moment. Police arrange
ments wero perfect, but dozens of
mothers nnd children and aged folic
sat down on door steps on side
streets nnd gave up all hopo of see
ing their hemes.
Maker, Major Con. Harry, Rodman
Wanamaknr ami tho .Muyor's secre
tary, Urovcr Wholan.
At the Victory Arch at Madison
Square, the ciowds wero thin. The
police, under Inspector Conboy, wero
stationed to keep tho crowds one
"luaro cast mid west from Fifth
;,nf hl,,7,rH!K "a
repetition of the Jam that marked
thu square on tho day tho l'7th
Division paraded.
wnivnl.mil inn niii.il.i.r 11,.. ...... I. u..i .
i llllfll tlIWlltI (ir F 1 1 u l" Ilia f'nnta-ii
'i i,ev went on a stilUn DiIm mm-m..,-
after the principal lefused to give
them iieimlsslon to attend the parade,
It is ritld thitt some of the teachers
Joined In the protest of the scholars.
Fighters of other years greeted the
77th heroes when they reached tho
com l of the dead at the Public Li
brary. With the elaborate and state
ly decorations as a background, were
assembled veteians of the Civil and
.Spanish-American War. Thoj know
the meaning of war and their ap
plauding suggested the reverence In
which they reviewed these young
warrUirs for liberty.
The wounded men at the I'nlon
League Club occupied every available
place from which a glimpse of th
parade could bo obtained. They had
one shout anil kept It up until It be
came the funniest possible stunt In
the neighborhood. The chant, with
all its inflections and Intonations
was:
"Oh, Jioy!
Among tho distinguished men nt the
club were Charles K. Hughes who
served, ns an olllclnl of fho draft or
ganization that Inducted the 77th
men Into service, and Col. Dan Ap
plcton. A royal welcome was acconlnl the
men of tho 77th Division by the
Knights of Columbus. The big grand
stand In fiont of St. Patrick's Cathe
dral wiui filled to capacity an hour
beford
tho punulo started. Lined
against
ine siui-wiiiK in mini oi nu-
Cathediul was the rotor guard of the
oilier. A hundred Knights of Comm
mm girls. ireHed
uniform. with K.
it) blue and white
of C. emblems on
their caps, threw Mowers on the
wounded as iho pnsed the stand.
, bomi.iei of Aineiio.in beaut) ro.les
was iire.iuiueu uy ine young women
11, . Ul. ,111 All till,!
(iui.T.ts of the ttotels Savoy and
Netherlands amused themselves wbUo
"."""C r,,r 'h phrn-l" corr.r a'.cr-n.
h throw nig clgiiroties from the win
dows to soldiers of other outfit t
which wem eagerly scrambled. Cigar
ettes wero throw too to the marching
.New lork boys along the, routo, but
x.
Vittonv auch
nary u ope did they stop to pick up.
I Discipline Is discipline.
The llrst parade pcrlsroprH made
their n pi ma i a noo miir the Victory
Arch. They contain n set of mil huh
mounted on wires about two feet
long, and another mirror Into which
tho .scctul(ir looks, Tho periscopes
enabled persons back In the crowds
to seo perfectly all that passed along
the Avenue, just as a siilimui'lne'H
crew, under tho water, can survey
tho surface of the oceJin. The peri
scope vender did a thriving ImslrcM.
I-jvery civilian who showed up at
City Hull early in the forenoon to
Join the nfflclnl party wore the dis
tinguished variety of headgear known i
variously ns a topper, high or silk
hat. with two exceptions, (!ov. SmlMi
and Frank I.. Dowllng, Jloroiigh
President of .Manhattan, had on
black derble.1. '
Dowllng was out in tho coirldor
when Alderman Donnelly appeared In
nn Immcnso topper.
"Hellrt," said tho Horough presi
dent to his drosHcd-iip friend,
"Where's the whip'"
DECORATION FOR ASTOR
SOUGHT BY NAVAL MENi
Captain Tells of Young Millionaire's
Heroic Work on Board
Damaged Vessel. v
Naval ofllorrs who served with I.feiu
Vincent Aator In foreign waters nu
working In obtain for the young mil
llouiiire sailor an honor decoration from I
this lioveriiiiient for an art f heitnain
which hail remain-d untold until fupt. .
IF. .'. Vlllard, I'. S. N., ainveil n-slei
I''HV " the Ceorwe WiiPhlllKtnn
Capt. Vllkird told ship news ivki lui-.i
and naval nllki-rs tit the 'iim (luanl
olllee to-day that while the sleiiin yai'iit
Aphrodite was oil Its Wa to tho Kiel
Canal last Jiinnaij witii iiicriiliorx oi the
Allied armUtlie eitiMiillHSlnn, the stern i
of the esae wan damagi-d by a llwit.-ig
mine whloli-Hiis rvplnded by one of the
Jliolit'rt iiiiiilei' blaili 8.
Tile Aphiodlte a leaking bid-t,
dipt. VII In nl said, .and he found ,-lu-woiild
sink before they made port. '
When the M-snel was IImiiiu IjikU) ami
hegliiiilni- to lake walei, oiing Aslnr 1
ateil to he permitted to go holmv Willi
the ship's earptuitcr This ho did and
for sevi-n mlmites waded thrntigh tin- ,
dark and llomled eoir.pirtinents und
lliiulU di urnilniil that tile laaUa uulil
tie stopped. Astur diteeted tin n pali 1
ork while dipt Vllhud navlguteu th.
v i . el fiom the bridge.
The Aphindlto and her clew weie not
only saved liy tills hemic wink, Inn tin
ArniiKlee I'oininlnnlon leached Kl-I
without liaving lo uyke tin- ronininili r
of tile trip in open li'iatK
two u. sjesTroyers
AGROUND AT TREPASSEY
i-'oote and Maddux Ur.i.Lr AnclMr
During ( i;ile T.inker Ilit, hut
N Blown Oil.
TUHPAMSI5V. N. I'.. May C The do-
atroyer Koole. one of the flotilla ae- -
,,,, i, ,i ,nre n roiinei lliin ulll, l,
American Navy Jiep-n tnieitfs tr.-ins-
Atlantic flight, went haul aground lie.-,-enrlj
to-duy. Naval officers said tie
ahlp wns In no Imiiiodlstc dang' r ml
that lll"y hoped to IIiihI liei hi li eh
wn.r (1H 00 lu ,ho vu,ai.r ,,,,,
,., .
The ostro)cr Maddot also' di if. I
imhoii', but her plight was not coimid
ered serious und he was ixpoetc.i io
tie floated aoui. The lanKer llixko
touched ground hut was soon hl-nva
afloat
The I-'oote and the two other vrmnj
erlv calo
UriiKKHii Ihmr alienor, during a wcat
The Fools and the Muildo, arc amon
- Dau
tho destroyers from -S'ew Vork, six of
wlilrh toncied Trcw"i.v yesterday on
their way to organize the trims-oceanic
-nam or guirMiiip rnr mo naval avia
tors between Trwpassey and the Azores
FIRE DESTRQYS.GANTEEN
. BUILWNiUT CAMP. MILLS
-X l-
Uhze In' Structure of Community
Service Starts 'fVnm UnUnnwn,
Cause Damage $30,000.
fMP MIM.S. I,. I.. M,,y 6. The
uanteen Uulldlng of the War Camp
yoiiirminlty fiorvleo nt Camp Mill, lo
Uti'd "t Htewiirt Avcnuo and AvcniiQ
D, wns almost totally destroyed by Hu
nt noon to-day. In the building was
n JIH.Oiiil sniiimiln? pool, built a year
ago
The eailno of tho rlre Is not known.
Worker at the cauti-cn attempted to
: put out the blaze, but It got beyond
itinir control ami they summoned the
'Camp l-'ro Departments. ,
The iois IS eatlniated at about $3(1.000.
sm.ai rxiJ"!
cUERBACH Chocolate Cocoanut Cream
Calces are made of the unsurpassed Auerbafch
vanilla chocolate and 'nutritious finely grated
cocoanut, mixed with rich cream-fondant with
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11
Chocolate Coconnuf Cream Cnfces
Tliere's an Aiterbach Candy for every occasion
'Dolly" CLocolatea The
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iitiiiiiiriiiu
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-lliita-.- a i.ii i
GETS "THIEF" IN AWTMI
Air Chae Staged as Police
Feature of Meet at Atlantic;
City.
Atlantic crrr. x. j., Mar-
Sheriff Albert Perklnt. gave a dewi ,
irt ration hwe this afternoon ofiA!l
practical use or airplanes in poll
work. Lieut. Eddlo Stlnson, playlnr th
role of a "thief," fled In his mainta1
toward PleaAantvllle City sbc-
miff.!
dlatant. il'erklns, accompanltd .. byl
pl'ot, followed In another plane.
Stlnson was "captured Just as
rrlvrri at Plesasntv ll CHI. 'TUi
event was the feature of "Police IAil
st me j-an-Amcrican Aeronautical con'
gresf . JC'J
pears ior ine wiioiy or i narie ww
tlnvH of -Phtladetnhla were sllaveiK
here to-day when word was recelved.nf '1
the am arrival or tus plane mere last 1
nlgni. uo worn pau Teen received all
nlrht from Davis, whose nlane was
piloted by Orion Hoover
O-JO
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