Omaha Daily THE WEATlIER. Fair; Cooler ily Sport Extra I1BST OP AIJj VOL. XL111-NO. 11. OMAHA, UTEvSDAY MOBNING, JULY 1, IMS-TWELVE PAGES. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. TlfK BEE'S The Bee OLUTION PLAN ER ADVISEMEMT Y FEDERAL COURT rnnr i ami tnT7PrTnnr.il l nu i nutted to Judges. EXCHANGE OF STOCK APPKOVJSU Southern Pacific Shares to Be Traded for Baltimore Issues. BALANCE IS TO BE SOLD tffl A ft A T A ll. If. lrust uompany 10 rut it on iu.axr.ci, Under Restrictions. GOVERNMENT RESERVES RIGHTS K Stllinlnten tlutl It Uny Anll Ar rnn"mciit nt Any Time If Ille Cl C'outlltloiin Should Arlno. IU'LLHTIpr. ST. PAUL. Minn.. June 30. The district court of the United States for the district of Utah late today npproved the Union Pacific-Southern Pacific dissolution plan as presented to the cqurt today by attor neys for the road and O. Cnrroll Todd, assistant to the attorney general Dut one change was made, the court appoint ing Louis C. Krauthoff of New York City a commissioner 01 me coun 10 see 10 u that the letter and plan of dissolution Is adhered to. ST. PAUL. Minn.. June SO. The plan for dissolving the Union Pacific-Southern Pa cific merger which Attorney General Mc Reynolds, with the pprovnl of President Wilson, has agreed upon with officials of the railway, was presented here to day to Judges W. H. Sanborn, William ! Hook and Walter f. Smith, sitting as district courtof the United States for the district of Utah and was taken r.ndcr ad visement. G. Carroll Todd, special assistant to tho attorney general, represented the govern ment at the hearing and N. H. Loomls and P, W. Clarke the road. The court took the plan and suggestion made nt the hearing under advisement. Tho plan presented today allows until January 1, 191$, for the complete dissolution of the combination adjudged illegal by the su preme court. All previous plans ore superseded by this latest one, which proposed that the Union Pacific shall exchange J3S,000,000 of Its J126,(X,000 holdings in the Southern Pacific for the Pennsylvania railroad's entire holdings in the Baltimore & Ohio virtually an equal amount-and that the remaining ISS.000,000 shall be. sold to the general public through a trust company. No present stockholders In the Union PaclFe continuing as such-might buy 'any of th Southern Pacific sto"cVso'sold.iimt each purchaser would be obliged to make affidavit 'that he was. not acting in con cert or agreement with anyone else buy ing Southern. Pacific to secure a new control for theVUnlon Pacific. The transaction would begin on Novem-f ber 1, 1913, and If not complete by Jan uary 1. 1916, tl?e court would dlroct the disposition of anV Southern Pacific stock remaining untakeVi. The court will bfs asked, before approv ing the plan, to 'allow time for anyone whether an interested party oj- not, to Interpose objections. Stipulation liy Government. The governtrent expressly stipulates that should Any Illegal conditions arise from the exchange of Pennsylvania and Baltimore & Ohio stock, either under existing law or future legislation or future Interpretation by the courts of present Btatutes. the government would have the right "freely to assail" the ar rangement. Attorney General McReynolds' state ment to the court, framed after cabinet discussion and conferences with Presi dent Wilson, comments on the exchange Df Pennsylvania and Baltimore & Ohio stock, and points out that at present no federal law forbids one railroad company from bwnlng stock In another non-com-petltlve line, but that by Interpretation by the courts a different meaning may hereafter be glyen to present statutes, or new legislation covering that point may be enacted. On the other hand, the president and his advisers feel that' there Is apparently no legal objection now to the proposals of tile railroads, under what administration officials regard as Imperfect federal law. ThefaAvantagts of the plan in the view of tbe prteldent are that it breaks up two factual or threatened monopolies and at tie same time fulfills the purposes of thfcovernment's present suit against the H J fcnah merger. The president and the atto'wiey general believe, moreover, that the (federal authorities are left free under tha plan to act as they deem right against any harmful or Illegal consequences not now foreseen. Attorney General's Statement. Here Is the attorney general's state l ment In full, to be presented to the court: The proposed sale to the Pennsylvania Railroad company of 8SS.934 shares (ttV iv..UO of the caoital stock oi me oouin em Paclfio company now owned or con trolled bv-the Union Pacific railroad ( ?mpany (being about 14 per cent of tho i-tai caDltal stock of the soumern i-aciu o-npany) in exchange for 426,472 shares HW47.M0) of the capital stock of the iialtlmore & Ohio Railroad company ow owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad mpanj (being all of such stock Held oy latter and 30.04 per cent of the en . c share of the Baltimore & Ohio com r,y) obviously goes far to separate the ahem Paolflc company from the nn Pacific company and to that ex- i: t breaKS up me particular unmwiui -blnatlon between them assailed in t original bill and now before the -t for dissolution. Moreover, It divests the Pennsylvania j road company ot a large amount .f f- rapltal stock o' an active competitor tl-o Baltimore & Ohio Railroad company ard thereby remedies a highly objection able condition. So far as I am- able to ascertain, such exchange would not. re sult In creating any new combination In restraint ot trade nor any other condi tion in violation of existing laws. Should the exchange be made, the Battle of Gettysburg Where American Thn following account of the buttle of Gettysburg, which began on July 1, 1SC3. is taken irom the outlook. fly KLSIIS SIMJMASTRIt. HE battle of Gettysburg was the most Important battle of tho civil war. The contest had coitTi Decn mus lar wunoui ae cjstve result. Intervention nnd ncKnowlcogmcnt or the Inue pendenco of tho confederacy by foreign powers was Imminent. In the north dls satisfaction reigned, enthusiasm had be gun to cool. The northern army was about to lose 15,000 men by the expiration of their term of service, and there was no prospect of- the re-enllstment of so many. The. battle of Gettysburg was the only battle of the war fought on northern soil. Here the enemy was at hand: liar rlsburg, a great rallwny center and depot of supplies, Baltlmoi. Philadelphia and Washington, lay exposed to tho danger of capture. There were engaged at Gettysburg about 0,000 men on the union side and about 80,000 on the confederate side. Ot this number the union loss was about 23,000 in killed, wounded and missing; the confederate about 20,000 an appallingly large proportion. All tho loyal union states except Kentucky and Missouri were represented. Every confederate state had soldiers upon the field. The town of Gettysburg was in no way remarkable before the battle. It was a little village, seven miles from the Mary land border and about forty-five miles from Harrlsburg. H was founded in 17S0, and though It was the county seat, It numbered In 1S63 only 3,000 inhabitants. Its most famous citizen was Thaddeus Stevens. Gettysburg has two educational Institutions, the Lutheran Theological seminary, giving Its name to tin. ridge west of the town, und Pennsylvania col lege, also an Institution of the Lutheran church, in the town Itself. The only cltl zen to tie Kilica in tne Dattle was a woman, Miss Jennlo Wade, who wa struck by a stray shot, probably froni tho union lines. Old John Burns seized his squirrel gun and fought with the union troops. He was wounded three time) and left on the field for dead, but recovered and lived to be a source of great Interest and admiration. The village lay apart from the lines of railway travel, and except for the pranks of the students and the sessions of court it knew little excitement Its topographical features seem to have pre pared It, however, to be the arena- to one of the greatest battles ot history. Gettysburg Is the meeting-place of eight roads, several of which are good pikes. Therefore troops could be moved about swiftly and could be easily con centrated. The two adjacent ridges of fered fine positions to contending armies. Seminary ridge to the west, occupied first by the union and afterwards by the confederate troops, has no sharp eleva tions. Seminary ridge to the east, oc cupied by the union troops on the sec ond and third days of the battle, is ter minuted on the north bv Cemetnry r.lll W Culp'i hill and oh the south by dig Round Top and Little Round Top. There are po great streams; the masses of rock and stretches of "woodland are thick enough to protect but hot to Interfere with the movement of troopsf Cemetery ridge Is higher than Seminary ridge and Is therefore admirably! suited to troops on the defensive, a fact which helped materially to glve-the union forces the victory. The village Itself occupies about the center of the field, which ex elusive of the cavalry field to the east, covers an area of about twenty-five square miles. The union troops advanced, speaking generally, from the south by way of the Baltimore, Taneytown and Emmlttsburg roads. The confederate troops advanced, speaking generally, also, from the north, by way of the York, Chambersburg, Mummasburg, Carlisle and York roads. BIG DRUG FIRM MOVES HERE' Harle-Haas Drug Company of Coun cil Bluffs Gets Location. WILL BRING MANY TO OMAHA Flrni Employs Lnrge Nunibrr ot Men To Loonte In Building Now Oc cupied by the Beebe-Ilun-ynn Knrnltare Company. Negotiations are about to be com pleted for the Harle-Haas Drug company of Council Bluffs to move to Omaha and occupy the building at Eleventh and Douglas streets now occupied by the Beebo-Runyan Furniture company. W. Farnam Smith and the firm are expected to get together Boon and sign up a lease or. the building. The new building of the Beebe & Run yan company at Ninth and Douglas streets is expected to be completed by November. When that (firm moves Into , the new place the Harle-Haas company will come across the river. (The Harle-Haas Drug company Is one of the largest Jobbing houses ot Its kind In the west. Its business is said te amount to nearly Jl.000,000 a year and Its acquisition will mean another stride In Omaha's advancement as n Jobbing cen ter. By moving to Omaha it probably also will bring several hundred employes, in cluding traveling salesmen who will make their headquarters here. Tho Harle-Hans company has been ne gotiating for a building or a site for a building since the first of the year. The ' real estate committee of the Commercial club has been working with the firm members In trying to find a location since they announced their Intention of leaving Council Bluffs, it was feared tho company would move to Kansas City and rather than have It get entirely out of Omaha's territory the Commer cial club went to Its aid. It was a court ot last resort, however, as there exists a taolt agreement between the Commer cial club ot Council Bluffs and the Commercial club of Omaha that neither will attempt to take business from the city of the other. Two sites, one opposite the Krug the ater at Fourteenth and Harney streets and the other at Eleventh and Farnam streets, were considered by the company and,' found unavailable. Then the Beebe Runyan building was decided upon. The Beebe-Runyan building will be vacated about October 1, tfv km v 3eVl'.y BAM Coufclernte i l r it 1 nwrvop v J s " ' r--nTiiTSiim-- ' ' .-,TP,1 , rnrrrnimr At the beginning of June, after Its il feat at Chancellorsvllle, the army of ti Potomab under General Hooker lay nort of the Rappahannock river In Vlrglnl The confederate army of Virginia, unde General Lee, began meanwhile to moV' toward the north. The union armi started in pursuit, and, capturing General Stuart's official papers, discovered Gen eral Lee's orders for a march Into Pennsylvania, the two armies meeting In skirmishes on the way, General Lee being Unaware, however, that the union army was advancing in mass. The confederate army crossed the Poto mac and moved up the Cumberland val ley to Chambersburg, Carlisle, and Cash town. Early's division marched on June 26 from Cashtown to York, part of the Women's Attack on Homes of Ministers Repulsed by Polioe LONDON. June 30. Miss Sylvia Pank hurst, daughter of Mrs. Emmellne Pank hurst, the suffragette leader, lead an at tacking party to Downing street Sunday afternoon for the purpose of Imprisoning the cabinet ministers. The expedition was unsuccessful. The attempt to cap ture Downing street failed, but the vic tory ot the police was not won without a series of fierce scrimmages in which both policemen and women were injured. Miss Pankhurst appeared at a demon stration in Trafalgar square In favor of free speech. She denounced the Right Honorable Reginald McKenna, the homo secretary, for "killing my mother." Then she Invited the crowd to go to Downing street und "Imprison the ministers In their own houses." At the head of a large body of sympa thizers, many of whom were dock work ers, she marched down to Whitehall, with the flag of the AVomen's Social and Po litical union surmounted by a liberty cap. The police, however, had been apprised of tho Intentions of the demonstrators and had thrown a strong cordon around Downing street The dockers tried to break through and some ot the women went to their aid, but were severely handled. In the fighting women were thrown to the ground and dockers club bed. Many were arrested. Finally mounted police dispersed the crowd. FOUR LABORERS KILLED BY TRAIN NEAR DUBUQUE DUBUQUE, la.. June W.-Four Italian laborers were instantly killed by a south bound Burlington passenger train three miles north of East Dubuque shortly uftor noon today. The men were members of a gang laying new track. When the train approached they apparently became con fused and stepped directly In front of the engine. The bodies were horribly mangled. FREIGHT FATE INCREASE ON FLAX SEE0 SUSPENDED WASHINGTON, June 30.-Increases In freight rates on flax seed, ranging from 6 to 11VS eents a 100 pounds from Minne apolis and other northwestern points to Missouri river destinations, today were suspended by the Interstate Commerce commission until October , THE n'ATTI.EFtELD OF'GETTVSni'KG smmand going through Gettysburg to t-uk supplies. .Vow suddenly General ta was amazed to discover that tho mlon troops were close at hand. Im nedlately lying at Cashtown, he con centrated his army- The union army, meanwhile, had crossed the Potomac at Frederick. There General Hooker resigned and General Meade took his place, and the army con tinued to move north, east of South mountain. General Meade proposed to give battle on the heights ot Pipe creek, fifteen miles south of Gettysburg. But or. the night of June 29, General Buford of the cavalry saw the lights ot the con federate campflres between Monterey and Fairfield, and . was at once ordered to Gettysburg. Hess Says Doubtful Who Murdered Jones GLEN WOOD, la., June 30. (Special Telegram.) Three witnesses were called today on behalf of the defendant In the trial of Francisco Guldlce for the murder of Fireman Howard Jones. An effort was made to show that Guldlce had not been seen near the scene of the murder on the night It took place. James Vlncenso and James Solo were called to tell of the whereabouts of Bill Porche, and both tald ho had been seen near the place where the murder, was committed on the night of MoV 27. This was corroborated in the main by F. Reubencamp, who tes tified that he did not see Guldlce that night. John Herbert, a Northwestern employe, testified along the same lines. The greater part of the day was occu pied with addresses of lawyers, the state's side being presented by County Attorney Cappell of Pottawattamie rounty. He went over the facts of tho crime, the confession and other evidence and urged there wns not a particle of doubt of the defendant's guilt. Attorney J, J. Hess, for the defendant, declared that others had access to tho room where Guldlce slept and might have placed the razor there, which was said to have been the Instrument of the mur der. It was also urged that there was doubt whether Guldlce was the man In tho railroad yards, near the scene of the crime, when It was committed. ' Arguments will be concluded tomorrow, when L. T. Gonung will close for thx state. i , Constitutionalists Occupy Guaymas DOUGLAS, Ariz., June 30. "Guaymas has fallen. Everything In our hands." Tids was the brief message received shortly before noon today by the consti tutionalists Junta from Hermoslllo. Another message received shortly after noon direct from Guaymas sold that the state troops had received the surrender ot 600 federals on the water front, where the garrlfon had' been driven, despite tho tire of the Mexican gunboats. The aim of the Mexican naval gunner was bad. The name of OJeda was not mentioned among those eaptured. It Is believed the federal commander Is hiding among the mountains of Dacatete. Destiny Was The Army of the Potomac was well clothed, well fed, magnificently dls clpllned and thoroughly reliable. It had hten relieved ot a leader ot whose Judg ment It was not certain, and had been put under one of whom It had great re spect. The confederate army was no less ready for battle. It was not quite as well cared for as the northern army, but it had the cheering recollection of many victories and a leader whom tt adored. The Army ot the Potomac waa divided Into seven corps the First, under Gen eral Reynolds and afterwards under General Doubleday; the Second,, under General Hancock and afterwards under General Gibbon; the Third, under General Sickles; the Fifth, under General Sykes; the Sixth, under General Sedgwick; the Fifty Thousand Are Marooned When Long Trestle Burns NEW YORK, June 30.-Nearly M.OOO persons were marooned on Rockaway Beach all night by fire which destroyed part of the trestle connecting that popu lar resort with Long Island. Tho flamuB started from a short circuit on tne rail of the Long Island railroad while a train crowded with 600 persons were crossing the long trestle over Jamaica bay. Thr rear car of the train caught fire and there waa a wild scramble among the passengers to get a foothold on the trestle. Hundreds of men, women and children picked their way over the tle to safety. About 300 feet of the trestle burned be fore the fire was extinguished. The only other route home waa by way of a single trolley line roundabout way, and unahla to accommodate all, most of them spent the night asleep on the beach or In the pavilions. SULZBERGER & SONS "TO ERECT BIG PLANT SIOUX FALLS. S. I . June 30.-(Spo-clal Telegsam.) While no official an nouncement has yet been made. It was learned today on appsrently the best authority that Sulzberger & Pons, the big packers, have definitely determined upon erecting a $1,000,000 packing plant In Sioux Falls. Some months ago the cit izen donated the necessary ground, but thero has been uncertainty as to the pur pose of the company. According to the Information secured today the company several days ago made the necessary ap propriation for the construction of the mammoth plant For several months the company has been operating a small leased plant us un experiment and to develop this field. The completion of the Jl.000,000 plant Is expected to add at least 2,000 to the popu lation ot Sioux Falls, i INSANE FARMER SHOOTS FIVE PERSONS AND HIMSELF ATCIUHO.N', Kan.. June SO. Harry Behonke, a farmer of Rushvtlle, Mo., who came here to witness a ball game yester day, became suddenly lnane tonight and after firing his revolver Into a crowd, wounded five persons, killing himself. Determined Eleventh, under General Howard; the Twelfth, under General Slocuru. The three cavalry divisions under the direc tion ot General l'leueoulon, were com- j manded severally by llufont, Qregg and KIlpAtrlck. In the confederate army thero wore nly thro corps, each one of which was much Inrge than u union corps. They were under the command of Ucncrals LoiiKstreet. Kwell and A. V. Hill. The confederate cavalry whs under tho com- mnml of General J. 14. It. Stuart Immediately upon his arrival nt Get tysburg General Ilutord established his camp upon a little rldve sloping west from Seminary Illdgn to Wllloughby Hun, and had tho ground between WllloUghby Itun and Marsh creek, thrto :nlle fur ther west, thoroughly patrolled. Kurly on the morning of Wcdnctday, July 1, htii pickets saw the advance of the enemy, General Heth s division or tho Thin! confederate corps, advancing nluntf the ChambersburR pike. One picket gal loped back with the news; the oUir from the shelter of the bridge, fired thn first shot of the tint tic, three miles to the west of Gettysburg. At once the confederates, fearing a large force, proceeded more cautiously. The union cavalry squadrons, coming promptly to the relief of their comrades, so harassed tho advancing troops that they were two hours In traversing the three miles to Wllloughby Hun. Until ;4i General Uutord directed his small host In their effort to stay the ap proach of the foe, hllo In the cupola of the seminary his lookouts gazed eagerly towards the south, watoh lng for reinforcements. Presently General Buford was sum monod to observe a targe body of union troops advancing along tho Emmlttsburg road. In a few minutes Qeneral ney nolds himself arrived and directed and encouraged tho troops. Cutler's brigade of union Infantry was now placed across the Chambersburg plko and the exhausted cavalry fell to the rear. Meredith s Iron brigade took possession of the woodland. For two hours the union troops not only held their own against a superior number, but succeded In driving back tho con federates. Tho confederate gonerals, Archer and Davis, lost more than half their effective force, and Ooneral Archer was finally captured with all his men, During the engagement In tho wood land. General Reynolds was shot as he ru riding among but troops. Gonerai Reynolds was one of the best-beloved soldiers of the union army. A Pennsyi vanlan by birth, a graduate of West Point, he had oeen distinguished service in the Mexican war. At the time ot tne battle he was 43 years old, with a pros pect of great fame before him. He was at once succeeded by General Doumeaay. In spite of Its early victories and its heroic struggles, It became more and more evident as noon approached that Cutler's brigade would have to fall back and that the union troop were oeinB worsted. Between 19 and 11 o'clock General Howard had arrived In the town and had heard the news ot Reynolds' death See ing the strategic Importance ot Cutp's hill, ho gavo orders that It be fortified. u v.n nniKltit General Meade that Reynolds had been killed and begged that the Twelfth corps be forwarded. He sent two divisions of his own corps under Generals Shlmmelpfcnnlg and Barlow to reinforce the union right, upon which General Ewell's artillery had opened fire, General Barlow was severely wounded; both tho Eleventh corps and the gallant First corps were compelled to retire to Cemetery hill. There was great confusion as the troops passed through the town. General Shim melpfennlg was captured, and could not regain his command for throe days; Gen eral Barlow lay within the confederate (Continued on Page Two.) ZACHARY T. LINDSEY DEAD Prominent Citizen and Business Man of Omaha Passes Away. RESIDENT OF CITY MANY YEARS .Succumb tn Hrnrt I'll 1 1 urn After nn llliipia of Tito Montlin -8nr-vlvMl by Widow nnd Two Children. Zachary Taylor Llndsey. president of tho Intcrstato Rubber company and resi dent of Omiha since 1SSS, died at his country home In Benson, opposite tHe Country club at 11:45 yesterday morning of heart afllure, aged 67. While Mr. Llndsey had been In poor health, not until a tew days -ago waa his condition considered critical. He had been 111 two months, but not until six weeks ago was he compelled to give up attend ing to business. He is survived by his widow, a son, Harry Swan Llndsey, re siding at Excelsior Springs, Mo., and a daughter, Mrs. Oeorge N. Peek, residing at Motlne, 111. Mr, Llndsey was prominent In Masonic circles, gavo freely to charity and was a member of Clifton Hill Presbyterian church. He was one of the prime movers In tho Transmlsslsslppl exposition and was chairman of tho ways and means committee. Zachnry T. Llndsey was born in Cedar county, Iowa, In 1817, nnd lived thero with his parents until 1SSS. when he re moied with them to Washington, la., where he attended the common school and Washington college. At the early age of 1 years Mr. Llnd sey enlisted In company B, forty-fifth Iowa Infantry, and served until nearly the close of the war, when he returned to his home and was employed In hi brother's shoe store. A few years afterwards he was celled with the western fever and engaged as a teamster with a party enrouta to Cali fornia. He paid W for the privilege of guiding a team of mules over the prairie and mountains to the coast, and waa four months making the trip. In California Mr. Llndsey learned several trades and finally found employment In a clothing store In Sacramento. He was offered a situation In a bank, but concluded to return to Iowa and enter the shoe busi ness at Blgnourpey, la. Within a short time after his return the brother dltd (Continued on Page Two.) VETERANS FIGHT BIG BATTLE OVER AGAIN ON FAMOUS FIELD Twenty-Five Thousand Men Awakd to the Call of the Reveille at Gettysburg. LIKE NOT SEEN SINCE WAR Biggest Army of its Kind Gathered Together in Fifty Years. FIFTEEN THOUSAND EN ROUTE Old Solidcrs Are Up Long Before the Sun. CLIMB THE BLUE RIDGE HILLS Xnlrilern of Fifty Years Abo Spend Day Hnntiplnar Storlrn anil Look ing Ul Old linenilee nnd Old friends. OETTYSHUIia. Pa., June 30. Twenty five thousand veterans in blue and gray, the biggest nrmy of Its kind that haa been gathered together In fifty years, awoke today on the fluid nt Gettysburg to the call of reveille and the warlike rattle of pots and pans In a score ot mess tents. Veterans who sat about the camp fires until late at night were up long beforo tho sun climbed over tho hills ot the Bluo Ridge. Beforo tho electric lights of this modern camp wero turned out to make way for the sun, tho veterans were sing ing songs of war time an the wide streets of the tented city echoed with tho "kl yl" of the "Johnny Rebel" and tho hoarse yell of his Yankee brother from the north. Tho regular army men In charge of the camp expected 15,000" veterans to come Into Gettysburg today, and by tonight they will be prepared to tent and mess the more than 40,000 men without hitch or delay. Thero was no set program today and tho veterans were left tree to look up old friends and ol& enemies, swap stories of '63 and enjoy themselves In any wuy they saw fit. More than thirty special trains came Into tho village during Sunday nnd thous- sands ot veterans who tramped up from the Shenandoah on their last visit rodo In the luxury ot soft-backed day coaches from Harrlsburg, Baltimore and Wash ington. Instead ot the roar of guns, tho thunder ot charging cavalry and the vocal tributes ot the mule drivers that greeted them I" the other days they walked or rode through the quiet, calm Sunday of a country town. Only the flags flying from every window, tha city of tenta (n the distance and, the crowds told that ueitysourg naa come out ot na usual into tha' extraordinary 'once more. TIitunnd WnlU. From the station ot thu two ratlroadi that come Into the vlllago Is e, good Ions mile to the camp of B.OOU tents where tho veterans are housed., Many of them mude the trip by automohllo or by car riage or tn the friendly shelter ot a "seeing" Gettysburg car, but thousands shouldered their suitcases and walked. The ' sun wns scorching hot under a cloudless sky and many succumbed be fore they found their tents. There was no compV'nlng, however, and the vet erans seemed ashamed to acknowledge that a thing like heat could stop them. "It's hot," said one old soldier tonight, "but It Isn't as hot as it was fifty years ago." Although the regular army and the Gettysburg commission of the stato could not copo with the heat, every possi ble arrangement for the comfort of the united armies has been made. The camp of brown army tents Is under the direc tion of officers of the regular army. Tho streets of Gettysburg are under the grim scrutiny of the Pennsylvania constabu lary, and for the care of the sick the army, the state and the Red Cross havo all made extensive preparations. Ground linked Like Brlclf. The camp Itself lies on ground that has been baked as hard as a brick and dried into dust by the winds that sweep between the hills, but Its sanitation, Its water supply and Its plans for comfort and for the feeding ot thousands ot men have been made with the utmost care. The tents tall westward with the slope ot the ground from tho Emmlttsburg road to the point on Seminary ridge, where the Immortal chargo of Pickett started on the third day of the fight. They cover tho "peach orchard" and tho "wheat field," where thousands ot men were lost and part of the ground over which Pickett charged, but they do not reach to the Bloody Anglo or tho base ot the Ceme tery ridge, from whoso heights Meade's artillery poured out Its merciless rain ot grape and canister and cut to pieces the (Continued on Page Two.) Cool Tkings to Drive Away the Heat of July These arc the days when hu manity swelters. These are the daya when we all strive to make existence more comfortable and these are tho days when advertising plays a pe culiar part In our lives. As we turn over the pages of TUB BEE we see tho advertise ments of things that accentuate homo and comfort. We see tiie advertisements of sales of refrigerators, of Ice boxes, of lemonade, berry and Ice cream setB;ot stiver pitch ers, of glaBB pitchers; ' of Wn- lngs, screens, veranda furnish ings; ot lawn and garden re quisites, ot the many things that go to brighten life and prevent heat troubles. I, (.Continued on Page Two.)