THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1917. JULY i PROGRAM AT FONTENELLE PARK Continuous Bound of Pleasure from 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. is Announced by Com mittees in Charge. Fred B. Martin, chairman of the spoita committee (or the annual In dependence day celebration at Fonte nelle park, has announced the pro gram of the event this year. There will be no fireworks, but Martin and his associate! promise a "bigger and better" celebration than ever. The celebration starts at 10:30 in the-morning with a ball game. The Deweys and Tiadesman teams, Class B nines, will clash. The diamond -athletes will be given one hour in which to stage their combat, for at 11:30 they must make way for the parade to the flagpole at the summit of the hill, where a salute of twenty-one guns will be given Old Glory. The national anthem will be played by one of the four bands engaged for the day and the public will join in the singing. Alter an hour'i intermission for lunches the program will be resumed at 1 o'clock. Two hundred and fifty children will stage a pageant contain ing such characters as Uncle Sam, Auntie Columbia, Liberty, Peace and Yankee Doodle, with brownies and fairies, and 100 children to represent all the states in the union and the wrious industrial of this country, Sports in Afternoon. Sport events start at 2 o'clock with races for the men, women and chil dren. Three prizes will be awarded lor all events, At 3 o'clock another ball a-ame will be staged, this time between the Stags and Modern Woodmen. At 5 o clock the Fontenelle and Riverview bloomer girls will clash. Alter tne dinner hour a program of patriotic speeches and songs will De given. hour bands have been engaged to play from 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. The commissary department has arranged to distribute 20.000 sandwiches. It is expected several thousand per sons win auena tne event. Germans Furnish Paper Free to Mexican Journals Mexico City, June 22. Every pos sible pressure, including financial ot ters, is reported to have been Oh, Yes, You Know Some of These Now Well-known Men Who Were Boys Together in Omaha Thirty Odd Years Ago When This Picture Was Taken. Try to Identify Them Photo will be printed again with the names in next'Sunday's Bee. Watct for it. Group is the first man ual training class at the Omaha High school. One is now a prominent busi ness man here, another is , a leading lawyer, another is a railroad man, and an other is a newspaper pub lisher. Pick 'em out. orougnt to Dear oy Germans and pi Germans to atop the campaign of El Universal for the severance of rela lions between Mexico and Germany. The discussion of the campaign has brought a renewal of charges that f pro-German papers are being directly aided in their campaign against the United States by free print paper uppnea oy nrms in tne United Mates. n is Known tnat iw rolls ot paper were snipped oy tne steamer Mon terey from a New York firm to Vera Crui in April. It is charged that La Opinion of Vera Crui was offered part of this shipment free if it would talke a pro-German stand. The paper rciuiea ana tne smpment reached Mexico Citv. Other papers here have repeatedly charged that the 400 rolls were given tree to pro-German papera in v tne capital, lelegraphic news, writ ten with the obvious purpose of mis representing the United States, comes from New York and appar ency naa no auncuity in passing the cepsor. German Papers Print Statement of Reinstein Copenhagen, June 22. Most of the newspapers of Germany today print long special dispatches discussing the arrival at Stockholm, Sweden, of the three "American" socialist renresen tatives, Boris Reinstein of Buffalo, Dr. Max Goldfarb of the New York Forward and D. Davidovitch. The newspapers, however, care fully refrain from reproducing the information in the Stockholm jour nals as to the non-American nation amy of these men who have come to participate in the International So cialist Peace conference. i The German newspapers reprint prominently Reinstein's statement that the declaration of war by Presi dent Wilson was the "work of capi - talisti in the interests of Wall itreet, with which President Wilson is close ly allied," and that it was "ordered because Wall atreet believed Russia might conclude a separate peace with Germany, giving Germany the vic tory, which had to be prevented at any cost." Older Issues of U. S. Bonds Are Much Lower New York, June 22. During the first bond call on the stock exchange today further sharp declines were re corded in the bid prices of old United States government issues. f , The reis'ered and coupon 3s of 1946 were 85 bid, a drop of 2 points; Panama 3s of 1961 were 82 bid, off 3 points, and the registered and coupon 4s of 1925 were 104 bid, a decline of a point. These quotations represent the lowest levels in years. No actual transactions were made at the prices given. . The previous Issues of the United States government have shown heavy tendencies ever since the inception of the Liberty loan. In banking circles it is believed that the depreciation is mainly due to sales of the old bonds against purchases of the Liberty h- 22,000 Bakers to Refuse Returns of Stale Bread ,'!!i,!g,on'.J,,n 2-More than -'A000 bakers throughout the country have agreed with the commercial economy board to begin on July 10 to refuse returns of stale bread from dealers. By thua reducing production '"etual consumption, enough waste will be eliminated to feed 200,000 per sons besides releasing many employea for other necessary work. Eleven Millions More Gold from Canada New York, June 22. Gold amount ing to $11,000,000 was received here today from Canada by I. P. Morgan & Co., bringing the total for the prea ent mvement un to $5o$nnnnn .nj making the aggregate imports of the I cm ironi an sources since tne first of the year $439,500,000. .. if?, ' mm: m, H ritewu$fasT Francis B. Sayre to Head Army Y. M. C. A. in France New York, June 22. Francis B. Sayre, son-in-law of President Wil son, has been appointed to serve as Young Men's Christian association secretary with the American troops in Francce. He will sail soon with about twenty-five other men who have been chosen for this wdrk, in response to cabled requests from Pars, Mrs. Sayre will spend the summer with Mr. Sayre's brother, Rev. J. Ncvin Sayre. NEW LINEUP FOR FOOD BILL BATTLE House Will Not Agree to Con ference on First Measure Until Senate Passes the Second. Washington, June 22. Administra tion supporters of the food bills ar ranged their battle lines today to make sure that the senate does not kill the second bill on the ground that the first bill is enough. Fearing that should the first, or production bill, with its clause against food hoarding be finally enacted while the senate debates the second, or con trol bill, it might be contended that the provisions of the first btll are suf ficent, the house leaders today de cided to let the first bill remain in its present stage and thus force the sen ate to enact all the program before any of it gets to the critical stage of conference between the two houses. Should house leaders be able to de lay the appointment of conferees on the first bill until after passage of the second bill by both houses, they ex pected to get most of the administra tion's program on the statute books. War Aims of Austria1 Are Officially Outlined Copenhagen, June 22. Assumption that the "survey of Austrian public opinion on war aims,' circulated by the Austrian correspondence bureau, represented the Austro-Hungarian government's program of peace terms is confirmed by an article in the Lem berg Gazeete, reproducing these con ditions of the official government pro gram. j The article, for which high author ity is claimed, says that Serbia and Montenegro must find their future economic development in close eco nomic association with Austria-Hungary. In other words, it proposes a customs union. It declares that Lov cen mountain in Montenegro must be retained as the key to the Gulf of Cattaro and that "Albania must be given autonomy under military and economic suzerainty of Austria-Hungary. Discussing Roumania, the statement says that this question is for Austria Hungary identical with the Danube problem and arrangements must be made for a free open Danube route, not subject to the control of any for eign power. Finally that Austria Hungary must have a better military frontier against Italy, more fully pro tecting Trieste and the Tyrol. Bee Wants-Ads Produce Results. The Poison of G 1X7.1 VVil sons erman Intrigue Antidote German intrigue in America as well as in Russia, in the form of veiled peace proposals, which, to use the words of President Wilson, "aim to deceive all those throughout the world who stand for Re rights of peoples and the self-government of nations," is the subject of the leading article in this week's LITERARY DIGEST, dated June 23d. The article, using the President's note to the Russian people and his Flag Day address as a basis, makes' very clear just what America is fighting for and the peace that must come. It throws the light of public opinion in this country, as shown by the newspaper press, upon the President's words, and shows that they are not only a warning to the Russians to avoid the fatal error of deserting the Allies, but, in the opinion of the Pittsburgh Gazette-Times, they are "also a warning to Pro-German neutrals and to Pro-Germans in this country." The article also gives answer to those who favor the making of a separate peace by Russia. Among other topics of almost equal interest and importance which are treated in this is sue of the "Digest," are: "We Have Tasted Liberty and It Has Made Us Drunk" Remarked Russian Minister of War Kerensky, and, in the Opinion of the Foreign Correspondents in Russia, He Spoke the Truth. This Article Shows the Russian Muddle in All Its Angles. Getting Greece Together Driving the Germans Back in Belgium What the Jews Are Doing With Freedom in Russia Doing More Work With Fewer Men Personal Glimpses of Interesting People How the Chinese Build Reprisals Against Germany The Y. M. C. A. Forehanded The South Calling Negroes Back To Make War-Profits Pay for War Our Bohemian Fighters Finger-Prints in the Orient Measuring Hunger Pangs Reviving the Elizabethan Age in England Investments and Finance People "Chosen" of God Edith Cavell's Last Letter Many Striking Illustrations, Including the Best Cartoons All News-Roads Lead At Last to "The Digest" Did you ever stop to think of the path your news travels to reach you, of how an event no sooner happens than the story of it speeds away, by word of mouth, by telegraph- or telephone, is flashed through submarine cables or flies free in air on the wings of the wireless to the office of some news paper, where it is translated into cold type, rushed through the presses, and hurried forth again by motor car, by boat, by rail, on horseback, and, in some remote districts, on camel-back, on sledges, or by canoe, to reach your door? , r- All this is wonderful enough, but when you reflect that the published news of the whole world comes to the editors of THE LITERARY DIGEST, and is' put by them through an impartial sieve, which re tains only the choicest part, uncolored and un changed in the least degree, then your wonder grows. For your use and the benefit the pith of all the world's events is concentrated without bias in the columns of THE DIGEST, week by week. Be advised and avail yourself today of this great est of. modern news-recorders. June 23d Number on Sale To-day All News-dealers 10 Cents NEWS-DEALERS may now obtain copies of "The Literary Digest" from our local agent in their town, ot where there is no agent, direct from the Publishers. Mark of Distinction to B a Reader of ' TIm Literary j Digest The Digest FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK PlVE ona day's pay-Save a Soldier. Don't dlsap H u point the Bay Scoots who represent the Red Cress. Another Big Enameled Ware Pur- chase on Special Sale Saturday s AT THE I UNION OUTFITTING GO. 16th and Jackson Street. H ONYX--TURQUOIS BLUE ORAY 5 The order for this hie shipment was placed many months ago, long before the heavy advance In the price of metal. 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WE GUARANTEE IT SOLD ON DRAUGHT OR IN BOTTLES Wherever Wholesome and Refre.hinf Drinks Are Served. STORZ BEVERAGE & ICE CO., Omaha, Nebraska. I 1 I hi :aPrWWWSl9