Show I VETERANS AND ANA CHILDREN ARE I I OVERCOME BY TERRI C HEAT EAT I j I Salt Lake Au Aug 1 IThe glare of the sun falling with Im Impartial partial severity upon young acid a d old I thinner thinned the parade of the Grand Grad Army AImy of cite tho Republic the feature pt of i the annual encampment I and wrought still more morl suffering among the hundreds of children who t participated In the formation or of the tho living nag flag arranged for the thc tion of the old soldiers I The numerous ambUlances pat the tho line of march on Main street were lit In requisition constantly Dashing I hastily from a place In the rall manly s sI where some exhausted veteran h hall I fallen Into the arms of his comrades the vehicles would visit Isil the lag flag I and remove a pallid chilI child gasping in inI I the motionless all air Side b by side in III th m Improvised hospitals along the Unu lino l I or of march lay la wrinkled warriors awl j little school girls I So oppressive was the heat that the plan llau calling for the appearance of the I living flag In ht the thc parade was nhan ahan I dosed and lel parents I wll h relief or even eyen wept with jo joy as ashell asI their hell little ones were restored tu to tut I t them Many Are Stricken I Incomplete figures show that at least a hundred children were taken from the tho streets and from fifteen to twenty old oid soldiers were carried In Inthe the am ambulances Many Ian of the victims I I old uld and young oung recovered as soon oun as asI a athey s th they ware placed in the lie shade treated In the tho gency station I numbered e fifteen of them j Grand Gand Army men and thirty children There Thele were no fatalities The Tho casualties would have been still stillmore stillmore I more numerous ri but ut for the provision s made lIy by the committee on health Through its I s foresight drinking water I lemonade coffee and sandwiches e served freely to time the at al the Place Illace of rendezvous and water was wa s I toile to be all along the rout c without leasing the tanks Three 1 to lid lief f stations attended 11 by trained I cu insured prom prompt lit timid capable aid for all sufferers I The hours of the parade were the hottest hours of the hottest hollest lIa day since the tho or of the encampment At 11 when the column got under underway wa way the weather bureau thermometer I registered n a temperature of So 85 tic grees The mercury rose roso until noon when It touched 87 It was at the tho that the children their evolutions as a lhing flag liaS sustained sus the greatest losses Radiation from the asphalt pavement and the tho entire absence of a breeze gave the suit lUll Its most serious effects Cool Brings Relief At ten lcm minutes past I 12 when the tho procession WA disbanding after pass passIng Jass InS Ing In before the commander in and his taft staff the tho sky over Oer the roll foIl of thunder was heard henr l in inthe the mountains and the thermometer d dropped to 78 degrees degroes toy low tent tem for tor full two hours And yet yot notwithstanding the tho dis discomfort comfort the parade was a grand graull sac I In III its significance magnificent In Its pathos In Its reception The Tho Ore live thousand and moro more old sol soldiers filers diers walking fotu abreast hall had the thc complete right or of sway over a mile or of streets 10 feet In width Every Eon sort of vehicle Icle was e from their path path and ropes and guards confined i the lie might throng ot of to the tho thoI sidewalks and tho rho reviewing stands I I Thousands of Spectators Fully One hundred t thousand housand per pel persons I sons saw or tried to see sec the UI spec spectacle And w whether the they saw or 01 not the they cheered and waved and cheered again Every Eor stale division got its mead of as with bands and Indicative pennant It swung into InlO the arc of tow I It was wag a far er cry from the tho thickets of thee the to the lice valley of the Great Snit Salt Lake from the walls of Vicksburg It the shadow of the olor Mor Mormon mon temple from the tho suns guns of Peters burs burg to the of Brigham Young from which the started And Anel tho they canto not with tho he accoutrements of war but with the tho Insignia of peace and industry The Nebraska obra ka delegation le l lIon tion carried oars ears of yellow vellow corn com The Tho flower was the bade bad e of the tho Ran Kan Kansans sans The were bearers of shoats Of wheat and the Green Mountain boys of Vermont wore the sprigs of pine In their bat bands It was In the lie eleven companies of 1 the Fifteenth States infantry I Irma from Fort Douglas that lint till the veterans saw as the they were forty five fio years ago The or of tho rho army with willI arms at C carry rr swung down t the ho street t tat at perfect stride and with will Jaunty Jaunt all at worn wom by the veterans of today when I os as recruits they fared forth to make York of tic the rc rebels The Tho cOhnn moved mOed slowly There Je frequent pauses during which the theold theold old admired the tho elaborate tri tricolor tricolor color drapery of the tho tall buildings and waved to 10 enthusiastic spectators I tors and the spectators gazed as I if f I for fOI the last Unto timo upon the tho arm a Yet there wore Worl many comments upon the igor of the Grand veterans as the lice on parade Still Stalwart Army I I Those who alight t justly he be called feeble pore much In the minority I The Thc years had frosted the heads or of orall all and many an empty sleeve and timber leg bespoke the stern reality or of war but lore thore were wera u a surprising or of alert llon heart hearty men amen who I I seemed qualified to keep pace with Uncle Snots regulars from the tho fort fOI fortun un the lime mill hili hiliA I A had the distinction of sending the smallest were on only I ion foul wearers of her hel ge I illinois the tho largest nunie ical shoving And at the tho rear came a little baud evoked lie I pictures of the greit Civil ChU war On the rho white uld be watcher road Libby Anderson ilk neon acon Tyler Belle Belleisle I isle and the names nimes of other Con t J federate prisoners rR This division con can I RI sister ted of o the Union of Var More impressive still to the nation were the absentees There was wasn af I II I an a n ache In many an old heart as asI thoughts turned to friends and leaders I of other encampments ate love of the true truo soldier for his commander may have drawn from th the I I infinite void old an an Invisible presence I II I Perchance the dim eyes eye of same or of orthe the veterans caught a fleeting glimpse of the calm face of Grant Perchance their duller dull l cars heard faintly the In incisive accents of Old h or orthe the rattle or of the spurs of Sheridan Who shall but that In tile the sun sunshine sunshine I shine over th the reviewing stand some ome of the nO Boys In Blue saw the kindly shadow Orthe of the great emancipator self sel and called from their heart of hearts I We are canting con ng Father Abraham ten thousand strong None in Serious Condition I Two veterans of the war with I 1010 are arc attending th the encampment Inca and occupied a carriage In the grand parade One Is James Anderson of I I Ohio the he other G of o Utah The business sessions or of the Wa Vo VoI I mans Retie Corps were begun besun this I at the First Presbyterian I church An address by the national Mary Iary I L Gilman in which I I sho the history and work of I the tho order during the lie post past year enl oc I uple much ot of the he Thera I was a presentation of gifts to many of Of the rearing officers I Four FOll r companies and several recep lions b by Grand Arm Army and other othel om clala t look ok place tonight I That nono nano of the sufferers prostrated U by the hen and excitement ot of the thed d clay y Is In a serious condition was the tho made at tho rho emergency hospitals this evening Virtually all allare are recovered and have passed from I the care of the 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