$5,000,000 HONOR TO CHINA MOSES: Sun Yat-Sen to Be Entombed and Enshrined on Purple Mountain June 1. THREE DAYS' MOURNING. Adherents to Wear Crape Bands--Feasts and Celebrations to Be Banned. SHANGHAI, May 11. (/P)--Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, national hero of republican China, is to be enshrined and entombed June 1 in a $3,000,000 memorial on the Purple mountain near Nanking, capital of the government for which he, more than any other man, furnished the inspiration. The tomb and an eight-mile memorial road costing $2,000,000, over which it is approached, will constitute a monument to the doctrines he preached and on which the nation is being built. The elaborate three days' program will give occasion, too, for the Chinese people to show approval of the new regime. Asked Nothing in Life. In his lifetime Dr. Sun asked nothing for himself, emphasizing the desirability of frugality and simple ways. But the ceremonies with which his body will be conveyed to his final resting place will rival the elaborateness and richness of the pageantry practiced by the Manchu emperors, whom he fought to overthrow. The memorial road itself runs through property confiscated from common people, a class to whom his life work was dedicated. Mme. Sun Yat-Sen, who has been in Europe much of the time since the death of her distinguished husband in 1925, has journeyed to China for the occasion. Sun Fo, his son, who is minister of railways in the government his father helped to set up, will also participate in the ceremonies. Powers Will Attend. In attendance will be official representatives of the United States, Great Britain, France, Japan, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Portugal, Belgium, Brazil, Norway, Cuba, Holland, Czecho-Slovakia, Spain and Denmark, all of which maintain diplomatic relations with the new China. All members of the kuomintang, or "people's party," are to wear mourning bands throughout the three days. On the day of interment, feasts and celebrations will be banned in all parts of the country, flags will be flown at half-mast and for nearly three hours guns will boom, the salute being fired from 33 cannons at intervals of five minutes. Three Trains Carry Body. Dr. Sun's body has rested in a temporary tomb in the western hills near Peking for four years. Three special funeral trains will be used to convey it to Nanking, the train bearing the elaborate bronze casket being preceded and followed by other trains carrying special guards of honor. At Nanking the body will be displayed in the auditorium of the kuomintang headquarters. For the final rites a hearse made in America at a cost of $10,000 will be used. It will be guarded by infantry and cavalry, preceded by horsemen carrying the blue and white flags of the national government and of the kuomintang. Milltary and naval bands will play continuous dirges and marines, aviators, police, representatives of every Chinese class, diplomats, officials of the nationalist government, and hordes of soldiers and mourners, will be in the procession. Coffin Wrapped in Satin. The bronze coffin itself will be wrapped in a blue satin cover with the kuomintang emblem embroidered on all four sides. When borne to and from the hearse, it will be carried with white wooden bars and blue ropes by carriers in blue and white uniforms. Sun Yat-Sen was born in Kwantung province in 1866 and was educated in American mission schools in Honolulu, later studying medicine in a British college at Hongkong. But the influence of the American teaching was marked throughout his life and when he enunciated his cardinal three principles for the revolution it was remarked that they could aptly be translated into the immortal phrase by Lincoln, that government should be "of the people, by the people and for the people." Banished by Manchus. Dr. Sun early became an active revolutionary and was banished from China by Manchus. But he continued to propagate his doctrines and once he was kidnapped in London by emissaries of the imperial Chinese legation. Intervention by the British government saved his life and he returned to the orient, using Japan as his base and organizing a revolution which in 1911 forced abdication of the Manchus. He was chosen first president of the Chinese republic but was forced out by counter-revolutionaries. In 1925, however, his party, with the aid of Russian advisers, established the nationalist government in Canton, and from then until its army entered Peking last July the party waged civil war. It did not become victorious until it had eliminated radical factions within its ranks and set up a more conservative administration in Nanking. Now its films, posters and newspapers preach to all China the doctrines framed by Sun Yat-Sen.