New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 27, 1919, Page 10

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co ambitions we have tle politic China. Ow Qemonstrate she is o sincere [ihina by using every end mote will and th are.’ Asl to the on Makino jzn minister's On thehds in Chin o ged to respec euinly en | and te propo > friend of coun Aol gb00 ommon wel disposition of left 20 room for Japan stan the peace the terms of the en China iapan in LITHUANIAN STORE OFFICERS. I\ namal Meeting of Co-operatiss ciation Held—Reporis Reccived rative tin he Lithuanian Co-op ation, Iac thuanis hual report was to khowing that duri tore has been a suce jvere elected as follows: President, Joseph Mikulas: dent, John Pitkevic Koloski; tre store manager, M. Kaveckis; of directors, P. Narkevic: ickeviea M. Ignatitis, J. Pitkevic: Milukas, C.Koloski, aveicik Szes kas, Miss Fva Koloski the sure Made Well and Strong k Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound. t around ¢ y work and k down a 1[jj tised in the pape:. || and read the test: monials, soI thougk I would try it. I am healthier over was in my life, and can recommend it to any woman who suffers as I did.” ~—Mrs. ELIZABETH MAY, R.F.D. N. Columbia, Pa. The reason Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound is sosuccessfulin over romini woman’s ills is because it co tains the tonic, strengthening properties f good old fashioned roots and ke which act on the female organism. Women from all parts of the country are continually testifying toitsstrength- ening, curativeinfluence, and the letters which we are constantly publishing from women in every section of this country rrove beyond question tl rit of this famous root and herb me Mr. Home Guard Your honorable discharge answers the question, “What did you do to help win the war?” It represents many a night’s work that the other fellow spent amusing himsel The fear of what the Guard uld do kept order in the city, It should be framed and bung where it can be seen. Lot us frame it. Open evenin, OHRNSTEDT’S PHOTO EST. 69 Arch St. - | when | Rian BREold fight- At iting Rheims, the presidential part¥ boarded d special and returned to Paris. The last part-of the moior trip was made in a snow storm to pro- | Arrives at Belleau Wood. The first fighting reached as the party Wood immortalized in the war by the gallant American marines. The motor cars turned off he main roads and rawled e through back ne: o brir the president close to the place the fighting took | place. The farmers were plowing the | shell-cratered the president aves of 100 or an hovs who gave thelr 1t point and looked across ic valley to Belleau Wood, mass of tree trunks and ish but now a national mon- ument to the marines, after whom the government have named the ground was neared Belleau the history of Aghting of flously whert fields as the g Col. Edward M. Watson, who com- an rtillery battalion in the f nd w er chief of statf of the Seventy- division in the Argonne fighting beside Presi- dent Wilson and Gen. William W. Harts and story of the battle Then Mr. Wilson drove up the hill over which the American troops smashed the crack Prussian divisions mustered there to crush the ‘‘zreen- horns” and where the advance on Paris was checked. This wa: Chateau Thierrs. Mr. Wilson the ruins of bric which Americans thrust back the enemy and shell-marked houses which vived the battles. The mayor of Chateau reeted Mr. Wilson who responded quite informally. He then drove on towards Rheims passing along the old battle line between Ic lanes of yed wire entanglements now rust- away in the first winter of pe: between long muddy trenches r ing over the hills and down into hol- lows as far as the eve could see and past the wrecks of dugouts, ammuni- tion dumps iation sheds, hospitals bas and all other litter left by the defeated enemy in his fight. Many Soldier ican, well roadsic eventl stood Bri told the saw the line sur- s over Thierry acks the Sees Ame lay alox German Graves. French graves There ‘were Desecrated cem found in many graves too eteries’ There constant panorama o destroyed or charred vineyards, zav | dens and homc The president was Rheims by the may te whom Mr. Wilson explained that he had not come to the devastat ed regions sooner bhecause he had been wholly engaged at Paris with the business of making peace. going to the through the were W 2 cases welcomed d a com hedral, he passed streets of a deserted city which was once the home of 115,000 people but wh less than 5,000 now are eking out an existence among the He visited Cross canteer e hundreds of destitute persons are fed night and day and the hospi- tal where the sick injured cared for. A light blanket of snow covered the ground as the president drove up to the cathedral and Rheims, and naked in all its mis lation, like a g moonlight. There were more in the air, circling over the town than there were human below in the littered streefs inal archbishop of { Rheims, who steadfastly by his charge during which time passed without a German shell hurling death into the city the president at the rough hoards which ex- seekers and encloses the rubbish into which thiz most hi toric been reduced. The | cardinal conducted Mr. Wilson to the nave of the cathedral, where in 1914 the Germans during their short occen { pation of the city placed their and then, being forced ate, burned th cend shells did not damage the vault. All over the flagging, worn smooth through the vears by millions of feet bringing Frenchmen to an hour's de- votion were piled heaps of rubbish, remnants of statuary and frescoes and fragments of columns and seulp- tures which were counted the most perfect and complete examples of Gothle art. As the president and the cardinal stood together looking up- ward, while the prelate briefly re- | counted the story of four yearg of constant destruction, they looked straight through to the clouded gky, Red and are nd deso- looked ruined beings Lucon stood for four scarcely met fence of now { cludes curiosity edifice has wouna- to e nen to death by that fired the roof but ed, acu- in- ished | wveyard in the | crows | near | | ana Before | The photo shows President Poincaire the e ing court at PFMONDAY, JANUARY 27, 1918. L S, YRR o ey the American commz American gener . headquarters upon the accasion of th | military decoration 1| presentation of the his French () Underwood & bare ruins of the city outside was also laying a blanket inside the President Visibly Impressed. The chalky stone of Cham which the cathedral v scaling off from the effects of German re and the falling snowflakes mixed with an almost it drop- ping of fragments. Pausing a moment before the scene of the crucifixion above the north door and before the painting of the coronatlion of the Vir- gin over the central door Mr. Wilson silently viewed the destruction wrought upon th masterpieces by the burning of the scaffolding when the Germans set fire to the roof of the edifice. The president igne, of buiit, s were cons followed the cardi- nal to the ruins of the chapel where | old-time kings watched through the night at the time of thelr anointing and to the ruins of the museum where priceless Flemish tapestries were ruined. He was shown where thousands of 1ls thrown from Ger- man batteries on two sides burst among the buttresses which support the main structure and wheré forests of sculptures which ornament the structure have been scarred, nicked and torn by fragments the big shells. Then the and they picked rubbish he to a point from they could view he shell-riddled painting of the Last Judgment. above the south the nbols from Noah's ark the great tered rose window, the Statue of St. Anna doze other works of art of which virtually none escaped As they left the thedral. cardinal gave the president a stained glass panel from one of the windows taken down in time to save it. Th panel is unscarred. Tt is circular and about three feet in diameter. It shows a figure of the Savior done in ny from rdinal took him outside, their way through Aoc about s of Irish Leader Croiming e Plunkett, Irish leader, is America aa effort to opinion to bring the Irish ques- conference enc ind he said that the war would bring Ire- gland closer together aad hope that they wonld ad ences at the peace ti- ated that represent Sir Horace on his way to influer public about a scttlement of tion before the p Befare ne believed land and expressed a Just their diffe ble. He also Wilson would e men at the confereace than Premier Photo from Underwood & Underwood leaving Eng President more | The snow flurry that Was covering the | Lioyd George. cathedral. | which | H ! the | colored to a Pal edifice, cathedral, glass of the view tk ns of spe nee is Koy historical Rheims, and not one has escaped early the the cathedral centuries. president the town specimen of the architectur nd an el teent hcen- two, with the most memorials CASTORIA For Infants and Children | inUse For Over 30 Years | Abwaze bears LS the /m of | signature ot STy, jous style or ale, Thes comprised three brands sealed in air-tight packages. Easy fo find —it is onh sale evervwhere. Look for, ask for, be sure to get WRIGLEY The Greatest Name in Goody-Land. s ,’.”",,"". l."'"'f""'”']! "'"’, THE FLAV.OR The Flavor Lasfs try gavo up e g [S CROSS OF LEGION OF HONOR TO GEN. 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The age and general con- Aition of car, Our trade-in sale of 1918 Olds- mobilen should nppeal to men who knows true value. Don’t buy a car until you have seen the Olds as it is years ahead of othef beauty mechanical advice cars in both ruction ko You coas! our will and this car. see why Wwe other agencies and are now hendling Oldsmobiles exclusively, We offer some very good buys In used roadsters and tourings. Cohen Motor Co. 86 Arch St.

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