New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 27, 1930, Page 9

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 27, 193. all the other celebrated places, «.ould‘ Negw it scarcely drum up a full regiment. |thesc o 9, i | In 1913, at Gettysburg, 75,000 vet- | that particu e 1 erans of the Civil War—represent- | ticular m ns ing both sides in the intra-fratern! | plans w By “n iggle—gathered to commemorate | com fiftieth anniversary of the grear- | wide, battle in the w All the Natural Fragrance JOHN J. DALY : They cante, then, (rom all status| Memorial Doy, iecoration Do v : ‘ seen brother sides n i 1 ) ead alvead iine A < st IThey were the guests, all of ¢ s 4 to t i i Sixty-five years age a valiant and | youngest soldier in the Civil War Of the state of Pennslvani | hat old build Fennes : A victorious army marched in the|He probably, and undoubtediy, was | {deral goverr h ¥ \ avenu ere 2 all the| I ert t of cour- he-day of its vouth along the broad } the voungest soldier, in any war, At |Rebs and the Union b What a T s of th 5 the | & '€ such a song as hat |y 4 ; stretches of Pennsylvania avenue in | least this is the contention of t tir they had t Gettysburg in t T y of t g 0 ngeronl ‘ B Washington, D.~. | | historian, Lossing—wno sea 1 fifty years a hey had blic—and « : a e Ve inenta : B g h That was the beginning of the |the records and never found a ho 1 ch other to the death ) ages ne ) Grand Army of the Republic. | $o near the cradle, so near {he | A t stone wall at Bloody n 1 t t ; 5 2 % oug Following the fall of Richmond, | £rave. and fighting in the Angle. in the Wheat Field. and ait|and the vet ; a 5 1 arked . and Lee's surrender at Appomattox, | With bearded men erih acreage now 4 r ) y 5 e : 3 A = { the victors came to the capital of | the nation, there to be reyiewed by the president of the United States. A this 1 cen | Siler 5 oxg e ] i as to the number of [thro var: a 4 cit ho marched in that histo rarade—a procession that took fully three days in the passing, accordin to some who witnessed it. Other say the parade was over in a day; that stragglers came into tof®n tne | nine s fonalieftio th capita ; . | ] e cay after the parade and carried on | Newark, Ohio [ . the march—a gathering of uniforin- An arm 2 ed that undoubted] numberzd |is approact 1s 1 birth- 500 Still Hope to Go somewhere near fifty thousand day Sevent thousand ( Men? They were bovs, most of| So, there h 18 8 ; itk ! them and they marched with a song |old fellows ¢ : the o red ho 2 : s g . on their lips—a certain satisfaction |Capital—Washingtor ] in their souls. After this demonstra- boasted the greatest r e ¢ DEOPLE tion. they did what most returning War veterans—there warriors have done from' time im-|One hundred veterans who T s ¥ 5 ‘. Y X : 2 ~ 2 e R D - 5 i : their in the SUMMER Johnny Clen . g |8 of the de when he donned t th st nts In Packets and Individual Tea-Bags the pértuits of peace, to the prosaic| On the first Thur tasks of "making a hving.” mo: the Civil W Now, sixty-five years after thai|—to carry out the celebrated parade in Washington. | but. as one of the t hor lan Ho the | the ‘ I by ~ the survivors of that Grand Oid|day. “it's hard to get t o , D S v : 7 e flOTTER LOAL CORPORATION Army Republic. are gathering in L f . e P + A y — - m— e lttle groups thoughout the land to|Up at ) there 1en't that | the ot 4 Pl « roster that ; ; BA =i e TR make preparations for the proper | same pep’ th ed 10 be S R o | boasted 4 2 . ! 2\ AND ST PHONE 4637 observance of Memorial Day 3 what wae prot tRaiwn i : ene 3 1| CAN BE AVOIDED I I or EGG oration Day, as they call it h meet f t 3 4 } 8, a vHat a| 20! ] c ¥ 1 Try LUCKY TIGER for falling hair Per T $14.25 t a DOLLAR le OW than a little later. are going out to the federsl hering that m s in ¥ ) ju . é I 7= A teries that dot the land. here t h nies 1o he held| Tears sprang into his eyes af a e [ el —and place flags and flowers on er the n. scarce bal- i e ¥ : S arbers Drugginre. e resting plac eir comeades, | er's irne he 1 S pe t pape L Y T he two 3 t remonie 1 4t N year, on May 30th, will be at Gett burg. Pa.. and at the National ) morial cemetary at Arlington gima At Gettyeburg the United States principal address At Arlington, Va one grave morc tha unknown'soldiers o Confederate and Union— S monies will be in charge partment of the Potoma of the Grand Army of the L £ 1 m he Rep i to anot r i ¥ ) o - R FE i ¢an mee Sixty-five years Young men, boy lita—and now the halls to itus old davs of old were the heroes of th €o fex remain 9 out of 10 screen stars R e e e R e R O e R B SN use Lux Toilet Soap to = Drummer Boy of l‘)uxkhma\mu Th Take the cage of Major General at BB S e e etens Ve i i e ana “heid . A - for the merciless close-up keep their skin exquisite Boy of Chickamauga.” H be . called “The Drump Shiloh,” because General ( terred this title upon hi Ayt oo mas th e S e e # SERER SR bl : ' ., . . o 3 GLARING blaze of light, flooding the screen | : . " £ star’s face. Light so intense that it reveals everything. There mustn’t be even the tiniest TUNE IN on station WTIC flaw in the skin. {Hartford) every Tuesday evening from 719 7:30. Diamond Orchestra No actress, according to 45 leading Hollywood directors, has ever been able to win and hold the heart of the public unless her skin showed simply exquisite in the close-up. And in the talk- ies there are mére €lose-ups than ever before! This is why 511 of the 521 important Holly= wood actresses use Lux Toilet Soap. In addis tion, 2!l the great film studios have made it the official soap for their dressing rooms. The Broadway stage stars have long used this | : " daintily fragrant white soap, too—and now the | el s ¢ . : e G famous European screen stars have adopted it Dizmond Ginger Ale you are now - Below) LOUISE BROOKS, exquisite star, in the lusurious bathroom created for her in Holly= wood. Both here and in her dressing room on location she uses Luz Toilet Soap. star’s face. The cruelest test 2 skin can meet—this test of the closc-up INCE 1928 the championship has waited for a champion, HELEN TWELVETREFS, charming Pathé star, has and for that same period of time 1928 Diamond Ginger 1o need to fear that her 1l not register flaw . s Tex f I o . She says: “Klieg lights make close-ups so : y $ Rl 2 . lessly perfect on the hiat sitized film—for she 3 2 lig Ale has waited for the flavor that only age can bring. For Al e e e o Tevealinal’ Ona'car't possibly hide the fetitre two years, the selected Jamaica ginger for Diamond Ginger | ‘ : 5 of th “hat is why so many screen stars . - - She sate 1 » 3 3 Q, . Ale has aged, ripened, mellowed . . . and only now is ready. el 1 Lux Toilet Soap. It gives Importart assets-a y satin-smoothness ‘studio LOOK FOR THE VINTAGE DATE ON THE NECKBAND OF EACH BOTTLE OF DIAMOND GINGER ALE. Our secret —it certainly is a lovely socp Photo by O. Drar. Hollrwant process includes time as a vital ingredient ... for time gives | = it the taste that only time can duplicate. MARY NOLAN, lovely Universal star, also uses Lux . ne s ! Toilet Soap. When the blaze of the close-up lights Buy Diamond Ginger Ale in the floods her face and shoulders and arms, she knows big bottles which hold five gener- | Root Beer that the camera will register a petal-smooth skin— ous glasses . . . either dry or golden. | Sarsaparilla i > of 1 1 important Hollywood ac- Thelhi 1 e guards her skin carefully with this e big hattles hold more’. ... yet White Birch daintily fragrant white soar the cost is small. DIAMOND GINGER ALE CO. Waterbury, Conn. Dismond Fizz [ She says: “I have innumerable French 5 S e soaps=~-but never have I had anvthing like Lux Sparkling Water Toilet Soap for keeping my skin fresh and smooth." 5 generous- glasses 20¢ | Lux Toilet Soap + 5¢ deposit First Siceeping Hollywood — then Broadmay and now the European Capitals . . . lo¢

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