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Show THE WORL D'S ' fie 1YtiT fit CloH Rtm~ Dnai'-l itt • Re- GREAT EVENTS ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE u,,_,..,_.........,_,_,..,...,,_,..,...,.........._______ o ----------------~. ltll4rubk SwiG by- Officer of lheMarines ~·>----------------- Editor's Note : This story Is a erose section of the war. As Captain Thomason Is a marine officer, natur4llly the actual names, dates, and places mentioned will bear a definite In activities relation to marine how. Intention, no Is France; there ~ver, to overshadow the rest of the fi ghting American units. This story Ia a Marine story, because the author •s only familiar with the combat ext)erlences of his own men-but every· doughboy who saw service In the war wilt rs:.cognlze these experiences and •ncounters as similar to his own. INTRODUC TION ' Capt. JOHN W. THOMASON, Jr. (I& .... ., die Mdoor <Ill r... Sbldooo ..... 1M k' 5 I{) by tJao Bell bndlcat•. Inc.) Cacao chiefs, whimsically sanguinary, barefoot gene1·als with names like Charlemagne and Christophe, waged war ac-cording to the precepts of the French revolution and the Cult of the Snake. They drank the enu de vie of Haute-Marne, and reminisced on saki, and vino, and Bacardl rum-strange drinks in strange cant!nas at the fnr ends ot the earth; and they spoke fondly of Milwaukee beer. Rifles were high and holy things to them; they also talked patronizingly of the war, and were concerned about rations. They were the Leathernecks, the Old Timers; collected from ship's guards and shore station!'! all over the earth to form the Fourth brigade of marines, the two rltie regiments, detachE-d from the navy by order of the President for service with the American l<Jxpeditionary Forces. They were the old breed of American regular, re~arding the service as home · and war as nn occupation; and they transmitted their t~per and character and viewpoint to the high-hearted vohinteer mas!'! which filled the ranks of the Marine brigade. It Is a pleasure to record that they found good company In the army. The Second Division (United St::;.tes Regular W8R the official designation) was compo~ed of the Ninth and Twenty-third Infantry, two old regiments with names from all of our wnrs on their hattie-flags, the Secoml regiment of engineers-and engineers are always good-and the Twelfth, Fifteenth, and Seventeenth field artillery, It was a division distinguished would It be, perhap In the best taste. And I have written ot: marines In this war because they are the fulks I know about myself. Those battletlelds were very large, and a man seldom saw much or very far beyond his own unit, It he had a job In hand. As a co.npauy officer, I alwuys had a job. There is no Intent to overlook those very gallant gentlemen, our friends, the army. '.rhelr story Is ours, JOB :s' W. THO~!ASO. ·, JR. too. 1@ by l.lolld., lhad. II !;ompa.n7.) The Sepoy Mutiny Attack. -1In the fie>lcs near Marhm:r marines of the First Battalion of the Fifth Seven years after the war, across found an amiable cow. There had the world from France, I met a major who sta1T, general American been nothing In tho way of rations ~f the that day; there were no prospects. w-as on the Paris-Metz road that last week in May, 1918, and saw the boys All hands took thought and designated coing ln. "They looked flne, coming a robust Polish corporal as excut!onfellows, "Tall said. he tn there," er. He claimed to have been a butcher bealthy and fit-they looked hard and in a former existE-nce. He was leading -competent. We watched you going in, the cow decently away from the road through those little tired Frenchmen, when a long gray car boomed up, halt· knew We better. and we all felt ed with the touch of swank that so ething was going to happen-" and Headquarters ~haufl'eurs always afwe were silent ovet· Chilean wine, in fect, and disgorged a very angry a place on the South Pacific, thinking colonel. men. of those days aud those "Lieutenant, what are you doing There is no sight in all the pagthere--" he yelled. •ant of war like young, traiiJed men "Sir, you see, the men haven't had look columns The battle. to colng an~·thing to eat, and I thought, sireolld and hus!nessllke. Each battalion we found this cow wande>rin' around fll an entity, J,20C men of one purpose. -we couldn't find any owner-we'd '!'hey go on like a rh""er that flow!'! like to chip in and buy her-we were are Uniform!! goln' to--" very deep and strong. drab these days, but there are point!'! "I see, sir, I see! You were going of light on the helmets and the bayoto kill this cow, the propf":-ty of some nets, and light in the quick, Rteady worthy French family, You will bear faces, young eyes and the brown In mind, l!eutenant. that we are in creatly daring. There i'S no singingFrance to protect the lives and propveterans know, and they do not sing erty of our allies from the Germansat excitement no Is there much-and Release that animal at once! Your all; they are schooled craftsmen, rations will be distributed as soon as c olng up to Impose their wlll, with possible--carry on-" The colonel det he tools of their trade, on another parted, and four or five 77s crashed nothing Is there and tof of fellows; Into a little wood two hundred yarrls t o make a fuss about. Battles are not up the road. There were more shells •alubrious places, and every tHe in the same place "Hi ! Brother Boche knows that a great many more are must think there's a battery over againcoing in than will come out there !"-"\Veil, there ain't-" the mabut that is along with the job. And rines sat dowb In the wheat and obthey have no llluslons about the job. served the cow, abandoned by a vanglorlIshed French family. There is nothing particularly oOUS about sweaty fellows, laden with "I was a quartermaster sergeant killing tools, t'(>ing alonp: to fight. And once, sir," said the platoon sergeant yet-such a column rf>presents a great dreamily. "I remember just what the ()eal more than 28,000 Individuals cuts of beet are. There'd be fine sirmustered Into a dlvllllon. All that Ill loin on that cow-critter, now. behind tho~e men Is In that column, Mr. Asltby (another flight of 77s burst forgotten, long too: the old hat ties, in the wood). if we was to take that that secured our nation-Brandy wine cow over an' tle her In tha brushsnd Trenton and Yorktown, San she oughten to be out here In the Going Over. Gettysburg, Chapultepec. and Ja!'lnto open, anyway-might drnw tlre . animatE-d and dash ot quality the by Caney; Chickamauga, Antietam, El hell's liable to hit anything, you scores of ~klrmlshf>s nearly every by an especial pride ot service. It know. sir-" year·-in which a man can be klllPd carried to a high degree esprit de "Sergeant, you heard what the dehas Frenchman some which corps, thl' In waR ehap a ever as dead as colonel ~!d. Rut if you think shl''d corpR own your esteeming as fined Argonne; traditions of thing~ endured be safer-l'd RUggelit volunteers. And and· things accompll~hed, such as reg- ant! looking down on all the other by the way, sergeant, I want a piece iments hand down forever; and the corps. And although It paid hen vily of tenderloin-the '!'-bone part--" falth of men and the lo,·e of women; In casualties for the things It didThe cow was duly secnreu In the centper 100 about months five in and that abstract thing called pntrlotwood, men risking their llves there1sm which I never heat·d combat sol- the Seconrt division never lost its pro- by, The Bod1e Hhelled methudically die~~ m!'ntlon-all this pas~es into the fes ional C'ha,·ac1:er. for two hours, and the marine.c were ln soldier!'! trained wl1en 1917, In contart, of forward zone, to the point rPduc1'd to a feurful state of nt"rveswhere war is girt with horrors. An(l the Cnite>d States were at a pt·emlum. "Ts that dam' heifer gonna Jh·e forthe navy of'fererl a hrigade of marin,,s evet·?-" 'fwo of three ldlometers ~ornmon men endure these horrors service In France; It wns regard- away fighting was g"oing on. ToP. lieufot' the with along thNn, ovPrcome and for mtu·lne officers to tl'nant, with his glass, picked up fur, desirable ed and insistent yearnings of the belly the reasonable promptings of fear; ha>e experience In large <•peration~ running flgur!'s on the slope of a hill. with the army; for It Is certain that You caught a flkkl'r, points uf light and In this, I think, Is glory. They tell the tale of nn American cloSE' co-operation betwee>n the army on the gray "'re>en fie! 111-hn ronet~>. tady of notable good works, much es- and the navy 1s a necpssary thing in <kcaslonal wounded F'renclmleh \vanteemed hv the I• cench, who, at the these dnys of far-fiunri hattie lines. dPrl'd bad:, weary, henrdf'd men, very end of .June, 918, vislt!'!l one of the The Briti;;h di tre~s at Oalllp oll is a dirty. They J,,oJ;ed "ith <lull eyes nt crying witnrs to this prineipie. In a thP American. -"Tres mam· nl~. In negoutt~>'s behind field. hospitals Sixth French army. negontte was 11avy transport, therefore, l nited has! BPauconp B che, Ia-" TJ,,. mafighting on the face of the Marne sal- :>tates Ship IlendN·son, The Fifth reg- rines were nt't P~peclallY intt-re><tell. f,_,r 'I' tPir regiment hurl hef'n a Jel!r In tent and the se>cond Am~rkan d'\·i ion, 1 intent of marinrs emt~:Jrl·ed first the with l!ni, .Tune, In France Fran(•e. training . • 'ow they, too, were then in action around the Boi>< de Chateau 1 armed American force~ . The Sixth ctlrty and tlrecl anrl very hun~ry. The of northwest Belle>au, Thierry, was unde>r his orders. Jt hap- marines follnwl'd. The two regiments wm· would get along . . . 1t always pened that OCC'nSlonaJ f'asualties Of coustitutf d the Fourth hrlgade. nne! had. A wPek ago, M<>rnorinl flay, th•·re the ~Iarine brigafle of the SPconfl st·rved in the ~econd divisi• n. Pnltl'!l American diYision. wounded toward Stat<'S Hegular, until th;· (livh:i••n had heen no drill~. 'fhp Scron!l Divithe flunk where Degoutte's own hori- came home, In Augu~t. 1!=119. About sion, up from a tour In the quiet \'erpleasant!· re>:tE'!l trenches, J:on-61ue infantry joined on. were 30.000 marines were sent to F'rance; dun picked up hy French stretclH•r ht>ar- some 14,000 of tht.><:e Wl.'nt 1ls rf>Jtl uce- around Bourmont. Humors of an at· meut;;; to maintain the two rPgiments tack h~· the First cliYislon, at C'untig. ~rs and evuruated to French hospital!'!. And thi!'l lady, looking flown a long, of the Fourth ' ' lgafle. A hrlgudE' ny, tlltered in. Cantl~rny was a town crowded ward, saw on a pillow a faf'e musters some 7,ROO officers and men; up toward 2\fontdidler. • 'ntlons of g ounll'ke the fiercely whiskered Gallic this hrlgnde took pm·t in some very grnphy were the vague t hut It was In tPrestlng eve>n ts. beads there displayed In rows. in the north. where all the heavy the of written have I Hereafter an are "Oh,'' she said, "surely you fighting was. It appea~ed that the marim•s In the war with Germany; Serond was going up to relieve tile .American!" "No, ma'am," the casualty an- how tlwy went up, and what they did F'lt·st. . . . "Sure! we'll relleYe 'em. there, and how some of them c-ame But If they wante>d a fiJ.:ht, why didn't •wered, "I'm a marine." The men who marched U)J the Pnrls- out again. Reing a marine, 1 have the)' let us know In the first place? Metz road to meet the Roche In that . tl'ied to set forth simple tale.s without -We'd a-~howed 'l'm what shock spring of 1918, the Fifth and Sixth comment. It Is unnecessary to write troops c-an do!" (TO I\E CONTINUED.) regirnl'nts of United States marines, what I think of my own people>, nor In were gathered from varlou~ places. the big war companies, 250 strong, you could find every !<Ort of man, from every sort of calling. There were northwesterners with ~traw-col ored hair that looked white against Poor little good boy I Nobody he- !'<'lves and that one or two of then: their tanued skins, and deHca tE'ly spoken ch11ps with the ~tamp of the Ueves In him; everybody dlstru.·ts him. n'H)' even ha\·e become preRidents o1 eaRtE'rn universities on them. There All the wh;e educators and psycholo- banks or railroads or something. Prob were lltrgt'-boned fellows from Pacific gists peer at him suspiciously and ;;ol- uhly we're wrong, but it's a comfort· coast lumb~r camps, and tall, lean emnly announce that he can't possfhly ahle theory, anyway.-Cieve land Plain southE-rners who swore amazingly In be approved of. If he Is tractable and Dealer. gentle, drawling voices. There were obedient they shake their heads dolorOU!>ly and prophesy thut it won't last; hu~ky farmers from the corn-belt, and Sun's uLooming" youngsters who had sprung, as It that he'll do ~ometlting dreadful ltter The phenomenon of the ~<m settln!! were, to arms from the necktie coun- in life to make up for It and ht''d then coming Into view again for a and ter. And there were also a number much hetter he gPttlng his allowunce of diverse people who ran curiously of original sin out of hl"l system while half minute or more Is called "loom to type, with drilled l!!houlders and a he's young, Ingrowing sin bt'lng a seri- ing"-the coming into sight of objects i~ bf:'ne-dPep sunburn, and a tolerant ous complaint. Well, rna~ he. But normally below the horizon-and of IJPn!lillJ: downward the to owing scorn for nearly everything on earth. somPhow, we can't help wondering if objert 'l'hE>Ir speech was flavored with navy it's quite a~ bad as all that. We al- rays of light from the distant words, and words culled from ull tho ways had u sneaking idea that t!Je by "' shadow surface Ioyer of cold, .., dense, air. folk who live on the Reas and the boys and girls who did as they were hel porta where our warships go. In ea!'ly tolcl and got Into no serlo• 1 mischief 'J·ne old-timers blamE' the cus,edne::u hours their tRlk ran from the Tartar :-rew up to be the depen1h1hle, conwall beyond Peldn to the southern sclentlous, industrious men and wom- of the younger generation on everJ lfilan ils. down under Manila; from en who do the bulk of the world's thin~ but heredit:v.-Arkan lioas UazettA Portsmouth Navy yard· • 'ew Hamp- work and do It quietly and efficientl;r,l retroiP'atto must All that Is rmman -.ll lre an<.! ver y cold-to obflcure bush- without rin,lng any bells or blowing any hor1\.s to call attention to them- lt it dQeB not ad\·ance.-Gli>bu n. ~<flllf'kl n~Q !11 <he \\"est Indies. where Look With Suspicion on Too-Good Youth :\Iarlnetti, the Italian futurist poet. au(!dtmlr appeared as the champion of eleetrlc signs and appealed to ~lgnor 1\Iu:;sollni to reconsider the Duce':- de· cision to uholish :,;ky-sign ndve>rt!:;ln~ In the big Italian <'itll's. This cau!'les the Manche~ter Uuardian to remar·k that not only profeLii'Pd futurist poets have found an elenwnt of \'liSt fasdnatlon In electric advertising, When Hupert Ikooke fir;;t nrrlve!l ·in • 'ew York and ~aw the nightly display on Broadw y he was greatly impreg!'ed. "The recurrent appearance and dlsappeamnee of va!'t fiery toothbrushes, medicine hot ties, flaming and immortal celestial unctl'rwear, appeared to him !Ike a nightly confilet of the gods, tlghtlng endiP:'lsly, lnclef'isively for New York." I lne female ftgurt' lmpres!'led Brooke more than the 2\Ionu Lisa. It was "nil &flame against the darkness, h!'aut lfui, arehalc like an Immortal <;ree>k ftgure."-P!erre Van Paasst'n, in the Atlanta Constitution. IN DAYSOF OUR FOREFATHERS Women Prepared Their Own Medicines The wise pioneer women learned to in woods and fields, the remegather FEW pots of grease cost many dies the Indians thousand lives and nearly $200,used. From the 000,000 in India, about bnlf a century rafters of colonial ago, besides inaugurating one ot the houses, bung great bloodiest tragediel! ever enttctcd. bunches of dried roots and herbs. Seventhe to India's history, down t h e s e, in From teenth century, is largely a chronicle sickness, of times ot barbarism, Internecine w11rs, invathe busy mother sions and Odental lntri&"Ue, with a brewed simple and growing Europeun Influence In the power!ul remediea. From roots and 'l'he v11st mo~t accessiule districts. herbs, L y d 1 a E. country was teeming with wealth of Pinkham, a descenda sort that attracted Europe's covetous pioneers, made her sturdy these of ant eye. 'l'he Portuguese won a commm·Vegetabie Compound. The beneficial cial foothold there, only to be driven etrects of this dependable medicine are from power by the Dutch, who In time vouched for by hundreds of women. were crowded out by lojnglish and Mrs. Wm. Kraft o! 2838 Vlnewood Detroit, Mich., eaw a Pinkham 'lidAve., French. Last of au; the l!'rench we1·e in the "News" one day and vertlsement routed by the English, until, by 17611, Could Go No Higher mind that she would glve her up made England prnctlcully ruled Indlu, Clive, After the last g"ame of the 19:.!4 the Compound a trial. At that time she Warren Hastings, Lord Cornwallis and world's ~l'l'ies, which wa;;; played In was Yery weak. "Arter the first botother governors brought the whole 'Vnshlngton. Bucky Harris-youthfu l tle," she writes, "I began to feel better territory either directly or !utllrectly managt>l' of the \Vashington ~enators and ltl<e a new woman after taking six bottles. I recommend It to others and ' under British sway. -was hu~tled into a taxi to join the always keep a bottle In the house." The natives were untrustworthy. munlripal parade. Presently (Bucky Mrs. Gust Oreen of 401 Lincoln Park The Indian potentates whose power tells the story In his hook, "Pinyin~ Boulevard, Rockford, Illinois, found was checked and a horde of fanatics the Gam!'"). the taxi was held up hy herself in a condition similar to that who~;e rellgiou:; rites had been curof Mrs. Kraft. ''I was weak and runa tmfflc polic·eman. writes. "but the Vegetable tailed by the fo1·eign rule were ever "Onlr the Pr!'sldPnt can ~Pt b.\· down," she has helped me and I feel Compound stirring up revolt against their new here," salrl the 1'op. recommend it to all I now. better mast-ers. Hence It was necessary to "2\J an, I f!Ot Bucl·y Harr!~ in thl~ women who need more strength." maintain a large army In India. Eng- bu!'l !" the rlriver eame hack, land could not pare a suffielent force "Why di<ln't you say so first ?'• the of white men for the purpo;;;e, so ortraffic man protPstl'd. "On ~·nur wav !'' ganized native r<'glments, under Brit"Then I knew." acid~ Huc·ky, "that ish officers, and trained tllt•m alon~ re>ach!'d the top." -Knn"'n>l f'lty hnrl J European llnes. '.rhe:;e native> troOIJS healing by prompt application of TimeR. were called Sepoys (from the Persian word ''.·ipahi,'' slgnlf~·ing •·soldier''), Make-up With Airbru3h and proved splendidly efficient In re~ome the>n.trical pcrfot•manee,; nn(l Jn peuh•d campaigns. Thus, by 18flti, all India seemed safe fLIId moderately con- In the movies. It Is often nece><sar~· to tent under British domination. ~rrue, put a "make-up" on n larger portion Accordion's Centenary there were countless fanatics nnd un- of the pl'rformer's body. In ordinary Etude . ays that the aceordlnn 'l'h~> scrupulous natiYe rulers who waited manner of proc!'dure, thiF: reqnlrt>i' I~ this rear eelehrating It!> eentPnan·. only the opportunity to re>bel ; but for considerable time, hut tltP opt'rntlon though It was not till 18:!9 that Dama long time the~· lacked the chun('!'. has been recentl3· hastenP(l h~· thP ll"e inn pro!IIWI!'d the perfected Instrument That same "chance" came aho11'f In of an al!·hrush. The colo1·Ing mutter in Ylenna. Like most Is practicallr sprayed ovE'r the surface an unforeseen fashion. lt wa!; to he covered and much time Is saved sort, this of misfortunes brought about and then augmented by blunders on the part of the BrlliRh government. l:leveral Engllsh regiments hud beE-n withdrawn from northern and ~·entr·al Indiu to ~erv~ In the ( 'r!meun wtu·. haarlem oil has been a worldOthers wt're away In Burmah. These wide remedy for kidney, liver and departures left barely eighteen white bladder disorders, rheumatism, BELL-ANS reghnents available for action. Sevlumbago and uric acid conditions. Hot water eral of the mo!-'t Important ar~enalf! and garri!;Ons were lu elll\r~e of the Sure Relief Sepoys. At ahout this time the Enfield rifle was n!lovte><l for use among ~ HAARLEM 0~ the Sepoys. In loading the rifle it was necessary to LJitP. off the end of thf' These cartridges were cartridges. 25¢ and 75¢ Pks's.Sold Everywhere correct internal troubles, stimulate vital They were also grt>a:-e. with coated organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist pueked !n glazed pavt•r. 'l'he fore>on the original gem.tine GoLD MEDAL. goin):: fad,; seem mere tri fies, yet they hrou~ht on a bloody in~un·N·tion. ~ The S!'poy !'lglmPnts Wt're Ul< de up dropplnw A VOID ltrODI d r U I I lD °1 of :\Iahomet: n~ and Bwldhbt~. A the eyeo soro frOID Alkali or other lrrita\lon.. English n.•ry well knew, the Buddhist · The old almplo remedy and :\1ahometans alike are forbidden tbat brlllltl eomlortlng relief 2Sc, all dr~g(liolo Ia best. by the lllOlit ;;neretl laws of thPtr rt- · Cll7 DaliAllatltel,li...,.Tork handling eH'll or t'atlng tlgion from lJOl'k. At once it was claimed lty ua· the rulers, a~iltltors ami fnnatlc:; that I t Itt• fat of swine wa.· u.-t>ll 111 greasing lH!lH•r·. the gh.zing nwl f'Vf'ry woman th(• cal'tl'itlgP~ lfnl eornplexlun the j. HEMOLA" man. every of ratwn ndm\ 'l'o this was adt!P(I tht' rumor thut thl' produce Jt f o r nnl:r $1.25 n.s t.bOUBtln<.ls of wuwl"D • tt>S' l fy. J HEK HOOKLI>,T. A lk_rourdealcr eeking to force tho,> government W<l , o r write llr. 0. H . llorry Co;, lle;>t. W, :11176 MlchlgiUl Ave, Chicago. natin~ troops to e mhrncP ('lu·i · tlanit~·, own by mnkiug them 'lola to tlteh· "A Beauty Shop in a Bottle Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads stop all pain crPPd. At once ttwatici~m bluzed into Ch • 1 lea l !\.[ns t err·l ec e--Tnt e r n · 1 a nd Ex \ quicker than any other kno~'ll t e r• nl Tr t n nt , H.t j u ve nnUon • t t h . ._ ·t in furious revolt. A deH•nt Christian a t 1Blott1. ~l o n yP ArltG 19.l'nnt N' \\ Mtet '>11ay method. Takes but a minute to quiet could not he more indignant at lwinl! 1'"\\1 - H •. \ l TY ~~~BO I ' \TOHU the worst com. Healing starts at 416 !lllnt"ll Hank li;: Tro • t Hid •., llnml, Fla. eommandPd to stamjl on the eruetf;.;: never it gone is ccm once. When the .. postttun than were the.e Mo!':)('lll wd Hindu comes back. If new shoeJ make the ula.- prko ) h o n e $2. ~ spot "touchy" again, a Zino-pad denltt>es ut tltt' ordt>r tn defil e tlH ir 1 h on atgn Ill. because That's instantly. it ~tops pork-fat. tasting d ar lllllldling ou!H h~· Zino-pads remove the cause-Se\ era! Sevoy regiment,; ref11. e<l to pressing and rubbing of shoes. rt>1ehe tltP <artriuges, nnd P\eu rPDr. Scholl's Zino-pads are medihelleil. They WPre dlslHl!Hit d, and t ht' cated, antiseptic, protective. At all government tardily 'culled iu" the druggist's and shoe dealer's-3Sc. hutPd articles of :unmuuitiou. On May 2, 1'l:i7, a ca\ airy rpginwnt For Indigestion, Dyspepsia, etc. was oruered, hy !'rror, to bite tilt' Relieves Distress after Hurried • gt·ea»ed enrt ridge~. in lo:uling thl'il' Being a Meals or Overeating. uuns. Th<'Y refuf'ed and were forcihlv gonel is gentle laxative, It keeps the dipain on-ehe one Put dbarmed. This WI!~ the ;;lgnal fm· gestive tract workln& normally. gPneral rHolt. At :\leerut, a fe..y His Objection 30c & 90c. · At all Druggists. miles northeast of Delhi, the :5epoys old fine a h su( is his ht>r, fat "llut, wasand towusfolk rose together, G. G. GREEN, Inc. WOODSUI\Y, N.j. sacred the British garrison mul wj1lte fami!~· tt·ee !" "Yl' ·. hut hP c•onw;; ft·om the shad~· residents and mqrched to Delhi. They of it." ~~· dney Bullt>tin. s!c'e 1 W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 19--1927. captured the latter eity and maLle it the headquarters of the mutiny. The whole Bengal presidency revolted and European!'; were maf'sacred whole«ale amid the most un~peakable outrages. •'anP. Sahib, maharajah o:f Blthur, loudly proelalmed his loyalty to the government, but at the firl'lt opportunity went over to the mutineer>~. He bes!eg!'d C'awnpore. On his solemn promhse of .·nfe-conduct the garrison at last surrendered. AR soon as they were at his mercy he murdered them, ma-;sacrlng 210 En;rllsh womE-n and children who had sought refuge In the town. Lucknow nnd other citle!'! garrisoned hy the English were be· Living room, bedrC?Om-kitch en or pantrysieged. nnd throughout northern and upstairs or down-every room in the house central InLlin Brltl;.h rule was nearly can be made bdght and attractive--clean and C'xtlnct. san.tary wi~h I:ing Wall Finish. The goverument at la~t awoke to the Easy to mix-easy to apply-and so economi· cal that a dollar's worth Is usually more than peril. Armies under Havelock, Outenough to decorate the average-sized room. ran, Cam!Jhell and other g(•neruls were Don't spcnJ a oingle penny fOT decorating undl vou l!ent to f:!tnmp out the mutiny. Luckknow more about this remarkable "all tinlst., \Vritc now was relit.>ved wlwn at the la»t toJay for Color Chart ehowlna 19 beautiful colou to choose from and name of dealer ncarc.r you. i<l.::Jo, ancl within 11 ypar the final THE CHICAGO WlllTE LEAD &. OIL CO. F:purk~ of ln~urrectlon were quendtt•d. 15th St. and S. Western A"e., Chicago, Ill. Then the British wreaked fl'urful vengeance on their 11-.?aten foes. 'l'he mutiny brougltt about a radIcal change In l<Jr.~;land's mode of ruling her J<Jnst Indian po!<~e;;sions. In 1 Sit) Be>njnmin Dlsraell, 11remler of Gn•at Britain, fmmecl the "Royal DISTRIBUTOR Titles Aet," making Qu!'en ''lctorla & empre>~s of Jndln, and, Incidentally, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH t;E'curlng for hims-elf the title of earl of Ueacon tl!'ld by way of rewnrd. IA CHAPTER I Poet Impressed With Huge Electric Signs (US~~ !~~m~£~~!~~n~~ Res· FOR OVE R Sure Rel·ef zoo YEAR S QOW MDJ.d1 ~ E L·ANS FOR I DIGESTION Ou allpain instant ly tc h e II EYe Salve for SORE YES D_,Scboll's Zi o·pad s The Ideal Wall Finish -for every Room in the House Wall Fin sh SALT LAKE GLASS 1 PAINT CO. |