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Show I , 4 l ,J " j , ' " ' fAIltD HO CiUniiHTtO Y IHC CCMSIITlt Oil (-USLIC IMOA- I mtiow w Am i hot oh rnou crHTmi Hcwa photo aiavier, I ' IS LEADING AMERICAN TROOPS IN GERMANY j Major-General Dickman, wHo is leading the American troops now entering upon German soil. General Dickman is shown talking with j correspondents in France. - - '-'' ' " I j ''L.V '.'5 ' ''''' 5' I '&, -c --sL v ; . H . ciMTBAi mwi rnoTO icnvicc. sew yoak.' I QUEEN WILHELMINA OF HOLLAND I The internal trouble in Holland is causing much anxiety in European official circles. The Queen is beloved by her people and when she I recently rode through the streets to greet the riotous mobs she was cheered on every thoroughfare. Photo shows the Queen on her favorite I horse. LEST WE FORGET This is a reproduction of a German, not a . French painting. It represents a scene in the historic palace at Versailles when Bismarck was imposing the terms upon France after the defeat of the French in the war of forty-seven years ago. Much of the familiar Hun paraphernalia parapher-nalia is in the picture. Bismarck wears the Iron Cross, "and the Prussian helmet is there. On the floor may be seen "scraps of paper" not so great a feature of history then as now and on one of them rests the heavy foot of Bismarck. The moment chosen by the German artist was that when Jules Favrc and Louis Thiers, the French plenipotentiaries, had been sunk into the abyss of despair by their realisation that their was no hope of obtaining modification of the severe and humiliating terms being forced upon them by their cruel adversary. Their is shown in an attitude of physical and mental collapse at the horrors from which his beloved country cannot escape. Now that the day of atonement has come, the Hun still animated by the same brazen insolence, untempcrcd by defeat is trying to evade the re-enactment of this scene of Versailles at Potsdam, with himself in the role of the vanquished instead of the conqueror. . J - - - bqitiih ornctAL photo&raph , COPYHIOHT U10OW003 A, UNOt V OOP. H, V RETURN OF THE BELGIAN ROYAL COUPLE TO BRUGES British official photograph, the first to arrive in this country, of the entry of the King and Queen of Belgium into Bruges. After being occupied by the Germans for four years, the liberated inhabitants almost, went wild with the sight of their hero king returning to their city. The photo shows the King and Queen' entering the square. The couple arc in the immediate center of the photo. On the extreme left is Brigadier General The Earl of Athlonc,- on the extreme right Admiral Sir Roger Kcycs. The royal party is saluting the Belgian flag, which has 1-cen raised for the first time in four years in the city. -j ; ; ; , ,, " ---- central uzt rnoio 1 service. Ntw Yooif. , t l A SCENE IN THE AERO WORKS OF UNCLE SAM IN PHILADELPHIA f I . Uncle Sam's Naval Department certainly has performed wonders since J '. i our entrance into the world war. The amount of aircraft turned out by us 1 5TfSvS?JS5S fWWM il ' during our neriod of the war was enormous. The photo gives one an idea ; J 1 tlie number being completed at the end of the war at the U. S N. Aero i & fPS Statin Philadclphi3' Pa- ; !: f CIHTRAL NCWI PHOTO UftVICC NtW.VOKK. jflltf- v23nj BRITISH KING AND. QUEEN VISIT AMERICAN WOUNDED The King and Queen of England together with other members of the British royal family recently visited the American Base Hospital at Dartford. They chatted with and cheered the Yankee boys who were convalescing convalesc-ing in the various wards. ' ' 1 JetMTBAL mwi photo tcnviecv mw vop.k. J DEMOBILIZATION STARTED AT CAMP DIX, N. J. The boys at Camp Dix, N. J., started the task of turning in their guns and other equipment after talks by Secretary Baker and General March. Group from left to right: General March; Secretary of War Baker; -Brigadier General Wm. Scott and General Hugh L. Scott. our entrance into the world war. The amount of aircraft turned out by us ; i during our period of the war was enormous. The photo gives one an idea ; of the number being completed at the end of the war at the U. S N. Aero i jj Station in Philadelphia, Pa. ; ': J C1HTOAL HEWt PHOTO ttWWCt. HtW VPS. j , " NEW WORK FOR OUR DISABLED HEROES , j Disabled men of the United States services are being instructed in Mcjjp motion picture machine operating at the American Red Cross Institute IjJ. in Nov York. Our photo shows a disabled soldier receiving instructions in the use of the movie camera. ijji. . : - " -. -1 l , AMERICAN RED CROSS, WASHINGTON II1 , The comnletcd building of the American Red Cross in Washington n is one of the handsomest structures in the Capital. Though it wa. fll'. ample size for pre-war needs, it was necessary to provide several urn gg. its floor space in additional temporary quarters back of the permanc mm building to take care of the vast amount of war work. ju Hj ,' IBM i M |