Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 187, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1926 — Page 7

NOV. 11, 192 b

ALONG THE MARNE EDAY-YESTERDAY (Continued From Page 1) the river front are holed by the Seventh’s bullets. Humdrum Resumed With the exception of a ruined house here and there, few traces of the war remain in Chateau Thierry. It has resumed its humdrum life os if the World War were only an incident in its thousand years of -existence. The Marne salient, that triangle measuring, roughly, forty miles on each side, where the current of the war was turned, and where a quar-ter-million Americans fought and suffered 30,000 casualties, is largely reconstructed and repopulated. Raw new buildings stand awkwardly in the old-time backgrounds and among the ruins. Vaux, which you remember as a mound of stones; Belleau, Torcy, Lucy-Lee-Bocage, where the church is a neglected ruin, a clock still thirteen minutes till two, a

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boureschcs—all well remembered by of the second and New England divisions—are isolated country hamlets, silent, except for cackling of hens and bleating of calves. Eight years’ growth of underbrush in Belleau wood is being cut away, in accordance with the Belleau Wood Memorial Association’s plan to restore the wood to its 1918 appearance. Today half of the 150 acres, whers 1,000 Americans were killed and 7,321 wounded. Is cleared. liodies, St ill There Grim mementoes of the killing are exposed and occasionally the remains of Americans and Germans are found. About fifty American bodies remain hidden in the matted brush. Steel helmets with gaping holes are found, strips of uniforms, sodden shoes, rusted rifles, smashed machine guns, littered cave-in trenches and shallow “fox holes.” On the roads toward the Vesle, the villages are mostly rebuilt. At Clerges, captured by Michigan and Wisconsin troops, the steel votertank, perforated by machine gun bullets, which thousands of you saw, still lies beside the road. Faded German billeting signs remain painted on walls. Tile Roosevells have erected a memorial watering trough at I’hamery through which Michigan and Wisconsin boys chased the Germans. Quentin fell and is buried near by. It hears Theodore Roosevelt’s words: “Only those are fit to live who are not afraid to die.” Fismes. where New York. Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania troops had bloody fighting, is about 90 per cent reconstructed in chalky stone. The town hall Is still a mass of splintered masonry, showing marks of thousands of machine gun bullets. I Cultivation Risky From Rheims, many miles across the Champagne, stretchek a blighted strip of desolate wilderness, churned by shell-tire, withered by gases, tangled with barbed-wire, studded with stumps of shell-blasted trees.

Here and there, peasants have cleared a few fields. But cultivation is risky, and some are killed by striking buried shells. Five laborers were blown to pieces a few weeks ago. Many villages In this?, region are exterminated forever. Perthesleshurlur and hurlus, e.re only piles of rubble. No human being lives within miles. You men from Texas and Oklahoma, and the Second and Rainbow division, the latter from twenty-six States, have vivid recollections of these places. The Argonne Forest is slowly obliterating Its multilations. Thick brush covers the trenches near Four De Paris, the Hindenburg line is overgrown by tall weeds and thistles hiding the blasted chunks of masonry. The dugout have fallen In. The deep shell-holes on the devastated crest of Montfaucon can be seen miles across country. Vouquois is a livid scar bare of vegetation. The tomato and tobacco cans you flung aside are still half-buried In mud. The faded first page of a

jfii. IVIaSS of yj wafoSTvo. OUR LEASE IS UP! WE MUSIGEI OUT! There Is No Way Out of It —Everything Must Be Sold —Not to the Highest Bidder 1 py T° The People Os Indianapolis And Marion County M Selling Out GOING OUT OF BUSINESS! I 1 AAfB F. AND GET YOUR SHARE OF THE BARGAINS LET NOTHING KEEP i M Colne 1 LU?¥lt: Y °U AWAY—BE IN LINE—BF,.ON TIME! ACT QUICK! THE SITUA- Lj rVUUI OdICS B w TION ADmITS NO DELAY. K r nmnJ)nv WE MUST SELL OUT EVERYTHING f Sale Conductors jfjj | MU’**'* SOUTH SO COME AND BRING YOUR FRIENDS YOU OWE IT TO YOUR POCKET- I llllNnl - SALE STARTS | book T 0 GET YOUR FULL SHARE of the bargains in | street I Friday |4) Army Goods, Shoos, Blankets, Roincoots, | Ev„hm S m... b.s.id | NOV. I L j Leather Coats, Sheepskin Coats, Underwear, Pants, Breeches 8 RUBBER BOOTS—ARCTICS—IN FACT EVERY THING YOU NEED FOR THE WINTER USE—COME AND BUY At 9 A. M. jp t— - - Now Is the Time for You I ] Men’s Dress Men’s Leather Palm Garters Alarm ar j. Army to Save—Come and Bring N 1 Hafldkef- SOX Wool SoX, Cloves, ValiiA env Clocks, CAV Belts Your Friends—Hurry! .|| ! chiefs 3c n” in D 11 n $1.50 value MX, ’ | 8 j Toc v!f u r 7c Pair 29c Pc 19c Pr. 11c Pc 59c 89c 8c Pr. 3c Ea.

Extra Specials MEN’S OVERALLS One lot of men’s extra on* quality heavy weight M £ J bib overalls; $1.50 S H ’ value. Selling out. Pr.. ■ MEN’S UNION SUITS Heavy fleeced union suits for men. $1.50 Mm value. Selling out .... MEN’S SWEATERS Roll collar, 2 pockets. S2OO value. Selling out a at S Men’s Corduroy Pants $4.00 values, in all . wanted, sizes. Selling N M out at ' £* a U MEN’S WORK SHIRTS Extra quality full cut mmm chambray work shirts, all sizes, SI.OO value. . J E _ Selling out at SHEEPLINED COATS Coats are made of se- _ lected pelts, moleskin C yF& shell. $12.00 values. V AjfiSelling out w ■ ARMY 0. D. PANTS All wool, sizes 32 to 35: $6 value. Selling B 4# out , faaQJ ARMY O.D. BREECHES Reclaimed, but they are £ gfl &'A all wool. While they Jp g J last. Selling out | J Men’s Heavy Overalls Heavy 220 denim, hard wearing, full cut over- f wW alls, $1,75 value. Selling EXTRA SPECIAL! Heavy wool, rope stitch , sweaters, $5.00 values, ■■ fA heather colors. Selling *r

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

love-letter from a Cincinnati girl to a boy hatneri Henry still lies in a dug-out near Avocourt, where the Ohio division jumped off to drive through the Hindenburg line. Where is Henry today? The narrow ravine where the “lost battalion” was cut off and suffered 370 casualties among its 564 men, is 1 a dense thicket. Only a small painted signed marks it site. At Vienne-le-Chateau, the house where the New York division had headquarters in the cellar, is repaired. It is a restaurant. The Seventy-Seventh’s cook’s belligerent penciled warning "Kitchen, You Keep Out,” Is still on the door. Varennes, captured by Kansas and Pennsylvania boys; Cheppy, where the mud was so deep, captured by Missouri and Kansas troops, are mostly reconstructed unpretty rural hamlets, incongruously new, the section of the Hindenburg line near Avocourt, where the Ninety First —Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, Nevada, Montana.

Will Be Like Wasting Money to Stay Away From This N i Selling Out Sale. Necessity Knows Law. We Must Sell Out 500 Pairs Men’s Odd Pants AT LESS THAN HALF SALE COST $2.00 Heavy Mens $3.00 $5.00 Dress Men’s Khaki anls ants PANTS PANTS 5 1.19 *1.69 *2.87 97c We Must Sell Out —Gome! Hurry—Get Your Share of the Bargains

Leather Coats All the Go This Season Genuine All-Leather Coats, Wool Blanket Lined. These Coats Never Sold for Less Than $15.00. While They Last. Qf Selling Out Price. vD BOYS*’ SHEEPSKIN COATS 4 Pockets, Belt All Around. OQ $8.50 Values. Selling Out. CORDUROY BREECHES Double Knee, Double Seat. d*o £7 Full Cut. $4.50 Value <^u*Ui Men’s Sheepskin-Lined VESTS Moleskin Top, All Sizes. Leather Sleeves. $12.50 Value. AQ Selling Out i|)D.vO Men’s Random UNION SUITS Heavy Ribbed, Mixed Random, Rayon Trimmed. All Sizes. $2.00 (J* “1 OQ Value. Selling Out luv Gillette Razors, 11c Shop Caps, 7c Sheepskin Moccasins. Reclaimed Hip Boots. First d| |Q Selling rfQ quality out I U Hunting Coats, $3.97 Huntnlg Knives, $1.39

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Wyoming and Utah men—smashed through. Is about as you fellows left it, so Hindenburg himself would never recognize it. The great hills around Verdun are barren scenes of desolation rovered with dead weeds rustling in the winds. Here 1,050,000 men were slaughtered. The hones of thousands are churned into the soil. Man’s devastation has defied even nature’s reparation. In material reconstruction from Switzerland to the channel. France has done vast work. She has expended sixty-seven billions of francs. More than fifteen billions are still required. Five hundred and forty thousand houses and farm buildings of 867,000 destroyed or damaged are entirely reconstructed, and 12,000 of the 17,000 public buildings, 3.224 miles of 4.061 damaged or destroyed to stop a corn in one oat Take Laxative BltpMO QUININE Tablets. The Safe and Proven Remedy. (The First and Original Cold and Grip "ablet.) Signature of E. W. Grove on to. box. 30c. Advertisement.

railways and narrow guages, 34,100 miles of roads of 36,394, 5,000 bridges and tunnels of 6,150. But for many, many millions living today, there is no reparation, no replacement. Their losses are outwardly represented by acres of white and black crosses. Strained faces and tear-dimmed eyes of visitors here give only a hint of the load of sorrow these places mean. 3 HURT IN ACCIDENTS Three men were injured in two accidents investigated by police Wednesday night. The officers say William Craig, 56. of 2642 Daisy St., was intoxicated and driving a horse and wagon without lights, on the left side of Harding St., near Kentucky Ave., when an auto driven by Albon Miller, R. R. C, Box 693, ran into the horse. The shaft pierced the windshield of the auto and fractured Miller's arm. He was taken to city hospital. Craig was thrown from the wagon and slightly Injured. After he was

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Cotton Blankets Cotton Blankets, Dark Color. $4.00 Values.

Aviator Leather '7Q Helmets, $1.50 Val. I 7C All Leather Puttees, Selling <P| Q 7 Out at .... nDI.OI Men’s Khaki Coveralls, $2.50 Value. d*| OQ Selling Out . . . . O Men’s Khaki Work CQ_ Shirts, Dollar Value Men’s Fancy Plaid Domet Shirts, $1.50 Value. 7Qr Selling Out I rC Men’s Ribbed Suits, $1.25 Values I /C Army Campaign Hats Selling Out. . .U/C FIXTURES FOR SALE

treated at the city hospital he was slated at the city prison. Mohameb Jowat, 203 Indiana Ave., | was taken to the Indiana Christian , Hospital, Wednesday night, injured j about the legs and body. Police say | witnesses to an accident at 203 In- | diana Ave., told them Jowat stepped , from the curb towards a safety zone, i and was struck by an auto driven by Miss Jessie Garrett, 331 Northern Ave.

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Indian Blankets Large o*7 Size p£.Q 4 Army All-Wool BLANKETS. $3.94

Athletic Union QQ Suits, 75c Values. . udC Men’s Corduroy Winter cap*. an r Selling Out Ul t Lunch Kits With Thermo Bottle. OQ Selling Out at. . O. D. Army Shirts, Lined Chest, Double Elbow. Selling <PO AA Out p£.uJ Yellow Slickers, All Sizes. $6.00 Values. d*Q f>n Selling Out .... vD.OI Painters and Paperhangers. OVERALLS Triple Stitched, $1.50 Values. Selling 69c Thermo Jugs, Gallon Size. Selling d* “I Q A Out

PAGE 7

Bert Jaffa Harold ’’■ffr 7 N. Illinois St.—l 33 N. Penn. St TIRES and BATTERIES ON CREDIT $ | Down Ml a Week PUBLIC Service Tire Cos. 118 E. New York St.

SHOES! SHOES! All Leather m A SCOUT (PI L Q SHOES I ■ U. S. ARMY Munson m Ji #4 Last, all OO 1 Q Leather ■ I \M ALL LEATHER MOCCASIN TOE SHOES $4.50 Value ■ U U ARMY GARRISON SHOES All Leather OIJ ■O W HIGH TOP SHOES wh L* h " $4.98 $8 Value * VV RUBBER BOOTS Th v e ,r co cs,q Money Can Em in Buy. BALL BRAND 4-Buckle Q J Q Arctics I —— M 1 ■ !■ IrT n ■ MOCCASIN STYLE boot! JSJS 16-in. High $lO Value SPECIAL Boys’ Heavy Sweaters dvv Men’s Wool Lumberjacks Knitted Boltom A 4 $5.00 Value. . . mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmxsmtmmmm k SPECIAL Barker Brand Collars Broken C Sizes, Each vL WE MUST SELL OUT