The Edmond Sun (Edmond, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1922 Page: 3 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Edmond Sun-Democrat and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THE EDMOND SUN
r 4
!l
r f V
Li
l
AT GRAVE OF HIS SOLDIER BROTHER IN FRANCE
’ f t i
"V'Vv-' ‘A
r
' li-i t 1 '4- c-'
r -
w - ' w ' i' '
v4iatm2® v
- -
- --
A view of American cemetery in Franc showing Corporal Harry McLaurhlin of th On Hundred and
Sixty-fifth infantry (old Sixty-ninth of New York) at tho fra of h-e brother Daniel who d ed of wounds re-
ceived at Chat au Thierry ALL tho graves of our fallen heroes are marked with cards stating the name of the
dead soldier his regimeht and the date of his death
BRAVE HEARTS
THAT LIE IN THE
BELLEAU WOOD
Thy deep
But cannot die
‘For now the world la all their own
And led by thoughts our brave have
eown '
Till Might haa bowed nor could
Withstand the force that atood
Secure and safe God wrought
Through stormy time they fought
And now they lie
In eleep
Alloa ! Alin I I Ihioli !" crtd
Ih French territorials streaming back
through the Second division of the
American army which hod Just come
fnrwrd In support and relief “Fly I
Fly I The Hun I" they shouted
“Kctrenf h — II ! We have Just ennie
Iet (he lioche retreat!” culled hack
an officer 1 d the American force an he
and Ida men rushed forward
It was May In France 1918 record
Clara Whiteside In th l'hllndelphlu
Ledger Tlie French line from Sol-
aon to Itclma paralleled In a general
way the line of the ancient road
Chemln de Dame and the French
defense were no strong that the war-
worn gallant French armle w ere using
middle-aged men known a territorial
to hold tills part of the line I’erhap
because of this and alo to make an
effort to apllt the French and English
ariule the German made a great at-
tack on thl aectnr at the end of May
and In five daya had driven hack the
French to oten country following the
great half circle of the Marne which
the Geminn crossed at Domnina on
the ent aide of the aallent at Chateau
Thierry and at Itelleau
There were no trenchea and no
fortifications to far back from the
fighting front and the war wu again
In tlia ojen Foreseeing the purpose
of the Gennnn army to enter a wedge
between the allied armies Marshal
Foch selected American troop to Mop
thl advance which at Lea Mere
farm and at Chateau Thierry had
reached th neareat point to Pnrla — 37
01 lie — since the previous advunce In
191-L
Heroism Commonplace
Th Second American division had
Just taken that part of the line In the
neighborhood of Itelleau while at Dor-
man and Chateau Thierry the First
and Third were holding back the Hun
llocka and crags hid the enemy’ ma-
chine guns but In the early pnrt of
the engagement the French were vir-
tually without artillery protection and
were fighting a hand to-hand action to
atop the Germans until help could
coma In the fighting of May and
early June 1918 the American troops
were without supports and reserves
but the Individual Inltlatlva wa re-
markable HcroUm was a common-
place of the American aoldler In ac-
tion “W need suppllea gas masks Who'll
volunteer?"
"I'll go!" promptly answered a
young sergeant of the marine
BELLEAU WOODS AND GRAVES OF MARINES
4r a-
r' J
VV
r'r
i- ’ T ' -
Part of th camatary at Ball Wood (now tha Wood of tha American Marine) (liowlag th grave al
loaa f tka Maria 1 ewe farce wk gar up tbair lira ia ika kat0 f Balloaw Wood
v- 4
"4
UiivV wV
---4
Ill offer wu acrepted He hud nn
alnio-t uncanny sense of dire lion mol
no one In the company posM-tsetl a bet-
ter knowledge of wood lore All hi
summer had I ecu spent In the oen
and these playtimes of emller dus
had developed iidit(es that now stood
him In good stead The playtime of
Ihe child had become the opportunity
of the man
Creeping cautiously through the un-dcrbru-di
he reached the shelter of
the woods only to hud that he hail
stumbled on ijunrry and a camp of
more than sixty German soldiers
Trembling with excitement he rustled
forward “Surrender!" he ahouted
"The whole Amerleun army 1 behind
me!” Surprised bewildered Ihe men
marched out under cover of the hold-
up und were brought prisoners into
the Aliierh an line On of the majors
In the Second division wrote In June
HI18 of the death In action of this
marine: "He was killed In the Ilols
de Ilellemi by a shell near where my
romuiund post was shortly after
bringing 111 captain out who hud been
wounded In nn attack we were mak-
ing The day before he went Into a
ip mrry and brought out t’0 German
ns prisoner single-handed Much an
act ‘iik for Itself"
It wn by this spirit these men
fought and because of fills spirit these
men won It was a dearly bought
victory hut It atoped the German
ot jistlve and the enemy never again
won a victory or tiindu another drive
Many States Shir Glory
In the little cemetery on the western
edge of Itelleau woods there I hardly
a stHte In th Cnlon Pot represented
There are lino alone from Massnchu-
aetta Ilelleuu woods Just above the
village of Itollenu where the German
sheltered their guns Is now called
the “Wood of the Marine Itrigade"
and what wu once a lovely w ooded hill
Is now a rocky devastation Its crown
of nature's green now row of “tooth-
picks" standing naked to the sky
In Washington In June lirjl the
plan of the ilellenu Wood Memorial
as-ia'latlon to rebuild the town of Itel-
leau by popular subscription was
launched The Itelleau Wood Me-
ntors! association thinks It better to
rebuild
"a hous that hit echoed a baby's
laugh and htld up Ita stumbling
fL"
belter to put a
“horns’ loving wooden arm
around a man and hta wife”
than to erect a abaft of murid cold
to the aky In memory of our dead
The national committee hopes to raise
kTAktiM) and with this money rebuild
the little town of Ilelleuu shattered by
our hoys In their advance on Itelleau
Wood
The plan Iso rebuild the village as
It was with the addition of a heller
church acluMil and with an adequate
water aupply th supervision will he
In the hands of Col Charles It Forltes
director of the Veterans' bureau who
served In Ihe A E F and who la a
noted engineer In civil life Every
rent raised will go Into the rebuilding
memorial aa Ihe organising expenses
are being borne hy a small group of
contributors The names and ad-
dresses of every contributor will be
preserved In the arehlves of the rebuilt
a “w
U 1 1
" -V '
t a
"Marie " or city hull Elghtv-two stone
building are t e restored a well
ns a group of small farms on the hill-
side Tit French government lilts
promised to have nil road put Into
condition a tlrir eontrihutlon ami it
will he guarded hy our Imv who He
Silent III the little green und w Idle
cemetery Jn-t r the way
Homei Moat 0 Rebuilt
In time nature w ill restore to Krnrew
Iter tree and Ihtv-ered loveliness hut
lieltlter time nor nature cun rebuild
shuttered homes Those of us who
have pot been Intimately touched by
the horrors of war or the cruelty of
sudden overwhelming separation from
those we love cun only approximate
the aadnes In th lives of those Shout
ua who have not been so fortunate
Many a mother heart Is hurled and
her enthusiasm deadened It -la only
through some pructh'ul memorial thut
her Interests cun he roused and re-
awaken ed
The field of honor at relleau will be
the permanent Alsne-Marne cemetery
“where a shilling foret of snow-white
crosses will stand aa sentinels over
the inortiil remains of (! of our
hoys" The organisation for this Jne-
inorlal to our dead has Its henthpiur-
ter In Washington with Marshal
Fta-h chnirmau for France John V
Weeks honorary president The pres-
ident I Mrs James Carroll Frazer
vie president of the Navy Ieugue of
the Cnlteil Stules and Vice I'leshlcnt
Coolidge us a member of the national
committee Mrs Charles lea Is chair-
man for I’ennsylvanln Mrs Theodor
W Iteath acting chulrmtin Gen W
T Waller executive secrelury Mrs
Helen Foster secretary
How Our Boys Went Into Action
Mr Heath revisited France lat
slimmer and went over til the ground
lit the neighborhood of Relleau At
Lei Mores furm she made the ac-
duulntanc of a young Frenchman who
had been severely wounded at the Hat-
tie of the Marne “He had witnessed
the advance of the American troops"
Said Mrs Iti-ath "anil his acrount was
So graphic ami bore such Icstlaiony In
the truthfulness of the American cor-
respondents who had Covered the ad-
Vance of the Amerleun army In IMS
and described the troop In action ut
itelleau thut I feel I should tell It til
you ns he told It to me
“‘Those men were magnificent nui-
dainel They had taken off their couts
and had pinned to their shirts a pop-
py As they rushed forward they
yelled ami madaine as they fired —
the Germans went lilplty Imp I lilpity
hop' This was the only English word
thut Frenchman knew but It wua the
most expressive English word I have
ever heurd It does seem Incredible
that our hoys should have been so
careless with their lives” continued
Mrs Heath “hut I have no reason to
doubt the truth of the ntnn's word
enelally as It corroborated the ac-
count of our own correspondents at
the time"
Tills memorial at Itelleau la to b
established to thna boys— our hoys
to their idealism to tltelr heroism Hint
brooked 110 barrier It Is to b a me-
morial that will give to the people of
thl part of France a practical expres-
sion of tie good will of the American
people as well as a national tribute to
the men whose “souls shall he where
the heroes ure" und whose memory
hulj “shine like the morning star"
WHO FELL THERE
" T J ! i:r :?
1 ' s 1!
SUITS FOR SUMMER’S NEEDS
HATS FOR BRIDAL CORTEGE I
xi-L il-ix il ill ill i!li iLu iLli ilU 1! iLU u
STREET clothes or "tnlbr-nmdes"
have become so dlvcrsllicd In style
that they must he classified as two-
pits' aulls three-piece suits enpe-
atilts coat-frocks one piece dres-e
and no one knows wluit next Each
of these divisions hits Its own story
hilt that of the twiv-pleee suit Com-
pel most attention none of the oth-
ers bus the suiiie wlde-spreml follow-
ing The story of the two-piece tnllnr-
mntle Is long and Interesting It be-
gins with plain utility stilts for
atreet or country tr travel and end
'‘Y'P'i
M A?VVg-
SUMMER SUITS
with formal suits that draw style In-
spiration from many sources and go
their Independent way wherever they
will An example of pnch of these I
shown here and that of the utility
suit at Ihe left Is typical of nearly
all such suits while that of the cos-
tume suit at the right sptuka fot It-
self alone Tweeds und homespuns
In the spring stvlnv have not
eclipsed the twills trlcotincs roreitn
ami serge that are always with us
hut they have managed to occupy a
good part of the horizon They were
Introduced early In ninny new spring-
tint colors ami they mail an In-
stant success They are made with
plain skirts and long smartly tailored
couts without adornment other tlinn
a few buttons or occasional braid
binding or a little simple stltcldng
Tltn suit lllust ruled Is In tun tweed
and expluins why eviry woman wants
one
Th auminery mlt at the right
with loose hip lctuPt coat ami wide
sleeves Is evidently a Chinese In-
spiration with embroidery of silk In
a motif that Is repeated on the
straight blouse which la made ex-
W!-
A '
' 1 i : a u
ENCHANTING WEDDING MILLINERY
pressly lor th suit In a vlvhl con-
trasting color It tells little of rivals
In Its own class hut' entices u lo
Investigate for utirxdves among atilt
t lint will repay and t harm us
In the matter of Vcoiidngne she
Widely varied styles In formal suit
ar a great advantage and every
woman may look for a t'pe that seems
as If made especially for her If she
doesn’t find It among the numerous
twopleee models she will run across
It somewhere in the collection of
other “litlllcur" Every woman
Should possess I plain utility suit und
the next most useful article In her
wardrobe la a dressier atilt
The heart of th bride her maids
ami milliners ar all aet a-flutter i
when the momentous question ol
headwear for her attendants comes
up Tlo-y ull know that Ihe sucees
of a beautiful pageant depends upon
Ita crowning glory and eaelt maid
pray for a becoming hat— one that
will do nil that u hat run do for fall
faces The genius of milliners glow
In the ereatlmi of lovely things t"f
grout occasions thut cull for the plc-
tureiue anil leave their fancy un-
hampered They revel 111 airy ma-
terial graceful sha'pes beautiful
colors and muk th most of such
opportunities
— v -rg '-r"
k r V
w
?
m
IV s
WIDELY VARIED
In the group of hats shown her
maids will find cause for rejoicing
They reveal the fine hum! of the artist
who know how to take advantage of
the mode Htid liianlpulnt It to suit
the occasion und to Insure hecoiu I it g-
liesa They are a tluttcrlng lot and
Include the beloved luce hut and B
'jrown nullities model which fushlon
smiles upon When thjs year's brides
luuld hat Is not In a mle color or
white It Is hceiiuse It is running after
one of two new favorites — beige und
wood brown The pretty model at the
low it right In the picture Is a triumph
of hrovvtt ii ltd silver In whleh brown
nnillnes veils a soft braid rrown ami
ailver litre hr I tit and brown grapes
droop front a clmu of silver lace
The white lint at the right with
faring of cldffon tiiukc a pretty back-
ground for various (lower trimmings
set on the hrlm It Is shown with a
cntlur of sliver-edged ribbon and a
wreath of llltle fruit and flowers
Snmlt round head set around th
crown repeat whatever color Is shown
for the collar and facing Head ami
ribbon trimming of a different sort
provide the only color mi t lie bat with
b -
0 x
' l
hrlm of llllles of-the-vnlley posed ov
a transparent undcrhrlm Hair braid'
ailver tinsel and georgette make th
hut at the upper right with the soft
crown and floppy I rim dear to the
heart of hrl Icsmahls Grapes In
silver and s color dangle from the
hrlm Organdie appeals to the d
signer id bridesmaids’ lints ami It used
to make large flowers that are posed
on Ihe brims of lace or other trans-
parent hats ami silver rllbou 1 111
Itienscly effective with them
4
CPTfeOlff VQTUM IWtfU
The Lloyd M'
Company
As t4 1
KINGPIN
PLUG TODACCO
Known as
“tliat good kind”
STry it— and you
will know why
TO lAtlHMtcwUlItT lot U NT
roK Mill! lOl DON'T M N T
If you are t r 0 of (urtn 1ruUtry arul nt
lo "litt oiir inn I bvl1niks I -r Ilian
li Irt tte ai“ u i flirt' tn tltn
I y t ntc p rip-ry (hat Ui -y y-nj l‘e on
Or ifi"‘"iitiii rtiit or gn'n- w it ii i t) t rn
till -jr h i I h- ri-nr tl i Od m 1
tiifi with v 1 1 ii Ii l itjflii ill' own-'
if x iii h hsva k-'iiu’M nt f-f
firni lv( ni initt Oi priui-iii of m dl
for voti
( A Mmire Ill N' DeerlHirn M( ( hlrna til
DAISY FLY KltLER7x!VN7uw
1 - 1 ALL 41 fl S
i U ALL 41 fl S
- n if J notrwim ntJ
w ’f ! T w f vnut ft
P'J vj s' r ti cf t i il cx
r
t2£f2SaSX
a I —-- — pr p a
Bamjiaj iM Um Am brook
ilya H T
Cuticura Soap
Imparls
The Velvet Touch
Saa ZSc Oialwmt 2S 50c Tlcaa 25c
Your Hair
qtirhly iwi II a4 briny bnrh nil it orroJ
m urfitl lunr1npT Al el! fl rlrn ' 7-
eiml Crva HL-LLUV ( MLMfHLV TLIN
W N U- Oklahoma City No 21922
Insanity Laid to Microbes
' After mere t tut 11 twenty yen ra'
work suinng lunuths nn K'llnbiirgh
ilii'tnr lias come tu the conclusion
t tint ninny forms a( insanity ar
cittiseij hy tlie nctlon of m'croliea
No Labor Savad
“Why did you quit going around
with thut labor-saving device?"
“Hud to work ton hard trying to
sell It"
WARNING! Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin
Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets you are
not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians
over 22 years and proved safe by millions for
Headache Colds Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain Pain
Accept only '‘Bayer” package which contains proper directions
Hndy of i2 tablet— AUo bottle of t4 and 100— Dnigijta
! (fee tre airfe of Brr fcUaefeftvro ef lf'neetleeidMtor ut BxUeyUceeia
rptmoiuorioniiEj
Thedford’s
p (Vegetable)
S Liver Lleilicine
dr
onomoniomoniomo
—
rjNEnSMlTlT
41V V Ta ill w
If ChillTonic
Wards Off Malaria and
WHY DRUGGISTS PECOMMEKD
SWAMP-ROOT
For many years dmgit bav vnteketf
with much intertt th rtmurkuliic record
maintained hy Dr Kilm-rt Sxa-nplUot
the frvat kidney liver end bUddrf
cm
It U phyniciao'e prcriptinii
£wmp-Ioot ia e atrDrthrninf mdW
cine It h ! the kuhirsa liver and h lad-
der Ho the work bature intended the y
hould do
Swamp Root baa atood the tret of years
It anld by all druptfU'ta on ita mnl
and it nhould help you No other kidoiy
m fu in haa ao many frirnda
I aur to yrt bwau p Hiot and atari
treatment at nnoe
However if you arih firat to teat Ibid
reat prepnmtmn nd tD renta to Dr
Kilmer A Co Ihnwhamton N for
artiple Lottie U hen writing l aura aod
UteQiioo thu paier— AdvertiHvment
Golden Cwqeat Hatched
tlriH f’s fithcr k'cps it fl U ( find
KtiiiitUft Ids rurt Itoliiitow county
furm but (ni u pi:dl In Columhud
Ink'll a lmd mi4 rNily to turn over
D 1 1 tt'c Mud tiMinim for cuim-Ji riiiilniC
to Stilts Murnor Shf nmk llin mi
Uii1ijIiiich er “The Weiner of llnve-
loe" In her KUia'IMli ehiSK u n I she p h I
I V till wonder (he stoiy of IU tfoldeu
’ kuhp'Mh fr nil of her father' irulneat
1 w cp of u dull ruy color Then tt
'time euine uud liniee deierildfo the
ihiT'a Jny with Mm k’'ld tieee4( wrote
bravely: “Thut iumin Sdm wh
bill by for It hud hutched a new hnnal
of H'ten uhu n- to udl to liU tbx ker
— ludjilnlMiliM New 1
Tough
Twii ncgr'ss were lying behlml a
pmklng cum un tin tlucks nt l’ret
Inking tie luliur nut nf t lie lillcgeil
lilmr luittilliin Sthl nne hnit'-t fully :
' liny Alt entiles rum a tnugli hreeit
My nle him n tliiiie cut his nnils wlf
a ax nn' hru-li his teef wlf a tile"
“Hull ain't so tnugli Mult nie run n
ant a pi u ttili-r an' twice a week h
d"ne stiiiv ItlsM-if wlf a blew lurch
— Attieriitin Ieg'en Weekly
Conscienc Bothers Thm
Tlie ruin full upnn the unjust aa
well us tlie Jest hut the unjust (hi lint
enjoy It because of their Irritnting Con-
science A Just man hits pence with
his conscience
SHAKE INTO' YOUR SHOES
And gprtnkl in th fH(-bath AtIkN 4
FiiOTu CASK the ntlnttlr hrelln !
drr for i'einful ftwilrn Hmartint 4t
It prrvnte tiiia’re end eore pot and tehee
th Bitne out of r-rne end bunlone Alver
we Allan s 4'ooi4:e to hrwn in ne hoe
and ninf the till of fret without M
Ac) — Advert larmrnt
T roubU-Seeker
Rom people cross bridges befor
they are reached others go to tha
trouble of building bridges where It
Isn't likely there will ever he any
water
Fnnwy linens are th pride of every
housewife Keep them In that condi-
tion hy ulng Itcd Cross Hull Blue In
your laundry At all grocers — Adver
tlscment
Th Safest Plan
“How did tlie criminal evade the de-
tective so long?" “Why he rented a
room In tlie same flat with him”
Not Only For
Chill and Fever
But Fin General Tonic
Restores Strength Try It
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The Edmond Sun (Edmond, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1922, newspaper, May 25, 1922; Edmond, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1746373/m1/3/?q=%22United+States+-+Oklahoma+-+Oklahoma+County+-+Edmond%22: accessed July 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.