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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1921)
-tL. THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE ROTOGRAVURE SECTION ''' A a u t d W J A l Vi 1 A 'A J A vt (jrz- V " 6 7 1V-- A i ' - J 9 IL-wjd li r t IN THE BLEACH ERS. An unconven tional picture of Pres ident Harding . and Secretary of War Weeks, seated in a rough pine stand as they interestedly watch a sham battle staged at Camp Ben ning, near Columbus, Georgia, by cadets in training there for West Point, all of them World War vet erans. The President made several speeches as he passed through Georgia on his recent southern trip and in all of them he preached the gospel of better understand ing and pleaded for the obliteration of sec tional lines. International MARSHAL FERDINAND FOCH, the greatest soldbr of the Woild War, the man who prepared France to fight, the great little Frer chman who led the Allied armies to victory, arrives in America and takes New York by storm. Above is the scene on lower Broadway with Marshal Foeh standing in the tonneau of his car, in a veritable snowstorm of tern paper and confetti, acknowledging the welcoming cheers from the thousands who lined the route from the Battery. At the left A splendid rlos"-up of the grim-lipped, seri-ous-:-yd so'dier as he smiled his apprecia tion at th? spk'nd:d tribute paid him on his firs, visit ot the United States. "I am too deeply touched for words," was the way he expressed himself. htti'rnntiotwl C. Curtis p. V I I 'II'M fc 4 ' z " 1 : ROBERT E. TOD, Retired New Vork banker and former Commodore of th Atlantic Yacht Club, who says hel. "play square" as he takes the" helm as new Commissioner of Immigration for the Port of New York. Mr. Tod was navitrating olicer on the U. S. S. Corsair (J. P. Morgan's, vacht) during the war and rose from lieutenant to com mander. Vndermn Left THE PROUD EST MAN IN THE ARMY. Sergt. M. J. Donohue, U. S. A., wounded at Cantigny and awarded the D. S. C., who has been chosen by the War Department to be official mourner for the enlisted men at the Arlington cere monies in connection with the burial of America's "Unknown Hero." Jfodrl Herbert CUNNING HAM AND CAVA NAUGH, sure and it's the Irish jig they should be after doini in Mr. Cohan's "O'Brien GirL" This whirlwind danHn? team is but one of the popular and peppy features that the in imitable producer has put into his "last" we refuse to be lieve him musical comedy at the Lib erty. w 0 1 -"i'iihi CHRISTMAS Thiw Bct irMl I rtta lMortl rt.lowln Holly Kin, WHh vouf name ftampnl In told elit Piim Paid lor M cents; mini plttiOim rtft fir txiyi ftml iclrh kI rhi-m. moufy oriler ur U. l-oiliul. lilr Ullnl llliln 4K liuum. F. 0. IUD. TV Jmi " It V' Skt Ik, Yt Or A Lamp that Can Never De maae Again This is a lamp so intertwined in history with the World War that to future generations it will be as cherished as a sword from Bunker Hill. Notice the symmetrical architectural linos see what a look of stately dignity it has compared with the merely "pretty" lamps you find in the average store. These are not merely lines of ART. Their very look of power and strength which lends such artistic beauty to the lamp also tells the story of the greatest single instru ment of victory in the World War. For the shaft of each of these lamps is itself one of the heroic shells for the famous French-American "Seventy-Fives" 'the gallant "75" with which the Germans never did succeed in coping. OThe shade was especially designed fos the v ictory Lamp by that great painter, Franklin Booth. The whole lamp is considered by artists as one of the greatest artistic achieve ments ot recent years. It is particularly appropriate lor your library table, living-room or den. Only a few lamps still left. No more can be made. Price about one-third the cost of lamps of this class in retail stores. Write today for full particulars, sent free. This lamp can be obtained on small monthly payments, if desired. DECORATIVE ARTS LEAGUE, Dtpi B, I7S Fifth Are., Nt Yk, N.T. 75-A l-rJ (ill A. suggestion from the Galleries of Interior Decoration, Burges.-Na.il Company, fourth floor, northwest. rSr- ', v. j -Itii i! I DOUGLAS SHOE STORE V". t7 lirNo.l6StOmafta x ."VKjs j wtdsren. t rant thfir bcm hd(l 1 a community mailirg list. ; a'.Mactor- to the most 'of them, "z f