Walter Hagen and two other players demonstrate and play golf in the United States. Walter Hagen demonstrates several different shots from varying terrain. Water in the background. Ball roles into the hole and Hagen takes it out. Hagen hits the ball from a sand bunker. Hagen is joined by two other players and the golfers tee off. The course is likely Oakland Hills Country Club, where Walter Hagen was the first club professional beginning in 1918.
The Versailles Treaty is signed in Paris, France. The gate of the Palace of Versailles opens. Sculptures, columns and fountains in the palace. U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and Italian Prime Minister Vittorio Emanuele Orlando get off cars and enter the Palace of Versailles. All dignitaries sit in the Hall of Mirrors at the palace. President Wilson, Prime Minister Clemenceau, Prime Minister Lloyd George and Prime Minister Orlando pose after signing the treaty. Seals in the book of the treaty.
Exterior view of U.S. Capitol building. Senator William Edgar Borah and Senator Hiram Johnson, both of whom oppose the Versailles Treaty, standing outside the Capitol Building. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee, including Henry Cabot Lodge, seated around a table.
U.S. President Thomas Woodrow Wilson in the United States. View of White House. President Wilson gets onto a train. People stand around him. The train moves. People gather to greet their President. Wilson bends and shakes hand with people standing beside the train. The President and Mrs. Wilson sit in a car and wave to the people. He tips his hat. Children sitting at the side of the road with the flag of the United States. The train moves. Wilson in the car.
The Palmer Raids in the United States during the so-called "Red Scare" period. Police in New York City arrest men and women, suspected of being anarchists and radicals. Police wielding clubs raid their homes, arrest them and place them in police vans. The arrested suspects are taken to Ellis Island by ferry for deportation.
View of soldiers with automobiles in an American Motor Transport Corps Reception Park, in France, during World War 1. A general, in a trench coat, is being escorted by another officer as he examines automobiles in the park. atop the main garage, the letters, "M.T.C." and "Motor Reception Park" are painted. The general's car sits with driver, awaiting him. It appears to be a Locomobile touring car, and bears the identification number: 1111. (Note: The American Expeditionary Forces Motor Transport Corps (M.T.C.) was formed out of the Quartermaster Corps on 15 August 1918. As the name implies, Reception Parks were where newly arrived vehicles were uncrated, assembled, and made ready for service.) (World War I; World War 1; WWI; WW1)