Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 15, 18 January 1922 — Page 10
l'AGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, 1ND., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 18, 1922.
"MARY PICKFORD OF SWEDEN" LIK ES HER CIGARET, U. S. CAPITAL LEARNS
Miss SIgrid Holmquist. Sisrrid Holmquist, Scandinavian ;ren star often referred to as "the Mary Pickford of Sweden," is rww in Washington. Miss Uolmcuist sees no barm in the after-dinner xigaret for milady, apparently. MORE CAVE-INS FEARED IN SCRANTON AS MINE COLLAPSE SHAKES WHOLE CITY
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Views of ri-cent cave-in in heart of Scranton, Pa. Above, crowd gazing at edge of sunken district where timbers have dropped into hole. Below, all that was left of one of the houses over the spot after the surface collapsed. The trapping of a score of miners in one of the mines beneath the city of Scranton, Pa., and the sinking of the surface over several acres cue to the caving in of the ground above the mine has aroused residents of the city to the constant danger of a more serious disaster. Several le?ser cave-ins have occurred in the main parts of the city, houses having been wrecked and streets rendered impassable. The.recent cave-in jarred the entire city like the shock from an earthquake. Several men in the Glen Alden mine, below where the cave-in occurred, were killed and many others injured by fallinff coal and beams.
THUMB PRINTS PROTECT DEPOSITORS IN POSTAL SAVINGS DEPARTMENT NOW
PLANS FOR CREATION OF PRESIDENT'S FOREST ANNOUNCED
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Girl depositor furnishing the postoiiice with her hngerpriuu at th Chicago postomce. In addition to the use of a personal identification card which depositors must present to identify themselves, the Chicago postal authorities are now doubly protecting depositors by taking their finger prints. Their finger prints are compared with these records later when they wish to withdraw money.
The pass in the forest between V-T park and Pleasant valley in the
proposed President's forest; an interesting photo of the late Theodore Roosevelt chopping wood in the proposed forest in 1913, and
map of Arizona showing (in black) the location and extent of the
proposed project.
Plans for the creation of the president's forest have been announced by Stephen T. Mather, director of the National Park Service. Three hundred thousand acres of Kaibab forest, a nation-
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al forest reserve north of the Grand Canyon in Arizona, are to be made into a public park. The Kaibab forest was made a game preserve by President Roosevelt during his administration. .
TWELVE SHIPLOADS OF WHEAT TO RELIEVE RUSSIAN FAMINE
He Preferred This for a Time
Stevedores, under direction of relief officials, wheeling grain into one of the boats at a New York pier,
Twelve shiploads of wfieat are ready for shipment from American porta to different points In
Russia to be rushed to the interior to aid the hundreds of thousands of families in the
famine-stricken regions. The photo above shows part of the wheat consigned to Russia.
One Friend Clings to Impressario's Widow, Threatened with Eviction from Home
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Selling milk satisfied Charles Garland (above) at his Massachusetts farm, but he has decided to give it up, return to his wife and accept his $1,000,000 legacy.
THE MOST PERFECT HANDS IN THE WORLD
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"My l'est friend," said Mrs. Hammerstein, above, as she fondled her big collie Teddy In her three-room flat at the Manhattan Opera House, New York, from which he.- stepdaughters, Mrs. Stella Keating and Mrs. Rose Tosetevin, seek to evict her. MANY MEMBERS OF ENGLISH PEERAGE
ARE WAITING TO FACE DIVORCE COURT
That knickerbockers are smart! That they are becoming is a de-
fashion dictators, have decided, batable question. There is no doubt
uui mat ir.ey are oecQmrng vo I these three charming maids, but I are they becoming to you? That is ! the question which each miss must
i decide before entering upon the
'great adventure of wearing them.
- .. . w .1 uivmiui a . . that they are moJest can be de
cided from a lo k at these styki, which are aj concealing as the most modest frock and much more
so than the modern short skirt."
If they are, wear them. If they are not don't even think about owning a pair. The woman who dresses in the latest fads whether they are becoming or not is never well dressed. She might better wear a becoming style of 1850. So bewara of knickers.
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A study of Misa May L. Walsh's hands. Penryhn Stanlaws, who has drawn enough of them to be a competent judge, says that Miss May L. Walsh, a Los Angeles, Cal., telephone operator, has the most . perfectly formed hands in the world. Miss Walsh's hands have netted her many extra dollars aside from manipulating the switchboard at a hotel. She has been called in frequently by motion picture concerns to allow her hands to "double" for those of stars whe3 closeups of their less gifted hand axe wanted. - - -
HOLD ON, YOU DAREDEVIL, LET ME OUT!
Two of the dissatisfied titled couples. At left. Lady Frazer and Sir John Foster Frazer. At riht. Viscountess Rhonnda and her husband. Listed among the 1046 divorce cases the British divorce court will hear in the next few months are a hundred or more involving, titled husbands and wives. Viscountess Rhonnda seeks a decree freeing her from her husband. Sir Humphrey Ma ".worth. Sir John Foster Frazr, noted journalist, ha3 been sued by his wife.
The oldest car in the world as It looks today. This is the automobile show season, when talk turns to autos generally. "I'd like to see the first auto ever made," someone remarks. Well, here is the first American built gasoline car, constructed by Charles E. Duryea. He started work on it in August, 1891, and completed it in September, 1892. The second Duryea car is in the National Mutf-n at Wa'-'iint-ru ... '
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