Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 105, 3 May 1922 — Page 10
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.,
NEWS EVENTS OF THE DAY SEEN THROUGH THE EYE OF THE CAMERA
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The Rev. Father Francis P. Duffy, wfth two officers of the famous .Sixty-ninth regiment, snapped aboard the liner Arabic, when they were j ' leaving for Europe. Father Duffy gained distinguished honors while . In France, where he served as a chaplain, .
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. . . New type of tank ior Ube in Africa.
The fighting between the giving; the victory to either side, Spaniards and Moroccans ha3 I and these tanks stand considerreached the point where the next I able chance of making the viofew battles will be decisive ones, I tory a Spanish one. -
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J. C. Wright. J. C. Wright has just been named director of the federal board for vocational education. The board administers funds provided for the promotion of vocational education in the states in the fields of -radq and industry. He will have administrative supervision of the activities of the board in all of its cooperative relationships witt the states.
Prince Otto, son of former Emperor Karl, in royal robes. Prince Otto, son of the late Emperor Charles of Austria, has beea proclaimed king of Hungary by faithful royalists. The little prince is with his mother in exile oc the Madeira Islands, where his father died recently.
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Sir Kenry Deterding, head of Royal Dutch Shell oil combine, who says that be is not afraid of the competition offered in China by the Standird Oil Interests.
Mrs. R. E. Huff. Mrs. R. E. Huff, who won her name, title and her figure, according to acquaintances, from winter plunges in Lake Michigan, i3 seeking a divorce from her husband. Dr. R. E. Huff, son of the millionaire president of the First National bank of Wichita Falls, Texas. Sh charges he came home drunk, brokj her nose and tried to choke ber.
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These are all first grade pupils In the District School of Washington, and the play Is called Th Changling." The kiddies' range of age is from 2 to 6, and the play has been repeated four times. ThU Is probably the youngest dramatic company in America.
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This picture shows (from left to right) Katrina McCormick, Victoria Titus, Mildred Titus, Martha Ellis, Sylvia Roosevelt. Winifred West. Sidney Neale, Florence Meyers and Nell Thorn. They are sons and daughters of Senators, statesmen and millionnaires.
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Una Cavalierl, Muratore. Edith Mason and Ge orgis Polacco, noted artists of the Chicago Opera Company, as they appeared following their Western tou r. It is said that difficulties with Muratore, the tenor, and others caused Mary to resign a- director of the c ompany.
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Photograph taken in the Charlestown ,fW.' Va. ). courtroom during the first day's trial of miner charged with conspiracy, rioting and insurrection, t he penalty for which is death.
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This is Sergei Rachmaninoff, the pianist, whose picture was snapped while he was signing a $100,000 contract to cover thirty concerts to be given by him in Australia. The photograph was made on board the steamship. Mauretania.
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Top, where the marriage took place; center, the principals. Miss Sarah Cockefair, Albert P. Schlafke, Mary Louise Bobb and Belvin W. i ., Maynard; below, guests listening in on marriage vows. ' "Start married life on a high plane." That was the slogan of Miss Sarah Cockefair, Brooklyn nurse, and Albert P. Schlafke, athletic director of the Veterans'. Mountain camp. So what was more natural than that they should pick out the plane of the Rev. Belvin W. Maynard, the "flying parson," for the starting place. Guests invited to the wedding heard the marriage vows made in the plane, a thousand feet above the ground, by radio.
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The rigors of her cross-country trip became so telling that no sooner had the wife of the French Marshal arrived in the East than she hurried to the hairdressers. There her wants were taken care of by Cora Van Norden Coppinger, a war heroine, who served four and a half years on the western front and proudly displays many decorations won for distinguished service., . ' "',"
