Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 127, 29 May 1922 — Page 6
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.,
NEWS EVENTS OF THE DAY SEEN THROUGH THE EYE OF THE CAMERA
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Following th Wg bond robberies that have occurred from time to time in the New York Post Office, postal officiate have issued orders that all employees are to be fingerprinted as a means nf checking up those who may have criminal -e jr;'s. This picturo sh ws Postmaster E. Morgan of New. York bein;i fluserrrinto J by Janes Boyle. Post Office expert. - . " " .
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Above, at right, view of the Lincoln memorial, a.s it appears from sid of sunken lake at main approach. At left, Washington monument as 6een from the central columns of the Lincoln edifice. Below, th Daniel Chester French statue of Lincoln. The human figure before it indicates the immensity of the statue. Two impressive memorials, tributes to "The Father of His Country" and "The Great Emancipator," now face each other in the most beautiful section of Washington, D. C. The nevr Lincoln memorial, to be dedicated May 3Q. Memorial day, faces the Washington monument. Hie most impressive feature f Ue I.iru'o'-! memorial is the giant statue f the Great Emancipator. The w.rk weiha 175' tons.
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"Jerry" with radio receiving apparatus listening to his master' roice. "Jerry" is the pet Airedale of Dean F. Paul Anderson of the University of Pittsburg. "Jerry" misses his master when he's absent. So Dean Anderson has conceived the idea of comforting the dog when away by talking to him by means of radio. Jerry wears his private receiving set f oijhe occasion, -
i ( " -.' " . ':'A.;-t. t .'K! ' ' V'-.' 'V I i ? f 6 1 :- f - ' -vfr ; jy lctwooD :.. A.. .-. -s. .i 1 I r .vrQr. : : Members of tin Cuban fencing they competed agamst since startjT'vf r team, sent here at the expense of ing on their American tour. Above jj the Cuban Goveinment. They (at the left), Senor AL D. Diaz: at ii 1 ' n" 1 ided In the downfall of the New the right, Senor M. J. Saaverio; Atf ' .Jr , Tork swordsmen, the first team below, Senor Leopoldo Anton. W" pgejpjpnnHi ,jiML Wl mitmmmmmmmmmmmi 9 J JJW " " I b- tp&H&ut: Yi - 'i Elizabeth Johnston and Helen fr C'tfV 4 " WVlV''KJ f ' ' Coblentz, fvr VXT&lfeV'?1?! f -I
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Indiana University Is going to have model dormitories for all girl students. "So poor girls can enjoy college," is the idea of feminine undergraduates who said this might as well be arranged when alumni started out to raise a million-dollar memorial fund. "No use to stop at a million," said Elizabeth Johnston and Helen Coblentz, prize money raisers among the co-ed3. "We'll make it three million or so," they declared in speeches at alumni meetings over the country. "Yours is the spirit that has won this country what it has," President Harding told them when the party stopped at Washington.
Marshal Foch, at extreme right; King George, at his left, and Marshal Earl Haig reading a map after the dedication ceremonies.
"Toujours Bons Amis!" This pledge of eternal friendship was exchanged by King George of England and Mcrshal Foch of France as the two attended the recent dedication of & monument
to the British dead at Notre Dame de Lorette, near Vimy. The king. Marshal Foch, Marshal Earl Haig of England and other notab)e3 are shown after . the ceremon v
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Dean Mary Yost of Stanford University. Dean Mary . Yost of Stanford University comes to the rescue of : the much maligned flapper species with the following: . "Her safeguard is her honesty and growing sense of responsibility. We judge the 1922 girl as silly because of, her ear puffs and forget that our own pompadours in 1900 rose at , least six inches above our f ore-J 1 heads. -
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Miss Lota Cheek.
Miss Lota Cheek, twenty years old, of Dawson, Ga has been de-? Siared Boston's most beautiful girl. Her victory won her a place in the-" "Make It Snannv" enmnnnv at fha Nam VnrL- mint r..,l.. ..
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George W. Sheram. 83 years of age, who served daring the Civil War with the Confederate forces at Atlanta, has lust started on a 600 ; mile hike from Atlanta -.o Richmond to attend a reunion of Confederate veterans. Despite "lis ad v-need J.e, he feels tnat lie will have little difficulty In making the tr.p.
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The daughter of a world, famous peer is In charge of a candy shop in Whitehall, London, where she makes her living selling chocolates.
Mrs. Walter Burns. The next visitor at note from the British Isles to our shores will be .Mrs. Walter Burns. Unlike other visitors who have come to lecture or solve world problems, she has tjo weighty mission. Her visit is to be a social one. She is the daughter of Mrs. Cavendish Bentinck, formerly Edith Livingston, an American eirL Mr. Boms is a eousin of J. Pierpont Morgan. She is noted in England for feer beauty,
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Lace has been gradually coming1 back until today almost every' dress which is not strictly tailored or designed for street wear shows it in some form of trimming. This charming dance or dinner frock for" spring makes use of all-over silk lace in a large pattern to fashion, the sleeves and yoke of th bodici and tonic oa the skirt.
