Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 299, 15 December 1922 — Page 14
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NEWS EVENTS OF THE DAY SEEN THROUGH THE EYE OF THE CAMERA
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Maria Ivognn. lovely tar of tho Chicago Opera Company says sh longs (or the days of the high collar and the slender waist. Miss Ivogun doe- make a charming picture and if he keeps on she may be setting a new style or re-setting an old one.
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Knit wear, used so man; season, for strictly sports apparel, is being utilized now for afternoon wear1 and more formal costumes f : il occasions. Shown here is a three-' piece suit of brown knit silk with a blouse of sand color. Poiret fox trims the collar, cuffs id 6ash ends, and there is no denying the costume i3 more dressy than it seems possible for knit goods appear. :'
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General Pershing smiled and so did Marie Tiffany, the Metropolitan Opera, tar, when the boys at Fort Mc Pherson demanded more songs from the charming singer The soldiers said "Sntr again" and Genera Pershing said "Sing gin" and there was nothing left to do but sing. "Darling Nelly Gray" was the tenth encore.,
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Mrs. Annie L. Swynnerton. The Royal Academy, fountain head of British art, has just hono ed Ms. Annie L. Swynnerton with election to an associate membership. This is the first time since the days of Sir Joshua Reynolds that a woman has been c.dmitted.
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To Eugene V. Brewster, wealthy Brooklyn magazine owner and grandfather, the survival of the fittest seems to be the rule in the game of love. Mrs. Brewster No. 2 objects to the rule as not being according to Hoyle while Mrs. Brewster No. 1, who lost out in the game some time ago, sits in the gallery and cheers for her former hubby and the new entree in the game, Miss Cor-liss Palmpr. 22 rstrwhil
newsstand girl of Macon, Ga., Hj .wrce0 bids fair in open competition to ' HVy!. c run away with the prize which is Brewster himtif.
EUGENE V. BR-EWSTElC,
PUBLISHER
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THE SECOND Mrs. EUGENE. V. BR.EW5Tr
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THE . Fl R-ST Mis, EUGENIE.
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Every day, as Sarah Bernhardt grows older, she continues to astonish the world, not alone by her activity think of a woman who has suffered the loss of a leg appearing on the stage at the age of 77 and charming an audience but by exhibition of ber other talents. Not only has she written books and painted pictures but this clever French womaj has shown herself a fted sculptor. The striking itatue shown in the Illustration Is the latest work of Mme. Bernhardt chisel, and It has attracted much attention in Paris, where it was placed on public view.
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Eleanor Churchill, left, holder of world's record for throwing baseball, and Camelia Sabie, who holds high hurdle and standing broad jump records. . A comprehensive record of activities of feminine athletes the r world over, just completed by the International Women's Sports Federation, recognizes forty-nine records established by the fair sex as world's records. Twentyone of -these records are held by U. S. girls and women. Czechoslovakia, rankine second, has
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ten record holders. Most of the records were set in the first women's Olympia meet in Paris last summer.
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Christy Mathewson, hii"self waging a successful fight against the dread white plague, has come down from Saranac Lake to help the sale of Christmas seals for the benefit of those afflicted with tuberculosis. Here's Christy entirbly surrounded bf seals.
Photo is of Brig. -Gen. Edwards. (J. S. A., retirea. ana Mrs. Edwards. Saying good-by to the army doesn't seem half the serious business to Gen. Clarence R. Edwards as it does to his wife. But, maybe, after all, that Is Just a soldier's set smile the grim old daddy of the famous Yankee division In the A. E. F. is wearing as he and Mrs. Edwards ptsed for their photograph at corps area headquarters in Boston the day he was retired. The final ceremony in which the General had part was the decoration of three men In the raiiks that same day.
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Dorothy Fenron.
iyv wiTl find a way," saya Dorothy Fenron, demure little choro girl with George White's Scandals, anent her proposed marriage to William M. Garland, Harvard student and son of a Los Angeles millionaire. A Boston marriage license clerk denied them a license when they stepped up to the cage in Beantownu "Well be married yet." eays Dorothy. .
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Photograph above is a scene in one of the thoroughfares In Salonica, where refugees from Smyrna have been unloaded direct from railroad box cars. Hundreds will be obliged to spend the winter because there is no shelter for them. Many of the refugees have not even a blanket to sleep on. Below: Christian refugees from Asia Minor arrire at Salonlcv -
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If asked to name the trotter that best typified the family of Peter the Great 2: "714 In the campaign of 1922. It would be difficult tor an horseman to find a better representative than the winner of the $12,500 May Day Sweepstakes for two-year-olds on October 6 at the ' fiftieth annua meeting of the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breeders As- Q oclatton. Thomas Taggart. formerly United States Senator from Indiana, bought The Senator by telephone last year for $3,500 as a birthday present for his son. Thomas D. Taggart. who now owns him. He la trained and driven by Alonzo McDonald.
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