Evening Star Newspaper, February 26, 1922, Page 68

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for the moving picture. dances. Kaiser’s palace now a movie studio. Where once the “su- preme war lord” was wont to pace the marble floor and await news of ‘“victories,” actors and actresses of the phogoplay world are filming “The Life of Frederick the Great.” Even the cradle of the Hohenzollerns, 200 years old, has been leased W. Brooke Johns of Washington plays the banjo on the sands of Palm Beach, while Mrs. 8ava Kehaya of New York © Keystoue View Co. Wide World Fhoto, Mrs. Elihu Root, jr., of New York assists the artist, Charles B. Falls, in preparing decorations for the beaux arts ball, one of the artistic features of the social season in the metropolis. A number of well known artists and sculptors contribute their work for the occasion. International. Russian ap- parel finds favor for win- ter and spring wear. Theboots are of patent leather with white kid tops. Collar and cuffs of the suit are of lambs’ wool. Wide World Fhoto. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.—ROTOGRAVURE SE(CTION—FEBRUARY 26, 1922 Rear Admiral George McElroy, who heads a special board of naval officers to determine whether the battleship Washington or West Virginia shall be the one completed under the new naval treaty signed at the conference on limitation of armament. By the treaty the United States is allowed to have two ships of this class, the Colorado being completed. Nationnl Photo Jock Hutchison, who knows a thing or = = two about the ancient game of golf, gives a few At one time, not so very long ago, he was military governor of Moscow, and he was pointers to Constance Talmadge, movie star. ' known far and wide in Russia as Maj. Gen Theodore Lodijensky. Now he is simply Theo- “But,” says Jock, “this parlor variety of the game dore Lodijensky, and he works as a waiter in a Russian restaurant in New York has its drawbacks.” PR c0! N VT IRIRIAE 4 Gen. Phil Sheridan’s famous horse, on which he took his famous ride from Winchester, Va., to Cedar Creek during the civil war. The stuffed animal, found neglected some time ago in a shed at Govetnors Island, may find a place in a Washington museum. ©@P. & A. Phetos. 2 Ke President Harding sends his photograph to a New York girl, Miss Pauline Henkel, who sold $3,300,000 worth of liberty bonds during the war. Miss Henkel is sixteen years old and has received many medals. She is also an honorary colonel in the United States Army. Tuternational

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