Evening Star Newspaper, May 28, 1922, Page 82

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.—ROTOGRAVURE SECTION—MAY 238, 1922 e e Mrs. Hughes, wife of the Secretary of State, and daughter Catherine in a box at the National Capital horse show. National Fhoto. springs a sur- prise by beat- ing Yale in the : i = Fred C. Lloyd, a Washington 880-yard race. % 3 R horseman, puts his steed, Sunbeam, The photo B through some tricks on the Speedway. shows Billy Note the position of the horse’s feet, g]u r l;;) (with e preventing a fall backward. i 1 € win- ning from Tommy Camp- bell of Yale. The fallen man, in background, is Joe McCar- Oregon provides comfortable quarters for woman jurors. All the little comforts of thy. Campbell home—light, airy rooms, individual beds, newspapers and magazines—and the women are Newhall of unanimous in approving the plan. Harvard third. Underwond & Underwomd Undersond & Underwond, Mrs. Frances Larimer Warner of Washington and her grand- daughter, Miss Helen Marion Lari- mer. Mrs. Larimer is the author Molla could not find a four-leaf clover, so she of several books. lost her tennis match on the White House courts Tom Thumb wedding, presented by children of the beginners’ department of the Ninth Street Christian Llstabritaszn. recently. Before each game, Mrs. Mallory, woman Church, 9th and D streets northeast. Left to right: Virginia Crossfield, Virginia Cummings, Doris Miller. champx_qn. makes a search for the lucky four-leafer Joseph Harrison, Melville Vinson, Joseph Young, Harry Meador and Betty McIntyre. —and ’tis a sad Molla when it is .X:?‘lmffn:l d. Ploto by Pridgeon. xtufl_pliotographer. = c—ilL =Al “Grandmother” and “father” of the “bride,” who gave her away in the Tom Thumb wedding. Leona Hall and George Baker ’ Washington banquet in honor of Ernest A. Cutts of Savannah, Ga., imperial potentate of America, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine. Mr. Cutts, in an ST address, wasgemhusia%tic over the probability of the 1923 Shrine convention being held in Washington. This would bring about 300,000 visitors to the city.

Other pages from this issue: