Evening Star Newspaper, January 16, 1923, Page 13

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)

HE STAR’S DAILY PICTORIAL PAGE THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. (. TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1923. IRISH LEADER AT WHITE HO Secretary of Agriculture Wallace and Sir Horace Plunkett, noted Irish political leader and agriculturist, who called on President Harding at the White House yesterday. x IN THE SHADOW OF THE DOME. Pueblo Indians in Washington to appear before the Senate lands committee, the first delegation of this tribe to appear in the capital since the administration of Abraham Lincoln. Four of the chiefs carry canes presented to their fathers by Lincoln. Nativuai Photo K <5 Mrs. Gurnee Munn of rk, who are spending _ Munn’s Great Dane. ASHINGTON SOCIETY AT PALM BEACH. ashington, and Miss Ethel Carhart of ] the winter at Palm Beach, Fla. The dog Harlequin. LLERS AT WHITE HOU M. Albert Thomas, director of international HE LEADS ALL THE from the world skating record for three-quarters of a mile rec ¥ Y championship at Johnson CALL YOUR AUTO BY WIRELE:! ATERS. Charles Jewtraw of Lake Placid. N. Y., who clipped tliree and two-fifths ntly. Sl This is now possible with the aid ANOTHER AMERICAN WINNER. R. H. Crawford (left), an American steeplechase rider, who leads in England with winning mounts. Craw- ford was once a familiar figure at the Laurel and Pimlico tracks. His Adirondack gold cup ! employer, F. Morgan, at right. Wide World Photo He won th, p nderwood & Taderwood.* IRA COLVER SPARKS of Peru, Ind., who shipped himself to Hono- lulu in a box labeled “Freight.” He lived in the box five days, then gave up. His compartment con- IT'S EASY— JUST TRY IT! Mits Hilda Ruckert of New York shows some fancy skating at the recent Adirondack gold cup championship FRENCH ¢ labor divi icine, Paris; Ambassador Jusserand and Dr. Sokolowski, secretar: MATTHEW C. MALLEY of St Louis, Mo., who paid the St. Louis Public Service Board $850 for a two-year concession granting him the exclusive right to pick up lost golf balls on the city's public golf course. Wide World Photo. ipinska, blind physician of the Academy of Med- of Polish legation. National Photo. S NY STOCK . Enough stockings for a centipede are fashioned into skirt, bodice, neckpiece, headgear and umbrella for this young lady. The costume was a feature of the national shoe retailers’ convention in Chicago. Copsright by Underwood & Caderwood. of Prof. Low’s invention consisting of a small apparatus carried in the pocket. An umbrella serves as an aerial, and a bell rings in the Wide World Photo. tained tinned food and water. INTERPRETS MESSAGE OQF INDIA. This Hindu musical trio is following the advice of the poet, Rabindranath Tagore, “going into thewestern world and taking to the great American culture-loving public a perception of Indian songs, poetry and dances.” Photo taken in New Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. York. - Wide World Photo. meet at Johnson City, N. Y. Copyright by Underwood & Underwood TO GIVE BALL FOR YOUNGSTERS. Directors .of the. Child Welfare Society of Washington, who_met yesterday to plan ball. Left to right, front row: Mrs. F. Lansdale, Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman, Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall, Miss Mary Gwynn, Mrs. William Howard Taft and Mrs, William Rayburn, Copyright by Underwood & Vnderww% A TO ORGANIZE DAUGHTERS OF NEPTUNE. Miss Dolores Beaton, daughter of the master of the sea-going tug, Sea Monarch, is one of the organizers of the Daughters of Neptuue, an ization for the f developing radio broadcasting to ships at sea. erganization ‘fr e purpose of ping ng to ships R O k)

Other pages from this issue: