Evening Star Newspaper, February 21, 1926, Page 83

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caarme 2 The Sunfly Stad® § exavees WASHINGTON, D. €., FEBRUARY 21, 1926. S. S. President Roosevelt carrying heroic captain and crew, steaming into New York Harbor, where the ship was greeted by thousands. A salute cf 21 guns boomed from Governors Island as the vessel moved up the bay. Capt. Fried and his crew rescued the crew from the sinking British freighter Antinoe in midocean during a terrific storm. A birthday photograph. Miss Paulina, daughter of the Capt. George Fried and his wife greeted by thousands of New Yorkers Claiming “discrimination of sex,” Mabel Vernon, executive secretary of Speaker of thz }?{ousegofpkeprese:tatives aad Mgm Prlizholas when the S. S. Roosevelt docked at Hoboken. The photograph of leader of the National Woman's Party, took up the cause of the Countess of Cathcart Longworth. She was one year old last Sunday. the hero crew and reception committee was taken in the dining salon of the by making speeches in Washington. The countess was being held by im- International. President Roosevelt. Ol sl naerao: migration officials of Ellis Island. Wide World Photo Among the delegates to the fifty-sixth annual convention of the department of superintendence of the National Education Association, in Washington, February 21 to 25. Left to right: C. B. Glenn, superintendent of schools of Birmingham, Ala.; J. W. Crabtree of Washington, executive secretary of National Education Auociagion; Dr. James E. Russell, dean of Teachers’ College, Columbia University; Dr. Frank W. Ballou of Washington, president of department of superintendence; Miss Mary McSkimmon of Brookline, Mass., president of National Education Association; S. D. Shankland, secretary of department of superintendence; H. S. Weet, superintendent of Rochester, N. Y., schools; William J. O’Shea, superintendent of New York City schools.

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