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\1(11\[' 19. 1926 cVENING STAR. WASHIN( THUR CLAIMS JULY 20 EVENTS JUSTIFIED PREDICTION| | Rev. Walter Wynn Defends Fore- cast of Disaster by Recalling THE ITON. . €. SDAY. A Safety Pin. From the Good Hardware Magazine. Mother — Johnnie, see W] LuMathess Johnalel s see i WhAE thefoniyasatetyipin | 5 I IIIIII!II countless persons, died, and historical consequences followed. ‘The French franc fell to a level it had never reached before and gravely affected French politic \ S ik controversy M Mexico over i the religious regulations On that day chaos linked Great Britain, over the coal strike; France, over the financial situation. and Mexi- | co. over the religious situation, he as **ME Wynn sa believes there | There were plenty of world-stirring has not been such a great combina- | " il oriCstirming fion of important events on any day | events on July 20 to Justify his fore- | jco the World War ended. | New York, where he 4ad dccided to! York offered her scholarships to_the edit and publish his magazine. He |value of half of the tuition. But Miss proposed to start a new magazine. |Eumrmh Masland of the Gardner| Real Life, of which I was o be edi- iSchonl for Girls, after ialking with' tor-in-chief, in addition to my work on | both Elizabeth and myself, offered her | Screenland. la scholarship ‘for the entire tuition. | New York: Every newspaper man|Of course, T accepted, and no happier | or woman works toward that goal. 1{.ho:ce of school could possibly h | had dreamed of “panhandling” in the {been made. Her three vears at Ga | big city for a_newspaper job, and had | ner, terminating in her graduat | been prepared to starve in a hall bed-| from Jigh school at the age of room, if necessary, while besieging|have Heen the happiest of her short {Park Row. But now my chance had | life. come to enter New York, with a two-| But it was not only in school that and-a-half-year contract in my pocket. |life was rich and full for her. cast of some great disaster, says the | one day, without heth. »,\l(huugh Elizabeth wept at the red * 2k and told them that be beth | jzation that she was bidding good- t U.S. FIGHTS TURK MOVE. Rev. Walter Wynn. who at the time | Ee i i declared his prognostication was | e Eli id traveled about most of her life | forever ‘o hor belosed school ‘and to had no girl chums and that she her “Pickle Club” chums, she was al was lonely. | most as elated as I wa Ked them to be kind to her.! At “the urgent invitation of her|Closing of Commerce Chamber Is based on an architectural allegory be- end their friendshih_ They | grandmother, who thought she would lieved to be represented in the Great | agreed to 4|o and beth | never see the child again after she| Officially Protested. Pyramid of Gizeh in Egypt. CONSTANTINOPLE, August 19 (). Here are the great happenings nder instructions from the United | which Mr. Wynn points to: i | States State Department protest has Felix A. Dzerzhinsky, who as head | been filed with the Turkish authori- rests, but there was always the possi n v |went to New York to live, Elizabeth of the Russian cheka, or secret police, ties against the closing of the Ameri- s bility that shi have lost popular little girl. | stopped off in Texas for a six-week somehow since s! ad been tested i “"‘ ted to membership in the exclusive | visit.and I journeyed on to New York to { was charged with ing executed can Chamber of Commerce here. This L £ chamber of commerce was incorpo- Beaumont. when she had scored 2 “ickle Club,” whose five or six meni- | get the new magazine under way and plus. | bers were extremely clannish and pos | to find an apartment, to which I could My telephone rang sessed of wonderful secrets. | welcome Elizabeth on September 1. rated in Washington and cannot | change its name, as suggested by the Turks, or cease its activities on behall It was delicious to see her becoming o his is Frances “/H‘l" of the psy New York Welcomes Elizabeth. of American business interests. Pro- fellow” of a girl, with| chol P e Los . .—.,?,i Bur?x[x‘rt?n S u',\,.'jn alling her on the telephone, | A newspaper reporter whom I had = : known in Texas was calling upon me tests have also been lodged with the { Turks by the British. French and Rel- the The Story of Ehzabeth BY HER .\lOTI"nR. ANNE AUSTI? (Copyright. 1 Britain by Alikance. " a1l Hhts reservan XIL—The Ch Champion. HEN Elizabeth was the Terman tests for men- tal ability in Los Angeles in August, 19 at_ the age of 8 vears and 11 months, T did not accompany her to the board of educ offices, for I was working. I was not particularly worried about the outcome the e ”::’xngm by far than the youngest Happenings on That Day. | Miss | that By the Associated Press. CHESHAM, England, August 19. Stedman sensed immediately the children looked upon Eliza e of the She ca ed them Style Ney's Fur Coats em- body the latest moods and modes of the lead- ing furriers and stule The world's death rate is estimated | at 68 a minute, 97,920 a day, and 35 L AIGLON GRILL 75c Your Dinner Cooked Meal Tickets Tssued. to order for 18th and Columbia Road : are designed to give long wear and unusual comfort. You can | It Tastes Different. Save on Easy Terms Buttermilk Is Good For You You can drink it freely—because its natural acid is just Sl B inviting her to their homes for ing! Elizabeth th eon and parties, sharing their the day before Elizabeth was due to S | with her. 1 was glad and happy, not |arrive, He had known Elizabeth in afrald that I would lose her, for we |Waco and Beaumont. and had read he newspaper stories seng out from dignified New"s financed fur coat plan rnables to learve were too ¢ for that ever to hap. nou ever recorded uader the Binet-Simon |, deturmitiing mental abil |y “What did =fe trake vered, nd joy expre. Mothers are like th “A score 214 meaning much further » conld because she broke the passed perfectly al the vocabulary test, adult. We find that, at vears and 11 montk mental We have ather tests the findings unde: slon of the Binet want to tell . in_aadition to being the me ¢ I have aver tested ) lovable and charming. [ am afraid for, my 1itself in tears the ‘pius Know v | h: plus don't p Slizabeth Enters Literature. After 1 had thanked her. she “Would you m v I nose for the reporter was when the tests were we gave him the world’s record in c} telephoned for a y r o make o ted, althongh pride come « IK different.’ “T have never 14 sked conscions don't n her. and it will be in_our “n 1 childish and norma 1ild conld pe: not the puny cled freak that the public ex mental prod When the story appear Angeles Times our litt Hollywood was hesieged viewers and press p all the « offset, effects of publicity he present porters. She the sent o cord any he the Los ilow in inter s from mful | o as possible this sudden avalanche of | T did not allow Elizabeth to lked with the re wirs photozraphed t to play or to bed to the hou the newspaper ind was n that red m. “The Highest 1 school the 1 not f motion picture com pany offs a contract for hei Q" When rolled in Schaol in weeks later, Lulu M mental versity of Calif eighth th man cor > exper 1t the sthern b vied schoo what is ca their mental while she was that Dr. Stedn terfal for the r about her ian’s book, iR al ife < serionsly \1 the s her education. Because pupils in the opportunity room wer they were' vonns 1 Te She went on swimming parties | Los Angeles at the time she made the 1 her “Pickle Clul”" chums, played |world's record in child mentadity. . skated and did all the other | Without saying anything to me of h thut normal, wholesome. | intentions, he told the city editor of a girls did. |morning newspaper the facts about o {her, and suggested that a feature SR I | writer be sent to the traln to inter- ! the meantime 1 had hecone as | view her on her arrival in New York g ging editor| Fortunately, the feature writer a: < very pleas-|signed to the story was a girl Eliz pnr.mn.- reminders [beth and I had known and loved in as still unsound. It|Des Moines—Hazel Ross. Elizabeth as it we had found a |did not suspect that she was being harbor, a delightful place in|interviewed, and talked with entlre ch to settle down and live com-|freedom and naturalness. The stor. «bly, like other folks. sympathetic and intelligent in eve hen ‘suddenly in Ju after |line, was played under a three-column eth, at the age of 8, had been |lead, with pictures, and created a omoted to the ninth grade, with a |great deal of inter w credits in high school work, the | As a direct result of this published ublisher of Screenland ordered me to interview, six private schools in New en UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED HESE lme]y stockmgs of purest silk have the dainty strength of a fairy’s wing. Full fashion- ed, in all the new colors. At prices that mean real saving—in the beginning, because they cost so little; in the end, becauge they wear so long. The patented garter strip helps to give longer wear in every pair. 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