Evening Star Newspaper, February 2, 1930, Page 104

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22 | ceomaea Sunda Across. 1 Knights of the Round Table, 8 A distinguished champion. 16 Ancient legend. 19 Name of one of the Creek tribes. 80 Part of a theodolite. 21 Employer. 22 Riper. 23 Ermine Summer fur. 24 Measure of capacity. 25 Ostentation. 27 Man’'s name, 28 Bare. “Matu:e. Lighting device, 34 Marries. 36 Bridge. 40 Genus of ducks, 41 Assert. 42 Abide. 44 Attendant. 45 A game fish, 46 Choler. A7 Prohibit. 48 Brief view. 50 Peruvian tubers. $1 Cancel. 52 Informed against. 66 Small animals. 68 Watchful. 60 Roman urban official. 61 Illinois city. 62 Hackneyed. 65 The city of which Melchizedek was 73 Pleasing. 74 Tropical lizard. 15 Up to the time of. crop of Hindustan 107 Calculates. 108 Ruminant mamals. 109 A woman of second sight. 110 Costumes. Down. 1 Nurse in Dickens’ “Martin Chuzzlewit.” 2 Axilliary, 3 Recent. 4 Border on. 5 A rodent. 6 Hearty assent. 7 Shoot out. 8 Figures of speech using present tense instead of past or future. 9 Audibly. 10 Tapestry warp-threads. 11 Arabian seaport. 12 Valley. 13 Roman date. 14 Snares. 15 Excesses. 16 A small shrub. 17 Seven-year apple trees. 18 Naive. 26 A conference with Zulus. 30 Toiled. 31 A wing shell. 32 Mixture. 33 Sleight-of-hand artist. 34 Walk through. 35 Pitcher. 36 Digging implement. 37 Document. 38 Active cause. 39 Famous emperor of ancient times. 43 Transact. 49 Catchwords. 53 Provided with small hairlike processes. 54 Voter. 55 Lord’s manor, 57 Sharp spar. 59 Southern constellation. 62 Coronet. 63 Consorts of rajahs, 64 Not suitable. 67 Stringed instrument. 69 Similarities. 70 Distinctive color. 71 Cover up. 72 Liquors, 77 Played. ‘PH® WUNDRY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FEBRUARY 2, 1930.° PR RS d b = » " ! ‘. 3 [} & 3 § 4 ~ 0 ~ A .H ERERKEER ERMNESE ; 88 Disposed. 89 Adventitio respiratory Here’s a Short, Fast One . Eaadd S JEEEEE ENENG JEEE dRANN dN NN JEEEN dEN il JANEEE JEEE NN vidEENE L ERER dEEEE AEEEE dEEE ANEEN i Al AEEEE dEN dll JEEEE ANEE dEANE dNJENE r 1 Halts. 6 English college. 0 Tear up by the roots, B1 Early alphabetical characters, 13 System of weights. 14 Pertaining to morning. 16 Concerning. 17 Erode. 18 Eucharistic plate. 19 Caress. 80 Hebrew word for .(o. 1 o i B 21 Burdened. 22 Three-part composition. 23 Wanders. 24 Pricks. 25 Humbles. 27 Excite to actlon. 28 Bewildered. 29 South Afriean antelope, 30 Beers. 31 Wranglet archaic, 32 Leave. 34 Aeriform fluld 35 Border for a picture. 36 Marry. 37 Printer’s measure. 38 American musician, 39 Morsel 40 Polish, 42 Comes on the stage. 44 Sea eagle. Down. 1 Blemish, 2 Endeavor, 3 Hawaiian bird. 4 Hair ointments. 5 Avers. 6 Ireland. 7 Wine cask. 8 Along. 9 Sea nymphs, 10 Russian mountains, 12 Bristly. 13 Where play starts 45 Cheap cigar. in golf. y Morning Among the Croés-Words i o 3 = 3 \ \ Base t First to Shoot the “Big Game.” Continued from Third Page Later, I took photographs of ‘Uncle Joe’ and his irevitable cigar, “I got a photograph, also, of Mark Twain when he came up to Washington from some- where in the South during the month of February, still wearing his white suit of clothes, to appear before the House. He gently sug- gested to that august body that since he had such an important measure to get through Congress he be given the privilege of the floor. It rained and snowed and sleeted dur- ing his visit, and he announced at that time his famous dictum that ‘Washington didn't have climate; it had weather. “Mark Hanna, whom I photographed in his committee room, where he moved national figures about like chessmen, had been so amusingly portrayed by Davenport's noted caricatures of him that it gave one a distinct surprise not to see the dollar marks in the checks of his smartly tailored business suit. Wwith all his forcefulness, he possessed real charm of manner, It was easy to understand how he came to wield so much power. “My associations with the Roosevelt family are among some of my happiest memories and dated almost from the beginning of Theodore Roosevelt’s official life in Washington as As- sistant Secretary of the Navy. “I got the first photograph of Col. Roosevelt in his Rough Rider uniform, and I probably obtained the first one of him upon his return to this country after the Cuban campaign. Col. Roosevelt had been serving as Assistant Secre- tary of the Navy when he resigned to accept a commission as lieutenant colonel of the Rough Riders. I had gone down to the Navy Depart- ment to get a photograph of his successor, and, seeing the colonel, I said to him that I would like to get a photograph of him in his new uni- form. “‘By Jove!’ he said. ‘I will be up at 8 o’clock in the morning. You come to my house early and you can take the photograph.’ So I really snapped him before the paint was dry on him 15 Base of the decimal system. 18 Surfaced a street. 19 Haughty. 21 Is defeated. 33 Lyric poem. 22 Scotch weighing 35 Golfer's warning machine. cry. 23 Demolishes. 36 Sinewy. 24 Talk idly. 38 Sport. 25 Proverbs, 39 Implore. 26 Polse, 41 Alternative, 27 Food. 43 As far as. 29 Puffs up. 31 Opposite of to. 32 Obtains. as a military man. The likeness was excellen§ and one that Mrs. Roosevelt liked very much. “For years I made the only photographs which were made officially of the Roosevelt children. They had a little fox terrier and a calico pony and a macaw, with a wicked-look- ing beak. The children used to pile on the back of the pony as thickly as they could sit, and he would trot along with them until he decided he had carried them far enough, and then he would sit down on his hind legs or rear up in front, and they would all go sliding down upon the ground. “I missed getting one photograph which I have since regretted that I did not go back for. I was taking a series of photographs of famous American painters who were working abroad. James McNeill Whistler poked his shaggy head out of his studio in London one morning and said: ‘Not today. I am so busy. Come back some other time.’ [ MADE one photograph many years ago which has become very interesting in the light of recent events. It was of the House of Representatives in session. Seated by one of the members was his little son, a very small face in that big group. That little boy has sinte been identified as Col. Charles Lindbergh. “One little photographic jaunt was associated with an incident which assumed international importance and infuriated Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany. The Kaiser's yacht, the Meteor, which had been built In America, was to be christened by Alice Roosevelt where it was lying off Shooters Island. The President and Mrs. Roosevelt were present at the christening, and so was Prince Henry of Prussia, the Kaiser’s brother, who had been making a sort of good- will tour of America. The eyes of all the world were turned upon that yacht christening. “I had secured permission to go out to the yacht early on the morning of the ceremonies on a tug that was to carry the boat bulilder. On board that tug was the representative of & famous French firm of champagne makers, George Kessler. He was carrying a velvet-lined leather case holding a very fine bottle of cham- pagne. “That French champagne was used to christen the German Emperor’s yacht. The French, of course, considered that they ‘put something over’ on the Germans. The Kaiser was evidently furious. It was whispered in Washington that the faux pas which inadver- tently had been permitted to occur was the real reason for the recall of the German attache who had had charge of the christening csme- monies.” (OCopyright, 1930.)

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