Evening Star Newspaper, February 2, 1930, Page 111

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—GRAVURE SECTION FEBRUARY 2. All the girls are smoking. This Indian squaw of the Glacier National Park Reservation is no exception when it comes to the new inode in feminine habits. ® P. & A. Photos. Enjoying the Reflecting Pool skating. Mrs. F. Trubee Davison, wife of the Assistant Secretary of War, out for a whirl on the ice with her son, Tru- bee, jr. ©P. & A. Photos 1930. feH Crod Another political battle on Capitol Hill. Demo- cratic and Republican pages of the Senate and House fighting it out with snow balls along strict party lines. ) Associated Press Photo. A jockey’s nightmare. The bad spill occurred in the running of the English Amateurs’ Handicap Chase at Hurst Park, London. The rider, Capt. Lumsden, escaped injury, but the horse was not so fortunate. © Underwood & Underwood. Tuning up for their battle with the Yanks. Two members of the crack Argentine polo team practicing at Los Angeles, wher: they will compete in the Pacific Coast Midwinter polo tournament. © Wide World Photos. In the good old Wintertime. The polar bear at the Milwau- kee Zoo registers complete satisfaction in a recent drop of the mercury to 26 below zero. © Wide World Photos. Commercial pilot at 18. Miss Betty Russell of San Francisco, who is said to be the youngest woman licensed to fly a commercial plane. © P. &A. Photos. \ A chance for movie fan guessers. Who guessed the first time that the sailor girl is the former Carol Dempster, who became Mrs. Edwin S. Larsen when she left the movies for matrimony? © Associated Press Photo. “Snow balling” at Miami Beach, Fla. Since nature offers no snow for the frolic, ice shaved from huge cakes is used as an ingenious substitute. Associated Press Photo.

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