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NFW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, HERALD CAMERA-MEN TELL THEIR STORY She Wins New Yoo V Vaens Jiev satns baert you 1 the headquarter s of These Are No Barnyard Chickens h four armies thern part of posted be- \re in- Age E ma When Louis Torcat re- turned to Los Angeles from Paris he brought with him a number of rare species of chicken. These pictures show three of them—above, an owl- faced rooster from Per- sia; upper right, Torcat holding a long-tailed Jap- anese sphinx; lower right, a Yokohamo rooster bal- ancing an egg on its head. N ¢ contests in the 1 the United This young Miss Anita g just been crowned as “Miss Philippines.” Moving Day For Englich Mansion croft Hall (1 nd, which is i pulle erected exactly lown piecc Elizabethan House at P cton me Manchester 1l (lower) and shipped to it stood before it was torn Carried to the Altar rewe, director and producer of f ¢ altar by Tom They'll be married in a few weeks. hter of Edwi carried to the Donald, wealthy Hollywood realtor. 1g World’s Richest ‘e One of the richest—and least known—men in the world is George F. Baker, dean of American bank- e He is chairman of the First National bank of New York and one of the little group of men that con- trol America’s railroads. Here he 18 at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., celebrating his §6th birthday. Sues Diana N Dr. Henry J. Schicrson of Chl- cago, beauty specialist, has sued fady Diana Manners for $1,000, charging e has not paid him for plastic surgery which, he s he performed on her face so t he could retain her beauty for stage work. She denies his charges. Elopers ry Saint, above, vy General Percy of Touisiana, has eloped with s O'Neill, son of Chief Justice Sharles A. O'Neill of the same state. O'Neill, w, is 21: she i¢ Their forgiven them. Masonic Officers Installed on Shipboard First officers of the General Henry Knox lodge, a new Masonic body at Boston, went through their installation ceremonies on the old ship Constitution. The lodge officers, mostly army men, are (left to right): Major Phelps, secretary; Major Harding Junior deacon; C Moore, senior warden; Frederick Hamilton, grand secretary; Colonel Dower, maste 3 Jackson, grand marshal; Colonel Borton, junior warden; General Barnam, marshal; Licuten- ant Price, senior steward; Major Wilson, proxy for the senior deacon, and Sergeant R. A. Snyder, tyler. Sea Claims Two Schooners on Florida Coast Txwo ships came to griet on the shore of Santa Rosa Island, just outside of Pensacola, Fla., and have been abandoned as tofal loss At the extreme la ft is the schooner Robert E. Dean of Thomaston, Me., which grounded in a ¢ fog. The Annie A. Ross of Boston, In the foreground, went aground when he Aptain mistook signal flares on the othe r vessel for Pensacola's light. Captain Johnson of the rt Dean is left destitute at 62 by the logs of his vessel. He and his men blame a black cat that came aboard just before the ship left Miami. Beauty Treatments Aid Deranged Minds Patlents at the Missourl state hospital tor the insane, St. Joseph, Mo., are getting a new kind of “cure.” Dr. J. H. Parker, superintendent, holds that marcel waves, faclal massages and the like help restore women's minds, and now there's & beauty p arlor in the institution. Valeria Skinner Inspect “The President’s Own Band” The United States Navy band, the pride of Washington, and sometimes called thé “president’s own band,” standing inspec- tion dressed in their new uniforms of blue, with gold braid on their chest and a touch of red on the collars and sleeves. Rear Admiral B. F. Hutchinson (left), commandant of the Washington navy yard, and Lieutenant Charles E. Benter (right), leader of the band, making the inspection. cot this loving cup by outspelling 40 other contestants in an old-fashioned spelling Lee ta Atlanta, Ga.