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Show 4j.dr r. Ur V Jbm '' - r- V - r 'i . - .JSkAA-- ?& V rvJa - . It',4 itiKLE 6ktruu VLU News and Personal Ghat From World Centers Kings Winnings -- Will Mot Coyer Stable Upkeep FH ges isy ROBERT TELUS RITCHIE. LONDON. (US) It must not to Live In Are First Envoys No1 th' 0nlj OfficiaI Residence so Owned By United States One to Find Racing a Losing Game in 1929 T ' ' t r ' t the Titled Women Come in a. in-Par- is . L ' - -- - - . . - r For Stakes. (Special Mvm CorreapoodetJc. Service. Foreign ; . - . 4SL Trk Copyright. 13 All right reeerrad.) LONDON, Pec. 10. Despite thn fact that four of bis home won nix race In the season Jjsi nded. stakes Jung Georges winning In of kings $20.053 made the sport an expensive pastime for him. lor! stable of his when the upkeep comes to be met it is certain tbit his winning on the turf will not cover them. But the sovereign Is not the find the tnily one hr Britain to one in t'le racing game e losing ear 1029. It has been a ordeal for the major iljr of the betting public because of the eclipse in so many races of the favorites or moot fancied the bookmakers While homes. chant in chorus that they cannot imagine who has won all the money as a result of tbs of the long shot or the out' eider, the view of the betting public n thyt th bookies hate bad a most glorious time of it. For the eecond time since the war the Aga Khan heads the list of winning owners, having won in takes the tidy sum ot 9199,430. with twenty horses In thirty-fiv- e races, though not a classic ..honor n came his way. Ths figure on the English turf has lavished money on his racing esWalter F, Edge, mew Faked State ambassador to France, shown with his wife, to the first tablishment, for he has been keen' ly ambitious to regain first place. diplomat to occupy the new government owned and furnished embassy (above). This season he was able to displace There Is a garden and windows wife apparently share the White By HAZEL REAVIS. Lord Derby, who ecuid top place of the drawing rooms look out on House belief that naturalness and AP Feature Service Writer) in the two previous seasons. Lurd Walthe green slopes of the Trocadero informality should dominate the PARIS (AP) When Mrs runners won a Perby's twenty-on- e no matter how official. total of fifty two races, but hr ter 8 Edge wife of the newly ar terrace extending down to the home, new The ambassadress, energet had to take second place in the rived ambassador to France, took vtint. and outdoor as V enthusiastic she Since the arrival of the Edge h. matter ot stakes, for hie winnings over the keys of the embassy 4 was born Camilla 8 old 4 un children and months 4, from personality, started scratch, diplomat amounted to 9172.299. Lord DerAmericans in Paris feel that the wall of Bath, Me. She comes of i by races unly the horses bred in Ically Kpnkmg. family shipbuilding his stables, which are reckoned as 8 be I th envied hostes of one! Yarkeo family tradition is repre- seafaring, at the embassy. sented in Pans embassies finest of the Washington reckoned her one of the finest in the country It is esdurtimated that his establishment of and the first wife of aa American! Callers who present themselves its most successful hostesses to start her at the big front entrance hear the ing Ambassador Edge a term In thoroughbreds is worth well over ambastad'r to France children senate. the shrieks and of in a rareer off.Hal laughter go.ernmont Like the king and $3,000,090. Mrs. Edges official duties are owned and fmnLhed embai'y. Astor. be never bets. jat play in the adjoining garden. It is a stately house in the Tro-- j Frequently a shining black lightened by the fact that the The outstanding feature of th? the is French is government is largely caralongside situatedambuatoi arter. parked season was the success of Irish-bre- d ideally qt horses. W. Barnett, vtn and beautifully furnished It is graveled drveway. indication that ried on by bachelors. President ambas-itis to take h Gaston Doumergue, premier Anounet Edge about ouSh to houM tbe AthiordiUrr only two braes-Tri- go - secured third place and mbaadres and 1 threethe air of the exclusive walks dre Tardieu and Aristide Briand, among win- - Mdor cf foreign affairs, are w h o u Daround the Avenue diena. . minister Bing owners, his stakes amouit-- ! tl1e an baszadrtUe i Tht new ambassador and his all unmarried. ing to 9141.840. With Trlgo. thejcrowdn-leadinhe cap! u ed both tbs Derby and the St, Le ger. There are now no fewer than 300 women, many of them titled, who take an active part n racing but only four of them succeeied In winning in stakes more than 120,-0Those four, howeve., won more than did King Georg., Lady Zia Wernher headed the list with m total of 424.413. her nearest feminine competitors being Miss Glorney. Mrs. Sofer Whitburn (Special Correspondence of The X and Lady CunUffe Owen. In some quarters the poor showY. Sun Foreign Service ) ing made by a number of well (Copyright, 1930 All rights reknown stables and the heavy lossserved ) es sustained by the betting public BELFAST. Dec. 30 E. fore i are atttnbuted to the exceptional Thomas Lipton takes hs challengand long period of drouth. Form, under th circumstances, nag a er to the United ! iUa this sumfickle Jade. mer In his fifth atKmp to lift the Amcma Dup, th acht Shamrock Picture of Lenin Sold V will have at hat two months in acmontng ompetuin with some For Frenchmans Taxes of th finest in British waters. That fa t was nad known to Th' H'nnral Srwcc Sun s correspond, m, who was told PARIS M. Edxar Ferraad. that the halbnger hculd b ready eommun at. of Mjmbeliaril, smali to take th water carU in May. town on the outskirts of Paris, It Is planned to rac the new recently refustd to pay taxes to Shamrock until the of July. the republican government. He Sir Thomas contender nnl probwas saved by the picture of the man whose doctrines in.piicd him ably meet such fhct craft as the Astria. Cambria. Cannla and White to refuse payment. Heather Mnc Accorn n to the French law. alkne II made an unsucccKsful hid for the most when Edgar refused to pay hie taxes, his properly was seized for hTtly prized trophy in yacht racing no British contender has under public auction. e Hod'n, Swrdtoii gon trials In actual racing before The first piece put on sale Kaz F. A. Larson, the Dube of Mongolia and Dr. of the larvm outfitting his treasured p cture of Lenir. leaving British for American cxplonr, la a happjr mood Into front Gobi When clean of Mongolia. the In Kalgan, gateway friend of Edg-- r 8ir Thomas intention to give b.d In the picture for 300 frinra. tne Shamrock V a real seasoning beA look course F. at a I KALG alwas China pony N, 1 (AD more than cover fore it ventures upon its Atlantic the proceeds and pljnip him for soft spots delinquent tax The sale Latson, th? Duke of MungolU, crossing will be highly applauded forthwith to the sing ng tf the yachting circles. customer one of hla best hen ponv huslneM t,!l" Her by Kerrand and bis Is Capt. Nd Heard, Chapman Andrew, gave up hi, on. of th larf et of it. kind in a man skipper friends of fifty, who served his apGobi dcsrt explorations because china. Samctmi. h ha, 3 00 ar.i-l- h in prenticeship fishing rraft InAho would final, on hand. Hi., principal Xankmg adimm:r-i-oFrench Forces on ous water or the North To let him rhiji certi.n f..-- ,, i,n. i. g.vlng advice to Mongoia. treah! a, but for more than thirty Rhine Insure Peace the Atmrican Munruiu of Natural many of whom come hundreds of 8ean has had an active experience to get his counsel Hlstorj in New Yrk. jmlbs of yacht racing He has also made Kal iin. situated on the Greit PARIS. French security on the Mrs. Larson, who was Miss Mary with American yacht Rhine is the best guaranty of j Wall ha been the heidquarters Hodgers. of Albanv, N- - yT takes as acquaintance racing conditions, for on two ocworld peace, secording to the view of Gofe$4 dewrt expeditions forimurh interest in outfitting the Gobi casions was h th contendheld today by General Mordacq, rars and the duke has helped out-- s eximduJopx as dofcs duka him ing Hhamroek aboard He really war here 'indr'frtena of the late fit most of them At pre-ehis elf 9n redoubtable racing skipper Marshal Foeh. best ruoroer i Dr fvn Iledn. f l he are Just like several sears after tie war, at teneral Mordac. right hand a fellow who ha ai expedi hn she ald. speaking of The tracting attnHon man of Premier Cleme ceau dur- - tDn om bwcti. first bv his masm th d rert i ow Dike lr. Andnw. Walter Grati-z- r ng the war and now leader of thes handling of the twelve-metand other desert searcher, terly jfr Larson can to Kiitjan as a Noresca m 1924 This craft, built ?! SZZ?1 and th night before a Gobi start in missionary but h hs been ou won lln Kings cup p Xir ' they all become so excited that threNorway, flUms hs the s vigorously" prlR times e hev dont dfp a wink' !U" f r Vi.'1 He give, full credit to Geneml' In 1923 Capt. Heard was made " Irga who. There nr f.ve larson children John J. Perehi g for being fine to.,,;, Li'ine of the Atra. a appointed h.m as au o'fu.al ntl n th UnPerf States. Airs. C L skipper accept Marshs! Foch n supreme4 owned by the late Sir Walker Ii es in Nw York, the old- - Mortimer Skinner 'ommanJer of the Allied arm It bh was the ' now lbr Mongols In ttcr th i o.' 5n :s an electrical engineer in as only thn tlat Erg'ind final-- ) he riced Among . duk-isaba t aaf ard two sons and a firgt big yacht ly agreed and th unity of com- - they know were hb rivals the I like them and trut daurh mand for the AtPel fore s wasrre- - xp?arn-r are in school in Fasa- Shamrock the White Heathated on Apr! !3 1919, Mordacq fhem and they tnut m But nf'dn Cat f er and the schooner Westward. He h.n rhe vn.la has been occupied by, had scored four ictories in eight Aked whrh- r he Frerch would GfCfk Royal Villa bis Erziish servant, Bloner, and "tarts. The Astra was designed hy ot he ddovafto the Young n an if U j Nicholson, who Is also the riOUSe bi, ai'e hev ref se 1 to evacuate the Rhine.. designer College May Nn he s'ate claims the estate, of the new Shamroeii he rTlied; Mi,r. (AP Th d'pomats ak that h aie CORFU, .onSnd.ng that it never has been' Sir Thomas is therefore basing e When' his hope, of victory not only on of the crown France is ben paid for jus debts Itepjs the Ge, k r sal v. la stand - p.operiy Hr nh ceded Carfu with the, a commander who ha, won the ad-tshe ga e up her securitv Thes RC . the ind x confuse two questions the r Ion. an i,iands to Greec.i mlraion of the Brl eh yachting j,1 r . int i", p3v0, mem of dfbts and France safe-is 4 th treaty handed over world for six ears t.r more, but j n v i t of t e M n Repos to tha tlreek te. on commander who hai shown o omn jn . o Another ouestion mit to the Gen- - Rarnt 01 ittOV pr king If the state estab-I- his rreatest genius mhn handling I: prolal v w'i era I was whether the evacuation fsee a it claim, it exifect Nicholson-designed to open a craft. would not hasten good will be become an educational institution - a u'J e on the sie. Th rJS occa.mnal v octween France and Germany. To Bervir-to Universal . on the . Ing , by tne U e Kiog G. org. I of ttila he replied that mum people dl- of bis demanding s American Atsolant Wife i reons are ao anxious to have peace that Gr"e A,tfcr . . vorcs hi the petfy I OO expensive to Keep former against they go around crying for It with-- ' 1911 !lt a found thv lie, be'ie,- -- T Miss actress. ParPauline out-- k owing how to gt it ,nS !t to be b..'vn pniate p'operker W- - had I want peace as much a aaytoqurathei it ta hr. four'll, n, BARON G WRANGEL.' M. Aseolant was In a great I ' son. Prince Andrea body e'se. he- - asserted. and PARIS tL'S) "She Is too ez-- hurry ivd could not say more on th'nk France's military security on! Andrew narrowly being pmne for me to keep the the subject, be was preparing to the Rhine is one of the bes ways' hot bv a court martim m conr.ec-- J reply of M. Jean Assoisntwa,navt-l leave France a second time, but ' ,fc of securing peace between France ' Yellow Bird la Its this tins It wa. only to go eg n0; I sad Germany and fled the country Since hop. while spy..- - mild tour of conferences. nerve-wracki- s 'I -- 1 three-year-ol- Me of Mongolia Upton To Test Finds Outfits For Gobi Desert New Challenger In Home Waters 0. Sor-lett- e S-- 1 J 1 4 A tut-ld- l K i i - bead-quarte- rs wa-ter- s. rid-n- ot , r I nt j seventy-five-foot- i twenty-three-met- f. tv I i cnn. -- t e :! , I -' i 1 -7r a -- 4 Gives Her Vernon U.S. Fib Sway St. James Palace, Where Great Powers Are To Hold Conference,' Has Romantic History Opens Reprisal trans-Atlant- 1 er Anti-ReEg- ic L. Yo-lhlnRc- ssia Joig PhnlnFrance be considered a bad omen that the meeting place for the fire power Invasion of Market Official Organ Charges which disarmament conference epens on Jan. SI and which has That Campaign Ia Be Producers American been selected by Hie Majesty King a was V, leper originally George ing Conducted in DeDenounced in Chamber hosp.tal for women, established in fifteenth century. sultory Manner Artists As Menace to French St. James' False, where the Refuse Request delegates of the United States, Art and Thought. Great Britain. Franco. Italy and has to are assemble, passed Japan through many vicissitudes since it EDWARD L. DEUS& was a leper hospital and has ac- By BARON GEORGE WRANGEL PARIS (US) The overwhelmUniversal Service. knowledged the presence not only of a score of the kings and queens ing invasion of the French film of desertion MOSCOW The of England, but of soldiers and market by American producers statesemen whose names stand was denounced recently, in the thirty Comsomols. (young and their going over to high in the world's list of heioes. French Chamber, aa a ''menace to The During the course of a pilgrim- French Art and thought. the Baptist youth organizations In of films benefit the the the for American attack foreign age against t)q Moscow region hM unleached a correspondents In London, who are was started during a discussion Of scandal that the may lead p a to report the proceedings of Uie the new budget for the Ministry clean-u- p disarmament conference, special ot Beaux Arts. in the leading After declaring that the continrepresentatives of the foreign ofsocieties. crusading intifice today revealed all of the gent plan was working out to The deserters, it is said, were mate history of this famous brick the detriment of French producers captivated by tbe more alluring palace, which ia one of the few M. V von Del boa deputy, declared ot with great emphasis; and entertaining social life affordsurviving monuments times in London. "Since the United Stages refuses by the Baptist Toung Peoples to buy our good wines, let us, in Infanta Eulalia, above, cousis ed Guides Show Palace. society. Under the direction of the for- return, show ourselves . less hos- of and of case brought into the limeAlfonso The Spain King eign office guides, Americana, pitable to their films " light. the altogether too political French. Italians. Danes and GerHi. remark waa greeted with mother of Don Luis Bourbon-Princ- nature of the activities of certain mans were shown the monograms great applause. of Orleans, is quoted Comsotnol branches, with aa abd M. Francois Poncet, Under Seof kings inscribed on sence of the reason the youthful relaxation. nuptiah and even on the cop- cretary for the Beaux Arts, then saying Desultory Campaign. per waterplpes which still serve took up the discussion declaring of her sou and Mrs Mabelli But worse than that the the Corey, divorced wife of Pittstc carry away London's perpetual that he himself recognized Pravda, organ of th rains from the roofs of St. James' fart that French films were being burgh steel magnate, may ncx Comsomols, charges that the entire submerged by the foreign Inva palace There la hardly a square foot of sion. Ije recalled the continual take place is that Mrs. Core) campaign is being the ancient pile which baa not its controversy which had prevailed does not care to lead the simpli conducted in a desultory manner. The Amerihistoric associations. When, in between the French and newspaper revealed that the e 1131. the "Laaar House which had can film interests and then spoke agricultural life which Princi printing presses which turned out literature served for ZOO years as hospital for of the truce declared In SeptemLuis finds to his liking. in th ber. female lepers passed into the publishing house of the 0 Atheists League, also printed Holds Tilt October, hands of King Henry VTII. the sit' In that truce, the Americans was said to have been 'dlacreeilv copies of a book of hvmns enVoice T titled The of to Faith to for chosen as it waa as dreary and agreed operate under the th Baptists. kneiy as could be desired for the 1 contingent which provides tbq The 8nvlet Association of Dra0 per cent oi At that they can release uolaiion of Ha inmates. matists. it is further alleged, paid number released of films they time, the Lazar House waa fully Ihs . lithe piajwngbt. Ippolitov-lvano- v three miles from the boundaries of in 1928, without contingent 209 rubles a months for several censes. ancient London. Octo-Bewords the for months for "That holds until writing d ireaty King Henry, the these hymns. Another Soviet dradeclared M. Poncet 1930, monarch, evidently had the intenmatist received as much as ?oo tion at that time to build a love "Neither party made any concesrubles in one month for similar nest for his newest bride, Anne sions to the other. Meanwhile we work, while proletarian plav 'Bolcjn. agreed to find another system in wrghts turning out plavs for workOfficial Residence. whereby cinema Interests 3 MAX PERLMAXX ers 19 clubs BY and received be France would only safeguarded. Tbej From the day that King Henry rubles (92 for a play. (Universal Service.) VIII and Anne Boleyn moved into French in government did not bindj- BUCHAREST is be The way Artists Refuse. any way by that agreethe new palace in 1532 until the Itself meat. Our two great republics ing paved for Prince Carol a reThe Atheists League, the same bam been should present, BL James are His die to Rumania. turn be in sot paitisans continually counted ope of the official reel said, once asked the over such a question." showing more activity and bold- newspaper of Soviet Artists to have oencea of the kings of England. agreement "Some day I hope we will have ness as public opinion is beginning Society Its members Even today, when King George no a sort paint som of League of Nations of the to change in favor of the exiled Tb 8ocIety Is ptoures. longer lives there, ambassadors are cinema. The the of development prince. to aid have . to replied that no artist the "Court of Sf film is now at its crucial point and A ear ago, no deputy would appointed bothers with such because James' 'and not to the court of we pictures cannot yet visualize the future have dared to rse in the chamber there Is no demand for them, and Buckingham or to the court of of the talkie. We were obl.ged to and demand that unfavorable critiY lndsor. the could not be hnc request make the truce with America be- cism of Carol cease. with. complied to disarmament the Delegates at that time the talkie and Vicar Mann, ao intimate friend The paper then demands that conference will go to their labors cause sound films were Just coming in of the Influential Minister of the the traitors he thrown out of aTl by way of the Friary court into and we had no has de- fhe organizations Involved. Interior apparatus ot our beambassadors' court, our manded In the chamber that the is own that It only recently cause the entrance to the state hss been able to acquire government take measures against which used to used industry the apparatus and enter the "slanderers of Prince Carol. IheiftJaVOr Job Held by the ambassadors and diplomatic into necessary the talkie field, father of his majesty. King Mich' corps is situated therein. On the Most Keep Traditions. Same as Mother ael " north side of the ambassadors' Continuing, he insisted that the "Insulting the father of the king court is that portion of the palace French must not al- damages of the WATFORD, England (AP) A the prestige known as York House, which is low the government traditions of French art crow n, declared woman who believe that being a icar Mann, the present residence of the Pr nee to be in Jeopardy. placed "and hurts the honor and credit mayor is the same Job as being of Wales. In an as when the entire of our little king. 81andr directed the mother a family only on A corridor from - I'rlary court is been elected prostrating itself before against the father is also d reeled larger scale has which is used commonly by those world man rial things, France must of Watford. the son. You know ver mayor invited to attend the royal levees, to Its great traditions." he against - A. F. Broad Mrskeep is from an a frm be descends well that eagle contains several noteworluy mod- declared. One does not achieve an eagle and that an oak spr.ngs liever in the maxim that a womern paintings; notably, The Roll a creacivilization bv the ans first duty in life is to her from an oak. Call ' over the central mantel- tiongreat Beof powerful machinery "I ask the government t take husband and her children, piece by Elizabeth Thompson loitits .measures to end she has done her Job in this disgraceful er wards Lady Butler); ''Khartoum, sides, France muet preserve real character. Those who jngujt to Princ Carol the home, says Mrs. Broad. then laOS, depicting the funeral serv- from other countrle. to iv comejSpertaca is time wilh;,n the for her to step into ln(erp,t of th. pub'.!- weal ice lor Gen. Gordon; and an un- us come to absorb our culture, for o the :rown. an the public life. A town Is only a famfinished picture of the Investure at Our little kinp Is now of an ily on a larger scale Carnarvon castle installed over tiu e Th s woman mayor, who to a are when he 'begins to understand at the farther end. has assured is rood and what s bad. Our grandmother, what The Main Stairway. as soon a he is (rrown townspeople that she will not inkin,have The main stairway, leading to from all over the world, who will be littlewill dcteid-honor of with terfere the duty anything to do with the chambers and suites, on the in attendance thereon, the Throne,,up. m ,j, and intgiity of his roads or any scheme having ensecond floor was designed bv S:r room is of the chief Importance technicalities about father gineering Christopher Wren, England's most, There the king and queen of Great which she knows nothing. famous architect. At the turn of Britain still hold their levees' under portrait of King Charles IV. a "I shall giV my attention to the stairway a portrait of George, the canopy at the far end. For the characteristic example of the art of those things only that I knowr prince of walea who afterwards be- purpose of the conference, a suc- Sig Thomas Lawrence. On .the about, she says. "Othcame George the III, looks down cession of tables will fill the length right and left of the fire place are something ers I shall leave to experts. My tetoria and concern w i! be the things upon all interlopers in the quiet of this room. , that afportraits of Queen A fine marble fireplace fills al- Prince Albert typical George III manner. by Winterhalter. fect the ordinary mar, his wife s are and their children." Of the many rooms on the second most one end of the Throne room. Over the two east floor which are to be devoted to the! It waa brought from France by the noteworthy portraits ot Kin Wiluses of the delegatee to tbe confer- - Firat Duke of Wellington. Abo. e liam and hla consort. Mary, and west are speaking likenesses of ence and of the correspondents the mantel-piec- e over the flanking doors ot the King Charles It and King James H. la a Tapestry Room, The Tapestry room, Which will be used-- , a ooe of the committee rooms for tbe conference, is a conpart of the original building structed by King Henry V IIL and is known as the old presence chamber. Tbe waifs of this room ars hung wtth priceless Mortke tapestries, m hich were made at tbe order of King Charles I. The tapestries illustrate the love myths of Venus and Mars and bear in their corners the monogram of the martyred Charles 1 and the Prince of Wales feathers. The in t fa is Tapestry room stands as it was originally designed by the builder of the Palace and on li marbtos ere carved the cipher "H and A Joined by a true lovers knot, the Plantagenrt ruse and the w hirh represented King Henrys claim to the throne of France. Rcgl Beauty Spot The real beauty spot of Jt. James Place with which ths delegates to the conference will become familiar ia Queen Annas Drawing Room, which was designed by Sir Christopher Wren when na ho remodeled the palace. The silk is of modern design and the wails of the great room ars hung with priceless portraits of tbs notables in Englands Royal line. Tbs following portraits are on view. Henrietta Maria. Queen of Charles L., after Sir Anthonv Van Dyck; John Manners by 8tr Joshua, Reynolds; Mary of Modena. Queen of James 11, by Simon the three Georges on tbe eastVerelst; wall, par ticniarly George L by dir Godfrey KnelJer. and George III, by Sir Joshua Reynolds. Other pictures in this room are: Anne of Denmark. Queen of James I. by Paul van Somer. George, Prince ef Denmark. Baflllmt l, region I, I ot cfaarcfa and state marked I he nirpUala of Filmies Marie fame ot Bc9ghw and Anne, Sir tone waa on Humbert of Jan. frown Prince Italy. Their wedding days of entertain, Godfrey Knelfer; Anne Hyde.by preceded by meat afnd the formal reception at the Qnlrinal palace on the eve of tbe manning. After the wedding, of York, by Sir Peter Lely: ta the faaaoas Paallne chape) of thv palace, at Hoar, which was richly decorated with rrienmn velvet Wiaans remarkable portrait of and golden chandeliers, the hridy and groom were received by Pope Pine at the Vatican. Above ait IJmt H. and that of Catherine the principal flgarea In tbo anion of the two royal tamales, at left tbe King and Qarea of Belgians; Braga uxa, the Queen Consoif sf sf James IX. by Sir Peter Lely. right, the King and Qaean of Italy; center, the bride and groom, and below. Pope Pint bj ' long-dea- fire-plac- self-sam- I3. 20.-00- Friendship For Carol Grows In much-marrie- His Home Land -- - Va'da-Vocvo- d, fire-plac- n hr i ' door-wav- full-leng- j Principals in Old World Royal Wedding fire-pla- fleur-de-li- s, wall-coveri- Du-cto- us i k A. |