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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1925)
_ „■, , _____■■■— -- ------ - — . . ... . . ____ First U. S. Owned Embassy The opening of the American embassy in Paris, the first owned by the United States in Europe, wat the occasion tor a celebration attended by 3.000 persons. Ambassador Herrick welcomed the guest*. Facing Gallows } &AJ3LS- ivi. a.z^r j\aa/i: XT A -»v »*.<>. j Clasping her baby, Mr3. Mary Mattia awaits trial in the Cape May, M. J., jail on a murder charge. She says she shat her stepfather to eato her honor and protect her home. Asks Divorce I -AN’N LUTlliylg^ c~-o $ •'A divorce is disagreeable, but I guess I must have one,” said Ann Luther, actress, in Los Angeles, admitting she planned to sue her husband, Ed. Gallagher, of the Gallagher and She an vaudeville team. $10,000 Smile jMias muggy maxwell j Suit for $10,000 damages was brought in Detroit by Miss Eileen Maxwell, photogaphers’ model, against Edward Meurer, with whom she said sho was riding when an accident occurred resulting In in* juries to her face which marred her infectious rmile, decreasing her earning capacity. IMAGINED HER ‘MURDER" London.—Just before her Je.-.th, Mrs. Winifred Newhouse, 34 years oid, said she was attacked by a huck ster An examination by physicians revealed that -die hud not been at tacked. Testimony was that a clot of blood in the brain, which Inter brought death, caused her to imagine the attack. In the Day’s News _ 1 After the most spectacular ^yiriiamentary sessions In recent years, the Chamber of Deputies passed Finance Minister Caiilaux’s new tax law. John W. Butler, author of the Tennessee evolution law, around which the Scopes trial is centered, said Professor John T. Scopes, the defendant, ought to be spanked by his father and sent to bed without supper. Abd el krlra was offored control of the Riff, under the Sultan of Morocco’s sovereignty, by a French-Spanish plan. Dr. John R. Straton, pastor of New York Calvary Baptist Church, said he Is con sidering a Fundamentalist drive for a statute in New York State for bidding the teaching of evolution. Reserve Fliers Killed ~~ | i Lieutenants R. H. Perra and C. K. Hickey, of the United States Army Aviation Reserve Corps, werd Allied near Mlneola, N. Y„ when their airplane crashed into a field apd was set ablase. They were members, of a party of New Bngland Army Reserve air officers, Hickey living at Brockton, Mass., and Perra at' Marlboro, Mass. An ambulance awaited with one vlotlm until the burning wreckage cooled tnfflclenUy t*> permit rewnvsJ of the other. Not satisfied with thi compensa tion which the Metropolitan Urand Opera Company offered her for injuries sustained when a horse stepped on tier during the produc tion of an opera, injuring her right leg. Mrs. Nannie L. TodacB, singer, is suelng for $100,000. Firemen j•pie.i'bJ'cc' " Oc* v/yvi-Ks— I The Prince ot Wales was the hero ot Cape Town, Africa, when be holpad to rescue children from a burning hut, and aided in check ing the spread of the fire, suffering slight burns about the face. Prostrated j .MISS RUTti-^TAg&K. \ "1 don’t believe he ever commit ted murder.” cried MIm Ruth Stark, of Syracuse, when told Philip Knapp, reported to be engaged to her, was wanted for the murdC. flJ a chauffeur “Just for a thrill.” Sha was prostrated at her home. Flunked His Exams <JQ>m COOlw ID GE ' w. One reason why John Coolidge, son of the President, has been ’aborlng so diligently at homely chorea while most of his college class n ates are enjoying themselves at resorts has leaked out—he flunked his French course. Huntress Mias Muriel Grant, daughter of Robert M. Grant. New York banker, will aocompany her father on a trip to "Darkest Africa” to shoot rhltioceroa Factory Heads Hiss ^tHgglflg PCOJ^y When her father died Miss Cath erine Doody, of Boston, was left with a large radiator factory to manage. She made good—the only woman to achieve such success.