Mayflower, Yacht of Five Presidents, May Become Official New York Yacht ilayor Walter soon may pace the decks of the Mayflower, wner« the feet of five Presidents have trod. The Mayor confirmed the report that wealthy friends are negotiating for the purchase of the May* flower. If the deal goes through, the yacht will supplant the Macom as New York City’s official welcoming yacht. (Upper) Kx-President Coolidge, President Hoover, Mayor James J. Walker, of New York. (Lower) The historic yacht which President Hoover has discarded ea too costly. , „ „ flatarr.atlAtntl John D. 3d Goes to A i • i -i «t Work at No. 26 Acclaimed the Most Beautilu] Mannequin In Movie Colony , Do you agree with th* judges who John D. Rockefeller, the third of picked Miss Dolly Jarvis as the that name, followed in his father’i most beautiful mannequin in Holly- -'•otsteps a few days ago. His col wood? It was no hollow honor, as leg® course completed, his grand hundreds of the world's best de- tour over, the heir to the largest signers, working in Hollywood, bid fortune in the world went to work to make the movie colony the fash- at 26 Broadway, New York, the ion center of the world. headquarters of the Standard Oil I International Newsreel Company. i International Newiree* Gene and Mrs. Tunney Return Home After Year’s Absence Gene Tunney and his wife, the former Polly Lauder, as they arrived in New York aboard the liner Vulcania. Thus ends their sojourn of more than a year in Europe which began with their wedding in Rome last Octo ber—anc» ends with a breach of promise suit in Connecticut. The ex iting of the ring is sued by Katherine King Fogarty for $500,000 and her ex-husband’s accompanying $500,000 suit for alienation of affections. International Newsre«J The Ill-Fated Yacht, Carnegie The Yacht, Carnegie, owned by the Carnegie Institute of Washington, which blew up in the harbor of Apia, Samoa, resulting in the death of the master, Capt. J. P. Ault. The Carnegie was a wooden craft, built in 1909 for experimental voyages. It has made several trips around the world (Inset) Captain J. P. Ault. InUrnaUonal Ntnrtal ' McCormick’s Doctor* Freudian Disciple, Gets S300 a Day The controversy which has brought attorneys and medical experts from all parts of the world in connection with the fight for custodian of Stan ley McCormick’s $50,000,000 estate, hinges largely on the employment of Dr. Edward J. Keinpf, New York neurologist (above) and ardent dis ciple of Sigmund Freud, Vienna psychologist and originator of psy choanalysis. In the thirty months since Dr. Kempf has been in chargi of Stanley McCormick, he ha3 re ceived $10,000 a month. Jumps from Bridge To Pay Wager; Now Unemployed' I Payment of a wager caused Cath erine Sherxvood of Norwalk, Conn., to lose her job. She had made a football wager with James Hicks, floorwalker in the same establish ment, whereby she, as the loser, was bound to dive from a thirty foot bridge into the ice-filled har bor. The fulfillment of her wager caused her to report late after, lunch hour. International Newsreel Elected Head of International Leapue . -■ ■ -- ' i Charles H. Knapp, Baltimore law yer, was unanimously elected presi derft of the International League at the annual convention at Chatta nooga, Tenn., of the National Asso ciation of Professional Baseball Leagues. Knapp succeeds Conway Toole, who died over a year ago. International Newsreel Scores Inconsistency Of New Moderns Ethet Mannin, popular English novelist, scored the “new moderns" who are constantly searching for the unconventional. After a time, she asserts, so many women do the unconventional that it becomes con ventional. lotcrnatioaaJ Mcwaroc* Morgan Manor House to be Y achtUub - .——— The forty-four room manor house of the old James Pierpont Morgan estate, Cragston-on-Hudson, New York, will be converted into the main clubhouse for . . 11 __— am atirl PnnntrV Club. The club acquired more than 400 acres or the main estate at a cost of $1,500,000. The estate is not only beautiful but it has a great historic value con taining the graves of many Revolutionary War hornna i Tncr»f \ .Tnhw Piornnnt Mnptrin WiC IWMWJ mui jwuw^ *-. - * _ , ' “ " Internallonal Newsreel Is This Napoleon’s Necklace? Given Noble Owner of Much to kftieen Maria Louise m loll Disputed Necklace The Archduchess Maria Theresa of Austria wearing the diamond This necklace, which is in the custody of Mrs. C. F. Townsend, the necklace that was presented to the Princess Baronte of Italy, and her husband, a British citizen, is repre- Empress Maria by Napoleon in sented by them as being the same necklace that was presented to Queen 1811. It is now in the custody of Maria Louisa by Napoleon, on the birth of their son in 1811. The present Mrs. C. F. Townsend of New York, owner of the necklace is the Archduchess Marie Therese of Austria. Mrs. \ similar necklace is in the posses Tosvnsend is asking the United States Customs Officials to investigate don of Mrs. Ernest Graham of claims made by Mrs. Ernest Graham of Chicago that a string of diamonds Chicago. Both claim their neek in her possession are the genuine Napoleon ones, and discrediting the iace is the one presented by Na validity of the Townsend diamonds. poleon. lnl*rn»Uu»d NcwarMl UuiuU Newirnat Largest British All-Metal Flying Boat bar-iTr. i. i " i . .. Britain’s largest all-metal flying boat, Iris III, is ready for an initial test and trial flight. The huge ■hip h&3 a wing span of one hundred feet and is sup* plied with three engines- The ship has been con structed for use of the ministry in coastal patrol work. International Newsreel Germany’s New Foreign Strong, Quarantine Head, Sworn In Minister i.eo A. Strong, of California, was recently selected head of the Plant Quarantine and Control Administration of the United States Depart ment of Commerce. Picture shows the new Quarantine Head being Delegate Havemann, a well-known