Word: paged
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Marriage & Divorce. A commission headed by Bishop Herman Page of Michigan voted last month, 10-to-1, to recommend that the convention liberalize the Church's canon on marriage and divorce, which at present provides that only the innocent party in a divorce for adultery may be remarried in the church. The commission would allow bishops, a year after a divorce, to approve remarriage where it seems justifiable. However, a minority report was offered by Dr. Howard Chandler Robbins of Manhattan's General Theological Seminary. One of the Church's outstanding liberals, who left the deanship...
Prime golfing axiom is that a medalist rarely wins a tournament. Last year in the U. S. Women's Championship at Summit, N. J., Medalist Mrs. Estelle Lawson Page, according to everybody's expectations, did not survive the third round. This year at Memphis, again medalist in the women's national tournament. Mrs. Page refused to be flustered, stayed calm even through such matches as one in which her opponent after a lusty swing lost her skirt. So last week Mrs. Page met 19-year-old Patty Berg, runner-up to Mrs. Glenna Collett Vare...
After the morning round it was apparent that Patty Berg, favorite with sportswriters because of her snub nose, would be only runner-up again. Playing in a faded blue jersey and battered felt hat with tees stuck in the hatband. Mrs. Page was 3 up at the end of 18 holes. Imperturbable, one-putting on green after green. Mrs. Page was 7 up at the end of 27 holes, ended the match three holes later. "It was just my day, I guess," she said...
Most women golfers good enough to try for the U. S. championship are persistent matrons like Mrs. Opal Hill of Kansas City, who was playing in her 13th national tournament last week, or enthusiastic youngsters like Patty Berg. Mrs. Page, 29, is neither. Wife of an accountant in Greensboro. N. C. she first took up golf for her health, has played only six years...
...waterfront warehouse the New Deal-hating Chicago Tribune ("World's Greatest Newspaper") had erected, in time for the dedication ceremonies, a huge sign reading: CHICAGO TRIBUNE UNDOMINATED. Morning of Mr. Roosevelt's arrival the New Deal-loving, Tribune-baiting Chicago Daily Times bannered across its front page: TRIBUNE PAINTS UP FOR PRESIDENT, ran a three-col. picture of the Tribune's warehouse display...