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8 Tales of Well S0 In Social and Official Life President Coolidge Easi]y Accessible, Is North Shore Verdict—Eminefit personages Noted in the Moving Throng. BY MARGARET B. President Coolidge on the North | Shore should be in famillar sur- | roundings, vet his neighbors seem to | Be discovering unsuspected traits in | the Chief Magistrate and taking the world into their confidence about is not news to the residents ! Capital that the President igh possessing the universal repu- | tation of being reserved and difficult | to approach, has in reality proven more accessible to all classes of people than any Executive since Grant. Theodore Roogevelt had the reputation for meeting every one, from prince to pauper, but in reality he gave too much time to sports and to his personal friends to permit any such general reception of citi- zens in groups or individually as does President Coolidge. For one | thing. President Coolidge, according to those who know him best, decided in his earliest years that intimate friendships took toll of too much pre- clous time and he never cultivated any He had close, true friends, but none was of the exacting kind. It cannot be doubted that the deepest affection is felt by the President for Frank Stearns, yet Swampscott takes notice | that the two men can meet each other several times a day with no more re sult than a smile or nod. The North Shore has gradually discovered that, while the President and Mrs. Coolidge are determined to pass their vacation quietly in the social sense, all those who wish to drop in after a proper formality will be received by both. Alexander Skrzynski, pre- »f Poland and its minister of for. affairs, has sailed for this coun- and will arrive Tuesday, prepara- tory to attending the Institute of Poli- pics. which will begin its courses in Villlamstown, Mass., July The Polish premier has declared in many »f his public addre: and in his Wate papers that the moral debt un- | der which his country rests to the United States aas induced him to take this trip and to make a profound study of the underlying philosophy in the American scheme of government He intends to send_ hereafter a few of the voung men studying diplomacy | and statescraft in Warsaw to the in- | stitute, for he deems a thorough com prehension of American affairs im- | perative for the successful diploma tist. Coming to Washington shortly | after arrival the Polish statesman will be the guest of Polish consuls and per spnal friends in Boston, Providence | and New York City. He probably will | return to Washington early in_ Sep tember and by that time the Polish | Minister, Dr. Ueladyslaw Wrobleski, who is spending the Summer in his home in Cracow, will #ave returned | with his family and will entertain the | statesman. The premier will be ac-| corded all the honors bestowed on such | distinguished visitors and will be for- mally received at court and perhaps | later at the White House here if it is | in readiness then and the President | has returned, but in any case he will be received by the Secretary of State. | Dr. Skrzynski proposes to be in the | domain of the United States for the best part of three months DOWNING. thot Count mier eizn try The Secretary of Agriculture, Dr.| Jardine, has been covering much dis tance since he took over his onerous duties, and is becoming well acquainted in the various communities. He has| twice been the guest of the horticul- | tural clubs of New York, and recentiy | attended the annual exhibition of the | National Plant, Flower and Fruit| Guild, held in the grand terminal of New York city. This organization was founded by the members of the horti- cultural society of the State, who real- ized that the greatest pleasure of a garden to raise sufficient plants, flowers or fruits to share such riche: with those who have them not. They | established booths where flowers, seeds, cuttings and roots could be bestowed gratis, where surplus fruits also were given away, and where ornamental plants could be procured just for the trouble of digging them. What this guild has accomplished for gardeners in humble circumstances and what it has saved the State in the matter of health and in an added food supply, it | is impossible to conjecture, though | New York is about to issue statistics on the subject. The Secretary of Agriculture could edd tremendously to the gardens of Washington by following a similar pro- gram, in regard to flower seed at Jeast. Take those glorious pansy beds which so delighted the eve a few weeks ago in the grounds of the Agricultural | Department. Some 15 or 20 plants of each variety can furnish seed enough to make a home garden charming. The hollyhocks on Hains Point have | reached their maximum of beauty and | are beginning to seed. Some of the| double ones in deep red are almost im- | to huy from florists, and tens 1sands of seed must g0 to was A guild to furnish seed to bona gardeners could be conducted by Dr. Jardine, Col. Sherrill and a few of | their aides to the joy and health of thousands of the citizens of the| Capital | is possi of thi d has, at the solicitation | h-Speaking Union of presented to,the Com monwealth of Massachusetts, through its present executive, Gov. Alvin T. Fuller, a splendid oil pa® ing of Sir Richar ne, who was royal gov-| ernor of the colony from 1636 to 1639, | and who left a splendid record in the New World. Vane was quite a celeb. in his later years, and was/| of the Commons in the Long Parliament. Vane was beheaded in| the Tower when Cromwell rose to| power, but on the restoration of the | Stuarts his son, Sir Christopher Vane was given possession of the estat The son of the me noblem2n wa: under William IIT, made “he iirst Lord | Barn: , grandfatler r removed, of | the present pee The portrait of the gallant Governor of Massachusetts has hung in Raby Castle, the seat of the Barnards for the past three centuries. The gift will complete the set of | colonial governors which has been collected by the Massachusetts His. torical Society. Gov. Fuller intends 10 have a gala time when the gift ar- rives, and has invited President and Mrs. Coolidge to attend the ceremony of placing the painting in the Massa- chusetts Capitol. Lord Barna of the En America, just The Minister-designate from Egypt, M. Mahmoud Samy Pasha, set all the tongues a-wagging on the question of precedent when he displayed the pale green flag on which a white crescent moon floats, the national emblem of | the land of the Nile, on a festival which is purely religious in character and without any political significance whatever. For the moment the courtly envoy from Egypt holds no official rank, and therefore is at liberty to @dorn his home in any way which ap- peals to him. But when he has pre- sented his credentials to the President and the Secretary of State and be- comes an active member of the Wash- ington corps he must needs take | counsel with the dean of the foreign body. Senor Don Riano, the Ambassa- dor from Spain, and with the officials of the State Department whenever he desires to display the flag of his coun- try. In the old days the dean of the diplomatic corps exercised much au. ' thority over the members of it, and | the separate individuals conferred with him on almost every point at the Wil k ith pun.i.livu wrou o |and lack of Instructions from any au- | It would add vastly to the picturesque | Capital | as quite | their flags | and | Nuneham, | coustns, [nue untfl the last months of i rial for “Life on the Mississippi.” CIETY. Known Folk ness, and M. Jusserand frankly de- clared that each mission must shift alone. The painful incident about the (German embassy and the flag at the obsequies of Woodrow Wilson resulted from a misunderstanding of customs thoritative source. In pre-war days every head of a foreign mission in Washington would have received a notification to ay its national emblem at hal The Seccretary of State, however, and the mentors at the American equiva- lent of a foreign office will no doubt welcome the innovation of his excel- lency from Cairo and commend his picty in so solemnly proclaiming the holy days of the Mohammedan world. spect of Washington If all the envoys | would follow the excellent example of the envoy from King Fuad. In an other capital “the company of Heaven" is not excluded from the honor paid national heroes. Before the unifica- tion of Italy all the nations sending envoys to the Holy See, to the King of Naples, to the Austrian province of Lombardy and Venetia honored their patronal saint on the proper day. Thus the British envoy uplifted the lion and the unicorn on the feast of St. George, the Netherlands remem bered St icholas, the German states St. Boniface—in a word, all paid the same honor to thelr protector in Heaven as to the earthly arbiter of their destinies. It has been pointed out that every flag should fly in a Christian nation on December 25. This displays its national emblem on Washington's birthday anniversary, logic: ould. But it appears just as reasonable to display it on the natal day of the Divine Saviour. Years ago hen Korea was a nation . the legation hung out the| flag on the new vear, which came in the early Spring, and for a long time the Japanese and Chinese displayed too, at the beginning of the new year. They have all aban- doned the practice in these later days. and not one of the 53 nations repre- sented in Washington observes a re. ligious feast publicly. The Hon. Barbara Harcourt, who is about to marry Mr. Robert Jenkinson ! in London, is a great-granddaughter of | that Junius Spencer Morgan who | founded the great international bank- | ing house now known under the name of his son, J. Pierpont Morgan. The | Hon. Barbara is largely American by descent, in that her grandmother, a daughter of Junius Spencer Morgan married Walter H. Burns of New | York, an assoclate in the Morgan firm | in London. and it was their daughter who wedded Viscount Harcourt in Ox fordshire. This noble has played an important political role. His father, incidentally himself, have also been glorified in George Eliot’s “Cleri cal Tales,” for Lord Harcourt also is Baron Nuneham. His splendid coun- try place, near the ancient town of in the Midlands, is mi- nutely described in “Mr. Gilfil's Love | Story,” and appears also in “The Sad Fortunes of the Rev. Amos Barton." | The Hon. Barbara Harcourt is very fond of her American relations, and frequently been the guest of her the young Junius Spencer Morgans, and of the Pierpont Mor gans. She is rather bookish i taste, and has declined to get mixed up in politics. Her father was in several recent cabinets, and in the last As. quith regime he held the post of min- ister of public works and later of| secretary of state for the colonies. Mr. Jenkinson {s well known on this side, where he served for a time with the ‘special military mission in early war days. Formerly an officer of the Second Life Guards, ke now is in bus ness in London. He has a fine coun- try seat—Lampton Grange—in orth- amptonshire, in close proximity to the Washington and Franklin patriotic shrines. Senator and Mrs. Wadsworth, who | lingered for the last possible moment in their new home, the beautiful place which Mrs. Charles D. Wetmore had stablished in Woodland drive, are making the acquaintance of their fir grandson, in Ilochester, where he ar- rived at the Stuart Symington home two weeks ago. Mrs. Symington was Evelyn Wadsworth, a former belle, who gccupled an exceptionally impor- tant position in national and local affairs. Washingtonians are not a: tonished that the naming of this pungster is calling forth family coun- cils galore, for there is material among his ~grandfathers and great.grand. fathers ample enough to supply sev- eral unnamed infants. Mrs. Wads orth, wife of the Senator from New York, called her first son Jeremiah,; though he is known as “Jerry,” after | heroic member of her husband’s! umily who lived in Revolutions Her sister, Mrs. Payne Whit- named her ‘daughter Joan and her son John, the latter for the re- vered poet, diplomat and statesman John Hay, father of Mrs. Whitney and | of Mrs. Wadsworth, There have been James Walcott Wadsworths who climbed to high places in public es- teem during the past 100 years, and the youngest son of the Senator bears this honored name, and figures as “junfor.” Mrs. Symington, however, could follow the honored custom of beginning a new family with her hus- band's appellation, and. as he is a junior, this would place this young cion of distinguished lineage quite accurately in his proper generation, Mark Twain's home in Hartford, Conn., is at last to be purchased by a group of his admirers and kept in perpetual commemoration of the Na- tion’s greatest humorist. This s fol- lowing the suggestion of that cele- brated literary critic, the late Charles Dudley Warner, who, with Harriet Beecher Stowe, was a nelghbor of Mr. Samuel Clemens in the Farmington avenue home. Mr. Warner has placed it on record that his gifted friend, world famous as Mark Twain, never wunted to go to bed, but preferred to sit up and talk, and that he talked better than he wrote. Mr. Warner lived in a quaint little cottage on the hillside, and the same stream which trickled past his door performed the same service for Mrs. Stowe and for the Clemens household. Nearb; a_man immortalized in the wri all three literary lights—Warner, Stowe and Mark Twain—Joe Twichell who is the beguiling Harris in “The Tramp Abroad.” Mrs. Twichell, ac- cording to Mr. Warner, was the first to discover the marvelous quality of Mr. Clemens’ running stream of talk as they all sat by the brook and lis- tened to the incidents which after. ward materialized into “Life on the Mississippi.” - Mrs. Twichell surrepti- tiously took notes of the talks, read them to her literary neighbors, and had them join her plea to Mr. Clemens to get the anecdotes together in book form. Mr. Clemens moved to Hart. ford from Elmira, N. Y., in 1867, and lived in the house in Farmington ave- 1869. During his residence there he wrote “Huckleberry Finn,” “Tom Sawyer” and part of “The Prince and the Pauper,” besides- collecting the mate- Young George Vanderbilt Cecil has Iready wrought a transformation in | It was during some excavations under | vote. SARRISE EW0iN —. e MRS. CYRIL WESLEY McCLEAN, Formerly Miss Ivey Huddleston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Huddleston of Comanche, Tex., married to Special Assistant to the Attorney General McClean, from the home of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. Forrest McCutcheon, July 1. and swimming pool at “Biltmore House.” In his special honor a series of lovely marble Cupids, which his grandfather, George W. Vanderbilt, founder of/the place, had ordered to be carved in Italy, have been set up about the pool and along the flagged walk leading to it. Mrs. Vanderbilt did not care for the little Cupids, and a t ¢ 't there was much discussion as to their | Unity offered for spending a week or disposition. When she and her daugh. |ore i camp as they are this vear ter, now Mrs. John Francis Amherst| FAWazd B, Shaw, the Seout execu v Cecll, were alone in the place they de- |7, Windred Washington Boy Scouts cided they did not desire Cupids inj* e G s e every part of their favorite garden|%re now at the two camps, camy and about the swimming tank. So the | [0S3VEL, CRICT IS of Thess lovely statues, 12 in number. had PSake Bav. and Camp i languished in an outhouse until this| ™, "p, ) Bartsch, chairman of the Summer. - Little George's advent has | Ot Uou| BeTsch. chalfiuan of vho reconciled his mother to the laughing | frocte SO mAteS, WHO. VEREC Co god of love. Placed on graceful pedes. | 20 "o **1ie had never seen the tals, they have proved the most en camp In such fine shape or running trancing ornaments among the flowers | VY B R TG SO 0 ne. and along the edge of the walk. Some | coe S G 4 . Which are flinging roses, others disport with |y, 5 jarge measure is responsible dolphins and have a tiny fountain at-| " gi ¢\ caven Scouts won thelr camp tached, while the remainder behave|iacrers last week, which is the largest as Cupids should—aim a dart at the|nymber to win this honor in any one unsuspecting god of love in the Pool | ek in the camp history. In order or among the flowers, |to win the lowest honor, which is the Gov. Lee Trinkle of Virginia has|req letter, a Scout must obtain 300 been indefatigable in uncovaring the | ints in the following 13 divisions of forgotten glories of the State, and|Seouteraft: 1, Scout advancement: 2, within the past month he has added |Scout contest: 3, nature work: 4 fresh luster to his researches by dis-|handicraft: 65, first aid; 6, markman covering the tomb of Lord Thomas|chip: 7, woodcraft: 8, aquatics; 9 Fairfax in the crypt of oid Christ|patriotism: 10, general scouting: 11 Church in Winchester. This Lord |radio; 12, special service to camp; 13 Fairfax and Baron of Cameron was a inspection. bachelor and the friend of Washing-| As the camp accommodations are fon. As ne had practically built and pidly being filled up any Scout de- endowed the church near his home, he [siring to attend Camp Roosevelt requested that he be buried there. {should make reservations at the His tomb, however, was forgotten in | | | BOY SCOUTS In the 10 years that Boy Scout Council has been conducting camps for the Washington Boy Scouts there has never been a season when so many Scouts took advantage of the oppor- earliest possible date. the passing of a century and a half.| The following scouts will be at Camp Roosevelt this week: Troop 1. Jim Boswell, Bill Boswell, Guy Glassford, Pelham Glassford, Willlam F. Nesbit Edwin Duvall, Franklin C. Winer; 8. Donald Harris, Albert Love, Bertram Nye. Ben Stone, M. David, Lee Harri Son. 2, Norman Stevens; 15, George Emmons, jr. Hugh B. Emmons John Matheson, Leroy Voshall, Snow den_ Fluckey, Eugene Fluckey, Joseph Richardson; 16, Floyd Willett; 17, Ros MeQuire; 20. Donald Cralg, Gil bert Hedges; . John Harris Douglas Frederick: 29, Fred . White 33. Wagner Lowder, Albert Harned Homer - Smith, Thomas Jackson, Robert Weigel; 42, Charles Mor- gan, Bartlett Judson, N. Page Worth ington, Robert Boyer, Robert Bourke; 43. W. Memler, E. Angelico, Theodore Tiller, Norris Ruckman: 45, Robert Emory: 47, Oscar Seigel; 52, William A. Horne, C. A. Markham, Robert Way, Robert Burkart, Sam Mears, Howard Mears, Morgan Shields, F mer Booth, Proctor Dougherty: 54, Edwin Watson: 57, Francis Shull, Joe Thomas, Robert Keley, R. H. Sargent, Alfred Lewis, Phil Ferris, Paul Alex ander, Joseph Galliher, Dick Snead. George Strong, Robert Cron: 60, Paul the chancel of the church that his coffin, plainly marked and in good re- pair, was discovered. Gov. Trinkle had, however, during a recent visit from the present Lord Fairfax. become convinced that the tomb of Washing ton’s powerful and helpful friend could be discovered if the excavations were made. He encouraged the plan and offered to bear part of the expense. It | is not proposed to remove the remains, | but to reinter them after the restora | tion of the old edifice and mark the | spot in brass, after the anclent way | when entombment is made in a church | crypt. Without doubt, the American | Fairfaxes will be present when the | work is completed. The Governor of Virginia proposes to make the reinter- ment worthy of the event. The Old Dominion honors the name of Fairfax in many ways for signal services to the patriots after July 4, 1776. This peer practically knew no home save the one he established in Virginia, and he lived there for more than 60 years. Gen. Hindenburg, the grim warrior of the great European conflict, is ap- | pearing in different guises since he be- come President of Germany. Accord. |Steinkuller, Kenneth Appold; 63, Wil ing to the testimony of many Ameri- |liam Everett, William Nichol ans passing the Summer in Berlin, he | Gordon Potter; 71, Donald Brow showing the most cordial interest in | Jack Cockerille; 83, David Lee, equal rights, and was, in fact, the|L. Viers, Frederick Mattingly, M. Dim victor in the late election solely be-|mette: 86, Lamar Pickett; 100, R cause he ‘commanded the feminine | Mickey, Leroy Miller, T. Sawtelle The German republic granted | Isaac Minowich, Paul’ Brightenburg: suffrage to women at the very begin- | 101, Henry McCormick: 104, Lawrence ning of its career, and their vote in all | Morsher, John Pendleton; 108, Gordon national elections has been fifty-fifty | Richard: 113, William Kilgore: 109, with the men, something entirely un-|James Smith: 1 precedepted even in the Scandinavian countries, where the fair sex entered the political field with such enthusi asm. But, though. German women ercise their privilege so universally, few are inspired to follow a public | career, and President Hindenburg, though elected by the women, is not embarrassed by them in seeking a place in his cabinet or in any other prominent role. These women gener- ally belong to the old conservative | clement, and believe as strongly in the | three “K's.” which in German stand | for “kitchen, children and church,” as they did in the kaiser's regime. Only in the Communistic party are women in _evidence. Frau Ruth Fischer Golke, the leadef of these radicals and one of those eloguent debaters in the Reichstag, has a number of brilliant aides in the pasliamentary battles which she wages persistently against the other parties. But her party is not socially as powerful its position would warrant. Frau Golke has failed to lure supporters from other ranks to her side, and the German women con- tinue to be as conservative under the republic as they were under the em.| Bring In This Ad Before July 19 Manicuring . . . .40c Shampoo . ... ...50c Hair Dyeing . .. $4.95 Hair Bobbing . . . 50c Marcelle & Bob Curl. . §1 MISS FLEET Formerly of Woodward & Lothrop and Lansburgh & Brother Garden Rose _Beauty Parlor 1112 H Street N.W. Franklin 2224. Expert Service I R e iy 0 | i I I [ 24 12 Degrees Cooler Than Downtown Washington t Avenue and Woodley Road WASHINGTON, D.C. Situated at the edge of Rock Creek Park overlookis city, yot within ten minutes tazi ride of the White House, the Wardman Park Hotel of- fers visitors to Washington. the combined facilities of a re- sort and city hotel. Uniform Rates: Single Room: $5.00 per day Double Room: $8.00 per day 2 bedroom has private bath Swimming Tennis appearance of his splendid home, 3 Lwer -garaen ! Burke, 0. D. Waters, J. Preston Lyon Jack Ruckman. Camp Woodrow Wilson, which is located but three miles from the Dis trict line at Georgia avenue, is now running smoothly under the diraction of Camp Director Bosarge. A fine | cook has been obtained from the | United States Marine Corps and good, | wholesome meals may now be secured at u nominal rate of $1 a day, or $6 w week. Single meals may also be secured at 25 cents for breakfast, 35 cents for lunch and 40 cents for din ner. This camp will be kept open until aftey abor day. so that Scouts who eannc attend Camp Roosevelt on account of Summer school ma have an opportunity to spend a week more in camp. There is still room | aL present for iore Scouts who desire to attend this camp. Camp Wilson is | mneeting i need for those Scouts who | | desire to camp out for a few days or a week, but who cannot get away to the | | other camp. CHESTNU T TREES BARRED California Establishes Quamnllnei to Prevent Blight. | SACRAMENTO. Calif., July 11 (# —The State Department of Agricul ture, through Director G. H. Hecke today issued a quarantine order pro. hibiting the entry into California from Eastern States of chestnut tree: and bark. The object of the regula fon is to protect California against he introduction of the chestnut blight . Resignation Accepted. | The resignation of Second Everitte ¥. Arnold, United States In fantry, has been accepted by the | President, to take effect July 14 Lieut WV e 2 7 3 of our store! \— (xd serious factors in shaping vour future, for with ‘more than ordinar: intuitive foresight, you to g0 off at half cock ruin rlans or your ty What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. action, Cancer. The planetary aspects are not at|duic verted and all favorable during the early part|Yather violent. On of the day and. although they show |YOU are an omnivorou an improvement during the after- |thoughtful student, sor noon and evening. it is not of such |Philosopher, and always a marked degree as to warrant any |intellectual betterment step or action out of the ordinary.|Very fond of travel There will be experienced during the Success only whole day a lethargical feeling, a dis- | Your ability to control v inclination to concentrate, and a ten lrml“v‘ and restrain dency to morbidness and self-dis-| In vour home satisfaction. It will, consequently, |Strong, passionate not be a propitious opportunity for |[It does not trying out the untried, or for wan- |continually dering into reaims with which you |endurance are unfamiliar. Patience. above all| Well known virtues, will be required tomorrow.|date are. Nat Patience with others and patience |federate gei with yourself. Children born tomorrow will, re- gardless of sex, enjoy similar physi cal conditions. Although having the appearance of being both healthy and robust, they will all require carefully regulated nutrition, with an abund- | ance of outdoor alr. to enable lha—m" to attain their maturity in first-class | condition. The boy's temperament will be willful and obstinate. His will | Pengl into water power should mnot be broken, but|then rinse: the ru guided. He will be very perserver-|perma di ing in those studies that appeal 10 |to fabrics, fast him, but disinclined to learn those|Caveral season's things of which he cannot appreciate | ;= /G'#1 S4500 the practical value. A girl, on the|andy container other hand, will be submissive and |household necessity. [ obedient and very easily influenced quire at prominent dr by environment. She will not have|and dry goods storc u very strong will and her judgment | Washington will always be influenced by her| Sterling Products Co S Easton, Pa If tomorrow is your birthday, your impetuosity and impulsiveness are life and d weake grows i persons an B, ral; Ro, Woolley, educator 4th, author d Bridges, editor. Johi, ht, 199 Just dip the handy MRS. EDWARD BARRY GINGELL, Formerly Miss Marguerite Elizabeth Berens, bride of June 4, whose mar- age took place in Annapolis. 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