Evening Star Newspaper, August 30, 1925, Page 44

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., AUGUST 30, INDERWOQD S T UNDERWQO®: yoiia ANCHEZ LATOUR_. Wwife of the Minister of Gua{cmai% who with hiw will leave next wee Hredtiandic City— Cenora, de $ Riot of Festivities Mark Closing of Summer Season At thgz rPleasure Resortsj Passing of Harvest Month Hint to \Vashington’ SOCiCK_\' Of Future Responsibilitics il’\ the Home Circles. SENORA de GONZALEZ. wife ofthe secrefavy of the Costa Rican le%iiou,. she will accompeany Sewor Gonzalez will accompany to Canade next weels. Shier on a Mols t wonth breeds thoughts, olai the | resorts to | the season | Official Washington uaily cool for if not definitc Winter, and the moon guides the da 1w nd 1 . sl o o |Notes of Special Interest In the Public View| ' To the Diplomatic Circle Cabinet and Legifila'ive!cheral Ambassadors Returning to City. Others Branches of Government| general HE White House unti 1 oth Preside Coolidge sected to retu that holiday | wemorates the toil days. T 1 ‘ Leaving—M. Daeschner to Attend Anniver- Represented in Rehearsal sary Exercises at West Point. season ops of Social Events first o tlady of thel| The Ambassador of Chiie and Senora de Mathieu, who have been guests for several weeks of Mr. Migel estate, Or ty, N. Y. York Tuesday for a days before coming to to visit the Gover of that and M orge A McLear and Mrs | Green B The Minister of ( 1, Senor | will go to New | Don J. Rafael Or no. will leave | stay of a few | Washington Thu: for Southamp. Washington, | ton to remain for an indefinite time. | The Minister returned to Washington | Friday after a motor trip to New | York 10 State of State eturn to thel street and Mrs. home on this evening from ngs, where the latter has | been for a fortnight, the Secretary joining her frequently. | The Secretary will go Monday to| troit to attend the meeting of the American Bar Association and will be accompanied by Mr. William H. Beck. da Tes The Secreta and two o in Washing the Attorne the apartrn (eneral temporarily movers, The Ambassador of Argentina and Senora de Pu rredon and their son- in-law and daughter, Senor Juan Car- los Luro and Seno de Luro, and the Benoritas Pueyrredon will come to Washington Tuesday. The Ambassa- dor and Senora de Pueyrredon and their daughters have been at Newport for several weeks and tomorrow will | go to New York to meet Senor and Senora de Luro, who are arriving on the Pan-American from Argentina. both | ife of | i 2 ied| Tpe Postmaster Genersl and Mrs. w are motoring in Michigan over | Sunday, the Postmaster General aving attended postal conventions in Cleveland and Detroit. They will re- turn to their home in Edgemoor the The Minister of Bolivia. and Senora de Jaimes Freyre and their daughter, Senorita Yolanda Jaimes Freyre, will leave the first part of the week for a 10-day motor trip to Canada. ¢ occu orney been here Agriculture, will ar- rive this 3 She will join the Secretary in t 2 X Mayflower wh he has taken for {middle of next week. the Winter. | _The Postmaster General and Mrs. | New will remain in the suburbs until | the first of Qctober, when they will return to their apartment on Wyo- ming avenue. The Minister of Lithuania and Mme. Bizauskiene are planning to go to Cape May, N. J., for a visit the first part of the week The Ambassador of France, M. Smile Daeschner, will go to New York the latter part of the week, where he will spend a short time before attend- ing the exercises marking the ann versary of the birth of Lafayette and the Battle of the Marne, which wi be held at West Point, Sunday and Monday, September 6 and 7. The Minister of Greece and Mme. Simopoulos have returned to Buena Vista Springs, after a short stay in Washington. ~ They were accom- panfed by the first secretary of the legation, Mr. C. Diamantapoulos, who will return to Washington the first part of the week. is at last to ts own \ tival, and r way for the establishment of a “Musical Festival Mrs. William Howard Taft helped to establish i when she was a prominent and brilliant pianist. eded a leader with practical ability to organize with whom personalities would be forgotten in it festival worthy of the Capital of such a Nation. hose exquisite verses ond her own circle of nd Mrs. Lyman B, charming voice and their already made her a up : are only a few of the r . maids and matrons { lishments could, if in them laurels and for- o There are . some very well known, Katherine | such sident Dawes, Speaker brilliant pianist. | Longworth of the House of Repr: ger with | sentativ Representative Winslow, spends and Mrs. Cable and Mrs. Prunell, of in mal circle v worthy head of ted people, for not only patron” of the arts, but she is an accomplished pianist and a | special lover of music. She is never absent from the good concerts and operas when it is possible for her to be present. Her son inherited his | mother’s love for it and her talents in it and is the composer of many ich his school chums h and which have al- made their way to the pub- His mother is his critic and | censor. Much of his time on his visits | to his parents in the White House is spent at the piano and over his | manuscripts Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Nevin G)ve pflfty and Dance' Assistant Secretary of the Treas- ury, Mr. Charles S. Dewey, will re- turn tomorrow from his Summer home at Jamestown, R. L, where he is spending a few days with Mrs. Dewey and their children. Associat Cincinnati in her vo Washingt such a the building of Society i The Secretary of Agriculture, Mr. Jardine, will move from Walter Reed Tiospital, where he has been for sev- eral weeks, to the apartment at the Mayflower which he has leased for the Winter. Mrs. Jardine will join him Tuesday from her home in the West. The Secretary of Labor, Mr. James | Davie, will return to Washington | this evening from Montreal, Canada, where he went to attend a meeting of the executive council of the Loyal Order of Moose. Mrs. Davis and their daughter Jane, who returned to this country with the Secretary, went directly to their home in Mooseheart from New York. The Acting Secretary of War, Mr. Dwight F. Davis, will return tomor- row from Dark Harbor, Me., where he is spending the week end with his family, after a trip to Camp Devens. Mrs. Davis, who recently returned from a long stay in Europe, will not come to Washington until the end of September or early October. agr “ashington supports all at worth he arts, but no swall cultivated mu ns, painters, tors and dar who follow art eping The Minister of Austria and Mme. Prochnik will go to New York the end of the week and will sail Satur- day on the Orizaba for Havana, where the Minister will present his credentials as representative of his government. The Ambassador of Ttaly, Signor de Martino, will sail this week on the Conte Rosso, and is expected to ar- rive in New York about September 12. is nher of sculp H hose The Minister of Rumania and Prin- | cess Bibesco will return to this coun- try the end of September, after an absence of a few months. Princess Bibesco and her little daughter have been in England since early Summer, having gone there to visit the former's parents, former Premier and Mrs. Asquith Howe, The Minister of Latvia, Mr. Charles L. Seya, is spending today and tomor- row on Long Island, and Tuesday he will g0 to New York to meet Mme. Seya and their three children, who are expected to arrive that day on the Homeric. The Minister will bring his family to Washington shortly after their arrival and they will be established 1 the house at 1715 Massachusetts avenue. The Minister of Egypt, Samy Pasha, and Mme. Samy, have gone to New York to meet the latter's mother, Mme. Sharawi, who will ar- rive on the Homeric accompanied by her son, Mr. M. Sharawi, and a close relative, Mlle. Ceza Nabarawi. The Minister will probably go to Cali- fornia to attend the diamond jubfles s celebrating the seventy-fifth anniver- Senora de Sanchez Latour will have! sary of the entrance of California into visiting them for another week, the |the Union, which will open September former’s sister-dn-law, Senora de San-| 19. i chez Latour, wife of the acting coun- The charge d'affaires of Rumania, sel general in New York; Senor Del- fino Sanchez Latour and their little | Mr. F. Nano, is expected to return daughter Rosemary. to Washington the latter part of the The Minister and Senora de Sanchez | week from Biltmore, N. C., where he Latour will leave Washington next|{s the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. A. | week for a series of visits. They will | Cecil at Biltmore House. go by motor and will spend a few days in Atlantic City. Leter in the season they will go to North Carolina —_— Gary 1 cultiv a8 3 her her rder The Minister of China, Mr. Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, will return to Washington the first of the week from Blue Ridge Summit, where he went to spend a short vacation with Mme. Sze and their children. Mme. Sze will proba- bly sail in September with her sons, who will return to their studies in! England. The attache of the Chinese Legation, Mr. Clarence Kuangson Young, is a guest of the Minister and Mme. Sze, and will return with the Minister. The Minister of Guatemala and) here as cssi W her murriag Miss Beatrice ent, has ac d sings wel | others of whom the fine arts 1 be proud, includi Mrs. Alice T in sculpture, painting, writing and dancing, all are well developed; Mrs. Percival McCeney-Welrich, known in Washington Senator Claude A. Swanson will go to New York today to meet Mrs Swanson, who is arriving the follow- ing day on the Leviathan after sev- eral weeks' stay abroad. ready | lishers. The Undersecretary of State, Mr. | Grew, will be joined by Mrs. Grew to- day, and their children, who are re- maining in their Summer home, will come to Washington the September. oung write middie of | Betrothals Announced, | Weddings in Prospect | Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hunter of| A dinner party and dance was oanoke, Va., announce the engage- |given Thursday night in the home of ent of their daughter, Annabel, to{ r "o Ao Davia J. Nevin, at 1498 Maury Jones, U. S. et e N vy 1 Joncs and | Monroe strect northwest, in honor of the late Mr. Jones. The |the seventeenth birthday anniversary wedding will tak: september 9, of their daughter, Miss Alice P. Sttor At aid evin. The guests ineluded Miss bride will =ail for Pahama cre he | Anna Ryan, Miss Agnes Ryan, Miss; will be aide to Gen. Palme S. A. Elizabeth Gre) ss Mary 3 Y, - Miss Agnes M ally, Mr. Abel Mr. and Mrs, Elia of |ris and Mr. Norbert Norris of Gaith- | last occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Syl- Germantown, Md., announce ersburg, Md.: Mr. Donald Nevius of | vanus Stokes, jr., who lived there with his mother, Mrs. Frederick E. agement of their daughter, Fannie Branchville, Md.; Mr. William McNeil, | while their house on Massachusetts| Mr. F. Lemmot Belin has been join- | McCormick-Goodhart, at Bar Harbor, Thelma, to Howard Watson [,\n-. Thomas _Delaney, avenue was in the course of construc- [ed by Mrs. Belin in their Georgetown i.eese of this city. The commercial counselor of the Swedish legation, Mr. Gustaf Weidel, who_has been acting consul general in New York, will return to the legation here the middle of October. He will be accompanied by Mme. | ‘Weidel. . | there before leasing the house on S | teenth street, where the embassy has | been establisked for some years. stant Secrstary of si¢| The commercial secretary of e s Robin. | nmercia ¥ e e RN | British embassy, Mr. Leander Mo Sy and will sematn through this | Cormick-Goodhart, has returned to whelk. peturningiatier Labor davi Washington after passing a fortnight Mrs. Dewey was in Washington for a few days last week, but will not re- turn until late in September wher they will move to the house at 1640 Rhode Island avenue, at the corner of | Seventeenth street. The house was ! his the 1925—PART 2. SENORA de JAIMES FREYRE. ~Wife of the Minister of Dolivia who lim and, Lieir dau- v trvip. Senor Tellez Is Aided By a Capable Group Of Young Diplomats Mexican Embassy Force Is| Tripled Since Ambassador | Assumed Post—-Charming' Matrons Grace Diplomatic Circle. Since Senor Manuel Tellez prese: ed his credentials to President Co idge about seven months ago, force at the Mexi embassy has been almost tripled and at the pres- ent time it contains a charming group of young matrons and their children who make up the families of the several secretaries and at taches. All like the Ambassador, Senor Tellez, are young men, for the established policy of the big repub- lc to the South is to have a virile capable force in the foreign office abreast of the times and alive to the advantages of modern progress. The Ambassador 1s not only the youngest member of the exalted circle to which he was promoted last February, but he is, being less than 40, the youns- est who has ever served in this role at the American Capital. Senora de Tellez is less than 30. Unfortunately her health is very fragile and has been particularly so &ince the birth of the young son last Winter, and she is at present recuperating from a long ill- ness. Senor Dr. Jose Benotez and Senor Manuel de Negri,- who have been connected with Mexican affairs in this Capital for some time, are both bachelors. But the other members of the staff are married and have brought their wives and children to the new post. Senor Don Carlos Baumbach came to Washington in May and,with Senora de Baumbach and their small son Carlos, they are sharing the pledsant quarjers of Senor Benitez, on Rosemont avenue. This interesting voung family are all natives of Sonora, which is one| of the border states and where the people in the upper classes bi-lingual and on the most friendly terms with the Americans who live across the Rio Grande or the invisible interna- tional line. The second secretary made his studies in the venerable University of Mexico and entering the foreign service, had been named by the new President, Senor Calles, to make up the staff of the first am. bassador who has served in Wash- ington in almost 10 years. The commercial attache, Senor Francisco Suastequi, also is from Sonora and is quite an authority on affairs along the Rio Grande and the American cities arby. Senora de Suastequi was before her marriage Senorita Laura Vasquez and there is & lively little daughter called for her mother. The commercial attache is at present at Fontanet Courts, which is quite near the embassy and in open country so to speak, for there are many breathing spaces near- by, but he expects to secure a pretty cottage in Takoma Park for Septem- ber and perhaps October. Senor Canuto de Vargas, who was recently promoted from being an at- |tache to the rank of third secre- tary, bears a name which is familiar in the Southwest and much honored | as one of the first of the long line of Conquistadores who crossed from Old Mexico to what is now the United States. Gen. de Vargas went to aid the missioners and settlers who were battling against the Pueblos Mr. Joseph The marriage will| Delany, Mr. John Fyan, Mr. John | tion. The former Ambassador of | home, after several weeks which she | _The retiring military attache of the take place im the early Fall | McKain and Mr,.J, Hoyle Nevipe B‘rn.g.sq and Mme, Jusgerand Iived spent in New England, (Cantinued on Fifth Page.) (Continued on Fifth Page.) the | Mxs RICE WILLIAM ME AN, Wife of the wew Senatoy from Colorado who will{ake a house here for the winier. BEVERLY, September’s the North Shore the tumn beauties, there pro of one of the loveliest seasons the year for the Washingtonians who are finding their stay stretch of Massachusetts one of delight. Crowded marking the closing of A w programs alluring to Capital City journe Yacht 1 continues vorite sport, the coun clubs tennis and golf are in full swin; | The hotels are for the most ~art p ning to remain open until after Labor day, and much depends upon length of the s Coolidge & f the Presid the North come to a close until £ unforeseen d tes the retu 1 a wonderful mer for the President and his ) Shore stay has done him a world of good. He is looking hetter than f years, and despite t has been able to keep in national nd intern: 1 which this country | There has been a atead callers to White Co weel. | Col. George liarvey, former A | sador to England, who has been Prides Crossing, was a a gues and there have been many Senators nd administration leaders at Swamp- | scott during the week. The President With ) give An just first of is o sea 1t is on this picturesque | the | 115, Full Days Mark Closing Of North Shore Season ipresidcnt Benefited by Sojourn—Capital Folk to l: Remain at Resorts Until After Labor | | Day Festivities Are Ovcr. Peterborc Baron man A 1d er at Magn flag i was 4 week man ats cottage ely to be and t season shore for sever | transpiring to_th p end of Mrs opened A party to ai Hospital itive booths colonists had ‘| don Means committee and 1 of the tableaux for th | planned to take a trip across Massa- | chusetts Bay during the week on the | | Mayflower, the longest trip the vac has been on this Summer since com- ing to Marblehead Many Interesting Events. There have been many events during the wee! the North Shore flow tournament at the Myopla Hu and the tennis tournament at the Montserrat Club. Socially, thers has been much going on, with Adolphus Andrews of the U. S. § Mayflower and Mrs. Andrews among those entertaining. Today there was a flower show at the ‘ew Ocean House at Swampscott, where the sec- retary to the President, Everett Sand- ers, and Mrs. Sanders and others of | the President’s official family make | their home. | President Coolidge at White Court | this week gave his last sitting for a | portrait to Mr. Edmund C. Tarbell, well known Boston artist who is paint- ing the Nation's Chief Executive. The vainting gives every promise of being a striking likeness of the President. Conte delln Porto of the Itallan embassy and Contessa della Porto will leave next week for Washington and will be at the Capital until Sep- tember 22, when they will sail for Rome. After a short stay in Rome they are to go to Bucharest, where | the conte will take up his new duties, Miss Lou Page, | Swampscott for a late season stay, is 1leaving for Washington next week for a visit with Senator and Mrs. Dale. Representative and Mrs. Nicholas Longworth have come on from Wash- ington for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. William Gordon Means at the Al- hambra cottage at Mingo Beach Prides Crossing. The Longworths have a wide circle of friends on the North Shore and the Representa- | tive’s mother. the late Mrs. Susan W | Longworth of Cincinnati, owned Skerryrove, the famous Longworth stone castle in the Mingo Beach col- fe. r show Means _cottage. Senator and James W. Wadsworth, jr., left this week, after a most interesting stay with the Means, where many parties were given in their honor. Senator ‘Wadsworth was the godfather for the Means young son, Augustus Gardner Means, who was christened last week. Gen. Clarence C. Wil- liams of Washington, who married Mrs. Means mother, Mrs. Constance Lodge Gardner. was also a godfather for the baby boy. Mr. Ulrich H. Bell of Washington has been enjoying a stay at the New Ocean House in Swampscott. Steinert-Currier Nuptials. Mr. Chester Lockwood of Washing- ton was one o MBS ushers for the Capt. | | Louts Bacon s who has been at | | Scotia ony, almost across the way from the | Mrs. | | been on from Wash Shore were { member meresun;:f ured by | the golf | ¢ Club| of William and of Mirs. He: Ab] former Sen: Beveridge, wt mer at Selwood, v ong the wir s tournament at gewick, jr. Miss Beveridee he mixed doubles a home to Washingt ver cup as n trophy of her on_the tennis ¢ Mrs. W. H ington has been « for a visit h nd of North ht r home & Was her Mrs her Sum Nahant. been spen ctamp i No rived at Marblehead re he will spend the late season with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J Moebs of Washington, who have been on the North Shore for the season at the famous yachting rern dezvous. The Moens are much inter ested in yachting and have done much entertaining at the Corinthian yacht club, one of the mest active of the clubs sponsoring rea chting on th hore. has Mrs. A. B. Taylor I Shore for a lor on Shore. s been on the late season sta Bass Rocks where ting many apital Taylor has entes at s Rocks golf club during her shore adjourn Capt. Douglas E. Dismukes, U N., and Mrs. Dismukes have bee guests of Mrs. on. Hutchins on the North Shore at ‘The Knoll ir the Fast Gloucester disteict. and Mrs. George Deering have gton for s Knol! s M. B is to spend North Shore. one esting periods of of the shore and country are at their best Miss Adams has the Rockhaven estate (Continued on Bifth Page.)

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