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MME. ENTEZAM, One of the many~ American womern iw the diplomativ corp. M.Entozam being third secretavy of the Persian Legatiow Society Folk Who Left City For Pleasure Resorts N Turning Eyes Homeward Washington Absentees Planning to Follow Presi- dent and Mrs. Coolidge's Example and Bring Vacations to Close. ACATIONISTS everywhere will be turning their eyes toward home this week, and Washington society, at home and abroad, will fol- low the example of the President and Mrs. Coolidge, and at least prepare to return. President and Mrs. Coolidge probably will be well settled in the White House by the end of the week. And it is a fresher, cleaner abode than when they left it a comparatively short time ago. Foreign Ambassadors and Ministers feel it incumbent upon them to be in Washington when the Chief Executive is “in residence,” and they, too, are announcing the dates of their return. Many of them will be coming because of missions and delegations on debts and other impor- tant subject under discussion, most of them arriving this month and next. The French, Italian and Rumanian debt-funding missions are expected this month, with others to come soon after, and the first of October will see delegates from most of the foreign countries coming for the congress of | the Interparliamentary Union. The President will receive these delegates and the Secretary of State, Mr. Kellogg, will be host at luncheon for them. Just what entertain- ments will be given for the ladies who accompany them has not been planned, but certain it is that there will be no littie festivity in connec- | tion with this congress. | HIS month will be devoted, for the most part, to settling in “Winter | quarters,” arranging wardrobes and choosing schools for the younger | generation, and October will be given over to weddings, so far as society | is concerned. October has long been a rival of June, but this year bids | fair to outdo former records and surpass June in the number of brides, for June fell off considerably. And then the field is clear for the debutantes, who usually make their bows in November RESIDENT and Mrs. Coolidge on their arrival here will find the members of their official family at home, the Secretary of State and Mrs. Kellogg returning from Hot Springs Tuesday. The Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Mellon, probably will keep until the middle of the month or even until the first of October the house at Southampton which he and Miss Mellon have occupied this Summer. But the Secretary is expected back this week. Secretary and Mrs. Weeks have given no sign of their intention to return for some time, and when they do it will be to empty their house, at Sixteenth and V streets, which they sold some months ago to Dr. Loren B. Johnson. Mrs. Sargent has not indicated the date of her return, but the Attorney General has been away for only short trips. Postmaster General and Mrs. New are in the Middle West, but will be back by the end of the weck, and the Secretary of the Navy and Mrs, Wilbur, back only a short time from a long visit to the Pacific Coast, are gznmi ready to move the first of next month. The Secretary of the Interior, Dr. Work, and the Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Mejlon, are the only unmarried members of the cabinet, and the fomer maintains an apartment at Wardman Park Hotel and has no one acting as hostess for him. The Secretary of Agriculture, Mr. Jardine, was joined the first of the week by Mrs. Jardine, their two daughters, and Miss Rita Hulme, Mrs. Jardine's niece. Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. Hoover opened their Washington home several weeks ago, after spend- ing some months in their California home, and the Secretary of Labor and Mrs. Davis will return within a few days after the President’s arrival. IPLOMATIC representatives of the four Scandinavian countries which maintain legations here—Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Finland— have accepted the inyitation of the officers of the Corinthian Yacht Club at Oyster Bay to witness_the international six-meter race between the American and Scandinavial countries September 15. The course will be off the Seawanhaka Beach and down Long Island Sound. The Danish Minister, Mr. Brun, will go from Bar Harbor, where he has spent the Summer, and be the guest of Mr. C. Sherman Hoyt for the event. The Norwegian Minister, and possibly Mme. Bryn and their daughter, will at- tend the races. They have been in Skyland, Va., all Summer. The Swed- ish Minister, Capt. Wallenberg, is in Stockholm, and the Finnish Minister, Mr. Axel Astrom, also is spending the Summer in his own countr ‘These legations will be represented by their charges d'affaires, Mr. As- garsson of Sweden and Mr. Kivikoski of Finland. The Corinthian Yacht Club challenged the ndinavian socn after its successful race in the Clyde, off Liverpool, when Mr. Hoyt, sailing his own craft, the Lania, car- ried off the Seawanhaka cup Cabinet Members Plan Early Return to Capital The Secreta. | 3. Davis, is _expected to return to Washington Wednesday from Moose- heart, where he is spending a few days with Mrs. Davis and their chil- dren. Mrs. Davis and the children will not join him here until some time in October, of State and Mrs. XKellogg will return to Washington Tuesday or Wednesday from Hot #prings, where they went to remain @ver the holiday The Undersecretary of the Treasury, Mr. Garrgrd. B. Winston, has gone to Manchester, Mass., to remain over the The Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. | GPend Mellon, who is spending some time with his daughter, Miss Ailsa Mellon, at Southampton, will come to Wash: | ington Wednesds The Assistant Secretary of State, Wilbur J. Carr, wili return to Washington Tuesday from Lenox, Mass., where he has been sojourning with Mrs. Carr and her mother, Mrs. Ezra Kéon. The Assistant Secretary of War, Mr. Dwight F. Davis, is spending the week end at Forrest Hill, N. Y., where he went to attend the Davis Cup matches. The Postmaster General and Mrs New, who have been motoring in the West, are now in Detroit, where the Postmaster General will attend a postal convention tomorrow. The: are expected to be back in Washing- ton Wednesday. The Secretary of Agriculture and Mrs. Jardine are today celebrating the twentieth anniversary of their mar- ringe and will have a small informal | dinner, confined to the family and a few close friends. The Assistant Postmaster General, Mr. Warren Irving Glover, will re. turn to Washington the first part of next week, after spending about a month with Mrs. Glover and their chil- dren at Eaglesmere, Pa. The Secretary of d.abor, Mr. James THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON. . C., SEPTEMBER 6, Agriculture Chiefs Scrvinfi in Cabinet Drawn From Collcfl:s Dr. Jardine, at Present in Office, Attained to Emi- nence in the Educational World by Work at Kansas. Washington for the last 25 years has come to associate the Secretary of Agriculture with colegiate life, since, with the sole exception of Mr. Edwin T. Meredith, who was so briefly the incumbent of that office, every head of that division of the executive depart- ments has reached high fame as the president or professor in an important college. James Wilson of Towa, for 16 consecutive years the Secretary of Agriculture, had been for many years the senior professor of the Agrictural college at Ames, Iowa. Under him, first as a student and then as a in- structor, was the late Henry Cant well Wallace, for mere than seven years the successor of his preceptor. | Dr. David Franklin Houston was pres. ident of the Washington University, St. Louis, when he accepted President Wilson's invitation to become Secre- tary of Agriculture. Dr. William Marion Jardine’s term dates from February 25 of this year, and his eminence in the educational world is part of the progress of his adopted State, Kansas, in matters of pedagogy. Besides being a highly successful executive of the Kansas State Agricultural College, Dr. Jardine was a very popular one, for when he left the college to come to Washing- ton he was escorted in state by the military department of the institution, while the entire student body was on the platform and gave the rousing col- lege yell as the train sped away. Mrs. Jardine, who but recently joined her husband at the Capital and is comfortably settled for the Winter in the Mayflower, shared this uni- versal favor, and she comes to Wash- ington in an exalted social role with the reputation for tact, discretion and originality which will endear her to her associates in the cabinet set and to the official circle as a whole. Kan- as, though claiming Dr. Jardine as a citizen only since 1910, when he came there from Utah, is proud of his rec- ord, and deems him one of its invalu- able assets. dry, prosaic wording which books of reference require, reads like a tale woven together for a child’s magazine, and in addition to this story of ad- venture and success against great odds, he is the central figure of as pretty a romance as ever adorned the blographical records of the cabinet circle. Mrs. Jardine, as Miss Effic Nebeker of Bears Lake, Utah, was studying diligently at the Utah Agricultural De- partment, possibly with no thought of a future save that of sharing the life of some quiet farmer near her home, when “Bill" Jardine, as cotemporary annals dub him, arrived at the college. He was a picturesque figure, had been a cowboy and hints of wonderful adventure hung around him. In brief time he became a faot ball hero and the leader in all the college athletics, but as yet he was unmoved by the adoring eyes of the girl students. But this did not last long. He soon at- tached himself to Miss Nebeker's train, and the year after he had taken his degree of A. B. in the Utah College he married his college chum. This was September 6, 1905, so that today the Secretary and his wife are quietly celebrating the twentieth anniversary of their marriage. There are three children. The eld- est, Willlam Nebeker, will enter his sophomore year in the Kansas State College. of which his father was presi- dent. This young man has never been in Washington, but he will be here for the Christmas holidays and will receive quite a cordial welcome from the young folk who are arranging holiday dances. The daughter, Marion, who shares her father's middle name, is 14, and ber sister Ruth will soon be 10. These young girls attended the public schools of Manhattan, the home town of the Kansas State Agri- cultural College, and the serious prob- lem now facing the Secretary of Agri- culture and Mrs. Jardine is to select the proper day school for their daugh- ters. Having satisfactorily solved the question of a home by obtaining a suite in the Mayflower, this selection His eareer, even in the| HARRIS W Commerce, and reotumzd, from E M1ss. ROSALIE DRAKE. { ishant Secretayy o Daughter of the };fi'{i‘i‘ _La\'va,l(.r,r gf&&& e urope with them receflilv}p 1925 PART 2 JMME WEIDEL, 4 i f The dean of the diplomatic corps, the Ambassador of Spain, Senor Don Juan Riano, who left Washington last week by motor accompanied by the attache of the embassy, Senor Don | Pedro de Sota, to visit Senator Peter Goelet Gerry at his home in Warwick, | R. I, will return to Washington the |latter part of the week. The Ambassador of Chile and Senora de Mathieu came back to Washington last evening after spending several weeks as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Migel in their Summer home, the Green Braes, Orange County, N. Y. The Ambassador of Great Britain, Sir Esme Howard, is expected to ar- rive in this country about the middle of October. Lady Isabella Howard, who has been in Switzerland since early Summer with her son, who is convalescing from a serious iliness, will come to this country later in the season. The Ambassador of France, M. of a school is now all that remains to adjust, before Mrs. Jardine will attack the huge task of performing the duties of a cabinet hostess. While the con- gressional vacation continues these will be comparatively light, though she must make all the first calls on her immediate associates, the wives of the cabinet officers; on the wife of the Vice President, when she comes, and on all the resident senatorial hostesses. Dr. Jardine, who has been ill at Wal- ter Reed Hospital, is recuperating in a marked degree, and has joined his family in their apartment, Dean of Diplomatic Corps SenatorGerry’'sHouseGuest Senor R‘ano Being Entertained at Warwick, R. L. French Envoy at West Point for Lafayette Anniversary. Emile Daeschner, is spending today and tomorrow at West Point, where he went to attend the ceremonies honoring the anniversary of the birth of Lafayette and the battle of the Marne, which are being celebrated Jointly today. . ‘The Ambassador of Japan and Mme. Matsudaira and their children, who are motoring in New York Stafe, are now at Niagara Falls and will return to Washington about the middle of the week. The Ambassador of Brazil, Senor 8. Gurgel do Amaral, is expected back in Washington the end of the month from the North Shore, where he has b-en for several weeks. Che Minister of Uruguay and Mme. .arela are now in Paris and will prob- ably return to this country the first of next month. The Minister of Sweden and Mme. Wallenberg, who have been at their home in Sweden since early Summer, will sail September 16, on the Homerie, for this country. They will be accom: panied by the minister of finance of Sweden, Baron Theodor Adelswaerd, who is & delegate to the Congress of the Interparllamentary Union, and Mme. Adelswaerd, who will be guests of Minister and Mme. Wallenberg at the legation during the conferency. Baron E. Trolle, secretary to the Minister of Sweden, who is touring in the West, will g0 to New York to meet the Minister and his party and accom- pany them to Washington. The Minister of Finland, Mr. Axel Leonard Astrom, is expected to return to this country some time in Novem- who is 18 Now York wathh M Waidel whule kf,wac,ting consul generalof .. Swedew theve, They will retura fleve 1 the Autunn Beginning of Autumn In the Social W’or[d} ‘ Personal Notes. | ‘Miss Louisa Perry Yates | Bride of Mr. Oliver Du- ’ 2d—Other Noted [ Nuptial Events. | rant, The marriage of M | Yates Perry nd Mrs. s Loui: ghter of Mr. | Edwara M. Yates, to Mr. Oliver Durant, 2d, took place last evening | at Mount 1da, the home of the bride's parents, near Huntly, Va The cere- { mony was performed on the lawn 6 o'clock, Rev. Kinsey Johns Ham- | mond, rector of the Episcopal Church ]ul Culpep Va., officiating The bride was escorted and given in marriage by her father and wore white satin and chantilly broidered in pearls, the satin forming a train pearls and clusters of orange blos- soms. Miss Mary Moore Yates was maid of honor for her sister and had a costume of peach-color georgette crepe. The bride’s other attendants were Mrs. Percy Randolph of Mill- ! wood, Clarke County, Va.: Miss Anne Marly of i Miss Elizabeth Lee Burge yville, Va.: Miss Emily Cheyne of Hamton, Miss Julia A. Yates, sister of the bride, and Miss Jane Edmiston of Sperry | ville. " Their gowns were fashioned | ke that of the maid of honor and were in rainbow shades of blue, orchid and green georgette. Little Margaret Fontaine Craighill, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Craighill of Washington, was flower girl and was daintily dressed in peach-color georgette. Mr. John Grifin Durant, jr., was best man for his brother, and the ushers were Mr. Ryland Washington of this city, Mr. Samuel Lewis of Culpeper, V Mr. Robert Mercer Menefee of Woodville, and the three brothers of the bride, Mr. James 3 Edward M. Yates, jr., and ancis A. Yates. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. John Griffin Durant and Mrs. M. E. Smith, parents and grand. mother of the bridegroom; Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Slaughter of Cincinnati, Mr. and Mrs. C. Willlam Wattles of Alexandria, and Mr. and Mrs. G.” B. Craighill of Washington The wedding of M { Leonard and Mr. dney Tolson | took place Wednesday afternoon in the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Leonard, at 810 V street northe: The ceremony was performed at 4 o'clock, Rev. W I. McKenney officiating. The bride was given in marriage by her father, and wore a gown of white georgette, trimmed with pearls, and carried pink rosebuds and lilies of the valley. Miss Marion Marstella of Salt Lake City was maid of honor and Mr. Melville H. Leonard, brother of the bride, was best man. Miss Marfon Lawson played the wedding music, and accompanied Mr. Melville Leonard, brother of the bride, | who sang preceding the ceremony. An informal reception and tea for the company of 50 or more guests followed, and later Mr. and Mrs. Tol- son left for a_wedding trip. They went first to Norfolk and will later visit Boston, Canada, Niagara Falls, | New York and Atlantic City. They { will be at home after October 15 at 310 V street northeas Miss Marie Hayes and Mr. Jack Cafone of New York were married Saturday evening, August 29, in the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Myrtie A. Hayes, Rev. W. I. McKen- ney officlating. Mrs. Felix M. Poole played the wedding music and Mrs. Leona McInturff sang. The bride was given in marriage by her mother and wore the latter's wed- ding gown of white crepe de chine, a wreath of orange blossoms held her tulle veil and she carried bride roses. Miss Elvira Cafone of New York, sis- ter of the bridegroom, was the bride’s only attendant, and wore white crepe de chine and carried vellow roses. Mr. James Marshall was best man, and the ushers included Mr. J. War- jren Hayes, brother of the bride, and | Mr. Jack Lowd, her brother-In-law. | Mr. and Mrs. Cafone left later for a | motor trip and will be at home after September 15 at 217 F street north- west. | St. Anthony’s Church; Brookland, was the scene of a pretty wedding Wednesday _afternoon, _when Miss Marguerette (Continued on Fifth Page.) (Continued on Sixth Page.) lace em. | Her tulle veil was held with | Wife of .beigium‘ M QEBACHEACH MME TILMONT, of they Charde d'attatres ul Tildwont, ?September Weather Draws I'T hrongs to OldfiNirth Shore Pretty Weddings Ma’rkr ‘jpresidcnt and Mrs. Coolidge Soon to End Pleasur- | | BEVERLY, Mass., September 5.—| The coming of September brings to | | the North Shore one of the most allur- | ing months of the year—a season un- | like that of many resorts where Labor day marks the closing of the Summer. Here on this picturesque stretch of the Massachusetts coast, where Presl. | dent Coclidge has establiched the Sum- | mer Capital, and where so many in | the diplomatic and resident set of Washington have found the life charming, the season has just begun to climb its peak Outside of the Magnolia and Gloues: ter districts, with a small circle in Swampscott ‘or Marblehead, society is | largely of the cottage group. Many Washingtqnians own their own homes on the North Shore and many more lease attractive places’so they are not at all dependent upon hotel life. The | hunting season will not start until late in the month and then Myopia | district will resound to the baying of | the hounds and the great steeplechase | and other sporting events reach a cli- max in October. | | _ Days are drawing close when Presl- | |dent and Mrs. Coolidge will forsake the charms of White Court in Swamp- | scott for the White House in the Na tion’s Capital, redecorated and done over while they have been on the North Shore. Although there has heen much guesswork as to when the President and his family would leave. | the stay will be until next week. There has been a family reunion at \\'hltel Court for John Coolidge, brown as & berry and the picture of health, is home from the citizens’ military train- ing camp at Devens, where he was for the most of August. He is soon to re- | sume his studies at Amherst with the opening of the Fall term this month. These have been rather busy days at Swampscott, with many officlal vis- itors and a number of personal friends dropping in for little chats or stays at the Summer White House. When the President and Mrs. Cool- | idge return to the Capital friends who | | have not seen them all Summer will realize the value of their Summer stay on the shore. They both enjoy splen- | did health; the President never looked better than he did today and Mrs. | Coolidge is as charming as ever, with | | her cheeks blooming with color and | her eyes sparkling with the life the North' Shore gives to all who visit it. For the Washington set there was | |a gay party tonight at the New | | Oceanhouse, " where so many of the | | President's officials aides make their | home. It was the annual costume ball | and there were a thousand invitations | sent out all along the North Shore.! Officers from the President's yache,| the Mayflower; Mrs. Everett Sanders, wife of his secretary. just back from & motor trip through the White Moun- tains; Col. 8. A. Cheney, the Presi- dent's military aide; Maj. J. F. Coupal, the President's personal physician, and Capt. Adolphus Andrews and Mrs. Andrews and most of the officers and men of the yacht and of the Marine Corps detail attending. Labor day brings with it the annual open-air horse show of the Myopia Hunt Club, to be staged on the polo flelds at Hamilton. There are 11 events on the card, and, as befits a Myopia show, the hunting classes are featured. This year the show will be more colorful than ever because of the number of pink-coat classes, in| which the riders, men and women, will wear the regulation pink. There are a number of wonderful trophies to be competed for on the field this season, including the Kennewick, Turner Hill, Abbott and Master's Challenge Cups! Among the Washing- ton people to show will be Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Denegre, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leiter, Tommie and Nancy Leiter and the Keith Merrills. There was a dance tonight at the Burrage cottage at Beverly Farms, where Mr. and Mrs, Harcourt Amory, jr; Mr. and Mrs. Franeis I. Amory, Mrs. T. Jefterson Coolidge, ir., and C. Conway Felton, well known to ‘Washington soclety, entertained. This afternoon one of the principal sport- ing evonts of the early September sea- son took place at the Princemere e tate of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Prince, at Wenham, when the annual American whippet derby was run off with some of the fastest whippets in America competing. Entries came all the way from California for the meet. Tonight Mr. and Mrs. Bayard Warren gave a dinner at thelr Barberry Hill home at Prides Croesing in honor of the many New York exhibitors. For most of the diplomatic colony Beptember will be another month on able Vacation Period at “"Summer Capital.” the North Shore. Tk now bright in the g season is here when the North Shore. The I bassy, at Beverly Farm: leased for the balance of the month Martino, wife of Italian Ambassador, wiil return to Washington until a the Am bassador arrives in this country from Rome, where he has been on business of his government. Conte and Con- tessa della Porta left is week for, Washington, and will be in the Capl tal until September 22, when they wiil sail for Rome. Baron Ago von Malt zan, the German Ambassador, will be at Magnolia for most of the month and the Chiltons and Charltons and others of the British Embassy will not leave for the Capital for several weeks. golden glow is d the y is highest on Representative Nicholas Longworth is spending the week end with Mrs. Bryce J. Allan and other friends in the Beverly Cove colony. Many of the lovely old mansions at Marblehead have been open during, the week for a series of teas in aid of one of the worthy Marblehead charities. Young folk costumed as in the days of long ago have entertained, and many of the Summer colonists have been in the role of hostesses Mrs. Adolphus Andrews, wife of the commander of the Mayflower, and Mrs. Curtis Guild poured tea at the reception at the Lee Mansion. The Ashleigh Mansion house and estate, for many years the Summer home of the late Mrs. Walker, widow of Rear Admiral Walker of Civil War fame, has been sold to J. A. Harris of Detroit. The Walkers for many years made their home in Washing- ton, and the estate is one of the best known in the Myopia district. Miss Alice W. Mann of the Wash- ington colony, who is to be one of the Capital's October brides, sailed Wednesday for Paris with her mother, Mrs. Isazc T. Mann They will be in France but a few weeks and in Paris Miss Mann will com- plete the selection of her trousseau Miss Mann, a favorite in the vounger society set on the North Shore, is to become the bride of Churchill Owen of Denver, Colo., and the wed- ding is te take place Saturday after- noon, October 31, at 4 o'clock, in the Church of the Covenant in Washing- ton. Mr. Owen, who is the son of Judge and Mrs. James Owen, is well known on the North Shore. He was graduated from Yale with the class of 1923 and is soon to complete his studies at the Harvard Law School at Cambridge. Mi. Mann had a merry house party at her Coolidge Point home over the last week end and her guests included Miss Anita Henry, Miss Louise Sewall and Miss Elizabeth Hickey, Mr. Robert Stead and Mr. Chester Lockwood of Wash- ington. Mr. Mann will be on th North Shore through September, Whm’ he will join his family, who are go- ing direct to Washington upon their return from Paris. Mrs. Curtis Guild, widow of & for- mer Governor of Massachusetts, who has been spending the Summer at Nahant, has been doing much enter- taining in honor of the members of the diplomatic colony. She had given luncheons for Signora di Martino, wife of the Italian Ambassador; Contessa della Porta of the Itallan embassy and Baron von Maltzan, the German Ambassador. The late Gov. Gulld was Ambassador to Russia in former years, and the Guild have meany frieds in the diplomatic set. Chester Lockwood, who has bean on from Washington as the guest & the Isaac T. Manns, was one of the ushers at the wedding of Robert S. Steinert of Cove colony and Miss Lucy Currier of Boston. Mrs. Coolidge fs interested in the industrial lite of the North Shore, for, besides being the Nation’s play- ground, the district s famed as a shoe” machinery, shoe and electrical center. This week Mrs. Coolidge visited a_Lynn shoe shop. where she witnessed all the operations from the time the leather was cut until the completed shoe was wrapped and packed ready for shipment to Wash- ington or some other shoe mart.John Coolidge made the first trip through a Beverly factory where shoe chinery is made and then visiting factory in Lynn and saw the ma< chines there used in the manufac- (Continued on Fifth Page)