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BOY SCOUTS Advancement contest 1: 3, 186, 3. Division T1L ision V 5. 108, 6.61: 4, 123, Kemert ¢ the honor Weigel, Troop 33, attained vank of eagle held in the ¢ lust Tuesday evening. e court Gilbert Wild of Troop life ut and Scouts Robert Troop 7; Arthur Cohen, Troop dack Arnold. Troop 110, be- on this court Paul i Nizer, Henry . UL Drake, AL Matsin followiy is court mpin it Bart rpentr rship; Thomas Troop & W. Troop 20 Troop 25, and wick, « interpr Yl Gille Ken siren 1" Wiid, T ip i ti wshin Wagne Shure it K. tsmanship h. « ] fire nimals and hik- vder, electricity; 1 W ind mining: Robert Weigel. Liking. mining and ploneer. 5. T %7 Vernon Bateman, foty tivsi, Daly Mulvey, safety first. » i wandicraft painti . public Py 44, crafisman: «eph Woodard, civic st vid 1o i 51 fety first. onal swimming: hn [ Ith and 4 G wood-c Dot Dow rvi B. Hillyard, lerlip, craftsmanship in tsmanship i wood Vanderlip, crafts craftsmanship bop 100, Arthur and first aid o t, handicr i , Willard Roth- Troop 110, Jack health. Troop 128, , eyeling f review held in the A. the following boys class: Troop 8., Heacock, Those who ™ rles ¢ sketry and craf arvin Harmon maushin in b in wood carvir Cohen. cooking nuls: Kelsey Sa tv fivst. T swimn Troop and onid ¢ Willlam Ad and Richard ler s of Col. Hay avalry, oned at Fort Myer, i sp ton drill will be given for on Saturday . after- This is a very in- and the Scouts are Al courtesy by Col. the drill out of A, Stati ial exhib the Boy Sco noon, March 27. teresting event Delns shown sps Hawlkins in havi v is of special in- Juts of the First Divi- ivision rally which herwood Pres- asium, Rhode theast, Saturday. 7:30. All Scouts duly | ‘tive or_associate in ivision on March 15 are eligible smpete Phie events will include Morse and <emaphove signaling, first aid, fire by i1l and by flint and steel, knot tower building, Scout yell or inspection and pyramid build- here will be two classes—class under 15 vears, The Scl \, 8 years. awarded to the troop winning Jighest total points in both classes. s will also be awarded to win- ner and second place in each event. A= announced last weels, the Third Division is putting on a rodeo or seouting exposition in the ring of the Riding and Hu Twenty-second nd P atur- day evenir ne contest fon of *h as b g, setting up 4 was decid This it camp. build in wer meeting of rening s will be s bulletin automob nd return Sunday is a2 committee i interesting program. rv to keep (he expense a; Volida an. nout plan Thurs April anging will Dr. John Sehool 1 for tho desirit by Hay. Tron La Qua very live and Iving start in Ty were the witiist ht of nd low Ty of Tech High reed to he the examiner hadge. Scouts can do_so with Dr. merit + this appointinent to ta ik " » L1 ot Hyattsville, utmaster, active tr the second annive p. To give a Aty Sev present and about 85 per cent Scouts registered in the troop. Iing the fact that the best srthinore chautauqua op com ylor, scout Chandie Troop 115, and R. P. n to those in scout ith the smile, were ble to tsy of the Sv Mr. haiy chairma it on. eo wmaster 110, merly Smith, better knoy i t officiais who were wits enj all, and th Butler. w onimittee: - with fow times wi from the t a miniatue ur's badge & serve interest, for ver: Mr. Butler ever absent op meeting. Ten Scouts were (0 ed With the one-year je stars, three of them being the md they had received On Thursday evenir Mistrict of Colur &2l Seonts of America, held arch 4, Council, a swimming How Mercolized Wax = Keeps Faces Young! kin is old-looking. sal ved, parched, rough. vily just peel it off! Have freckles, pimples, moth patches, liv pots? Teel offt 1t the sensible thing to do. "nd simpie. Jnst apply Mercolized Wax at hedtime, as vou apply cold am: wish it off in the morning. Fine, alnost invisible skin particle: lare flecked off with ll)fl W harm. o detention ‘indo | trace the treatment itself mains. The lively voung. healthy under- skin is brought gradually to view | |Z-vou have the exquisite com- | plexton of robust girlhood. The| kind women envy and men admire | and you v look from 10 to 20 | vears Young | Obtain a 93¢ box of Mercolized | | Wax from your druggist, use a directed, and you will bless the da vou made the acquaintance of this wonder worke MERCOLIZED WAX Bring out the hidden beauty Advertis r!mM:. I Tow hlotehy your ov or vou of re- At this Y | ' son, ftsman- | bop | demonstra- | The | 4t the American Legion Hail | 11 of the parents | them | meet for the colored Scouts in the pool at the Dunbar High School. Five troops were represented, but only one team was sufficiently well drilled, s it was_vietor, with very lar score. This team, Haywood Hower ton, scoutmaster, won 9315 points; sec ond was Troop 502, John H. Brown, scoutmaster, with 101, points: third, Troop 505, Lewis Oldham, scoutmas. ter, 8 points; fourth, Troop 506 Clarence T. Brooke, scoutmaster, points, and Troop 504, Edward Lee, scoutmaster, 0 points. The winning troop was presented with an engraved plaque. There were three prizes for indi- vidual winners in each class. These were bought by Haywood Howerton, scoutmaster of Troop 507, and were won as follows: Class A—First, Vailor, Troop 507, 10 points; second, Wright, | Troop 507, 10 points; tie for third, . | Johnson, Troop 506, and Powell, Troop | 307, with & points each. Other puints won as follows: V. Brown, Troop 50 |3 points: Smallwood, Troop 007, points, and Willie Williams, Troop 506, st 11 point. Clas B 507, points; second, Briscoe Troop 507, 13 points; third, Jack Troop, 07, 5% points. The others are as follows: English, Troop 507, poin Oliver Brown, Troop 502, 415 points: Meridith, Troop 50¢ 4 points; James West, Troop 507, 2 points. The events were won as follow 1 length free style, cla ~Vailor, Troop 507. first: . Johnson, Troop H05, second; Wright, Troop 507, third, Willle Willlams, Troop 506, h. Class B—Wallace, Troop first: Jackson, Troop 4 and Oliver Brown. Troop Two lengths back stroke, | Troop fArst, | fi Wallace, Troop 07, second, : . third. Cld A-—Vailor, ‘lass B—Briscoe, Seven lengths free s Wallace, Troop 507, fi 7. second. Plunge class A—Wright. Troop 507, ;'C. Johnson, 505, second Smallwood, Troop 507, third. and V. Brown, Troop 502, fourth. Class B— V.. English, Troop 507, first: J. Meredith 06. second, and James West, Troop 507. third. Fancy diving—Un- limited, Wallace, Troop 507, first, Powell, Troop 507 d Johnson. Troop Under- cater swim, cla . Troop W second, 3rown. third. first; Jack- second. and | 507, | | Troop Oliver Brown <on, Troop o fa Meredith, Troop 506, fourth. Relay— | A, Troop 507, Vailor, Powell, | Hughes, first. Class B-- ce, Jackson. West Candle race Powell, " Brown, Troop 5 Troop 507, third. Towing_ race—Jackson and Wright, Troop 507, only ones who finished. Tales of Well Known Folk In Social and Official Life | | (Continued from Fourteenth Page.) | | point where it touched the confiscation | of Arlington by the Federal Govern- | ment. To restore the old mansion to its aspect in the first 60 years of the | nineteenth century, when it was typi- | al of the elegance and progress made y the young republic in its almost | hundred” vears of existence will re quire more than a congressional appro- priation. Mrs. Keyes will still find | much to employ her in stimulating | interest in the interior decorations | |and in regathering the orizinal pieces | | of furniture. so y accom- | plished by the regents of Mount Ver |non, in their restoration of Washing- | ton’s home. | Mrs. Josephine Thomson Swann of | Princeton. who died within a month's | time, has been given a place amons | true, disinterested American patriots by reason of her gift to the city of Trenton of the mansion which Gen Washington occupied during the Rev olutionary War, when he was sum- moned from his military headquarters to confer with the Continental Con- gress then sitting in the Jersey cap- ital. When Mrs. Swann purchased the property it was almost a ruin and | | had been used for years by some Ital- fan quarrymen who were working on | the railroad and on the public build- |ings of Trenton. But even these aliens knew the. tradition and under | stood the tness 4 for they had set aside the room nander 1 used fo I | | her home in Warwick, V THE whiteness and on a deal table, in the center, they had set up a cheap litho graph of the immortal leader and day v red lamp burned be- fore It. wann spent five years in restoring the old house which had been built by Judge Luclan Berrien and she diligently hunted for furni- ture of the heirs of this Revolution ary jurist, who was the friend and confidante of Gen. Washington. well as of the outstanding foundes of the Nation, Jefferson, Hamilton, Robert Morris and others. The house is filled with Washingtonians, prin- eipally letters and military relic: SU ) Cleanor Roosevelt, dnughter r. and Mrs. Franklin Roosevelt, who is to marry Mr. Curtis B, Dall June 5, is weli known in Washington, where she passed from pinafores to the age of swect 16, Her father was Asslstant Secretary of the Navy from 1913 until he was nominated as Gov. Cox’s running mate in June, 1920. Miss Roosevelt is the grandniece of the late Presi- dent, her mother, another Anna Ileanor, being the daughter of Elliott Raosevelt, only brother of the twenty- sixth Chief Magistrate. Franklin Roosevel:, her father, is the younger half-brother of that James Roosevelt who married first the daughter of M and Mrs. William Astor. This James Roosevelt’s daughter ' Helen married her cousin, Theodore Douglas Robin- son. Miss Anna Roosevelt gradu ated some two years ago at Miss Farmington’s School in Connecticut after having studied for several years in the Cathedral School of this city. But she did not lay aside her books after getting her certificate, but fn- stead she matriculated in Cornell, took the course in agriculture and made her debut between times last season. She has received her degree tn Cornell ind she intends to pass as much time on the estate of Mrs. James Roosevelt at Hyde Park, her paternal grand mother, as she will in the Madison avenue house which Mr. Dall is pre paring for their home. Flowers and garden stuff and perhaps dairy prod- ucts will engage the attention of this energetic daughter of the Roosevelts. Mr. Dall is the grandson of a_well known financier of Baltimore, Cyrus B. Dall, and is the son of Mr. Mrs. Charles B. Dall of Long Island. M singer of a by-gone day <s Jane Margaret Carey, a_sweet who died in a few days s the author of the spirited o which James Ryder Randall's “Maryland, My Maryland,” was irst” cousin of ago, musf Wi Spring Coats Reflecting the very latest ideas in style, materials these and | All That's Newest DAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MARCIL 14, 1926—PART SPANISH WAR VETERANS ‘ T Department Inspector Willlam Jenkins made an official call on Col. John Jacob Astor Camp, No. 6, Mon day night and gave an interesting talk. Three hew members were mus- tered into the camp with full cere- monies, Floyd B. B. Daugherty, Archie J. Jones and Samuel J. Shay. A mo- tion was passed unanimously request- ing Representative Knutson, chairman of the pension commlittee, to have H. R. 8132, the Spanish War pension bill, brought before the House for imme- diate attention. Comdr. Oscar Feldser presided. At a recent meeting of Henry W. Lawton Camp, No. 4, the department commander and staff pald the camp an official visit. Among other visitors was Senor Cayetano de Quesada, Cu- ban consul, who addressed the camp. The following were elected to mer- bership and will be mustered at the next meeting of the camp: Benjamin A. Poland, 36th United States Infan- try; Reginald B. Looker, 1st District of _Columbia__Volunteer Infantry Robert 13. Lee and she lives in Con- federate history for her feat in mak ing her way to the Lee headquarters near Manassas, just before the first battle, and singing *“Maryland, My Maryland,” to the accompaniment of a guitar. Miss Carey was descended from Col. Wilson Mills Carey, who took out a land grant near the Lee estate at Warwick, Va., in 1654. She wrote poetry and composed music from her earliest vears and acquired some fame in pre-Civil War days. Left with a considerable fortune for the times, Miss Carey showed more business acumen than poets usually have, in purchasing large tracts at Bar Harbor about 50 years ago, and for a trifling sum. It was not a re- sort then, but when it became one she made a tidy fortune through selling her surplus land. Her own villa |erected on the high peak just above the present thriving city in 1872, is one of the landmarks of the Maine resort. Miss Carey had sold most of her patrimony in Warwick County and retained only a small place, where she spent a few months yearly. ' Going | North for the Summer, she discovered | Bar Harbor as by accident. She hax |always been deemed the founder of the resort, for she induced the best pegple of her acquaintance to build there. Of recent years Miss Carey | spent her Winters in Baltimore. and Best in nd in all the most wanted and colors for Spring smart coats are certain to be popudar at the wide price range offered here. | ors, Stylish Suits cellent materials, charming col- and tailored to perfection See them, and*you'll agree that ~hopp be a ping around clsewhere would waste of time. 25.00 to 539.50 Dre Inall t dresses are in sizes for women tty patterns so suggestive of Spring SS€es These dainty and misses. Charge Accounts Invited €3 ASTOUNDING EASTER MIRROR OFFER $9.50 to $60 Values Exceptionally Low Priced 4.85 to $32.50 t of mirror frames, some of them electrically wired. in a variety of and polychrome, have been assembled o f MIRROR Lxtraordinarily fine, beautifully polished plates. specifically chosen make these the GREATES] VALULES A complete o TERED. ortmen olors—silver, antique gold or this special sale. A varied assortment of newest id most fashionable shapes and sizes of buffet and console mirrors. Every glass a first-grade plate and EVER ‘OF 1 as clear as crystal. This offer will make history in the mirror line in v Vashington. snmsinw. COHEN’S 123165 nw. POPULAR PRICE PICTURE STORES FRAMES MADE TO ORDER atives E. Hart Fenn of Connecticut. L. A. Frothingham of Massachusstts. Lester Hill of Alabama, James M. Magee of Pennsylvania, Schuyler Merritt of Connecticut, He: Rath bone of Illinois, F. H. Foss of Massa chusetts and Elbert S. Brigham of These include Speaker Nicholas Long- worth, Senator James W. Wadsworth, . of New York; Senator Royal 8. Jopeland of New York, Senator Ken- neth D. McKellar of Tennessee, Sen- ator Thomas F. Bayard of Delaware, C. Miller, member of the Fed Mrs. Sadio Coulter was installed as chief of records. After the meeting there was a soclal session and refresh- ments were served. A St. Patrick’'s party will be held for the member: the home of Mrs. Charles Weber, Shepherd street, March 17. At the next meeting of the society, April 7, a card party will be held. Frank L. Averill, 3rd United States Volunteer Engineers; Joseph Irving Howen, Sth Artillery; Charlie Glass, United States Marine Corps: Thomas P. Carroll, 1st District of Columbia Volunteer Infantry; Benjamin ¥. Skid- more, 4th New Jersey Infantry, and Frank P. Moore, 2nd Virginia Infan- tr. Meetings this week are as follows: Col. John Jacob Astor Camp, Mon- ay: Gen. M. Emmett Urell Camp, Wednesday; Licut. Richard J. Harden Camp, Thursday: Sergt. George Berry Camp, Friday; Admiral George Dewey Auxiliary, Monday: Gen. M. Emmett Urell Auxiliary, Wednesda; John Jacob Astor Auxiliary, Thursday. FRATERNITY TO BANQUET. Telta Kappa Epsilon Alumni Af- fair to Be Tuesday. The Washington Alumni Associa tion of the Delta Kappa Epsilon Fra ternity will hold its annual banquet Tuesday evening at the Willard Hotel. James Anderson Hawes of N York, general secretary of the fra ternity, will be the guest of the Wash. ington association, which includes i its membership # number of mem bers of hoth houses of Congress and other officials of the Government. | . & - - lole——lale——]o[———[a[———[o]c——lalc—2al |0 Cudl Down bil Frocks 608 to 614 Past Comdr. William 1. Jenkins, de- partinent inspector, made his official inspection of Richard J. Harden Camp at its last meeting. Capt. Cluverius, who was the personal representative of the Secretary of the Navy at the dedication of the tablet on the Maine memorial at Havana, repeated the speech he made on that occasion. Quartermaster Gen. Murphy spoke on the humorous side of the pilgrimage to the shrine. The Cuban c¢onsul re- sponded on behalf of the Cuban peo- ple. Past Dept. Comdr. Mattocks gave a resume of the legislative situation up to date, and Mr. Watts of Lawton Camp, Md.; Mr. Rutledge of Naval Camp, Philadelphia, and Mr. Perry of Harrisburg, Pa., told of conditions in their communities. The entertain- ment committee announced ull ar- rangements completed for a buffet luncheon March 18, this meeting being the official visit of Dept. Comdr. Bel- knap and his staff. The Stroller keeps pace with fashion 4 . st enjoys the smart vela- tionship with the suit made of unusual leather combina- tions, adding a mew spike heel so new in talored shoes . -« Particularly worthy to see. lx‘js.nu Washington Temple of the Lineal ’J” 4$tree¢~ oclety at its last meeting received Charlotte Seiffert into membership. Patou Prints from Paris —original designs made up by Ameri- can artists—in French models. $1675 Second Floor —for business and sports—one and two piece styles: assort- ed colors. $15.00 Street Floor i_psborn ELEVENTH ST. | Marking a New Relation of Price to Value A Special Group of_ Splendid C $30 You'll be captivated with the originality of these styles—and the wealth of the variety—while the manifestly superior values will make their impress. Twills and Tweeds—Satins and Failles— designed appropriately for dress or sports wear—with edging and collars of fine fur. As your taste may incline—there are the sil- houettes, the wrappy types and others with cape effects. oats ———lol———ld]c————|o]——[o[c———]a][c———[o|c——=|0]——=|a|c——[o[——=[a[——= o] ——=]0] With Sizes and Models for Large Women In the various regular sizes [ [} fl ' Predominating colors are: | | | | | fi | | | | | | Cucumber, T histledown Winter Rose, Navy, Seashell, Kanaka, Etc. Third Floor [——|al——/alc——=]alc———Ja|———=[a]———=]ol——2 o] a i F |———lal——lal———[o]——]