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v ~ PRESIDENT T0 LEAD WASHINGTON FETE Address at Capitol to Fea- ture Celebration in City. Groups Plan Exercises. The 185th of Georg served inniverss be ob with na pito! various Washington will here tomorrow both tional ceremonies at the with fitting local grou The obs t the Capitol will be particularly s ificant this year since President Coolidge will address a joint ind divuige his recom mendation the Nation-wide observ anc th anniversary of Washington's birth in 1932. Admis- sion will be by card only The Distric official celeb be at Poli's at 11 am. Representative Burton of Ohio will be the speaker David Jayne Hill, former Ambas ny, will preside Howarg, the British Ambassador, will nt a gold medal to Adelaide Em- student at Gunston Hall, for an essay on William Pitt. and ceremonies tion will Masons to Celebrate. Several thousand part in a ceremony of the advisory board of the District of Columbia Masc Clubs. will assembie at 10 w.m. at the 2 National Museum, where address will ba delivered by prominent mem- | bers of the order. They then will| make a image to the Washington Monument, where a wreath will be placed Memorial the scene Masons will take | under the auspices Continental Hall will be of a joint celebration at by the Daughters of the Revolution, Sons of the American Revolution and Children of the American Revolution. The State regent, Mrs. James M. Willey, will preside. The principal speaker will be Gen. Summerall, the chief of staff of the Army. The public will be ‘welcome. The Washington National Monu- | ment ‘Society will hold its ninety fourth annual meeting at 12:30 at the Metropolitan Ciub. The District of Columbia Society of the Sons of the Revolution will hold its annual meeting at noon at the La Fayette Hotel. Schools to Close. Representative Burton also will ad- dress the meeting of the Association of Oldest Inhabitants of the District of Columbia. in the assembly hall of St Mark’s Episcopal Church, Third and A streets southeast. The patriotic exercises will be held at noon follow- ing the monthly meeting at 11 a.m. Theodore W. Noyes, president of the association, will preside. All the public schools will be closed. Informal exercises were held today at some of them. At George Washington University “a birthday party given at Mount Vernon by Gen. and Mrs. Washington in honor of their Scotch neighbors from Alexandria and Dumfries” is the Intcresting program arranged for tomorrow evening. The proceeds will g0 to the George Washington Uni- versity Hospital. Business houses downtown will close at noon, and Government activi- ties also will be suspended. Legion Plans Honor. The members of George Washing- ton Post, No. 1, the American Legion, ‘will motor to Mount Vernon tomorrow morning and place a wreath on the tomb of Washington, following an an- nual custom since the organization of the post, March 7, 1919. ‘The caravan of automobiles will start from the clubhouse of the post at 1829 I street at 9:30 o'clock, headed by Post Comdr. G. T. Rude. A community celebration of Wash- ington’s birthday will take place to morrow might at 8 o'clock in Trinity Parish Hall, on Piney Branch read, when the citizens of the District and Maryland sides of Takoma Park will participate in a musical and literary program. Rev. Clarence True Wilsor will deliver the principal address. A Washington's birthday celebra- tion and dinner will be given tomor- row at 1:15 o'clock in the Presbyterian Community Hall, Takoma Park, un- der the auspices of the Presbyterian Community Hall activities committee, of the birth| sme | WASH script Division—H Publication of a letter in Kansas nimed to have been written by : ge Washing .to his wife short {1y before the signing of the Declars {tion of Independ in which he ex | pressed “love” for “my king" and re | sented becomi! bel.” “shared | |equal interest here today with plans {for ome of the greatest celebrations tc {morrow commemorating the first President’s birth. President Coolidge will address a | joint session of the Senate and House. His speech, to Le broadcast to mil lons of listeners over 42-station hook-up arranged by the National | Broadeasting Co. and probably relayed | to European radio f: by | stations, will set in motion plans for | tion of the 200th anniversary ashington’s birth in 1932 Silent On Letter. Historians here declined to offer as to the probable authentici- of the “lost” letter pro. Kansas City as one penned | corge W ston, although W. | former chief of the manu.| f the Library of Con in Cambridge, Mass robably founded | well known forgery. | The letter, dated June made pubiic by A. H s City artist, in a o in the Kansas City before the signing of the Decla- | fon of Independence, and signed | “G. W."” It expressed the writer's be- | lief that “good terms” could be ar-| ranged between the American colonies | and the British “without cutting one another’s throats,” and also the au- | thor's regret that “this cannot be ac- | complished without fixing on me the | d name, rebel.” “I love my king, you know T do,” the text continued, adding, “a soldier, a good man, cannot help but love him. How peculiarly hard then is our fortune to be deemed traitors to 50 good a king!" Pledged to Do His Duty The letter went on to say that the writer was prepared for an eventu ality except a ‘“dishonorable peace,” | and that he saw his duty, “that of standing up for the liberties of my country, and whatever differences and discouragements lie in my way, 1 dare not shrink from it.” Other high lights in the letter, about 2,000 words long and in script de scribed as similar to other facsimiles of Washington's letters, were refer- ences to failure of the Continental Congress to grant certain requests of Washington, which caused his Army to suffer great inconveniences, and to his attention being called to “the dis- covery of a most wild and daring plot” which, he wrote, probably “will make a good deal of noise in the country.” His wife Martha was assured of his affection and hurt was expressed at her suspicions that he was inatten- tive and losing his regard for her. | Fear for lis wife's health led him to request that she be innoculated against smallpox. Urged to Go to Philadlephia. She also was urged to leave for Philadelphia because of fear that “that restless madman, our quondam governor,” might carry on a “preda- tory war in Virginia and vent his spite at my house.” Charles Moore, present head of the manuscript division of the Library of Congress, said that only a thorough study of the letter's text could estab- lish its authenticity. He recalled that Martha Washington burned v tually all of the revolutionary leader’s letters soon after his death, but that two are known to have survived. One, dated Philadelphia, April 23, 1775, i preserved in a collection here, while the other, of unknown date, passed into unknown hands and has never turned up, Mr. Moore said. Mr. Ford, the former manuseript di- ion chief, was positive the Kansas ity letter was a fake. He said the ietter from which the excerpts appar- rently were taken never existed in Washington'’s handwriting and s known “only from printed versions.” He added that Mr. Clark “may have a contemporary copy, but it is without of W b , & Kan- | article | vs | ALLEGED DOPE AGENT GETS SHORT RESPITE Solomon Released From Jail Short Time—Returned With Bond Boost. | Congre Jacob Solomon, alias Jack Rose, said to be a member of a narcotic ring operating out of New York city, had a short respite from the District jail Saturday evening but spent the night in the jail. Solomon had been held by United States Commissioner Turn- age for the action of the grand jury on a bond of $6.000 for the alleged sale of a large quantity of narcotics | early this month to a government agent and had been indicted jointly with dree Dubois, vears old, an entertained a York Abner for w_ Detroit furnish bail for ington cha plaint york by rranged company to | slomon on the Wash But theére was a cor 1 - offense from N under which Commi; had issued a wu n and Attorney Siegal st d out ng the 1,000 for the release ting United St r ol of Solomo ites Attorney Leo d to the amount of raised it t 3 ot nish the add mal was returned to bond and Solo sail. AMERICAN OYSTERS FAIL IN FRENCH WATERS Dealers Try in Vain to Eke Out| Decreasing Home Supply. -Experiments an oysters in the r 3 1, in the opin French w fon of b forts were made by tail dealers to eke out the decreasing supply of hivh-grade oysters with the species. The spawn gave in the beginning, hut not experiment pay industry say it is be imported from the rive In a state of week's sea ; useless for in th cause bivalves United great voyage purposes of depr 1d are practical reproductior to Blowing Rock, Carolina, sail their ‘When western visitors North value as history or an autograph.” “No account of his having found it in family papers will offer support of his claim,” he said. CALLS LETTER A FORGERY. Alleged Washington Manuscript De- nounced by Himself, W. C. Ford says. CAMBRIDGE, Mas February 21 P).—W. C. Ford, former chief of the manuscript division of the Library of said today that a letter dis- covered at Kansas City purporting to have been written by George Wash- ington had been forged during Wash- ington’s lifetime with “diabolical” in- tent. “I love my king,” said the letter, which purported to been written shortly before the Delaration of Inde- pendence. This and other spurious letters were st published in London in Mr ord says, and later one of them was issued in New York. Washington first saw it in February, 1778, Ford said, and wrote to Richard Henry Lee: “Not one word of which (the letter) did I ever write.”" The letters were published several t'mes afterward, Mr. Ford said, and Washington made a strong effort to learn their author. - Denounced by Washington. v in the presidency, continued Mr. Ford, a letter to the Timothy Picker- h letter and adding ation that they ‘are and that I never saw appeared fi “On his Mare 1797 Washington wrote ng, specifying ea his solemn decla i base forgery, »r heard of them until they | in prin 1 “Nothing uld be cleare the | question. From the first publication, | to shake the confidence of the people lin W to their redssue in | 1795, o artisan purposes, they | and stamped as for- Ford cited two men as having teen suspected of writing the letter. | He glish review as I & a young Episcopal York, though he himself suspected I, the last royal atiorney rgina d a lovalist. ‘ashington admitted that the det prepared with great care, Ford, “and the admixture of mily elrcumstances gave an ir of plausibility: their purpose was | diabolical. They had been written by 4 persan who had some knowledge or information of his family, and yet he had made bad blunder: BIOGRAPHIES OF SERVICE. New gton clergyn W | savs v Jack Randol | | El)r. Barton Says Washington Hatchet Inspired Gettysburg Address. CHICAGO, February 21 (®).—More biographies of Washington like that written by Parson Weems, who related the cherry tree story, are needed to- day, Dr. William E. Barton, biogra- INGTON'S “LOVE FOR KING™ NOTE STIRS CAPITAL INTEREST| Branded Fake by Former Chief of Manu-i cline to Comment on Letter. \ | speech London | & | Clark Tells How He | . 1776, was | ¢ lit proved to be THE EVENTNG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1927. istorians Here De- ‘ oln derlved | for the Gettysh ntinued. “In spite of | the subject, Parson | Weems that Abraham 1 ispiration he king ot ven 1 1 the Weems believing the story the hatchet than lenying it.” | Another speaker, Dr. Joseph M. Til- | den. presid Lombard Colleg esburg, 11, expressed disapprovai of Rupert Hughes' recent biography »f the first President, and said “no amount of tittletattle concerning Washington, wnalysis of his char- | acter, can transmute the unalterable foundations upcu which his fame is | s BELIEVE more reason for no NUINE. | LETTER G ame By OMd| Manuseript. KANSAS CITY, Fel 1 4 ed H. Cla City artist, | who made publi old manuscript | purported to been written by | Ge Washi today said h was a genuine | ter Mar 1 Washington In nenting on opinions of his. | ans expressing doubt as to the| in of the let rk said that if | ry he hoped it ginal forgeries | during the volution @ | = let was one of th known to have closing days Stands By Letter. i “1 intend to stand by the letter up- til it is proved to my satisfaction it is| false,” he declared. “My hope then will be, of course, that it is one of the original forgeries and after all has value. If it is an original forgery used for British propaganda in 177 perhaps it is rarer than Washington letters, f authorities rejected the letter be- cause in it Washington appeared to have loved the King, perhaps they re- jected it to save Washington from any stigma it might attach to his name. Yet I do not see that it would have been a stigma. Washington is known to have been very conservative at the beginning of the Revolution.” When shown the copyrighted ex- planation of the discovery in the Kan s City Star, Dr. F. H. Hodder of the chalt of history at the University of Kansas, said the authenticity of the letter was doubtful. Tells of Tradition. Dr. Hodder pointed out that English commissioners referred to the Clark [gtter were not appointed u til 1778, two years after the letter w purported to have been written. Clark told of a tradition of a_Wash- ington letter in his family. He be- lieves it may have been obtained through his great-grandfather, Jon than M. Houghton, an officer under | Washington. Clark obtained it from | a large collection of heirlooms left by | his sister, Mrs. Alice Clark, who died at Lawrence, Kans, last October. the in BURGLARS ROB LAUNDRY AND TAILORING SHOP Get Cartridges and Suit Case From Former—20 Pairs of Trousers, Stolen, Are Recovered. Burglars vesterday evening sacked the laundry of Tom Kong, 1335 Fourteenth street, and the adjoining tailoring shop of Max Zeitlad From the laundry they took a box of cartridges and a suit case. From | the tailoring shop they took a quan-| tity of clothing. The burglary was| discovered by Kong, who returned to his place of business early this mor ing. Entrace had been gained b jimmying the door. Police found pairs of trousers stolen from Zeitlad place hidden in a garage in the rear. A colored man snatched a handbag | from Miss Edith Lathrop, 1321 Euclid | street, on Clifton street hetween Twelfth and Thirteenth, last night. The bag contained a small sum of | money and key The establ| ran-| hment of Edward B. | Norris, 710 Ninth street, was burglar. | ized between closing time Saturday and thid morning, clothes valued at $420 being taken. Entrance was effected by breaking a glass panel in a door. SECOND COLLEGE CRUISE | OF WORLD TO BAR GIRLS “Floating University” Permanent, Sponsors Say, But Omission of Feminine Sex Unexplained. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, February 21. will be barred from the second >/ lege Cruise Around the World,” was announced yester 4 The first “floating univ of- | fering college and pre-college courses, left here last September for an eight month’s world cruise, with 500 man and woman students. Its sponsors id today that the “floating univer- | sity” now is a permanent institution, but no explanation was given for the | barring of girls from the second | cruise. The steamship R and-America Line, which with the first has been second trip it of the Hol. | now is at college pas chartered for the | starting next Septeraber | 20, by Phelps Bros. & Co. and the | University Travel Assoclation, spon- sors of the c because the ves- | sel is readily adaptable for school- rooms, campus and athletic The Ryndam is expected to return to New York May 2. ndam CASTORI Castoria is a pleasant, harm- less Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, espe- cially prepared for Infants in pher of Lincoln, told the Sunday Eve- ning Club. hats in P.wind catches and returns them. a semi-cirular direction the “It was from the much-maligned bi- ography of \\'ushmxlulv» old Parson * | afternoon in t | sounded re | Rev. | pleted. | think of a perfect capital which did | Nation lives. . ANNUAL TRIBUTE PAID BY SOGIETY Sons of Revolution Attend Washington Services in Cathedral Chapel. annual commemorative service | Di sty of the Sons of | 2evolution held hichem Chapel of | of the the rict Soc was vesterday B the Washington C: Members of v his servic r on the Sunday n ton's birthday. The patriotic remembrance of Ceorge Washington again and again { A colorful moment came after the | processional of the choir and Cathe-| cal clergy when the color guard of | the society, escorted by many of ”"'1 members, brought the Ameri H ind t Colonial and Revolutionary standards before the altar, where they were held at salute while dral vy attended In| held each a v kevnote of the deeds was sounded sreen Conducts Service. w was conducted by d Green, chap t soclety, assisted by Very | hl and Rev. Wil ling to an he sermon e commemora- | Marcus Ben iety, support- Dr. This ser Thome the Distr Q. ( L. DeV custom, just shop Freeman, t was read by Dr min, president of the sc ed by Brig. Gen. George Richards, honorary president. Dr. Benjamin | o the names of the members who died during the past year and the record of their descent from Revolu tionary ancstors, Included in the list wera the follow- ing: Rear Admiral Richard Graham Davenpc Orville Breckenridge | Brown, James Malcolm Henry, Frank Warren Hackett, Col. Archibald Hop- Kins, Rev. Walden Myer, Col. George Coolidge Saffarrans and Maj. Gen. Joseph Prentice Sanger. Taps” Are Sounded. “Taps” were sounded after the read ing of the names. ““The geatest menace in this country aid Bishop Freeman, “is the 0d kind of personal liberty which demands for an individual the right to do as he pleases irrespective of the sanctions of “You need nct look below the mid-| dle classes to find those who make travesty of law 2nd who disre- | gard or mmvent the law. The | most_shocking thing in our national life just now Is the widespread dis- | respect for the saretity of law. We may not like a law, but that fact does not give us the privilege of violating it. The solemn warning | needs to be sounded to the citizenry that violation of the law mea mate disintegration the st In concluding his sermon, Bis Freeman said that “America soon | must make its choice between the ro- | ligion believed in by George Wash. | ington, and which was a fundamental | force in the formation of this Nation, | and the spirit of no religion as typi. | fled in Sovietism, which defles the living God and declares His religion the opiate of the people. Observance Called Fitting. “It is very fitting that the Sons of the Revolution come for their annual service of commemoration of the reat Washington to the Bethlehem Chapel,” he continued. “For in the plan of George Washington for the National Capital was conceived such a building as the one now being com- | ifam nug by tion I “‘Geoyge Washington could not not contain a monumental expression of the Christian faith by which this Circulation _statistics of Philippine newspapers disclose that the English | language is ascendant in the while Spanish and native dialects are nsurance 3,000z 54240 at Age 30. for Full Information LeROY GOFF Insurance— 11 by ol 610 Woodward Bido. " iain 530, Real Estate Loans No Commission Charged You can take 12 years to pay off your loan without the expense of renewing. $1,000 for $10 per month, including interest and prin- cipal, half of which is ap- plied to reduction of debt. Larger or smaller loans at proportionate rates. PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSGCIATION Largest in Washington _ Assets Over $13,500,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W. JAMES BERRY, President. JOSHUA W. CAKR, Becretary, Life | ARGENTINA AWAITS arms and Children all ages. Proven directions on each package; Physicians ev«ywzp secommend it ’ Ae Orator On Washington H .| this mornin ATIVE THEODORE F. RTON OF OHIO. Mr. Burton will speak { Georze Washington's birthday—once at the “oflicial” celebration in_Poli's Theater at 11 o'clock and later he will address the meeting of the Associ tion of Oldest Inhabitants at St. “2rk's Episcopal Church at 12 o'clock. REPRES | | COOD WILL FLYERS Expected to Reach Buenos Aires Friday—Stay There to Be Cut Short. By the Associated Prass. BUENOS AIRFE February 21.— Word has come to the American em- bassy from the United States Army aviators that they expect to reach Ar- gentina on their good will flight over South American countries next Fri- The flyers, who are now at Santiago, Chile, hope to alight on the beach at Mar Del Plata, fashionable Argen- tine watering resort and Summer capi- tal, and deliver to President de Alvear personal message from President | Coolidge. After stopping at Mar Del Plata, | Unitea MASON MEMORIAL CONVENTION OPENS Alexandria Gathering Dis- cusses Plans for Completing Washington Monument. | By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va Prominent M m all over the States, including the grand masters and deputy grand masters from 48 Masonic jurisdictions, mem- bers of the George Washington Na- tional Memorfal Association, began ession, mark- ual convention ebruary 21.— ing the seventeenth an of the a Plans for carrving on the work of | national memorial to on, the Mason, under being discussed completing the George Washing construction : the meet $360,000 Expenditure Seen. Expenditure of $360,000 during the working year of 1927 was forecast by Louis Watres, former lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania and presi- dent of the association, who gave a detailed report of the work accom- plished during the past year and sug gested plans for the future. The expenditure contemplated for 1927 is $35,000 more than that ex- pended last year. The work last year enabled the memorial to assume tan gible form, and delegates today ex- pressec prmally their satisfaction that the construction of the memorial is progressing so steadil Reports from the various jurisdic tions will be tendered today and to morrow, and it was indicated that many of these reports would deal with plans for financing the memorial project. Officers of elected _tomor association will be Tomorrow _after. the oW Who do you think made his will for him? The Court He intended doing it himself, but he put it off too long Federal-American With a Large Trust Department the planes will resume their journe: to Buenos Tires, where the flyers ex pect to remain for three dayg before | golng to Asunsion, Paragua | The aviators explained in thefr mes- | sage that they would have to cut short | | their stay in Argentina because of de- | lays in their schedule, which would | have to be made up. HIT BY AUTOMOBILES. Ernest Crymes and Mrs. Annie Hutchinson Were Victims. Ernesf§) Crymes, 53 years old, 514 | Sixth stfeet, was knocked down by | the automobile of Herbert Jordan, 601 | Third street southwest, at Sixth and | Ii streets yesterday afternoon, and his | head and hand were injured. Police | took him to Casualty Hospital. i Mrs. Annie Hutchinson, 72 years old, | 3118 Warder street, was knocked down 1t Fourteenth and Girard streets about 9:30 o'clock last night by the automo- bile of Joseph Harding, 910 East Capi- tol street, severely shocked, her arm fractured and her head hurt. She was taken to Garfield Hospital. Mrs. M. W. Lacy, 2027 North Capitol street, was injured Saturday night when her husband’s automobile col- lided with a taxicab in front of 2400 Sixteenth street. She was treated by Dr. R. T. Holden. See This Before Buying Corner Brick Home 4200 13th St. N.E. For the usual price of a row house. Close to stores, schools and trans- portation. A home of unusual de- sign, substantially built and beautifully finished. Open Until 9P.M. Terms can be arranged Walter Vaughn - Owner—Builder N. 5431 SSEBEBBAARIABRBRBBRABIBABARD Lansburgh & Bro. night linsure S grimage to Mount Vernon and of them will participate ton in a stated communicat Alexandria Washington Lodge and an nual celebration of the bir of | br George V shington . Among the 1 tending the meeting 1s R. A. Mcc ney, venerable, old member order from Va., and grand 1 U me row r on of t pas Maso; Welcomed by Rowman. James Bowman of grand master of Mas gave a brief welcoming then the association dev the busines the flnancing of the memi It is plan; the meme in three y gregate $5.000,000, by Maso Americ These contributions are from year to vear and e the actual construction rial, and members of aid this morning were determined to keep up th tributions so that the work m: Roanol: the hail with lics of the an to honor in endurin Letters Hang on Walls, George Washington was worship ful_master of Alexandria-Washingtor Lodge in 1788-86, and the chair wh he presented to the lodge and in wh he was wont to preside is still in room. Besides many other which Washington 1 in wfforded 2 e in whic intimate nn whom form meets sonal T [ 1005 Pa. Ave. All $35 Overcoats 60c 50c 75¢ 75¢ 50c 50c 50c Spring Hats—large and small $5 Teim ' Little straws, silks and felts to accompany the tailored suit; intriguing combi- nations of silk-and-straw to match the new silk hemps that forecast frocks—brimmed milan and milan the Summer mode. In bright shades, pastels—and black. Second Floor—Lansburgh's—8th Street $100 and Coats now $79.50 So yvou will be very wise, and very eco- nomical to buy one immediately and store it until next Winter. Rich, glossy sealine (dyed coney), with collars and cuffs of marmot, fitch, er- minette or squirrel to furnish effective con- trast. Several mod- els—of rich beauty— all of them silk lined! Second Floor—S8th Street o avold lations, shways look for the slgmasre of (Lot¥5Bidn | LANSBURGH & BRO, 7k 8 $125 Fur AND E STS. 50c 50c 63¢ 50c 50c 50¢ While they last—: $1.00 Fancy Wool Hose $1.00 Plain Silk Hose $1.00 Fancy Silk Hose $1.00 Silk Ties $1.00 Silk-and-Wool Ties $1.00 Knit Ties $1.00 Box Initialed Hdfs. $1.00 White Linen Hdfs. $1.00 Knee Union Suits $1.00 Kumea-Part Links $1.00 Pioneer Suspenders $1.00 Leather Belts $1.00 High School Buckles (Plated) $1.00 Silk Bat Ties $1.00 Tie Pins $1.00 Tie Clasps o $1.00 Belt and Buckle Combination noon the delegates will go on a pil- | life Washing & The ing several letters from the pen of ipy prominent places the w my nd uking « ne opened this morn. 1 by 150 delegate: us attendance rec- meeting, in 1910. author memo- promi . and Mr. v m any living Mason recipient of con that he tion meeting hwugh he | Dog Census Lightens Fines. ting a new law .. land, prohibit fror in ‘the main t enches unless Owners of ber of dogs vaded district « chaper - 7 storek » dogs golng street w and idge freed the RY CLEANIN AT WOODRUFF'S 18 of the Highest Guality conts ves An Lenzth. 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