WOMEN OF ARMY AND WOMEN WHO LEAD ET ICRS. TACT'S SOCIAL LIFE. THE PRESIDENT'S WIFE Wives of Generals Bell and Ed- yards Chief Among Social Leaders at White House. GOLD LACE HAS GREAT HEYDAY Presidential Affairs Made Gay Through Presence of Land and Sea Fighters of Nation. Waihington correfpondenc : When Mrs. Taft, in her official role as first lady of the land, surrounded herself with a coterie of the cleverest and brightest officers of the twin branches of the service, everybody in Washington society recognized that the era of the army and navy set had arrived. In brave array the military Wen form a moving background at Mrs. Taft's at homes, and in their im maculate dress the officers of the land end sea forces are a splendid attribute at Mrs. Taft's fascinating garden par ties. At the White House entertainments carcely has the line of guests passed until Mrs. Taft is surrounded by a group of officers and their wives, daughters and sweethearts, whose persiflage and laughter instantly dis sipate any indication of an oppressive or a "military" perfunctoriness. Replacing Col. Eromwell, who with Mrs. Bromwell were dominant factors in the social life of the capital in the last administration, is Col. Spencer Cosby, whose career has been marked with distinction. Col. Cosby Is the first of the administration bachelors to announce his engagement, and In the fall Miss Yvonne Shepard, daugh ter of Mrs. Charles It. Shepard of New York and Washington, will fall heir to the position vacated by the withdrawal of Mrs. Bromwell. Miss Shepard is tall and svelte, her well-carried head is graced with quan tities of silky, fair-brown hair, and her pretty complexion is set off by the taste Miss Shepard displays in the se lection of the color of her gowns. She wears large hats, flower trimmed, and long, sweeping gowns, which accen tuate the graceful slenderness of her figure. As the wife of the President's aid and constant attendant, Miss Shepard will be thrown constantly In associa tion with the White House family, ana her adroitness and social graces will be put to a severe test in the carrying of a role not less Influential man difficult. Gen. Bell's Wife a Power. As wife of the chief of staff, Mrs. j. Franklin Bell will have a high position in tne full tide of the official season. Not content with standing at the neaa or tne serried ranks of nrmv dom, Mrs. Bell is no less popular with me diplomatic as well as the con Gicnoiuum mm president set. AS a great friend of Mrs. Edson Bradley of New York, she is in touch with the smart life of the little coterie of the rich and Important who mmn Washington each winter to enjoy its BCHNUIl. Gen. and Mrs. Boll Inst wlntr tv possession of a commodious home at i'orc M.ver and there throughout the Beason Mrs. Hell challenged th h miration of society by the conduct of a series or deiightrul entertainments her guests Including the btIzzIp,! v,t.' erans who surround the chief of staff, me young omcers eager for an oppor tunity to display their mettle, the debutantes, the foreign "guests" of the nation and the general everyday-man and womnn who goes In for Washing ton's social good times. Associated with Mrs. Bel! In the so cial life of the army set is Mrs. Woth erspoon. the attractive vfTo of Gen. Bell's first assistant. Mrs. Boll's sis ter, Mrs. Ernest Garlington, wife of Gen. Onrllngton. is another army ma tron whose power In society has to bo reckoned with. Mrs. Garlington Is a pretty, falr-halred woman, endowed with a liberal share of the good fel lowship and good humor Mrs. Boll displays In such a marked degree. In the childless home of the chief of stRff Miss Sally Garlington, Mrs. Bell's Jolly, goodnatured and good-looking young niece, has a large and import- ? " J? 'Pf 4 K VV - 'A xf IK: y A " i ' ' y " f $ A J VJ L'sx ' ... ' ' it - v : s i ff" J'ji i ..j. iV A Tint. J. s i i i ?5 THE yEEKLY 1 fcV&&W' 1 ITIKG WOODEN PAVING BLOCK; 1 yk' R i ' It ' 1 I k r .1' CLAR.jrwr EtWAJtD.P ant role to carry. Miss Sally is a dancer who has won acclaim at the amateur dramatic productions which have been features of Washington's smart life for the last few years, while her skill as a horsewoman gives her a forward place in the gay little com pany of "paperchasers" who gallop over the hills two or three times a week. Mrs. Aleahlre, wife of Gen. Aleshlre, is one of the army matrons whose wit and poise count In the proper equip ment of an army officer's wife. She is large and nice-looking, noticeable chlofly for the sweetness of her ex pression and her general air of ex treme eood breeding. She is the moth er of a debutante daughter, who has the distinction of being one of Miss Helen Taft's best chums. Mr. Kilwaril Winn I.nuri'la. One of the handsome homes of the army set established In Washington is presided over by Mrs. Clarence Ed wards, wife of Gen. Clarence Edwards, chum to the President and general Kood fellow. Gen. Edwards, who is one of the most generally liked officers of the Bervlce, has his honors to look to when it conies to a discussion of his wife's popularity. Everybody likes Mrs. Edwards and her place In the fa vor of tho community waxes as the years Increase. In girlhood, as pretty and vivacious Bessie Porter, sho made her first aD- penranee in Washington, coming over to visit her great-aunt, Mrs. Saunders Irving, widow of Washington Irvlng's nephew. Mrs. Irving maintained a menajie second only to the White House In point of social Importance, its gentle mistress, who was an in valid, being one of the few women up on whom the wives of the Presidents felt it Incumbent to leave cards. Mrs. Edwards is a slender, delicate looking woman, whose chief beauty lies in her sweetness of expression, her well-bred air and her lovable manners She looks at life through two jolly, twinkling eyes and she has sympathy with everybody and with everything that lives, without regard to place or position. Her servants adore her and pay her the sovereign compliment of remaining in her service two decades or more. A very great-great-granddaughter of the first white man that settled In the western part of New York, Mrs Ed wards' family, the Porters of Niagara, N. Y., held the original grant of the immense tract of land which Included the falls until the taking over of the property by the State government. Gen. Peter B. Porter, Mrs Ed wards' great-grandfather, served as secretary of war In the cabinet of President John Quincy Adams. Gen. and Mrs. Edwards' daughter Bessie is a pretty little woman of 10 years, who is a chum of her father and the boon companion of her mother. The Edwards home Is a reflex of the cnaracter or its owners. Beginning with the general's office on the first floor photographs of familiar friends men, women and small children run riot and overflow into the attractive drawing room on the second floor, gay In its dress of summery English chintz and filled with fine old mahogany and interesting things picked up In the out of the way corners of the army of ficers' world. The Edwardses keep open house in and out of season and aside from dis pensing a hospitality as smart as the smartest, Gen. and Mrs. Edwards delight In having friends to lunch or dine en famllie. 1635 Henry Bull, the new colonial governor, arrived in Boston. 1641 Richard Bellingham chosen colo nial governor of Massachusetts. 1692 Jamaica devastated by an earth quake and tidal wave. 1709 Paper money first authorized I and Issued in New York. 1756 A bankruptcy act was passed by tne Khode Island Assembly. 1770 City of Port au Prince, San Do mingo, destroyed by an earth quake. 1774 The Connecticut Committee of Correspondence suggested a time and place for a meeting of the Congress The Boston port bill went into operation. 1776 Richard Henry Lee introduced a resolution into the Congress, de claring that "the United Colonies are and ought to be, free and inde pendent States.". . . . British fleet arrived at Charleston, S. C, to be gin the campaign in the South. 1785 John Adams, the first American minister to England, presented to the King. ' 1805 Peace concluded between the United States and Tripoli. 1832 First reform bill became law in England. 1840 The Unicorn, the first steam ves sel from England, reached Boston. 1 1845 Mexico declared war against the United States. 1848 Whig convention at Philadelphia nominated Zachary Taylor for the presidency. 1859 French and Sardinians defeated - the Austrians at Magenta. 1861 A "Bank Convention of the Con federate States" met in Atlanta. 1862 Fort Pillow, Tenn., evacuated by Gen. Beauregard. 1864 The Federals were repulsed in a battle near Cold Harbor. Va.... Morgan's forces defeated by Gen. Burbridge, near Lexington, Ky. 1866 Dominion Parliament met for the first time in the new buildings at Ottawa. 1872 President Grant signed the Phil adelphia Centennial bill. . . .Repub lican national convention at Phil adelphia nominated Grant and Wilson. I ,..,..U.I. U. $.JV II ' y"T'7 .-'WW i ! wwvJii OA iiYi v-tTf. ,trv 3'" i.iUV A- VHSisMB frSwl ' y ,. . v) x (' -4r-f "1-4V,- l& ; s; .-ri fcx- Ix-x a This mnnhfnti- whlf'h pan nut 24(100(1 wnndpn hlnrljs in tpn hnnrti orm. sists of a series of circular saws fed with wooden battens. These are kept In thA rle-ht rtlrppfinn hv the frnmp whtph in lh niptnrp ia rnipfl in nrrlo to show the sawing apparatus. The battens move up an inclined plane to- waras me saws ana tne nnisnea diocks are oeiiverea aown a similar piane at the other end. The motive power is electricity. Through an official act of the Church of the Brethren in Pennsylvania mem bers of the sect who wear gold rim med spectacles and eyeglasses are vir tually called heretics. The Brethren, or Dunkard3. as thev are commonly called, have always been opposed to all forms of . ostentatious display. In the rural . districts the members of the church adhere faith- ARMIES AND THE AEROPLANE. . .: .. ivK. "-v sfr- v v v v Remarkable Photograph Showing a Cavalry Horse Shying at the Approach of a Monoplan The Mlrnrle of Polite Peralatencr. Says Orison Svvett Marden, wrltinj in Success Magazine; When, genius has failed in what it attempted, and talent says impossible; when every other faculty gives up; when tact re tires and diplomacy has fled; when logic and argument and influence and "pull" have ail done their best and retired from the field, gritty persist ency, bulldog tenacity, steps in, and by sheer force of holding on wins, gets the order, closes the contract, does the Impossible. Afe, what mir acles tenacity of purpose has perform ed! The last to leave the field, the last to turn back, it persists when n other forces have surrendered and fled. It has won many a battle even after hope has left the field. Confederate commanders in the Civil War said that the trouble with General Grant was that "he. never knew when he was beaten." Wheu Grant's generals thought that his army, with only two transports, would be trapped at Vlcksburg, they asked him how he expected to get his men out. urging that In case of defeat he could get only a small part of his army upon two transports. He told them that two would be Dlentv all the men that he would have when he surrendered. It is the man In the business world who will not surrender, who will not take no for an answer, and who stands his ground with such suavity of man ner, such politeness, that you cannot take offense, cannot turn him down. that gets the order; that closes the contract; that gets the subscription; that gets the credit or the loan. He Is a very fortunate man who combines a gracious manner, suavity. cordiality, cheerfulness, with that dogged persistency which never gives up. for left 1874 House of Representatives passed a bill for the admission of Colo rado to the Union. 1875 Charlotte Cushman made her last appearance on any stage at Easton, Pa. (889 Fire at Seattle destroyed $5,000,' 000 worth of property. 1891 Massacres in Hayti by order of Gen. Hippolyte.... Chilean insur gent steamer Itata surrendered to American naval vessels. 1892 The "High-Water Mark" monu- ment on Gettysburg battlefield was dedicated. 1893 Destructive floods in Mississippi 1893 Business portion of Fargo, N. D., destroyed by fire. 1894 Dedication of the Field Colum bian Museum in Chicago. 1895 Motion favoring woman suffrage defeated in the Canadian House of Commons. 1898 Lieut. Hobson sunk the Merrl mac in the harbor of Santiago de Cuba. 1900 British under Lord Roberts en tered Pretoria. 1902 United States Senate passed the Philippine government bill. 1903 Tornado swept over Gainesville, Ga., with loss of many lives.. Cruiser Tacoma launched at San Francisco. 1905 Lewis and Clark Exposition opened at Portland, Ore.... Nor weglan Parliament proclaimed dis solution of the union with Swed en. 1908 President Roosevelt appointed a national commission on the Con servation of National Resource! ....An explosion on the cruiser Tennessee killed five men. . . .Jury disagreed on the fourth trial ol Caleb Powers for murdering Gov Goebel, of Kentucky. .. .Balloon Chicago, flying from Quincy, I1L, ' to Clear Lake, N. D., broke th aerial speed record, averaging se enty-flve miles an hour. ceremony and the kiss of charity ex changed by members at church serv ices. Sometimes the district conferericej attempt to enforce stringent rules ol conduct under pain of excommunica tion. The Ohio conference has decided that all members shall be expelled un less they agree that the "wearing oi hats by sisters, the mustache alone by brethren, all fashionable dressing, wearing of jewelry, gold and unneces sary ornamentation be discontinued and that the sisters wear the prayer cap during religious services." The question of a paid ministry ha been a source of much perplexity to the church. ' Originally ministers were chosen from the membership of the congregation and served without pay, continuing their previous emDlovment The city churches found such methods impracticable and to . maintain tijelr work were forced to pay their Dastors. Officially this is termed a supported' ministry and under that designation has been tacitly permitted; COSTUMES OF TIIK DU.XKAKDS. fully to the old-time regulations, es chewing all ornate features of dress or architecture. Those who go to the cities and es tablish churches there have discon tinued many of these customs. The men wear neckties -and watch chains, which the older rural members re garded as . abominations. The cltv churches have organs and stained glass windows, which are not tolerated in the rural churches. In matters touching the conduct of the members the Dunkards are not governed by set rules, but merely by tne general sentiment of the church Before a woman has returned from her wedding trip she has all her plans laid for freeilng out his kin, and mak ing home for her own. Crona Continent An to Race. At the same moment that the Pacific Exposition was set in motion the Mayor of New York, by firing a golden revolver on the steps of the City Hall, started five automobiles on a race across the continent to Seattle. Th prize offered by M. R. Guggenheim for the winner Is a 12,000 trophy and $2,000 In cash. The machines entered I are two Ford cars, a big Shawmul T7j 1 America' Cocoa Consumption. The imports of crude cocoa into the United States in the calendar year 1908 amounted to 97,419,700 pounds, valued at $12,999,836. The Imports the year previous were 912,147 pounds less, but the total value Was. $2,155, 743 greater. . In other words the mar ket value of the cocoa imports dropped from 17y2 cents per pound in -1907 to 13 1-3 cents In 1908. The United States is the largest consumer- of xo coa, the world output of which la about 340,000,000 pounds. The leading countries supplying the American mar kets are the British West Indies, which sent 27,945,871 pounds In 1908, while 17,026,116 pounds came from elsewhere In the West Indies and Ber muda; Brazil furnished 15,301,524 pounds, while 18,773,936 pounds came from elsewhere in South America. Crude cocoa ranks as twenty-fifth in importance of merchandise Into the United States. WASH1XO THE FEET. and an Acme- expressed from time to time in Us con ferences. The only authorized m-boH of the church Is the Bible. the literal Interpretation of various passages of Scripture are based the va rious customs of the church, such as the baptism of adults in a running Biream. ms opposition to warfare and litigation, the wearing of the plain garb, the love feasts, th feet-washing" Training St. Bernard Bog. - The training of the rescue dogs ot the Hospice of St. Bernard, on the Alps is really very simple. During the summer months, when the monks are not so busy, some of the assistants at the monastery take the young doge out into the valleys or hollows there is always snow. One man will go and lie down In the snow and bury himself in It. and then a look after him. The animal Is taught to bark when he has found him, and also to rouse the man up If he. ia asleep. When the man wakes up and stands on his feet the dog leads him to the hospice, running along In front to show him the way. . Note. The 1 note is not the smallest Is sued by the Bank of England. By mis take a note of the value of one penny was made and Issued In 1828. It was in circulation for many years, a source of annoyance to the cashiers In mak ing up their accounts. At length the holder of it brought it to the bank, and after considerable argument per suaded the authorities to give him 5 for it Bltndneaa front Falling. Fair Client I wonder whether It II possible for a Dersnn t v, from a fall? Expert Lawvei- Ye become blind from falling in l0ve-Judge. you think Hep Goeaa. The Fat One "nnn-t travel broadens one? The Thin On Oh , J vo iVU f Deen on a lone iourner. h Yonker Statesman.