Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 207, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 September 1915 — CHUM OF WILSON’S COUSIN [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
CHUM OF WILSON’S COUSIN
Mrs. Norman Galt, who has been the guest at Harlakenden House of the president’s cousin, Miss Helen Woodrow Bones, has long been identified with Washington. Her husband was a member of a jewelry firm established on Pennsylvania avenue when Jefferson was president, and since his death in 1908 she has lived with her mother, Mrs. Bolling, in the Galt residence on Twentieth street. Mrs. Galt, before her marriage in 1895, was Miss Edith Bolling, the daughter of Judge W. H. Bolling of Wytheville, Va. The friends of the presidential household are more or less in the national eye, and so Mrs. Galt, who has always shunned social publicity, has come into sudden prominence as one of the few familiar guests at the White House. The picture shows Mrs. Galt with President Wilson at a ball game in Washington.
