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THE EVENING STAR, ‘SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1897-24 PAGES. 11 FOREIGN POSTAL SERVICE. | POSE OFFICE NOTICE. as changes my cect at N MAILS for tie week ending May 29, Promptiy a. tine wince as tolrows: SLALLS. ioe BUROPE, per vad iymonn and AD wust be directed to wats of BU i. foc EUROPE, per La pLOm, *aettaunle, re i, vie Y direst, per sa Trou New Work, via Autwerp. Ketters musi ce directed “Per Keusungin. w (At vray PM. for BUH trum sew Lore, via Piym0uca, erat Lond WM. s3. Zutndan, Letters must ve di- | ¥ as. Bisuiares, Cuerbourg aud Hemcurs. RETHRLAS LS vs a |. tor FRANCE, SWITA- miLasb, sath, TURALY, BGYPT and saiti> Lat vie Marre. PAT cogre, frow » for GERMAN 1. ard KUSSLA, Le : OPE, wer | | sailing from New York om tues matter, ete., tor C aul sp aat- reseed priuied matic for other parts of BUROPE. ‘The American znd Wht om Wednesdays, the ¢ days and the Canard, erman steanters on, Saturdays take printed matter, ete., for ail ccuntries for whi y are advertised to ea il. MALLS FOR SOUTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA, WEST INDIES, E teamers sailing uers on ‘Thurs if y MONDAY—(a)At > PM. for JAMAICA, per steamer from Boston. (At 10:05 TM. for BE LiZe, PUI GUATEMALA, per 5 1M. for from New AND IL, pers. Pheresina, ‘Maraniam and Ceara. (At 10:55 P. D TOLAGO, per POPP erieeteectoctectote THE QUALITY STORE. Some things that perhaps you don’t know-== Do you know that we make Furniture Slips? The best, and in all probability cheaper than you can get them made anywhere else. Do you know that we sell Window and Door Screens? nd if we haven't what you want ready-made, we will ‘measure and make to order. Hoeke's prices are always ail right. Do you know that we carry a full line of Drapery Laces? A big assortment of good grades and handsome patterns. To get them here is to get the best. Fall window length—or by the yard for sash curtains, Do you know why the Wisconsin Peerless is the best Re- frigerator? Come In and examine it. Won't take long—and you'll sce its strong points in a jiffy. Do you know that the Whitney Baby Carriages are best? Another thing we'd Hike to prove to you if you'll give us the ckunce. Best and cheapest. Do you know that our Straw Mattings are all special values? We won't sell cheap Mattings—but we try to sell good Mattings cheap. Splendid patterns. Every reason why you should buy your Mattings here. HOEKE, Furniture, Carpets, Draperies, Pa. Ave. & 8th St. it ¢ PORT AN- ia. |. for LA PLATA P.M. for ST. THOMAS, ST. LE WINDWARD I: Madiana, from New York. (erAt 16 for_FORTU ISLAND, JAMAICA, AND GREYTOW: ted “Per AI, Go- CARTHAGENA” AND . Holstein, New AMPECHE, CHIAPAS, Y—(@At 12:05 P.M. for ST. PIERRE- '. per steamer from North Sydney. (b) - for SANTIAGO DE CUB. na, from New York. Letters AND COLOMBIA must be dire NEWFOUNDLAND, by rail to Halifax, via steamer, clese here duily ex: Sunday at 12:05 P. AM. Mails for MIQUELON, by rail to Boston ai thence via steamer, close’ here daily at 3:20 P.M. Mails for CUBA (except those for "ACIFIC MAILS. JAPAN and HAWAII, per 6s. | & San Francisco, close here daily up 3. dy Mails for AUSTRALIA (except_ WEST AUSTRA- LIA, which ‘are forwarded vin Europe), HAWatl and FLW ISLANDS (specially addressed’ only), per ‘orangi. from Vancouver, close here daily after May 22 up to 6:30 P.M., June 1. (D Mails for CHINA and JAPAN, from Tac June 6. ber _s.s. Pathan, ua, close here dally ap to 6:30 P. HAWAN, per s.s. Australia, from San pse here daily up to 6:30 P.M., June Mails for AUSTRALIA (except those for WEST AUSTRALIA). NEW ZEALAND, HAWAIL FUT and SAMOAN ISLANDS, pers. Marlposa, from Sun Francisco, close here daily up to June 19, 6:30 PIG MAUS are forwarded to the @ OGSGO0000800000 SOOSQGOG In Coasting contests 5 “Sterlings are first.” Nothing reveals the true qualities of a wheel like coasting! Then there is no tricks or jockeying— just the force of gravity proves the wheel’s easy run- ning qualities. Sterlings easily excel. In the coast- ing contest held May 17, on Ist street hill, near Sol- dier’s Home, W. Matchett won on a Sterling— 300 feet ahead of all.@ This was done on a stock wheel. One of the contestants, an employe of a bicycle concern, rode a specially built wheel. If you want an easy running wheel get a Sterling from W. ROY MITCHELL, Fourteenth Street and New York Avenue. OVGSO8 GSSSSO8 28009 mh30-th,s, tu-27t , and the schodule of closings the presumption of thelr uninter- nd trans Registered mail closes at 1:00 P. M. Tuesdays and s ays. ray22 AUCTION SALES. FUTURE DAYS. ©. G. SLOAN & CO., AUCTS, 1407 G ST. NW. POSITIVE SALE OF HORSES, CARRIAGES, HARNESS, &c., IN ORDER TO REDUCE STOCK. - In order to redace my stock for the summer se gem Ts soit at publle auction, at ey stab st. on TUESDA YCLOCK AM. “JAMES P. WILLETT, Postmaster. E ‘without ARNESS; 1 ‘TOP BUCKBOA WITH HARNES DAKD PHAETON, 1 DOCTOR'S PHAETO: ace B 2 2. STR. VEHICLES 5 pperty of customers leaving the city, and it will pay intend ing parchasers to be present at sale. may be expected. W. PF. NEY. €. G. SLOAN & CE my22-its RATCLIFFE, SUTTON & CO., AUCTIONEERS, 920 PA. AVE. SOUTH WEST, WIT: K BUILDING IN REAR. By virtue of wo deeds of trust, recorded, re- spectively. im Liber 1932, folio 262, and Liber 256, follo 344 et seq., of the land records of the District of Columbia. and at the request of the party secured thereby, the undersigned, trustees, will offer for sale, by ee suction, in front of the mises, on THURSDAY, TW! Y-SEVENTH D. 1897. AT HALF. E E ‘the followiny tate, situate in the city of Washington, District ¢ Columbia, to wit: pambered five (5), in McWilliams” subdivision in square five hundred and Ubirty-six 36), X. 186, Im the surveyor t said District, to- gether with ali the improvements, 7 &e. — tated at sale. A deposit of $200 at male. Conveyancing, & DOUGLASS 8. MACKALL: es JACKSON BROS., Seyenth. : “Cash only—and the narrowest margin of profit.”” Remarkable Cuts in Re- 3 frigerators and Baby Carriages. °. We'll scll you a REFRIGERA- et aS TOR, an ICE CHEST or a baby ibeyeoray + oy carriage at 40 per cent less than eae a the credit houses charge. BABY CAR- RIAGES, a full line, at prices froiity2n a $2.98 ICE CHESTS insolid oak. $2.85 REFRIGERATORS, “our own” brand, double cases, packed with mineral 65 O08 galvanized steel lining, patent ventilators, from. 919-921 = ___ Trustees. DUNCANSON BROS., AUCTIONEERS. 2 OF LOTS IN “WHITEHAVEN,” o: DUIT ROAD AND W STREET, PALI- SADES OF THE POTOMAC. By virtue of a deed of trust, recorded in Liber 1591, folio 392 et seq., of the land records of the jumbia, and xt the written request of holder of two of the promissory notes secured thereby, we will, on THURSDAY, the TWENTIETH DAY of MA’ D. 1897, at O'CLOCK P.M., in frout éf the sale, at public auction, of District Workers Held Their May Mass The Christian Endeavor Union of the District of Columbia held #ts May mass meeting at the Church of the Covenant last evening. Miles M. CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR UNION. Meeting Last Evening. ism. The ungodly denominations to get into some little town is wicked.” eerie Another Protest Against the Air Motor Shand, president the union, presided, and the singing HAY'S EULOGY ON SCOTT ate Delivered at theitnveiling of a Bust in Westminster Abbey. a E@ort Aroused@i€hthusiaam and Was Characterized! by-Dean Bradley as “Wise, Eloquent-and Truthfal.” — 3 The Duke of ucpleuch unveiled at Westminster Abbpy yesterday afternvon a memorial bust of;Sir;Walter Scott, in the presence of a distinguished assemblage. The bust is by Mx. -Ifutchinsgon, R. S. A., and is a copy of Sir Francis Chantroy’s well-known portrait. Col. John Hay, ambaszador of the United States, delivered an eulogy on Sir Walter Scott, which was received with the great- est enthusiam and was described by Dean Bradley as being ‘wise, eloquent and truthful.” Mr. Hay said, in part: “His lines have gone out through the earth and his words to the end of the world. No face in mod- ern history, if we may except the magis- terial profile of Napoleon, is so well known as the winning. irregular features of the ‘Squire of Abbotsford.” “It is rather the world-wide extent of his fame that has seemed hitherto to make it unnecessary that his visible image should be shrined here among England’s writers. His ~spirit is everywhere; he is revered .wherever the English speech has traveled, and translations have given some glimpses of his brightness through the vale of many alien tongues, but the vastness of his name ig no just reason why it may not have a local habitation also; it is, therefore, most fitting that his bust should be placed to- day among those of his mighty peers, in this great pantheon of immortal English- men. “In this most significant and interesting ceremony I should have no exeuse for ap- pearing, except as representing for the time being a large section of Walter Scott's immense constituency. I doubt if any- where his writings have had a more loving welcome than in America. The books a boy reads are the most ardently admired and the longest remembered; and Ameri- cans revelled in Scott when the country was young. “I have heard from my father, a pioneer of Kentucky, that in the early days of this century men would saddle their horses and ride from al] the neighboring counties to the principal post town of the region, when @ new novel by the author of ‘Waverley’ was expected. “All over our straggling states and ter- ritories in the east, where a civilization of slender resources but boundless hopes was building; in the west, where the stern con- flict was going on, of the pioneer subduing the continent, the books most read were those poems of magic and sentiment, those tales of bygone chivalry and romance, which Walter Scott was pouring forth upon the world with a rich facility, a sort of joyous fecundity like that of nature in her Most genial moods. “Through all these important formative Gays of the republic Scott was the favorite author of Americans, and while his writ- inga may not be said to have had any special weight in our national and political development, yet their influence was enor- mous upon the taste and sentiment of a people peculiarly sensitive to such influ- ences from the very circumstances of thelr environment. “The romances of courts and castles were specially appreciated’/in the woods and plains of the fréntier, where a pure de- mocracy reigned. \Phe:poems and novels of Scott, saturatgd with the glamour of legend and tradition, were greedily devoured by a people without perspective, conscious that they themselves were ancestors of redoubt- able lines whose battle was with the pass- ing hour, whose glories were all in the days to come. é “Since the time of Scott we have seen many fashions in fiction come and go; cach seneration naturally seeks a different ex- pression of its expertence and its, ideals; but-the author of ‘Waverley,’ amidst all vicissitudes of changing modes, has kept his pre-eminence in two hemispheres as the master of imaginative: narrative. “Even those of us who make no preten- sion to the critical faculty may see the twofold reason of, thés enduring master- bocd,, Roth: mentally gnd racrally Scett was ore of the greatest writers who ever lived. His were memory, his pcwer of acquiring and relating serviceable facts was almost inconceivable to.ordinary men, and his in- structive imagination was nothing short of prodigious. p “The lochs and hills of Scotland swarm wjth the imaginary phantoms with. which he has peopled them for ail time; the his- torical personages of rast centuries are jostled in our memories by the characters he has creat2d, more vivid in vitality and color than the real soldiers and lovers with whom he has cast their lives. “But it is probably the morality of Scott that appeals more strongly to the many than even his enormous mental power. His ideals are lofty and pure; his heroes are brave and strong, not exempt from human infirmities, but always devoted to ends more or less noble. “His heroines, whom he frankly asks you to admire, are beautiful and true. They walk In womanly dignity through his pages, whether garbed as peasants or prin- cesses, with honest brows uplifted, with eyes gentle but fearless, pure in heart and delicate in speech. These are the essential and undying elements of the charm with which this great magician has soothed and lulled the weariness of the world through three tormented generations. For this he has received the uncritical, ungrudging love of grateful millions.” NEW RAILWAY PROJECT. A Company Formed to Build a Rond to Gettysburg. A meeting of the directors of the Wash- ington, Westminster and Gettysburg Rall- road Company was held at the company’s offices in the Atlantic building, the 20th in- stant. and officers chosen. The directory consists of Stilson Hutchins, J. B. Cole- grove of Washington, Geo. C. Smith of Wilkesbarre, Pa.; J. A. Shorb of Littles- town, Pa.; Wm. B. Thomas and E. J. Lawyer of Westminster, Md., and T. Her- bert Shriver of Union Mills, Md. The offi- cers elected were: Stileon Hutchins, pres- ident; J. B. Colegrove, vice president; H. A. Cady, secretary, and Wm. B. Thomas, treasurer. ‘The proposed road is to be built from Cabin John, connecting from: ‘Washington at that point with the Great Falls road; thence by Rockville, Washington Grove, Laytonsville, Etchison, Damascus, Mt. Airy and Westminster, and by the way of Union Mills and Littlestown, to Gettysburg. As by the terms of the company’s charter they can use electricity or steam, it was practically decided to make it a steam road. It wasalso decided to build it in a most substamtial manner, using 80-pound steel rails upon a grade of not to exceed ¢ per Passengers will pe able to. ‘t from Washington in iq juorning, “spt ‘ection than 7 t'clock, ang, #fter spending seven Pad a co —— eS will be back m2. 1e ts have made the eH ary sureye ae EXQUISITE SHIRT WAISTS Displayed in This City. It all the -hand some Shirt Waists shown clse- where in this city were roil- ed together in one collection they would not eytal t superb assem- bly of these eautiful cre ations shown under the one roof of Mr. McKnew. I have never seen such lovely _ styles and colorings in, Shirt Waists before in this city. The exjulsite setting and harmonious blending of the colovings by the skillful hands of the weaver rival in their beauty the products of the hand painters. All the color Weauties of are combined in the light, inex- pensive v. ¥ fabries this season. If in search of exclusive patterns in Shirt Waists, patterns which are not met on every boulevard, creations that will have an individaality about them, I should strongly advise you to visit Mr. McKpew's, for his high-art collection includes many select and beautifui novelties which are not to be seen else- where. He explained that they were confined exclusivly to him for this city, and’ that ouly a few of the leading houses in the country were fa- vored with them. Beautiful, dainty :nd Sinex- pensive Shirt Watsts of lawns, imported lappet lawns, satines and grenadines, strewn with the loveliest floral vine, scroll aml figured patterns, as well as striped effvets, the latter Ine includ- ing the new gold und silver striped waists, which are new witlr this season. Most of the waists are finihal with detachable high rolling linen collars, or with upright collar, with horlzvatal border, one inch deep, and linen cuffs. “ The plums of this collection may be had at Ze., S8e., $1, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75, $2, $2.25, $2.50, 32.75, $2.88, $3 up to $3. A splendid line of Black and Black znd White Satine, Lawn and Batiste Walsts $s also exhibited at $1.50, $2, $2.25-und $2.75, as well as a large selection of the new White Pique and India Linen Waists, from $1.25 up to $4.50. Lovely Organdy aad India Lawn Waists have been designed for wear at commencements. ‘They are the highest class creations of the kind I have ever seen ready made, and it would cost dou- ble the price asked her? to make them up at home. Fine India Lawns, trimmed with Valen- clennes lace and eiabroiderics, in most exquisite de- signs, are shown at $5 and up. Dainty Organdy Waists are marked as low as $8, und the house furnishes materials to match for ekirts upon request. The Silk Watst paradise of the city is here. Every chvice creation of the season is shown. The prevailing materials used are taffeta, India and surah silks, shown in black, changeable, piaids, polka dois and striped effects. ‘The price range is from $3.50 to $21.50. A little collection of some very beautiful shirt waists left from last year are pliced on a separate table and offered at greatly reduced figures. They are not represented as this season's styles, as would be the case in most other stores, but are sold for what they are— last season's styles. Correct styles, with love- liest of coior effects and the highest grade work- munship, makes Shirt Waist buying at McKnew’s one of the real pleasures of life. POLLY rkyor. MAY COME AGAIN, Gen. Coxey Hints at Another Wash- ington Trip. Coxey is talking of ccming to Washing- ton sgain with another army. He says that if he comes again it will not be to petition, but to demand. Mr. Coxey’s news- paper, which he called Sound Money, has been compelled to suspend publication. In an editorial arnouncing the suspension the editor claims that it was due to the fact that “the masses, to whom reform papers must look for support, have become so poor thut they can no longer afford to take the papers. In the course of his edi- terial be says further: “After givirg this administration and Congress a few months more grace in which to redeem their pledges of prosperity, which have already gone tc protest, and prosperity not appearing, it will become necessary to again mass the unemployed and bankrupt people at Washington, not to petition, but to demand that they fulfill pledges made prior to election to an out- raged people, or else resign, as they cer- tainly have obtained their offices under false prete.ses, and many people are now doing time for slighter promises for ob- taining gocds in like manner, as an offi- cial’s salary (money) is a legal order for goods.” —_—.___ The Turn Verein at River View. The Columbia Turn Verein will make an excursion to River View tomorrow. The occasion, like all Columbia Turn Verein af- fairs in past years, will be enjoyable in the extreme, and the committees in charge have worked incessantly to make it a great success. Besides the regular amusements to be found at River View, there will be gymnastic exhibitions, athletic games and contests by senior and junior classes. The steamer Samuel J. Pentz will leave at 11 a.m. and 2:45 and 6 p.m., and will make the return trip from River View at 1, 5, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. From all indications, an immense crowd will make the trip, as the Turn Verein has a large circle of friends in Washington, and they will all be found there tomorrow. —_+ If you want anything, try an ad. in The Star. If anybody has what you wish, you will get an answer. Ni SSS N A Perfect \ ‘fant Food Gail Borden DA SSDSOSO8 9OSOSHGOTSS GS 9OGEH09909000 @SC8O8 9 9ESOS HHSHIDSOOSHOO LEH partments. ed up this just to have a sale. the way. anybody—anywhere. them. SSOSSOS9 OO OSS OOOSCO8EOSOSHOOSGOSOSOGO Basement—elevato~. @ 2d floor—clevator. 22-inch handsome foulard silks, in six distinct —patterns—navy, —_heliotrope, green and browa grounds—39c. stuffs-- for 2gc. yard. 244toch printed Japanese suram —the most exquisite patterns Ughtfclly cool for dresses and waists— to go for 38c. yard. Natural, white, washable and brilliant Japanese silk=24 inches wide-to go for 2ge. yard. Pure silk black brocaded grenadine— 24 Inches wide—che new and pretty pat- terns—-reducsd from $1 to 79¢. yard. Ast toor—7th st. annex. Heavy twilled silesia—in binck and colors—for ard. Yard-wide “Perkasilk”’ in all the new- est colors—the 10c. sort—for for organdie liniags—i3c. sort—for 10c. yard. 36-inch rustle perealine—tack and colors--regular_price—10e.—for 64c. yard. Black, white and gray “Victor” silk levo—vest quality—for 7c. yard. Old 7th st. store. Monday morning day at ‘7th st. annex, 260965000059 009000 DO090E09G00 = @Goldenberg’s Store News. | Goldenberg’s Store —- Aside from the noise from hammering and falling of bricks, which is heard in the building next door, there yet in the store of any rebuilding, but in a few weeks that dividing wall will be torn out, and then you'll see it. It puzzled us at first how we would manage to give up so much selling space—where we'd put the stocks that are located in this vicinity. You helped us out of the “muddle” by taking them away. There's certainly no place in the store for these de- partments as they stand even today, and that's why the reduc- tions—the slaughtering of prices—continues--to move the greater portion of these stocks so that when the walls come down they will be small enough to share the limited quarters of other de- We want you to understand us perfectly. We haven't hatch- annexation sale It is perfectly legitimate. reduce some of the stocks, and we've taken the “sacrifice way” of doing it. We lose a pile of money, but we get a lot of people here—make them friends of the store—and get the stocks out of Such a sale of mattings as starts here Monday upsets all previous offerings ever made by _ When we bought this immense lot of mattings we didn't think we’d need the part of the store they occupy. But here they are—came in yesterday—and just see how we've slaughtered 115 rolls China seamless matting, in very desirable pat- terns, to go at the ridiculous price of 9 cents a yard. 182 rolls of fine heavy China matting—seamless and extra good patterns—to go at the record-breaking price of 14 cents a yard. Greatest of shirt waist sales started here yesterday, when several hundred dozen of the cele- brated “Albion” brand waists went on sale at not much more than half price. The lot comes direct from the maker—are the most perfect fitting waists made—are in the most desirable pat- terns—and in every size from 32 up. In the lot are fine figured lawns, -——handsomest of croisettes, prettiest of percales, and they’re going at such ridiculous prices as these: Those waists worth 5oc. go for............- 3 Oc. Those waists worth 75c. go for...........++ A40c Those waists worth $1 and $1.25 go for...... 60c. no indication We've got to wy Fis Dainty summer silks to go. No pet silks! The richest go at the reduced prices as well as those not so rich. The silk stock must be ve duced to make room for the black stuffs. Special lining prices. 25c. dress stuffs, 12!4c. yard. we shall put on sale a lot of 36-inch wool check dress stuffs, in green, black, brown, blue and other com- binations—splendid for skirts—and has been 25¢.—to go for a 12'4c. a yard. y materially re- White and cream brocaded India silks — in small pretty 80 very up- ©. sort—for Monday— 39¢. yard. Handsome Japanese silks—30 inches Wide—wear guaranteed—in white grounds with figares in heliotrope, new blue and pea green for 55¢. ch navy and Wd. striped and figured Ja lustrous and sheer—for 49¢c. yard. yard. ck polka dot, ese silk —soft, 28-inch natural white and plain black Lyons dye Japanese silk—soft finish the Svc. surt—for 39¢. yard. © & a Yard-wide aatural and white grass cloth—usual Be. sozt—for jc. yard. “Supreme"’ silk-fiaished organdie lin- ing—tooks like sMk—perfect shades 2c. about town—for 5c. yard. 2€-Anch black and gray haircloth—regular price, 25. 18c. yard. herringbone for 2tinch best quality black aud gray herringbone haircloth—for 33c- yard. BGOSSSSIS SIO ECC OOAHOHEO UTaip eS emgesiaam, | GOLDENBERG’S, 926-928 7th--706 k sts. eoeeeseosoosese cceeore canes ‘This bue and cry about WESLEY PARK. A protest, signed by forty-three residents | Very satisfactory,” and property owners on Capitol Hill living rat along the C street line of the Eckington Planked Shag aj Marshall Hall. and Soldiers’ Home road, was today filed | Planked shade ta onte of the delicacies of with the District Commissioners, against | ‘MS Dart of the country, and nowhere Is it was led by Page L. Zimmerman. The ex- ercises were opened with song service and respensive readings, led by Rev. M. Ross Fishburn. Crairman Tuckey of the California leces or parcels of land, im the county of Wash- fogton, ‘in the District of Columbia. that ie to say: Lots numbered 7, 5, 9, 10 and 11, in block 6, in the sutdivision made by Jacob P. Clark and Edward B. Cottrell, trustees, of lot 3, and part of lot 2, tn “Whitehaven,” and recorded in the office of’ the Eagle Brand Condensed Wilk _ > than the cheap ready-made kind What does it mean? Cartly, it means rveyor of the District of Columbia, 1 ty book the issuance of any permit for the equip-| Prepared with ‘taste and skill as at that Set » Tr page 9%. ‘These lots wil be cach ne Max | transportation pear eit ea = ment of the line with*air motors, and nas. Hall, wherg.it. is served every —and more than the “sweat- pe buy 2 lot where its value will ——— prided ene ts Bt = Guan | ng that the company be required to put in | 8% .40. excursioniatay, who make: the trip : “shop” tailored kind—but it gives Whet,msbea even the desect bioom? EG, Ee SUE eee the underground electric system. to that delightfat resort. Passehgers to ‘The petitioners, after ex ‘Marshall Hall cat‘ refnain there elther one or five hours, just“; ‘it suits them, as the pont tea LABOR AND CAPITAL. ‘Think of purchase! Issory the eae 1. st it purchaser, A deposit of $100 on cach lot required at time of sale. Terms of sale t> be complid with in fifteen days from day of 2 ‘wise the trcstees reserve the right to resell’ the propetty at the risk and cost of the defaulting pucchiser, after five days’ ‘of each resale in rome newspaper printed and published in Washing: ton, De. Tap-aca's parte ers and And an army of laborers at work on the AMERICAN UNIVERSITY roug! Mr. Puddefoot’s subject was “ Money for Things We Like," end his Which Hes immediately adjacent, at 45th my8-d&ds main street and Massachusetts avenue, prin. E7THE ABOVE SALE 18 PosTroxen uxra, | Point was to show that. walle every at! inv thts case means near oe aly. ‘i Ste al See ee ee 2 a'tancles. Gal op rapper tes same ‘upoa WILLIAM W. AYRES, HowaRp F, WM. E 1 ‘Washingtos Loan ‘Trust : For Other Auctions See Page 22. Pt rea: z Corns and Bunions ; 3 : ; and ft Se H ‘ Pa. ave. Sto6 p.m. Sunfay,9 tolk _ my2l. |S HUMORS OF ALL KINDS pare’ asa Cuticura Soap, Sef, i sth mode