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JLY LAND TOURIST I"AVEN FUND SOUGHT ..ve for $10,000 to Erect Com- niunity Center in Palestine to Be Lannched Tonight. {ITE GIVEN BY CARMELITES 21 Sects to Participate in D. C. Campaign. ‘lembers of all religious faiths are ting in the local drive for $10,000 in the erection of a $500,000 pice and community center for rican tourists on Mount Carmel, The campaign will be haily launched at a public meet- at §:15 tonight in the small bali- i of the New Willard Hotel rominent Protestant, Catholic and vish clergymen and laymen and yresentatives of numerous fraternal crs, including the Masons, Knights Columbus and the Elks, are behind movement, the object of which is extablish a rallying center for the 400 Americans who every year visit Holy Land The site for the hospice. at Haifa, the gateway to the Holy Land, has °n donated by the Carmelite ¥ath- who have held Mount Carmel for o'y and who wouldn't think of ling a foot of the sacred ground. lans have aiready been prepared by ge Oakiey Totten, jr., Washin The raising of the project is being in- the local campaign Palestine. 0,000 for the igurated with - $10,000. D. C. Woman Is Founder. The founder of the movement is Catherine Kennedy Antonius, taveler and lecturer, of 1467 Rhode and avenue northwest, who has ade three extended visits to the olyv Land, and who is the wife of tichel J. Antonius, a linguist and in- rpreter. who was born in Syria and hose influence in that country was rzely responsible for the donation the hospice site and the indorse- ent of the movement by prominent fcials of the Holy Land. Mrs. Antonius. who is a native of arion, Ohio, but who has lived until cently for seven Years in California, visited the Holy Land in 1814, hen she became acquainted with ‘latives of her future husband, who titute one of the oldest Christian imilies in the Holy Land, and who \wn valuable cotton plantations along ne Nile. On returning from her second trip Palestine Mrs. Antonius met her future husband in California, and ‘here sprang up the romance that Ited in their marriage and in the hing of the hospice movement and Mrs. Antonius returned to ‘alestine in_ 1920, remaining for two sears, and it was during. this visit hat the community center idea ger- minated. Mrs. Antonius was cha- zrined at the fact that while practi- ally every nation had accommoda- rlons for its citizens when they visited the Holy Land, not a single American otcl or rallying center was to be iound in Haifa, the great gateway. Pollowing the donation of the hospice site, Mrs. Antonius put the project before prominent officials of the Holy Land at a specially called meeting at Damascus, the first gathering of Moslems ever to be addressed by a Christian woman, and received their fullest indorsement. Meeting At Willard. The meeting tonight at the New Willard will be addressed by Mrs. Antonius, Charles F. Roberts, grand master ot the Masonic fraternity and president of the American Mount Car- mel Hospice Corporation; Mgr. C. . Thomas of St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, Rabbi Abram _Simon of Ligth 'Street Temple, Rev. Jason Noble Pierce. pastor of First Congre- gational Church and first vice presi- dent of the hospice corporation; 4 per. sonal representative of Bishop Free- man of the Episcopal Church, who will be unable to attend; Miss Janet Richards, well known lecturer: lsaac Gans. Senators Samuel M. Shortridge of California and David 1. Walsh of Massachusetts, and Representatives Julius Kahn of California and James M. Mead of New York. Mrs. Antonius will show ews of Jerusalem, the town of Haifa, Mount Carmel, the proposed hospice building and the Prophet Elijah, who lived on the sa- cred mountain. The musical program will be under direction of Senora Rose Pallio of the Washington Opera Com- pany. The patronesses will include Mrs. Fairfax Harrison, wife of the president of the Southern raiiroad, and Mrs. Thomas H. Carter, widow of the Montana senator. The board of directors of the hos- pice corporation is compfsed of Mr. Roberts, president; Dr. $ierce, first vice-president: Mrs. How#rd L. Hodg- kins, second vice presidgnt: Peter A. Drury, third vie president; Anthony J. Barrett, treasurer: John Malone, recording secretary; Mrs. M. de Clare M. Berry. executive secretary; Mgr. Thomas, P. Paschasius Heriz, O. C. D. Mrs. Antoniu: campaign director; Peter A. Drury, Rear Admiral W. S. Benson, U. S. N.; Michel J. Antonius, George A. Ricker, Dr. Charles I. Grif- fith, Mrs. Cabot Stevens, Mrs, Eilen S. Mussey, Maj. Gen. Frank M. McIntire, U. S. Al; Mrs. Peter A. Drury, Estelle J. Philibert, Mansaur Samaha, Milton Strasburger, J. A. Balderson, and Mrs. A. E. Murphy. Although the drive does not formal- 1y begin until tonight, Emile Berliner and Peter A. Drury already have sub- scribed to the fund. A LEGENDS OF THE ROSE. to Recount Stories of Love, Hate, War and Death. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Among all flower favorites there arc few persons who will deny rirst place to that flower of all flowers— the rose. Earth bath no princelier flowers Than roses white and roses red. ang that mysterious English poet, Jampion, of ‘whose life so little is Known. And we find him singing again: Let prinees princely Sowers defend! Roses, the garden’s pride, Are flowers for love and flowers for kings. Exclaims Herrick, one of the great- est of our lyric poets: Then in that parlay. all those flowers Voted the rose the queen of flowers Many are the legends concerning the rose, many the stories of love, hate, war and death. There Is, In- deed, scarcely a great name in the vast realm of literature which has not paid tribute, in some form or other, to the rose. One finds in Herodotus, the celebrated Greek his torian of antiquity, mention of the double rose. In the Song of Solomon is found the phrase: “I am the rose of Sharon and the lily of the valley,” though, alas, that rose is belleved to have been the crocus or the nar- cissus. However, the Bible is crowd- ed with references to the real rose, the rose we know today. The Romans were great lovers of reses and ‘their mightiest emperors strewed huge masses of them about their banquet halls when some great feast was in progress. Nero show- ered roses on his guests and rose perfumes ran'in streams through his palace during his luxurious festivals, A Roman legend says that Flora, goddess of flowers, overwhelmed by grief by the death of her favorite nymph, supplicated Jove to transform the beioved into a flower that would surpass all others. Jove immediately fashioned the rose. This was the white variety. An- other legend relates that once, when Venus was hurrying to the ald of Adonis, she stepped accidentally upon the thorn of a rosebush. Blood drip- ped from her foot—and ever since that time we have had the red rose. The rosary of religious services is named for the rose, crushed roses, ac- cording to chroniclers, having been strung before the advent of beads. And we are told that the expression “sub rosa” came about because the Romans used to paint a large rose on the celling of their banquet halls a3 & reminder to those present that ‘Wwhat occurred was not to be repeated. Inset—Mrs. Catherl: FRENCH SOCIALISTS THREATEN TROUBLE Holding Whip Hand, Seek to Con- trol Government From Outside Vantage. EVADING RESPONSIBILITY Radicals Fearing for Own Position, Complein. By the Associated Pres: PARIS, May 17.—At the end of a week's post election maneuvering, the Socialists appear to have the whip hand in the political situation, and are showing a disposition to use their advantage. The Radicals, their partners in the campaign, will be unable to make up a majority in the Chamber of Deputies without them, and apparently will have to come to their terms if the victory of the combination is to be made profitable and give victors the reins of government. This situation threatens trouble in both parties. The moderate Radicals are beginning to complain that the Socialists are far too exacting, and that they will, if encouraged, over- whelm the radical end of the com- bination. The Socialists, on the other hand, are*engaged in a hot discussion as to whether their leaders ought to be allowed to take places in the cab- inet. Such leaders as Renaudel and Blum, supported by the resolutions of the Amsterdam and Marseilles con- ventions of the party, hold it will be impossible for the Socialists to col- laborate in the government. They contend that the party can profit more from the hold they have on the situation by remaining outside the official circle. The Radicals must come to their terms, anyway, they affirm, and they can get what they want without taking an: responsi- bility for failure on the pa.. of the new ministerial combination, they argue. Sifuation Complicated Further. The Republican Socialists, who were the third group of associatgs in the coalition of the Left, and are al- most as exacting as the Socialists proper, have further complicated the situation by taking official action to- ward a demand for the resignation of President Millerand. The execu- tive committee of the party, which has about forty seats in the new Chamber. has demanded the head of the president as one of the first con- ditions of its support of the new gov- ernment. Ex-Premicrs Briand and Painleve, who are members of this party, are supposed to be ignorant of the action taken by the committee, and it is ex- pected they will hesitate to approve it. None the less, it furnishes en- couragement to the Socialists, who have been most aggressive in their attacks on the president during the past few days. Alarmed by the turn events are taking, the Radicals, unable to get their leader, Mayor Herriot of Lyons, to come to Paris, have sent an emis- sary to Lyons to meet him on his return from the south of France and advise him of the gravity of the situ- ation. Herriot Wants Soclalist Support. is the The general opinfon tonight is that |_ the Socialist convention to be held in June will decide against the party's participation In the govern- ment. M. Herriot's friends, elected with him at Lyons, say that in that event, the leader of the Radicals will refuse to accept the premiership. M. Herriot, they declare, is willing to head the government with Socialist co-operation, but is unwilling to take up the task of governing merely to do the bidding of the Socialists with- out their having any share in the responsibility. Camille Chautemps, deputy = for Indre-et-Loire, who is making the emergency trip to' visit M. Herriot, will endeavor to induce the Radical leader to come to Paris at once and take the lead in untangling a situa- tion which is becoming eve: hour more snarled. [ Three Stages of Revolution, Edward A. Filene in Harper's Magasine. There are usually three stages in the development of revolutions. The first stage is marked by the immoral content of the oppressor, by that blind satisfaction with the status quo felt by men who are indifferent to everything save their own comfort The ‘second is marked by the moral discontent of the oppressed, by the legitimate protest of the men upon whom the status quo rests heavily. The third is marked frequently, a1though not always, by the immoral Gscontent of the men who seek to eploit the legitimate discontent of their time in the exclusive interest of themselves or of their class. Knowledge Is Knowledge. From the Cincinnati Baquirer. He—What did you learn at cooking school ? She—How to wave my own hair, the best cold creams and the nicest place to £o for lunches. He—Heavens! Is that what they teach there? She-=No, but it there. is what I learned REALTORS AND COLLEGE PLAN TO CO-OPERATE Under a plan for stare-wide co-ordi- nation of real estate classes the Uni- versity of Southern California and the educational committee of Califor- nia Real Estate Association will Jointly examine students’ papers pre- pared in the courses as conducted un- der local real estate boards. A diplo- ma showing completion of the course will thereupon be issued jointly by the university and the state associa 600 BRITH SHOLOM DELEGATES ARE DUE Arrive Today for Twenty-Second Annual Convention—Sessions at Raleigh. DAVIS WILL BE SPEAKER Kennedy Anto COOL CELLAR CHERISHED FORM HOME ADJUNCT City House, Built for Rent or Sale, Without Such Con- venience. Perhaps the housekecper who moves from the country to the city misses more than anything else her cool cellar, where apples will keep all winter. through, and milk, meat and butter are safe except in the ex- treme heat of summer. The city house, built for rent or sale, boasts o such luxury, and even if one build it is almost impossible to keep the plumber or the furniace man from | running hot-water pipes through one's cherished “cold storage” room. By constant watchfulness and firm insistence, we finally emerged from the contest with such a room, amply supplied with broad shelves and with a window opening to the north for light and air. Then, to make it more useful as a daily affair, a skeleton umbwaiter carriage was constructed, incased in wire netting on the fourth to run from the pantry above down to the cold room. Above this cold food closet and running up through the hathroom on the second floor to the third dumb- waiter, which we find so useful that it almost seems to supply the serv- ices of an extra servant in the house. A word through the speaking tube to the cook, and the children's lunch appears, or kindlings for a fireplace, or drinking water at night, and when there is iliness to be reckoned with and a glass of milk to be adminis- tered every little while, and some thing else between, we wonder how we could ever dispense with it YELLOW RIVER TAMED. Flood-Control Project in China Re- claims 1,800 Square Miles. From the North China Herald. The average number of laborers em- ployed for the seven months of construc- tion for changing the channel of the Yellow River as a flood-control measure ‘was about 7,000, and the greatest num- ber employed at one time reached 23,500 men. At one time 12,000 were at work In the leading channel alone. Famine conditions in Shantung had passed, so it was not easy to secure sufficient borers, and though good pay was given it was necessary to develop a large re- cruiting organization to obtain the men. The river was diverted on May 15, 1923, and all the dyke protection and other works were completed and offi- cially accepted October 20. Then 1,800 square miles of land were reclaimed and approximately 250,000 people reoccu- pied their homes. Crops were planted in June and a bountiful harvest was reaped in the autumn. Much credit is due to the civil governor of Shantung. Hsiung Ping-chih, for putting this work through and financing it. NAMED ON REALTY BOARD. M. T. Miller has been hamed first executive secretary of the Kansas v (Kan) real estate board. 1d- ward Grace, former general secre- tary of the Pasadena Y. M. C. A, has been appointed first full-time secre- tary of the Pasadena (Calif.) realty board. Richard Endicott, jr., is the new executive secretary of the At- lantic City real estate board. E. Blenkhorn has been elected to take the place of V. McCoy, resigned, as secretary of the Santa Monica Bay (Calif.) real estate board. PERCENTAGE BASIS LEASING. Spread of long-term leasing on a percentage basis is indicated by the negotiation reported to the National Association of Real Estate Boards this week of the first lease of this character in Kansas City property. According to the terms of the lease, the banking company renting the ground floor of the building will pay annually a rental equal to thr tenths of 1 per cent of the bank's gross deposits HIRE REALTY SECRETARY. Assistance in the location of Tul- sa's incoming industries and activity in drawing new industries to the city will be the function of a special full-time secretary to be employed by the Tulsa real estate board. Plans for the attraction of new industries Ismo cities are being made a special study of the National Association of Real Estate Boards through its in- dustrial division. e The Expert’s Testimony, From the Houston Post. ‘Wifle—My goodness, the pie doesn't Seem to be very good. . Hubbie—What's the trouble with it, I found it all right? Wifle—Well, there's something wrong, Willie refused a second piece. 13th St. us, founder of the Hospice Movement. RIVER SHANNON MAY SPUR IRISH INDUSTRY Project Under Way for Harnessing Stream of Rare Romantic Background. LARGEST IN FREE STATE Geographic Society Bulletin Tells History and Picturesqueness. “The Shannon River, which so long | has figured in the romances of the imaginative Irish, will soon be con- nected with an industrial romance of that country, if the great engineering project for harnessing its water, re- ported to be in progress, is put into operation,” says a bulletin from the headquarters here of the National Geographic Societ “Dainty shamrock blooms and other flowcrs nod their pretty heads by the side of its foaming weirs and its bawling rapids. They give a colorful background to stories concerning the fairies who still play pranks upon the inhabitants in its vicinity, the mi- raculous cures of the numerous holy wells and the potency of the wishing wells near its banks. Longest in Irish Free State. “Statistically speaking, the Shan- non is the largest and longest river in the new Irish Free State, measures 240 miles in length and is eight miles wide at its mouth. During its course it drops 150 feet from the foot of the Cuilagh Mountains, where it rises. o the sea—the last feature be- ing the source of its power to turn the wheels of industry. “From Loop Head and Kerry Head, the twin capes at its entrance to the sea, it is navigable for all classes of ships for thirty-six mi or up to its junction with the Fergus River and a considerable world navy might be hidden within its estuary, whicl in some places widens out to ten miles. Once, many years ago, the town of Limerick, at the head of navi- gation on the Shannon, had fond as- pirations of being the greatest port in Ireland, because ships from America could sail up the river and dock at her wharves, but a turn in the tide of affairs of the island caused the city to wither away, and now few boats except excursion steamers and pleasure craft drop their gangplanks along Limerick's waterfront . “Down through Lough Allen. near the northwestern coast of Ireland, out into the central portion of the coun- try and back again to the southwest. the river flows, measuring off a por- tion of land very similar in shape to Wales, about the same size and in a corresponding location with reference to Ireland that Wales bears to Eng- land. It has been canalized and made navigable for small vessels as far as Lough Allen near its source; the Grand and Royal canals connect it with Dublin, the Ulster Canal with Belfast. Its volume is obtained from a cdtchment basin of 4,544 squarec miles. Divides Inland Historically. “Historically speaking, it has for a thousand or more years been the di- viding line between eastern Ireland. which was overrun at various times by the Danes and the English, and western Ireland, which is Irish through and through and where Gaelic is still the language of the people. “But the beautiful fertile valley, with its green, calm, lush meadows, seems fitter for a more peaceful life than history has hitherto accorded it. The Danes pushed their boats up to the head of navigation at Limerick in the ninth century and managed to throw a bridge across the river. This was almost the only way of getting across the river barrier, with the exs ception of the ford at Athlone, just below Lough Ree. “Brian Boru led his forces against the Danes and drove them out after a struggle which romantically colors the pages of Irish history. but the Normans came just a little while later, took Limerick and erected a great round-towered castle, from which they might clinch their hold upon the country. Scarcely a century passed that did not know bloody struggle along the peaceful river. Edward Bruce captured the Norman castle in 1316, and Hugh O'Neill held it for six months against one of the greatest of Cromwell's generals. The venerable old castle. with its great drumlike towers and walls ten feet thick, stands by the riverside today. “The portion of the river just above Limerick is known as the most beau- Instantaneous HOT WATER We apply the thermostat ‘to your boiler and insulate your boiler with dead air and asbestos. thermoflash arantee it to be durable and reliable. mates. both winter and summer. 709 C. A. Mnddiman Co. One Door Above G tiful, and has been dubbed by happy fishermen _the ‘Utopia of Irish an- glers. Its salmon and trout fishing is famous enough to make devotees caress their rods, poles and flies in retrospect over the hours they spent 'at Carrick-on-Shannon, Athlone, Kil- laloe or Castleconnel.” Automatic Hundreds of this in use. We Get our esti- Most efficient results 709 13th St. Visitors to Be Received at White House Tomorrow. Six hundred delegates from four nearby states and nine cities will ar- rive this morning, together with their families, to attend the twenty-second annual convention of the Independent Order of Brith Sholom, which con- venes at the Hotel Raleigh at-11 o'clock. The delegates will be met by the local committee and escorted to headquarters. retary ‘of Labor Davis will ad- dress the ‘convention this afternoon. Chairman = Bernard Danzansky formally will open the convention and t_lwn turn the gavel over to Executive Chairman Frank Merin of Baltimore Local Lodge Celebrates. Coincident with the opening of the convention, the George Washington Lodgo here will celebrate its tenth anniversary. The local lodge was the first given a charter outside of Maryland, Ttabbi J. T. Loeb will open the con- vention with a prayer while Dr. Abram Simon, rabbi of the Washing- ton Hebrew Congregation, will de- liver the address of welcome. Then the convention will be turned over rman Merin to Grand Master The Rev. William Tash at memorial services in of ‘the members of the order who died in the last year. After these ~ exercises Grand _Secretary David Paulson will read his report, and committees will be appointed. Speak at Banquet. Senator O. 1. Weller and Repre- sentative John Philip Hill of Mary- land, will be the principal speakers tomorrow night at the banqu Tomorrow at 12:30 the delegates will visit the White House where they will be welcomed by President Coolidge. In the afternoon they will &0 on a sightseeing trip. Hoffman as president of the George Washington Lodge, No 1 O. B. S, has taken a prominent part {in arrangements for the convention. He has been assisted by Mr. Dan- zansky, H. Neff, M. Abramson. H. Klavans. B. Hayma William Tash, . Garfinkle and S. Poretzky. Under the leadership of Mrs. H. | Neff, chairman, the following com- | mittee will be on duty at the Union station this morning: Mrs. M. Abram- | son, Mrs. M. Klavans, Mrs. B. Hay- man, Mrs. William Tash, Mrs. H. | Poretzky, Mrs. R. Rosenberg and Mrs B. Danzansky, chairman of entertain- ment. honor Leaders In Lodge. Leading members of the local lodge include the following: H. Kassnett, C. Luria, M. Maizel, N Plotnick, L Polan. H. Poritzky, H. Ratner, T Rosenberg, J. Rudden. H. Rubner, M. Rain, A. Rosenbloom. Ruben- stein, 1. huster, H. Shapiro. M. Sokolove, C. Shiller, A. Silverstein, L Sklar, S.'Spiegle, L. Stein, M. Jacobs, A. Stein, §. Stein, (¢ Solomon. Dr. Shorell. D. Tauber, William h, D. | Falk, M. Garfinkle, E. Golden, M. | Goodman, S. Gritz, M. Greenbaum, L. | Greenberg, L. Gurvitz, B. Hayman, J Hoffman, I Hayman, J Hais, L. Honigman, 1. Jacobs, H. Klavans, & {Kluft, D. Kolodny, S. Konigsberg, S. Kellner, S. Kessler, R. Klivit, R. L. Krupnick, H. Taishoff, H. Tabb, M. | Milofsky. M. Werber, J. Weinberg, A. Zimmerman, Dr. Wolf, M. Wakoff, B Rachlin, B. Segal, P. Solomon, J. Shiffiman, H. Oxenberg, S. Mostow, J. Meyrowitz, A. Litvin, L. Lazarow, H. Goldblatt, P. Hershell, L. Fogel, A. Footer, J. Cohn, M. Broverman, R. Blacker, H. Backard, M. Needle, I. Abramson, A. Piver, S. Plax, M. Katz |S. Segal. J. L. Tepper, A. Tash, M. Weber, H. Klufft, 1. el, M. Abram- | son. Dr. Borisow, Golnic g ‘B-' linsky, 8. Blumberg, 1. Blanki | Blum, B.' Brotman, N. Bortnick, {Blumberg, B. Brill, J. Berman. | Bonett, J. Cohen, H. Diener, B. Da zansky. Edlovich, H. Edlovich and J. Fla: 1315 E St. N.W. Foot Specialist See this beautiful Dutch Colonial Home in Resemont, facing. directly on Mount Vernon Boulevard. .Large lot. Every modern convenience of a city home. To inspect, drive out Mount Vernon Boulevard to Walnut Street, second house on your right. tion to all who show grades. The California state assoclat urging its member boards to inv those in occupations allied to real es- tate to join the real estate cla A report to the National Association Boards states that of Real Estate some 1,200 students are now en in the state, with real then about to be additional cities. organized i The Tennessee Real Estate Associa- tion has undertaken to devel Tennessee schools, colleges and institutions a two-year real course. The Chicago Y. M. C. Commerce has n land economies course of study, selling, r conveyance The in its which rea . and real estate pi MILLIONS NEED HUSBANDS. Bureau Seéks Mates for Eligible French Women. From the Louisville Courier-Journal. Courtship sight unseen couraged officially as a overcoming the decline in the birth rate, it is proclaimed in cular issued by the Office d Francais et Etranger, or Frenc Foreign Marriage Bureau. Unlike the average “vulgar cies,” the bureau has as its sol tive bringing together by spondence French spinsters and French or foreign men, allowing to compare tastes and affording an opportunity to another. On the advice of lea lawmakers and political men, ments are being sent throu France, the colonies and to countries in an attempt forelgn marriages part of the 1 marriageable men in the w There are at present 3.000.000 eligible women than men in who will be forced to remain unless they can find husbands o of their own country Applicants are asked to questionnaire, describing and the type of woman they marry. The office then young woman who most the description. and looks tials on both sides. = ng w fill them o up ci WILL WAR ON FALSE ADS. A committee of review has appointed by the St. tate Exchange to ac misleading items affceting real esta change reports to the ) ciation of has devoted a fund to be co-operative business moveme; scotch such advertising and to lish_public confidence in the ments of advertise te. ational —— Creole Proverbs. o Boston Transerips tongue has no bones Chickens don't boast what goup they make He who takes a master. When your hen put her in the pot. is laving He went to school a kid and came back a sheep. Behind the dog’'s back but before him it is “Mr, Dog.” If - vour petticoats fit you don't try to put on your hus breeches Leaks are frequently caused b: allowing metal flash being too low, water to 1op or splash over it. under weatherboard. Come in and have your footprint taken. We will read it for you. Absolutely no obligation Stach’s Ground Gripper Shoe Shoppe, Phone Main 6382 Attendance National Theater Building Always in Ground Gripper Shoes Price, Only $11,500 Terms Reasonable F. C. Goodnow Company Main 307 729 15th St. N.W. Virginia Office: 102 South St. Asaph St., Phone 926 g satisfactory estate classe: A. College of inaugurated a course aleo inc law, transfers and ew course is the first of its kind to be organized in such a school., is to be means French pt or reject one to offset yrid war. France, presents nearly Louig Real in all cases of advertising or newspaper The ex- teal Estate Boards that it used it is dog, Inquire jon Ig ite ali ssex. rolled n ten op in state estate tate udes tice. | | Many‘, to a o Tnion h and agen- e mo- corre- either them them riters, docu ghout allied b: 088 of more | single utside out a selve ish t the fits reden- | been Es- Asso- in a nt estab- state- go0a | partner takes a!r don't well band's Look EXTRAORDINARY ANNOUNCEMENT PUBLIC AUCTION SALE Our Entire and Magnificent Stock Will Be Sold at Public Auction Reason We Are Forced Out of Business Building to be torn down. We have been in business in the city of Washington for the last twenty-five years and this is our first and only Auction Sa!e. urStock Consists of iamonds, Watches, Jewelry, High Art, Curios, European Specialties, Silver- ware, Etc., Etc. ALE STARTS Monday, May 19th 11 AM. Two Sales Daily 11 AM. 2:30 P.M. A Diamond Ring will be given away free at every sale. The first fifty ladies entering the store Monday, May 19th, 11 a.m. will receive a free souvenier. LUCIOS 1313F St.N.W. WASHINGTON, D. C.