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Come in and sit We have booklets, photographs and figures that demonstrate every phase of the tremendous development going on now at Coral Gables. Lists of owners and in- vestors, including some of the most prominent business men in this country. Maps and charts that outline every foot of land in this wonder- city of the South. Come in and get the real facts. Let us prove to you that Coral Gables, Miami, Florida, offers unparal- leled opportunities for investment. But don't hesitate. Prices are still moderate. Special De Luxe Round Trip March 15, Saving You $54.15 Get in touch with us today Washington selling representative for CORAL GABLES Room 215 Munsey Building Washington, D. C. Telephone Main 1608 'SATISFACTION | A USED CAR xf_n‘oal 14th STREET AT R i Red.Rough Chapped Hands| Healed and Beautified with New Greaseless Medicated Cream dainty, healing, vanishing creaminab- %:3 /e skin 2t once. Ttgsoothipg med. t] tly stops ail burning and smart- ing. 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Dispatéhes from Syria tell of politi- cal prisoners being sent to Ruad and mention other places which emerge | into the day’s news after lying in the | back waters of world history since the time of the Crusades. 5 In a communication to the National Geographic Soclety, Maynard Owen Willlams tells of a recent trip he | made through this historic, but almost forgotten, region “As one comes up to Tartus from the south, having left the ruing of Marathus behind and drawn a_sort of coast circle around the shoreward side of Ruad, the most prominent feature of the landscape is a huge Crusade church bulking large above the town. The interior, when one has entered it, through a small breach in the age-browned wall, color of crumbling newspaper falling away from some treasure it enveloped, or of nut brown mummy Wwr ing, the interior is pleasing in its grace. Time, however, has worn finger holes in the once rounded columns, and it re- sembles the workshop of a carnival committee or a pageant board, be- cause artless battlements, jig-sawed from thin lumber, fill one corner. Church No Longer a Church. “The Crusader church stands alone between fat-roofed houses and the fertile plain, edged with spiny cactus. {On the right-hand forward corner there is a small tower erected when | there were plans of making a mosque of this vast harn of a building. But Tartus is . and a mosque, like a cafe, is at its best when embellished with humans compacted together. A great face, high under upturned domes, may need only the comple- ment of a lowly, kneeling fixlxr(:_m make it a house of worship. mosque, lacking the presence, n a more companionable upholster) living beings in it. So the chu no longer church, is saved from 'h_e des rtion of non-Christian worship andoned to the desecration of h the walled town (the roadway from the south enters a hole hacked in Phoenician masonry coeval with Solomon’s Temple, perhaps) there is a | Crusaders’ Hall, the outside of which runs along one side of the square. But atter how llage hoys le to see divided among many owners, Another Rare Building. “A little farther on, its megalithic foundations sloping to the disused moat, there is a former church, now a mosque, with a really fine minaret proclaiming its presence. Above the arched doorwa s has given way |to a sor efoil which disguises the | and the imam, handsome commanding in presence, i3 so rdial a friend that one cannot be | grudge him the privilege of instruet ing the youths in a ow corridor of |a room flanking the main hall. |” “The student may. if he will, trace he megalithic wall most of the way | d the town. Rut to what pur- | es counting stones awaken | 3 tion? Or does one huge | block. its cheek bulging bevond the ! carefully cut edges, trimmed to.a per- | tect line along the seam. betray the workmanship as akin to that which Hiram did for his Jewish friends on Mount Zion? When Crusaders Sailed Home. “Tartus was the last place on the mainland to be held by the Christians, but it was from Ruad that the last of the Crusaders, giving up hope of Christianizing by the sword a land in which they had lived for two cen- turies, set sail for home. When the twentieth-century fighters arrived to fight against the Turks and Germans Ruad’ was occupied by the French, and todav its central castle. domi- nating the low-ly island and in turn dominated hy a lighthouse, is the prison of political prisoners. “Ruad stirs the imagination because, quarrying awav its tiny coast line to construct a megalithic wall which dropped sheer to the surf, the Arvadi- ans shut themselves into a place where, lacking a fleet. thev would starve. but sallying forth from there they dominated the mainland as far as the Orontes, including the Nosari- veh Hills, now inhabited by descend ants of several mystic sects and those who gave the word assassin to the world. Men of Ruad Skilled Mariners. “Today the men of Ruad are skill ful mariners as of old, and in the les waters between the island and. the mainland there are many small ships. These ships are all that turn the bal- ance of trade in favor of the island, enabling it to live, for all the food is imported from the mainland. It is a tiny Britain, around which one cam row in half an hour, and the boatman who ferried me across from Tartus in a heavy boat equipped with four oars- men and a sail was glad to add a trip around Ruad to the ferry passage for the promise of an extra 50 per cent added to the 75-cent fare, which was the minimum for a direct crossing. “Tonight I sat in a Tartus cave full of muleteers in conical felt caps, slouchy and comfortable, and town. folks in tarbouches well pressed and ruddy in the light.’ !Traps and Poison Fail, Submarine Overrun by Rats By the Associated Press. NEW LONDON, Conn., March 4. —The U. 8. 8. V-1, the largest of the Navy's undersea vessels, which is at the submarine base here un- dergoing a series of availability tests, is faced with the problem of ridding itself of rats. The craft recently retur-ed to this country from a 14,000-mile cruise in southern waters, where at some port the rats succeeded in getting aboard, and since have multiplied very rapidly. They cannot be poisoned, for they would then crawl away to die in the remote parts of the hull and in the partitions, and it would be impossible to locate them. Neither can they be lured into traps. FORD LIBEL TRIAL SET. Million-Dollor Suit of Sapiro to Be Heard September 14. DETROIT, March 4 (#).—Federal Judge Arthur J. Tuttle yesterday indi- cated that the $1,000,000 libel suit of Aaron Sapiro against Henry Ford and the Dearborn Publishing Co., will go to trial September 14. The case was on call for the present term, but a delay was requested yesterday by Senator James A. Reed of Missouri of defense counsel. who desires more time to obtain depositions, %u Mousr Not Miss A SINGLE IssuE oF MAUDE ADAMS' JUDGE MAY REVEAL RUM RING SECRETS St. Paul Man Scheduled to See Prosecutor in Cleve- land Inquiry. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 4.—Fur- ther developments, prior to the return- Ing of indictments, in the Federal grand jury Investigation here of an al- leged nation-wide bootleg alcohol con- spiracy hinged today on an interview scheduled between District Attorney A. E. Bernsteen and Municipal - Judge John M. Finehout, St. Paul. Except for the possible appearance of Judge Finehout before the grand Jury, the interviewing of witnesses, which has been in progress for nearly four weeks, has been completed. district attorney’s office is of the opin- fon that the blanket indictment may be returned before the end of the week, although the 200-page document has not yet been written in its entirety. Judge Finehout was to he interview- ed immediately upon his arrival from St. Paul, whence he came, supposedly, to tell what he knows of the activities of the “Twin Cities million-dollar rum ring,” sald to have heen a subsidiary of the alleged conspira 1t Bern. steen deems it desirable, Judge Fine- hout will go before the grand jury with The his information, it was indicated to- Judge Finehout has not been|' subpoenaed. Allan McGill, assistant prosecutor of Ramsey County, Minn., who came to Cleveland today, unsubpoenaed, waived immunity and went before the grand Jury, follow/ng a long conference with Bernsteen. Extreme secrecy sur- Rheumatism With applicator attached®o cork, just brush “Heet” over the pain area, whether in hands, shoulders, feet, legs, back, necl you feel this harmless, glorious, pe trating heat draw the pain right out of the aching or swollen joi I or nervi Besides, “H rounded his. conference and testimony. More information on the Twin Citles angle of the case was gathered yester- day, when a Minneapolis hotel man- ager and a St. Paul law student who had worked in alleged gambling den were interviewed. Names of both men were kept secret. Aching Joints Lumbago Neuritis the congestion and establishes a cure. “Heet” contains two soothing, pene- trating ingredients, too expensive to i inary liniments or anal- o fragrant Ordered Here for Duty. Col. William G. Turne Veterinar: tion and breeding headquarters, Kan- sas City, Mo., has been ordered to this ity for duty in the office of the Sur- Corps, attached to the remount sta- geon General of the Arm: DE LUXE Packaged Ice Cream _ MAPLE NUT Special Flavor MAUDE ADAMS “The One I Knew Least of All” Once upon a time, in a traveling company touring the small towns of California, was a “leading lady” of fifteen — and Ly e her mother. The leading lady was very, very small, and very, very frightened, and the one thing in the whole world she longed for was to become a great tragédienne. So she worked and she struggled—oh so hard! But it just wouldn’t work out right. -For there was a pert little tilt to her head, and a tiny, haunting throb in her voice,and a hint of a brave, elfin smile that peeked out through her e away from her lips. yes even when she drove it And so at last she simply had to give up trying to make people weep, and turn around and make the world a happier place to live in by giving us her lovely “Babbie” and her deathless “Peter Pan.” * %k %k % % The greatest American actress of our generation, the best- loved woman our stage has ever known, at last has consented to break her long silence to give us this wonderful story of her life and her work. Written as only Miss Adams herself could do it, these pages will bring back to those of us fortunate enough to have seen her plays a host of happy memories—and to every reader, young or old, they will convey that subtle loveliness, that charm, which set her apart and above all rivalry in the hearts of her public. Begins in the March issue, now on sale, ten cents, 52 SpriNG FasHioN FEATURES With Easter only a month away what can be more interesting than The New Paris Hats for Spring? And here they are, the smartest, most up-to-the-minute showingimaginablebyReboux,Thénault, Suzanne Talbot, Rose Descat, and all the other great modistes. WonbpERFUL STORY OF HER LIFE AND WORK AND THE ONLY WAY TO MAKE SURE IS TO SUBSCRIBE—THERE'S A COUPON FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE. Five women write five splendid stories in the March issue of The Journal —Emma- Lindsay Squier gives us her colorful ro- mance of China in Two Women of Han; Sophie Kerr begins a most significant and important novel, Nancy Davin; Elsie Sing. master paints another of her unforgettable characters in Mrs. Eveland, the woman who dominated a whole town, even after her death; Dorothy Black’s Salvage is one of the prettiest love stories you have ever read; and BELOW Lois Seyster Montross’ Love in a Mist carries a bit of a lesson for all of us, young or old. But the women don’t have everything to » themselves with The Journal's fiction. Five most distinguished gentlemen prepare for your entertainment their finest wares— Booth Tarkington presents The Travelers, a play in one act especially fitted for ama- teur production; Albert Payson Terhune has a new.Gray Dawn story for you, Out- law; Robert Hichens’ remarkable novel, The Unearthly, reaches its most dramatic climax; Zane Grey’s Forlom River fairly crackles with excitement and adventure; and Ellis Parker Butler will rock you with laughter with his newest story, The Crisis. And don’t forget the most fascinating and practical Princess Cantacuzéne tells the true whys and wherefores of Paris, the Arbiter of Fash- ion and indicates just how far the dictates of Paris are binding upon the rest of the world. Then there is a wealth of most charming and practical costumes which reflect the very best of the Paris mode of the moment as it applies to the well-dressed articles on Needlework and Better House- * keeping—eleven of them, all by recognized experts—and Ethel Davis Seal’s remarkable suggestions for interior decorations, entitled Fresh Inspirations From the American Wing. Then, in the American Painting series, there are three pictures by Winslow Homer which we know will prove most popular— especially the famous painting, The Gulf 13 Stream, with its stark drama and its awful sense of isolation. American woman of every age. And, of course, The Journal’sown uarivaled pattern service. THE LADIES' HOME JOURNAL 290 Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pa. 1 enclose one dollar. Please send The Ladies' Home I Journal for one yeas, beginning with March. Name. Street | | Town— State____-_ | I | the Year L A'D I EBE S HOME JOURNAL ‘You can subscribe through any newsdealer or authorized agent, or send the coupon direct to THE LADIES’ HOME JOURNAL, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 4