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WEEKLY OUTLINE STUDY OF

CURRENT HISTORY

BY J. MADISON GATHANY, A.M.

HOPE STREET HIGH SCHOOL, PROVIDENCE, R. L

Based on The Outlook of June 12, 1918

Each week an Outline Study of Current History based on the preceding number of The Outlook will be printed for the benefit of current events classes, debating clubs, teachers of history and of English, and the like. and for use in the home and by such individual readers as may desire suggestions in the serious study of current history.-THE EDITORS.

[Those who are using the weekly outline should not attempt to cover the whole of an outline in any one lesson or study. Assign for one lesson selected questions, one or two propositions for discussion, and only such words as are found in the material assigned. Or distribute selected questions among different members of the class or group and have them report their findings to all when assembled. Then have all discuss the questions together.]

I-INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

A. Topic: Reprisals.
Reference: Editorial, pages 249, 250.
Questions:

1. What are reprisals? Illustrate. 2. What answer has The Outlook given to its own question: "Are reprisals justified?" Explain its answer. 3. Do you personally believe in reprisals? Give your reasons. 4. In the opinion of The Outlook, what are the principles that should govern any reprisals undertaken by America? What do you think of what The Outlook says about these principles? Can you add others?

B. Topic: Help for Russia; Japan and Bolshevism.

Reference: Editorial, page 261.

Questions:

251; pages

259

1. Does The Outlook believe we can help Russia? Give in your own words what it says in answer to this question. Is its suggestion sound and practical? 2. After reading this editorial and Mr. Mason's article, tell in two hundred words what Bolshevism is. Does it possess any praiseworthy features? Discuss. 3. Mr. Mason reports that Baron Goto "Japan cannot tolerate says: the Bolsheviki." Explain why not. 4. What did Baron Goto say to Mr. Mason about China? What do conclude from this? you 5. What other topics did Mr. Mason and Baron Goto discuss? Give the substance of what was said. 6. Mr. Mason evidently does not believe the Allies should intervene in Russia. The Outlook believes they should. With whom do you agree? Give reasons. 7. Tell what you think of the following statements: (1) "We can afford to wait until the Bolsheviki give way to a régime that will invite our aid against Germany." (2) "We should not hesitate over the question whether the Bolsheviki will misinterpret our help or not." (3) "If Germany establishes her domination of Russia, she wins the war." (4) "Russia within the German Empire means the mightiest military empire the world has ever seen." (5) "The entire civilized world would welcome the intervention in Russia of a considerable American military force under the direction of Theodore Roosevelt." 8. The following books are of special value to those interested in National and international affairs. Read all of them: "Japan or Germany," by Frederick Coleman (Doran); "Militarism and Statecraft," by Munroe Smith (Putnams); "The War and After," by Sir Oliver Lodge (Doran); "National Strength and

International Duty," by Theodore Roosevelt (Princeton University Press).

II-NATIONAL AFFAIRS

A. Topic: Child Labor Law Invalid.
Reference: Pages 245, 248.
Questions:

Note. Make this topic the basis of a study of the Supreme Court and its relation to the Congress and the States. 1. What is the Child Labor Law that the Supreme Court has declared unconstitutional? Who made the law? 2. For what reason did the Court declare the law invalid? Give the opinion of the Judges who disagreed with the decision of the majority. 3. With which group of Judges does The Outlook agree? Why? With which do you? State your reasons. 4. What are the only two legal ways by which a decision of the Supreme Court can be reversed? Explain and discuss both. 5. Five men in the Supreme Court can defeat the will of over five hundred men in Congress who represent over 100,000,000 American citizens. Is this democratic? Be sure you think soundly. 6. What is the most important function of the Supreme Court? What are its other does it have original jurisdiction? 8. When functions? 7. Over what classes of cases and where does the Supreme Court sit? 9. From what courts are cases appealed to the Supreme Court? 10. What is meant by "original jurisdiction"? By "final jurisdiction"? 11. Does England have a court that has power to declare unconstitutional law passed by Parliament ? France? What countries only have such a court? 12. How do Federal judges secure their positions? Lose them? What is the salary of a Supreme Court Justice? Should it be more? 13. The Outlook believes that a movement for industrial freedom has

a

Does

been going on for twenty years. Can you prove it? 14. Consult any good civil government text-book for many of the answers to these questions. Think out the others.

III-PROPOSITIONS FOR DISCUSSION (These propositions are suggested directly or indirectly by the subject-matter of The Outlook, but not discussed in it.)

1. The ideal of a soldier has not changed since the days of the Pharaohs. 2. History shows that it is nationally dangerous for lawmakers to disregard social unrest. 3. The power of the Supreme Court to declare laws unconstitutional should be abolished.

IV-VOCABULARY BUILDING

(All of the following words and expressions are found in The Outlook for June 12, 1918. Both before and after looking them up in the dictionary or elsewhere, give their meaning in your own words. The figures in parentheses refer to pages on which the words may be found.)

Intimidate, terrorize (249); class tyranny, Socialism (252); affable, chaos (260); affinities, entente, intervention (261); acquiesce, decade (248).

A booklet suggesting methods of using the Weekly Outline of Current History will be sent on application

CHINESE PROVERBS

Under the caption of "By the Way" the question is asked in The Outlook whether there is any collection of Chinese proverbs. In reply I would say that there are at least three in English besides a number in Chinese, and doubtless others in French and German. Of those in English one is found in Justus Doolittle's "Vocabulary and Handbook of the Chinese Language." Another is Mr. Scarborough's "Collection of Chinese Proverbs," and a third is "Chinese Proverbs," by Dr. Arthur H. Smith, author of "Chinese Characteristics," "Village Life in China," etc.

Another collection, covering a much wider field, by the last-mentioned author was in manuscript at the time of the Boxer outbreak in 1900 and was destroyed. It contained between eight and nine thousand proverbs, phrases, etc. Dr. Smith's "Chinese Proverbs" was published in 1902, and is a revision of an older work; it contains some nineteen hundred proverbs, including poems, sayings, etc. Although small as compared with the great mass of proverbs in daily circulation in China, this work is of no little value, since with nearly every proverb Dr. Smith has taken pains to insert the Chinese text and to explain clearly its use, and often the source from which it was derived.

Here are a few of the proverbs: “A single expression makes a country prosperous. "A single expression ruins a country."

." "If two persons are of the same mind, their sharpness can divide metal." "When three men are of one heart, yellow earth is turned to gold." "He who depends upon himself will attain the greatest happiness." "The people are the root of a country; when the root is firm, the country is tranquil."

A few illustrations of proverbs that need and have received elucidation by Dr. Smith may not be uninteresting:

"How many students have been puzzled by the strange statement: What is worn is clothing, what dies is a wife.' To this adage the most appropriate response would seem to be that of the inebriated citizen who laboriously spelled out the words of a hardware dealer's sign: ""Iron sinks-all sizes." Well, who it don't?' That clothsays ing is apparel and that wives are mortal no one is prepared to deny. But what of it? The apparent platitude assumes, however, a more rational appearance when we are informed that the meaning is merely: When your clothing is worn out (so as to be of no service to any one else), it may be said to be your clothing; when one's wife is once dead she is irrevocably one's wife (for she cannot remarry and become the wife of another). Nothing, in other words, can be called our own until we have used it up.

"The large fish eat the small fish; the small fish eat the water insects; the water insects eat water plants and mud,' a saying which contains a compendious and accurate description of the relation between the higher officials, the lower officials, and the people of China.

"Some of the most apparently enigmatical Chinese sayings belong to that large class in which the obscurity arises, not from any particular expression, but from the circumstance that something vitally important to the sense is left to be supplied, a something to which the unhappy auditor (or reader) may have no possible clue."

A large proportion of Chinese proverbs are puns that do not translate well into English. Dr. Smith has devoted more than one-fourth of his book to these, but their chief interest is for those who can read Chinese. FRANKLIN M. CHAPIN.

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Rub two highly polished bars of finest steel together. Without oil or
with an inferior oil you will get friction.

With a quality oil at the places of contact, you could rub till dooms-
day, but the bars would never wear out. The oil literally spreads a
film between the places of contact and keeps the metal separated.
A film of poor oil will break down and give friction its deadly chance.
This is why you should see to it that the lubricating oil in your
motor is a quality oil, why you should use Havoline Oil.

HAVOLINE OIL

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REG. U.S. PAT. OFF.

"It makes a difference"

Your motor, bearings, and cylinder must be protected by oil that does
not break-no matter what the weather or speed at which you drive,
no matter how hot the engine becomes. You can depend upon Havoline.
There is no practical way to test motor oil unless you use it in your
automobile. No "free sample" will prove anything, except to the
expert analytical chemist. But if the experience of a vast majority of
the better class of car owners all over the country is worth anything,
you can empty your crank-case today, clean it out with kerosene, buy
a can of Havoline, fill up your motor, and start her running. You'll
be surprised at the new lease of life your good old car will take,
running on Havoline. You may find it necessary to drive your present
car next year, and the year after that. The oil you use is important
to the life of your car, whether you continue to drive it yourself or
want a good price for it when you sell it or trade it in.
Havoline Oil comes in sealed containers, your guarantee of uniform quality.

Havoline greases are compounded of Havoline
Oil and pure, sweet tallow. Clean to
handle and correct in body

Indian Refining Company, New York

Incorporated

Producers and Refiners of Petroleum

THE NEW BOOKS

This department will include descriptive notes, with or without brief comments, about books received by The Outlook. Many of the important books will have more extended and critical treatment later

FICTION

Lord Tony's Wife. An Adventure of the Scarlet Pimpernel. By Baroness Orczy. The George H. Doran Company, New York. $1.35. This is another tale of the French Revolution in which, as many readers will remember, "The Scarlet Pimpernel " played a heroic and mysterious part. This author's stories always please a large audience of readers who are fond of excitement and tense situations. They are not of a very high literary order, but they do have movement, intrigue, and mystery in abundance. Rekindled Fires. By Joseph Anthony. Henry Holt & Co., New York.

There is original work in a new field in this story of life among Bohemian cigarmakers. One rather expects from such a subject a tense and rhetorical tractate on labor and industry. This is not at all what the author has done. He knows the people he is describing, and he portrays amusingly their national traits, their good nature, and their friendliness. The Bohemian boy who simply drives his way into the industrial life of his elder compatriots and later drives his way into and through college is an original, distinct character, and there are others almost equally well drawn.

HISTORY, POLITICAL ECONOMY, AND POLITICS
Reconstruction in Louisiana : After 1868.

By Ella Lonn, Ph.D. G. P. Putnam's Sons,
New York. $3.

This book tells in great detail the history of Louisiana under carpetbag government, including the period when that State became a pivotal center in the Presidential election of 1876. It will interest the students of Louisiana's history primarily, but it has its larger political and racial lessons for those who can draw them from the rich storehouse of material here admirably presented.

RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY Science of Power (The). By Benjamin Kidd. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York. $1.50. This is a posthumously published work. It will stimulate scientific study of society, as did its predecessor, "Social Evolution." Its argument maintains three leading propositions: The science of power in civilization is the science of passion for the ideal. The emotion of the ideal is the supreme principle of efficiency in the collective struggle of the world. It generates the of sacrifice and renunciation. It power is most highly and permanently developed in the child. The power of organized society is that of social heredity through the social culture to which the child is submitted. Through this an entire nation may be changed in character, outlook, and motive in a single generation-e. g., Germany. Capacity for self-sacrifice and renunciation to the uttermost is more highly developed in woman than in man. In the mind of woman the winning peoples of the world will find the psychic center of power.

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mission at Marsovan, Asia Minor, at Princeton Theological Seminary, and at Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia. His account is exhaustive; he pictures the history of Armenia from traditional times, and especially from the earliest days of authentic history. The book has peculiar pathos in view of the fact that by Russia's return to Turkey of its conquests in Armenia not only are the remaining Armenians there imperiled, but, because of the Turkish advance across the border, some 1,500,000 Russo-Armenians and about 300,000 Armenian refugees from Turkey are now exposed to Turco-Teutonic outrages and

massacres.

Winning of the War (The). A Sequel to "Pan

Germanism." By Roland G. Usher, Ph.D.
Illustrated. Harper & Brothers, New York. $2.

SCIENCE

Destinies of the Stars (The). By Svante Arrhenius, Ph.D. Translated by J. E. Fries. Illustrated. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York. $1.50.

Dr. Arrhenius is a noted Swedish chemist, a recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He is also well known as an astronomical investigator. In this translation of a book which has won great popularity in Sweden we have fascinating glimpses of the great spheres in the heavens whose contemplation just now helps to bring to our minds peace when there is no peace.

Wonders of Instinct (The). By Jean Henri Fabre. Translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos and Bernard Miall. Illustrated. The Century Company, New York. $3.

The ripest knowledge and most winning charm of Fabre's observation may be found in these records of insect psychology, family life, and habits in peace and war. Three years ago Fabre died at the age of ninetytwo. Only in his old age did the world find that his writings combine science and romance in an enticing way. Maeterlinck, who first gave Fabre the title of the "Insect Homer," also rightly said that he was of the most profound and inventive scholars, one of the purest writers, and, I was going to say, one of the finest poets of the century."

MISCELLANEOUS

one

Co-operation: The Hope of the Consumer. By Emerson P. Harris. The Macmillan Company, New York. $2.

A thoughtful criticism of the present system of distribution, and an_outline, based largely on the successful Rochdale plan, for co-operative buying among American consumers. The author is a practical storekeeper of wide experience, and as such presents many valuable suggestions toward the solution of the problem.

Good English. By Henry Seidel Canby_and John Baker Opdycke. Illustrated. The Macmillan Company, New York. $1.

This is a sensible book of instruction for the use of both teachers and pupils. If anything can help the average boy or girl, who has no special concern for the refinements of English style, to take an interest in the subject, it should be a book like this when used by an intelligent teacher.

Most of your friends use it and profit by it

THE NATION'S
INDUSTRIAL

PROGRESS

Believing that the advance of business is a subject of vital interest and importance, The Outlook will present under the above heading frequent discussions of subjects of industrial and commercial interest. This department will include paragraphs of timely interest and articles of educational value dealing with the industrial upbuilding of the Nation. Comment and suggestions are invited

SPEEDING UP THE MOVEMENT OF FREIGHT

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(From The Nation's Business")

One of the important considerations of freight-handling is the time required to transfer freight from the trucks which deliver it to the shed, to the cars or boat; to transfer freight from one car to another at the freight transfer points, where the shipments are segregated for their final destination; and, finally, the movement of freight from the cars at its final destination to trucks which haul it away from the shed.

Under ordinary conditions, after a car is loaded it moves without serious delay to the transfer point or final destination, so that one of the vital features of facilitating freight movement is handling it rapidly at the loading sheds to get the cars under way, and again unloading the cars promptly at destination.

The present freight movement of cars is about 1.2 miles per hour. If only one minute were saved for each of these 2,325,000 freight cars, 1,614.5 days of twenty-four hours, or the equivalent of 4.4 years, would be gained. This would mean to the shipping public that freight would move faster and more freely without any increase in the number of cars on the lines.

How this saving is to be effected is one of the problems which faces all transportation men. At present sheds are congested by freight, roadways leading to them are clogged, and at the same time the stations

themselves are so filled with men and hand trucks that workmen interfere with each other.

The surest solution of this problem is the application of some means of freight handling which will increase the capacity of each workman. The equipment is available and is doing its work wherever it has been tried. It has been shown that the capacity of one man can be increased to equal that of seven or eight.

This speeding up has cleared streets of traffic so that instead of a truck waiting for hours to unload it unloads in a few minutes. Instead of the freight being piled on the platform it is put on a truck and immediately removed, leaving the unloading platform clear for the next load.

Not long ago a truck backed to the unloading platform of a railway terminal. The truck driver unloaded on the platform 88 pieces of freight in twenty-six minutes and clattered away. The next truck moved to the unloading platform. There were only four crates on this truck, but it was twentyfive minutes before the space on the unloading platform was clear so that these crates could be unloaded. The unloading took eighteen minutes.

In this instance the second truck lost twenty-five minutes, and all the trucks strung out back of it lost twenty-five minutes. And the transportation company lost twenty-five minutes' use of the platform.

On a later date a truck with three cases

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1918

Speeding Up the Movement of Freight (Continued) backed up to this same platform and unloaded in a little over two minutes. The total weight of these cases was 4,000 pounds. Instead of their being dumped out on the shed floor, they were placed onto an industrial electric truck, carried 3,500 feet in two minutes, and unloaded directly into the freight car which was to carry them away.

Compare the time consumed in handling these two truck-loads. In the first case it took twenty-five minutes to transfer the freight from a shed floor. In the second case 4,000 pounds of freight was unloaded from a truck and put in the car in less than five minutes. It is hard to imagine congestion on a platform where material is handled in this rapid fashion.

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Some dramatic machines have been developed for time-saving equipment. The Hullett Unloader handles ore, coal, or grain at the rate of 22 tons a load. The operator sails through the air with the shovel, and thus has direct control while seeing exactly what he is doing. A round trip-from the boat hold to the unloading destination and back-is completed in fifty seconds. Four of these machines have emptied a 12,000ton vessel in four hours. This is faster than the boat was loaded by gravity at the head of the lakes.

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At one of the largest freight terminals in the United States the average time of ship loading and unloading has been reduced one-half by the installation of electric freight-handling equipment. Six thousand-ton boats are now handled in seventytwo hours, instead of one hundred and forty-four hours. The saving in cost of freight movement is enormous. It costs about $300 for every day that a boat of this size lies idle. Thus three days saved means $900. At the same time the docks and piers have had their capacity for freight practically doubled. Twice as much freight can be passed through in a year as under the old conditions.

The capacity of the boats regularly loading and unloading has been increased by seventy-two working days a year. If a boat makes the round trip to Europe and back in thirty days, more than two trips. a year are gained for each boat.

The greatest loss of time in freight movement is in the handling at the shed and on platforms. It costs approximately as much to place freight in cars as it does to haul it one thousand miles.

The use of mechanical methods is the only means that is available for increasing the capacity of freight sheds. Transportation companies are turning to double-deck sheds with the cars coming in at one level and the teams at another. Freight elevators are common and escalators are avail

able. The capacity of men lifting freight is fairly efficient to a height of five feet. Higher levels swell the cost out of all proportion to the benefits...

The Government has been to the fore in pushing the mechanical handling of freight at its own docks and warehouses. Progress has been all the more rapid on account of manufacturers giving precedence to Government orders.

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No Hotel on the New England Coast is more notable in the beauty of its location, the attractiveness of surroundings and perfection of service. Located on the sea, in the center of a large private park. Accommodates 500. Local and long distance telephone in each room.

Associated with the IDEAL and
NEW ENGLAND Tours

OPEN FROM JUNE 24th TO SEPTEMBER 25th
Every facility for sport and recrea-
tion. Fine golf course, yachting,
tennis, trap shooting and rifle range,
dancing. Pool, still and surf bathing,
deep sea fishing, and well-equipped
garage under competent supervision.
Music by symphony orchestra. Send postal today for
beautiful illustrated book, telling how easy
to reach here from all points.

WENTWORTH HOTEL COMPANY, H. W. Priest, Prest., C. A. Judkins, Mangr.

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Your Wants

323

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in every line of household, educational, business, or personal service domestic workers, teachers, nurses, business or professional assistants, etc., etc.-whether you require help or are seeking a situation, may be filled through a little announcement in the classified columns of The Outlook.

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If

you I have some article to sell or exchange, these columns may prove of real value to you as they have to many others. Send for descriptive circular and order blank AND FILL YOUR WANTS. Address

Department of Classified Advertising THE OUTLOOK, 381 Fourth Ave., N. Y.

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You Can Be So Well

Do you know, ill health

or chronic ailments, in nine out of ten cases, are due to improper food, poor circulation, insufficient exercise, incorrect breathing and incorrect poise?

Remove those unnatural conditions and your ailments vanish. This may surprise you, but I am doing it daily; I have done it for eighty thousand women.

Without Drugs

I will send you letters of endorsement from eminent physicians and tell you how I would treat you. Physicians endorse my worktheir wives and daughters are my pupils.

Don't let writing a letter stand between you and good health, animation, correct weight and a

perfect figure. Write me now-today-while this subject is uppermost. If you will tell me in confidence your height, weight, and your allments, I will tell you if I can help you.

Susanna Cocroft

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THE OUTLOOK CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISING SECTION

Advertising rates are: Hotels and Resorts, Apartments, Tours and Travel, Real Estate, Live Stock and Poultry, fifty cents per agate line, four columns to the page. Not less than four lines accepted. In calculating space required for an advertisement, count an average of six words to the line unless display type is desired. "Want" advertisements, under the various headings, " Board and Rooms," "Help Wanted," etc., ten cents for each word or initial, including the address for each insertion. The first word of each "Want" advertisement is set in capital letters without additional charge. Other words may be set in capitals, if desired, at double rates. If answers are to be addressed in care of The Outlook, twenty-five cents is charged for the box number named in the advertisement. Replies will be forwarded by us to the advertiser and bill for postage rendered. Special headings appropriate to the department may be arranged for on application.

Orders and copy for Classified Advertisements must be received with remittance ten days before the Wednesday on which it is intended the advertisement shall first appear. Address: ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, THE OUTLOOK 381 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY

Hotels and Resorts

COLORADO

11th Ave. Hotel

DENVER, COLO.

100 rooms. Rates 75c to $2.00 per day. Depot cars Nos. 58 and 11 stop at our door.

Hotel Campion

TWIN LAKES, COLO.

A vacation playground supreme. Open July 1 to Sept 15. Rates $4 to $8 per day. Folder.

CONNECTICUT

NORFOLK INN

In foothills of Berkshires. Ideal scenery. All sports. Fine auto roads. Invigorating, healthful climate. Garage and all improvements. HENRY R. SWEET, Prop., Norfolk, Conn.

MAINE

The Homestead

BAILEY ISLAND, ME. Open June 15 to Sept. 15. Illustrated booklet and rates upon application. Address

THOMAS E. HAZELL, Summit, N. J.

THE JOHNSON and COTTAGES Bailey Island, Maine. Beautiful location overlooking Cusco, Fishing, boating bathing. Casco Bay.

hours' sail from Portland. H.F.Johnson, Prop.

Robinhood Inn and Cottages

BAILEY ISLAND, ME. Will open June 15. Bathing, fishing, sailing. For circular, Miss Massey.

Thwing's Camp Belgrade Lake,

Maine

A picturesque collection of rustic cottages on shore of island, beautifully watered and wooded. Cottages furnished complete with all conveniences. Central dining cabin with excellent table also used for dancing and entertainments. Fine fishing, boating and bathing. For information address

FRANCIS D. THWING, Belgrade Lakes, Me. DOUGLAS

Douglas Inn and Cottages HILL, ME.

Attractive mountain resort, 1,000 feet altitude. Charming scenery; pleasant walks and drives. All improvements. Fresh dairy products, poultry, vegetables and fruit from farm. Furnished Cottages to Rent, with meals at the Inn. For terms address E. S. DOUGLAS.

COOPER'S CAMPS

In the heart of the beautiful Maine lake and forest region. Private cabins, well furnished, and central dining-room. A real change with healthful recreation. Ideal sport for the hunter and fisherman. Write for booklet. Capt. G. W. Cooper, Eagle Lake, Me.

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COME TO MINNESOTA!

Come where the fishing is great and where your family will be comfortably housed in attractive cottages or at homelike hostelries, and the children can disport themselves on sandy shores and by the hour in the shallow water. Minnesota is the place for you this summer!

Sailing, golfing, tennis, fish-
ing, canoe trips through the
beautiful lakes and streams
over the pack-sack trails of
the old voyageur- or a
motor journey over a net-
work of good highways-
all are here.

A request will bring you full
information and descriptive
literature. Write Today.
TEN THOUSAND LAKES OF
MINNESOTA ASSOCIATION,
1031 Commerce Bldg.,
St. Paul, Minn.

MASSACHUSETTS

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Come to Picturesque finement at very moderate rates the attrac

Moosilaukee Inn

On the side of the old Moosilaukee Mountain. Wonderful scenery, air, health-giving

I waters, wholesome No mosquitoes

here. No hay fever. Plenty of sport. Golf (no charge), tennis, fishing, driving, walking, climbing. Refined people. No transient crowds. Season opens July 1st. Rates moderate. Write H. E. MACKEE, Manager, Box 16, Breezy Point, Warren, N. H. NEW JERSEY

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tions of a beautiful lake shore in a locality with a remarkable record for healthfulness. The club affords an excellent plain table and accommodation. The boating is safe, there are attractive walks and drives, and the points of interest in the Adirondacks are easily accessible. Ref. required. For information relative to board and lodging address Miss MARGARET FULLER, Club Mgr., 115 E. 71st St., New York. Furnished cottages without housekeeping cares. Circular and particulars on applica tion. John B. Burnham, 233 B'way, New York. ADIRONDACKS

Interbrook Lodge and Cottages Keene Valley, N. Y. Situated in spruces trated booklet. $12 and up. M. E. LUCK, Prop. and pines. Wonderful location. Beautiful illus

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The New Peninsula House The Algonquin Hotel

Sea Bright, N. J.

NEAREST OCEAN RESORT TO N. Y. Two New Buildings, Every Modern Appointment

Commuting a Pleasure-A Delightful Sail

By the Luxurious Sandy Hook Boats, leaving

Cedar St. at 1:15, 4:10 and 5:15 P.M. Booking Office, Sherman Square Hotel, Broadway and 70th St., New York.

THE WARREN

ON THE OCEAN SPRING LAKE BEACH, N. J. A house that's "different" in its fine appointments, unusual and artistic decorations, homelike atmosphere and service. Surrounded by green lawns and gardens, at the edge of the sea. W. B. STUBBS, Prop., N. Y. Office Norece Hall. Tel. 7140 Schuyler.

NEW YORK CITY

Hotel Le Marquis

31st Street & Fifth Avenue

New York

Combines every convenience and home comfort, and commends itself to people of refinement wishing to live on American Plan and be within easy reach of social and dramatic centers.

THE CHAMPERNOWNE CAPE COD | THE SANTUIT 32.00 per day without meals.

Modern

KITTERY POINT, ME. appointments. Rooms en suite with private baths. HORACE MITCHELL, Prop.

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Boating, bathing.

Cotuit, Mass. JAMES WEBB.

MARBLEHEAD, MASS. The Leslie

A quiet, cozy little house by the sea

PRIVATE BATHS. DESCRIPTIVE BOOKLET.

BEACH HOUSE

Siasconset, Mass.

NANTUCKET ISLAND

Golfers' Summer Paradise Best 18-hole seashore course in U. S. Tennis, surf bathing, etc. No Malaria No Hay Fever No Hot Days American Plan Moderate Rates

Room and bath $3.50 per day with meals, or sent upon Illustrated Booklet gladly JOHN P. TOLSON. request. HOTEL

BOSSERT

:

Montague, Hicks, and Remsen Streets BROOKLYN

TRANSIENT AND RESIDENTIAL The science of conducting a hotel properly is at its highest when it is least apparent. This is exemplified by the cultured, livable atmosphere of the Hotel Bossert. Send for illustrated booklet "B" Norece Hall, 114 W. 79th St. The Graycourt, 124 W. 82d St. Quiet houses where families and ladies traveling alone will find homelike and refined surroundings. Folder and rates on application.

Bolton-on-Lake George, N. Y.

A modern homelike hotel for discriminating people. Ideal location on Bolton Bay. Excellent cuisine and service. All amusements. Own garden vegetables, milk, cream and chickens. Special June and Sept. rates. $3.50 to $5 per E. O. PENFIELD, Prop.

day: $20 to $30 per week. Handsome illus

trated booklet.

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On Great South Bay, Bellport, L. I. Cool, comfortable, charming Family resort. Table supplied from own farm. Sportssailing, fishing, ocean bathing, golf, tennis. HOW would you like to live for 2 or 3 weeks or months, in cottage or hotel, on a strip of land VIRTUALLY SIX MILES AT SEA? Where there are congenial neighbors and all of the conveniences of home. Where the breeze seldom stops blowing; where boating, bathing and fishing are daily pastimes and where the cost is reasonable. Do you know that

POINT O' WOODS, L. I.

only 50 miles from New York, is such a place? Direct inquiries to C.W. NASH, Supt., Point O' Woods, L.L LOOKOUT FARM Not a boarding-house, not a hotel, but your summer home. 2,050 feet elevation. Booklets. E. B. SOUTHWORTH, Trout Creek, N. Y.

PENNSYLVANIA

Echo Lake Bungalows

MONROE CO., PENNA. Housekeeping bungalows and camps. 80 miles from New York, 93 from Phila., easily reached by rail or motor. Amusements for all ages, and an extremely good place for families with children. All outdoor sports. Dancing, etc. All supplies delivered. Modern conveniences. RHODE ISLAND

An Ideal Summer Home for 400 Guests

Ocean View

The Leading Hotel of

(Across Frenchinan's Bay from Bar Harbor.) MERWIN J. BULKLEY, Proprietor. Wubb, Norece co., lt w. 79th Station: Block Island, Rhode Island

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