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Hotels and Resorts

California

Hotels and Resorts

New York City

Tours and Travel

CLARK'S 6th CRUISE

AROUND THE WORLD

San Ysidro Ranch, Santa Barbara Hotel Webster 128 DAYS, $1,250 to $3,000

Unharmed by Earthquake

Furnished bungalows of various sizes; situated on the foothills among the orange groves, overlooking the sea. Central diningroom, electric lights, hot and cold water. Good tennis court. Two miles from ocean and country club, six miles from Santa Barbara. Booklet. Address

Manager San Ysidro Ranch, Santa Barbara

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(Near 5th Avenue)

40 West 45th Street

NEW YORK

Directly in the fashionable club and shop
ping section. Within five minutes' walk to
all principal theaters. A high-class hotel
patronized by those desiring the best accom-
modations at moderate cost.

Rates and map gladly sent upon request.

Tours and Travel

Including Hotels, Drives, Guides, Fees, etc. From N. Y. Jan. 20, by specially chartered Cunard new s.s"Laconia, 20,000 tons. Featuring 26 days Japan and China including Peking; option 18 days in India; Cairo, Jerusalem, Athens, etc., with Europe stop over.

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CLARK'S 22d CRUISE, Jan. 30
THE MEDITERRANEAN
By specially chartered

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new SS

Transylvania," 17,000 tons. 62 days' cruise, $600 to $1,700 including Hotels, Drives, Guides, Fees, etc. Featuring 15 days in Egypt and Palestine; Lis

Your Tour Abroad bon, Tunis, Spain, etc.

is too important a matter to be decided
without first investigating the advan-
tages offered by the Bureau of University
Travel, a unique institution operated
without private profits. Membership in
its tours insures best of leadership-low
cost-greatest satisfaction.

Small parties will sail in January for
EGYPT, PALESTINE, ITALY,
NORTH AFRICA, SPAIN
Write for illustrated booklet

BUREAU OF UNIVERSITY TRAVEL
15 Boyd Street Newton, Mass.

Calling for Suggestions
for Your next Trip

You do the calling-
we'll do the answering

CLARK'S 2d CRUISE, 1926
NORWAY and WESTERN

MEDITERRANEAN

New ss"Lancastria " leaves June 30
repeating this summer's most success-
ful cruise, 53 days. $550 to $1,250.

Originator of Round the World
Cruises. Longest experienced cruise
management. Established 30 years.

FRANK C. CLARK, Times Bldg., New York

TRAVEL!

To EGYPT January 16, 1926. with Prof. Albert
E. Bailey-his eleventh Egyptian
party. Abu Simbel. Camp in the Fayum.

ROUND the WORLD January 6, 1926, with

Arthur K. Peck. Visit the unspoiled hinterland. Motor 1200 miles in Java.

To MISSION FIELDS in the far East. Sep

teinber 25, 1926, with Dr. Harlan P. Beach, our greatest authority on Interdenominational Missions.

To THE HOLY LAND April 8, 1926, with

Bishop Shayler of Nebraska. A Churchmen's Pilgrimage with objectives primarily religious.

To NORTH AFRICA February 25, 1926, with

Albert Kelsey, F.A., I.A. Unique route including Biskra, etc., by auto; following the blossoms in Sicily and Italy.

TEMPLE TOURS

447-A Park Square Bldg.

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Just tell us when and where prevail. Write. mentioning "Outlook" to

and

HOTEL CLENDENING ask for any travel information

202 West 103d Street Within a few minutes of all New York attractions. Comfortable rooms and suites. exceptionally fine cuisine, and an atmosphere that pleases particular people. Write for Booklet O and Map of New York

Hotel Judson 53 Washington Sq.,

New York City Residential hotel of highest type, combining the facilities of hotel life with the comforts of an ideal home. American plan $4 per day and up. European pian $1.50 per day and up. SAMUEL NAYLOR, Manager.

At Your Service
Without Charge

Hotel and Travel Bureau

THE OUTLOOK COMPANY 120 East 16th Street

JAPAN HOTEL ASSOCIATION
Care Traffic Dept.

JAPANESE GOVERNMENT RAILWAYS
TOKYO

for full information

Rates for a single room without bath and with 3 meals,
$5-6 in cities and popular resorts, $4-5 in the country

SPECIAL PRIVATE TOUR TO

The MEDITERRANEAN
JANUARY 16-Party Limited to 8

RESER TOURS, 171 S. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N,Y.

New York Earn Your Trip to EUROPE by securing

five members for one of my tours. Established 1900, BABCOCK'S TOURS, Inc., East Orange, N. J.

In writing to the above advertisers, please mention The Outlook

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HERE is a Book that shows

you how best to see the New Southwest. It is freepublished by the Gateway Club of El Paso who will send you a copy if you mail the coupon below.

Fill in the coupon and receive 58 beautiful photos and a brief story of this great sunshine country. You will enjoy the pictures of Old Mexicopleasure-loving Juarez! (a six cent car ride away). See also the views of prehistoric villages, mountains, and many intimate shots of El Paso, the City where Sunshine spends the winter, and where there is room, health and prosperity for all.

Send for the Book today. Then plan a trip West and visit El Paso en route. All railways allow free, 10-day stopover. No trip to the Coast complete that does not include El Paso and vicinity.

Mail the coupon.

El

Paso

Gateway Club

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GATEWAY CLUB

TEXAS

88 1

501 Chamber of Commerce Bldg., El Paso, Texas.

Please send me the free booklet, "El Paso and the New Southwest."

Name.

Address.

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WRITE for free samples of embossed at $2 or printed stationery at $1.50 per box. Thousands of Outlook customers. Lewis, stationer, Troy, N. Y.

PERSONAL STATIONERY-200 single or 100 double sheets good bond paper with 100 envelopes to match, printed in blue. $1. Hicks, Macedon Center, N. Y.

EMPLOYMENT AGENCY

SCHOOLS, hospitals, hotels, clubs, tearooms, welfare organizations, supplied with workers. Positions for secretaries, social workers, superintendents, matrons, housekeepers, dietitians, cafeteria managers. The Richards Bureau, 68 Barnes St., Providence.

HELP WANTED

EARN $110 to $250 monthly, expenses paid, as railway traffic inspector. Position guaran teed after completion of 3 months' home study course or money refunded. Excellent opportunities. Write for free booklet CM-27. Standard Business Training Institution, Buffalo, N. Y.

EXPERIENCED NURSERY GOVERNESS for girls one and three years old. Prefer one speaking French, but specially seek competent, amiable person for permanent position. Dougherty, 103 East 86th St., New York.

HOTELS NEED TRAINED MEN AND WOMEN. Nation-wide demand for highsalaried men and women. Past experience unnecessary. We train you by mail and put you in touch with big opportunities. Big pay, fine living. interesting work, quick advancement, permanent. Write for free book, "YOUR BIG OPPORTUNITY." Lewis Hotel Training Schools, Suite X-5842, Washington, D. C.

HELP WANTED

NURSE-Active, intelligent, for care baby 10 months, and assist 3 older children, boy 6, twins 3; preferably English. Good recent references. Live Scarsdale, N. Y. Address 6,373, Outlook.

SALESMEN wanted. $10 daily easy. We start you in auto accessory business. No investment, no experience necessary. Exclusive territory. Motor Products Co., 1760 Lunt Ave., Chicago.

WANTED, at once, mother's helper and companion to two girls, 7 and 10, going to school. Must be Protestant, of pleasing personality, perfect health, be able to play piano. Age 30-35. Personal interview desired. Send references and answer to Mrs. J. R. B. Moore, Morristown, N. J.

WANTED.-Companion for elderly lady who is to spend winter in a Southern hotel. Experienced, capable woman about forty preferred. Box 6,399, Outlook.

WANTED-companion, Protestant. Refined, willing, and obliging. Musical preferred. Age 30-35. Able to supervise housekeeping. 6,406, Outlook.

WANTED, near Wilmington, Delaware, mother's helper for 3 children. Young, competent woman desired. Personal interview necessary. Mrs. N. T. Booth, New Castle, Del.

WANTED-Pleasant young woman companion for elderly lady. Light housework duties. 6,377, Outlook.

WANTED.-Useful companion to widow living in suburbs of New York. Pleasing personality. Neat sewer. Some experience nurs ing; willing to assist light chamberwork. Protestant. At once. Well recommended. 6,396, Outlook.

SITUATIONS WANTED

AS companionable house manager to semiinvalid or to assist in adult household like member of family. References exchanged. L., 94 Cottage St., New Haven, Conn.

COLLEGE position wanted by university graduate in social sciences. 6,409, Outlook.

ENGLISH woman of refinement, traveled and experienced, as companion, assisting in supervision of household. Has held similar position fourteen years. Excellent references. 6,397, Outlook.

EXPERIENCED teacher wishes grade position. Mrs. W. S. George, Route, 23, Winthrop, Me.

GENTLEWOMAN desires position as companion to young or middle-aged woman. Would manage household, do secretarial work or travel. Excellent references. 6,395, Outlook.

POSITION as companion and home manager, at once. Would travel or not as desired. 6,393, Outlook.

POSITION desired by young American woman as useful companion and household assistant. References. Address 6,387, Outlook.

PRACTICAL middle-aged gentlewoman (not servant), assistant in refined home where such service is needed. Moderate compensation. References exchanged. 6,411, Outlook.

REFINED, educated woman desires position as companion to young or middle-aged woman. Will travel. Address E. K. L., 228 Garfield St., Kennett Square, Pa.

REFINED young woman desires position taking care of children. Kind and gentle discipline, capable in sickness. Scotch. $100 a month. 6,398, Outlook.

REFINED young woman, pleasing personality, experienced, desires position, nursery governess, elder sister," or companion. Al references. 6,404, Outlook.

SAILING early November,two professional women, experienced travelers, will escort children or adults requiring companions to State destinations in England or Europe. terms. 6,403, Outlook.

SUPERINTENDENT or matron children's home or any institution. Experienced. 6,408, Outlook.

TEACHER, companion, counselor. Virile Westerner, now in East. Interested in higher things. Fond of boys and outdoors. Willing, trustworthy, and strictly temperate. An athlete who doubts value of athletics. 6,394, Outlook.

TEACHER of great sympathy and understanding will tutor (Calvert System) children under 8 in their own homes. Brooklyn or New York. Interview requested. 6,413, Outlook.

MISCELLANEOUS

TO young women desiring training in the care of obstetrical patients a six months' nurses' aid course is offered by the Lying-In Hospital. 307 Second Ave.. New York. Aids are provided with maintenance and given a monthly allowance of $10. For further par ticulars address Directress of Nurses.

LADIES-Let Patricia Dix help you with that next club or study paper. Inforination upon request. Rates reasonable. 6,298, Outlook.

CHILD care for winter months. Northern woman of culture, going South for winter, will take care of healthy child for the season. References. 6,407, Outlook.

symphony is one of Tchaikowsky's greatest-thrilling in its climaxes, emotionally alive from first to last. Its arrangement is interesting in that its treatment by a solo pianist often differs markedly from the usual orchestral interpretation. The "Pique Dame" Overture is interesting in a different way. Its military precision of handling creates the illusion of an orchestral performance. The music itself is merely light entertainment. Personally we should prefer to hear Bodanzky conduct something more interesting and substantial.

CONCERTO IN E MINOR, Opus 11 (Chopin). Played by Josef Hofmann. Duo-Art.

Chopin is for the most part not a composer of surprises. The E Minor Concerto discloses him as we expect to find him, with a characteristically resonant use of the pianoforte, delicate grace of melody, and a mood of soft, gentle sadHe becomes sometimes monotonous as with the disquieting regularity of his accompaniment in the second movement-but never unpleasant. Hofmann's performance shows precision and shading. He has also skillfully blended the orchestral and piano parts into

ness.

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In writing to the above advertisers, please mention The Outlook

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WHAT IS "IT"?

CARNEGIE knew the value of millions,

but there was one thing which he valued even more.

As a young man he worked for Colonel Anderson, a man of wide culture and fine tastes. Colonel Anderson took an interest in him, welcomed him to his library, guided him in his reading and choice of books.

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You know something about this great
library already, but you owe it to yourself
to read the whole story in Dr. Eliot's own
words. The story is printed in a free
book, "Fifteen Minutes a Day."

This handsome and famous book tells
how Dr. Eliot, from his lifetime of read-
ing, study and teaching, selected for you
the few really great books that everyone
must know to be well-read, and how in
only fifteen minutes a day you can gain
from this wasteless library the broad
viewpoint and the culture that are the

FIVE-FOOT SHELF of BOOKS

FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY This year marks

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P. F. COLLIER & SON COMPANY 250 Park Avenue, New York City

By mail, free, send me the guide book to the most famous books in the world, describing Dr. Eliot's Five-Foot Shelf of Books (The Harvard Classics) and containing the plan of reading recommended by Dr. Eliot of Harvard. Also, please advise how I may secure the books by small monthly pay

ments.

Mr.
Name Mrs.

Miss

3548-HCT-H

the Golden An

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The publishers cannot undertake to send the booklet free to children.

L_

niversary of the House of Collier-Fifty years of publishing the world's best books at low prices and on easy terms.

Please mention The Outlook when writing to P. F. COLLIER & SON COMPANY

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Published weekly by The Outlook Company, 120 East 16th Street, New York. Copyright, 1925, by The Outlook Company. By subscription $5.00 a year for the United States and Canada. Single copies 15 cents each. Foreign subscription to countries in the postal Union, $6.56.

HAROLD T. PULSIFER, President and Managing Editor
NATHAN T. PULSIFER, Vice-President

ERNEST HAMLIN ABBOTT, Editor-in-Chief and Secretary ARTHUR E. CARPENTER, Advertising Manager LAWRENCE F. ABBOTT, Contributing Editor

"The Best American Biography Produced to Date"

T

HE President was never in a firmer, more self

contained mood than on the last night of the session" (March 3, 1865). "He was in his room at the Capitol signing the last minute bills. Stanton was with him. On receiving a telegram from Grant, the Secretary handed it to the President. Grant reported that Lee had proposed a conference for the purpose of a 'satisfactory adjustment of the present unhappy difficulties by means of a military convention.'

"Without asking for the Secretary's opinion, Lincoln wrote out a reply which he directed him to sign and despatch immediately.

"The President directs me to say that he wishes you to have no conference with General Lee, unless it be for the capitulation of General Lee's army, or on some minor or purely military matter. He instructs me to say that you are not to decide, discuss, or confer on any political questions, such questions the President holds in his own

in danger of forgetting that this is the story of Lincoln's inner as well as outer life. When I closed the book I felt that I knew Lincoln. I have never had the privilege before. I believe that the publication of this book begins a new era of American biographical writing."

But Professor Nichols's estimate is only one item in a perfect avalanche of commendation from historical scholars of recognized authority, from prominent writers, from journals whose book notices carry great weight-and all of a favorable tone that is extraordinary.

"The most satisfactory life," says Professor Allen Johnson, of Yale; "Deserves unqualified praise," says the New York Herald Tribune; "Brilliant," says Senator Albert J. Beveridge; "The most brilliant life of Lincoln ever written," says Joseph Lawton Newton, editor of the Christian Century; "Marvelous," says Frederick E. Taylor, President of the Northern Baptist Convention (referring especially to Stephenson's analysis of the psychology of the great President); "A triumph of imaginative realism," says Stewart B. Sherman; "Fascinating," says the New York Times; "Superb," says Warren P. Hall, Professor of History at Princeton University.

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"Before we knew Lincoln not at all;
here we meet him face to face"

hands and will submit them to no military conferences or conventions. Meanwhile, you are to press to the utmost your military advantages.'

"In the second inaugural delivered the next day, there is not the faintest shadow of anxiety. It breathes a lofty confidence as if his soul was gazing meditatively downward upon life, and upon his own work, from a secure height.

"The world has shown a sound instinct in fixing upon one expression, with malice toward none, with charity for all,' as the key-note of the final Lincoln. These words form the opening line of that paragraph of unsurpassable prose in which the second inaugural culminates :

"With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation's wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan-to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves, and with all nations.'"-From STEPHENSON'S "LINCOLN."

The Key-Note to the Final Lincoln When a great and discriminating book store such as Brentano's in New York City issues a notice like the following, you may be sure that it marks a notable event in the history of authorship and book publishing. On a little card widely distributed by that house is printed: "We recommend LINCOLN, by Nathaniel Wright Stephenson, as one of the best American biographies of the last ten years."

And Professor Roy Franklin Nichols, of the Department of History at Columbia University, goes even further. He says: "In my opinion, it is one of the best, or perhaps more accurately, the best American biography produced to date. You are never

The Verdict Is Almost Unanimous

Few books equal it in vivid interest and charm. It is fascinating in its skillful delineation of the gradual development of Lincoln's mind and character and as an illuminating study in personality and springs of action.

In the face of such a wealth of laudation from such sources, it would seem to be a hopeless task here to construct another pæan of praise even with the highest skill in phrase making. This is a story of the development of a man's soul told with the consummate skill of an artist, carrying the reader along at a tension which, as the New York World says, " mounts and mounts into the crashing finale of victory- and the hero's death." The book is handsomely bound in dark blue cloth, stamped in gold, printed on heavy book paper, and contains 478 pages. It is strikingly illustrated with portraits and rare prints. The price, $3. Get Your Copy Today. Just Mail Coupon

The Outlook Company, Book Division 120 East 16th Street, New York

Please send me, postage prepaid, my copy of Stephenson's Lincoln." Upon receipt of the book and bill for same I will remit $3. If for any reason I am not satisfied I will return the book at your expense and owe you nothing.

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