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CLARK'S 6th CRUISE

ROUND THE WORLD 28 DAYS, $1,250 to $3,000 mcluding Hotels, Drives, Guides, Fees, etc. om N. Y. Jan. 20, from Los Angeles b. 5, by specially chartered Cunard vss Laconia," 20,000 tons. Feaing 26 days Japan and China includ-Peking; option 18 days in India; iro, Jerusalem, Athens, etc., with rope stop over.

CLARK'S 22d CRUISE, Jan. 30 E MEDITERRANEAN specially chartered new Transylvania," 17,000 tons. 62 days' ise, $600 to $1,700 including Hotels, ves, Guides, Fees, etc. Featuring days in Egypt and Palestine; Lis, Tunis, Spain, etc.

CLARK'S 2d CRUISE, 1926

THE beauty, fascination, and mystery of the Orient lures visitors from all over the world to

ORWAY and WESTERN JAPAN

MEDITERRANEAN

ss "Lancastria" leaves June 30 ating this summer's most successruise, 53 days. $550 to $1,250. inator of Round the World

Longest experienced cruise agement. Established 30 years.

NK C. CLARK, Times Bldg., New York UROPE TRAVEL 1926

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EAL TOUR of EUROPE 4 acres on Georgian Bay.

MALL PRIVATE PARTY

TOURS, 171 S. OXFORD ST., BROOKLYN, N. Y.
CUROPE-1926-

ation Tours-Popular Tours. Con-
ted and Independent Travel. Un-
usual Itineraries.
ERCE TOURIST COMPANY
1 Madison Ave., New York

RN FREE TOUR TO EUROPE

prices reasonable. Write for parEars to EDUCATIONAL TOURS,

59 Prospect St., East Orange, N. J.

Hotels and Resorts

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In writing to the above advertisers, please mention The Outlook

Massachusetts

Enjoy this winter at

The WELDON

GREENFIELD, MASS.

Just the place for a rest in the country Winter sports featured. Excellent cuisine Orchestra every evening Winter booklet and special rates J. Tennyson Seller, Mgr. New York City

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.

North Carolina WHITE HOUSE INN

ASHEVILLE, N. C.

Near Country Club. An all year guest house and tea room catering to the needs of those who desire the refined atmosphere and home cooking of a home rather than that of a large hotel. For reservations write Mrs. E. C. EHLE, 26 Edgemont Road, Asheville, N. C.

Tryon, North Carolina

Accommodations in private family for few guests. Rates on request. 4,653, Outlook. South Carolina

-CHARLESTON, S. C.

Where the charm of
Yesteryear Blends with
the vivid Life of Today

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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 sheets. 100 envelopes, postpaid $1.00, west of Mississippi River $1.10. White bond paper, blue ink, top center ouly. Cash with order. RUE PUBLISHING CO., DENTON, MD.

PERSONAL stationery-200 6x7 or 100 folded sheets, 100 envelopes, mailed for $1.00. Hammermill or Atlantic Bond. Hicks, Stationer, Macedon Center, N. Y.

EMPLOYMENT AGENCY

SECRETARIES, social workers, superintendents, matrons, housekeepers, dietitians, cafeteria managers, companions, governesses, mothers' helpers. The Ricnards Bureau, 68 Barnes St., Providence.

HELP WANTED

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

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, fiue living, interesting work, quick advancement, permanent. Write for free book. "YOUR BIG OPPORTUNITY" Lewis Hotel Training Schools, Suite N-5842, Washington. D. C.

LECTURERS: Clergy who can speak on current events and who would be interested in several engagements each month in the churches of their State. Good payment. State qualifications in first letter. 6,573, Outlook.

SITUATIONS WANTED

AN English woman, now engaged as companion, wants a similar position or one as housekeeper; speaks French and German. Will travel. Address Miss Bligh, 3930 City Line Ave., Overbrook, Philadelphia.

CAPABLE, refined lady desires position as companion or mother's helper. Best references. 6,602, Outlook.

CAPABLE, refined young woman, fond of chiviren. as mother's assistant. Wiling to assist with sewing and light househoid duties. 6,612, Outlook.

EXPERIENCED young woman, speaking French, German, English, seeks position as governess, traveling companion, or housekeeper. Excellent references. Josephine Dossenbach, Box B, Leonia, N. J.

NURSE, capable, refined, desires position with invalid. Excellent recommendations. Willing to travel or go country. 6,597, Outlook.

PRIMARY teacher desires position as companion or governess. Used to travel. Able to take charge of correspondence; good voice for reading: genial: adaptable. References. Refined home wanted more than high salary. 6,56, Outlook.

WANTED, by Canadian university graduate, position as governess or teacher. 6,611, Outlook.

WORKING housekeeper, Protestant, good manager, wants entire charge for one in family in Philadephia. 6,504, Outioon.

MISCELLANEOUS

TO young women desiring training in the care of costetrical patients a six months' nurses' and course is offered by the Lying-in Hospital, 37 Second Ave.. New York. Ads are provided with maintenance and given a moothly allowance of $1. For further particnars adress Directress of Nurses.

LADIES-Let Patricia Dix help you with that next club or stuly paper. Informa tion upon request. Rates reasonable. 6,38, Outlook

CANADIAN, Woman, going South for winter with smali daughter and maid, will take m charze another chid or young girl. Strictest personal references must be given. 6,607, Outlook

Fo

By the Way

OUR years ago there were fifty popular story magazines. To-day there are over three hundred. Unfortunately, many of them are of the confession-tale group and have warranted the label of "Gutter Literature" which has been given them. Book publication has also increased in volume. There are now printed an average of twenty books per. day, compared to the average of six per day four years ago.

The "Arkansas Gazette" wonders if the magazines one finds in the dentist's waiting-room are put there to indicate how long the dentist has been practicing.

Press items of the week tell us that every ten persons engaged in private business and industry in the United States are supporting an eleventh who is totally dependent upon public funds. ... Billy Sunday is reported as having received $18,500 for his share of the offerings at a recent six weeks' evangelistic campaign in Williamsport, Pennsylvania.

The troubles of a Newark, New Jersey, theater owner with his union spotlight operator are chronicled. He asked the spot-light man to stay an extra hour for a rehearsal. The regular rate of payment is $2 per hour. The operator replied that he would have to charge the union rate for the extra hour-that rate being $11.66. In the same theater the orchestra were asked to wear velvet coats provided by the management. donned the coats, but stated that it would mean a payment of $5 more per man each week. . . . A new excuse for the busy office man has been invented. Instead of replying, "He's in a conference," a young lady secretary in Wall Street coined a new “turn-away” phrase, "He's in a temper."

They

It takes about 1,500 nuts to hold an automobile together, but one can scatter it all over the landscape.

Kid McCoy, ex-pugilist, received serious newspaper publicity for his claim that the Volstead Act is a force for evil because it has forced many women "who used to grab their weekly expense money from a tipsy husband's pocket to go to work.” . . . Prohibition enforcement agents in San Francisco were fooled recently by the rum-runners' subterfuge of smuggling in real liquor when supposedly posing for a motion picture of a ship unloading "prop" cases of liquor. The Federal agents turned the tables the next week by staging a fake moving-picture

scene in the main street of Watsonvill California. While the merchants wer enticed from their stores by the shout of the film director to the suppose actors, the sleuths entered every stor and found large supplies of liquor in fou of them. . . . The booze stream continue to flow into San Francisco, however Ned Greene, the leading enforcemen agent, had been puzzled by the smilin countenances of the rum-runners whe boat-loads of contraband were seized He understood their unconcern when h found liquor insurance papers in th pocket of one of the men captured. Th boat and contents were insured for a sai landing and at a surprisingly low rate It is said that the very small percentag of captures along the coast has led to the very nominal premium rates for the insured. Mr. Greene has asked Washing ton to pass upon the legality of this in

surance.

"Why didn't you send your man to mend my electric bell?"

"I did, madam; but, as he rang three times and got no answer, my man de cided there was nobody home."

Movie items of the week include the announcement of a film called "He Husband" starring Count Salm, husbar of Millicent Rogers, and the report the return to the films of Theda Bara former screen "vamp." She will now ap pear in two-reel comedy features. Up the time of this writing no humor ha been seen in the fact that her comedy director will be Richard Wallace, for merly an undertaker.

A new trade trick is reported in th New Yorker." An automobile pur chaser decides on an expensive c coupé, but hesitates at the prospect paying the full list price for it. thought occurs to him. He visits second-hand auto shop and pays $1 for the most decrepit motor he can fin He then goes back for his club coupé an is granted a turn-in allowance of $4 for his old car.

United States Attorney Buckner te a story about a Unitarian minister wh when asked to whom he addresses prayers, replied, "To Whom It M Concern.”

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In writing to the above advertisers, please mention The Outlook

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THE OUTLOOK, January 13, 1926.
Subscription price $5.00 a year.

His Private Letters in Two
Great Volumes

TOWHERE is the human being more

NOW

truly revealed than in his letters. Not in literary letters-prepared with care, and the thought of possible publication-but in those letters wrought out of the press of circumstances, with no idea of print in mind. A collection of such documents, written by one whose life has become of interest to mankind at large, has great value quite aside from literature, in that it reflects the very soul of the writer.

These letters of Mark Twain's-brought together in two attractive volumes are peculiarly of the revealing sort. He was a man of few restraints and no affectations. In his correspondence, as in his talks, he spoke what was in his mind.

Mark Twain was one of the foremost American philosophers of his day. He observed life as vividly and as directly as a motionpicture camera, and the amazing record of his adventures in humanity is to be seen with most startling distinctness in his letters. He was the world's most famous humorist of any day. During the later years of his life he ranked not only as America's chief man of letters, but likewise as her bestknown and best-loved citizen.

Who has not chuckled with him over the doings of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn and Pudd'n-head Wilson? Who has not held his sides at Mark Twain's irresistible comments on men and events? Mark Twain made men laugh, but he did more than that. He preached a new gospel in travel literature-a gospel of seeing with an overflowing honesty; a gospel of sincerity in giving praise to what he considered genuine, and ridicule to the things he believed to be sham. It became his chief literary message to a waiting world. He knew, and showed his hosts of friends how to understand human nature; and his knack of doing this was simply amazing. Not often will you find a text-book of sincerity in human living that will compare with those intimate letters which Mark Twain wrote to his friends during his extraordinary career.

Here is your chance to meet the greatest humorist of all time face to face. Mark Twain, the genial friend of millions, still lives in his letters, which now are yours to enjoy-in 856 fascinating pages of wit, humor, pathos, philosophy, and irresistible word pictures of every-day living and human

nature "Mark Twain's Letters," edited by Albert Bigelow Paine-bound in dark green silk cloth with gold stamping, fully illustrated, and contained in a handsome gift box. Spend five days in Mark Twain's genial company. Then make your own decision. If you do not decide that these two superb volumes of human revelation demand a place in your home library you are free to return them at our expense and owe us nothing. But if, like thousands of others, you decide that this opportunity is well worth grasping, simply send us $1 as your first payment and after that two monthly payments of $2 each. Do not fail to send the coupon by an early mail. This creates no obligation of any kind. Your set is packed and ready for instant shipping.

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The Outlook Company

Book Division

120 East 16th St., New York City

Send me on approval and without obligation Mark Twain's Letters in two volumes. Within 5 days I will send you $1 as my first payment, and after that two monthly payments of $2 each, or I will return the books at your expense and owe you nothing.

Volume 142, Number 2. Published weekly by The Outlook Company at 120 East 16th Street, New York, N. Y.
Entered as second-class matter, July 21, 1893, at the Post Office at New York, under the Act of March 3, 1879.

Here are Ugly Facts

About Our Country

Why the Blackjack Triumphs
and the Nightstick Fails

THE murderer's hand is 9 times as likely to strike you down in the United
States as it is in England. A New Yorker's home is 36 times as
likely to be robbed as the home of a Londoner. More than twice as many
people are murdered in Chicago in a year as in all England and Wales.

WE
We live in a criminal's paradise. Our courts are in-
efficient, often almost powerless, always paralyzed
by technicalities. Our public is mush-minded; it
sympathizes with a spectacular criminal. Our police are
frequently corrupt, our juries too kindly, and the pardon-
ing authorities too lenient with criminals. Bail is too easy
and legal tricks too often win immunity for the criminal.
In one year in Chicago 426 defendants jumped
$1,500,000 worth of bail.

There is no crime wave here. There is a permanent crime business, organized like any other, and comparable in extent and resources to our major industries. Seventy-five years ago England was the most lawless nation on earth. England conquered the criminal.

Must we fail where Britain has so brilliantly succeeded?

In the hope of arousing and shocking the American public out of its good-natured apathy, THE WORLD'S WORK is publishing a series of articles on the Crime Situation. The author is Lawrence Veiller, president of the Criminal Courts Committee of the Charity Organization of New York. He is the first to present the subject from a really international point of view, for he has just returned from England, where he investigated the sharply contrasting conditions for us. He does not treat his subject with kid gloves. He spares no one's feelings. He reveals much that is startling, much that is exasperating, much that is revolting. Do not miss his extraordinary articles.

Is this Country Really Civilized?
Read the Amazing Articles on Crime in

THE WORLD'S WORK

NEXT FOUR ISSUES FOR ONLY ONE DOLLAR

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