Evening Star Newspaper, July 30, 1922, Page 20

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Wear-Ever side handles. Galvanized Iron Wash Tubs, 22-in. on top, with iron handles .- Rochester Extra Heavy Tin Oval Wash Boiler, with new corrugated copper bottom.................. - ROACHES - BED BUGS - MOTHS : ANTS | - FLEAS MOSQUITOES * The most important quali- ty in an automobile i5 de- pendability, which, it is uni- versally acknowledged, is found in its highest degree in the Cadillac. The Washington Cadillac Company RUDOLPH JOSE, President 1138-1140 Connecticut Avenue Franklin 3900, 3901 DParber&ERoss Jhe biéflaxdware and Housefurniching Store; 11th.and G St= Specials, 2nd Floor. Aluminum Colanders, 1l-in, Regular price, $2.50 with $l .25 50c $2.75 Preserving Needs Mason Fruit Jars, Porcelain Lined Covers Pints.............70c per dozen Quarts............80c per dozen " (Second Floor) 2 JELLY-MAKING REQUISITES Strainers—Kettles—Glasses On Display on Third Floor North Pole Refrigerator Made of hardwood; 35-Ib. ice capacity ... $12.00 White Mountain Refrigerators 10% Discount Perfection Oil Cook Stoves $6.00 Up Nursery Refrigerater and Water Cooler Combined Packed with mineral wool...... $2.75 White Enamel Kitchen Table Porcelain top, 25x40 inches, with AEIWEE: oo oo o nion il s dens s oo $6.75 INSECTICIDE CLEANSER DISINFECTANT DEODORIZER = USFE LIQUID Use It When Motoring—It Drives Away Mosquitoes. "KILLS LICE CHICKEN LICE WATER BUGS SPIDERS HORNETS WASPS AND MANY OTHER INSECTS Best results obtained by using Bono Sprayer DO NOT SPRAY ON PLANTS In 5-Gal. Cans, $13.00. Quart, 85¢ Gal., $2.75 Sprayer, 65¢c. ; THE SUNDAY STAR, WAS ‘Reviews of New Books THE LAURENTIANS; The Hilla of th Habftant. By T. Morris Long- streth, author of “The Adiron- dacks,” etc. Illustrated. New York: The Century Comspany. HE secret of successful travel i{s not to go from place to place but from person to person.” The wrinkles on this old planet are much alike—so the author, in effect, says; nor does. it matter, really, that one fall, or wall, oy helght be greater than another. “But to pass from man to woman, from girl to fellow, each native In his proper niche, meeting them as strangers but leaving them as friends by virtue of some news, some affinity, some hardship, or even some turn of weather shared—this Is travel, and on the road where peren- nial freshness lies.” It is this spirit of fellowship which, in large meas- ure, secures not only to the traveler and author himself but to the reader s well the rich and happy returns from Mr. Longstreth's adventure in the “great wonderland of the Lauren- tian mountains,” just north of the St. Lawrence, between Ottawa and the Saguenay. Even the landscape Js here translated Into terms of human friendliness. The mountains are of a “comfortable house-broken sort. that you like to have just beyond the garden—cozy as a kitchen, old and magnanimous and worn with the weathers of all time.” And within this homey setting the wayfarer moves from person to person by way of the region's amazing network of lake and stream, a network that serves to es- tablish’ a nelghborhood and at the same time to set up perfect obstacles to obnoxious Intimacies. Moving farther and farther in, the author brings us to the eighteenth century and, finally, even back to the seven- teenth, with the isolated habitant | much what he was in the New France { of Louis XIV. Whether, however, he moves forward in space or backward in time, or simply settles down to {soak up some interesting corner and its people, he is a steady joy as gulde |ana interpreter. A travel book that istands gne among a thousand for its {worth and charm. | UTAH; The Land of Blossoming Val- % leys. By George Wharton James, author of “Arizona, the Wonder- 1 land” ete. Illustrated. Boston: The Page Company. The “See America First” family has {reason for pride in this fresh addition to the group. For, to both eye and hand, this is an impressively artistic piece of book-making. And once within the covers readers are in- |stantly conscious of unusual sub- stance in the story itself. Beyond a gereral graphic survey of the land nd a brief account of the ancient in- abitants of the region, the book deals. in the main, with the work of | the Mormons in the upbuilding of the {state. To be sure, there are brautiful bits of description setting out the marvels of the andscape, but on the { whole the story Is a tribute to the | statesmanship, the patriotism. the in- | telligence, the vision and the practical zeal of the Mormons in creating and maintaining one of the great states of the Union. The body of the Story springs from the migration—the forced migration—from Illinois of the follow- lers of Joseph Smith Into the great wilderness of the west. From this Point on it is a record of Mormon | achievement within the realm of | American civilization. No, Mr. James is not a mormon. He is neither an advocate nor an apologist. He ap- pears fo be merely a fair-dealing man who, upon a study of the fleid. sees no other way than to render to | Caesar the things that are Caesar's. A finely informing piece of work that, aside from its clear competency nd literary charm, appeals to the | reader for its upstanding attitude be- |side the pure truth of the matter jabout the making of Utah. AND MANNERS OF MALS. By Willlam T. Hornaday, Sc. D., A. M., author of “Our Vanishing Wild 'Life etc. | Illustrated. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. No pinch of salt is required here to season up Mr. Hornaday's account to the reader's acceptability. For a long time, now, the siudy of wild animals | has been the sole preoccupation of i this investigator. And out of this period of intimate and intensive study e has reached the solld ground of ertainty that animals think, just as man thinks, and that they are able, | moreover, to relate experiences and i derived thought in the sequence that i man_calls reasoning. The book in i hand s a body of personal observa- | tions on the part of this author in | support of the claim that animal be- | haviors spring from experience. record- { ¢d in the brain, just as our own do. In !a broad initial survey the author de- i fines the rights of wild animals, sets forth their relative intelligence, as- i signs to them temperament and indi- | viduality and a language of their {own. In hundreds of cases he, by in- icident and anecdote. drawn from a {first-hand _ study. dramatizes the { mental traits of one and another of | these—of the orang-outan, chimpan- | zce, gorilla, of the elephant and the bear. He deals with these mental and moral qualitles as one would deal with them in relation to man himseif. One section of the study is given over to “the baser passions” of these wild creatures. Chief among these is fear —just as fear is man's fundamental weakness, his supreme enemy. The purpose of this informing and in- tensely interesting book of experi- ence is to show the human his close { kinship with the other animals in the | hope that this fact will establish be- {tween the two orders a better under- i standing, so that man will deal more |intelligently, more humanely, with ithe relatively helpless The | book objectifies Mr. Hornaday's own wish that “the boys and girls of America. nd of the whole world may be Induced to believe that the most in- teresting thing about a wild animal its mind and its reasoning. live book, absorbing from cove: i cover, out of the hand of a trained and sympathetic student of wild life the world over. THE VEHEMENT FLAME. By Mar- garet Deland, author of “Old Chester Tales.” etc. Frontispiece by C. E. Chambers. New York: Harper & Brothers. : Reluctantly one has to count this story unseasonable. The vehemence of the flame itself and the summer | weather—these two coupled with the { surpassing realism of the drama— ‘tend to ralse temperatures still more | under the heated controversy that al- { ready has set in about the story. Thne { book is calculated to enlist sympathy iand champlonship—now for the boy- ! husband, now for'the elderly wife in | her obsession of love for the boy. A { youth of nineteen in love with him- self and with life. A woman of thir- | ty-nine—shut in, but ready to wrest ifrom any source the justification of existence. Propinquity does not rest, and one comes upon the not infre- quent case of the boy who marries the much older woman. That is the i basis of the tale. Its projective pow- er rests in the jealousy of this wife, haunted by the dangers that beset iher lost youth. And this story { marches valiantly and masterfully ito the bitter end of its own essential substance. No, not a pleasant story —that is the point, largely. that peot ple are quarreling about, though they | hardly realize this. pleased, to have the happy ending. to savor another fairy tale—but pleasure to the reader and the futilities of the fairy tale do not lie in the essence of this matter. One, by merely looking across the way or down the strest. has to admit that a situation like this does exist in plenty. Having made this admission, thers is only one other thing to do—just to agree that here is a very superior example of literary realism—just to agree on a common aspect of _modern life. Rather heroic artistry, this. but tru artistry and, as such. a very distinct service to realistic literature as well s a personal triumph for the author herself. THE GLIMPSES OF THE MOON. By Edith Wharton, author:of “Ethan Frome,” etc. New York: D. Apple- ton & Co. Even Mrs. Wharton cannot work ulml:c. And the sudden conversion They are the kind of mountain { They want to be | is—ninety-nine to the hundred—an emotional spurting that soon settl to innocuous bubblings as the n!r\'ali loosen up and the biood cools to nor- mal. “The Glimpses of the Moon rests upon one or the other of these frail foundations. Therefore one quarrels with it and with the au- thor, too. For this author begs the question by holding off her miracle act till the last moment. Even then it 1s merely a gesture, as Mrs. Whar- ton shuts up the story and runs away, leaving the reader with a perfectly good grievance. We submit it to you. This s the story of two social para- sites, a man and a woman. By some mental hocus-pocus each assumes that he has certain marketable goods —personal charm, power of enter-: tainment, an accommodating spirit. | These two, therefore, live on the largess of their friends. Then one day they fall in love with each other. They marry off-hand under the easy plan of repudiating the bond if and when it irks them. The man, turn- ing out to be less hardened to_the sponging existence than the girl, finds himself shocked at her frank social bargainings. He leaves her. Then, after a somewhat lengthy to-do, he returns to find a noble woman who looks upon an unaccustomed poverty of life with him in an eager and ac- cepting spirit. This s the point In which Mrs. Wharton takes her leave of the matter. Nonsense! The set- 1ing of this modern romance is one jthat this novelist uses with under- standing—it is assumed—and skill. This is the setting ,of the rich and idle order of society. In this case the group is flying from one Eu- ropean pleasure point to another. The prime occupation of the majority of the group appears to be adultery —oft weeks in this remote villa or that one, partners in an illegal and transient association. There must be a moral to the tale—since there must be something ‘to it—so, one comes upon “Satan finds mischiet still.” and 80 on, and o on. ROBIN. By Frances Hodgson Bur- nett, author of “The Head of the House of Coombe,” etc. New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company. In “The Head of the House of Coombe”” Lord Coombe won the in- terest, and affection, of readers gen- erally. So, when the author promised to deal further with this ingratiating lord, everybody was glad. Now thbe new novel is here. Robin and Donal. the delightful children of that other story, are grown up. Lord Coombe is older. The war is at its beginning. The new romance moves forward in the atmosphere of war, of stricken love, of renunciation and despair—but with the noble lord, now as then, the humanly fine bulwark of the troubled circle where Robin Is now the center. It is a touching story—and vet, these grown children are not so utterly convincing as were the same two when they were baby lovers in the garden. Mrs. Burnett is quite a won- der with children. Possibly the lack here lies in the fallure of these two— of Robin certainly—to grow along with her years. Ignorance of life, so abysmal, innocence so utterly un- touched by sight, even. removes Robin, a little, from full acceptance. Lord Coombe, however, remains tri- umphant, the real heart of one's in- terest. As an idyl of voung love— something apart from the drab facts of life—it is a charming thing, with- out any doubt. SUNDRY ACCOUNTS. By Irvin S. Cobb, author of *“Back Home," etc. New York: George H. Doran Com- pany. Irvin Cobb is gradually taking on the perennial and permanent charac- teristics of the institution, as Mark Twain and certain others of kindred tribe have done. His humor is the kind that soaks into the understand- ing and enjoyment of everyd: folks; his notion of the square deal steps along with the common American sense of fair play. He Is sound and at bottom serious, despite his outward appearance of the laughing philoso- pher. Here, at hand, are ten of the regular Irvin Cobb stories. drawn oft from the middle layers of life and rounded out in a kind of rural sim- plicity that one finds delightful and engaging and sound. Just some more of the welcome Cobb literature. | PIECES OF HATE; And Other Em- thusiasms. By Hevwood Broun. New York: George H. Doran Com- pany. A fresh little hit-or-miss book. based, one judges, on the very sound theory that it matters not at all what one writes about. provided he takes up his topic with zest and handles it in a way that puts it across. In the main these are critical bits—now of a novelist or a dramatist, now of a book or a play. Interesting, by vir- tue of a certain thoughtfulness that elects not to be ponderous. Over on page seventy-nine is a beautiful story, “Frankincense and Myrrh"— simple, profound, lovely in_the y that Oscar Wilde's “Happy Princ Jovely. The rest is quite worth while—but_this little story is a joy that stays by and talks quietly of the few lasting and tender things of life. BOOKS RECEIVED. THE REVOLT AGAINST CIVILIZA- TION: The Menace of the Under | Man. By Lothrop Stoddard. A. M. Ph. D., author of “The Rising Tide of Color,” etc. New York: Charles | Scribner's Sons. THE GAUNTLET OF ALCESTE. By Hopkins Moorhouse, author of { “Deep Furrows.” etc. New York: James A. McCann Company. RADIOPHONE RECEIVING; A Prac- tical Book for Everybody. By Erich Hausmann, Alfred N. Gold- | smith. Louis A. Hazeltine. John V.| L. Hogan, John H. Morecroft, Frank E. Canavaclol, Robert D. Gibson and Paul C. Hoernel. With an introduction by Michael 1. Pu- pin. New York: D. Van Nostrand Company- HARMONY WITH LIFE. By Har- | riett Doan PrentAss, author of “From Nature Forward.” Philadel- phia: J. B. Lippincott Company. CHINA AT THE CONFERENCE. A report by Westel W. Willoughby. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press. A HOOSIER AUTOBIOGRAPHY. By William Dudley Foulke, LL. D., au- thor of “Maya,” etc. New York: Oxford University Press. THE SOCIAL GOSPEL AND PER- SONAL RELIGION; Are They in Confiictt By F. Ernest Johnson, research secretary. New York: As- sociation Press. THE BRINKLEY OPERATION. By J. F. Brinkley, M. D., Sc. D. Chicago: | Sydney B. Flower. DITTIES FROM A DITTY BAGj And | War-Time Memories. ni- Albert S.{ New York: k. L. Par- Crockett. sons & Co. AMATEUR RADIO; How and Why of Wireless, With Complete Instruc- tion on Operation of Recelving Outfits. By Maurice J. Grainger, radlo expert. formerly with the Westinghouse Electric and Manu- | facturing Company. and the United | States Navy. With more than 150 afagrams and illustrations. . New | York: The James A. McCann Com- pany. | HAY FEVER; Its_Prevention and| Cure. By W. €. Hollopeter, M. D., DIAMOND SPECIALISTS 30 Years in the Jewelry Business New Goods New Store The well-known rectangular- FrE.TE $2050 OPENHEIMER & SHAH jewel Watch 807 F Street N.W. HINGTON, D. O, LL. D. New York: Funk & w.‘.‘ nails Company. THE ADVENTURES OF ANTOINE. By H. Collinson Owen. New York: ‘The James A. McCann Company. THEOSOPHY THE PATH OF THE MYSTIC; Links for Your Own Forging from the Lectures and ‘Writings of Katherine Tingley. Compiled by Grace Knoche, st dent of Katherine Tingley. Polint »Loma, Calif.: Woman's Internation- al Theosophical League. THE COMING OF COAL. By Robert ‘W. Bruere of the bureau of indu trial research. New York: Associ- ation Press. THE DIVINE RIGHT OF DEMOC- RACY, OR THE PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO RULE. A study in cmzen-hlfl‘ by Clarence True Wilson. New' York: The Abingdon Press. TOMORROW WE DIET. By Nina ‘Wilcox Putnam, author of “Adam's Garden,” etc. New York: George H. Doran Company. THE FIGHTING STARKLEYS; Or The Test of Courage. By Capt. Theodore Goodridge Roberts, au- hor of “Red Feathers,” etc. Bos- on: The Page Company. A VIRGINIA SCOUT. By Hugh Pey- dexter, author of “Kings of the Missouri,” etc. Frontispiece by D. C. Hutchison. Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company. AMBUSH. By Arthur Richman. Duffield & Co. PACIFIC POLICY; Especial- 1y in Relation to China, the Far East and hington Confer- LK. vakami, author apan and World Peace,” ete. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co. THE JEWS. By Hilaire Belloc. New York: Houghton Miffiin Company. HOW TO SELL AT RETAIL. By Wer- rett Wallace Charters, director of the research bureau for retall training, Carnegle Institute of Technology. New York: Houghton Mifflin Company THE PUBLIC LIBRARY. Recent accessicns at the library and lists of recommecnded reading 1 ap- pear in this column each Sunday. reprinting of the material monthly bulletin has been rarily discontinued. Recent accessions in the industrial division: New in a tempo- BUBINESS. Alexander Hamilton Institute, New York. Forging Ahead in Busi- ness. HK-A129f. American City Bureau. HK83-Am35m. Assoclated Retail Credit Men of New York City, Inc. The Retall Charge Account. HKDA-AsT6. Bare-handed Selling. HKF-B234. Basset, W. The Organization of Modern Business. HK-1B2970. Bell, Spurgeon. Accounting Princi- ples. HKB-B414. Bonney, L. E, and Cole, C. P. Hand- book for Business Letter Writers. HKC-B646h. Church, A. L. The Training of a Secretary. HK-1C477t. Commercial Directory of the Republic of Mexico, 1922. Ref. HKS95-5C3. Cooper, C. S. Foreign Trade Markets and Methods. HK83-C7861. David, D. K. Retail Store Manage- ment Problems. HK-D283r. District of Columbia Bankers' Asso- ciation. Proceedings of the Third Annual Convention. +HN-D638. Dudley, A. W. Modern Commercial Bookkagvmx. HKB-D864m. Hatfleld, W. W. Business English Projects. HKC-H254. Hoenig, L. J. Modern Methods In Seliing. HKF-H676m. Huebner, §. S. The Stock Market. HR-HS72s. Kniffin, W. H. _American Banking| Practice. HN-KT44. MacElwee, R. S, and Taylor, T. R ‘Wharf Management. SOS-M155. Massey. R. W. Letter Writing. HKC- M3ss. National Paving Brick Manufac- turers’ Association. Committee on Uniform Cost Finding. A Sys- tem of Uniform Cost Finding for Paving _ Brick Muur.clurers.l HKBC—N216. Rand, McNally & Co. PAINTING We put it on right so it stays and looks good. Free Pstimates—Our expert will call R. K. Ferguson, Paioting Dept. Phones Main 2490-2491. Commercial 1114 9th St. FLOWERS FOR FUNERALS Open every evening until 11:30 0O’Clock for your convenience. KRAMER Your Florist % 916 F St. g{% t | who predicted his with- | drawal from the government ——!| due to 1ll bealth by saying he T | would be back to work within ten days, was cured after all || ‘methods failed by Embs | the French exponent of | Autosugge . Lord Curzon personally makes this interest- ing disciosure today. (Philadelphia Public Ledger.) ALL LONDON IS REPEATING— “'Day by day in every way T am getting better and bett The potency of this formula tully explained in ELF-MASTERY CONSCIOUS AUTOSUGGESTION (in English) EMILE COUE | Famous French Psychologist, whose clinics | ancy are the taik of Europe and who fecently created a sensation in Londoo and aris. of Coue, o, This book, writecn by Dr. Emile . contains & ocomplete expost of i haerias, me - Sure, Simply and Price, $1.00 Postpald At Book Btores or from Publishers 500 Sth _avenue, N. Y. World, July 18, 1922 London, July 15. Because of fliness Countess Beatty did ot entertain much Iast year. ‘Tt was only after. 437 & olng utomurania Oona, of Hancy, ‘that she again Béoaine one of the most active BumsteaoswormSyrup *Te JULY 30, 1922-PART 1. Atlas of Foreign Countries. Ref. HKG-Rilbca. Risque, F. W. Bookkeepin, ness Management. Hi C.‘ Organization Shaw, A. Problems. . Shaw, A. W., Company, pub. Increa: ing Ssies Through Advertising. HKA-Sh271. Shaw, A. W., Company. pub. Sad. W., Company, pub. Bank HN-8h27. Organ izing for Increased Business. HK-8h270. Sherbow, Benjamin. Effective Type- Use for Advertising. HKA-Sh52e. Smith, W. J. Modern Commerclal Banking. HN-Smé8m. Swiggert, G. L. Business Training and Commercial Education. HK- Swh4b. Taussig, F. W., comp. Selected Read- ings in International Trade and Tariff Problems. HK-T198s. Tobdal, H. R. Problems in Sales Management. HKF-T637p. Willis, H P, and Edwards, G. Banking and Business. HN-Wi PRINTING. Fleming & Reavely, Inc, New York. Type Faces. ZHD-F§2. Hague, C. W. Textbook of Printing Occupations. ZH-H128. Ives, G. B. Text, Type and Style. ZH-Tv38t. Lanston Monotype Machine Company. Tabular Composition. ZHL-L297t. Metsenbach, H. A., and Bassman, Fred. Color-mixing Guide. ZHR-M47. Minneapolis School of Printing. Prac- tical Printing. ZHL-M866D. Rapld Electrotype Company, Cincin- natl. From Xylographs to Lead Molds. ZH-R1%6. Redfield - Kendrick - Odell Company, New York. A Printed Specimen 2¢ Caslon Old Style Type. ZHE- R24. United Typothetae of America. Edu- cational Department. Practical Gp:;entlcenhlp for Printers. ZH- n46p. p. Wilson, H. W. Firm, Publishers. Style Book. ZH-W696s. SHORTHAND. regg. J. R. Making__Shorthand Teaching Effective. ZF-G863m. Gregg. J. Reporting Shortcuts. ZF-G863rs. Rosenblum, Abraham. High School Course in Isaac Pitman Phonog- raphy. 1914. ZF-R726h. 8mith, C. C. The Expert Typist. ZHW-Smide. SoRelle, R. P. The Educational and Practical Value of the Study of Shorthand. ZF-So66te. SHOP MANAGEMENT. Allen, C. R. The Foreman and His Q Job. TIB-AI53f. Case, W. L. The Factory Buildings. 1919. TIB-C263f. Hunt, W. F. Handling Material in Factorfes. 1920. TIB-H917h. Polakov, W. N. Mastering Power Production. TIB-P755m. Shaw, A. W., Company, pub. Cheaper Production. TIB-Sh27c. PR — More than 100 women are enrolled as students in chemistry, architecture and engineering at the Polytechnic School of Charlottenburg. Germany. Excellent Location Ninth Street N.W. At Crittenden Ten Sold—Five Left lot 20x85 feet.. Six bath—Hardwood floors, L H., Colonial front and two-story back porches. Price, $7,850 Terms Floyd E. Davis 7th and E S.W. Main 358 OWNERS—SELL NOW LIST YOUR HOUSES WITH US NOW. 90% of Purchasers Apply H TO US STONE & FAIRFAX John T. Meany, Pres. i 1342 New York Ave. NW. | Phone M. 2424 | 712 Otis Place N.W. Nearly Ready for Occupancy Two-story brick, contain- ing six rooms, tile bath, hard- || wood floors, H-W.-H.; Colo- |} nial front and two-story back porches. Paved street and alley. See this_home before buying. Terms if desired. | Floyd E. Davis 7th and E S.W. Main 353 | FOR SALE Valuable for Business Purposes ! 915 “E” street, the coming whole- sale and jobbing section; magnifi- || cent lot, 24x159, to a 30-foot alle with an alley immediately in the |} rear running out to “F" street; improved by a large brick building with store and apartments above, easily converted for business pu: poses: selling at a very low figure. The adjoining property. 913 “E, can also be bought, giving a fron age of 48 feet for large business houses. For full particulars, terms and price, apply to b STONE & FAIRFAX 1342 New York Ave. — PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION | Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 [f|' or 83 months. It | i | Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- fore maturity. I $8,000,000 Surplus More Than $800,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY, President JOSHUA W. CARR, Secretary NATIONA 2277, Ry FOR SALE 1736 Corcoran Street N.W. Just off Dupont Circle Attractive seven room and bath house, with electric lights and vaporized heat; hardwood floors, also large double garage in rear. PRICE, $9,750 ON EASY TERMS Immediate Possession, House Now | Vacant and Open for Inspection. = Lighted Each Night BENTON, TRENHOLM - CO 924 17th Street N.W. Telephones Main 4826—Main 502 AL LA L1 0 LA L L SO o A {///////////m// N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N Jameson-Built Homes “First Cost Is Practically the Last” 1f you want one of these beautiful Northeast Homes now is the time to make your selection. 800 to 826 L St. N “Open Daily and Sunday” 6 large, all outside rooms: tile bath, h. w. h, electric light, large closets, hardwood floors, servant's toilet, wash trays, cement fromt porch, wide double rear porches. Built-in heated garage |is part of the house. In a most exclusive section. FOR SALE BY Thos. A. Jameson Owner and Builder 906 N. Y. Ave. NW. After 5 P.M. Linc. 6146-W “Ask the Man Who Owns One” Main 5526 ELCUCATIONAL. STEWARD SCHOOL {Accredited) * 1202 F Street Washington’s largest and best equipped commercial school. The policy of providing the best teachers and most modern equipment have contributed to the amazing growth of ! STEWARD SCHOOL. ; . . Situated on one of Washington's most prominent business corners it is accessible to all car lines. The following standardized courses are offered throughout the entire year. Higher Accountancy Bookkeeping English Typewriting Algebra Business Administration Office Practice Civil Service Courses Calculating Machines Enter at any time for Day or Night School Special Summer Rates Catalog sent upon request Secretarial Science Stenographic STRAYER’S BUSINESS COLLEGE | | Warrenton, Va. Summer Session Now Open. { 1 i i H Day and Evening Classes. ‘Beautiful New Building. Cool,_Central, Complets. School. / 0 .Gflglfln. Cawalog. = y e Miss Nellie V. Butler, Box B. Principal Emerson COLUMBIA | SCHOOL OF | Institute 1740 P Street N.W. (Established 1852) Phone Franklin 4463-4458 . | SUMMER SCHOOL Roy C. Claflin, Pres. 14th & T Sts. Phone N. 272 Learn Drafting and enter this profession of good pay and congenial work. | prepari DAY OR NIGHT SESSIONS P HoRARDOLEM, INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTIONS i COURSE IN 3 TO 9 MONTHS H Full Information on Request | Get Latest Catalogue | ENROLL THIS WEEK OF EXPRESSION Mills Building, 17th and Penna. Av. Franklin 3627, SCHOOL — W ! COLUMBIA _ UNIVERSITY rd, Ph. D., ‘Thomas Shej l, res., £08% Eye | B iy airueion. cofere prepar SUMMER TERM et physics, chemistr: || pepartments in Public Speaking, cpen_summer: day. night: coed; moderate Dramatic Art, Development of the Reading. Send for catalogue. Parlor Building. Learn Languages . BERLITZ SCHOOL $16 14th St. N.W.—Tel. Frank. 2620 Reduoed Summer Ratet rors. ambitious men and women. REGISTER NOW FOR ‘Day and SCHOOL - FINE W////r///////////////,/l/////////////I////////I//I///////////////////////////II///III/////”/////I///////////I/I/Ihg For Girls and Young Ladies High School and College:Courses. A Limited and Thorough Home y and Evening School for Men and Boys. A. McD. CRAWFORD, Principals. O’CONNOR SCHOOL North 8545, Speaking Voice, Chautaugua and Personality ACCM(WN TANCY zoeptional opportunities to NOW IS A GOOD TIME TO BEGIN "ING covrse of preparation for life’s duties. Wood' DRAWING. Commercia] School, located in & quiet neigl Pen, wash. water-color classes. Day and ! borhood, 311 East Capitol street, is just evening. Registration 2. p@. DORSEY ideal place. One ¥ s tuition costs $105, | DONIPHA 1824 H st. n.w. 168% payable in seven monthly payments of $15 - RS, s B—— FAUQUIER INSTITUTE Evening Classes | PACE INSTITUTE 715_G_ST. X.W., Corner 8th and G Sts. FELIX MAHONY, Director. Main 1760. New Location: Conn.Ave.& i St. “Stady Art with a Purpose” Day and Evening Classes Children’s Saturday Class Interior Decoration, Costume, De= sign, Textile Design, Color Com- Individual Instruction. York to Wi delphia_to Washington. Special ra MOVING, PACKING & STORAGE ngton &od RED BALL TRANSIT cO. SE G NG, SHIPPING. F. 2423 'llEPRODF.\ OR_FURNITURB, Con- ave.

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