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Sleevelessness has never tuken &0 stfong avhold as a feature of fash- ion with Americans as with French women. Perhaps our arms have something to dgo with jt. Admiring foreigners say nice things | to. us about our- figures, our coloring, our hair and the way we arrange it, our hands, qur ankles, our feet—but did you ever hear them pay compli- ments to our arms? Perhaps they do—but it isn't usual | —because American women simply haven't such shapely arms as most Europeans. It may be overindulgence in athletics, it may be that our gen- eral nervousncss keeps us from de- veloping gracefully rounded arms. At any rate, American women don't usually have beautiful arms and they | know it. And there is no very, good reason In showing ugly arms when you don't have to, even when sleeve- fessness is part of the prevailing fash- ion But if you are one of the exceptions —then go to it. Wear your sleeveless dices and wear them with sleeve- less jackets, for the fashion may pass 8nd not return for ANy Seasoas. @ong periods have lapsed in times &one when perfectly 20t appear oven in the evening. Dur- ing the directoire period sleeveless- ness was as much admired and as usual as it is today, but it was rare before that age to appear showing anything of her arm above the elbow With the sleeveless frock the Prench W delights in wearing bracelets, sometimes two or three be- w the elbow and one above. Very seldom does and at last the American woman i wearing short gloves with her sleeve- | less froc of embar without feeling a species sment. The gauntlet is still frequently worn by the sleeveless, but there is a new trick of wearing a very short glove that ends where the hand joins he wrist. Often the end of this glove < covered with a bracelet—and this £ course is by of contrast to the gauntlet An extraordinary little sleeveless jacket of plaited beige crepe is shown in the sketch—worn over a beige crepe frock embroidered in front. Brown ribbon ties the jacket, at the front. (Copsright. 1928.) f BEDTIME Peter Hears a Welcome Sound. How lon Pe Rabbit shivered and shook at the end of the hole under a big stump in the Green For- est. while Mother Bear and the three | little Bears tried to dig him out, he y8d no idea. To him it scemed a life- time. As a matter of fact it wasn't vel long. Now time never varies You know that A minute is alwa; just so long. Nothing can make it longer or any shorter. But 1t doesn’t seem that way. No. indeed. it doesn’'t seem that way. When vou #re having a good time, minutes seem simply to fiy. When you are in dan- MRS, GROUSE WHAT OTHEF " CAN GET INTO. ger and very much afraid minutes seem to drog. So it seemed to Peter §# long. long. long time before that digging stopped. en when he no longer heard the scund of digging. and no longer heard the exciled squeals of the little Bears. and the sniffs and grumbly, rembly growls of Mother Bear, he isten WRITTEN AND Time. 6:15 pm. Place, any kitchen in any six-room bungalow in any town in the U. S. A. soprano is speaking rapidly, off key: “T just knew vou'd forget the steak Jt does seem that you might do one little teeny thing for your home once ina while. A lot you care about your home, anyway! Just so long as you wet three good meals a day and a womfortable bed. You'd be out every It you could but see the top of this hat, you would see that it was cover- ed ‘with layers of chiffon of varying shades of orchid lavender, each lay- er narrower than the other, and each edged In a delicate fringe of orchid pink. The first and widest layer hangs over the brim. The hat is faced in orchid pink silk. The beads around the lady's neck are cool erystal - Frozen Rice Pudding. Cook half a eupful of washed rice in a double boiler with a quart of milk and the grated rind of three oranges. Cook for an hour, then add two’qupfuls of sugar and & pinch of salt, and cook for half an hour longer. Cool, add the juice of three oranges and two cupfuls-of cream whipped solid. Freeze. WOMAN'S PAGE Gloves With Sleeveless Costume BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. e arms did | The most daring beauty | at Versailles would have lacked cour- | she wear long gloves; | STORIES ;Worl'd! ILLUSTRATED By Elsie Tobunson A leaky lyric | 1 | | * | | | FROCK OF BEIGE CREPE WITH | SLEEVELESS PLAITED JACKET OF SAME ~ MATERIAL, TIED WITH |{BROWN RIBBON. THE FROCK IS | EMBROIDERED IN FRONT. By Thornton W. Burgess. continued to ecrouch at the end of that hole and shiver and shake. He didn't dare o up to see if those Bears really had ieft. No. sir, he didn't dare do it. Truth to tell, he felt as if he never would dare move again For a long time all was still. Peter couldn’t hear a sound. But if he couldn't hear anything to frighten him, he could imagine plenty of things to frighten him. He imagined those Bears waiting just outside, ready to jump on him the instant he should poke his head out. He uld shut his eyes and just see them. “Quit, quit. quit. quit.” Peter stopped shaking and pricked up his ears. He knew that voice. He listened eagerly. “Quit. quit, quit, quit. Come out. | Peter Rabbit. Come oue. Those Bears have gone away.” said that voice, | softly. Peter drew a long breath. Then very slowly he crept up toward the entrance. Two or three tunes he hesitated and stopped. Each time he heard that soft. “Quit, quit, quit” again, and took new courage. At last he was where he could look out There just in front of that hole| was Mrs. Grouse. Yes, and her bables were with her. Peter hounded out L in & hurry then i h, Mrs. Grouse!" he cried. “I | never heard a more welcome sound in all my life than vour voice! 1 | guess I never would haye _came.out | if you hadn’t called Jng.. Where th dreadful Bear: | ““Gone,” replied Mr: Grouse. * | get into. DId they frighten you bad- 1v, Peter?” Peter shivered.: “I should say so! | They frightened me almost to death' { When Mrs. Bear began digkin, gave up all hope. Yes, sir. | up all hop I don't s now she stopped.” Mrs. Grouse u don’t know Bears." Digging you out was more work than Mrs. Bear cared for. You never in vour life saw a Black bear stick to one thing very long at a time. ears are too happy-go-lucky to work {very long or hard at any one thing. Did you see how T fooled them? Peter nodded. “I did.” satd he. “It | was wonderful. 1 don't see how you dared do it.” Mrs. Grouse tossed her pretty lit- tle head. A mother will dare any thing for her babies.” said she (Copyright, 1923, hr T. W. Burgess) chuckled. i | { | single evening if you had vour way | That's all you care about me—or the youngsters! And if 1 ask you to do | the smallest thing you act as if you ;ware the most abused man in town. “It's mighty different from the way | some men treat their wives. Wh | Ruth Stoddard’s husband just waity lon her hand and foot. But I can slave and slave and I don’t get a mite of thanks. | polWhat'e that? -You work, too: | Pooh! A lot of work you men do, sit- ting down there In ' the office with ur feet up on the desks. Why, I do more work in one morning than you do in a week. An’ you've got a dozen men to help you, but I've got to do everything myself. T'd like to see how long vou'd stand being cooped up in a dirty house with five cross youngsters. t isn't, either, my fault it the house is dirty! That's a pretty way to talk to your wife, as if I was a scrub?woman. “There that child goes again'i! I told you what I'd do_if you grabbed another doughnut. Take that—and that! Stop your screaming this in- stant. Youre not hungry! And I; guess if you are you can wait a little! You all ‘act as if I was nothing but a slave. No wonder I can't manage the children when their own father ingults me! And all because supper is a little late Oh—if I'd known marriage wi 1- ke thi < Flings herseif into the nearest chalr and resigns herself to her grief. Wil- lie ‘sneaks back. into the pantry for another doughnut, the baby break: into an uproar, the head of the house sighs, mutters something my editor won't let mé print, rolls up his sleeves and begins to get supper. . (Copyeight, 1923.) Us fellows was setting on my frunt steps aiid pop was standing on the top step smoking and breething the air, and us fellows started to tawk about wat job we would pick out to werk at if we had our chofce of all the best jobs in the werld, Sid Hunt saying, I know wat 1'd be all rite, Id be the guy that sets off the firewerks inwparks and diffrent places, in the day time I'd sleep or go to the ball game or enything I wunted to, and at nite 1d set off the fire werks and watch them werk. Being a grate ideer for @ job, and Leroy Shooster sed, Well I tell you wat I'd do for a living all rite, I'd be a motor cykle racer and a jockey and wen I got tired winning races on motor cykles I'd win some on horses and I'd be sutch u fast rider both ways that I wouldent hardly be able to ‘get enybody to race me unless I diskized myself so they woullent know who I was at ferst. T'd be a fire cheef, thats wat I'd be. Puds Stmkins sed. 'All I'd do would be to ride erround in my automobeel from one fire to another to see that the firemen was putting them out good, and a ordnerry fireman would ony see one fire wile I was seeing 6 or 7. I think I'd be a candy deslgner and taister. 1 sed. Making the other fellows all look felliss, and pop sed, You win, but jest to remind you that it's a hard life after all and that we all haff to make our own way by the swett of our brow, I think Il send you er- round to the cigar store for a half a duzzen Queen Billies. Wich he did. ashiony orecds Annabel Y A Rngen Decidedly new is this long-waisted dress of voile, crepe de chine, georgette or chiffon. You can obtain patterns in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure. For the dress in size 36. two seven-eighths yards of thirty-six-inch material is necessary. Price of pattern, 15 cents, in postage xtumps only. Orders xhould be ad- dreased to The Washington Star P tern Burena, 2z East Sth street, New York ecity., Please write name and address clearly. COLOR CUT-OUT A Circus Float. i When the Billy Goat stepped into 'the street pulling the float you see hére, all the children for seven blocks around who had come to see the grand parade shrieked and shouted at the top of their lungs, for joy. “Yo, ho, HO! I know where you got that float!” A big bol laughed so hard that he fell off the curbing with a thump, “It's Billy Cut-out's wag- on!" That s exsctly what it was, though you would hardly know it with its bunting and festoons, Cut out the wagom, them color 1t purple, -with yellow wreaths and wheels.. Do you see the dotted the float? Put paste o ten the wagon te the soat which you cut out yesterday. Wateh tomorrow for the boy is to ride in the wagon. (Copyright, 1923.) Fruit Dumplings. Make & rich biscuit dough, roil thin, out into squares, and put a spoonful, of preserved or fresh fruit flnaldy cut in the center of each one. Fold up, tle loosely in dJdumpiing oloths wroung out of hot water and dredged with. flor, and boil for half an hour, or steam ‘in buttered patty pans withaut the dioth, Serve ot with cream or any preferred sauoe, e Red-shouldered Hawk: lin- eatus. Length about 18 inches. Upper parts dark brown with a red dish cast; shoulders rusty red; tall black, with white bars and a white tip. Under parts reddish brown, barred with white. Resident (common) all the year. The red-shouldered hawk receives only praise from those who know its habits. Sixty-five per cent of its food is mice, and the rest various small mammals, frogs, fish and insects. Dr. Fisher says that in all his experience he has never seen It attack a fowl nor has he found the remains of one in the stomachs examined. He writes: “This hawk, like most other birds Bueteo The Humble Ass. You may be surprised to hear that & mule is the latest star to be re- cruited for the movies—although I don’t know why you should be—and you can take that you please! After all, the mule, as proved, has been @ much beust. Not very long ago. in one of the best magazines, 4 poet commemo- rated the humble ass in lyric verse. The poet said something about the ass living its one supreme moment, with lovely words to the general effect that once upon a time a mule heard psalms about his head and had palms bout his feet. One got a thrill from this meter about & mule. Now we hear that a temperamental mule emotes in the movies, and just to be able to prove it to you I inter- viewed the quadruped and secured from “it"” this picture: tears and all, which I trust the artist will faithfully reproduce so that the tears may be discernible. This mule-star's a small specimen any way is being maligned name is Biliken, of the mule race, residing in great affluence in the city | Tt may be that Billiken cannot register the emotions of pride und joy, as, indeed. wh should he, considering the abuse and drollery accorded to his racé, but he can go through such marvelous facial contortions of laughter, determina- tion. grief, indignation, intense pa tience and weeping that Maurice Tourneur has given him a prominent part in “The Brass Bottle,” which same Mr. Tourneur is now producing for First National release. Biliken has other accomplishments. He is versatile, like all the cinema artists. He has a palr of hind feet that would rival the best buzz saw on the market. He can and does smash more of Los Angeles. furniture and studio settings on the | Uriited lot in five minutes than any other—er—six temperamental stars. But the more he smashes the more he pleases Director Tourneur, for, you Aren’t Fathers Funny? There's no doubt about it. Fathers are funny. The children say so and thelr mothers admit it. ‘My father is funny,” sald Madge thing that he doesn’t like he sa mother, “Those children of yours,’ but it we do something that's good h says, My children.’ Isn't that funny? ‘Yeh., Mine's just like that. Last winter I had & run of bad luck, I got in trouble in English four. The teacher didn’t like me and nothing I did suited, Of course, I know I'm no star, but just the same she mever gave me & mark she could help, and 1 came near flunking. Got a second warning, yoy know. That made dad , that boy of ‘What's ext thing I caught cold ?d had to stay in bed three days. Then I got back to school and fell on the stairs and sprained my ankle and the doctor had to come again. Just as I was getting spry again I got a boll on my neck and he had to come back again, and dad says, t boy of yours seems to_be doing nothing but gotting sick, I was never sick like that!’ And ma never says a word! jo. My mother doesn't either.” ‘Woll, ‘long toward the end of the term I picked up and ate the Eng- lish, so she had to give me a passing mark, and I got the prize for the essay from the Bugle. 1 was glad to get that, so ma could say something about me that wasn't against me, you see? All win- ter dad had been saying, That bay of yours,’ so I chased home and tol her about it. “Your father will ‘Run and e so pleased,’ g‘.l\lm the first in 1 told him and he smiled all’ over, and when he was talking to Mr, Spence over the phone he says, ‘Did you hear that my son Bob drew the medal from the Bugle? and mother smiled as pleased as could be. Fathers are funny ¥ .“Aren't, they? And mothers just Learn a Bird a By Lucy Warner Maynard RED-SHOULDERED HAWK. The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS Day |of prey, makes a very interesting pet, |and on’account of its varied food is |easy to keep. Apparently it {s less {shy than the red-tail, nevertheless nder ordinary circumstances it will {not allow & man on foot to approach | within gunshot. Like other hawks, |it shows no fear for one on hors: | back or in a wagon. and in this way can be easily approached. ] ‘Bottom lands grown up with large {deciduous trees, or the neighboring hillsides, are the favorite' nesting sites of this bird. The nest Is placed 1in one of the large trees. forty to eighty feet from the ground, and usually in the fork where the main branches diverge from the trunk. A pair will inhabit the same locality for years and often occupy a nest fo {several seasons.” | (Copyright L. W. Mayoard.) HALL. see. he plays the part of a fractious mule confined in & professor's library, which he forthwith wrecks. ill more to come: Biliken can sit down gnite gracefully for one of his kind; can nod “yes” and “no” in ar swer to questions. He can kick a man | quite tactfully, without hurting him, and withal he reveals in his calm i | | | THE SCREEN'S LATEST TEMPERA- | MENTAL “FIND," BILIKEN, | movements a professional dignity and | reserve which might be emulated by "mnn, with harm te none. In a word, one never knows where {or in what perverse form the Olym- | plan flame of genius will be made manifest. Wherefore it behooves us all to respect our humbler brothers lest in one of them ome day we meet lour rival. {let them be and never say a thing. | When the little ones get to scrapping and crying, father puts down. his paper and calls, ‘Stop that nolse,’ and they quiet down a little bit and start right in again, and then he hollers, ‘Ma, can't you make those children of yours stop their racket?” and she does. “But when the photographer came in and asked ma if he could hage a picture of the twing for exhibition, father was very careful to see that his name was given as their father. I noticed that. “Sure. When we're bad we belong to_mother and when we're good we take after father!” “Yes. Aren't fathers funny?” PAM'S PARIS POSTALS PARIS, - June 15.—Dear Ursulsa. Somehow my date calendar is alw! in the wrong place when I want to ribble notes. _This clever pencil al- Bives the date correctly, You adjust it like a watch—only you have Ilo remember to keep it rl;nu 1 | MAJ. GEN. HENRY T. ALLEN, ?:m, g A‘I K Planked Venison Steak. our dealer. Sitroux USED ENVELOPES WinCash Prizes FEED THE BRUTE. | Favorite Recipes by Famous Vis This 1s just about the most deli- clous dish T know of—at any rate, it 18 a favorite with me, and if you have the venison it is not diffcult to prepare. Take a good sized steak, at least an inch and & half thick, cut from the haunch of a deer that has hung for a week or more, lard it at inter- vals of half an inch both way$ with small strips of fat salt pork, and sea- son with pepper and celery salt. Take a baking plank of suitable size and prepare it. After having placed a dozen small squares of but- ter at intervals on the steak, put it on the plank and bake in a hot oven until the blood barely shows in the inside. Serve piping hot &nd garnish with parsley, lemon, scraps of fried deer liver and strips of salt pork fried to a crisp brown. A plain brown gravy, if desired, may be served. (Copyright, 1928.) mporting Co., N.Y.C. 3 Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. , Keeping Cool. For some obscure reason, we house- wives aren't apt to give as serious attention te warm-weather comfort as to cold-weather comfort. Yet it is quite possible to mitigate the long torrid season as to take the sting out of winter’'s chill. Of course, it is not inexpensive to do this. What a juvenile member of our family calls “coolth” isn't any cheaper than warmth. We expeot to pay well for our winter comfort— the furnace itself, coal and perhaps wood for the fireplace. Why not be willing to buy summer comfort in the way of plenty of electric fan a capable, well filled refrigerator and vacuum bottles to preserve cold water throughout the hot nights? It is not extravagance, but economy, to keep the ice box completely filled hot range for an hour —and then have the family say that it's “too hot to eat?” Mueller’s Egg Noo dles cook in 8 minutes. Novel, tempting hot- weather dishes can be prepared in 15 minutes. 1 And Mt. Vernon Mt. Vernon, 10, 2:30 For Marshall Hall, 10 2:30, 6:30 Fare Mt. Vernon, 85¢ Admission to Grounds Extrs, Marshall Hall, 50c Steamer Charles Macalester Seventh St. Whart Chicken Dinner at Marshall Hall, $1.50 “Join_the Experienced Travelers” The Giant Express “PARIS” Wed.. Tuue 27 (Sailing 10:30 A.M.) FRANOCE. .. July 4. July 25, Aug. PARIS. . ""July 18 Aug. 16 Sept. LAFAYETTE Aug. 4 Bept. 1 Sept. New York—Havre—Paris Pupular priced one.class ships Chicago June 30 Sept. 6 Oct. July "2 Aus. Roch: July 7 Aug. : La 8 uly 14 Aug. 11 Sept. . -July 28 Aug igo(Spainj—Bordeaux La Bourdonnais.July 12 Sept. 18 Oct. 50 Roussillon Oct. 9 Nov. 20 Jan. 1 New York Daylight Kaving Time Local French Line Agents or Company's Office, 2406 New York Ave. N.W. am a; SOUTH AFRICA UNION CAbSvTLE LINE for snflings an further information anply €anderson & Son. Gen. Passcnger Agts. 26 Broadway. New York, Or Any Steamship Ticket Agents. QRWEGIA N“ MERIGA LINE MODERN STEAMERS—Short Route to ito 3 Borgensfiord July € Aug. 10 Sept with ice. The larger the piece the st rtjord. ] & longer It keeps and the better the ‘When you put them Tnl: e fo0d keeps also. It Is not extrava- on the table everybody e - will forget the weather! Recipes in every package “The kind that made Mother stop making her own"” MUELLER'S igance to indulge in electric fans living room, dining room and be: rooms, since we all use fewer elec- tric lights in summer and the current used will probably not exceed that con- sumed fn the winter months, when more lamps are used. With plenty of iced drinks during day and night, an artificial breeze everywhere in- the house, frequent shower batns, cooling foods and tran- }quil thoughts, the hot, humid weeks may be lived through very comforta- bly. At night keep a half-current fan Boing gently in onme corner of the room, place ‘a vacuum bottle of cold water on the bedside table and—on desperately hot nights—put a bow! of cold water on the shelf beneath the table, with a thick washcloth be- side it, so that one may occasionally bathe the scorching skin. By giving as constant care to our cooling equipment in summer as we do t6 our heating system in winter (e ought to achieve comfort the year roun My Neighbor Says: A piece of meat, game or poultry The wonderful, refined, entrancing complexio: rendered. brings back the appearance of youth, staat. Hj tic. Exe; s00thing action. *3 years _in use. Wiite lesh-Rachel. 2 Send 10c for Trial Size FERD.T. HOPEINS& SON, New Yoek| Gouraud's Vacation Tours, $83 And Up—Including All Expemses All the attractions of a delighttn Suchting ‘en Hermuda Ix Cool $n Summ; Average Summer Temperature, T deg. Norway, Sweden, Denmark,Germany 15 5 € to @ Quaint Foreign Land All Sports—Modern Hotels—No Passports “FORT VICTORIA® S. S. “FORT ST. G DRGE" Sailings Wednesdays and Saturdays Send for Special Tours Booklet FURNESS BERMUDA LINE 34 Whiteball St., N.Y., or any Tourist Ag Delightful Far Western VACATION TRIPS California via Colorado and the Rockies, optional trip to Hawaiian Islands. 3 to 6 weeks. Mak own itinerary. A1l de arranged b merican Express T De Write for ““Summer ¥ Cation Buggestio 1328 F Bt. N.W. Main 1200 may be prepared for several days in the hottest weather by wrapping it in a clean linen cloth previously Wwrung out in good vinegar. Wring the cloth out afresh in vinegar at least twice a if the weather is hot or damp, thiv being a much more trying state’ of the atmosphere than when the temperature is higher but ! without dampnes: The fruit in solid cakes will sink to | the bottom if baked in a slow oven. Heavy streaks through a cake will undoubtedly appear {f the butter and sugar are not thoroughly beaten, or if the butter is not properly rubbed into the flour. Keep honey in the dark. If exposed to the light it will quickly granulate, Leather that has become dull and shabby looking may be very much improved in appearance by heing rubbed over with the white of an egg {\well beaten. Large holes in the knees and heels of stockings, if mended as follows, will be found to wear longer, look neater. and be more comfortable than if mended in the usual way: Take some strong black net, cut out slight- ly larger than the hole, and tack neatly on the wrong side. Then darn in and out of the net on the right side until the hole is well covered. The darning will hardly be seen. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN Oriental Cream STEAMSHIPS HAMERICI LINE NEW YORK TO ROTTERDAM i Via Plymouth, Boulogne-sur-Mer i RYNDAM....... ... June 30, Aug. 4, Sept. 8 | NEW AMSTERDAM July 7. Aug. 11, Sept. 15 | | FEENDAX (new)...July 14, ‘Au. 18, Sept. 22| POTTERDAM i : Auc. 25 Sent. 20 | VOLENDAM (new)...July 28, Sept. 1, Oct. 6| Oftice, 24 State Si . Y. or LOCAL AGENTS 1 | { | a0 ANCHORUines ¥. ¥. to Cherbourg and Southampten. AQUITANIA ~July 8 July 24 Aug. 21 MAURETANTA ... 'July 10 Aug. 7 Aug. 28 BERENGARIA... Jily 17 Aug. 14 Sept, 4 N. Y. to Plymouth, Cherbourg axd Hamb: TYRR: (new). .June 98 Aug. 8 Sept. 12 LACONIA (new)...July 12 Aug. 22 Sept. 26 N. Y. to Cobh (Queenstown) and Liverpoel. CARONIA .. .June 30 July 28 Aug. 30 FRANCONIA (new).July 7 Aug. & Sept. 1 CARMANIA ......July 4 Aug. 18 Bept. 15 Boston to Oobh (Queenstown) and Liverpool. MARIA (new). . July 12 Aug. 9 Sept. § SOYTHIA (new)...July 26 Aug. Sept. 20 ; N. Y. to Londonderry ana Glasgow. COLUMBIA . Jug 7 Aug, 47 Sept. 1 ASSYRIA l3uly 18 Aug. 11 | CAMERONIA (new).July 21 Aug. 18 Sept. 15 TUSQANIA (new) Bept. 6 Oct, 6 Nov. 3 N. Y. to Plymouth. Cherbourg and Londen. BAXONIA June 3u Aug. 4 Sept. 15 ALBANIA Aug. 18 Sept. 29 Mediterranean TUSCANIA (new) Bee your local Tu and Anchor 8. . Washington, 1 | { i 1 The Child’s Right. UNITED-AMERICAN LINES, Joint Service with HAMBURG AMERICAN LINE EUROPE ENGLAND FRANCE GERMANY To Plymouth, Cherbourg, Hemburg I Reliance - June 26 | RESOLUTE . July 10 Aug. 7 Sept. 4 RELIANCE. . July 24 Ang: 21 Sept, 18 Oherbourg. Southampton, Hamburg ALBERTBXLLIN (sew) July 26 Sept.0 i e HAXSA " June 58 Aug. D Sent. One mother Every child hag a right to a happy home life. If there is ever any dis- agreement, no matter how slight, between the father and mother they should always make it a point to dls. cuss such things in private—ocertain- 1y never at the table, or wherever the child may be a’'grieved hearer. (Copyright, 1923.) Voyags de Luxe to the MEDITERRANEAN, Menu for a Day. “ ‘the New 89,000 Ton Palatial Liner BREAKFAST. GIULIO CESARE JULY 7th Stewed Strawberries or Cherrien,. Largest and Faastest Italan Liner. Roasted Call or Creamed Puutx:su s Graham Muffins LUNCHEON. | Ham Fritters Mashed Potatoes String Beans Banana Float Iged Tea DINNER. Frled Chicken With Coftes ITALIA AMERICA SHIPPING CORP. One Btate Bt. New York - l SUVA, AUCKLAND, SYDNEY The Well Equi, NIAGI ‘MAKURA" (13, tons) Ball from Vaneou For lnu‘ toes Spinach With Hard-bolled Eg; Pt corn o the Cob T Cottage Cheese _Frozen Plntu?h Pudding % Coffes or Ioed Tea - BERMUDA Mediterranean, Caribbean an Europe, Orient, South America Stezmship Tickets—All Lines Regular Rates OBER’S Steamship and Tourist Agency No. 1 Woodward Building Phone Main 1089 RIO DE JANKIRO MONTEVIDEO BUENOS AIRES A vorage umequalled to a contivent e interest. are delightfully evol and $.S, Vandyck June 30 §.8. Vasari July 14 , somfortable ships containing ment of # modern botel. Lowest Rates, overs, Unexeelled Service. s Bouthi America arranged. For Rates, lllustrated Literstare, ete.. Apply EUROPE | oS, t. MAKE SUMMER BOOKINGS NOW d North Cape Summer Cruises forel caric beasty or climate. sod int Special Tours areund LAMPORT& HOLTLTD. 42 BROADWAY. NEW YORK Asent o 3E Havana, the Panama Canal, the -giant Andes and the nderful cities of Latin- America. A trip on the luxur- fously appointed “E" 350 tons displacement, the rgest ships to Peru and Chile, conditions. New York-—Havana Panama—Peru—Chile EBRO .......... July 21 ESSEQUIBO Aug. 18 Special Reduced Rates for Round South Amcrican Tours PACIFIC LINE The Pacific Steam Navigation Co, Sanderson & Son. | 26 Broadway, N. V. Or Local Agents NEW S. S. COLUMBUS Largest and Fastest German Ship 82,000 tons, 20 knots speed NEWYORK PLYMOUTH BREME Oct. 24 Nov. 2% Jan. 5 Excellent Accommodations oo NEW S. S. MUENCHEN NEW YORK—BREMEN July 7 Aug. 11 Also Superb One Ciass Sept. 14 Cabin, Ships Unsurpassed Ouisine and . Service For Rates, Reservations, etc.. app 14.18 Pearl 8i,, near State St., N. or any local steamship agent. DIRECT Sierra- Ventana (new) Sept. 12 Bromen July 1 Aug. Sept. 20 Hannover Juiy 17 Aug. Sept. 29 Beydlitz July 25 ‘Aug. Oct. 3 Yorck Aug. 1 Sepf. 5 0Oct,10 N