Evening Star Newspaper, July 2, 1923, Page 29

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‘White Frocks for Town Wear BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE, White is especially and singularly | mppropriate for—every ogoasion. Tt is about. the best choice you can make for everything but your bathing suit. To be sure there are white bathing suits, but unconscion- eble amount of attention you won't Wear one. For other occasions— everything from weddings to first mourning, from childhood to old age, from tennis to city shopping, white ig well chosen Smart women even | elect white for part if not all of heir riding clothes. More and more Women are appreciating the value of T umework. It they do thelr | own they often choose the all-white frock in preference to colored cot ons that fade with frequent wash- fnw. and if they don’t they buy white frocks for cook, maid and nurse. There is an ever increasing demand for the white servants’ uniform. All of which does not have much do with the smartness of white but it does to show that we an't very well get away from white. aMany women are even going back to the all-white muslin nightgown nd underclothing. esting thimgs about white frocks this | summer is that they are so often | chosen well dressed women for town wear. Lven those very con- servative women who would once have considered black or na Dblue or Come equally dark tone the only | thing ruitable for thin silk frock to weur when going about town in Warm weather and would have felt extremely uncomfortabie and - con- Spicuous in white, now wear this in preference to any other color. P e our citien are becoming ner, perhaps well dressed women A it more easy to wear white when | come to town in summer since | “ome in their own cars rather | in railroad tr: perhaps the city and Jining-lessness of the | Trock malkes it easier to have HI white frocks cleaned or laundered | Than onee was the case There 1e a good many perhapses. Tut the really interesting fact is that | the en fes that this sum- as to be a “very white season. Come tr It is even whiter | 1 the prophets had expected. H But it is net necessary to wear| white to be smart, in fact the; Dreference at present seems to be for the white frock with colored ac- A" smart woman recently little | frock shown in the sketch when she lunched in town one summer's day. The frock was of white crepe de chine finely tucked nd buttoned with large buttons of to n 1 they than e v propl att al cessories, wore the The Diary o Are You Contented With Yourl Lot? You know, after all, it is just as well 10 be contented with the lot to which we are called—be it movie lot or other- \ Or 1 might state, paradoxically enough, that it is Just as well to be dis- wise. | | ETHEL SHANNON MIGHT HAVE | MADE HOMES SWEETER! | contented with our lot, for we will be ¥. no matter what it is. 1 am a writer, and T should like to be a dramatic actress, ] won't go so far a 10 say a Bernhardt, for that would be a | sacriiege, but you know what I mean, And o it goes with almost every one 1 know. Even those enviable beings, the | celebrities, hanker to be other | an they are. With almost every one them the movie's loss might be some | er profession’s gain. Just for fun, 1 anyw | BEDTIME STORIES Fast-Growing Babies. None but mothers ever know How worries with the children grow. | i, Grouse. | Just as little human babies first | ercep and then learn to walk and vun,‘ s baby Grouse first run and then | 'l" rn to fly. It is astonishing how | fast these baby Grouse grow. Peter | tabbit ¥s so, and he ought to know. When he first saw them they were running about on the ground, and their tiny wings were of no use “AY. MY, MY!” EXCLAIMED PETER. | “HOW TFAS YOUR BABIES GROW, MRS. GROUSE before he saw upon Mrs. so suddenly Tt was ten day again. He came and her family that he startled them. Instantly those little Grouse flew a few feet Before hiding under the leaves. Peter was surprised. He was 5o sur- prised that for a moment he couldn’t find his tongue, and when Peter can't 3ind his tongue he is very much sur- prised indeed. You see, it didn’t seem possible that those tiny wings could have grown feathers big enough to enable those little birds to fly. “My, my, my!" exclaimed Peter. How fast’ your bables grow, Mrs. Grouse “Don’t they?" replied Mrs. Grouse roudly, “In another week they will, b able to fly some distance. It is a great rellef, Peter. Yes, siree, it is & great relief. They are a constant cause of worry before they can fly. Jen they have no chance at all to escape enemies except by hiding. To make jt worse. they are obliged to nide right where they may happen %o be. But as soon as they can fly a Jittle they have a better chance of hiding. A pair of stout wings and = r of good legs are a great com- {:ilmfln“. Peter.” “1 sallose 50 at all them Grouse said Peter, who, of FROCK OF WHITE CREPE DE CHINE LAID IN FINE TUCKS, FASTENED WITH LARGE BUT- TONS OF THE MATERIAL. the material. She wore a rouge- colored straw hat and her purse was | of green, red and bronze striped silk. (Copyright, 1023.) f a Professional Movie Fan GLADYS HALL. k some of them now and then: "It u weren't in the movies, what would you ltke to do?" Kenneth Harlan answered me by say- ing that If the Talmadge sisters hadn’t offered him a contract several years ago he would have been a professional dancer. and that there are times e'en now when he takes out the nl;l ‘bxan;t slippers and gives them a regretful look. Bithel Shannon says that she had be- gun the study of interlor decorating when a friend of hers suggested that she get a job as an extra “just for fun. Now look at her! Alas for the artis- try of the home! B. P. Schulberg. the producer. would have tried his pen at short stories If— ah, that eignificant if! Tom Forman observed that if Edison hadn’t discovered how to make pictures move there might have been another law firm added to the already plenteous as| quota and one of the partner's names | Would have been Forman. Orville Caldwell's ambition was to take up lanseape gardening, but he was sidetracked by a theatrical offer which | has led at last into screenland. Eve Unsell says that she was pursuing an ambition to report front-page stortes when she sold her first screen plot, and the front-page dream was no more. Olga Printzlau believes that she might now be rivaling Paris gowns with de- | signs of her own making if she hadn’t dashed off a scenarlo in & spare moment and received a check for it the following week, which served also as a check on her designing desires e { Charlie Chaplin has come out in print with the confession that he has an illy suppressed desire to be an orchestra leader. Personally, T can see Charlie perfectly as an orchestra leader. What do_the rest of you think about it? Gaston Glass came the nearest of any one I know to being satisfied with at least the physical exactitude of his am- bition. He said that if he were not act- ing in a studio he would be in one any- way, being, as he is, vitally interested in the choice and preparation of stories for the screen. A goodly portion of his lelsure time now i devoted to reading tories and plays which the preferred scenarlo department has singled out for special consideration. Now, don’t all of you aspiring writers swamp poor Gas- ton with your Mss. Remember that he is still “a” actor. (Al rights reserved ) By Thornton W. Burgess. course. knew nothing about wings. Every two or three days after that Peter managed to see the Grouse family, and it seemed to him as if he could almost see those little Grouse grow. They were continually trying those fast-growing wings, and by the time they were three weeks old the strongest among them could actually fly over the tops of some of the smaller trees. Mrs. Grouse was now less anxious in one way, but more anxious in an- other. She’ explained it to Peter in thig way: “I'm afraid now that sooner or later they will get separated. At first when I gave them the signal to hide, they all hid right where they I knew just when to find . But now, if surprised by an enemy, they take to thelr wings be- fore hiding, and I never know where all of them are. I'm always worry- ing for fear that one of them may £0 too far and become lost. Being a mother is worrisome wark, Peter. There can be no two ways about it, being a mother is worrisome work. What's that? A twig had snapped. Mrs. Grouse was instantly all alert. She gave a low signal to the children, and they all remained motionless. There was the faintest rustle of dry leaves. Coming down the hill toward them was Bobby Coon. Mrs. Grouse gave another signal. those twelve young Grouse, and dis- appeared over the top of a little hill. Mrs. Grouse followed. Bobby Coon shuffled along down to where the Grouse had been. He sighed. * “They're getting too big. They're growing too fast,” said he mournfully. “If only I could have found them before they learned to use their wings I might have caught two or three of them. Now it will be nothing but luck if I ever catch one. I never saw youngsters grow as_they do.” He sighed again. 'm’ glad you didn't find them be- fore,” sald Peter, and took care to get well beyond Bobby Coon's reach. ‘Copyright, 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST Raspberries Lamb's Liver Broiled French Fried Potatoes Rye Muffins Coffee LUNCHEON Creamed Shrimps Cheese Sandwiches Ginger Ale 5 DINNER Cream of String Bean Soup Roast Veal with Bread Dressing Green Peppers Saute New Potatoes Sliced Tomatoes (with French dressing) Cottage Cheese Cherry Ple Teed Tea or Coffee Olives - ‘ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, JULY 2, 1923. The Guide Post By Henry van Dyke The Secret Pavilion. In the covert of thy presence shalt thou hide them from the plottings of man; thou shalt keep them secretly in a pavillon from the strife of tongues.—Ps. xxx1.20. It may be that you and I will never be called to pass through sufferings and trials llke those of the author of this psalm. It may be that our country will never forfeit its great privileges and hasten by the pathway of Iniquity to a ruinous downfall. It may be that we shall never have to protest alone against the corrup- tions of an apostate church. But It can hardly be, if we are true men, that we shall not be forced at some time or other to take the un- popular side. It can hardly be that we shall never feel the hostile pressure of the plots of man, and the stinglng arrows of the strife of tongues. Then we shall need a refuge. and we shall find it only in the loyal ad- herence to our convictions, in_ the falthful performance of our duty, which shall bring us so near to God that we can feel His presence encir- cling, embracing, hiding us, as in a secret pavilion. (Copyright, 1923.) Into the air went| 1 Annabel 'Wor hngton Cape-Sleeve Dress. An exceptionally pretty dress which is cut from one straight plece of ma- terial and so very easy, to make. The pattern cuts in sizes 16 years, 36, 38, |and 40 inches bust measure; size 36 requires 27 yeards of 36-inch ma- terial with 3% yards of binding. You codld buy your material for i | this dress after lunch anu aave the garment completed well before dinner time. You should choose volile, cot- ton crepe, georgette or crepe de Chine to malce this garment. Price of pattern 15 cents, in postage mtamps only. Orders should be ad. dressed to The Washington Star Pat- tern Bureau, 22 East 15th street, New York city. Please write name and address clearly. COLOR CUT-OUT This Way to the Circus. i “Right this way!” yelled Leslie, the balloon boy. Billy Cut-out's big clréus was about to start. The boys and girls crowding around could hardly wait for it to begin, after they had seen the wonderful parade. “All ready,” announced Billy Cut- out. “The first thing will be some breath-taking trapeze stunts by Burt” Then Freddie Racket blew his horn three times and everybody watched for the first stunt to begin. Get out every color in orayon bex to color Loslle's belloons. Then maks. his shirs light brown, his overslls blue and his oap brown. When you cut him out and mount him, be sure to cut along the dotted lines around his arm and then tomorrow you ocan bang his basket of popoorn and cones onm his arm. this week you will have & new. circus. Be sure not to miss & “big show.” stunt for Dit of the Learn a Bird a Day By Lucy Warner Maynard BLUE-GRAY G Blue-gray gnatcatcher: caerulea. | Length four and one-half inches; ! long tail. Upper parts and tall blac white. Under parts Female and forehead. Resident (not uncommon) April 5 to September; winters in Central America, Cuba and the Ba- hamas. The tiny gnatcatcher's consp! feature is his long black and white lmn. which is usually open and in | motion as he flits about in the tree tops. This daint. biuish-gray; outer forehead tail feathers grayish-white. young without i black 1 from | | uous wood sprite will be "I prefer the the dom of Anatole France. You must have lived A good deal before you can und stand just what the famous Fren {man means by that remark. Sooner or later though. it comes to every human being—that place where he decldes what attitude he will take toward life. Usually that crisis comes after a big hurt and dis- illuslonment. Always it occurs when | age begins to set in. Life s red hot and spendthrift at eighteen. What- ever the pose adopted at that age, it's adopted hard. You can't be indiffer- | ent about things with your fir mustache or first beau in the offing You may try to appear callous and cold. but Inwardly you're all a-seethe. But later, things change. You've made a good many experiments, sat- isfied a good deal of your curiosity, | and you begin to see the hurt as well jas the hilarity that waits for vou in life. What attitude shall you take? Shall you throw yourself into the melee regardless of the consequence? Or shall you begin to build a ‘wall about your spirit which will keep the hurt away? | { _Yes, it is possible to build such a wall. “The wisdom of indifference”— | that is what Anatole France named | that wall. To view life from the side | lines, survey the game and decide it isn't worth’the risks, to save your- self from stress and strain, tempta- | tion and tempest in every possible manner—that's the way to bulld that | wall. And many people whom the | world deems highly respectable have built just such a wall. Most old peo- ple are all encased in that “wisdom o1y passion indifference,” The Water. Schools are closed and many children are going to have a long| holiday. Two long summer months to | frisk about and play and grow in.! Sometimes two long months to waste and to misuse. ; That brings me to point out one danger that ought to be guarded against this summer. This summer? Because it Is,this summer that we can work in. Last summer has gone, next summer we know nothing about. So this summer, please. When the children go to the water see that they have an older person with them, and make sure that the older person is one who has some control and authority. A doting rela- itive or an easy-going tutor sort of person won't do. many | There’s an attraction about water that draws children to it with magic force. Water s so_ deceptive. It doesn’t look deep. Tt doesn't look cruel. Tt is soft and smiling and whispery and lovely. A child floats his boat and as it Polioptila_found in wet woods where gnats and | bridge | 1and, isten,World! | mouse? | best swimmer in the town, so I feel drifts out he wades in after it. Some one who knows and can help him if he needs help should be close to him. Even If he is in no danger of drown- ing you would not risk letting him get a bad fright. Poys and girls love to swim and the temptation to swim farther than the other fellow is strong. Children cannot measure their strength and are likely to spend most of it on the outward trip and have nothing to come back on. Some one who knows about life-saving should be on the outer 1imit of the swimming distance in a boat, ready to go to the rescue of a tired child or to caution the daring one to_turn back. Boats are alluring things. There's romance and poetry even in an old flat-bottom boat that couldn’t turn turtle if it tried—perhaps. I'm sure enough about the romance buf I'm never sure of the turning-over part. Tt doesn’t seem possible that there are still children who will clutch the sides of a boat and rock it, but there And they will stand up in it and change places in It and fight about who is to “oar” it. Children should not be on the water without a competent adult on hand to keep order, teach the rules of the water and rescue the perishing. The rule about canoes is broken every summer: Nobody whe: eannot swim should venture inlo & canoe. =} | i ATCATCHER, other small winged insects are abun- dant. At the Virginia end of Long there js a point of wooded which 1 the favorite haunt of | birds and particularly of the little gnatcatcher. He is_also found in wouds adjoining the Mount Ver- nbn grounds, and Mrs. Merriam-Bailey discovered two nests in_the Zoo and one on High Island. The HIgh Isiand nest was only six feet from the ground, but usually ‘these birds build much higher. The nest is an exquisite little structure, stuccoed with lichens like the hum- mingbird’s. There is & group at the Smithsonian, showing the mother bird sitting and belng fed by her mate. The gnatcatcher's song is a soft sweet warble, and his call-note has been likened to the “ting” of a banjo string. (Copyright, I many W. Maynard.) But some there are who prefer peril to such protection. For them there is “the folly of passion.” They give themselves recklessly without count- ing the cost. Like prodiglous gam- blers, they throw all that they have | of thought and strength and love and | ambition into the pot and take their chances. And I'm with those reckless souls. We only live this life once, whatever may come after. I shall 1 mine llke a prince rather | than a pauper. Why be a human if you're going to live like a hunted W l:;a_l think you, my friend? ‘opy It won't do to have the girl say, “T an’'t swim a stroke, but Don Is the safe. It would be a great deal more sportsmanlike to say, “I can’t go with Don because I cannot swim, and if we get into trouble I would place his life 'in_danger as well as my own. T'll learn how to swim first.” i An accident is what happened after | everybody had said it wouldn't or couldn’t ‘happen. It's better to be safe than sorry. easier to guard the children from accident than to mourn | for them after one. (Copyright, 1923.) ‘Just Hats” 1 \ | A Frilled Toque. A toque suitable for the older woman s this taffeta model. A short brim is trimmed i{n a ruching, and a large cocarde of the same etands in frout, to the left of the high crown. jaltogether mother remembered many | sized. { poles into the | green peppers. ittle Benny’s Note.Book The Carpender. 1. The carpender can fix enything, From dog houses to skools, But on the other hand who couldent, With all those lovely tools. I love to see him Jointed ruler And draw a line as strate as he can make, then take along it As if his hart would brake. He muk|en the shavings fly up in the alr And the sawdust drop down on the floor, And he stops for lunch at 12 o'clock And sometimes a little before. 1. pretty quick wen serews wen he bores holes and blows out the fuz stopping werk we blows™ Is the quickest thing he does. Even one carpender hammering nales Is a bewtifiil site to heer, But wen several hammer together 1 could lissen to them all yeer. take his dubble And his saw and saw He's he screws in And But the wissle Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. A Homemade Beach Tent. Mother and small sonny were to spend the month of July at the sea- shore, and dad was to come down week ends. The beach was a wide, gleaming, sunny stretch of sand and, alas, an expensive one! The covered beach chalrs in which mother would have liked to sit and read while sonny played in the sand were costly to buy and even more costly to rent. Um- brellas are too blowy and tippy to be of much use seashore, espe- 1ly when the breeze is strong, and a blistering hot hour spent dashing waves. So this year she got ready for long, mfortable mornings spent in the shade of a homemade beach tent by the which she Invented and made herself, much to dad's admiration. First of all, she got two yards of 60-inch-wide awning cloth, in black and orange. This she hemmed neatly around all four sides. Then she made a scal- loped valance of the awning cloth and stitched it to the top piece. The whole thing folded and rolled up small, =o that it could be tucked into her trunk. When she reached the shore she got @ workman to cut for her four light poles, about three inches in diameter, with pointed ends which could be thrust Into the sand at any angle de- Into the top of each pole was screwed a stout screw-hook, and in each corner of the "ning, under- neath, was sewed a brass ring which slipped over the hook and kept the awning in place. - When mother started for the beach'} in the morning she put the awning into her big beach-bag, laid the poles in the bend of her elbow and set out. It took only a moment to dig her and at such an angle that the sun was shut out, hook the awning on. and settle herself com- fortably. When the sun got too much for sonny there was plenty of room for him ‘under the improvised port- able tent. And when dad came it was big enough to shelter him, too. AND THEIR CHILDREN That Practice Hour. Our mother says: My young hopeful used to approach the piano for his practice hour with an air of martyrdom, until 1 woke up to the fact that it was my business to make it inter: g for him. 1 showed a sympathetic interest in the little pleces, picking out phrases I liked, saying, “That sounds like a bird call,” or “That is like going to a fire” ' 1 praised him when he seemed to do something particularly well. And I planned a little surprise for him at the end of each practice. { Harlequin Sandwiches. Cream some butter, and into it mix some chopped parsiey, capers and Use enough of the Vegetables to make the butter a de- cided green. Flavor with pepper, salt and a little cavenne. By cutting the bread very thin, and inserting a slice of brown bread between two slices of white bread, an attract and ap- petizing sandwich is ‘made. — Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcass beef in Washington, D. C., for week ending Saturday, June 29, 1633, on ship- ments sold out, ranged from cents to 18.00 cents per pound apd averaged 16.27 cents per pound.—Advertisement. —_— Fresh Berry Punch. Take two quarts of fresh berries, preferably strawberries or red rasp- berries. Mash the berries and pour over them three quarts of water and the juice of two lemons. Mix thor- oughly and allow to stand in a cool place for three or four hou The mixture should then be strained and sweetened to taste. This is delicious | served in tall glasses filled with chopped ice, or in small glass punch cups with a few fresh berries floating on_top. EUROPEAN HOTELS. Paris (France) GRAND HOTEL Place de I'Opéra The lu'rest Hotel in Europe "FEATURES. —from your home 70 destination YOUR Trunks—in fact all of your baggage can be checked. on your ticket at your hotel, or Union Transfer Company's Special Delivery Service is a convenience planned to save You time and worry. UNION TRANSFER CO. Baggage Express All principal cities Call Main 371 residence direct to destination. RESORTS. BEDFORD SPRI 'ATLANTIC CITY.N.J. The ideal American plan hotel directly on th Sixectly on the ocean front. i Grand Atlantic Hotel 1A AVE. (STEEL PIER). Capncity, 600 | ¢ and Most Lopniar Avenne in Kesort rgest otel off heront | CONVENIENCES. AUTO BUs. GOLE PRIVILES | Rate $4.00 up. ©0. D. PAINTER, Prop. TABOR INN 0} jement. J_P. & A M. DU APART < Hednged rontals: ¥ MILLS) 15 Hoston ave. o ___ Marine_ The Engleside * The ouly resort an the Jerses. Coast that NRIES ferfce bathing. aiwars good fab: Mtn & odery hotel “and” Eives sure from [Hay Fev besides, Booklet tennis courts. _Now_open R. F. ENGLE Mer. MARYLAND. RULEAL HOME, ON ON WEST Chesapenke Bay. Boatin, ng. cool breezes, spacivus porches. o room. modern conveniences, ex- cellent food, mus; ncing; Gentiles only Write for ‘booklet. Mrs. Matilda Nowell, Shady 8ide, Md. Phone West Hiver 2i ry;u,;. Tsland_Resort « reliet Five TIFUL ccommodations: | for ‘rest, recreation and cions lawns, ‘tennis, . fshin : booklet Mirs. PENTZ. Box 134. St. Michaels. Md. | AND | - = ERsR vy S BLUE RIDGE M booklets and list of hotels Write Asst Gen. Pass Baltimore, Md. ATIONING T3 For descriptive CHESA HIGHVIEW HOT t place on the beach; rates reasonuble, good service: motor boat for fishermen; Chesapeake Beach, Md. G. NOLTE, Prop. 2 CHESAPEAKE B SPENI Cottage, ton v st.; home cooking: lovely. and Philedelphia ool rooms, house. Finest and safest bathing beach on const: ocean ou one side. ay Rolf, fishing. Loating MT. PLEASANT ¢ e Dennis. Comfortable, The Dennis, {00 table. View of ocesn and bay. Reaso rates. Mrs. R. J. D New Avalon Hotel S poreies 57 per day wkiy: rates on application. Dancing. Toses D. OLIVER DITTO, Prop. KAYE COTTAGE On Boardwalk: excellent table; bathing B ud i WALK. front dining room. tablv JOHNSON. Prop. Hotel and Cottages. Ocean front. Bust service. Orciiestra, Ballroom. Grill and Tearoowm. _Golf. fron All "con- <“Ntrs.. 0 Ocean City Golf Course. New Nine-Hole Course COLONIAL HOTEL On boardwalk; running water in every room. Private baths. Booklet. Gwnership maRAgemeat. OCEAN FRONT J. L. MASSEY & SON, ek Newest Tutel on The Hastings Hotel jire it o cellent rooms and private bath. \rs. GEO. B. CONNE CHAS. LUDLOW. T ¢ Coul_iry_rooms Over: ar looking otean_and _bay Rates reasonable. Mrs. Bathing. Hom RE Pr BREAKERS G "civaies water”” and tennis privileges. C._II. TIMMONS. _Phone 7 Atlantic Hotel Opens June =3 front, ‘24 yr. present management. Private baths, music, dancing._C . PURNELL. Prop. & Mgr. Tuuniog_water in evers The Belmont g Totcr . e Cool._ delightful tooms. Kates re le, L. R HEARNE SHADY SIDE. MD. Arundel House D/t o, Cuesspeake bay. 60 minntes trom Washington, Fishing, boating, bathing: un- celied home cooking. T. M. BUSSEY. Shady St S0 Fer, “West River 202 yi1e GO TO NEIMEYER'S. at Shadyside. Md., for Your vacation: good home cooking; cool roomis; i Buhinz, crabbing and boating: fne drinking waters best place on Wes fe. from D o meyer's, Sha — SHADY SIDE, M- Fishing parties and accommodations for week ps. Write end_trip Tl THEE ik . Owner-Prop. ocean under ' o o | d | t R VACATION AT LETCHMORE | SPRINGS (PA, HOTEL Redford A _glorious rful “Allegheny feot above wen ating mountain ¢ rare opportunities healthful recreation, riding, swimming Bedford Springs o Lincoln Highway on’ Tequest. Now MARTIN Drive to Springs thix sim- spot_in the won. Mountains. 0 Fine iovigor- imate that offers for rest and Tenir, golf. 1 the celchrated tive waters. On Send for booklet. open. SWEENY, Manager VIRGINIA. ““NORTH HILL” A colonial resort near Bluemont on Shen- andoah river; valley, mountaln and water scenery: shaded ground, drives, fishing. boat- ing, swimming: new baths and sewerage; no children, invalids or tuberculars taken: $15 and S18 Jeoklet. Maurice F. THE front, ownership _manage SPRINGS., VA. 0rk:1“gy Springs Hotel Washington’s Mountain Resort 2300 feet American plan: table the best; golf, teunis, ridiog. dancin swimming and all smusemenis; mineral spring: and batis; reasonable rates E. L. COCKRELL. Pres. STEAMSHIPS. tion; cool; FRENCH Line == Plymouth TTomn The Expericrord Travelers” Havre—Paris The Magnificent “FRANCE” Wed., Juy & (Sailing 11 A.M.) PARTS. ", July 18 Aug. 15 Bept. 18, FRANCE ... July 25 Aug. 22 Sept. 19, LAFAYETTE Aug. 4 Sept. 1 Sept. New York—Havre—Paris Popuiar priced ongclass ships Chicago 30 Sept. 6 Oct s aly "2 Aug. 2 Sept. Rochambeau. July 7 Aug. © Sept. La Savoie....July 14 Aug. 11 Sept. Houssillon July 28 Aug, New York - Vigo(Spainj—Bordeaux La Bourdonnais.July 12 Sept. 18 Oc Roussillon Oct. 9 Nov. 20 Ji New Tort Dauliohe Kavin Local French Line Agel Company’s Office, 408 New York Ave. NOTléE. The New S. S. “BERKSHIRE” Sails Baltimore to BOSTON July 6, 13. 20 And the New S. S. “ALLEGHANY” To Savannah-Jacksonville July 3, 13, 24 Other Sailings as Usual to NORFOLK—BOSTON—SAVANNAH— JACKSONVILLE Merchants & Miners Trans. Co. 1406 New York Ave, N.W. “'.\slnnnfl!.iD o5 OUTINGS Norfolk Virginia Beach Ocean View SURF BATHING BOATING FISHING 400-Mile Water Trip peake Potomac River and Ches: Bay New York and Boston By Sea l-l‘nfln:l;: and Ln:;mn at CITY TICKET OFFICE Weodward Bldg., 731 15th St. N. W. Norfolk & Washington Steamboat Co. G. T. PROCTOR, Shady S HARPERS FERRY, W. VA. THE LOCKWOOD Open for the Season REHMOBOTH BEACH. DEL. ic He Ucean front. Hotel Henlopen U e 1 rates familie Booklet with m: P.sv?ddr.ond all wa, Clean, safe beach. Best of food. Same management. __ X PENNSYLVANIA PLEHURST INN, Stroudshurg, Pa Capacity 200; 10th season: croquet, bathing, tenuis; G-ucre lawn: old sbade. 300-(t. ve garage: booklet. W. M. BURNETT. Ju EA(;ITE} Tbe summer resort that is different because it combines mountain’ and s shore conditions with unique surround- e sandy beach and temperate water of the Lake of the Eagles afford splen- did bathing 2,200 feet above sea level. One of the finest 18-hole golf courses in_America. For bookiet and rates write THE_FOREST INN, Herman V. Yeager, Manager THE CRESTMONT INN. + William Woods, Manager THE LAKESIDE John 8. Kirk & Son THE RAYMOND L. B. C. List, Manager, | | COMPLETE OCEAN STEAMSHIP SERVICE WHITE STAR—To Channel ports. Liverpool Quecnstows and Bremen. Standard of rvice in Keeping wiih the magmificence ot Olyinpts, _Fomeric amd _world’ largest ship, Majestic. Regular expreas service. RED STAR—Te at Plymeut Weekly head land AMERICAN LINE—To Hambu: Service of regularity, dependa- bility, comfort and convenience. [nternational Mercantile Marine Cs.. Washington office: 1308 F St. n.w. R. M. HICKS, Manager. Via Cape Cod Canal Connecting at Boston for Portland, Bath, Gardiner, Rockland, Bangor, st. Johm, N. B. Yarmouth, N. S Steamer jeaves Pler 18, N. 'R. (ft. Murray St). New York, daily. in cluding Sundays, at P.M. (duylight saving time). EASTERN S. S. LINES

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