Evening Star Newspaper, September 25, 1923, Page 27

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WOMAN’S- PAGE Beltless Frock Is Widely Adopted BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. A friend in Paris who has Watched the development of fashions for au- tumn there writes to assure us that the belt and girdle has not entirely disappeared from off the face of the carth of fashion. You can still find frocks with some sort of a ceinture if you search long enough for them. And this as well as anything else £lves us an idea of what a wide- tpread fashion the beltless frock really has become. Sometimes the belt one's appendix .or merely as a vestige. digeloped at back but not at front— *"8 in rare instances at front but not at back. Sometimes there is & bit of an application at either side that might be regarded as a vestigial elt. But don’t imagine that beltlessness or girdlelessness means waistless- ness. On the contrary, often the ryks that show no actual belt or dle .are so cut and draped and manipulated that thé tapering of the rody above the hips that we. call he waist is allowed to show. And Ul this is an interesting’ paradox. We once used girdles and belts to draw n our waists—to accentuate such slenderness of waist as we pos- sessed. Then belts and girdles be- came so wide and o low that the only way we had of ever getting back to the defining of walst-slen- derness at all was to abandon the sirdle or belt. A few of the French dressmakers like Cheruit show a disposition to re- turn to what they call a' nérmal ne, fairly well defined. Most 'f the others show a strong_disposi- ion to use no girdle at all. In either ase the movement is away from the irdle drawn around the hips. Where the RIp belt remains it is mude very The beltiess frock often takes the form of a sheath, and this sheath is sometimes cut stralght and narrow with no revelation of the waist save with the turning or bending of the body. The mavy blue frock in the figten 1s of this’type hen there are sheaths that are deftly drawn to reveal the waist slerderness. Sometimes a tumic takes the form of a sheath with a tapering flare at the hips like an inverted calla lily. lingers, like wisdom - teeth, Sometimes it is “But T had twelve baskets of rasp- berries waiting to be made into jam, an' if I didn’t do them that morning, they'd mold—you just can’t keep aspberries in warm weather, judge, 1" I thought you could get somebody > just as well.” With these immortal words did Mary Elizabeth Clark face the august maj- esty of the United States of America and explain why she hadn't been on hand to do jury duty. Mary wasn't the only one. Seventeen out of thirty-five of our leading lady citizens had likewise failed to show up after being duly notified that their country demanded their services. The reasons given were various, but near- 1y all had & common plea. of domestic urgency. One needed to take Willie to the dentist, another had just moved into a new neighborhood and had to enter the children in school, still an- other had a So it went. 4 REPE DE CHI GRAY PE SLIP IS VEALED AT THE OPENINGS ON EACH SIDE OF THE SKIRT. They were needed at home. And, not being familiar with the dignities and terrors of civic responsibility, they thought that that settled the matter and did not even bother to notify the judge of those more urgent domestic claims. Yes, this is a true story. pened in one of our large coast cities And it is happening on other cities all over the- United Stat Mary Eilizabeth wanted the vote. She wanted all that went with the vote, every single honor and privilege and responsibility that John Henry en- joyed. So she got the vote and allsthe Test of it. And then—then the rasp- berries were ready for jam and she forgot all about the jury! What does it prove? That Mary Elizabeth has an inferior mentality? Not a bit of it. Her forgetfulness was due to ignorance, not stupidity. But something gravely significant lay behind that ~ forgetfulness—a vast dumb, relentless force called Mother Nature. That force gave the woman a brain equal to the man's. But it gave her different hungers and apti- tudes. She wasn't made for lesser jobs than man, but she was made for @ different phase of the one great job. “¥ou nfuseefend- for the family and govern the tribe,” said Nature to man, “and you must care for the home and rear the child” said Nature to ‘woman, as she drew them up from the duse_and slime and fashioned them into human form. So planned Mother Nature at the dawn of time. Can a nineteenth amendment undo that planning in a year or two? I doubt it. On ~certain " jobs the woman {s fitted and willing to work shoulder to shoulder with men. There is no reason why she shouldn’t take as great interest in civic affairs as man —no reason why she shouldn’t vote— no reason why mother's opinion on a political question shouldn't be as eagerly sought by her children as dad’s opinion. But when jury calls won't the raspberry jam always come first? It hap- Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Grapes, Oatmeal with Cream. Corn Omelet. Hashed Brown Potatoes. Popovers. Coffee, LUNCHEON. Escalloped Oysters. Bak!ni Powder Biscuits, pple Tarts. ‘Tea. DINNER. Lamb Stew with Rice Dumplings. Buttered_Carrots. Boiled Potatoes. Tomato Salad. Prune Whip. Coffee. CORN OMELET. Score the rows and scrape the pulp of five small, plump ears of corn or one cupful canned corn (strained). = Mix with five well-beaten eggs, one teaspoonful of cream, and salt and pepper to season. Have a sheet-iron frying pan, hot and buttered. Pour in the mixture and shake and tilt the pan un- til it is evenly cooked Roll and serve on a hot platter. For semi-formal occasions a frock like this would be an. excellent cholce, It might be fashioned from a plain or printed crepe for theater or the afternoon tea, and of Spanish eire laoe it would make a very lovely and inexpensive dance frock, And.it's just the easlest thing you ever made! It's cut from & single Jength of material and you're enly (o mew up ghe underarm ssams, one slde seam and stitch the other side together, letting the material fall in a graceful cascade. The dress pattern, No. 1804, cuts in sizes sixteen years, 36,-38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. To make it in the medium size requires two and seven-elghths yards of thirty- sig-inch material. Price of pattern, 15 cents; in post- age stamps only. Orders should be addressed to The Washington Star Pattern Buresu, 22 East 1Sth street, : New York. ecity. Please write name and-mddress 3 APPLE TART. Pare, quarter and core six apples and put them in a bute tered baking dish. Add four tablespoontuls of molasses, four tablespoonfuls of brown sugar, one teaspoonful of lemon juice, one teaspoonful of cinnamon, % teaspoonful of nutmeg, 1 tablespoonful of butter cut into bits and four tablespoonfuls of water. Cover with a_rich ple crust with slits for the steam to escape and bake in a moder- ately hot oven. LAMBE STEW. One pound of neck of lamb or mutton, sprinkle with pepper and salt and place in saucepan. Cut one pound string beans and slice two large Spanish onions Cover the meat with onions and lay beans on top. Place cover on saucepan and leave on side of the fire for two or three hours. This dish requires no water or. butter. VERSIFLAGE Nasturtiums. Each day I think another flower that in my garden grows is.love- llest of all the bower—last week it was the rose. But when the lark- spurs, azure blue, were stately tall, I sald—"No other bloom can rival you except verbenas red ‘Then * holly- hocks against the fence looked proudly at the sun. My-admiration waxed intense. “The prize,” I cried, “you've won.” But oh! ‘my feel ings changed today. Nasturtiums-did I spy; though late to bloom, they now essay to climb quite extra high! There's naught this side of paradise. (I'm sure as 1 can be, for though I'm far from truly wise my feelings tutor me); there’s naught. to give such keen delight as thrusting deep 'through leaves a hand to seek, stems out of sight—then gather dainty sheaves of frail nasturtiums glowing. right—rich amber, red and hues like light, WILHELMINA STITCH. #a got a letter from Ant Fanny today, and after suppir she was reed- ing it, saying to pop, Willyum, my sister Fanny wunts your advice about Herbits education, ‘Who's Herbit? pop sed, and ma sed, Her child, of corse, and pop sed, Wy for Peets sake, that kid's not a yeer old yet. He certeny Is, he's 14 munths, ma sed, and pop sed, O, that's diffrent, that's jest the rite age to start to study to be a plano tuner. Now Willyum, don’t be frivolis, ma sed. Lissen fo wat Fanny rites. Fanny say 0 pleased whenever 1 turned on the tawking machine that I was going to make some kind of a musician of him, but. now every time.I1 play a simple peece and ask him wat it s he allways says We Have No Ban- nannas, no matter wat it is,’so per- haps his ear for music is not perfeck after all, and now Im thinking of making a diplomat ‘out of him be- cause he's so diplomatic. For instants when he wunts to get something to eat between meels he jest yells as if his little hart would brake, and it never fales to werk. But on the other hand I wouldent quite know how to g0 about making a perfessional dip- lomat out of him. I wish you would your husbind wat he thinks be- cause its no use asking my husbind because being a printer himself he can ony think of one thing to make little Herbit and thats another printer. Yee gods, pop mind giving her a sed. 0, T think thats very nice of you, Wiilyum, ma sed, and pop sed, Not at all, tell her I suggest to put him out in the hot sun and if his skin terns a bewtifill tan color he would make an excellent life gard but on the other hand if he terns the color of an overripe brick and gets all biistered tell her to rite for more In- formation. Til tell her nuthing of the kind and jest for being friviliss I wont reed You the rest of her letter, ma sed. Wich she dident. sed. Well, little advice, I dont he Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. Turning Dark to Light. A R R It was nearing the 1st of October, land the young couple who had been living in a tiny apartment had their {reasons for wanting,a larger dwell- ing, preferably one wlth a wide, green {vard, where a little person could ipl 11 day in the open. For days |and days they had hunted, and final- ly had found a little suburban cot- tage within their means. It was not la very mew house, however, and it jcertainly was not modern in a deco- rative sense. Its walls were covered with spotty paper (glaring red in the difing room), and the woodwork bes to what one interior decorator brown gravy period.” “We - could repaper, 1 suppose,” mourned the little home-maker, “but we could never turn this dark wood- work light. It would take five or six coats, and probably the old brown paint would have to come oft first. That night her husband came home with a little booklet telling how to transform the dull, dark woodwork into shining ivory! “It's mot so impossible, after: all Bettina,” he announced. “These paint experts say that if we will have the present woodwork thoroughly cleaned Znd scoured, and then rubbed with No. 1 sandpaper (to give the old fin- ish @ tooth for the new finish to cling t0), we can apply a coat of ordinary. white paint as an undercoat, and when that is dry we can sling on the ivory enamel that yot have set your heart on. “So it you'll have that husky hand- maiden of yours do the scouring, I'll rough her up with sandpaper, and we can take turns putting on the white paint and_the enamel.” “Oh, Bob,” breathed the housewife, delightedly, “can_we do the gloomy old bathroom over, too, and that back room that we want to use for a nurs- ery? This house is perfect all except the walls, and if we can make those light and bright, let's decide to buy!" BHistory of Bour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. COFFIN VARIATION—Coffer, Coff. RACIAL ORIGIN—English and Welsh, SOURCE—An occupation, also a lo- cality. The family name of Coffin has two ) different sources, and about the only ; way of telling which is the probable ) one in a given instance is through some knowledge of the individual's ancestry. The English origin of the name was | in an occupation. The first bearers of the surname in that country bore it as a designation of their trade, which, as might be suspeoted, was the manu- facture of “coffyns.” But the “coffyn”™ of those days Was not necessarily a burigl casket. n fact, its general use In that se se did mot become widespread until a later period than that in which. the name was formed. It meant the same as a “coffer,” and the two words were interchangeable. The original form of the name was either “Coffrer” or “Coffyner,” or:in some cases where the casket formed part of a device upon an inn_or shop sign, “de la Coftyn.” The family name of Coffer, of course, is a straight de- velopment from ‘“coffrer,” and Coft, here it does not represent a short form of Anglicized German name (Kauffmann), is a shortened form of Coffer and Coffyn. The Welsh surname came. into ex- istence as descriptive of the locality in which its original bearers lived. | “Co* meant “high” and “fin” a-“head,’ “‘extremity” .or “boundary.” “Cyfin" signified 3 houndary, 3 limilt gr & hill, and “cefyn” the ridge of a hil , At ferst Herbit looked | TREES OF WASHINGTON BY R. A, The pecan is a southern hickory, ranging from Indiana and Kansas south to Alabama and Texas. It is the largest of the hickories, and in Texas, where it is at its best, it reaches a |h(‘lKht of 170 feet, with a trunk di- anieter of six feet. It is not only the largest of the hickories, but it is the native hickory of by far the greatest economic importance, the nuts of its wild and cultivated trees furnishing a large portion of our fall and winter nut supply. Some improved varieties of the pecan have been developed, varieties with larger nuts, thinner ells and sweeter kernel: and many commer- cial-pecan orchards have been estab- lished. A large percentage of the nuts | on the market, however, ave still | gathered from wild trees. As a shade and ornamental tree 50 the pecan excels. No finer tree adorns the ave- nues of southern cities than the pe- can,” eays Julia Rogers. BEDTIME STORIES Brownie’s Strange Adventure Continues. Understanding paves the For friepdships that will always —Farmer Brown's Boy. Strange {hings were -happening to Brownie the “Thrasher. He Wi§ a prisoner in a big wire trap made like # pen with a wire covering. This was bad enough, for never in his whole life before had Brownie been a pris- oner. Now Farmer Brown's Boy had epome over to that pen and was look- ing down at him with every appear- ance of pleasure. Without being told, HE LOOKED DOWN AT FARMER BROWN'S BOY. Brownie knew that Farmer Brown's ‘Boy had set that trap. He knew that Farmer Brown's Boy had spread those good things to eat inside that trap just to tempt him in there. There was no chance to fly, so Brownie began to run about looking for a way out. Presently he found a little opening and ran through it. A Children, like the rest of us, do their work on a mysterious stream of power that we call energy. When it is flowing steadily, easily, the chil- dren swim along, making fine prog- ress. Dam it up check it, and they make no progress. They are lost in dread and confusion. Too often we check it by our headlong rush to force the little ones to go ahead more rapidly. Watch a busy child and see how easily he moves and how gracefully he adjusts himself to the demands of. the job; how serene the expression of his face and how happy his eyes. He is at ease. No tension shows. itself in nerve or muscle. His energy. is flowing free. Some anxious. Srown-up . goes. to examine his work. He finds a mis- take. He calls out sharply :and talks ¢t the top of his voice. “Why, wi “Too- bad, too bad!” “Quick, quic ‘Never ‘again, never! The child's body-has grown tense, the graceful, sure-moving hands slip and blunder-and- become clumsy. The 1light of happiness leaves his eyes and trouble lurks -in_their hs. His energy has been checked, dammed up, and there will-be no-headway until It is released and flowing freely. Children must be helped and guid- ed. Criticism is food for their growth and as necessary as any other stimu- lant, but it must be given gently and impersonally with -a light touch that Will not jam on the weights or check the flowing energy. ‘Whenever it becomes your duty to 1ook at the work of a child do a Iittle bit-of remembering. Hold still a sec- ond and recall the efforts you had to make to do a bit of new work and how far from succescful your efforts were. That will give you a bit of | sympathy and appreciation of what is on. AN ‘cn;refillhr the . person . wha. { Brownie felt better. EMMONS. PECAN—HICORIA PECAN. In the open the pecan becomes a broad, round-topped tree with a large, heavy trunk. The bark is of a light reddish brown, and is broken into small scaly plates. The leaves are pinnately compound, twelve to twen- ty inches long, and are composed of nine to seventéen leaflets. Each leaf- let is oblong-lanceolate in shape, rounded or wedge shaped at the base and taper pointed at the apex. They are coarsely toothed and dark to yel- low green above, paler beneath. The winter buds are of interest and a help in distinguishing the tree. The ter- minal buds are a half-inch long, sharp-pointed, yellow, and are com- posed of narrow, hairy scales. The lateral buds are’ much smaller and often occur in pairs, one above the other. The value, fuel The tree illustrated is growing on the Mall east of 14th street and a short distance south of the green- houses of the Department of Agricul- ture. wood of the pecan is of little and is used for little else than , By Thornton “W. Burgess. little door closed behind him, and Brownle found he was worse off than before. He was now in a small cage. Farmer Brown's Boy came around and opened a little door in the top of that cage, a door just big enough to put his hand and arm inside. His hand closed around Brownie, and he was lifted out. At first he tried to peck and struggle, hut be was held in such a way that he couldn't. 'Then he wisely lay still. What was going to happen to him? He didn’t dare think. He was sure that it would be something dreadful. Ho was sure that he would never see his nest and Mrs. Brownie again. But nothing dreadful did happen. Farmer Brown'’s Boy held him very gently and comfortably. He stroked him softly, and somehow with _every stroke His heart stop- ped beating so fast. Little by little fear left him. He began to enjoy it. Yes, sir, he actually began to enjoy t. “He ‘didn’t know why, but some- how he knew that Farmer Brown's Boy intended- no harm Then Farmer Brown's Boy fastened + queer ‘shiny’ thing around one of his egs. It was a little metal band with 1 number on it. Of course, Brownie lidn't know this. Farmer Brown's iy fastened it very geptly and very arefully He took the greatest care hat it should not be too loose, yet hat it should not be too tight. = When that. little metal band had been fixed to suit him Farmer Brown's 30y once more softly stroked srownle. Then he opened his hand. For . a second or two Brownle lay without moving. Then it came to him that he was free. Yes, sir, he was free. He spread his wings and Farm- er Brown's Boy made no effort to stop him. - Up in" an apple tree flow Brownle. He shook out his feathers and then out of pure happiness at his freedom he sang. He sang as only Brownie can sing. He looked down at Farmer's Brown's Boy. Farmer Brown's Boy was 1ook- ing up at him with a broad smile on his freckled face. Brownie dida‘t fear or hate him any more. He couldn’t have told why ‘he didn‘t, but he didn't. ~He had a queer feeling that somehow all this adventuro hag something to do with friendlincss on the part of Farmer Brown's Boy. (Copyright, 1923, by T. W. Burgess) talked to you about your job. Remem- ber how Jis sharp word paraiyzed your spirit, ‘how you lost all sense and blundered aimlessly for a long time afterward. Remember how you thrill- ed at a word of praise and Jjumped forward to take the suggestion of- fered in gentle, helpful-tones. That will give your voice sympathy and understanding. Then remember that teaching is setting free the spirit of a child; that You ‘cannot, by taking thought, add one cubit -to-his stature, but by free- ing him from ignorance and cheering him through’ your knowledge and faith and love you help him to add to_his owr.stature; to teach him. . The line of communication between féacher and taught. is very light; in- tangible, ‘a thingof spirit that rides on.the flow of enbrgy; a power of in- finite nd. It will not bear shocks. Speak -gently, move gently. (Copyright, 1923.) Molded Cereal With Fruit. Pack any.leftover or freshly. cook- ed cereal-into.individual molds" that have been 'wet with cold ‘water. ' Be- fore serving, stand the molds in hot water for fifteén minutes or place them in a steamer for, ten minute: Turn out and. serve .hot with thi cream and very little sugar or. with crushed or stewed fruit. : ot Fish and Radish Salad. Separate into \flikes with ‘a’ fork any cold fresh or canned fish, season with pepper, lemon juice.and’a few drops of meat sauce, and pack firmly In-a mold. Chill thoroughly and at jme - cut * into" res. Sanie o a bed of radish siicés and , ‘place ~a radish ‘rose in " the center of ?ch square and mayonnaise dressing, . serve with, The Guide Post| By Henry van Dyke Hollow Fame. Forgotten as a dead man out cf mind.—Ps., xxxi:12. What shall we say of fame as the chief end of life? Here, again, we must be careful to discriminate between the thing itself and other things which are often con- fused with it. Fame is simply what. our fellow men think and say of us. It may be world-wide; it may only reach to a single country or city; it may be confined’ to a narrow circle of society. Translated in one way, fame is glory; translated in another way, it is_merely notoriety. It is a thing which exists, of course, for the thoughts of other people about us are just as actual as our thoughts about ourselves, or the real character , and conduct ~with which those | thoughts are concerned. But the three | things do not always correspond. Consider what hoilow fame is worth. | It may be good or bad, flattering or { painfully truthful. People are cele. brated sometimes = for _their vice sometimes for their follies. Anything out of the ordinary line will attract notice. 5 Notoriety may be purchased by a colossal extravagance or a monu- mental absurdity. A person has been made notorious simply by showing himself “more kinds of a fool” than any one else in the community To be governed in our course of life by a timorous consideration of what the world will think of us is to be even lighter and more fickle than a weathercock. ’ It is to be-blown about by winds so small and slight that they could not even lift a straw outside of our own Imagination. (Copyright, 1928.) .COLOR CUT-OUT Tom Proves a Good Runner. | When Tom Cut-up started to "srhnul wearing a brown and tan {checked vest and cap, tan trousers | iand brown shoes and hose, he decid- {ed that at recess he would stay in and read’'a library book instead of going out to the playground. “Everybody ust go out and get some fresh air,” ordered the teacher when she saw Tom linger in the room. Then Tom had to go out with the others—much as he didn't want to. At the door a boy grabbed his arm. “Say,” he begged, “will you take my place in the game of Fox and Geese? I have a sore foot and I can’t play” ~Tom was:very happy now that he had a part in the game and he played harder than he ever had played at home. “That boy’s a good runner,” Tom heard a voice say admiringly. It was the boy who put him out of the game yesterday. (Copyright, MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN | 1923.) The Court of Justice. i {One Mother Says: . | Children .like ‘to be consulted. ]Somotlmgq the repression of their hatural impulse to express their side of tife case sends them from the room hotly rebellious. They are apt to carry on a day-full of contrariness in such a temper, not understanding why their viewpoint is not of, some value. My little girl knows she must obey me, but I never refuse to discuss the “why” of it with her, tak- ing Into account her own reaction! (Copyright, 1923.) Prune Spice Cake. Cream ? a cupful of shortening sugar. Add one egg and beat until sgooth. Stir in one cupful ‘of sour milk, one and one-fourth cupfule of steamed. finely cut prunes, . one-fourth cupful of chopped nuts.! Sift together two and three-fou cupfuls' of flour and one and half teaspoonfuls of ree-fourths of a tea- “of cloves and allspice -half teaspoonfuls of 6 the liquid mixture. pan bake oven for about fifty Almost Unbelievable SIRA IS Youcan hardly realize the wonder- B\ ful improvement to your % skin and complexion the mirror will reveal toyou after usin, Gouraud’s Orien Cream for the first > 26 Brosdway. New York. time. White-Flesh “SOUTH AFRICA UNION CAbSyTLE LINE for sailings and further information apply ®anderson & Son. Gen. Pussenger Agts., Or Any Steamship Ticket Agents. Rachel. 6 e Send 10c for Trial Size F. T. HOPKINS & SON New York Gouraud’s Oriental Cream Resolute. .. Reliance Albert Ballin .Oct. Resolute. ... 0ct. N. Y., Hamburg Direct = Cabin Westphalia .. .......Oct. Mount Clay. L .0ct. Thuringia Oct. Hansa .. Nor. Cleveland.. . Nor, WINTER CRUISES West Indies Reliance, Jan. Round the World. Resolute, Jan. 1 Mediterranean .. . Reliance, F For full information applyto -Oct. Oct. 2 16 s 3 1 25 (HARRIMAN LINE) Joint Service with FRANCE ENGLAND GERMANY N.Y., Cherbourg, SeutSampton, Hamburg Shipe , hibe 9 ’ UNITED AMERICAN LINES HAMBURG AMERICAN LINE 39 Broadway, N. Y., or Local Agents OLLAN AMERICA LINE H Via Plymouth. Boulogne-sur-Mer VEENDAM (new)..Sept. 22 Oct. 27 ROTTERDAM .....Sept. 29 Nov. 3 VOLENDAK Qot.” 8 Nov.10 | RYNDAM ii:0ct. 13 Nov. 17 NEW AMSTERDAM Oct. 20 Nov. 24 Office, 24 State St.. N. ¥., or LOCAL De AG! NEW YORK TO ROTTERDAM o. Dec. 15 Dec. Deo, 22 29 ENTS I Special Winter Voyages to th MEDITERRANEAN By the New Du"_lo = Palatial Liner eg. Jan. 8 and Febh. 16 NEW YORK to MADEIRA, GIBRALTAR. ALGIERS. NAPLES, GENOA, MONA( Other Sailings to ITALY ARE.Sept. 26 VICTORIA SUTHERLAND One of the Seven Sutherland Sisters Dee. NAYI AZQ{QN_E GENERALE * l‘TQLI NA' 22,000 ons Cco ITALIA AMERICA SHIPPING COEP.. 3eneral Agnts One State St., N. Via HAVANA | Panama-Peru-Chile The trip of endless fas- cination. il by the palatial “E" Steamers, 14350 tons dispiace. ment, the largest and most ' luxurious shipe o to Peru and Chile— ESSEQUIBO. oct. 13 EBRO.......... L. Nov. 10 "Special Reduced Pates for Round South America {ovirs PACIFIC LINE THE PACIFIC STEAM NAVIGATION CO. Sanderson & Son, Inc., Agents 26 Broadway. N Y. or Jocal agenta HONOLULU Mount Vet;;non, 85¢ (Admission to Grounds Extra) At 10 am. and 2:30 p.m. BY SEA From Baltimore, M t Large Ocean Liner. Lioyd's rating class, 100AL. Culs sine unexcelled. Large decks, spe elous lounge smoking room| Speclal round-trip) rate, good. until the last of Oc o . el Miami, Fla Jos. P. Stephenson, | Next Sailing: Local Agent, 205 Sept. 28 th St. 8.W. Baltimore & Carelina S, 5. Co., Balto., 0 Charleston, S. and SUVA. AUCKLAND. SYDNEY The Well Equipped Royal Mail mees, ERICA i Str. Charles Macalester d., C.; ue. “NIAGARA™ (20,000 tons)....Oct. “MAKURA" (13,500 tons) ...Nov. ail from Vaneouer, B. C. Yor fares, ote., apply Can. Pac, Railway, or 1419 New York ave.. Washibgton. | Oanadian_Australasian Life, Winch Building, 741 Hastings St., West, Vancouver, B. C. WEST INDIES CRUISE. From New York—January 8 S.S. RELIANCE BROAD decks, open air swimming pool, Srmnasium, verandsh cafe. spacious public [ ‘rooms and staterooms specially ventilated for tropical service— with every cruise comfort, the beautiful triple-screw liner Reuiance sails ona 25-daycruisetoWest Indies, under experi- enced United American Lines management. 25 Days of ; W $250 up Dec. 2 Jan Piymouth Wed., Oct. 3 (Sailing 11:30 -Oct. 24, Nov. 14, Dec, New York—Havre—Paris Popular priced. one-class _shi Chicago. ......Oct. 11, Nov. Do Rochambeau. . Oct. 18, Nov. 24, Jai je... Oct. 20, Dec. 1, Dec. ..Nov: 7, Dec, 11, Jan. New York—Vigo Roussillon. Oct. 9. Nov. 20, Jan. La Bourdonmais -Oct. 30, Dec. Now York Daylight Saving Time Local Erench Line Agents or Company's Cffice 1406 New York Ave. N.W. FRENGH The Giant Express “PARIS' AM.) Sept. 29 17 (Spain)—Bordeaux 1 n ITINERARY Havane Kingston, Colpn, Curacos, LaGuayra. | Poceof Spatn, Barbados, Fort deFrance. Nasan | Write for the Weat Indies Cruise booklet and full information. UNITED AMERICAN LINES (Harriman Line) 39 Broadway, New York ©Or loca) seeamship agents BERYDRY ' Vacation Tours, $83 And Up—Including All Expenses ANl the attractions of a delightful yachting cruise to a Quaint Foreign Land All Sports—Modern Hotels—No Passports S. S. “FORT VICTORIA™ S. S. “FORT ST. GEORGE” Sailings Wednesdays and Saturdays Send for Special Tours Booklet FURNESS BERMUDA LINE Y., or any Tourist Agt. Resumption of First Cabin Service ork- 5. MU fannover Seydlitz.... 5 local steamship agent UERICA ¥ and Barbados Rio de Janeiro Montevideo—Buenos Aires Calling Northbound at Santos and Trinidad. Vestris, Oct. 6 Vasari, Nov. Vandyck, Oct. 20 Vauban, No Large, comfortable ships containing every eppointment of a modern hotel, low rates, Iiberal stop-overs, unexcelled service. Spe- cial Tours to West Indies and round South America arranged. For Rates, Illustrated Literature, ¢te. apply company’e offes, 42 Broad- way, N. Y. or any Steamakip or Tour- ist Agent or R. M. Hicks, 1208 F st. n.w., General District Agent. LAMPORT & HOLT, LTD. By the famous “ROTTERDAN' of world-wide_ reputation le: ing New York Feb. 6, 1924, undgr the personal management of the Holland America Line. 65 days of delightful diversion. ITINERARY includes Madeira, Portugal, Spain, Algiers, Tunis, Greece, Constantinople, _ the Holy Land_snd Egypt, Italy and the Riviere. fully planned Shore Excursions, Stop- over in Europo. Cruise limited to 500 guests Tliurirated fulder on roguert 21-24 State St., . Y. or Local Agents 1416 Peari St., near State St., N. Y., Palestine & Egypt HOLLAND AMERICA LINE Next Winter EDITERRANEAN A Grand Cruise January 19 to March 26, 1924 The eyes of the world are centered these days on the Mediterranean. This is an opportunity beyond compare to see the historic wonderlands of the “Sea of the Ancients”, traveling with leisure and in the utmost. comfort on the most luxurious, most replete, and largest steamer sailing to the Mediterranean next season. An abounding itinerary €mbracing all points worth while— with a long stay in Egypt. Stopover privileges in Europe, with return by Majestic, Olympic, Homeric, etc. THOS. COOK @ SON 245 Broadway NEW YORK or Local Steamship Agents

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