Evening Star Newspaper, February 13, 1929, Page 23

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! THE EVENING STAR, LAST WASHINGTON, D. €. ® WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1929. 23 CALL You have until midnight of February 28, 1929, to get one of these 5,000 HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATIONAL COURSES for only $2.98 postpaid! ACT NOW! Here’s What You Get— A Complete List of All the Titles in the 60-Volume Educational Course E have only 5,000 sets left of our 60-volume edition of the popular HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATIONAL COURSE. We are offering these 5000 sets, for quick sale, at the same price of $2.98, payment in full, until midnight of February 28, 1929. This means that your order must be postmarked on or before midnight of February 28th, if you are to get one of these HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATIONAL COURSES at the bargain price of $2.98, fully prepaid. Incidentally, by ordering on or before this date, you save $7. For when these 5,000 remaining sets are gone the contents of these 60 handy books will be issued in two large, expensively produced cloth-bound volumes, at $5.00 each, or $10.00 for the set. These two large volumes will contain every word that the smaller volumes now contain; not a thing will be omitted. We have decided to make the edition more SAVE sumptuous—and consequently more expensive-—because of the tremendous impression that these worth-while $7.00 books have made on the people clamoring for self- education. Meanwhile, we have 5,000 sets of the 60- volume edition—60 books in handy pocket size—to sell for $2.98 per set. We are giving the public a final chance to secure this material in this convenient form. When these 5,000 sets are gone, the 60-volume edition will be discontinued, and the. two large, more expensive vol- umes will take its place. This is positively vour last chance to secure this sensational HIGH SCHOOI. EDUCATIONAL COURSE for only TWO DOLLARS AND NINETY-EIGHT CENTS! Hurry! Don't hesitate! Sign and mail the order blank immediately. This price is making publishing history! Seize this opportunity NOW! Haste is imperative! Rush your order so that it will have a postmark before midnight of February 28, 1929. Pay for the books when they reach you, but by all means get that order blank in the mail! Remember— February 28th is the deadline. Get YOUR order mailed in time. Complete Description MAKE no mistake about what these books are. The set contains 60 different books, or 60 separate volumes. Each volume measures 31%x5 inches, and the books run to 64 pages each. The type is 8-point (the size used in the average daily newspaper), and it is clear and easy to read. The manner of setting these books enables us to put 15,000 words of text in each book, so you see the books are not sketchy, or mere “outlines.” Each text is complete in itself. The total number of pages in the set is 3,488; the total number of words exceeds 825,000! Is not this a bargain at $2.98? And we pay the post- age to your address! Many of the books have illustrations or diagrams to make the text more understandable. The books are uniformly bound in stiff, su::stantlal covers. You will be amazed and delighted with the worth of this set. 'I'EXTBOOKS are often dry and musty. This Educational Course will be found re- freshingly different from the usual educational volume. Every book has been written with the reader constantly in mind. Every page is clear and readily under- standable by the average person. No attempt is spared to provide books which every- one can use to learn without the aid of an instructor. Every book in this 60-volume set is self-teaching—that is the plan that underlies them all, to make no instructor necessary. Of course, the books are of no value un- less you read them with the determination to learn. There is no royal road to knowl- { edge just by letting your eyes run idly over the printed page! But if you have real ambition, then these are &s to books to help you get ahead—these are books which y may be of more genuine benefit to you than all four years of formal high school training. 4 Understand The simplicity of these books is truly amazing. You will be gratified to find them entirely lucid in every way. No subject is kept difficult—all are presented to you so that you can get the most out of them. Just reading these books is educative to an extent that you cannot realize unless you try the experiment! Furthermore, every volume is interesting. The type is of a size to make reading easy. The authors have been interested in their subjects, and this makes it certain that those subjects are presented in a delightfully fascinating manner. ‘What makes some textbooks difficult for the ordinary reader is that essential facts have been left out—such facts to be supplied by the teacher. In this Education- al Course every fact is inserted in the text. With attention and determination a thorough grasp can be had of the subjects represented ih this course (see the com- i plete list at right). It is not necessary to ask questions—every question has been fore= i seen and already answered by the writers who have made this set a marvel of clear- ‘ness and completeness. All of these questions, and hundreds of others, are understandably an- swered in this 60-volume EDUCATIONAL COURSE, totaling some 825,000 words of text—and the price of 60 books is only $2.98, payment in full. This price includes the postage to your address. At such an amazingly low cost, can you honestly afford to be without a set of books which promise to be so useful and valuable to you? (1) Who said: “Where ignorance is bliss, ’tis folly to be wise?” (2) What is meant by “squaring the circle?”” (3) What have the following names in common: Van Buren, Tyler, Polk, Fillmore, Pierce? (4) What are the four forms of Eng- lish Composition? (5) What is Psychology? (6) Who were Donatello, Cellini, Bologna, Rodin? (7) What is the Milky Way? (8) Who was Delilal famous speech begins: “Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your hat do the following mean: (a) “Sprechen sie Deutsch;” (b) * fan, 3" (c) “Habla usted 0l12” (11) How far does a falling body drop in the first second after starting from rest? (12) What does “ibid.” mean? (13) What was the Roman god of war? (14) What were the three orders of Greek architecture? (15) What chiefly caused the U. S. Civi f Answers Questions Like These 1 ’ CONSXDEF. for a moment the wide scope of these sixty books—think just how i comprehensive they are! There are 825,000 words in these sixty volumes. They include a wonderful variety of subjects, from history and economics and literature to mathematics, foreign language and thearts. Even commercial subjects, such as geography and typewriting are included. You get a substantial foundation in the arts, and an insight into the great world of science. Then there are the handy refer- ence volumes, the alphabetical dictionaries, which give you concise information just when you need it and exactly as you want it. Four foreign languages—the languages which most English-speaking people de- sire to learn—are given in this set. These foreign languages are self-teaching in these handy volumes. They may be readily grasped with the aid of these books. valuable information and useful knowledge. There are two volumes of questions and answers (quizzes) with which you may test your knowledge from time to time. There Is that excellent general treatise on “How to Study”—this enables the average person to study in such a way that he will get the most possible good out of his efforts. ‘You will find it invaluable to have at hand many of these books which you may not use at first. Though some of the subjects may seem to you apart from your pres- he requires them. That is what makes this course so thoroughly useful, and that is why sixty volumes were chosen as the ideal number of books for the set. In our modern civilization, with the miracles of modern printing, knowledge is within everyone’s reach. There is no longer any excuse for any individual to remain ar with the knowledge of your fellows. This 60-volume EDUCATIONAL COURSE will e a forward step in this direction. These sixty books will be worth far more than * $2.98 to you in achieving this much to be desired result. Mail that blank before it is too late! Everything you need is here—this series is compact . Variety of work alone is really worth the entire price of the set in ent interest, they will sooner or later come in handy. Everyone, today, should have in ignorance. Lack of knowledge is not tolerated. Today you must be progressively - HALDEMAN-JULIUS PUBLICATIONS - and complete in itself. This is a course crammed with Subjects ] the valuable hints it gives and in the manner in which it a representative library of reference to which he can turn in search of facts when alert—keep abreast of the times—and maintain a standard of education that is on a . Dept. F-78 . GIRARD, KANSAS IMPORTANT NOTE: These volumes are original, copyright works, a series and prepared especially for the series of which ilable only in this they are a part. These 60 books must be ordered as a set—the individual titles should not be ordered separately. ENGLISH (GRAMMAR) 1. Common Faults in Writing English. Containing Faults of Grammar, Miscella- neous Faults, Errors in the Use of Words and Index. 2. Spelling Self Taught. Containing General Principles, Capital and Hyphen, Word Groups (with helpful rules), Word Building and Changing, etc. 3. Grammar Self Taught. Containing the Parts of Speech, The Sentence, Pars- ing, etc. 4, Punctuation Self Taught. Contain- ing examples and rules for use of Period, Comma, Semi-colon, Colon, Interrogation Point, Exclamation Mark, Quotation Marks, Parentheses, Dash, etc.; with Ex- ercises for Drill. 5. 4,000 Words Often Mispronounced. Containing 4,000 words with correct pro— nunciation in easily understandable sym- bols. 6. How to Improve Your Conversation. Containing Fundamental Precepts, Vo- cabulary, Dramatic Effeet, Gesture and Gesticulation, Laughter, Dialect and Dia- logue, Etiquette in Conversation, etc. 7. How to Improve Your Vocabulary. Containing Single Words, Words in Com- bination, etc. 8. How to Write Letters for All Oc- casions. Containing the Rhetoric of the Letter, Friendly Letters, Love Letters, Social Letters, and Some Conventions of Letter Writing. 9. How to Prepare Manuscripts. Guide . for Writers on How to Submit Manu- scripts for Publicatioh. 10. How to Argue Logically. The Precepts and Art of Discussion. HISTORY 11. An Outline of United States His- tory. Containing American Beginnings, Founding of the Union, Expansion and Conflict, etc. 12, History of the American Revolu- tion, 13. History of the U. S. Civil War. 14. Lives of U. S. Presidents. Brief biographies with pen portraits. 15. Current Events: Debate on U. S. Dry Law. Clarence Darrow vs. Wayne B. Wheeler, LITERATURE (General) 16. Facts You Should Know About the Classics. Containing Classics of the An- cient World, Classics of the Middle Ages, Classics of the Modern Period. 17. One Hundred Best Books to Read. A reading guide. 18. The Enjoyment of Reading. Notes on the appreciation of literature. ' THE ARTS 19. Painting and Painters. Contain- ing.the Beginnings of Painting. Greek Painting, Roman Painting, Renaissance, Dutch Painters, etc. 20. Sculpture and Sculptors. Contain- ing the Beginnings of Sculpture, Italian Decadence, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries, etc. 21. Music and Musicians. Containing Music of the Ancients, Church Music, etc. 22. Dictionary of Musical Terms. 23. The Story of Architecture. Facts you should know about the evolution of buildings. LANGUAGES (Foreign) 24, Latin Self Taught. Complete with Introduction, Rules, Syntax, Vocabulary, etc, 25. French Self Taught. Complete with Introduction, Rules, Syntax, Vocabulary, etc. 26. Spanish Self Taught. Complete with Introduction, Rules, Syntax, Vocabulary, etc. 27. German Self Taught. Complete with Introduction, Rules, Syntax, Vocabulary, etc. BUSINESS (Commercial Subjects) 28, Outline of Economics (Wealth). Containing Machinery, Production, In- dustry, Exchange, Banks, Interest, Profits, Rent, Wages, Taxes, etc. 29. How Wall Street Works. How money is made in the buying and selling of stocks and bonds. 30. United States Commercial Geography. 31. A Handbook of Commercial Law. Containing Contracts, Mortgages, Real Estate, Insurance, etc. 32. How to Write Business Letters. Complete with samples. 33. Typewriting Self Taught. Ap- proved touch system, with exercises, dia- gram, etc. 34. How to Write Telegrams Prop- erly. SCIENCE 35. Chemistry for Beginners. Con- taining the Elements, Atomic Weights, Valency, Periodic Law, Formulae, Or- ganic and Inorganic Chemistry, etc. 36. Physics Self Taught. Containing Gravitation, Inertia, Force, Motion, Heat, Light, Sound, Electricity and Magnetism. 37. Astronomy for Beginners. Con- taining the Solar System, the Sun, the Planets, the Moon, Comets, Stars, etc. 38. Psychology for Beginners. Con- taining the Mind, Subconscious, Will, Per- ception, Memory, etc. ; 39. The Riddle of Human Behavior. 40. Evolution Made Plain. The facts ° about the evolution of the earth and life upon it. 41. Great Men of Science. 42. Facts You Should Know About Animal Life (Introduction to Zoology). Containing the Classification of the Ani- mal Kingdom. 43. Manual Training: Elements of Woodworking. MATHEMATICS 44, Elementary Plane Geometry Self Taught. Complete with theorems, prob- lems, diagrams, etc. 45. Curiosities of Mathematics. Con- taining Squaring the Circle, Pi, Trisection of an Angle, Compound Interest, Prime Number, etc. » 46. Arithmetic Self Taught (Part I). Containing Numeration and Notation, Ad- dition, Multiplication, Subtraction, Di- vision, Factoring and Cancellation. Frac- tions, Decimals, Percentage, Averages, Ratio and Proportion; with Exercises. 47. Arithmetic Self Taught (Part I). Containing Powers, Roots, Interest, Gain and Loss, Discounts, Weights and Meas- ures, Area, Volume, Practical Proportion; with Exercises. REFERENCE MANUALS 48. Familiar Quotations. Complete guide to famous quotations. 49. Popular , Shakespearean Quota- tions. All the famous lines. 50. A Dictionary of Classical Myth- ology. 51. A Dictionary of Biblical Allusions. 52. A Dictionary of Foreign Words and Phrases (in Frequent Use in English). 53. An International Dictionary of Authors. . 54. A Dictionary Names (Gazetteer). GENERAL HELPS 55. How to Get a Liberal Education. 56. The Secret of Self Development. 57. Revealing Comments on Human- ity and Life. 58. How to Study. Containing What to Study, Environment of Study, Tech- nique of Study, etc. QUIZZES (Tests) 59. 600 Questions and Answers.. What do you know ? 60. 400 Questions and Answers. Gen- eral information quizzes. of Geographical All 60 Books for $2.98 Until February 28, 1929 D YOU get 60 books for $2.98 as long as these 5000 remaining sets last and if your-order is mailed on or before midnight of Feb. 28, 1929! This is slightly less than five cents per book—can you imagine any book treating, in a text ¢f 15000 words (the total words in each of these books, on the average), a subject like Grammar or Economics or U. S. History that is not worth FIVE CENTS? This HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATIONAL COURSE, in this 60-volume handy edition, is a bargain of bargains. There is nothing like it anywhere. It is unique in the field of popular education . .. Think of all that this course can mean to you. The books are each 3)4x5 inches in size. They fit readily into a pocket, handbag or satchel. They take up very little room on a table or in a drawer. Being so compact, yet so comprehensive and readable, these books will be worth more to you than you can guess. You can carry sev- eral with you wherever you go, to utilize in your spare time. With a set of these books to choose from, you can make every odd moment count—make your new wasted minutes pay you dividends! You know that you could often get a lot of good from a book if you only had it handy when you need it! This handy edition solves that problem. Get a set today! . . . The authors of these sixty educational volumes were especially chosen to prepare these works so that the average person may readily assimilate their contents. In spite of the sensational low cost of these books, they have been written by authorities in their various fields. Some of the writers who have helped to make this HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATIONAL' COURSE POSSIBLE are: PROFESSOR CARROLL LANE FENTON, of the University of Cincinnati; JOHN COWPER POWYS, famous lecturer and critic; JOSEPH McCABE, world famous scholar and author of 180 books; LAWRENCE A. BARRETT, High School Instructor of Mathematics; JOHN S. GAMBS, High School Teacher; MAYNARD SHIPLEY, President of the Science League of America; LLOYD E. SMITH, former college English assistant; HEREWARD CARRINGTON, New York Scientist; J. GEO. FRED- ERICK, commercial expert; DR. ISAAC GOLDBERG. well known critic; MUR- RAY SHEEHAN, educator and novelist; LEO MARKUN, research student; NELSON ANTRIM CRAWFORD, well known writer; CLARENCE DARROW, famous lawyer, etc., etc. . . . Thus, it is certain that every one of these books is of outstanding excellence. As a reading course this set cannot be surpassed —for the price of $2.98 you get 825,000 words of text, nearly a million words! The general editorship has been under ‘the direction of E. HALDEMAN-JULIUS, famous for his campaigns of popular education and for providing good reading at a price within reach of every one’s pocketbook. 825,000 Words ) All $ 2 .98 of Text! £ . 3,488 Pages s or ;ffif' . GRAB THIS CHANCE! books is possible, has beeni‘possible, be- cause of mass production. - These books have bee%lbought by more than 250,000 people. e popularity-oftfiese books is irrefutable indication that they are fill- ing a widespread need. Indeed, the price is so low that many people get the set just to have the books handy for refer- ence. At such a price no one can afford to be without these books. In usual library form they would cost perhaps $25; in the new two-volume cloth edition they will tceo?tflsm—b‘;lt‘you cara geit tkas son to be the most efficient in the every- same material, word Ior gvord, in day activities of his work and of his con- pocket-sized volumes, for. $2.98 post- tact with others. When it is required paid! But remember—5000 sets are all that a person have a High School Edu- We have. You must not delay—Feb. 28th cation, it is meant that such a person IS the lost day! Grab this chance NOW! must be equipped with a substantial Amazing as it sounds. it is quite truc background of English, History, General that $2.98 is FULL and FINAL PA ) Literature, some Languages, Commercial ~ for all 60 of the books in this HIGE Subjects (Business and Economics), SCHOOL EDUCATIONAL COURSE. There Mathematics, Science and the Arts, it are no strings attached to this offer— is expected that such a person will have ~ $2.98 is all you pay. Think how exg:n- his intelligence alert and trained to en- Sive a High School education usually is in able him fo learn new things readily, to ~ comparison—here you get 60 books for no know where to look for facts not already ~ more than one average text book costs in his possession; in short, to be a man . in school. And you dispense with the in- or.a woman aware of those fundamentals - Structor altogether; you become your own which, form the basis of every education- = teacher, learning as you read. and of all culture. We &aay the postage to your address on Probably. you have often felt lack of this 60-volume set. The price of $2.98 in- knowledge you really ought to have at cludes all charges except the small C. O. {our command. Perhaps you did not get ~ D. fee (exactly seven cents), which goes he most out of your school days, or pos- to the U. S. postoffice. All packing and sibly you were obliged to leave school be- carriage charges are otherwise fully paid. fore you had completed your education. '~ “You can avoid any possible delay or in- Or your High*School training has slipped convenience (C. O. D. packages some- into the past, and you are “rusty” on - times move slower than regular parcel many subjects. Whatever the reason for . post, and if you are not home when the the lack, you feel that the void is there package is first delivered it may cause —and you want to fill in the gaps! This ou a little inconvenience) by remitting 60-volume HIGH SCHOOL EDUCA- 2.98 with your order. Satisfied custom- TIONAL COURSE is just the thing for ers everywhere guarantee the value.of you—it is comprehensive, easily under- this set of books. You are assured of standable, thoroughly reliable and au- satisfaction—when you see the books you thentic, and absolutely up to date. will be convinced that they are worth the ‘Whether you wish to study High School bargain price of $2.98. - Subjects for the first time, or whether =~ However, send no money with the order you merely wish to review your Hl%h unless you wish to., We shall be glad to School Education, you will find these 60 send the books C."O. D. if you prefer. books exactly what you need. Read the Just mail the blank and pay the postman list of titles carefully as listed at the on delivery. PROMPT SERVICE GUAR- left—and remember, all you rny for all ANTEED. 60 of these splendid books is two dollars All you have to do is see that your or- and ninety-eight cents! der is mailed on or before midnight of A word about this astonishingly low February 28, 1929, so you'll get one of the cost—the price of $2.98 for all 60 of these 5,000 remaining sets. YOU HAVE UNTIL MIDNIGHT OF FEBRUARY 28, 1929 TO GET YOUR ORDER IN THE MAIL 'The postmark will tell the story: All orders will be filled which are postmarked on or before midnight of February 28, 1929. NOW you can fill in those embarrassing gaps in your knowledge. Here, in 60 handy volumes which fit your pocket or handbag, you can get the essentials of the usual High School Education for only $2.98. This is positively all you pay—if you use the special order blank below be- fore our remaining 5,000 sets are gone— mail it before midnight of Feb. 28, 1929. .What do the words “A High School Education” mean? They mean a thor- ough grounding in those essentials of modern knowledge which enables a per- e e e e e e e e e e e e e S e e e S S e . e Mail This Blank Before February 28, 1529 Haldeman-Julius Publications, Dept. F-78, Girard, Kansas. ! i i Send me at once the 60-volume HIGH SCHOOL EDUCA- TIONAL COURSE. Unless my remittance (check, money order or cash) for $2.98 is enclosed herewith, I agree to pay the postman $2.98 (plus 7c C. O. D. fee, which goes to the post office) on delivery. It is understood that I am to make no | further payments whatever, and that you are to pay the postage : to my address. | | ] 1 13 I ] 1 1 4 Name'c.ooioiitacionme vane vale st AQAIOSS Sainivatn s orvr ki du GIbYE imnioh i o d b o i i st r b SRR G Sl ¢ B Ea G NOTE: No'C. O. D. orders can be sent to Canada or foreign countries. These must remit in advance by international postal money order or draft on any U. S. bank. F ] | I ] I 1 ] 1 ] 1 1 ] 1 1 i | | 1 i 1 i

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