Evening Star Newspaper, June 1, 1930, Page 36

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o (Continued Prom Yesterday's Star.) “I wouldn't mind a bit,” he assured fer. “Tll wait all day if you want me to.” She gave him a rendezvous in Christ- church for the next afternoon, said he | ‘was not to expect her df she did not come by 4 o'clock, and held out her hand. He shook it warmly, and then, with sudden boldness, bent down and | kissed her on the wrist. She snatched her hand away, and | ran up the short garden path to her billet. But her annoyance—if she had | been annoyed—lasted only a few sec- onds for, as she opened the door and stood with the hall light shining down | oh her, she turned, and blew a Kkiss at him. It was not until he was nearly home that he suddenly realized he did not even know her name. There had been the letters “M. L.” on the attache case in which she carried her skates, and | he spent much of the evening inventing names to fit the initials. He told Madge he had been to the Westover, and felt both angry and pleased when she ac cused him of “picking up some girl.” He denied the accusation without much conviction and then gave himself away entirely by asking all sorts of questions about the W. A. A. C.’s at Christchurch. Before he went to sleep he had a long debate with himself as to whether he ‘would dare to kiss her wrist again when they met tomorrow. But on the next afternoon he waited m vain. They were to meet outside a bookshop, and he had read the title of every book in the window before half-past three. Between half-past three and four “e told himself 20 times that he saw her coming in the distance, and 20 times scoffed at himself for confusing her with such plain creatures as these 20 girls turned out to be when they came nearer. She had said he ‘was not to walt after 4 o'clock, but it was not until half-past that he gave up the business of telling himself that he would go unless she came before he counted up to 100. And all the way back to Alum Green he asked him- self whether she had mistaken the time or place of meeting, whether she had not been able to come, whether she had not wanted to come, having some one more interesting than he to_meet. Dr. Raleigh was busy all day with his hospital work and his regular prac- tise, which had been considerably en- larged by the shortage of local doctors. ‘Madge, too, went off early in the morning, and returned only after dark. So Jimmy spent most of the day potter- ing about alone. Part of the time was given up to riding up and down vari- ous side roads in Christchurch, for he could not be sure where her billet had been—the roads and houses were so alike, and he had not worried when he | had come with her. But he did not | succeed in meeting her, and ultimately | he gave it up as a bad job. For, in his | @glow, unimaginative sort of way he felt that he had no time to spare, that he | wanted to visit all the spots he knew well in the New Forest, and to’let them soak into his memory. He bumped along moorland paths on his motor- Nke and recalled the earlier “hunting” Madge and Dennis on ‘“push- blles" that were now relegated in their rustiness to the potting shed at the bottom of the garden. Although most of the flowerbeds and little patches of Jawn had been given up to the cultiva- tion of vegetables, the tennis lawn re- mained, but he had nobody to play ‘with, and he soon tired of hitting a ball against the side of the house to keep his eye in. When he could thrust out of his mind the thought that if he were now in Christchurch or at the Westover rink he might just possibly meet the girl whose initials were M. L., he was RESORTS. NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y. 'MODERNIZED—REMODELED Only hotel averlooking Falls aad Rapids. Baths, showers, rus. Bl Koo e 3200 ymmodations for 70{ LAWRENCE 3 WHITE, 1 UP!’EB SARANAC LAKE, N. Y. T SARANAC INN . On Upper Saranac Lake, N. The outstanding Adirondack summer resort nter. Cot . Irving Boernstein, of C., with his celebrated or- ‘movies. Thomson and Mc- rokerage office. Address: Harring um. President, Saranac Inn P. O., N. MAINE. HARMON HALL YORK HARBOR, MAINE exclusive Harmon Park, overlooking River. Near ocean and fi 70, Fitles from Bosion. nd. n e—private batbs. oating. Fine xolf lin Open June 21 to Sept. 15—Booklet | Pwmership agement W. J. SIMPSON. . ~_ASHEVILLE, N. C. CATCH NATURE’S SPRINGTIME MOOD IN THE LAND OF THE SKY JPREPARE for the most gor- geous time you've ever had —then come on up to Asheville. Mile-high mountains ablaze with bloom. Azalea, mountain laurel . . . and rhododendron so radiant that a three-day Rho- dodendron Festival will honor this princess of mountain blos- soms June 18, 19 and 20. Long ool Asheville days throb with every pleasure. Golf on five Ross courses . . . tenni archery, riding, swimming, hoat- ing—the capital of Summer z::;u. Paved highways wind ugh matchless scenie gran- deur. Biltmore House, mansion of the Vanderbilts, with its treasures of art and decorations, is now o to you. Breeze- swept n\(l!,:- (high above the mosquito lines) are brilliant with social life. Metropolitan botels with unsurpassed service and euisine. Ask your ticket agent about special rates and Pullman service via Southern Railway. Motor up, if you pre- fer, over perfect paved roads. 'or motor routings, hotel in- formation and 52-page booklet about Asheville and “The Land of the Sky,” write Dept. 5 Chamber of Commerce. RHODODENDRON FESTIVAL—JUNE 18-19-20 {Ashpv lich Noeth - B8 - Coroling | Poor young Master James! ‘dlnckns beaiitiful mountain tra perfectly happy to be strolling around the garden or the house, or tramping over the moorland and through Wil- man’s Wood, the fallen leaves of its | oaks turned crisp and brittle by frost. lrhm was only one companion he would really have liked—Dennis Stan- | hope. It would be fun to show Hawkins, or one or two other fellows | Bovington Camp. the ins and outs of his home and he enjoyed the short { walks that could be managed with his father or with Madge. But Dennis was | the only one who thought just as he did about the cottages, with their slow | blue smoke, the mysterious stiliness of | Wilman's Wood, the bubbling clearness | of the Highland stream. Words hadn't | been necessary between Dennis and him in the old days, and the idea that he ’ might come across Dennis out in France or Flanders gave him a great eagerness | to be out there, despite the uncertainties |of it “all. With Dennis somewhere around, it would be all right. CHAPTER IX. RS. TUCKER stood on the worn doorstep of her post office, and peered anxiously up and down the village street. Ever since “this dratted war,” as she called it, had begun, she was constantly faced with this problem of telegrams—she who, in the old days, as postmistress at Alum Green, had had young Joe Bennett and Silas Medley to deliver the letters, Medley's boy to bicycle round with any urgent |’ telegram, and that hoity-toity Ethel Sidney to help in the shop. And now the Sidney girl had “gone into muni- tions,” and put powder all over her face; young Joe Bennett was some- where in France; poor old Medley car- ried on as best he could as postman, with Mrs. Wade's daughter to help him; and Medley’s son had just joined up. So here Mrs. Tucker stood on her own doorstep, looking anxiously up and down the street for Bllly, her son, on his way back from school. There was frost in the air—one of the last frosts of the Winter, it would be—and a thin white mist softened the outlines of the cottages, the Bank House, and the row of elm trees that flanked the low, gray stone church. It helped to obscure the road, and Mrs. Tucker searched in vain for anybody whom she could send with the telegram to Dr. Raleigh’s house. How was it, she asked herself peevishly, that Billy always took so long to get back from school? And here she was left to do all the work alone! This dratted war! For the telegram was important. It came from Master James, and it said he was ordered overseas. Could his father, or Madge, come to Lyndhurst Road station, at 4:35, since his train would stop there on its journey to Southampton, and would thus give him a chance to say “good-by.” And that the telegram should come just when the telephone was out of order, so that she could only send it up by hand to the doctor’s house! He would be so upset. Why, it only seemed a year or two ago that he had got into such trouhle for tnll!ng into the village pond in his t Eton Jjacket, and now he was ordex‘ed over- RESORTS. VIRGINIA. from | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JUNE 1, seas. Well, well, Joe Bennett had lfld’ it would all be over in a few weeks, be- cause the Germans couldn't ngm any more, and he was a sergeant now, he ought to know—Mrs. Tucker hld a great respect for authority. It was, indeed, this respect which made her hesitate for so long, before she put on her bonnet, locked up the shop, pinned a notice on the door to say she would be back in half an hour, and, over- whelmed by the importance of her mis- sion and the sense that she was break- ing all the post office rules, set out along the road to deliver the telegram at Dr. Raleigh’s house. Emma, the cook-general, explained that the doctor was out on his rounds, and that Miss Madge was on her V. A. D. work in Bournemouth. “Washing dishes and such like ‘tis they gives 'er to do,” she explained indignantly to Mrs. Tucker, as to every- body else who would listen to her. “A downright shame, I calls it. 'Ow's it ‘elp them to win the war? That's what I want to know. And why don't they wash their own dishes? Miss Madge, indeed! Why, look at my own 'ands.” And she held out two her hands, chapped and wrinkled with rough work and washing up. With a due sense of her own im- portance, Mrs. Tucker explained the contents of the telegram. But her suc- cess did not last, for Emma was mas- terful and commanding, which she was not. “Now I wonder where the doctor will be,” mused Emma. “Up to old Mrs. Farwell's, I dare say. We must telephone and ask.” Mrs. Tucker pointed out that telephone was out of order. “And just when young Master James is going off to foreign parts!” said Emma reproachfully, as though Mrs, ‘Tucker had herself cut the wire with the one pair of garden shears she had in the ironmongery department of her shop. “Well, what shall us do about 1t?” Before they had decided how to find the doctor or his daughter, the former himself returned in his shabby Standard car. His face was disappointingly pas- sive while he read the telegram, for he had been expecting it from day to day, and hour to hour, “Do either of you know the exact time now?” he asked. Here Mrs. Tucker was able to shine, for she pulled at the long silver chain of which she was g0 proud, and produc- ed a nickeled watch from some secret hiding place inside her blouse, but, apparently, outside her corset. “Twenty-two minutes past four, sir,” she announced with an official note in her voice. “That'’s Greenwich time, sir. Told me by Bournemouth this very morning.” Dr. Raleigh did a rapid calculation in his head. He had meant to do a little work in his dispensary before set- ting out for the hospital in Bourne- mouth. But none of the medicine was really urgent. In most cases some patent preparation would do just as well, and in others his patients would forgive him when he explained in the morning. After all, he told himself, Jimmy was his only son, and Madge could not be at Lyndhurst Road to see him go. Every patient would be sorry if the son, whom they all liked so, could not say “good-by’s to the father, —_— the 1930—PART TWO. who was their doctor. If the car went well he might just manage it. But the car did not go well. Tts engine kept missing all the way up the long hill across the moor by Farthing Dyke. It was this beastly petrol they sold you nowadays, and the car had Teceived such rough treatment these i last few years. Jimmy himself had not done it much good during his leave— careering over to Bournemouth or Southampton at all hours of the day | or_night. When Dr. Raleigh reached the sta- tion the solitary porter told him the train had just left. Even its.smoke | was still visible, hanging in the quiet afternoon air. He stared at it in silence, until it could no longer be distinguished from the surrounding white mist. Then he went out of the little station and stood irresolutely by the side of the car. If he were to drive to Southampton he would certainly get there before the transport left for France. But perhaps Jimmy would be embarrassed if he were to turn up at the last moment like that. Besides, there would be | sentries and restrictions c. one sort | and another to deal with, and Dr. Raleigh was not of those men whose very indifference to authority causes it | to yield to their favor. He would give it up and go home again—but for the first time his study, which had so often | been a sanctuary, held out no attrac- tlon. When he was tired or lonely or depressed he had found comfort in the neat rows of books, the bound volumes of the British Medical Journal and the Lancet, and the homely disorder of | papers in his roll-top desk. But this was a new form of loneliness and de- pression, this feeling caused by the departure of Jimmy, and the com- panionship of books and furniture he knew well enough to love would not palliate it. Besides, he remembered with something of a shock, he had his work to do. He would be late for his appointment, and, above all, he hated unpunctuality. 'So he started | the car, and drove off thoughtfully to Bournemouth, with its hospital of wounded and shell-shocked patients. Suppose Jimmy were to come back | smashed un—smashed up like the man he had to operate on this afternoon. Or nervy, like the corporal who could not be in a room where the drawers or cupboards were shut, and who had tried to kill himself with a fork when the nurse had gone out of the ward. They were all s0 young, and so grateful, though God knew what they had to be grateful about. Here, at the oross-roads, he had often sat of an evening with Jimmy, on thelr way back from some long tramp in the forest. It was the highest point for miles round, and on & clear day you could see the white cliffs of the Isle of Wight away to the south, while to the west and north were miles of heathland with strips of pine woods crossing it here and there. To the east was the dark, dense Wilman's Wood, where Jimmy and Dennis Stanhope had built their log cabin when they were supposed to be Red Indians. _A little RESORTS. AsBL‘RY PARK, N. J. RESORTS. ENNSYL sxn‘or CLUB * in the Poconos” Por, mét:rml%un concerning our Club-Hotel General M. Packer. Vice Presde ger, Skytop, Pe DELAWARE WATER GAP, PA, REENLEIGH [ beaut. spot in Del. er Gap. Every room with pv'e bath. On Wit uotiow Geit cburse.” K- B Foley, Msr. ln the Mountains of Virginia Hillside Cottages, near Orkneg Sprine Siust o g esitul Shenandon| Valley, !urn west at Mt. l ads.” A unique resort. ondufill Seenery, call of the mountains,’ . g00d 100 pire air. WiIl Tejuvenase v of blayerolnds, swimming merican olan. T SRYCE, Ow 2 Owiier Jackson, Macani care given Rate. F'D.“Dundas, - Arnisions” Stavaton Va. BUENA VISTA SPRINGS, PA. *IN THE ALPS GWK‘A' ohn J. Gibbons, u.r EAGLES MERE PARK, PA. OCEAN VIEW, VA. Merrimac Newly decorated and refurnished. Large screened porches. Excellent home-cooked meals. Privale baths, running water in THE VIRGINIA BAY On the bay front. Modern, homelike, ex- cellent meals. Ratés reasonable. Mrs. Geo. W. Blount. Atlantic Hotel o geoss o Wide ySrandas. Copwenient bathing, fish: Ing aposting, etc. 30 vesrw personmel management. YERS. On ¢ Carpenter Coth'e fron Near Nansemond Hotel. Cool. com: ornbk rooms. No Correspondence_solicite: ORKNEY SPRINGS, VA. EAGLES MERE PARK, A Desiratie ¥ nished cottases for usekeepin; eoping with meals st netel, Write | Ediar R Kiess. The Forest fan: 1 BRADDOCK HEIGHTS, MD. RFST COTTAGF Large A Centrally Looated Al Conun!en Qui Excellent Meals Beruiital View" MRS. J. ALFRED SIMPSON Telephone Braddock 9-F-11 A Famous Sonluou Hotel city 500 Alwnyl Open Where You Will Love to Live While Playing the Summer Away. BEALH | HAVE! 7R | Ewmsm BEACHHAVEN.NJ. THE ISLAND RESORT The only resort on the Jesey cone that combines perfect bathing, el iy e moden hotel, and _gives sure relief from Hay Fever besides. Booklet. Five tennis courts. Opens June 20 Seachrist Mountain House CENTRALLY LOCATED—HOME-LIKE Hot and Cold Wner in All Bed Rooms Reasonable rates—write for booklet. SYLVIA Bright, cheerful rooms; large " porches; excellent MISS_LAMAR. “Phone Braddock 107 pens June 14 ' ORKNEY "SPRINGS HOTEL Orkney Springs, Vl. Accommodations for Largest and most popular teet: Vi Fun springs. golf, . horseback _ridin 11. nd_Mgr. reason- able ra ‘Bookiet E. 1, VI R sy i!autel Chalfonte OCEAN FR VIRGINIA BEACII, VA. Al Concrete Highways Siz Hours' Drive HOT AND COLD RUNNING WATER—PRIVATE BATHS Golt the year round. Horseback riding, Princess Anne Gountry Club, 18-hole course, ranked as the second best in the country Booklet. Mrs. Horace L. Gray, Prop. The Pocahontas Oven All Year. Special Rates Until J In the heart of all tractions. an front. Mody two' floors. Southern calsine horseback _ridine. ete. " Mi POCAHONTAS your home Mri. A B. WILLI WiLL Auu, er CenlnllJ located on water r 2 Every modern convenience. inia Leggett. The Newcastle Ocean front. at 13th st. New, cellent meals. Fine surf bathing. Teservations, etc. Write Geo, mer.. or phone 793, e IDfiE and piay with Now open to serve you: spacious verandas and all outside rooms; excellent cuisine and Hipreme surt bathing. “Write today for Fes: ervations. “We make folks happy. Seaside Cottage Oggan front st 17th t. Seafood and home ggolm' Hot and cold runmnn‘::nir.x omi ront. vir- modern, ex For rates M. Modlin, All outside Rooms. Private Baths. Golf | Privileges. SurfBathing. Deliclous South- ern Meals. Write for Interesting Booklet. Spottswood Arms Ocean front, bathing, private baths Special rates to June Mrs. Myrtle A Welborne. owner-mar. . For attractively furnished rooms, with or_without board. write— The Dolphin Cottage | NEW WAVERLEY HOTEL | JRST Ficels e days and holidays— Weekly & week-end rates. Mrs. C. O. Hottel, Prop. 1 ‘ad. Hts. 26-F-2. _______ OCEAN CITY, CITY MD VAYFLOWERE MOUNTAIN LAKE nlix. Mt. Lake Hotel Mt. Lake Park, Md. WHITTJELD | Gie ot the Best Eauipped Hotels in OCEAN ROVE—Fireproof, overlookins e R S X booklet. Capacity, 200, Phone 1991. __CHARLE HERMAN, Owner & P WlLDWOOD. N J. REA ON THE E!ACN FRONY paAN BEAUTIFUL WILDWOOD CREST tha, Hot and Cold Water in all Ga . "Bookict. Capacity 130. Senstble G. K. SINNAMON, Ow HOTEL DAVIS New. brick, near beach and amusemente. Private baihs. American and European an Booklet. gt AL INN 1 8a. to New Convention & 6 525 wkly. Own. Mat. J. Bush, ‘ KEYSTON o :'ku‘n’\i;; ouses. Parking free. . J. Grein _SPRING LAKE BEACH, N. J. MONMOUTH Open Al Year, [ SPRING LAKE BEACH N. J. | Directly facing the Se Sports and Social centre of the North Jersey Coast Golf (ouuu Ocean Bathing Boating Horseback Riding Polo Motoring Dancing afternoon and evening Sunday Concerts Open June 27th to Mid - September JOSEPH E. SMITH, JR. Manoger TELEPHONE SPRING LAKE 330 S . | HZE'COLUMBIA Come Play in the Surf A Gay and Fashlonable Resort . . . ©n the North Jersey Coast 75 Minut #rom New York . . . every sport that's invogue . . . ten Golf Courses, both Urban life and Charming Country. Summer Homes $500 fo $3,000 season rental. For Information ad- dress the City Clerk. | | [ Anchor at Cape May for the Summer Your cares and worries will be absorbed Ly the i he clean and level bathing beach — its sports and As Far South as Washington 20° Cooler For information write Paul G. | Directly on the Ocean Front ‘An American Plan Hotel yun very” Sodedrn " Apvointment. T & Gardens, Tennis. Go estra. SCOTT, Manager. May, the beach front, 3 & fa w-ek)y Rutning | on dally (with meals), water, private bat D suite. with bath; cuisine and serv- cxcelled: elev J.'W. Mecray & Bro. HOTEL ¢ AFAYET APE MAY.N.J. ON THE COOL BEACH FRONT Hot, and cold yunning water 1n all roome, s elevator: fireproof earage. Roap Map and Booklet R REHIP MANACEN further on, on the right, young, delicate firs had begun to hide the burnt black patch where the two boys, having failed to stamp out their camp fire properly, had set the whole place ablaze. How frightened they'd been when he had turned them out during the night and shown them the sky all red as a result of their carelessness, and had threaten- ed to tell the police about them! And how they'd thrilled to the adventure of helping to beat out the fire the next morning! Adventure—that was what they had wanted. And now they were both mixed up in the greatest adven- ture mankind had ever known. And nobody could tell where it was going to end. Something was going wrong with Stanhope—you could see that by Madge's behavior after she had read each of his few letters. The boy wasn't treating her falr, and Madge wouldn't talk. Perhaps if her mother were alive she might have done. But now, when she read one of Stanhope's letters, you could see she was puzzled and un- satisfied, although she wouldn't say what was wrong. And how was the adventure going to end for Jimmy? Not, please God, as it had ended for some of these maimed fellows in hospital. Dr. Raleigh left his car some way down the drive, and walked up the rhododendron avenue to the big red brick house that some wealthy Jew, without any desire for self-advertise- ment, but in a fit of genuine generosity, had turned into a hospital. “Could I speak to my daughter?” he asked the Sister before she took him to the operating theater. “I know I oughtn’t to disturb her when she’s on duty, but it's rather important.” Madge came up from the kitchens still wiping her hands on_her apron. RESORTS. _ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. \TLANTIC | CITY I'Il $saQOr t Fa Same Ownership as Ambassador Hotels —New York and Los Angeles Hotel New Belmont ON BOARDWALK AT OCEAN AVENUE 205 feel on Ocean front. Newest Beacn Front Hotel. bath and telephones, European plan. - ing_privileges from bedrooms. _Garage. Ocean End South Caroli EUROPEAN PLA Running water, private bath or Radio and telephone in Bathing direct th ree privil Most central location. Cap. SHOREHAM ia 'h & Steel Pler Nev\ly mnnsltrd lnd b!'nuulully rzlur» nished. . Capacity 250. All outside ajr rooms. *Running wat rivate Elevator 1o street ROPEAN PLAN RATES aily. Special Weekly Rates Prez blthlni nnvllelu from hotel. ooklet_on request. J. BICKAR, Owner Mgt. olton Manor ONE OF THE FINEST HOTELS 1 N ATLANTIC CITY | mmmnulm | REMEMBER Thig is the time for Your visit to e WILTSHIRE Virginia Ave., 300 feet from Steel Pler J. Biddle Ellls Managing Director. Write for rates Samuel Ellis Est MeG | rooms: running water: : looked! Her face was bronzed, and her blue eyes were as clear and frank as those of a sallor. She had masses of very wavy hair that would not stay under her cap. Only by the two little puzzled lines between her eyebrows could her father tell that she felt any- thing of the war. It was in her nature to do her job quietly, thoroughly and without question. Perhaps it was for- tunate that she took life so much as it came. In the little morning room, where visitors had to wait to see the patients, he told her that Jimmy had gone off to the front, and the silence with which she took it made him feel awkward and embarrassed. One never knew how a girl's mind worked. Madge was so frank and so straightiSrward, and yet, as he now realized, he did not really know what she thought about anything, ex- cept dogs and games, and, perhaps, scenery and rather elementary music. If only Jessie were still alive. “What bad luck on poor old 3. Madge said at length. “Going off ltke that! Still, I bet he's glad to go. He ought to do jolly well out there.” ‘Then, after another pause, she gotmg from the table with its ugly, red-pl cloth. “I suppose T'd better get back to work. I'll be ready any time after six. After all, even if the bus is getting old, ATLANTIC CITY. BN, P FLEETWDOD spectel Sor witn ‘Running wnnm.:l th ‘hower Eatirels Refurnished. Phon 5TW Binder. Prop. (formerly of Sirath Haven) GALEN HALL Atlantic City, N. J. NEW YORK AVENUE NEAR BEACH. Amer. & Europ. plan. Running water and priv. baths. All utside rooms. Bathing {rom Hotel. Near stations. Mr. and Mrs. George P. Proffati 917 NGEORGIA AVE.ATLCITY,N.J. Scrupulously clean; block to Convention Hall. White service; rooms with running water $3.00 up daily; 318 up weekly. American Plan. 21st_YEAR. EMERSON_CROUTHAMEL. THE WHITNEY ARMS (Formerly The Wheel Corner Mass. Ave. & Boarawalk. Atiantic City Completely renovated and newly furnished throughout, assuring comfort without ex- {ravagance’ New management offering in- troductors rate THE OPEN DOOR TO HOSPITALITY’ HOL &L= UlIGAN N.¥. Ay, or. Beach. Amer. I R. water. Elev. Exc. tabl 0d. StClarcHotel A homelike Hotel on Beautiful Pennsylvants L Cgmiort without extray CONTINENT l. Tennessee Ave. private bathe Eunning % clevator; white' service weekly 'rati rica) u plan. ¥, sauire to Faiioad station and bus fines. " Garage: WALSH M. DUNCA! Clcwion »q:nruc-wmg JUST or FOR YOUR COM e Y e el =y e SR BONIFACE. TABOR INN Ocean and Connecticut Ave. Ideal location: large, airy 28th & Owner Boardwalk at Montpelier Ave. hotel with moderate e European Pr nnn RunNIng water all rooms. CHAS. . flé"e!'m BB R SR FRANKLIN HOTEL A PLAN ONLY Atlantle City. Virginia Ave. *Eu n Plan. Famed Rates £2.50 B mn.- from Hotel Ownership_Mana, Milton Lindsay HOTEL APOLLO Afnie 2% h-tro; tian and Elevator. EARCH. Near Beach Restaurant On Bosrdwalk, facing ocenn. Central attractions up. Bpecial weekly. Fireproof G Don’t Make a Vacation Mistake"—Resorve Not | unnwrrmmmuflrll.lmAeoonmmmml FIREP OOF BUILD GS i urd "aonand an isformel hoter DeYIL 920 o .um-&?‘ X, } DIRECT OCEAN V!EWS -flx-n nv o s LE on Sust, 0 wp for 2, with prival $85 up for 2, with toilet and htl Single, 325 to $40. Why pay move? dalaneet Wondorkl gegle Manie bicinen. " INTRODUCTION OFFER ties] arkabis hote! 84, $4.50 or $8—1 Night & 3 Meals Ewropean—$2.50 up with bath I Mu-f:-‘:orv Barvice Bun’ Degks, "3 Larr Forches. Write for bool LAKE GEORGE, About the shores of beautiful Lake George you will find picturesque resort communities with every comfort and attraction. Sports without end —golf,tennis, fishing, boating, bathing upon andy beaches, horseback riding slong old Indian trails, motoring, mountain climbing. The people here are chiefly American families owning their own homes and estates. Many fa- mous landmarks remain from history-making days. klet containing full list of resorts, hotels, boarding and rooming houses, camp sites and auto map. LAKE GEORGE RESORTS ASSOCIATION Secretary’s Address 110 Canada Street NEW YORK How young and healthy and strong shu it's always better than the train. Cheero! See you later.” But as she was about to pass her father, she suddenly slipped her arms round him, and stood there for a time, with her face tucked into the hollow of his shoulder. “‘Oh, dear,” she muttered, more to RESORTS. PEN MAR, PA. # PEN hme)l than to him, “I suppose it's all And back™in her scullery again, she sald, with a vehemence which so startled Mary Pollard thlt she dropped a plate, “Damn this war' (Continued in Tomorrow's Star.) RESORTS o FEN MAN, PA. MAR NOW OPEN FOR THE SEASON IN THE BLUE RIDGE 2,000 Feet Altitude Only 75 Miles From Washington via Fudcnci and Thurmont CROUT’S HOTEL ,mom - Personal supervision of Mr. and Mrs. JASON E. CROUT. Write for rates & circ'r. Llrle airy rooms, Mt Forest Inn Liry o L0 thlclln dinners—half chicken .:r'fm, MRS. BELLE STOLER. Large, airy rooms. hot and cold running water in all on lawn for park. ' _Shuffieboas Pacsis. Dath. MAS. C. MIDDLEKAUFF. THE LYNDON raaos, FENNA. oA Yacation home away from let. A. D. Bool GENMEL Brop. BEDFORD SPRINGS, PA. All Amusements Dancing Beautiful Scenery Excellent Meals The Bon Aire Comfortable. larse de porches, g00d meals, hot and cold running water. Meals to transients. ~ Booklet. MRS EDGEWOOD HOTEL Running water in rooms. Home cooking Facing park. Meals to transients. C. H MILLER. HILL CREST MANOR You may expect comfortable beds. §0od home-cooked meals, courteous service and reasonable rates here. MRS. G. A. BYERS. BEDFORD SPRINGS, PA. BEDFORD SPRINGSHOTEL Bedford Springs, Pa. On Horse-Shoe Trail, with ford Village—1% 32 Miles of Crystal Water Amidst Majestic Moyntaing connecting Highway at Bed- miles distant. Lincoln Wonderful GOLF—18 Holes CHAMPIONSHIP TENNIS COURTS INDOOR TILE SWIMMING POOL PICTURESQUE MOUNTAIN TRAI MEDICAL BATHS—The World-Fam BEDFORD MINERAL WATERS OPENS JUNE 7 Reserval Now Apcommodates 800, Two dancing, Spend a cool Summer Va- cation in the PIKES PEAK REGION Live comfortably and econom- ically In beautiful Colorado Springs ormountain-encircled Manitou.TakethetripsupPikes Peak,CheyenneMountain and the Manitou Scenic Incline; to SouthPark,SevenFalls,Cripple Creek, Royal Gorge, San Isa- bel, Petrified Forest, Pueblo, Denver. All outdoor sports. [Tt cotorapo ASSOCIATION, Dept.! 53+ A .45 | 514sixteenth St., Denver, Colorado | Send me Colorado vacation information. Summer Round Crip Washington to Colorado, Good until Oc- tober S1. MASSACHUSETTS. ;D @, MASSACHUSETTS. F1 shermen take notice ESTERN MASSACHUSETTS—the fish- erman’s paradise—trout, bass, pickerel and many other kinds of sporty fish—state stocked streams and ponds. Delicious food—reasonable rates—250 West- ern Massachusetts Visit See the collection of French Indian war maps at the Lord Jefirey at Ambherst. Come via Bear Mountai Trail. and Berksh Return by way of historic shore road or the famous Boston Post Road. B A M 10 B WA D 20 SN 8 G Vs s, Western Massachusetts Gateway to New England RESORTS. RESORT! “Back in the Adirondacks, I see.” “Well, after all, one good vacation deserves amnother.” Typical. Outdoor lovers who have once discovered the D & H way to the ideal vacation invariably come back for more. Here they find everything Nature has to offer within a few hours’ train ride of New York. Every imagin- able sport and pastime in a crisp-cool mountain setting. Werite or call for free book, “A Summer Paradise”... 350 pages of helpful suggestions. pictures, maps,etc... Delaware & Hudson Railroad Corp. DELAWARE & HUDSON ®&N Traine LAKE GEORGE ve Gra Central Term » New York City M. J. POWERS, Gen'l Passenger Agent, SARATOGA SPRINGS Delaware & Hudson Railroad Corp., Aibany, N. Y. LAKE CHAMPLAIN ADIRONDACKS v Please send me your 350-page book “A Sum- mier Paradise.” Enclosed 10 cents for postage.

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