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[ 5'1‘1-_‘AM5H'1PS. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JULY 6, 1930—PART TWO RESORTS. COSTE PRIMES PLANE FOR ATLANTIC FLIGHT RECORD SOUTHEAST BUSINESS FRENCH SCIENTIST SAYS NONE DEAF Patients Demonstrate Hear- ing After Treatment at Milwaukee Meeting. @pecial Dispatch to The Star. MILWAUKEE, July 5 (NANA).— Dr. Marcel Vignedion of New York Uni- versity does not belleve there is any- body who is totally deaf. “I have not found such a case in the 30 years in which I have studied more than 4,000 cases of deafness,” he said while here to demonstrate how he opens ears to the Association to Promote the ‘Teaching of Speech to the Deaf, now in_convention. Prof. Vigneron asked for subjects who were rated as absolutely without ability to hear sound or voice. Local deaf schools produced the subjects. The French scientist, formerly of the Sor- bonne, Paris, then showed a highly skeptical audience how he could make every one of the deaf persons hear pure tones from tuning forks and, after a few minutes of tone massaging, as he called it, make them hear the vowels 2. e and u spoken by the human voice. He had never seen the subjects before. Dr. Vigneron made no claim to being | able to magically restore hearing. He did assert, however, his belief that all persons dubbed totally deaf could de- velop some degree of hearing of either voice or music by continued stimula- tion of the auditory muscles through sound massage. Ears Need Exercise. “Sound is to the ear what exercise 4s to the muscles,” he said. “When deafness begins from any cause people stop using their ears. They should use them more.” Dr. Vigneron said that no costly ap- paratus was necessary, but that patients could devise simple methods, such as he used in the laboratory, to stimulate the long unused or neglected parts of the ear to revive circulation of the blood and restore some degree of hearing. The children with whom Dr. Vigneron demonstrated here belonged to all classes of deafness. Some had become deaf from spinal meningitis, scarlet fever, falls, and some were congenitally deaf, In no case was the professor un- sble to get sound through to the brain. Usually it took but two or three min- ‘utes for the first pure tones. There was a tense scene at the first demonstration, with hundreds of skep- tics watching. Calmly the professor struck his tuning forks, held behind the subjects’ heads. Th had been instructed to raise their hands if they heard sound. Soon hands began to Pop up and a broad smile covered the face of Little Peggy, hearing her first sound. Her green hair ribbon bobbed violently as she nodded yes. Dr. Vigneron then struck forks of different tones until he increased the | range from 85 vibrations per second to 912. Then he introduced overtones from sounding boxes and tapped on hollow forms. He explained that it sometimes took just one specific tone, which had to be discovered by experi- ment, to convey the first stimulation to the long dead ear. Quickly the other tones penetrated. o Stimulation Brought Results. ‘The professor told of cases in which he had been able to make a subject un- derstand and repeat 15 words after se eral hours of stimulation. teacher in Milwaukee had her ears opened by Prof. Vigneron one day and awoke the next day able to hear a typewriter for the first time in many years. The professor has devoted most of his life to sound study, except for four years in the World War in which he was wounded five times and won the Croix de Guerre. His demonstrations here caused a storm of phone calls from deaf persons asking that he treat them. He saw many. The State Teachers'| College gave him their gymnasium one morning in which to demonstrate. Criti- cism and cries of fraud were also raised from some doctors and the deaf lajety ‘who read about his experiments in the newspapers. But as H. M. McManaway, Staunton, Va., national president of the Associa- tion to Promote the Teaching of Speech to the Deaf, said: “We have seen what he did. We can- %ot deny that. We are open minded. We want especially to see what can be accomplished in a permanent way after | prolenged treatment.” TWO DIE IN CRASH OF THREE BALLOONS Seevral Injured in Mishap During | Cruise Celebrating Rhine- land’s Liberation. By the Associated Press. COLOGNE, Germany, July 5.—Two persons were killed and several injured | today when three balloons which were | participating in a cruise of German air- craft celebrating the liberation of the Rhineland were forced to earth by a storm. One pilot and one passenger were killed. The injured were all pas- sengers. ‘Two of the balloons swooped ‘down | into the village streets at Poll and En- sen, and the third on a main highway | near Cologne. | At Poll the basket of one balloon | crashed through the roof of a barn so violently that a farmer shouted “The Zeppelin has fallen!” Emerging from his house he found the pilot and passengers strewn upon the roof. who later died. | Many balloons and airplanes, among | them the famous Junkers plane D-2000, took part in the cruise. MAY REROUTE TOURISTS Paris Commission Is Troubled by St. Lazare Congestion. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. PARIS, July 5—The Gare St. La- gare will not much longer be the first glimpse of Paris for the majority of American tourists. Plans to alleviate the increasing congestion owing to the bottle neck and the growing suburban traffic are now being discussed by the city transport commission with the head of the state railways. They contem- plate using the St. Lazare solely for suburban trains, and the Gare de Mont- parnasse and Des Invalides, both on the left bank, for the arrival and de- parture of boat trains. (Copyright, 1030.) LISBON TO BUY WHEAT Purchase for Army Necessitated by Flour Shortage. LISBON, July 5 (#).—Owing to a shortage of flour the Government today authorized the purchase of 48,200,000 pounds of foreign wheat for the requirements of the army. The Portuguese wheat crop has been badly damaged by storms. Tornado Followed by Flood. BRAGANCA. Portugal, July 5 (#).— A tornado which struck this region last night left scores of villages and highways flooded. Two shepherds who scught refuge bencath a tree were killed by lightning. Bridges were washed @way, halting railway trafio, A deaf | It was one of the passengers || Their plane, Capt. Dieudonne Coste (right), famous French fiyer, and his mechanic, Maurice Bellonte, hope to take off soon from | Le Bourget Field, near Paris, on a transatlantic flight to New York. the Question Mark, is shown above. —Assoclated Press Photo. Naming of Group to in Secret Investigat ure, Opposed to Old English Customs. BY H. J. J, SARGINT. LONDON, July 5 (NANA)—It is an extraordinary thing that in London, the largest city in the world (though I| am subject to correction in regard to certain Chinese cities which may be more populous), there never has been heretofore a single woman detective. ‘The English spirit hitherto has never thought it consonant with its ideal of women to put them on secret police work. Now, suddenly, Scotland Yard realizes that there is an enormous field in which an intelligent woman in plain clothes can make herself useful in the | detection and prevention of crime, so London is to have a corps of woman detectives. Visitors to London are familiar with policewomen in uniform, those quaint and rather pathetic figures in clothes identical with those of the male Bobby, except for the skirt, and with the huge | and terrible ill-fitting boots. They may | be seen moving slowly and apparently painfully, though I have never asked one, in the Strand and in the neighbor- hood of Piccadilly. They do not seem to do very much except k"E an eye on the frail sister- hood which gleans a precarious liveli- hood in the West End of London. Every |now and then they arrest & man, | usually one of those fellows who push a fruit barrow close up by the sidewalk and get into the way of the traffic. It} is a terrible disgrace for a London | costermonger to be arrested by a woman | Bobby and there is generally some sort | of a protest in court afterward. Suspects Lighter Sentence. Although nothing s ever offcially admitted, I believe that when the mag- istrate comes to apportion out punish- ment, either in the way of days in jail or a fine, a certain discount is allowe to the prisoner as a soothing salve to his feelings after he has been run in by a blue-skirted policeman. When the police have wanted to employ women in the past on detective or near-detective work, they usually| called in the assistance of the wife of a constable. This is done quite fre- quently in ‘cases of fortune tellers, whase activities are very widespread in London and who make a lot of money out of credulous people, mostly women. A policeman’s hard-boiled wife, ade- quately disguised as a credulous woman, will go to one of these clairvoyants, and, hn\'mfl paid the necessary fee, will be told that her future is the rosiest possi- ble one and that she will shortly be married to a tall and handsome man with blue eves, the r clairvoyant not knowing that her patron is already married to a stout and possibly not | repulsive man with a blue coat. A | summons is thereupon issued and the unfortunate fortune teller, who cer: tainly has been unable to look into her own near future, is fined $25 or $50. The new idea of woman detectives is quite on a different basis. These women will be exactly on the same level as the men detectives and no doubt will be eligible for promotion like their men TWO Transatlantc THRILLS ALL-EXPENSETOURS 5 Days—$ 76 8 Days—§ 94 9 Days—$100 12 Days—$118 Including and hotel Py o e by By sailing oa Wednesday, the trip is made in true “Dutch™ Style—on the “Veendam®' — just chartered from the Transatlantic service of the Holland- America Line. If return is arranged oo the *‘Ber- muda,” there's another Transatlantic thrill coming with a jolly British crew and all the niceties of ““Furness' servics. In Bermuds, bathing, sailing, bike riding, teas, dances, tennis, sightsceing and many other pastimes in the cool mid-ocean atmosphere. Bermuda's aves- age summer temperature is only 77¢ Pler 95 (et 5th St) and go dirset to deck ot n!m-l‘u-u-giulch-mw' FURNIKSS Dermuda Lne Whitehall St. (where Broadway bagins ) 565 Fifth Ave., New York or any Authorised Agens 'LONDON SURRENDERS TRADITION AGAINST WOMEN DETECTIVES | clothes police are told off to investigate | Assist Scotland Yard ion Is Novel Meas- colleagues. They will do some of the work which has hitherto been carried out by men without any very great suc- cess. I will give you an instance or two. Must Visit Night Clubs. As in every other city which has a wealthy section, night -clubs flourish here. "These are ephemeral things. A man will hire a fairly large underground | | room with a ground-floor entrance and | will run the premises as a club, selling drinks at etxortionate prices during rohibited hours and attracting all orts of undersirable people. Plain these places and they get themselves taken in as members. After securing all the evidence they require they either have the place raided or else they pro- ceed by a summons served on the pro- | prietor. Night club proprietors, however, are | not altogether fools and they can detect a plain clothes officer as easily as the next man. There is a tradition in Eng- land, as in New York, that a detetcive can be tald by the size of his feet, but even if that is a cruel libel—and I do not know that it is—it is very often possible to recognize & plain clothes policeman by other signs. He is usually a well fed, well drilled, clean-cut sort of fellow. “You can tell him by the set | | of his shoulders, which he can't help | holding straight,” to borrow a line from | Kipling. After such a man is seen to enter the club or asks to be admitted as a member, the word goes around at once and drinks are put away ‘That is where women are going to be useful to the police. Women's shoul- | ders are very rarely drilled and tne | type of woman who is being taken into the force as a detective will he rather ifferent from the ordinary police type. e will be rather more educated and | will be able to go anywhere without at- tracting attention to herself. Will Study Women's Crimes. Other duties which may be assigned to the woman detectives are those re- lating to offenses by women, such as shoplifting, trafiicking in, dangerous | drugs_and the checking of Women who TOURS. Pt ol Jan. 31, $600-81500 By&lo!atill newS. S, “LAURENTIC,” 19,000 tons; Madeira, Canary Islands, ?rum (Granada), Gibraltar, Algiers, Ealtat, At.dhel;\ Smbim lzndnys in | Zypt ane 'alest ; Italy, Rivie | Cha&ourg Liverpool'. New York.n‘ E Ober's S5, ourist Apeney. 1420 W St., N, Frank ¢ buding. New Vork: Crgy Ride the PLEASURE FLEET to VACATION-LAND Plan to visit the sparkling Great Lakes play-ground area on your wvacation! You'll enjoy every sport and recreation here. Luxurious D & C steamers to serve you . . . largest and finest on inland seas. Concert, dance orchestras, a far- famed cuisine, big comfortable at rate-and-half for R. T. Lv. Buffalo 6 p.m. (E.T.) Lv. Detroit 1:30 (Tue., Thur., Sat.) r. Mackinac lsland 9:15 a.m. Ar. Chicago g day 9. m. DETROIT & CLEVELAND NAVIGATION COMPANY STEAMSHIPS, act as go-betweens among thieves and recelvers of stolen goods. It is said that eight women have already been chosen. They will be under the control of Miss Dorothy Peto, a well connected woman of good family, many of whose relatives have already rendered good service to the state. There are Petos in the diplomatic service and in Parliament and the name is a highly respected one in Eng- land. Miss Peto, in addition to con- trolling her eight detective women, is also in charge of the women in blue who perambulate the Strand and Pic; cadilly. No sort of information is being hand- | ed out as yet from Scotland Yard, the London police headquarters, about their secret eight. All we know is that Miss Peto, a very determined-looking woman, has been apopinted to co- ordinate the new semice under the commissioner, n. Lord Byng, and neither the names nor the exact duties of the eight have yet been divulged. I spoke to an official in Scotland vard on this mater and was very po- litely but very firmly told that no - formation could be given out. ‘The new experiment will be watched with interest and I am quite certain that the first arrest, however dull in its details, brought off by one of the secret eight will receive considerable at- tention. GERMANS TO OBSERVE DATE OF CATHEDRAL 900th Anniversary of Historic Speyer Structure to Follow French Evacuation. By the Associated Press. SPEYER, Germany, July 5.—Follow- ing shortly upon the evacuation by the occupying” French forces, this eity will celebrate July 12-14 the 900th anni- versary of its famous cathedral, which was founded by Emperor Conrad II in 1030. Sunday, July 13, will be observed with a religious procession through the streets, followed by a national celebra- tion in front of the cathedral, with a serenade and illumination of the sacred edifice in the evening. Pope Pius XI will send & special le- gate to the celcbration, and has also commissioned the Munich sculptor, Au- gust Weckbecker, to make a Madonna for the cathedral. It will replace one destroyed in_the Middle Age 4 TOUR! EUROP By private motor. &mall party tour of six countries sailing Aug. 101} Fst SELLECK New York $202 train parties leave every . July and Aug. Recreation radio,'movies, bathrooms, i-Pullman’ trains, * Send fof booklet of Club Tours to Pa- National Parks. Rocky MLs. EN TOURS. INC. ve. New York. 3351 Fifth Avenue Yellowstone, 11 Days, All Expenses SPECIAL > Sund; car, d e luxe al illustrated cific Coas ST.ICNACE » staterooms, radios=—and unusually low fares! Tickets from any authorized tourist agency. Tourist autos carried Ar. Detroit 9 a. m. _STEAMSHIPS, BERMUDA s. 5. Pan America thereafter. From Bermuda July 12-19- stopping at Bermuda sail from New and every two weeks thereafter. From vy ulingsfol (21,000 tons) from New York July 15-22-31 and every Thursday 26 and every Monday thereafter. Regular South American Liners York July 11 Bermuda July 14 and eveny two weeks thereafter. 40 hour service— Round-trip, $70 and up—Fastest and Steadiest Ships. NASSAU « HAVANA 12-day all-expe cruises . $140 and up ‘The ship your hotel. 2 days in Nassau—2% daysin ‘Havana — 2 days in Miaini and two sight-seeing trips in Havana. Fortnightly service from New York. NASSAU 12-day ali-expense t our . $125 @nd up—6 days at Royal Victoria Hotel, Nassau (American plan) and steamer round-trip between New York and Nassau. SOUTH AMERICA Fortnightly from New York to Bermuda, Rio de Janeiro, Montevideo and Buenos Aires. Cool, Santos, airy, outside, amidship rooms mostly with beds. Excellent cuisine and service. Special low all-expense tourist cabin tours, Sailing from New York, July u MLUNSON sTE 67 Wall tocal N tourist agent or AfliHIP LINES ew Ye TWO BOYS CONQUER HAZARDOUS RAPIDS Canadiaris Accomplish Feat Considered Impossible by Accident. By the Assoclated Press. CORNWALL, Ontario, July 5—Two Montreal youths whose light ecanoce drifted by accldent into the hazardous Longue Sault Rapid of the St. Lawrence River yesterdgy came through alive and were recovering today from exhaustion. ‘The shooting of the rapilds has been regarded as an impossibility by exe perienced boatmen. Jack Walker and Willlam Savage were traveling from Ottawa to Montreal in thelr 16-foot canoe, and missed the entrance to the Cornwall Canal, which would have carried them around the rapids. uddenly they found themselves drawn into the “Big Sault,” their frail canoe buffeted by five-foot waves, acraping barely hidden rocks, and shoot- ing downstream, entirely out of control, &t express train speed. After 10 minutes they found them- selves in the quieter waters of Robin- sons Bay. The canoe was partly filled with water, and Walker leaped over- to swim to shore. Fighting swift currents, he reached the bank and | fainted. Savage stayed in the canoe as it drifted on into Murphys Rapids, an- other rough streteh. Two campers saw him and set out in a leaky rowhoat to rescue him. An oarlock broke, but they | reached him, lifted him exhausted from the canoe, and got him to shore, TEACHERS OPPOSE LABOR PARTY MOVE American Federation Meeting Turns Down Resolution Offered by Local Group. By the Assoclated Prei MEMPHIS, Tenn, July 8.—The| American Federation of Teachers, affil- lated with the American Federation of Labor, has rejected a resolution advo- cating the formation of a Labor p'lrly‘ distinct from the major political or- ganizations. ‘The resolution was offered by the| Brookwood, N. Y., Local of the Teach- | ers’ Federation. In resolutions submitted on the last day of the federation convention here, the legislative committee advocated un- | restricted selection of text books, the| elimination of high school commence- | ment programs on the ground they made the diploma more of an objective than | studies, and Government aid in fighting {lliteracy in backward sections. RAILWAY CLERKS’ BANK REOPENS DOORS AGAIN | Is Now a Branch of Central Trust Co., One of Cincinnati's Largest Btate Institutions. By the Assoclated Pre CINCINNATI, Ohio, July 5—The Brotherhood of Railway Clerks’ National Bank, closed by its directors a week | ago following & run of depositors, was | reopened today as a branch of the Central Trust Co. There were some withdrawals, it was said, but these were | more than offset by a large number of deposits in the first hour of business. ‘The Central Trust Co. is one of Cin- cinnati's largest State banks. Its last published statement reported resources of 844.741,000. STEAMSHIPS. TOURS $58 UP v Reduced fares south; cool sum- mer cruise, 2100 miles round trip, Miami, $70, Jacksonville $4¢. oAl fares include i and regular berth on ship. _Sailings from Pier 3, Pratt St., foot of Gay, lmore. Low auto rates. MERCHANTS & MINERS TRANS. CO. 1338 H St., N.W. SUNDAY NIGHT.- Leave Balto. Sunday 5 P.M.; two days Boston; due back 7 A.M. following S unda; MERCHANTS & MINERS TNOW COST T EUROPEI Now in effect . . ‘whether you select an Empress, Duchess, decided saving in First Class fares on great white express Empresses . . . down the St. Lawrence Seaway. From July 16th . . . greatly reduced fares for Cabin Class to Europe . ... also for Tourist Third round trips. And, Ships.. . sailing almost daily from Montreal and Quebec ... the same Canadian Pacific standard of service is maintained throughout. See your local agent at once or apply to C. E. Phelps, General Agent' 14th St. at New York Ave. N.W., Washington, D. C, CARRY CANADIAN PACIFIC EXPRESS TRAVELLER'S CHEQUES THEIR JOB IS TO DRY EW YORK Andrew McCampbell (left), who has been chasing moonshiners and boot- leggers since 1907, has taken over the job of drying up New York City. He is the new prohibition adminis! - 2tor for Southern New York. He is shown talking with his assistant, James J. D« 10ovan, —Associated Press Photo, AUSTRALIAN MINE FRAUD IS CHARGED Important Political Figures! Involved in Sale of Prop- erty to State. By the Associated Press. BRISBANE, Queensland, July 5.—Im- portant Australian political figures to- day were faced with grave charges growing out of sale of the Mugna mines to the state for £40,000 (about $200,- | 000). Involved in the scandal are Ernest G. Theodore, Labor premier of Queens- land and Treasurer of the Common- wealth, W. M. McCormack, another former premier of Queensland: Peter Goddard. mines manager at the Chil- lagoe mines, and Fred Reid, of the firm of Goddard & Reid. ‘The charges are preferred by the Brisbane Royal Commission, appointed by the Queensland government to in- quire into the circumstances of pur- chase of the mines. The commission found that the money shared between these parties was fradulently obtained. “The appoint- ment of Peter Louis Goddard,” the re- port continues, “was not made honestly and in the true interests of the states by those responsible.” MAYAB FLYING TO CUBA Ortiz Rubio's Private Secretary Is Plane Passenger. MEXICO CITY, July 5—The am- phibian airplane Mayab left Valbuena | Afr Field this morning for a non-stop flight to Havana. The principal pas- senger was Col. Eduardo Hernandea Chazaro, private secretary to President | Ortiz Rublo, who intends to spend sev- | eral days in the Cuban capital, STEAMSHIPS. e v s ITBATTERY PALE - A BOSTON THINK OF “YOU" ON THIS VACATION TRIP * * Comfort and luxury of trans- Atlantic ships on the new M. & M. ocean liners. Music, dancing, bridge, teas; deck games; hostesses. Know the thrill of cool salt air... the romance of nights. .. at sea. All-expenses included. Tours to White Mountains, Cape Cod, Nova Scotia, Florida, Niagara Falls, Lake Champlain, Ausable Chasm, Hudson River, Boston, New York, Montreal, Quebec and Havana. Free booklet. Send for illustrated booklet. WASHINGTONJ ER/TRA SAILING = Three sailings weekly this v summer, including each Sun- eesbovel ”*° BOSTON SHEES'S or one of the“M" D14IDvd NVIAVYNVYD; 8 |PRIVATE PLUNGE RIVALS ANCIENT POMPEII BATHS | Largest Swimming Pool in Country | Believed That Built for New York Estate. 1 By the Associated Press SOUTHHAMPTON, N. Y. July 5.—| A private swimming pool, rivaling the | famous ancient baths of Pompeli, has been completed at the country home of Col. and Mrs, H. H. Rodgers. It is belleved to be the largest private pool in the United States. ‘The building which houses the pool has a glass ceiling, supported by huge | pillars. Walls and celling are decorated to create the color of an outdoor sky. A hallway 150 feet long connects with the main house of the estate. John Russel Pope was the designer. | ONE GOLD STAR MOTHER ‘ CARRIED FROM VESSEL Mrs. Annie Raymond, 76, Stricken in France, | Returns From Visit to Son’s Grave. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 5.—Mrs. Annie T. Raymond, 176, of Providence, R. I., one of the 226 Gold Star mothers who | returned on the United States liner, | President Harding today from the | battlefields of France, was carried on a stretcher and taken to a hotel. She was stricken in France, a blood trans- | fusion being reorted to, to save her life. Panama Canal officlals will install a | transcanal ferry between La Boca and Arraijan. | RESORTS. ___BUENA VISTA SPRINGS, PA. *IN THE'ALPS OF AMERICA® Bienallsty BUENA VISTA SPRINGS, FRANKLIN COUNTY, PA. Open June 14 to Oct. 1. 500 Rooms. 100 Baths. 'Goif, Te 3 Da: | " it Joha' 3. Gifbons, Mgr. Phone Bide Ridge 5i24 P, PA. Coolest & most | beaut. spot in Del. | pv't bath. On R. Foley, Mgr. | REENLEIG Water Gap_ Every room Wolf Hollow Golf Course | MAINE: Wells Beach, Maine For Rent. _Furnished cottage, 4 rooms | modern. Fireplace. “Quiet resort on the | excellent _beac! endid fishing. | Hawkes, Shepherd 3159 | MASSACHUSETTS. MEN TO HOLD OUTING Athletic Events, Beauty Contests, Dancing and Games Feature Frolic July 23. Athletie events for children anc adults, beauty contests, dancing and games will feature the annual outing of the Boutheast Business Men's Asso- clation, to be held at Morgantown on the Potomac, Md., July 23 Members of the entertainment com- mittee, of which Frank Del Ver chairman and P. C. McGrati vice ¢ man, include Joseph J. Crouch, J. A. Richards, Kenne Smith, Alexander J. Beilin, A. J 1 gan, R. H. Krohling and Sam Thomp- son, William McKinley Poole 1 chioi - man of the publieity commitiee, Imports of furs and fur manuia-- tures into this country last year totaled $122,528,580. could find anything better than these Adirondacks.” “Not as good, if you ask ™€ People are talking that way about the Adirondacks. They are find- ing that right here, near home, Nature has laid out a most wonderful playland. Lakes, mountatns, rivers...all the sports ...any number of pleasant friends, or none if you prefer being alone...the ideal vacation is the D & H vacation. For free illustrated book write or call Delaware & Hudson R. R. Corp, DELAWARE & HUDSON D& H Trainsleave Grand Central Terminal, N.Y.C. SARATOGA SPRINGS RONDACKS . POWERS, Generaj Passenger Ag:. Delawsre & Hudson Railread Corp., Albany. N. Y Please send 30-page book, “'A Summer Paradise”’, describing ideal places. Enclosed 10c for postage ..Dept. © B SARANAC INN On Upper Saramac Lake, N. ¥. The outstanding Adirondack Summer resort and golfing center. Coyfages for reat fully furnished and cared for. Meais at hotel Certified milk on table from our accredited herd. Large sun parlor with Violet Ray glass. Mrs. Preece. with her stable of twenty well trained saddle horses Irving Boernstein of Washingion, D. C., with his celebrated or- chestra, Talking movies. Thomson and M Kinnon's brokerage office. Address: Harr ton Mill: Inn P. It’s cool . England. D. sonable rat ing — fishing. interest. States Grounds, Springfield. Come via Bear Mountai Trail. shaded modern highways — it's cool in New ous food at comfortable hotels — rea- and Berkshire Return by way of historic shore road or the famous Boston Post Road. in New England Free lllustrated gires infore mation on hos tels, A Take in places Visit Tercentenary exhibi see old time New England village at Eastern sociation, P, O, Box 1684 p Springtield; Mis. Western Massachusetts Gateway to New England ~_ BEDFORD SPRI BEDFORDSPRINGS ____BEDFORD SPRI HOTEL. Bedford Springs, Pa. On Horse-Shoe Trail, connecting with Lincoln Highway at ford Village—1%3 Bed- miles distant. Manager N MAR, PA. 4 Wonderful GOLF —18 Holes CHAMPIONSHIP TENNIS COURTS INDOOR TILE SWIMMING POOL PICTURESQUE MOUNTAIN TRAILS MEDICAL BATHS—The World-Famous BEDFORD MINERAL WATERS Accommodates £00. Two ballrooms | dancing. Beautiful estate of 3.00 acres ers . superior cuisine delightful rooms, attractive and varied smusements Dleasant a5 80 ciations and moderate rates Matgo Roads from Everywherg PEN MAR, PA. Spend Your Vacation at PEN All The Bon Aire good meals, hot and s to 'transients. BV pint THE LYNDO! All _conveniences. _ Rates Homelike. Garage. Booklet. Amusements Dancing Comfortable, T cold_ running Wi Booklet. ROUT’S HOTEL Personal supervisior TABON E. CROUT. IN THE BLUE RIDGE Only 78 Miles From Washington via Frederick and Thurmont Beautiful Scenery lary oms, wide porche 3 MRS. PEN-MAB, PENNA. reasonable. A. D. GEMMEL, Prop. MAR 2,000 Feet Altitude Excellent Meals Large, alry rooms with Mt. Forest Inn Sir g, yoer water. Qarage sccommodations. gmi chicken __dinners—half chicken served. MRS, BELLE STOLER. i Large, al Y a Park View Large, sy rooms oy ang P, lélhr“ nelgul :urecn;l nvlnlm;hlnl 2 E guests. Bath. MRS. C,XJ%DLIKA‘!'PPL. il "EDGEWOOD HOTEL Running water in reoms. Home sonking. Facing park. . C. . | TASIREP Mel 1 iradstonte