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RES AMERICAN YOUR VACATION AT THE HENLOPEN -' T TR Rernd T ice ads, ORTS PLAN . HODERA.T! RATES—MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW Exceptional M and i Ocean Bathing, Fresh Water “a Qlodern Throu Write for Circular GRENOBLE HOTELS, INC., Operators BEDFORD SPRINGS, PA. c | 11 danci; IN THE BLUE RIDGE All Amusements Dancing i table, large The Bon Aire comiousne, e g0ood meals, hot and cold running water: Booklet. wi MRS Meals tc ‘transients. B. F. DIEHL. ROUT’S ‘HOTEL Personal supervision of Mr. JASON E. CROUT. Write for rates & circr. M DELAWARE _WATER GAP, PA. Spend Your Vacation at PEN MAR 2,000 Feet Altitude * Only 75 Miles From Washington via Frederick and Thurmont Beautiful Scenery Mt. Forest Inn Lurse; sir and modations. Special chicken served MRS. BI Park View Bedford Springs, Pa. . On Horse-Shoe Trail, connecting with Lincoln Highway at Bed- ford Village—1%4+ miles Wonderful GOLF —18 Holes CHAMPIONSHIP TENNIS COURTS INDOOR TILE SWIMMING POOL PICTURESQUE MOUNTAIN TRAILS MEDICAL BATHS—The World-Famous BEDFORD MINERAL WATERS Accommodates 500. Two ball rooms Beautiful estate of 3,000 acres. rs & superior cuisine, delightful room varied amusements. pleasant ing. o offers ‘associati ater. Garage accom! s e .r.‘tA. D.ouGE'MMEL Prop. guests. Bath. MRS. C. MIDDLI attractive and dinners—half ELLE STOLER. cold runn! distant. for Excellent Meals chicken Large, airy rooms, hot and ing water in all es overlooking for wn EKAUFP. EDGEWOOD HOTEL Running water in rooms. Facing park. ILLER. VIRGINIA. ¥y rooms, cold Home cooking. Meals to transients. C. H REENLEIGH gaotest & sg beaut. spot In Del. Water Gap Every room with pv't bath. On Wolf Hollow Golf Course. R_R. Foley. Mgr. BUENA VISTA SPRINGS, PA. BLUE RIDGE SUMMIT, PA. Furnished Cottages, large or small, at onterey Country Club. G0l course, swimming pool. " Cold nights. i ) Blevation 1.4 70 m. fro: ashington. Mr. O'Dunne (Ow BRADDOCK HEIGHTS, MD. The Braethorn Cottage Mrs. Clarence W. Rudy—Phone 124 Special chicken dinners on Sun- . Weekly & week-end rates Mrs. C. O. Hottel, Prop. Ph. Brad. Hts. 5. Bright. cheerful rooms; large " porches: excellent meals. MISS LAMAR. Phone Braddock 107 OCEAN CITY, MD. Atlanti 200 rooms, new. Ocean front. cl’!l"ld Dancing. Fresh d, Pasteurized milk o pure fltered wai xclusively. Ph. 138. HOTEL. 40 new reoms and baths Ocean front. Best service. Ballroom. o_Orchestra. Garage. Golf. _Tennis. COLONIAL HOTEL Boardwalk: mod 1al ra Golf. eTonis' Manasement. 110 July 18, ‘season. Spiinss. sust 5 —fine write M Beach. Va. Bryce's Hi rs. . B. -, or call Potomac In the Mountains of Virginia “;‘n"mgo“""' Va. Johnson. Beach 452, near “Orkne; beautiful Shenandoal at Mt. Jackson, Fi Wonderful scenery ? |late appearance. ch. s s<h: | of life. Artesian drinking Drive via Frede Further particula; ricl 3,000-f¢. On Top of the Blu PANORAMA HOTELS—COTTAGES Altitude dge in the Center of the SHENANDOAH NATIONAL PARK On the Lee Highway (U.8.211) Virginia's most scenic and accessi- : quiet, cool and ble mount, estiul. in reso A A D May be reached by auto or bus in hours. Two Wa e entrance Il Georgia 3732. cottages, ariety of outdoor sports: mil t of Luray distance phone Luray ington - y. Round rustic and averns. Long Py For literature write . PANORAMA, Luray, Va. VIRGINTA BEACH, /A. TBotel Chalfonte OCEAN FRONT VIRGINIA BEACH, VA. All Concrete Highways .‘ Siz Hours' Drive :flnlczxmth HOT AND COLD RUNNING nd_Sun_Parlor. WATER~PRIVATE BATHS THE KAY Slaihe Brintess Anha ounior SRt on boaramalk. Excelient g™ patning ||| 18:hole cou ke 85" the"second free "MRE M. KAVE. Frop. Ph. 117 best in the coyntey, ookiet. Mrs. Horace L. Gray, Prop. New and } | \ THE LANKFORD 'On Broadwalk: garage. M. B. Quillin, Prop. CHANDLER HOUSE Running water in rooms. Noted for meals. ‘Reasonadle. 0. M. & . W Chondier HOTEL STEPHEN DECATUR lin BT BUET e SHBLANC 2 Jethed i 1y e g i et LA & ON~ BOARDW AL ) . Southern eulsine. favorite food, and to open it by tugging BREAKERS °F FoAROWAIE.; orseback riding, ete. Mal a string. After that, letters Were at- §010 zunning water and private bath. brone 3 "“’"""v Gl LRT tached to the bags, which were all of 76_C. H. sons. Prop. rs. A. B. WILLL the same color. After several months THE BELMONT O5oar,, onte ooms; the fish knew which bags contained ooms, Terms Reasonal T0OmYy, RTHEARNE. Comfortable and Home- THE DENNIS like. Hot and col me- ning water Terms reasonable Bathing free St season MRS, B3 DENNIS. THE DEL-MAR "= Private baths, MRS. S. 1. CAREY. THE HASTINGSHOTEL &%, Eadtprivaie et M. GhaS TUBLIN® NEW MT. VERNON b SNUG HARBOR and THE HAVEN Eighteenth Street and Oct t VIRGINIA BEACH, VA, " ' Now under same management. Open until October first. PPERSON MOSBY The Ay LOLA G. CORINNE on ble_rates. -Mar. water front. Oentrall; incing, minlature RURA SHADY SIDE, MD. e Bvery fRodera coat nfl't'T fi}.?}"': h‘e"i,?a‘; w%g i ‘F’l& 38 miles from Washington. Rabes $10 per e rank B mlsckiigne: Shate & MGns o §.3=lml' wees. Booklet. A W. . OCEAN VIEW, VA. - Bide, Md. West River 217-F.11, - MOUNEADS LAKE PARE. MD. | yor e, s e o «JThe “‘Mgn;.gpra}cfi > and all outside rooms: e low! it 1 3 ] | e S SR Wl i BAES RAR g B o Py e i Th N tl ; | G ST e Newcastle| Martha %:'JW ORKNEY SPRINGS, VA. eeeoan front. m’m , &1 A reservations, ete., N Orkney Springs o send Orkney easld ttag Hotels e 5 _— w:n’,:‘hflé“m‘“’&“-fi% p sommstsin b0, 2% vt [NEW WAVERLEY H Zargest and most gopula T Washipgton, s b Vihey. ""HED | AU outside Rooms, Private Baths, Golf beaut:fu ndoan Valley, , 3 ; Pri Surf Bai Deliclous 1th- roads. ehvnl;: E’?{.‘; ".:A“W,. u:n vileges, “‘L- ral thrines, golt, tennia, horseback rid; “SPOTTSWOOD ARMS - 202 el R o ™ Bottom of Death Valley Is 276 Feet Below Level of Sea. Death Valley, normally parched almost lifeless, which a queer the weather made into a beautiful flower garden for & brief period during the early Summer, has a somber fame be- ause of its name, its heat, and the act that it is the lowest bit of dry land in the United States. The bottom of the valley, which lies in Eastern Cali- fornia, is 276 feet below sea level, and in Summer the temperature rises to 130 degrees Fahrenheit in the shade. A bulletin from the local headquarters of the Natlonal Geographic Society de- ucrllfis this subcellar of the Western World. “Death Valley resulted from a terre- trial ‘sinking spell’ tens of thousands of years ago,” says the bulletin, “just as dozens of other valleys in the Great Basin area did, and just as did the world's most . famous below sea level area—the Dead Sea region of Pales- tine. At the time the valley was formed a long, narrow block of earth, not more than a dozen miles wide in this particular locality, broke from its rocky moorings and settled downward, leaving shear cliffs on each side. “Since that distant day of Death Valley’s genesis, two important develop- ments have been under way—rains and winds have been cutting the bounding cliffs into rugged, sloping mountain- sides and have oeen transporting the material to the valley floor. Death Valley is committing suicide, gradually the floor is being built up, and in time, after the passage of some thousands of years, no part of it will remain below sea level. “In normal years a few inches of rain fall on the valley floor. But during May of this year there were daily showers for more than half the month. Under this stimulus, seeds that must have lain dormant for years sprouted and large patches of the less salty areas of the valley became car- peted with wild flowers and grasses. Valley Being Filled Up. “More rain falls on the mountains bounding the valley—the Armagosa Range to the northeast and the Pana- mint Range to the southwest. It is the precipitation on these ranges—the eroded remains of the cliffs that at first towered over the valley—that is gradu- ally filling the great sink with debris. From the valley floor one sees the mouths of numerous canyons, and be- fore each spreads a fan-shaj deposit of sand, salt and stones brought down by freshets. The water that pours out of these canyons after rains in the| mountains is usually quickly drunk up by the dry sands, or if it accumulates in the lowest depressions of the valley it rapidly evaporates in the hot, dry desert air, leaving a deposit of salt. “‘Approximately 500 square miles lie below sea level in Death Valley. In width the depression varies between 6 and 12 miles. From end to end it ex- tends northwest and southeast for 125 miles. It lies approximately parallel| to the long, diagonal surveyed line that| forms the greater part of the boundary between Nevada and California. It is a few miles southwest of the boundary, not far from its midpoint, and thus lies wholly within California. Presents Desolate Appearance. “The valley usually presents a deso-| The lowest areas are | salt flats. Most of the relatively higher portions of the floor have an abund- ance of salt grains, too, mixed with the sand. Here and there old saline crusts are broken into hard, jagged pieces. In places the sand and salt drift into dunes. The area is not wholly devoid | An occasional stunted mes- quite bush manages to exist in the shifting sand. In the Autumn and Winter and early Spring a few horned ‘toads’ and other lizards scamper about, | but these animals are wise enough to| migrate to more hospitable regions be- fore Summer sets in. “From the steep sides of Death Valley & few small, scattered springs of good | water trickle. These have been care- fully marked. Other springs are so impregnated with minerals that their waters are unfit for use. One sizable spring gushes into the valley. With ald of its waters, small tracts of alfalfa and a number of trees are grow- ing. Near this touch of civilization are important borax mines that have been worked for years. “Death Valley gained its doleful title in 1849, when a party of overland trav- elers bound for California perished in its wastes. Board-marked graves and | an occasional human skeleton show that, the valley has taken its further toll of | life, but with a railway near the south- | eastern end, wagon and automobile| tracks throughout the depression, | springs, an_irrigated ‘ranch,’| and mines, Death Valley has neces- sarily lost some of its somber reputa- tion. Lately & hotel has been built in the foothills, and now even tourists visit the once dread Death Valley.” FISH TAUKMT TO READ BY BERLIN SCIENTISTS Placing of Food in Bags Marked First by Color and Later by Letters Is Bystem. ‘The casual observor does not give a fish credit for possessing any great amount of intelligence, but some scien- fion’ ihey Sty that thes. have Taconi say tha ve tau the fish to read. o . The fish in their tutelage weré first '-::ght to distinguish colors by placing food in different colored bags and dan- their favorite food by looking at the letters. They even learned to distin- guish the letter R from B. 2 RESORTS. VIRGINIA BEACH, VA. For attractively furnished rooms, ¥ith or_without board, write— The Dolphin Cottage COLONIAL BEACH, VA $3 to $4 daily meals): § o 820 wkly. COLONIAL "BEACH HOTEL Chicken and sea Enjoy your vacation food “dinners, orchests water in e A e “*THE VIRGINIA BAY ~ *igns, Mosers, pomle o ] ‘oo |at the foot of the ancient fortress Trophies of War With Spain to Be Installed in Cabanas Chapel. By the Associated Press. HAVANA, July 12.—The first military museum in Cuba, in which will be ex- hibited many articles of historic value and a number of trophies in Cuba's war with Spain, will ‘be established within the next two months in the old chapel of Cabanas fortress which overlooks " | Havana’s Harbor. dssociated Press Phote honored in annual list of awards to dog heroes. Fritz seized Here Is Frits, the bathing suit of his when the latter sank while Ing. master, 12-year- swimmi old Michael Le Pore of d —Assoclated Press Photo. NEW DOOR TO OPEN WHEN APPROACHED Electric Concern Designs Portal Operating on Light and Hydraulic Apparatus, Special Dispatch to The Star. An automatic sliding door that opens and closes without conscious human ef- fort has been perfected in the labora- tories of the General Electric Co. at Schenectady. A person walks toward the door and when he gets within the proper distance it opens and lets him g:u, closing only when the passage has en completed. Hotel waiters and others who carry burdens in their arms need no longer struggle to “hold the door” when such an installation has been made. A pho- toelectric cell does the job for them. A ray of light is focused past the door threshold onto a photoelectric cell. This ray, when interrupted by the body of a person approaching the doorway, sets a hydraulic door-opener to work. The hydraulic device is somewhat sim- ilar to that used in subway cars for ac- tuaging the doors. e tube is connected so that it con- | trols, throygh a three-tube amplifier, an automatic relay, which in turn starts a small motor that operates the hydraulic device. A lever then forces the door open and “holds” it for a period of time, adjustable to the varying condi- mxas under which the door may be | used. OLD GRAVES ARE FOUND | Mutilation Indicates Bodily Resur- rection of Dead Feared. SINGEN, Germany (#).—Graves dat- ing from 3000 to 100 B.C. were found | “Hohentwiel” at the crossroads of the old highways from the Rhine to Lake Constance and from Stuttgart to Zue- rich. In many of the graves mutilation of the corpses indicated that the living feared bodily resurrection of the dead and sought to prevent it. SHARKS GUARD CONVICTS! Battleships Will Be Used as Prison | Quarters. SYDNEY () .—Two obsolete Aus- tralian battleships anchored in the shark-infested Hawkesbury River are to be used as prison quarters for hun- dreds of short-term prisvners, who will build roads through the large Kuring- gal Chare National Park. | The sharks will discourage plots to escape. 2 Planes Gluttonous for Gas. In gasoline consumption one airplane equivalent to 40 automobiles. TOURS. is 113 OF EVERY 10,000 GERMANS ARE DISABLED Recent Statistics Show 700,000 Afflicted With Physical or Mental Defects. The number of crippled and insane people in Germany runs up to about 700,000, according to recent statistics. ‘This means that 113 out of every 10,000 inhabitants are aficted with perma- nent physical or mental defects, as compared with a ration of about 65 to every 10,000 before the war. More than two-thirds of the total are men, the reason for this disproj n- ately large share of the male sex being exclusively found in the war. German militarists used to call a “steel bath’- Col. Jullo M. Aguado, commandant of the coast and fleld artillery units which make their Meadquarters at the fortress, has interested the government in the idea and has all but completed the renovation of the aged chapel. He has been notified officially that Spain is sending some 30 or more articles which have lain in the Museum of Mad: id, close of tie war for in- ndence, in 1898. Havana Museum will turn over other articles of military significance for exposition in the new institution. It was in Cabanas fortress that scores of Cuban patriots were executed by Spanish firing squads while crowds on the upper tier of the fortress looked on and applauded. BOUNDARY CLEARING MUST BE CUT AGAIN Forest Along Alaska-Canada Line Again Grown Up, While Anima Have Broken Markers. Special Dispatch to The Star. FAIRBANKS, Alaska, June 22—Na- ture has almost healed the forest scar left by Alaska-Canadian boundary markers. This Summer the 20-foot sky- line trail cut 25 years ago through the forest along the 141st meridian must be cleared of second growth spruce, cedar and underbrush. Many of the concrete boundary markers and rock cairns will have to be reset. In many sections they have been tipped over by grizzly bears, moose, the action of frost or earthquakes. The 141st meridian runs into the Arctic Ocean west of the delta of the Mac- Kenzie, and is the international line southward to Portland Canal near Ketchikan. STEAMSHIPS. _ a healthy reaction against effemination of the modern world. Surely an extraor- dinary “steel bath” into which people go hale and hearty and which they leave as cripples. GRANT’S VISIT TO JAPAN WILL BE COMMEMORATED Ancients Who Berved on Welcome Committee Are Directing Work on Tokio Monument. ‘TOKIO (#).—To commemorate Ulysses S. Grant's visit to Japan half a cen- tury ago, two distinguished ancients who served on the committee of wel- come are directing the erection of a monument to the Civil War hero in Uyeno Park, Tokio. Chief promoters of the enterprise are Viscount Eiichi Shibusawa, the “grand old man” of Japanese business, still ac- tive despite his 89 years, and Baron Takashi Masuda, aged 8 ‘The monument will be a broad slab 8 feet high and 16 feet across showing 2 rellef bust of Gen. Grant and with inscriptions in Japanese and English. It is being erected near a cypress planted by Gen. Grant in May, 1880. Nearby is a tamaran planted by Mrs. Grant. The trees now are 40 feet tall. TOURS Yellowstone, 14 Days, All Expenses e n; Ullustrated booklet of Club cific Coast. National Park ALLEN TO! v Yo MEDITERRANEAN ! 27¢th CRUISE Jan. 31, $600-8: By &)Aolltil.l newsS.S. "I?AURE Canary I “en ACE” World Cruise Ask the 10,000 Americans who've cruised with Canadian Pacific about this “5th Ace.” It's Canadian Pacific’'s world network of rail, ship, hotel and foreign offices. It leaves you nothing to do but enjoy: (1) 137 day high-spot itinerary; (2) spring-around-the-werld ealendar; (8) distinguished 21,850 gross-ton Empress of Australia; (4) New York-Paris cuisine and service. Book now for choicest rooms, as low as $2,000. From New York, December 2. Sailings to fll'iellt The giantess ships to Hawali, Japan, China, Philip. pines! Frequent sailings from Vancouver and Vietoria by Empresses of Canada, Russia, Asia...largest, fastest Pacific liners. Next summer, Empress of Japan ... even larger, faster. . . 26,000 gross tons (39,000 tons displacement). Ask about reduced first-class round trip summer fares to the Orient. Also ask about Escorted House Party Tours to the Orient, $715 up. Your own agent, or Canadian Pacifie General Agent, C. E. Phelps, 14th and New York Ave. N.W., Washington, D. C. LOWER FARES ° EUROPE R Mid-summer Sail- ings...down the majestic St.Lawrence Seaway... First Class fares on the famous Great White Empresses are mow substantially reduced. § Effective July 16th, lowest fares for Cabin Class to Europe, and on Tourist Third round trips. And whether you select a luxurious express Empress, a regal Duchess, or one of the comfortable “M” Ships, sailing almost every day, from Montreal or Quebec, you are sure of Canadian Pacific’s famous standard of service throughout. ‘Con- J| venient train comnections. Apply to local agent at once, or to C. E. PHELPS, Gen. Agent, 144k 8t. at New York Ave., N.W. Washingten, D. C. ,M- on the . 1) Return. -» ...fi.fiu.u...."“ u::/-.u 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 on the “‘Ber- muda,” there's another Transatlantic thrill coming with a jolly Beitish crew and all the niceties of *‘Furness'" In Bermuda, bathing, sailing, bike riding, teas, dances, tennis, sightseeing and many other pastimes in the cool mid-ocean atmosphere. Bermuda's aver- Aage summer temperature is only 77¢ FURNESS Bermuda oLine 34 Whitehall 8t. (whore Broadway Bagine ) 868 FIN Ave., Now Y ock or any duthorieed Agons S STEAMSHIPS MURIEL KIRKLAND Resigned from leading role in “Strictly’ Dishonorable,” New York play. She said her leading man became too ardent during love scenes. —A. P. Photo. INDIANS’ SEAL CATCH FALLS BELOW THOUSAND North Pacific Operations Far Un- der Record, With 988 Last Month, Against 2,100 High. Special Dispatch to The Star. QUILLAYUTE, Wash.—North Pacific Indians have lost much of the instinct which sent them out to sea in open canoes to spear fur seals during the Spring migrations. The three tribes this year made a total catch of 988, compared to 1,500 a year ago and 2,100 an_record hunts. Alaska Indians sealing off Bitka in the Gulf of Alaska killed only 60 seals, 3 which 25 were yearling pups. This was also the smallest catch on record. RADIO INJURES BLIND Plano Tuning, Leading Profession, Sald to Have Dropped. Special Dispatch to The Star. OLYMPIA, Wash,, July 2.—There are few remaining professions left for the blind, and that radio has played havoc With one of them was the complaint of ”.dekflm to the thirtieth national convention of the American Association of the Blind, held this week at Van- couver, Wash. Plano tuning, one of the chief jobs of the dlind, has declined in thi~ last five years, STEAMSHIPS. O(jaslu.ngfon 14 YOU CAN GO ToO NEW YORK VIA NORFOLK Go to Norfolk by the Norfolk and Washington Steamboat Company. Connect there with an Old Dominion Liner sail- ing daily to New York — ex- cept Sundays. Fare, $15 and up, one way. Old Dominion Liners leave Norfolk daily, except Sunday, 7.30 P.” M, daily, escopt Sunday, 7.30 P. M. Time. Forthrou, tickets, reservations and ‘foldm. ?ply Norfolk and Washington teamboat Co., 731 15th St., N. W. Washington, or 159 Granby St, . Norfolk, Va. OLD DOMINION LINE OF THE EASTERN STEAMSHIP LINES BERMUDA Special All-Expense Tours— 6 days $82—11 days $112—13 days $124 (or longer if desired). S. S. Pan America (21,000 tons) from New York July 22-31 and every Thursday thereafter. From Bermuda July 19-26 and every Monday thereafter. Regular South American Liners stopping at Bermuda sail from New York every other Friday. From Bermuda every other Monday. 40 hour service—Round-trip, $70 and up—Fastest and Steadiest Ships. NASSAU + HAVANA + MIAMI 12-.day all - expense cruises hotel. 2 days in Nassau—2% days $140 and up —The ship your in Havana—2 days in Miami and two sight-seeing trips in Havana. Fortnightly service from New York. NASSAU 12-day all-expense tour $125 and Up—6 days at Royal Victoria Hotel, Nassau (American plan) and steamer round-trip between'New York and Nassau. SOUTH AMERICA ro.coighiy trom New York 0 Bermuda, Rio de Janeiro, Santos, Montevideo and Buenos Aires. Cool, airy, outside, amidship rooms mostly with beds. cuisine and service. Excellent For information see local tourist agent or MUNSON sTEAMSHIP LINES : 67 Wall Street, New York City | % Reduced fares south; cool sum- . mer cruise, 2100 miles round trip, Miami, $70, Jacksonville $46. AU fares include meals dnd regalar berth RS Babicore. Lo aue v BOSTON THINK OF “yOu” ON THIS VACATION TRIP % Comfort and luxury of trans- Atlantic ships on the new M. & M. ocean liners. Musit, dancing, bridge, teas; deck games; hostesses. Know the thrill of cool sal't air... the romance of nights. . . at sea. _TOURS §58 UP_ 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. Sanl Pier 3, ’ 2 Tow co vt ™ Sendfor et B S fot o G MERCHANTS & MINERS 1338 H St., N.W. TRANS. CO. WASHINGTON Leave Balto. Sunday $ P.M.; two days in Boston; due back 7 A.M.following 5 unday. MERCHANTS & MINERS [seccabove] 12- DAY CANADIAN CRUISES REDUCED Quebec, Montreal, RATES Hies, $ I 25 up e t.nndwrence ALL EXPENSES Saguenay Rivers. AKE the beauty route up the St. Lawrence in one of the newest and finest cruise liners. Time enough for leisurely seeing the sights of Quebec, as French as Paris; Montreal. the gay Summer resort, and Halifax, in the Evangeline country. For an extra adventure, you'll explore the Saguenay River as far as Cape Trinity. “Party time" all the time on board the famous Clyde-Mallory Lines' cruise ship “Shawnee'—Dancing, concerts, deck sports, bridge and amateur en- tertainments—and a jolly crowd of shipmate : No hotel ense—and all your board ship for the whole trip 5 “Teluded in the one low ra Take car—only $30 each way. Ask for booklet CLYDE-MALLORY o | SUNDAY NIGHT-EW/TRA SAILING Three sailings weekly this summer, including each Sun- *~* BOSTON WONDERFUL CRUISES NewT.$. S, Shawnes from New York July 26 August 9, 23 Sailing 3 P.M. Other Clyde-Mallory Vacations 6 to 13 Dayr 6050 wp Information and waoklet on request ®