Evening Star Newspaper, October 4, 1936, Page 41

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GILDS PRESERVE POMPOF OLDDAYS Belgians Turn Clock Back for Arquebusiers Fete in November, VISE, Belgium, October 3.—Twice n November this quiet little city on | the border of Belgium and Holland will deck itself in festive array and | hold celebrations reminiscent of | medieval times. On the eighth its ancient Glld of the Arquebusiers will | hold a fete, while the Gild of the Free Arquebusiers plan” fo make merry a | week later, the fifteenth. Even though the arquebus, a sixteenth century gun, which preceded the musket, went out of use about? 1570, its carriers in this city, the arquebusiers, have kept up their ancient gilds and today membership in them is still looked upon as & mark of distinction. Twice annually they | turn back the calendar 400 years and | stage these November celebrations with | all the color of the Middle Ages. | Other Belgian cities as well as Vise preserve gilds and contests that date from medieval times. Just as colorful as the fetes of the arquebusiers are the Archers’ Company of San Se-| bastian.. Once made up of men who | formed the bodyguard of the Counts | of Flanders, this company still prides itself that Charles II of ‘England visited its tower in 1656 and wrote his | name in its golden book. His brother, the Duke of Gloucester, even tried his hand at the bow there and left behind a silver arrow, still the show piece of the tower. About fifty men today take part in the tournaments, wearing white Jackets and shooting from a band- stand at the back of the tower. Their target, a clay pigeon on a pole above the building, is a hard one to hit, and By courtesy of E. Irving Fulton of the Chamber of Com- merce of the United States, The Star shows today the latest postal issues of Germany. They are: A 6 plus 4pfg postcard to advertise the Reich’s equivalent of P. W. A.. and a series of four attractive scenic stamps depicting roads and bridges con- structed by the “labor front” workmen, —Star. Staff Photo. BY JAMES WALDO FAWCETT. The Treasury Department an- nounced late yesterday that the “left- over” potato exempt tax stamps, about which there was a considerable dis- disturbance a few months ago, will be destroyed this week under the super- vision of the Procurement Division and the Department of Agriculture. If had been the Government's intention to sell the remainder to collectors, but the protests of the Washington Philatelic Society and other stamp organizations resulted in the change of plan which now is to be consummated. on windy days it sometimes happens that no one breaks it. The Traveler’s Notebook An additional 25,000,000 copies of Movement to Delay Opening Date of Schools May Extend Vacation Season—Language Barrier " to Foreign Travel in U. S. | added under their breaths: | velers—speak American and. nothing | else. The foreign traveler making ar- started out long ago to remove one of the natural barriers in travel—a difference in tongues. When the trek to Europe became pronounced, signs began to pop up in the hotels and shops of Paris, Berlin, Vienna and Rome: “English spoken”; and wags “Amer- ican understood.” Jobs that brought | the French and Germans and Italians into contact with Americans fell to those who could speak English. In Switzerland, school children are taught their own language and thn‘ of the nation directly across the bor- der. Other foreign languages are en- | couraged, among them English. Get- ting a white collar job in Switzer- | land today is based on ability to speak two foreign languages and having a | working knowledge of a third. While American schools do teach | foreign languages, the courses general- ly are taken o lightly that they are soon forgotten. Little or no premium is placed on linguists, unless a stu- dent happens to fall into a niche where his extra knowledge is of service. Ho- tels, sight-seeing services, policemen— all in direct contact with foreign tra- rangements in a hotel is met with the attitude, “Speak English or we can't| get together.” Or, perhaps a hallman, | a bus boy or a janitor, from the old | country, will be pressed into service as an interpreter. | The European would rather stay' at home. RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. BY JACQUES FUTRELLE, JR. MERICAN vacationists this year refused to go home when Sep- tember 1 rang down the cur- tain on the Summer season. In wholesale lots, they scoffed at the traditional finis. It was one of the | phenomena of the travel year, and sta- tistics will prove it if one cares to gof into figures. We won't. Anyway, resorters have been told for years that there was another act— a gorgeous one called Sepzember—andt‘ this year they waited to see. Sure| enough, there was! They saw the| flame of color sweep over the forests to the north, gradually they shook off their bathing suits for riding togs and clumped out in the crisp mornings | for longer hikes, knowing that their return at midday woud find the sun friendly, not merciless. | The Summer season for travel starts | slowly in June and, by custom, ends ebruptly on Labor day. It's like & large. city- meving down.to_the .office at the precise hour of 9. Resort and recreational facilities are taxed to capacity during those three months, all too short for a vacation-minded nation to satisfy its desire for a change in scene. Except for one thing, the| travel season could extend throughout the year, for there's Florida, the Carib- bean and California as outstanding | meccas for the colder months. In fact, they do a thriving business now, but Winter vacations are by no means as usual. And the reason is, school— tyrant of the children, and, in a vaca- tion way, of their parents. THERE is really no solution to this “We've got to go home and put Johnny and Mary Ann in school.” For the month of September, though, the blow can be softened. This is what members of Adirondack resorts ntend to do. Meeting recently, they inaugurated & movement to delay the opening of schools in New York State. If the parents want the scheme put into effect-—and hotel owners of this pic- turesque vacation land believe they will welconte the idea—they can do something to bring it about. For the time being, the object is mid-Sep- tember opening of all schools of the State. This they hope to accomplish | through the State Education Depart- { ment. | The fame of the Adirondacks hav- ing spread throughout the country, draws tourists from every State. While the postponement of school opening would affect only residents of New York State, the idea might develop on a national scale. And if parents don't like the idea—well, it's a demo- cratic thing that takes care of itself eutomatically. If the stay-lates are in the minority, Labor day will con- tinue to call the Nation home, and only a fortunate and relative few will be able to enjoy freely the charm that September holds. ‘LOSELY allied with America’s system of education is another phase of the travel industry—attract- ing tourists from abroad. This phase is languages. The palatial liners that cleave the Atlantic are built for and supported by Americans. Europe has never been sold on travel in the United. States. Yankee tourists fill the ships going across and they fill them coming back, roughly to the tune of three Americans to one foreigner, Lately, movements have been launched to at- tract Europeans to eur shores. Even an American with a predilection to travel abroad will admit there is plenty to see, and if pressed might confess ‘that some of the mightiest spectacles in the universe spread over ’ the American scene. It's an old story now, but Europe RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. ATLANTIC CITYS DISTINCTIVE HOTEL eatside HARRISON COOX . MANAGES fn/oy yout l/o/:'day: ATLANTIC C . —Completely and house in exelusive rdwalk. Experienced Advertisers Prefer The.Star. - the Susan B. Anthony stamp have been ordered printed. Deputy Third Assistant Postmaster General Roy North has said that the only reason for the delay in the man- ufacture of the Army and Navy heroes series is that the designs have not been approved. Ed Hadley, Casper, Wyo.. has had his automobile covered with miscel- laneous stamps. The labor involved kept five girls busy for six weeks. Popular Mechanics Magazine for November follows the lead of the Gov- ernment and violates the illustrations | law by reproducing a photograph of a 2-cent stamp. Sales at the Philatelic Agency dur- ing September brought the Post Office Department $176,384.68, approximate- ly 90 per cent of which sum repre- sents clear profit to the Government. Mrs. H. H. McCluer of Kansas City, original sponsor of the Mother's d: stamp of 1934, is the author of an interesting and attractive pamphlet, “Women as Presented on United States Stamps,” recently published. The fifty-first annual convention of the American Philatelic Society, held at the Hotel Fontenell, Omaha, Thursday to Sunday, September 24 to 27, brought together about 500 stamp enthusiasts from 25 different States. * President Eugene Klein of Philadelphia was in the chair during the Dbusiness sessions, and former Presidents Clarence W. Hennan and A. H. Wilhelm also occupied places on the platform. The Board of Vice Presidents was represented by Mrs. Catherine L. Manning, philatelic cu- rator, Smithsonian Institution. Other national officers of the organization attending included: Dr. H. A. Davis, secretary; Fred W. Green, chairman, By-laws Committee, and J. E. Guest, sales manager. Briefly summarized, the high spots of the occasion were: Announcement of the appointment of Ralph A. Kim- ble to succeed Adolph D. Fennel as editor of the American Philatelist; official magazine of the society; changes in six by-laws relating to financial affairs; choice of Detroit as the place for the 1937 meeting; auc- tions conducted by Vahan Mozian; & writers’ luncheon with Albert F. Kunze, leader of the Washington Stamp Club of the Air and Washing- ton correspondent of Weekly Phila- telic Gossip, as chairman; and a ban- | quet with Mr. Kimble as toastmaster. President Roosevelt sent a cordial | greeting, and Gov. Alf M. Landon of RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Oatc{oou s Bright skies and seas, warm Kansas, Republican candidate for the presidency, expressed his good will in & letter which read in part as fol- lows; “I am glad to know of the meeting of the American Philatelic Society in convention at Omaha and extend to you best wishes from the State of Kansas. “The collector of stamps—to place your avocation in the lexicon of every- day life—knows no boundaries, and those little pieces of engraved and gummed paper tell the story of the whole world. “Not only does philately provide | thousands of people with a delightful avocation, but it also accomplishes | a great, deal in the way of educa- | tlon. Young and old alike, gain much | knowledge of history, both past and | current, by perfecting their collec- | tions. have both, | convention. | The papers presented during the three-day gathering included: “United States Twentieth Century Stamps and Pony Express Covers,” Max G. Johl; “United States 'Revenue Stamps,” Justin L. Bacharach; “Precancel Stamps,” Stphen G. Rich; “Presi- dential Franks,” Edward Stern; “Air- | mail Stamps,” Walter Conrath; “Latin American Stamps,” K. N. | Woodward; ‘“‘Confederate Stamps,” |Charles J. Phillips; “China,” Dr. Lloyd Stanton Ruland; “Preparation of Sales Books,” Mr. Guest; “Phi- latelic Museums,” Mrs. Manning, and “Philatelic Literature,” Mr. Kimble. Robert E. Fellers, superintendent of the Division of Stamps, gave two ad- | dresses. Protest against current Post Office Department policies was voiced by Michael L. Eidsness, jr., assoclate editor, Stamps Magazine, in an ad- | dress to the writers’ up. “Post- | master General Farley,” he declared, “is putting out many illegal issues just to enrich the philatelic agency. | Collectors must buy these produc- | tions or have vacant spaces in their | albums.” The convention exhibition was judged by Mr. Wilhelm, Harry L. Lindquist and Philip H. Ward, jr. Local arrangements were in the hands of a committee consisting of R. R. Barber, general chairman; Dexter C. Buell, Dr. W. P. Wherry, | Ford Bates, E. L. Bumpas, John B. | Brain and Gladys Rohrs. 1910 Seventeenth street, announces | that the projected Eucharistic Con- gress stamps are being udulzned.' | Date of release will be Pebruary 22, ,and no orders will be received before | that date. . Panama will mark the fourth Span- ish-American Postal Congress with two series of stamps, as follows: Regu- lar issues, }ac, orange, ruins of old Spanish fort, Porto Bello; 1lc, green, the “Panama tree”; 2c, vermilion, na- | tional fiesta costume; Sc, biue, Simon | Bolivar; 10c, violet, tower of Old Ca- fthedrnl. Panama; 15¢, pale blue, Dr. | P. Garcia y Santos, founder of the | Pan-American Postal Union; 20c, brown, Madden Dam, Chagres Rive: | 25c, pale brown, Christopher Colum: bus; 50c, yellow, Gaillard Cut, Pa Cathedral; airmail issues, 5c, blue, Ur- raca monument; 10c, yellow, human | genius uniting two oceans; 20c, rose, air view of Panama City; 30c, violet, | Vasco Nunez de Balboa monument; | 50c, vermilion, Pedro Miquel Locks, | Panama Canal; 1B, gray-black, Pal- | ace of Justice. 1In connection with the Gordon Ben- | nett Cup balloon race, August 30, Po- land overprinted two stamps of the 1935 series—30g, in blue, Mir castle; RESORTS. PENNSYLVANIA. | “Spend Columbus Day ‘ Week-End in the Poconos. Special rates for this full week end. Sat 100! ai n ial eclientele. Lutherland, Pa. - HEBLAND « . ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. THE KEYNOTE! sun and healthful climate of a wonderful Autumn season . . . your inspiration! An unparalleled variety of sports and attractions by day and night . . . your invitation! COLUMBUS DAY, with its 3-day Week-end— October 10-11-12—YOUR OPPORTUNITY Magnificent hotels, on and near the famous Boardwalk, and scores of modern boarding houses ‘to make you supremely comfortable. Good motorways. Low round-trip travel by train and bus. For illustrated folder, write * ROOM 119, CONVENTION HALL at ;fi ATLANTIC CITY Facing Ocean and City Park \}i Autuma address for peo- ple who particularize in their choice of season . and setting. Su- perb guestcom- forts and supe- rior cuisine. || “It is my sincere hope that you | pleasant and profitable | dimee { 1s composed of junior stamp collectors The Philippine trade commissioner, | I i [ 155(‘»(1':15 PO 13 et 1 Estonia is responsible for this beautiful set of four com- memoratives in homage to St. Bridget, a Swedish princess who founded the religious * Order of the Holy Saviour. The designs are graceful Gothic in character. Values: 5s, green; 10s, blue; 15s, red, and 25s, ultramarine. and 55, in red, Raczynski library. The | text of the surcharge is: “Gordon Ben- nett, 30-VIII-1936.” = Advices from Manila explain that the recently issued set of three sur- | charged stamps in honor of Antine Ar- naiz and J. J. Calvo, aviators who flew to Madrid, represent condemned or re- jected stock which was overprinted hastily on short notice. The values are: 2c on 4c, carmine; 6c on 12c, orange; and 16c on 26¢c, blue green,! 1917-1925 series. The Rizal commemoratives of the Philippines Commonwealth no longer are available in Washington except from private dealer: Robert Bilsborough, president of the | Washington Federation of Junior | Stamp Collectors, speaking from Sta- | tion WOL on Monday evening, said in part: “Our organization was estab- lished May 25, 1935. Its membership and junior stamp clubs and is open to every junior collector living in Wash- | ington. “We attempt to make our meetings both entertaining and educational. In | the entertainment line, we began last Saturday a series of contest programs; and iIn the educational line, beginning October 10, we will have an adult at each meeting to discuss the funda-| mentals of stamp collecting. “‘One of the purposes of the federa- | tion is to hold exhibitions. The prepa- | ration of entries for these displays teaches a good deal. In preparing my | entry for the third International | Philatelic Exhibition, I gathered some information of the type which Mr. Kunze terms ‘the story behind the stamp.’ “For example, I was surprised to | learn that ancient Greece and Rome | ma Canal; 1B, gray-black, Panama | were not the only countries to erect | temples to Minerva, the goddess of | wisdom. A Latin-American nation also | had pictured such a building on sev- | eral stamps. The country is the Spanish-speaking republic of Guate- mala. Investigation disclosed that one | of the few Guatemalan Presidents to ! de 1a Reforma.’ " | into subjects which otherwise he 1936—PART TWO. brera, had ordered its construction. He dedicated the edifice to popular education, and once each year schol- astic awards were made to stimulate interest in education. As & result, today education is desired. “In 1917, when a terrific earthquake visited Guatemala, one of the few buildings to survive was the Palacio de Minerva. An attempt was made to inclose the pavilion and house the contents of the destroyed Museum or Palacio de 1a Reforma, but this was given up. ‘I also learned with amusement that the editors of the standard stamp catalogue do not know the correct Eng- | lish translation of ‘Palacio de la Re- forma.’ They call this museum » ‘re- formatory.’ Making another stab at the correct name, in the 1937 edition of the catalogue they term it ‘Palace Miss Mollie Lewis, treasurer of the federation, also spoke from the same station on the same occasion. of the most interesting things in stamp collecting,” she argued, “is running across a stamp you've never seen be- fore and. can't identify. Here's a challenge that must be met, and the philatelist must then consult the map, the atlas and maybe the dictionary, before he finds out which country is- sued the stamp and what the strange letters on the face really mean. “Of course, identifying an unknown stamp is only one of the absorbing points in stamp collecting, for stamp collecting serves as a modern magic carpet. In a few minutes even the | inexperienced collector finds himself whisked to mysterious corners of the earth and traveling among a number of countries, seeing strange sights and historical monuments and mak- ing friends with famous characters. The pageant of civilization moves be- fore him, and he finds himself drawn would regard as dull and to be avoided. “Before you know it, you've become familiar with history, geography, | science, art and music—painlessly and without much effort. And it's all| great fun. 1 “Certainly, there must be many | other appealing features in stamp col- | lecting, or else such distinguished men as President Roosevelt, former Presi- dent Hoover, Secretary of the Interior | £ Ickes and thousands of others would | ¢ not have become fascinated by this “Stamps, it seems, help to make | practical the things we read about, hear about and-study about every day | in the year. Thus, the preunce]ed‘ stamp familiarizes the student with| T the geography and commerce of the United States; and the collector of foreign stamps knows what the news- announcer is talking about when he | hears of the bombing of the Alcazar, the devaluation of the French franc, the accession of King Edward VIII to the throne, and the Italian occupation of Ethiopia. | 2 “If you are interested in the cultu- ral and historical aspects of stamp collecting, and are between the ages, of 10 and 18, the Washington Federa- tion of Junior Stamp Collectors in- vites you to attend its meetings on the second and fourth Saturdays of each month.” ‘The program was broadcast by cour- tesy of the Washington Stamp Club of the Air. 1 Howard H. Tewksbury, - United States Commercial Attache, reports from Guatemala that the government of that country is advertising for bids | for the printing of two series of | be re-elected, President Estrada Ca- stamps—regular postal and airma Sait WORLD ¥ away on this 104 day CRUISE $1033 First Class includes shore excursions abroad! “Thill to the pageantof lifeRound the World this winter on one of the big, smooth-riding President Liners that sail fortnightly from New York for Cuba, Panama and California, then on along the Sunshine Route to Hawaii, Japan, China, the Philippines, Malaya, I ndia, Egypt, Italy and France for just $1033—complete! This fare covers your shore program abroad as well as your stateroom, meals At slight additional expense you and entertainment aboard ship. mdy stopover en route, gontinue on a later President Liner. Each has every stateroom outside, broad decks, an outdoor swimming pool. Fo€ <ull details call on your own Travel Agent, or at TRANSPORTATION BLDG., WASHINGTON « METROPOLITAN 0695 Steamship Lines EARLY BOO WINTER TRAVEL HAWAII end the PACIFIC you can discount chance and aclovoudic] winter trip will be planned ‘Phone National American Express Travelers Choques Always Protect Your Funds AMERICAN EXPRESS, 1414 P.8t. N.W., Willard Hotel Blds.. Washington, D. C. - OEarope - CJAit Trips [OSouth America [0 o | Bermud. Russia. Africa Cuba | Wesclndies BA:LI \ =N throngh AMERICAN EXPRESS Travel Has Come Back With A World-Wide Rush! For your quick convenience AMERICAN ExprEss TRAVEL SsrviCE suggests this list of famous wonderlands for & winter visit: WEST INDIES...SOUTH AFRICA...EUROPE AROUND THE WORLD By filling owt this conpon and mailing it to AMERICAN Exprass AssgicaN Expruss trained travel staff, with all details omplete: Tickets and staterooms reserved, hotel sccommodations secured, sightseeing trips scheduled, your every requirement foreseen, and Travelers Cheques to insure your travel funds. AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPLETE WORLD-WIDE TRAVEL SERVICE mmon'co s Fovemost Cravel @rflnnf-at‘m 1414 F St. NW., Willard Hote! Bldg., Washington, D. C. KINGS FOR TRAVEL SERVICE ISLANDS...zhe ORIENT stare prepared. Your chosen and arranged s advance by 1076-1258 Mexico [C]Mediterranesn b “One |- both bi-color. Date of delivery speci- fled is “not later than the end of The Jean Jaures stamps of France | easily might have been far from at- | tractive, but it happens that they are | distinctivély notable among issues ol} their kind. Commemorating-the career | of a great Socialist leader assassinated | by “a wretched half-wit” at the out break of the World War, they show | their subject in two characteristic poses. in the 40c, red brown, he is shown speaking in the Chamber of Deputies, and the composition is in- stinet with life. The higher value of the pair—1.50f, blue—portrays the martyr with the symbols of the re- public. Both designs are noble and | Rimm Sklarevski, Baltimore phila- telist, will discuss “Batum”; R. H. Rule will exhibit British Jubilees and there will be an auction. Visitors welcome, The Washington Philatelic Society will meet at the Hotel Carlton, Six- teenth street, Wednesday evening at 8. William L. Slattery, comptroller of the Post Office Department, will dise play stamps from the Near East. Public invited. The Washington Federation of Junior Stamp Collectors will meet at the National Red Cross Building, Sev- enteenth street, Saturday afternoon at 2. Alden H. Whitney will be guest of honor and principel speaker. Boys and girls interested in stamps assured a cordial welcome. STEAMSHIPS. annnml order. State” rooms that all face the see . . . out strong in character. . Robert Truax and Frank Donovan, | jr. are on an “off-the-beaten-track” tour through Maryland and Pennsyl- | vania today. They are checking up ancient post offices and mail routes which once were famous but now are in danger of being forgotten. The Washington Stamp Club of the Air will meet over station WOL to- morrow evening at 9:15. Mr. Kunze will report on the Omaha convention. The Washington Collectors’ Club | will meet at the Thomson School, | Twelfth street, Tuesday evening at 8. | aaee——————— 2 STAMPS. Baden ;Stlrelev E: ‘man_ State), Mon, E to approval appii- UYENO'’S STAMP SHOP . 1205 Penna. Ave WHITNEY’S T N EX- ‘The Bosnian Assassination, The That Set the World Afire!” We e this complete set: complete t-Ship " set; 2 complete Ds over' 50 years old. lini stamp. all for 1 68 Nassau st., Dept STAMPS—COINS—AUTOGRAPHS Bought and Sold HOBBY SHOP @ | . de). w Vatican (8) Astrid Conge (3) 33c. 13c. THE STAMP SHOP. | 920 G St. N.W. ‘We Bus Stamps.” _ | STAMP ALBUMS Stock Books, Catalos Sampr, Dl anples. call ind der HARRY B. MASON, 918 F N ______TRAVEL. jes, New Sets. Single | THROUGH THE EXCITING COLORFUL PACIFIC o . Empressof Japan, January 9. Choice of 10 all-inclusivetours, including Eucharistic Congress (Orieat),aroundtheWorld, South Seas. #T0 THE ORIENT s280 up Chi loor pools, erchestras, talki . | wide haten ot s oy $175...to JAMAICA, B. W. 1o CANAL and 3 ports in COLOMe Every Satwrdoy 18DAYS | PANAMA 2 visits Zon histori at Kingston, ond Conel tveity 1,000 Conel 004 Pavrae Sy Cartagena; Puerte Colombia (time o d Sarranauille) Santa Marto. inroom | with private bath available for as Hitle of . - - $710, 17DAYS $180...te HAVANA, JAMAICA, - &- PANAMA CANAL snd COSTA Mlkllmlhlnflrh“ i 10 deys HAVANA; W. L 13 hote! accom. modations and sightaseing. Coclivonmags, "o isshes s 3155 w. 'rom New York No 9. S go7, Authorized Travel | g "=y | UNITED FRUI COMPANY, E North River. New York City. L okt FURNESS LEADS THE WAY FOR all Cruises ocr. 27_Noy, Pl REGULAR FALL CRUISES 1o BERMUDA hefemous Monarch of Bermuds ond Quoen of Bermuds SDays$64up 9 Days S50 13Days $113 :h i milar tripe of varying ‘Rous hote SATLINGS TWICE WEEKLY Go to Japan on the record- breaking * liners, Empress of Asia or Empress of Russia, in 10 days of luxuryand comfort. Sail- ings to Yokohama (round trip First Class, $499 up; Tourist Class, $280 up) . . . Kobe, Na- gasaki, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Manila. Or take 3 more days and go via Hawaii by Empress of Japan or Empress of Canada. From Vancouver or Victoria. Also Third Class on all Em- presses. S/ < Bed £'T0 HONOLULU s I70"P Cl Tourist ass 5 days by the fast Empress of Japan ot Empress of Canada. One way: First Class, $125 up; Tourist Class, $85 up. Round- trip just double. Or go by Canadian Australasian liners, Aorangi or Niagara, at slightly lower fares. From Vancouver and Victoria. #'NEW ZEALAND $296.» Go from Vancouver and Vic- toria on the modernized Aar- angi or the Niagara. See Hawaii and Fiji en route. Round trip to New Zealand, First Class, $454 up; Tourist Class, $296 up. .Round trip to Sydney: First Class, $574 up; Tourist Class, $393 up. FOLDERS - MAPS - INFORMATION from your own agent or Canadian Pacific: C. E. Phelps, General Agent, 14th and New York Ave., N. W. Wash. D. C. Nation- al 4235. Cabin Class Ask your TRAVEL AGENT or Furmess Bermuda Line, 34 Whitehall St, (where Broadway begins) New York City. LASTS ALL YEAR ON | THE SOUTHERN ROII'I'I. N1 2o /71T £0 o con™! OCT. 10, NOV. 7 Gibraltar, Naples, French Riviera, Genoa. Azores, Lisbon, - Gibralter, Algiers, Palermo, Naples, Putres, Ragusa, Triests. R~ OCT. 24, NOV. 14 Gibralter, Naples, French Riviera, Genoa. . L J OCT.31 Azores, Lisbon, Gibraltar, Algiers, Palermo, Neples, * Patres, Ragusa, Trieste, “4pply Travel Agent or 62¢ Fifth Ave., New York City. .ITALIAN LINE

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