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EDMUND B. CHAFFEE.

Opulent Country
Newspapers

(Continued from page 341)

supplant it while the doings of the neighbors appeal as news. The most successful country paper is the one that prints regularly the most names-little matter why, just so there is personal mention of people we know. It is this home touch that constitutes the greatest asset of the Country paper, and it is something that cannot be taken from it except by another and better home paper.

W

HATEVER the developments of the future, country newspapering has in these days found itself. It has passed from being a gamble with fate to a stable and accepted industry, with the same change of sentiment regarding its province as has affected the public utility. The public some time since realized that two or three light plants or two or three telephone exchanges were economically wasteful. Duplication of newspaper plants to serve the same constituency in a moderate-sized community was open to the same criticism.

Economists tell us that the ideal community is one in which all the businesses are fairly equal in prosperity and in financial position. Then each has respect for the other, and a sound civic pride and community advancement follow the co-operation of all the leaders of the city's activities. The country newspaper has taken its place among the enterprises of the town as an equal, serving with fidelity the town's interests. Its financial path is thus made smoother than of old, and it deserves its prosper

ity.

February 29, 1928

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was out of breath and soaked from head
to foot.

"Oo-chee! Oo-chee! Oo-chee!" they
chattered to one another in monkey talk.
"Wish't we could do that! Wish't we
could do that!"

At last the Professor stopped washing, picked up his basin, and went home, leaving the monkeys in a great state of excitement.

He

Next day, at exactly the same hour (for the Professor was a punctual man), he was back at the mimosa tree. instead of washing his face, stepped befilled his basin, set it down, and then, hind a tall bush and waited.

He heard an excited rustle above his
head, for the big black monkey, who
had been waiting patiently since sunrise,
had dashed off to fetch his friends and
relatives. In a moment back they swung
through the tree-tops, and hung there,
staring down at the wash-basin with
their little beady bright eyes.

"Oo-chee! Oo-chee! Oo-chee!" they
chattered. "The man-monkey has left
his plaything. "And down they swung,
hand over hand, in such excitement and
plop! right in the basin of water, and all
hurry that their big black leader landed
the others piled kerplunk! on top of
legs.
him in a great hairy tangle of arms and

Such a splashing and a gurgling and
a bubbling-till there was no more water
left in the basin. Then the Professor
came out from his hiding-place, and the
monkeys ran away.

Reserved

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THE OUTLOOK RECOMMENDS

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70 Fifth Avenue, New York Recommends teachers to colleges, public and private schools. EXPERT SERVICE

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Next day, at the same hour, he set the filled basin under the mimosa tree again, but this time he had brought a bag of sugar, which he poured into the water. Scarcely had he hidden behind the bush Vacations in the Homeland

than there came an excited chattering
and rustling in the tree-tops, for all the
monkeys had been waiting since sunrise.
Down they swung and began splashing
about, and when the sugared water
touched their tongues they screeched
with delight and began to lick one an-
other's wet faces, till the Professor be-

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hind his bush nearly burst his buttons with laughter.

So the new game went for several days. The news spread through the jungle, and monkeys of every kind gathered from far and near to join the fun under the mimosa tree.

And then-and then-the Professor sprang his great surprise. One day he set the basin under the tree as usual, but this time it was filled with the stickiest of sticky glue. The monkeys, waiting impatiently above, thought it only a thicker kind of sweet water, so down they swung in a great hurry and plunged in, hands, feet, noses, tails, and all!

Then what a screeching and a yowling arose in the jungle! The louder the monkeys yelled for help and the harder their friends tried to pull, the faster everybody stuck, until the basin was completely hidden under a crowd of struggling, chattering, frightened, furious monkeys.

"Aha!" cried the Professor, strutting proudly out from behind his bush, and he called to his helpers, hidden all about. Plop! went big bags over the monkeys' heads, the glue was washed off with some special stuff, and each bag was hung on a long bamboo pole carried by two men. Then, headed by the smiling Professor, the procession set forth, and after traveling miles through the jungle, reached the shore, where their ship lay waiting. The natives' eyes nearly popped at the sight of so many monkeys caught alive; but the oldest and blackest and cleverest of them all nodded his woolly head wisely; then the monkeys were carried aboard. Instead of being kept in stuffy berths, they were let loose in a nice big, airy cage on deck; somebody gave them peanuts and bananas and water, and they soon fell asleep.

As the ship rolled and tossed, they smiled, dreaming of windy days in the African tree-tops, and when they woke and saw only men's faces staring through the cage, with big waves rising beyond like green mountains, they put their big hairy hands to their faces and cried and cried. For several days they moped, all homesick and many seasick, but when they found bananas and peanuts and water appearing in their cage like magic every day they began to chatter to one another: "Oo-chee! Oo-chee! Not so bad. Better than rushing around the jungle hunting food and watching out for lions and tigers." And pretty soon they were swinging happily through the cage, making the sailors laugh.

One day their big black leader scrambled to the top of the cage, screeching: "Oo-chee! Oo-chee! Oo-chee! See the

tall stone trees on shore!" and there they were in sight of the skyscrapers of New York.

After much confusion and a long, jiggly ride in dark wagons, they reached the Zoo, where the proud Professor watched them all safely unloaded into their new cages.

And there you will find them, crunching peanuts and bananas, cutting up monkey-shines, and staring with their little beady bright eyes at laughing boys and girls. And whenever the Zoo needs monkeys the old Professor sails for Africa again with a ruler, a wash-basin, and a bottle of glue.

Ludwig: The Story of a
Writer

(Continued from page 352)

of a biography of Napoleon by one Ludwig. The following day "Napoleon" was put into the hands of some one who could read German, was commended for publication, translated, and published.

Without "Napoleon" there could have been no Ludwig vogue in America. "Bismarck," "Wilhelm Hohenzollern," and "Genius and Character" are manifestly subsidiary to "Napoleon." Even the publication of "Napoleon," under normal circumstances, might not have created that vogue. "Napoleon" is a fat book, consisting of about 700 solidly printed pages. It was to have been sold for $5, which is a fair price for a book of its bulk. Then the Book-of-theMonth Club, with 40,000 subscribers, expressed a desire to have "Napoleon" as its January, 1927, book. For reasons which need not be examined in this place, the Book-of-the-Month Club cannot order for its subscribers any volume the retail price of which is more than $3 per copy. For the sake of that wholesale order Boni & Liveright reduced the retail price of "Napoleon" to $3, accepted the Book-of-the-Month Club order, approximately 40,000 persons began reading "Napoleon," and several thousands of these readers began talking about a biography which had the tang and the sweep of fiction, and the name of Emil Ludwig was no longer utterly unknown to the American public. Since January, 1927, "Napoleon" has been selling at the average rate of 1,000 copies per week. In America alone 100,000 copies have been sold. This means that 200,000 persons, at the least, have read "Napoleon." No less than ten persons have read my copy.

Long before "Napoleon" had become

a success of esteem, or a success in the crasser sense of the term, its publishers had considered, and rejected, "Wilhelm Hohenzollern." This rejection cost them the American rights also to "Bismarck," which Little, Brown & Co. has made a best-seller, although on a smaller scale than "Napoleon." Subsequently Har court, Brace & Co. published "Genius and Character," G. P. Putnam's Sons published Wilhelm Hohenzollern" and the trilogy of plays on Bismarck,

Although Herr Ludwig is only forty seven years of age, he has been writing since the age of fifteen, and much of what he has written, apart from his biographies, consists of drama and fiction. From a confidential source I learn that some of it is terrible. This fact will not necessarily prevent much of it from being put out in translation. Probably within the year there will be issued a translation of his Mediterranean travel

impressions. In his boyhood he wrote "tender lyrics and darkly wild rhapso dies. The former have been discarded." At twenty-five he wrote a play on Napo leon. As a boy he wrote a ten-page essay on Goethe which subsequent years of research and mature reflection have not invalidated. It was a "psychological essay" on Bismarck which first made him known in Germany, although his plays, previously, had seen publication but not production.

During his London visit a year of more ago, in which city he was lionized no less than he has been in New York Ludwig wrote an article for the "Daily Express" in which he said that his mas ters in biography were Plutarch and Carlyle. (His masters in thought are Goethe and Nietzsche.) He seeks to emulate these, he wrote, in lucidity and in energy, and in his attempt to appor tion to the inspirer some of the glory of the inspired he asserted, "Had Plutarch never lived, Napoleon would not have been Napoleon." By implication he tries to reconcile his love for Napoleon with his democratic pacifism: "I tried to op pose war, since its technique now precludes heroic deeds." He had said in one interview that the relation of a biog rapher to his subject—as his to Napo leon-should be that of a lover to a mistress, "You have got to have a love

affair, not just a marriage, with the person you are describing." He attempted to explain in another how the ex-Kaiser for whom he had expressed something like mild contempt, falls into the classif cation of an intellectual mistress; while in an article he declared that he has not written a life of Mozart for the probable reason that he loves him too much.

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WHEN

HEN a $25 a week clerk makes a mistake it usually doesn't cost much. But when a $25,000 a year executive makes a mistake it's likely to cost a lot,

Suppose you are general manager of your company. A question on advertising comes up. You make a decision which later proves unwise. What does that unwise decision cost your company? Thousands of dollars in good-will!

The same applies to manufacturing and marketing problems-to investment problems-to sales problems. A small mistake is likely to cost thousands of dollars.

We have in our files many letters like this one from Mr. F. H. Haviland, who is now connected with the Equitable Life Insurance Society at Chicago. At the time he wrote it he was a partner in a dry goods jobbing concern in Chi

cago:

"Early in the year we were warned by your reports that the market would drop during the summer and, having read them very carefully, we decided to clean out our stock and be ready to restock after the prices had fallen. Business continued to be unusually good during the spring, so that we were persuaded against our better judgment to

A famous banker, an accountant, a specialist on advertising and sellingwould you like to have them help you run your business? Thru the medium of the Institute Course, the experience of business leaders is at your disposal.

place orders for $48,000 worth of laces from Ansonia, Connecticut. Before these goods arrived in Chicago in July, their market value had fallen $16,000, the cost of disregarding your advice."

Authoritative Business Counsel

If you could have in your own office a banker, an accountant and a specialist on advertising and selling

If each one of them was a $100,000 man, willing to help you at any time in the advancement of your

interests

Wouldn't you feel safer in the soundness of your business judgments? Don't you think that opportunities might open up which now escape you, either because you do not see them or have not quite the courage and resources to take advantage of them?

Would you like to have such a corps of advisors if you could have them at a cost of a few cents a day? Naturally you would. Any business man would.

The man who gave us this thought is president of a successful corporation. In a bookcase in his office, almost at his elbow, are the volumes of the Institute Modern Business Course and Service.

"Men in my position," he said, "know very well that we need a course in executive training. But

Alexander Hamilton Institute

Executive Training for Business Men

we should never dare to commit ourselves to a 'Course,' because we know that we simply cannot find the time to go thru with it.

"When I enrolled with you, I had no idea of finishing the reading or solving all the problems or taking all the lectures. I merely said to myself: "These people have gathered together some of the smartest brains in business and in university teaching. They offer me those smart brains as my staff of business advisors, at a price that is just nothing at all. I'll take their advisors and keep them here beside me; even if I look to them for the answer to only one problem a month, I shall be making money."

"Forging Ahead in Business"

An illustrated book called "Forging Ahead in Business" tells all about the Institute Course and Service. It answers every question. It tells what the Institute has done for 300,000 men. It explains why 38,803 corporation presidents have taken the Course.It tells exactly what the Institute can do for busy men. The book is interesting, inspiring. It for the asking. Send for it.

is

yours

ALEXANDER HAMILTON INSTITUTE New York City

500 Astor Place

Send me the new revised edition of "Forging Ahead

in Business," which I may keep without charge.

Please write plainly

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Signature.

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TH

THE beauty, fascination, and mystery of the Orient lures visitors from all over the world to

JAPAN

The quaintest and most interesting of all countries. Come while the old age customs prevail. Write, mentioning "Outlook," to JAPAN HOTEL ASSOCIATION Care Traffic Dept. JAPANESE GOVERNMENT RAILWAYS TOKYO

for full information

Rates for a single room without bath and with 3 meals, $5-6 in cities and popular resorts, $4-5 in the country

Hotels and Resorts
Cuba

The Savoy, Havana American plan. Moder

F Esq. 15. Vedado. ate. Delightfully located. Well run. Rates, details, direct, or Outlook Travel Bureau.

England

ELEGANCE

LUXURY

A Mart of the Unusual

Harris Tweed

Direct from makers.

Ideal sporting m terial. Any length cat

Samples free. Newall, 127 Stornoway, Scotland

Apartments

HOWARD HOTEL, LONDON Overlooking Gramercy Park-Lovely 4-room

Every bedroom is fitted with running hot and cold water, central heating and telephone. The restaurant serves the very finest of foods and wines in the brightest and most attractive of surroundings. The lounges are spacious and luxurions. Bedrooms from $2.50. Inclusive terms arranged. Outlook Travel Bureau will make reservations for you.

K. Kubota Care Oriental Hotel NORFOLK ST., STRAND, W.C.

Kobe. Japan

Services of guide, interpreter and translator. Before your journey to Japan consult him.

ALPINE TOURING

and hiking, and Continental European motoring arranged by Dr. G. Plattner. of Berue, Switzerland. Dr. Plattner and his friends are experienced Alpinists and motorists. Being university men, they wish to conduct

discriminating parties of four or five. Ex

penses $100 per person a week. Write to Dr.

F. MARTI, Goucher College, Baltimore, Md.

SUMMER

TOUR OF EUROPE

Small Private Party

EDWARD N. RESER

171 South Oxford Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.

Motor Through England

Automobiles of every inake to be used with or without chauffeur. Free advice. Personal attention.

MAJOR W. T. BLAKE, Ltd. 578 Madison Avenue, New York

Cables: Howdotel, London

Connecticut

Nursing Home The residence

of S. Mary Ives, MD, 230 Washington St., Middletown, Conn., offers for invalids and those needing rest comfortable home surroundings, with opportunity to regain health.

District of Columbia

HOTEL POTOMAC Washington,

D. C.

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apartment to let for 6 month from March, April or May. Write McCandles 29 Broadway, New York. Tel. Whitehall 69

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

BOYS' boarding school near New York, es tablished 1900. Opportunity. 8,279, Outlook,

BOYS' camp-Berkshires, modernly equip ped, very successful, bargain. Following 8,280, Outlook.

PERPETUAL royalty interest, 640 acrevia famous West Texas mineral region for $12 Land under lease to large oil company. WAN ranty deed covering all minerals, including oil, gas, and potash. Write Louis R. Aber nathy, 617-C-Petroleum | Building, Houston, Texas.

STATIONERY

WRITE for free samples of embossed at 5 or printed stationery at $1.50 per box. Lewis, stationer, Troy, N. Y.

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managers, governesses, comanous, mother helpers, housekeepers. The Richards Bureau 68 Barnes St., l'rovidence.

VISITORS TO FLORIDA workers. secretaries, dietitian, cafetera requiring special food and care in comfortable home can be accommodated by lady who is an experienced dietitian. Mrs. M. LAMB, Seabreeze, Daytona Beach, Florida. Box 532.

New York City

HOTEL BRISTOL

129-135 W. 48th St., N.Y.

A 60 Days' Escorted Tour ROOMS WITH BATH

visiting France, Italy. Switzerland, Germany,
Holland, Belgium, England, Ireland. $595
(all expense included), sailing from New
York, July 6, back in New York Sept. 2.
LUBIN, care Farley Travel Agency, 535 Fifth Ave., N. Y.

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Dorland Travel Service provides tours throughout Europe. Finest cars with superior chauffeurs from $6 a day Tours, inclusive hotels, from $15 a day. Itineraries to suit individual requirements. Road. rail, air tours, steamship and hotel reservations. Information Bureau, Reading Room, etc., free

to all visitors. Write for booklet of spect

men itineraries and rates to

Outlook Travel Bureau, New York, or
Dorland House, 14 Regent St., London

EUROPE • 1928

Student Tours from $275 Select Summer Tours from $775

(High Grade Hotels) PRIVATE MOTOR TOURS Steamship tickets to all parts of the world. Cruises; Mediterranean, West Indies. Bermuda STRATFORD TOURS

452 Fifth Ave., New York

visiting Spain and France, sailing on the new Conte Grande" June 30, returning to New York August 27 on SS. "de Grasse." All expense included, $1.225. LUBIN, care Farley Travel Ageney, 535 Fifth Ave., N. Y.

ENGLISH & SCOTTISH TOURS

private cars, moderate prices. Details and booklets may be obtained from The Outlook Travel Bureau, or Mallinson, Wingate

House, Windermere, The Lake District, Eng.

Incomparable Y Summer 1928 Tour

First class. Restricted number. For circular address Professor Young, Coll. Sta., Box 581, Durham, N. C.

Thompson Tours to Europe

Something Different and Inexpensive 228 S. Washington Ave., Saginaw, Mich. 214 Majestic Bldg., Detroit.

DIXIE TOURS to EUROPE & AMERICA

Earn trip by securing members. BOX 204, EUSTIS, FLORIDA

Evening Dinner and Single-$3-$3.50-$4-$5 Sunday noon. $1.00 Double-85-86-87 Luncheon .50 Special Blue Plate Service in Grill Room For comfort, for convenience to all parts of the metropolis, for its famous dining service come to Hotel Bristol. You'll feel "at home.

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HELP WANTED-Instruction

HOTELS NEED TRAINED MEN AND WOMEN. Nation-wide demand for h salaried men and women. Past experience unnecessary. We train you by mail and ret you in touch with big opportunities. pay, fine living, permanent, interesting wo quick advancement. Write for free by YOUR BIG OPPORTUNITY." Lewi Hotel Training Schools, Suite AR-5842, Wa ington, D. C.

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HELP WANTED

WANTED-A trained nurse who dess change of occupation and scenery to epe several months on ranch in Wyoming assist in care of small baby. Box 7, Wyo.

WANTED-Lady. Protestant, teacher.go erness, not over thirty, for girl thirtee Country. Good reference. Salary seventy five dollars a month. 8.281, Outlook.

SITUATIONS WANTED

COLLEGE graduate, traveled extensivel abroad. visiting friends in France during July, offers his services, any capacity, in e change for passage. Excellent references 8,285, Outlook.

CULTURED English gentlewoman se post as companion or governess in America or traveling. 8,273. Outlook.

FRENCH woman (native of Paris) wit successful experience wishes an engagement for 1928-1929 as non-resident teacher in lege preparatory school (boys or girls) F English. Interview arranged. 8,269, Outlook

HOUSEKEEPER, managing, companie hostess. Gentlewoman, not servant Excellent cook, capable, experienced. Highest rele ences. 8,284, Outlook.

POSITION as housekeeper in home wher children need mothering. Experienced. Rel erences exchanged. 8,282, Outlook.

POSITION as nursery governess by wou who is very fond of children. Experience References exchanged. 8,283, Outlook.

MISCELLANEOUS

TO young women desiring training in the care of obstetrical patients a six month nurses' aid course is offered by the Lyng Hospital, 307 Second Ave., New York A are provided with maintenance and given monthly allowance of $10. For further ticulars address Directress of Nurses.

to T

Your

of the 'Cas

rtments

OPPORT

3

More

Real Estate Sections March 28 April 25

May 30

First

SPECIAL REAL ESTATE SECTION

Bermuda

What to Buy-Where to Buy

HOMES-ESTATES-FARMS-RANCHES-REAL PROPERTY

FOR SALE, RENT, OR LEASE

Maine

New Jersey

Copy for Next Section due on or

before March 16

New York

Full Lentul houses for season in bean: Pemaquid Harbor, Maine Coast FOR BAY HEAD, N. J. ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS

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California

THE ESTATE OF

"YELLOWSTONE" KELLY Situated near Paradise, Butte County, California above the Sacramento Valley, between the fog and snow, consisting of 65 acres-25 partly in Almonds, walnuts, prunes, a few olive and citrus trees. Some woodland, with a living stream. All fruits excel. 40 acres unimproved park, consisting of two wooden slopes, oak, pue, manzanita, laurel, and holly, with living stream between, bathing hole and small cataTact, rocky gorge and lava. Noble avenue of tall cedars from bungalow to highway. ONE L.S. KELLY, Paradise, California

California Bungalow for Sale

7 sunny rooms, 2 baths, shade trees, lawns, gas furnace, solar water heater. Beautiful

keation on hill above orange groves. Ideal for

children. Mra. E. H. PFEIFFER, Redlands, Cal.

Connecticut

BEAUTIFUL

"Abandoned Farm"

5 rooms, 2-car garage, shade trees, fruit; susceptible of great possibilities. 1 mile to bathing beach, 3 minutes from Boston Post Road; 100 miles from New York. Located in a beautiful shore town. $2,200. 1 acre land, more available.

JAMES H. DAY
Real Estate
Hartford, Conn.

Masons Island, Mystic, Conn.

June to October. Furnished bungalow-cainp for four. Fine location. Boating, bathing. $425. E. I. Gill, 336 State St., Hackensack, N. J.

Sale Deep water. 1 mi. from mouth. Lots 75 ft. wide, $750 and up according to location. Address

e Shore Lots on Niantic River, Conn.

M. R. Tank, 7 Fairview Ave., Chatham, N.Y.

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3-story frame cottage, 10 rooms, 2 baths.
sleeping-porch, 1-car garage, compete ont-
side copper screens, 2 squares from the ocean.
$10,000, including furniture. Commission to
brokers. R. R. Foulke, 505 Chestnut St., Phila., Pa,

Furnished cottage, bath, open fireplace. Jay, Essex Co., N. Y. Hot and cold running water, electric lights. $275 for season. Convenient to supplies. Central for touring. A quiet place to rest. ALMON WARD, Ocoee, Fla.

Adirondack Camp for Sale

On LONG LAKE, N. Y. Six acres of woodland with 1,100 ft. of shorefront on most desirable point two miles from village. Five-room camp, completely furnished, including silver, liuen, blankets, etc. House has large living-room, 32'x18', with big stone fireplace, small kitchen, three bedrooms, and bath with running water. Icehouse filled. Boathouse containing good sixpassenger motor boat (Fay & Bowen engine), rowboat, and canoe. This very desirable property will be sacrificed for $10,000. For further particulars write to Mrs. GEORGE J.

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healthy Cumberland Valley. Hagerstown, For Sale, Morris County, $8,500 ABBOTT, 1055 Ardsley Road, Schenectady, N. Y.

the Gateway to the South! Please tell us your wants. HOME REALTY CO.. Hagerstown, Md., Room 201, 1st Nat. Bank Bldg. Bell phone.

Massachusetts

CAPE COD

For Sale, Spacious Summer Home

in the pines near the beach. 5 bedrooms, at

tractive living-room, all conveniences, 2-car garage; 2 acres, near Belmont Hotel and Herring River, West Harwich. Water and land

sports near at hand. Further particulars,

Walter A. Briggs, Esq., Attleboro, Mass.

Adirondacks Icy Brook Camp St. Huberts, N. Y. Fully furnished, grand piano, 8 bedrooms, 2 sleeping-porches, 4 bathrooms, 3 fireplaces, dining-room, kitchen, study, garage, electric lights. Apply to

S. B. Weston, 1324 Spruce St., Philadelphia. Pa.

ADIRONDACKS, SCHROON LAKE, N. Y. A lake of romantic beauty; the most efficacious resort known for tired, nervous people, convalescents and children. Furnished season cottages to rent. Write for booklet. CHARLES L. WEEKS.

FOR

FOR SALE, at Craigville, Mass. LE Summer Home, Furnished SALE Attractive Home

fully furnished summer cottage, 9 rooms and bath, 5 bedrooms, large sleeping-porch, sunparlor, fireplace, double bath-house on finest bathing beach. References exchanged. Ad

dress Cottage, Box 71, Wall St. Sta., N.Y.City. For Sale at the 1,000 Islands

House in the Berkshires To Rent

for balance

of winter or for summer season, furnished house in Pittsfield, Mass. Excellent location, oil heat, electric refrigerator. House redecorated within year. 14 rooms, 3 baths, 2 lavatories, large sleeping-porch. Owner this summer. For further information write Mrs. Philip R. Freeman, 1903 Gadsden St., Columbia, S. C.

South for winter, and desires to go to Europe FOR SALE, on Hudson River 50 les

CAPE COD, Truro, Mass.
Bungalows ou green dunes near ocean. $200-
5600 season. Herbert Lloyd, Bound Brook,N.J.
OCEAN-FRONT BUNGALOWS

Moderate Rentals

S. OSBORN BALL, Truro, Mass.

New Hampshire

LAKE SUNAPEE, N. H. Charming Summer Homes and Cottages, furnished, for rent and for sale. Write for booklets. SARGENT & Co., New London, N. H. Headquarters Lake Sunapee Real Estate

fruit On State road between Hartford and LAKE TARLETON, N. H.

New London. Center of 5 bus lines. Some antique furniture available. 9,007, Outlook.

Norfolk, Connecticut

For Sale or rent, Charming House witgarage, 4% acres, 2 brooks, beautiful trees.

Apply owner, P. O. Box 148, Norfolk, Conn. Sound, Rowayton, River For Sale

year cottage, 5 rooms, bath, electricity, Modern allacres finely landscaped. Pine grove, roses, reenhouse, barn. Grape-vines. 200 yds.to harbor and trolleys. Adapted for development. Ibr. to N. Y. Plaza 0.39. 39 E. 50th St., N. Y.

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Attractive modern cottage directly on lake. 9 rooms, 2 baths, electricity, garage. Adjoins club. Golf, tennis, saddle horses. For sale.

Full commission to brokers.

George Matthews, Jr., Inc., 33 E. 49th St., New York City

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SUGAR HILL, N. H. miles from New York City. Offered at $30,000.

NEAR SUNSET HILL HOUSE Attractive furnished cottage. 10 rooms, 2 baths, 2 lavatories, electric lights; garage, 5 acres. Unobstructed view of three mountain ranges. Within short motor ride of eight golf courses. No repairs necessary. For rental during summer season or for sale at less than cost. J. B. HARDON, 87 Milk St., Boston, Mass.

For Woodstock, N. H. 2 10-roomed

130 ACRES; 10-ROOM HOUSE heat. bath; good barns, orchards, pond. Offered for quick sale at $13,000. Rural Life Co., Kinderhook, N. Y.

то

RENT Lake George, N. Y.

Summer home, furnished. 6 bedrooms, 2 baths, and all modern conveniences. Ideal location. Dock and garage. A. B. LEOTAUD, 137 Glen St., Glens Falls, N. Y.

FOR Summer Home

SALE

Ideal for family with children. North Shore, Long Island. Rare location, 60 miles from New York, among wooded hills overlooking water. 7 bedrooms, 3 baths. 4 acres or more. Address owner H. Crosby, 8 Hubert Pl., Maplewood, N. J.

Picturesque Old Mill

Stream, pond, dam, trees, and 125 acres surrounding. 70 miles from N. Y. Suitable for country estate. Ralph C. Brown, Riverhead. L. I.

FOR SALE beautiful 12-room brick house on
St. Lawrence River & Roosevelt
Highway. One mile from country club and
golf course. Suitable for home or inn.
H. E. SWEET, 63 Bishop Ave., Massena, N. Y.

FOR SALE 100-acre dairy and truck

farm, well watered. Modern 10-room house, fine barn equipped with all labor-saving conveniences. Situated just off State road, 1 mile from Middletown, Orange Co., N. Y. R. D. 3. S. H. LIVINGSTON. For

Country Home of 180 acres

4 mi. from Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 13-room house and 6-room cottage with all modern improvements, 6-room farmhouse. Full set of new farm buildings, 2-car garage, gravity water system. Fine location, good roads. Price $25,000. F. I. Bower, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., R. 3.

Rockland County, N. Y. 35-Acre

Estate 14-room house,5 baths. Guest house,gardener's cottage, 16-room tenant house. Garages, barn. Swimming, fishing, boating. Ideal for country home, club, sanitarium or school. MORRIS & GANNON, Valley Cottage, N. Y.

FOR Six-Room Cottage, Furnished

SALE

All modern conveniences, fireplaces. Sleep For Rent, 12-Room Furnished House at Round Lake, near Saratoga. Bargain

Rent

ing-porches, garages. Far Mt., on State road; Windy Ways, on lake-fine bathing, canoeing: beauty spots of Franconia Valley, White Mts. C. H. Raymond, Lawrenceville, N. J.

For Sale in
One of the best farms

New Hampshire 279 acres; large tract growing timber; 350 tree orchards, productions of which have taken many blue ribbons: 10-room colonial house with all city conveniences; 2 barns. 2-car garage, ice-house; on elevation commanding wonderful view. Further information, 8,959, Outlook.

New Jersey FURNISHED HOUSE

8 rooms and bath.Good location.July 1-Sept.1, $150 month. Herbert Lloyd, Bound Brook,N.J.

JOHN M. STEWART, Owner, Englewood, N. J. FOR

SALE Fine Dairy Farm

in Saratoga Co., N. Y. Write or see Frederick D. Curtiss, Route 1. Ballston Lake, N.Y.

1 mile from Bear Mountain Bridge. 600 sq. Hunters Lodge, Sullivan Co., N.Y.

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For Sale-Large 13-Room House

2 baths, spring water. fireplace, large rooms, wide porches, beautiful mountain scenery. Opportunity for lake, private trout pond, large barn. Pleasant, ainple grounds. 25 to 900 acres joins, nearly all wooded. Ideal for hunting and fishing club, Scout camp, or residence. Terms and price reasonable and low. Inquire of ALBERT HOLCOMB, Acidalia, N. Y. For other Real Estate Advertising see next page

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