Hotels and Resorts THE OUTLOOK CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SECTION NEW YORK CITY Hotel Webster AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILE owners, garagemeni, mechanics, repairmen, send for free copy of our current issue. It contains helpful. instructive information on overhauling, ignition troubles, wiring, carburetors, storage bat. teries, etc. Over 120 pages, illustrated. Send for free copy to-day, Automobile Digest, 527 Butler Building, Cincinnati. Adı ertising Rates: Hotels and Resorts, Apartments, Tours and Travel, Real Estate, Live Stock and Poultry, sixty cents per agate line, four coluinns to the page. Not less than four lines accepted. ''Want" advertisements, under the various headings, "Board and Rooms," "HelpWanted," etc., ten cents for each word or initial, including the address, for each insertion. The first word of each "Want" advertisement is set in capital letters without additional charge. If answers are to be addressed in care of The Outlook, twenty-five cents is charged for the box number named in the advertisement. Replies will be forwarded by us to the advertiser and bill for postage rendered. Address: ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT, THE OUTLOOK, 381 Fourth Avenue, New York City (Near 5th Avenue) NEW YORK Directly in the fashionable club and shop ping section. Within five minutes' walk to all principal theaters. A high-class hotel patronized by those desiring the best accommodations at moderate cost. Rates and map gladly sent upon request. JOHN P. TOLSON, Prop. HOTEL JUDSON 63 Washingadjoining Judson Memorial Church. Rovna with and without bath. Rates $3.50 per day, including meals. Special rates for two weeks or more. Location very central. Convenient to all elevated and street car lines. VERMONT FOR THE HOME HONEY. Delicious Dew clover honey direct from producer, Guaranteed pure and clean. 10 pounds $1.90, 5 pounds $1.05. postage prepaid Zones 1, 2, 3. Herbert A. McCallum, Great Barrington, Mass. PHOTO DEVELOPING GET acquainted offer: Mail ns 200 with any size filmu or six negatives for development and six velvet prints. Twenty-four honr service. Fine work. Roanoke Photo Finishing Co., 323 Bell Ave., Roanoke, Va. vou cannot find a more comfortable place in New England than GREENFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS It affords all the comforts of home without extravagance. MHESTER, VT.“The Maples," Delight U ful summer home. Cheerful, large, airy rooms, pure water, bath, hot and cold; broad piazza, croquet, fine roads. Terms reasonable. Refs. exchanged. The MISSES SARGEANT. Tours and Travel | Hotels and Resorts MASSACHUSETTS If You Are Tired or Need a Change Delightful Autumn Tours to THE WELDON HOTEL EUROPE and the MARBLEHEAD, MASS. MEDITERRANEAN The Leslie Sailings Aug. 13 and Sept. 14 WHITE HOUSE INN For details write BUREAU OF UNIVERSITY TRAVEL 15 Boyd St., Newton, Mass. ELMWOOD COURT INN AMERICAN TRAVEL SANATORIUM SCHOOL IDEAL climate, special teachers, faithful, careful treatment, massage, medical orthopædic gymnastics. Near Phoenix, Arizon 141, Outlook. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES COOKING for PROFIT. Earn handsome income; home cooked food, catering, tea room, etc. Correspondence course. Am. School Home Economics, Chicago. BIG money and fast sales. Every owner buys gold initials for his auto. You charge $1.50, make $1.35. Ten orders daily easy. Write for particulars and free samples. American Monogram Co., Dept. 167, East Orange, N.J. EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES Health Resorts A quiet, cosy little house by the sea. Now open. Private baths. Descriptive booklet. he Ideal Place for Sick People to Get Well Doylestowa, Pa.lAn institution devoted to the personal study and specialized treatWent of the invalid. Massage, Ilectricity Hydrotherapy. Apply for circular to ROBERT LIPPINCOTT WALTER, M.D. 91 Elm Street, Northampton, Mass. Season June 24 to Sept. 10. Reservations may be made now. Detailed information upon application to Mrs. M. V. BURGESS. White Plains, The Bethesda White A private sanitarium for invalids and aged who need care. Ideal surroundings. Address for terms Alice Gates Bugbee, M.D. Tel. 341. WANTED--Competent teachers for public and private schools. Calls coming every day. Send tor circulars. Albany Teachers' Agency, Albany, N. Y. DIETITIANS, superintendente, cafeteria managers, governesses, matronie, honse keepers, social workers, and secretaries. Miss Richards, Providence, East Side Box 5. PLACEMENT BUREAU for employer and employee; housekeepers, inatrona, dietitiana, governesses, secretaries, mother's helpers companions. 51 Trowbridge St., Cambridge, Mass. Box JAPAN PITTSFIELD, MASS. A Cozy Inn Amid the Hills. Open Independent travel to the West and Eastern and Ca June into October. Attractive rates for June. nadian points. Itineraries submitted. Inclusive price. Booklet on request. J. A. McNAMARA, Prop. THE TEMPLE TOURS 65 A Franklin St. . . . BOSTON ROCK RIDGE HALL THE beauty, fascination, and mys WELLESLEY HILLS, MASS. 1 tery of the Orient lures visitors ! Hot and cold running water in nearly all bedrooms. Some private baths. Many comfrom all over the world to fortably furnished rooms for general use. Large, breezy, screened piazza. Fern room. "Crow's nest "Outlook. Edison Phonograph -laboratory model. Casino (separate build ing) with playroom for children. Bowling, The quaintest and most interesting of all tennis, croquet. Pleasant forest walks and countries. Come while the old age customs country drives. Milk, cream, berries, fresh eggs, chickens. Rates $15, 18, 21, 25 a week. prevail. Write, mentioning "Outlook" to JAPAN HOTEL ASSOCIATION NEW YORK BELLPORT, L.I. On Great South Bay TOKYO Cool, comfortable, charming Farm vegefor full information tables. Tennis, golf, sailing, bathing. Rales for a single room without bath and with 3 meals, $5-6 in cities and popular resorts, $4-5 in the country Mount Pleasant House, Orient, L.I. Quiet. refined, homelike. Most delightful spot on the Island.' Water sports. 3 minutes' walk from beach. Illus. booklet. Accommodates 150. Eugene J. McDonnell, Prop. and Mgr. Parties enrolling now. Moderate NEW YORK CITY prices. Most interesting routes. Great success 1920. 65-A Franklin St., HELP WANTED Professional situations WANTED-Nurse for the summer for small infirmary in institution in the country. 154, Outlook. Teachers and Governesses WANTED-Refined, experience woman between 30 and 40 to take charge of girl 7% and boy 6% years of age. Must speak good French and be able to start children in musie. Protestant preferred. State salary, experience, and give references. P. O. Box 331 Waterville, N. Y Property Wanted ANTED, for August, in the Berk shires, a small house with garage; accessible to village. Address Children's De partment, Public Library, Fort Wayne, Ind. Real Estate CONNECTICUT Hotels and Resorts 202 West 103d Street New York A hotel of Quality and RefineTHE SIGN OF THE ment, located in the Residential TROUT AND THE FLY Section of the West Side. Short In the heart of the Laurentian Mountains. A Select | block from Broadway Subway Lodge run by university men. 75 miles from Station-within easy reach of all Montreal, on privately owned forest land. Finest lake and mountain scenery. Altitude Shops and Theaters. 1,600 ft. Excellent trout fishing and shooting. High grade cuisine. References exchanged. Dan Single Room . . . . $1.50 Capacity, 12 men. Opens July 15 and closes Rates - Single Room, Bath near by, $2.00 September 15. Apply to PAUL A. LEIGHTON, Lac Superieur, Terrebonne County, P. Q., Can. Parlor, Bedroom, Bath, for 2 . $3, $4, $5 Parlor, 2 Bedrooms, Bath . . $5, $6, $7 CONNECTICUT Excellent Restaurant The Wayside Inn Moderate Prices—Table d'Hôte or a la Carte NEW MILFORD. Litchfield Co., Conn. In the foothills of the Berkshires. Open all Write for Booklet Camd Map of N. Y. City the year. An ideal place for your summer's rest 2 hours from New York. Write for booklet. Mrs. J. E. CASTLE, Proprietor. MAINE West 72d St., through to 71st St., New York 300 rooms, each with bath. Absolutely fireproof. One block to 72d St. enBailey trance of Central Park. Comfort and Island refinement combined with moderate Me. SITUATIONS WANTED Business Situations WANTED-Position as librarian in boardLOTS on shore front ing school or small college, boys' boarding NIANTIC RIVER, school preferred, by woman librarian of ten CONN. Salt water bathing, boating, fishing, years' experience. Would do clerical work if desired. 162, Outlook. clamming. 100 acres woods, 500 ft. stone clock; river to 1 mile wide. Box 62, Chatham, N. Y. Companions and Domestic Helpers HOUSEKEEPER. By experienced home FOR SALE maker. Fond of outdoor life. Cheerful dia UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY position and cultured. Widower preferred Closing of Estate, 3-apartment house ; 166, Outlook. 17 rooms, 3 baths; beautifully located. Owner COMPANION or managing housekeeper on premises. 67 Blakeman PI., Stratford, Conn. where ability, culture, and true womanhood are appreciated. Experienced. References MAINE exchanged. Would travel. 165, Outlook. WANTED-Position by school secretary se traveling or nurse-companion. Capable of taking entire charge of nervous or chronic invalid. Best references. College graduate Fine old brick house in the town of 168, Outlook. Hollis, Maine, along the Saco River, with PROTESTANT, cultured young woman, outbuildings and about one acre of land. companion to lady or semi-invalid. Highest Near the summer home of Kate Douglas credentials. Personal interview. Permanent Wiggin. For particulars address Mrs. GEO. 8. 169, Outlook. HOBBS. 127 Pleasant Street, Portland, Me. HOUSEKEEPER assistant in school or institution. Miss Deans, 271 West End Ave, FOR YORK CLIFFS, ME. New York. SALE Teachers and Governesses To settle an estate, attractive house and furniture; 7 master's rooms, 3 baths, SENIOR college student, companionable 2 servants' rooms, living and dining rooins, and fond of athletics, wishes position as butler's pantry, kitchen, laundry, furnace, tutor in engineering and mathematics 174, 4 fireplaces, sun and sleeping porches. Outlook. J. PERLY PUTNAM, Agt., York Harbor, Me. MISCELLANEOUS MASSACHUSETTS MISS Guthman, New York shopper, will CHARMING HOUSE For Sale or gend things on approval. No bain ples. Beter To Rent, and never rented before ; ences. 309 West 99th St. molern. Plymouth, Mass. Apply to BOYS wanted, 500 boys wanted to sell The J. B. SWANTON, Esq., 60 Allerton Street. Outlook each week. No investment necessary. Write for selling plan, Carrier Depurtment The Outlook Company, 381 Fourth Ave., New York City. HALF the people who write for free sam. Adirondacks N. Y. For Rent. ples order later. There's a reason, 300 sheets Cottages, fully equipped, very moderu; bath, notepaper and 100 envelopes printed with your name and address $1.30. Lewis toilets, etc. Season $300 to $1,000. W. H. OTIB. 94 Second Ave., Troy, N. Y WANTED-Christian home for well-bom girl of eleven. No family ties. Very talental, $90 for August. $125 August into October. gentle, affectionate, and responsive Best of Hotel Hargrave OMESTEAD lam CAMP IN ADIRONDACKS FOLLOW THROUGH BY FRANCIS B. KEENE Consul-General at Rome ITEAR the teaching of the tee n Follow throughGem of golf's philosophy; Follow through. Heed the maxim, soon or late You may baffle fickle fate And be known among the great. Follow through. On the links of life be wise. Follow through. It may win you Fortune's prize. Follow through. When in enterprise you vie, On your purpose keep your eye. Let your swing be true and high. Follow through. BETTER THAN BOLTS BY PAUL V. COLLINS T VERY blacksmith and wheelwright V knows that the way to fit a tire onto the felloe is to heat the tire, so that while it is expanded by the heat it is larger than the felloe, and as it cools it contracts, binding itself fast upon the wheel. But it has remained for the Bureau of Standards to reverse that principle. This problem came to the Bureau: Find a method of binding heavy steel plates together where it is impossible to use bolts because of the location of the plates and where the shearing power is too great for screws. The scientists bored inch holes through the steel plates and prepared steel pins eight or ten inches long and one-thousandth of an inch or onefifteen hundredth of an inch larger in diameter than the holes. The pins were about ten inches long—the thickness of the two plates to be fastened together. Then, the plates being in position, the steel pins were immersed for ten minutes in a beaker of liquid air which was at a temperature of 2,000° F. below zero. This intense cold contracts the pins, so that they are easily driven into the holes, and upon their regaining their normal temperature the expansion gives an enormous grip, stronger than any rivets. Another method, equally original, but a little less reliably effective, consists in making the steel pins slightly smaller in diameter than the holes into which they are to fit. Then along the axis of each pin is drilled a hole an eighth of an inch in diameter. This hole is filled with a high explosive known to soldiers as TNT. After the pin has been driven home, the TNT is set off, causing the pin to expand, and this expansion remains permanent, gripping the sides of the socket and holding like a rivet. These methods—both new-are not available to ordinary workshops, un. equipped with liquid air or with the necessary knowledge of high explosives, but they will be found useful where old BY THE WAY Secretary Weeks to be the busiest monial entrance, he found, to his astoncoastal waterway of the world. It has ishment, that "the noble gateway, the more traffic than the Suez Canal, and work of Kalemegh, had been reduced to is regarded as one of the chief arteries a heap of ruins. I deplored this rash of commerce in New England. Its pur. destruction of the gateway, but the chase by the Government for $11,500,000 Rawat declared that he could never has been recommended by Secretary have looked upon it again with comWeeks, on account of its military and placency, since it had nearly deprived naval potentialities. me of life." Mother (as reported in the "American In some wide-awake stores, according Legion Weekly”)—“Why do you wish to to "American Business Methods," a be a great general like Sherman?" meeting of employees is held once a Willie—“So's I can say things like him month to discover and eliminate all and not get licked." waste of effort, time, and material. A list of questions is asked and answered. Edward Payson Weston, the pedes. One question, which suggests unusual trian who was famous a generation ago humility on the part of the store's manfor his wonderful walking feats, is still agers, at one of these meetings was hale and hearty at the age of eighty-two this: "Give ten reasons why this store years, so a newspaper paragraph states. would displease you if you were a Even now he walks three miles daily patron." for his mail and several times a week takes a twelve-mile walk in the neigh- Another store mentioned in the book borhood of his home. Plutarch, Ulster above quoted from is said to taboo the County, New York, just to keep himself word "Hello" in an employee's answer in condition. Weston once walked 550 to a telephone call. The firm's name or miles in six days, and 5,000 miles in "Good-morning" is preferred. When a 100 days. customer is addressed, "Are you receive ing attention?" is insisted on in this "We inclose herewith" is a common store instead of the blunt query, expression in business letters. It is “Waited on?" "Can I interest you in criticised by a correspondent as tauto shirts?" is regarded as better than logical. "Anything that is inclosed is “Something for you?" And "What is it necessarily 'herewith,'" he says. "Each you wish ?" is approved, rather than other" is also objected to in such “What is it you want?" phrases as, “The crowd got in each other's way." This, our subscriber Under the headline "Trouble in the says, should of course be "one an Transmission" the "Journal" of the other's," as applying to more than two American Medical Association reprints persons. this local item from the Lisbon (Ohio) "Journal:" "Mrs. Lucy Mumaw has More than ne hundred buffalo calves been under the Doctor's car this week." were porn ju che Yellowstone National Park this pring, a bulletin says, and The “Journal” (of the A.M.E.) pubthe Park herd now numbers approxi. lishes a series of "definitions" in its mately seven hundred. As if in celebra humorous column. These are samples: tion of the increase, it is said that the "Gall—The word that comes after 'You rk's springs are more active tha2 at gottalotta.' Gargle—The German lanany other time in thirty years. guage. Gas-The usual ingredient of after-dinner speeches. Glacial-Attitude "Experiments have shown that it is a to be assumed in response to request for good idea to place any special article a a $10 loan. Goggles-Modern substitute store wishes to push in the window at for an intelligent appearance." the left of the main store door." The statement is made in a book called The following clipping from a treas"American Business Methods." The ured scrap-book is sent by a reader, reason given is: “The customer pesi with the suggestion that many persons tates and generally looks to the left as would like to keep it for ref érence: he opens the door with his right hand." The longest chapter oʻthe New Another strategic point recommended is Testament is the first chapter of the store's exit: “A placard should face Luke; it contains eighty verses. The the customer as he is ready to leave the shortest is I John, fist chapter; it contains ten verse') The longest store." verse in the Old Testament is the Some East Indian potentates have ninth verse of the eighth chapter of Esther. It contains ninety Varie been noted for their friendship for composed of 426 letters The shorttheir British coadjutors. One of these est verse in the Old Testament is the was a certain Rawat described in a new twenty-fifth verse of the first chapter edition of the works of Colonel James of I Chronicles, consisting of twelve Tod, a British Agent in India in the letters and three words. The nineearly part of the last century. He was teenth chapter of II Kings and thirtyvisiting a city called Begun, and trav seventh chapter of Isaiah read alike. eled in state. In going through the his The twenty-first verse of the seventh chapter of Ezra contains all the let. toric gateway of the town the elephant ters of the alphabet with the excepon which he was riding became fright tion of "J." The thirty-fifth verse, ened and threw nim off; he narrowly eleventh chapter, of St. John is the escaped death. When he recovered shortest in the Bible, 8 Days $91.00 Upward and Including all expenses for Steamer, Hotel and Side Trips All Outdoor Sports via Palatial Twin Screw Steamers “FORT HAMILTON" FURNESS BERMUDA LINE New York PUBLISHER'S NOTES “IV E began housekeeping, many years W ago, with The Outlook, and very little furniture," writes a subscriber in Minnesota. "The Outlook has been periodically renewed, likewise the furniture—both necessary in our housekeeping. The weekly visits of The Outlook have been welcome because we have not agreed on all points with its editors. I think if we had you would have been tiresome and the visits would have been discontinued long ago. My aged father, a retired clergyman, lived with us before his death, and how he did disagree with The Outlook's theology! At the last he could read only with the aid of a magnifying-glass the size of a saucer; but he never missed a number. It was on these points of disagreement that he loved to dwell, to study, to 'sputter,' and to grow.” How you can build your home at a saving of hundreds of dollars T ERE is a brief excerpt from a long letter from A. L. Davis, of North Loup, Nebraska, who, along with numerous others, writes to us in divided strain: “What America needs is a consistent, continuous foreign policy. And the fact that Harding is going ahead with the policies of Wilson, notwithstanding election promises, shows that beneath the insincerity of politics there is developing an American foreign policy, in spite of politics. Your bitter denunciations of the Wilson Administration, while approving so much of the same programme when directed by a Republican, has been one of the painful surprises to me. I had said I would stop my subscription, though I have been a subscriber for years. However, I am inclosing check for renewal. “With all your faults,' I cannot do without you." • Come time back you asked for the peregrinations of certain copies of The Outlook," writes Edna S. Knapp, of Caryville, Massachusetts. "Allen Eastman Cross, the hymn-writer, takes the paper in Milford, Massachusetts. He hands it to Mrs. Carl J. Dane, of Milford; then it comes to us here in Caryville. We read it, and add it to all our own periodicals and send them to a family of seven nine miles from the railway in the Vermont hills. The Bartletts read the copies threadbare; the mother keeps the papers in her own hands first and reads aloud the things the older children can appreciate at the evening story hour; then the papers really begin to circulate as she passes them on. I believe The Outlook is less of a magazine than a habit. Twelve hundred leading architects and leaders of the nation- A membership may save you $500.00 to $2,500.00. waste of paying rent for a house owned by somebody else. I You want to be sure that your house plans are as perfect and economical as the most skillful architect can make them. You want to know how to finance a home so that what you now pay each month for rent will, little by little, make your home your own. How can you get this information! How can you be sure that the home you finally But you must act now. The Institute does decide upon will be all that you dreamed it would not promise to keep the membership open at be? How can you be sure that you will not waste this rate for a permanent period. Read the $300 or even $2,500 in needless building expense? 24 Service features; and fill in and clip the The answer to all these questions has been coupon now. provided through the organization of the Home Owners' Service Institute-an organization existing for one purpose and one purpose only - to make possible more and better homes for men and women These are the 24 Services to which of moderate means at savings from 25 per cent to 40 per cent. your membership entitles you. $5 Fifty Homes Laid Down invested now may save you hunon Your Library Table dreds. The Home Owners' Service Institute grew out 1. Fifty prize house designs. of the nation-wide "Own Your Home" Movement, 2. Diversified series of plans. which had the co-operation of leading architects, (a) Brick (d) 4-room building and loan associations, investment bankers (b) Frame (e) j-room and real estate associations all over the country. (c) Stucco (f) 6-room In the 1921 National Prize "Small House Com Guide to building costs. petition," open to all American architects, more than 1.200 well-known architects submitted plans The "Small House Competition." for economical bungalows and houses of four, Privilege of purchasing architects' five and six rooms in frame, brick, and stucco. blueprint working drawings anal The fifty prize-winners selected have been gath specifications for 50 plans, ready to ered together in a handsome book-a de luxe build. library edition-the "Home Builder's Plan Book." To members of the Home Owners' Service Insti How to solve Home Owning Finan. tute this book will be sent immediately upon re cial Problems. ceipt of the coupon below. Think of it-fifty Home Site-A Savings Account. hores all laid down on your library table for you 8. Selecting the Building Site. to study, discuss and compare. This is part, but 9. Cost Estimating, Securing Bids, Letonly part of the service which members receive. ting Contracts. A series of fourteen educational pamphlets is included in the service. These booklets contain a Good Architectural Planning. wealth of practical and invaluable information for 11. Selection of Materials. the home builder, written by the leaders of the 12. Building Now With Wood. "Own Your Home" Movement and the 1921 "Own 13. The House of Brick. Your Home" Expositions in Chicago and New 14. Stucco Homes. York. 15. Planning the Plumbing. You receive an Active Membership Certificate in the Home Owners' Service Institute for one 16. Heating With Comfort and Economy. year. All questions which arise while you plan, 17. Lighting in the Home. or during actual construction of your home, will 18. Painting the Home-Inside and Out. be answered, free of charge, by correspondence. 19. Decorating and Furnishing. Our corps of experts will be at your service. . Planting the Home Grounds. Fifty Landscape Plottings. 22. Business of Being a House Wife, A complete statement of the twenty-four ser A Sample Building Contract. vices offered to members is contained in the panel 24. One Year's Active Membership Ceron the right. Read this list carefully. It is as tificate in Home Owners' Service Inif ye had gathered together for personal consul stitute. tation the nation's leading architects and homeTuilding experts and put your individual problem into their hands SEND NO MOVEY. CLIP THE COUPON You pay $5 only when you have examined i the Service HOME OWNERS' SERVICE INSTITUTE, The Home Owners' Service Institute is 24 West 39th St., New York. conducting a nation-wide campaign for 1,000,000 members. It wants to enroll every Send me your Service. I will pay the PostAmerican family of moderate means which man $3 upon delivery (plus the small posthopes, either this year or at any time in age fee). If I am not satisfied for any reathe future to build and own its own home. While the offer remains open, the price of son whatsoever, you agree to refund my membership is not $100 or $50 or even $25. money upon return of Service and MemberThe Insitute asks for no money at all in ship. advance. It offers to send to any responsible man or woman who will clip the special introductory coupon the complete service. Name Accept it; examine it; pay the postman $5 (Please print name) for your membership and complete service, plus the small postage fee. If at the end of ten days you are not more than satis Address ... fied with your membership, return the service. The Institute will promptly return the fee and substitute another name for yours on the Membership Rolls. City ............ ...Outlook 7-20-21 - -- 21. MAN in Brookline, Massachusetts, A likes his copy of Chesterton's "The Man Who Was Thursday," which we recently offered as a premium. He writes: “The books of the Modern Library are a boon to the invalid and the aged because of the excellent print and the light weight to handle." NEARLY 700 letters were received in W Contest Number Three; prize winners will be announced in an early issue. THE CHAIR ON THE BOULEVARD By LEONARD MERRICK "Unique and unapproachable."—N. Y. Times. Some of the most exquisitely amusing yarns in the literature of our times are in this collection."-Boston Herald. By the author of "While Paris Laughed," Conrad in Quest of His Youth," ete. Each, $1.90 TORCHLIGHT By BARONESS LEONIE AMINOFF This story of men and women who lived out their destinies in one of the most dramatic periods of history, the French Revolution, is told with strength, humor, and sympathy. A book we recommend without reservation. $2.00 GREEN APPLE HARVEST By SHEILA KAY E-SMITH "She is of the soil of Thomas Hardy," says Samuel Abbott in the N. Y. Tribune. $2.00 THE INLAID NEW GUNN DESK eliminates the use of plate glass and blotters ON THE ...... 461 ... GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN “Thirty years builders of Desks" NEW YORK BRANCH, No. 11 E. 36th Street t... THE BRASSBOUNDER By CAPT. DAVID BONE Keith Preston in the Chicago Daily News says: "The more we reflect on this book the more we like it for its keen observation, its mellow humor, and the fine story of rough adventure that it is." $2.00 . HANIT THE ENCHANTRESS By GARRETT C. PIER THE TRAGIC BRIDE By FRANCIS BRETT YOUNG "A haunting novel, very beautiful, full of power, and marked by the authentic accent of romance," says the Chicago Tribune. A fresh proof of the genius of the author of "The Crescent Moon." $2.00 Publisher's Notes ........ World Conference....... 466 Nations ........................ By Lyman Abbott By Richard Barry By P. W. Wilson By W. C. Gregg. With Photographs by the Author Censorship at Paris. By Wade Chance By Enos A. Mills By Charles Henry Meltzer By Bernice Lesbia Kenyon By Theodore Stearns By Lyman Abbott By M. L. Polcher SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES THE PENOBSCOT TUTORING SCHOOL Summer Term : July 11-Sept. 10 DEER ISLE, ME. A legitimate school of highly specialized instruction, located in ideal surroundings. A faculty of experts and a complete equipment. For information address Tbe Directors - S. B. Knowlton, Lester D. Tyler, Haverford, P. N. Y. Representative: W. B. Wildman, The Trinity School EVERED By BEN AMES WILLIAMS "One of the strongest stories of human passion and obsession that we have ever read."-N. Y. World. $2.00 RAINY WEEK ABBOTT Brimming over with fun, this ingenious story of a house party is precisely the book to have at hand to amuse a week-end guest. $1.60 VELVET BLACK By RICHARD WASHBURN CHILD Short stories of mystery and adventure, each with amazing power to give the reader a thrill of tense suspense'. ANTIOCH SCHOOL THE ISLANDS OF DESIRE By DIANA PATRICK connected with Antioch College Opens in the fall of 1921 to accept a limited number of boys and girls as boarding pupils in an ideal school enviroment. For informatiou write to The Director of the Antioch School, Yellow Springs, 0 TRAINING SCHOOLS FOR NURSES School for Nurses BY SUBSCRIPTION $5.00 A YEAR. Single copies 15 cents each. For foreign subscription to countries in the Postal Union, $6.56. Address all communications to THE OUTLOOK COMPANY 381 Fourth Avenue New York ('ity All these books can be bought at any bookstore, or direct from E. P. DUTTON & Co. th Ave., New York City Registered in New York State, offers a 2 year cours as general training to refined, educated womeu. Require | meuta one year high school or its equivalent. Appls to the Directrena n N YAAR Vonirare New York |