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Hotels and Resorts

NEW YORK CITY Norece Hall, 114 W. 79th St. The Graycourt, 124 W. 82d St. Quiet houses where families and ladies traveling alone will find homelike and refined surroundings. Folder and rates on application. W. B. Stubbs, Norece Co., 114 W. 79th St., N.Y.

HOTEL JUDSON 53 Washington Square adjoining Judson Memorial Church. Rooms with and without bath. Rates $2.50 per day, including meals. Special rates for two weeks or more. Location very central. Convenient to all elevated and street car lines.

NEW YORK

HURRICANE LODGE

and COTTAGES

IN THE ADIRONDACKS Hurricane, Essex Co., N. Y. Comfortable, homelike. Altitude 1,800 ft. Extensive verandas overlooking Keene Valley. Trout fishing. Camping. Golf links, nine well-kept greens. Mile course. Tennis and croquet. Fresh vegetables. Fine dairy. Furnished cottages, all improvements. Terms $17 to $30 per week. Special rates for season. Address K. BELKNAP, Manager, Hurricane, Essex Co., N. Y.

CAMP LINGERLONG

On Pine Lake. Includes 500 acres of wildest Adirondack Mountains. Hunting, fishing, swimming, canoeing, tennis. Saddle horses. Tramps to surrounding mountain peaks, Lake George and Lake Champlain. Dancing. Excellent meals. Spring water. Cabins and tents $14 and $16. Private parties entirely isolated. References required. Manager, O. D. ROBINSON, 101 W. 85th St., New York City. ADIRONDACKS

THE CRATER CLUB Of the Burnham Cottage Settlement, Essexon-Lake Champlain, offers to families of refinement at very moderate rates the attractions of a beautiful lake shore in a locality with a remarkable record for healthfulness. The club affords an excellent plain table and accommodation. The boating is safe, there are attractive walks and drives, and the points of interest in the Adirondacks are easily accessible. Ref. required. For information relative to board and lodging address Miss MARGARET FULLER, Club Mgr., 115 E. 71st St., New York. Furnished cottages without housekeeping cares. Circular and particulars on application. John B. Burnham, 233 B'way, New York.

ADIRONDACKS

Interbrook Lodge and Cottages Keene Valley, N. Y. Situated in spruces and pines. Wonderful location. Beautiful illustrated booklet. $12 and up. M. E. LUCK, Prop.

On GREAT SOUTH BAY, BELLPORT, L. I. Cool, comfortable, charming family resort. Table supplied from own farm. Sports- sailing, fishing, ocean and still-water bathing, golf, tennis.

Goldthwaite Inn

HOW would you like to live for 2 or 3 weeks or months, in cottage or hotel, on a strip of land VIRTUALLY SIX MILES AT SEA?

Hotels and Resorts

WYOMING

Real Estate

MAINE

6-ROOM

Real Estate

RHODE ISLAND

WYOMING―Trapper Lodge TBUNGALOW on Maine Lake, For Rent A Cottage at Weekapang, R. 1.

An all season stock ranch. Good water, table, fishing and saddle horses. Camp OUTDOORS WITH COMFORT in the Big Horn Mountains. Address WYMAN & SON, Shell, Wyo.

Health Resorts

The

MEDICAL SANITARIUM
Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
Practice limited to Disorders of Diges-
tion, Nutrition and Elimination.
All meals privately served.

IDYLEASE INN

Newfoundland, New Jersey

A quiet, restful health resort among the hills of northern New Jersey. Large sunny porch; dry, exhilarating air. All forms of hydrotherapy and massage under medical supervision.

Believing that there is a curable physical basis lying cause through a scientific study of each

for most chronic ailments, we seek the underindividual case. Booklet sent on application.

"INTERPINES"

Beautiful, quiet, restful and homelike. Over 26 years of successful work. Thorough, reliable, dependable and ethical. Every comfort and convenience. Accommodations of superior quality. Disorder of the nervous system a specialty. Fred. W. Seward, Sr., M.D., Fred. W. Seward, Jr., M.D., Goshen, N. Y.

3 acres woodland, canoe, motor boat, fireplace,
ice. Rent $200. Address Owner, 8,797, Outlook.
MASSACHUSETTS

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near Watch Hill. Fine location on a rocky point overlooking the sea. Large sea-room, ten sleeping-rooms, bath. Garage. Apply to MARY E. FOSTER, Lansdowne, Pa.

HELP WANTED

Business Situations WANTED-Man (unmarried) to be assistant headmaster and director of games and sports in the Junior School of the Peekskill Military Academy, Peekskill, N. Y. Address the Prin cipal.

MANAGER WANTED-A growing charitable institution in an Eastern factory city needs a manager with vision and push. It is now backed by a small but earnest group of manufacturers; is doing a fine work in its neighborhood, but could easily do ten times more. If you have enthusiasm, the gift of working with others, and a real desire to be useful in a larger field, send full particulars to Box 2,338, care of The Outlook. Present salary $2,000. The right man will be worth much more.

WANTED-Secretary and stenographer for educational institution. Prefer refined, educated woman between 30 and 40. Address

Asheville School, Asheville, N. C.

Companions and Domestic Helpers

COMPANION, summer, country, lady over thirty, refinement, breeding essential; duties and remuneration light; reading aloud. 5,987, Outlook.

WANTED-Young woman of refinement as mother's helper in small family. Address Mrs. Badger, 234 Westminster Road, Brook

Furnished cot-Richmond in Berkshires lyn, New York.

tage to rent,

9 rooms, bath. State road, X mile from station. 5 miles from Lenox. Rent $225. 8,799, Outlook. NEW HAMPSHIRE

Crest View Sanatorium
Greenwich, Ct. First-class in all respects, White Mountain Farm and Summer

home comforts. H. M. M.D.

Dr. Reeves' Sanitarium

a

Residence, Song. Facing Mt. Washington. Price $1,200. Address Rev, J. E. Johnson, Littleton, N. H.

mental patients. Also elderly people requiring M Bretton Woods, White Mtns. For rent, a

A Private Home for chronic, nervous, and care. Harriet E. Reeves, M.D., Melrose, Mass.

LINDEN The Ideal Place for Sick People to Get Well Doylestown, Pa. An institution devoted to the personal study and specialized treatment of the invalid. Massage, Electricity, Hydrotherapy. Apply for circular to ROBERT LIPPINCOTT WALTER, M.D. (late of The Walter Sanitarium)

Country Board

WANTED Lady wishes to receive into private home in Hartford, Conn., one or two congenial persons as paying guests. Address References, 8,765, Outlook.

Real Estate

CONNECTICUT

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only 50 miles from New York, is such a place? Direct inquiries to C.W. NASH, Supt., Point O' Woods, L. L.

For those only of meager purse but academic habits. Permission will be granted to not more than twenty to pitch tents on the tide-water channel of the Hudson between Catskill and Kingston, at the birthplace of the late John Bigelow. Applicants will be charged a nominal fee, but must furnish guarantees. Address POULTNEY BIGELOW, Malden-on-Hudson.

CAMPING

NORTH CAROLINA

ELTON COURT

Newly furnished, modern house, near ocean, Gulf Stream 35 miles off coast. Bathing, boating, hunting, and fishing. Ideal spot for rest and recuperation. Special rates to party of 5 or 6 gentlemen. Address

DR. C. A. SUTTON, Beaufort, N. C. RHODE ISLAND VAILL COTTAGE COMMUNITY, INC. Block Island, R. I. "A Summer at Sea" on South Bluffs. Surf bathing, deep sea fishing (swordfish, tuna and bluefish). Goff and tennis on the preinises. Dancing. For information aduntil June 24th. After that Vaill Cottages.

dress Bruce Bennett, Hotel Astor, N. Y. City,

Narragansett Bay-Thorndyke Hotel Jamestow, nicely furnished, all modern

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COTTAGE, 6 rooms and bath, partially furnished; barn; 22 acres woodland, garden, and fields; access to small lake. 2% miles from sta tion. Inquire of Adams & Keeler, Ridgefield. FLORIDA

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aplewood, N. H., near Bethlehem and comfortably furnished cottage with 5 master bedrooms and 3 servants' rooms, 3 bathrooms, laundry, dining-room, also servants' diningroom; living-room with fireplace; well heated, electric lighting, phone, fine porches; broad lawns and grounds kept up by Maplewood Hotel. Good markets. Write Secretary, 1800 New Hampshire Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C.

BUNGALOWS

TO LET. Apply to H. M. SMITH,

SUGAR HILL, N. H.

MATRONS, governesses, mothers' helpers, cafeteria managers, dietitians. Miss Richards, 537 Howard Building, Providence. Boston, 16 Jackson Hall, Trinity Court, Thursdays, 11 to 1.

Teachers and Governesses HOPKINS' Educational Agency, 507 Fifth Ave. Governesses, nurses, housekeepers, dietitians, companions, attendants, secre taries. Families, schools, institutions.

YOUNG, experienced, Protestant nursery governess fortwolittlegirls. English or French preferred. Address Box 114, St. Davids, Pa. TEACHERS desiring school or college positions apply International Musical and Educational Agency, Carnegie Hall, N. Y. WANTED-MAN (unmarried) to teach HISTORY and either ENGLISH or LATIN at Peekskill Military Academy, Peekskill, N. Y. Address the Principal.

WANTED-Competent teachers for public and private schools and colleges. Send for bulletin. Albany Teachers' Agency, Albany, N.Y. CALIFORNIA needs teachers with graduate study. Consult Boynton-Esterly Teachers'

WHITE MOUNTAINS-Chase Farm Agency, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Cal.

Whitefield, N. H., the A. L. Brown homestead, 12 rooms; modern cottage, 8 rooms; bungalow, 6 rooms. Low rental for season. W. B. & E. S. CHASE, 150 W. 105th St., N. Y. City.

Winnipesaukee Lake Wolfeboro,

N. H. Cottage, garage, boathouse. All conveniences. Rev. Dr. HIGGONS, 842 S. 57th St., Phila., Pa.

FOR SALE at

Successful Boys' Camp Close of Present

Season. On beautiful New Hampshire lake. Fully equipped. Desirable, active clientele. Moderate price. Address 2,342, Outlook.

NEW JERSEY

HOUSE with beautiful garden room with

fountain, on residential street in delightful town twelve miles from New York. To rent, furnished, $150 per month. References. P. O. Box 23, Bloomfield, N. J.

FOR BEwo attractive cottages RENT at particularly low

with modern conveniences in exclusive club colony overlooking water; high ground, beautiful trees. One hour from New York on Sandy Hook boat. 8,787, Outlook. NEW YORK

Lakeland Highlands as our Guest
-without charge. High, rolling country,
lakes. Boating, bathing, fishing,
numerous laots vertage' summer tempera Essex-on-Lan attractively located

ture 81°. Cool days, restful nights. This invitation is extended to acquaint refined people with our commercial grapefruit groves as an investment proposition. Each 10-acre grove should return $2,450 net (annually) after the fifth year. Cost is $4,950, on convenient terms. Trees scientifically cared for by experts, mak: ing non-resident ownership entirely safe and profitable. We entertain prospective purchasers at our Country Club without charge. Write at once for illustrated booklet, and learn what scientific methods and co-operative care HALLAM & Co., Owners, 227 Fifth Ave., N. Y. MAINE

are doing for the grapefruit industry. W. O.

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Champlain.

village house with privileges of the Crater Club to rent for $250 for the season. Open fireplaces; modern plumbing; completely furnished. J. B. Burnham, 233 Broadway, N. Y.

RENT, Furnished Cottage,

Tin Kingston, VT for months July and August. Possibility of maid remaining with tenants if desired. Address 167 Main St

ATTRACTIVE BUNGALOW

For Rent for Summer Months Located directly on Trout Lake, three miles from Bolton Landing, Lake George. Built by present owner, who will rent for the entire season at moderate rental. Completely furnished. Six rooms with three bedrooms and bath. Kitchen with running water. Ice, wood, and rowboat included. For full particulars address 7,855, Outlook.

n

Bungalows For Rent One attraalsed. Prze, cottages for rent

tive in

Kennebec County, completely furnished. 5
rooms, bath and screened porch. Running hot
and cold water. Ice, wood and canoe included.
Price $100 per month, or $200 to $250 per
season. J. A. CHASE, Kents Hill, Me.

Furnished. spring water, sanitary plumbing. Golf, tennis, boating, bathing, fishing. E. B. WALTON, Glenburnie, N. Y. VERMONT

Cful summer home. Cheerful, large, airy TO RENT, PEMAQUID, Maine For Sale Large Country House, in

rooms, pure water, bath, hot and cold; broad piazza, croquet, fine roads. Terms reasonable. Refs. exchanged. The MISSES SARGEANT.

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YOUNG woman as nursery governess for two little girls, ages 2 and 3 years. Some experience with children and knowledge of their physical care required; also an instinctive fondness and understanding of children most necessary. Ridgewood, N. J. Personal interview desired. 5,992, Outlook.

SITUATIONS WANTED Companions and Domestic Helpers UNIVERSITY student desires position girls' summer camp Middle West; swimming, etc. Experienced. 2,336, Outlook. [DIETITIAN desires position in institution or with charitable organization. 5,984, Outlook. PRINCIPAL of large Southern school would like summer position as tutor, companion, or to chaperon party to mountains or seashore. References exchanged. 5,983, Outlook.

WIDOW, gentlewoman, capable, experienced, wishes position as matron, managing housekeeper, or assistant in tea room. Good judgment, refined, pleasing personality. Excellent references. 5,979, Outlook.

AMERICAN nurse, household manager; experienced traveler, domestic science trained. 5,995, Outlook.

Teachers and Covernesses KINDERGARTEN supervisor wishes summer position. Excellent references. 5,969, Outlook.

HIGH school teacher wishes summer tutoring. 5,990, Outlook.

TUTOR-University graduate, experienced. Athletic. 5,959, Outlook.

TUTORING, college entrance subjects. Excellent_references. (A.M. Harvard; Professor of English and Modern History, University of New Brunswick.) Earl A. Aldrich, 16 Magnolia Square, Dorchester, Mass. GOVERNESS-care of young child. Would take convalescent from infantile paralysis. Last place seven years. 5,994, Outlook.

MISCELLANEOUS

PROFESSOR'S family will give limited number girls personal care in camp on Connecticut lake. "References exchanged. Terms reasonable. 5,991, Outlook.

PATRIOTISM by Lyman Abbott, also,4 verses of America The Pledge to the Flag2 verses of The Star-Spangled Banner, all in a little leaflet. Further the cause of Patriotism by distributing in your letters, in pay envel opes, in schools, churches, clubs, and social gatherings. 200 sent prepaid for 30 cents. Arthur M. Morse, Montclair, N. J.

CULTURED family will take some children or young ladies to ideal Maine summer resort. Home life. Physical care. Exceptional opportunity for coaching in music, school work, languages. Permanent home if desired. 5,993, Outlook.

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In this issue: An Authorized Interview with Baron
Skimpei Goto, Japan's Minister for Foreign Affairs, by
Gregory Mason, Staff Correspondent of The Outlook

THE

TWO LETTERS

HE correspondence received in an editorial office is often very confusing. Those of our readers who call at this office are so friendly, kind, and appreciative, and say such nice things about the work we are doing, that we begin to feel quite cheered up by our usefulness in the world, when along comes somebody of apparent intelligence and certainly an earnest spirit who casts us into the depths of humiliation. Such an instance will be found in the first of these two letters, which comes from a Methodist clergyman in Indiana. In almost the same mail the second letter reached us, from a professor in a theological seminary in Illinois. We are glad that Professor L.'s letter came when it did, because it alleviated the smart and bruises left by the Rev. Mr. S.'s severe castigation. Of the two verdicts that are here pronounced we can hardly be blamed for thinking the second comes from the more far-seeing and just judge.

Nevertheless we sincerely express our regret for even having seemed to our Indiana reader to be petulant and nagging, for petulance and nagging are the most unlovable of all petty human vices.

The Outlook,

New York City:

May 8, 1918.

Gentlemen-Of course Wilson has made his mistakes. Many of us will grant that we should have gone into war long before we did. But please give us a rest on your "knocking." It is getting to be perfectly disgusting! Knock! Knock! Knock!

Every one knows what a rabid Republican magazine The Outlook is, and, while you think you are fair, I think you positively could not be. Your criticisms are destructive and cruel, not constructive. Even when the Administration is praised, it is done so ungraciously, with a remark about some past mistake, or what good thing "Roosevelt" did when he was President.

The issue, May 8, is frightful. Your endeavor to justify your position of "knocking" by calling it "criticism" is sickening.

If it were not for the grand old man, Lyman Abbott, with his liberal, sane, inspirational religious articles that appear from time to time, and other splendid contributions non-political, I would not give The Outlook table space. I am, and have been for five years, Your indignant subscriber,

The Outlook Company,

New York City:

O. R. S.

May 6, 1918.

Dear Sirs-I enclose a new subscriber to The Outlook on one of my certificates. He (the new subscriber) asked me to send his name together with the money to your office. Hence payment is made with my own personal check.

Mr. K. is one of my fine students who graduates from our Theological Seminary this year either to "join the colors" and go to France or to become pastor of a church at home. I consider it one of the best achievements of my life when I persuaded him to become a subscriber to The Outlook. He is the fourth young graduate who has become a subscriber through my effort since I became connected with the Seminary. And I shall keep up the good work begun. It will do for him what it has done for me-broaden, strengthen, ennoble.

You will never know what The Outlook has meant and still means to me. I long for it as I do for a
friend. We do not always agree, but it is so noble, so magnanimous, so loyal to truth, so tolerant of others'
views, so fair, clear cut, and pure in diction, that I love it both for what it is and for what it is not. Of
all the many papers that come to my table The Outlook is the most valued.

As a minister of many years' standing and as a teacher of theology you may know that I have enjoyed
Dr. Abbott's editorial contributions, not the least his "Knoll Papers." With every issue that arrives I
fear lest it will be the last one his pen shall drop. I pray that he may live yet many years, and thus help
us to live better lives. He has thousands of "unknown friends" who even now call him blessed.
Well, I did not intend to burden you with so lengthy an epistle when I began this letter, but I had to
get rid of it. Having done so, I feel better.

THE

Yours ever gratefully,

OUTLOOK

381 Fourth Avenue, New York City

(Professor) F. A. L.

AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY JOURNAL OF CURRENT LIFE
"Never partisan, never neutral, but always independent

Yearly Subscription, $4.00. At News-stands, 10 Cents a Copy

[Advertisement]

The Man with a Million Dollar Memory

How Any Man Can Improve His Memory in a Single Evening of Solid Fun

A

MAN must have a pretty good memory to have it assessed at a million dollars. And yet this is what I have heard business men say was a small valuation of the memory of one of our big industrial leaders.

The man I refer to is one of the giants of American Business. He is the president of one of the largest corporations in the world and one whose employes run into the hundred thousands.

Ask this man anything about the history of his business-about the details of production in any one of his plantsabout the characteristics of his thousands of important employes-or in fact ask. him anything you can think of in relation to his business and its complex ramifications, and he comes back with the figures and facts without an instant's hesitation.

All who know this great man—and there is not a man in America who doesn't know him-say that perhaps the greatest factor in his marvelous success is his memory.

Memory and Good Judgment Good judgment is largely a matter of memory. It is easy to make the right decisions if you have all the related facts outlined in your mind-clearly and exactly.

Wrong decisions in business are made because the man who makes them forgets some vital fact or figure which, had he been able to summon clearly to mind, would have changed his viewpoint.

The Power of Memory

A man's experience in business is only as old as his memory. The measure of his ability is largely his power to remember at

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the right time. Two men

who have been in a cer-
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If you can remem-
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If, however, you have not a good memory and cannot recall instantly facts and figures that you learned years ago you cannot make your experience count.

There is no asset in

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Mr. Roth's Amazing Memory Feats

Any man, woman or child of average intelligence can easily and quickly acquire a sure

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Today there are over ten thousand people in the United States whom Mr. Roth has met at different times-most of them only once - whom he can name instantly on sight. Mr. Roth can, and has, hundreds of times at dinners and lectures, asked from fifty to one hundred people to tell him their names and telephone numbers and business connections, and then, after turning his back while they changed seats, has picked each one out by name and told him his telephone number and business.

These are only a few of the scores of other equally "impossible" things that Mr. Roth does-and yet a few years ago he could not remember a man's name twenty seconds. You too can do these wonderful things.

A Better Memory in One Evening

Mr. Roth's system, which he has developed through years of study, and which he has taught in class to thousands of business men and others throughout the country in person, is so easy that a twelve-year-old child can learn it, and it is more real fun than any game you play solely for pleasure.

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Try Before You Buy

So confident are the publishers, the Independent Corporation, of the remarkable value of the Roth Memory Course to readers of this maga zine that they want you to test out this remarkable system in your own home before you decide to buy. The Course must sell itself to you by actually increasing your memory before you obligate yourself to spend a penny.

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"I have examined and used the Roth Memory Course, and I wish to tell you how pleased I am with it. I have seven systems of memory training, every one of them of some value, some of very great value; but the Roth course introduces a new principle which excels them all. It is as simple as it is effective." FRANK W. COLLIER,

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52d Year

Young men and young women find here a homelike atmosphere, thorough and efficient training in every department of a broad culture, a loyal and helpful school spirit. Liberal endowment permits liberal terms, $325-$400 per year. Special Course in Domestic Science.

For catalogue and information address ARTHUR W. PEIRCE, Litt. D., Principal

WALNUT HILL SCHOOL

23 Highland St., Natick, Mass.

A College Preparatory School for Girls. 17 miles from Boston. Miss Conant, Miss Bigelow, Principals.

SHORT-STORY WRITING

A course of forty lessons in the history, form, structure, and writing of the Short-Story taught by Dr. J. Berg Esenwein, for years Editor of Lippincott's. 150-page catalogue free. Please address THE HOME CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL Springfield, Mass.

Dr. Esenwein Dept. 68

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BY SUBSCRIPTION $4.00 A YEAR. Single copies 10 cents.
For foreign subscription to countries in the Postal Union, $5.56.
Address all communications to
THE OUTLOOK COMPANY
381 Fourth Avenue
New York City

for Preparatory and High School Boys, at ANDOVER, MASS.

JULY 3 to AUGUST 14 Directed by Canadian Overseas Officers. Same instruction given as in France. Trench construction and manoeuvres. Bayonet fighting, bombing, rifle and machine gun practice. All departments of Military Instruction pertaining to modern warfare. Equipment and plant of Phillips Academy to be utilized. Fee, $150, including everything. For informa tion, write DR. ALFRED E. STEARNS, Principal.

Camp for Selected Boys

12 TO 18 YEARS

Chesterfield, Mass., Hampshire Highlands June 25 to October 1. Rates $6.00 week. Highest references. Y. M. C. A., Northampton, Mass.

CAMP OXFORD A Summer Camp for Boys,

OXFORD, MAINE Eighteenth Season. Highest efficiency at minimum rates. Booklet. A. F. CALDWELL, A.M.

CAMP PESQUATIQUIS

Moosehead Lake

The Maine Woods. For boys from 12 to 17. A six weeks' trip, covering over 300 miles by canoes; living in tents: getting some real fishing; seeing lots of game. The number of boys limited to 20, which means that each boy will have the best care possible. A lesson in woodcraft. For Booklet and Reservation, address EUGENE HAYDEN, North East Carry, Me.

Camp Cobbossee

LAKE COBBOSSEECONTEE, MAINE 16th season. Location, equipment, supervision, food the best. Ideal boating, swimming and land sports. Experienced college men. Camp physician. Write for Booklet. R. L. MARSANS, A.B., Director, Shandaken, N. Y.

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INNER

ОАНЕ

The Hill of Vision.

On Granite Lake, New Hampshire.
The Camp Unique for girls of all ages.
Dr. and Mrs. CHARLES A. EASTMAN,
MUNSONVILLE, N. H.
FOR

Camp Moy-mo-da-yo GIRLS

Limington, Maine. Gardening, War Work, Military Drill, in addition to regular camp activities. 11th season. Miss MAYO, 16 Montview St., West Roxbury, Mass.

BOOKKEEPER

GET OUT OF THE RUT:

become a Certified Public or Cost Accountant; go into business for yourself; demand for expert accountants exceeds the supply; our graduates earn over $5,000 yearly; have more business than they can handle; learn at home in spare time by our new system. Write for booklet and special offer. We have no solicitors, Universal Business Institute, 155 Pullman Building, New York

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