Interest Women talcum - Chronicling America · i1 3 I§. EDUCATIONAL EDUCATIONAL FRESHMANACCOUNTING...

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EDUCATIONAL EDUCATIONAL

FRESHMAN ACCOUNTINGStarts Sept. 7

: Two-hour class sessions, three nights per week. Choice ofli 5:30 or 7:30 periods; prepares for B. C. S. degree "and business,i Ask for 32-page catalog.

ADVANCED ACCOUNTINGStarts Sept. 21

Enroll now for Income Tax. Cost Accounting, AdvancedAccounting and C. P. A. Quiz: 12 C. P. A.'s on faculty; wort#recognized by leading universities.

Washington School of Accountancy,73ns£. st- Y-M-C-A *"d°Main 8250 1 X ? JL V/ * * Women

St. Margaret's SchoolEPISCOPAL).

Kindergarten through high x-hool. R«»ardineflepartment for girls between eight and sixteenTear*. Out-of-door classes. Misse* LIPPIN-COTT aud BAKER. Principals, I'll:. Cali¬fornia st. Phone North 4641. oe6*

SHORT INTENSIVE COURSESActnntiar; SecretarialBookkeeping RrkHiIiTjpr iv l Itlitc StenographyCalculating BnokkeeplagMachine Machine

Tooeh Adrilac and LlntiifGKEGf. ft PITMAN SHORTHAND

DAY AND NIGHT ANDChart Ciril 8«rrioe Preparatory Course*.

Individual and Clan Instruction.New ClaaMs.Enroll Now.

Steward's Business College(Accredited)

1202 F St Main 86715GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY

THE LAW SCHOOLSession of 19JO-1921 Begins

October I, 1920at 5:10 O'Clock P.M.

In the Georgetown Law SchoolBuilding

Office Open for Registration,9 A.M. to 5 P.M. DailyHugh T. Fegan, M.A.,

LL.B.. Ph.DAssistant Dean

Georgetown Law School Building506 E Street N.W.Phone Main 7293

LAW SCHOOLOF

The National UniversityCo-Educational.

(Incorporated by Special Act of Congress.)Fifty-second Tear Begins October 1, 1920.

NOTE.Opportunities offered to completethe undergraduate course leading to thedegree of LL. B. in two years. For cata¬logue and information apply. Secretary,National Law Building. 818-20 13th st. n.w.

Phone Main 6617.

WashingtonDay School for Boys

Start* September 20.GYM. and SWIM Every Day

5th to 8th Grudea, High SchoolSmall ClaiMfN

Individual Instruction.Regidtrr Your Boy .Now

Catalog Upon Request.1736 G V M r A MalnSt. N.W. I# in# ts A. 8250

Wood's School311 East Capitol StTelephone Liicala 3S

Thirty-fifth YearAll C.aaiaercial Branches.

Seven In one family wer.trained in our school. On* let¬ter reads: "JVe placed five ofyour student^ today at $1,100.00.Please send more like them."Those five earned more in on.month than they had paid uafor the entire course.No solicitors. You are re¬

quested to call, telephone orwrite.it is better to call.

Court F. WoodLLJVf., Principal

NATIONAL SCHOOLFINE & APPLIED ARTS

1606 PA.-AVE.. NEXT TO RIGGS BANK.Opens October 1st. Main 1760.

Modern. Practical Courses.Spectrum Color.Interior Peroration. Costume. Textile. Design. JCommercial Drawing. Painting. Sketching. Car-;toon. Caricature. Fine Arts. Newspaper Illus-(ration. Send for catalogue. Register nuw

Day and Evening Classes.

EMERSON INSTITUTE1740 P St N.W.

Phones: Franklin 4463-4458REGISTER NOW FORTHE FALL SEMESTERMen's Dept..Day and Even¬

ing School. Registration fromSept. 7-15th.

Prepares for all colleges and professionalschools.Prepares for West Point, Annapolis,Coa*t Guard.DIPLOMATIC SERVICE.Classes pre-paring for the October examinations beginSept. 7th.WOMEN'S DEPT..Evening school only

.separate from Men's School. Registra¬tion Sept. 7-16th.Catalogues and circulars sent on request.

BERI.ITZ SCHOOL" 811

14th StreetN.W.

SCHOOL OPEN ALL SUMMER.Languages

AccountancyDegree Granting Power

parr* for ('. P. A. and Hanigent and OldeMt School In

PreparatoryAccredited Hawi*

Telephone or Write for On>ew IMS-Page Bulletin

Stenography5:30 ( laMen StartSEPTEMBER .

DraftingMechanical, Architectural, $5.00 :i

Month

KfVw.v Mr AMain 4 .lTlt Vsia* WomenS2TM

Dav and Evening Schools.Ar;Thui*-ri<'. algebra, geometry, trigonometry,

wile 111ti«=. Li.glNIi, Latin, Spanish, French, his¬tory. ci\ics. |.n>>it-s, chemistry, stenography. type-wniin;'. bookkeeping. auditing. accounting. Cer¬tificate :iilnni> io ;«U hading universifies. Tui¬tion if»s»»«abi«* Send for catalogue. The Cni-versity Preparatory School and the Civil S» rv-i.*»- preparatory School. s.e corner 1-th andI' >ts. n xv. I'itone Frank. 1'oso.L APOLITI III* MAUDS. M A . M.S.. Prin .

FRENCH SCHOOL forCHILDRENand YOUNG GIRLS

4 17 YFAB8 OLDTHE MISSES MARET.

1784 Conn. Ave. Washington, D. O. *

kall-noyes school"DAT AND NIGHT.

Regvlsr classes and private coaching.pnoisry to college: civil service preparationand .immercial law by former L*. S. examiner;colleg prep, b* ex-teacher Central H. 3.Prospectus. ££1 E su n.w.

PRIVATE lpsson* in mathematics. sciences,language*. music; 1'tfiversity graduate; 20years' experience. Prof. J., Box 513, 11thst. station.

COLUMBIASCHOOL ofDRAFTING

Roy C. Claflin, Pres.14th & T Sts. North 272Night Classes.Day Classes

Individual InstructionCourse in 3 to 9 MonthsCall or Write for Latest Catalog?*

ENTER ANY TIME

George WashingtonUniversity

Chartered by Act of Congress in 1821Co-educational

Offers Graduate and Undergradu¬ate Instruction inLiberal ArtsEngineeringArchitectureEducationLawMedicinePharmacy

In addition to classes during the fore¬noon arid early afternoon, over two hun¬dred classes in college, engineering andlegal subjects are held in the late after¬noon between five-ten and six-fifty.

For Catalogs and Other InformationApply to The Recorder.

Lisner Hall, 2083 G Street NorthwestTelephone West 1649

Sessions in all departments begin onSept. 29.

GEORGE WASHINGTONUNIVERSITYLAWSCHOOL

Co-Ed JcatioralBegins 56th Year on September 29

Member of Ass'n of American Law Schools.Optional Morning Classes. 7:60 to 8:40Forenoon Classes, 9 to 11

Lata Afternoon Classes. 5:10 to 6:50A separate LAW SCHOOL BUILDING hasrecently been purchased, entirely remodeledand folly equipped to accommodate the gifcat-ly increased student body.For information write or call on the 8eere»tary. 1433 K Street n.w.

^ Selecl SchoolWASHINGTONSCHOOL FORSECRETARIES1419 F Street N.W

Washington College of LawCO-EDI'CATIOXAI.

Twenty-fifth Year Opeas Septem¬ber 27 at 7 P.M.Tuition, $75 Per Annum.

Sessions, 5:15 to 7:15 P.M.Confers Degrees IL. B., LL. M. and M. P. L.

Office Hours, 10 to 5:30.Removed to New Home.

1315 K Street N.W.Phone Mala 4585.

COLLEGE OF LAWYEAR COURSE, $75

Colleicea of Commerce. Edueatloa,Graduate Studies, Law aad

Liberal Arta

Accountant's C. P. A. in 18Months or Less.

School* of Accountancy, Commer¬cial Art. Houaehold Arta. MteraryArta, Secretarial Scieace, aad

Social Work

Employees' CooperativeUniversity

70 Sabjecta 50 TrofeaaoraClaaaea at SilO. 7:10 aad KtiO

l.on Tnltloa. Degreea Conferred.Intelligence Teata and Vocatloaal

Advice

Fall Qnarter Starts Sept. 20Rciriater now aad ut lilac aoiae

teiaare hours for procreaa.Specialise!

Research University30 Jaeka«n PI., nenr White Houae

Call Main 540 for aew catalog-

Domestic ScienceHom^ EconomicsDomestic ArtSecretarial CourseMusicLanguages

Full particulars at school.

THE ABBY3IOO l«th Street N.W.

MARY ARLINE ZURH0RST, Principal.Established Phone Col. H76I.

Session begins Oetober 7.

AccountancyEveningand day¬time courses at PaceInstitute* prepare forC. P. A. and Federal ac¬countancy examinationsand for positions as Con¬trollers, Treasurers, Audi¬tors, and the like.Informative 32-page Bulletinand schedule of beginningclasses upon request.

Pace Institute715 G St, N.W. Washingtpr

EDUCATIONAL

Spoken and Writ¬ten EnglishGrammar, Vocabulary,

PronunciationA complete six months' court* of

three days or nifhts a week for grown-opt.

Public SpeakingA Practical Course for Public Men,

Lawyers, Law Students, OrganizationMembers, Salesmen, etc.

Voice and SpeechGaining of the Speaking Voice, Dic¬

tion, Enunciation-.Speech Defects.

Expression 4

A course of Personal Culture and Ac¬complishment. Voice Training, Bead¬ing, Recitations. Monologues. MemoryTraining, the Art of Conversation andGeneral Personal Development.

Self-DevelopmentA course for Confidence and Poise

and General Self-Expression.CIssRfR Day or Erfnlaf

Private Lftnona

Hickman School of Expression1340 New York Avenue N.W.

SHORTHANDTVPKWRITINfi. ACCOU NTANCY,

C1V1I. SHRVICK. PENMANSHIP. ETC.

WASHINGTONHI'SINF.SS COLLEGE,

POTEET * WHITMORE. PROPS.1321G St. N.W. Nex^°oNPEPM. Mnurch'

TRAYER'SBUSINESSCOLLEGE

Ninth and F StreetsDay and Night Classes now

open.Latest methods in Shorthand.

Typewriting and SecretarialTraining.Make your future success sure

by enrolling NOW at a schoolwhich has successfully trainedthousands of young men andyoung women for choice positions.

Branch School

Washington Business andCivil Service School1317 New York Avenue

Phone Main 3430 or Main 4304

MUSICAL INSTRUCTION.WASHINGTON COLLEGE *

17th at. at Pa .e OF MUSIC.Seventeenth year.

Opens September 13Illustrated Tear Book.

! SINGING ;Sixth year. Mrtie. Lucia Border!, diploma-grad¬uate and formerly assistant to Lamperti (teach¬er of Sembrich). principal. Foreign instructionat home. Booklet on request. Consultations.11 to 1. 1628 S n.w. Phone N. 7031.t'KULELE, MANDOLIN. ViuLIN aTLDlU.Ukulele taught in ten lemons. Studio. 1772Columbia road n.w. Phone Col. 859ft. sel8**-

REAL ESTATE LOANS.HAVE'CT.IEXT'R fund nf fl.OOll tn JS.U00~toloan ou first trust secured on Washington im¬proved real estate. Address Box 153-H. Staroffice.I.N LARGE OK b'MALb SUMS.LoWEsX iRATES OF INTEREST. LARC.E LOANS A ISPECIALTY. THE F. H. SMITH CO. 81J\f>t 1. ST. N.W.

.I

Honey to loan.$250 to *500.000 oM d.C. real estate. Several larce truit fond.. Alltiansactions conducted with economical con¬sideration for borrowers. WM. H. SAUNDERSSl CO.. Southern bldg., 807 15th at. n.w.FIRST AND 8ECONP TRUST LOAN O.V D. C.property; prompt action and brat poaaibleterms to borrowers having proper security:consult the firm that has made a reputationfor results and reliability.

SHANNON A LUCHS,Main 2345. 713 14th st. n.w.

MONET TO LOAN '

On desirable real estate securities.TYLER A RUTHERFORD. INC..

817 15th at. n.w.

ON V. C. REAL ESTATE. WE ACT AT ONCB.Courteous treatment. PERCY H. RUSSELLCo.. gth end N. Y. aTe.REAL ESTATE LOANS A SPECIALTY. LOW-eet interest rates. Prompt serrice. GFI. W.LiNKINS. i714 Pa. are.

The Greatest Economy.Now that all sorts of clothes and

food and household furnishings arero expensive, we have been fairlyflooded with printed directions formaking the things that we have lastas long as possible. We are gettingback to the time when we think itis worth while to scour a burnedcooking utensil even when it takesmany minutes, because although ourown time is valuable it can be wellput to work in conserving tl^ burnedutensil.Now if you come right down to it

and ask yourself wherein in the pastyour greatest extravagance has con¬sisted you will doubtless find tb:*t itis in buying the wrong thing. Thinkof the shoes, not that you have wornout. but that you have not worn at allbecause you did not like theni orfound them uncomfortable after yougot them. Think of the blouses thatyou discarded before they had ac¬tually worn out because you couldn'tstand the sight of them, and thinkof the hats that spent very muchmore time on your closet shelf thanon your head, because you thoughtafter you bought them that they wereunbecoming. And with food much thesame thing holds true. You makethe mistake of trying new ways ofcooking food and then finding outthat your family does not reallyrelish it that way. You buy somenew sort of meat substitute becauseyou are impressed with the adver¬tisement and on opening it at homeyou find that no one in your familylikes it. and the only reason whyyou manage to eat some of it ig be¬cause you have to do something: tosave your fa<ce after you have boughtit.Think of the kitchen utensils, pat¬

ent potato peelers and vegetablescrapers and orange squeezers andthe like that you have bought be¬cause you thought at first sight thatthey would save labor, only to findlater that they are of inferior ma¬terial or that the idea is not so goodas it looked at first.

PARCEL POST TO CHILE.Agreement Waits Upon Ratifica¬

tion by Chilean Congress.SANTIAGO, September 7..It is an¬

nounced that an agreement has beenmade between the Chilean and UnitedStates postal authorities providing forthe establishment of parcel post facilitiesbetween the two countries, effective uponratification by the Chilean congress.Parcels that would be accepted locallyi.i either country subject to postal regu¬lations and not exceeding eleven poundsin weight would be mailable under theagreement.

¦nars the perfectappearance of her com'plexion. Permanentand temporary skintroubles are effe lively

concealed. Reduces un-natui ll color and corrects

skiis. Highly antiseptic,rith beneficial results as

/

OfInterest to WomenWOMEN'S FIGURES AND FASHIONS

BY ANNE RITTEXHOVSE.

Everywhere you go these dayswhere clothes are talked about.andsometimes quite apart from any dis¬cussion of clothes whatever.you heardomparisons between French women

and American women. A very decideddifference in the proportions of theFrench woman's figure and that of theAmerican woman is generally agreedto be the real cause of the necessity

jso often of modifying a French'fashion before you can make it ac¬

ceptable to the American woman. Sowhether you have ever observedFrench women in their native habitator not. you must have been informed,as a result of all this comparison, thatthe French woman is rounder than,though not so broad as, the Americanwoman, and likewise that she has veryslender legs.we are apt to call themslfinny. That is why she can wearthe extremely short skirt and snug,plain bodice better than we can.

Difference |n Tnate.But the difference isn't all anatomi¬

cal. It is partly psychological, tem¬peramental. For one thing, you havedoubtless heard, she doesn't care ifshe looks hippy, whereas the Americanwoman is bent on keeping the slenderup-and-down lines of youth. That iswhy the bouffant silhouette is still inthe limelight in Paris and dead overhere, and why they are still lookingfor a revival of the bustle, whereasour designers here shake their heads{skeptically when you'mention it. Thevknow the American woman won't hjtveAnd another interesting difference in

taste between the French woman andthe American is this, that we simplywon t wear catty, ratty furs, whereasthe !> rench woman is far less discrim¬inating. and seldom inquires concern¬ing the pedigree of the peltrv thatadorns her frock. That was the ex¬planation of one of our leading design¬ers when she remarked that, whilesome of the French dressmakers werestill bringing out frocks and coatstrimmed with fur. there was practi¬cally no call for fur-trimmed frockshere. The better class women wouldtiaVe none of them. You could hardlyafford to put sable or any fine fur on asuit that is to be worn but a season,and. in spite of the high fur prices,these are the skins that the welldressed women want.

Fabric Faro.And perhaps this inherent dislike on

the part of American women for the

ILttleJto^ies^Bedtime-BY THORXTO.V \V. BURGESS.

The Little Rabbit Is CarriedAway.

Koc|i stout of heart whate'or befall:Thing* may uot turn out had at all.

.8tri|»ed Chipmunk.Peter Rabbit's little son had not so

much as one wee little hope left.Here he was caught by a terriblegiant, from whom there could be no

escape. Was helpless and hope¬less. His little heart was thumpingso with fright that it seemed as ifit was trying to pound its way outthrough his ribs. Once he venturedto struggle a little, but the hand ofFarmer Brown's Buy closed a littletighter around him and after thathe didn't struggle any more. Itwasn't until a long time after thathe realized that that giant hadtaken the greatest care not to hurthim. At the time he was toofrightened to think of that.At first the little Rabbit kept his

eyes closed. Somehow he didn't feelthat he couid open them and look atthat terrible giant. But after a few |minutes he did venture to open them.A face such as he had never see"nbefore was very close to his own.Tt was a freckled face and though itfrightened him terrlblv it somehowdidn't seem like a cruel face. As amatter of fact it wasn't a cruel face.It was one of the best-natured facesin all the threat World. A smile wasmaking all the freckles run togetheruntil they seemed like one big freckle.

"NOT QUITE HALF GROWN*. THELITTLE SC AMP MUST HAVE RUN¬AWAY FROM HIS HOME IN THEOLD BRIAR-PATCH."

and in the eyes was a look of pityand understanding and kindness,though the little Rabbit was toofrightened to know this."Not quite half grown." said a

voice. It was the voice of the ter¬rible giant. "Not quite half grown.The little scamp must have run awayfrom his home in the Old Briar-patch. Certainly Peter Rabbit didn'tbring him way up here and leavehim. This is no place for him. Heisn't big enough to take care ofhimself and if some one doesn't takecare of him he'll be gobbled up bysome of his hungry neighbors. IfI leave him here Bowser, the oldrascal, will sneak back here the firstchance he gets, and even if he doesn'tcatch him will frighten him almostto death just as he has done thismorning. I ought to take him backto the Old Briar-patch. Yes, sir,

18 j)08* what I ought to do.But I can't do it now. I've got a lot ofwork to do and the Old Briar-patch istoo far away for me to go over therenow. 1 don't see that I can do anythingbut take him home to keep him out oftrouble until I can find time to take himback to his..own home."farmer Brown's Boy gently stroked

the little Rabbit and somehow thattouch made the little Rabbit feelbetter. With each stroke of FarmerBrowns Boy's fingers a little bit ofthat terrible fear left hinV. It wasjust as if that fear was something

rubbed off and thatthose gentle fingers were taking it

n ,5ach stroke. The littleRabbit could not have told you whv.,"i - *ea" ,vas growing a feel-jing that this giant was a friend afterall. He was still frightened, but he

>!° lon8fr so sure that somethingt< rnhle was about to happen to hirn.

X-tmii WifS., som<,thing about thenLtt 1 of,t!iat 'land that held himthat was friendly. it stoooed the

shaking °.ft tr'eUi -hich had beenPVer since Bowser tile

Hound had discovered him¦, ?ewmH^oBrOWn'S ,Bo>" stroked him

tm" "'ore. then turned towardhfm lilt,e Rabbit with

?haV d?wn from the l«ndRnw«er fl. u

e JIittl<- Rabbit saw

J Hound trotting alongn?i» *

somehow he was gladif rtnnl WaZ rif\.ht there instead of

w«ll With b" 6 stones of the oldwall with Bowser trying to get at

carried away? the "ttle Rabbit was

(Copyright. 1910.)

More women than men have regis-ZZi,n the next election in

I

second-rate fur is one of the thingsthat are bringing into greater favorevery (season the pile fabrics that aremade to look like furs. Of course,there is the objection to them thatthey pretend to be something thatthey are not. That is sometimesraised. Once, however, that we makeno pretensions about them, but wearthem on their own merits and forwhat they are. they will find readieracceptance. And there is certainlynothing actually cheap about gar¬ments made from these fabrics. Acape wrap made from a pile materialsuggestive of moleskin is itself asexpensive as a sealskin coat used tobe.Now. quite obviously the really

good furs, sable and seal and mole and

A threk-quartrr-i.ex<;th mole¬skin CAPE THAT ALL MIGHTCOVERT. BUT FEW WOMENCOULD AFFORD.

choice fox skins, are not for the aver¬age woman. If your position demandsa variety of frocks, evening frocks,afternoon frocks and frocks forsports, with wraps for these. variousoccasions then the initial price of asingle fur coat is appalling. Thechoice really lies between getting theinferior peltry for which you havean inherent dislike.being a trueAmerican.or getting one of thesepile fabrics that have the warmth andthe richness and something of theappearance of the real fur. And per¬haps the latter selection is the better.

Disfiguring Growths ofHair Entirely Removed< \evr Method Removes Hoot*

and AIM

If you :ire afflicted with a growth ofsupeifiuous hair, go to your druggist atonce, get a stick of pltelactine. followthe simple instructions-. and have tlinpleasantest surprise of your life! Withyour own eyes you will see tin? haircome out. rootn and all.quickly, easily,leaving your skin smooth and hairlessas a babe's.

Phelactine i< not to compared withthe .usual depilatory or electrical meth¬ods. It is new and different. It isodorless, non-irritating, and so harm¬less a child could safely cat it. -Adver-tisement.

Poor Dye Ruins Material

Each package of "Diamond Dyes"contains directions so simple that anywoman can diamond-dye a new, rich,fadeless color into worn, shabby gar¬ments, draperies, coverings, everything,whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or

mixed goods. Buy "Diamond Dyesno other kind.then perfect Tesults arc

guaranteed even if you have never

dyed before. Druggist has Color Card,showing 16 rich colors.

Ready for FallHousecleaning?Send your Laces, Drap¬

eries, Blankets, Couch Cov¬ers, &c., to us for thoroughcleaning.

Just Phone

The

HoffmanCo.11 BRANCHES 11

Main Office, 740 12th N. W

Phone M/4724PRIVATE BRANCH EXCHANGE

Don't say talcumsay

9f

White and flesh30 and 50c.

and Talcolette Vanishing Cream 35ct any drug store

THEHENRY B. GILPIN CO.

Baltimore, Md.

after .

Shaving

time to can pearsCool, luscious, canned pears are a real treat

when fresh fruits are scarce and costly.Preserve a quantity of all fruits and in all your

preserving use Franklin Granulated. All Frank¬lin sugars come to you clean, pure and of exactweight in sturdy cartons and strong cotton bags,safe from flies and ants.

SAVE THE FRUIT CROPThe Franklin Sugar Refining Company

9 9"A Franklin Cane Sugar for every use'Granulated. Dainty Lumps, Powdered, Confectioners. Brown.

Golden Syrup.MADE fltOM SUGAR-CANE

fexTBAFIWE*^5s ~

franklin!GRANULATEDSUGAR:

^andaniotl'urttyTVfrmnlJmIrfwiiUW

FRANKLINCANE SUGARS

5c per cornEnds it quickly and completely

When you suffer a corn ple|se remem¬ber this:Less than five cents and a moment s

time will end it.by a touch. '

Apply liquid Blue-jay or a Blue-jayplaster. The pain will stop. And soon

the corn, however old, will loosen-andcome out.

Millions of people have proved this.Every night a myriad of corns are endedin this way.

Corns are becoming rarer and rarer, aseverybody knows.The reason lies in Blue-jay. It has

solved the corn problem for all whofind it out

Don't pare corns and pad them. Don'tcling to old harsh treatments. Apply thisscientific method.watch it actThen remember that every corn can

be ended in that quick, gentle way.Order the Blue-jay now.your drug¬

gist sells it.

/ Blue=jayPlaster or Liquid

The Scientific Corn EnderBAUER & BLACK Chicago New York Toronto

Maker* of Sterile Surgical Dreaain*« -and Allied Product*