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00D ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED IN INSTITUTE’S LIST THIS WEEK NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERAIxD. THURSDAY;, JULY 30, 10914 : Travel. Poming Hawali, by J. K. Goodrich. e w fappy Irish, by Harold Begbie. Published in England under fitle “The Lady next door.” the .o the old paths: memories of lit- erary pilgrimages in England, by Arthur Grant. “The book is one which could only | lave been written by a man who fiew the old villages with their dwel- 88 and churches well. He skil- lly offers his reader a great deal £ their charm.” Nation. *en pondoner’'s London, by Wilfred Whit- ten. v e flexico, a handbook for travellers, hyi oo T. P. Terry. | exico, its ancient and modern civ- ilization, history and political conditions, topography and nat- ural resources, industries and gen- eral development; with an intro- duction by Mn.}‘tin Hume, by R. Enock. 4 e fiagara River, by A. B. Hulbert. | “He tells all that is best worth cording. No mention of this vol- me can be quite adequate that fails b take into account the extraordi- iry chapter which is given to-chron- ing the mad achievements of that ympany of dare-devil bipeds of both es who for decades have been veeping over the Falls_in barrels hd other receptacles, or who have e dancing their dizzy way on bpes or wires stretched from shore | ‘shore above the hoiling, leaping ater beneath.” Publisher's note. PR orth Africa and the desert, by G. E. | Woodberry. |#‘Scenes and moods” indeed—not ¥ of the places and people the au- jor met, but reflections of his own ds as influenced by the mystery hd. charm of the quiet, the very jivit of the land. Only a poet could feel and write, but all who have kindred spirit may read.” A. L. A.} ooklist. ‘A book that will become a classic.” oston Transcript. A puth American tour, by A. S. Peck. [“A guide book to the tourist areas South America. With practical | tails and sensible advice for trav- ers are mingled much of historical id descriptive interest, gathered ostly from the author's own exper- , and relieved from convention- the personal touch.” A. L. | | | | * thousand miles with a dog-sled, a narrative of winter travel in Alaska, by Hudson Stuck. | aeum. i copies which he wrote in the |a simple, “The author is a man of intrepid urage and endurance, with wide open eyes and mind and a knack of putting the results of his observations in attractive form. The volume worthy of high rank in the liter ture of its class.” v e ow What to in England, by Home see (e} (o} “Takes twenty different towns of in- | terest as the centers from which ex- cursions can be made, thus enabling the traveler to see England and Wales more conveniently. Distances and routes of travel are given, but prices and stopping-places are omitted.” A. L. A. Booklist. PR Fiction. P. Shiel. P Dragon, by M. Jehane L. A. Tal- bot. of the forest, by e Punch and Judy, by Edwin Pugh. P Ragged-trousered by Robert Tressall. “The work of u socialistic ~house painter whose manuscript was cut down by one of the editors of Punch.” “A book that by no means should overlooked or:ignored.” Athen- philanthropists, be . u o of Phaedrus, byy N. Doctor Hillis imagines a Greek slave lad inspired by his love for Christ, searching the country for rec- crds of his life and carefully making names Matthew, Mark and Luke. It is direct account with a con- vincing atmosphere, and both the story and the verifying notes are in- teresting.” A. L. A, Booklist. o % Story D. Hillis. of ‘With the best Lessing. intentions, by Bruno $10,000 STAKE UNDECIDED, Three Horses Left to Battle for and M. Prize at Detroit, Mich, Detroit, Mich., July 30.—With the result of the $10,000 M, zac M. stake for 2:24 trotters still in- terest in the great classic was stiil at fever heat today. Three horses survived yesterday's .six heat strug- gle, to fight this afternoon for the rich prize. They were: Peter Scott, driven by Walter Cox, with two heats to his credi assi McGregor, also with two firsts, pilot- ed by Tommy Murphy, and Linda Wrona, McDevitt driving, with one win, Rythmell, driven out to win | the first heat yesterday, was distanced in the second mile and so gets no part of the stake. The regular program for the day comprised the free for all pace, $3,000, in which the greatest pacers in training were named to start; the 2:09 trot, $2,500; the 2:18 pace, $1,- 16 trot, $1,050. M. undecided, DEFENDS HIS LIFE The liver is usually a quiet, unassum- ing organ and we do not think much about it. It has, however, protective functions that should command respect. In the process of intestinal indigestion there are set free what physicians and scientists call ‘‘toxic bodies,”” in other | sons. If these poisonscnterin- ! irculation of HOW A MAN'S LIVER | | | l able to destroy tlagsin its work they quickly form in amounts excessive enough to be troublesome. Headache, constipation, dizzine: furred tongue, wind on the stomach, bad complexion are the means by which nature gives warning that the liver needs help. | The rerfedy is to stimulate the liver by the use ofPinklets, the gentle laxative pills that do not gripe or purge butsimply assist nature. Harsh laxatives and salts often do harm by aggravating the condi- | tions they are taken to correct. Pinklets, taken regularly for a time, really do cor- rect constipation. Your own druggist can supply you with Pinklets or they will be sent by mail, ostpaid, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., at 25 cents per bottle. Send for helpful pamphlet. ALDWIN REPLIES TO WOMAN’S VERSES Governor Sends Verses He Composed on Train to Mrs. J. W, Mur- phy of Hartford. Hartford, July 30.—Mrs, J. W, Mur- phy. of No. 4 Bond street, Hartford, today received the following from Governor Baldwin, in reply to some verses which she sent to him. In a letter to her enclosing this, he stated that he had written the verses hur- riedly while traveling on the train: “Dear Madam: “You are very kind To say so many pleasant things In grace of poetry entwined.— Sweet poetry, which ever brings, Child as it is of sentiment, New ‘charm to words of compliment. “To me, at least, your verses read As if they spoke your honest thought, And meant that you believe, indeed, I try to do that which T ought, However short I come of reaching All that 1 may be fond of preaching. “Whoever holds a public place Some praise, much blame, is sure to get. source of trace— *Tis a cheap way to pay a debt— But yours—a stranger’s tribute—must Be honest, if it be not just.” The praise he oft’ can “He profits most who serves best,” is the motto of the Farmer ulgar.Al advt. Emperor Francis Joseph Will Be 84 Years MRS, MABEN " Old on Aug. 18 in Midst of the War Crisis ‘WAS MADE WELL. ot Emperor Francis Joseph, the aged ruler of Austria-Hungary, will be | eighty-four years old on Aug. 18. [ that date he will have seen his army conquer Servia or he will have seen ! Europe plunged into a general war or he will have gone through the climax of his career, possibly passing through the portals of death. The picture shown | here is his Jlatest posed photograph. Austria is equipped with army dirigi- bles, one of which is here illustrated, an odd shaped balloon pointing, like the huge forefinger of Mars, into the | war sky of Europe. BOWERS-GOODWIN. Ellen Goodwin and John H. both of 4 Washington Place, married yesterday afternoon o’clock in St. Mark’'s church curate, Rev. Mr. Jones. wedding trip they will Washington Places Bowers, were b . 2 by the After a reside at 4 HOOT. Britain | Hart- SHARE IN HARTFORD Members of the New Schuetzen Verein will ente The nest sitost of the ford Schuetzen Verein meet in !lal‘l-l.\'nu(hern New England Schuetzenund [tunl, August 24. The next shoot nri“m be held next year in will enter the n Verein meet in Hartford the Hartford Hartford. By Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- table Compound and Wants Other Suffering Women To Know It. Murfreesboro, Tenn. — “1 have wanted to write to you for a long time to tell you what your wonderful remedies have done for me. 1 was a sufferer from female weakness and displacement and 1 would have such tired, worn out. feelings, sick head-'¥ aches and dizzy spells. Doctors did me no good so I tried g the Lydia E. Pink- ham Remedies — Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash. Iam now well and strong and can do all my own work. I owe it all to Liydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound and want other suffer~ ing women to know about it.”’— Mrs, H. E. MaBEN, 211 S. Spring, St., Mur. freesboro, Tenn. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which are derived from native roots and herbs, has for nearly forty years proved to be a most valua- ble tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women everywhere bear willing testimony to the wonderful vir- tue o’ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Why Lose Hope, No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope un- til she has given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. If you want special advice write to Y.ydia E, Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl- dential) Lynn, Mass. be d, rend and answered by & woman and held in strict confidence. — RACK Automobile Contest For Czar's Cup Called Of, New July the bile York, Austro-Servian race for the was to be held ~Because of war the automos Czar's cup, which in Russia beginning on August 29, has been cancelled, Notification of the fact was received by the Automobile Club of America today in a cable despatch from the Imperial Automobile Club of Russia. Entries for the race were to close terday and carg and drivers from al] the countries composing the triple alliance and the triple entente it was The course through the south as the Crime- Black Sea and expected would compete 1 was 10 be from Moscow Caucasus, as far A an Peninsula and the return. | MARVELS OF GREAT PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION AT SAN FRANCISCO IN 1915, FOUR OF THE VIRILE SCULPTURES DESIGNED FOR THE IMPOSING TOWER OF JEWELS. THE ADVENTURER. MAHE photographs here shown are of four of the sculptures that " have' Just been completed by Flanagan of New York & Panants-Pacifie Internatihal The figures are among the strongest and most effective in the manner of their execution among the statuary that is to ornament the Exposition in profusion, The figures are entitled “The Adventurer.” “The Priest,” “The Soldier” and “The Philosopher.’ = % THE PHILOSOPHER. All four sculptures are to decorate the great tower gateway that will rise above the south gardens of the great central court of the Exposition, the Court of the Universe. The tower, to be known as the Tower of Jewels, will be 435 feet in height, and its base will THE PRIEST. be cleft by an archway 125 feet in and expressing the keynote of the Ex-| minating in the nnal triumph in the height through which visitors will pass | position color scheme. building of the Panama canal. directly north from the main Exposi-| The Flanagan sculptures, as indeed| John Flanagan, creator of this pow- tion gates into the Court of the Uni- | all of those upon the Tower of Jewels,| erful quadravirate, began his work verse. In the vaulted archway of the| will deal with romantic themes insep- | with Truman H. Bartlett of Boston and tower will be a series of allemorical| arably assoclated with the search for a|later studied with Saint Gaudens, paintings designed by Mr, Jules Guerin| passageway between the oceans, cul-'Chapn and Falguiere in Paris. He was THE SOLDIER. awarded silver medals at the Paris exposition of 1900 and at the Buffale Pan-American exposition a year later for his striking soulptured reliefs. Ona of the best specimens of his work is an elaborate decorative clock for the Cone gressional library at Washington, Your letter will o