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FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1922. CREDITS SUCCESS TOCO-PARTNERSHIP WOLVES by B Atkty |London Businessman Calls This " rivolous ttle story thos, all| System “Sheet Anchor” soap-bubbles and froth, but it is in- London, Aug. 26.—At the mam- genlously contrived, Is written with much cleverness, and underneath its bubbly surface is a keen edge of ga- tire.—N. Y. Times. moth establishment of “Lever Broth- ers, Port BSunlight,” Lord Lever- hulmee has long demonstrated to the commercial world that it pays to; SPREADING RAIL IS CAUSE OF BAD WRECK | treat employes well. The co-partner- | 15 05 ship idea has been the foundation of his gigantlc business. He has just carrfed that idea a long step further Life insurance policies will be tak- en out by the company for every co- partner in the firm, from laborers to directors, The policles of ordinary members of ‘the staff will be worth from £100 to a maximum of £1,000; those of foremen from £200 to £2,000, and those of managers from £400 to £4,000, A system of grading is to be instituted to determine the amount of the policy allotted to each person, De- votion to duty and efficiency will lead to.promotion to a higher grade and NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, New Books at the Institute ASBETS OF' THE IDEAL CITY by Charles M. Fassett, “A brief 1ist of what the practical common sense assets of a city should be, a campilation of the more import- ant Institutions, activities and under- takings which tend to the progressive development of better citizens and their welfare."—A. L. A. Booklist, . .. BUDGET MAKING by Arthur Buck. “It is not the purpose of this hand- book to disciss th ephilosophy and theory of the budget but to present model budget forms and to outline the procedure of budget making in such | a way as to be of assistance to those engaged in the actual work of pre- paring budgets, although the book {s written with special reference to state budget making, it is also applicable to city budget making."-—A. L. A. Book- list. the book finds all misunderstandings explained, all sorrow drowned in hap piness."—Literary Review e MA ST IN'S Gets Resulrs-Tgati Wy Jo Date We Have Sold B How MASTIN’S Vitamon Puts Flesh On Thin Folks Strengthens The Nerves and Invigorates The Body Easy and Economical To Take If you want to put some firm, healthy, “#tay-there” flesh on your | bones, Increase your energy, nerve force and power, clear your skin and complexion and feel far bet- ter, try this simple test: First welgh yourself and measure your- self. Next, take MASTIN'S Vita- mon—two (ablets with every meal, Then welgh and measure yourself egain ench week and continue taking MASTIN'S Vitamon Tublets regularly until you afe satisfied with your galn in weight and energy. MASTIN'S Vitamon Tablets contatn not only the purest form of yeast vitamines but all (hree vitamines true organic irom lime salts and other Decessary ehmehis which Nature provides for perfoct vigor of body and mind, 10 bulld firm flesh, earich the blood and strengthen the whole digeste ive and iniestinal uact help to feed and nourish the shrunken tissues substitutes and imitations, INSIST won SHORN LAMB, by E. 8. fampson, “A romance of @4 Virginia in the new South"—N, Y. Times P Incorporated WINNIE O'WYNNE AND 257 MAIN STREET BOOTH’S BLOCK E. enesT 38 ncuts Bictes 1V ncwts Tracks Ripped Up for 300 Yards at Newport, With Only Three People Slightly Injured, Newport, R. I, Aug women were slightly injured and a score of men, women and children were shaken and bruised when a New York, New Haven and Hartford pas- senger train bound for Newport from Toston was derailed late yvesterday, three' miles outside this city the | shore of Narragansett Bay. — Only the |, {ncrease in the amount of the pol- locomotive remained upon the rails. | jov while for {nsufficient or careless The tender was torn from the en-! o™y ny employe may be graded gine and with the single passenger| aquwn coach, the smoker and the baggage Should an employe retire with the car ripped up the tracks for 300 yards, i ., pany's consent, the company will finally stopping perched at a pre-j .o 45 arrange that he continue to carfous angle. . pay the premiums. In the event of Mrs. John 8. Deavu of Newport,|,.".mniove leaving in any other eir- Mrs, Mary E. Waite of Worcester, | .o\ utances, ‘the company will try to Mass, ,and Mrs. E. B. Doldon of| 0,00 that the assured person, if he Salem, Mass,, were taken to a hospl-| .," gogires shall continue payments tal where it was said their injurlesi o ¢po" o qinare rates without medi- were not serious. cal examination. Trainmen attributed the accident to} - o4y nemployment scheme a spreading rail. the firm will pay a co-partner such a The ingenuity of F. C. Burst, a radio g\, "with all allowances from oth- operator at the naval coaling statlon| oo oo™ Wil equal half wages at Melville, brought quick ald to the| g\ 60 ih pe baid on a similar basis passengers. Clamoring from thel T " oo of slckness extending over wrecked smoker the sailor wig-wagged A R T e e e signals from the top of the car to aty " lope anq its continuance will naval barge at anchor in the bay. S ba laoRAAATe A launch was sent ashore from ”'el Lord Leverhulme, explaining the barge and took all of the 30 DASSEN pone 4o 5 meeting of the employes, gers to Newport. who adopted it with enthusiasm, sald LOTS f that it was not something in place of HELPS HOGS, BY HECK wages. The payment of trade union Practice | 25.—Three COMING OF COAL by Robert Bruere. w. on Your Weight Indiontes ~aur Strength— Are You Galning Or Losing? It you want to get inoro weight and streagth take a littie MASTIN'S Vitamon with your meals and wateh the amazing resafts. PRI CONSTRUCTION OF NEW TYPE TRANSATLANTIC RECEIVING SETS by M. B. Sleeper. P A Display of : ?au/(i//inery, Original, smart daring—in which the modes created by Paris for Fall are revealed in all their loveliness. The prices are moderate. $3.75-$12.50 DICTIONARY OF SPANISH IDIOMS WITH THEIR ENGLISH EQUI- VALENTS by Leonard Willlams. . on solid flesh i the places where it is most needed. For your own safety and protection against choup MASTIN'S to get tho original Vitamon Tablets. Get Your Supply of MASTIN'S ViramonTaeLers Now/ —0On Sale At— GARDENS OF GREEN HUNTER. Mr. Hunter has the gift of creating story-sermons which charm the youth- ful hearer and command his assent and approval. In ‘Gardens of Green' the author has elected to follow the calendar and this gives the book special value to those who minister to a Junior Congregation or teach in Bible schools. by G. M. . . HAIRY APE; ANNA CHRISTIE; THE FIRST MAN by Eugene O'Neill Three long plays of the well known American playwright, two of them Broadway successes. . s SMITH COLLEGE STUDIES IN MODERN LANGUAGES. KNUT HAMSUN by Josef Wiehr. Knut Hamsun; his personality and his outlook upon life. PR MANUEL OF THE MECHANICS OF WRITING by R. W. Pence. “A ‘clean’ writer—that {s, one who shows the same regard for good taste in punctuation, capitalization, and the preparation of a manuscript, that he showsin matters of dress and deport- ment—is almost invariably a clean thinker is the author's striking argu- ment for the brief, clean-cut rules of punctuation, abbreviation, spelling, letter writing, manuscript prepara- tion, copy editihg and bibliographical details which because of their simple form andindex make it possible for the writer to have at least the ap- pearance of clear thing.”—A. L. A. Booklist. BALANCE OF OUR Summer Hats NOW BEING SOLD AT ONE PRICE Wide Seam Stockings— black only . $1.25 Van- Raalte Heavy In- grain . . Silk Stockings — gs, . DL | colors ... rates of wages was the basis of the P but the idea of the new pro- posals was to reward and encourage diligence and efficient service. “We feel,” Lord Leverhulme add- cd, “that there cannot be any greater stabilizing effect than that of remov- ing the dread of unemployment and removing the possibility of depend- ents being left destitute in the case| of the death of the bread winner” | Raisers of Pigs Find This Every Year Aids in Keeping P —— forest of Castle Fusano, 20 miles from Rome is burning. The forest con- tains a castle erected by the Mar- chese Sacchetti in the 16th century and forfeited against the pirates who fested the Tyrrhenian coasts. thor of “Cupid's Court,” announced last night that the court held a meet- ing in Vietor's Hall and eight couples were matched Mr. Delker said that Lord Leverhulme spoke highly of | the questionnaires from spinsters and T S ARG r;nr'nf'r"hm ‘The | Pachelors who wish to enter matri- ir e (m\:’: and strain | Mmony via the court were still coming t pas.|that we have gone through in busi- |7 ness have proved.” he said, “that co- partnership is a sheet anchor in such a time. We may have adversity in |25t night was the 18-yvear-old girl i internal par- | fro Zentuck 2 3 lic need protection against ¥ the! fiituner-bitk T “arnvaastaln;that the | trom, K i ky. who, at the publi e e ession of the court, was bestowed on asites such as roundworms, the eggs s F of which remain in the soil - | Mr Delker himself by J Louis out triumphant and with flying col "O'l'mnnr-':. T T Turning over the soil in the lots Out helps to get rid of the pects and the OTS [ nell was not on the jury last' night, of froage makes it a profitab NS L | and, according to Mr. Delker, the g;;‘:m(on. Ign add¥ion to providing| 16 MATCHED IN.CUPID COURT |, i cctive husband selected for the Rhoen mountains —near Gersteld. cheap protein feed, pasture crops aid | Kentucky belle is a ‘“young World | Hentzen's machine landed 350 meters as a laxative and require the hogs to to | War veteran living in New York ! ahove the starting point. take a certain amount of exercise, | city.” Hentzen is the flyer who last Sat- which is necessary to breeding ani- urday remained in the air two hours and ten seconds, breaking all records mals and growing pigs. Rye is probably the best crop to and ten seconds hieaking use for fall, winter and spring pas- ture for hogs, the department’s cir- cular states. Throughout the corn belt it may be sown from August 20 to about October 1, depending upon the latitude. In warmer climates the crop may be put in at various times up to as late as December. By putting in successive plantings from two to four weeks apart it is possible to have fresh pasturage all the time. Animals in Shape. Washington, Aug. 25.—( By Associated Press.)—Hog rai accomplish two desirable re plowing up the barn lots at 1 a year, says the United State ment of Agriculture. In place, hogs need good succu ture as much of the time as is pos- sible, and in the second place they SS RECORD. NEW MOTORL Berlin, Aug. 25.—(By Assoclated Press. —A new record for sustained flight in a motorless airplane was set vesterday by Herr Hentzen, student flver of the Hanover technical school when he remained in the air more than three hours. The flight was made on the concluding day of the gliding competition held in the ——— OSIERY VENUS Full Fashioned Silk Stockings, black and all colors. For $l .95 Saturday only According to Mr. Delker, one of the first persons to be mated by the jury . . THE POLES IN AMERICA by Paul Fox. . Kentucky Belle, First Awarded Delker, Goes to Another. Hammonton, N. J. Aug. Thomas B. Delker, newspaperman-au- | .o | PUBLIC HEALTH SURVEYS by Murray P. Horwood. “‘Comprehensive and practical guire for the making of sanitary surveys of cities and towns with numerous il- lustrations, sample tbles and charts, recommendations from selected sur- veys, bibliography and subject index.” —A. L. A. Booklist. . s THE RUSSIANS AND RUTHENIANS IN AMERICA by Jerome Davis. The book is published under the auspices of the Interchurch World Movement. The author has studied the conditions of the Russians and Ruth- enfans in America from every espect; their economic, social, educational, and religious condition and their rela- tions with the American people. He finds that they are almost completely {solated, a constant prey of economic exploitation and government injustice and that nothing is done to Ameri- canize them spiritually, to make them feel that the country is worthy of loyalty and sacrifice because they love it. PINE FOREST BURNING Rome, Aug. 25.—The heautiful pine 25— Let Personality Pick Your Perfume, He Advises DESCEND UPON DEAVILLE The Greatest Historian of Them All OMER wove history into his songs. The Pharaohs carved it in stone. Julius Caesar painstakingly penned it on papyrus. Kings and Queens Among Those Who Will Spend Vacation at Famous Watering Place. Deanville, France. Aug. 25.-—Deau- ville will see a notable gathering of Kings during this month of August. King Albert of Belgium, King Al fonso of Spain, King Ferdinand of Rumania, the Shah of Persia, and the| Emperor of Annam all are expected ¥ to spend several weeks in this fash- BITTERMEADS MYSTERY by E. R. resort Most of Punshon. their wives, and a| . Fiction s o. ionable watering them will bring gay season is anticipated Deanville hopes that King Constan- tine of Greece may be lured tempor- arily from his throne to taste some of the pleasures and diversions of the smart seaside town, and that King Alexander of Jugoslavia and his youthful consort, Queen Marie, may spend a part of his protracted honey- moon here. As all the known to one another, it likely | they will seize the occasion to talk over affairs of state and the mational problems of their countries. This will be the first time in a generation that| | 80 many European rulers have gath-| | ered at one spot. “A Conclave of Kings" is the phrase applied to the event by Deauville's Chamber of Commerce, and Emperor Francis-Jo- seph's historic admonition to King| Ferdinand of Rumania is recalled: Today, history is written and given to you simultaneous- ly with its occurrence. Fvery day, the important events of the world are summed up fully and comprehensively in your newspaper. You are able to keep abreast of his- tory in its making. . BREAKING POINT by M. R. Rine- hart. CERTAIN PEOPLE OF IMPORT- ANCE by Kathlee nNorris. . v EIGHT STROKES OF THE CLOCK, by Maurice LeBlanc. . s JUDGEMENT OF CHARIS by Mrs. Balllie Reynolds® “The decision of Charis, daughter and only child of a noble lord, to win her own liveiihood as private secre- tary rather than marry a persistent wooer leads to a pleasantly romantic situation.”—Literary Review. DR. W. D. DUANE AND COLLEEN MOORE, FILM STAR, FOR WHOM HE IS DETERMINING THE CORRECT PERFUME \ sovereigns are well is And not the least important phase of modern history lies in the realm of industrial progress. You find this chronicled in the advertisements. future husband from a crowd of strangers by a message to his nose.” In prescribing personality perfumes, Dr. Duane first makes a careful study of his patron's striking characteristics, temperament, color and “aura." Then he recommends the perfume of the fiower they'are most like. Among celebrities for whom he has provided individual scents are Mrs Woodrow Wilson, orchid; Mrs. Lyman | Gage, jasmine; former Queen za- By NEA Service Los Angeles, Aug. 25.—One drop of perfume may socially make or break a woman. Dr. Willlam D. Duane, celebrated odor chemist, who has prescribed perfumes for royalty and society lead- ers on two continents, says so. For 30 years Dr. Duane was follow- ed his sensitive nose into many lands in quest of rare essences and has translated them into ravishing bou- | Advertising is a priceless boon to those who use it prop- erly. It keeps their information up-to-date on the great variety of things that make life what it is today. It tells MERCY OF ALLAH by Hilaire Bel- loc. .« . ODDS AND OTHER STORIES by | “It is a time quets for the elite in his laboratories. “Woman,” says he, ‘“from ancient times has been borrowing the gift of flowers for her toilet, bul it is sur- prising how little she has learned about this fine art. Depends on Personality “What a drop of perfume may do for her depends upon how she selects it with reference to her personality. “By constant reiteration of song, pictures and folk tales, certain types of women have become almost {in- stinctively associated with a. floral counterpart. They have the fancied characteristics of the rose, the lily or the orchid. Wherefore the violet girl subtly affronts the nose if she insists upon smelling like a Chinese lily, or the red rose matron like a mignon- ette. “Merely to smell sweet, or to ex- hale costly essences indiscriminately, is to miss all the deepest implications of perfumery which carries a most powerful appeal to emotion and intel- lect. “I'll wager that many a girl by her haphazard uee of scent has repelled the very kind of friends she most| seeks to court May Land a Husband “On the other hand, many a girl of refined instinct has attracted her | beth of Spain, bouquet, and Queen of Belgium, bouquet. TRIBUTE TO COLLINS. | Ireland’s Most Famous Horse Race Is | Postponed in Respect for Him. Belfast, Aug. 25.—A remarkable concession to the nationalist sentiment is seen in | Royal corporation, promoters of the | Maze horse races, the most important | meeting in Ulster, to cancel the second day's program next Monday in conse- quence of the funeral on that day of i Michael Collins, | Added significence is given by the |tact that the promoters had | viously declined to postpone Satur- day's events, although an Orange demonstration, for which 12 special |trains are to be run from Belfast will i be held only four miles from the race track on the same day. Dail Mects September 9. Dublin, Aug. 25 (By Associated i, Press)—The postponed meeting of the Dail Eireann will be held September 9 instead of September 7 as previous- ly announced. the decision of the Down| pre- | Ethel M. Dell “The odds" introduces us to the principal characters in “Without prej- udice,” the second and longest story | in this volume of seven short stories written in Ethel M. Dell's accustomed manner. . PIERRE AND LUCE by Romain Rol- land. “An 1dyl of springtime and youth ,as delicate and simple in its beauty | and ardor as the love of Paul and Virginia. The story of a French boy and girl who build a tiny isle of calm out of their dreams in wartime Paris.” | . . t | RETURN OF ALFRED. by the au- thor of “Patricia Bren, spinster.” T ROBIN by Frances H. Burnett. Sequel to the “Head of the House of | Combe.” t . SAREEL by Edith Dart. ' ‘SBareel’ is a tale of a sensitive young woman, a workhouse child who experiences an artistic appreciation for a wild English moor ard an in- | stinctive attraction, towards gentle- men; she is of finer stuff than the gether." @ Until Guaranteed Payment, fire Settlement of have previous arran pay for such o fected. pal Settlement French concession on the south and a great district on the north economy Settlement paying for country folk thereabouts. The end of ment in non-taxable areas. for us Kings to stick to- | RESTRICT FIRE RULES Shanghai Department Will Not Give Service Outside of Taxable Area Shanghai, Al ~Services of the department of the International Shanghai that hitherto generally available listrict of Shang- peen hroughout all the hai fn cases of need in future will not be suoplied outside of the limits of | International Settlement ment side Such an hat has been issued by he unless | and consent to services are ef-| announcement | the munici- is to live profitable, his wares. International between the authorities of the which lies of Chinese territory The measure, it is stated, is one of designed to remove from ratepavers the burden of activities of the d('part»‘ them of the thousand and one things they need in order happy and useful lives. The consistent advertiser pays money to tell you about He knows they are good—he backs them with his money because he is confident that they will satisfy. For only merchandise that is consistently good can be consistently advertised. Keep up with History. IT PAYS. Read the Advertisements.