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12 ADOPT RESOLUTIONS FOR BETTER HEALTH Commonwealth and Health om-, oers Hold a Conlerence fydeey, N. & W., Jan, §.—A num ber important resolutions on the subject of industrial hygiene, inelud fug one providing for systematie medi eal examination of all workers, were sdopted at the conference bhetween Commeonwealth and state health rep Pesentatives One resolution urged that all per o ployed in factorjes or work shops should be examined medically Letore employment, until the persor had completed his eighteenth year The conference asked that the medieal records of the edueational de. partments be made available to th authorized medical inspectors in the case of any chid seeking employment in a factory or workshop, and urged that factory medieal inspeetors be of | ed out and were assis NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1923, e e . e ———en. HYGIENE OF WOMEN AND CHIY DREN by Janet B Lane-Olaypen A new work in & nene too crowded the hyglene of women and ehil ice hockey team which will eppese Oxford at Muren shortly. They are J. B. Hilliard (Pringeton and Trinity Hall), W. ©. Miner (Yale and Mag-|field dalene), and W. B Tedd qrunfflunldun as individuals and Jesus) &Rt investigat FIRE HOUSE BURNS lihis information in & simple and Building Also Was Verona's Municipal Center—ios §160,000 Verena, N. J., Jan Municipal Building town fire appar 1 eh |value to individuals as well as te [ers, social workers and nurses §.~The Verona | 2 9% containing the [INEALS OF FRANCE by g, police headquar- | Cestre mbers and munielpal | “One resuit ters, eoune of Clemenceau's visit knowledge of the subject as & whole|F and the present summary presenting |ces Radeliffe, ete.” | practical form should prove of great|SOCIOLOGY, QUEEN BLIZARETH'S MAIDS HONOR by Vielet A, Wilson “Intimate plotures of the court, and its frequenters in the days of Queen oy Recent import. | Bligabeth, as well as blographies of ys have enlarged our|her malds of honour, including Mary Lady Mary Grey, Lady Fran . . Its Development and Application, by James Quayle Dea- ley. Charles | SOME IMPRESSIONS OF MY ELD. ERS by 8t, John G, Ervine, “Intimate talks, in the form of in. offices was destroyed by fire yesterday | nas heen to set the American people | formal essays, of a number of the loss of about §100,00¢ fire was discovered by Patre ata The man Charles Rewland blocks away, who saw it in the roof He ran in and notified the police world owes to France should sergeant on duty at headquarters. The | these lectures by Professor volunteer firemen of Verona were call- | whieh were delivered last year at by the fl";\\'rueun university, They are rea departments of Montelair and Over- |sonable in tone and well ealeulated to ospital. The eause of the fire | promote a bhetter understanding he- to have been an over- tween the United States and France. 1 flue, The building was formerly | They present France ehureh The municipality has|peace among nations. bought land for a municipal center, where a new bullding is to be erected, before concerning the things broak is supposed heat DR THE LATER PERIODE OF QUAK- ERISM by Rufus Matthew Jones. “Covers fully the history of Quak- a friend of |desire to [te thinking more intensely than ever |foremost writers of England'and Ice- that {land whem Mr, Ervine counts among beat three | Prance stands for in the werld today, [hs friends — G One who would really know what the | Sygne, Wells, Yea read |Arnold Hennett and George William Cestre | Russell," and Chesterton, . TEACHING TO HBoreas, “An interesting text on an unus. ual subjeet, written for teachers who cultivate the habit of thought in students. Its purpose is to | g | THINK by Julius Review of Reviews. |discover the principal types of think. ing which are required in everyday life, and to Indicate practical ways and means for their development in the ordinary school," | | . Fox & Jompany e Hartford Hartford CLEARANCES! STORE WIDE , Newi Bbok; at appointed Another resolution urged that the minimum legal working age should be fixed for Jactories and werkshops at not under 14 years for boys and 15 years for girls Each state should have in effective operation legislation controlling oecu- | pations dangerous to the health of the employes, another resolution said Another resolution, which adopted, read “This conference considers that view of the importance as a phase of public health administration of sys-| tematic medical supervision of the health of individual employes, and of | the valuable information and results | which have been obtained from the | introduction by private employers of | a medical service for their establishe | ments, that ery employer, includ- ing governments, should be encourag- | ed to provide efficlent and regular medical service, which shall keep un- der review the health of the workers, and shall inquire as to any relation between variation in health and con- dition of employment, Moreover, in order to obtain the greatest amount of public benefit from this measure, records of work done should be kept by a standardized method Tt was estimated at the conference that between 18,000 and 19,000 child- ren under the age of 16 years are em- ployed in factories in the Common- wealth, SCHAEFER IS FAYORED T0 WIN FROM CONTI| Former Champion Is the Popular Bet- was | in ting Choice in Match With Clever French Billiardist at Chicago. Chicago, Jan. —Jake Schaefer, | former world’s 18.2 balkline billiard champion, because of his greater ex- perience was made favorite by billlard | enthusiasts over Roger Conti, cham-| pion of France, in their 1,500 pmm’ match which opens here tonight. | While Schaefer was the pop choice, it was admitted that he be forced to do his best to defeat the | Frenchman and win the right to meet | William F. Hoppe of New York, pres-| ent champion. Both are said to be| in tiptop shape for the match, which | will be refereed by J. Herbert Levis. Schaefer, whose phenomenal play in| the Chicago tournament in 1921 un- seated Hoppe as champion, did not display, the same form in the New | York tournament last fall when Hoppe regained the honors. In the Ne York event Schaefer and Conti per-| formed about on a par, each winning | three games and losing two. | Conti, who made his first tourna-| ment appearance here in 1921, did not | come through among the first three, but created a sensation by defeating Schaefer, 400 to 203, a reverse which| eventually threw Schaefer into a tie with Hoppe, necessitating a playoff. 0. §. STUDENTS COMPETE | Ihe: Beveral Participate in Sports of Michacimas Term Which Has Just | Ended. Cambridge, Eng., Jan. 8.—Ameri- can students at the Universities here took an active part in the sports of Michaelmas Term, which has just ended. T. J. E. Pulling (Princeton! and Trinity), and W. B. Todd (Prince- ton and Jesus), have been playing steadily in the varsity golf team, and show every indication of winning their golfing blues. J. H. Van Alen (St George School and Christ's), who won | his blue at tennis last year, and D. K Key (Harvard and Caius) reached the finals of the hard court doubles championship where they were de- feated after a five set match. Other Americans of the Varsity hard court squad are E. N. Case (Princeton and Corpue), A. W. Willcox (Cornell and Peterhouse), and E. A, Weeks (Harv- ard and Trinity). D. A. D. Simpson Trinity), the boxing blue, who won the light heavyweight bout against]| Oxford last spring, is again in form| and recently won his match against| the army at Aldershot. Three Americans are playing in the | | —DRINK — | AYERS’ SODA WATER| Take home a large bottle of lemon | and lime—something you wiil like— it's delicions. Three size bottles—3c, Court Street Private Hospitak LAURA DEMOS, SUPT. Equipped for Medical, Surgical and Maternity (Groton awl 10c, 15 | 1 | 160 Washington St. the Institute The average citigen is willing to spend thousands of dollars a year for paying, lighting and police protection, while he utterly fails to see the value or the necessity of a publie library, And yet the public library inay smooth the road of life for real suc- cess and usefuiness much more effec- tively than the paved streets of your city, The church, the school, the li- brary and the press constitute the great quadruple alilance for the spread of intelligence among men," D) ADVENTURES IN by Robert and ton. HOME-MAKING Elizabeth Shackle- A BOOK OF GERMAN LYRICS by Frederich Bruns. . e THE BOOK OF WINTER SPORTS by J. C. Dier, . CHARACTER REVELATIONS OF MIND AND BODY by Gerald El- ton Fosbroke. . o THE CHRISTIAN CRUSADE FOR A WARLESS WORLD by Sidney Lewis Gulick. “In this little book Dr. Gulick does two things: he shows how public opinion, by endorsing and making ef- tective true principles of Christian civilization, may ‘outlaw’ war for all time by building up a positive substi- tute for it, and, in the second place he outlines certain definite tasks that lie before us, in keeping international obligations already incurred and thus working toward a warless world. ort, Dr. Gulick has a program Review of Reviews. . oo THE CRADLE OF MANKIND Rev. W, A. Wigram and Sir E. A. Wigram. “Written with the intimate knowl- cdge gained from long residences in castern Kurdistan, the book is an in- by i *| forming and readable account of this | little known country, its people, cus- toms, legends, history, race problems, government, with ample illustrations of the misrule of Asiatic Turkey. Gives much about the Oriental churches, a subject on which the first author is an authorit A. L. A. Booklist. . . . THE CREATIVE CHRIST; a study of the Incarnation in terms of mod- ern thought | “Because he hits the nall of mod- ern necessity on its glaring head, Dr. Brown's new volume will make an appeal which few treatises on Chris- tianity can make today." Boston Transcript. P | DEVICES AND DESIRES by F. C MacDonald. .. DISCOURSES AND ESSAYS by John Ayscough, . . e GHTH NOTES: Voices and figures of music and the dance, by H. T. Parker. “Deals with the great interpreters EI | of our time-conductors, singing-actors, singer of songs, pianists, violinists and | Author {s music and drama- the Boston FEvening dancers, tic editor of Transeript.” . GEORGE GISSING: an appreciation by May Yates. “Miss Yates has presented, in small compass, a sound and adequate sur- vey of the whole field of George Gis- sing’s work illustrating her argument with frequent and apt quotations. She writes as one who loves her subject, ‘this side idolatry’; that is to s is at once sympathetic and inating, and there is little exception to be taken to main conclusions.!" Christian Science Monitor. . o+ GILBERT K. CHESTERTON by Pat- rick Braybrooke. . » .. SEmmess— COLD WEATHER NEEDS We have a fuil line wecond-hand stoves, ofl heaters, lieaters, etc, of new and gas A. LIPMAN New and Secondhand Furniture. 24 Lafayctte St. Tel. 1320-2 T R T W S T, Now is the Time to Wire Your House, Store or Garaze, for Electric Lights or Power. Best Work Towest Prices Repair Work a Specialty YONAN ELECTRIC €O, For Sal six room Coltage and two-car gar- age at Belvidere. Steam heat and fire place. Owner leaving town and will sell at sacrifice. COX & DUNN [BUSINESS AND OFFICE EQUIPMENT 28 COURT ST. TEL. 2900 Realtors 272 Main St. Phone 1828-3 | crism during the cighteenth and A. L. A, Booklist. nineteenth centurles, tracing its de- & . velopment from a purely mythieal to|TERTIUM ORGANUM; the third a broadly humanitarian viewpoint, canon of thought by F. P, Ouspen- with interesting sketches of promin-| sky, ent friends such as Ellzabeth Fry, “The chief value of a book Illke John Bright and Whittier.” this ls not that it will eh our or- A L A dinary ways of conducting the affairs ) of life, but that, greatly to the credit LIFE OF ANTONIO FOGAZZARO|Of the author, it reveals in striking by Tommaso Gallarati-Scott! ways the limited range of our know- “Under various guises Antonio Fo.|!NE faculty, opens up fresh opportuni- gazzaro has revealed much of him. '8 of approach towards inaccessible self, his religious views, the changes|4¢Pths, and discioses new vistas for the human wonder, which is only the Booklist and the progress of his inner life, in & the Saint and those other novels that |besinnings.’ Boston Transcript. have given him place as the greatest - e of modern Itallan novelists, This|A TREASURY OF PLAYS FOR record of his career correlates those WOMEN by Frank Shay, (ed.) studies he made in his own psychol- “The plays in this contain only ogy and amplifies them from hun-|{women characters or such male dreds of hitherto unpublished letters|characters as can be played by wom- to friends to whom he lald bare un-[en.” reservedly his most secret and most| “A hopeful revelation. The level is sacred thoughts and feelings.” high, Indicating an unusual level of s S By | public taste. The printed play 1s LITTLE ESSAYS OF LOVE AND|holding its own with other forms of VIRTUE by Henry Havelock Ellis. |literature.” Outlook. “The subject-matter is now gener- 95938 ally famillar, but Mr. Havelock Ellis| WHAT PROHIBITION HAS DONE brings to it a mature knowledge and TO AMERICA by Fablan Franklin. !a wealth of historical and anthropo- “A brief statement of the case logical illustration.” against the Eighteenth Amendment as Times (London) Lit. Sup.|a violation of the Constitution of the R United States and of the principle which lies at the bottom of respect for law, as a cause of despotism, a menace to liberty, and a promoter of Rose | socialism. Proposes an amendment repealing the Eighteenth Amendment, hut at the same time conferring upon AMERICA | Congress the power to make laws con- cerning the manufacture, sale and mary of our- |transportation of intoxicating liquors.” to San Fran- Nation. GOOD GRAIN by Emmeline Morri- son. . . | THE MASTER-MISTRESS by O'Neill. 8 s s e MY IMPRESSIONS OF by Margot Asquith. “A friendly, spicy st selves, from New Yo cisco."” WOODROW WILSON AND WORLD SETTLEMENT by Ray Stannard Baker, “A frank and dignified presentation of Mr. Wilson's case in defense of what happened at Paris during the making of the treaty of peace. Mr. Baker is a loyal friend, a stout and honest fighter, and the tone of admi- ration in the book is not slavish.” Independent. THE NEW AIR W Luther Moore, “Dr. Moore, who was for 18 years chief of the United Stales weather bureau, attempts in this volume to simplify the science of meteroraology for the benefit of the general reader. He has avoided the use of technical terms as far as possible and seeks to famillarize the reader with the fun- damentals of weather forecasting.” Review ‘of Reviews. s e ORGANIZED PRODUCE MARKETS by John George Smith. “Mr. Smith’s detailed descriptions of the methods adopted by the lead- ing produce exchanges, especially in,; this country and America, are sin- gularly clear. His readers will be able to interpret the market reports i ‘ Sargent Holland. and will know the meaning of ‘op- o ; tions,’ ‘puts and calls,’ ‘straddles,’ ‘ar- A tale of mystery, how Melchior 3 $ | Pryde's nephew was found myster- by 1 t terms. bitrage'and other fascing M ectator, | iously slain in the library at Hillcrest followed by a chain of mysterious| . RLD by Willis . . Fiction DITTE: towards the Stars by M. A Nexo. ' MASSAGE AND THE ORIGINAL SWEDISH MOVEMENTS by Kurre W. Ostrom. . s o0 HOUSE OF DELUSION by Rupert .. OUR MEDICINE MEN by Paul H.|°vents. de Kruif. ST X s author, of late a bacterolo-| PACKHOUSE by G. A. Chamberlain. gist at the Rockefeller Institute, de- 4 ° o Soribes his book as follows: ‘it is a|THE UNBIDDEN GUEST by Silvio study in contrast between the fine| Villa, practitioners of the old type and the . fomewhat ridiculous new pseudo-| VALIANT DUST by Katherine Ful- scientific men." lerton Gerould. . “A collection of short stories writ- SOCIAL CHANGE WITH RESPECT|ten of many different phases of life, TO CULTURE AND ORIGINAL|distributed geographically from the NATURE by Willlam Fielding Og- | New Fngland hills to the great desert btk of Arabia, with a glimpse into Aus- A study of the influence of hiolo- |tria—This author’s storles are always gical forces on social evolution, the|finished, exquisite bits of literature, nt of human nature and civ-|as complete in their way as her es- gays. The experiences portrayed are, . . mercifully not those of common oc- THE SOCIAL MESSAGE of the Book «urrence.” of Revelation, by Raymond Calkins, Christian Science Monitor. Volz Floral Co. 92 W. Main St, “Sev !t with Flowers” Tel. 1116 |adjustme: ilization, ete.” + Does Your Office Smile A Welcome? When a customer enters your office, what re- ! ception does he receive? i | Are you there with the glad hand, the cour- teous suave, and polished salestalk? { ine ! But does the scenery back up your | i act? That office equipment has answered its | | purpose for years and satisfies you, but what im- i pression does it give your customer? i Dingy office furniture is like shabby clothes to a business man. | Suppose you add a few new chairs or a new | desk and give your office a fair chance for success. 3 { | | 1 . | | | | Consult Heading 57 on Our Classified Page ! I | ! | T AT ST NOW IN PROGRESS AND ALL BROKEN LINES, SMALL AND ODD LOTS WILL BE SWEPT OUT AT ONCE FROM EVERY DEPARTMENT IN THE STORE. MANY OF THE MOST DESIRABLE LOTS ARE TOO SMALL TO ITEMIZE AND THESE ARTICLES WILL BE FOUND ON TABLES AND COUNTERS MARKED AT RIDICULOUSLY LOW PRICES. ATCH FOR THESE CLEARANCES THEY'RE GOOD AS GOLD OYSTERS CLAMS CRAB MEAT SHRIMP SCALLOPS LOBSTERS HONISS’S 24-30 STATE ST. HARTFORD CROWLEY BROS, INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 755-12 2-Family house on Smalley street for only $5,700. Only $1,000 cash required. This house is a Big Bargain. Good yard. To Rent—Two tenements in West Main street block with steam heat furnished. 6 rooms to tenement. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg, FOR SALE NEW COTTAGE—6 ROOMS AND 2 CAR GARAGE ALL MODERN EQUIPMENT, MUST BE SOLD AT ONCE—OWNER LEAVING TOWN H. D. HUMPHREY 272 MAIN ST.—ROOM 208 NATIONAL BANK BLDG. Estimates cheertully given on all jobs i SO S For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts. THE OLD HOME TOWN TN fi: BY STANLEY AT LAST AUNT SARAK PEABCDYS BEAUTIFUL NEW RED PLUSH ROCKING CHAIR IS UNPACKED,