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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1923, oy W. Paing SBmith b series of skelohes of the town, HASSAN, the story of Hassan of Bag- | past and preseat, of the history, the b ded. and how he came to make the | traditions, the people, the geagvaphy, golden Journey 1o Samarkand by J. [the natural hestory of Cape Cod.” e n‘ e B Piecker | ) REPRESENTATIVE ONE-AC oA SBRIIR B AB A A delightful piece of fanciful writ ‘l"r‘hA'M .plx' ‘::‘; ,.\I‘I:h .;'!‘ "f":.. ng, ¢ d with surprises of inel PLAYS by M. J. Moses MAGNETIRM by Harie M. Terry. | 4098 a9 quickened with A collection of one.aet plays for antful incongruities, melodious With | the little theater wh . Iyrical passages in verse as in prose.” ler some novel dw Nation & Atheaaeum. | sources Heview ¢ architect ) terary . 4% A T he s eharaeter as from unusual WORLD TODAY Hadley . . ART by Clive He “The reet of ATEUMent Natien hat of & produc a . » » :: . rt PIOdUOes | yigrORY OF THE PREE CHURCH and b & v e, By ey MAN CALLED THE BROWNISTS AND PILGRIM PFATHERS IN Wiates the spirity " HOLLAND by J. G. Soheffer, D.D. f is the hrst Huskin P N began to publish *Mg 3 1843, that eould even eon "“'I‘\\‘“ . % vinee a serious-minded person of good '“' OWS by Whiting Williams judgment that art is something more e AN than an agreeable ornamentati And irol seasoning of life Athe whi il 5 ) AND SHADOWSE: a hook poems by Ralph Chaplis . Mr & true work ROME AND THF by Herbert Bpencer Prof. Hadley has v y in this velume an exhaustive picture of the situation that existed in the Roman HANDS AND HAMPERED |empire in the last half century of the Pagan era with the end _that the d stim ature g a0 side of our ok sines lern Painters’ in ivably eon- | author plants |and the world teday may be profitably brought te view. Prof, Ha of the | will merit attention because of work- | lueid presentation of an interesting ring | period of Reman history Christian Beience Moniter, P SPEEDS AND POWERS by €, ¥ Fyfe i stes undertook in the | eoal of France Pbelief that thoughts ar men might be Pogars men of other countries BORDER by Ambrose A BARR prisor THE BLACK Hooklist E. Gonzales A “The author has done thing; he has invented & n negro dialect story H y HOUL OF MAGIC AND OTHER a remarkable | “paEas by William Nicholson i tn & aroup| William lhn:) l."‘\'..» of 42 genre sketehes « ustly hus id E Pkt meoreus life in the low country, orig '““‘"M; "t '“‘\ CHARACTER by inal in conception surprising in treat ",l'_'"“” St ‘:';l-“"»'\::":"m W ment 1 have seen nothing so novel - o ntenaed anywhere recently, For which reason the genera! reader, teacher, or ®tu 1 venture to say at the outset that dent, for the husiness man or person- this is a rather remarkable book nel worker, gives a survey of the prin There are other reasons s good.” eipal methods of judging human char Jobn Dennott—literary Review,|8cter, namely, letters of application % { photographs, applicants’ own osti : * e i L {nates of their characteristics, per THE BOOK OF WABHINGTON by¥|gonal interviews, letters 44 Robert Bhackieton mendation and testim “Mr Shackleton has added another pyp MANAC to the attractive series of books on American cities, He has taken up un; various outstanding ures, build-| ings, streets and institutions and de-| 4 scribed them with liberal accompani- | ment of anecdote, He had added to his text a large number of photo- graphs and pen and ink drawings.” Literary Review: ) R THE THEORY OFF MIND AR PURE ACT by Giovanni Gentile . s THE WAY OF PO ny by John Drinkwater, “An antholegy for young readers. Mr, Drinkwater has ch y for it the motto, ‘Poetry 15 beautitully like life itself in seeming not to echange yot always being new.' There are a8 mod- ern poets as Harold Munro and J, C Squire, included, forgetting t petter known Georgians, and poems of Mr, Drir kwater's There are many poems of animais ar A hirds, and many bucolically simpl Literary Review, . P or 1ON by THY Pred . WONDERS OF line Atwater Mason .. NEGLECTED ERA by Edith Ross MISSIONS by Caro- Praley. “A presentation of Jewish history {from the time of Ezra and Ne heminh to the destruction of the city of Jeru salem by Titus, covering four centur TSy . | 168 concerning which the records of BRITISH MERCHANT SHIPPING |¢he Bible ave practically silent by Clement Jones, | L L | THE NEW BOSWELL by R, M THE CAUSES OF HEART FAILURE man, by Willlam Henry Robey. | *“Some account of the present pur Pneumonia by Frederick Taylor Lord. suits and conversatio of Samuel “The two books above are in the|Johnson now in Elyliumm, compend- series ‘Harvard Health Talks' publish- | 'ng a number of illuminating obser ed by the Harvard university press. vations by him upon current earthly They are addressed to the layman in matters,” non-technical language.” | « e WOOD AND FOREST by Villlam Noyes. DRI RDAY AND TODAY by Ralph “Informal talks of the quips ar cranks of London society, of the wa of the old aristocracy and the wiles of the nouveau riche, of the country house life of yesterday and the pres ¢nt misfortunes on ancestral acres, of old and new days in the celebrated London clubs and the chanc that time has wrought in the old land marks." Free .« v 0 NEW HAIR: CULTURE by B, A, Mac fadden, « e Fiction HILL OF DREAMS by Arthur Ma- chen, “This novel rela mystic adventur Guest or artistry. . THE OLD HOUS “It is, in fine, a inguished and beautiful work of fiction, meriting that burst of critical and popular en- thusiasm which greeted its appear- ance in Hungary some years ago.” . s 3 PAINTERS by ]‘.nphnr!, trucel. “A concise and illuminating ume which explains briefly the prin- ciples of technique and then, as it sketches the historical evolution of painting, it rev s its dommuun:i philosophical id stract form."” . AND SHI Moodie . ND by John vol- | “lett and T tes the strange and . Cecile Tormay. L. A. L ' dy ¢ characteristics ment made by members tion of C'hild Study, the constructive Al P CLIMATIC CHANGES by Ellsworth |of the FFede Hunting & Visher Stephen. editor has set forth a Climatic changes—Their nature ;nnl“»mm“m of rational treatment—pur- pose, knowledge, and apathy — in the place of rationalized impulse impulse, ignoran friction — in the training of children. He deals with various stage f development, forces and experiences that influence | the conduct and attitude of children, causes. Prof. Huntington's book has a bear- ing on the problem of world over- crowding which is becoming more and more prominent in sociological and s In fact, it is a WHISPERING SAGE by H. 8 Drago and Joseph Noel. i h brings togeth- | t his work in the | peints of analogy between that period | 1 | tonio Mutkaviteh of E of a boy on the WILL BUILD ORPHANAGE ‘ French Give Land on “River of Abra- ham” For Home For 1000 Armen: an Child Refugees Beirut, Syria, Veb, 12 government has given 1o the Near | Hast velief a tract of land at the so- |ealled “River of Abraham™ on whieh | will be established an orphanage for 1,000 Armenian girl refugees from Anatolia The institution, whieh will bhe in charge of Mrs W. R. Genneway of | Feattle, Wash,, will comprise four dormitories, a large hospital and an industrial sehool, The site is on the seashore, 20 miles north of Beirut, Although histerieally important, the land has been unoceupied since 1911, when a landslide destroyed the village of Afka with a loss of 400 lives, In Roman times, a temple to Venus and Adonis was located there. The region is famous because at certain seasons of the year the river is color- ed red with mineral matter which the anclents bolieved to bhe the bloed of Adonis spiiled by a wild bear NINE ACC OF MURDER The Freneh second Herrin .\ll;sum Trial Opens At Marion Today Marien, 1Il,, Feb, 12, =~ Nine men, charged with murder growing out of {the Herrin, TIl, mine riots last June |were to go on trial in Willlamson |eounty eireuit court today, They are necifically eharged th killing An- e, Pa,, a guard at the Lester strip mine, The disorders resulted from an at- tempt to open the mine with non- union labor during the coal strike. Four of the defendants were acquitted at an earlier trial in connection with another death, One of those to be tried is Hugh Willis, miners union of- felal, DISCUSS RUHR SITUATION Paris, Feb, 12, — (By Assoclated Press)—Gen, Degoutte, who spent part of the week-end in Parls, had | long conferences with President Mil- lerand, Premier Poincare, Marshal I'och and Minister of War Maginot at which every aspect of the Ruhr situa- | tion was discussed. - FOR SALE 2-FAMILY HOUSE — Belvidere — Steam Heat Garage COX & DUNN AGENTS Mass. Mutual Life Insurance Co. 272 MAIN ST. FOR SALE . ¥ox & Jompany e HARTFORD Telephone Orders Taken As Early As 8 A, M, HARTFORD Another Great Shipment of Karpen Furniture Arrives in Time to be Included in The February Sale ~ Yes—a just welcomed shipment of luxurious Karpen Living Room furniture will be included in the February sale ;rroving conclusively that this is not a Clearance of specially selected suites and discontinued pieces at reduced prices; it is greater—far greater in every respect than any of our famous half yearly Furniture Sales of the past. | For it embraces everything on three great floors with nothing however new reserved. It affords absolute selection of our vast furniture stocks at prices reduced from 10 to 50% ; as examples of what we are doing note the prices on these Dining Room Suites: 10-piece American Walnut dining room suite, Queen Anne period; buffet, oblong table, china closet, serving table, 5 chairs, 1 arm chair, upholstered in genuine leather. Sale price. .. $19 8.piece American walnut dining room suite. Queen Anne period. Buffet, oblong table, 5 chairseand one arm chair, upholster- ed in genuine leather. $l 50 Sale price ......co0000e Demonstration and Sale of Wear-Ever Aluminum Wear Beginning Monday, February the 12th Come in this week and meet her and learn a thing or two about Wear-Ever Ware; any- thing you'd like to know Mrs. Hodgson can tell you. During the demonstration and sale we shall reduce prices and offer “Specials” from day to day. Again, Mrs. Hodgson, the popular expert from the Wear-Ever factory will pay us a visit—we hope a long one; because she knows the Wear-Ever story from start to fin- ish, and Hartford women have confidence in her advice and appreciate her suggestions on cooking and baking. 1t takes 5000 bees to weigh a| volume to his earlier an hypothesis of e Survey. companion ‘Earth and Sun weather and sunspots'. .. THE COUNTRY AG T AND THE FARM BUR J by Maurice Chase Burritt. . . | 3R IN ENGLAND, DANIEL WEB: rd Gray. edited by Edw « s o DENIZENS OF THE DESERT by Edmund C. Jaeger. “A study of wild life of our south- western desert by a biologist who has made this region a lifelong study."” . o o DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME BY STATES IN 1919 by Oswaid Whit- man Knauth. « v . DOVER ROAD by C. C. Harper. “\Ir, Harper recalls many memo- rabilia connected with historic bhighway.” this o s . EATING VITAMINES: How to know and prepare the foods that supply these invisible life-guards, by Charles Huston Goudiss. o s e ENGLAND IN 1815 by Joseph Bal- lard. . . DICTION 1"OR SINGERS $ by L. A. Russell. .. | OF THIEE NEW| John Elliottson | ENGLISH AND SPEAKER . TION by THE EVOI/ TESTAME Sym he book is clear and interesting| and well written, the work of a teach- er rather than of a scho and of a| teacher who has read widely and used | accurately the books that preceded | him. The chief merit of the volume; iies in its treatment of the ch istics and contents of the Ney s ment writings and in the cffort made | to explain the environment of the writers in the apostolic age. Paul's Jetters are explained with simplicity and effectiveness.” Lit. Review. PR FIVE ONE-ACT COMEDIES by Law- rence Langner. “Mr. Langner was one of the found- ers of the Washingfon Square players, probably the first organization to | start the one.act play on its path to present-day popular recognition and | he is now one of the six able directors of the New York Theater Guild." PR ! FRENCH PICTURES AND '&‘H\;HL‘} PAINTERS by Mrs. Lorinda Mun-| son Bryant. | “In ‘French Pictures and their| Painters’ we find the same charm of diserimination that was so apparent| in Mrs. Bryant's ‘American Pictures| and their Painters’ and ‘What pictures | to see in Europe.! She seems almost | intuitively to see the weaknesses of | many of the pictures she selects the while she never loses sight of the great virtues in them.” To anyone interested in French paintings, French artists, Mrs. Bryant has indeed pre- sented a book deserving of gratitude.” Boston Transcript. . s A GUIDE TO ENGLISH GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE by Samuel Gard- ner. “This is a very valuable book, chiefly because it is quite untechnical and teaches through the eye rather than by printed word or word of mouth. It will be chiefly prized by non-professional readers who desire to acquire some gencral knowledge of English Gothic without having re- course to elaborate and detailed trea- tises such as would be valuable torl and of conditions favorable to whole- scme |THE PROVINCETOWN BOOK by |212 MAIN ST.—ROOM 208 Sonditions (aoraull aminlot | HNVONE WARTING. Al AL RETAIL BUSINESS, CENTRALLY which with those who work with LOCATED, CALL ON ME AT ONCE. children have |: (’(:)\ln; H. D. HUMPHREY. NATIONAL BANK BLDG, TOURING $995 ROADSTER $995 Prices {. o. b. Factory Tax Estra COUPE $1445 SEDAN $1465 Cord Tires on All Models $400 Cash buys this Jewett. Balance Monthly JEWETT oA Thrifty Six Built by Paige 50 H. P.—Amazing Performance —$995! greased—have sealed-in lubrication good for 15,000 miles. Jewett gives fast shifting of gears with a bare 3-inch movement. Thanks to a new clutch, shift as fast as your hand can move. No pause, no clash. Drop from high to second at 30 miles per hour: that's Jewett gear-mastery. Ball-bearing spindles, an exclusive Jewett betterment, give superior steering ease. Every inch of it is ruggedly buiit; and Jewett's 200 pounds greater weight gives big-car riding ease. Genuine leather upholstery. Built- in transmission lock, Drum-typa head lamps. Snug curtains; abundant riding room. : See for yourself this highspower, Paige-built Jewert Six, at $995. In all the world there never was such a car at such a price! Jewett's six cylinders are 3% by 5 inches. They give you full fifty horsepower. No automobile of com- parable size and price was ever built with such power! Consider the amazing perform- ance of this fine motor in the 2805- pound Jewett. Acceleration from 5 t025 miles in seven seconds. Youcan take traffiz in high gear at two miles an hour,or the straight-ahead stretch at sixty. Bzat any car climbing hills. It's the wonderful Paige-built motor that does these things — a motor finely built and ideally lubris, cated. High-prassure oiling sends a gallon of oil every 46 seconds to all mainand connecting rod bearingsat 15 miles per hour. All moving parts are remarkably smooth, noticeably silent. The new-type, all-steel, oil- tight universal joints — oiled, not THE LASH MOTOR CO., Inc. WEST MAIN & LINCOLN STS. A REPUTABLE CONCERN pound. R s ey A Classified ad in the Herald will help you to find the rent that you de- sire. fi INVESTORS Don't compromise with Safety! Why be satisfied with less than ab- solute protection when FIRST MORTGAGES Yielding 7% in Advance offered by The Bodwell Realty Co., in convenient denominations are easily available at Room 402, National Bank building. The Bodwell Realty Co. Phone 1801, New Britain, Conn. —————m—— CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 2013. Estimates cheerfully given on all jobs Two Family House on Smalley street at a BIG BARGAIN. For special REASONS the ownerl%lla(; got to take a loss of $1,000. Here’s your chance. 5,400 Iron Men will Buy It—Get BUSY! Good centrally located store for rent.. Fine | for groceries and meats. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bunk Bldg, OYSTERS | —DRINK— CRgIéAfi’FSJ i 'AYERS’ SODA WATER | Take home a large bottle of lemon SHRIMP and lime—something you will like—- SCALLOPS ‘(’;:::a‘ec“;fe' bottles—3c, 10¢, 15c. LOBSTERS HONISS’S 24-30 STATE ST. ’ HARTFORD ! COLD WEATHER NEEDS We have a full line of new and second-hand stoves, oil heaters, gas lieaters, etc. A. LIPMAN New and Secondhand Furniture. 24 Lafayette St Tel. 1328-2 THE OLD HOME TOWN % e s (5 —, AUNT SARAN PEABODY, LEADER OF THE SOCIETY FOR SUPPRESSION OF PIPE SMOKING, IS EXTENDING HER WORK ANDHEREAFTER, wiLL INCLUDE ALL KINDS -~ orF PRoMISGUOUS SMOKING.