New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 26, 1923, Page 9

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1923, Dealer -and - Consumer Both have Confidence in "SALADA" T X A d Hence the tremendous Demand. “The most delicious Tea you can buy* LML | particularly valuable,"—Saturday Ite- | JUST TRY IT. ' A8 1 REMEMBER, by Emily Els |yl " s iy abeth Constance Jones, oiale 4 L : : :n————-v il "Autoblography of the late Mistress | poREIGN COMMERCIAL CREDITS, 3 e S 3 % Hidne ) > 9 g ‘ 0 A 3 y M. Cadwell, Leonia, N, J. of Girton College, Cambridge, and Edwards, 3 te The Naugatuek Chemical Co, Vul- former librarian and leeturer In .. ¢ i . canizing rubbe; 1 the product ob Geraldine Farrar, star of opera and screen, i Is her attorney, Alvin Untermyer, Stenographer (ime e 0 ¢ produe Phllosophy. - FRENCH COURSE VORI é Alvi tained thereby, haven't you a real one? icans, by Thatcher Clark, vorce action against Lou Tellegen, On the right,s shown here testifying before a referee In her di- Trade-Mark Registrations, . woman explained she had no at left. New Books at CASTORIA the Institute | inUseForover30Years | WNlways bears O | the AMONG THE CANADIAN ALPS, by ' Slguature of Lawrence J, Burpee. “From the explorstions of Nivers| ville In 1751 to the conquest of Mount| Hobson a few years ago, Mr. Burpee| tells the story of mountain climbing adventures, some of them personal, in the Canadian Reckles, ineluding Sel- Kirks, with mueh readable deserips tion and many illustrations,'—A, 1. A, Bookiist, has paid special attention te the re- lation of price to value as food and those whe wish to knew exactly whether they are paying for flaver or rarity or energy-value, where pur- chasing food, will find exact informa- tion set out in a clear and interesting fashlon, The information given on meat julees, jellies and extraects s mine, and the boy fingered it for some time in complete silence before Ying' “But its just paper; by George W, . AMER- asset and soclety commits Ineredible by Beach, | | el carrier, COHMI"NIT\’ Bt xl.l:l'Nflfl FOR IN. DR The Canfield KRubber Co, Bridges sliver dollar, but she assured him » Ifll!lAh. T?“;\fl- THE GENERAIL l':tgl\ll.l'!'l'l’;i g” port, Adhesive insulating tape, |the paper was just as good as the PRYCHOLOGY CONCEPTIONS, | The Horton Manufacturing Co., silver, and even more valuable if one CONSCRIPTION AND CONBCIENCE, by Robert MacDougall, : 4 Dristol, Golf balls [wanted to sell it at the bank by John W. Graham, YA reflective unalysis of the sys- UFE OF “DEAD “AN" ls PATE.\TS ISSLED | Pitney-Powers Postage Motor Co,, The little fellow wasn't persuaded. [ o 1 | tem of theoretical aims of psychology [f0!!Y When it gambles with its human |Stamford, Postmarking and stamping He thanked the American woman very CONSTANTINOPLE TODAY, and the methods of procedure it om. | Fesources, how the abolishing of child SAVED BY '"{E UNDERTAKER TO CONN, PEOPLE wachine, [politely and walked away in a deep Clarence Richard Johnson, ploys.” ,:‘:;::,.’T::‘.S,‘:m.rl. ::.I.“T..:‘lt-::llp r.;:; | | The Salt's Textile Manufacturing study over the intricacies of cur- “It would be difficult to find a §:9°8 ‘ -———— Co,, Bridgeport, Kabrics in the plece rency. more interesting subject for a social | THE HISTORY OF THE BALKAN|showing the wastage of child labor”| ¢ Ax s Rushed to M . . made wn:uly or in part of silk, n':uuu‘ In shops foreigners are frequently survey than the capital of the Otto. PENINSULA, by Ferdinand . » G OF RE ’ Vot 4 i By = 0% | Patents Jssued By the U. &, '"""fuml wool, blankets, automoblie robes, |asked for dollars, Shopkeepers and man Emplre; and the American con- Bchevill. N Ry OF RMUATIYATY) by " pital and Not to Ofice February 20, 1023, to Con- | St6amer rugs, etc, {clerks are anxious o have at least ductors of this survey have done full| *“One turns with genuine satisfac-| Albert :::l"‘“""' £ | The Scamless 1tubber Co., Inc., New one as a souvenir, No American who Justice to their subject, The cosmo-|tion from the numberless books '““':\,“r?? ,;‘:,!:d;,‘.!,!'."'l[-.:d':["‘;‘:':r'y‘):x? Tomb, necticut Inventors, |Haven, Dolls, ;dr'uar;'vs to ‘l'm:a :.l 'I’('h to a fiem‘un olitan character of the T whose most sorious purpose is ex- o bobed o M | | R, J. Bisk Co, New London, Pig-|friend ean do better than mall crisp, ‘r:wlmpnhs. its mixture of medl‘:l:l:"l:lvj hnhuutwl whemthey hul\,-- :u‘vn W pass- m“l.““l‘"'-y-l and o‘xplulnu Iua T;)Ial rI:-. ‘Nunhuu. N. H, Feb, 20—~Adam | (List furnished by ‘uu' office of lllrrld ment linoleum cement, £ |new American bills. The high rate of Ism and modernism, its religlous|hausted when they have given|c®D .|;TN opnlmn 5. ”‘.\nn ull e he|Ware I8 tmluy in the Memorial G, Manning, \\'mu.(n'er Store, 211| The Warner Brothers Co., Bridge- exchange on the dollar is almost the background, its industries, charities,|a passing Impressionistic ple- Pl"" ‘{'" "('l"‘l’ ’,‘""'" ""‘:“fl'. Ifl{'!*'lr- hospital here with better than af Main street, New Britain), Iport. Chains, |sole topic of conversation in mixed and schools, and its present condition | ture of world affairs, to this ju- ?hu: '.orl ... . :" o e “‘r"”d"ff‘ fighting chance to recover from &| ‘pwpyr 2, Benedict, South Norwalk. | Applications for Trade-Mark gatherings, and fortunate is the man as affected by the great European|dicial accurate, and admirably pre-|that the Aymag too can understand, ’m-np gash from an ax, and if he does | ooy "0 o0 Registration, |who can produce an American bill struggle, are strikingly and interest-|sented history of “Dalkania,’ by Prof. | reeover he will owe his life to an un- Robert 8. Blair, Sound Cora P. Atkins, West Hartford, Par- |before astonished friends. ingly brought out in this comprehen- ‘ sive seientific study."—Outlook. PR DIRECTING STUDY, by* Harry L. Miller, . e A DISH OF APPLES, by Eden Phill- Ferdinand Schevill, professor of mod- ern history in the University of Chi- cago. Professor Sc¢hevill has written what is probably the most comphe- henstve history of the Balkan penin- sula in any language. Tn writing he has proved himself to he more than MINIMUM COURSE. OF STUDY; re- ports of committees on minimum essentials in clementary cduca- ! tion by Ernest Carroll Moore, . THE NEW SPIRIT IN ENGLISH | | that VERSE; an anthology for read-|ever the snow i dertaker, not to a doctor. received Ware had. committed suielde at Litchfield Medical Referee Willlam E, Reed decided that an undertaker only necessary to make the hard trip badly | When official here covered and word | Shucking vegetable product. | Edwin W. Bultard, Whitneyville, | trolling means for fluld-circulating ap-! paratus, Multi-speed refrigerating ap- paratus, Wedge, | Torrington, e ) George P. Carroll, Hartford. Con-|driers, toasters, and waifle irons, Elec. | ("Washington Bureau of New Britain Herald). The Fitzgerald Manufacturing Co,, Electrically-operated hair trically-operated vibrators, | The Holstein Rubber Co., Hart- Safety-controlling mechan- | ford, Single and double faced rubber London who broke his leg when FREEMAN IS IMPROVING. DY GEORGE H, MANNING Feb. 26,—Repre- . Freeman of New he stumbled while walking in the sub- Washington, D, sentative Richard ers and”reciters, by Ernest Guy|drifted roads, Pertwee, composer, | Accordingly Vietor A. Gagnon, an P | ex-service man, made the trip. Lo- OFFICE PRACTICE AND m‘s;.\‘lass“"'”"" Ware in a loft in the barn on PROCEDURE, by Florence I (the farm, Gagnon discovered that| MeGill. ‘(hu “corpse” was alive, Gagnon S ale tourniquetted the wound, packed the " o - " ~_ | Man into his undertaker's death bas- THE TRAIL OF THE PBACE. ket, and made a flying trip to the pas b by Fred B. Smith. Memorial hospital here. international Y. M. C. A. secretary, HUNTER RESCUES DOG | GAUGHT IN SNOWSLIDE traveled to the Far Bast on a mission —_— { ism for compressing machines, | sheeting. icorge D, Gallagher, Washington, | Charles Kemper, doing business as|way between the capitol and the , assignor to Winchester Repeat- | Radio Products Co.,, Westport. Radio|pouse office building last Tuesday, is ing Arms company, New Haven, Conn, |telegraph and telephone apparatus and getting along nicely the physicians at Handlamp. | appliances. Providence hospital report. Alfred C. Gilbert, assignor to the| The Stanley Works, New Britain, [ A. C. Gilbert company, New Mn.veu.!\'!!el. bit braces, planes nail sets, Conn. Rheostat, {hammers, etc. Two applications. | Henry M. Gleason, assignor to Chase ! " o e o ana swarsoé GERMANS MAKE SCRAMBLE ' FOR AMERICAN DOLLARS| the same, { | potts, a chronicler of events. ‘Balkan i Peninsula’ is a personalistic history, DRAMATIC LEGENDS AND OTHER!If we may use the expreseion, con- POEMS, by Padraic Colum, cerned more with the human than the “This latest volume of Padraie]technically actnal circumstances In Colum into three parts: the fir:d|each particular situation.'—Christian called 'Country Songs': the second,|Science Monitor. ‘Creatures and Things Seen’; and the L A e last, ‘Dramatic Legends.' All' three/ HUMAN 1TFE: FROM THE BIOLO- sets of poems show no amateur, but, GIST'S POINT OF VIEW, by a skilled craftsman with an inborn Vernon Lyman Kellogg. sense for poetic values,"-——America, “Colvu Lectures at Brown ['niver- | SN sity, presenting a great theme with EARLHAM, by Percy Lubbock. eloquent charm, reverence and scien-| “8o deftly are these happy memo- | tific authority.” ries interwoven so sensitively do they L 004 Kurope, Japan, Egypt, India, Jerusa- touch experiences of childhood rela- The industrial applications of X-|jem, and Constantinople,” tively common to us all, that Mr.[rays; an introduction to the apparatus; e Lubbock's reminiscences and Interpre-|and methods used in the production|q:p prer popTs: ENGLISH AND/ tations reawaken ours. And the life and application of X-rays for the ex- AMERICAN, by Theodore May-| lived in many an English and Amer-|amination of materials and structures Dak | ican ‘Barlham’ of a half century ago, /by P. H. 8. Kempton. “The British poet, in his criticism will come back out of a tranquil past| . v e of English and American mode’n to bless a present sorely in need of Internal combustion engines; a re-|poets, shows himself not only exacting blessing.”"—Toston Transeript. view of the development and construc- fin his demands but also unstinted in| Y tion of various types and their eco-1his praise. He makes challenging | THE FIREMEN'S nomic superiority for modern power statements of our American poets— ‘Williams, purposes by J. Okill. Frost, Robinson, Lindsay, Amy Lowell, | ed to come trom a ledge of rocks. Go- ® L8 b the Benets, cte,, and English poets as|ing ncarer he came upon the dog's |JEAN JACQUES ROUSSEAU, well, Chesterton, de la Mare, Mase-|trail, which he followed up a precipi- . Henri Frederic Amiel. field, Bellog, Yeats, etc.” |tous bluff and found a place where | “A (Mscourse delivered at Geneva, LB R there had been a snowslide. The ful"demipilation and study of modern| 1§75, at the festival commemorating | pEDAGOGY OF PHYSICAL TRAIN.|(racks of the dog could be seen no | knowladge .of . chomical - constituents|the 100th anniversaty of - Roussean's ING, by C. W. Crampton further and by the time he reach- of faods, and of their relation to theldcath. Tt describes and evaluates the| S ) ed the place th> whining had ceased. | production .of energy. Dr. Hutchison!sontribution of the Genevese phil-|,, & it - L The hunter peered down and made | - ——— - osopher to mankind pictures of the ”“‘ST}I-;I’;;I\I[‘Z%[ J‘Oll;nor;‘%?’rfl‘ out u hound wedged in a cleft in the | man himself and assesses the criti- Pl gy rocks, almost buried under the snow, fsms of Rousseau's personal life as whieh had swept it into the cleft, How To KEEP et RED GARDEN, by Henning Kehler. i WELL ALL WINTER A, ] well as of his philosophy.” He lowered himself so as to get hold " “The author, as an official in the HIS is the time when you hear .. : of the hound's collar, and after con- LITERARY GUIDE TO THE BIBLE: [Danish embassy had occasion to|riderable difficulty was able to draw travel in Russla, during 1917-18. The/| people sy, “There’s lots of sick- ness this winter.” ON | | [ Herbert R. Green, New Eritain, Gas mixer. Murray B. Loete, assignor to R. Wallace & Sons Mfg. Co., Wallingford, | Conn. Spoon, fork or similar article. Elbert W. Lively, West Haven. Egg- heater attachment or the like. Clarence D. Platt, Bridgeport. Elec- | tric switch. | e g Delmar G. Roos, assignor, by mesne | Berlin, Feb. 26.—American dollars | cious dishes from assignments, to the Locomobile Co,, ['0ld & magie charm for Germans | " Mueller’s Spaghetti Bridgeport. Tire carrier, Since the quotation of the doliar has | that the oftepnest you John H. Thacher, Wethersfield, as-| U Well above 20,000 marks, that| b signor to Pratt & Whitney Co, New coin Is regarded as charmed., News- | have it the more you York, N. Y. Lathe chuck. {papers display quotations of the dollar enjoy it, Cooks in 10 minutes in black type on their first pages. It stands alone. Quotations on English, delicions SPAGHETTI of friendship and peace, and in this volume he tells of conditions as he found them in England, continental Coin of U, Is Regarded As Charmed in Region Where Mark Is Nil. Traces Muffled Whining to Hound's There are so many Rocky Prison—Animal Was ways of preparing delis Iacing Death Callicoon, N. Y., Feb, 26,—J. Ellis Terrell of this place was hunting foxes on Iortnam's Knob, near Damascus, Pa., last week, when he heard the AID, by Ernest W. mulfled whining of a dog, which seem- Swiss and Scandinavian money are relegated to the market pages. | An American woman who lives in 1Br~r11n was recently approached by a |seven-year old German boy, the play. mate of her son, who hesitatingly | asked; “Won't you please show me a |real dollar?” She handed him a dollar bill to ex. Shingles . oe FOOD AND PRINCIPLES OF DIE- TETICS, by Robert Hutchison. ‘Interesting and useful as: a care- by BY The storm is coming, but your roof protects you from the drenching deluge. Neither rain nor snow nor baking sun, nor the attacks of sparks and fumes can shake the confi- dence of those who are protected by Certain-teed Slate Surfaced Shin- fires in the business district caused | gles. Beneath the outer beauty of more than $500,000 damage yester- | iy their mellow red, green or blue- ']“,y\' foit-atory biidIng Sopoupiediby | B black surface, there is a through- the Central Glass company and the and—thmugh quality which resists Sl ot tho Sevhie Brreme Gary the ravages of time and weather. mission company were destroyed. Yourmofis thzmostimportant— e and can be made the most attract- U. S. Portia ive feature of your home. Dura- bility is essential,—fine appear- ance no less. . . Certain-teed assures you both—at an economiical cost. $500,000 LOSS IN TWO FIRES Big Buildings Razed in Kansas City Business District Kansas City, Mo, Feb. 26.--Two A study of the types of literature the dog out from his narrow cell to present in the old and New Tes- hookAronslsls of a series of sketches of |a place where he could get a foothold, taments by Laura H. Wild, Russian life as he has seen it under The hound had made desperate ef- LR soviet rule. He has no love for the|forts to get out of his prison, but LUBRICATION AND LUBRICANTS; | bolsheviki and the picture he paints|could gain no footing, and undoubt- It's not the fault of the weather; a concise-treatment on the theory!is one of tragedy and chaos.” + |edly would have perished of hunger winter should be the healthiest time of and practice of lubrication; the! . s ox {and exposure had not Mr. Terrell dis- the year. But you should make sure physical, chemical and mechani- SALISBURY PLAIN, by Ella Noyes. |covered him in time. your blood is rich and pure, and your cal properties and testing of | P ey | The dog showed his gratitude for | entire system in perfect condition. liquid and solid lubricants, by J.|SAVAGE SUDAN; its wild tribes, big|his rescue by sticking closely to Mr., Gude's Pcpto-rlanfi , taken now, H. Hyde. . game and bird life, by Abel|7errell until the latter discovered his will help keep you weli all winter. It A TR Chapman. i |owner, another fox hunter, and turned | J enrlcly-your blaod i on 1P |MANCHURIA — LAND OF OPFOR. e the hound over to him, ! jous enture eystem,: xour d"““‘f"s‘ 2! TUNITIES. THE SPORTSMAN'S WORKSHIP, by T it—liquid or tablets, as you prefer. “Deals with the geography, re- Warren Hastings Miller, ) sources and commerce of Manchuria.” L] u es LR STARCH AND STARCH PRODUCTS, THE MEANING OF CHILD LABOR,‘ by Marold A. Auden. by Raymond Garfield Fuller. .0 00, SRS Pepto.'Mangan “A consideration, mainly of thc‘ Fiction, [ . economic side of the child labor ques-| HUNTINGTOWER, by John Buchan. 'FIO”“' ardbf!ao:z{ffl{{tjrfle';‘ {tion, how the child is society's chief * ‘Huntingtower’ is a splendid story| = « | Woven around an old Scotch house, A | . ¥ ey retired Glasgow grocer, the gang of | 4 ‘Gorbals Die-Hards,’ a Russian prin-| cess and the villainous captain of a bolshevist ship make up the plot, through which runs the silver thread " of Scotch humor.”-—America. S e | PHANTOM, by Gerhart Johann Rob- | ert Hauptmann, | “A novel by Germany's foremost | dramatist, dealing with an abnormal | man and his spiritua isis. I . . - I “Pape’s Cold Compound’’ Breaks a Cold in Few Hours TRIUMPH OF THE SCARLET PIM- | ‘ § PERNEL, by Baron Orezy. | This is the continuation of the ad- | { ventures of a brave and altogether| | charming Knglish nobleman during| | the reign of terror in France. The variety and the thrill of hairbreadth escapes should satiate the most vo- racious appetite.”-—America. .o ness, sneezing. The second and third doses usually break up the cold com- | pletely and end all grippe misery. “Pape's Cold Compound” is the| quickest, surest relief known and| costs only a few cents at drug stores. | Tastes nice. Contains no quinine. In- sist upon Pape's. Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! Take ‘“Pape’s Cold Compound” every two hours until three doses are taken. The first dose opene clogged-up nostrils and alr pas- sages of head; stops nose running; re- lieves headache, duliness, feverish- . 3 i THE VOICE AT JOHNNYWATER, by | 254 4 ¥ E J . s bat o i LI B. M. Bower. g e ¢ = “A story with ‘an engrossing plot, | contintous action, perfect western at- mosphere and a group of lovable characters ¥ o Declares Times Are Changed And Re- ligious Laws Should Change Also | Constantinople, Feb. 26. — In the course of his long speech-making tour | in_explanation of the peoples’ party | which he is founding, Mustapha | Kemal, was questioned by his hearers | on everything from finance to religion. | At Brast, for instance, a man in the | audience demanded to know whether the proposed statutes to national | heroes were not in contravention of | the Ismet lJaw. Kemal replied in the | negative, “‘Since the prophet founded our faith,” he said, “some 1,300 years | have passed. When he was teaching | Lis principles idolatry was still exist. | ing and.it was necessary, at the time, | to correct this tendency by forbidding statuary.” ’ Most powerful high-pressure stean engine in the world was built for the ! Cargo-Fleet Tron company of England ‘and develops 25,000 horsepower at (i .iebrandt of California who has| 140 revolutions a minute, ‘Wwith steam {taken charge of his work as head of | at 199 pounds. the department. H Don't let skin trouble unfit you for the days work my itching at once and 1 got the first night's sleep I had had in weeks. Now my skin is well." What it has done for one it can do for other, Why don’t you try it? e Corlain-teed Products Eczema, ringworm and other itching rashes. seldom heal them- selves, but Resinol Ointment does heal them and makes refreshing sleep possible for skin sufferers. Onewhohnundlhhmlml_ng, healing ointment writes—'‘Resinol Ointment is so soothing it Resi TECTION WALLAFLOOR AND ‘SURFACE PR( ( J Resinel Soap and Resinol --fi-h—;n-nh': v ml-nhh-b-wa omarting. CERTAIN-TEED-ROOFING SOLD BY CITY COAL AND WOOD CO. 141-143 ELM STREET TELEPHONE 217 Washington traditions have been broken during the present illness of | Atty. Gen. Daugherty by Mrs, Mabel Your druggist sells the Resinol trie

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