New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 16, 1923, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

'THE ESSENTIAI |EVERY TEACHER'S PROBLIEMS by |the everyday life of the people, NEW BRITAI 1-\“: leglslatures to illustrate the prin. ew Books at ciples of legislative action,'-—S8pring« by John Phelan, fleld Republican ““The book has made avallable, in . ) good form, a valuable body:of litera- tbe Inst'tute LIFE OF BIt ARTHUR PEARSON [ture, which, previous to this, no one { by Siiney Dark person could hope to find and by so | S S CZest for life' 1s Mr, Dark's read.|doing will add impetus, to the move. T 1INE & the secret of the remarkable |ment for a better rural America,- AMERIC |\\ [PUELE by Raymond Ba- | carecr of Sir Arthur Pearson, news-|American Journal of Soclology. j:’.‘(‘”;j'i'\-l ‘}h‘ ““j“““ paper proprietor and founder of 8t | e e i ‘“ 9 ‘“"‘L““ '. ng "“ Dunstan's hostel for soldiers and sail- | SCANDINAVIAN ART by Carl G, o oM ‘H" : 'nd [ors, blinded in the great war; and he| Laurin, | ol b fner ul“'.b“. S "\’ '\ certainly could not have done the! “This book, which elaims to be the Bt saanosive Paid Lt ‘\; work he did, had he not possessed |first comprehensive treatment of g A I 4 aeld IShUurgh 'that quality, But Mr, Dark insists on | Scandinavian art in any language, is PR It as the keynote to his character. (one of the series of Scandinavian £ 3 b His first chapter is a summing up of | monographs published by the Ameri- “‘T":""‘\"‘ AND PHYSIOLOGY I'OR | the whole man, and, as Mr, l"lnrk mn-sgnn::mu\"lnn N‘aunrln):ion. who ac- b "‘ e o PO by Blizabeth e Sir Arthur Pearson well, and | knowledge thelr indebtedness to Mr, AR T LS | has talen the opinion of other friends | . Henry Smith, of 8an Francisco, ANIMAI CURIOSITIRR Ly W, & there can be no reason for supposing | whose gift provided for the complet- Berridg: e i So/that he has not presented his hero in (ed manuseripts and engravings, It is o 3 e ’ the right light, as ‘a man of cheer | divided into three scctions, dealing re- Bscantionalt e "”"‘ and vesterdays and confident tomorrow | spectively with Swedish, Danish and R S ahiraln Tishea | l,’ 00K ON{—Times (London) Lit. Sup, | Norwegian art, and contains numer. tlons s : L ‘e {ous illustrations of architecture and SR NEW STONE BRONZE AND I:.\m,\"mrulmnrv and reproductions of por- COMMON SENSE IN BUSINFSS IRON A by M, and C. H, Quen- |traits and pictures."—Times (Lomion) Harold Whitehead nell { LAk Bup, ; “This volume is the second in Mr, (@ LIS, A SHORT COURSE IN ADVERTIS- ING by Alexander Faickney Osborn. The author Department of ‘Everyday story ind Mrs. Life' series and Quennell’'s new continues the ation (o ooy, writes for business men o0 oz in their ‘Fyoryday Life in the| A helpful feature is the numerous Jarger aspects. He holds that busi- |©ld Stone Age' published some time | illustrations showing the ;ul\rrti.-w.‘ ness should be ‘joyous and sympathe lago. In a most suggoestive and read- /ments of well known nrnfiumn of tie, practica I generous, just and |APle manner the authors, after touch. |twenty years ago side by side with purposeful,’ anc writes optimisti- | /"€ on the transition between the Old |present day advertissments of the eally and hur of its human |aNd New Stone Ages, illustrate the|same products and pointing out the side."—Time Lit. Sup v s which successively mi- | reasons for the greater effectivencss of . . e shores, and the gradu- | the modern type."—A, L. A, Booklist. CRUISES ALONG BY.WAYS O @ change from the hunter to the pas- | o e THE PACIFIC by Willlam H.|t0ral stage and reconstruct from the |THE TALKING MACHINE INDUS- Hobbs. evidence of archaeological remains the TRY by Ogilbie Mitchell. > life of th carly races in its vari- . e e DEVELOPING MENTAL POWER by 0U€ phases. The whole volume with|THE UNITED STATES by William . |its copious illustrations makes good | Hudson and 1. 8. Guernsey. George Stra “Every teacher read and ponder Times (London) Lit. S8up. | “This volume belongs to a series to . . MOTHER | reading."” rent should Stratton's | . OF essor asizes the develdp- | NUTRITION He died AND | tributed a history of France. message. It emp | ment of a unified reasoned control of CHILID by €. Ulysses, Moore, M. D.|when the book was half finished, and behavior as a basic & l-inelusive “A presentation of the facts of nu- | it has been completed by Mr. Guern- aim of education.”-—Iiducational Re- trition, in which are incorporated the 'sey, of the De Witt Clinton High view, important discoveries made during|School, New York. The selection of | I T the past five years which have reve- |portraits and maps is excellent,”— DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE O | lutionized our ideas of dietetics.” (Times (London) Lit. Sup. THE AMERICAN COLONIES AND . s | AR THE EARLY REPUBLIC by Fiske|OUR REPUBLIC by Samuel Eagle|VEGETABLE GARDEN by Adolph Kimball. | Forman. Kruhm. i * *, “The book is a compendium of Vam} RYE AR OF CHEMICAL |from the discovery of America to the| WE AND OUR GOVERNMENT by | J. W. Jenke and R. D. Smith. PHYSIOLOGY by Wiltiam Dobin- | Harding administration. These facts i son Halliburton are not confined to our political and | It is an excellent book for the edu- oo geographical development but take in |Cation of the foreign-born in the poli- |industrial growth, and inventions.|Oof citizenship. It is equally good for Emphasis is placed on the importance |YOUNg people’s reading whether in of the economic factor.” | connection with class work or not. The " e o inormal boy should fairly eat it up. 3MS OF "MODERN SCIENCE | For the average citizen it will be at William E. St “An attempt ples through the situatio to help te ‘veloping prinei- study of concrete chers to acquire | toward their| PROBI a profession: itude work and to in professional | ES OF LECTURES DE-|once interesting to read.”—Greens- knowledge and skill.” LIV ED AT KINGS' COLLE! boro, N. (., Daily News. T Naaae UNIVERSITY OF LONDON, by Sane . IDEALS, AIMS AND METHODS IN| Arthur Dendy. WHAT'S WRONG WITH OUT EDUCATION by John Dewey. P GIRLS? by Beatrice Hale, Y THE RABBIT BOOK by F. L. Wagh-| “Contends that the thoughts and ac- INDUS TAI. ORGANIC CHEMIS. bt tions of the modern girl are the re- TRY by S. P. Sadtler and L. J. pecially thorough and compact. sult of environment and training and Matos. uthor, cientist who has had [that the constructive part she may play as worhan in the progress of the tical experience, bases his discus- ) on the best practice and his own |World ~depends upon the parents, | schools and society of today. Not only “Adapted for the use of manufac- | p turers, chemists and all integested in| the utilization of organic materials in|results.”—A. L. A. Booklist. the industrial arts. v e e f LI e | RADIO AMATEUR’S HANDBOOK by LEGISLATIVE PROCEDURE by! A. Frederick Collins. ! Robert Luce. “A valuable contribution to the ex- “By a happy mixture of remini- isting field of radio literature since it scence, anecdote, specific illustration | presents this rather difficult subject and suggestive of sometimes ingenu-|from two angles; the construction and | ons obiter dicta, we are enabled tolpurchase of wireless apparatus and | enjoy as well as profit by a discussion [ the underlying principles of its opera- of the major problems of methods of [tion. Snitable for a supplementary | doing business in legislative bodies. | text in the high schools and will be Mr. I.uce has been catholic in his se- |of interest to a perimen- lection of material and draws upon |ter in the wire the experiences of American and for- for more IRTHMORE BUTTERMILK BABY CHICK FOOD Chicks take toit like ducks take to water! It’s nourishing, healthful, and easily di- gested. Helps build bone, blood, muscle and feathers—makes chicks grow faster, feather out more evenly, mature earlier and become better layers. Don't experiment—WIRTHMORE Butter- milk Baby Chick Food is made in New Eng- land —by New England people —for New England people. It is just what you need to give your chicks a good start in lifel—and insure a profitable egg yield at matunty. Buy WIRTHMORE Poultry Feeds—at your WIRTHMORE Grain dealer’s—Now. Write for FREE Fgg Record Book ROCHESTER HENRY Sold in 3.6%4.25 and 100 Ib. packages Bone Meal . CHAS. M. COX CO. ST.ALBANS GRAIN CO. Wholesale Distributors Manufacturers Boston, Mass. St. Albans, Vermont THE C. W. LINES CO. — TELEPHONE 691 — We Sell and Recommend Wirthmore Poultry Feeds to make the hens lay, weigh and pay. Fruit and Ornamental Trees Roses, Flowering Shrubs, Vines, Hardy Garden Flowers in SHUTTLE Near A quick, good assortment, “Bristol Grown-Sturdy As the Hills.” Bristol Nurseries, Inc. Telephone 1301-2 Catalogue Mailed on Request 86 WEST MAIN ST, CINDERS A. H. HARRIS General Trucking Bristol, Conn, | which the late Professor Hudson con- | their |tical implications and responsibilities | K@Gp less trouble. 10 Room House with extra 50 foot ot for $7.500, ment now vacant, but with 12 applicants, [ READING IN RURAL SOCIOLOGY (goes down to basie principles in her |analysis but makes practical sugges- A, Booklist, DR Fiction AS WE ARE by Walter B, Pitkin, .. CONVALESCENTS by Charles ¥red- erie Nirdlinger, “A hospital story of a day nurse and a supposed ‘hopeless case,’ with a very active mind, keen eyes and ears and a gift of satiric wit; together with the love story is a running commen- tary on all that goes on in that ‘anti- septic little world,’ the hospital, . . . COURTLANDTS O WASHINGTON 8Q. by Janet A, Fairbank, “A better story of the Civil War, from the Northern standpoint, has |perhaps never been written, 1%or | though entirely lacking in controversy it is vital with the spirit of the con- flict, The best is the middle, which seems so real that it must have been written with some old diary in hand. |But the whole is fresh and vivid, de- lightful for its very conventions which Ann so scorned,”—Boston Transcript, i |TTAINT PERFUME by Zona Gale. R IN LLONDON by Conal O'Riordan. “The whole is lightly and pieasant- |1y written with frequent outcroppings |of real Irish humor. One understands | many of his country men as the fore- most Trish novelist."” | PR MERRY O by Ethel Hueston. | spirits, young love, and the romance |of the open road. . e+ e POOR PINNEY by Marian Chapman. PR Y |SECRET DRAMA by TIsabel Beau- mont. “A novel, by a new English writer, |which has just won the Melrose first novel prize in London.” | liam LeQueux. e THE WAGON WHEFEL by William I. White. « v o. WEDGWOOD MEDALLION by E. B. C. Jones. | WOLVES OF | Leroux. .« v . THE SEA by Gaston FOX’S NEXT MON. A “THE TOWN THAT FORGOT GOD” your — GO-GAS miles and CONSUMERS SERVICE STATIONS, CONSOLIDATED BOSTON — NEW HAVEN — NEW YORK H. HALL Cor. South Main and Trinity Sts. LAWN DRESSING Sheep Manure .............. $3.00 per 100 pounds civriierensene.. $3.50 per 100 pounds Top Dressing .............. $3.60 per 100 pounds Any of the above fertilizers applied to your lawn will produce strong green grass. Rackliffe Bros. Inc. Park and Bigelow Sts. Phone 1075 MEADOW AVENUE rch Street First floor tene- Terms reasonable. Sece us THE HOME BANKING & REALTY CO. PHONE 728 EEr s S e e e S HE S RS e s e et ] FOR SALE . 99 WEST ST.| Tel. 1233-3 tions for hettering conditions,—A, L. | [now why the author is regarded by | | “A merry tale full of youth, high | | « s 0 | VISION OF DESIRE by Margaret Pedler, « s = |VOICE FROM THE VOID by Wil- DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1923, : HARTFORD HARTFORD ARPEN FURNITURE WEEK April16thto 215t Inclusive The Eighth Floor This means that a rare opportunity is in store for persons -desirous of buying furniture of the best grade advantageously. » G. Fox & Co., hold the exclusive Hartford Agency for Karpen Furniture, and during Karpen Week, 100 Karpen Living Room Suites - will be displayed on the Eighth Floor. Come and enjoy. this splendid exhibition and learn the special prices. G. Fox & Co., Inc. | We can offer you a good bargain in a cottage in Belvidere. .Also cottage on Wooster street at a very cheap price. Owner is leaving town. Two good centrally located cottages, one on Locust street. One on Cottage Place. Money to loan on second mortgages. HARTFORD [ 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bidg, e —DRINK— FOR SALE AYERS’ SODA WATER | Bungalow at Somerset Drive, new and first class il @t H, DAYTON HUMPHERY —Something you will like—it's deli- | 272 MAIN STREET NATIONAL BANK BLDG. OYSTE CLAMS CRAB MEAT SHRIMP SCALLOPS LOBSTERS HONISS’S cious, Three size bottles—3c, 10c, 15c. CROWLEY BROS. INC. | PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 2018, Estimates cheerfully given on all jobs f 34 Lafayctte St. BY STANLEY COLD WEATHER NEEDS ! We have a full line of new and second-hand stoves, oil heaters, gas ’hwlcrfl. ete. Quinlivan Plumbing Co. 712 Stanley Street Plumbing, Heating and Repairing FIXTURES AND MATERIAL AT REASONABLE PRICES Tel. 2092, THE OLD HOME TOWN A. LIPMAN New and Secondhand Furniture. Tel, 1829-32 OTHER KINDS DONE GooD AND CHEAP- "y, STANLEY 7, L\ NEA SERVICE 2 PAINTER HASKINS WAS THE VICT/M OF ACCIDENT AT HIS UP-TO-DATE PAINT SHOP TODAY.

Other pages from this issue: