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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1924. o Science larizing and wider distribution of the And There Were No Casualties o N e . Ber. | eralizations discovered in recent de- | (1) a ue THE A B C OF ATOMS by trand A. W. Russell. cades, so that science will not lose | touch with the ordinary man and The author introduces us to a fas-| onan ™ 1t jg written with wisdom in every packet of cinating wonderland that is infinitely : aom | g ind humor and with such simplicity small, infinitely complex, and infinite- | 200 IWHOF S10 A bl Iy full of energy. It is so simply | ¢ " | written that it should be intelligible | * fod it {to the reader who has ouly the ele-| prngrwsg oF ARITHMETIO IN ments of physics and chemistry. iyl LAST ',;,,A".”,“‘ OF A o e i NTURY by David Eugene| i THE CONSTITUTION OF MATTER Smith. } by Max Born. [ : "' Xl .A. m305 | cal Matter,” and “The Fusion of Gifts Phree essays on “The Atom,”| RELATIVITY by J. Rice. 4 I R ORANGE PEKOE BLEND Chemistry and Physics.” The library has recently received | T the following gifts which wiil be of Pure, Delicious and Economical. interest and value to all students of | ‘From Mechanical Ether to Electri-| HUMANIZING OF KNOWLEDGE I a 1 ! y James Harvey Robinson. nistory and genealogy: | o, . o . ey % . » v t] ELI X Y D I'wenty persons were in these two automobiles when they crashed at Memphi Thisthook 4s &iples Sor the WOPU- |l HMMODORS JOH"\' HODGERSI Anxious om‘fi’é;"?:n river steam- L;n?i:’:,‘finTAztz‘Ef‘f'go '33.!2|s of cently-—and none was seriously hurt! A motor bus and touring car collided, the bus—carr, captain, commodore, and senior|boat)—I say, my good man, is this|Gobelin tapestry, which formed part of the American navy,| beat going up or down? of the set of four given to a Grand 19 people—being demolished. officer SAGE TEA TURNS 3-1838, a biography by Clms.| Surly Deckhand—Well, she’s an old | Duke of Russia in 1782, were sold at b in. | tub, ma’am, so I shouldn’t wonder if |auction recently for 4,100 guineas. | she' was goin’ down. Then again, her | They are signed by Neilson and bear | bi'lers ain’t none too good so she the dates 1774 and 1779 and came ques sire circulated by the \':l-"l"l” JPHANIE a book of verses by New Books at N GRAY HAIR DARK | ¢ e = ‘vmgm go up.—National Magazine of |from the collection of Count Sehere- !mietjev. An Asia Minor carpet from IS Grandmother's Reipe to Bring | AN by William Henry Hudson. | the Hardware Trade. |a mosque in Constantinople realized * CHILDREN by Sara Cone Bryant. comedy by George Kel Back Color and Lustre An unpretentious story of a young| tbe lnstltute | sl el | to Hair girl's life. Those who know the| 11,800 guineas, at the same sale. I OLLER IVERSITIES 3y That beautiful, even shade of dark, pheanty, the delicacy, the truth of | i EXNGLAND by Al i et “‘.‘\l ‘"‘”, s . ,?“, NG hair can be had by bréew- jyudson will find a certain interest in| Jeee Eton Collars Biography hole T ¢ =1 LAND by Henry J. Chaytor |ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sul-| thig as a strange early product of a| | Narrow Eton collars are attached ? KA ’ n attempt to estimate the influ- r. Your hair is your charm. Tt| great artist. { ( ] |to the new Dlouses with pleated | bosoms just like a man's. v to the o ence « Provencal Troubadours | s sl B ad e e s It is av interpre- ; LLoNehor S Tonaac) the place of Oxford | "POn middle English Ivric poetry—a | jades, turns gray or streaked, just an| L IGHTER OF FLAMES by Willlam in the political, intel. | Jueston t has hitherto reccived f gpplication or two of Sage and Sul- 8, Hart, | f little ov no atiention.—Publishers’| phur enhances its appearance a hun-| An historical romance of the pic-| Rm]m WY m | Cleared Up Days NEW s TO LL THETHE TORCH REARERS, a satirical igions history Weekly ks dredfold. turesque days of old Virginia in In Few i b TRUE TRAVELI Jera by |, DOt bother to prepare the mix-| which the action centers around the distingt i v jurist, sol- |1 0 HIGH 8CHOOL BOYS by| " " o1 5 e opera DY ture; you can get this famous old| peroic figure of Patrick Henry. | dier and Al rts Ao, illlam H. Davies recipe improved by the addition of AR g No woman need have a repul- enrich the lit q 1 po- Ad ses given at high school ST | other ingredients at a small cost, all | CCADILL T iia slve, unsightly skin—ten chances SiEeat aiil iiniocictbtiary SoNEton: | nHians1t aiexines | éxmmn P ary| WILD CHERRY, poems by Lizette [ ready for use. tI is called Wyeth's| PICCADILLY ‘_" f"‘".‘”““ Copim o one It's caused by constipation e il g e MY Woodworth Reese Sage and Sulphur Compound. This o i L . and a lazy liver, which Is easily | e depende WOUGH i} WHE 4 E ? MY CRYSTAL v Elizabeth Workers svith boys will find here many | .0 CEnLRINAYS “" depended upor “|‘ TI“I ,' THE NFEA Tby Rhomas Out of work? Well and quickly remedied. For a good, outh fithexican Teayel kil e s A rvecord through fictitious charac- do not grunt! safe, purely "“nbhn ""‘:'“' own use 5 L o i A ters of ti lays and nights of war- which will keep your system clean, S LIFE O THE ANCIENT EAST by! lverybody uses “Wyeth's” Sage|ters of the days and nights ’ ; ¥ and Sulphur Compound now because | fare at Bois de Belleau, Soissons and Let a WANT AD help the|it darkens so naturally and evenly| Champagne. Told simply and with 1 that nobody can teH it has been ap-| No attempt to analyze or moralize, you hunt! « s o gives & picture of ) and_political pe dur St THE WAY OUT; essays on the mean- 50 years; als 1 interesting ing wnd purpose of adult educa-f e oaen Lt account of the author's relief service pekiin Niver Stanley. | PESt known ancient city sites and has | b 4 tion by the Hon. Oliver Stanl | plied. You simply dampen a sponge ¢ Pranoe this book an attempt has been | told the story of the excavation, who : T ONTEN . i attempt has been{ o 'it, what he found and its signifi-| OF soft brush with it and draw this| WINTER OF DISCONTENT by ade to bring home the truth of adult He recreates the great days|through thehair, taking one small Father James Irancis Barrett, WRI I E A presents in fiction !}:rm’ OLD RECOLLECTIONR OF AN OLD | egucation to those who ; 4 | cance. e Y ] those who hitherto had | B0 (00 L in it mountainous|strand at a time; by morning the| The autho and | 30Y Ly Bamu S|herwe \ ), " 1 o P r:,r‘\"vnm,. e (e e i ; A ‘1"“””""" of or Interest | Calls of burnt brick,of Thebes with | Eray hair has disappeared, and after | the arguments for the Roman [ many varied experiences during o B 4 ”,,mfiw “all that | Mts hundred gates and its myraids of [ another application it becomes beau-| Anglo-Catholic position st ab-| vear period filled with cve | Al g G A IR bronze-clad charioteers, of Nineveh | titully dark and appears glossy ;m-l!sulvm divorce. An interesting prohv; importance, tha . 5 g bt b nd its robber Kings. Troy, the city of | lustrous lem presented in an interesting way. rather sketehy ontiine ut he ey Literature omance, and Knossos, the home of dently enjoyed to th is sha »f | the sea Kkings of the Acgear Th those in which he took part, and his Ar'NT POLLY'S STORY OF MAN.|ability to make such things really at- zest in it all infuses his account of KIND by Donald Stewart tractive reading with nothing of ‘the | p | lesson & it them is rare and this | what he w hd It i% an exc vis is more than a paredy on vari- nd ¥ | book shows that Mr. Baikie has it. lent book fuil of the joy ite and RBHIER e rkal AhRt dealiaith ] of true tales of adventure.—~Book Re- | .00 o nrotoplasm to m«‘, ¢ o s | view Digest. glorious estate of sack-suited citizen- | THE OLD ROAD by Hillaire Belloc. | o A S ry, a satire, often bitterly savage, on| A fascinating study of the most an- | . A QUAKER PIONEER, a blography | ;oo iy general and civilized man in|cient of all English roads—the one | of Charles . Coffin and tionlar The ithor's keen littie | which has run since prehistoric times of the Coffin family mpiled 1 o slits many shams. His charae- | from ancient Canterbury to ancient ind which is the oldest | Mary Coffin Jolinson and Percival ' yopigic humor s admirably present.| Winchester | * . Brooks Coflin commended to all who like salt in | monument of human life in the Brit- | t l T ey 1S no measure of its value STORY OF NELL GWYN . and instructed and gains a unique | : Chesterton. ISH CRITICAL ESSAYS 0"{1”"" of England through the varying The author remarks that in English | ™ oy SIXTEENTH, EVEN. | knowledge of many of her most de- These are the things to consider history Nell Gwyn has, properly TEENTH AND EIGHTEENTH|lighttul and out-of-the-way corners. eves CENTURIES, selected and edited s & o James Baikie The author has chosen 12 of speaking, no place, Had she T O by Edmund D. Jones ROMANCE OF EXCAVATION by would hardly have bes . y welection, Which beging with David Masters lair's breadth. Yet the Sidney and ends with Thomas Warton,| A tale of courage, fortitude and THEcottoh cardependsinlarge gineers, with our wealth of ex- atlons, including 15 coats of paint t v it Bt dol b el ; s intended to be suffick compre- | high endeavor. A scries of wonderful pi i cnsive to enable the reader to follow | adventures, the most recent of which sald, vory lovabis terar the main movements counter- | is the discovery of Mr. Howard Car. is no criterion of value. best. ’ gt mavements of English eritical thought | ter and Lord Cabiarea awilness's ] Studebaker builds 150,000 fine cars We use 35 formulas for steels. op'n cars have real ’..“‘.‘" wi TAM BYRD u‘h T ‘ "“K ; A ol s Shi from the Renaissance to the re vival | extraordinary achievement in solving yearly, All of them are Sixes. The Each is best suited to certain parts, cushions. They cost, over imitation SRS e e main osta are ivided by that enor. s proved by years o tese. Toather, about §25 per car The st th riet IN EXILE by John Cournos [ 1ong-buricd und practieaily forgotten | reous output. Thus at prices of $975 On some steels we pay the makers No closed cars could be more luxu- S &5 the tutiix ut Poetns in the freer forms that re- | giories of Assyras; Bchliemann's un- | and up we offer the utmost in quality. 2 bonus of 15% to get them exactly ~ rious. That lining of Chase Mohair :-'mlf"i' ety il flect another xide of the author of |earthing of ancient Troy; the finding | We offer maximum values. right. There is no room to excel us is made from the soft fleece of An- elan or indeed any we oA pael o Bt e e of the Palace of Kuossos in Crete Don't judge these cars by prices. there. gora goats. A velour lining would frord 1 ' e SR BeUrsmed 8 Under other conditions they might ¢« s 0 save about two-thirds that cost—up KING, DAVID AND HIS WIVES, a|civilization that endured for ages be A drama by David Pinski fore the Phocnictans launched thety cost twice as much, yet offer less than We machine the entire surface of t0 $100 per car. Pinski is th 1wiedged master| galleys on the Meditcrrar all | these. each crank shaft, as was done enotes 3 on Note how every detail d in- . e J Some major costs Liberty Airplane Motors. That ex- finite care Th:ty‘ as you know, Is st i R y X vich i a unit and could be|to tell, One must go far to find & Quality cars require costly facili- tra cost is heavy. But thus we get expensive. S ncation without reference to more interesting or inspiring volume ties. Studebaker has Note the complouno ; v A - L taken in ‘F' than ‘i.|~ |"‘r-n\ Digest Interna- SS0,000,WO ifl‘"M in o'omhf‘"mdd'. Th' ATITTUDE OF HIGH SCHOOL | ot tC (iindie sather than the plot| o oo e modern plants and equip- nickel - plated bumpers, :L'l'\ S AR " tp ® @ prosc drama, but by the INDIAN WARS OF NEW ENGLAND ;“"“- ?0.0tOO.C:OO in g;:’ extra disc wheels with bty Siranedhiey f passages from the by Herbert Sylvester orge plants alone. $10,- At Biada il : peaim he creates o postic atmospher 000,000 in body plants, Just Go and See :°:" tires, ‘":::‘ g:‘:‘a Aoty hy de- gt St e Studebaker is today the leader in the it pgsogg o Jh ittt the costliest cars. ONF. THOUSAND AND ONE PLAYS FOR THE 1 LE THEATER ¢ ”» baker standards. GIR].S' USE A Frank g ‘FREEZONE There are 12300 up- fine-car field. . . . to-date machines em- PARSON'S PLEASURE . s ployed %o Suid these .ngmde:raker b“fldi.hm qunli'tycan than Nothing is ,,,;;,d Compare part part AT s e, CORNS: B vichit off cars, Some ate ohors Buyers of fine cars last year spent over A i MOIST BRUSH .~ e Gt G| ety e 8200300000 or Srudebaker model. - RAL K rt on volume and efficiency. perience, we probably know what is and varnish. ct play. In this volume | make stories far more marvelous . { | iit five dramatic episodes, | than any writer of fiction would dare | Few outputs justify such facilities. Then The demand for Studebakers has almost you some scores of ad- . ¢ parts mu'fbezouch:dw'- trebled in three years — as people found vantages. of Beautiful Hair plicated w J :‘g;r:nd ol gt them out. Then consider Stude- Quaker mysticism. somn s B Then go see them. Compare them with baker history. For 72 Studebaker engineer- any car you will. Don’t spend $1,000 or years this name has stood ing costs $500,000 per over without knowing what Studebaker for quality. When peo- year. That to us is $3.33 offers. You owe that to yourself. ple rode in carriages, Studebaker built the per car, Our Department of Re- best. Now those same search and Experiment traditions are applied to employs 125 skilled men. motor cars alone, It makes 500,000. tests per year to that perfect balance, that absence of Consider Studebaker records. Mark maintain our standards. vibration. how these cars in service have mufl- Our Bureau of H-lthod- and We use more Timken bearings tiplied demand, until people last year Standards fixes the requirements for than any other car which costs un- paid $200,000,000 for Studebaker every part and detail. 12,000 inspec- der $5600. They cost considerably cars. tions are necessary for eath car 0 more than ball bearings. o ¥ @ insure against flaws and mistakes. These facts apply to all Stude- Consider their service records. We employ 1,000 men to make them. . 0rq of all styles and sizes. The Cars like the Studebakers cannot ... iois uged in all chasses are One Studebaker car, built in 1918, be built without such facilities, such _y. 0 has run 475,000 miles. It is still in research, such care. Yet enormous i ’ active mwce It hul‘ made a mid- g:;;;::’ :‘lrg;:‘n:;fl them possible at Beauty—Luzury=Finish ;in;n trip from Los Af...n.. to New The Studebaker coach work has ngu e T The best we know been famous for decades. No one ‘What more can you d"::; o’f..'; Studebakers represent the best we can excel it, a motor car than the Studebakers know. And with our army of en- The finish is produced by 26 oper- offer? Tnstantly a Gleamy Mass of & €0l start them taking The eftect is start v ' ; #ee plain, flat. oily or . . WILLIAMS'® White Pine, HONEY and Tar s dpagendere g e > h 1 —_— ! When combing and dressing | a wtween 1 ¢ o e ! LIGHT-81 SPECIAL-SIX B3 @« B [ X oy B - bo S.Pass. 112° W. B. 40 H. P. 5-Pass 119° W. B. 50 H. P, 7-Pass. 126° W. B. 60 H. P, just molsten your hair Touring - - - « - $135%000 Touwing - - - . . $17%000 Roadster (2-Pass) - =+ - 132500 Speedster (5Pass) - . . 183800 Coupe (5-Pass.) « « -« 189500 Coupe (5-Pam.) © e 249800 Sedan < - e+ = 198500 Sedan % Drash with a littie “Danderine” and ' ' p h h : Brush it through vour hair. You can . Ptk - o ' e ol do your halr up immediately a ' s . S : : : % ey will appear twice as thick and hea ’ iyt reeetd sl & . : : ja g mass of gleamy hair, sparkling 'V ¢ te ? mposed P ; . . with Iife and possessing that incom- &7 care % Sedan parable sofiness, freshness and jux- t rale t » té - uriance—yet not greasy. o . ) g2 Rt of ¥ (All prices |. 0. b. J to your ) Cerleton C long and strong. Hair stops falling out and dandruff disappears. Get a 7 p i S$5-cent bottle of delightful, refresh y 1 fog “Danderine” at any drug or toilet 'availabic ' ‘ " = foed On . M yousr halr becomes. | Times.