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12 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, TUESDAY, 'APRIE'S,.1924. e ———— e N and times of George Srd and reflects the ory of the American Revolution thro its first entirely through letters that d between | the monarch himself and Pitt, Fox, | Walpole, Burke, Mann, George Wash- ington, Franklin and many others. . FIRST BOOK O B. Smith, New Books at | The Institute BARBED WIRE AND WAYFAR by Edwiil Piper. “An anthology prairie by an author @ part of this avest of whicl The volume is valuabi mosphere which it coming generations, PRINCI H, phase, LOGIC by Henry . - INTRODUCTION TO Ol ALTERNATING by Athert E. Clayton of pioiicer life on the who is 1 STUDY LENTS iy CURi RTEBRATE - ZOOLOGY by H. \ L INVE . L. AND | nkampil | LANDSCAPE PAIN | OoTTO TO THE PR T Cha Hind, an Cleay ING by Wa BOOKKI PRACTICE and W. C. FROM GI- DAY by “A carefully chosen; ‘well written nd hea illustrated selection, author Which aims to give to the average a res. Peader a ‘vision of the continuity of inaies | hiY ty in design, line, form and color . B YEARS O° H. M. HYNDMAN Rosalind Travers Hyndman. “This may induce many readers to{ seck a closer acquaintance with the man who wag one of the striking pe critieal years of Eng- who was a great so- cialist a ictorian, a great in- dividualist and a f ! believer in the | extension of the potvers of govern- ment, | | SARITSA TO | . . | CAMERA TRAILS IN AFRICA by M. Johnson, . “Travel adventures of the his plucky wife years in iifully African and dence of 2 CANNED Ioops 1IN [:I.L\"]'IH,\' TO HEALTH by William G M. D, I . . LANTERNS Thompson Seton. “Chinese life of today in strange manifestations with larly interesting facts Woman in China and her s freedom. by Grace CHI sonalities of lish life, a m: all s particu- th on . CONTINUOUS Cl AND MACHI croft and 17, W, . ters, possessing ex- | “A volume of | t, from the double | CRITICISM IN AMERICA, traordinary i SUNCTION AND STATUS. lght the inwardly on the “Skirmishes on the frontiers of Am. | characters and personalities of the | ter and of him to whom they were addressed; and, secondly, ontwardly on the court and politics of Russia | while that country was in the throes of war and revolution, . let erican criticism” by 9 critics who here discuss the theories of the craft. “ .o DOG AND DUCK by Arthur Machen, “Entertaining and enlivening essays, shot with shafts of wit and stuffgd with matured advice, by an author whe would have us ‘recapture the rel- ish for life and relish for letters'."” | . oo ELECTRON IN CHEMISTRY by Sir J. J. Thomson. £ o0 FABULOUS FORTIES, LOG OF TH Basil Lubbock “A history of the famous tea and | wool clipper ship ‘Cutty Shark,' the | wmost interesting sailing ship still | | afloat. It has been compiled from her log books, her captain’s ahstracts, and from information received from those Meade Minnigerode. who served her and from those who “Recreates old New York, its pen. ' served her rivals, One chapter gives ple, politics, and paktimes in the days | the true details of a tragedy which when ‘Broadway was a pasture and | Conrad has woven into one of his fas- 42nd Street avas but a lane!” Reading cinating books. it is ltke looking at the photographs . in an old family album. One's first | reflection is “What a queer lot they were',"” Y SARK)” h,\; 1840-1850 by MAGIC FOR AMATEURS by Willlam H. Radcliffe. .. MAKING OF RURAL EUROPE by Helen I. Douglas. *“A concise historical survey of land- tenure from the Middle Ages to the present time, closing with a brief .. GEORGE THE THIRIY AND THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION by Frank A, Mumby, “This book illustrates the character v \ My Cost, $100,000-—yours, 50c a week By Edna Wa llace Hopper My qlicet of beauty ebst mnl!vl'mu]ilu’u)l\' experts the world over now me at least 100,000, We searched the | employ it, but they chagge too much, world to get the best that science had | It contains no animal, no vegetable to offer j fat, The skin cannot absorb it. It | But those helps made me famous as ! simply cleans to the depths, then de- a beauty And they A parts, All the dirt, oll, grime and dead youthful beauty to my I\]‘m come out with it One never Now I want others to e | knows what a clean skin means until same helps, 1 arranged so his way. My Faclal may get them or wwoman | Youth costs 75¢ | may use all my helps at a cost My Youth Cream ts my cold ercam | over B0e per week French creatfon, It con- White Youth Clay taing products of both lemon and akin 18 ke a baby's yet mine Also all the best lh;* I owe that ws to foster the skin te Which France | ture. T use it as a night cream, also | daytimes as a powder Every our 1 keep my skin protected by it, cream Youth per Youth .t g 1 e kept me grand old age oy 1the have Any gir 1| she cleans it not ther another strawberry, My k 18 a grandmother largely 1o a superclay ereated for me Not like the crude & #0 many still employ refined and dainty. on 20 years of scientific study s nge science base, 1 muddy ¢! This clay N My Hair time clay brings comparable results v oy greats I call this my White Youth CI Vis less my ar, mat purg: the dlemis glow which eombats all enlarged Keeps ¥ and 81 Two Master Cronms righter WOODWORK. O-Cedar cleans, polishes and beautifies floors, doors, baseboards, mouldings, and all fine wood surfaces. It enhances the beauty of the home. Easy to apply~ economical in use. Be sure you get the genuine I'scrved to strengthen the sutumary of the changes which have position of since the World! ' . the peasunt class War.” . . FRANCE W Arthur A, Til- | ley | “A comprehensive, scholarly survey of the political, economic and social | listory of France from the 16th to | the 20th century, with a summary of | lLer important activities and achieve- ments in every department of art, sci- ence, literature and philosophy. OLD MEMORIES by Sir Henry Jones | “A simple record of a beautiful life The author describes his happy child- | hood, which as the son of a village shoemaker in Wales, ‘was not unlke that of Lloyd George, his struggles for an education, his t and finally his appointment at € us professor of moral philosophy.” . * PALESTINE THE LAND OF THI I"AITHS by Philip Gibbs. “An examination of the polit situation in Palestine and the prog and prospeets of Zionism, . . » | BERNHARDT by sil Woon, “Whether or not it is scrupulo © Massachusetts Baking Co accurate in all detall, the books is a vitalized portrait of a dominating and bizarre personality, an enthralling character study. It has in the telling 1”“ the vivacity of the Frenchwoman's narrative and is certain to enjoy % wide reading.” . oo PRINCIPLES OF CHEMICATL N- GINEERING by William H. Walker and others, e ANSLATION T'ROM CH by Et THE UNSTABLE CHILD by Florence Mateer, “A study of thé children who are normal in m#tal health but whose brains do not function properly. PRI AND' INTO hel C. Bearmap. . * W Fiction iHT LIGHJS, A DE CTIVE ORY by Robert O, Chipperfield. P DOOMSLAND 8| “A novel of pictures of the . TIMBER by Shane Leslie, Ireland, vivid in its land and its people.” P by Harold Bind- Canadian woods.” . H. N . tider Haggard. . . HEU-HEU by s HIGH ROAD by J. Ramsay. Astory of the struggles of a mu- E an to break through a discourag- ing environmgntsand to fulfill his tistic destiny. . . MYSTERY MAZAROFT J. 8 Fletcher, by CRE | NEVER T'IRE FIRST, A STC " r Mou ) Dorrance., . by Vic . ATION by Anthony lor Bridges, . . PRISONER WHO SANG by Johan Tiojer. “A haunting story of a man of many personalities and of the woman he loved, by the, avthor of ‘The Great Hunger',” siianly THIRTEENTH LETTER, A DETEC TIVE STORY by Natalie 8, Lincoln. . s s WHEN GERONIMO RODE by F. C. Hooker. “‘A thrilling tale of old Indian fight- ing days in Arizona.” 1085 OF 2 MILLION DUE T0 BIG FLOODS New England Is Hard Hit--Conn. Yalley Sitnation Acute | Boston, April 8.—Swollen by hours |of rain and melting snow, rivers | thronghout New England had over- | lowdd their banks today, taking a toll of one death, bringing injury to | a score of persons and causing a| property loss estimated to be in ex- | cess of $2,000,000, The Connecticut, Merrimack, Nashua and other rivers continued to rise through the night. In the Springfield-W field river val- ley yesterday, conditions were report- ed to be the worst since 1878, with, | large districts inundated, the Connec- tieut flood waters were expected to { reach their peak today or tomorrow. | Roads were washed out in scores of I plates, mud and sand was deposited ; on railway tracks, delaying Boston & ! Maine and New sHaven railroad trains | ana disabiing trolléy service at many { points. To floods were added dam- | age from gales and winds and high | tides along the Maine coast. Vermont | found transportation lines hard hit in many places, In New Hampshire train service was hampered and cul- verts weakened while throughout | Massachusetts flood conditions caused i heavy property damage, - The situation was most acute in the | waters of the Westfield miver receded. Springfield district of hte Connecticut | I°lood conditions wers bad throughout valley, At Westfield an unidentified | Worcdster county, Spencer, Fitchburg, man about vears of age, was swept | Jelferson and Southbridge. into Powder Mill brook, a tributary of | At Claremont, N, H., a country the Westfield river, when he attempt- | school was marooned yesterdry by the ed to ford a flooded section of the|flood, the 11 pupils being removed Springfield road. He was drowned over a hastily constructed bridge. A before rescuers could bring aid. | woman and her five small children At Westfield, Fitchburg and parts I“'f"','—‘ ""H"‘"L‘f}’)l'" r;;mu frm;l G"l°“§'\,"‘:" . s i 4 | 1and in the Piscattaquog river in I of Connectiout, floods. .were reported | Hampshirve, when rising waters invad- to have poured into basements and | oq their home. first floors of factories, causing them to shut down. . Many families in the | Springfield-Westficld, Holyoke district were marooned by rising waters. The situation in the Westfield valley was | time as oK The jimson weed when exposed to the raysgof radium for as short a 0.minutes will develop secd limproved, however, today as the flood | producing many new types of plants. SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not geiting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 24 years. 5 ‘V'Acccgt only “Bayer” package Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also hottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. which cont2in$ proven directions. Aspiria is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of SaNcylicaeld All the skill and experience of Six Big Bakei One day their wonderful idea came to the Six Bakers. Never could any one of them accomplish it alone. But together they could make the per- fect loaf! By combining all their skill and all their years of experience! TODAY—in 200,000 of the best homes Today White Rose, the ideal loaf of these Six Bakers, is on the finest tables in New England. Such a fragrant, crisp-crusted, creamy-grained loaf! Its fame spread fast in these states where wo- men are born with an appreciation of fine baking. Made with the kind of ingredients these keen housewives would choose themselves —such as Pilisbury and Gold Medal Flours, Fleischmann's Yeast, Diamond Crystal Salt, Domino Granulated Sugar, Swift's Shortening, pure milk with all the cream init. ... Petfectly mixed and baked. The most exacting New England housewife is proud to serve it. The Six Bakers are eager to keep White Rose the richest loaf in New England. Every month they meet to go over their recipe, test their loaves, and compare new discoveries. Try this ideal loaf. Get White Rose from your own grocer today. HITE ROSE The Master Loaf qf the Six Bakers , 1924 ) Why New England housewives choose White Rose The fine quality ingredients they would use themselves Firm, crisp crust Soft, firm texture Cuts without crumbling ‘Toasts an even delicious brown So rich it keeps fresh for days The wholesomeness that chil- dren need The wrapper with the checked pattern like a fresh, clean tea towel