New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 30, 1915, Page 6

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BMPANY, i) at 4:15 p. m. | Railway electricians Church St b at ‘New Britain 1 Matter. iy part of the city Cents a Month. o be sent by mail 60 Cents a 2 year. rtising meaium in books and press to advertisers. na on sale at Hota- nd St. and Broad- Bity: Board Walk, d Hartford depot INE CALLS. D LIST. ithe assessors shows " have reached the ¥, which fover the previous during a is an 1n- rcrense s much complaint conditioris makes arkable now that us in black and all of the increasc rty, the addition in the plant of Lan- alone being over jars, while that on of the American m is $170,000, P. R0, Corbin Cabinet | 000, and the Skin- hy, $22,500. These bes suggest what a pnufacturing con- blic life of New always been a what would be- ere.it not for these of capital and the ch a large num- \ployment. They New Britain and, f they pa. 'almost amount of taxes B vear. € the report shows for automobiles dof $231,085. This pue which has years. It was the assessment Bcarcely amounted are constantly i the city now re- isum from their ‘the form of taxes. the grand list has jpast year faster fle of the assessors of, which suggests office is and how e the members of | to the business of [property and plac- list. s lsoCTETY. Fresident Buol of ety the: the work | be taken over by ' preferabiy the not wholly un- is too rmuch to ex- nue such a work prx of cradicating rowing, will con- «~1il necessitate ganization can be Jose members are Bs or a profession plgn it, ifices in order to | p the Prgantzation to and novement. has | good in dealing je 1n New Britain go willingly and et that credit al- le should be given ys it de- @ as a public mat- pf the city, or if I be necessar president fer to = city _presumably I the factories a th good results, B on another side. fFuverculosis so- led with the work jected to perform {5 if the sugge: along sensible ult in the work board of health o handle ssitate extra help. to it, tuberculosis as pales d maintains Pnefit of patients disease. Why lity do its part? g uioMis are recog- e to be be by treatment ntific and atter. The pri- ‘es his time and Bratuitously is to should not be do the work and pbuld be provided appropria- in- s Lasis . rno must be [give any serious ic matters. ! nas | i PRESIDENT WilLSON ON "PROSPLRITY. The speech of I'resident Wilson be- fore the of at Association Amerizan be seriously considered, because it of a character different other delivered by him or from any else with the same spirit of optimisn The president is confident that times are coming dnd while all may not cheerfully subscribe to the he lays down for the government business no one will doubt but compliance with them - would one rules that make for a better understanding all around. There can hardly be any doubt but that business is going to improve cause in the first place the country tariff act and a new cur rency law which unbiased judges say will result in a great financial benefit to business. They have not had & be- a new 1y thie tariff law, but enough has been seen to suggest its value. It is not just what each business man would like: proval, but there is a belief that the present one will meet a need that has long been felt and that the ultimate result will prove its worth. What has prevented business enterprises from working out to advantage of late is the European war, which must have satisfled the people how dependent we all are one upon another. It used t» be said that this country could live independently of all other countries, but we all know better now, and tkis knowledge will help us all to better understand the argument offered by the president. There must be a return to normal conditions first and then rope and a restoration of confidence back to stay. President Wilson has reasoned it out somewhat closely and worked in a little of the golden rule, too, so that we have a rosy picture of the future but beneath the bright coloring there is a sound philosophy which have obtained in this country and desire to take a peep into the fu- ture. MISS1ION. The bill introduccd this week in the by of Thompsonville for the appointment legislature of a three headed highway commis- soin is likely 1o meet with considerable sole opposition. Some <ay that the object of the ineasure is to oust Com- | missioner Baunett who was reappoint- Governor Hol- which have made any commen® on this bill, seem ed the other day by comb. The newspapers, to be in oppesition to it and all regard it as a measurc that should be beaten. In the first place the passage of the bill would inean a return to the old conditions which existed when the was created and It will be remembered that it was con- head would be highway lep i tment there were three commissioners. cluded that 2 single preferable, would work out better and the law was amended to conform with tilis idea.. It will he a good thing for the state if the it is, it is doing the work demanded highwey department is left as increase in the expense and most like- It Alcorn’s ly a decrease in the efficiency. is for those rcasens that IMr. bill should Le beaten. There was much displeasure occasioned by the removal of Mr. Maciorald cause he two yeurs ago be- was a1 machine republican and some felt.that his removal would mean an injury to, the but the party has state so that there could not have been organization, nce carried the There is and as strong a re- publican and party man as Mr. Mac- able to build good roads anld that is what the anything o that contentioin. a republican in ihe office now, while he may not be Donald was, he scems to be state wants and what it pays him for. 1t is rather diflicult to dig up con- ditions that can operate against Mr. Bennett. Y2 appears to be all right. The speech of ex-Governor Frank B. Weeks at the banquet of the Mc2 Kinley club in Hartford shows that in he has not forgotten how to deliver an address suitable {o the occasfon. It will be remembered that when he was governor his public speeches attracted favorable comment for their cleverness and nicety of ex- pression. His address at the :McKin- ley club gathering was along that line. his retirement proved that he still has the ability and the knowledge to entertain an ence and leave it better informed ed. Telephoning to San Francisco be expensive enough to rank as popular American amusement. Thre minutes talk will cost $20.78. the luxury of paying $7 g of ) you there. ‘Waterbury, Washington vesterday contains much that needs to 15| any | good | chance to work out as yet, particular- | no tariff act ever met with general ap- | with the rehabilitation of things in Eu- | in this country prosperity should come | which is not easily eliminated if we | are to study carefully the conditions | THREE HEADED HIGHWAY COM- | Representative Alcorn | of it as well as it can be done and to | make a chang: would simpiy mean an | The specch of Commissioner Chandler audi- when he finishes than when he start- | will | a e | pected ultimately Think 2 minute [ wealths must now suffer the spectacle to hear central call “‘San Francisco, are | Republican. FACTS AND FANCIES. id that the Crown Prince of s to marry the pretty Prin- jlizabeth of Roumania But no reason why the European | diplomats should arrange marriages | for political advantages when this war has shown how little family or blood ties count when opposing inter- i ests meet.—Norwich Record. Hereafter no student can receive a diploma from Princeton university un- less he can swim. There as abundant | reason for this out the collegiate education. Lack of know- { ledge of the art of swimming does niore than enough to swell the nation- | ul casualty list and if we can make | collegians cxempt to deep water dan- gers by all means to let us do so.— Ansonia Sentinel. roundin of It is not the great steel combination | that is flourishing in these difficult | times; it is the vastly smaller indepen- dent concern like the Bethlehem Steel | company which is rushed with bus- { iness and is by no means passing its | dividend Tested by adversity, this | comparatively small independent com- | pany is beating the trust to death. ! At least, the spectacle teaches that | energy and brains in an independent | company may still defy and distance in prosperity the hugest of industgial | combinations.—Springfield Republi-, | can. . It is quite amusing to note that while Senator Hurley and Represen- tetive Devine are working tooth and rail o get something for Waterbury in the way of improvement, as for example, a normal school, the re- publican members of the legislature, Senator Peasley and Representative Bronson are working just as hard to { land themselves and their friends lucrative jobs, Still the republicans rail and rant against the ‘spoils | system.” As far as we are concerned | we heartily recommend that Messrs | Peasley and Bronson go to it while the going is good.—Waterbury Democrat. “Everlastingly At It.” (Cleveland Plain.Dealer.) There used to be a catch-line in the ! magazine advertising of a_ certain | soap or cleansing article, to the effect | that “keepng everlastingly at it brings | success.” To the housekeeper, this imeant merely the expression of a truth she had always been conscious of—that to keep clean one must scrub forever. Perhaps that is the reason we don’t see the line any more. It was | too suggestive of an eternity of scour- | ing. 1 Imagine, now, a wealthy man mak- ing a will in which he provides that somebody must wield a scrubbing | brush forever. Not till the end of | anybody’s life, mark you—this partic- | ular job is to continue to the end of | time, and well on into enternity. One | Orlando H. Davenport who died in | Roxbury, New York, left $500,000 be- ; hind because he couldn’t take it with him; and he specified that his tomb- | stone must be scrubbed with soap and water once vear foreve: His will reads, in part This must be done in the most careful manner, without the use of lye or acid stronger than eom- | mon soap, so that all shall be kept free from moss, stains or dirt.” | This work must be done in May ev- ery year ‘forever.” And the four headstones on the lot must be scrubbed in the same manner. A romancer might get an idea for a wonderful bit of imaginative lierature out of this freak will. He might fan- cy a civilization a thousand years hence, when the customs, the man- ners, the politics, the language of the pregent day are all forgotten, but | when each May certain persons go and make a religious rite of scrubbing the hieroglyph on a meaningless stone. One may feign that by then this will be a shrine, and the person who instituted it a solar myth. Or- | lando H. Davenport will be a mystic name to conjure with; he will be thought of a a personage of the twentieth century to whom princes and powers bowed down. Comment | tors will confuse him with the Or- lando of “As You Like It,”” and the Davenport who invented a sofa bed. | And thus his name will go ringing | down the corridors of time with a | scrubbing brush and a bit of soap. | Goonandimagine, f you will. But “ such can never be the case. No mon- | ey lasts forever. Benjamn Franklin left a small sum to the United States | as a lesson to future generations on | what compound interest can do. That | sum and its interest, too, has long ago | been absorbed by the activities of life and growth. Money is not a living thing. Orlando H. Davenport will be as dead two hundred vears hence, in name as he is now in fact. a Wastrel Commonwealths, | (New Post.) The multiplication of Minnesotats{ | talents proceeds at a rate that must | leave her sisters ruefully conscious of the saddest words of tongue or pen. Her auditors’ pertinacity in discovering that previous estimates of i the public land values were all too low is nothing less than an attempt to rub it in. Last year the prediction was that Minnesota. from her iron, timber, and farm lands, would uitmately have a fund of $200,000,000; now it appear that it will be still greater, and may i be much greater. Her iron lands thi vear bring in a million; by 1920 they should bring in four millions. North and South Dakota are abetting her, | moreover, in the humiliation of the | remainder of the west. Fach is like- 1y to have, in the end, a fund of above $50,000,000—the one having 2,500,- 1 000, the other 2,000,000 acrcs. In painful contrast Towa has sold all hut 200 acres, and has $4,800,000 to show for it; Wisconsin he old all | but 16,000, and has a debt: Michigan | has sold al, and has $5,800,000; Ti- linois has sold all. and has $1,200,- 000. The original patrimony of each | of these states was from 6,000,000 to 000,000 acres. Texas alone is an ption, with an enormous area ex- to accumulate $80,- Ail these wastrel common- York £} ex 000,000. of Minnesota buying their state and battening on the interest. bonc A { hoard { housed TOWN 74LK. = HE office of l I clerk is a to obtain what being businesswise in Britain and if the in- formation sought is not to be gotten there to the city great place a line on done New then all that into the building ir office of the water of charities, the under one roor visitor to City hall time what is going on public business in the Clerk Thompson says that things are pretty slow in his office at present, there being but a few warrantee deec which indicates that tne buying and selling of property has almost ceased, some days there being no such docu- ments being filled ror record at all. The matrimonial market, how- ever, is running full time, nine licenses being issued on one day this week and ix on another. Tt 1s mearing just now and the young folks are not des any necessary spector’s office, the ione: the comm the board ASSEsSOTS, now, learn all and lic works or the in jig the way of city. City can in longer. Still it does not matter whether times are good or bad cupid | is generally busy and he is apt to drop into the city clerk’'s office at any time, his calls sometimes being after hours, but the clerk never allows him to g0 away disappointed. There were 543 marriages in New Britain last vear which may he taken as positive proof that there were some people who were not discouraged by the war, the tariff or the hard times. the year there were 620 deaths and 1,988 births, showing that the popu- lation is still on the increase. In 1913 the births numbered 1,757 and the preceding year they footed up 1,712, while the death in 1913 were 587 and in the same year the marriages num- bered 728 which shows that cupid was not near as busy last yvear as the one before. These figures are inter- During | step | of pub- | being | | tenement, Lent | rious of postponing their weddings | esting because they throw some light | upon our growth as a community. It is claimed that the weadings are not | as numerous as a city of the size of New Britain ought to have, but the figures for last year as compared with those of the year before suggest that | even marriage is affected to some e tent by the neral condition of bu ness, there evidently being some who | do unless the industrial conditions are in their favor. They can hardly be blamed for that for it is claimed that if a couple start housekeeping in debt that they will not find it an easy mat- not care to begin housekeeping | ter to get out of it unless they strike | the cap)tal drize at a fair or hit a lot | was practised upon one woman. somewhere and the chances in | tery this line are never very good. The young folks as a rule wait therefore until times are good before venturing on the sea of matrimony. The housing conditions in this city which have attracted the attention of the board of health during the past vear and which are mnow receiving some consideration from the chamb of commerce, have not improved a whole during the past twelve months. The reports from the town | people in the | gought to he avolded, cral |a clerk’s officé and those of the building | this the on in inspector throw more light question than anything else city. While there were 543 marriages | last year there wcre but approximately ly 404 tenements provided and as In many former years many of couples have been either compelled te find a home out of town or to live with others as boarde Comment has been made on this situation from time to time in this paper and the board of health investigated the mat- ter of overcrowding last year only to come to the sensible conclusion that it would be unfair and unjust to at- tempt to enforce the law the overcrowding of tenements until such time at least as the ci is able to provide quarters for its people That time has not arrived, on the con- trary the conditions are worse today than when the matter was formally investigated last year. esting question, however, to ask what is to be done about this matter. Is it to go on year after year the same ¢ it be any 1y house the people of this community and if so what will be its nature? Tt would seem as if there can be but one of two solutions of this trouble, eith- er some one or a company must be formed which will build houses on a large scale or there must be an effort those | | although rished | more smaller dwellings of $173 that the large buildings for tene- and if they are fin- the owners experience finding tenants, The buildings are _fairly in some of the three they are instances ordinary 500. This tendency a cost indicate crected at ems to towards ment purposes up well difficulty in in those reasonable except tenement rather high beyond the workingman. mand for such rents and the who 1, supply them no doubt tains tisfactory return on the cap- ital invested There were forty-four single family houses erected during the year at a total estimated of $119,600. while the two family houses numbered sixteen and $61,100. These were the size of the dwellings which used to be erected a gen- eral thing, the owner upying the lower floor and renting the upstairs the rent heing usuaily ficient to pay the interest and and leaving the owner to apply what he had been paying for rent towards liquidating the mortgage. The com- mittee which has been revising the building ordinance of the city has declared the six tenement structures on account of the fire risk also because it felt that the sani- tary rangemenis cannot be well provided in those 'ge buildings as in the naller ones nd the conten- tion is no doubt correct, What the effect of this change will be is a mat- ter of conjecture. If it will result in heing erect- ed the effect will be better for the city and better for those seeking tene- ments, but just now the latter are in demand bevond the supply and there isn't much question isea as to their character so long as they are of satisfactory size and the sanitary provisions are suitable. The size does not matter much, no rents houses, where and in means of the Still there some de- man ob- cost cost as oc suf- against is as Tt has fallen to Senator Klett to introduce some, at leaf, of the bhill which have been suggested by Gov- ernor Holcomb in his message. |Those introduced by the local senator call for the consolidation of the factory inspectors and the labor commissioner and the tuberculosis commission of three members into one member. These are all in the line of economy and while there has been talk of these changes before, there is more of a chance of they being combined now than ever before for the reason that they seem to have some pretty strong backing this time. There will, how- ever, be some opposition because of the influence of those who hold the places and who do not care to let go of them just yet. Senator Klett has also introduced a bill to regulate for- tune tellers, which had its origin in a case in the police court last year and in which a clear case of fraud The idea of the local senator is that it is best to have the licensing of sucha hands of the police, that if this was done there would be less flcecing going on and that is what is Hearings will people take an they may start soon and unles interest in those measures ) ail of passage because of a belief that they are lacking in interest. This may he especially so in the case of the bhill which calls for the engine on the dinkey trains to run forward and not part of the trip with the tender first, as is being done and which has resulted in accidents, some fatally There should be enough of people in- terested in this bill here to make the hearing intéresting and create a healthy sentiment for the measure. Representative Schultz has also in- troduced some bills of local interest. they have had their origin in the State Chamber of Commerce and if passed will apply to the whole state. One of the measures, which by the way has not been commented upon and which is of special interest. is the establishment of a fire preven- tion day. Some attention is being | give matters along this line in other concerning | Blven ma places, but there is sufficient evidence ! at hand to suggest the need of advice | too here. We are having and the, reports from matter fire: on the many | come of tnem are far from being sat- Tt is an inter- | ! be has been doing or will there ever | real attempt made to proper- | made to induce people to buy land in | and build homes There was some evidence for a time t yvear when it seemed : if there was a dr tion of houses by individuals, but when the industrial depression came on all work along this line ceased and it has not been revived. It has al- ways appeared strange that men with capital have not invested in a business of erecting new houses because there can hardly be any question but that a satisfactory return would be received. It would be better if people could induced to build hou thgmselves because then there would be an tional interest in the work and it would be & further inducement for others to . emulate their example. There is any quantity of land to be purchased now within a stones throw of a trolley line and the price is not oxorbitant. These places ought to bo built up and not until they are will the city be what it ought to be and the people properly provided with homes. Who will be the first to start the work that is so much needed? the country themselves addi- The principal reason for there ha ing been so many tenements provid- ed last year, when the building busi- ness W light on account of the industrial depression, was that among the buildings erected the were thirty-seven six family houses, $300,600. Building Inspector Ruther- ford's records are very complete and among other features of them is that the three family houses come next, there having been thirty-four of them €0 o for | towards the erec- | lin be | | asked Representative Hoy | counter | demic costing | | accomplish them sug- ought to if possible of that come and isfactory that gest incendiarism investigated and stopped. When a fire starts no one knows when or where it will stop. Its possibilities are awful to contemplate and it is desirable that every possible precaution be taken against it at the same time that there be a sen- created in favor of full pub- to the cause of fires. That needed in this city. and timent licity a is badly Barbs. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) kson county has de d war on barbed wire armers and others such with that quarter believe that an inhumane utensil as a wire prickers has no rightful place outside @ luropean battlefield. Certainly, it is no nice way to treat law-abiding live stock to string deadly harbs acros path. So its a delegation of Jacksonians has to introduce Ohio to of barbed pro- He a Dill in the assembly hibit the reported as considering Barber went out as the most jal for country fenc were supposed to encourage age breasts a higher respect for prop- erty rights and boundaries. One en- with such a fence was posedly sufficient to convince the most ohdurate horse or that a fence wus something more than a mere aca- expression opinion on the part of its builder But barbs are not as they started out to be. A good many farmers are convinced that they in- flict unnecessary injury and accomplish that a smooth wire cannot There humanitar- jan motive behind the Jackson county and it would not be sur- some favorable action use wire is wire came in when rails popular mater- The barbs in sa\ sup- cow of popular as no good is a zestion, prising to see in the legislature. SAY timely in ex- WHAT OTHIRS of questions as discussed changes that come to Herald Views on all sides L office. Tipperary and the Rhine. (Springfield Republican.) It is not quite pleasant to ¢ sing- Ger British pluming themselves on hall ditties while the folk verybody Germans are both a people, but it not in very good taste to hoast of Jacking these qualitie Prince Ru pert’s gay cavaliers learned not to de- either the seriousness or the psalm singing Cromwell's round- heads. Nor necd it be supposcd that the German when he fervently singa the songs of his father 1d is less sin- cere than the psalm-singing Marston moor. The London im when it tries to exp! ference by saying t diers sing “Tipperary” hecause like it, “whereas the Germans their famous war songs because they know that they are the songs which a soldier ought to sing.” Such a de- lusion® could only arise in an unmusi- cal country like England or America, where the popular tunes come from the music hall or the dance hall, and not from the people. For cen- turies the Germans have been singing their stately chorals, their pealing war songs, their gravely sentimental vokslieder. It their musie; it is the kind of music they like to sing Music is their special art, and they make the kind of music that ex- presses the national temperament It is not a “high brow” taste, though Germany has been called the high- brow nation. To sing good, serious music is as natural for them as po- liteness for a Frenchman or sport for an Englishman. It will hardly do, therefore, for the Times to urge that the Briton in time of great emotion sings ribald songs because emotion is to him so sacred a thing that it is not to be expressed; the case is rather that his national life gives no means to express his emotions if he would—he is on the esthetic level of Gavroche. To sing trash for a lifetime and then to try to rise to a fine battle song would strike a false note; the false note for a German reared on Beethoven or on folk music would be to go into battle singing doggerel from the music halls—Cromwell’'s men were tolerably good Britons, but they did not feel obliged to sing ribald cavalier tunes for fear of expressing their real emo- tions; if their psalms were not on the German level they at least had solemnity Americans take the English rather than the German point of view. but with a difference; humor is likely to have the upper hand ecither of senti- ment or sentimentality—terms which may be distributed judiciously be- tween he Rhine Watch” and “Tip- perar; In Cuba some of the chor- isters were going in for lugubrious songs of the fenting Tonight” sort when soldierly instinet got the mas tery, and the rollicking vulgarity of “Therell Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight” prevailed The levity is a superficial thing, to be sure, but it does not [follow that what 1i derneath superficiality is of a superior sort In one way another sentiment must be expressed, and it is mainly few exceptional Englishmen like Shakespeare and Shelley, with a gift for expression that English civilization justified mere courage in battle does not re- guire a superior race. Now in music the Germans have and the English lack a great medium for the collective expression of high emotion, and it is hard to twist the argument so as deprive them of this credit. If the Greeks had been a dumb race they might have fought as bravely, but should have had no Tyrtaeus ing music their noble songs hy mans roll out patriotic mns that the and muiscs and knows serious a sp of of quite wrong away the dif- British sol- ain they sing is by a to we A Good Slogan—*"Build Now."” Tribune.) (Chicago issuea ny the indus- of contemplating In the appeal trial commission the city ecouncil who new those are truction, extension urged to start or repair work t | cons ar work at once, Simi- | ilar advice has been | York and Boston employment, and it has been heartil indorsed by cfficient men ‘of affairs “Build now,” ought to hecome tional siogan. The Manufacturers’ RRecord, a national pub- lished at Baltimore, is pushi movement with or and inte Results worth recording have tained For example engaged in the building trades Augustz have united in an ment offering reductions in the reductions rangi from twenty-five cent ind showing that at this time, owing to the in the labor material ms would mean of twenty comi on un a periodical is vig lige been at- firms in advertise- already. prices ten per in construction condi rkets, fifteen detail ns and saving cent A few months ago it to appeal to the courage and farsight- of business and to argue from “the b: of Amer can industrial and financial conditions Today the facts of the money and the foreign trade speak for them- and the “buila slogan appeal to the mere who, while planning new « waiting to from per was necessary edness men sic soundness market | selves, now" is | an of [ struction the common s men on or improvement, of waiting — or because IO timidity. It s that the remedies for unemployvment sible— larger time preparation hastening, the 1 of builders facturers’, a chants’ “Do it now” the heads of teaching this men have the them a lul'JuxL lesson and exampl \r ke sive for of of now all | evident careful the manuf and advancing, Tk g, and | and repair construction has a new meanin business houses who are doctrine to their to young give effective opvortunity most impressive and Puritans | the vicinity of MCHILLAN'S ° SATURDAY. THE LAST DAY ; of Qar 'MID-WINTER CLEARANCE SALE HOSITERY SALE Sale Price £ ATURDAY, Pair, 11le 2 UNDEN | Including all our regular 12 1-2¢ Hose for men, women | children This price for Saturd | only. . grades CHILDRE FLEECED WEAR. 1 | Sale Price 22c. Vests, Pants and Drawers sizes. S . in MARK DOWN OF WINTER COATH These to stock prices Saturday turn ol cash 3 into $5.08 EACH. For values women’s to $15.00 and Misses 1 $3.00 EACH Children’s Coats, Coats in sizes from values to to 16 Day of Curtains, Cottons, saturday the Last on Floor Coverings, Materials, Sheeting our Draj Ete, 8 Columbia Grafonolas The made ‘ The improved reproducer and -q} entifically constructed tone arm hage placed Columbias in the lead l'rim to suit every purse $17.50, 825, $35, $50, 875, $85, $140, $150, $200, On clearest tone talking machine Easy Terms Double-Dise 65c and up. Recory Grafonola Dept. 24 floor. J. Van Ost., Mgr. D. McMILLAN 199-201-203 Main Street. | FIGHTING RESUMEIS WITH SEVERITY IN WESTERN WAR AREA NO' TRACY LE \??N the cold h Sinc weather in Belgium® inee s frozc has rocity I and Fr the ground® hard fighting been resumed continued fe ticularly in La Bassec and Ypres the ) well as around Soissons has fight- ing been severe, accompanied with heavy losses on both sides French claim the 000 alone in fighting the companiec kaiser's b —_——-s e m—_—_ oo T —— SAN'T FIND DANDRUFF of dandruff ai two application into the Get a Every bit after one or derine rubbed well the finger tips of Danderine at any dr save your hair. After a fe tions you can’'t find a 7 dandruff or any fallmg scalp will never itch. of Dan Up withf cent bott 1 splics of the sLore aricle hair, and withogh o

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