Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 15, 1914, Page 8

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Buck Up with Liberty - When you're rivets five hundred feet in the air, you get that old he-feeling that life is full of good . sf s tl‘ere’s andk?;ga'm the game. “Cowboys o‘:nt}éev:hy i Siese alert, structural iron men. en they ke to “buck up a bit—well they go for good, il bodied, ich LIBERTY AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS « rpyright 1913—Morse International Agency. All Rights Reserved ! plants will not grow, and few soils contain emough to produce maximum or even fair crops of cereals. It is the most expensive element of fertilizer and in an available form for plants the most difficult to obtain, except through the interventiou of microbes. Yet na- ture has not been so lavish in her sup- ply of anv other element necessary to plant growth, ‘as .something like 38,000 tons of frec nitrogen of the alr rests acre of land. While sci- WATER IN BUTTER. $14,000,000 Lost To Dairymen. A. A. BORLAND, State Agrh. College, Burlington, Vt. Fourteen miliion doliars are annual- 1y lost to dairy interests In the United States through the Tow moisture eon- tent of butter. The maximum legal amount is 16 pei cent.; the average January Clearance Do You Want To Save Money? for the United States is only 115 DeF ontists Dave . % = > been devising means by cont,An additional 5 petf cent. MIBNt which atmospheric nitrogen could be be added, making the water comtent combined by electrieity into plant food 15 pet cent. without exceeding the micropes—the minutest form of plant legal Hemit and without deterioration in , Jife_have heen quietly at work. The guality of the product. Now, how ¢an | pave heen “working for nothing board- the meisture content of butter be con-. jno themscives and paying for the tfrolied = There are many factors in-| ,rivjlege” In leaf mold and humus flueacing moisture content of butter | or ()., woods myriads of them have but the two most important are the | | been gathering nitrogen from air and Spurning ftemperature and the amount | rendering it available for higher plants, | thus feeding the trees of the forest and storing a surplus in-the sofl for juse of future generations. In culti- | vated fields, where conditions have been favorable for their reproduction they have been doing the same thing. Where legumes are grown they are particularly active. They have a lik- ing for this family of plants and with them assimilate and store in the soil | i large quantities of nitrogen. When conditions are rizht nitrogen fixing bacteria will supply a legumi- nous crop, like alfalfa, clover or peas, with nitrogen for its own perfect de- velopment, and also assimulate and | leave in the soil a sufficient amount to | produce a large crop of corn the fol- lowing season. | Nitrogen gathering microbes are in | evidence when legumes are found with sthall knots of nodules on their roots | If agriculturists will grow - legumes, keep humus in their soil, rectify aeidi- ty with lime and see that microbes are | resent, either from natural or artifl- | cial inoculation, the question of nitro- gen for growing crops will be solved. | THE WOODEN HEN. How She Rears Her Chicks. B. K. PARKINSON, In buying new brooders there should be great care as to selection and a strict observance of rules regulating temperature. Brooders before being | used should be cleaned, scrubbed, dis- | infected inside and out, lamp flues cleaned, outside painted, then put in | the sun to air and dry and also new | wicks bousht and used for each hatch. Now to find a good location. An in- door brooder should be kept in a warm place where tempe: ure never goes below freezing. An outdoor one should be in a sunny place, for sun is very es- | sential. Churning temperature is of funda- mental importance. During fall and wintet, when meisture content of but- Tér is low, temperature of churning should be as high as is consistent with securing a uct firm enough for handling. Experiments conducted un- der direction of the writer showed an increase of two per cent. in water con- tent of butter churned at 70 degrees F. | as eompared with 50 degrees F. That churned at 50 degrees F. averaged 13.8 per eent, moisture; that at 60 degrees ¥, avvragd 14.4 per cent. that at 65 degrees averaged 149 per cent.; that at 70 degrees F. averaged 15.7 eemt. Churnis were done with a | , the kind found on any | 'arm. Churning should stop when bt~ ter granules are the size of corn grains. The temperature of wash water should | be near that of buttermilk, although if high churning temperatures are em- ployed wash water a few degrees low- @ temds to firm butter. Vice versa, in springtime, when per cent, of water in but..r exceeds the legal limit, cream should be churned at as low temepra- ture as possible without prolonging the time of churning, thus causing butter to be salty. Working the Butten ‘The amount of working has consid- eradle influence on per cent of mois- ture in the finished product. When | butter is worked in absence of water, | moisture content decreases rapidly as | amount of working increases. but if | butter is worked in presence of wa- | ter moisture content increases with | amount of working. Consequently if | high percentage of water is desired butter should receive minnimum amount of working sufficing to dis- tribute salt evenly when no water is present, but maximum amount_of | working if water is present. . Care should be exercised at all times not to overwork putter. = Again, if natural moistu water should be drained away, butter | partially worked, water drained off and | the working comipleted. - i LITTLE FAIRIES OF THE SOIL. They Work Day and Night. MEA DE‘ . }G USEN. That soils are active has long since been an established - fact, and- from these facts attention has been attract- ed for several years past to the rela- tion of the minute lving organisms of soil ‘to the nutrition of plants. My own experiments with soil mi- crobes during the last ten years, in which the microbes of nitrification have been grown in every variety of liquid and soil media and in different soils, have given convincing results as to their value in assimilating and stor- | ing nitrogen for plant food. 'h nitrate of soda at sixty odd dollars y.r ton and the end-of the > content of butter is high all | | the hover The House In order. The brooder placed, cover floor and | with_an inch of dry sand, ! on top of which (except under hover and for a foot in front of it) spread | finely cut clover or hay for about an inch. Light the lamp, or stove, which- ever it may be, regulating the temp- erature according to directions so the heat where the chicks sleep is between 95 and 93 degrees the first week, grad- vally dropping to 90 degrees by the fourteenth day and to 80 degrees the | twenty-first day. Leave the newly hatched chicks in the incubator nurse- | | ry thirty-six hours, then transfer them in.a warm lined basket to the brooder (evening is the best time,) providing a small drinking fountain fiiled with fresh tepid water and a box filled with charcoal. The first three days feed a mixture ‘of one-third hard boiled (twenty minutes) eggs, using shells and all (infertile, thin shelled or mis- shapen eggs) and mix crumbly, Long Cut Tobacco . Put LIBERTY in a the man who know$ t}n‘ee to five years. hurried—or LIBERTY X because a large g protect this famous old trial and you'll always which Is injurious to horses. As a ! D matter of fact, corn stover is to be defying the police from be- cades, constituted the main Af- nd ba ipe and it goes right to tne spot with t%ebacco. gCl':ew it and you get the limit of tobacco enjoyment. LIBERTY is made for the sturdy man who wants a natural, full-bodied smoke and satisfying healthful chew. : : : LIBERTY is made of pure Kentucky leaf, aged . The “aging” process cannot would not be so mellow and smooth. - LIBERTY never varies, is always just right, reserve stock of leaf is carmried to | brand. Stick LIBERTY into your overalls for a week's stick to it. Sold everywhere in 5c packages. THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY ! that the 1t is al- wero heard. It trial will be long is expected drawn out You Can Save Money On Every Purchase Made During This Big Sale In every department—upon every counter you will find displayed the seasonable merchandise, all marked at clearance prices. Our big stocks are all reduced, and many advantageous purchases which we have made all swell the tremendous total of the stocks which are offered you at these clearance prices. Come early while the assortments are at their best. Here Are a Few of tie Big Clearance Bargains Domestic. Department 5S¢ UNBLEACHED COTTON -SALE PRICE 4c 8¢ UNBLEACHED COTTON. 0vcucrtancesnans svsave SALE PRICE 7¢ 39-INCH UNBLEACHED COTTON....cucvvuienannn SALE PRICE 7¢ 36-INCH UNBLEACHED COTTON....cccuuueierenas SALE PRICE 8¢ 3 ..SALE PRICE 240 81-INCH UNBLEACHED SHEETING, value 36-INCH UNBLEACHED COTTON, value 7c......SALE PRICE 5/¢ 90" BLEACHED COTTON wcocesverens nissvorh .....SALE PRICE 7Vc lic BLEACHED COTTON .SALE PRICE 9c THe BERUIT OF THR EOOM s onuvsii cosnsidsssvdd SALE PRICE 9/2¢ 81-INCH BLEACHED SHEETING, value 33c........ SALE PRICE 26¢c 15c LONSDALE CAMERIC -SALE PRICE 12/4c -SALE PRICE 13c SALE PRICE 3% ..SALE PRICE 48¢c SALE PRICE 58 SALE PRICE 79¢ SALE PRICE 10c SALE PRICE 12)%¢c ..SALE PRICE 15¢c 42-INCH BLEACHED CC $1.00 BLEACHED SHEE 12%c BLEACHED PILLOW C 16c BLEACHED PILLOW CA 20c BLEACHED PILLOW i oni{ an Ll ; preferred to corn fodder for horses, | feature of Lie strike drama today. leged that the two men had a dispute, N R > stz S L At ey i Fmcet milk, 2dding ith a slight addition of some cohcen. | ter the hall had been raided by police | Which resulted in Alien enticing Cun- | 32¢ BLEACHED PILLOW CAs ..SALE PRICE 17¢ , t 7 7 ti 2 { trate feed. Shredding the stover is'|and detectives without avail, great ningham, who was an old man, to a ROC UTLTS hes . come too soon. Without nitrogen 'Gres Qall, Over this, the second |7 7. sary mnor desirable. | crowds. gathered and_tne police were lonciy scotion of Westviile, and hoot- $1.00 CROCHET QUILTS—hemmed.......... ., -SALE PRICE %8¢ S ————————————————————— ] v ki The name corn stover is applied to | compelled to make several ayonet | ing him. The defense Is ected to o WX S : near the hotor pye s K5eP HICkS the stalk after the ear has been re. | charges owing Lo tlre agressive atti- | bo that the accused was under the ino J 3150 CROCHET QUILTS—hemmed......... S SALE PRICE $1.19 WHY GRIP IS DANGEROUS. | oo O o o mes: ‘heth they/moved. Stover may be fed to dairy | tude of the peoFle, many of whom were | fluence of | at the time. e N e e e SALE PRICE $1.29 | are used to it The fourth day step’ cows with good results, particularly | slightly injured. ~With the final bay- | — — ] sLcC Q : 1t is an Epide Catarrhal “Fever | the nursery food, feeding scratch feed, \f the stover is shredded and mixed | onet charge the police cleared the en-‘w OBITUARY. ‘ $1.75 CROCHET QUILTS—fringed with cut corners.. SALE PRICE $1.39 Cotund Wy & 15 that Qe throwing it in the clover. and stari With cut alfalfa or bram, oats, bar- | tire meighborhood and a cordon of po- | o . | iy Lasvis’ the Pationt Waak sreen food, though sparingly, and ley or peas, thus providing a valuable | lice with fixed bayonets was thrown Prof. Benjamin Peirce. I} s2s50 IN QUILTS—hemmed.c.....q. SALE PRICE $1.5 Y <l | Bvoid sour or frosen fens "or 'musty and cheap feed. Shredding adds value ' around the hall The- position of the | Cambridge, Mass. - Bente After the Acute Stage Brain, for. they are cevtaln Aeaih. as it is more easily handled and stor- besiesed Bain and his friends is seri- 'min 0. Peirce, Hoil or of 500 MATTIN: QUIE NS ol s oo s s SALE PRICE $229 Has Passed, After the sixth day begin feeding meat ©d and readily eaten by stock. ";‘,S- as they are cut off from all Sub- mathematic nd naturs hilosophy r 5 * Scraps ARt = - plies. i, in Harvard college, died today. He 50 S - TS with @ = SALE PRI g [P Ties aand e maan guiice UP TO UNITED STATES. Bain came out of the hall this even- was a member of Jearned socielies and $3.50 SATIN QUILTS with cut corner LE PRICE $259 following successful method of feed- ' ing, strolled nonchalantly about the the author of several books on math- 14c BLEACHED DOMET FLANNE SALE PRICE 10c ing is excellent: Over the cut clover Holders of Mexican Bonds Want Their cleared space in full view of the po! ® ematics and physics. S 2 2% s spread_ten pounds of chick feed, cov- Interests Safeguarded. | sndfre-entered the chall Nl ey Gharles H. Guider. S G e “SHLE Suice o 3 erlogrmiit v mork (nehismcor Gloyari) L L e L e Bolice. boimmaider explainea REY. he . 14—Charies H $2750 BLANKETS—tan only...... SALE PRICE $150 A PAIR jand ten poundS more of feed, and so had no intention of again attempting jown in_this until there are eight inches of litter today from the City of Mexico, through . 5 e village $2.25 BLANKE' white and tan..SALE PRICE $1.79 A" PAIR | and sixty pounds of feed. This, with the American charge, that the suspen. 20 assault on the hall, for he con- the Nore SALE PRICE 90c EAC {meat scraps and - green food, ' lasts sion of the payment of interest on the ! ’ e isgaks f a stroke : e about five wecks, and reared in this Mexican national debt covers a perio: iL = 2 S way chicks will prove sturdy, healthy of six months only was mot regard- A bomb explosion cccurred today at & vetats SSALE CRICS W kacH {and possess great vitality. ed here as conveying much encourage- ment to the holders of Mexican bonds. State department officials do not doubt that if the revolution still is in pro- SALE PRICE $1.10 PAIR ODD PAIRS OF BLANKETS—COTTON OR WOOL—SLIGHTLY ed troopers and several stril ed by the police near the sa were rescued by thelr comrades, place but BEST USE OF CORN FODDER. Grip Patients Gratoful fo Peruns, the | ~ How To Prepare and Feed It. |gress at the end of cix months there [yore subsequently rearrested by the | Alban S e SOILED—AT SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICES Expectorant Tonic. JAMES B. MORMON. will be another default for the same | B AT oAt i;n:m(m i Dalginre ded Hadsin Do not make the error of regarding. | . SR A x:eigzfig'h:ln?r;’:gr}:]&bum the present| u\\, 2 DERER HOLDS | Railroad . declared tonight e R R Corn is an excellent feed for live |Suspens ymen! = the ¢ Would not grant its 15 & big difference between the two. stock, both grain and stalks being fed FMurlPrm;,;)s l)df : (lllxluontfl:tn( among | A POSSE AT BAY. es’ demands. The road to -advantage, but inl feeding it care | Buropean bond holders, it was sus- ——— e o B Dretibnn Grip is an epidemlc disease that Pol- | must he taken to get the Vst reaiiite | gested today forbode a remewal of | Fear of Wounding Man’s Wife and 5 3:\2‘~'1’|: f:‘x-.f-l o Sar i ri'x: sons the vital organs. When a per- | The grain is a concentrated source of | pressure from the KEuropean govern- Children Handicaps Officers. | s. We must maintain disci- son has grip, the air passages are |nutriment, palatable, easily masticat- | ments upon the United States to take | | slive with ‘millions of bacilli poison- | ed and readily digested and assimilat. | Some decided action to safeguard the | jravemie N. Y. Jan. 14—Edward | AL ing the blood. The infected person |ed, but for dairy cows, corn should |interests of their subjects in Mexico. ' peardsley, the Summerdals farmer | Murder Suspect Captured. never make up more than one-half to | At one of the embassies it was stated three-fifths of the concentrate part of | that it was quite out of the question the ration. It needs roughage as corn- | for any of the European powers, either Teels tired and exhausted. Peruna is a Tonic Laxative. who shot John G. W. Putnam, over- | i 14.—Isaac Bond, seer of the poor of Chautauqua county e e 1spect wanted in connec- Chicago, latest n yes ay, is night still rricaded i e r 1a o It requires a good tonic laxative to | stalks or hay fed with It, for corn Is | individuality or collectively to inter- | ria iiitle: focmbons, which 1o aged | tion murder last October of| Xeep the body of the patlent as strong | POOT in protein, but rich n digestible | vene in Mexico now that they have 'rounded by a posse of twenty armed arrcsted e toder “hongdent was 7 - — = as_possible to counteract the effect of carboh;-arazog. So for dalry cows. | practically. if not formally, confided to ' men. In the sheriff's force are half . leased frome the '1;“»,”,”‘.;’;“5 a:‘f}in{t | service tenth part in certain cases. Follow- the Doisons creafed by the grip bacil- | £ Should be ground and fed e e e e it rrcoton f /& dozen crack shots who are under in- t August after serving a become ing this method, the hot water piping lus. An expectorant tonic with some | brat, Middlings o ground oats which | those intereats but that it was assumed | girgetions to fire at Beardsloy. when- murder of David Jones at | vants, ised for cen heating systems ca laxative qualities is the safest rem- 5 e, that the United States would take no- | oyer he shows himself. Fear of wound- | Cape Girfardeau September, 1 change. e protected and will last much lons- edy. Such P B . Live Stock Thrive on It. tice of the pacnt distress of these Bu- | {ng Mre. Beardsley or the nine children e T & Al et At the top of the: hot water pipe: . Such.is Peruna. Bewars es o i + ropean interests. . a ' R Last > is mounted an air separator of sut- pecially of coal tar powders or tablets | _ “OT0 f]"dd"’; ipthe maule slven touthe | S iime % administration” ;uffielals -~ are nerito ot o i e e Bewsyicd Orow &t Vinsyurd’ Haven. | ithires miind ed in the ClV{ hia design which Servea to remov patient. corn fodder has been ascertained to be | 1+ has deliberately held up the inter- i ygate this afternoon two of Beardsley's | X. B., and all the members of the crew | Soisnos Nt | Ammonia bombs are being used in There is no specific for the grip. about 1 to 115, so that some higher | ©5f rayments with the purpoge of forc- | eriends walked boldly up to the front | of some of the national forests in this the British schooner Greta were | Peruna has been used with good | protein feed is necessary to properly | iN& """{""’_““"‘S it lP"SF‘““’\ "}ll‘fl‘ {door. Beardsiey refused to admlti ht to this port toda the tug | Protecting gloves generally | country to extinguish forest fires, espe- success in former grip epidemics. In- | balance it to get the good results, and wituacprovistons f”r]efl"?flm alarm- | them and declared that he would resist | which took them off their | for X-Tay work b cially in connection with brush fires, dications point. to the return of grip | either alfalfa or clover has been the successes of the constitution- | ,rrest until he was dead. | dismasted’ vessel. The Gr is sup- | having applied | where the fire fighters cannot get near thiswinter. found excellent for the purpose. In n}e['s g{ifvrflm!:m\le;d l;\ nir!-:letr‘n;mh His friends urged him to surrender | posed to v | of 1rnb'v“’ tha | enough to the burning area to beat . 2 tests with sheep the Massachusetis | 4 S i £t i | is known to out the fi s. It is sald that each Do not fall to read the expertence | 02T 1" 10 s" Shown that difterent yas |and thereby martyrize himself in the | o, e S%ke of the . children = and and lacks o % loded bomb will extinguish fire Murderers’ Sentences Commuted. in a circle of about five yards diameter, Washington, Jan. 14.—President Wil- Beardsley finally promised to give him self up tomorrow. Mrs. Beardsley Dbegged the men to bring food and fire- of former grip patients with Peruna. Mrs. Gentry Gates, 8219 First Ave., is only lexican people, rather than the reins of power to the | eves of the rieties® of corn fodder, while surrender slightly in digestibility, varying are good . for A French Fast Lake, Ala, writes: “I had a | fattening purposes. Af the Manitoba {men who have sworn to hang him as & | wood, She sald there was no fire In | 31 life sentences Impaces Lo boroey amdd l]i!:l};‘c[s) Rats as Food. bad case of grip: I tried Peruna and | éXperiment farm corn fodder was fed | traitor. the house and that the children were | y r W. Barnes and d Robinson, inmates Rats are not entirely unknown as a { the whole of the hand from Injury by it cured me. I can safely say it is a | to_Steers, and it proved to be more starving. | tissue has the advan more elastic and ac screen for the X-ray moistened with hot water and allowed The i of the Leavenworth penitentiary, who - ‘he new fab is woven | food in England. Not so very long fine medictne” Drofitable “roughage ' fhan. ost | INDICTMENTS EXPECTED | Sheriff Anderson sent two men to| took part in a mutiny among the Pris- | Soom S which i neavils “sized" With | ago rat plos were comparativers com: s o e s. Where L numbers of | IN THE COPPER DISTRICT. | the house with food. They had orders | cners in 1901, when a guard was| . Jea3 composition, so that it contains | mon in Nottinghamshire, ana one inn T rles ells, Br., stock are kept, good results mav be i { to rush Beardsley if they Succeeded in | killed. e times its weight of lead. Thit pear the county town made a feature South Bt, Delaware, Ohio, writes: |obtained by feeding cut corn fodder | Grand Jury to Report on Strike Out- | getting inside. When they approach- | i oy Suree: e age of being much | of perfodical ra’. suppers and did very “After a severe attack of la grippe I took - Peruna and found it & good |to stand for twenty-four hours. ed, however, Beardsley covered them In Serious Condition After L Walk. with a rifle'and made them pass the | . - ition After Long Wal Ithaca, rages Today. { well out of it. ~And rats have been proved to have a medicinal value, for s as a very good , especially when . Y. Jan, 14—After a walk ted feed s i 5 2 4 ! r tonie! e B iyen with, tois mmeed | Houghton, Mich, Jan. 14 —Findings |food throush a st (aoOS of some 300 miles aiong winding roads | the back portion is re-enforced. | one arctic exporer has recorded tha and the cattle will eat it readily anq |°f the special grand jury which has from New York city to Ithaca in | observe that the gases | those of his crew who were not too MERIDEN TO HAVE waste little. In fact, it is better and safer to use with cottonseed meal than dried fodder or hay. | Corn fodder may also be fed to| horses, but one-third of the bulk of the ration should be made up of some other material, preferably red clover or alfalfa. Avold feeding soft corn, Get This For Colds Prescription for Positive Results. Don’t Experiment. 1t i3 cheaper and better to prevent this contly contagious disease by putting in tae drinking ater twoor thres times a weeks “rom your druggist get two ounces i ot Glycerine and haifan ounce of Globe l’s Roup e <} Pine - Compound (Concentrated FPine) ’-a Take these two ingredients home and — edy it Sem in%o § BRI pint of good whi ¥, vell. . Take ona 1o two e oINS S EOMASE 1eome | bedfonn s, S0 ciin, il a0 baet remedy far colds, catareh, diphtheria,ete. | €OTding to age.” . This is said to be the ccept no substitutes; insist on Pratis, quickest cough and cold cure known to Poultry Regulator the medical profession. He sure to ge¢ v only the genuine Globé Pine Compound mummmi&nmnfiwkfi? (Concentrated Pine). Each £ ounce Drofits. We. guarantes, var riena Faving | hottle comes in a tin screw-top sealed money back. ‘She. pi. to 25 1. pat) ot 4530, case, -If your druggist is out of stock BT Get Bracta 100 rns Pl ot 82 he will quickly get it from his whole- sale house. Don’t fool with uncertain J. P. HOLLOWAY mixtures. nl is risk Fo; u(zle past si Vears (his bad a wanderful de- JAMES M. YOUNG mand. Published by the Globe Pharma. C. W, HILL & SON ceutical laboratories of Chicago, . been inquiring into lawlessness in the | copper_ strike region will be returned in court tomorrow. This announcement ' was made tonight by George Nichols, | the special prosecutor who has been in charge of that branch of the state’s judicial machinery No intimatfon was forthcoming as to whether any true bills would be in- cluded in the report at this time. Ob servers of the last few days, howev make it practically certain that some indictments will be given out. j e There is also a possibility that the ! ti grand jury will include in its present- | 19 ment some reference to the deportation ' F of Charles H. Moyer, president, and exacut Sunday school officials. to hold the 57th annual sta NEXT CONVENTION, State Sunday School Asscciation Ac- cepts Invitation. Meriden, Conn., Jan. ve committee-of the Connecticut unday School association met in this ty tonight with the local pastors and An invitation te_conven- on in Meriden on Nov. 4, 5 and §, 914, was accepted by the commitfee. tans for the convention wili be made by the Meriden people after the Easter | Charjes Tanner, auditor of the West- | Season. ern Federation of Miners. BT B The other returns 2re expected to|ALLEN ON TRIAL FOR embrace charges of varying degrees | against certain members of the West- ern Fedération of Miners. TRADES HALL UNDER i SIEGE BY POLICE. Three Hundred South African Strikers Imprisoned There. Johannesburg Union of South Africa, Jan. 14——The slege of Trades Hall, Where Secretary Bain of the Federa- tion of Trades and @ band of his sup- u | Elderly Ma afternoon, Judge Shumway Dbench. minor witnesses for the progecullon’ geological survey leave government to shrink, loosen and die—then theing all over the scalp. WESTVILLE MURDER. n Was Enticed Into Woods and Shot Dead. New Haven, Conn, Jan, 14. — The i trial of Willtam B. Allen, charged with imurder in the first degree in causing the death of Francis Cunningham in the Westville woods_last April, got nder way in the superior court this on _the A jury was selected and three 14.—The stato | weather at times below zero, V. G.| Gahnkin, a sophomore in the Cornell | college of civil engineering, was In a serious condition in_the university in- | irmary tonight, suffering from expos- { ure. His hands are frozen ‘; Scientists which water holds in solution have a marked effect upon the wear of iron and steel tubes, but if the oxvgen is eliminated the internal coyrosion of i to as much as one- piping 18 lessen: fastidious to eat of the good rat soup set before them by the cook enjoyed an immunity from scurvr, when all ! the abstainers from rats were stricken down. e —————————————————————————————————————————————— Belgian Bishops Denounce Tango. Qrussels, Belgium, Jan, 14.—The shops of Belgium have issued a joint tter condemning “the tango and other degrading dences, which are threat- ening to invade Christian home: the more and more accentuated modesty of feminine dress.” No Naval Programme in Canada. Ottaw: Ont,, 14—Canafa will not launch a ni programme this | vear, it developed with the opening of | the Canadian parliament today. | Interesting Bits. Although a railway now ‘comnects Damascus with Beirut, it has intro duced no great change in the custom: of the natives and their mode of liv ing. The streets in the newer quarters are fairly, broad and clean, older streéts, while broad_enough, are dirty and the houses dilapidated. Many members of the United States but the | of its lustre, its strength and its ve 'SAVE YOUR HAIR! IF FALL ING OUT OR DANDRUFF--25 CENT DANDERINE —— LADIES! MEN! HERE'S QUICKEST, SUREST DAND- RUFF CURE KNOWN. Thin, brittle, colorle and SCragsy hair is mute evidence of a neglected scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf. There is nothing so destructive to the hajr as dandruff. It robs the hai ry life; eventpally producing a feverish- | ness and itching of the scalp, which if not remedied causes the hair roots | I3 THE ! hair falls out fast. A little Danderine tonight—now—anygime—will save your hair. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store or surely |tollet_counter, and after the first ap | abu.. ! sofu plication your hair will take on that life, lustre and luxuriance which is so beautiful. It will beeome wavy and fluffy and have the app of ance; an incomparable gloss and but what will please vou T Will be after just a few weeks' when yon will actually see a lot ine. Jowny hair—uew bair—grow- mo us of

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