Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 26, 1916, Page 10

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OCTOBER 26, 1916 Washington St. House Nearly Finished Exterior Work on Home for Walter F. Lester Completed— Plastering to be Started Soon—Progress on Two Houses Being Erected by Julian Williams—Old Blissville Mill Chimney Being Torn Down. The exterior work on the house that Julian Williams is erecting on Wash- ington street, opposite the Backus hos- pital, is all finished, and the interior is ready for plastering, which will be started in & day or so. The sidewalks have been laid, and Mr. Willlams has sold the house to Walter F. Lestex who will reside there. The second of the three houses which Mr, Williams is erecting has all the framework up and the rafters will be et for shingling by Friday. This house is iocated on a new street which has been cut through the prop- erty. The third house is ready for the woodwork, the foundation work being all compléted. Peck Street House. The roof on the house that Charles 1. Rathbun is erecting on Peck street has been shingled and work has been started on the interior work. The work in general is advancing as rapid- ly as can be expected. Plate Glass Windows Set. The plate glass windows for the stores located in the new Chamber of Commerce building on Main street, which is in the process of building, have been set, and soon the doors will be hung. The top floor is being fur- nished and will soon be ready for oc- cupancy. Contractor F. C. Young has charge of tk work. Rafters Set in Place. te building that is being elected for Hertz Brothers on Thames nearly ready for the roofing. .rs have: heen placed in pos the roofing cove The_concr and PETERSON'S OINTMENT BEST FOR ECZEMA |3 First Eczema, stops itching Salt Rheum and Piles. benef of thank- mighty Buf- tment s me of » i did it so s Yo R and BUILDE eleg '50 West Main St.| PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING A A= DEL RANGES for all | of Ranges Loley 12 FERRY STREET ' CALL UP 734 ! With or Without Gas Attache | ments but Always EFFICIENT § and ECONCMICAL— £ i Repairs makes »rficbert >J. Cochran2 GAS FITTING, PLUMBING, STEAM FITTING Nashington Sq., Washington Building Norwich, Conn. Agent for N. B. O, Sheet Packing. Phone 5%1 of | 1 Ipe will be started. Contractor John Paracent! has the contract. Ptogress on Clubhouses. The two clubhouses which C. M. Wil- liams is erecting, one at Attawaugan, the other at Ballouviile, are ready for the roofing. Tearing Down Chimney. Contractor George Allen started to work Wednesday morning on,tearing down the old chimney at the Blissville mill. The mill has not been used for some time and a number of years ago the boiler house was torn down, but the chimney was left standing. The chimney is about S feet high and six feet square _at the bottom. Addition Completed. The addition on the house of Henry P. Gorman on Washington eireet is all complete and t! > double piazzas tractor George work. charge of the Foundation Finished. The founds the ion for the addition on buiiding ow James am on Norwich avenue is all com- and ready for the woodwork, will be started today (Thu bakery Grave! anlin dine to the for Roadway, 1vel for the road- which is un- The way 1 der construction a blewood ceme- tery has been started and soon the work of la cement road will be a st MeWilliams Co. are the Ame: n Thre hos con Co. ns w State Pier Superstructure. Scheidenhelm Construction cor- of New York (o) the $125,000 con ture or ompletc h of the The a floor Good progr ing on_ treet, wh en roofed in so that the interior work can rdvanced with speed Om nOwW on. Marsh Building. On the AL build on State steel D second tloor ha een pl side walls run up to the third fioor s at the first o these steel s 1 cast w huilding ed c hollow e, but th which is next to thc hat collapsed, is of brick. Hotel Addition. placing of a heavy derr: ) the steel work for the Me- ridian etreet addition to the Mohican hotel, work will go ahead now on FODERN PLUMBING as ctricity is cssential in modern house as e to lighting. Wa guaran- tee the very best PLUMBING WORK by expert workmen &t tne fariest orices. Ask us for plans and prices. J. F TOMPKINS 67 West Main Street T. F. BURNS ieating and Plumbing 92 Franklin Street iRON SASTING FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY 'HE VAUGHN FOUNDRY € Ne. 11 to 25 Ferry Street COAL AND LUMBER GOAL reg Burning Kinds and Lemgn ALWAYS IN 3TOCK A. D. LATHROP MHfice—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta, « Telephone 463-12 ~ T~ o~ c ot YOURHAIR! 25 GENTBOTTLE STOPS DANDRUFF EVERY BIT OF DANDRUFF DIiS- APPEARS AND HAIR STOPS COMING OUT. TRY THIS! YOUR HAIR APPEARS GLOSSY, ABUNDANT, WAVY AND BEAUTIFUL Thin, brittle, colorless and scrazzy 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 hair of its lustre, its strensth and its very life; eventually producing a feverish- ness and itching of the scalp, which if not remedied causes the hair roots to shrink, loosen and die—then the hair falls out fast. A little Danderine tonight—now—any time—will surely save your hair. Get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store or tollet counter, and after the first ap- plication your hair will take on that life, lustre and luxuriance which is so Dbeautiful. It will become wavy and fluffy and have the appearance of abundance, an incomparable gloss and softness; but what will please you most will be after just a few weeks' BUILDING ACTIVITY IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT assive | It and work id raising the structure, as the foundagon walls have been practi ly all the preparat ' in the deep excavation down fo = rock has been completed. Barracks at Navy Yard. | | The erection of new barracks for the men at the submatine base, Navy | Yard, Groton, is now well under wav | The buildings, which will be made of | wood, will be built at an expenditure | of $45,000. The barracks will be| modern in every way, More improve- | ments will be made at the base with- in the near future. BUILDING AND BUSINESS. Operations Throughout the State Cur ing the Past Week. The real estate market continues very acttve. During the past week in the citfes of the state reported in The Commercial Record, sales by war- ranty deed numbered 542, as compared with 383 last year; while loans on mortgages totaled $1,496,379 as against $1,099,204 a year ago. _ Petitions in bankruptcy numbered Seven, with assets of $15,601 and lia- bilitles of $31,263. In the correspond- ing week of last year there were seven petitions, with assets of $13,395 and liabilities of $20,903. The number of new incorporations formed in Connecticut last week is the largest for several wecks and much larger than In the like week of 1915. The 17 companies this week have total apital stock of $2,187,000, which com- ares with 11 companies, having total capitalization of $305,250, last 3 Building permits have bheen i during the week in the citics of New Haven, Bridgeport, Hartfor bury, Stamford and New 4 the number of 177, as 141 per- mits issued In the same cities a yvear g0. The cost of the new work this alled $500,8 the largest .r- d being found in Hartford. Last e onstruction ~work acts awarded last week include store and apartment blocks in Water- brick_ schoolhouse Bristol, ford, Pridgeport Bri- large additions to an office Hartford, roundhouse in adition to rectory in Bridge- one and two- houses in and New week bartment include Dlocks, part- sidence ment b [and ap: Adiien work, rtment wo and new, g for Telephone ions to build- bake and a num f real es- Mort- weeks for the e to $7.100 ana d Londor 0. there were 11 sales 12 a year aso. and STONINGTON. There more bu pects of considerably at Lord’s Point between store | ason and te a lit- will be commenced Bradway of Put- the Point for the week-end, expects to build another cottage on the lot he recently pur- chased and will erect a garage to o with it. Mitchell Hunter is ar- ranging for alterations and an addi- tion to Rockrimmon cottage and I. 1, Stoddard has taken tne contract for the work. Theodore L. Hopkins of Springfield, another summer resi- dent at the Point, who recently pur- chased a cottage of the Cottrell Lum- { ber Co., is to make improvements to the property, practically remodelling the dwelling, and this work, too, will be done this fall by Contractor Stod- dard- Other cottage owners are con- templating improvements and before next summer there will be several | new co®ages at the Point. GROTON. Julius Fleischamann and Cincinnati, who has purchased the Hooker and adjacent property at Eastern Point for the erecticn of a beautiful summer residence there, has sold two of the three cottages on the property to Frank Bradley of Eastern of New York Point, preparatory to clearing the land for the erection of his villa. Plans for the house have already eiscimann Yeast building which been drawn by the ! Co., architects, for will be 200 by 75 The land is dire on the water front, south and adjacent to the Griswold hotel property and beach. Mr. Fieischmann and his family have spent the last three seasons at The Griswold. Mr. Bradley, who has pur. cottages, plans to move them to sites on Tyler avenue. It may be possible that he will move one, -by lighter, to Groton Long Point. a feet. tiy, ed the MIDDLETOWN. Joseph S. Arnino has been awarded lthe contract for 2 new factory to erected in South Farms for the New England Enameling Co. It will 30x80 feet, built of brick, with con- crete foundations and concrete floor. The new residence being erccted on Brainard avenue for T. H. Thompson is_now ready for plastering. Joseph S. Annino has completed the foundation work for one house and as . work rted on 'Yhe other on more place for the Middletown Trust Co., trustees. BEOLTON. Work has been started by George & Matthew Wolf for the erection of a frame summer hotel, 30x70 feet, two stories high, at Belkn; BUILDING OPERATIONS IN NEW ENGLAND. of The statistics bu lding and en- zineeriny operations New England as compiled by The F. W. Dodge com- pany follow: Contrac Get. Contracts to Oct. Contracts to Oct. Cont Contrac Cont Cont Contracts Contracts Contracts Contracts Qct. Jet. Oct. Oct. Oet. Oct. Oct. Oct. Cet. Oct. Contracts Contracts Contracts Contracts Oct. Oct Oct. to HOW TO STORE APPLES. Fruit Should Be Free From Disease and Should Be Packed Carefully. n the or county not the; Countless to store ther e de eirs, The following = ] 1 from a bulletin ! shin e exp Inn artly-colored fruit is poor in ce and quality, tends to wilt o a seems to offer lit ance to de tle res Overripe fruit tends to mealiness and physiological disintegration. A warm summer and fall tends to overmatu Keeping unles prompt firmness med Better poor the fruit is picked and Overgrown fruit and does not keep so mm-sized firm-textured keeping quality re- sults the fruit ft until it is ell grown and fully colored, but still firm. This is known as the hard-ripe stage. The seeds are brown, and the stems tend to separate readily from the fruit spurs in picking. When va- of different season are grown, is customary to pick them in order it of maturity. If the late ones are ntedy for storage it is sometimes to depart from this order for the purpose of securing such ap- ples at the proper stage to keep well. The earlier sorts are then picked and disposed of for immediate use. “Much_deterioration in storage is due to injuries received in the pre- liminary handling. Skin punctures are more serious than simple bruises, as the latter tend to dry down unless the fruit overripe. In a series of storage experiments skin punctures were found to Le the most fruitful cause of decay, followed closely by disease infections, after which came in order, stems pulled out, bruises and insect injuries. “Care should be taken to store only such fruit as is free from disease. Perfectly clean fruit from well-man- aged orchards is likely to giev the best results. Spraying may therefore be of value in preventing loss in storage by eliminating wormy and in- fected fruit, as well as in warding off attacks of disease and Insects in the orchard. - Finally, it should be em- phasized that it pays to store only sound fruit of high grade. Unsound or inferior frult, if it does not rot, often fails to pay the storage charges and competes in the market with bet- ter fruit, lowering the price of all. “Care should be taken in picking not to pinch the apples sufficiently to leave indented fingermarks. The fruit should never be removed from the tree by a straight pull, as this tends to pull out the stems or break off the fruit spurs. Do not throw the fruit into the picking utensil or pour care- lessly from one receptacle into an- other. As soon as the apples are picked place them in the shade of the tree until they can be drawn to the packing house or temporary stor- e. “The ordinary apple box is a very satisfactory package in which to store use, when you will actually see a lot of fine, downy hair—new hair—grow- ing all over the scalp. Danderine is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them. Its exhilarating and life-producing prop- erties cause the hair to grow long, strong and beautiful. Ssels : il apples. Its small size allows the fruit to cool off quickly and uniformly; it is easy to handle, economical of space, and the fruit is not apt to work loose as a result of shrinkage. A closed package tends %o check evaporation and_ prevent wilting, though it may slightly retard the cooling of the fruit. Very tight pack is not advisable, s some of the ‘ars ltkely. to, bs. TOLAND COUNTY AGENT. John E. Gifford To Take Up Duties Next Month, John E. Gifford, of Sutton and| Hathorne, Mas: pted the po- sition of County in Tolland County, Conn. Mr, of the firm of Gifford and 1, Devon Breeders, of Sutton, ss. and graduated from Massachusett cukural College in 1894, overseer of the A& Grange, secretary of the Worcester gricultural Society and president of the Patrons’ Co-operative Society of Massachusetts. For the past four years he has been instructor of dal ing in the Essex County Agricultural School at Hathorne, Mass. Mr. Gifford will take up his duties as County Agent scon after the mid- dle of November. This will give him ample time to become acquainted in the county and to organize his work for the spring campaign. He 1 sachuse STATE POULTRY FARMS, Study to be Started the First of Sep- tember. Beginning December 1, 1916, a_sys- tematic study of Poultry Farm Man- agement in Connecticut will be made by the Comnccticut Agricultural Col- lege assisted by certain of the County Farm Bureaus. This work will be done under the supervision of the Farm Management Demonstrator and the Fxtension Poultryman. Its purpose will be to determine what types of Poultry Farm Manage- mert under actual conditions vield the Jargest profits. The business of each farmer co-operating will be analyzed and a report returned to him in per- son. Over forty farmers have already ex- pressed their willingnesg to co-operate More co-operators are desired. If in- terested, address R. E. Jones, Exten- sion Poultryman, or I. G. Davis Farm Management Demonstrator, ~Storrs, “onn. POULTRY HOUSES. Make Buildings Comfortable, Dry and Sanitary for Comfort of Hens Dur- ing Winter. This is the season of the year when all poultry keepers should be prepar- ing for the coming winter by putting their poultry houses into the finest possible condition. _ Outslde repairs such as replacing broken glass and repairing curtains should be made in order to make the bulldings as com- fortable and dry as possible during the cold winter months, The best material for replacing worn out curtains is a heavy grade of cheese cloth which will permit the light and air to pass through and at the same time prevent drafts. It is injured. Ripening and deterioration are accelerated by a high temperature after picking. The fruit should there- fore be cooled as quickly as possible after picking and placed in storage without delay. Keep the apples out of the sun and place at once in a shady packing house or cool temporary stor- age. Then, as fast as the fruit can bhe graded and packed, place in storage :Ellere it is to remain until wanted for 0.”. ¢ 3 not wise to use ofled canvass or any material of similar nature because the air cannot pass through it. Burlap is not desirable because of its color. When purlap curtains are usea they shut ofit so much light that the poul- try house is dark and cheerless. The most thorough cleaning of the year should be given to the poultry house during October, because hens are to be kept in close confinement during the next four or five months and they are likely to contract any disease, the germs of which may be lurking in the house. Walls should be brushed down and white washed. White wash is valuable for two rea- sons: First, because it makes the house brighter and more cheerful; and, second, because of its qualities as_a germicide. When the house is provided with a board or concrete floor it is easv to do a good thorough job of cleanins. The floor should be Swept and sprayed with disinfectant, and every corner and crevice in the building reached in some manner with a solution of one part crude carbolic acid and three parts_kerosene, or something equally as efficient as a destroyer of insects and disease. In houses that are pro- vided with a dirt floor, the litter should be removed until nothing but clean dirt is left, and then the house filled in with clean gravel to a depth of five or six iaches. It is a good plan to put three or four inches on the con- crete or board floor during the winter months, thus providing material for taking up surplus moisture and giving the hens an opportunity to take a dust bath almost anywhere in the house. Tn removing the little during the winter time it is not mnecessary to take out the sand, merely raking off the coarser parts of the litter and supplying coarse straw, leaves or shavings. One more reason for cleaning poul- try houses st this season is to permit the proper use of the valuable fertil- izing material which is thus obtained. It is a well-known fact that the ni- trogen in poultry manure becomes very, quickly available, and when it is sproad on the iand, if there is no veg- etation to use it, it is wasi%l by g ing off in the air. It is therefore wise to put all poultry manure at this on sod lané which is to under, or cover crops, th additional growth in vezetable to be turned under in the 1 spring. EGG LAYING CONTEST Preparations Being Made For Opening of Next Contest. Only one more week remains of the fifth Jaying contest at Storrs. It does not now appear that there will be any have made very creditable records and some of these are moving up quite a rapidly when they are able to lay four times as many eggs a week as certain other groups. The “Oregons” entered by the Agri- cultural College of Corvalli an easy first for the week with 47 eg: to their credit. They outlaid their nearest competitor by nearly a dozen eggs. Obed G. Knig! dottes from Bridgeton, R. I, came s ond with a yield of 38, and Tom Bar- ron's pen of English White Wyan- dottes were third with a production of 7 Dr. N. W. Sanborn’s pen of aff Wyandottes from Holden, Mass. laid 33 eggs for the week. The total Wi st as the Pacific coast sections to parti ate in the sixth lay- ing contest which begins immediately after the closing of the present com- petition. The tiaree best pens in each of the principal breeds are as follows: Plymouth Rocks. Rock Rose Farm (Parred) Katonah, N. Y. . Pen. & 2046 13 Albert T. Lenzen (White) North Attleboro, Mass. . 1920 8 Oregon Agricultural College (Barred) Corvallis, Ore. .... 1862 Wyandottes. 20 Obed G. Knight, (White) Eridgeton, R. I. . s 27 Tom Barron, (White) Cat- forth, England 2161 28 Abel Latham, Brierfleld, Engicnd ......... 1972 Rhode Isiand Reds. 53 Pinecre Orchar ton, Mass. ..... 1908 46 A. W. Rumery, N. H. E 1852 50 Jacob E. Jansen, Haven, Conn. .... 1792 White Leghorns. 63 Francis F. Lincoln, Mt Carmel, Conn. . ... 2018 69 Will Baron, Bartle, near Preston, England 2008 66 F. M. Peasel Conn. ceees 1905 Miscellaneous. 98 Oregon Agricultural College, Corvallis, Ore. . 2085 93 J. Collinson, (BlackLeg? Barnacre, Garstang, Eng, .. 1762 100 A. Schwarz (Black Rhine- landers) Burlingame, Cal. .. 1645 HOGS MAKE THIS MAN'S BREAD AND BUTTER. In Farm and Fireside, the national farm paper, a writer tells why he thinks there are great profits in hogs. He relates his experiences as a boy and says of his first transaction in hogs: “In February, when they were nine months old and weighed 260 pounds apicce, I sold them. I got $3.65 a hun- dred for them. Here is the transac- tion_itemized “Receipts — Sow, 350 pounds @ $3.50 cwt., $i2.25: six pigs, pounds @ $3.65 cwt., $36.94—$69.19. “Expenditures—Cost _of sow and pigs, 315; skimmed milk, $S; oil meal, $2; corn, 116 bushels @ 25c., $29 — $54. Profit, $15.19. “While the price of corn then was about a third of what it is worth now, the present price of hogs is nearly three times as much as I received, so the present proportions of hog and grain prices are the same.” FARM MANURE. Some Valuable Figures Presented by Prof. Southwick. All farmers know that the manure from their arimals is valuable, that it makes crops grow, but few have a clear idea of why it does this and just how valuahble it is. All manures are valuable, first: be- cause they add plant food, that is, manure contains the same consti- tuents we purchase In fertllizers. Sec- REACHES FINAL WEEK.| few places in the last weeks of the|one-half the nitrogen and two-th contest. In the fifty-first week there|the potash on the farm.” were six pens that did not lay any |saving it?—B. G. Southwick as there are 1,560 ond: because of the organic or vege- table matter they carry. Third: be- cause of the bacteria they contain. There are the three reasons why farm manures make soils “richer” and make crops grow hetter. .The plant food in manure varies with the kind of animal producing, the feed given the animal, the work done by the animal and the care the manure receives. Plant Food in one ton of manure (solid and liquid) from different animals. Pounds Per Ton Value per Ton Nigro. Phos. Potash. Ave. 1916 Prices Horse 5 $6.13 Cow 3 5.07 Pig . 7 162 Sheep 7 9.60 | Hen* 16 7.36 | i *Hen manure varies greatly depend- ing on its freshne and care. Prices used in figuring values: Ave. price 1916 price Nitrogen Phosphoric ‘Potash It is easy to see from the above ta- ble, which is based upon ihe total ex- creta with 1o lo that no farmer can afford to d rd his manure | pile this coming wintc 0 bedding | s included in these figures but the | kind and amount of bedding may add | materially to the value ure. Phospho: Potash c Another very garding farm mant amount of fertil tained in the solid and liquid po: The following table shows this com- parisc Relative Proportions of Plant Contained in the Solid and Liquid Excrement. Food trogen Phes. Acid Potash Per Cent. Per Cent. Horse . 38 100 " 44 Coywi(. . 51 100 9 85 Pig. . 33 8] 2 43 Sheep 48 95 70 Ave. ....1-2 1-2 9-1001-3 1 These significant figures show that the d farmer who if not saving the liquid manure, or o changes in the relative standing of the|it, is losing one-half of the nitrogen leading pens. On other hand a|his cows excrete and four-fifths of all good many pens while not at the top [the potash. Everdy farmer in the state ought to memorize tae following fact “the Manid manure contains eges at all; there were thirteen pens!omy Department, Connecticut that laid seven esgs or less which |cultural College. means only.a ten per cent yield where- as there were seven pens that laid|55 SONS OF BRITISH PEERS better than 40 per cent. Thus it can be seen that & sroup climbs rather e A ENINIBATTLE Four ‘Cabinet Ministers Have Sons in the War. Lost London, Oct. 25.—Fifty-five sons of British peers have fallen on the bat- tlefields of the FEuropean war. The last was ILijeut. W. Wyndham Ten- nant, the eldest son of Lord Glencon- ner, who was killed in France Sept. at the age of nineteen. Only a fe days before the death in action o his cousin, Lieut. Mark Tennant wz reported. Lieut. Wyndham Tennant had been : 5 ! with_the army just over a year, hav- Yield of all pens amounted to 1497 {3 "joined as soon as he reached the ST B y legal age. In a letter to his mother rerhe laving contest wWill present a|gateq just before going into action very busy scene for two or three days | fated, Ju before and affer the first of Novem- | %, WE & i e ber.' During! this time alll tht birdsiin | po i 10 WHten in case anything happens to me, for I should like you the present competition will be cone - : = e to have just a little message from my siged ‘to their owners: They will| S io0e JMgbs il messase front my t el to Canada, ngland and as far love for you have made my whole life t et . one of the happiest there has ever birds going to Calimornia and Ore-1{peen. This is & great day for me. gon. Simuultaneously another thous- | ‘High heart, high speech, high deeds and birds will ng in from all|'mid honoring eyes. God bless you, and give you peace.” Four cabinet ministers, Mr. Asquith, Lord Lansdowne, Mr. Pike Pease and Mr. Arthur Henderson, have lost sons in the war, and Lord Crewe a son-in- law. Mr. Henderson is the Labor par- ty leader, and his son was a_captain. Lieutenant Raymond Asquith sava of the man- | Average f: manure of different | animals mixed together has about the | following amounts of plant food per | ton or load, including bedding: | a. small part of | FELL FROM LOFT; HURT; THEN WELL HOW A MAN WHO LANDEZ CN WOOD PILE AND WAS SORE FROM HEAD TO FCOT FOUND QUICK RELIEF. Once upon a tim: n Putnam who ‘lives in the ‘gu tty hamlet of Wendell Depot, M imbed up into a loft to gei some ding ma- w6ther man Hv- do. terial, just as many ing in the cou must *often Suddenly he slipped and fell Ter feet below was a piic of wood, knotted and gnar It E tumble, and Mr. Putnam injured painfully in the back, he wa rved with bruises, and was fron: head tc foot. The next day he hought a bottle of Sloan's Liniment which had been re- | commended to him. very few hours the sorenc s and the lameness I ppeared. He was an ac Sloan’s Linimen all drug stores, at Liniment AL S RATRY. promise of holding as high a place at the bar as his father. He had an ap- pointment on the staff but insisted on service in the fighting line. Mr. As- quith’s younger son was wounded at the Dardanelles. Iloyd George has two sons in the arm 5 Costly Innocence. Those victims of the blackmail gang, being reputable persons with nothing to conceal, paid heavily to have that unothing concealed.—Buffalo Express. Plymouth.—The Cleveland Family held in Grange hall Sat- ¥ and a good time was enjoyved by the memb: Dinner was served at one o'clock and about thirty-five sat down to the table, THIS STOPS HAIR FROM FALLING OUT to count the irs in your comb and 1 dead, % len hey are n advance warning of future baldness and proof that th us little dandruff germ busy on your scalj Dr. Sange famonus specialist, first >t druff and falling hair are cau microbe. Then came the the value of the real Parisian (liquid form) in destroying the druff germ and prompily pre the rther loss of hair. [he « : three d use of Parisian mply marvelous, and the Amer! awakened to the t dandruff is just as unneces- it is unhealthy, and that the can be quickly rid of it and save the hair by using a few ounces of Parisian on ge 1s sold for not more 5 a-large bottle at and toilet counters every Te. an ideal, daintily perfumed liquid, from grease and stickiness, and surely cause hair to grow soft, trous and really seem twice a ant. Lee & Osgood Co. alway large supply, and guarantee i have a to you. DR. F. W. HOLMS, Dentist Shannon Building Annex, Room A American fouse Special Rates to Theatre Troupes, Traveling Men, Etc. Livery Connaction, 8Shetucket Street, FARREL & SANDERSON, Props oven. Order a Magee Range faction! NOW is the time o change! Put a Magee Range in your home aglci realize what comfort it is to have a good fire and a quick oven always at your command. Magee ovens are quickly and evenly heated, because one movement of the damper throws the heat at once around five sides of the Don’t put up with that old stove any longer! and enjoy real satis- Complete gas attachments and glass oven doors. Sold by SHEA & BURKE 41 Main Street, Norwich, Conn.

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