Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 25, 1910, Page 8

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FBESH-MINED We are now unloading a larze cargo of STOVE and CHESTNUT at our whari. E. CIAPPELL CG. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street Tplephonn. Lumbe fetf22d J. A. MORGAN & SON Coal and Lumber Central Wharf. Telephone 884. dec24d LUMBER The best to be had and at the right prices too. Remember we always carry a big line of Shingles. Call us up amrd let us tell you about our stock. H. F. & A. J. DAWLEY. novisd Free Burning Kinds and ieaigh ALIWAYS IN STOCK. A.'D. LATHROP. Office—cor. Market ard Shetuckes ~ Telephone 168-12. t29d CALAMITE COAL Well Seasonzd Wood C. H. HASKELL 439 'Phonss 402 87 Franklin St. 68 Thames S: mayéd Enamel INTEH!HP DECORATIONS WilL dry hard over nightémd croduce a bright, glossy enamel finish on furaiture, picture fr_mes, vases, or any article of int:crior use to which they may be appl.ed. Seventeen beauliful shades. GHAS. flSGfl]fl §0d, 45 and 41 Commerce Sir NORWICH, . Al g3, - = CONN, DR. C R. CHAMBERLAL Len:ar Surgeon Io charge of Dr, 8. L. wGeer's practyes durinyg his last iliness. 161 Main Street. Norw < oovitd ‘ch'.‘ Sk AHERN BROS., General Contraztors 63 BROADWAY ‘Phone 713. Jun3a Face nnd Sealp Mas- -sage, S pooing and Manicuring. Orders taken for combings. 5. T. 5. UNDERWOOD, 51 Broazdway. MRS. Tel. 553-4. FUNERAL ORDERS Artistically Arranged by HUNT * * The Florist, Tel. 130. Lafaystte Street. - Juniséa Special Price FOR 16 DAYS ONLY On Tailor-maie Suits S. LEON, Ladies’ Tai.or, ~ 278 Main Si. *Phope 712-6. jan21d ‘We are nheadquarters for NARRAGANSETT BANQUET ALE. Family trads supplied at 60c per doz C. B wfllht. 8 Cove St. Tel. oct3od RTEARE SR CcnaianofWillBeM‘lh Stuart’s Dyspepsia - Tatlets Cure Stomach Troub. . A Trial Package Sent Free. to give to the system, through the di- gestlve tract and the stomach, the body so that it may no longer suffer zmm dyspepsia or other stomach uble. We ‘will send you a quantity of: these tablets free, so that their power | to_cure may be proven to you. | Thousands upon thousands of people are using these tablets for the | aid and cure of every known stomach disease. Know what you put into your stomach, and use discretion in doing so. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets contain | fruit and vegetable essences, the pure | concentrated tincture of Hydrastis, Golden Seal, which tone up and strengthen the mucous lining o# the stomach, and increase the flow of gastric and other digestive juices; | Lactose (extracted from milk): Nux,! to strengthen the nerves controlling the action of the stomach and to cure | nervous dyspepsia; pure aseptic Pep- sin of the highest digestive power .and approved by the United States Phar- macopoeia. One of the ablest professors of the University of Michigan recently stated that this Pepsin was the only aseptic pepsin he had found that was abso- lutely pure—free from all animal im- purities; Bismuth, to absorb gases and prevent fermentation. Ihey are deliciously flavored with concentrated Jamaica Ginger — in itself a well known stomach tonic. Liquid medicines. lose their strength the longer they are kept, through evaporation, fermentation and chem- ical. changes, hence Stuart’s Dyspep- true and logical manner of preserving the ingredients given above in their fullest strength. If you really doubt the power of thése tablets, take this advertisement to a druggist and ask his opinion of the formula. It is due your stomach to give it the ingredients necessary to stop its trouble. It costs nothirg to try. You i know what you are taking, and the |fame of these tablets prove their value. All druesists sell them. Price 50 cents. Send us your name and ad- dress and we will send you a _trial package by mall free. Address F.:A. Stuart Co., 150 Stuart Building, Mar- shall, Mich. The Phxlldelphu and Reading Rail- road has reduced the hours of labor og; its locomotive and car shops from n to eight hours a day, owing, it is said, to a slowing up in business, Barns and Stables Silos and Tanks add value to farm property when built as permanent investments —weather- and time-proof. This is the i certain result if built of concrete madewith EDISON Portland Cemenl. because itis Uniformly 10% Finest Ground in the World For that reason less of it goes further than the same weight of other cement. Always the same in color, fineness and stwength. We know the cemient well and do not hesitate to recommend it strongly CRUTHERS & LILLICRIDGE Norwich, Conn. DON'T WORRY; It W Warry owv es Wrinkles. tli-health does gous kealth no od, and merely causes ‘wrinkles, that make you look oldez than you are. If you ere sick don't worry, .,hmn it to make ycurself wel To do this we repeat the words of .han-.n‘. of otner former sufferers from woman. ly ilis. similar to yours. when we say, lake Viburn-0. It ts a wonderful femals remedy. as you will admit if you trv & Direciions fue s use are printed s!x languages with every bottle. Prle- $125 at druggists FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO. 106 zelt 129th Street, New York mars. LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY e are confident oni Ples, Cake and read canuot be excslled. Give us a trial order ° movad 20 Fairmount Street. Belivered to Any Part of Norwich the Ale that is acknowledged to be tha best on the market — HANLEY'S PEERLESS. A telephone order wlll receive prompt attention. D. J. McCORMICK, 30 Franklin St sfuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are made necessary chemicals not only to digest food, but to enrich ‘the.fluids of* the sia Tablets are recognized as the only & bomght Orrine from ths = — In her hflgg N' '20 h! l’:t"‘l"’ the '“':',;; Bytore sctentifo ‘?,;,.B'f:,“"‘ sne read of lhe vond:fiul of the American Acad- | g On ke S T page. te { l.!oo let she read the rlb. l und all money pal lol Orrlnn ll It flfl.fl to effect a cure. After reading the Booklet she became convinced that Th was a remedy of unusual merit. Bhl decided to purchase it and cure her husband of dnmkanne Orrln- onred hlm Now she,lis a py home, Orelas Shelpon to. puronase Tho. home: elA the ollowlng letter from Walter K. Schi 4 Canal St, Grand Rapids, chh.: 'or a number of years we have be agents fGr Orrlneh During that time have had occasioh to be convinced, b yond a doubt, that Orrine is a repufab) ) remedy, worthy recommendation. Oue of the many cases coming to our attention, a mechanic earning $22.50 per week, who had not taken a full pay envelope home for over five years, was induced to try Orrine, a complete cu being the result, The man became wor more to his firm, receiving an advance In pay, and has purchased a home: The house stands there show~ ing the merits of Orrine. We cannot help but feel that we were most for- tunate when we secured the agency for this reliable Iiquor cure. Orrine is prepared in two forms. No. 1, 'a powder, absolutely tasteless and odorless, given _secretly in food or drink. Orrine No, 2, in pill form, for those who wish to cure themselve, Orrine costs only $1 a box. The gua antee Is in each box. He gave bodies in was a fellow emy of Arts’ and Sciences and of the American Assoclation for the Advance- _Science, and a member of the th Century club. -the Parz tbllowlng a slwck. Professor Dolbear gained romiw | 1n" the sclentific world by his investi- gations in wireless telegraphy. He is said to have s.l;tlclnwd fully twenty years in the inventivn of wireless telegraphy; his patent in 1886, which was not puthadbounu of finan- cial reasons, contained the principles of the wireless system of the ‘present day. By many he was, considered as the originator of the télephone: Ke anticipated by six years Herz's discov- i ery of the existence of electrical waw in space and by four years Roentgen's discovery of the X-ray. Amos Emerson Dolhear was born Nov, 10, 1837, at Norwich, Conm, in the house which was ‘the birthplace of Benedict Arnold. When two vears old | his father died and scon afterward he was taken by his mother to Newport, R. I, w e he studied in the public schools until his mof 's death, which occurred when he was 10 years old. Soon afterward a friend of his moth- er sent him to a farm in’ New Hamp- shire. Here he found employment in a shipyard and in a . printing office and managed to obtain a meager educa- tion in the district school, -where he evinced a keen interest in freehand drawing, geology and mi and began the study of astronomy, although without the assistance of teacher or extbook. ‘When he hbeunne ;1 lltg’a V;”::tt he was sent is guardian ory ler and en'wz%vd the employ of Allen & Thurber, remaining there until he be- came a journeyman. Schoolmaster Cowa Mob. At the age of 18 alluring accounts of the west led him to join the stream of emigrants and he traveled to Mis- souri, where he had acquaintances. Here he. was employed on a farm and latf-r became schoolmaster in Harts. well. Here he was the hero of an exc! incident. He had incurred the ill wi of some of the roughs by punishi two of his pupils for misdemeanors and was twice mobbed, his assailants attacking him, armed with n/ Crystal Palace in 1“8 a gold medl.L e was one of the examiners at the electrical exhibi- tion in Philadelphia and at the World’s fair. Professor Dolbear began to display his inventive,facylties at an eariy age. Even before he reached his “teens” he had wrestled with the illusion of per- petual motion, and with ingenious re— sults. He also devised at this age what is known as a “locus” telephone, with tin cans and string. While work- ing as a mechanic and during his col- lege course je patented several inven- tipns, but not until 1876, when he be- gan his experiments in telephony, did the world begin to hear much about bim as an inventor. In his first in vestigations he used a Helmholtz in- terrupter and electro-magnets. A few weeks later he eon:tructed a telephone with a magnet. With such an instrument ulung ana singing were reproduced. Famous Lawsuit. Thirty years_ago the most famous case in the United States was that brought against Prof. Alexander Gra- ham B®ll by Professor Dolbear, who claimed that the generally accepted in- ventor of the telephone had merely taken his ideas. The case was bitterly fought and went throught many courts and finally the, decision was handed down in favor of Bell. Many people who remember that suit felt at the time that the legal decision was correct but that Professor Dolbear had in reality been the original inventor, that he had lost becausde he was too much of a sc entist and too little a man of business. He had been first, they said, but he had not_properly protected his rights, The suit involved the use of the permanent magnet in the receiver, which Professor Dolbear always. insist- ed had been his invention alone and which he claimed Professor Bell had used without right and without author- ity. Professor Dolbear moreover main- tained that the process of transmitting speech could not be patented and that only the mechanical device can be giv- en a patent. The supreme court, how- ever, in 18823 granted the petition of the Bell company for an injunction against the Dolbear company for an infringement of patents. Before Professor Bell's invention of the telephone was ever heard of Pro- fessor Dolbear had put up instruments in two Tufts college buildings. In one he often invited friends to gather and then a cornet would be played in the other bujlding and the tunes“were as apparent as though the player had been in the room with his auditors. Transmission of sound without wires envelope) Building, Wll!hln D, Orrine is for sale In this city by N. D. Bevin & Son, 118 Main Bu-eet. efficacious remedy for drunkenne: they will not offer you a substit WASHINGTON WHIST Given 'by Helping Hands at Home of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Bogue. Mr, and Mrs. Willlam F. Bogue en- tertained the Helping Hands at a de- lightful Washington whist on Thmw day evening at their home on Broad street. The rooms had been attractive. ly decorated with red, white and blue | streamers and on the walls were American flags and various views of "Washington at different times in his career. The committee were charm- ingly dressed in Martha Washington costumes and Master Harlow Bogue and Miss Ruth Bogue made handsome pages. Eight tables of whist were played, Willlam H. Balcom taking first gentle- man’s_prize, silver mountell nutpicks and cracker, and Mrs. Wales W. Clapp | the first lady's prize, an olive dish. | The consolations went to Mrs. Henry | M, Coit and Mrs. E. R. Tuttle. Re- | freshments of ~Washington pie, cake and coffee were served by the hostess, The next meeéting of the Helping Hands will be held In two weeks at the home of Mrs. Signa Beebe on Lau- | rel Hill avenue. Litchfield.—Right inches of snow fell in Tuesday’s storm and as it was blow- cowing the ringleaders and driving the mob away. Not being permitted to en- list for Civil war service because of physical defects, he left Missouri and started back east with a pack .on his back and only a few dollars in his pocket. He walked for more than 400 miles, supporting himself by his skill with the violin and flute. He stopped -at Egypt, IlL, to earn money by paint- ing houses and from there took a ‘was accomplished by Professor Dolbear twenty years before Marconi succeeded in making the invention a commercial success. Years ago he even telephoned without wires for the edification of his friends. Modest and Retiring. His modesty and unwillingness to claim anything for himself which characterized his life outside the one exception of the suit which he brought on the telephone invention was illus- trated a few years ago when h¢ was invited to write an article on New England inventors of the nineteenth steamboat up the Omo and came by rail to Newport, R. L He soon obtained work at Taunton, Mass.,, but gave un the machinist’'s trade because of ill health. After get- ting another job ‘in the Springfield armory he broke down, and, determ- ining that his life work must be of a different character, decided to acquire and become & ing great guns Wednesday the roads are badly drifted.agein. a better education teacher. Quick Rise as Seientist. He entered the Ohio Wesleyan uni- versity at Delaware and showed such aptitude in physics and chemistry that mark which is - |century. Every name ever known to he was made.an assistant in thowe do- | S lentivis from the stx New Eugiand found on every 3 Y states was found in the article with bottle of the ing spent actually less than two years upon his course and having supported himsélf entirely by his own exertions. After graduation he went to Michi- gan university to studv chemistry, and in six weeks was appointed assistant instructor in that department. At the end of the vear he was placed at the head of a geological exploring expedi- tion around Lake Sunerior and on his return the degrees of A.M. and M.E. were conferred on him by the univer- the exception of that of Amos E. Dol- genuine Scott’s Emulsion. the standard Cod Liver Oil preparation of the world. Nothing equals it to build up E Professor Dolbear was not easily in- duced to teHl about his inventions. Even to friends he seldom spoke of what he hag done, and only to relatives and one or two intimate friends did he ever appear perturbed, because Bell or Mar- coni had received so much wealth and *f::me that he thought were rightfully 5. Professor Dolbear was made profes- and bowie knives. He met them with the ‘same weapons and succeeded in ity. N fo Decamo. asaIMtIRt: prblessor o e nemn O Diyeics Iy 1906 and | | the weak and ed bodies natural history in Kentucky university 5o WA IRl 1nc‘1Aungust 1869, 3% ofyoungand old. " Al Druggists and at the end of the year became pro- fessor of physics and chemistry in Bethany college. He was elected mayor of the city of Bethany, West Virginia, in 1871-72, and in 1874 accepted the chair of physics and astronomy at Tufts col- lege. Professor Dolbear early began to wrestle with “perpetual motion” ai wnh ingenious results, While work- g as a mechanic he patented several mvemnms. ‘but’ not until his ‘evreri- ments in telephony were made publie did the world hear much of him as an inventar. Notable Inventions. He began to study the convertibility of sound into electricity .in 1873 and in® 1876 perfécted and patented his magneto-electric telephone. In 1879 he made other discoveries in telephony and invented the static telephone. Some of his other valuable contri- butions to science are his magneto- electric telegraph; the electric gyro- scope, used to demonstrate,the rota- tion of the earth; tuning forks for the illustration of Lissajous’ curves; the opeidoscope for the illustration of vo- cal vibrations and a new system of incandescent lighting. He was the author of several stan- dard scientific works, A Handbook of Chemical Analysis, A Treatise on ments in Physics, Chemistry and Nat. ural History, The Telephone, and | Matter, Ether and Motion, Miss Alice J. Hood. They had six children, of whom three sons and two daughters are living. They are Ben- jamin L., a senior at Tufts college; Clinton E. and Samuel H., both at present in California; Miss Catherine and Miss Mary, both in-St. Louis. ALL DENTAL WORK can be done without pain by Dantists who KNOW HOW., We pr!do ourselves on KNOWING HOW. Good Dental work nowadays is only p;‘zzu‘ble by Dentists of experience. We" have been 20 years galning that. - ‘We have made PAINLESS DENTISTRY a specialty, and whether you need filling, crowning, extraction or bridgevrork, we can do It for you positively without pain, and at from one-ihird to one-half the prices prevailing at other offices for the same quality of work. IT WILL PAY you to investigate and consult us beforq going elsewhere. We make no charge whatever for examination and advice, PAINLESS EXTRACTION FREE when sets are ordered. All work guaranteed. KING DENTAL PARLORS, DR. F. C. JACKSON, Manager. Franklin Square, Norwich. 9 a. m. to 8 p. m.; Sundays 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. Bend 10c., name of pspet and this sd. for eur besutiful Bavings nk and Ohlld’s Sketoh- Book. Esch bank contains s Good Luck Ponay. SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St., N. Y, Hours: Telephone. (11 '»H n* i T , The rapidly increasing consumption of 'I.be fimous J) il hmm&mmdm h quality of the ingredients, the skill, science, nndnmd- to which Ifi-o popular beverages owe thzir excellence NEARLY A QUARTER MILLION -BARRELS SOLD IN 1909 _——m—m I I i f T %:;r:v';w T i LU"M?‘BEE‘” SHINGLES and '.ml iHouse Trim, Doors, Sash, ouldings, Etec. Cargoes of Lum m Coal recently CHAPPELL (0. . CENTRAL WHARF, \ Telephones: 23.24 or 145. mayTw e SPECIALY PURE ORANGE WINE 50¢ bettle. JACOB STEIN, 93 West Maia St Telephone 26-3. feb104 We Will Serve Another FIVE 0°CLOCK DINNER SUNDAY, FEB. 27th. Mlusic by the Orchestra. desired. Tables will be reser ved Telephone No. 704. WAUREGAN HOUSE, THE PARKER-DAVENPORT 08, Proprietors. TURBAN BRAIDS TURBAN FRAMES THE NEW Turban Pins and Barrettes, Hair Work of all kinda. Chirepedy, Shampooing and Scalp Massage, Facial Treatments, Manicuring. The Gibson Toilet Company, Suite 26, Central Bldg., Tham 55 Representativeof the GOOD- WIN CORSET. Approved by designers of faslion. Every woman afforded the Opportunity of a test fitting. teb12a Special Bargains on Bedding and Stoves e THIS WEEK. Don’t fail to come and get our prices. Schwartz Bros., COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS, 9-11 Water Street JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Made and Ruled te Order, 107 BROADWAY., Telephone 26k Large Shipments of Carriages and Harness arriving every day. ‘There is many new styles and novel. ties. Came in and look them over and talk them over. THE L. L. CHAPMAN (0., Bath Street. feh22daw Rose Bowling .A,lleys; LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucket Street. 4. 3. C. STONE. Prep octisd 3. F. CONANT. 11 Fraskilm Streer. Whitestong 5c and the J. ¥, C. u

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