Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 23, 1910, Page 15

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SANDS HAS NARROW ESCAPE. | Young American With Estrada’s Army Tells of Experiences. Clifford Sands, a former Seattle high school youth, and erstwhile brigadier- general in Estrada’s army, told some of his experiences in the insurrection upon his arrival in Seattle on a visit with relatives Tuesday night. Young Sands escaped being shot hy a firing squadron of the Madriz -rmg by the chance aid of Dr. Clarence Burgheim of Houston, Tex., who refused to give medical attention to the Madriz forces unless Sands was paroled. “I was captured at Prinzapul the coast, June 18th, two days Blakeslee for Lieptenmant Governor. The most interesting “umor con- cerning the second place on the ticket is that n is being sought by Senator Denis A. Blakeslee of New Haven, a well-known railroad contractor, and a man whose road connections are said to be so close as to be a serious handicap in the event of his being a State candidate. This wil be a bad year for candidates with railroad af- fillations, and it is claimed that this would not be the only weight Mr. Blakeslee would be obliged to carry. His connection with the investigation of New Haven county affairs is not regarded with favor, Trumbull in the New York Sunday Herald yesterday votes in the largest city of the state. The chief cause of complaint against him in this matter seems to be that he accepted the chairmanship of the committee and passed judgment on men with whom he had been asso- ciated in business and politics. It is, therefore, apparent that the disposi- tion is to draw the lines pretty fine this year, and to insist on a_ hight standard of efficiency as a analifica- tion for public office. We shall see how this idea works out.— New Britain Herald. Wandering Pairs. The Crippen murder and the Porter Charlton uxoricide it follows so imme- e St Miss Madlyn Marshall and Black h been engaged port ac ave to sup garry"Keuy in his new play, “Deacon Marie Tempest is b be seen this winter in a drama of low life in Paris. It is called “A Thief in the Night” and is an adaptation from *“Le Costand des Epinettes.” i 5 ago in this country and in Englan this remarkable effort strikes into an entirely nntrod field. It deals with the daily life typify the whole, carrying her through many and varied experiences — and .concluding with her wonderful discovery, the dis— covery that is the moral of the drama. Hall Caine’s new four-act drama, “The Bishop's Son,” is to be produced in London on August 15. It deals with a man who has sinned, but who works out his own salvation. on Both manifested a displeasure with it and said that the nomination would cost the diately match each other closely. mern are Americans, married to women with careers. Both were wandering pairs with no settled life. In each case the two couples were coming and go- i Th party a tremendous bundle of tain - e rives e theatrical people are wondering if George Ade is planning to enter- the Sultan of Sulu when he ar- in this country. They helped The play will call for a very large cast and an exceedingly elaborate scenic’ equipment. Competent judges who have examined the manuscript predict that “Everywoman” will create I had made an attempt to blow up lhe Nicaraguan gunboat Venus,” said Sands. “I was charged with being a dynamiter and & spy. Of course the trial was a farce and I was sen- GENUINE must bear signature( ing, amusing themselves, no gt & DIRE DISTRESS dorhestic relations {o the life about s Ul uee a sensation. fenced ‘to be shot, but Dr. Burg ; them. In both cases strife had been N ne of y leim interfered and I was paroled.’ heard by neighbors, quarrels and th:d;ig?eafi‘:g{i:is o8 ‘T;'e °D,_,"" The Dramatic Mirror has been hold- | Sands tried to dynamite the gunboa? M brawls. The wites in both cases were Princess’ in New York last season, is ing a sort of guessing contest over the Venus by paddling out to her in a it Is Near at-Hand to Hundreds of | women .who had wandered as they| g,,0"5 her vacation by acting in a|MOst often played ~dramas in this| Canoe as she lay off Blueflelds bluff. pleased,-and shared in the miovinz | [ W8 T WO SRe R s Lon- | country, but recently printed some | They saw Norwich Readens. and of the | figures relative to.the earning powers of them. Tt states that “Rip Van ‘Winkle” is the only play credited with having earned $5,000,000, and Jeffer: son is said to have acted it 5,000 times. It was done for three years at the Boston theater to full houses every show . the: music -hall gayer world. ” Step by, stép both husbands ‘came 0 | oo Dressler has closed her New murder. The course is clear. These New | ill-fated .pairs were leading a life that | York rTun in hT"“e "hNG”'-"“" Ry irritates, sours the temper, brings fits | that she can have a thrag weeks’ v =4 - e cation. At the end of that time she and outbursts of anger and draws near | AHON. (AL Ihe end oF UL, e She TUBERCULOSIS TREATMENT . vs. TUBERCULOSIS CURE There is a vast difference houue ’ treatment and a CURE, Sanatorium, don. caped without a amtch ‘nnd swam ashore.” With seven men Sands was sent | two days afterwands to Prinzapulen, a town below Bluefields. The gun- 'bons Venus and Jacinto came down, shelled the town, Don’t neglect an aching back. Backache is the kidney's cry for help. « ~. gl 4 s s tetic and CllmAl(n Treatment are bon-fic Neglect hurrying to their ald to violence. These wandering, W e night. . “The Old Homestead” is said . - landed 150 marines | ;n"g ‘way " They ‘‘bolster Y Means that urinary troubles follow | tached lives were u;mun& iously pre t6 have cleaned up $4,500.000, “Char- | 21 e.p_}_ured“ nndst and two of his | times give u,. consumptive ti .m,,...;,, i i i ay fo . " “The men.” 2 v 808, et R et uch pals the last| Maude Adams went abroad last le's Aunt> SRES0000; "l‘she Private | ne said, ey took me out and mede | faatly” bess Siemberioe, sog d-'oon"n?fi Dire distress, diabetes, Bright's dis- | T, (dsome tragedy does not come, | Wock and is said to_be headed for | Secretary.’ $7 an wee V=| me waich them shoot two men they | headway again, developing more rapidl ease. But there are laws of human life that | London to consult J. W. Barrie about | ender.” 3$300,000. had captured, It was to impress me | Nature herself tries to heal. but the aix: Profit by a Norwich citizen's ex- | cannot be set at naught. The wodded |2 new play. This looks as if the|for at least coming fate. They blind- | toe 85T develop, fanter the IIN‘:I‘::.W“ ro Y 2 Conpies awho detach themselves from | “Chantecler” plan might wisely have [ Honevmoon™ ‘for $350,000 folded them, stood a flle of soldiers | Bestruction of the lungs. ooy perience. family, friends, the domestic environ- | been dropped. for $400.000. Gobdness alone Knows| o' s few paces, and shot them aructio: what “Way Down East” has earned for ¥, when seeking a cure. In the public min also that seems to be the one method, Ye Mrs. William H. Clark, 112 Chestnut Consumptives first lhlnk of llnltofl% sobering course | of life are living unnatural days which. | and the ordinary . e - Do Miss Christie MacDonald sailed for | “Joe” Grismer and Hur” for Street. Norwich, Conn, says: “I can 3 P Stands by His Opini peopl w . i - Pi _lin the end, kill most joys, even if | Eurone Wednesday on board the Lu- | Klaw & Erlanger, to say nothing of y His Opinions how ‘many le do you know who have vouch for Doan’s Kidney Pills as be- [ the end, Wil most N P Eiladelphia ania. She will visit England and | such minor hits as “Florodora,” “The| Dr. Wiley of the department of ag- |been permancntly cured by Ssnatorium ing a remedy that acts as represented. | 5 = | and return when her new | MedrryThWIE;;wl.'Mjn‘ne Musi'ltithn!l'e‘r" riculture refuses to bow to the opin- |LTeatment’ it g e A u: hem from N. D. Sevin & B s S AEVahd managers, Werba & Luescher, have and “The Little Minister.” e profits | jons of his superiors as to the use of 1) I procured t B of all these would take seven figures | Benzoate of soda as a food preserva- | ho pnrsicibas and consumptives thom | her new play ready. by physicians and Son's _drug store, and their us: A Live Club. apicce to give Sive. Secraiary S . 2 Iz 3 % s 3 etary Wilson is disposed to |selves, but when the makers of FEckman's brought me more relief from a paln 4 T:“"\*‘,f“sfi 3.:’0“)’ E‘"'f},‘]‘:"“‘"}:f’;““nff::_‘ Pauline Chase ;has informed Charies — —_— toleration, but pending the decision | Alterative can produce irrefutable testi- any other medicine I had previously | pu® S0€ 0 TUAE "ot Liberty lake on | Graham White. the English aeronaut,| Judge A. Heaton Robertson denies | VWiley refuses to abate his opposition. | minGed consumpiives will refuse to listen used. For years I was subject to at- lina 80th. To this sathering former (o take her in an aeroplane from | that he threatened indefinite postpone- | “The “e“filflgmeflg;‘ during the 1last (o the new call of health and happiness 1t tired ang yresidents of New England’ in all I. 'ts | Y ondon to Southampton, there to meet ment of the new depot in New Haven Y®ar.w sa r. Wiley recently, “have |that is made by Eckman's Alterative, tacks of backache and I fe ! s 2 camship' which wiil bring her to [ if asitation for a public sérivice com- accentuated my opinion as to the |: These cured people were skeptical. i “been Everyone is. But If your present treat- of the nortliwest ha mission seemed likely to succeed. He | harmful character of benzoate of so- weighed down awitli languor and de-10f the nortifwest na e York 3 @ y in thi $ - ment is not curing you, is it effective? pression, often being unfitted for work. [ o NEEe 78 TAUCH RS T is ; € says he may have intimated in private ;’: 2 Hh‘f“d' vf“"‘a"““"d I expect | RO The disease must be eradicated en- Doan's Kidney Pills proved to be just|that a club house will be erected next Leslie will be the American |conversation, not in an interview, that | (0 See that view sustained by the | ijrely, . d and I feel grata. | vear—“so that we can entertain vis- who will join the English railroads could not undertake great | °';;’“ courts, as the evidence that | Find out what Eckman's Alterative may the remedy I required an L e s when Charles Frohman pro | improvement works while the general | N2s been submitted recently in Indiana |do for you. We refer you to clergymen, ful, indeed, for the bement I derived | (078 from, ew CnEErt O Mam D. | Guces “Our Miss Gibbs." This will | government kept up its ‘policy of an— | 285 points that way." Al Tight, we D e e s R PR " Xhves: T TS s CIEY) . SEYE . How i - * A5 like to see a man stand by his opin- ose word could not be bought for any ficm their use. Finley, secretary and one of the found- | follow ‘the dbuf\r prethmna{\ widsgn ',2 novance and restraint. The correc- ions: but it is well enough to give the mone v B . | ors » on.—Springfield | “The Arcadians” a e Knickerbock- | tion appears to apply only to the defi- 2 4 - 8 Pokoman's Alterative has cured many T Sl 20 oy g 'gcsp:f;llci\‘:f organization—Springfield | .. 4 ater, New York, and Is written | niteness of the complaint attributed | 0Urts a chance.—Eridgeport Standard. | cases of tubercuiosis that Sanatoris h Foster-Milburn C:-' f“lfls“;’vsl:etw York, 2 | by the same authors. fo him rather than to jts spirit. Does| _— pronounced sbeolutely dncurable. sole agents for the United States. Reboversd | ———— it mean that the corporations most his vear Siberia will export 61,250 5 Remember the name—Doan's— 80| (1 . on “ootnte gusessed valua- | _Arthur Shattuck, the young Ameri- | affected by the change of state policy | tons of buiter, against 63,000 tons in R B T LR take Hio other. tion was eut down over $5.000,000 by | can pianist, whose seriousness of pur- |toward them, indicated by the ap-|1908, Germany, England and Den- | in Norwich by Lee & Osgood Co:, asd o e o 7508 "but the loss haw | Pose and splendid artistry has won | pointment of a state utilities commis- | mark are the best customers. other Druggists. It can also be ob- ey, L o Tt rieily &R pecowerd S| the commedation of Buropean critics, | Sion, accept the change as so proba- tained at. or procured by your local - ez . gt g . q: . y i = . r o ure: “ls Life Worth Saving?” present valution stands at $22 sailed for Iceland from "Copenhagen |ble that they do not intend.to oppose Cases. or write for Bvidence to (he % > XS i o9 K £ he fi July 6. He has been engaged to give | it openly, but will work only for such Eckm: Lab. 1 Mrs. Mollie McRaney, Prentiss, Miss., t $23,523,000 bfore the fire, | A 3 & = > Zckman oratory, Phila., Pa. ‘rites that she had a severe case of | 50 having been added the es of concerts in the half dozen |a modified form of oversight and reg e M Sialha troatie. wnp ot | yesr, ha willy this sadition ities of that island, which are known | ulation as will least cause the em- ‘f‘elu:e!l;o&lneg of Foley's Kidney Remiedy | Yoes a 60 per cent. reduction in the | among the most cultured communities barrassr;wm to.- improvement ‘:ng A 5~ 23 collected ear. | of Europe. practica operation against - which ¢ cured her sound and well. She closes | rate from the $23 collected last year. o ST Judge Robertson makes objection? Or | STEi her letter by saying: “T heartily rec- does it mean simply that Judge Rob- ommend Foley's Kidney Remedy to| In 27 vears the Kimberley diamond| -“The Wife Tamers” is the title of . AL . Ton any sufferer of kidney disease. It sav- | mines yielded $420.000, worth of | Oliver Herfopd's new musical comedy | fho omiland a s way bt e noot ed my life.” Lee & Osgood Co. diamonds based upon Julius Horst and Alexan-|genera] terms?—Waterbury American. der Engle’s merry German farce call- & “Glueck bei Frauen.” In order to please their wives, two young hus- | bands exchange ‘“pasts”—the comic consequences of a most engaging sort. The piece will be among the first pro- duced this autumn. ed Early Rising Fallacy. On the popular notion that summer is the time for early rising has been founded the National Daylight Asso- ciation with the object of setting the That leaky r>of of yours will cause you no end of trouble if not attended WILLIAMS, JR., General A clocks ahead an hour for the summer |10 @t once. The same holds true of |y g Ast. | - > months. There seems to be an im- x H. C. LONG, Special Agt. The Educator Shoe JUST ARRIVED of the Few Fialas company b - the | Pression that people will be happier if | the Futters and leaders on your house.| ~ F. H. KENYON, Special gt Broadway theater, is revealed for the | (1Y can begin work before the day ; jun25S Hartford, Conn. Let's the child's foot grow as it should. Great Spanish Peanut By e other o h family |8cts hot. A fallzcy. These sum-{|And RIGHT NOW is the time to have is g 5% st s S pnoche mer mornings were made for sleep- 2 of five, ranging in years from 17]; . r Room for ail five toes. downward. This very considerable do- | & IS really harder to get up |t done. Delivered to Any Part of Norwich P. CUMMINGS, mestic accretion has not been formed | "Nohody wants to go to bed early on Let us tell you the cost. The price | the Ale that is acknowiedged to be the OTTO FERRY, by the gradual process of custom, but |, hot nizht, By 10 or 11 oclock it 7 X > best on the marke: — HANLEY'S oval Gold Stamps. 52 Central Ave. No. 336 Franklin Street. t h the forms of legal adoptjon, | g begi 3 r i ise you Roval D | Miss Tewis having assumed the task | ant) an the n"p‘:‘g{‘h_lu tEviég:‘z{(’”ami will agreeably surprise you. PEERLESS. A telephone order will rearing the offspring of her brother, receive promp: attention. thing for a sensible person to do is to = % o e T » died in California just after Rhis | it gutside then for an hour or so if D. J. McCORMICK, 30 Franklin St Custom Grlndln I)Eh TIST1 had expired Miss Lewfs com- | possible to get cooled off. The early may17TThE = DR J. JONES | Frnin bk e hierent | e ot e e Lo | Andrew J, Whole c much for sleeping. e most re- TUEVSADNA';:.;‘I’.EF\?;:AO‘S . E. - E mr‘uxm;nar:‘:;xr‘\rtzm:;(nh ';_Y;\t;lre'fi{;i;?!s': freslhu‘g' sleen comes in the cool of » y’ NEV;MA.RK!T HOTEL, at 4 - T er 2 - 4 st, early morning.—Kansas City Star. 15 Boswell Ave. A0 S T et soas | SIS B BNaRen BHIMRRY - | o e e e b e, e 12 Ferry Strest. Fioet; men it Leese, and Clgues Telephone. decl4d ' 'Phone. Take elevator. | nurse, and Miss Lewis is quite proud | from about 1683. Telephone 20. apres |order. John Tuckle, Prop. Tel Why Physicians Recommend Castoria It is used by physicians with results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the result of three facts: First—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: Second—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food: Third—It is an agreeable and ASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authonties. perfect substitute for Castor Oil. It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, however, is zo expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. Teo our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to the information.—Hall's Journal of Heallk. Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chica- Dr. L. O. Morgan, of 80. Amboy, go, 111, says : “I have prescribed N.J.says: I prescribe your Casto- your Castoria often for infants ria every day for children who are during my practice and find it suffering from constipation, with very satisfactory.” betger effect than I receive from Dr. William Belmont, of Cleve. 20 Other combination of drugs.” land, Ohio, says : * Your Castoria stands first in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place.” The Kind You Have .Always Bought and which Dr. W. L. Leister, of Rogers, Ark., says : ““ As a practicing phy- sician I use Castoria and like it very much.” .. Dr. W. T. Seeley, of Amity, N. Y., says : ‘I have used your Cas- toria for several pears iz my practice and have found it a safe and ~eliable remedy.” Or. Raymond M. Evarts, of Santa Ynez, Cal.,, says : ‘““After using Dr. W. F. Wallace, of Bradford, H. H., says: “I use your Castoria in my practice. and in my family.” has been in use forover 30 Or. Wm, I McCann or Omahs, Neb., says : ‘‘ Asthe father of thir- teen children I certainly know something about your great medi- cine and aside from my own family experience, I have, in my years of practice, found Castoria a popular and efficient remedy in almost “.years, has borne the signa- ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under Dr. H. J. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: “I have used your Casto- ria and found it an excellent remedy in my household and priv- ate practice for many years. The his. personal supervision your Castoria for children for years every home.” Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, formula is excellent.” o v : it annoys me greatly to have an Mich., says : I prescribe your Cas- . since its 'infancy. Aliow ignorant druggist substitute some- _ Dr. Howard James, of New York, toria extensively as I have never Dr, Wm. L. Bosserman, of Buf- thing else, especially to the pa- ~City,says: “It is with great pleas- found anything to equal it for chil- falo, N, Y., says: “I am pleased to LHII ure that I desire to testify to the medicinal virtue of your Castoria. I have used it with marked benefit in the case of my own daughter, and have obtained excellent resul 8 from its administration to oth r chfldminmypuofiee, Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadel- phia, Pa., says : ‘“‘The name that your Castoria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and believe it an excellent remedy.” dren’s troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the fleld, but I always see that my patients get Fletcher’s.” Dr. Channing H. Cook, of Saint Louis, Mo., says: “I have used your Castoria for several years past in my own family and have always found it thoroughly efficient and never objected to by children, which is a gpeat consideration in view of the fact that most medi- cines of this character are obmox- ious and therefore difficult of ad- ministration. As a laxative I consider it the peer of anything that I ever prescribed.” DILN no one to deceive you in this. tations and Just-as-good” tient’s disadvantage, as in this case. I enclose herewith the wrapper of the imitation.” Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says : ‘‘ Physicians generally do not prescribe proprietary prepa- rations, but in the case of Castoria my experience, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an exception. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice be- cause I have found it to be a thor- oughly reliable remedy for chil- dren’s complaints. Any physician who has raised a family, as I have, will join me in heartiest recom- mendation of Castoria.” speak a good word for your Casto- ria. I think so highly of it that I not only recommend it to others, but have used it in my own family.” All Counterfeits, Imi- NAmcCOTIC. B 5 6 Recge of Ol Tir SAMUZLEITCRIR - Seed~ 3 Dr. F. H. Kyle, of St. Paul, Minn., says : “It affords me plea- sure to add my name to the long list of those who have used and now endorse your Castoria. The fact of the ingredients being known through the printing of the formula on the wrapper is one good and sufficlent reason for the: recom- mendation of any physician. I know of its good qualities and re- commend it cheerfully.” ASK YOUR ‘PHYSICIAN are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and *Children—E xperience against Experiment. Apetfect Remedy for Cons | Hon, Sour Stomach, Durrt:'; Worms ions, Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Sm of GENUINE CASTORIA Bears the Signature of NEW YORK.

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