Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 28, 1910, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Yy NORWICH AROUSED MARVELOUS VICTORY OVER DISEASE sychopathic Doctors Aston- ish the Multitude Their public healing in T. A. B. hail the last two weeks proved and con- vinced thoueands that all manners of diseases can be controlled without drugs or the surgeon's knife. The Demonstration Certainly Surpass- ed Anything Ever Attempted Be- fore the Public Eye, Their Private Offices at Martin House, 16 Broadway, Norwich, Will Be Open for Some Time — Con- sultations Free from 9 A. M. te 8 P. M. Daily Until Nov. 15. usands who witnessed these demonstrations wers con- marvelone vinced by what they saw that the re- sulte oitained by this wonderful sys- tem of healing diseases without the use of dangerous poisomous medicines were y astonishing. sver before in the history of med- feal p ca has anyone been able to arouse more enthusiasm in a skeptical 7 the last two weeks in A. F at Dr. Blumer's demon- se wh vitnessed and received treatment were thoroughly convinced | that the benefit derived by most ever: 1 treatme vidual fortunate enough to receive was most remarkable and wa sthing less than ¥ ase treatad and the results ob- tained were truly astonishing. As a result of this convincing proof real efflcacy of naturopathic treat- ment great numbers are flocking to| the Psychopathic Doctors’ office in the | Sertin House, 16 Broadway, where | they have more time to enter into de- | tails of difficuit cases. miraculous. of Here every case is carefully exam- | fned, and if a cure is possible you are @s sure of it ss you are of the sun rising. If, however, you are beyond ralof, amount of money would in- e these doctors te accept your case. emains undisputed: The gift of healing is which but tow possess, + the gift of oratory and mus ust remain in i ote T'he following most remarkable cases were treated in the hall: A lady who had been suffering from tory rheumatism for some was helped onto the platform In less than five minutes she was re- evad of all pain and left rejoicing. Another lady, suffering from spinal disease, was assisted to the platform. In & few m ® she was so relieved | that she fairly cried with J A man reduced to a state of com- | piete halplessness from pa was | given a few minutes’ | and surprised the audience by off the platform unassisted | A man 78 years old had all the stiff- | well as all his rheu lieved in a few minutes A gentleman who had been deaf for ten vears had his hearing restored in five minutes A man who suffered four neuraigia was relieved of a moment of time. A young lady relleved from a severs che abant 2¢ feet away from th and the voung lady standing at in the audience was in minutes relleved to the greatest astonishment of all and discovered all Ler pain gone A gentleman who had been deaf for ght vears had his hearing restored in 10 minutes A lady who suffered four yaars from nenralgls was relisved of all pain in = moment of time. A gentleman who was a sufferer of vears from all pain in rheumatism, who was unable to walk vithout & cane, and told Dr. Blumer 1t he would not venture to take a stap withott his cane. was after a five- minutes’ treatment abMe, not only to discard his came, but walk across the platform and around the hall without the cane to the greatest astonishment | £ the public | A young boy who was able to stand or walk for about five vears not only was made to stand. but began running around < the platform and around the hall with such lity that | it escited the audience. Now le your oppertunity of testing ir emiire satisfaction the most ough =and successful svstem of healing disease without dange: edicines known to the world. It m what your dis s or your 4 ’ | ey have proved hefore the ot vusands that there is scarcely a dis- eage ihai cannot be permanently con- trolled. A great ray of hop: has pene- teted the hearts of the aficted who ‘earned that the Pevchopathle Doctors s ve diseases such as catarrh monary complaints, liver and kid- | ey troubias, parairsis and all diseases Wf the nervous s st=m tumors and zoitres 19ved without the knife, or the loes of a drop of blood. all stemach disturbances. spinal and cerebral d srders female weakneas of ail descriy tlons, rheumatism in all its forms, | sueh as rheumatie gout, inflammatory rheumatiom, swzlling and inflamma tion of the joints, deafness and all dis- mases of the ear and eve. Nn matter ~hat the trouble may be, there is hope =0 long as the Psychopathic Specialistd ars in Norwich Whila their free healing in the hall has heen discontinued, hundreds of people come from far and near to be reated at their private office in the rtin__tlouse. 16 Broadway. Their ook, “The Revolution In Medical Prac by Dr. Blumer, Is on sale at G . Davie' book store, 35 Brondway. al o regular price: cloth 30 cents, paper sover 15 ceiits QUALITY tn work anould aw be considsred, especially when it costs no more than the loferfor kind Skilled men ars emploved by us. Our prices tell the whole story | Roseweli, | residence parks. SHORT CALENDAR HERE TODAY Cases to be Assigned for Trial at November Session Be- fore Judge Case—Arguments at New London Today will Close September Term. “The short calendar session of the su- perior court for the November term will be held here today at 10 o'clock, with Judge Case presiding. Cases will be assigned for trial, and it is under- stood there are many on the trial list. The ion opens mext Tuesday, for which a jury will be drawn. At New London on Thursday Ernest Pearson was given a divorce from Iva E Pearson, on_the ground of adultery nmitted in New Bedford at va times. The plaintiff re ham, aund they were married September 16, 1907 was given the custody of tha child A The superior court sat in New Len- don Wednesday night unt o'clock to ames Wilkinson & finish the case of J Co. v des in Wind- | . Alfred Mitchell, the suit for bal- | | ance claimed to be due on an electric- al contract. The testimony was fin- | ished, the arguments heard and Judge | Burpee took the papers. The case heard Thursday was that of Charlemagne Holmes, administrator, and others vs. Mary B. Brooks and others, a suit based on the claim that Mary Brockway of Hadlyme. o made a will 12 years ago leaving an | amount approximately $3,000 to Mary Brooks and husband, of making a will. was incapable | i Brown & Perkins appeared for the | defendants and Attorney the plaintiffs. The testimony in the case was com- pleted on Thursday and the arguments are to be made today, after which the court will adjourn wifhout date, it be- ing the end of the September term. Carlson for ACADEMY FUND GIFTS LESS THAN $2,000. Sum Has Besn Raised by Subscrip- tions Sent to The Bulletin. No better use can be made of your money put aside for philanthropic work than by contributing to The Bulletin's ¥Free Academy building fund, which is now less than $2,000, the exact amount being $1,965. Contributions need not be in the thousands to be eptable, as none will be turned asic It is something all can participate in. The contributions received ar Contributions. Morning Bulletin. . Norwich Charles H. and Lucius Brown Henry Parker Ulmer Leather Co Mrs, Elizabeth Randall D! P. Brewer. A atefal Mother. Mrs. Harriet B. Camp H. F. Dawley Grosvenor I - William C. 1 e Edward C New York Mrs. Geo Greenman..... The Mis Cudworth zonard V R. P. S Mrs . Norwich Town friend... DAMES AND DAUGHTERS. of Chicago | 000 cartoons, fn m is the chief Hammer Mrs. D. Harry has a collection of 2 all of which Uncle character. Not only is Mrs. B. R. Ruffun of New Mexico, a regularly ordalned deputy game warden, but she gets right after and arrests the fel- fows who shoot birds out of season A very proud old lady resides at Deerfield, Wis. Senator Kuute Nelson of Minnesota, and she recently celebrated her ninety- fourth birthday anniversa Nelson and her husband came from Norway to Chicago in 1840. Mrs. S, the College Equal Suffrage club of Spokane, Wash., bas erranged to have Oct. 4 set aside as woman's day at the Spokane international fair. The pro- gramme on that day will be devoted exclusively to the interests of women. Florence Shepard, manufac- B gown | turer, and now rated among the lead- ing business women of the Hub, Is a rare type of business woman who ven tured into Boston at an early age and with no other assets but good health | and a pair of willlng hands started out by making hats for $3 per week in a Boston millinery store. Sporting Notes. Wrestler Gotch cleaned up $50.000 the past season. Henry St. Yves, the French Mara- thon runner, will turn aviator. An Irish polo team will come over to this country in September and play in eastern tournaments. George (“Candy”) Lachance, the old Boston first baseman, is umpiring in the Connecticut league. Paterson, N. J., is the only city in the country with a population of over 100,000 which is not represented by a league baseball teaw. It is said that the reasom Catcher Archer of the Chicago Cubs can throw 80 speedily and accurately frem a erouch is that a scar on the arm from an old burn has affected the muscles in such a way that he gets power and control impossible for other catcher: Navigating the Air. A steamship runs aground and an airship runs atree, but the net result fs much the same.—New York World The aeroplane wrecks are gefting ak most as common as train wrecks and { they do not seem to be half as danger ous.—Milwaukee Sentinel The fact that Curtiss dropped oranges on yachts from an aeroplane seems (o presage the time when these Ml high ex s machines will be ak plosive lemons to delphia Inquirer. Before you begin (o criticise ion meets for not panning ont as per prom ises please kindly remember how many races for the America’s cup have been boring and inconclusive drifting matches. Both aviation and vachting depend on the wind, and the wind is mighty unsartin.—Chicago Post. battles! Phila Tales of Cities. The Chinese port of Fuchau, a popul of about u million, #lmost no systew of wuniclpual sewer age or disposal of gurl In the aguarium in Batlery. psrk, New York, there are 102 tsuks for the accowwodation of fsh. The Luilding was formerly used as the luudiug place for lramigrants Moutreal 18 expauding in beautiful It looks odd to see with tion STETSON & YOUNG. may2ia WHEN vou want o put voor husi- ness befnre the public there ix no me Alum beiter than through the advartis “ax oolumns of The Bullatin, tine bank buildings in residential local- ities instead of bumched in busigess cealers. The lower town is neither well build nor cleanly, but new Mon treal Is majestic in Ns dignity and masaiveneg~ has | | | mittee to draw FIRE DOG KILLED BY AUTOMOBILE. Teddy, Owned by John Blackburn, Struck in Laurel Hill Avenue Thurs- day Morning. Teddy, the four y belonging to John B ical company killed on Thursday tomobile which cs A. M. Brown to tl avenue. The dog Chemical company house of H. H. Richmond. Almost in front of the house the auto came upon the animal without its knowledge and killed it instantly. Teddy was a favor- itz at the station, as is also the older dog, Nell - old coach dog iurn of Chem- 1, was struck and morning by the au- ied Deputy Chief > fire in Laurel Hill had gone with the to the fire in the To Draft Resolutions. A committee consist Samuel Harty of Berkeley divinity school, Archdeacon J. Eldred Brown of Norwich and Rev. Isaac Peck of Brooklyn, have been named as a com- up a minws in behalf ng of Rev. Dr. | of the Episcopal church at BrooKlyn on the death of Rev. S. F. Jarvis. At the funeral services Thursday, Rev. Isaac Peck read the opening sentences, Archdeacon Brown read the lesson, Dr. Harriman the creed, and Dr. Hart the prayer. Three hymns which the sang were Rock of The Is O'er and Jesus Lives. An unt of the funeral appears else- where. Smell and Taste. The sense of smell is most nearly al- lied to that of taste. Hearing and seeing depend upon nerve responses to vibrations in the air and in the | ether. In order to taste a substance | it has to be wholly. or partislly dis- R | She is the mother of E. Commerford, president of | solved; in order to smell a substance it must encounter the olfactory organs as a vapor, an emanation. a cloud of particles arising from odoriferous mat- ter. Children C‘ry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA R;;a;*esenting one of the Largest Fur Manufacturers in the United States we can szll FUR COATS at extremely low prices. We have a large stock on exhibition. Marmot Lined, Russian Pony, Muskrat Lined, Russian Calf- ekin, Mink Lined, Galloway Cow, Jap- anese M , Morrocan Lamb. THE L. L. CHAPMAN C0., Norwich, Conn. Furniture Facts With a few remarks regarding the policy ol our concern. FINE FURNITURE An incoming season never brought us so much splendid furniture as our present stock We ing our standard of quality ever since this store opened, until we can now truthfully say. the displays. have gradually been r: | best things from the furniture world for the money may be found here. HONEST FURNITURE is what we try to sell and do sell. Furniture that will wear and hold to- gether, at the lowest prices that such things can be sold for. That's your kind and you will see as much of it in no other store as we are showing. Handsome Styles, Highest Qualities and Reasonable Prices are the foundation .on which this bus- iness is building. DO YOU KNOW your money will go twice as far here as any furniture store in town? Don’t take this state- ment for granted. Inspect our stock and note our prices. It will not take long and we might save you money. We solicit your inspection of our stock. Schwartz Bros, HOME FURNISHERS, Telephone. 9-11 Water Strect octuad just imported a very large | stock of Artificial Eyes t retail for $400 each. We shall fit them and sel them to our customers at whol NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1910 AT THE AUDITORIUM. Vaudeville and Motion Pictures. Big houses at the Auditorium on Thursday showed their approval of the bill of vaudeville offered in the mid- week change, which presents three new acts for the rest of the week, whil> the Kuma family of Japanese mystery workers and equilibrists hold over for the whole week. These three people show some especially neat and clever work which is the signal for bursts of applause. In a musical sketch entitled A Sym- phony at Home the Lamberti Trio, which includes a_cute little child per- former, gives a pleasing number which includes solos by the child Lamberti, violin and ‘cello numbers by her fa- ther and mother. Trainor & Wixon are a good monologue and singing team with a line of Broadway jokes. An acrobatic and horizontal bar act by McNaught & Lantry introduces some comedy features to the enjoyment of the house, and the cameragraph pic- in- tures are of interesting subjects f'ludmg the star film Trapped by W' ess. Safe at Plainfield Blown. The safe in the general store of J. P. Kingsley & Sons of Plainfield, some time after midnight Wednesday night, was blown open with nitro glycerine and a number of warranty Geeds, in- surance papers, about $50 in mouey, al} the account books and other papers taken. The safe and a large part of the interior of the store was wrecked. ‘There is no clue. The store, which is 2 general one, has been entered number of times within recent yes Banish Catarrh* Breathe Hyomei for Twa Minutes, and Stuffed-Up Head Will Vanish If you want to get relief from ca- tarrh, cold in the head or from an wrritating cough in the shc t time breathe HYOMEI (pronounce it High- o-me). It will clean out your head in two minutes and allow you to breathe freely, awake or asleep. HYOMEI will cure a cold in one day, it will relieve you of disgusting nuffles, hawking, spitting and offen- sive breath in a wee HYOMEI made chiefly from eu- calyptu a soothing, healin killing antis: eucalyptus fc erz catarrh, tion_were ne . that comes fr s of inland Au asthma and c er known to e nsump- t. HYOMEI is pleasant and easy to breathe. Just pour a few drops into the hard rubber pocket inhaler. breathe it, and cure is almost cer A complete Hyomei outfit, including inhaler and one bottle of HYOM costs only $1.00 at druggists every where and at The Lee & Osgood Co. If you already own an inhaler, remem- bar that you can get an extra bottle of HYOMEI for only 50 cents. I free trial sample write Booth's Hy mei Co., Buffalo, ) ARTIFICIAL TEETH Of the sixteen teeth of either jaw, grant us but two, and we can put in the other fourteen and make them STAY FIRMLY in your mouth without the use of a plate. Come to us and Happy and Contented. Louisville didn’t gain much in pop- ulation, but it still has Col. Henry Watterson and is contented.— Phila- | delphia Telegraph. Soften the elows with alive oil and massage with a good cold cream. LIVES EMBITTERED BY SKIN TROUBLES Many estimable lives have been embittered by skin afflictions, due, in most cases, to neglect in in- fancy and childhood. Delicate skins readily become irritated and evere eruptions develop. Then | treatment after treatment is tried and found wanting until life be- comes a nightmare of torture and! disfigurement, imposing a fearful | handicap in the race for busine or social advancement. Yet this physical and mental suffering might have been avoided or miti- gated by a timely use of Cuticura oap and ointment Pot Always Boils on the range, the world’s best ! Slightly Used Watches We have a few watches that have been used a little while. Some you couid hardly tell from new. We will close them out at one- half their rzal value. They won't last long the prices we ask for them. The I’Iaut-Cadden‘ Jewelers and Silvers. at Co., th . Established 1872. PLAUT - CADDEN BUILDING Public Hearing The Charter Commission will hold a Public Hearing Friday Evening, October 28th, 1910, at 8 o’clock, at the Council Cham~ ber in City Hall. The questions sent out by the Commission will he discussed. All citizens of the city are invited to be present. H. A. TIRRELL, Chairman. HERMAN ALOFSIN, 2d, Sec’y. oct27d cooking sity, tove, a hot weather neces- and always “a friend indeed, in time of need.” You ought to see the new Estates, quality ranges built fo discriminating purchas Heater, you call. Gas & Electrical Dep't., 321 Main Street, Alice Building = e > Hear Ve! also the Ruud Heater, when WE HANDLE GOOD LIQUORS. We neve to recommend cheap stuff. Fine liquors that ple the most particular are here in quantit Something exception zood Mount Vernon Pure ‘Whiskey STEIN, 93 West poor, 1y Rye our JACOB *Phone Main St. oot26d Dr. F. W. HOLMS, Den'ist Room A. oct10d Shannon Building Annex, Telephone WE'LL PROVE IT King DentalParlors DR. JACKSON, Megr. Frankiin Square, Norwich, Ct. Artificial Eyes At Wholesale We hav price of $250 each. —Ghe— Norwich Optical Co., Room B and C Shannon Building, Main Street en-| trance, up one flight, over Alling Rub- ber Store. Lense Grinders and Manufactu Opticians. D. OSBORN GII A. M. BELANG been engaged i yiners for the above firm It 1t's Made of Rubher We Havz It Hunting Boots Bear Brand Woonsocket Snag Proof .. Rhode lIsland Sweaters . Turtle Neck V Neck Working Coats Men's Blanket Lined Working | Coat, water proof. $1.38 i | ALLING RUBBER CO. 191 Main Street, Norwich, Ct. BOTTLER cor. Market and Water 8 te line of the beat Aies. Lager and Wines. =pecially bottiea for fam- Uy use. Delivery, Tel 136-5 | | is strongly maintained this seaso est creations NECKWEAR, ETC., at popular pri Better look | at the Humphrey Instantaneoas Water | any | The Open Book before every young of life is man and woman. The chances of writing “Success” therein are greatly increased by the syste- matic, practical instruction im- parted at the Norwich Business College. | ! ‘ We would like to send you fuli information concerning this school. W. E. CANFIELD, i Principal. e, — NOTICE Louise Frank! or. locatsd in her newv ofice, Breed Hall n Winer Is noa Roum 1 Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m phone 660. auglle medium 1o V'The Bul- i letin for bu world which leads the in every essential of Clothes perfection, is the standard of merchandise abounding in the large stocks of OVERCOATS Fall and Winter and SUITS at 'Purtenursmitfihell GOMPANY TwoMoreDays of Extraordinary Offerings SATURDAY business is active this week the The special values we are offering during this last week in October app ibly to all who would buy with econ- FRIDAY Fall throughout store. | most forc- omy. These items are selected from almost every department in the store—offer- ings that mean a positive and libera saving of money on goods needed far immediate use. Two More Days FRIDAY SATURDAY A Sale of Ostrich Plumes IT IS NOW IN PROGRESS. GENUINE AFRICAN OSTRICH PLUMES AT ONE-THIRD LESS THAN REGULAR PRICES. Ostrich Tips—three in_a bunch At 79¢ — usual price At $ 1.39 usual price At $ 248 — usual price At'$ 3.98 — usual price $ 5.00 At § 4.98 usual price $ 7.50 Dt Tembinee: At $ 1.39 — usual s 198 At § 1.89 — a $ 2 At § 248 § 3. At § 298 $ 4. At $ 3.98 — 3 At '$ 498 — usual price $ At $ 8.98 sual price $1 At $12.98 — usual price $1 At $17.98 — usual price §25.00 Handsome Willow Plumes, ail hand ties — at $4.98, $6.93 $7.98, $8.98 and up to §1&98. | UMBRELLAS A SPECIAL SALE 1000 Umbrellas for Men, Wom- en and Children at an average reduction of 20 per cent. from regular prices. 59¢ UMBRELLAS $1.00 UMBRELLAS $150 UMBRELLAS $2.00 UMBRELLAS $250 UMBRELLAS $3.00 UMBRELLAS $5.00 UMBRELLAS at at at at at at at 49¢ 89¢ $1.20 $1.69 $2.19 $2.49 $4.20 Wash Goods Twe f Apron Ging A in blue and white checks, regular 8¢ quality 53/ 1 | 5000 od quality Outin light and med plaids \1 price W 6 Domestic Department The style and fit of each gar- ment far surpasses the majority of made to order clothes and at a big saving in price. Qvercoats $8 to $25 Suits $10 to $25 The Reputation long enjoyed by this store as being headquarters for correct Headwear n by the largest showing of the new- in both Soft and Stiff Hats. Big Showing of SHIRTS, UNDERWEAR, COAT SWEATERS, GLOVES, HOSIERY, ices. ““Ask for Royal Gold Trading Stamps’’ iT PAYS TO BUY HERE. John A. Moran Clothier, Hatter and Furnisher, Corner Main and Shetucket Sireets Extraordinary Economies in Staple Articles That are Needed Every Day. At 5e nch Brown Sheating, valie At 734c—36-inch Bleached Sheeting, vaiue AL 950 Pillow Cases, sizes 42x36 and l 45x36, value 12%c. | At 16c—Pillow ( S and | 15x36, value 200 | At 48c—Sheets, size 81 value 80c. | At 85c—Shcets, size $1x80, value $5c | BLANKETS AT SPECIAL PRICES | At 55¢—8 10-4 Cotton Blankets, white and gray, value Tc. 'A\v $1.68—Size 11-4 “Woolnap” Blank- ets, white and gray, value $2.0. }A\[ $248—Size 11-4 White and Gray } Wool Blankets, value $3.00. At $3.48— 11-4 White and Gray | Wool Blankets, value $4.50. At $4.98—Size 11-4 White Wool Blank- ets—sample pairs and very fine quality, valu> $6.00 and $6.50. i | TABLE LINENS, NAPKINS, ETC. 1At dleached and Half Bleached, | Linen Table Damask, extra H six patterns, value 6jc a | | At ‘a_Heavy All Linen, Satin | ible " Dan regular At $2.69—Size inch apkins to match Table Li $2.69 a dozen, value $3.25. At 38c—Beast quality Turkey Red Table Damask, value 50c. At 9%5c—All Linen Crash, value 12%ec. At 1115c—All Linen Crash, extra | Tie value 15 | At 960— 1sh Long Cloth, | nehes wide and chamois finish, 12 yurd pleces—at 96c a piece 1 value $1.50. | AL 95c—Hemmied Crochet Bed Spreuds | valie $1 | j129~H ¢ i m e @ Crochel Bed | Spreads, value $1.50 | AL $1.66—H e mm e d Crochet Bed | Spresds, value $2.00 | At $1.19—H o m m e a Crocher Bed , Spreads, value $1.50. The Porlous & Michel o, ocililer

Other pages from this issue: