Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 10, 1914, Page 8

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TNIS NEW MEDICINE SAVES YOU MONEY We are druggists right here in your town and make . a living out of the drug ‘business, but it is because people have to have drugs and not because we like to see people suffer—we don’'t. Our duty is to render the best service we can, anG when someone is alling, we are interested in seeing them take the best medicine there is f~r their par- ticular trouble. We don’'t recommend “cure-alls”’, as we_don’t believe there are such things. We don’t want you 0 spend more tkan vou have to. Some of you get small wages, and when you're sick, none at all, and you should et the most you can for your money. We recently came across a new rem- edy for increasing strength and build- ing up people who are run-down and emaciated. We know that a slight trouble sometimes grows into a seri- ous one, and to stop it in the beginning will save you money in the end. This new compound jis called Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion. It is the best remedy when vyou are run-down, tired out, nervous—no matter what the cause. It doesn’t merely stimulate you and make | you 1ieei good for a few hours, takes hold of the weakness and builds vou up to a healthy, normal condition. Jt is a real nerve-food tonic and build- er of good blood, strong muscle, good digestion. It contains Hypophosphites, which tone the nerves, and pure Olive | Oil, which nourishes the nerves, the 100d and the entire system. Pleasant to take. Containg no alcohol or habit- forming drugs. We spromise that if are not perfectly satisfied with it we'll give back your money as soon as at the 7,000, vou tell us. Sold only Rexall Stores, and in this town only by us. $1.00.—N. D. Sevin & Son, 118 | Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Give your teeth chance It isn't 4alf enough to clean, whiten and. polish them. Go one step far- ther—protect them from “acid-mouth,” the cause of nearly all tooth decay vour teeth need. This is the #eal protection Pebeco Tooth Paste affords. This, if you please, is the great rea- son for Pebeco’s exist- ence i There's a mighty army of sensible people who daily keep their teeth free from decay and disease. They see the truth. A tooth will last only aslong its enamel. Pebeco pl‘ESCl‘\'CS th(‘ [’1121!!'(:‘—" hence your teeth—for1 Pebeco alone rakes the bi step forward in tooth care and culture. ‘Pebeco” vour teeth ! as Ten-Day Trial Tubs and Acid Test Papers to Test Your Mouth for Acid—Sent Free LEHN & FINK 120 William Street \ Wemen as a Power. | “If ever the time comes when wo- ! men chall come together simply and purely for the benefit of mankind, it will be a power such as the world has mever dreamed of Thoughtful. “Whenever I finish reading one of | “I always | my poems.” said the poet, leave the platform on tiptoe.” “How thoughtful!” remarked his friend. “To avoid waking the audience, I suppose.” Intormatlon l*or Drinking Men men—and women— drink to excess who would gladly take treatment they were would be freed from the craving and | necessit drink. There is a wa; io again become masters of yourselves I you will al Drin Habit Treatment a safe, sure vegetable remedy that removes the craving for drink in t} without the use of hypoderm tions—you will find hundreds of dr ing men and women have been suc- cessfully t at the Institute dur- ing the p: and get proof and references, or write or 'phone for book of information. 1 . 1 1202 Chapel S . tel. 5540 (day or DRUG HABIT SUCCESSFULLY TREATED. e ———————————————————————— P"_ S OLD TR. HARRIS f8 now manufactured and sold by N. D, Sevin & Son, 118 Main Street, or can be procured direct from the owner of the original pre- scription, MRS. MARY A. HARRIS, R. F. D. 6, Norwich, Conn. Price One Dollar. but | Matthew Arnold. | REMEDY FOR PILES | FARMERS AND May Be Asked to Decide. Th& United States supreme may be asked to determine whether | a Connecticut tiller of the soil may legally and rightfully have recourse to the probate court in the district in which he lives in which to make {an assignment for the benefit of cred- itors, or whether he is precluded from such procedure by the uniform bank- ruptcy law of the United States, This question arose in the suif court | ! of { the Rockville ional bank against Charles H. Latham of Hartford, trus- {tee of the insolvent estate of Ra A. Talcott of East Windsor, was de- cided by Judge Marcus H. Holcomb lin the superior court in the ne {of the question and the Conn | supreme court handed down a decision Thursday that there was no error in the lower court’s ruling. William E. gan, lawyer for Talcott, and Henry | J. Calnen, lawyer for the trustee, are | quite likely to take the case to the | { United States supreme court, The Specific Case. Talcott, an East- Windsor farme getting into financial difficulties, de | assignm in the probate court ast W and Deputy Sheriff pointed trustee. Among cott owed the RoCk- ank $12,000 and the bank appealed from the action of the probate court, l i though a tiller BANKRUPTCY East Windsor Case Raises Question as to Rights of Insolvent Tiller of the Soil in Connecticut—U. S. Supreme Court Preliminary hearings were held be- fore Judge Holcomb ! court in this city, and Charles Phelps, | attorney for the bank, argued that of the soil may not be petitioned into bankruptey, involun- tarily, yet he cannot voluntarily choose the probate court in which to make an assignment under the Con- necticut statute which Mr. Phelps ar- gued had been superseded and sus- pended by the uniform bankruptey act of the,United States. Judge Holcomb azreed with Mr. Phelps’ proposition when the gques- tion was argued by Mr. Pheips and Mr. Calnen on demwrer. The final judgment in the case in the superior court was given by Judge -Willlam S. Case for the plaintiff, t in his memorandum Judge Case aid that the essential question in the e had been settled by Judge Hol- comb, Result of Decision. The result of the decision is that a r who is insolvent may file a petition in bankruptcy upon his own volition but his creditors cannot force him into baniruptey and bit uncertain if the creditors could hale him into the probate court as an insolvent debtor, though the declsion prevents him from voluntarily going there with an assignment for the ben- efit of his creditors. That the autombile strive to understand his car tinker with if was asserted recently by Arthur should and mnot one day who & ! owner Johnson s 4 { returned from the south where he took T'his is the 7cal protection ! part in road races. He is well known | among the automobils dealers and gar- | age men. He contends that it simple mat- | ¢ for a man or woman to learn to | a but it is a different matter bmes o repairing certain making certs while th built, but many a life shortened by experimental work ‘that every man who in- drive his own automobile to become thoroughly ith its mechanicai fe and construction. It is not nec that he be a good mechanic to do this A careful study of the instruction book and a close inspection and stud ! Help to him a knowledge and suppor the “for a purchase: as a result v competent operator of a car become a mechanism mastered lavoided | of the ing of a another scheme and give of labor.’ | IMPORTANT TO EVERYONE it 1 that the tention when we 1 neys should when ne less exerc often eat more most h herbal comp: able success remedy is mention - “TIL FOR AGHING SORE, TIRED FEET | | | | ST. PATRICK’S DAY CARDS AND FAVORS NEW LINE CARDS AND BOOKLETS for Birthday Friendship Engagement Bon Voyage Wedding Graduation Sympathy Baby NORWICH yiEWS MRS. EDWIN FAY Franklin Square SHOE SPECIALS Ladies’ $250 Gun Metal Butt ... .$1.98 Ladies’ $3.50and $4 Fine Shoes...$2.98 | Men's $2.00 Shoes now ..$1.68 Mon's $250 Gun Metal Shoes ....$1.98 FRANK A. BILL, 104 Main St. “TiZ” FOR TENDER, PUFFED-UP,‘ | SWEATY, CALLOUSED FEET i AND CORNS. ! People who are forced to stand on| | their feet all day know w sore tender, ect mean. g'l"ht Y. cures their feet s feet in perf condition. “TIZ” is the only in the world that draws out poisonous exudations which puff up the feet and cause tender, sore, tired, aching feet. It instantly stops in corms, callouses and bunions simply_glorious. Ah! how comf vour feet feel after using ’Ym\'ll limp or draw face in ps Your shoes wc your f¢ up n't n. {en and hurt © whole 25 cents. I comfort Just think for only DOINGS IN THE AUTOMOBILE WORLD should be || 'A VALUABLE SUGGESTION , Ray Harroun, famous engineer and‘ designer of racing cars, endorses erstwhile rival, Burman, in say- g that all previous speed records will undoubtedly be shattered in®tne big Memorial Day classic on the In- dianapolis speedway. That European manufacturers wili make frantic efforts to regain their lost ground in the American market by building cars that will retain the cup, is a certainty. That American makers have aw ened to the fact that Buropean buyers ard speed prowess as indicating the ue of a car, is also true. Only a few American manufacturers have taken the matter as seriomsly as Ku- Topean manufacturers, howev and consequently the representation will be nd the preparations less care- fully made. For example, most Amer- makers w anter only one car vhereas the Kuropean never stakes chances on less than a team of three. With “the Vanderbilt and Grand Prize races off the . the racing world once mo turning its atten- tion to the next i : race on_the Indianapolis motor speedway. This event gives promise of being the great- ntest in motor history, ‘with no t six s battling for uprer As las contingent | cms likel te over the to insure an is admittedly f his time, a mar events than b among them i3 t eatest driver wko has won more b has fingers and toes, two Grand Prix faces of 1912 and 19, This entrant alone is thought capable quishing the entire Ameri then there are others. is but a slight shade beh soillot in brillian he pair usually ishes , two. Goux is cap- last whicl the undispuied g covercd in the superior | the bank, | it seems a | i b 3 1 oven. bars Soap pkg. Starch 10 1bs. e of Swift’s Oleomargarine Bermuda ONIONS, Ib. . 9¢ New CABBAGE, Ib. ... 5¢c 1 bottle Blueing ; A}l for ! CODFISH, 2 pkgs.. ... Condensed MILK Fi 19¢-23¢ idec 9c 25¢ me Granulated POTATOES, peck. he prices range frm | more than $6,000.00. There f| for speed, with low rakish IR t on narroW lines. small cars for family use, large Seven-passenge eqGuipy cxtended tur all speedy sters for busine and profe: men, the convertible car that ts owner a clc open body uits his pleasure. is also motoreycles who finish in his there uphol- y refinements and count- exhibi- When Roasting Meat. When meat is being roasted there is danger of its becoming brown, place a basin of The steam will prevent scorch- | and too TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY SPECIALS 9to11 am HOUR SALE 9 to 11 a. m. e Smoked Shoulders, b. 9:¢ 2p m todp m 2 Ibs. BEST LOIN LAMB CHOPS Fresh Sliced LIVER 6 c Fresh Arrival of All Kinds Fresh Fish Tuesday Fresh Creamery Butter Ib.30c 9to11 a.m. HOUR SALE 9to1la.m SUGAR 47c¢ .. 23c | PURE LARD, bb. .. water in the ; ing, and the meat will cook better. e hour mark 1 of the coolest in the ganre. . where a sec nd cr nd edition « v run, he w for firs with ed um ablot luropean who will but a no I chief claim to bility whi rt at which he vilot who will fame is his round cor- S no pee r lois American field is as yet in the and, therefore not subject 1 {hese men a own the Botl ) their side h any U\ln;: can produce. stand the 1 nge. their this the rac On When a car strikes a hill that is tco steep to_be surmounted in tue well known among and sales | One of the iatter recent | peculiar use of his © He had gotten a prospect up to the sale seemed assured, all the selling argu- 2 used. Then the man took sudden interest in another ma- <hine and the next thing the salesman now he saw his prospect out in his ri demonstrater. On seeing the salesman found him are becaus f its hill One pa liking climbing 3 was men Oh man, can oned. that's nothing.” said the sale: “why do you known-ah-why, 50 up that hill backwards!” The annual - Boston Automebile Show, heralded as the best exhibit of its Kind in the world, will open one week at Mechanics building, eve ‘vrl' the entir »mobile in are focused on this yes is most complete in ever Automobile and_ac manufacturers and over the country have arrived in Bos- ton full of ambition and prepared for The ustry weel at the show. The reg- the various hotels showed ay automobile enthu funmduolr' of the | icular hill for 25¢ 15¢ 1 Ib. Frankfurters | 1 quart Sauerkraut Cooking COMPOUND e aAE GRAPE FRUIT, 2 for 15¢ Sweet POTATOES, Ib. 5¢ PEA BEANS, 3 quarts 25¢ Royal Blend COFFEE Beef EXTRACT, 2 oz. 19¢ 17¢ 1 can Tomatoes 1 pkg. Macaroni 2Y5¢ “Popple.” In some English dialects “pobble or vopple” (for it is variously spelt and pronounced), seems to mean a large pebble (A.8. ®apol). The seme word survives today among sea-faring men, who talk of a “popply” sea, meaniug a “choppy sea”—one the surface which is agitated with innumerable “lumpy” waves. On the other hand there is an old English word “popple meaning “peplar,” which Is in use to- day in some parts of -Canada. Evident- ly the word as it stands Is of consid- erable interest, and of double deriva- tion and meaning. Would Make Reparation. We told a proud father the other day that his baby was a perfect image of him. It pleased the father, but we are going to apologize to the kid as soon as he gets oid enough to under- stand.—Exchange ? | Jcfer® ysep cars prohibitory, but, who waits.” Used Packerd “Sixes” have lost none of their inherent quality because of the service they. have seen. They fulfill these require- ments today as effectually as ever and will | do so, one and all, for years to come. No such investments in efficiency and Juxury have ever been offered at equivalent prices. Efficiency . The ideal of every motorist is to own a | car that asks no favors on either highway or boulevard—that will carry him in comfort over the roughest roads ; at speed and without effort up the stecpest hills, that will convey || distinction in any company, and be a source || of satisfaction and pride under all circum- N stances. The first cost of such a vehicle is to some “all things come to him Packard Motor Car Company of New York 296 Poarl Street Hartford, Connecticut from all over New England have al- | ready arrived intent on attending the| opening he exhibition this vear far surpass- es all previous show ‘ars of prac- tically ‘evers ‘stvle, . make. and price | re exhibited in addition to no end of | ries and auto supplies. Rep- | tives from the various con- carpenters, decorators and oth- > busy today putting the fin- | touches to the mammoth ex The magnitude of bit is particularly recent addition a5 o this ye impressive. are ex il its models. s @ general air about the show th are exhibited. S classes and the desires of the most d and pld(‘n(‘all\ every make is| of finish annl‘ r. The | l ONLY 5 DAYS MORE OF The F. A. Wells Co.’s Fire Sale MEN’S OVERCOATS as low as $3.98 MEN'’S SUITS, 33, 34, 35, 36 size, $6.75 SALE HOURS—9 A. M. to 6 P. M. of | The Grand Sale Remnant Store ANNOUNCES A SPECIAL 10 Day Sale . On All Merchandise ‘The sale comprises the new- ‘est seasonable goods at great savings. The new and the markable. goods are all variety 1S re- Sale commences Wednesday, March 11th, FOR 10 DAY DRESS GOODS 56-inch All Wool Suitings, all icolors, values to $1.75 a yard | For this Sale 79¢ 1CO’ITON AND SILK WASH GOODS 1000 yards Mercerized Fab- rics for dresses, values to 29c, tall colors— * Sale price 10c yard 36-inch Percales, 8c yard ! 36-inch Madras, 8c yard 10c fast color Gingham, checks and stripes, 8c yard salatea Cloth, 10c yard !36-inch Unbleached Cotton— Sale price 6¢c yard Handkerchiefs for ladies, 1c %Ladies' 29¢ Underwear—Sale | price 19¢ q( “hildren’s 235¢ | Sale price 15¢ | Men’s 50c Underwe: T, Underwear— 39¢ sS ‘Hnu\e Dre: for 49¢ E $1.25 House Dre | price 79¢c es, values to ¢ hmt Kimonos, flannelette, 12Y5¢ 2 50¢" Corsels: cieni OO CorsSetS i 00 ( 151 82. Corsets i 1 [ % consENs | ] ; | | all Silk Petticoats, Sale price $1.79 | I I ! There are dozens of other excellent bargams but space will not best lengths 6-~ and 7-4 Sheeting, quality, in short 15¢ yard 2000 yards Fancy Muslin, all colors and patterr 7c . yard Cotton Batting, 5¢ roll Silk Remmants in all colors and patterns, values tc $1.00 yard—Sale price 39¢ yard. LACES AND EMBROIDERIES Narrow lLace and Insertion ic yard Hamburg Beading and Inser- tion—Sale price 5¢ yard We have just received ow complete line of Embroideries of the finest quality for dresses and children’s wear, also Bead ings, at great savings. MUSLIN UNDERWEAR Our new Spring line of Un- derwear just received at re- markable savings. WAISTS 100 NVaIS Tl L T 200 Wais worth to 69c— Sale price 39¢ HAIR GOODS 24 and 26-inch Switches, made of the finest hair, at half price. WHITE VOILE AND LINGERIE DRESSES A sample line of elegant Dresses, being samples are slightly soiled, all different— values -t Sale price $3.98, $12.00 $1.25 Children’s Dresses 69¢ Sample Suits, new styles, $8.75 permit to describe GRAND SALE: REMNANT STORE 261 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. iDr. J. M. KING| | DENTIST May Building JanlTuWF | Telephone 1227. THE DEL -HOFF European Plan Rates 75 cents per day and up HAYES. BROS,, 26-28 Broadway F. C. ATCHISON, M. 9., M. J. FIELDS Florist PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN 39 Ward Stree Roemu 1, Second Floor, Shannop Blds | Cut Flowers, 'Designs, Forms angd Night ‘phone 1083 v | Plants Telephone $£:37

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