Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 20, 1909, Page 10

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)

THE BEE Novelty Fur Sets Novelty Sets—In Red Fox, Blue Wolf, Black Wolf, Blended Squirrel, Jap Mink with pillow and rug muffs and $35 I shawls or fancy searf, at . Sweater Coat Sale This is a special sale of fine sweater coats bought at a great sacrifice. New and Black Russian Lynx Sets—Large rug muff with big, wide shawl $l0 scarf, heads and tails, at. . ... | Black and Blue Wolf Sets—With long full heavy fur throw and big $ l9 Pillow Muff, at ... i Fur Scarfs at $10 Blended Brook Mink—Striped scarf with wide rug muffs, head trimmed, at > 38 $10 Great !'de of All the Women’s Dresses From the Jacob Cohen 8tock worth up to 316 ‘ $6‘98 These are the highly fashionable one-piece wool and silk dresses that are so much in demand. Scores of the prettiest dresses in Cohen’s great New York stock, including many samples. Fine serges, broadcloths, cashmeres and silks — trimmings of em- GREAT SPECIAL SALE OF ALL THE Children’s Coats From the Jacob Coheh Stock, New York Worth Up Sl9 290 to $7.50, at. and & — Great lots of the finest chil- dren’s coats in ages 2 to 14 years—made of bearskins, the new Billy Opossum coats —Ostrich eloth—broadecloth, kersey, etc.—all colors—all the prettiest childish styles— worth from $3.50 to $7.50 $1 92N0$29=8— CHILDREN'S COATS All the children’s pretty win- ter coats from the Cohen stock—worth up to $10, at . OHILDREN'S COATS WORTH UP TO $12.50 & $15, at $7,60 All the highest grade girls’ and children’s winter cloaks from the Cohen stock—smart as they can be and worth $750 High Grade Cloaks Bought from the Cohen Stock, New Yark, —all colors and All the Finer Groups broideries and silk and plain all sizes — ac- tually worth up to $15.00— From the Jacob Cohen Stock _worth up to $35 i tailored effects 98 s L and very well made sweater coats with high from $3.50 to $6.50, at Brandeis Annual Millinery Offer! In Our ENTIRE STOCK In addition to our regular stock, we offer the have just received them from New York where York’s smart sets—for the cafe—for theater and or low collars, two pockets, prettily Your Unrestricted Choice ne matter what the newest millinery innovation—‘‘Metallic Hats''— they were designed expressly for the New York for dress wear. They are included among our stitched, made to sell $190~$290 former price, at....... beautifully wrought turbans of metallic lace. .We Horse Show. Newest winter hats worn by New hundreds of hats; Saturday, one day only, at $10 Nearly 50 dresses in this group. They consist of fine broaduloth in beautiful embroidered and braided effects—fine prunella cloths, French $ ' 5 All the Women’s serges, ete.—trimmed or plmn—beauhful colors and the ultra smart and practxoal styles—worth up to $35,at ........ / All the French Hats. All the Even- All the Ostrich X Plume Hats. SPECIAL 'SALE OF Brilliant Hat Pins Of Finest Cut French White Stones | tiful ‘.\ admired. Our Own Importation More than 50 styles of these beau- brilliant hat pins now so much $1 BRILLIANT HAT PINS 50c $2 Hat Pins $1.25 $5 Hat Pins $2.50 $4 Hat Pins $2 $6 Hat Pins $3 . Coronet bands for party and evening wea stones, worth up to $2, wbin r, inlaid with white 69c¢ Carved and plain barettes, guaran- teed not to break, worth 50¢, Elastic® belts, Jef Abuvkhs, in- eluding black— 25c [ 5 e T 25¢ Leather shoppmg bag—your own initial in brau,. SI at e at .. Belt Pins, brooch pins, pearl and coral beads, hat pms 2c;53f links, ete., worth up to $1, at. HARM DONE BY HTPNOT!SM black masks, hands ankles ard the lke, Although ‘“animal magnetism,” whether at grabbed people's All the Aigrette Hats. All the Paradise Hats. All the Fur Hats. All the Marabout Hats. ing Hats, All the Paris Dinner Hats. All the White Fox Hats. Brown Fur Hats. Turbans draped to the head with mercury wings Beautiful hats trimmed with long willow. plumes. Large black and white hats for cafe and theater wear. Fur beaver hats in medium shapes with plumes. Simply trimmed little hats now so fash- ionable. Choice of our entire stock, at. ... $12 -values, Extra fine hal §15 values, a hair, $10 value: 18 inches lon‘ hair, u u value value, at ... | 24 inch net coyered roll, TEN DOLLARS 24 {nches long, natural wa: hair, $7 value, at ... 24 incheés long, natural Wavy hair, §5 value, at 22 inch long natural wavy hair, $3.60 value, at . 20 inches long natural w hair, $3 value, at ..., STRAIGHT HAIR SWITCHES 98¢ 22 inches long hair, value, at 24 inches long hair, ‘81 value, at ROLLS 24 inch w 76c value, at .. Cluster Puffs, 10 and 12 In set, 38 value, at .. Smell pompadour, made of hu- man hair, at ... $3.50 SECOND FLOOR WORTH UP TO $25, AT $10 Hundreds of strictly up-to-dat @ broadeloths, kersey and nov- elty cloth coats in those smart plain tailored effects or the coats trimmed in braids—many sati long lengths—newest cut and Positively Worth Up to $25 —Saturday at . DRUG 26c Hydrogen Peroxide . 26¢ Sanitol Tooth Powder $1.50 Oriental Cream ... 25¢ Colgate’s Tooth Powder. 26¢ Sozodont Tooth Powder. 26¢ Rosaline 26c Diamond Nall Polish G 76¢c Pompeian Massage Cream 59¢ 50c Mme. Yale's Almond Bloom Cream, special . 26c Lilac Talcum Pawder .. 50c Java Rice Powder .. 25c Satin Skin Powder .. 50c Mme. Yale's Powder b cakes Ivory Soap . 16¢ Ligquozone Soap . 4 16c Colgate’s Glycaflne Soap & 76¢ Rubber Gloves . 8 n lined—all up-to-date— 10 and Toilet Articles PATENT MEDICINES 60c Milk's Emulsion ........20¢ 86¢c Castoria. ..... pre 13320 60c 8yrup of Figs . vl idBe $1 Smith’s Mountain Renovator ¢ $1 Dutty’s Pure Malt Whiskey 89¢ $1 Lydia Pinkham's \'egenblo Com- SUNDRIES 15¢c Chamols, special ......... $1 Traveling Cases, special. . . 60c Duster (feather) .... 10¢ Halr Receivers . 26¢ Shinola Outfits 10c Shinola .. .. arig. ' Another medicine was so diluted that it ‘would. have required an. accumu- lation of doses equal ‘to -sixty-four times from lung trouble and was sur- prised at her refusal to let him examine her chest. On being reminded that he had | found to be alive. At the Steinhell trial in Paris the other day a young man, prob- ably self-hyptonized, rushed into the court- matter for ghouls to open the tomb with- out risk of detection, but the fear of some such visitation prompted Mrs. Harri- fifty to 400 feet in length and required from one to three days for a test of each. | For five weeks the first summer and maliclous or beneficent, has o ew sound, thé bulk of the earth to Amoun: fo: onc | often made this cxamination, sue Feplled. room and.proclalmed himself the assassin. |man to take additional precautionary -l:;ne tl:f“rnex-“p.-u; Turassure, sseiatad It is merely one of the early terms, along|grhin of medicine. Dr. Elisha Perkins of| 'You never before did it when 1 -waS|A number of American psycholo! measures. - A time clock was acoordingly | = ¢ $ R 3 4 Tragic and Comle Doings Bu[gelfint e T Andatie The N:",.eh, Conn., in 1706, patented a brass |asleep.” When awakened she remembered | cjuding Professors James and Munsterberg, |Insialled at the grave and the night ;\:::" o.f L\.Vl Kow‘nlke ‘Anfl‘ 3 the Revival of Witcheraft. carly experimenters thought that’ Subjects |arid ron “tracer” three inched long, which | Dothing of the epfsode and apologlsed for | beljeve that Richard G. Ivens, & youns [Watchman Insiructed to reglster the (ime |ormers of Wisconsin unlyers Fotiere - PG | \ were acted upon by rays emanating from |was drawn'across the Torehéad to cure |her rudencss to the physician. Subects 80 | man who was executed for the murder of (of s visits thereon. The tomb is visited | FOL C. L. Crandall Prot. B W, Retiger ‘ orystal balls, bright lights and so forth.|tobthache and headache. It was popular :u_t usually recall i the waking state-thelr arry, Begate M, Hollister jn Chicago three |Wise every night, at about: afidnight and ) 0 cor (V8 1 (RSt ol Airiod vhe FALES OF SPOOKS AND THINGS | Braia, who mede a ploneer sclentifié study |and successful K Jpnotle expériénces, but remember theml|yeary ago, was actially ihnocent and was (G4WN: de |Dast summer supplementary tests .were ik of psychic phenomena, discovered that the y kinds of mechanical means, as|when again hypnotized. hyptonized by the police into his “con- The grave of Mr. lerlr:nan was made made o bae. it the Mkl wk reiis e tio Sukmeations, Menfal Thera- |fubjects really acted on themselves. He|crystals, lights, the sound of a gong and Hypuotie Limits. tession."” near that of Mr. Harriman's firet son, . | MACo 0 one of the Missourt Hivar bri :m b A Rien? Mag. | demonstrated this in & case where & Lon- |passés with the operator's hands, are used | Pernheim had a girl subject who seemed | There are sald to be three ways of graft- L Harriman, Jr, who died twenty two |, = i( 40" coensary heavy sngines and % peutics, Maliclious “Animal o don sclentist was producing wonderful | toj start the subjeet on the subliminal path. | to be entitely In the power of her oper-|ing false ldeas on the minds of others— |Y¢Ars 880. The walls were cemented to netism, and Awesome Active 1ty of Ghosts. Payohle doings, tragic: and comie, welrd charges of ‘‘maliclous anlmal magnatism" nd “mental malpractice’ haVe lately been iling on top of one another ih the viclnity of New York, and the ayerage man has catalepsies by the ald of magnets. Brald told the patient that he would. put in her hand something more powerful than a mag. net and thereupon thréw her Into’ a deep trance. But the mysterlous objects . more powerful than a magnet were only a purse and key ring. On another occasion he in- formed & woman friend that he ha@ just got a sample of an American drug that Bxperts variously give from three to nine stages of hypnosis, beginning with drowsl- ness and ending with deep somnambulism Liebault says there is first drowsiness, then drowsinesa with a possibility of sug- gostive catalepsy, then slight'sleep with a possibility of automatic movements, then deep sle¢p fn which the subject only hears what the operator tells him, then light ator, yet could not be persuaded to empty an Ink bottle on her best dress. An Ameri- can subject cheerfully. obeyed orders to stab the operator with a cardboard dag- ger, but when an open penknife was given | her and she was told to repeat the act | she hesitated and had an attack of hys-| teria. More under the Influence was a youns | | third, by violent by quiet and statements, repeated at interv second by cunning “indirection or the production | of an inference,” which is a mental trick; | foreing, which s the | police “sweating’’ style. The effect of continued hypnotism on the | sincere | subject is a weakening of the will and in- telleot, and in nervous cases there is a sure abeolute dryness, and for a 4l tance of eighteen inches from the top con- crete was solidly packed. Upon this bed of concrete was lald & heavy iron chain. It s reported that this will In time be re- placed by an imposing and ocostly granite monument.—New York Heraid, TEST BRIDGES UNDER STRAIN |loaded trains, which wi run back and | forth over the bridges at varying speeds, producing by the autographic récorders 15,- 000 diagrams, the dats ‘from which s now being assembled for the final report, which is expected to furnish & more rational and exact basis for bridge design, eliminating the element of guess work {n providing for speed strain, beéen wonderirg whether a revival of the|gcted through glass, causing nausea, He|somnambullsm. .of which 'the Waking|woman subject of » European allenist who | ISR SLInMAYY: A trange ;te Colioyed. b mfia:: 3:":::"?5:.1'2{’:9 (;:)Br:fil:dm:y”l‘r:ol age ‘of witchcfaft is imminent, put a vial of colored water In her hand and | memory s indisinct, and finally deep|p.q traimed her to go nto a trance at the | smes A wber of Sostie pame beon e, |Effect of Speed of Heavy Trains [railroads of the country for the tests wifl Over in Someryille, N ‘ere WAS & | she immediately became nauseated. The [ sompambulism with an entire loss of mem- SWIRIng: of 8. SinE, LBie Waa' Ceomling & slons.” A number of a.-u. have been re- e gl o bt v ity ol +f ublic exhibitlon of hypnotism \ast week | cure consisted in giving her another viaf|ory on awakénlog and a possibliity of all : & |ported during the hypnotle trance or fol- s , pecaliiey wil » street one day when she heard the chimes |lowing it. Bernheim reports a man of 7 Analysed. be utilized In starting another ser o in which Prof. Arthur Everton threw his | of colored water which was guaranteed to|the phenomens. of church bells, became hypnotized, stag- | who was hypnotized to relieve the pain of tests Invelving a different feature of de- A subjeet, Robert Simpson, into a trance and | be the antidote. 3 A DI a Doetrl, Sired ABat, wad .rub fate. Uy & rebiot |5 Infiniad Jag: he ‘Dagan to bresths-with — |stgn. This will requlro & new.type of ap- walked on his rigld body, supperted at the Hypnetic Suxgestion. Evil suggestion, which fs the sclentitic | 1o U AR AR GOND Y & vebicle | o oulty and died In two hours, declaring | D2 F. B. Turneaure of the College Of | purytug 1o be developed during the coming tremitied om two chairs.iand ‘then was| The Emmanuel movement In this coun-|counterpart of “malicous animal magnet- | ¢ "o o CacROOER FREEE HE TOR | (1 ypnotism had killed him. The post- | Enéineering, University of Wisconstn will | yincer in the laboratories of the collese of able to awaken him. Everton was ar- try‘is a revival of the early -recognized, ism,” is a disputed doctrine. Some Euro- tized at mortem showed em lism of the pulmon- report the results of the 15000 tests made engineering. sted. ‘Mo Insisted that the subjtet was [curative power - of hypnotic suggestion, | pean authorifies; as Luys, maintain tnat| %50 5% & publle performance and was i, . ", tery, and probably this was due to|O% the effect of the speed of heavy trains Ive, Telegrams fram ali pver the conn- tipation, paralysis, chorea, | anything can be done with a hypnotized | J50F ¥ nto a trance When |, excitement of the hypnotic process., O the members of steel and iron rallway — Srv gave advice ofe of them reading, |Dad habits, abuse of druge and liguor havesubject. A man may be polsoned or mu-|¢¥Cr O SAW & shining llght. One night| wpis case resembles the recent fataiity | bridges, at the annual meeting of the ‘Suggest heart action.” An expert hypno- st from Newark arrived, and did suggest art action to the rigid figure lying in o dead room of & hospital. ““Bob, your heart action. ur heart aetion s strong. Bob, your art begins to beat. Bob! do you hear of Bob, your heart is starting!" . But It was not starting, and an autopsy owed that Simpson's aorta had been R ptured, whether as the result of strain ring hypnosis or otherwise. Listen Bob, being imported to this country to stir been cured by mental treatment. It would be logical to assume that these diseases can also be caused by suggestion, al- though it is denied that the production of blis; and changes 'of temperature are is that hypnotism reaches the lower sphers of consclousness in which there s control over bedlly functions which' are normally |Involuntary; for example, the sweat glands |ana the Intestinal muscles. ~Belentists deny that suggestion can act without thé genuine hypnotic phenomena. The theory | tllated without the slightest after recollec- tion. Subjects may be made to sign their names to promissory notes or wills. On the other hand it is maintained that the moral sense of subjects s even keener dur- {ng the hypnotic period than in'the normal state, and almost invariably resists evil suggestions. Liebault, & member of the Nancy School egnt of his subjects were amenable ¢riminal suggestions. to | retused to play the role of a minister or of Investigation, found that only 4 or & per | Some subjects car- | & carrlage lump In the street produet the usual effect on him and he was walk- ing toward it in peril of his life, when a | companion seized him. | Although the plea of suggestion is not | $0 common in criminal cases today as it Wwas & few years ago, as far back as 156 & tramp was (ried and convicted in a Eu- ropean court of abusing a woman after hyptonizing her. In 187 a dentist was charged with mistreating a young patient | by suggestive power. In 1594, a man named & woman who was hyptonized and used as | {in New Jersey. | known Austrian subject, Ella There was a physiclan who hypnotized his wife to extract a tooth without pain. He made a few passes; she shrieked and dropped dead. She had, it s said, no trace of heart dlsease. A well Salmon, became much excited one night preceding a seance, and dled. The post-mortem | showed nothing wrong with her except | anaemia. The Hindu fakir whose heart ceases to | beat and his lungs to breathe for several | days while he reposes in a grave s ex- American Rallway Engineering and, Main- tenance of Wi ssoclation in Chicago next March. Two years have been consumed in the investigations In which, Dean Tur- neaure says, nothing has been found to indicate that insufficient provision has been made in the past for safety, but rather that it had not been made in the same rela- tive degree In large and small structures and in the same members of a structure, to secure the maximum economy. * Heretofore little actual data has been experiments were conducted with apparatus To Enjoy the full confidence of the Well-Informed of the World and the Comamendation of | the most eminent physicians it was essen- tial that the component parts of Byrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna should be known to and approved by them; there. brilliant example of sugseation, Accord-|that of & fish pedier, to put a Iump of | the tool of extensive thievery b duet, which they demand in a laxative " y three | Precautions Takenm by Family to Pro-|purchased in Germany, including those of JSp American spooks, told awesome tales of [ing to Sir J. ¥, Simpson, there was one(arsenic (actually suger) In a friend's cup | criminals. Prof. Krafft-Ebing testified in por v satn u i Prof. Turneaurs in 1907 Extreme difficulty | remedy of an ethical character, are ass 8 during the Atlantic crossing. One |homoepathic solution 80 attenusted that|of tes. The youns man did so, and When |favor of an accused shoplifter, who in- ol and expense prevented further investiga- | b eho i ured Jouns woman falnted, other passengers|the patient would have had to take & dose |asked why he had polsoned his friend re- | iiicd (hat she had been hyptonized and . Y the Company's original method of mans Vscreamed and fled when Madame Pal- Jadino invoked ghostly arms, cold breeses, very second for 30,000 years before he l-wu have consumed one grain of the plled, laughingly, enough.” Many girl subjects refused to follow in- “Oh, he has lived long delicate or impolite suggestions, even show- fog & moral squeamishness not of their waking state. One girl wouldn't help her- aeif to & glase of water, deeming it im- refused to tell an anec- ‘woman declined to put ber nose as an assistant in the although she laughed at the physiclan hypootized o Firl i she was acquitted, but it was afterward found that she was a professional th'ef and had deceived her scivutifie champion Potency of Suggestion. Suggestion is potent In criminal cases in another direction than the causing of | crime. As administered by the police in the | “sweating” system, it is a prolific cause | of false confession. Robert E. Cantwell, & Chicago lawyer, has found U7 cases of execution for murder on ‘‘eonfessions” in which the alleged victims were afterward To convince the member of the family of the late E. H. Harriman that his grave is nightly visited by a watchman at speeific hours a time clock has been placed at his tomb in the Protestant Episcopal {churchyard at Arden. The clock is care- fully inspected by some member of the |tamily every day and due record made of |the time of each nightly visit. Resting between walls of granite and| with the opening sealed with elighteen inches of conerete, it would be & difficult tion untll two years ago when Prof. Tur- | neaure invented an electrical instrument of simple design which autographically rec- | ords the actual amount of bending, length- ening or shortening of the bridge members | under stress. Twelve duplicates of the in- strument were made in the university shops for the tests, which covered every part of some fifty bridges on eight rallway sys- tems, including the Santa Fe, Rock Island, Chicago, Milwaukes & St Paul, Nickel FPlate, Chicago, Buplington & Quiney, Nor- folk and Western Pennsylvanis and New ufacture known to the Company only. The figs of California are used in the production of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna to promote the pleasant taste, bus the medicinal principles are obtained from plants known to act most beneficially. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine—manufactured by the fornia Fig Byrup Co. cnly, snd for sale York Central. The bridges ranged from y 2y all Lading druggists. flable regarding the comparative effects knowledge of the patient. Of course, thers | ried out the experimental crimes evidently | Caynsky, was sentenced to three years in|plained by the power of suggestion.—New | 5 S A 3 ¥ bridges, | fore, the Calil Stirring American Spooks. may be a subconsclous knewledge which | because they. realized that the deeds were an Austrian fall for hyptonizing Into| York Tribune. A% BN VT ot sl ou’ el Bridee | W forply Fig Syrup Co. pub- L r);.uo- lp.ncl‘l:n!lbalrd X steamship |doss not veach the higher levels of the|not bona' fide. An English experimenter |pseudo-matrimony a Baroness von Z, be made largely by suess work in the spec- | Lshes 8 full statement with every package. ngeds Irene of lame BEusapia Palla- | mind. suggested to & youmg shopkeeper, who had laged 3. Dr. Voisin reported the case of | | lats The perf i i i ina, the celebrated Itallan medium who | Homoepathy is cited by its critics as a ¥ - GRAVE GUARDED BY NIGHT |ifications and designs. A few isolated | perfect purity and uniformity of pro. 1

Other pages from this issue: