Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 16, 1910, Page 12

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Sramitton, Mont., April 15—EMward Barrill, the quide who acco: Yrederick A. Cook on his Mounmt Me- Kinley trip and who made an vit in the polar controversy to the fect that Dr. Cook had never 1he top of the peak, says that in inion the Fairbanks Thomas Lioyd, never reached the mit, either. rrill asserts that It is w to climb the mountain at the of year the Fairbanks party tra be- cause of the condition eof snow Says Fairbanks Party c.-u Not Have Reached Mount mfln s Peak. indi of mm tain, the route followed by Cook was covered by & deep blanket of snow.” BOB VEAL CASE. Louis Letsky Fined $10 and Costs at/|. Waterbury. Tis meaning of the term “hog { Waterbury on Tuesday. Le hatged selling veal, ST Tl was Tder Bt polbie e P T mz..m.,s i M Doe dressed to mean hat the inside of the carcass was cleaned of the in- {ornal porta and sometimes the hide igm: ‘waklm tl 2 week in’cold storage. i Brea Beach of the i of Beach &mu:h nldvell shrinks about a 2 day. Wildam Riether, the meat dealer, ve the term the above also, internal parts sometimes out, m t.h. huu 13 wm on. John A. Lilley said the insides mre always remaved and the general This evidence was against the accus- od snd he was fined $10 and costs. An -ndm.ann.— ‘aterbury Deme- “Gentlsmen Convicts.” Wow gemes the warden of the West- u pr-eu-uy abandoned. The con- wous garb hurts the feeling of H “gemtlemen,” says the warden, bitters them and impedes the 'm "‘bfll. ‘Therefors, natty blue uai- ms with class Jetters are to be sub- stituted for the time honored dress. All of which is very engaging. What sre these “gentlemen” in prizon for? e would Mke to ask. Have they been te make them good, or to unish them for having been bad? 1t he latter, was there ever a punish- sment which @id not hurt the feelings ©f the person to whom it was admin- 1stered® ‘The truth is, thers is entirely too much maudlin sentiment in these mat- tars. Nobody is more in favor than we are of putting the' man who has done wrong on his feet again if it be posstdle to do 50 and of making & use- ful citizen of him. but if he has sinned he should be made to bear the punish- this week?—Chicago Post After Doc Cook. Lieutenant Shackleton didn't claim even he had reached the South pole, et the president gave him s medal st have it in fof Doc Cook—New- ark Star. The Turkish government bas pro- hibited the Importation of wines and containing more than a certaln n of aleohol, and the impor- manufacture and consumption of Deverages contalning alcohol not made from grapes or graps products. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cures All Spring Ailments. Mrs. Marion Bruce, Cumberland, Me, writes: “I have taken Hood's Barsaparilla for a great many years, &nd I think it the best blood medicine in the world. I take it both spring and fall. This last winter and epring 1 was In very poor health. I was weak and had lost all my appetite and I was all run down. As soon as I began to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla my strength came back and my appetite returned. 1 am now well, do my housework, and no lenger have that tired feeling.” Get it today In usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. 1 $10 PER MONTH L] To Be Paid for 100 Months to Son of Murdered Policeman, The Bridgeport Standard says: The common council, n ka meeting Monflsy evnnk‘ voted pay to a be selected by the police bo $10 per month for 100 months, i | for ti b&uefl;‘of Ellsworth L. eDitz, minor son of iman Ellsworth G. Deitz, who was shot and killed by Gusetave Muller, insane, while on duty on Fairfield avenue, recently. It de- veloped during the discussion that the city did not have $1,000 unappropriat- ed and so could not, without special measures, wvvle-n such lump fund, payment of per month uni the sum of 31,000 has been pald can be managed end will be accomplished. The monml;.:umnu are to cease when $1,000 been expended or at the death of the beneficlary. Kite Flying. Down the street the boys are flying kites, They are generally store kites, made up of birdlike forms and vivid colora. ‘That s not the kite of the boyhood of other days, when the boys had unlimited fun. - They mads their own kites. ‘There was no touch of commercialism in the sport of those days. ‘The boy’s genius was the im- perial circumstance. . The kites in those fair Hellenic days were six-cornered affairs, made up of three sticks, some string and a news- paper. The paste used in sticking the paper to the string connecting the ends of the sticks, was_made up of flour and cold water. In these de- generate days such paste would not stick at all, but then it did. And the tail of that kite—what a gloryl—a long string with bits of paper tied on at six-inch intervals, making it look like the spine of a great snake. How proud it seemed undulating up there in_the blue! Then kite-flying was closely inter- woven with the genius of the boy. He had to depend upon himself. But it was a loving sask from the whittling of the slim sticks to the tving on of the tail. But the great joy at last was to see his own creation, floating up In the azure as if it was a part of the glory of the world Then, per- haps, the fall would come off, or the string break and the kite collapse and &0 dangling, dawdling down until it lodges in some old tree. Then is trib- ulation, but what joy is there In those shouts ‘of despair! Don't buy a boy a kite. Let him make his own. Count it an opportuni- ty for rendering the boy a real serv- ice. God only helps those who help themselves. Keep an_eye on that— Columbus (O.) State Journal. Diaz, at 80, Kills Jaguars. The spectacle of Porfirio Diaz, who for a third of 2 century has been the actual or the virtual president of Mex- ico, tramping through the mountains end killing jaguars is at least as much of an inspiration to admirers and em- ulators of physicial virility as that ot Theodore Roosevelt killing big game in British East Africa. President Diaz iz 80°gears 1. He was the real mil- itary ‘hero of the fight against Max- imillian in 1863-67. He upset the successor of Juarez in 1875. $o hax controtied Mexico, witk all the power of a dictator, since 1877 Santa Ana, the other “Grand Old Man” of Mexico’s _ national history, ltved %o Dbe 81, and started his last rebellion in 1867, when he was 72 years old. We have had men powerful in politics atter reaching'a great age, in the United States. lere_the pen is mightier th-n the sword. But in Mex- ico conditions are different. The poli- tician who is a power must be able to do actual campalgning. Considering that fact. the long life of Santa Ana, and the longer activity of Porfirio Di- az_may be regarded as rather remark- able.—Brooklyn Eagle. Vice Consul Fdward T. Heyn of Reichenberg, writes that an important school for weaving will soon be opened at that Austrian city. He notes that a few of the textfle factories there have the continuous Northrup-Draper looms invented in Massachusetts. A house painted with Rogers Paints has the best protection that paint can give it. The ma- terials we use and the process | we employ in producing these paints make them_the most dur- on the market. They are guar- TO-DAY » 7 “the UNITED_CIGAR STORES CO. opens its first store in this city &t Shannon Building, Main Street In 125 other big cities we operate hundreds of stores on the original plan which) will prevail here—all known by the sign of the UNITED Shield—the emblem of guality. These stores are all operated on one plan—to give you better cigars for your here appreciate good cigars. _ 'money, no matter what price you pay, than you can get anywhere else. We come to this city because it is known as *“‘a good cigar town™. | Smokers It is our policy when com'mg to a new city to get in quick”—to make a noise =—to let everyone know we’re here—and to tell them what we have. At the beginning we are willing to give away our profits many times over in inducements so big that everybody will try our cigars. Hence the extra inducements named below which are really souvenirs to commemorate the establishment of a UNITED CIGAR STORE in this city. Get them and keep them—they are valuable and absolutely free. /Weare confident that once the smokers of this city have measured the superior’ quality ofour c1gars we w1ll keep them as customers as long as we maintain that quality. Some of the Clgars that Have Built Our Business’ LA TUNITA Princessa, our bejt full strength 5c cigar.— 8¢ PALMA DE CUBA Bouquet, our best medium : strength 5c cigar. —S5e¢ BENEFACTOR Perfecto, our best mild 5 cent cigar.—S5c CAPT. MARRYAT J wincible—— 6 PALMA DE CUBA Media Perfecto——————.4 for 25¢ RICORO Saratoga — o3 for 20c 'MARDI GRAS Brevas (after dinner size) T ORLANDOQO Media Perfecto, our best mild 3 for25ccigar—— LoDl S .3 for 25¢ RlCORO Cabinet, our best full strength 3 for 25¢ cigar o —— 7 1T HAVANA-AMERICAN Universal————__10c FLOR DE MURIAS Perfeccionado.———-—-2 for 25c Something for Everyone on/ - Opening Day Free to every purchaser—A useful match holder. Free with a purchase of 50 cents or over—A. pocket) Cigar Cutter. Value 25 cents. Free with apurchase of $1.00 or over—A pack of' Shield Playing Cards. Value 50 cents. Free with a purchase of a box of cigars amounting to $2.00 or over—A Colonial Glass Cigar Jar. (Keeps cigars fresh.) Value $1.00. Free with a purchase of $5.00 or over—A beautiful Amber Cigar Holder in case. Value $1.75. . Free—One package of Royal Bengals Little Cigars with every purchase of two packages of little cigars at 10 cents or over —no matter what brand. Please remember that with this Company no transaction is complete until the customer is pleased. We not only guarantee satisfaction—we INSIST on it. Every cigar sold goes to the customer under this UNQUALIFIED GUARANTEE. M’/, ICIGARS UNITED CIGAR STORES largest'mtlleWorld/BeuweWeSeflefiePeopkBéit [ The Relief of Old Horses. It has happened that persons own- | horses which are seen on the ing such horses often allowed them | Th d théy needed the piti bt merely because was in the line of business. “The Boston 'assooiation now asts that old or decrepit animals, A cerns and corporations or by city gov- | apology partial It is & pity that an an animal is a | slave trafic in that place, e lihood for its hite slave rid- As a result of work done by the |ernments, be not sold indiscriminately. | Means of gaining a livel communities that are w! arad jocia owner, one hesitates to make the com- Fomigh, thepe {u b:en“. tion in | Unless they could go into considerate plaint. But the many should be bene- sponse to the effort to bring some anen higher u says The Palladium, “New Haven scts o fine example in Eetting relieved | TrmCunly affected. In getting at the bottom and removing 5 ars soen on”the stsets | {iould be spared the ansuish of see- |y ffoundation of the white slave traf- | great Library bulid mxnotm in tears one's ewned Ly large aen~ when it da s | all tnose ing it—Meriden Record. - Ferrating Out Crime. —n The New Haven Palladium compli- | munity. In no other endeavor is the | price is 3600,000 lnd the bufldln‘ i ments the police force of that city up- | work of the police better appreciated on the thm\l‘hnlll and expertness | than in that of dfillnc a ('mlhfi ferreting snm to justice | blow to the white slave trader. the white ' ia true, But fic in thie city, the police in a most | of Chlcllfl W] of aiding the moral uplift of the com- | lam Rainey Harper. 7 i “To ot State's Attorney Alling the bottom 1§ yet to be reached in thi e must hear from hearty r 7 urther. hands, they might better be killed. :mfi.:h%::de:gfi?exd:fi fow. The |2t oh & burden and In the manner | the state’s atforney further. humane disposition of old or worn- |g society cannot step “,wd“,,"‘““m Ings and the persons in the street | of prosecution in the criminal courts. Py, ‘rescue i Ground has been broken for to_serve gratifying way carry out its functions | memorial to tho“fuu w-idm wm-

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