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Let the Hoosier Cabinet cut Your Kitchen Work In two - No more steps to pantry No meore steps to cupboard Less steps ta cellar ' L IDEAS FOR REAL CLEAN-UP SUGGESTIONS We Sell Grand Rapids Furniture. We also sell i i -, _| all we can that is made in New Britain; Roxbury Hammocks,“Rip Van Winkle” Springs and Bedding See Our Model Flat for Suggestions Every woman in own The World's Sewing Machine by machine for “THE MATTRESSE 85€ ! Pillows, Upholste: Box Springs | Now On Spee SALE A fine selection of the famous Good Night Never Stretch Mattressesy which are nteed sever to stretch out of shape, get thin and lumpy or lose their fufts are now on special sale at this store. Also an extra fine selection of Good Night Pillows and Upholstered Box Springs. tionally good opportunity to get extra g Call and See ' Brussels Carpets, Regular $1.50. Clean-up Price . ... Three-ply Carpet, Regular $1.25 Clean-up Price All Wool Ingrain, Regular 85c and 90c. Clean-up Price............ 65¢ Regular 50c Carpet. Clean-up Prite ... French Wilton, 9x12, Regular $60.00. Clean-up Price ............. $45.00 Regular Wilton, 9x12, Regular $45.00. Clean-u p Price $30.00 Axminster Rugs, 9x12, Regular $28. Clean-up Price ............. $19.98 : Brussels Rugs, 9x12, Regular $22. Children’s Carriages from $1.25 to Clean-upPrice ... ... $85.00. - Five manufacturing Co.’s to select from: Heywood Bros. and i 4 kefield Co,, F. A, \\'h§moy & Co,, s ;;‘_-nu‘fllcr; The Brilliant Electric Vac uum Cleaner ..... $15.50 Torrington Vacuum Clean- .3 I votnaaeas o B0 Window Shades . .25¢ to 75¢ Elgin Vacuum . Cleaner, with brush ...~ ... $8.00 Wizard Mops 69¢ to $1.50 Cedar Oil Mops ...... $1.25 “0O-So-Ezy” 2 Mops for $1.50 Curtain Rods and Lace Cur- tains. Our New Auto Truck Now Ready to Deliver Goods Anywhere inNew England JOHN A. ANDREWS & CO. . Refrigerators from $5.00 to $45.00. = Le_anni’s, Olderless, Whité Meunthin DUBLC 15, D WALTER LS5 Watsibwry oy Lets Griffca Dows Wih 0o fil Detroit, May 10.—In a pitchers’ duel before more than 13,000 persons here yesterday Dubuc humbled Walter Johnson, the score be¢ing 1 to 0. Although the Washington star Etruck out six men the Tigers gar- ! New York. ' No other recent cham- Not long after losing his title, Sul- pion has had so brief a reign as Sul- livan was knocked out by Oscar Gard- j livan. The nearest approach to Sul- ner, and late in 1899 he lost to Kid | livan’s record was made by Billy Broad. In 1900 he defeated Broad in ] Papke, who won the middleweight New York and stopped Oscar Gardner | title from Stanley Ketchell on Septem- in Louisville. The mnext year hejber 7, 1908, and was defeated by the fought three bouts with Broad, losing | Pole on the folowing November 26. one and getting two draws., In 1992 o8 e Dave tried to come back, but was Bd Barrow's Birthday. whipped by Terry McGovern at Louis- Edward Grant Barrow, the presi- ville, Sullivan was afterward defeat- | dent of the International league. will ed by Young Corbett, Charlie Neary | Pass his forty-seventh milestone to- and Kid Herman, and quit the ring | day, being born in Springfield, 111, on scored their run in the fourth inning | in 1905. e has recently been em- | May 10, 1868, Barrow’s job is about | promoter, head on a batsman hit and two singles. | Floyed as a referee in the clubs about | the most difficult in baseball, as the | and manager of The Cubs won the game in the fifth. £ e Zimmerman hit to Huggins, who threw wild to first, Zimmerman taking second base and scoring on Saier's spiked in the left arm by Johnston in] livan lost on a foul §n ten rounds. the fifth inning and will be out for several days. Score: NOAL LEAGUE. Yesterday’s Results, Pittsburgh 8, Cincinnati 3. Chicago 2, St. Louis 1. Internation any other the Feds, while: chilled the ' Mentreal _and vear the P { one that four of the Barrow had & fore assuming { minor circulty ; cession a pri 'y 5 manufaeturer, & ager, a boxing T 200100000—3 Pittsburgh 0100302208 1 Batteries: Douglas, Lear an Clarke, Dooin; Harmon and Schang. h. Cincinnati 9 3 Standing of the Clubs, Won. Lest 18 6 13 7 11 8 10 10 10 2 19 R T 7ne Afmy, stil) unbeaten, continues », to show:the way to the college base- ball teams: with the phenemenal team batting average of .383. The Navy Saier’s Homer Does It. Chicago, May 10.—The Cubs defeat- ed the Cardinals, 2 to 1. Vaughn and Sallee pitched great ball, each al-l lowing four hits. The Cardinals Philadelphia .... Chicago Boston .. Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Brooklyn . New York ... 14 12 Games Today. New York in Bosten. Philadélphia in Brooklyn. Chicago in Pittsburgh. ,,< 8t. Louis «:02.000100000—1 has slugged its' way' to second place in batting strength, having passed Col- umbia in the course of the week, in which its average jfumped to .281. Yale and Harvard each showed big gaing over their averages of a week ago, although both are far from the top: Harvard, with an increase of tweén- | ty pointgsto its credit, made the big- gest gain of the weéek, coming up from ~ 202 t6 .222. ' Pemnsylvania, too, took 32 brace and jumped from ,203 to .219. 2Princeton dropped back four points to :285, but Yale advanced from .232 to .245. Both Syracuse and Dartmouth 'struck some more formidable pitching and their averages sufféered according- ly. Celumbia, too, lost ground, drop- ping from 278 to .246 although it won both games played. Harte 'the Harvard catcher is the real individual slugger, with an aver- age of .424. He leads Geérhardt, of the Army by ten points. Watts, Columbia’s star second baseman, pumped his av- erage up to .384, while Bush forged to the top of Yale's list with an average of .347. Among the pitchers Neyland of the Army is the leader. The aver- ages: Team Batting Averages. G. AB. R. H. SH. 8B. 381 95 127 13 40 556 120 156 18 56 470 80 124 20 42 821 63 80 4 16 381 75 95 13 15 425 104 19 55 147 21 42 101 17 38 102 15 21 13 13 B.C. .3338 .281 264 249 .243 245 .285 222 Navy . Columbia 14 Dartmo’th 10 Syraéuse .11 DON'T BOTHER DOMINICK. Mullaney Biggest and Most Ferocious Ump in Captivity. Dominick Mullaney has been um- piring in the American league for ihreé weeks now, and up to date no one has hit him on the nose or even threatened him' with violence. Mul- laney is one of those fellows that you just naturally shrink from hitting; =ort of hesitate, as it were, and stay the ¢ruel impulse. Mullaney is 6 feet 6 inches tall and weighs 240 pounds. They say that a ball player attacked Mullaney one day while he was um- piring in the Southern league. The trouble started at the home plate and the struggle continued all the way to the players’ bench. After a super- ficial examination the ambulance sur- geon said that in a few weeks the ball piayer would hardly know he had been in a fight. But if not annoyed Mul- janey is said to be perfectly harmiless. LYNN BUYS OWEN QUINN, nered six hits off his dellvery, while Dubuc allowed but one. Score: r.h. Detroit .. +...00001000x—1 6 1 ‘Washington .....000000000—0 1 0 Batteries: Dubuc and Baker; John- son and Ainsmith, Acosta. e. “Lajoie Day,” Athletics Whipped. Cleveland, May 10.—Lajoie ~day brought no cheer to, Connie Mack's @owntrodde: hiladelphia champions, for the Indians trampled all over the Philadelphians, winning 3 to 0. It was a pitchers’ battle for five innings. Then Bush weakened and the Indians | bunched 'hits with passes, scoring three Tuns. Morton was in excellent fcrm and had little trouble disposing of the easterners. Score: r. .000000000—0 Cleveland .00000300x—3 Batteries: orton and O'Neill; Bush, Bressler and Schang. h. e Philagelphia . S 3 g Ak Loudermilk Turns Sour. St. uis, May 10.—The White Sox ‘won a 6 to 1 combat from the Browns New London, May 10.—Owen Quinn, ; For six ‘innjngs it was an interesting iast year’s first sacker for the Planters, Fngland league. Lawrence was after made the mistake of trying te do has been bought by Lynn of the New jand Russell. battle- between Loudermilk Loudermilk went all to pitchers’ | pieces in the eighth and lost the game Quinn about the same time that club| when he allowed Russell to single ana tried to land Tex Meyers. Lawrence; then forced him home with three straight passes. James went to the business direct with the New London | box in time to walk Weaver and shove players while Lynn and Lowell, latter of which landed Meyers, went direct to the local club to do busi- ness. Leouis Pieper has made the an- rouncement that Quinn hes been pur- chased by Lynn and will pastime at first base, the present occupant of that job to be released. FREEZFE OUT FOR O’DAY, Hank O’Day, one of the greatest umpires that ever lived, can't get a job in the big leagues. The Ameri- <ans, Nationals and Federals all have turned him down. Hank can't bo Plamed for not considering a minor of { 1eague offer. He's too good an um- pire to work in any except the fast- est company. Looks like a case of the ‘another run over, y | The remainder of the Sox runs were scored off Baum- gardner and Hoch. Score: - y v h. e Chicago .........000000123—6 8 1 St. Louis +..000001000—1 5 3 Batteries: Russell and Daly; Loudermilk, James, Baumgardner, Hoch and Agnew. NATIONAL LEAGUE. ‘More Trouble for Herzog. Cincinnati, May 10.—Cincinnati and Pittsburgh stopped off here on their eastern trip long enough for the Pirates to administer a defeat to the Reds, 8 to 3. Pittsburgh pounded the itchers hard, Herzog was 4 Chicago ..00002000x—2 Batteries: Sallee and Snyder; Vaughn and Bresnahan. Sportography BY “GRAVY.” BIRTHDAY OF DAVE SULLIVAN, WHO WAS CHAMPION 16 DAYS. Thi: is the thirty-eighth birthday of Dave Sullivan, the gallant little fighter ‘from Cork avhose reign as a cham- pion was the briefest in modern pugil- istic history. Back in 1898, Dave was the featherweight champion of the world for exactly forty-six days. All the more glory to him, for what pugilistic top-notcher in these com- mercial days would risk his title so scon after winning it? An armliess ,man could count 'em on his fingers. _ f Dave, of the illustrious Sullivan clan wkich includes John L., Jack and { Mike Twin, Spike, Tommy, and'a host of other great fighting men, was born in Cork on May 10, 1877. He was 1five feet four and a half inches in + height. His pugilistic career began in 1894, and he went along without ‘a defeat until 1897, when he lost a twenty-round decision to Pedlar Palmer, the English boxer. Dave fought draws with Casper Leon, Aus- tin Rice and Jack Ward and twice knocked out Patsy Haley. Sullivan reached the championship goal on September 26, 1898, when he defeated Solly Smith in five rounds at New York. Smith, a Los Angeles boy, had copped the title from George | Dixon in a twenty-round battle at San Francisco about a year before. The !lag from Cork was something of an :accidental champion, as Smith broke ihis arm early in the championship contest and had to quit. George Dixon was still claiming the title, and clam- ored for a match with Sullivan, The latter was willing, and on November 11, 1898, the Irishman and the Choen- late Drop met in New York, and Sul- A Remarkable Offer made to Visit only, by Dr.NAUGH SPECIALIS Who Dr. Naughton making an X-Ray examination with The Tm- sm«l Ski ope as an aid to Diagnosis. This and other won- lerful methods of examinations are Free to all who call ¢ the Beloin Hotel, One Day Only, Tuesday. May Jith, Hours 10 a. m. to 6:00 p, m. FREE FOR THIS VISIT 73 5t soviiaone Never before has such an opportunity been not fail to take advantage of it. Those wishin his visits and call early to avoid the erowded For nearly 15 years I have been studying the itry of food and Chemistry of the human body. I have put these two sciences together and formulated the scienceof Applied Food Chemistry. By theapplication causes. It gives Nature a chance. of this knowledge I'cure all formsof This is the true science of human nu- stomach and intestinal diseases, and trition, and it is governed by laws as all other disorders that result from infallible as the laws of gravitation. wrong eating and drinking. This ou obey them you canmot be metbod cannot fail because it con- . If, you do not obey them you forms to the laws of Nature., cannot be well. It is estimated that ninety-two per You have no idea what your body cent. of all diseases is caused by . is capable of, until have it per- errors in eating. These errors are fectly nourished. You have no {dea made by wrong selections, wrong what your mind is capable of, until combinations,and wrong proportions itlivesina perfectly nourished hody. Dr. NAUGHTON will positively be at the FELOIN THE 11th, 1915 from 10:30 o’clock in the morning un.ii to consult with and examine all cases . J. onhim 2 ast hours. of food. T teach you how to correct these, how to select, how to combine and how to proportion your food according to your age and your occupation. This cures by removing In Stomach, Heart, Catarrh, Kidney, and all Chronic Diseases that i I e —————— ¢ 0 To all who call at the BELOIN HOTEL, TUE ’ 1 will give Consultations, Diagnosis of Disease, and b, . HOTEL, U P.NAUGHTON,M.D will Be a BELOIN H( NEW BRITAL One Day Oi Tuesday, AY, iven the sick of this vicinity, and if you are suff to see him should remember the Days, Dates and You have no idea of £ until every bone, organ of the body is 100% efticiency, whi does. If you are sick or stomach or intest) require a short te; ing—then I bali give to the body all § nourishment it to your age and 1f medicine is ny preseribe only such not conflict with 1 1 got results and # ent. 7:30 o’clock n 4 5 ® Nature Met (5 4 br k%