New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 8, 1915, Page 10

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LIES WINNERS OF EIRST GAME tinued Wrom First Page.) should beat Alexander we rfow up the sponge. We . We have Demaree, Mayer, s, Rixey and McQuillan, any are good enough to beat a lubs when they are right, and itcher is in first class con- isagreeable weather apparent- no effect on the bleacherites, whom have béen in line for lan thirty-six hours waiting for ing of the gates at 10 o’clock prning. Men and boys alike to be outdone by the and maintained their vigil out the night. One group fire and by a sort of unwritten pnt those who foraged for food titled to keep places they had ginally. In the early morning e line steadily was augmented tiona) arrivals and by dawn it id for several blocks. Many who held places near the the line sold them to late at a “fair” price and again p their dreary 'wait further “Red Sox” Favorites. ugh betting on the series has n brisk, several wagers of fair | e been placed, mostly at 6 to he Bostonians the favorites. bets were made on the result first game, National league sup- offering 3 to 3 that the Phil- hld win provided Alexander was to do the pitching. bt speculators did not seem to humerous as in past years but ho were in evidence secured on and good prices for seats. First Inning, half—There was a delay un- noving picture man could be om the fleld. er singled over second base. pston crowd howled. Scott d, Alexander to Luderus. went to second. Speaker Alexander appeared ner- Hoblitzell, forced Speaker. to Niehoff. Hooper went Lewis up. Hoblitzell was off first, Alexander to Lu- No run, one hit, no errors. nd half—S8tock out on foul to Bancroft flied out to Barry. fouled out to Hoblitzell. . No o hit, no error. Second Inning. half—Lewis shot a hot sin- p - lett. Gardner sacrificed, jder to Luderus. Lewis went pnd. Barry hit to Alexander rew to second to head off at third. Stock threw to Ban- who touched the runner out. meantime Barry went to sec- Burns saved Alexander a wild by a nice stop. Cady struck No_rup, one hit, no error. nd half—Cravath up. The gave thle big home run hitter and when he came to the bat the outfielders backed against hce. Cravath walked. Barry uderus’ grounder and touched h on the line, Luderus safe at Barry was too [late to catch nner. ‘Whitted up. Luderus ealing, Cady to Barry. Shore ne speed and a’ puzzling curve. pd walked. | Niehoff struck out. , no hit, na error, Third Inning Half—Shore out Niehoff to s. Alexander worked his low n the Boston batters. Hooper jut to Whitted, who had to back make , the catch. Scott shot a ner to left center for a base. r fled out to Whitted. No run, t, no error. pnd Half—Burns flied out to Alexander up. The stands gave iladelphia pitcher a great cheer. hder scratched an infield hit Gardner could not fleld in time. forced Alexander, Gardner to . Bancroft went out to Hoblit- nassisted. No runs, one hit, ror- Fourth Inning. Half—Hoblitzel was thrown Niehoff: Lewis fanned. The howled. Gardner sent a single he second bag. Barry flied out avath. No run, one hit, no er- ond Half—Parkert shot a single ht. It was a Texas leaguer. ith sacrificed, Shore to Hoblitzel prt went to second. Barry threw mderus, Paskert taking ‘third. prt scored on Whitted’s infleld hich Barry could not flield in Niehoff up. Whitted stole sec- Cady’s throw was high. Niehoff peott to Hoblitizel. One run, two no errors. Fifth Inning. Halft—Cady up. out Cady. Shore up. d over second. Hooper up. per popped out to Bancroft. forced Shore, Niehoff to Ban- No run, one hit, no error. ond Half~—Burns fanned. Alex- r flied out to Lewis. Stock safe st on Shore’s fumble of Stock’s der. un, no hit, one error. Sixth Inning. rst Half—Speaker flies out to ted, who made a side-catch. itzell singled to right, Cravath pst making a shoestring catch. is fanned, Hoblitzell stealing Ina as the batter struck out. finer flied out to Burns. No run, hit, no error. cond Half—Paskert out é-Hoblitzell route. Cravath filed to Speaker. Barry threw out erus. No run, no hit, no error. i1 Seventh Inning. Half—Barry singled over Cady sacrificed, Alexander to rus, Barry taking second. Shore ck out. Hooper fanned. No runs, hit, no error. ond Halft—Whitted flied out to who made the catch near the st Neihoft Shore by the rst Shore threw out Bancroft.. out, Shore to Hoblitzel. Barry threw out Burns, a pretty fielding play. No runs, no hit, no error. Eight' Inning. First Half—Scott popped out to. Bancroft. Speaker walked. Stock | threw out Hoblitzel, Speaker going to | second. Speaker scored on Lewis' single to left. Lewis went to second on Whitted’s throw to the plate. Gardner flied to Paskert who cut off a sure hit. One run, one hit, no er- rors. Second Half—Barry threw out Alexander. Stock walked. Bancroft got a hit when Scott was slow in covering the bag to take Barry's throw of Bancroft’s grounder. Pask- ert walked and the bases are filled. vath out at first. Bancroft scored on Luderus infield hit. Paskert went to third. Time was called while Luder- us left the field for a moment. Lu- derus out trying to steal, Cady to Scott. Two rums, two hits mno er- rors. Nirth Inning. First Half—Barry fanned. He missed the third strike by a foot. Henriksen batted for Cady. Hen- riksen safe when Luderus fumbled his grounder. Ruth batted for Shore, Ruth was out on first, Luderus un- assisted. Henriksen went to second Hooper flied to Luderus. No run, no hit, one error. COURT TO PRORE DR. . HILLIS’ ACCOUNTS Stock scored when Scott threw Cra- [ “The Public Can Look for Some Live- 1y Proceedings,” Declares Clergy- man’s Business Agent- New York, Oct, 8.—Indication was given yesterday that the financial af- fairs of Rev. Dr. Newell Dwight Hillts, widely known as one of America's most eloquent preachers and pastor of Plymouth church, Brooklyn, made famous by Henry Ward Beecher, will | soon be accounted in court. Lawyers acting for Dr. Hillis yesterday se- cured a summons requiring the ap- pearance in the supreme court, with- in twenty days, of Frank L. Fergu- son, former president of the board of trustees of Plymouth, who for nearly five years managed the «ergy- man’s business affairs, It was a disagréement last March between Dr. Hillis and Mr. Ferguson that eventually led to the recent pul- | pit acknowledgement of Dr. Hillis that he had been too anxious to make money and that he had gone into speculation in order to make provi- sion for his family and others depend- ent upon him. Mr. Ferguson he was glad the summons had been issued and that the matter was com- ing into court. “The public can look for some lively proceedings,” he de- clared. said yesterday that | AUSTRALIAN NAVY. Cruiser and Two Torpedo Boat De- stroyers to Be Added. Sydney, Australia, Oct. 8.—The cruiser Brisbane and two torpedo boat destroyers, which will be launched at the Cockatoo Island Naval Dock Yard here during the next two months, will add considerably to the Australian navy. The Brisbane will be the first cruiser entirely construct- ed in an Australian yard by Australian workmen. She is named after the capital of Queenland, and is a sister ship of the Sydney—the victor over | the Emden—and the Melbourne. She i« 5,000 tons displacement and is armed with 6-inch guns. The two destroyers are the Torrens and the Swan. A REGAL WRAP FOR HER WHO GOES TO OPERA This gorgeous garment is fashioned of old rose panne velvet. From its 0 9 TO 11 A. M.—HOUR SALE—9 TO 11 A. ¥ STEAKXS, short, Sirloin, Round Porterhouse and 17¢ Guaranteed Eggs . ...dozen 26¢ LEGS OF SPRING LAMB .............]Ib 16C FORES OF YOUNG LAMB ............Ib 120 FANCY CHUCK ROAST BEEF ........Ib l 5(: Lean, Fresh or Smoked SHOULDERS ...Ib 1 2 c 1 1b Liver !5 1b BACON. 12Vc SKIN BACK HAMS, 8 to 10 Ibs,.. 1> 17¢ SWIFT'S ALL PORK SAUSAGE » 2 Oc RoABE - ...» 20c PLATE CORNED BEEF o> 9C 28c FRESH GROUND Hamburg Steak Ib Moh Creamery Butter ......Ib BULGARIA JOINS WITH TEUTONS (Continued From First Page.) of realizing her desire for union of all Bulgarian peoples.” Why They Arc Fighting. The news agency says further “The manifesto to the people * * states that Russia is fighting for Con- stantinople and the Dardanelles, Great Britain to destroy Germany's competition, France for Alsace and Lorraine, and the other allies to rob foreign countries. The central pow- | ers are fighting to defend property and assure peaceful progress. “The loval neutrality maitained by Bulgaria has been advantageous to the present time, the manifesto say and it is only now that military and economic preparations have been completed. ““The manifesto states that Serbia, the worst enemy of Bulgaria, has op- pressed the purely Bulgarian popula- tion of Macedonia in the most bar- barous manner, the male population being compelled to die for Serbia’s ceuse, the women being outraged, and the rivers running red with blood.” Bulgaria Seizes Railroad. Sofia, Bulgaria, Oct. 8, via Am- sterdam and London, 12:27 p. m.— The railroad running between Mus- tapha Pasha, a town of Thrace, north- west of Adrianople, and the Bulgar- ian seaport of Dedeaghatch, in the Aegean sea, was taken over today by the Bulgarian staff. Some forty miles of this railroad runs througn Turkish territory. Bulgarian Envoy Gets Paseports. Nish, Serbia, Oct. 8, via London, 12:42 p. m.—The diplomatic rupture between Serbia and Bulgaria is com- plete. The foreign office has hand- ed the Bulgarian minister his pass- ports. Drop Bombs On Nish, Nish, Oct. 7, via London, Oct. 8, 6:23 a. m.—An aeroplane coming from Bulgaria this afternoon dropped numerous bombs on Nish, killing five persons and wounding two Others. It then returned safely to Bulgaria. “Benevolent Neutrality London, Oct. 8, 12:30 p. m.—A mes- sage to the Times states that the Greek government has decided to is- sue a declaration of the attitude of “Benevolent neutrality” toward the entente powers. Frénch Official Report. Paris, Oct, 8, 2:33 p. m-—North of Arras last night the cannonading con- tinued, with both sides taking part, according to announces:ent made by the French war office this afternoon. There was also artillery activity in the region of Roye and and to the north of the River Aisne. In the Champagne district was vio- lent bombardment on the part of the German artillery, with very energetic replies from the French cannon- There was also active fighting in the trenches southeast of Tehure. Russians Withstand Attacks. Petrograd, Oct. 8, via London, 2:06 p. m.—There is renewed military ac- tivity on the northern end of the Russian front, from Dvinsk to Novo Grodek. The heaviest fighting is in the neighborhood of Dvinsk, to the south of which the Germans have had some success. On the whole, how- ever, the Russians have been able to withstand their assaults. The Germans have succeeded in crossing the Vilya north of Smorgon, enabling them to coordinate their forces north and south of this point. Teutons Claim Progress. deep, square collar hang rich drapes massive folds, one corner being fin- ished with an elaborate silk tassel. fleld: fence. It looked like a run when it started. Niehoff The front fastens with a metal clasp set with garnets, l Berlin, Oct. 8, via London, 3:45 p. m.—The Teutonic invasion of Serbia is proceeding favorably, progress in the crossing of the Drina, Save and Danube rivers by the German and up | [ Yellow Onions ... 4qts i OC st for 12C RIB OR LOIN LAMB CHOPS | ‘ BONELESS COTTAGE . 180 HAMS ........ RIB ROAST Fresh York State Eggs doz Austrian armies under Field Marshal | Von Mackensen being reported by German army headquarters. The capture of three cannon op- posite Ram is announced. NOT ENOUGH WOM DOCTORS. Demand in Eugland Exceeds Supply, According to Report. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) London, September 30.—The de- mand for women doctors exceeds the supply, according to a statement by the London School of Medicine for: | Women. Even the posts of house physician and house surgeon in the | hospitals, heretofore always held by men, are offered to women. Thig is particularly true of the provincial hos- pitals. Women are also taking the practices of men who have gone to the front. Boards of Guardians are | 5o hara up for doctors that, casting aside their inherited prejudices, they offer positions to women at increased | salary. Before the war, an infirmary j @octor in the White Chapel district, who was always a man received only $500 a year and emoluments. Now the same post is advertised for a woman at $1,000 and emoluments. The women’s medical school of London has trained 600 women doc- tors now in practice, and has 220 stu- dents on its rolls. The class entering the autumn terms is larger by 60 ap- plicants than ever before. BISHOP CODMAN DEAD, Head of Episcopal Diocese of aMine | Passes Away at Maine, Boston, Oct. 8.—Rt. T¥c. Robert Codman, bishop of the Episcopal dio- cese of Maine, died at a hospital here late yesterday. He had been un- conscious since an operation several days ago, Bishop Codman was married at Bar Harbor on September 16 to Miss Mar- | garetta Porter of Philadelphia, and they were cruising on his yacht Calu- met II, on their wedding trip when | he was taken ill. He hiad been bishop of Maine since 19560. Before entering the ministry | in 1894, he practiced law in this city | for six years. He was graduated from Harvard in 1882 and from the Har- vard Law school in 1885. He entered the New York Theological Seminary in 1891, graduating in 1894. He was assistant rector of All Saints’ chugch at Ashmont, Mass., 1894-95, and rec- tor of St. John's church in Rnxhur)zt Mass., 1895-1900. Trinity college in 1900 conferred upon him the desree of 8. T. D, | | Wireless Flying Torpedoes, (Bridgeport Farmer.) A few years ago the matter of fact descrintions of the new air torpedo would have read like fiction: Jules Verne's tale of an under sea boat was | fiction. Tennyson wrote in fanciful | verse of purple argosies battling in the air. Wireless communication was the theme of a hundred novels. Tha fiying machine was described in fic- tion, fifty times, before it became au | fact. There are no reasons why tor- | pedoes should not be directed by | wireless through the air, just as they | can be directed by wireless, | the water. | Nations must turn themsel7ves to the defense of the air, for it has be- | come a certainty that, in the near fu- | ture, the weapons o the air will be much more numerous and deadly | than they are now. under Items Of Interest To Women. Remnants of meat of different kinds | can be ground fine and mixed with rice, a raw egg, seasoned and made | into cakes and fried brown on bbth | sides. They are very good for a lunch dish. If the blankets have been in use through the summer now is the time to sun and air them before the fall and winter storms set in. It may be useful to know that when you have over-salted soup this can be counteracted by dropping an un- cooked potato into it. Allow the soup to continue boiling until the TH Gree Red Pep‘;lg:s .4 qts ].OC .for 230 Cape Cod Cranberries 3 qgts 25C e lDC 1 pk Potatoes 2 qts Onions . Jersey Sweet Potatoes . .. Fancy Ripe Fresh Cut Spinach . ... Best Pure Lard ......2 1lbs William A. Burns, William Arthur Burns, the eleven months old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burns of 35 Cemetery Lane, lied last night. The funeral will be held tomorrow afternoon and inter- ment will be in the old Catholic cemetery. John Sarra. John Sarra of 71 Cleveland street died this noon after a long illness. He was thirty-seven years of age and leaves a wife and four children, the eldest of whom is 10 and the young- est four. They are: Louls, Alfred, James and Mary. The funeral will probably be held tomorrow morning from St. Mary's church. Interment will be in the new Catholic cemetery. City items Mrs. N. A. Montgomery of Roches- ter, N. Y., well known speaker and lecturer, will speak at the girl's mass meeting to be held at the Center church at 8 o'clock this evening- The public is cordially invited to attend. The police were notified this morn- ing that there was a strange man try- ing to effect an entrance to some of the west end residences, but no one was around when the patrol arrived. The bowling team of the local Y. M. C. A. journeyed to Hartford last night and defeated the representatives of the Hartford association two out of three games. A marriage license has been issued to John Wikman of Southington and Maria Josephine Johnson, a house- girl, at 69 Lexington street. W. E. Latham is entertaining his brother from Arkansas. Municipal payrolls for the week are as follows: Subways, 61; streets, $847.78; sewers, $459 . The board of directors of the New past $394.- | Britain Boys’' club and the citizen's committee met this afternoon at 4 o’'clock at the Chamber of Commerce and discussed the Court street site being considered for the Boy’'s club building. g Mrs. Earl Tewksbury of Middle- field is the guest of her mother, Mrs. Stella M. Alderman, of Slater road. Germany's Best Friend. (New York World.) Since the submarine policy of Von “Tirpitz was announced in February, President Wilson has been a better friend and a wiser counselor of the German government than its own military autocracy has been. By pat- iently, earnestly and firmly under- taking to bring the imperial author- itles to their senses, he has shown a higher regard for Germany's repu- tation before the court of civiliza- tion than Germany's rulers have shown. If he has finally restored the German government to reason and sanity and brought it to appreciate the vital importance of that ‘“‘decent re- spect to the opinions of mankind” which no nation can indefinitely dis- regard, his service to the German people is no less important than his service to the American people. The war will not last forever, what- ever the outcome may be. Some day a Germany that is not blinded with rage and obsessed by Schrecklichkeit will come to perceive that the truest friend the fatherland had in the great crisis of its history was the president of the United States, who forced a war-mad autocracy to respect both the law of nations and the law humanity. NOT NEGLECTOING PARIS, Paris, Oct. 8.—Although most of the laborers employed by the city are at the front, municipal improvement is not being neglected. The Champs Elysees is being repaved, as well as buildings needing repairs are receiv- ing attention. Many of the work- ers are Belgians free from military service and Frenchmen who are in the military classes not yet called or who have been declared exempt from potato is cooked. military duty. of | a number of other streets and public | NEW CLOVER HONEY » 18¢ | Meadowbrook | the wrist. | Grammar school, | Anna M. | mer, | Eckenfoerde, Cheese J DEATHS AND FUNERALS. VA SMART MODEL IN NAVY BLUE PUSSY WILLOW SATIN This afternoon fr@gk has a deep yoke of georgette crape, which also furnishes the long sleeves shirred at A ribbon ruffle and touch- es of embroidery trim the yoke. The skirt is full and the back of the plain bodice is relieved by a smart batiste collar with flares, SCHOOL BOARD MEETS, Holds Regulay Monthly Session This | Afternoon, | The October mecting of the board | of education was held this afternoon. The finance committee reported a balance in the appropriation $158,803.56. The committee on the following report: Substitute teachers employed—Mrs. Margaret Deeley, Grammar school, grade seven; Mrs, Mary B. Hall, grade seven; Mrs. Young, Grammar school, grade seven; Nettie Gamerdinger, Smith school, kinderkarten; Mrs. Bur- ton I Gerrish, Smith school, grade East Street school, grade four; Stanley school, grades one, two and three; Mrs. Ruth H. Guiberson, Smith school, grade one; Mrs. Helen Spar- Northend school, grade four; Anna Riley, Lincoln Street school, grade four; Rockwell school, grade one, Burritt street, grade one; Hopkins, Lincoln Street s one; Florence Hanford, school, grade s Anna Rockwell school, grade six. teachers made East Street Sheridan, BIG SCHOOLS OF MACKEREL. Berlin, Oct. 8.—Such schools mackerel as have not been seen German waters for many years now visiting the seacoasts in both the North Sea and the Baltic, and the fishermen are making enormous catches. The fish are entering the Baltic through the Cattegat in great shoals, and the Danes are also tak- ing their part in the catch The German fishermen a taking enor- mous hauls in the waters around Kiel, and Fehmarn; and many shiploads of lce are coming of in are down from Denmark and Norway for packing the fish for shipment into the interior. | any. one spot | to which it | return, | with | “What do of | hool, grade | E MOHICAN MARKET Specials for Saturday MOHICAN PURE CATSUP ... bot ] R ¢ MOH. SPECIAL FAMILY FLOUR ™= 5Q) - DINNER BLEND COFFEE, 25c value ...1b ] ¢ FRESH CRISP GINGER SNAPS ......21bs ] § ¢ EVAP. or CONDENSED MILK .....3 cans 95 NEW PACKED SUGAR CORN ....3 cans 95 - PAMCO NOISELESS MATCHES ®% b= ] &5 ¢ 1 can TOMATOES, 11b ELBO MACARONI ] 5 ¢ MOHICAN CRUSHED OATS ......3p.s 9B ¢ ............comb23c Cottolene For Cooking »at! 250 STRANGLED TO DEATH, Boston, Oct. 8.—An unknown young woman was found murdered in a room in a West End hotel yesterday a vie- tim of strangulation. The police to= * night were searching for a man whe accompanied her to the hotel last night and later left hurriedly. No clue to the woman’s identity was found in her clothing. When Home is a Residence. (Providence Journal.) A ‘“residence,” according to the Treasury Department, for the pus- poses of the income tax law, “is that place where a man has his true, fixed and permanent home and principal establishment, and to which, when- ever he is absent, he has the inten- tion of returning.” This seems to satisfy all the de- mands of exactitude and fullness in a definition. The Treasury officials would probably welcome any sugges® tions for improving amendment, but it is hard to conceive that any neces- sary particular for a round and well-_ balanced description of & residence has been overlooked, slighted, or given disproportionate weight. It is certainly vastly more edifying than the dictionary's: “Residence, a plact where one resides.” The government's 4dentification of “residence” wtih “home"” is especially pleasing. The two are synonymous for the collection of the Federal in- come tax, it seems, even if for the purpose of escaping some forms of local taxation, a man's “legal resi- dence” may be far removed from his home. The illuminating clause, “that place to which, whenever he ¥ absent, he has the intention of re- turning,” leaves nothing to be de- sired for a definition of “home.” The wanderer may take up many resi- dences, of a sort. But if there is on the earth's surface is always in his mind to that is his home, and it does not matter if the Intention to retufh is postponed indfinitely 7 This carefuly framed official des finition conforms exactly, in meaning, if not In terms, to one spontaneously offered to the claims committee of the City Council, once upon a time, by an elderly but spirited woman who was appcaling from the assessors’ dg- cision tax her resident of Providence. She admitted that she lived much of the time In Providence, but claimed that she made her homé a daughter in a tant town you call ‘home’?” she was And the reply that brought the inquisition to an end was: “The place you go whenever you feel like it, and where you stay as long as you please.” . f sked Of Interest to New England. (New York Evening Post.) The completion Gate, of the largest the world is not merely an impres- sive feet of engineering; it marks the forging of the last link in the Jine today, over Hell steel arch in | which is to connect the metropoiithn East from Washington uninterrupted overs Indoed, it will cities of the to Boston in an land railway route. join the remotest cities on the Pennsylvania system direct with the New England centers on the New Haven and those of Quebec and the Maritime Provinces on the Bos@n and Maine and the Intercolonial. AS a means of intercommunication bes tween the Long Island boroughs and suburbs and Manhattan the New York Connecting railway, as it is to be called, should prove of very grést value to the city. But it is an ex- ploit of structural engineering that the bridge, with its single arch of 18,« 000 tons of steel spanning the dls- tance of 1017 feet between the cens crete end towers, is most striking, The two halves of the arch have been growing toward each other fop months, and it is found that they will meet today within one-fourth of an inch of the lines marked out by the engineers This insignificant variation represents the error in the surveyor's measurements, in manufacture and fitting of compli ed steel sections and in the com tions of the concrete towers i foundations are over 100 feet b ithe water line.

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