New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 21, 1915, Page 13

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= ARNSTORMING TOURS TO BE BARRED,—BAN [ Johnson Says Present Teams Are a| Joke and This Sort of Baseball Is Injurious. Chicago, Oct. 21.—The post-season toth of picked teams of the American and National leagues, which was to cpen yesterday at Oshkosh, Wis., will be the last in which American league players will be allowed to take part. President B. B. Johnson of the American league, in making this an- nouncement yesterday, players gathered together to repre- _ sent the American orginization were a | ‘Joke team” and that the prasctice of continuing baseball half through the winter is an injury to the sport and ¢ the players themselves. “We will stop this masquerading.’” Fresident Johnson said, “as there is too much baseball now in the regular B scason. I am strongly opposed to it. The only way to increase the public’s interest in baseball.is to reduce’ thc guantity and improve the quality, slead of increasing the quantity nn(‘l! reducing the quality. “Nothing like a reprecentative team has been picked from either of the m.ajor leagues. represent the Joke.” President Johnson said that rresent tour was being made withou dhe~tonsent of the National Baseball ommission, only the consent of the Club owners whose players were so- lected having been obtained. These club owners, posed to their players making post- season tours, preferred to give a re- Itictant consent rather than make an individual stand against it, Mr, John- een said. American lcague jforestall plans for future post-season jffours. ANOTHER INVESTIGATION, ' ‘aptain Solon of Minncsota Fcotball Team Denles Professional Playing. Minneapolis, Oct. 21.—Lorin Solon, | aptain of the University of Minnesota gotball team, charged with playing irofessional baseball at Harve, Mon,, | st summer, yesterday asserted the harge was false, hé said: “In September I took a trip to lacier Park. On thé way back I met L number of the Havre ball players on fie train. Later a number of Chi- pagoans, whom I knew, boarded the fraif. They evidently jumped at the fonclusion that I was a Havre ball layer. On reaching Minneapolis [iley.then spread the false report that flhad been playing ball.” | “Members of the faculty, beyond ad- nitting the case was under investiga- on, refused to make any comment. ! Undismayed by the chance that Bey might have to play Iowa Satur- ¥ without their star and captain, e Gophers yesterday afternoon went nto an extra practice. Bernie Bier- an was generally believed to be the jan Coach Williams would play in he place of Solon, should the Eligi- ility board decide agnmst the cap- in. JIT MAY BE MGR. FRED. nodgrass Said to be Slated For Managerial Berth of Vernon Club. New York, Oct. 21,—Fred Snod- ass is likely to follow Wilbert Rob- hson, Charlie Herzog and other. play- connected with the Giants under cGraw into the managerial ranks. nyway we have it straight from one the Pacific Coast K League club wners that Fred Snodgrass is being onsidered as manager of the Vernon ub. Hamilton Patterson and Snod- rass both have been mentioned for joc White's place and it is said that Inodgrass and the Vernon owners are jickering over the terms. If §podgrass does become manager the Vernon Club he will have pals of the 1915 Braves with Whaling, Cathers and Moran - been sent to Vernon in ex- e for outfielder Wilhoit. sides Doc White cf Vernon it ig hat Frank Dillon of the Angels I’ ‘will have to- step aside. nefl» of the Los Angeles Club arc id to be in favor of a playing mana- and one of the men at present ith the Angels i3 likely to land the MANY WANT SEATS. Botween Holy Cross and Ford- on Saturday Attracting Attention. INew York, Oct. 21.—Billy Lush, hletic director at Fordham, vyester- v received a request for the reser- tion of 1,000 seats for the football me between Holy Cross and Ford- . to be staged at Fordham Field ! Staurday. The reaquest came lom Holy Cross slumni, pre s a great number in the metro- plitan section. Some are even oo g to come down from Boston with group of Fordham sraduvates, who | t Saturday formed a Fordham Club the Hub. Holy Cross and Fordham alwavs hit up a rattling good battle, and with | matched br a e elevens pretty evenlv s vgar's contest ought to Irker. Arrangements have heen de for the advance sale of tickets Spalding’s and Taylor's stores. FRISCO CLUB WINS FLAG, n Francisco, Oct. 21.—Bv -vin- ng yesterday's came from Oakland, o 4, the San Francisco clnb wan e championship of the Pacific Const wet Should San Francico 1o~ the remainder of the games of season, which cloves this week, il. would continue at the hcad percentage column. of said that the The one ga‘hecred to ! is' a the | althoush on- | Consequently the National | Cofimission will draft legislation to | of whom ! it | THERE IS A VAST ARMY of men and women who really never know what it is to enjoy sound, vibrat- ing health—who would be surprised to i suddenly gain that exhilarating vitality that robust health brings. Literally thousands without any par- | ticular sickness live in “general de- bility”, as the doctors call it—have headaches, are tiréd and indifferent. To all such people we say with unmis- takable earnestness—‘Take Scott’s Emulsion after meals forone monthand allow its rare oil-food to enrich and en- liven your blood, quicken your circula- tion, stimulate nutrition, and aid nature i to develop that real red-blooded h(e that means activ \" y (.‘I’\]O\ ment, success. Scott’s Emulsion is not a drug, but a pleasant food-tonic—free from alcohol One bottle may help you. i Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. i IS BAKER TO FIGURE IN | BIG BASEBALL DEAL ? 15-31 in- | ! Rumer IMas It That Big Deal is On | Effecting Gardner, Maisel and Former Athletic Star. Oct. 21.—That Larry Gard- | ner of the Reca Sox is to be traded te the Athletics in three-cornered | deal whereby New York Americars will accdire Run” Baker, while Fritzy sel comes to Boston, i= the lates: report in baseball cles, and almiost the first gun to fired from thc winter lcague fortre: Maisel batted for -277 this year. Gardner for .265. The Red Sox third beserran fielded for .93% haviny 239 rseists in 127 gamcs, Maisel fielded for .948 with 224 assists in 135 gumes. Gardner and Ty Cobb are Mysiic Shriners, and Larry as inclined to ¢ympathize with Ty during the boo- ing episodes of the final Detroit series here, Gardner played fine ball in che World’s series, but the trade in ques- tion is sald to be on the cards. Ray Collins, Gardner’'s old college chum at Vermont, is also due to he traded and sold, and it is inferred that the powers that he believe that this is an additlonal rea-on for trad- ing Gardner, Vean Gregg will be leot out, according to . the underground reports, while Manager Carrigan may have difficuity in persuading the president of the club to offer Heinie Wagner & satisfactory contracr Wagner’s ralary was cut this year, although when he was signed it was not expected that he could play re vlerly, whereas, as a matter of fact, he took part in 95 games. | Doston, “Home | » cir- bo YANKEE PITCHER SIGNS. The Yankees yesterday received the signed contract of Beft Shockér, a right hand pitcher, who was drafted by the New York club from Ottawa of the Canadian league. He has made a great record during the past séason in the Dominion league. . His most recent feat was to strike out ninetéen men in a gfame against the All- Leaguers at Milford, Penn., on Sep- tember 29. Pitching for the Red- ford tearm he allowed only four hits nad the contest was won by a score of 4 to 1, due to his excellent work. During the past season Shocker pitched a total of 303 innings. His opponents scored ninety-five runs and made 186 hits. He gave forty-eight bases on balls and struck out 186 men. He won nineteen games and lost ten. Shocker also proved himself a suc- cess as an outfielder, taking part in twenty-eight games. He had a field- ing average of .926, and his batting average in the fifty-four ‘games in which he participated as a pitcher was .277. Shocker is twenty-four yvears old. During 1913 he was with the Windsor club ¢nd with Fort Mayne and Ottawa during the season of 1914. NEW PLAYERS FOR WHITE SOX. Chicago, Oct. 21.—Secrctary Harry Grabiner of the Chicago American | leazue team announced ye-terday that | the White Sox had obtained Outflelder { Chappell ana Pitcher Shackelford from the Milwaukee team of the ! Amerizan a~ociation. He denied, how. | ever, that “Nemo” Liebold. outfielder, | would be sent to Milwaukee as part of the deal. It is rumored that Chap- pell is to be turned over to Cleveland in” part pavment for Joe Jackson, | Toth and Klepfer already having been ! turned over in connection with the trade. WHALY MAKES THREATS. i Los Angeles, Oct. 21.—Bert Wha- .Ilng. the former Boston Brave, who, with Herkiz Mecran and Fred Snod- grass, was traded to the Vernon Pa- cific cosst league club will not report uni he is made manager of the team. Whaling, it iIs said, demands that Doc Whi's, the former 'White Scx bhurler hs deposed as manager and that he be established in that berth. Rert thrcatens to make a hur- dle to the Federals unless Maicr complies with the demand. i TO RECEIVE MEDALS. Chicago, Oct. 21.—The members of ,the Chicago team of the Federal | league will be presented with medals ! by the league, declaring them cham- plons of the world for 1915, accord- | ing to a letter reccived yesterday by | Joe Tinker, manager of the team, | from James A. Gilmore, president of | the league. “Inasmuch as the Na- | tional commission failed to accept our challenge for a series to decide the champions, your team is the unques- tioned champion of the world,” says the letter. [JERICANS WIN FIRST GAME. . osh, Wis.. Oet.'21.—The All- erican baseball team defeated the gq'mlonals here yesterday after- , 4 to 2. Score by imnings: ' .‘ r. h. e. jericans ...000103000—4 7 0 s .000001100—2 & 3 i’—flurper and Cady; Pfef- . McCarty. D PDNPEIAN RESH-PURE -SWEET Barbed wire is playing its important part in this war, as it has in several former wars, succeeding or supple- menting the “‘cheval de frise” forme: Iy employed to stop charges and hin- der advances. It is reported that the German forces have closed the Dutch- elgian frontier by means of barbed wire fences or barriers carrying Wartime Vlectrized Barbed Wire Cost Pussy All of Her Nine Lives INNOCENT VICTIM OF THE WA powerful | clectrical currents. The bbotograph shows a German remov- ing with an insulated hook the body of a cat which had been killed by contast with the wires. CAMBRIDGE' HONORS DANA. of Author, Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 21.—Th 100th anniversary of the birth in this of Richard Henry “Two Year city Dana, autho: the Mast,’ yesterday. Under the auspices of the Cambridge His torical Society a Dana exhibition was opened in the Widener Memorial Li- brary at Harvard University,, consist- ing of a large collection of paintings, o Before w celebrated here Celebrates 100th Anniversary of Birth | | versity ly connected with the life of famous author and Included in the collection was a ver plate presented to Dana by Wen- dell Phillips and other abolitionists or his defense of Anthony Burny, a fugitive slave the In Memorial hall at Harvard Uni- tonight Bishop William of the' Episcopal diocese rence of Massachusetts will preside at a mem- | Addresses will be H. Choate former ambassador to Great. Britain, who one time was a legal ' associate of Dana; Prof, Bliss Perry of Harvard orial meeting. given by Joseph books, letters and other articles close- and Moorefield Storey of Boston. Spirited Fight Owner | [RUSSELL] Chicago, Oct. 21—The fight for the Western conference football title is one of the most interesting held in years. No one eleven stands out. Il- linois’ narrow .escape.from defeat at the hands of Ohio State;, the feature of a recent Saturday’s football this part of the country, indicated to critics that the Illini are not vincible when they are weakened by the absence of some of their stars. Coach Zuppke will need his best m. in the lineup he sends against Wis- consin, Chicago and Minnesota, now his strongest rivals for the confer- ence title. The schedule for Oct. inl in- | for Western Football Conference Title| "’3 brings a chance for direct com- parisons among the conference teams. Purdue meets Chicago, and the out- | come may show the relative strength of the maroons and the Badgers; Il- linois meets Northwestern, Ohio State takes on Wisconsin and Minnesota | plays Towa. Captain Buck of Wiscon- |at tackle and is almost assured of a i place on the all conference eleven. C is about the best quarterback in ths | west this season. He has played bril- liantly in a number of the maroons’ games, Law- | sin has been playing a strong game | ptain Russell of the Chicago eleven | 314 DEER KILLED, Since Law Went Into Effect in Con- necticut on August 1. Hartford, Oct. 21.—According to | figures filed with the superintendent [o¢ fish and game 314 deer have been killed in Connecticut since the law allowing it went into effect August 1. The supenintendent believes there | has been some illégal killing and will take steps to bring the violators - of the law to justice. A Montville- man called the capitol -today with a bill for $201 damage done his orchard by deer. He was told that with the enactment of the new law he had no redress. at ————————————————————— OPEN NOSTRILS! END A COLD OR CATARRH How To Get Relief When Head and Nose are Stuffed Up. 0009099000000V 0000000000S Count fifty! Your cold in head or catarrh disappears. Your clogged nostrils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. No more snuffling, i hawking, mucous discharge, dryness | or headache; ne struggling for breath at night. Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist and apply a little of this fragrant antiseptic cream in your nosrtils. It penetrates through every air passage of the head, sooth- ing and healing the swollen or in- flamed mucous membrane, giving you instant relief. Head colds and catarrh yield like magic. Don't stay stuffed- up and miserable. Relief is sure. Call Tel. No. 900 and your room will be warmed by an Electric tomorrow morning. Just what you want in the fall and spring Heater when you are not ranning your fure nace. Costs from $6.00 to $15.00. good cold and no little discomfort. The Spring & Buckley EléGtric Company, [TT-T9 Church Strest, | bath It will save you from catching a | | ! Get some now, this minute, and rid MOST FAVORABLE FEATURE OF LOAN From Investment Standpoint Is Conversion Privilege New York, Oct. 21.—From the in- | vestment standpoint the conversion privilege on the $500,000,000 Anglo- French five-year 5 per cent. loan is one of the most favorable features of the issue. This is the opinion of leading investment bankers. By sig- nifying a desire to do so on or before April 15, 1920, the holder of the five- | year securities can convert them at any time up to maturity into joint Londs of the British and French gov- ernments, bearing 4 1-2 per cent, in- tcrest and running to October 15, 1940, but redeemable at the option of the governments on or after Oc- tcber 15, 1930, Stop the Thing that Csuses and the Cough will Stop Itself fritnd?u ous place. Therefore, wi the cough temporarily l!v:xihm made remedy that gets right at the e s I‘ut 2% ounces of Pinex gives you ; full pint of most pl prepare. Full ahecuon- with Pi; or Hight soneh and atons ths JeAdl In other words, a purchaser of present bonds gets a joint and sev- eral obligatioi of Great Britainu and France that will pay 5 per cent. in- terest for five years and 4 1-2 per cent. for at least ten years more, and he has the option of taking back his money at the end of five years with 2 per cent. added, which would in- crease the return on his investment for that period to nearly 6 1-2 per cent. a year. The yield on the 4 1-2 rer cent. bonds, which he could take, at the present price of 98 would be opproximately 4.75 per cent. Great Value Seen- Looking at it from a more specu- lative viewpoint, great value can be seen in the conversion privilege In the fact that it gives practical as- surance to the purchaser of the present bonds at war prices that he will have the advantage of a peace market before the obligation matures. The securities, being several as well as joint obligations of the two gov- ernments, should enjoy the highest credit reached by either of them within the next fifteen years. With- i that period the war and its effect on interest rates can reasonably be cxpected to have passed, and govern- ment bond prices can be expected to compare favorably with those before the war which were the lowest for over twenty years. In regard to the future value of the five-year 3 per cent. Anglo-French bonds, a prominent banker at the head of the syndicate said: “The best basis for figuring the probable future value of these bonds iIn time of peace, or the 4 1-2 per cent. bonds into which they may be converted, is not English consols at 114, paying 2 3-4 per cent, interest because there were special reasons for that high price; but French 3 per cent. rentes, which in times of peace sell In the 90s, or-on a 3'1-4 per - cent, basis around 95.” Price Well Over Par. Adopting this conservative basis for an estimate of the future value of the bonds under peace conditions, it is found that a price well over par may be quite possible, In every year between 1889 and 1913 French rentes sold above 95; in 1897 they went as high as 106 1-4. At 95 they return- ed 3.16 per cent. A fifteen-year 4 1-2 per cent. bond to return the same yield would have to sell at 116. As the new bonds approach maturity, or their redeemable date in 1930, how- ever, they would sell nearer par and vet give the same yleld. Their price five years hence, when the war will probably be over and some of its ef- fects passed, would be 111 1-2 to vield 3.15 per cent. When the bonds have but five years to run they would sell at 106 to return the same yleld. Even at the low price of 88 1-4 for rcntes in 1912—the lowest price in over (wo decades—the corresponding level for a 4 1-2 per cent. bond with ten years to run would be 109 1-4, and at five years from maturity would he 105, At the 1913 lower price of -45, which can now be said to have reflected the coming war, the cor- responding price for ten-year 4 1-2s would still be 107 3-4, and for a five year bond about 104 1-4 e ————————————— FOOD SOURING IN STOMACH CAUSES GAS, INDIGESTION “Pape’s Diapepsin” neytralizes acids in stomach and starts digestion, Five minutes! No sourness, heartburn, acidity or dyspepsia. If what you just ate is souring on your stomach or lies llke a lump of lead, refusing to digest, or you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food, or have a feeling of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and stomach headache, you can surely get relief in five minutes. Ask your pharmacist to show you the formula, plainly printed on these fifty-cent cases of Pape’s Diapepsin then you will understand why dys- peptic troubles of all kinds must go, and why it relieves sour, out-of-order stomachs or Indigestion in five min- utes. ‘‘Pape’s Diapepsin” is harm- Jess; tastes like candy though each dose will digest and prepare for as- similation into the blood all the food you eat; besides, it makes you go to the table with a healthy appetite; but what will please you most, is that you will feel that your stomach and intestines are clean and fresh, and vou will not need to resort to laxa- tives or liver pills for biliousness or constipation. This city will have many “Pape's Diapepsin” cranks, as some people will call them, but you will be en- thusiastic about this splendid stom- ach preparation, too, if you ever take t for indigestion, gases, heartburn, dyspepsia,” or any stomach yourself of stomach misery and indi- gestion in five minutes. | disease among It wlrnl m flammation or obltrncfioa h l d bad roufih don’t p with a lot of drugs i throat nerves. Treat the cause— inflamed membranes. - Here is a and will make an obstinste oo mure quickly than you ever t.h“o‘l;u worth) i t Mtll and fill(t with pl.in granulated sugar syrup. 00! at a cost of onl“v‘fil“cl:udy ’ON‘:wc' It] helll the Infifmed membri tiv m it doel i{"o'“]v Tooieas S0 ops the f Pllegm in the throat and Dronenial hus ending the persistent loose cou Pinex js a highly cor t pound of )\nrwuv pine :;‘l:-;:“;lie guaiacol, and amous the world for its healing effect on the membs To avoid disappointment, drugeist for “2 P o Pines. ion’t accept any: o lbl{)l\l{’:dlnh!fm ‘v refun h The Pinex s, T, vf.&'"r:‘f.m OUR FUTURE POLICY TOWARD INDIAR Outlined in Address By G. Foreman, a Muskogee La: Mohonk Lake, N. ¥,, Oct. 21 lining “Our Future Policy Toward § full-blood Indians of Oklaho Grant Foreman, a Muskogee lawy declared yesterday at the Lake honk Conference on the Indian Other Dependent Peoples that the better protection of the Indl congress should legislate for i as individuals instead of legislal for them in the mass. He sald, in part: “When the rnlrlcuonl were moved from the d by the Indians of the Flvl Cl'fl Tribes of less than three-quartess Ti dian blood, they soon sold their and now very few of them have el land or money to show for their er tribal holdings. Of the more 160,000 Indians of these tribes about one-third are now restricted that they cannot sell their These Indians for the most part full-bloods, and they showid be objects of concern by congress still retains jurisdiction to for them, and is responsible for ti future- Remove Restriction. will “The restriction on the sale * their land will be removed by" lapse of time in fifteen years, “if is not sooner removed by con The purpose of congress should to prepare these people for the that they are thrown on their own sources. But it is very eviden adequate preparation is not b made. h “Permitted by the laws of con to lease their lands, though they not sell them, most of these Ind have leased their allotments incl ing their homes, to white men, | have been compelled in many casol to move off into the hills or Wou These leases sre usually made_fgr (] adequate consideration and the dian not only gets the worst of £ deal, but defeats the avowed Du posc of congress to establish hiln o his ollotment and teach him Wow make his living from it, . Many Destitution. Cascs. ., “Many cases of Gestitution . g fcund among these Indians who = a5 the owners of good tracts of lang, either because they have leascd it g will not work it. Tuberculosis increasing and there is no moncy B facilities available to ireat the ca When these cases are called to ottention of the Superintendent Muskogee, it is necessery to sell p; of the Indian's land under depart mental supervision, and use the Pl ceeds for the relief of the Indjan This wasteful proceedng would not] bo necessary If congress would miak adequate provision for the treatment) of disease and relief of destitution.* “The law permitting these Indian to leasc their land excopt under th supervision of the department should be repealed, and they should - mot be allowed to lease thely homestends at all. Part of their surplus shouwld be sold under departmantal super vision, the proceeds or s» much &s necessary, expended by department ip improving their homesteads, and the unexpended funds held by tho department against his future neods. He should be required to remove on bis homestead and made to under- stand that he must make his Uving from It. Restrictions by Congress. “Heretofore restrictions were mov= ed by congress on the sale nf over 10,000,000 acres of land upon o fostl only as to the quantum of Indiag blood, and the result was disastrous: Congress should adopt a policy of legislating for the individual Indiang instead of legislating for them in tho mass. A commission Or represenis. tive of the Interior Depaftment should be empowered to examing cach of the 33,000 restricted Indiane, laye sity them, the future policy toward them being based on their dndividual necds and qualifications. Only by in- dividual attention can distress and these people be re- leved, or can these restricted Indinns in any adequate measure be pre- pared for the day their restrictions are removed and they arc exposed 1o ‘tht white grafter.”

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