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[ P . INSURAHGE. ¢ ~ ALL KINDS & ~ AUTO INSURANGE t Telepheme. J. L. LATHROP & SONS, 2 Shetucket Streot, Norwich, Conn. y2idaw 3 —_— Thames Loan & Trust Co. Building. Agency octIIMWEF NO DANGER SIGNALS— A CLEAR TRACK is ahead of you if your property is insured in a reliable company, but danger signals should be hoisted in front of you if you are not. Consult us about insurance. ISAAC S. JONES, Insurance Agt. Richards Building, 91 Main Street. oct22daw N. TARRANT & GO., 117 MAIN STREET. Fire, Accident, Health, Fiability, Plate Glass and Steam Boiler . .. INSURANGE Norwich Union Fire Insurance Socie! u. 8, Assots 32.759,422.10 tern Assurance Co, U. €, Assots $2,397,608.00. 7. Wi dec11d THE OFFICE OF WM. F. HILL, Real Estate and Fire Insarance, 1s jocatrd In Somers’ Block, over C. M. Williams, Room 9, third floor. febl3d Telephone 1. ATTORNEYs, AT LAW. SHOWN & PERKINS, Mttorneys at Law over First Nat Saenk. Shetucket. St ¥ ‘Sntrance Stairway, nex: to Thames Nat Bunk Tel. 38-2. NORWICH DAILY LUNCH, 3 40 Franklin Street. TRY OUR REGULAR DINNER—cuc. SPECIAL SUPPERS With Tea or Coffee—15c. Open from 5a m to 12 p. in. E. GALY, Prop. sept6d HEADQUARTERS for anything in the Mill Remnant line, oolens, Flannels, Dress Goods, Cot- tons and Silks. Prices very low and a large stock to choose from. Call and see me at the MILL REMANANT STORE, 201 West Main 8t. John Bloom, Prop. DENTISTRY The dental business establighed -by my brother, whose assistant 1 was for many vears, will be continued by me, assisted by Dr. V. D. Bldred. It will be a pieasure to see the former customers of my brother and as many new ones as will favor me with their patronage. Extracting 2ic and up. movigd DR. CHAS. B. ELDRED, — e DENTISTRY Crown and Bridge work Is the work thet stands the test of time. No plate to cover the roof of your mouth; no falling down; beautiful and as firm your natural teeth. The perfect work-of today and absolutely without pain fn its insertion, Jel en parle Francais. All operations guaranteed. DR. BEARDSLEY, 237 Maln Street. aug2sd QUALITY in work should always be considere espectally when it costs no more ?;u% the inferior kind. Skilled men are employed by us. Our prices tell the whole story. R STETSON & may27d + DOMINICK & DOMINICK, FOUNDED 1870, Members of the New York Stock Exchange. Bonds and High Grade Investments Orders executed in Stocks and Bonds, Grain and Cotton, NORW!(;H BRANCH : 7 Broadway Telephone 901 FRANK 0. MOSES. Mar. YOUNG. WHEN you want to put yowr busi- ness beforé the public. thers is np me- gnn itter !hln‘nug u;m advertis- . atietin, oK QUARTERBA Annapolis, Md., Oct. 21.—The con- rdmon of Midshipman Earl D. Wilson, quarterback of the navy footbal team, who is in a serious condition as a re- sult of spinal injuries received in the game with Villa Nova on Saturday, remains about the same tonight. The surgeons consider his death only a question of time. However, the young man is rational and talks of the team and his interest therein. The authorities at the naval acad- emy were notified today that the corps of cadets at West Point have ordered flowers sent to the beside of the in- jured navy player. This information came in_a message from Lieutenant U. 8. A, head coach of. the , who at the same time expressed the sympathy of the army. TEAM STRING OF 537. Norwich Duckpin Five Beats the League Record Made bv Westerly. The No. 1 team at the Rose alleys hit a record breaking pace there on Wednesday night, smashing by two pins the league record for team single of 535 made by Westerly No. 1 last season on February § on the West- erly alleys. The new mark of the Norwich team was made in the thrid string: of their match agaipst the orwich No. 2 team and resulted when urtevant, Murphy and Harris all | piled up strnigs well over the 100. mark, with Peters and McClafferty coming along in the 90s. Harris led the rolling with 131, Mur- phy wa? second with 111, and Sturte- vant's string was 107. Peters' count of 97 and McClafferty’s 91 made up the grand total of 537, which now stands as the record in competition for the orwich, Westerly and New London leva. The new composition balls which Manager Stone has at the Rose alleys help out a lot on the making of big scores even with unexpert rollers, and have given all the top liners a big jump their figures, this fall. Mr. Partridge, o Westerly roller, was up here Wednesday using the 'composi- tion balls to roll a number of strings. He slapped down 116 without turning a hair. the biggest string he ever rolled in his Ifie, and now swears by the composition kind. He talked about arranging a series of games a little later in the season MANAGER CONGDON REPLIES TO P. A. C’S LETTER. Claims Manager Miller Departed from Agreements—Ready to Explain Scor- ing of Games. To. the Sporting Editor of The Bulle- tin: In yesterday's Bulletin a commpnica- b9 3 Wilson of Navy Team Cannot Recover—Norwich Five Breaks Duckpin Record—Other Sports. S tion appeared from the P. A. C. bnse- ball team, and I have the following to inreference to the same: . The P. A. C's are a thousand times welcome to the city champion- ship, of they wish to claim it after showing a yellow streak. They would never have a chance to claim it if ‘Manager ‘had lived up to his agreements. § 2. Up to this time the C. A. C. Jrs. have done all the press work, said com- munieation says. It was only last Thursday that he asked me to contra- dict the rumor that Gallivan and Zemke were going to pitch. He told me Saturday evening that he was not goinz to pitch Gallivan, yet he had him go in. 3. If the manager or any player on the P. A. C. team desires to know about Sullivan’s batting, er anything clse about the games, he will find me | at the C. A. club rooms ready to give the desiced informaticn. 4. 1t Tieason robbed the Jrs. of three hits what is the P. A. C. Kkicking about. We are rot. If a player can rob a bacsman of a hit, well and gdod. The C. A. C. Jrs. showed their game- ness by living up to their agreements as far as possible. (Signed) H. A. CONGDON, Manager. P.S.—Will Manager Miller insert the record of the P. A. C. team in this pa- T Norwich, Oct. 21, 1909. BROOKS TOYED WITH COY. Snatches Ball From Yale Captain for a Touchdown. and sometimes he's the cake of ice in the flow down stream. He fells tem- porarily cast for the frost roll after yesterday’s performance, says the New Haven Leader of Thursday. handled the ball so loosely that the scrubs scored. ' The Yale scrubs had crossed the 'varsity line only once this year until yesterday, and the fact that the regulars put on a full head of steam and skimmed four touchdowns Coy's peace of mind. He showed a complete reversal of playing form from his_brilliant work of Tuesday, when nothing could check his march down the field. . Springer Brooks was the sténe in Coy's patch yesterday. Brooks missed his train when he tried to make hi freshman eleven last year, but for two weeks his steck has figured in a bull market. He got into part of the Wes Point game last Saturday and put uj | gilt-edge football. He toved with Cov | vesterday till the spectators almost fancied that the mighty Yale football lend rush making tracks in his direc- [tion. | Brooks pulled off his first demonstra- " FINANCIAL AND COMMERGIAL BANK OF ENGLAND'S INCREASE IN OFFICIAL DISCOUNT RATE Absorbs Attention of the World—Recovery in Wall Financial Street. New York, Oct. 21.—The attention of the financial world was focussed on a_third weekly advance in the official per cent. On October 7-the rate was at 21-2 per cent. since the first April. Today's 5 per cent. rate ther: fore Tepresents a rise of 21-2 per cent., dowbling the bank rate in two weelks. Such drastic action is rare ex cept in panic times and must be ac cepted as indication of extraordinary conditions, On October 31, 1907, the rate was faised to 5 1-2 per cent. from 41-2 per cent, in response to the bank- ing panic which had broken out in New York, On November 4 following the rate went to 6 per cent, and on No- vember 7 to 61-2 per cent. as a result of the acute demand from New York for rescue purposes. A closer paral lel to the present situation will be seen in the occurrences of the fall of | 1906, when the bank raised its rate to | 4 per cent. September 13, to 5 per cent. October 11 and to 6 per cent. on Octo- ber 19. The protective measures in that case were directed against the | New York borrowing and the raid on | London's gold supply, which was push- |ed through the medium of American | finance bills floated in London. The huge borrowings on the part of New York at_that time was connected di- rectly with the furious speculation go- ing on in the New York stock market. That the present action of the_Bank of Englend is directed in part against New York's speculative borrowers is affirmed in news advices from London, and is also indicated by the heavy sell- ing of American securities for London account, which is forced by the meas- ures of the English bank.- These were again in heavy volume today and were attributed to the closing out of loans in London in which these stocks figur- ed_as collateral. United States Steel cause, although none of the stocks which have figured recently in the | active speculation were entirely exempt {from this pressure. It is obvious, how. | ever, that besides this influence on the | London banking proposition there are on théir suppliss. Although the Bank of England secured the new supplies of gold in London on Monday and ha made its rate effective in the privat discount rate, gold continues to go out to other points, and’ apparently Berlin threatened further large withdrawa Even today’s rise in the bank rate w: greeted by a sharp drop In the Berlin exchange on London, although all other exchanges, including our own, moved strongly in favor of London. In New York the advance in sterling exchange was so violent as to give rise to calcu- lations of the possibility of gold exports within a_short time. The paying off of New York obligations to the Lo don mon market must have gone on at a lively rate to judge from the act- |ive demand for cable transfers and sight drafts on London this may have on the loan account of American banks is the subject of prin- | cipel interest here. - The New York money market did mot share in the sensational action of Yareign money markets today, the call loan rate hold- ing at 41-2 per cent. as 4 maximum land vielding to helow that. The re- covery in_the stock market was en. couraged hy the tranquil tone of the local money market. There was evi- dence also of the requirement from an uncovered short Interest in stocks, left from the operations in anticipation of the advance in the English bank rate. In United States Steel especially there were signs of Al aggressive turn againat the snort inforest The vigor- ous strength shown by Wabash pre- ferred made It the subject of conjec- tures of a part in another railroal deal. The covering movement by the shorix made the closing tone strong. Bonds were easy. Total sales, par value, §: 762,000. United States three registered declined 1-8, the fours registered 1-4 aud the fours coupon 1-4 per cent. in the bid price on call STOCKS. High Low 524 A w2 Close, 32% Ky i@ 5% 1000 the Bank of Ergland today again by | discount rate, a full 1 per cent, to 5! put at 3 per cent, after having stoody i of was the most notable affected by this | | other forzes at work towards deplction | What effect | = 400 Am. 115 Linseed Ol Tocomotive ... . Smeltiig & B. pfd Sugar Rifining. . Tel. & Tel Tobaceo ptd Woolen 0 Anaconda. Mining 12000 Atehison 2400 Do. pfa 500 Atiantic Coast Line. Baltimore & Ohlo Do. pfd Beihlehem Sieel Brooklsn Raptd *Transit Canadian Pacific Central Leather Do. ptd i Central of ‘New Jersey. Chesacpake & Ohio Chlcag & Alton Great. Western Chicago & N. W. 16 58% 4 111 13t 1% 9% 6% "k 115 104 138 116 2000 1000 900 300 | 100 200 | e Chieago M. & St P | -C. C. €. & St Louls 3000 Colorado Fuel & Tron.... | ——— Colorado & Southern. . Do. Ist pia Do. 2d pld Consolidated_Gas Com_ Products Delaware & Hudson. .. Denver & Rio Grande. Do. ptd : Distileds’ Securities ... Erie. 3 | Lt pfd it 44 Fou 81 hinols Central 20 1455 Interborough Met. 175 Do. pld .......... 105 Toter Harvester 9 Inter Marine ptd International Paper o International Pump . a7 Towa Central 3 Kansas € Do e Louls . le & Nashvitie & St Louts P& 883 Missour Pacic Mo, an. & Texas. i® 4 i 11 National Lead 88wy sTi N. R Mex. lst pid 6000 New_York Central 3 800 N. Y. 0. & W. Nortolk & Western. . North ~ American Northern Pacific Pacific Mail a 8 1% 800 People’s Gas 200 Pitsburg C. 300 2E'S. Pressed Sted Car Pullman Pilace Car Rallwas Stéel Spring. . Reading H Republie Stcel ) Do. pld ... | 15400 Roek ‘Tsland ‘Go 800 Do. ptd | 200 %0 vowis § 100 Do. pfa s 500 Kloss Shet. 8. & T 111300 Southern Pacific Southern. Rail 300 Do. pld = —— Tennessoe Copper ... Texas & Pacific. 0 Toledo, St. 1000 Do. ptd 0 Urion Pacific Do. pfd United Staics Realty United Staies Rubber. United States Steel. ¥ 03 2 L & Wt 300 Do. pfd 2 500 Utah Copper — Chem. 3000 : | 43100 100 W Maryland 809 Wostinghouse ~ Electic . 200 Western Unlon % Wiceling & .. | 100 Wiseonsin. Central i last loan 4, New York, Oct. 21.—Cotton spot clos- ed quiet, 15 points higher; middlin uplands_14.04, middling gulf 14.30; sales 3,500 bales. Futures closed barely steady. Closing bide. October 13.70, November 13.66, December 13.78, January 13.75, Febru- ary 13.79, March 13.83, April 13.83, May 13.85, June 13.76, July 13.74, August 13.37, September '12.57. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. WHEAT Oven High Low. Dec. 104% 104 1116 163 May 1041516 104 15-16, 104 ¢ 3ty % ek 98 CORN: Dec BTSN TR L May a6k 6% July Gk % e oATs: J aa% sy P 1] w0 4015-18 505 it Sometimes Ted Coy. Yale's great foctbail captain, is the whole show, | Twice he | across the platter does not tend to help | hero shivered when he saw the scrub | | Total sales, $30.700 shares. MONEY. |-~ New York, Oct. 21.—Money on call firm, 3@41-2 -per cent. ruling rate 41-2, closing bid —, of- | tioaf, 14 1b. §1 in’afld. 14 lh.n FiEem on.fl'fl 25)R. Clams. pk. 60 lofHound Clams, op, t 35 12/Cannea sdimon. 13 Halibut, Market ' Cod, Oft 8. Haddock. 10- Steak Pollock, _1i 2 for 25 Am. Sardines, 5@15|Lobsters— b Saraines, 25( Live, 22 Qysters. ‘at. db5() | Boiled, 2 Boneless Cod,10@ib{Steam Cod, 18 Weakfish, 15|Fiounders,” 10-12 Blackfish; 15! Flatfish, 12 Brand, box. 60 Boiled Crabs, 50 Bluefish, 22 Hay, Grain and Feed. No. 1 Wheat, $2.15|Qats, bush., 55 Bran, $1.35/Cornmeal, Middlings, zl 25) p- cwt., $1.55 Straw, c 1.35|Hay, baled, Bread' Flour, $1.15 top, $1.10 $7.25@37.50| Provender, St. Louls, .90 cwt., $1.65 Rye, 35|Cottonsed Meal, Corn, bushel, 921 Lin. OIl Meal, $1.90 cwt., $1.85 tion twenty-two minutes after play opened. - Coy tried to catch one of the scrub punts and juggled the pall. Be- fore he could claw it again Brooks had snatched it from his grasp, elbowed | Cop puon the grass and was making | tracks down the pike for a ‘seventy- vard run and touchdown. He took the ball over becsuse nobody got a line on him till he was too far in the lead. Coy was slow in g y a| Kick in the second period and Brooks leaped up, blocked the punt, and| snatched the ball for another chase | down the field. Howe, the 'varsity quar- | terback, had been eveing Brooks ever | | since the first upset, and he was on | the trail before Brooks fairly got his stride. Howe overhauled Brooks at the | | ten yard line and owned him. The | scrubs would not be denied, however, {and they sent a pretty touchdown across the line when Merritt heaved a forwari pass along to Freeman, who nipped it neatly. ting away a HOW CONNIE GETS THEM. Money No Object—Car Tickets and Trolley -Rides, Says a Philadelphia Writer. ‘While other owners are giving the price of a skyscraper for thelr experi- | ments, Connie Mack dodges the class | i(\. circuits with their hold-up fig- res and looks to the Pumpkin valley | and. Roan Mare leagues for his finds. If somebody says that Biffer of Bal | more or McSwatt of Columbus ought ! to make Ty Cobb look like a faded | lily, Mack says can the chinstuff, so | murmured a Philadelphia funny man | recently. But, if somebody says that | there i3 a fellow in Barrel Stave, Nev.. | who is strong enough to bat a ball ovet the city hall, then Mack boards | he next train for Barrel Stave and | soon puts the Nevada wonder in Amer- ican league bondage, it possibly cost- ing Connie the price of a safety razor to gratify the demands of the Barrel Stave management. But, for the most part, Mack doesn’t do any business | | with' the minors at all. Most of the men who are bearing the brunt of the | Athletics' fight for the pennant didn’t | st Mack one penny in release mon- | | | First, There's Eddie Collins. Look some of them over. There's | Eddie Collins, the infantile star, who | |is so young that he is afraid to go pome in the dark. Colling once lead ' |“American league in clubbing and ranks - cond in crooked work on the paths, ut Eddie didn’t cost any Marquard fortune. Connie got hep to Eddie | while the youngster was read!nz Co- lumbia university in Milton, Homer, | Euclid and ball playing. After some | correspondence Collins joined the Ath. letics, and Connie, trembling lest he| should be bowled out for overspeeding | the expense limit, turned over to the | Shibes the following items ‘of expense | defrayed in landing the collegian Monday, postage, two cents; Wednes; day, postage, two cents; Thursday,ra road fare from New York for Collins | and myself, $5: Thursday, incidentals, five cents; totai, $5.09. Connie ex-{ | plained that the incidentals were due to a hold-up on the part of Collins | | while ‘waiting for the Philadelphia | train in the Jersey City shed. At the/ | last minute Bd | balked and refused | |to budg e an inch unless five cents | worth of sweet eating chocolate was | | forthcoming. There was nothing for | | Connie to do but to stand for this! | hold-up. It was risky business, bu “onnie has a conviction that Collins ince joining the team has justi- | i fled that $5.09 expense bill, including | | the Jersey City. hold-up. Then look at Eddie Plank, the left- | hander, who can’t wear out. Connie| | didn’t wait until Eddie worked his way | to a class A. A. league, and then mort- | gage Shibe park to get him. Plank | somes from Gettysburg, and amid keen bidding from the Chew Travelers of | Germantown, the C. Wheelmen, | | the Arrow 'Juniors, the ex-Northide | professionals and the Athletics. Mack made the most liberal offer and copped | Plank, but it took a first-class railroad | ticket from Gettysburg to Philade phia and a copy of the Police Gazette to land the man. Bender and Captain Davis. Mack also had to dig deep to z ] Bender. The Chippewa , w. | pitching for a rubber collar team at | Harrisburg when Mack started nego- | tiations for his services, After a three | hour conference Mack and the Indian | compromised on a railroad ticket and | four bits advance. But the most dar: ing speculation of all was the acquis tion of Captain Harry Davis. Harry | had big league experience with Pitt: burg and New York, but subsequent retired to do extra base penmanship for the Pennsylvania railroad. One | day Mack found he was shy a first | baseman. Suddnely he recalled that Davis was wearing out his throwing | arm pushing a pen for that heartless corporation. At a cost of five cents Mack called | | Harry up on the 'phone and told him ! that he was a real ball player and that | must not dare contradict him.! ome over to Columbia park tomor- | row. and start pufting the ball over | the right field fence.” sternly ordered| Connie. “To show you what confidence | ! have in you,” he concluded, “T'll wire you five cents. so that the trolley ride to the park won't be out of vour pock et “All right” responded Davis, * you are willing to take a chance like {that I'll "do best." And Harry | hung up the receiver, muttering hew the baseball war had cau-ed n-anagers to throw away their money. And that's | what Harry Davis cost the Athletics— | five cents for the 'phone call and five | cents for a de luxe ride on the beau- tiful and scenic Philadelphia rapid transit. Krause Came High. To land Harry Krause, the phenom- | enal young left hander, who leads the | American league pitchers, Mack had to | | put a hole in the Athletic bankroll big | enough to drive a horse through. After hocking the old Columbia park bleach- ers, Mack scraped together enough to get a ticket from San Francisco to Philadel; , and in this manner ob- taiued Hrause, who was pitching for the St Mart’s college nine when his ieft arm -began to. attract attention.! Mack also had to heavily to ob- taln the release of Jack Parry frem Holy Cross, When, the faculty at Colby college Jearned that Mack had his eye Jack Coombs. it ran up fhe price threcfold, but the. Athletic chief step- practically nothing. Wise old Mack probably be- lieves that it is better to pay a rail- road ticket for an obscure player that will make good than $11,000 for a Mar- quard frost. It is not to be.inferred thal there is anything cheap about Mack. The Ath- letic team Is operated on a most lib- eral basis, Mack paying fancy salaries to all of his deserving men, and in addition has the best appointed club- house in the country for the conven- ience and comfort of the players. SELEE PICKED EVERS. Great Chicago Shortstop Proved All inat Was Claimed for Him. When John Evers gets through being a player he may be a manager. Per- haps he may be a plaver and a_mana- ger, t00. Wherever baseball men get together the subject of Evers mana- gerial possibilities usually is discyssed when_the ability of players to act as the playing directors for big teams is talked about. Evers knows how to pldy baseball because he is a keen observer and student of the sport and those who play it. Frank Selee was the manager of the Chicago team when Evers first cutered the big league as a player. There wasn't_ mucl physically of the second baseman in those days. There isn't great deal of him now, but he has grown some. When the baseball sea- son is over and he has time {o take a little rest he gathers flesh and he might almost pass for a heavier man than he is. About the first time that Evers came to New York Selee was talking one afternoon about the future of his team. Chicago wasn’t winning cham- pionships in those days, although little Dby little the manager of the club was building the organization which has since made such a fine record in base- bal “T've got a second baseman,” said he, “who is going to be one of the great- est players on the field one of these days.” ho is he?” “Johnny Evers” was the reply. “What, that little cadaverous. looking chap who has been out in the field for Chicago once or twice?” said a base- ball critic who happened to be in New York at the time. “You can call him little and cadaver- ous and whatever else you may think he looks like,” said Selee, “because just now he is not very well and not in’the best of condition to play, but when he is right he will develop into one of the stars of the National league. He knows baseball about as thoroughly for a youngster as any boy whom I have found for a long time. He will im- prove steadily. A vear will be needed before he will be able to show what he can do as a fielder, and perhaps two years before he will be able to prove his best skill as a batter. Yet there i no more doutf about his future th there is about the past of some of the big_men of the national game. Frank Selee is dead. His abilily as a manager always was in evidence. but if anything was needed to establish it his prediction as to the future of the second baseman of the Chicago club would be sufficient. Evers has done all that Selee claimed he would. More than that, baseball men are now be- ginning to look forward to his future as manager if .the opportunity ever arrives where he will be able to handle the affairs of a team. Football Schedule Saturday. The following are the football games on the college schedule for Saturday: + Lehigh vs. Army at West Point, Union vs. Rochester at Schenectady, N. Y. Yale vs. Colgate at New Haven Bowdoin vs. Holy Cross at Worces- ter. Harvard vs, fass. Carlisle vs. Pittsburg at Pittsburg, Pa. Cornell vs. Vermont at Ithaca, N. Y. Dartmouth vs. Amherst at Amherst, Mass. o Georgetown vs, Washington, D, C. Wesleyan vs. Hamilton at Middle- town, Conn. Brown at Cambridge, North Carolina ‘at Massachusetts State at ‘Williamstown, Mass. New York Univers Hoboken, N, J. Pennsylvania vs. Penn State at Phil- adelphia, Pa. Princeton vs. Lafayette at Princeton, Fordham vs. Swarthmore at York. Syracuse vs, Trinity vs. Conn. ty vs. Stevens at New Niagara at Syracuse Norwich at Hartford, Heavy Backing for Losing 'Favorite. Jamaica, N. Y., Oct. 3L—Jeanne D'Arc, at 11 to 5 easily won . the Gowanus selling stakes, six furlongs, defeating the heavily played favorite, Besom, by five lengths. GRIDIRON GOSSIP. will be der of the secret season Harvard's prac most of the rem: Brown usually is unable to play best game against Penn, ju: as Cor- nell is on Thanksgiving day. Any opinions that Dartmouth is go- ng to be weak this fall were dispelled by the showing of the Hanover team against Willlams, Dan O'Flaherty is getting profic in drop kicking. Monday he twenty-eight goals in thirty from variots angles. trials Vic Kennard saw Brown play Penn- sy _and he says that Gammon's team ! will ‘come to Cambridge this week stronger than last year. Princeton undergraduates are allow- ed to apply for four seats for the Yale- Princeton game. The 'varsity players may purchase eight seats each, Cornell has not yet indicated that it will have more than an ordinary eleven with which to-reopen its football rela- tions with Harvard in the stadium on Nov. 6. Gooddale, one of Harvard's most promising freshman players, severely injured his collarbone in the Grotoi game and will be out of the game for three weeks. Joe Nourse, who played center last year for Harvard, is coming to Cam- bridge for the Brown game and it will be no fault of Coach Haughton's if hé doesn’t stay over to work with the | Crimson centers a while. Billy Garcelon s keeping % on the requests that come to him fi friends and acquaintances for sea for the Harvard-Yale game. So far he has had 718 applications for seats. His personal allotment as graduate mana ser will probably be about sight sea “Were 1 50 tall to reach the pole, Or grasp the ocean by my span, T must be measored by my sou' The wivd's the standard Towa ships approximately. 100,000,000 pounls of butter outside of its bor- ders every year, the surplus oyer jund above’ the home consump: tion. et v " A plant for the manufacture of silk thread is to be established at Port Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul. Brazil. The silkworm can be raised to ad- vantage in that state. A good furniture polish may be made of paraffin, oil and turpentine, Kero- sene, foo, {e good may be uséd to darken woods that has not been varnished. When two thin glasses are’ struck to- gether, set them in rather warm water and pour cold water in the upper glass. The expansion of one and con- traction of the other loosens the glasses, - “She has been twice div ced, hasn't the trouble? nds to blame, or was it her fault?” “T believe she had three proposals in her younger days, and she had a sort of curious desire to try while crude “oil. la has been in use it a rule to pour a of oill in the top notch a month, and it will ¥ it the ends of the ribs from rust- ing and the umbrella will Jast lopger. an umbrel] time make Formic acid is found in a natural state in ants, caterpillars, leaves of fir and pine trees, and in the common net- tle, and it also forms itself in a dis- tillation of sugar, starch and tartaric acid. It is extracted commercially by heating crystallized oxalic acid with glycerin, from which the resulting jc acid is withdrawn by means of distillation. o AL ) To Continue Postoffice. At East Hartford word" has been re- ceived from the postoffice authoriti at Washington, D. C., that the post- office at Hockanum is not to be dis continued October 15. The residents of Hockanum are much elated over the of their protes The post- office will' continue for the present un- der the management of Mrs. C. S. Brewer, Swarming bees send out scouts to look for desirable Jocations. SPLCIAL OFFER TO BOATMEN _— For the next Sixty Days we offer the following price: 1% H. P. Engine $40.00 31 H. P. Engink $65.00 5 H. P. Engine $85.00 Send for special prices for larger Regular_price $ 50. Regular_price $ 90.00 Regular_price $110.00 Engines, Jump Spark and Make and Break above 3% H. P. Catalogue: s ;umllh!d. WEST MYSTIC MFG. COMPANY. West Mystic, Conn. ALL DENTAL WORK. can be done without ourselves on KNOWING HOW. |- possible by Dentists cf experlenc that. tistry his particular speclalty for crowning, it for you, and do it positively wi to one-half the prices prevalling a of work. IT WILL PAY you to Inve: elsewhere. We make no charge w! n by Dentists who KNOW HOW. We pride Good Denta! work nowadays is only e. We have been 20 years geining Bach of our staff of operators has made some branch of Den- years, and whether you need filling, extraction or bridgze work. we have a SPECIALIST to do thout pain, and at from oie-third t other offices for the same quality jate and consult us before going ‘hatever for examination and advice, Sets of teeth that fit, from $8.00 Gold Crowns, 22 karat....$5.00 Bridge Work Special —our own system — absolutely impossible for break off Fillings All work guaranteed for 10 years King Dental Parlors, Dr. Jackson, Manager. Franklin Squ or All Months Aliké with us. The first 10 day of each month are deposit days in the Savings ‘Department and Interest is allowed from the first day. All days allke In Commerc cial needs can be” met. THE THAMES LOAN Shetucket Street, al Department, where all your finan- & TRUST COMPANY, Norwich, Conn. A dining room without a Sideboard is much like a window without the home atmosgiiere. LN Our collection of Sideboard and. Buffets is one of the largest in Bast< ern Connectuct, and our prices posi= ' tively the lowest. Speclal prices on all Dining Room Furniture this week. Shea fiurke i 37-41 Main Sireet. oct7d Individuality Is What Counts In Photography. Bringing out the real personality, the fine points in character, the lits traits that make us what we are. Toned down by the natural spirle of an artist into perfect accord. Not & thing of paper and pasteboard with a ready-made look. If you want a photo of your real self, or what your friends see to love and admire, call on LAIGHTON, The Photographer, Norwich opposite aug1sd Savings Soclety Schlitz Milwaukee Beer, $1 a dozen. Famous Narragansett Select Stock, 60c a dozen. Yale and New England Brewery Co’s Ale, Lager and Porter, 50c & dozen Wines, Liquors and Cordials at spe= efal prices. JACOB STEIN, 93 West Main St. Telephune 26 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 offer to the public the fines: standard brands of Beer of Europe and America, Bohemian, Pilsner, Culmbach Bavarian Beer, Bass' Pale and Burton, Mueir's | Bcotch_Ale, Guinness' Dublin _Stout. C. & C. Imported Ginger Ale, Bunker Hill P. B.[Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anheuser- Budwelser, Schlitz and Pabst. A. A. ADAM, Norwich Town. Telephone 4 iye2d The Thames National Bank REMOVED ToO 41 Broadway, TELEP“O!CE! Central Building — 990 and 991 EDUCATOR SHOES. A word to parents: Let the child's toot grow as it shouid. Children’s feet while growing require careful watch- ing. Foot troubles incurred while the foot is growing last through life. Edu- cator Shoes positively prevent foot troubles by allowing the foot to Erow as nature intended by providing ample Toom for all five toes and by EIVing proper support to the ankle, muscles, arch and instep. RYE Fancy New Rye for Seed —at— A. R. MANNING’S, Telephone. Yantic, Conn. OUR WORK meets the approval of the critical people, Rogers’ Dom:stic Laundry. Premiums. oct14d Now is he Time for Mince Fies You can get everything to make them of, including Sweet Cider, here. We have a new stock of White Rose Canned Goods. Some of the best P tatoes in the city—S0c in & bushel lots. Now, is the time to buy at {THAMESVILLE STORE Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main Streel, Norwich. Ivla ' PURE OLIVE OLL There are many brands but only one | best brana. LAPURA all. We import it direct | y. We sell It at a low price. Let us supply you 0. FERRY. : Ter: 703 336 Feankll Tel. 903-2. Rear 37 Franklin 8t | Free delivery to all parts of the city sept27d octl2d FACTORY FOl ROBERT BROWN ESTATE, ARTHUR M. BROWN, Manager 65, 57, 59 West Main 3tras 2 SUPPLIES Housecleaning Time Is Now Upon Us It you find anything in the house furnishing lines is lacking or needs replacing when you clean e come to our stors, Our stock is one of the largest in the city, and everybody knows our prices are the lowest:in town, Buy of us and you will be satis~ fied. M. HOURIGAN, 62-66* Main Street. G. E. HODGE, Hack. Livery, Boarding and Feed STABLES Up-to-date Equipment and Guaranteed Satisfactory Service. 14 to 20 BATH STREET. (Tormerly Chapman's) Teleykone 16, aorie Headquarters for Best Ales, Lagers, Etc., in Town. JAMES O'CONNELL, Propristor. Telephone 507. octdd LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY We are confident Ples, Cake and Bread cannot be excelled. Give us & trial order. novad lTaper Hanging for $1.75 Jour ' reom with the e Glas! reasonal m L. We sell Wal pers at 50 per cent. CH. BARON DECORATIVE Co. 150 West Main St Send postal and we will call augisd Rose Bowling Alieys, LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucket Street. ; . A 4 C. STONR Fren f A 20 Fairmount Strest.