Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 24, 1909, Page 3

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= uTulw' am ® Shetucket Strest, Norwich, Conn, N. TARRANT & CO., " I_Ail]‘ll“?- INSURANGCE Nerwich Union Fire Insurance Society, u.s, Assets $2,759,422.10 Westorn Assurance Co, U. 8, Aseste $2,397,608.00. THE OFFICE OF WM. F. HILL, Real Estate and Fire Insurance, s jecated In Somers’ Block, over C. M. Willlams, Room 9, third floor. febisd ‘Telephone 147. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BROWN & PERKINS, Attoneys-at-Law First Nat k, Shetucket St. o mPr::co y next to Thames Nat. Ban! 33-2. Open Monday and ?t- y evenings. oct29d FALL MILLINERY A cholce line of the latest styles iIn Fall Hats at MISS BUCKLEY'S,'308 Main St aeptidd Do It Now that old-fashioned, unsanitary #fll‘ r&ued by mew and mod- open . It will re ou m of health nd"l'l.v{nc (] th a figure with Overhauling and re- done. Let me give replacing all the olé ing the modern kind that t'.r out the sewer gas. The i e first-class and the price - J. E. TOMPKINS, wugpitd 67 West Main Street. ~ NOTICE! T will repair, remodel, redye and clean your furs at a very reasonable price, and all my work is nu-nteed. Drop a pestal and I will eall for work, Telephone 264-3. / BRUCKNER, The Furrier, noVIOMWF 55 Prankiin Street. No Building in Nerwich will ever be too large fer us to bu All we ask is an opportunity to b for the job. Competition i keen and coimpels close figuring, but years of experience has taught us the way to figure close and do fiest<class work C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Builder, 218 MAIN STREET. e 370, THE PLANK Headquarters for Best Ales, Lagers, Eto., in Town. JAMES O'CONNELL, Proprietor. " Telephone 507. oct2d GEORGE G. GRANT, _Undertaker and Embalmer 32 Providence St., Taftviile. Prompt attention to day or night calla Telephon. #9-2L. anri¢MWFawl ASTHNATI L U may274 CURED AFTER 3 YEARS, n 1893, This was & very severe case. We used ‘hre REMEDIES as directed,, and from the lnt"h-u improved, was fectly well and has never had an atiack since. Bend for (free) samp Frerson (Apothecary), Lawrence, Mam " TTp% The Bime Savings Bank OF NORWICH, DIVIDEND The regular Semi-annual Dividend has been declared from the net earn- (ings ef the past six months at the rate of Four per cent. a year, and will be payable on and after Nov. 15th. FRANK L. WOODARD, Treasurer. DOMINICK & DOMINICK, FOUNDED 1870, Members of the New York Stock Exchange. Bonds and High Grade kwestments = uon:v;oy{-;ugm- w0 FRANK O. MOBSES, Mav. SEvmALE eet27d K | nals. Sport Notes. ‘New York, Nov. 23.—Firmin Cassig- mol, the French billiard champion, and Hacry Ciine of Philadelphia won the two games played today in the 18.2 balk line tournanient for the chimpion- ship of the world. Cassignol defeated Albert Cutler of Bcston, 500 to 412, and Cline defeated George F. Slosson, the local veteran, 500 to 392. " In the Cassignol-Cutier game the Boston pl@yer in his ninth inning made the highest run of the tournament thus for—153 points, then fail. to- get either object ball out of k space. The Frenchman was both ‘deliberate and delicate in his cue work, getting on even terms with his opponent with a run of 97 in the l4th inning. The game then dragged and at the 23d the men were tled again with 853 each. Cassignol drew away gradually, with one run of 58, and won the game in the 37th inning. George F. Slosson, the favorite in the tournament, was - defeated by Harry Cline of Philadelphia this afternoon by a score of 500 to 392. The Philadel- phian gave a splendid exhibation of open table and nursing plays in his 21st inning, which netted him 45 ca- roms, ten of them resulting from three cushionl shots. With a carefully play- ed run of 120 in his 31st inning, which was full of brilliant open table work, Cline overtok Slosson and with an un- finished run of 34 ran out the game in the 35th inning. O'FLAHERTY’S BRAIN AFFECTED. This is Statement of Harvard Medicdl Adviser Today—Accounts for Crim- son Quarterback’s Erratic Playing by Hard Blow He Received. It is sald now that Quarterback O’Flaherty’'s brain was temporarily affected by an injury In Saturday’'s football game, which is believed to ac- count for his erratic playing against Yale. He was unable to remember his sig- Time after time he gave the signals over again, repeating the play just run off, which was demoralizing to the rest of the team. Captain Fish tried to have him leave the game. “I am all right, ‘Hami,’” said O’'Flaherty, and he refused to quit. ‘When Dr. Nichols, the team’s medi- cal adviser, ran out on the fleld the first thing O'Flaherty said was “I am all right.” The doctor questioned him. The questions were in the way of a test to see how the Harvard quarterback’s mind was acting. “What day is it?” FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. R e S G at the anmaal meeting of a ¢ the as ved Mro_gklht g Flah yote received from nearly one-! of ::l:egeltlh:'g‘oetor, A ety cont the, 839 members of the association in O’Flaherty's nose was hit hard. His the United States and Canada, oppo- sition to the ‘three in five heat was R:'cew:: g:“ lo‘l:t:::’.:h:;‘:‘di;:: registered by a vote of 305 to 38. Some one of his back teeth was driven out.|9f the ballots even favored a single It affected his brain and he was in no | heat. 5 .| The proposal made last year for the :o.nmdl::,ix; tlo“remun n'fn'the game, Har establishment of a national stakes for 4 AT W, the trott! championship of the Unit- CORNELL HEAVIER THAN PENN. e ed States was renewed. J. Kil- U. of P. Football Cripples Getting In- patrick of. Californja urged that the; fine breed of Pacific coast trotters| . to Shape—Coaches Not Very Optim- istic. should have inducement to meet the winners of the eastern events. There | should be contests, he suggested, a Boston, Indianapolis and San Franci co, with Lexington, Ky., for the cham- pioaskip meet. >~ g United States Senator Joseph W. Bailey of Texas, president of the as- sociation, who presided, said that the | national championship idea had the approval of the association and that the plan would bz tcken up for con- sideration when stakes of $20,000 were guaranteed. Senator Bailey was re-elected pres- fdent and all other officers were re- elected. Delaware was admitted to membership. < LAGKED FINAL PUNCH. Yale Team Needed This to Be Called the Greatest Ever. b My To close followers of the Yale team the result—two field goals and a safety —is but a confirmation of opinions ey frequently expressed throughout the Cornell Hopeful—Not Confident. se:‘.lon. namely, that ;he ntea;n ln.ck:d what is known as “the final punch” ,.,f,{’,;:fi".fi.g "J;’:.Y,',Z,’,';’r,‘{:o,?;",f}{ that is, the ability to drive through a tonight for Wayne, Pa., there to a’.wnltl desperate defense for the first down the Thanksgiving day game with Penn- | that will lead up to a touchdown. sylvania. Three of the team’s best|Eleven times Yale was in a sooring men are still on the sick list, and the | Position Saturday and eleven times she most optimistic expression that could | Was forced or chose to use kicking be obtained from any of the team’s ad- | P1ays instead of the rushes that might visers was that “Cornell will put up a | bave led to the much to be desired mighty hard fight for the honors.” | touchdown. It is all very well to say There is little hope that Robb can be | that this was due to the undeniable used in the ‘but Weeks and Sea- | Strength of Harvard’'s defense. But the grave, although hardly fit, will be call- | 5ame thing was manifest against ed upon to take their places. Princeton, whose defense could not be —_— offered as an excuse, and to a lesser degree against West Point and Brown, and even Amherst. In these latter games, though the touchdowns came, they were not scored on those irresist- 4ble plunges which have come to be superior conditioned team, Harvard|an expected characteristic of all good was beaten more through her own and | Yale teams. Had the 1909 team pos- the officials’ work than the power of|sessed this power along with its versa— her opponent. Never before has Yale | tility and extraordinary football knowl- actually beaten a superior Harvard|edge it might well have been termed a eleven, although on several occasions | marvelous team. As things stand it she has managed to hold them to a tie.| will go down in history as ome of the —C. W. Randall in the New York|most remarkable elevens ever turned Evening Post. out. P Yale won because her men knew many different kinds of football and because, to support the marvelouslty skilfuls kicking of Coy, she had a team trained to grasp instantly every finest point of the kicking game. Harvard knew one kind of football and at this Philadelphia, Nov. 23.—The unive sity of Pennsylvania football players who are at Winslow Junction, N. J., preparing for their final game of the season here Thanksgiving day with Cornell, spent today solely in signal practice. No scrimmage work will be indulged in before the game. With the exception of Scott and Lamberton all the cripples have greatly improved and it is hoped will be in condition to start in the game, Ramsdell is ex- pected to start at fullback, Hutchin- son.at guarter, Somers and Irwin ha The other positions probably will be filled by Braddock and Marks, ends; Fretz and Ferrier, tackles; Pike and Dietrick, guards; Cozens, center. This team will average about five poupnds & man less than the Cornell aggregation an@ the Pennsylvania coaches are neot very optimistic over the outlook for victory. Yale Beat a Superior Team. Better in attack, stronger on defense, with team work just as good as that of her adversary, and an indlvidually STRENGTH OF WABASH Helpad to Sustain Prices in a Weak Stock Market. New York, Nov. 23.—The decision against the legality of the Standard Oil company in its present form con- tinued the disturbing influence in the £10ck market today. It was most acutely manifest in the group of cop- per industrials. The reason for this was nol that those companies are par- <icularlv vulnerable to the effect of the decision in their present form, but that an animated speculation and sharp advences in prices of those stocks have taien place based on the assumption of a coming consolidation of the cop- per producers on much the same lines as are prohibjted by the court’s de- cision in the Standard Oil case. The speculative position in those stocks, therefore, was very vulnerable and net able to benefit from the soothing as- surznces regarding the ultimate effects of this decision which have come from representatives of capital interests. As- sursnces were given yesterday with colm of authority that the plans for ‘harmerizing the copper interests weuld be in no wise affected by the new de- velepment, ‘Today, however, assertions were current that the abandonment ef the whole project was being considered pending the final clearing up of the quesgtions involved by, the appeal of the Standard Oil case to the highest court. The line of policy towards the ques tion apparently shaping on the part of the corporations failed to entirely re- assure speculative gentiment. Eminent corporation lawyers and influential financial leaders seem united in for- mulating the view that the conse- quences of the Standard Oil decision would be so dangerous and se harmful that steps will be taken by the law- making body to obviate them upon its assembling in December. While the authority of this opinion as to the harmfulness to the corporations of the law is recognized in the stock market, there is less readiness to accept it en the probable action of congress. There is recognized the political difficulty that would arise from what would be, in effect, a bil for the relief of the best hated of all the great corpora- tions in the popular estimatiom. This consideration raises doubts of the readiness with which relief will be ob- tained from the evils complained of by the cprporations and the sweeping ap- plication of the terms of the law to all trade combinations. The discussion of the subject develops the difficulty of shaping a legal requirement which will at the same time permit the advan- tages of ce-operation and economic division and secure the benefits sought from competition. Other considerations played little part in the day's market. ‘Wabash preferred stood out as the conspicuous exception to the day's | weakness in as prominent a way as | did Reading yesterday. Its movement helped sustain prices against the weakening effect of the active liquida- tion in force at other points. No news was forthcoming to explain the strength of Wabash. The declaration of an extra dividend on Central Rail- road of New Jersey rallied Reading from its acute depression, owing to its share in the benefits through holdings of the stock of Central of New Jersey. The tracing of the course of this dis- bursement afforded an example of the complications of the interholdings of securities amongst corporations. The six and a quarter per cent. dividend on the Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal com- pany provides resources for a two per cent. dividend on Central Railroad of New Jersey stock, while Reading's holdings of the latter stock will entitle it to & sum on the distribution equal to somewhat less than one-half per cent. on the outstanding Reading stock. The movement of Reading implied that this was considered a moderate ground for addition to the considerable advance already scored in the market price of the stock. A rise in New York ex- change at Chicago to 25 cents premium per $1,000 showed the relaxation of pressure from the interior upon New York for funds. Foreign exchange rates rose quite strongly in spite of a further decline in London discount rates. The short interest built up in course of the decline furnished a suf- ficient requirement to work an effec- tive rally in prices. Seuthern Pacific showed some positive strength on the gound of the stror_}, annual report. onds were easy. 'otal sales, par value, $4,083,000. United States bonds were unchanged on eall. M sTocKs. 700 Allls Chelmoes Dd ...... 544 063% 643 she outplayed Yale in the ratio of two 217200 Amal. Copper .. 200 Am. Ajlgoul yards to one. She knew how to ad- 1400 Am. vance the ball by ‘straight slamming ::z: A‘: rushes-and how to stop her opponents’ rushes. But of variety of play she had little, and for this reason she lost. Deciding Game, Baltic weights, The Greeneville Heavyweights and the Baltic eleven, two football teams that have each only lost one game this season, are to meet on the Baltic grid- iron on Thanksgiving morning to set- tle what they clai mis the champion- ship of Norwich and vicinity. Once al- ready this year the Baltics have beaten the Heavyweights, and the Heavy- weights have evened it up by trim- | ming Baltic, so that the coming con- | test should prove one of the most ex- citing of the season. The Heavyweights have greatly strengthened their team, as was shown by the game last Sunday on the Cran- berry. Baltic will. present the same lineup as they have had the whole year with ene exception. Reéd % | L'Heureux of Jewett City has been signed as left halfback and Baltic should make a good showing when they line up at 10 o’clock with him at left, Hi Henry at right and Capt. Joe Henry at fullback. Quarterback Troland Not to Blame. Capt. Mickey Shea of the Bulkeley footha]l eleven is stirred up by criti- cism of his quarterback, Troland, and writes a New London paper that T'r.- land is not to be blamed for the loss of the game or any mixup in the sig 1 | nals, The trouble was that some of the other men on the -~leven were asleep at the switch.. What_ could the vs. Heavy- 30) Do. pfa . 300 Atlantic Coast $000 Baltimore 5080 Brookiyn 1500 Canadian Pacific Leather 200 Do. 2d pfd 26400 Consolidated 600 Com Products & Hu 900 Delaware 4700 Deaver & Ric Grande. 600 Do. 2d pfd . 1000 General Electric . 7500 Great Nortehrn pfd . 4700 Da. Ore ctfs itral ‘The women of St. IIM.: ence of several lows for three co: 97, 180—412. / GRANEY’S $100,000 OFFER For Jeffries-Johnson Fight—Wants It in San Francisco. San Francisto, Nov. 23.—Eddie Graney, the prize fight referee, left for New York today with a check for $5,000 which he intends to place as a forfeit for a bid he will make for the Jeffries-Johnson bout. . Grantey intimated that the purde he would of- fer would be at least $100,000. Graney plans to tobtain a permit to hold the fight within the city limits of San Francisco and claims that if he is suc- cessful he can afford to bid more than James Coffroth, whose arena is in an adjoining county. Ty Cobb is Fined $100. Ty Cobb, outfielder on the Detroit baseball team, Monday at Cleveland, 0., was fined $100 and costs for as- saulting George Stanfield, a night watchman in a hotel, on the occasion of the Detroit team's last visit to Cleveland. When the fine was an- nounced by Judge Vickery Cobb said | school children, he did not have that much money, and Miss Mary E. Love of Pascoag, R. the execution of judgment was contin- | T, is the guest of Miss Annie !)on- ued to give the ball player an oppor- | nelly. nity to obtain funds. Cobb was in- Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Coughlin of icted on the charge of cutting with | Norwich were guests of Mr. and Mrs. intent to wound, following a fight with | ‘Thomas Mi'ey over Sunday. Stanfield, in which the watchman was Mr. and Mrs. George Pierce are vis- stabbed, but in criminal court was al- | iting relatives in Providence, lowed to plead guilty to assault and | Arthur Blanc has moved into his battery. This did away with the ne- | new cottage on Church hill. cessity of a_trial. The Men's league of the M, E. wjwievm e church are making preparations for Desmond for Referee. the annual coucert. Joe Desmond of this city has been selected to referee the Collins-Barnes werstling match at Central Village on Thanksgiving day. Burdicw of Cen- tral Village is to be timekeeper. Col- lins was in this city on Tuesday look- ing in fine condition, as he has been training steodily for two weeks., utive strings: 135, h, “The schools will close today for the Thanksgiving recess. Sessions will be resumed Monday- A new crosswalk has been put in from Anthony’Adams’ store to the south side of Bast Main street. The other walks which were torn up when Main street was ized are to be_rebuilt. John Keefe of Amherst is spending a few days in town. T. M. Lyon is located in his new store in Staffordville. The forty hours’ devotion will begin at the second mass in St. BEdward's church Sunday. BALTIC School Children Entertain ish Fair—~Men’s League Re- hearsing for Concert. Parochi Th2 Immaculate Conception parish fair was well attended Saturday night. The fair was held on Monday after- noon for the pupils of thé Academy of the Holy Family. A pleasing enter- tainment wes given by the parochial New Have Major Tilson gave an address Monday evening to the Brooks club of Trinity church, New Haven, on Personal Experiences of a New Con- gressman. Highlanders to Train at Athens, Ga. Athens Ga., Nov. 23.—Manager Stall- ings of the New York American league baseball team today completed ar- rangements for his team to train at Athens next spring. The street rafl- way compauy will at once provide a suitable park. TRAVELERS' DIRECTORY. All <Water Route NEW YORK Chelsea Line Fare $1.00 Unexcelled frelght and passenget serviee direct to and from New York All Outside Staterooms, From Norwich Tuesdays, Thursdays Bundays, at 5.156 p. m. New York Pler 22, East River, foot Roosevelt Street, Mondays, Wednes- days, Fridays, at 6 p. m. ‘Phone or write g:r folder, ACADEMY CAMPUS NOTES. “Doc” Thofpson, the Taftville boy, now at Yale, will hofjd down the center position. Jack Murphy, the big Academy tack- le of a vear or two ago, will play at guard for Yale Consol. The football eleven had a session of signal practice on Tuesday in prepara- tion for the game Thanksgiving after= noon. - The quarterback position is to be fill- ed by Burke, who handled that job on the Academy eleven for a couple of years. ' Manager Worth has tried to arrange a game for the state championship P. S. Freicht received untll § p ™ with the New Britain High school C. A. WHITAKER, Agent team, bpt they declined on the ground may4d that their eleven had disbanded. Tom Aubrey, one of the speediest of Academy sprinters in recent years, will | be at halfback, and can be counted up- on to electrify the spectators with one of his runs, if he ever gets 4 R000 | cos—— &——————— — start. ¢ { Arthur Robinson. who is managine the Yale Consolidated team which | plays here Thanksgiving afternoon, is ! expecting to provide a big attraction by bringing down two of the Yale 'var- sity players, Savage apd Murphy, for officials. The water way — the comfortabie way of traveling. Steamers City of Lowell and New Hampshire — safe, <staunch vessels that have every comfort und conven- lence for the traveler. A deiightful voyage on Long Island Sound and a superb view of the wor- derful skyline and waterfront of New York. Steamer leaves New London at 11 ». :. weekdays only; due Pler foot of cast 224 St. 545 a. m. (Mondays - and Pier 40, North River, 7 GRIDIRON GOSSIP. The Cornell-Pennsy game Thursday will mark the formal dlosing of the season in the east. The injury to Lilley, who is usually one of the hardest men to knock out, robbed Yale of a pillar of strength, There is no tackle on the gridiron to- day who is Lilley's equal.—New York Times. Harvard is planning for another great team next season, while Yale is A m. mourning the loss of most of her stars. | Fare ”olWloh ln "ew 'ork $‘75 Unless some pleasant surprises are developed at New Haven. the Elis will | Write or telephone W. J. PHILLIPS. Agent, New London. Conn. augsd have a hard time with the Johnnies. 5 s ChNNUAL onvise (0 the ORIENT cepted) quarter do when the men tried to puil off the play in the opposite direction to what the signal indicated? Another cause for Bulkeley's poor showing which is mentioned by Captain Shea is nervousness which attacked some of the players in the first half. It seems the Academy threw such a fright into them when they came to be lined up, that the Bulkeley boys shook in their canvas jackets, and couldn't do themselves credit. Football Celebrators Pay .QSO in Fines. As a result of the celebration of the Yale-Harvard football game, Suffolk county, Mass., gained $650 in fines on Monday. The corridors of the munici- pal courts at Boston were crowded all the morning, and it was a long session for the judges. Sixty persons were fined $5 for drunkenness, fifty paid like amounts for disturbing the peace, four- teen paid $5 for refusing to move on when requested by an officer, and seven were fined the same sum for pulling off the trolleys of electric cars. In all nearly 400 arrests were made during y ‘the evening. 1000 St P. & 2400 Missourl Pacific Kan. & Tex 400 People’s Gas 1y 200 Pittsburg, C. C. & 8t L.. 95 2000 Pressed Steel Car 100 Pullman Palace Car. i | Baltic Lightweights Defeated Taftville. | The Baltic Lightweights met and.de- ; | feated the T. A. C. of Taftville Satur- day by the score of 5 to 0. The fea- ture of the game was the playing of Adams at bhalfback, and also Roy, who % | went over for a touchdown. Roy is a tsecond Ted Coy. Higham at end play- % ied a brilliant game. The next game is with Jewett City at Baltic. D. Sulli- van, referee; E. Kelly, umpire; lines- men, Steffen and McGill; timekeeper, ‘Woods. 300 Do. pfd United States Realty. 2400 United States Rubber. .. 1300 Va. Carolina Chem. 13600 Wabash . 3 ~——— Wheelin 8 200 Wisconsin Central 0 50 Total sales, 1,250, Another All-American. The Boston Post suggests the follow- ing for an All-American eleven: Kil- patrick of Yale and Bankart of Dart-— mouth, ends; Lilley of Yale and Fish of Harvard tackles: Andrus of Yale and Tobin of Dartmouth, guards; Bar- rett of Fordham, center; Sprackling of New York, Nov. 23.—Money on call firm at 4 3-4@5 per cent.; ruling rate 4 7-8; last loan 4 3-4; closing bid 4 7-8; offered at 5. Time loans firm; sixty days 5 per cent.; ninety days 4 3-4@6 per cent.; six months 4 1-2@4 3-4 per cent. Brown, quarterback: Philbin and Coy COTTON. y of Yale and Minot of Harvard, . New York, Nov. 23.—Cotton spot *0;7 T Recks At Princeton, the outlook is decided- ly poor. The only really star man that will return is Hart. The losses g February 5, 73 days, up, from graduation are greater than [ griruery & 12 02 A P o, S s Yale's, while the second team and the |the world; Tours to Eurdpe. freshmen will not furnish the stars | FRANK €. CLARK, Times Bldg. New that Yale’s will York. novigws “HERE’S YOUR CHANCE” Dame Fortune is likely to say that any day to the man with a good bank account. She seldom says it to the man who has nothing saved up. Our bank is glad to turn good investments in the direction of our friends. Open Saturday evenings—seven-thirty to nine, THE THAMES LOAN and TRUST COMPANY, 28 to 34 Shetucket St., Norwich, Conn. We own and offer the ursold portion of $900,000 . of the cumulative preferred stock of The McCGrum-Howell Co., of New York Factories at Norwich, Conn., and Uniontown, Penn. President, LLOYD G. McCRUM. Vice-President, GEORGE D. HOWELL Dividends 7% per annum. Payable February Ist, and quarterly, FREE TAX IN CONNECTICUT. Net Earnings Over Three Times the Dividend Requirements. The McCrum.Howell Company is the largest indepen- dent manufacturer of boilers, radiators and enameled ware in the Unit:d States. It is the only concern producing all three of these building necessities. closed quiet, 156 points decline; mid- dling uplands, 14.70; middling gulf, 14.95; sales, none. New York, Nov. 33.—Cotton futures closed barely steady. Closing bids: Shreck in No Shape Against Langford. Pittsburg, Nov. 23.—Police tonight stopped the boxing contest between Sa.én hal;:“osrrdt the negro middelweight, November 14.27, Deceraber 14.32, Janu- :?E:. fl,henn" :;ei:‘e ;E‘:etrr;\:;a.am:nz: iry 14.52, February 1462, March 14.76, | count of Schreck’s aparent lack of con- prih 14.77, May 14.92, June 14.80, July ! qytion. rungford in the brief period of 14.85, August 14.13, September 12.97,| poxing twice knccked Schreck down October 12.47. and pummelled him at will. C alloway Takes Heavy Punishment. Open. High. Low. Close. Boston, Nov, 23.—The ability of Ralph 100% lz 13-16 108 13-16 | Calloway, colored, of California, to take l:“ nlng 106 punishment with gameness epabled o 4% him to last nine rounds against Jim Barry of Chicago at the Armory Ath- :“Y-“ = e ::* latic association tonight, but in the €% 60% 61 E i CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. tenth he was knocked out. 38 15-16 39 The longest kick in the Yale-Har- it 41 13.1¢ | vard game was made by Coy and car- » L‘ 38 Aaa xied fuat £2 18 mesde The capital has be:n increased to $1,500,000 Preferred and $1,500,000 Common, to enable the company to handle its steadily expanding business to the best advantage. We recommsnd unqualified y this preferred stock. Price $100 per share carrying with it 20 per cent. in common stock. Full detaiis on application. - GAVET & PORTER Sterling New England Securities

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