Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 1, 1910, Page 3

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NURWIUH BULLETIN, SAI = UKDAT, UUIUBEK 1 s 1910 __fi___—_____——z_—_____fl___——_—-—-—-—fi . INSURANIC=. FIRE AUTO ciasiur J. L LATHROP & SONS. 28 Shetucket Street, sept20daw TO PROTECT YOUR HOME yon put in burglar aiarme, good plumb- ing and safety locks. But bells, traps and locks melt under fire and mean a total loss unless—Vital Question, Are you insured? If not, see us today and vour policy for FIRE INSURANCE will be in your hands tomorrow. Then only are vou safe. ISAAC S. JONES, insurance and Real Estate Agent Richards Building, 91 Main St. septidaw N. TARRANT & CO., 117 MAIN STREET. Fire, Accident, Health, Liability, Plate Glass and Steam Boiler INSURANCE Norwich Union Fire Insurance Seciety, u. s, Assets $2,594,330.17 feb26TuThS 1HE OFFICE OF WM. F. HILL, Real Estate and Fize Insurance, 12 Jocated In Semery Block, over C. M. Williams, Reom 9, third floor. feb13d Telepbone 147. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. AMOS A. BROWNING, $ Richards Bldg. A ttorney -at-iaw, ‘Phene 308 BROWN & PERKINS, /tiameys-atLaw over ¥irst Nat Bank, Shetucker St INSURANCE Norwich, Conn. FIVE PAGERS Fl gramme of Sports. [ Columbus, O., Sept. 30.—What habit- ues of the Grand Circait pronounced the most remakable heat and finish seen at any point this year occurred in tile middle mile of taday’s 2.05 pace, a race that went to Evelyn W. Earl, Jr., was first choice in the pooling. The & with the next lined up across the track, and all so close together that Evelyn W. s sixth break. At the bezinning of ond heat Major Brino picked up the Cox pacer and carried him through the first quarter in 20 seconds and to_the half in 1.00 1- On the far turn Star Patchen made a break and dropped back. All the others kept within range of the leaders and the rush at the fin- ish was tewrific. Evelyn won in 2.02 3-4. The meeting ends tomorrow. ACADEMY CANDIDATES HOLD THEIR PLACES No Change in Team That Will Meet Windham High This Afternoon. The lineun first pirked for the Acad- emy foothall team have all held their jobs down in the t week and the same cleven men who appeared in the opening came last Saturday will play against Windham high school when the eleven from Willimantie comes down here this afternoon. But there is one shift in nositions, us Isbister has been taken from right guard and put at center. where he is passing the ball good shape. Herbert, who started at center, is at right guard, and seems beiter fitted for this posi- tion than to handie the ball on the snapback. T.eft end is silll a somewhat uncer- tain place as Bliss and Smith are mak- ing a fight for choice on this flanks Provably Smith wili_stary the game this afternoon, with Blisg Substituting later. Biiss has (he wudvantage in weight. ‘but Smith pikes up for this in some ways by aptitude for the game and he 7 the marks of 0 sh a punter of J{s which is said to be | a prime esgential in the _Captain McCormick at k. Kinney und Swan at halves and Smul- lens at, fullback are developing into a £00d tunning quartette and also have new game. quarterba a varietr of forward and double pass- es which should he effective for prog- mess over the chalk lines Friday afternoon Manager Bailey A hpd the marking out of the field com pleted by running all the five yard lines. so that the officials will have no | tro determining the distances the scalp of Windham high when t Emtrance | meet this afternoon. The Academ) Et_l;_n;w-'y' ;nx:ntn Th“--o' NWat. mnk}lmmp e -2. pen Smith or Bliss le, Elliott 1t. Walsh urday eveninzs. 1g, Isbister c, Herbert Larson rt, Tucker, Anthony & Co. BANKERS and BROKERS 28 Shetucket Sireet Telephone 005, Members of New York and Boston Stock Exchanges Boston, New Youk. 53 State Street. 24 Droad Street. PRIVATE WIRE. Stocks Bumds Investments TE WIRE To one per-cent. (1 mon Steck of Oct. 1, 1910, to at the’'close of 1p1h BROME, Treasurer. NOTICE Dr. Lowics Franklin Miner s mew fooated In har new ofice, Bresd Hall, Roumn 1 hours, 1 to 4 p. m. 2 e L auglie Belivered to Amy Part of Norwich the Ale thmt is acknowledged to be the best on the marke: — HANLEY'S PEERLE®S. A telephone order will receive pzomp’ attentien. D. J. McCORMICK, 30 Framklin St mayiITTRS Face and Scalp Yias- .wage, Shampooinx Manicuriag. Orders takea for combings. 2. 8. UNDERW OO The Norwich Wickdl & Brass Go, Tableware, Yacht Trimmings and such things Refinished. €9 to 87 Chestaut Bt. Nerwici. C ootdd WHEN vou want to pet busi mea: befors tho public, there iz no me- sium beiter taam through the advertis. ing celnmne of The Buletin vour i ) i NG 4 A R i Gebrath re, Capt. McCo ney mick gb, Kin- rhb, Swan Ihb, Smullens fb. All-Stars Issue Challenge. The All-Stars challenge any football | team under 17 yvears in New London or | { Windham counti Address H. Kel- | | ley. Manager, Franklin street, Nor- wich, Ct. ~Onr lineup: E. Smith rt, B. Sullivan 1t, M. Guinan (Capt.) rib, J. Carbery 1h, A. Fielding ¢b, E. Ellis qb, R. Simcox ¢, J. Ahearn rg, C. House lg, P. Peanault re, S. Gullbeault le; subs, W. Cohen, J. ¥ veland mage finished the first heat | gained or needed on downs Practice this week under Coach Aultman has greatly improved the Academy’s play and they should get | CITY LEAGUE NOTES, Fast Game on Hospital Afternoon—Sachem Park Game Is Centrals vs. Greenevillw The Sachem park attraction will be the Centrals vs. Greeneville. Catcher Harrington has made quite because of ala record for timely hits in the league the sec- | series. Fifteen strikeouts by Bill Austin in SOME CITY | ESS WHICH? [ Norwich | be worth it. LEAGUE Town Greeneville's record by defeating the the Greeneville same last the league recor is out mond This ! tean for every event: NISH ON A LINE Remarkable Feature at Columbus Grand Circuit—Athle- tics Break American League’s Winning Record— Baseball, Football and Field Day on Local Pro- BIG ENTRY LIST -FOR TAFTVILLE MEET. Local and Jewett Gity Athletes Will Compete This Afternoon in Pinochle Club’s Field Day. Taftville's best and biggest field with the Taftville band playing in front of the postoffice before the meet starts and during the intermission on the field, is promised for this afternoon at the athletic meet conducted by the Taftville Pinochle club. There has been a big sale of tickets and the ath- letes who are entered in the eleven events have all been training faithfully, ensuring exciting finishes in every event. The following are the entries, four- Albert Aberg, William Emerson, Walter Grant. E Fontaine, 1. Germain, A, Murdock George ' Purlow, Oscar Deshaires, George Semino, .all of Taftville; Wil- liam McKenna, Robert McKenna. John Wilson. Edward Popham, Joseph W. Geer, all of Jewett C in the single events William Bouchard of Norwich will go into all the jumps; Charles Mc- Sheffrey, Taftville, 100 yard dash; C. Normander, Taftville, 100 vard dash, 220 vard dash and potato race. There will be three teams in the re- lay race, the Pinochlesciub team. T. A. C. team ‘and the Jewett City team. The Pinochle club will be represented b: Albert Aberg, William Emerson, E. Fontaine and George Barlow, and the representatives of the T. A. C. boys will be George Semino, Eugenz Lam bert. C. Normander and Charles Mc Sheffrey. The Jewett City men had not made known to the management Fri- day night who would represent them. There will be two tug_of war teams. one headed by John Nolan and one made up of Pinochle club men. The events will be run off the following order: 100 yard dash, run- ning broad jump, 220 yard dash, stand- ing broad jump, pole vault, one mile relay race, tug of war. running high jump, three broad jumps, hop, step and jump, potato race. The prizes will be awarded after all the events are concluded. and the offi- cials will be those already announced. in STARS—| TEN THOUSAND CARS | ALONG VANDERBILT COURSE turday is | = urday 1S § i pmense Throng Waits All Night for . i Race to Start at Dawn. o equal Ry | Broadway's restaurants, limousines The Sachem park ball game offers |and touring S runatouts ind e the fans a chance for an Interesting | daulets, big cars, littie cars, red cars, game and should be seized each week | green cars, imported six cylinders and for the seaon is fast drawing to a|clephantine seeing-New York moving close. vans, loaded down with human freight, Hot, scrappy contests are due in the|every shape, make, and denomination | games today and tomorrow in the on-|of automobile. from the little, selfish, deavor to alter the ieague standing,|tw ated . electric of the make of | which is as follows 1903 to the $20.000 French machine of ;i the day after tmorrow, all were puf- Aoy L"“"\'\s“"d']"f;_ fing, snorting, and hiccoughing their o oo o way towards the same objective point. oo o G - The race, which will start at dawn, e i e 2 is a triple event, consisting of the i e . Vanderbilt cup contest, in which 31 G 4 o cars are to circle the course 22 times: = the Wheatly Hills cont in which COLLEGE FOOTBALL TODAY. |nine cars are to cover the cou fif- = {teen times. and the Massapequa con- test in which six cars must make the i e ten times. T, | Thirty-two cars will compete in the Maryland vs. Indians Vanderbilt cup race, a distance Stevens Ins. vs. Princeton. 278.08 miles; nine for the Whea Norwich University vs. Hills trophy. 1%8.6 miles: and six fo Gettysourg vs. Pennsylv the Massapequa trophy. 126.4 miles. St .}'nlm'< v Annapolis. s :3;::)(\_\81:3\1\ \{.\' l’;m']):v‘ 2 Masachusetts Goifers Triumph. Jowdoin vs. West Point. Hamilton, M Sept. Mass Delaware vs, Lafayett chusetts golfers triumphed over a team il from Pennsylvania today in the pre- liminary round of the xth competi- FINANCIAL AND COMMERGIAL. STOCKS PUSHED FORWARD | 1 Which Have Had Little Part in the | Market Lately. | New York, Sept. 30.—The moderate | effect produced on the money market by the week’s shifting of cash reserves must be explained by the conditions of | the eredit account amengst stock ex- change commission houses. | Months ago preceutionary loans | were teken on time by many houses | in fear that the autumn might develop | & severs siringency in the money mar- | | | i ket. The foresightadness of the brok- ers, like that of the banks, now bears its fruit and helps to escape the con sequences whioh were seem in per- spective. The listless and imdifferent stock markets have left Jittle demand | for the rasources thus made available | in time leans, and fthey are put out | in in call 'loans te other borrew- s as demand prices. There must be some such explanation for the fact| that cald loan rates on the last day | of the quacter today did not getabove | 3 per cent. in spite of a week's outgo | of cash estimated at ten to twelve mil- | lion dollars out of the reserves that | carried an actual surplus of endy 317,- 500,000 last Saiurdav. The financing | of the $170,000,600 dividend and inter- est payments for October to have mede large demands upon bank credits as well this week. The shipments of cash during the week by express seein to have taken a compar- atively small sum on balance from the banks, but the $9,913,000 treasury operations reflects money demawds to a large extent. Drafts on New Yeork banks from inte- ix assumed rior correspondents for parments to the government on account of internal revenue taxes have been on a large scale, this be a usual incident of the season of crop mov demand for currency The sbsence of disturbance in the call money market left the speculative movement in stocks free from co sfraint on that account. It was as- i | { | sumed, apparently. that with the turn | of the month thers might be a raflux | of funds to the money market and re- | iaxation in interest raies. Advantage | was taken of the situation to push for- | ard into active strength & large num- | her of, stocks which have bad little | part in the market's doings for some | time past. In the meantime there | heve been distinct upward movements | in a selected few stoeks which have | obsorbed neariy all the dealings in the | market. The selected few feil into the | backsround todav. They aiso steod | | nearly still in the price movement. It looked like a price adjustment to bring inactive issues into conformity h the advance which has occurred in a few leaders. It was, preenfinently, a market of speciaities. The advance in Western Union was on_rumors of a merger with American Telephone, for which no official countenance could be had. A reported restoration of asking price for Lake (Cepper by the Calumet and Ilecla wus 4 factor in the cop- per group | Boads were firmy Poiul sales, par | value 32386000 Tnited States bonds were URCRalig e call. o STOCKS EIRA e 14 500 wdo & Southesmn 12500 Cousolidated Gas 1009 Corn Products - cisware & Badson 2800 Denver & Rlo Grende 400 Do. prd 9200 Distiliers Sccurities 5100 Fste Do. 131 pid Do, 34 ptd Gantral Flectric = Great Northeru pfd . Do. Ore ctrs, Tllinots Cential Toterborough Met Do. prd Inter Horvesier ——— Inter Marine Intemational Paper 3 3 tia% el 3200 1700 Mining Co 00 100 Coast. T 00 ore & Ohio Bethlehem Steel 1 4500 Brooklsn Itanid Transit 1400 Canadian Pac Centilel Lealher Do. prd Central of New lerser Chesapeake & Oilo Chicago & Alton 0 Chicazo Gre ral Iowa Ce ople's Gas sburg, C. C arg_ Coal Prossed * Stecl Pillman_Palace ® 2 Tdland ora L &5 T S Tavie Do ptd Sioas Rhet. § Soutiiern Pacifio 3 w & Do. ped Tenicane Copper Texas & Pacific Frdcdo, St 3. Do, prd Talon Pacific ved 1 hem Railway Wesiern AL W wited Staiee Realiy % middling sl 14.60. Sales, 5,700 s Mineola, L. Sept. 30.—The Van- | Hospital this afternoon. | aerbitt cup race, restored to its pris- Jack Casey's recent mark of one|tine _glory of an ail-night revel {error in nine chances at short was a | Stretching from the theater and res- fast mark for this league. taurant ‘d tlrlz.-[ of Manhattan to the e S sere and yeHow corn shocks of Long Murra; oks good on third. The |jsiand_ was ushered in early tonight boy picks them up in and wings them | with the time-honored accompaniment |over in nice shape from that corner.|of horns and the weird and fantastic Manager Farrell wants to welcome | 8littering of ten thousand spectral mo- his season's best crowd at the FHos. | tors churning their way through sleep- ipital this afternoon. The game will | In& villages like giant fireflies. From their anchorages ou ide tion fo rthe Lesley cup, plaved over the {links of the Myopia Hunt club. The | Massachusetts players tomorrow will { mect the Metropoiitan team. holders of the cup since it was offered, in the final. round. Both insing foursomes the team of ten ‘M ex- celled those from Pennsylvania. In the rning Massachusetts won six singl matches to four Pennsylvania, and {in the afternoon captured four of the | five foursomes. GRIDIRON POINTS. As usual. Lafayette will I cellent backfield. Coach Folwell has two sets, one as good as the other, and they are both able defensively. Touser the Carlisle fullback, prom- ises to be as prominent t fall as e was last vear. He kic »m the field and got one touchdown ve an ex- - in Wednesday's game. Dittrick and Hooper, two of the best | candidates for the Tufts eleven. will be oblized to give up foot for the greater part of the season on account of their studies programme, Brown will have two good tackles in Bartlett, the strong from Worce ter academy. and Smith, who has just been stored to good standing in his studies. Corp, Sisson and Kulp form center trio, which gives a strong the ine. Punting and catching unts arve fea- tures whick will he more important | this season than ever, according te Waiter Eckersoll. “If a team is for tunate enough to have a man who ca hoot the hall from 59 to 70 yards, such an eleven sure 1o make a good showing says He figures that the short low kicks will give way to the long and aceurate attempts, kicks that go a great Cistance and away from the defensive backs. Ballou and Pel ed in drop an Princeton cozciles. promise. ish and eton are being drill- kicking by the Boih show signs of The ends proposition is tick- ecial attention will have to be divected to this dep: Brede- nus is improving at left end and may be kept there. The guards and tackies are not filling the Dill. but it is pected that the line will stiffen solidly as practice progresses. The Tigers will have the advantage of a powerful scrub eleven to drill with “The tackling this year will he about the same as it was last rear and the vear hefore and the year before that.’ says Coach Yost of Michigan. “The ! rules commitise didn't legisiate great innovatien into the game when it abolished the flying tackle,: nor did it make much differenca. Why, you know, I've been trying for more than ted States Tuhber ten years to get my men to lea their i ed. ijiates Plesl feet to tackle, .but they wouldn’t do it. 3200 Th Copper Sometimes thex’d do it when they were “olina Chem going against this poor stuffed dummy - e bave hlasiits oot hece But it e wasn't often that they’d remember Westingho: % their lessons when a live opponent 700 Weeern 1 had eluded them. So vou sec that T T s iob s rule won't hurt us much.” MONEY. < New York, Sept, 20— Money or --'=h§ccond-hand firm, 21-2@2 per cent, ruling { 73-4, tast loan 25-8, ciosing bid y , | Gared as 75 > Motorcycles Thce loans firmi: Sixly days per cont. ninety dews 4G4 1-1 11908 4 H. P.... .. b .. $150 tlzgess {1910 4 H. P . 2 175 | Z S | 1810 4 H. P. Magnets .$200 CovTON. ! (R 1s8l thus 50, mitas) New York, Sept. 30.—Cgtion futures | f Cluses burel steady. | Al Hxeslsior Asutc Cycles, Tives, obgr 18.36, Nevenber 12.5 addles, |amuos, Gas Tanke and 1873 danvagy 184, February | other necessary suppiics in stock 1380, March 1237, Aprfl 1381, May 11298, June 13.94, July 1395 c'v JEJFENBLETON IR Spot closed quiet: middling uplands Yantic, Cenw, or Imperial Garage, Norwich. o ed a goal | DANNY MURPHY . IN THE LIMELIGHT. Will Play in Middleboro This Afternoon Brother’s Team. Danny Murphy, whose good war club has been a big contributing factor in putting the Philadelphia Athletics into the championship of the American | league. spent Friday at his home in this city. He is on his way to Middleboro, | Mass., where he is to play this after noon on a team that his brother owns. Danny will be in the full glave of the spot-light up there, for the town is plasterd with posters announcing the coming of the star right fielder and big | sticker of the champions. Donahue, | catcher of the Americans, is also ex- | pected to play with Middleboro. i CANADIAN V;OM;N CHAMPION | LOSES IN MIXED DOUBLES. | Defeated in Pair at Longwood. Foston, Sept. 30.—Miss Lois Moyes of Toronto, the Canadian woman's cham- | pion, was eliminated as factor in the | Longwood tnnis tournament today | when, in the semi-finals of the mixed ! doubles, Miss Moress and Richard | Bishop, the eastern doubles champion. | were defeated in straight sets by Miss Marion Fenno and Nat W. Niles of "Boston. Miss Louise Hammond of New York, winner of the singles, and R. (. Seav- | tournament at the Roque club grounds by defeating Herbert B. Cary in! straight sets on Friday afternoon, 6—0 and 6—4. Gilbert galloped off with the first set with ease, but Cary press- ed ‘him hard at the outset of the sec- ond. Cary magde it 4—1 before Giibert made a rally, but after getiing such a good hold on the second set Cary, fell off in his play ahd Gilbert took the set, 6—4. William Frisbie and Fred Syming- | ton are to mieet in the other bracket of semi-finals, and the winner will play silbert in the fi G als. i CUBS ARE WORRIED. | Chance's Men Realize They'll Have No Cinch h the Athletics. With only a few more games needed to clinch the National league pennant the Chicago Cubs are sure of succes: in this line, but they are beginning to worry about the world's series with the Philadelphia Athletic Captain Chance will not deny that he is weak- er in the pitching department now tha he was three months ago. The Chica- “if we are going to beat the We seem to have slumped badly think we will be going rizht in a few days. The world's will not he a snap for us, 1 we know we will have to play than ever to beat the Athleti Other Chicago players Athleti bu harder who dis- cussed the situation in general seemed to wonder whether st Mack's they could win star boxmen, Bende the C‘ubs just now are not boast- On the contrary, they've got their thinking caps on. | BEST PlTCHERS NOT BREEZERS. | Strikeouts Not Essential in Art of | Twirling. ater the men he strikes out is usuall: The ordinary r of fans go out to a game when Mullin or foss or Walsh pitching an? ave disappointed if the twirler does not whiff a dozen or more. There is a reason. Pitchers who know their {try to save their saiary arms as vossible, To strike out means the deliver balls on an average. may start with a bali strike. Then another ball may fol- Jow, two or three fouls, another ball, and then possibly the th This requires lots of work tion on the muscles. The who understands tries to get the batter fielders. ake a man like Mull happy if he has to pitch only three balls during an inning. Three ground- ers to the infield pid 1cceasion save his arm more than the man sit- in the bleacheys would helieve. A game with comparatiy little ex- ertion leaves the niteher in herter for ih xt time he has That 1 vou hear the i yell Make 1 hit The the fewer the rule, business as much a batter to eight The pitcher and then a exer- twirler genera hit to his | | | | | the game to He is cons to i out Thames Natio | | | has a 1ot to do with the wa: jas ma. Semi-Finals by Boston || go vlayers say Reulbach is a back number: that Three l'ingered Brown lost much of his old effectiveness | and has ome an uncertainty, and that P the southpaw. is iia to go up in the air at any time. and McIntyre has not the class. to cope with the great twirlers under Connie Mac! ing. The Chicago © rs will not deny that ther are depending almost wholiy on Overall. the big Californian, to {stand (he bulk of the work on the imound, with King Cole also counted on to 0od work. These. two jers, according to the Cubs, may the Athiet and from now until | the world's series begins they will be specially groomed. | “We've got to play better ball than we've heen showing,” said Chance. nk. Coombs, and Morgan. Altogeth- | Buick! also seek to make They ag possible for the as easy things hurler. : Not long ago Addie Joss of Cleve- land pitch:ed a no-hit same against the Sox. He struck out iew batiers. His knack that day lay in nisking the Sox cround out. His control was so perfect that many of them pushec a dinky roller straight at him. — The only time when the pitcher really and truly tries to fan the batter is when | he is in a tight hole. With two out and ihe bases full; he works his hard- est to outguess the batter and make him retire on strikes. Confidence in the team belind him v the great twirler goes. ~That is why the high- salaried men on the leading teams of the country fan fewer than the pitchers of the weaker teams. For instance, Mcintire does not fan Nalf baiters since joining the Cubs as he d vhen with Brooklyn. It forms a psychological study of rare terest. St. Louis . Brookly. Boston New York Defeats Boston With €ase. Boston, Sept. 30.—New York easily ton today, 17 10 we's liowie vun in the #fth Inning sent “head of him. Becker The ball into center fleld, where it bounded over AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost. Philadelphia ... 10 New York .. 62 Detrott Bostin c W st Athletios Brook League Record for Yictories. Sen + winning todas’s game Philediiphta broke the American leazite by Detroit er, former Massachusetts champbion, | last yea: Slls o e who will meet Miss Fenno and Nfles fn | ("% 2% . the finals, had to play their best to dis- e R pose of Miss Frederika Paine of New- | abhi po a e b port and Gardner Beals of Boston. | ('hmur- b 4 ‘Y 1 ’: (”ll,nr»r’!.ll ‘ e o 3050 0Caminem @ CONSOLATION SEMI-FINALS. |§Pkerer 3 0 2 0 O Coe & gl e 4 1 0 i Gilbert Beat Cary at Tennis in Iimeili 100 ] Straight Se j Rt 10 3 i s Gerdenie: 1 Walter E. Gilbert won his way into| Woedp 3 Fa ] the tennis firals in the consolation | s, Score by inni a Barry 20 thres Speaker: stolen 1R, by Crombs bt B i : firet wid_ piteh Connolly and ¥ i Coombe: Americans New 20.—T kelr first gome i new mavazer, Hal Chase heaten by W gton 6 to 5. The visitors profited by Warliop's wild ness, three of being scored by men who | had” been pases. { a. New York. Washingi A Hemphill.rt s 4 ' H abhopo a 7: unpires, O'Loughtin and | a ab o A e 11 8 ! 10 |3 5 b AR | 42 420 Tord I we B Sourhs ettt e meck. runa bn akicd Tor. Wiltse antrome e “ll'l . New York. abh po a ab h po Collins.1f 5 3 3 0 ODeworelf,f 6 4 2 Goode.cf 2 1 2 0Doyh 6 21 Shean. 2y 2 4 2 oSn'dgrassef 1 1 0 Reck. 1 111 0 OMurms.rflt 5 3 0 Curtls.p. 00 iz "' : ‘Totals, 18 2 _X : _. ., ot Ci urtis 1. off Mattern 4; struek out. b by Mattern 1, Uy Wiltse 1. hy Crandall oloh 2; home Fun. Becker; _three base hit. two base hite Miller 2. ‘Wilson, Brown: sactifice bils, acrifice 1y, ay: stolen bases. Hins. Snodurass, Metkle, Sweeney plays, Brown to to Beck. Shean to Sweeney to Beck. Doyle to Bridwell to Merkle; hit by pitch- er. by Matiern 10 wild piiches, Brown, Curtis, Ma fem: passed Dall Rariden: bits. off Beown 10 in 4 oft Wiliae 11 _ins. off Curtis 3 in 11-8. off 15 in 5. oY Rudeiph © in 1. off Matern 6 time, res, Klem and Kane. . delphia. played ten in, hitting game. tn w was called on account of darkness. Philadelphia. ab . po & Thtus.of 4200 Knabe.sb 5 1 3 4 Rates.cf 6 4 3 0 5 140 10 ilse 70 Mocre p 01 Siiattler.n 01 6 30 11 *Ratied for Shettler *<Ealted for Miller **+Patied for Rucker & Frwin Score by 1 Pilisdelphia ... Brooklyn Lft on bases, base P hits, Magee Pransficld. off Girard 1 in E o not “Where am I at’ whole lot of pol Charieston News - DON'T ot nci to a tle today in a hears n 8 Grant 2 Himmne bases on Play Tie Game. —Brooxlyn and Phila- fix pitchers were used. Time Scoro: Brookiyn. o s e 0 Dayidson.cf a8 0 0 Daubert. ib 020 1 Wheat if 480 0 Vimmel. 2 040 100 120 210 0 Milter.e 320 0 *Burch ] 1 Bergen.c ale 110 IR 00N 00 000 Totals, 41143013 0 08U i 8th in Sth, buc was taken out. a1 011003 6~ 10. Bronkiyn 10: tw base hits, Geulson 1san: stelen basos Coulson; wouble play, balls. off Moore 2 off Riofler 4: struel 1Y Rucker 5. by Sean. : passed ball. \fo in inings, off Shettle 3. off Rucker 13 in 8; time ton and’ Johnetone. Most of 'Em Are at Sea. w who originateé but it is bothering 1 iticians ght now.— and WORRY Courier, i It Makes Wrinkles. | Werry over | health no good, | wrinkles, | than you are. It you ere sick, don’t wort | about it to make ycurself well. | this we repeat the words of thousands of other former si ills, similar to 1!! i that make you Jjook 1ll-health does youws and merely cauvses oldre y but To do ufferers from woman- voura, when we say, iske Viburn-0, | It ts a wondcrfal femals remedy, a» Direcilons fer | you will admit if yau try it its use are printed in s!x languages with every bottle. Price $1.25 at drugglsts. FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO. i 106 West 129th Street. New York. i mar3id Save Expense and Gain Health Avoid zeWinter! Go to the SUNNY SOUTH in Comfort and Luxury nd for een Folder\ hot, ecld. A A WORD TO THE Telephone 553-5 OF NORWICH nal BOSTON NEW YO Targest coastwise shi social hal W TTuewday and Satu e meals and From Pier 3 “Tuesdar, T commodious promenade decks, g, smoking Fooms, bufiet ; b; Prom 20 Atlantic Avenue, 3. X., every . every ‘und Saturday. athis— ‘barth aboard ship. r Traffic Manager, Fierses Norn Kiver, Buick! As the authorized agents of the Buick Automobile Co. | ceived a limited number of NEW 1910 BUICKS of various models which we ars positive can be piaced here within ten days. The discounts on thcse cars will surprise you. SUFFICIENT. M. B. RING AUTO CO,, ISE 1S we have re- 21 Chestnut Street The Thames National Bank Capital, Surplus and Usdivided Profits, $1,870,000. The public is cordially invited to inspect the un- rivailed facilities offered to its customers by The Bank, and to avail of services in every department of banking. IS NOW OCCUPYING ITS NEW BANKING HOUSE No. 16 Shetucket Street its

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