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NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910 Fegy INSURAT? AUTO uiamuere J. L LATHROP & SOAS. 238 Shetucket Street, Norwich, Conn. sept2odaw N. TARRANT & CO,, 117 MAIN STREET. Fire, Accident, Health, Liability, Plate Glass and Steam Boiler | . INSURANCE Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society u. s, Assots $2,594,330.17 £eb26TuThS GET A POLICY AND GET IT NOW. No wise or prudent man lets his house or propefty run unprotected inst loms bw fire for a single day. s protectiom costs so little. and sans so much. Domn’t put it oft, but do it mow, and eonsult us about it. ISAAC 8. JOKES, Insurance snd Real Estate Agent, Richards Building, 91 Main St. novédaw HBE OFFICE OF WM. F. BHILIL, Real Estate and Fire Insurance, s jocatnd In Semery’ Block, over C. M. Wikams, Room 9, third floor. 134 Telephone 147. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. AMOS A. BROWNING, Attermer -at-Taw, 2 Richards Bidg Thone 205 BROWR & PERKINS, Mbmeys-at-lan over First Nl&hk Bhetucket Si Y wrday fl-fl-? Tucker, Anthony & Co. and BROKERS 28 Shetucket Street Telepaone 905, Members of New York and Boston Stock Exchanges Bonten. New York, 58 State Stvest. 24 Brosd Street. PRIVATE WIRE. Dominick & Bominick BANKERS and BROKERS Stocks Bonds [Investments PRIVATE WIRE TO New Yor Chicago 8t Louls Beston Cineimnati Pittaburg Norwich Branch. Shasnon Bidg. Telephene 801 FRANK O. MOSES, Mar DR. C. R. CHAMBERLAIN Lenta/ Surgeon. In charge of Dr. 8. L. @eers practws during his last liness. 161 Main Street. Nerwich, Conn augéd noviéd 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 ofier to the public the finest standard rands of Beee of Europe and America, mian, Pilaner, Cuimbach Bavarian , Bass' Pale and Burten, Mueirs Beotoh Ale, Guin Dublin _Stout, C. & C. Umported Ginger Als, Bunker Hill P. 8. Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anbeuser. | Budwelser. S-%lita and Pabst. A. A. ADAM. Norwich Town. Telephene 447-:2 rz2a The Dime Savings Bank OF NORWICH. DIVIDEND The regular Semi-annual Dividend ias been declared from the net earn- ngs of the past six months at the| ate of Four per cent. a year, and will s payable on and after November 15¢h. FRANK L. WOODARD, oet2idaw Treasure JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Slank Books Mads snd Ruled to Grda; 108 BROADWAY. Teteghiows IS AUTOMORILE STATION, & 3 Colt, § Olis Strest. Automoblle and Blesole Ponaiviug. General Ma- chine werk, Jebbiagz. ‘Thons B o RS [N URANCE Yale and Harvard Elevens Play West Ends Today. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 18.—The football t2am which wins here tomor- row—Yale or Harvard—will take place not only as undisputed champion of the east but among the great teams in the history of the sport. If Yale wins she will have shown a iliency, a courage ainst odds and ability not only to will but to do that will mark her 1910 ele as the pluck- iest fighting team she ever put out. If Harvard wins she will tablish more firmly the reputation she been making for herself all sea- Her game been solid in the mentals, alert and ingenious in and rigid in defense. In short, if her form at New equals what she Haven tomorrow has shown other | games and she wins conclusively her | performance will be a tribute to Percy Fiaughton, the head coach, that must place his name among the masters of the game and his team as one of the smoothest intelligently Te- sourceful and formidably efficient of football machi Yale always plays her best against } Harvard. Whatever the team has in it comes out in the last game of the but there e been Yale games 2 'this where Harvard ruled favor- he betting and paid the long end of the m when time was called for > last Against Dartmouth, Cornell and Brown this year Harvard has never bezn forced to exert herself. She won with power in reserve and ften with nearly a full string of sub. titutes on the flald in the closing period. Can she forget tomorrow how to play good football? On the other hand, Yale has bses beaten twice this year, once crushing- by teams ordinarily counted on to + stiff rub, and tied once. m she was an indifferent untfl last Saturda; amazing and savage | cton. The Tiger had | gone brillianily through a successful season and counted two to one en win- | ning. Can Yale do it again? If her team showed then’against sharp and stubborn opposition what it can be when it is o nedge, what will it do to- orrow h new eonfidence in itsalf, e traditional stimulue of a Harvard game and one more week of knowledge and finesse cramvmed into it by expert coaching? Tomorrow will tell, and either way the biggest game of the year iw hound to be this year the best. The linoup of the Yale team will be as follows: Kilpatrick left end, Scully left tackle, Fuller left guard, Morris nter, McDevitt right guard, Paul right tackle, Brooks right end, Howa quarterback., Field left halfback, Daly right halfba Kistler fullback. HARVARD MEN CONFIDENT. After Team’s Last Practice at Farm- ington. Farmington, Conn., Nov. 17.—Seldom has there beem the confidence ona night before the game with Yale as that expressed by the Harvard team | {and eoaches at thelr quarters at the { Elm Tree Inn here tonight. The last practice before the game was held on the linis of #he Country club this aft- ernoom, an hour being spent in depart- mental and signal drill. The ’varsity and first substitute clad in sweaters, long_ trousers and cleated shoes, the | regular uniforms having been sent U’! New Haven, lined up against each oth- | er, and whilo there was no _actual scrimmage, the various formations to ! Greatest Gridiron Game Of The Year Trained to The Minute— Both Sure of Winning—Norwich Free Academy | be used against Yale Saturday were carried to completion. The team as picked is as follov Leyis, left end: McKay, left tackle; inot, lett guard; Perkins, center; ! Fisher, right guard; Captain Withing- | ton, right tackle; L. D. Smith, rigit| end; Wigglesworth, quarterback; Cor- | bett, left halfback; Ted Frothingham, | night halfback; H. C. Leslie, fullback. YALE OUGHT TO WIN. Opinion of Waiter Camp, Tom Shevlin and Ted Coy. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 18.—A stiff battle and a winning one, is the pre-| diction of Yale men for tomorrow’s; game between Harvard and Yale. nothing to choose from in the matter of condition of the players on either side.. The Harvard men feft the shade of their university confident of winning. There was no argument about it. With the ending of practice this_afternoon Waiter Camp said_the battle would be a stiff one, and Yale ought to win. Other coadhes, like Tom Shevlin, Ted C Brink Thorne and Foster Sanford declared hat they could ot see how Yale could lose. On proph- | ecies the honors were even on the night before the game. Wagering was quite active, and in this Harvard ruled the favorite by considerable adds. Dartmouth Coach Picks Harvard. Meriden, Conn., Nov. 18.—Head Coach Randall of Dartmouth picks Harvard to | win the contest. Randall opped ov- er night in this city preparatory to go- | ing to the big ng of the contest, he said Harvard to two touchdown: 1 base my sions on the fact that the Cam-' bridge boys have an exceptionally good team, while Yale’s is only medium.” West Ends vs. Acadsmy Teday. Manager Bert Bailey's efforts to get an out of town football team for this afternoon to fill out the date called on the Academy wedule Hartford High school were not succe: ful, but the date on the schedule will be filted by an eleven of the best home talent. Stafford Skelly, the Storrs halfback of a season or two ago, will put a team called the West Ends on against the Academy for th afternoon and will muster a lineup that promises to give the Academy a run for their money. Tt will ba the next to the last game for the Academy, &s they finish the season Wwhen they meet Yale Consolidated on Thanksgiving. can- by Horse Shew Has Had Great Week. | The mnational horse show, which oloses In New York today, has had one of its best weeks on record. Attend- ance figures have cven exceeded the year when the presence of the Duke of Marlborcugh made it an especially brilliant society attraction. Collins-Schmidt Match. . Under the management of Bill Col- lins, a wrestling match is to be pulled off for the Ocoum sports on Tuesday evening. Monte is to mest Scnwhidt of New Bedford in a finish match. To Play at Norwich Town. The P. A. C. Jrs., a rising football team, goe to Norwich Town this after- noon’ to play the voungsters of th village green gridiron. . FINANGIAL AND COMMERCIAL ZYBSCO COMING HERE FOR, HANDICAP MATCH. Will Try to Throw Jack McGrath and Butcher Miller in an Hour. Arrangements for what will be the biggest wrestling atiraction this part of the state has seen have just been completed in securing Zybs-o, the giant Polander, fresh from new iaurels won in Europe, to come here for a match in Frochuchkeit hall on the last Saturday in November. Zbysyco’s op- Y JACK MGRATH. Local Irish Giant Who Will Go Against Polish Giant. ponents are to be Jack McGrath, now of Worcester and recently of this city, where he needs no introduction under the title of the Irish Giant, and Butch- er Ailler, another heavyweight, who belongs to the Hrooklyn Athletic club and has a record of going up against all the gest of the men in the wrestling gam Zybsyco, who weighs 250 pounds, agrees to throw both the ather men in an hour. N er of his opponents will be infants in his hands, McGrath now weighing about 212 and Butcher | Miller about the same, so that the big feliow will have to put in some wagiri- wind going to pin his two opponents in the required time. Zybsyco admits only the great Gotch @s his superior, and holds the totle of chamrion of Europe, which he recently defended In a two hour drawn battle with Gama, the wonderful East Indian | wrestler, who had defeated many of | the hix men of the mat with apparent ease. Doc Roller, Hackenschmidt and Abdul the Turk are ail on the list of the men that the Polish giant has met to give him a world-wide reputation. HARVARD TO PLAY PRINCETON. After 15 Years These Ancient Enemies H Expected to Meet Next Season. Although much secrecy is being | thrown about the matter, it-is known that an agreement is to be signed this week whereby those ancient, enemies, Harvard and Princeton, are to meet again upon the football field, beginning next vear. The alumni athletic committee at | Prineeton is almost a nnit in favor of i the project and an equally strong sen- timent has appeared at Cambridge. Harvard and Princeton have mot played since 1895, so it will be 15 years next fall since the last Crimson team went against the Tiger. They played in 1895, but before that they had not | met for six years. The games of 9 and ’96 were fillers for Harvard, for those were the two years in which | relations with Yale were suspended | followinig the '94 game at Hampden | park, Springfield, Mass., when Yale, | winning by a score of 12-0, was accus- ied of unnecessary roughne: In *97, when Harvard again played {with Yale, Princeton was not on her i schedule, although she had dropped the University of Pennsylvania. This left her with but one big game, as neith- er the Cornell team mor the Dartmouth eleven really succeeded to Pennsylva- niia’s or Princeton’s _place, although and more of a dangerous rival Princeton, too, was left with but one i real game on her programme, that with | Yale. Friends of both universities have l'beM! trying to get the teams together { again, but until this year they have | been unsuccessful. ! The only question that remains to be selttled is the one of date. Each of the Big Three, as it becomes again, will have two games. To make the sched- j ule equitable it is likely that Thank: | giving day will be restored to its for- mer impertance, It is a tradition at Harvard to close its season with the Yale game. On the other hand, Yale each vear has seen Dartmouth more | was always in the habit of playing the Tigers on Turkey day when Harvard had two big games on its list. HUSKY OKLAHOMA BOXER HOPES FOR CHAMPIONSHIP. Carl Morris Tips Beam at 245 Pounds and Has Some Ability. glant 'Frisco engineer, who recently entered the prize ring with the avowed purpcse of working up to the point | where he can issue a challenge for the heavyweight championshio, with the | hope of bringing the belt into the pos- | session of a white man again, is show- ling unexpectzd form with the gloves. land fight fans in Oklahoma, who had inot hitherto taken® Morris seriously, {now are beginning to wonder whether {he may not possess championship ma- ‘t(‘l"ifll after all | Morris' friends are especially en- {couraged by the showing he made in I nis fight at Tulsa against 1d Anderson of San Francisco, who was knocked out |in the fifth round of what was to have |been a 15-round go. Anderson, who | has been successful both as a boxer jand wrestler, defeated Wom Sharkey lin Los Angeies and has fought many {of th: men who are considered top- | notehers in the game. | Anderson weighed 195 pounds |time of the fight, while Morris weigh- jed in at 245. He weighed 320 pounds | when he stepped down from a 'Frisco |engine thrce months ago to enter the {ring. but has trained down 75 pounds jin the three months. fIe had the best 1of the contest with Anderson all the | way through and would have ended it |much_earlier only for Anderson's | gameness in coming back when he was {hardly able to keep on his feet. _ Morris is a man of remarkable phy- {sique. He is 25 vears old and stanis six feet four inches in his bare fee He learned the rudiments of the boxing game in the army, but had no idea of {becoming a professional pugilist until | Carl Morris of Sapulpa, Ark, the t the ja few months ago, when iends who IR d noticed his cleverness well as | his_physique advised such a course. {In nis fight with Anderson he showed {100 per cent. improvement since his re | cent battle with Tim Hurley. He in- !tends to go at the game in conserva- tive style, matching fights whenever [he can get them, but trying each time {to get a little better man than the - {ones he fought before. | The telegraph companies of the Uni- ted States employ about 30,000 per- sons. _ STATE TROOP CONTROL At Automobile Race Course s Censti« ered Only Safeguard. . Officials who participated in the grand prize automobile race at Sevan- nah, and the drivers of the contesting cars, are united in declaring that only by the use of state troops may & roid race be made safe for both spectators and contestants. ¥ There was nothing but praise for the Georgla soldiers ~ who the course. The soldiers, with loaded rifies and fixed bayonets, were stationed 100 yards apart over ths 17-mile track. The drivers declare that not a single spec- tator crossed the track and that at no time was there crowding at the dan- gerous points. Compared with the last Vanderbilt cup race, held on the Long Island course, ‘and its fatalities that cam? I from poor policing, the Savannah race was a revelation. Louis Wagner, the driver who was seriously injured Saturday, is improv- ing, but will be in the hospital for some time. Pop Foster With New Haven. Announcement has been made by George M. Cameron, owner of the New Haven team of the Connectocut Base< Dall league that he has signed Clar- | ence Foster, manager of the Holyoke | club last season, to play in the outfield | next year. | _Of the 17 men used by Andover Saturday all but six will be available for next vear. TFive of the six will enter Yale. Mahan, the star, will be at the academy mext fall, —— — Clear Brains and good spirits come naturally when the stomach is up to its work, the liver and bowels active and the blood pure. Better con- ditions always follow the use of BEECHAM'S - PILLS Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10c. and 25¢. 'OCKS. PRICES ADVANCED, Whole Market Turned Strong at the | Close—Call Loan Rates Below 3. | 1 | { 18.—Tliere was a | New Nov. aavy cage today in the propor- | tion o dealings in United States Steel and Urdon Pacific to the aggre- @ate volume of the market. These stocks, together with Reading, fur- nished the medium for concentrated speculative operations whivh had be- come so conspicuous as to induce crit- | icism and arouse suspicion, The discus- sion had become £o imsistent as to come under officlal investigation today | by the inittative of the brokers cos | carned. The fact of this inquiry was | supposed to expiain the subsidence of the particular activities under review. The absence of any official censure had the effect of removing some of the un- eaginess which had ‘begun to be felt ccount of the length to wiich feared the movement was run Tiie tone of the speculation ben- ed in a passive way from this out- and from the corresponding ces- s professional operations ho: tile to vhe market position thus involv- | ed. There was a considerable demand | from a shont interest left uncovered as | sult of vesterday’'s bear operations. 1e supply of stocks proved scanty and { the demand, lizht as it was, proved ef- fective in advancing prices, The spac- | ulative outbreak in the Rock Isiand ocks, joined to the Reading ‘move ment, turned the whole ma t strong growing _ease of the money an effective factor in favor b ice In prices. The average of the day’s call l0an rates fell below per cent. for the first time since the November settlements began to affect o marlket. Some sentimental influence was cribed to the judicial decision in fav- | of the Standard Oil company by lhe! an ning. eft adva United States court at Jackson, Tenn | Reported buving of copper in the do- | | mestic market explained the strength of the copper industrials.” The publica- i of passages from the interstats | e ate hearings implying t York atral’'y expense accou wd been padded in order to help th | contention for rate increases created | an_impression that affairs with ths| railroads might be better than are 2d- | nitled | The shifting of the principal speen- | iative mctivity io Reading and the re vival in the Rock Island issues was | supposed to point to a shift in the per- | sonality of the leadership. Renewed rumors of a coming increase in the| Lehigh Valley dividend figured in this | movement. i Reading’s proportion of the total dealings rose to nearly one-third, and United States Steel fell back to only about one-sixth of the whole market. Bonds were heavy. Total sales, par | value, $2,350,000. United States bonds were unchanged on call. STOCKS. A Chalmers pfd. Copper s Auricaltural . Beet Bugar - igh. Allls Amal. Am. ey 1 Am. Az, Anw A am Am Am Lecomatire | Susinig & B pa Stesl Foyodr. des .. 47 Sussc Retiag & Fel.. Wooken A o, et Amm. A, Alisconda Minig Cv. Coust e & Ohin tmel 1o Balliwn 0 Berhimen 1000 Bromihew, Rapid Twamsil 1600 Cavadian Pasifte 1000 Gentral Leather .. 100 Do. pfd : Central of New Jewey. Chieago De. prd Chicago — Coru 1000 Dolawars Do pra .. - Distillers” Seausitios . TN Do. ist fpa Do’ 24 prd Gomeral E: Great Ne Do. Ore atis. .. Tllincis Central Interborough Met, Do. Tnter Merine ped . International Papes . Intemational Pums . Towa Central Kanme City Do. pfd Lactede Loutsville Minn. & St. M, St P & Mo., Ean Do.” ptd Missouri Pacilc . v Bieeuit c. nt. & West Nortolk & Western... . North American 1300 Northern Pacifie 200 Pacife Mall 2900 Pennsslvan 390 Peopies Pittaburg, Pittsburg_Coal Pressed Sicel Car. Pullmen Palace Cor Rellway Steal Spring. Reading 102100 700 100 31100 00 100 Republic Steel Do. pfd Bock Iutend Do. pid Bt k. & ¥ Bt Louls S. Do. pfd ..... Bloss Shet. S. Southern Paclfic ... Southern Railway .... Do. pfd Tennesen Copper Texas & Pacific 2 Tole Lo&W.. Do. pid s Tnion P Do. Tnieed & Toited United Do_ pfa 5800 Ttah Coppar 2400 Va. Carclive Chem D Wabssh .. .. 0 Do. pta .. 8 0 Wesetrn Marylaud | ... Westinzhouse Electrtc 0 200 1200 100 1100 200 900 590 100 Real Rubet teel 300 8100 1108 “200 Wostern Union. ——— Wheeling & L. Tele.... Total sales, 585,360 shares. COTTON. New York, Nov. 18—Cotton spot closed cuiet, middling uplands 14.50, middling gulf 14.75; sales, 11,100 bales. Futures closed steady Noven ber 14.26, December 14.2 ebruary 14.34, 4. April 14.45, May 14.57, June 14.54, July 14.54, August 14.23. MONEY. | Nov. 18.—Money easier, 21-2@23-4 per cent, ruling rete 23-4, last loan 21-2, clsing bid 21-2, offered at 21-2. Time loans dull and easy, sixty and ninety days 9 1-2 per cent, six months 41-4@4 1- New York CHICAGD GRAIN MARKET. WhEL T osen Low. Clse Deo, s sy Juy RN: Dan. Mar Ty @ fey ta 3% iy 1 i pany’s stook. Director EDMUND DAY, Seymour, Conn. Director and Treasurer WHITMAN §. MEAD, Greenwich, Conn. Bonds will be retired—by lot—1 Fuly 1, 1916, 1-5 ($60.000) at 120. July 1, 1917, 1-5 (360,000) at 115. Security: 236,000,000 feet fsus less than $1.30 per thousand feet of Timber. The Directorate of the Company, made up of Connecticut business men, well Manufacturing its timber into lamber and m (in addition to returns sufficient for the retirement of $200,000 NorthwesternTimber Co. HARTFORD, COININ. DATED JULY 1, 1810. Ten Year 6% General forigage Bonds (The above is part of an Awthorized Issue of $300,000, $100,000 of which has DUE JULY 1, 1920. DENOMINATIONS $1,600, $500, $100. INTEREST COUPONS PAYABLE JANUARY AND JULY. TRUSTEE, CORPORATION TRUST COMPANY, NEW YORK. President W. E. BURNHAM, Bridgeport, Conn. Director SIDNEY E. HAWLEY, Bridgeport, Conn. Direc or a CARL FOSTER, Bridgeport, Conn. General Manager and 1st Vice-Pr Hartford, Conn. Dire BRUCE N. GRIFFING, , Shelton, C« nn. nd Coun JOSEPH accordance with July 1, of Merc eti As far as is practieable, the Company will delay operations and manufacturing the opening of the Paname Canal, now assured for December, 1913 lumber (321 to $26 per thousand feet) at least fifty per cent., and ms the f 1920, 1-5 bond an Jul July 1, 1, 1918, 1 1919, 1 (360,600) at 100. antable Standing, Tidewater, Timber—90 per cent. Cedar-—m: d operating expens e the markets of the E United States and of Burepe more accessible and much more profitable. The above 225,000,008 feet of Merchantable Standing Timber—approximately 10,000 acres is divided as follows: Red Cedar 60 per cent, Yellow Cedar 80 per cent., other Merchantable T In addition te the foregoing. there is a large amount of Red Cedar and Yellow Cedar s phone and electric lighting poles, piles, etc., approximately and Yellow Ced”? tion, and addi Attention is invited to the following statements regarding this particuiar ber Cruisers, Forest Engineers and Timber and Lumber Men famil itable already been subscribed for.) resident EVERETT J. LAKE, CLAYTON 8. BOIES, Seymo Director Conn 2nd Vice-President BRUSH, Greenwich, Conn. wing schadule, at the respective Premium indicated: (360,000 at 110. (%60,000) at 105. ng the bond known throughout the State. The immediate management and direction of the Company’s affairs is in the hands of Everett J. Lake, of Hart- ford, General Manager of the Company. At present prices for Cedar logs, by than 250 per cent. of its bond issue. selling its timber as logs, the Company can realize a sum equal to more z it as such (which is the Company’s plan), should insure s) liberal returns on the Com- and selling its timber until which should reduce present freight rates on storn part of the securing the Bonds, mber 10 per cent. for telegraph, tele- 00,000 railroad ties, and a large amount of fallen Red trees. All the foregoing is on tidewater, giving the Company the advantage of water transporta- substantially to, the value of the property. nished upon request:— F. 8. BUCK, President Cedar Lumber Company, Ltd., Vancouver, B. C.: “We are now and for the past twelve menths have been operating on timber, from our limits on Gilford Island, B. C. T. B. McBLHINNEY, Timber Cruiser: “This property is by far the best tract of Cedar | have ever seen or cruised in this section of the country, during over four years' oonstant cruising, and including much of the best timber. “The prepor#ion of Yellow Cedar to the whole is unusually large and the grade r with conditions, copies of We regard .Yellew Cedar as the most valuable cedar on the Pacific Coast.” mber, taken from reports of Tim- which will be fur« and quality is exceptionally high. Much of the Yeliow Cedar which | saw is from 12 to 18 feet and over in circumferance, and the large tress will acale ten thousand feet and over per tre A. ¥ ANDERSON, Vice-President Cruisers’ Timber Exchange, Ltd, Vancouver, B. ( “Reéferring to Yellow Cedar and the merits of the wood, as compared with s the best quality of timber that grows in British Columbia, and igher price than any other native wood.” there can be no doubt but that mand a much other preducts in this Province, it will com- Bonds will be ready for delivery December 1st. Advance subscriptions or reservations for the remaining bonds will be received by the Company, until December Ist, at par and accrued interest, - Bonds subscribed for, - prior to the above date (December 1), to carry an equa! amount of stock of the Company as a part of the same consideration ; --the right being reservad to award a smaller amount than applied for. Address subscriptions or appli- cations for reservation of bonds to Northwestern Timber Company, HARTFORD, CONN.