Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 10, 1911, Page 3

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Pirates Lead National League Hace World’s Chn.mps of 1909 Head the Cubs by One Point —Tigers and Athletics Win Their Games — Sam - Langford meshes Smith in Five Rounds—Refetee Stopped Bout.. INSURANCE. AUTOMOBILE . FIRE INSU R.A“NCE Take Advantage iof These Spec'ials,i,vap;dv Reduce Yoilr Cost of Living. THURSDAY and FRIDAY SPECIALS. to fall down even before the redoubt- able Walsh is Bill Wicks, according to the way the Hospital fans feel. Some- thing has brightened Bill's batting eye The leadership of the National league fell. to the Pittsburgs Wednesday: This is the first time this season that the world's champions of 1909 have JUST A WORD! Z If you will let us attend to your In- surance matters the service we will render vou will be so good that you will pardon us for calling your atten- tion to it in this preemptory way. ISAAC 8. JONES, Insurance and Real Estate Agent, Richards Building, 91 Main St. 1HE OFFICZ OF WM. F. BILL, Real Estate and Fire Insurance, I» Jocuted In Somerw’ ‘Block, over C. M. iillams, Room §, third floor. “Telephone 147 ———— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW AMOS A. BROWNING Attorney-at-Law, 3. Richards Bldg. "Phone 700. Brown & Pcrkins; Attorneys-at-Law Over First Nat. Bank, Shetucket St. Entrance stairway next -to Thames National Bank. Telephone 38-3. BRADY & BRADY, Attorneys and Coumsel at Law, 256 Broadway, New York Cit,. James T. Brady Charles A. Brady of New York. of Norwicn, Conn. Dominick & Dominick Members of New York Stock Exchange Established 1870. 10 Shetucket St., _Shannon Bldg. Bankers and Dealers in Investment Securities. Selected list of Bonds and Preferred Stocks, sent on application. Fidelio Beer On Draft or in Bottles. Team Delivers Everywhere. H. JACKEL & CO. Tel. 136-5. cor. Market and Water Sta. DENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Sulte 46, Shannon Building Take elevator Shetuciet street en- grance. ‘Phons The TOGGERY SHOP: LINE OF Men’s Summer Shirts of the Better Grades, at remarkably LOW PRICES For ten days we will clese out our entire line of $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 BHIRTS at prices as follows: 1.50 Shirts for . $2.00 Shirts for . $1.35 $2.50 Shirts for. $1.75 These are Shirts of individuality. Ymexcelled in quality, design or work- ames 0. Macpherson HOWTUCK AFE ANITARY ATISFYING Norwich, Conn. PRING WATER Tel, 34-2. Cremo - Some - CIGAR [ O DR. C. R. CHAMBERLAIN Dental Surgeon In charge of Dr. S. L. Gee practice during his last ilines. MeGrnry Building. _ Norwich, Conn, is no. ndvs tising -*d]um in urn nnecticut. 1 to The Bul« touched the top rung in 1911. The combination gives Pittsburg first place by one point, as follows: Lost. P.C. 38 Pittsburg . . 61 Chicago . New York Philadelphia FAST TRACK AT CLEVELAND. Fastest Trotting Feat of Year Stepped in 203 3-4 by Soprano. Cleveland, August 9.—Ideal condi- tions graced today's meeting of the Grand circuit at the North Randall track, and the result showed in the various races, Two new individual records were set up, the fastest trot- ting heat of the yvear was stepped, and the events generally brought out more than ordinary speed. Soprano added to her previous laur- els by winning the Fasig Stake race in fine style. She stepped the fastest trotting heat of the vear in the first heat of this race, 2.03 3-4. Zulu Hal, a recent graduate from the half-mile track, made a new in- dividual record in the first heat of the 210 pace by making the mile in 2.03 1-4 when hard pushed by Er- nest. ENGLISH LIGHTWEIGHT COMING. Matt Wells Matched to Meet Knock- out Brown in New York on 30th. New York, August 9.—George Mac- Donald, manager of Matt Wells, the English lightweight champion, an- nounced tonight that he had matched Wells_to meet Knockout Brown, the New York lightweight, on August 30. in this city. The men will fight under the auspices of some club not vet se- lected. MacDonald said the men agreed to meet at 133 pounds, weighing in at 4 p. m; that Charley White has been selected as the referee, and that a cash forfeit of $500 each has been posted by the fighters. It is ex- pected, MacDonald said, that Wolzast will make a match with the winner of the bout, BOUT STOPPED IN FIFTH. Sam Langford Practically Knocked Out Jim Smith at New York. New York, August 9—Sam Lang- ford won from Jim Smith in the fitth round of a scheduled ten-round bout at the Fairmont A. C. tonight. The referee stopped the bout after Smith had gone to the floor for the count of nine, Smith was practically out when the bout was stopped. Sam Austin Out of the Lineup. Manager Farrell will have the third base station on the Hospital team for | the. game on Saturday against Mont- ville filled by Brennan of Jewett City, in place of Sam Austin, who is laid ug with malaria. Montville is coming up Wwith its crack pitcher, Walsh, who has been mowing down everything in this territory, and he will be right on the job to add the Hospital team to the list he already has the Indian sign on. But one batter who is not expected lately, for in the last seven times at bat he is said to have made six hits. The secret of this reeord is said to lie in 2 new training diet Bill has discov- ere, HERE’'S TO THE FAN. The Main Thing in Baseball, Interest- ed Twelve Months in the Year. The fan is the main thing. He is everlastingly at it. The game may be played but six minths in the year, but he is talking about it all the time. In the winter he anxiously devours: the sporting pages to read of the doings of the great players. Any yarn about 2 player will interest him, and it need. not be true. During thé days when the snow covers the ground, the fan is consoling himself with comments of games played months and months be- fore; of stories relating of the experi- ences of this or that player or umpire in days gone by; or @f the stories of some old timers, Anything about base- ball will catch his eye, winter as well as summer. Even in the small towns, the great stars of the game offer sub- jects for conversation out of season as well as in season, and conversations of this kind are often considered more essential than the neds of the moment. In summer there is hardly a more di- rect way of interesting a fan than by commenting sympathetically or other- wise ahout a particular player or team. Such remarks will provoke long windetd discussions, even at the ex- pense of something else. The country is baseball crazy, but that is no sin. And what is this game of basebal that has the whole of us by the ear? Some see only batting, fielding, pitch ing and running. The game demands menta! skill as well as mechanical per- fection. It requires brains. The ball- player may not be a deep thinker on genera! subjects; he may not even be a rapid thinker in baseball; but if he isn’t some one else is in the game, the captain or the manager, and he fol- lows the latter's mode of action. If the ball player is a brainy fellow he adds to his general baseball assets, for the game requires a cool and calculating head. Great ball players are rapid thinkers ih the field. They act instant- 1y and correctly. The manager is sup- posed to be the general, but there are jtimes in a game when occasions afise {that must be thought out instantly. And when they are rapidly diagnosed that brings the plaver into the lime- light.—Spr.ngfield Republican. Mack’s Opinion of Cobb. “I have to hand that fellow Cobb the call,” says Connie Mack. “I have seen them all, but he is king. If you'll tell me where he is w why, I will bow; but the only time he looks good to me, 2s manager of the team he is not with, is when he is in bed and sleeping. I Iha\‘e spent a million hours watching te detect a weakness in his baiting, and I sm no wiser now than when he began crown himself king of out- fielders. Not only is he the greatest |physical star of the day, but he is a |thinker. Watch him running on_the bags; and you will see he uses more than his wonderful speed to make his brilliant plays.” ~ FINANGIAL AND COMMERCIAL AN UNCERTAIN UNDERTONE. Market General Apathetic With a Ten- dency to Low Prices. New York, Aug. 9.—Today's stock market was largely a repetition of the preceding day’s. Prices moved in a vay suggestive of further liquidation, after which they recoversd, only 1o again decline. The undertone was un- certaln at best and clearly reflected the various agencies, agricultural, commerciel, industrial and political, which are now such compalling factors. There seems to be increasing doubt in banking quarters regarding the re- vival of general trade in the fall, and the labor situation, particutarly in its application to western railroads, is looming large on the financial horizon. Other news of the day included an- nouncement that the Atchison road purposes to issue $100,000,000 of com- mon stock and some more convertible bonds. The stock, it is stated, is not intended for immediate use, but rather as an emergency measure. Should che company engage in any new financing this year it will probably do s3 through the medium of some of its bonds, a large amount of which is available for this purpose. The market fell into a staze of apathy during the early afternoon. whan prices declined to vesterday’s low level and in some instances below. Traders anticipated the publication of the government crop report to attack the market, but were not very aggres- sive, the market dropping more from its inertia than for any other reason. Returns of the crop report were in some respects more disappointing than was expected. The crop figures wers followed by another raid on the market which sent Union Pacific un- der yesterday, with sharp declines in the grain carriers. The decline was orderly at first, with little indication of bear propulsion, but in the last few minutes the selling gathered such huge proportions that prices crumbled away to the lowest level of the pres- ent movement. There were faint rallies which failed to arrest the fall to any appreciable extent and the closing was extremely weak, with the short inter- est in complete control of the situa- tion. Apart from the several items of naws referred to there was little of interest bearing directly upon the financial si:- uation. The death abroad of an erst- while prominent operator found some reflection in the weakness of one of the properties with which he was iden- tified. London was at first inclined to renew purchases in this market, but later in the day turned seller, its sales on balance probably aggregating about 20.000 shar The bond market was directly af- fected by the movement of stocks. To- tal sales, par value. $1.902,000. United <t?‘tes government bonds unchanged on call. STOCKS. Sales. igh. 500 Allis Chalmers pfd 227 6400 Amal. Copper 6% 100 Agdeultural 5014 3300 Beet Sugar L Am Can ;> 400 Car & 800 300 o 300 A, Tee Securitfes [ Linseed 0l Tocomotive .| . Swelting & R pra Steel ‘Foundrie: Sugar, Refining & Tobacco prd . Woolen . 2 Anaconda Minjng " Co. Acminca”. . ¥ Do. ptd . Atlantic Coast Tine Raltimore & _Ohio. Bethlehem Steel 10200 Conadien Bacine ‘wnadian Central Leather 300 Do. pfd .. oo Central of New Jersey. 6400 Chesapeake & Ohio.. - Chicago & Alton 200 Chicago Great West ——— Do./pMd. .,....: 400 Chicago & 'N. W..lll 16400 Chicago, M. & St. P.. C. C. C. & st Louls 400 Colorado Fuel & Iron. 1100 G00 200 Colorado & Southern. Consolidated Gas Com Products . DeWlaware & Hi Denver & Rio Grande. Do. ptd S Distillers". Erle st pra 2d ped General _Electric Great Do. Tilinois Cen Interborough Do. pfa % Inter Harvester Inter Marine prd Intemnational Paper . International Pump. Towa Cent 5 Kansas City Sou Met. Do. pMd .. Laclede Gas Lehigh Valley ... Loulsille & Nash Minn. & St. L M, St P& S Mo, Kan & fTex. Missouri Natlonal ational . R. cific Biscult Tead Mex! pid. Central . Pacific Pennsylvania Peoples Gas Pittsburg C. Pittsburz Pressed Pullman Palace Car. Railway Steel Spring Reas 5 Republic 200 Do. pfa 4860 Rock Island 0 Do. prd St L & & St Louts Do. pfd Sloss Shef. S” & 1 Southern Pacific Southern Railway Do. prd Teunessee Copper Texas & Pacific Toledo St. L. & W.. Do. ptd TUnion_ Pacific Do. ptd . TUnited States Tnited States United States Do. ptd - 113700 00 Steel “Co. 400 100 500 151100 1100 400 Utah. Coper 300 vt LTk 1173 116% 1 —— Wheeling & L. Frie Total sales, 601,900 shares. MONEY. New York, Aug. 9.—Money on call steady at 2 1-4@2 1-2 per cent.; ruling rate 2 3-8; last loan 2 1-2; closing bid offered at 2 1-2. Time loans 2 3-8; firmer; 60 days 2 3-4@3 1-4 per_cert.; i 90 days 3@3 ix months 3 7-3@4 COTTON. : New York, Aug. 9.—Cotton futurss closed very stead; Closing bids: Au- gust 12.21, September 11.38, October 11.31, November 11.28, December 11 January 11.27, February 11.35, April — May 11.43, July 11.4 Spot closed quiet, 10 points high middling uplands, 12.40; middling zulf, Mare 12.65; sales, 200 bales. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Bish Low. Clom 9 9115-16 92501 oTs e oaw o 1037 100% 102 316 42 316 41% < 41 1516 4% % 44y _E% 5% 47 516 LEAN CHUCK STEAK Mohican Creamery BUTTER - 104 PURE LARD - 2 ibs. I9c|EBES Choice Sirloin Steak b | §c Fresh Northern Fine Table doz. 21 ¢|rsi. B 51b. Pails LEAN SALT PORK 1 Tk gg%fio Lean-Sliced b an-Sliced BACON 1123 STELA L PURE LARD 14 Ib. 25¢ blc UTTER - KARD SYRUP &= tiohican Corn Starch One Pound Mohican Ghocolate %21bf 5¢ Ib. 28|Ful tream CHEESE Ib. [5¢ 22[: Table SAI.T Value 5c[TEA "5icc” Roos seee EXTRACT hot, | 5 |Mustard F resh-Made ; Huckleberry Pie Exh Qe 3e Large LOAF BREAD . Home-Made BREAD ROOT BEER 5% 1ost §-88 | BOTATORS eck 4|0 S loat I 2c g;llllogNS 2 qts. I 3c Orange CAKE bag 6¢|FLY PAPER b 23ciMixed COOKIES Ib.10¢ Four Double Sheets 3¢ Sardines can§g . peck 353 5c Fine Eating APPLES . Native CUCUMBERS 3 for AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Rost. P.C. Philadelphla 35 Detroit ... 38 Boston 51 51 Cleveiand 8, Boston 4 . Toston, n_was in position seseral times to me, but the deciding hit was lackin 8 1o 2 and Cleveland won, Boston. : **Thoney ul sessese Totals *Batted for B, **Baited for Williams in 0th. Score by innings: s Home Run Wins for Senators. Aug._ 0.—Washington _defeated = St Louls again © 5 fo 4. With the score a_tle in the eighth Gessler hit the ball oser the right field fence for a home run. The flelding of -McBride, Conroy and Austin were featares, Washington. ab b po Washington, . Louis. abhpoa e Milan,cf 4 - 3 3 Smooonoos Wallace, Austin; York, Aug. 9.—De of the series with New Ford for faur runs by a score of § to oit so far. Cree cals who could fathom Detroit. abh po a Jones.1t 5840 it won the fourth game k today by falling on ath. Tie game, won sl De- the only , 1o~ Score: L ind Gard Danov b0 1 1 1 230 60 20 0 ofCreelt 10 18 0 ofinignt 01 g2 11 4 OfHaruzeilay 90312 0 3 3 OiGardner3b 4 3 1 0 0 15 2 ofSeemeve 1 0 4 2 0 2.0 0 Of«Cadwell 0 0 0 0 0 = = o 10100 12 1fFard.n 20120 <Woiter 1 0 0 0 0 uinin.p 20010 sn 1.0 00 o Totals, 31 5 *Ran for Sweener in Tth. **Batted for Ford in 7th ZBatted for Quinn in 9th, Score by innings: Detrolt 2 1 New Yok 1 Two base hits. Chase, tarec Cobh, Athletics Win Swatfest. Philadelphia « hard hitting game here today the A cfeated Chicago 9 to 7. It was the forn victory ox eir op- ponents. Y en off the rubber in the second innir Coombs was taken out of the box in_ihe v and Danforth sent to the rescue. The Chicago. 1 Philadelphia. bh opo & e abh po & ¢ Mlntyrert 3 13 0 0T Lordlf 2000 Hlordsb 1 2 2 0 0'Oldrincg.el 200 Callahandf 5 2 § 0 0E.Collins,2b 130 Bodie, 346 0B 100 MCnell2h £ 2 0 4 0Mu 710 I.Cont 508 0 03] 710! Tan' 002 0 0B sy Corhanse - 3 1 0 2707 500 Payne. 18y otk o 110 Kreitzc 30 2 1 0Danforthp 0| 00010 2% 4101 0 Totals, 1 “Lanze 11000 *Walsh "1 0 0 0 0 Totals, 40 14 21 10 0 *Batted for Corhan 5 **Bitted for Hovlik in §th. Score by tnnings: Chicazo 3 0010022 0 2 Philadelphia. 0 473001001 *—9 Two base hits. Corhan, MInnbs: three base hits, Murphy, ~MeInnes, Barry, H. Lord. Lange; bome run, Bike. New, Coach for Brown. | Brown university has opened a new chapter in her track athletics by en- gaging Edward J. O'Connor, last year's coach at Bates college and one of the foremost track men in this country, to take full charge of track athletics at Brown. Jack O'Brien’ has been matched rto box ‘Sam Langford ten rounds at the Twentieth Century Athletic club on Tuesday night, August 15, at catch- weights. O'Rrien wanted to match at the light heavyweight limit, 168 pounds, and Joe Woodman, Langford's man- ager, had accepted the contest under those _conditions, hut refused to go through on his ow,n proposition. HUGGINS A GOOD WAITER. Cardinal Midget Worries Pitcher With Armn nq Tactics. NATIONAL LEAGUE SPANDING. Won. Lost. This little wisp of gins, is the greatest man, Miller Hug- them ail into a fr. by his annoyin; H tactics. Huggins is the greatest wait n toning Contest. £ e Jasing O er in the game. Despite his modes defeated Philadeiphia’ the score being 7 to 6. batting average, he has scored 65 run: n balls t It was th | the reiiable Sandy pitch se | bim, finally getting a walk. | entering wedge, of an |1y resulted in one r for Huggins an; lead-off man in Boston : ithe 'National league. Not much of a| GAMES TODAY. hitter (.257 in figures), he is the hu- Philadelphia at Pl man gadfly to pitchers and he of | this year. Pittsburg. Philadelphia. bt iy to At Etk L %% % § §|ains at his work to understand his im arke.1f o | portance. o mple, against Alex. ently, in the first inning with the Quakers, he made ack that final- |Squares in Chicago, a semi-profession- al team, and it was just as likely to happen against pitchers any ordinary ball player should hit with ease. Had I allowed these siumps to get my goat, as the saying goes, | wouldn': be even good enough for 4 semi-pro team now, and my dropping out of big league ball in 1905 would have signaied my gradual going back. 1 didn't quit the Chicago club in 1005 becauss I fig- ured that I was not fast enough for the big games, but because of the money there was in_semi-pro, bail. I ihad managed the White Sox during part of 1903 and durlng 1004, and fei: capable of tackling the joint proposi- tion of magnate and manager in the Chicago City league. T had very fair o | success, and therefore when the oppor- g s o | tunity ¢ame to come back to the Whits o Sox fold again, this spring, 1 deter- mined to Many of my well- meaning friends tried io persuade me 2 [to give up the ides, but I kmew that the benching of Alexander at the end t |of the inning. Huggins exasperatingly jmy nerve would stand the gaff and | waited for the big left hander, Burns, [counted on my hitting to offset any to find the plate. Burns got himself |Gomparative slowness I might show. T in the hole for about seven pitched |have been playing baseball profession- balls before he began to locate the|ly since 1874, and through the 37 years | plate, Huggins tant d him by foul-|Of it, whether I have been v;.tchln? o s o_r|Ing Off three more good ones. ‘Then |playing the infleld or e \1nz;‘ e out- 3 0 1¢|Bums tying 0 slip o stralzhs oneficld, I live Sred to whick fo (hac Mov- Beck; three | he punched out a safety to left |er-give-in spirit always, an \lw . Yr g startéd the fireworks. [success I may have attained I ascribe pitchers out of transportation. oot the first and_third % win from Brook- Huggins esd; the league in jockeying to that.” Tom Bannon, an old time Giant a: member of a famous baseball fami : : ET. e et ke e s (L ERERG D ERFLAIRe - Snon has _been recommended for a posi st." Louis. Brookiyn. White Sox Veteran Attributes His|on Thomas J. Lynch's umpiring sta i fooeres 0% 111 Baseball Ability to Persistence. | s 3 0 ofbaubertin 4 118 3 o b 15§ Oflumweoy 45 3 0 8| Jimmy Callahan, the White Sox | Delivered to Any Part of Norwich $ ¢ pwdoncr 4 201 0 1)come-back, spiels as follows.on the 2¢- | 1o le that is acknowledged to be tha G 3101 00" The real secret of success in base- | best on the market — HANLEY'S H 4118 @ 4.1 is persistence, according to my| PEERLESS. A telsphone order wiil = e }‘ s 3 0 fl‘l"e('ip(’. Nev ‘Ialln\\’ \l)ulx}se:‘f;(‘)”;)t}lnj\x;i receive promp: attention. 0.Burke.p 2 0| that u are beaten or ha y C ea 2 " wowis, 3182115 3|l beaten. Always consider that you| D Jo McCCRMICKs 30 Franklin St 1 for Ruckes In Sth. = o have just as much chance to line t ball out to a safe spot when there arc | Louis ... 10100011 *|two strikes on you as when you have GEO E pchflEn | Brootisn 00600000 . G Two base hif, Smith; home run, Erwin |adopted 2 system that Imuch to do with the wonderful pinch ng of Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner, ,Lajole and many others. Cobb i | ways more dangerous with two st [nn him, I think, than at for no ball was ever devised fool this Georgian more or twice, and his short-arm, v {ious stabs, employed when two stri have been poked over, always send th: sphere somewhere like a rifle shot. New York Pounds Chicaso go. Auz. 9 pitehers all over the bases New York. abh po | | could | onc other times, which than Civil Engineer, | wishes to announce to his patroas and | the public that he has moved to 65 Broadway, Chapman building, opposits the Y. M. C. A. | English Lunch Sitirany Eventns. S| Hand's Celebrated Half Stock Als a specialty. 1| Sheanss 100 think Cobb fails oftenest when he is | The Westerly House, Sader.ib 4 211 3 trying place hittingion the first or sec- & ¥ > No. it fi:.’,.‘.‘”.:{, i1 i 0 ond ball pitched. &Formelr(lv\ D J.;)B;‘le:;“u ;rr:m 5 >0 O randall.p | “The fans have considered me a enyon ckhove pe. Mlntrep 1 0 0 1 ¢ {come back veteran this year, but it wr Grabam . 1 0 0 0 0] Totals, due to no change in my styvle of'play. e Ll e L I have always plugzed along and LA Motals, 34 7 26 18 never given up, no matter what the | wied, for icher Tu, ot odds. There have been times dull:mz it by ; ¢ lengthy career when my stickin: l . | Merkie out, it by batted balLe By :“beo“ T o ek o b at CARDWELL’S By il R 1 Co that of a .100 batting pitcher. | 00320641 0— even happened several times| Tel, 952, 3..9 Water Street merman, Herzog, Tinker, Saler: I was piloting the iLogan | Mvers. Cincinnati 5. Boston 3. Aug. 9 Cincinnati made it three siop today and. won their seventh | Suceessive Sietors by @ feove of 5 1o 3. Seore Wwh oL SN R e $1% R e €102 " 402 6 b3 iate H . il e | s A T : Re- Trgerion 50 g 42 2 ! Don’t Hide Them With a Veil; Re Griffinp 4 0 0 2 0 . N D T B3 2 move Them With the New Drug Score by tnnin oo 5 ncinna 2 5 g i e : slyo buse nhits, Ingrion, Bates: thres base it An eminent skin specialist recently discovered a new cDonald i WEDNESDAY'S BASEBALL GAMES. drug; othine—double strength, which is so uniformly suc- bbige e DL L cessful in removing freckles and giving a clear, beautiful Rochester 38 642 o0 =5 e 2 i complexion, that it is sold by The Lee & Osgood Com- | Buttato ’ Terets ey pany under an absolute guarantee to refund the money if Providence ‘League. it fails. Eastern At Toronto—TFirst game: Newark 2, Toronto B. ¥ S Saimeore Stomtreal 1o Bl viore Don’t hide your freckles At ;’l’(\vl(l(’l\( thm"m‘ 4, 1]‘l’v’lv\,\dfllu- % AL Jerses City—Hochester’ 1, Jessey CIty 2. ¥ R St e othine and remove them. COMNECTICUT LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Spri { Bridseport Hartford w Haven w Britain Connecticut League. terbury 5, N New- Britain Hartford 5. At Soringfeld—First same: Springlld 4. Bridge- port 0. Secoud game: Sprinzfield 8, Bridgeport 4. New Encland League. AL Lynn—Fall River 4, Lynn 2. At_Lawrence—Lawrence’ 6, New Bedford 8. 2= Worcester—Worcester 9, Brockelon & freckles vanishing entirely. under a veil; get an ounce of Even the first night’s use will show a wonderful improvement, some of the lighter It is absolutely harmless, and cannot injure the most tender skin. Be sure to ask your druggist for the double-strength othine; it is this that is sold on the money-back guaran-

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