Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 29, 1912, Page 3

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NORWICH BULLETIN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1812 INSURANCE. A Specialty ARM INSURANCE * J. L. Lathrop & Sons, Norwich, Cenn. COVERING YOUR ROOF AGAINST FIRE IN®URANC We guarantee instant payment for very dollar ) when you surrender us to write yours to- ISAAC S. JONES, Insurance and Real Estats Agent, Richards Bullding, 91 Main St. “The Oldest and Strongest Companies JAMES E. FULLER, 161 Main. IME GFFICE OF WM. & EILL Real Estate and Fire Insurance, is jocaind in Somsry’ Block, over C. M. iiliams, Room §, third floor. Telephone 147 ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW AMOS A. BROWNING Attorney-at-Law, 3 Richards Bldg. "Phone 700. Brown & Perkins, litomeys-at-Law Bank, Shetucket St y next to Thames Telephone 338 airw ‘ank Natlons EDWARD GRAFF. WM. E. GILMORE, Special, G. EDWARD GRAFF Stocks, Bonds and Grain Room 5, Chapman Building, 65 Broadway, Norwich, Conn. MEMBER idat Stock Exchange of New York, Board of Trade. Telephone 842, C. H. GILFILLAN, Mgr. eekly Jetter, seful {nformation. INVESTMENTS Dominick & Dominick Tel. 901 Ask 1t Norwich | Frank O. Moses, Mgf. STORAGE Finest and largest storage room n this city. Elevator service connected. Nates reasonable. Contract Work || and Building Materials of every | course of the market as a’' whole, the |_ | tarred, Room In The E. C. Basehall League Putnam Has Made Application And Others May Come in at Next Meeting — Taftvill, Wauregan, Moosup, and Jewett City Have Already Entered—Magnates at Jewett City Sunday. If there are any baseball teams in matched as to sizg, us Woodsey is a this section that want to get into the |6 foot 3 giant, weighing 200, and Don- Eastern Connecticut Baseball league | ovan goes him three Inches better on for the coming seasom, now s their | height and about 15 pounds on weight. time, and they want to speak right up. | HOPPE WON. Sunday afternoon at Jewett City the magnates of the teams from Waure- Billiard Expert Clans Up in His Match With Cline. gan, Moosup, Jewett City and Taft- ville are to come together in Jewett City for a meeting, these four ‘having already entered the league, and Presi- dent J. B, Benoit has had an applica- tion from Putnam The Centrals of Norwich and the Tri-Village team still have a chance 10 get in by sending delegatees to ti Philadelphia, Feb. 28—Willie Hoppe won his 2,000 point 18-1 balk line bil- liard match with Harry Cline tonight. | Hoppe won the afternoon game, 400 to 1303. His high run was 86 and his av- e 239-17. Cline's high was meeting, which will be called at 2.30 | 7 and iis average 18 5-11Th the night Sunday afternoon, and any other | game Ciine could put together only teams that desirc to bo counted in| gy while Hoppe was gathering 400 should send their representatives t0 | noints. Hoppa's gh run was b4 and this_meeting. With four clubs, it 18 believed that the season would be a success, but the officers and managers would be well his average 1510-26. Cline's high run was 67 and his average 1114-25. New Haven Woman Won. satisfied to it made up fnto a six : club league, as it has been in preced- Pinehurst, N. €[, Feb. 23.—Miss Hel- ing seasons. en Barnet cf New Haven. Conn., de- - —— feated Miss Margare® Blancke of 0 Plainfieid, N. J., at tennis in the final CORNELL -ATHLETICS round of women's singles today for SHOWED A DEFICIT Football and Bassball the Only Sports to Make Mon Ithaca N. Y. Feb. 28.—The annual statement of the Corneli athietic coun- cil just issued. shows that Cornell ran behind Jast vear on its athlotics and had to resor” to a sinking fund to meet the country club’s February cup. Nans Leave for South. [ 8. —Twelve mem- bers of the Cleveland team of the American league will leave tomorrow for spring practice in the south. They | will be, under the leadership of Man- ager Davis. Several additional play- ers will join at Mobile. Clevel the cxpenses. Foothall and baseball ——— — were the only sports which made money, The crew lost $10,000 and the Dingbats Ware) Winnsrs. Gontingent $7,000. Faotball proc.| Jewet: City Dingbats defeated Oc- s were $5.000 and those from: Lase. | cum team 8 to 6 in a good, ltvely ball $1,000, The total disbursements | 8amc. Occum led in the first half. a_gsod sho There was a the for the year were $73,108. Sl at- . AFRAID OF K. 0. BROWN. Young Fitzsimmons Was in Bad State| _Cl2ims New Skating Record, s Rock Island, ill, Feb. 28.—What is When Bout Finished. | claimed today as @ new wor'd's two- % 4 | mile record for roller skaters was New York, Fel " | made here las: ht by s Brac Brown, it was generally agred by ring- | ey (he Sratar Sat DY Louls Brad- eide judges, had the better of every|.i.i'ihe di 3 i round in a bout with Young Fitzsim- ance in mons, a local lightweight, at the Long- . Athletics’ Youngsters Were Licke: acre A, C. tonight. The latter was ten ke pounds lighter than Brown and ap-| San Antonio, Te Feb. 28.—The peared afraid of his opponent. Brown | Youn: division of the Philadelphia had him in a precarious situation in | 2merican lea t 3 beaten to- the tenth round. $ to 6. by the San Antonio team i fof e Texas I * in their first ex- Will Accept Woodssy's Challenge. hibition game ar. Big Jack Donovan, the cop, who was challenged this week by Woodsey for a wrestling match, stated on Wednesday that he intended to accept the chal- e, as he had made the statement he was ready to meet any man in the world, and he was ready to back it up, and, furthermoreqby anybody he Wesleyan 56, Hempshore State 18: Middletoy Conn,, Feb. 25.—Wes- leyan ea: defeated New Hampshire e college at basketball here tonight, to 18, Roller Polo Rssults Wednesday. means Zbyezko or Gotch preferred. He | At Schenectady: Schenectady 8, sald he was not in condition just now | Poughkeepsie S for a hard bout, but that a match| At Amsterdam: Albany 6, Amster- with Woodsey would be arranged in the near future and when he gets on the mat with Woodsey the Voluntown dam 5—extra period. Third Baseman Ferris of the Iowa man will find out he Is up against | university nine has become bling in I agains Tty s bec blind in s something that will give him one of | Indlana home. He wiped his face wi the liveliest sessions of his life. | nalihis syes b | his catching glove and his eyes be- | came infected. FINANGIAL AND GOMMERCIAL, I Prominent Stocks Recover Sharply on | When the two meet they will be well 300 Brooklyn Ra 2000 Cazadinn P 4000 Central Leathe 10160 id Transit Larger Volume of Business. New Jerse ¢ -«m‘l Chesspeske & OLlo ¢ : | 100 Chicago & ‘siten New ‘York, Feb. 28.—Apart from an| 100 Chicasn cvess sessioen extensive covering movement by the| 100 Do bia - short inter hich effected a very | 1% Chiosgo &N\ 4000 Chlcago, M. & St P, C. C. C. & St Lous... Colorado Vuel & Lron sharp recovery in stocks as Union Paci ch prominent | ic, Reading, and United States Steel, the stock market |—— Colorado & Southen today differed only slightly in salient | 802 Corsolldaicd Gas features from the early days of the| s pamwan w ™y, week, Trading was ‘on o larger scale, |— — Deer & ‘Ris reonds but no less professional than The strength of United States teel | was perhaps the more notewo! be- | cause of the severe arraignment of | that corporation at the hands of ex- perts employed by the Stanley investi- ting committee. In substance, the so-called “billion' dollar trust” was ged with stifling competition, dom- ination of the trade, excessive capital- |- ization and inflated values of the many | plants taken over by it. In point of act, however, and judging from the | before, | Do. pta Securitics =, 900 er Harmeyi Inmainal Faper Jowa Central > Raneas ‘City Soniiers " Do. effect of the report seemed to have | Leen discounted. | In the minor issues there was no lit- | tle activity ir_ Ceatral Leather pre- which declined abruptly, pre- | sumably as a result of the comps financial exhibit for the past y disclosed at the annual mesting. A USELESS THROWING, It Rdins More Good Wings Than Any Other One Thing. “Useless throwing ruins more ball players than any one thing,” declareu Manager Bob Wallace, whose 16 year: } of steriing service on the diamond put him in a position to judge accurately, writes Harry Neily. “Logs of the good right arm is the bugbear of the men who play the na- tional game,” the Browns' manager continued. -“How many times you see an infelder cutting loose hard throws when he might just as wall have tossec the ball easily. It looks nice to see 1me swift stuff, bit it gets you noth- ng. “I have found working out slowly the best plan. I never hurry a throw on a slow runner, either. In the practice before the game, if a man warms up gradually and then cuts loose a hard throw at the finish, just to see if the old stuff is there, he isn't going to ruin his throwing arm haif as quickly as the fellow who makes every throw at top speed. Hugh Jennings and Tuck Turner present two fine examples of athletes who cast away their throwing ability needlessly. \hen the old Orioles’ in- fleld was at its best the warming up practice was fully as enjoyable as the contest itself. Jennings, with ail his DPepper, never made an eagy peg. He put the ball across the dlamond with the old zipp stuff until there came a time when he could no longer throw with his accustomed speed. Then .he went to first base, at thet time con- sidered the old man’s home. Jennings today can cover a‘lot of ground and he can hit, but when he practices with the Tigers he jerks the ball underhand- ed. His arm is gone. Naedless throwing robbed the Cleve- land club of a pennant in 1908, the 3 that Detroit, the Naps, the White Sox and the Browns had such a merr struggle. Tuck Turner, shortstop, nev- er conserved lfis energies, and there came a time when he, like Jennings, could no longér whip the ball ove His arm refused to resvond to tres ment, and during was idle most’ of the season, long rest im- proved the wing somewhat, but it never came back as good as formerly. LOLORADO E. COMING BACK. Famous Trotter Will Once More Go Down the Circuit. Much is expected by George H. Esta- brook of Colorado E. the coming sea- son. After a year in retirement prep rations are being made to send the clever troiter back to the grand ci it to battle with the free for allers. Col- orado B. is now five years old and hav- i cord he will find the going From ali accounts Col- orado E. could trot all halves in 59 seconds after a few weeks of training late last fall. Gus Macey did not string him much, but the colt w timed several haives in one minute flat. If after a season in the stud he could show that flight of speed, it is, :asonable to expect that Colorado vill be able to hold his own in the t classes this season. Colorado E. will most likely be en- tered in the free for all trotting sweep- stakes at the North Randail meeting this year and will meet such trotters as Billy Burk, 2.08 3-i, Joan, 2.04 1-4, Charley Mitchell, 2.04 1-4, Willy, 2.05, and others. Just how fast a record Colorado E. will earn the coming sea- son is problematical, but with racing luck many believe that the three yvear old star of 1910 will take a record close to 2.02 this year. In addi { i ion to Col- | orado E. Macey is preparing trotiers [ and pacers for nez the two year old division to the an- | tiques. In the latter the 16 Country Jay will be the stabl sentati have shown the most thus far are Gold Dollar (6), 2.06 1-4, by Pulvis; Lillle W., green trotter, seven years old, by Simmoneer; Redlock, 2.17 1-4, seven vear old trotter, by Anderson Wilkes; The Wanderer, seven year old greerf trotting gelding, by The Tramp, dam Sorrento; C. The Limit, 2.04 1-4, pacer, by Searchlight; Denver Jay, nine vear old green pa by Stambrose; and Country Jay, 2.05 1-4, the 16 vear old | trotting gelding, the most unique trot- ter living. With this ageregation of | high priced equines it is to be hoped | that the Estabrook colors are to be flaunted in front many times the com- ing season, Driven to Be a Fighter. Many and varied have been the ways in which the boxers of today have broken into the game, but one that ap- ears to be rather funny was the ad- vent into the ring sport of One Round | Hogan, the California lightheight, who occupies a very prominent place in the lightwelght scramble at the present time. Hogan, like Jimmy Britt, was a plumber’s helper, and while he rather liked boxing, he had little desire to become a fighter. One day business in the plumbing line was rather quiet and Hogan had to hang around the shop. _“The was a funny man,” says Hogan, “and was never satisfied unless he saw you doing something. I was standing around when all of a sudden the boss let go a shriek that nearly took me off my feet. ‘Hand me that ink, Hogan,' said he. Now, what | son college. | Johmny Kilt Why turn yourself into a medicine-chest, filling it with every new concoc- tion that comes along? . Natare does the cur- Ask your Doctor if SUNSHINE AND Scott’s Emulsion is m:-’:d‘(’:“l’r"“f" Cougl olds, Grippe, and many other ills. ALL DRUGGISTS 11-62 the boss thought was ink was some- thing else, and, at that, it was within reach of him. “That ain't ink’' said L ‘It is,’ 1d the boss, and with that he took a swat at me. To the boss' surprise, I fought back, and in & min- ute had him flattened on the floor.” Needless to Hogan had to quit his job, and, in’ fact, he had to q the city for a while, The first plac he struck was Salt Lake, and at the time the boxing game was going good. Hogan asked for a match, got one with a big fellow, and in his desperation to make good he won in a round. In his following 12 fights in the same city Hogan flattened his opponens in a round apiece, and it was there he won the name One Round Compound in America Its one purpose is to wash clothes clean without wear on the fabric, with- out affecting colors and without labor. PERSIL will Save You Money Made of pure palm oil and an active oxygen compound, Persil cleanses, purifies and whit- ens—without harm to fabric or to colors. Wash Your Clothes with PERSIL Clothes cost a great deal of money and the effect of washing with rub- SPORTS OF ALL SORTS. The latest chamber prospect is Irish Lad ring of Wirt Mallow. of commerce 2.12 1-4, in the The Toledo club will George or Willle Mitchell Naps. get L from ty the | George W. Leayitt paid an even $1,000 for the four yvear old Moko filly Au- | drey Gray at the Lexington sale last weel A purse of $5,000 will be given for a | race among trotters of the 2.10 class at nd’s grand circuit this year. eting layer of the P cher well who Ww: running a ver in South Dakota. Flying Fox, d his_paddock in He ited with having run a mile in the Lingfield park stakes in land. in is cred- A Dr. Jame: in Greens one of the turned out at Washington ¢ In 1398 Welty end and proved the football of western Pennsylvania. m was right sensation Manager work of ere: ers at his new ball plant in Washing- ton already. These seats were not put bing and strong soap is in last summer when the big stand | g oL soands was built, but Griff exp some big worse than daily“wear. crowds this sumnfer and wants to be prepared for them. P There is no washing wear-and-tear with Persil. Clothes last twice as long when washed with Persil. The thrifty Germans used 60 million pack- Clark Griffith says that h give Tom Lynch $5,000 to let him um- pire in the National league the com- ing summer just so he could be even with Hank O'Day for some of the de- cisions he has suffered at his hands in the past. new cham- and at the ager, Jimmy ne, like al pions, is going to try his theatrical game. His ma Dunn, has signed a contract calling for ilbane to appear h a burlesque ages last year. how in the west for ten weeks, for € hich he is to receive $1,500 a week. J. §. Simmons of Phi paid $630 for Dr. Archdale, the New York midwi handsomely upon his purchase. He consigned Dr. Archdale to a speed sale in Philadelphia and he was struck down to Matthew Dwyer of the New York Speedway club for $1,500. adelphia, who 209 3-4, at. 10c a Package A. S. Jameson, representative for Yale on the international intercollegi- ate cable chess match committee, of which he Is chairman. announces that Oxford and Cambridge have been un- able to respond to overtures for an- other match by cable on_nccount of financial considerations. No contest over the wire will therefore be held until 1918. MoHICAN CoM The MID-WEEK SPECIALS : THURSDAY and FRIDAY. Purchases Delivered In City 5c 8 Large Salt Campbell’'s SOUPS, MACKEREL, 4 for...19¢ all kinds, can.... Salt Herring Mustard Sardines |Sweet Sugar d s ..7%c|Com, 3 cans.25¢ i Domestic Sardines g3 cans . Steak Salmon , can yodle 1 1. BACON 2 Ibs. LIVER. for25¢ 12Y5¢ Prime Rib Roast Home-made Sausage, 2 1bs.25¢ Breakfast Bacon Chops, 1b. ... Pork: Chops Salt Pork PURE LARD Ripe Bananas Oranges dozen Lemons .....23c{dozen .....12V5c Fresh Roasted Fine Onions 15c|Peanuts, bag...5c|2 quarts. .. SOLID MEAT OYSTERS, gt. .......c........ .15¢ Sugar Dates 15¢ At the first puff you get that ex- it Turbieh iragrance. That's why Fatimas are a great big success. Wi lainly to gi ! Ty i | Rty dapom, 35 of you 10 NO HIGH PRICES By the use of the King Safe Sys- tem of Painless Dentistry your teeth can be extracted, filled, crowned, bridged or cleaned without a particle of pain, no matter how nervous or sen- sitive you may be. Hundreds of testl. raonials from pleased patients, Painless Extraction Free when testh . deficit of slightly more than $2,000,000 | % | are ordered. ) description. Let me quots you J|was reported, an increase in that item |- 0% . v E CIND R PATH | allow English to take the watch. This T e e | i x|l TWENTY YEARS ON A ok Guarated | showing makes more remariable the | 370 onh Amedean n T i 3 P friends remained at the ho T 9 to 8 Sundays R — | declaration of the regular dividend on | ‘fo ) By JOHN D. NOLAN. that night, opening wine fo P W T N | the preferred stock only the day before. | 2:0 Pemnsyiranta ... TMBER 19, e N e T 10 to L A NUMBER 19, the races that never were run. A.N. CARPEN]‘ER Interborough - Metropolitan issues| 41 Pewle's Ges 168 Ll sy 2 £y m Tady Assistan . wero very active and stron following | 1100 P e The following night I Telephone Lady Assistant, 100 Pittsburg | the presentation to the public service nervous as the | Wild Dave, the hostle Commerce Street Telephone 171. ! Belivered lo Any Pari of Norwich the Ale that is acknowledged to be the best on the market—HANLEY'S PEERLESS. A telephone order will receive prompt attention. D. J. McCORMICK, 20 Franklin St. THE AU Baggage and Pa TRAISEER 00, | i Delivery. Regu- | commission of a new offer by the trac Brosed ‘Sice Ca 100 Kallway St Sy Y5800 Reading e 1300 Lepubie Sieel 00 Do e 3 1000 Mo Taaid Gs. tion company. Buperficially, at least, the terms offered differ in no essentis degree from those which have been un- der consideration since last summer. ! Officials of the company expressed the 0 Do. pfd ... opinion that an early acceptance of | 400 St L. & 8ty their latest offer is highbly probable, e but this feeling is not shared by those e R ah who are qualified to speak for the them Pacifie .. commission. ‘3908 rv:“h;’,‘;,’\ Rallway As a matier of fact, the most potent factor of the day was the news receiv- | ed in private cables from abroad. which | indicated an early agreement respect- | ing the threatened coal strike in Greai | Britain. These advices were not horns | however, by official staiements, which reported a continuance of the deadlock. Tho market attained its| greatest activity in the last hour, and | although prices shaded somewhat from the top, there were many material net 200 Terinesson Coppper Texas & Pacic 09 Toledo, BL L & W @ Pacfic lar Trips (o all parts of the dlty twice | gains. In fact, all the more important| 1o 4 issues closed at considerable advances, 2200 Western Union 176-3—Two Telephones —108-2 | declines being almost entirely confined | 40 Wheeling & L. % (2 feb13d to _stocks of secondary character. Just | i fehieh valley 159 = { betore the end American Tobacco broke | i Ray Cousor. % | six points. ! "400 Am. Tobsco 1000100 U2 2q | Increasing tension in the Mexican| Total eles 420,200 sharey 3 | situation as reported from Washingtn, COTTON. nother large shipment of gold to| New York, Feb. 28—Spot cotton clos- Exeelsior, $175, $185, $200 , 5250, | South America for Paris account, and | ed quiet; middling uplands 10.45, mid- , $230. continued drain on local banks wure | dling gulf 10.7); no sales. ldson, $225, §275. | among the news items of the day. Futures closed quiet and steady. ced 1o $145 | The bond ‘market was steady on|Closing bids: February 10.10, Marcn 5 B torions Sin, | very moderate trading. Total sales, par | 10.11, Apri] 10.18, May 10.37, June 10.33, cycles: Singie and | t00 “Sore $2,089,000. July’ 10,37, August 10, September Excelsiors from 3100 up; Twin | pfted States government bonds!10.35, October 10.39, November 10,11 Cylinder 5 h. p. Indians, $125 to 3150. | were unchanged on call | December 10.46, January 10.45. g Second-hand Motoreycles faken in 2 ke trade for new machines. STOCKS. MONEY. Sales High. Low. New York, Feb. 28.—Money on call 200 Allis Clilmers e ... 5 A ey n e o 0% | fteady, 2@21-3 per cent, ruling rate . V. Pendleton dr. 300 A Aerituaral o8 23-8, last loan 2, closing bid —, of- 10 Breadway. 0 Am, Sugar . il_' fered at 2. Come in and see new 1912 model. Bt i g ] Time loans firmer, sixty days 2 3- tebsa |2 A% Shatol @3 per cent.” ninety days 3@31-3, six 1% Am. Mide & L. pid months 3 1-4@81-2, 100 Am. Lce Secudt s BROWN & ROGERS - Am. Linseed OL CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. . o g0 41 m. . ‘ . Do, prd e 207 100% 10 Contracting Painting o . i Ca i+ | 2 1700 Am. 8u efning. 5 ~ % 5 Paper Hanging | ii% 32 e o K . ok Prices and work guaranteed, ol 1 0. feb13TuTh 27 Chestnut Street. 6 THERE 1= no gaveril lum in g2 B2 e Connectltys sagsi o The Buls n i wiin for business T k s an Matched With Miller—Training at Orange Lake—Brooklyn Girl Shows Me Up With the Oars—Miller Quits With Dave, the Hostler. Milier apparently had little relish for a race with me, but we finally reached an agreement to miles for $100 a side; a forfeit of $25 a side belng posted. The race was to be tun two weeks later, at-Orange lake, near Newburgh, N, Y., where, on the same date, a ften-mile , for A gold watch, was to be run Sparling and English, two local rinners. Martin and his friends were backing Sparling, and they proposed 1 should go to Orange lake and train him, an offer which I accepted. There were only about a dozen guests remaining at the hotel, when we arrived at the lake, all very socia- ble people, and one young lady from Brookiyn was the bright, particular star of the party. She could walk, ride or row with any of us, and on one oc- casion she took all the conceit out of me in & race across the lake. 1 had become greatly interested In was a world-beater, and had offered to row any man in the party, when she her a start of three boat lengths. The next afternoon found us all at the lake and at the start I allowed her to in- crease her lead, but, soon seeing the distance Increasing, I got down to work, but in vain, as I could not re- gain a yard of my lost ground. 1 took all the chafing I got for the next few days in the best possible manner, but rowing lest all its charms for me frem that day, Hparling had rounded into fine shape and ran a trial in 69 minutes, which s0 pleased his backers that they bet heavily, as there was lots of money behind Pnglish. 1 advised them not to place too much meney until the day of the race, Some queer presentiment telling me something weuld go wrong, On tie morning of the race I received word from Martin that Miller had for-~ foited and left for Philadelphia, but English would keen hand promptly, 1 was disgusted with Milier's actien, as I had haped to make a goed sum on the race, but L Bew turned my ac- lentian fo §paving, whem 1 netieed —Sparling Scared Stiff—A Wild Ride | run five | amateur | rowing, and had begun to imagine I| offered to row me if I would concede | {was becoming very Iy a0 veisat: search of a race. Dave owned a trot- | Martin and his friends from New- | ler which was once a running hors | burgh arrived before noon, and had | With & record of Im. 50s, and th dinner ut the hotel After a light | horse he drove, hitched to a sort of dinner, Sparling had gone to bed to | Puckboard { rest. er we had eaten we went up | We did not make a match at Wal- | | to room, and found him in bed |den, but Dave got outside of lots of | | with his teeth chattering, as if he and, cnce away | had an attack of the ague. I knew | he ed a yell like & | | he could not beat an old woman in|and struck the horse, which started off | the condition he was then in, being|on a dead run, covering the ground nearly as frightened as a man about [ with the speea of a locomotive. to be executed, and I advised them to | ng speed for leave him in bed, and say he was too {u position was | {111 to run, thus saving thelr bets, and | beco uncomfortable, arm and my was growing numb fr ng to | I iron bar on the the | “PATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, ard, when we reached fhe top : -y cos oath that he | Of & steep hill, at the bottom of which | akes oath that he | Cas the river by a | 4 = VNS King Dental Parlors THOMAS JEFFERSON KNG, 0.0, o sacacson, Mamaeer Originator of the Kin o 3 System of Painless De: 205 Main Street, Norwich, with a railing about three feet high. \ closed my eyes instinctively, feeling sure we would strike the rail and be hurled (o death. As the horse's hoofs struck the planks, I felt sleeve graze the rail as we flew across the bridge, and a few minutes later land- ed safe znd sound at the hptel. The following moraing 1 left the Jake, going to Dillon’s grounds at ’Fuhkm where John L. Sullivan and Mike Cleary gave a boxing exhibition that day, and then left for Winsted, Conn, whers Sullivan_had matches me fo run Miller of Hartford thres miles, for $150 « side. This race [ won in 16m. 8s, receiving 375 from Sullivan for my share, after which T returned ty Norwieh t6 spend the ‘winter. | y ot Toledo, County tate af and that said firm will pay sum’ of QNE HUNDR JOLLAK I each and every case ¢f Catarrh that | cannet be cured by the use of Hall's | Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHE] Y. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of Decem- ber A. D, 1886. A. W. GLEASON, | (seal) Notary Public. all's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- nally, and acts directly on the blood and ‘muzous surfa::s of the system Send for testimonials free F, J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 7sc. Take Hall's Family Pills for-consti- pation. Wet and chilled feet usualiy wYeet {the mucous membrane of the nose, | throat and lungs, and la grippe, bron- chitis or pneumonia may resmlt. Watch carefully, particularly the chil- dren, and for the racking stubborn | coughs give Yoley's Honey and Tar | |Campound. 1t ~ soothes the inflamed | |membrancs, ~and heals the cough | |quickly, Take no substitute, The Lee | | & Osgood Co, Blamed a Good Worker. “I blamed my heart for severe dis- treps in_my left side for two vears,” writes W. Bvans, Danville, Va.,, “hut T | know new it was indigestion, as Dr. | King's New Life Pills completely cured | Best for stoma liver apd kid- | oubles, eonstipation, headache or | 25c at The Lee & Osgood | Our prices are 1 Marsh Building { For piano quality, ) For piano prices, ! For these reasons, D. S. MARS 230 and 232 State St. " PIANO BUYING differs from every article of value that enters the household. The PUBLIC, generally speaking, is strangely ignorant of PIANO QUALITY when every day pianos of the cheapest construction are bei:.ug bou(h? at pric:s far in excess of their real worth. Pianos identifiéd with piano quality such a3 e FISCHER PIANOS are the foundation of the present day reputation enjoyed by Fischer and the piano house of MARSH. PIANOS OF QUALITY—Knabe, Fischer, Decker, Stenling, Haines, Cameron, Lehr, Huntington, Atngelug Player Piano and Autopiano are within the reach of all through our large buying capacity. ess than the New York or Boston markets. GO.TO j

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