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- that Kilbane knocked Attell down, the ' has played center on the eleven for | champion’s npi:fl -mual:n of blows two years, ! Bene Xeps Tolla ety BADEN SHOWED, HIS CLASS. ‘bnne‘ kept f;llowl‘ngmma man areund | th . landing six blows to eve < — y rebeivad: -k ws lacked | Made Consistent Winning Record Throughout the Past Season. INSURANGCE. % We sell protection for all BURRILL'S is a mostideal prepa- . ration for keeping the teeth pol- ‘ CHANGES IN RULES UNNECESSARY ’ power, and he could-not stay the cham- p Another Season Expected to Prove Present Football Even |pion's rushes. ~Attell's face was bleed- strongest companies, - ¥ ing and he could hardly stand when, TFor 24 years the Transylvania stake, at Lexington, Ky, has been the race M Sat.ilfactory—CouheG Should Give Mm.e A“en_ led from the ring after the fight was B. P. LEARNED & CO. - Thames Loan & Trust Co. Building. Agency Established May. 1346, Colleges. tion to Offensive Play—Past Year Successful For Small e The Office of WM. F. HILL " Real Estate and Fire Insurance is located in Somers’ Block, over C. M. Willlams, Roor 9, third floor. Telephone 147 The Army-Navy game on Saturday, which was won by the Navy on two fleld goals kicked by Brown late in the last quarter and which closed the season, brought out no new football which wasn't shown under the .old code. While this season’s gridiron campaign has been productive of bet- ter games than during the last few seasons, none of the stronger teams of the east has developed an offensive play or system of attack which seemed possible after the rules were revised last season, says the New York Times. Nothing aside from old-fashioned football tactics was shown in the Army-Nayy game. Both teams used line bucking plays, wearing their backs out in hopeless smashing against strong defense. There was a great lack of variety of play. The championship goes without question to Harvard, and yet Harvard followed olq football tactics all season. The crimson had a carefully drilled football machine, mechanical in ac- tion rather than brilliant or spontan- eous. Victories over Brown, Vander- bilt, Dartmouth, Princeton and Yale give Harvard as clear a claim to the title as a football team in the east has had in several seasons. While there have been more touch- downs during the 'season with four rushes to carry the ball ten yards, the running, opén game has not been de- veloped as the football rulemakers had anticipated. Coaches realized that they could still develop a defense great enough to offset the additional privi- leges given to the attack. The result was that In many of the big games the teams had to resort to the kicking game. Good Offensive Teams. Two teams developed the offensive game to a high degree, these clevens being Princeton and the Carlisle In- dians. Princeton had one of its light- est teams, and from the very first of the season used open play with speedy execution. They made use of all the changes in the rules which favored the rushing game, and displayed a wide variety of play. The team, however, which developed the running game to a high degree of perfection this season was the Carl- isle Indians under Coach Glenn War- ner. Here was the most successful scoring team of the year, with a fast, open attack, a highly developed inter- ference, skill with the forward pass, all built around Jim Thorpe, one of the most sensational players the game has developed. The Indfans’ great offensive game was developed to its high state of efficiency, however, at the expense of their defensive game, and it was this uncertain feature of their play which prevented this year's Indlan team from being a great eleven. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Brown & Perkins, [Ittmeys-at-las Dver First NaL Bank, sheiucket o« Entrance atalrway next to Thaowes Nationa' Bank. Telephone 33-& Don’t delay in ordering your Hay, Grain and Feed. Do it today. We can please you both as to quality and prices. It will pay you to inspect our grain and see what a fine lot we handle. Hay, straw and feed of all kinds sold at reasonable prices. Call and let us convince you that this is the place to buy. CHAS. SLOSBERG, 3 Cove Street WHITE ELEPHANT CAFE DAN MURPHY & CO. Ales, Wines, Ligquers and Cigars Corner of Water and Market Sta Pies, Cake and Bread that capnot be excelled. PLone your order. Frompt eervice LOUIS H. BRUNELLE 10 Carter Ave. (East 8ide) 8mall Teams Successful. It has been an unusually successful season for the smaller coliege elevens, which are coached to come to their best form early in the season. These teams have profited by the new rules, the additional advantage alloted the offensive play giving them & better opportunity against’ the big elevens, y of the coaches have been back- ‘ward about making use of all the ad- vantages glven to the attack during the past season, Most of them have followed what they believed to be a safe and sane polley. But it is be- lleved that another season under the new code will lead to. & greater de- velopment of the rumning game, A feather In the cap of the rule- makers is the small number' of ser- ious injuries this seasen, While the four rushes allowed te gain tem vards has brought back inte use eld-fash- ioned line bucking tactics, the elim- ination of pulling, tugging and push- ing the runner has praotically done away with the danger of serious grid- fron accidents. After all, this was the thing that the rulemakers aimed at, Educator Graham Educator Golden Corn Meal Educator Wheat Bran Educator Crackers in pkgs. ALL NEW GOODS People’s Market 6 Franklin St. JUSTIN HOLDEN, Prop. Notwithstanding the Fire we are still deing business at the old stand and the quality of our work is just the same as ever—“The Best” Nothing but skilled labor employed and best materials used in our work. and their labors have been rewarded with success. It is not likely that the rules com- mittee will make any radical changes in the rules as they stand when they meet after the first of the new year. Another season’s trial, it is believed, will show the present rules to be even more satisfactory than this season. TINKER CAN GET $10,000 AS THE REDS' MANAGER Herrmann Rea.dy to Double His Salary If Cubs Will Trade Star Shortstep— Fogel’s Fatal Mistakes. Joe Tinker in explaining why he will not play another season with the Chi- cago Cubs says that he cannot get along with Manager John Evers or Owner Charles W. Murphy. Tinker, however, has a much stronger reason for declaring vehemently that he will manage the Cincinnati Reds or retire from professional baseball. He can draw from August Herrmann just twice as much salary next season as the Chicago club paid him this year. Tinker received close to $5,000 from Magnate Murphy for the fulfilment of his 1912 contract, calling for his ser- vices as shortstop. .As manager of the Cincinnati Reds Tinker can have $10,000 and be his own boss. In spite of the fact that they are enemies off the fleld Evers suddenly has decided that he cannot let Tinker out of the Cubg infleld, and thereby hangs g tale. Evers believed he could fix up a deal with Miller Huggins, the new manager of the St. Louis Cardi- nals, for the services of Shortstop Hauser, who is one of the best. But Huggins when the subject was broached turned pale and almost col- lapsed. Unable to get Hauser, there- fore, and suddenly hearing that Cor- ridon of the Detroits wasn't believed to be much by Hugh Jennings and Ty Cobb, Murphy was prompted by Bvers to call off the Tinker deal after the terms had been agreed upon last Wed- nesday Wight. As a matter of fact baseball men say that Murphy and Evers made a foolish move for the reason that Tin- ker means what he says "and that Herrmann will never make such a gol- den offer again. Herrmann agreed to pay $8,000 cash to the Detroit club for the release of Corridon—the price Detroit paid to Kansas City—and to release Outfielder Mike Mitchell and inflelder Phelan, whose releases to- day couldn’t be purchased for less than $5,000 each. In addition Herr- mann agreed to pay Tinker $10,000 for next season—all to get a winning team in disappointed Porkville, It is un- derstooq that Murphy would have made the deal if Herrmann had in- cluded Knisely at an additional outlay of $2,400 to the Dayton club, With the deal is off the question in Cinein- nati just now is: “Would Tinker make good with no experience as a managerT’ KILBANE BEATS ATTELL, Bout Stopped in Eighth Reund te Save Champion’s Opponent. Cleveland, 6. Dec. 3.—Spurred by the demands ef his friends that he demonstrate his utmost ability, Johnny Kilbane, featherweight champion, to- night decisively defeated Monte Attell in a 12 round bout here, Atteil was receiving such punishment that in the eighth round the police demanded that the bout be stopped and the referes gave Kilbane the decision after one minute of fighting. Attell never had a ehanee te display his ability. Kilbane started off with a rush and knocked ‘Attell dowm in the first round. Attell was groggy after that and stayed on only threugh his merve, Haif a dozen times after FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL STETSON & YOUNG, Carpenters and Build, orss HARRIMAN LIST FEVERISH. Telephone. 60 West Main 8t Merger Decision 8till Has an Unset- tling Influence on Market. Delivered to Any Part of Norwich the Ale that is acknowledged to be the best on the market—HANLEY’S PEERLESS. A telephone order will recelve prompt attention. D. J. McCORMICK, 20 Franklin St Rutherford H. Snow The Bean Hill MONUMENTAL MAN k. . ATCHISON, M. D., PrAYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Second Fk or, Shannon Bldg Night 'phoue 1283 F. C. GEER, Phone 511 New York, Dec. 3.—The influence of the Harriman merger decision by the United States supreme court hung heavily over the stock market today. Fluctuations in the Harriman securi- ties were feverish, and the list as a whole was unsettled. There was a great deal of theorizing as to the prob- able effect of the dissolution decree, and while opinions varied sharply, the preponderance of speculative sentiment was bearish and prices were borne down sharply. Selling was converged on Southern Pacific, which dropped 3 points on un- usually heavy dealings. Union Pacific, after a strong opening, yielded to 1 1- below yesterday’s close. Many rail- roads and industrials were depressed a point or more. The market rallied toward the close. In the alsence of authoritative state- ments from the Anterests most directly concerned as to the probable effects of the Harriman dissolution decree, thel problem was viewed in varying lights. On the constructive side, it was argued that the Harriman managers would be able to work out a plan of partition no less successfully than was the case of the dissolution of the Standard Oil and American Tobacco companies. Possi- ble benefits to stockholders in the dis- tribution of assets were held up as bullish factors. Traders who took a bearish view held that application of the principles adhered to by the su- preme court in yesterday's decision would be of far reaching influence not only in other cases to be massed on later by that court, but ultimately in determining the status of many cor- porations which have not. thus far been called to court. In the case of Southern Pacific, its especial weakness was attributed to speculation as to its | fortunes once it is cut loose from the -parent corporation under which it has been built up to its present state. Greatly Increased expenses of ad- ministration under the new regime also were taken into account. Tension in money was somewhat re- laxed, and easier conditions were look- ed for, with the call from the national controller out of the wav. and gold coming in from\London. The bond market was heavy. Total sales, par value, $2,550,000. _ United States bonds were unchanged on call. PIANO TUNER Norwich, Conn. PLUMBING AND STEAM FITTING. Sanitary ¥lumbin; A peep into an up-to-date bathroom is only less refreshing than the bath itself. During the summer you wi the more look to the bath for bodily comfort. I will show you samples and plans of the porcelain and other tubs and glve you estimates for the work of putting them in in the best manner from a sanitary standpoint—and guar- antee the entire job. J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Richardson amd Boynton Furnaces. b3 West Main Strest. Norwich, Conn T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Stres! ROBERT J.COCHRANE Gas Fitting, Plumbing, Steam Fitting 10 Went Main st., - Norwich, Cena. Agent N. B. O, Sheot Packing, aprid Bales. 22600 Amal. —— Am. 1100 Am. Copper . . Tobarco .. 1200 Anaennda. Mining Co. 00 Atchison ——Do. pfd ... % 285 29! U ——— Do. 24 ptd 200 Genernl _Electric 1700 Great Northern 400 Do. Ore Cifs. . 100 Tnter Martne prd 200 International Peper International Pump . 200 Kanees City South —— Laclede Ges . 6400 Lehigh Valley Loulsvile & Nast 100 North Amefean 2200 Nothern_Pacifie 400 Pacific Mail 800 Pennsylvania . 5 800 People’s Gas 15 100 Pittsburg C. C. & St L..108 1800 Pittsburg 'Coal . o, 800 Do. pfd .. Sloss Shef. 8. & 1. 68500 Southern Paciflc .. 1200 Southern Raflway 62800 Union Pacific 4300 Do. pfd ... 7600 United States Rubber. 9700 United States Steel. 2600 Do. pfd .. 2200 Ttah COTTON. New York, Dec. 3—Cotton futures closed steady. Closing bids: Decem- ber 12.36, January 12.49, February 12.53, March 12.59," April 12.58, May 12.53, Jume 1251, July 12.46, August 12.33, September 11.87, October 11.72. Spot closed steady; middling uplands, 12.85; middling gulf, 13.10; no sales. MONEY. New York, Dee. 3.—Money on call strong at 6@10 per cent.; ruling rate 9: last loan 9; closing bid 8; offered at 9. Time loans strong; '60 days nominally 6 1-2@7 1-2 per cent.; 90 days nominally 6 1-4@7; six months 6. stopped. MAY ELECT BROWN IN PLACE OF LYNCH that has determined the racing cham- plonship of its year. This is because it is a nominating event in which the entries are transferrable. and as the horses are not named until almost the last hour it brings together the best that have raced here and there throughout the country. From a rac- ing point of view, the Transylvania last month was the poorest of the 23 Certain National league baseball | that preceded it, having had only four men belleve that they will be able to | starters out of 20 original nominations, elect a successor to President Thomas | but, in winning it, Baden proved his J. Lynch at the meeting in New York | title to the 1912 racing championship. this month. according to the New | The turf has had faster horses than York Sun. This fact became known | Baden, but it never had one that went yesterday as a sequel to the story |to Lexington a truer candidate for the from Milwaukee that Joseph D. |racing championship, mnor one that O'Brien, who has just resigned the | clinched his title more cleanly than he Effort. Under Way for Louisville News- paper Man to Succeed New Briitain Man as National League President. position of secretary of the New York | did when he marched off with the ra club, would announce himself a can- | in straight heats and beat into su didate for Lynch’s troublous job. But!mission Cheeny, that has been a gi- O'Brien, according to inside informa- |ant against all others she has met| tion, hasn’t a chance. The man who | this year. has been groomed for the National Baden is a beautiful horse, six years league’s presidency is Robert W. | old, by Bingen (son of Bingen, 2.06 1-4, Brown of Loulsville, city editor of a newspaper in that city, and a former grand exalted ruler of the Elks. Chief | advocate of Mr. Brown's election is C. H, Ebbets of the Brooklyn club, | who has been in Milwaukee attending the minor league meeting and who will | visit several western cities in the Na- tional league circult before arriving in New York next Wednesday. Ebbets has been doing quiet mis- sionary work in Mr, Brown's: behalf | since last September. He has received assurance from C. W, Murphy of the Cubs that Chicago’s vote will be cast for the Louisville man, and Murphy also has guaranteed the vote of the | Philadelphia club. From Milwaukee | last night came the interesting infor- mation that in the interest of har- mony the Pittsburgh and Cincinanti clubs, contralled respectively by Bar- ney Dreyfuss and Garry Herrmann, have promised Ebbets seriously to consider the Brown candidacy. Two Vears ago, when Lynch was | elected to his present office at the sug- gestion of President Brush of the New York club, a_deadlock between Brown | and John M. Ward was broken. Brown | was nominated instead of John A. Heydler by Herrmann, who was sup- ported by Dreyfuss, the late Stanley Robison of St. Louis and the Boston club, Brown, long a personal friend of Herrmann, did not have sufficient strength to win over a vote from the Ward contingent, however, so that his | friends finally accepted Lynch. Ebbets therefore decided several months ago to bring the Loulsville | man to the front, confident that his nomination would meet with the ap- | proval of Herrmann and Dreyfuss and that with the votes of those magnates Brown’s election would be a certainty. Ebbets and Lynch have not spoken for more than a year. Soon after Lynch's electlon he fined Ebbets for an infrac- | tion of the rules and subsequently he removed the Brooklyn man from the schedule committee, Ebbets vowed vengeance and has been waiting for a chance to square accounts with the league’s president ever since, It appears that Lynch's trouble with Horace Fogel of the Philadelphia clubp| which hes turned the league upside down, has been used by Ebbets as reason why Brewn sheuld be elected. Other magnates, it is said, agres with Ebbets that teo much publicity has been given to fhe Fogel charges by Lynch, and that the latter has over- stepped his authority in attempting to drive Fogel out of the councils of the league, Ebbets and his allies insist that Fegel’s signed statement reflect- ing upon the integrity ef the umpires under Lynch’s centrel sheuld not have been taken seriously; that Fogel's hot- headedness and the idle talk ecarried no weight with the baseball public, and that Lynch should have taken no official notice of it, Furthermore Eb- | On ground balls was so uncertain that | bets & Co. believe that the league's | the sight of a ball leaping toward the | censtitution does not provide for the |far corner, with men on bases, always | expulsien of a club official and that | filled the home crowd with thrills of | Lynch's aggressive policy toward Fo- | terror. Now, the third baseman is so | gel might involve the league in court | mechanically perfect that the sight of | proceedings that might prove disas- |the hottest grounder going at him | treus fer organized baseball. | worries the public no more than if it | e D | were humming its way to the human BASKETBALL TEAM [t < WALKS INTO WESTERLY. could fleld over .285 on the season was Taftville Boys Forced to Leave Auto| third sackers field over and ac When 'Engine Breaks Down. hirk the chances, either. Much of t Lo 1)ro\'?mentfi no doubt is que to t The Taftville basket? | but there has been a vast gain ed out for Noank Tfi:&;;":v;}g;‘g i years, when you consider the where they were to play the Tobsters, | kil With which grounders, bunts and Tht party left Taftville postoffice in an | flies are handled. This improvement, auto truck about 6.30 o’clock, and had | however, hasn’t been so recent as some got well into the country when the en- | of the critics imagine, but began rignt glne of the auto truck broke down. | 2fieT the thicker gloves came into use. The driver tried to repair the eugine | NOne of the modern third sackers h but did not succeed. The men got o | anything on Collins or Bill Bradley, | of the truck and started off fn & hung|20d the all-round class of 1912, though for a telephons, which thes found 1 v | 2qual mechanically to the Collins- | farm house about two miles down the | B2dley stuff, is not up to their mark | road. They informed thelr frienas 1g | generalship and execution. It may Taftville of thelr plight and - sisteq|Pe remarked, just incldentally, that | that they @id not know exactly woieq|the modern 'third basemen have an | they were, but thought that s odd tendency to throw too low, rather | ooy Westerty, atot that they were|than too high. Denny and Whitney | tions for the Westerly Toad they otooy” | sailed them “overhead—the 1912 gang | ed off for that city on foot e:'nsd“i:m‘- | throw them among the first base- | expected home this morning. Kri produced in addition to | Cresceus, | for so many in the 2.30 list. on cart-horse lines to withstand the wear and tear of a strenuous cam- to his liking, but not even he in his best year -showed such consistency and downright bulldog tenacity as has characterized the 1912 campaign of Baden. When thé 'mile track campaign open- ed at Lansing, Mich,, on July 2, Baden was’\there, ready for the word, and for 15 comsecutive weeks he did not fail to fulfll an engagement. He has been beaten here and there, only to come back the next week in victory. This year he won from Lansing to Lexington ten races, and has been placed in four of the other five. He contested 55 heats in 15 weeks, which is as many as some horses called great | have raceq in a lifetime, and of these be won thirty, which average 2.07 1-2. | He has been beaten twice by Esther ! W, 2.06 1-4, and once each by Chatty | Direct, Oakdale and Dave Halle, but | in“turn he has defeated Esther seven times, Oakdale three times, Dave Halle twice and Chatty Direct in one race. In addition he has won every race, ! four, that he has trotted against that grand racing machine, Cheeny. His | winnings for, the season are the larg- est ever won by a stallion in one year. | Baden’s unparalleled career can be | carried a bit further by combining his 1911 and 1912 campaigns; they show 18 victories, four second moneys, three third moneys, three fourth moneys, and just one blank out of*29 starts in as many weeks of racing. BETTER THIRD BASEMEN. Showling of Dangerous Corner Artists | Imprqves—Zimmerman the Leader. | The third bastng line of 1912 was of an extremely brilliant character, as the work around the far corner has | | been for several seasons. Third base- | men, in recent vears, have acquired a mechanical perfection in fielding the position that is little short of wizard- like. They go in after bunts with more aceuracy than in the earlier days; they can smother grounders on either side with a certainty that is bewildering, and their throwin has become ex- traordinarily accurale, Twenty years ago, third basemen were continually hurling the ball a mile above the first baseman’s head, foreing that unhappy animal to make frequent journeys of a retrieving character, while the sure- ness of even the best third baseman { man’s feet, and the first sacker who | can scoop them up is the white-haired l child. All things considered, it is hard to | see where anyone can be ranked above | Heine Zimmerman for all-round value among the third basemen of 1912—at | least, so far as the National league is | concerned. Zimmerman, formerly a general utility person who wasn't counted quite good enough to intrust with any position as a regular, went | to the bag for the Cubs after Lennox haid failed through slowness on the hoof. Heine surprised from the very | jump with the way he handled the Job. His attention to grounders, liners, flies and throws was all that could be desired, and he came in on bunts with a pseed that had never been expected | of him. At the bat, he proceeded to tear up the National league, and fin- ished with a record equaled by few | third basemen in history—possibly by | none in recent seasons. Zim hit about .377, and fielded, it is believed, well over .925. The second rank among the National | league third basemen is, when you | study out all the points, the apparent property of Bobby Byrne, Pittsburg’s little demon. Byrne batted steadily |and was a dangerous slugger in the pinches. His third basing was artis- tic and heady—craftier than that of | Heine Zimmerman, and rather better in most ways, while Zim's batting gives him the preference, WALSH LEADS IN SHUTOUTS. Blanks Opponents 55 Times During Career. Hempstead to Step Into Brush’s Shoes. Indianapolis, Dec. 3—H. N, Hemp- stead, son-in-law of the late John T. Brush, president of the New York Na- tional league baseball club ,will leave here Saturday for New York, where next week he will represent the team at_the annual meeting of the league. Mr, Hempstead is vice president of the club, but never has’ taken part actively in the management of thé team. He said that he would make no statement concerning the affairs of the affairs of the late president until he becomes more familiar with the management. Until after the Brush wil lis pro- bated Mr. Hempstead will say noth- the Glants, but his associates believe the family will continue to hold con- trol of the club. International League Convenes. New York, Dec. 3,—President Edward Barrow today issued a call for the an- nual meeting of the International league for Monday, Dec. 9, at the Ho- tel Victoria, New York. When the club owners voted to adopt the inter- national title for their league last fall they also voted a five year term to President Barrow, so the league has no_ presidential election this year, and only minor matters are on the business programme, Against Betting on Race: Oklahoma City, Okla., Dec. 3.—Jus- tice Lane of the supreme court in a decision handed down today held that the maintenance of pool rooms where results of horse races are wagered on 18 a migdemeanor, and that their exist- ence is illegal. He recommends that injunctions be secured before the erim- Massive Ed Walsh, Comiskey’s man of steel, is the only American league hurler who has passed the haif-cen- tury notch in shutouts, but two other men now on the reserve lists of teams of the junior organization may get 1inal laws are invoked. It is said there| by this mark next season. Walsh has Bi & Ev ere for 25¢ Guaraateed and Manofactured by NEW ENGLAND LABORATORY CO- Lynn, Mass. BURRILL'S TCOTH POWDER IS SOLD IN NORWICH BY roadway Pharmacy, H. M. Lerou Ph armacy, Utley & Jones, The Porteon Mitchell Co., and The Reid & Hughes Co. . Li ion, 2.07 3-4), by | on 44 occasions before death claimed fod Ligers, by Atlan, 2078-4), dam by | im. | Cy Young the first hod 48 white- in 1892, and he traces three times to| Washing jobs to his credit ere he re- Miss Russell, the great mother that|turned to the National league. Ge Maud S, | Mullin owns 3¢ shutouts and Walter 2.08 3-4, others that are responsible ggg‘gso" lays more than any other horse, was bullt | Of the brush; Plank Philadelphials; | Mullin, Detroi paign, ang with it he was a glutton | JOAnson, washington's; - = | York's; Powell, for work, and races of split heats were Miiwankee Laurel Hills vs. Manual Training the continent. Saturday evening the Manual Train- ing Schoo] basketball team from New | London will play the local Y. don team is a fast aggregation and am interesting game is promised, An interesting dianapolis Hallowe'en celebration was a mask motorcycle parade. O. F. McLain, president of the In- dianapolis appointed state commissioner for the Federation_of American Motorcycl Anderson, Ind., motor jolned the new y about 50 members. “Motoreycling travel in Europe,” Milwaukee ! fearless motorcs country—Patrolman cently this officer overtook a runaway team, jumped from his cycle to the c: stopping the horses i damage had been done STONINGTON Members of Travel Club Listen to In- forming Papers—Pequot Couneil Takes Action on Dr. Brayten's Death. George claim to Chicago’s . Walsh has most prolific wielder e Young, Bosto Powell, St. Chesbro, Ne and Reidy, | The Travel club met Tuesday at the free library at 4 p. m. The papers were Lois 14th and the Zenith of the French Monarchy, carefully prepared | and finely written by Mrs. Hobart Bab- cock; The King's Farvorite, Loulse de |la Valliere, Madame de Montespan, | Madame de Maintenon, by Mise Ger- | trude Palmer, which indicated wide reading and was exceedingly interest- ing. The meeting of the officers and teach- rs of the Second Congregatonal Sum- lay school is to be held this (Wednes- LE evening at 8.15 o'clock in the school room. | Willam F. Tanner, Jr., of Stoning- ton and Miss Phebe Dennett of Paw- catuck were married Saturday at Westerly. Took Action on Dr. Brayton's Death. At a spectal meeting of Pequot coun- cil held Monday evening action was taken on the death of Erother Bray- ton. The several committees were ap- pointed. Those on resolutions were John H. Ryon, Henry R. Palmer and James H. Weeks. Baltimore; School, he Laurel H. M. C. MOTORCYCLE NOTES. feature of the In- Motorcycle club, has been have The with anks of the Ander. club) Value of Literary Bureaus. Returns from the campaign bureaus indicate that one vote was made for every 22 tons of literature distributed, bue even thhat goes beyond the wildest | expectations of the most optimistic candiadte.—Philadelphia Ledger. nly way | says Herma tour of 0z of : of the most cle policemen in the Or Same Sort of a Glass. flying motor- ‘When Stobbs, of Kansas, wired nd succeeded in | Roosevelt “the prairles are afire for re any serious | you!” he must have been gazing into & d looking glass—Chicago Inter Ocean. McKenny. Re- ge Every Woman's Complexion is bound to show whether or not she is in good physical condition. If the complexion is muddy, the skin sallow; if pimples or-skin blemishes appear it is then attention must be given to improve the bodily condition. There is one safe and simple way. Clear the system and purify the blood with a few doses of Beechamd) Sy This well known vegetable family remedy is famous for its power to improve the action of the organs of digestion and elimination. They will regulate the bowels, stimulate the liver, tone the stomach and you will know what it is to be free from troubles, from hmd:n-h&, backaches, lassitude, and extreme nervousness. They will make you feel healthier and stronger in every way. By clearing your system of poisonons waste Beecham's Pills will have good effect upon your looks—these they Will Beautify and Improve The directions with every box are of special valus and importance te wemen. Sold everywhers. In boxes 10e., 28c. THARKSGIVING SPECIA CARVING SETS KEEN KUTTER WARRANTED GOODS SPECTAL PRICES: 455 Focd st - -5 Butcher Knives KITCHEN UTENSILS Egg Beaters, Mincing Knives, Cake Mixing Spoons, Po- tato Mashers, Wire Strainers of all kinds, Bread, Cake and Pie Tins, Etc., Etc. THE HOUSEHOLD, ALBERT BOARDMAN, Prop. Bulletin Building » 74 Franklin Street are many pool rooms in thie state, all ostensibly acting as of which are agents for firms in other states. Robinson, N. F. A. Captain, At a meeting of the Norwich Acad- emy football team on the close of school, Tuesday, Harold Robinson was eleven. elected captain of the 1913 L'Heureux, '14, was chosen manager, fed his adversaries on goose-eggs 55 times since he struck fast company in 1904—a most marvelous record . con- sidering that during the first two s®a- sons he was on the old Roman's pay- roll he succeeded in blanking hig ri- vals only twice. Of the pitchers who stand a chance to fit jackets of white on their adversaries before they go to the minors or into retirement, Phil- and Barry, '15, assistant manager. Rob- adelphia claims one in Eddie Plank, inson os an upper middler. lar with his team mates, Ketcham Elected Yal New Haven, Conn., Holman Ketcham, 1914, Y, was tonight Captain. He has played a strong game at quarterback during the past season and is popu- the veteran southpaw, and Chicago the other in G. Harris White, who is also getting along in years. The Get- tysburg guide has blanked the enemy on 48 occasions, while the Georgetown ! graduate has done similary 45 times. G. Edward Weddell had used the Need Printing? 356 ert Lee Hedges sent him to Minneap- Dec. 35— whitewash brush 47 times before Rob- | of Brooklyn, fil ¥ elected captain of the| olis to toil under Joe Cantillon, and Yale football team for 1913. Ketcham' Addie Joss bad wielded this implement ,