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INSURANCE. TAKE A POLITY AETNA . ON YOUR AUTO with J. L LATHROP & ©SCNS mouth Overwhelmed by NORWICH BULLETIN, MONDAY, BIG UPSETS INSATURDAY'S GAMES Princeton Outplayed by Strengthened Yale Eleven—Dart- Carlisle Indians—Michigan De- feats Quakers by Old Fashioned Football, : + BT R - New York, Nov. 18—Tn the closing | the Crimson defense. Since the back- irs of the eastérn football sea field is generally considered the best arsity eridiron form suffered a stag- (in the eastern college football world gering upset and today there is mourn- | the improvement in defense has lifted ing and autopsy where joy and cele- |a'load from the minds of Harvard ad- bration had been planned as an after- ' herents, math of Saturday’s big games, e Penn. Downed by Michigan. pionship aspirations and months of 3 & Bttt careful campalgning were awopt away | Fennsylvania went the way of other in the wreck left by the belated rush T dpveas. which - hidve. glashe elovens considered out o fthe min. | With western teams, for Michigan de- Tofm hooks and comparative | feated the Quakers'13 o 0. As if to score sheets have been thrown away | fiemonstrate the ability of the Walver- as misleading and the football follow- DAt OTuseRn EN0 SRELS v enters the final week of the big College contests dazed and doubting his own and every other man's opin- ions. Pr 3t ed il take out a FIRE POLICY. It will cost you only a smail sum yearly and will save you thousards of dollars In case ot fire. ISAAC 5. JONES Insurance and Rea! Estate Agens, Richards Building, 81 Main St RAILROAD WRECKS demonstrate the value of acci INSURANCE outplayed and held to a Yale: Dartmouth swamp- 1 India Permnsyl- an_ with the hioned football tactics: nayy machine almost Penn. State, the heavy Uni- of Pittsburgh team oufplayed ashingtion and Jefferson were but few of the upsets that marked the day one of exceptional setbacks. Of all the leading elevens of the east- ern football world, Harvard alone con- tinued her successful career unchec ceton tie by the Car] vania outplaved by Michi aid of old-f: the powerful stalled by versity by ¥ . 2, ed. The fact, however, that Brown dent insurance. Get a palicy | (5. (00 eide Dy & 7 to 0 soore in the TRAVELERS bridge, Yor Cetmeon meotia have. sl ready returned from New Haven with Teports of the possibilities that lie in reconstructed Yale team. Yale Proves Formidable. Although those Harvard coaches who B. P. LERRKED & CO. Thames Loan & Trust Co. B Agency Establishes May. 1848 REMQVAL William F. Hiil, Real Estats and Fire Insurance has remcved to 25 Shetucket street, opposite Thames National Sank. Over Woeolworth's 5 and 10c Store. | witnessed the Yale-Princeton game were chary with comment after the struggle it is known that they left the home of the Blue with far sreater respect for the EIi eleven than pre. ¥ prevailed in Crimson quarters. There was ample reason for this change of opinion concerning the Blue, for the Yale team, although still im- perfect, has found itself and will prove a_formidable opponent in the Cam- bridze stadium next Saturday. Tt out- played Princeton in every department of the contest at Yale field and only poor generalship and lack of a fin- ishing ch saved the Tigers from a defeat where vigtory had been con- fidently expected. Just Yale prospects improved as result of her play against Prince- the champlonship aspirations of Dartmouth were shattered by the red Juggernaut constructed by Glenn War- ner from the pupils at the Carlisle Indian school. The score of 33 to 10 demonstrates clearly that the victory of the aborigines over the Hanover men was not due to any fluke and this is borne out by the surprising and ver- satile attack with Indians kept Dart- mouth puzzled. Harvard's Easy Victory. While the Hanoverians were being climinated” from eastern championship fields the Harvard combination con- tinued its undefeated march by com- pletely outplaying the Brown unive sity feam. This In itself was not a remarkable feat, but the easy and non- chalant manner in which it was done ATTORNEYS AT LAW Bnnni&il)erkins. 7M{nvfia_n-al—lu Nat. Bank Shetucket St airway near Thames Telephone 35-3. EDWIN pun, er Fi trance Nationa ~108 JOHN A. MORAN Real Estate and Investments McGro Office ain St. Residence ry Building, M WILLIMANTIC Cubs Swept Alleys With White Sox. mantic | was rema impressiye. Although . I regulars ed but a short time | v Sox ght games. Wood | second and third siring players w > - and | showed surprising abllity and it is st e evident that Coach Taughton Is al- score. ready bullding parts to take the places ern representatives by beating them with the eastern game. In place of complicated forward passes and blind- ing trick plays $o often used by west- ern elevens, Michigan = riddled the Pennsylvania line by short plunging atticks, varled by end runs behind invulnerable defense. he first time this season the Army eleven has received an encour- aging report from Annapolis after a game in which the navy has been a contestant. In Penn,_ State the Mid- dies found an opponent able to check their powerful rushes and the navy eleven had to work hard for every one of the ten points scored by touchdown and fleld goal. TIGER AND BULLDOG TIE. Field Goals by Guernsey and Baker Only Scores—Yale Sgows Unexpect- ed Stréngth. New Haven, Nov. 16—Princeton’s football team came to New Haven Sat- urday confident of placing a on the place that had once n arked the old arena where so m. mes had been fought in the past. The Tige felt that when the long shadows of eventide had begun to fall the last same pla; on the historic arena would result in the overwhelming de- feat of the Bulldog. Kverything that had been®done in the early days of the season pointed to it, but like many teams in the past that have risen to the crisis in the supreme moment, w‘ team clad In blue and led by Captfin Ketcham did the same thing,. and. the score wak a tic 3 to 3 The game undoubtedly will g0 down as one of the hest ever fought tween the two teams of the s rivals simply beca it ende the rival comhinations on even terms. It was not, however, what one might call a spectaeular contest. There were but few episodes in it that brought thrills to the crowd of thirty thousand. It was a case, more or less, of each slde pla ving for the other one to make few big runs w; e made, Guernsey a Hero, Tt was Guernsey’s toe in the second guarter that hoofed the ball squarely Detween the posis and gave the blue its sole tally. It was Guernsey later on who punied time and again in such fashion that the orange and black was ever beaten back toward its own ram- parts. Guernsey was the hero of the game for‘the Bulldog, if any was, for if it had not been for his good ing in Jate stages there is no telling what might have happened. He made a mistake and always got in catching the the leather away Culi: the present stars In the Crimson|a fine effoft. Knowles % achine, wher their plaving days shall | ceded him, was gaod enough fo. off S—_—— - 5 24 | have ended. So far as could be judged | anything that Princeton could send his oes -~ o] by B the shifts made | way, but Guernsey was better. 41 .3 in the Harvard line since the Prince- | = In this connection. though, must al- - P g+ e ton game have greatly strengthened | ways be remembered the work of the - — P o R LEHIGH VALLEY WEAK. " 3 Totals i i Sustained Loss of Point in Bear Drive | o Against Railroads. Made New Duckpin Records. York, Nov. 16—Interest in foot- | week of the Duckpin tour- | ball yvesterday was more marked than | ~me Ty sowl- | Interest in the stock market, and the | is w t ’ f the haif day’s trading was a | e Pirates | abo 20 sh with pr ar | arrow and the closing some- {what irregular. Initial overnight s and sta follow: | changes were unymportant dunl | 2 rates ....... 1 2 730 4 e Bh A e By Scamtier = A . s o | January March 13, 39; May 438 : b vitality | Guict iling upland opening th —_— A made &n | MONEY s they were | New York, Nov. 15—Money on call . » while 2 some- | nominal. Time loans eos 60 days s 2 § ched, stocks | b; 90 days and 6 months 4 3-4 a 5. , gie str ht ont and the tech - osition appeared to be strong- CHICAGD GRAIN MARKET - 3 | wrmar Open. MWigh Low. € sues selected for the declinc| D < 8% 86 i uri Pacific and some of the | jii¥ 88 88 4 the el Mi; i Pa- | coix- : i e ta fractionally off. New | Dre 5 0% & Hartford showed a small de- | M B : Cubs Won from Schoo! Boys. 4 -‘ AR S o s feated the West Chelses | ra 2 was Lehigh Valley, | " s s 8% 8 9 S n in | wr f more than a point. | May i 121 616 a hotly s 3 score of | Deny ande preferred also | July 4% i A 1 g 6] ceniy \ Toss exceeding a point, but| = B e t ik was | IVESTOCK MARKETS. b g Send ed the day | veey including 35 4 4 M aiino,ha cars for market, making with pre- e . St - pding was off, while vious arrivals 40 cars on sale, Steer - S | et A lied were very dull and 10@15¢ lower: bulls { o G | barely sicady; cows siow and 1025 e Eake B G | STOCKS. |1ower. Commion (p good steers sold at i aighy 40 per 100 Ibs: oxen and stags ot | at’ $6.00@¢ bulls _ at $4.75@7.00 agv Americ e R i faw | cows at § 6.80. Dressed heef was " 5. & ieluding 834 fc market, making « - i n ] “ | with the stale stock $87 on sale. Veals sm. 1 e | were fn fair demand and full steady: % < 2 A, aetitee | vearlings and grassers slow; the pens . a eal € K @ lwere mot fully clearad o e eals xold At $5.004 e 100 Challenge from Jewett C ¥ Rapld Teans 5 24 | Ibs.: yearlings at ”4’“ ’\»: seol Phe AL Seanh | ¥ brd ] 4 | calves steady at 14@18 1-2¢ for clt e . : 304 | dressed veals; m few 19¢; country < ol 4 | dressed soid at 11@17c. heetiant tne Lipl gl Receipts of sheep and lambs we o . s 3 head, including 21 i-2 cars fo antegiving day tres making with stale stock de, Jeweit Cit n 1-2 cars on sale, Market less ac- {tive and prices were 10@1sc lower Pittsburgh and t v closing weak, Commoen to prime sheep ® to 0 game: then Buckneil be: % | (ewes) sold at $3.25@§4.50 per 100 Ibs.: burgh § to 0, and then i | lculls at $250@33; medinm to choice got after Bucknell to the tune of 70 | Dise.” eouritics ambs at $7.50@8.05; culls at $5.5 points. The Army did better, however, | 100 . 8 5 & At Jressed mution steady at 8@llc per Bt amtast. ATSE which how- B lb.; dressed lambs casy at 12@lic ever, i far from being s o hog dressed 14 1-2¢; country dressed = 61 North pfa hothouse lambs selling at $S@$10 per 0o e, Seet o e i i Receipts of hogs were 8,000 208 Do, ptd head, ~ ineluding half & car oo 1twah v for ' the market. Teeling a_{rifie 30 May Dept. Stores casior. Good stale hogs sold at §8.00@ 870 per 100 lbs. Couptry dressed hogs 7 Mex 8 phY’ Contral Nrth a Do. prd 2 Beaboard AlF Linia phd. - steady at 9613 al 16@1i8c, Chicagy, por It Toasting pigs Nov. 14.-Hegs—Regeipts, 6,000; market dull and lower, Mixed «nd butchers, §7.60@8.20; ood heavy $7.60@8.80; soush bLeavy, $7.76@1. light, $7.60@8.80; pigs, §3.75@7.65, Cattle—Receipts 2,06p; market slow = flagay. | Beeves, $6.30@9.05; ¢ and heifes, SEBE@E16; stockers and feeslors, $4.60@ 7 6s; Pekuns$6.60@7.70 cajves, 37@1?;;? bigs g Sheep——Receipis 18,0 99; market quiet and weak. Natlve, $4@s.25; western, $4.10@5.15; Tambs, $6@7.65; western, 616756, ombstone | an error, fust as it seems fo be in ail the big games played nowadays. Lit- | tle of spectacular play was seen and ends and the others in their down field work. It was a pleasure to watch the way the blue tacklers stormed dewn NOVEMBER 17,1913 R SN Right tackle. Puarith ..o “..... Lookaround GI]HN'EHSTDNE OF MOOSUP PAROCHIAL and burted the Tiger who eaught the Right end: AR ball. Most of the time it was Hobey | Loudon ,............. Vedernack Baker, an_deach time the ball nestled | . Quarterback. - . in his arms hopes ran high that the | Ghee :.............. Welch (captain) T 57 artful dodger ‘would elude the men | Teft naitback. who were thundering down on him and itney ...................., Guyon zigzag his way o the goal line in a Right halfback. 3 long run. It never happened. The best | Curtls ......0... “+i.. Bracklin| he could do_was to come back fifteen | Puliback, vards once when he had an extremely | Murdock ,...................... Calag Jorie s o aat Referee, W. R. Okeson, Lehigh; um- FE R G- ke S pire, Dr.’S.'B." Newton, Willlams: lard Grilling 3 head linesman, J. B. Pendleton, Bow Baker was tough. He received shocks | doin; time of periods, 15m. each; Dart- enough to put the ordinary player out | mouth scoringtouchdown, Loudons of commission, et he came up always | goal from touchdown, Hogselt; goal smiling and never hurt. Once, though, | from field, Hogsett. Carlisie scoring— he showed that he did not like the | Touchdowns, Guyon 2, Calac 2, Brack- terrific battery that was aimed at him | lin; goals from touchdowns, Garlow. when he signalled for a falr catch in | Substitutes; Dartmouth — Redfield his own territory, for Hogsett, Hinman for Colby, Rogers One of the odd things about it all, | for Hinman, Llewellyn for Ghee, Can- . thoush, was that Wilson, who was | non for Curiis, Tuck for Murdock. Cgr— seldom in the same breath with Baker, | lisle—Broker for Verernack. was really more formidable in ne ru : i ning back of kicks than the Tiger vap- | TAFTY 1ED. i i taln was, Wilson was always on the | | TVILLE AND STERLING T e - "%‘;fi«‘f" o |spot to take the ball as it spiralle iy o T £ riiapen | @own hia way, and he was able more | C108e Game of Soccer Played at Ste : q IR often than Baker to cut down the effect ling With Score 1 to 1. AR B, qak of a high kick by his slashing detours [ o e e > over the chalk marked field. The Taftville soccer football club L Bl Journeyed to Sterling Saturday to play AW ke ying. the Sterling team on their ground. The Among the Tigers there was one who | Taftville officifils depended on the same stood out probably more than any one | team which defeated Sterling previe else. This wasl Law, the halfback. | ously, and while the latter team in- who really bore the brunt of the Tiger | Cludeg wo naw plasers tho Fame re- assault. He was the kicked, and con- | Sulied in o tle, Ahe game commenced G | siderable kicker he was. Never did he | at 3 o'cldck, and by special request of (Special to The Bulletin.) by Father McCarthy, returned to the| The new building is now about.e¥ |falter. It any man could ever be eX- | the Sterling oficials Reld Mclntyre on Nov. 16,—Priests and peo- | church , where the large congregation | per cent, completed. Its Walls Have | o e o g DT e “Tigas | fook charge of the game. The Taft-| Moosup, Nov. 16—Priests and peo- | L 5%, Lmbted. “About & score of pas- | ascended beyond the lower lovel of the : Bt e mereroanSyar never obes | Ville captain won the Loss and elected | Ple from all eagtern Connecticht bar- | [0y STq% (itant prieste from various | third story, and only s, short time more o | Sentre was wretched, yet never omcelto kicki uphill towards the postoffice. [ishes between Norwich eastern Connecticut towns and cities [ will be necessary fo complete the ex~ ¥ | did Law make a mistake. Time after | v “5p hiog were the fivst o assume | Eathered here Sunday afternoon for | €8s e T ey o @ Y=t time h' reivd a pass that made the | The Waftvilies were the first to assume | FIRCC,, (THE, 30 services incident | Were grouped o sanciuary. struction worke ki fn Tiger stand gap. Time after time did | fh€ 88 S L Phe Ster. | to the sealing of the cornerstone of the The Ushers. IS i PSS Ml ; 5 A, in taking long shots at goal. The Ster- L3 building is to be three in all fecl that the ball would surely be | | #308 CRF FIGHE BE 800k1e in driy- |new All Hallows’ parochial &chool | The trustees and collectors acted as above the basement, &nd 18 construate 3 | blocked. - Only once was there a chance | ¥ x‘l;en§ni;:LXlus‘e.».lflg then took hold | building by Rt Rev. John Nilan, | ughers at the service, the list being as | 5q°0f vien ol E |of this, thoush. and on that ocea- | i, 190 O MY il goal had | bishop of Hartford. Stormy weather | follows: William F. Curran, Ferdi- | o6 of R I A | glon Law, profiting by the lesson he | come narrow escapes, the Steriink for- | kept away hundreds who had plafned | nang Lafreniere, William Kennedy, | Sone , trimas of the i | learned in the Harvard game, picked | SO0 TI7T0 oot ver the bar, | to come to Moosup, but, nevertheless, | Tonn Fay. e e al 2d Sa & run. 1f | wards repeatedls shooting over tie bar, : 5 by 66 teot. Ite cost is to “the B D e Eominst |and Taftville was hard pressed in the|nearly 1000 gathered at the chureh,{™ g ' o\ i\ French and English. | netiiborhood of $38,000. 1 o crlmson the tale Might have béen | fAirst half and was very fortunate in | Which was filled to capacity. Ths dokimons dncident to thelnealing Plan of the Building, ‘ i | dtitavent keeping a cican sheet till the interval. e oy iof Sealinghatons. of the Gornerstons were s Frentii st | x vl ribeas orovtaca o it | Law easy to distinguish in the | Half time: Sterling 0. Taftville 0. | e ceremony of the sealing of the| English, both eloquent expositions of | 4 nevel feweirs prowidol te e Bames | 3 early part of the game because he wore | Affer the interval the Sterling fort| cornerstone, at 3 o'clock, was brief, | the reasons for the esthablishing of | loent 18 38 SRR 7 T30 in i no headgear. Later on it was easy to | Wards kept the Tattyille men on thew| . 3", o itnessed by but a few peo- | parochial schools, the first sermon, in | Forrom: Whovo Shey, S0 Sriso’ Cooms piek him out from the general melce |oWn half, but tne Taftyille defense|UiC S® (i "gicat number of tho: o | French, by Rev. Pierre Rivoir, M.|%1es befme (e Deploring of Semiond 4 becauise of another Hing ot B e | bt Siarling was ‘mot to, be' de. | assembled had been informed that It| 8, o witchburg, Mlass. the Jngtiish | Gave™ Maosa rooum ave 2 by 54 fect to mim. In one scrimmage some un-|again, hut Sterling was Dot L0 18°LS | would: be as well to remain in the|sermon‘by Rev. John Q. Dolan of Tar~f Cr Dasensent dlso coniatns [ kind Yare Boot Stebped on fis head and | nied, 'and 20 minutes from the end | SOUWG 1S, o REL 0 Sepa R G| poran B Do ohn 8, DO, o) JAN feach, The basement also contaims | opened a gash. Thenceforth Law play- | Desjurdin Jouled in the penalty area | oy quring the time devoted to the| especiaily fipe orators, and their ser- | % %50 TP oy o abont 23 by i {ed with a haio of crimson. Tt was a | Smith, thé Sterling goatieeper. came| OB JUCHE 1° TS IS onduct: | Shoms wero fieard with the closest at- | S rdemy and sveragiog v |stranse colncidence that - the other|out and took the kick stcessfully.|q*piS pighiop Nian, assisted by Rev.| tention. The teaching of the church [BS LSS S0 o o o, ! | other Idvker, Guernsey, in the waning | This reverse seemed to put life in ghe | 5000k 13 *McCarthy, rector of All Hal. | that the edbcation of the child should &z, O% the first floor provision ts made | moments of 'the contest, had the same | visitors and tney completely xan the | Jorph 1 A O rane Soriima hs well as - setuins [ 7 ve class Toomy, 29 by 15 feet, four | red ‘auteole about his head, for some~| Sterling men off thelr logs. and aftef| s temporary platform had been’ereet- | training: ‘that' the dsvelopment of thefyem i leb ilis OF BT o SNAGEas STRNCS One had piaced & foot nome Loo Bemtly | ten e o B D eemhaleh. mak. | ¢ for the cornerstone ceremony at the | mind should be comcident and in con- [F0¥9 ST OO V8, T, Oh Ll on his face, & perlod a fifteen ‘yara | [ONArded WHI Jess Grecnbalgh mak-| .o feant corner of the building, and|junction with religious inetruction, | 38 feet % SRAGL oRe L TeC WO ] T e D o Thoen yaml ling o beautiful g, e o scorq | Standing on this structure with ¥ather | and that the dual system satisfies both | ZBS75 888 S0 T o qpan o, 0 “og penalty_against Princeton put Yale | Tafiville team worked hard fo score| SRRCINE 08 BVR S UTS I SHINE | Bagesal asal Aivine 1o thoss sesking and |[BeCURE fioor (o€ e bulktine 20 by 5 | o i 3, Saras ey pfrom, We | Sterlivg ol when tho ngl whiatle| el seaiing, A silver tromel was tsed | foxt i the herimons sa. ressous, why | 13 12 2 IR i et A down | hlew; with the score a:tle, Sterling 1, sl he moriar for the few |the Ro: ‘atholle chure yuile } e Tonr it ey MRk | tathiterr s h e e B e ity tor the sdusstion ottt ohils Large Amb‘:‘l | | topped in two more tries. | ‘Nest week the Plainfield team will} o Rty SR s over hac: & The entire third floor i given over | - g R hel 2 e ol o seal the cornerstone and to ¢ dren, 3 | ernsey was called from_the | pe in Taftville to oppose the locals on to Seal the, ecrnereione SEC 0 Solemn Denediction of the Flessed | to an assemily hall, where school and [Hoe s 8T T ad hn evers | the Providence street grounds. and f} Uiy iowel s ‘engraved with an in- | Sactament marked (he close af the | parisit ot gatherings and emtectain, e ooyl s reportea tat dhe iEIGIBREI]. to * I scription that forth the purpgse | corvice Rev. J. H. Fitzmaurice of | ments can be heid. This assembly hall Ptk M et no hesitation: beotsd | &, Stron one, having tied with the: S0t 00 1 wan used, = day and | Greeneville haing celebrant, Rev. Tena~ | is 85 by 74 feet, and has a stage at enc | and with no hesitation booted & | Steriing team at Sterling by four goals ol 1ter to be | {jus Kost of Dayville deacon, and Rev. | end. 'There is also an auteroom and ‘r.'y“m vlvl T, llx\;\‘d“:"lx d{é‘f‘f{'mn' -h! Which AY FOOTBALL RESULTS. | Targest subscriber (o the school build- Miss Diane Lafreniere, erganist, was|The roof is to be supported by from I D ot fastaat sine od | SSATURD. L 7 d. The actual work of placing | girectress of the choir. frusses, d | had been hoping agalnst hope, leaped 4 L gt 1 n e act v ot directress i of M up as one man and yelled its exultation | fale 8. Piecton | the bricks in position was done by 1- Clergymen Present. mq"“ca‘;m“"mui’f" ol when % to the skie e 1“-.\"3",5 ol of Norwich, and all en-| - An one ‘the priests not | previousty | S 4o it e st opron: Baker Ties Score. “orn 0, I vette 3. zaged by firm that is constructing | mentioned who were at the e ed heating and ventilatiing systems, | I S15F il of the s gt ) o L teaeivenin 8 e were: Rev. John H. Broderick and Itev. fye pufiding s of semi-fireproof eon- [ e, eieE epl of the dhird aua il e 9, Yale jitio bullomes Myles P. Galvin, Norwich; Rev. Timo % ot ! |temiwas & rin ofa3 yaow packon one| - Hacvard - Frsshmes ' Xa Rt R Myls B T IRl e ,?qnmm,,, fnrmw s uvm““ -t-d‘ ! | after Guernsey tried a field-goal from | 55, Villanova 0. | The coppep box enclosed in e cor- | simmons, New Tondon: ‘Rev. “arles O e D w,,-,""‘.,"" | the 42 yard line, only fo fall by send- 10, Penn State 0. | nerstone contains copies of the Moosup | Erennan, Norwich an:‘n‘ Rev. ;ui“lfl_\.l [, the school, which stands ”4‘ | ing the ball a couple of feet to one side. ell 23, Gettysburg 0. | Journal and of the Catholic Tran- | H. Kennedy, Greeneville: F ard | DA oo charch, will be & very | A moment or two later, when Yale Dickinson 21, Sw more 7. | script, the diocesan publication, coins| M, Hayes and Rev I-'.'r.vw; J. Kuster, | S0 Gy structurs, & prideiof the per- | { had been beaten back into its own te Springfield Y. M. 14, Massachu- (¢ the current yenr and copies in Lai-| Jewett City; Rev. Richard X | e and to all of DkvowD, = | ritory, Gue y was forced to Kick | getts A, | in, English and French of the follow- | Voluntown; Rev ’(_\._ \»T,w Charnley tompany of Norwich .are the 4 |from the 10 vards behind his line. The | - anesota T. | ing document;: field; Rev. M. sinet, Da aaral ootosclors, d i ball scooted up to the blues' 32-vard s 19, South Dakota T. | “For the greater glory of God Al-|Rev. Thomas J. nnon, Rev. Wit A 200 Pupile. " [line, but Baker failed to signal for | mighty, for the prosperitv of the Cath- | Papillon. Willimantic: 7. Hr 5 M""’dfl’"m e | fair catch, when he might have kicked rington and Jefferson 19, Pitts- | olic religion and of the ,_«lv.-» m:a;nt 05 nmnn,\T;x((fi\'.ll\e.’r.n\\. Sour s swwwm -fl'b Pecommos | & placement goal. A |the United States, for the zood and|geols, Arctic, R, I 3 pils, and attendance | Aficr three ineffectual attempts at ‘“;’qu Cry | Well being of the community, John Jo- | Following the services R may not be far from that number, / |the line Baker stepped back to his| mygig in seph Nilan, bishop of Hartford, has|Carthy entertained the vi lerey Bishop Confirms Class of 250, {40 vard tne and turned the exul Colgate 25, Syracuse 13. this day, w &reat gathering of | and friends at a lunch served fn the| y = 0F B iy They viatt 19 tion of the blue into chagrin 20chester 14, Hobart 0. | priests and people, and great pomp|basement of the church, the Wauresan } o, o 4 ing a perfect fleld goal from his Stev Connectict fd according to the rite of the Roman | house of Norwich catering. T s e vard mark. It was a 10 to 1 chance, . Washinston e naselt iald ihls. correrstone Finely Equipped School. of confirmation on & class of 250 at | but sioney’ made oo and tne score o e ta U, for ATl Hallows' school. 2 In the new parochial school building [ the 10.30 mass at All Hallows' church Tas L Towa 1 the prasence of John NI-| An Hallows® pa is 10 have one of | Sunday. Rev. Joseph H. McCarthy was JELT Indisoa 21 ENorthomestern: 2. 1eus ADIRBops BE A NET X.{ the very finest Catholic educational in- | ce it of this mass, and Rev. W. A. Nt nphaty Hino e e T hode son, | 6 Nions in the eastern part of the | Keefe of Plainfield and Rey. J. Q Do- DARTMOUTH TEAM.| Weslevan Maw Yorks Dolveraiiy ent of the T | and its completion will mark the|lan, who was celebrant an earfier ’ = | Georsetown 8, Virginia 7 Idwin, goxer > | L s phol ot s et Bishop Nilan, ional Attack in Defeatin AN HAS JoRRSe IOy k B o sosup: for while the Sisters of the| At this service Bishop Nilan made e S rver Elevn 25010 "% | sMITHS COMMON IN BASEBALL. in the vear of | 0V Condncted A school | nts onlly addresses of the day.speaking LEleven S0, | - : ord ninte ndred and thir-y ¢ 0 a time, it has been on & small {in_ both English and French on the New Yor! ov. 16.—With % varying | Drive Jones Family from Leadership | seale comparea with will be the | subject of Confirmation and Penance | atte e Hetrneares | gues. At the Church. o when the new building is. ready hose Who had received the sacra- attack that seemed the nearest point in Big Leag [ e now bilatne I8 o s LoSCRpstal oo teaclind iy Loo el mithy | Immediately after the sealing of the | for occupancy, some time about Febru- | ment, in particular, end to the lprge ball scientiste. Carlisle Indians defeat~} The signing of little “John SIIh| o rlcrstone Bishop Nilan, accompanied | ary 1. congregation generally. i Dartmo 35 to 10 at the Polo ! o¢ the King ¢ s third cateh ounds Saturday. With a 10 1 i tho. Yan the latter part of | Ak R 3 ;. B X | o 7 gmined in the first half, the bis lite season did something more th R ST e et s ek g Rl S G e e e e A rohe a four-cors | from Detroit. and Chicago, 1 jut on under anything like first cl win, " even against & iderably: | Among Glenn W government | nered tie for il net of having | ally Bumus .nl‘u S whi e ield condit N ‘weak am.’ 5 | educatedirednien two fetives stood ouf| 4y ereatespmumbersol Wlayers ot Qe NS MRS R, 10T The appl on O e T . i [Ae acminsakieg of the ¥ Great | SPUTY [wins ja tho B Bve- |1t wes dntv e P S Ll i | #Generalship” Joe Beachman insists | Gus Welch, captain of the Carlisle | Smith family in first pl | | e n e e ots |band, and Joe Guyon, a 19 year old | representatives. The Il .vx.m1~‘.yv;‘rblfiry»‘.\’ tha within the Tast weelk £ ¥ New | (DAt e e hAmyy — team hn i | Chippewa, who moved In_the miche in | yith the commonest of dtle to ne York club has declared the lists closed. | been foeled so much by forwacd pass: | Carlisle football fame left vacant by | names is not a full-fl JossEiv o L OEbyD i ... | come In to make their opponents make 1Jim Thorve. were speeding messen- | . ¢ appelation be re Job ! L 00kl | Reteree Bl I ord tacked on ten | S2Me 18 to make gers of victor: Somcting very simil But he chose | Charl ; ; ey con lyards too much he penalized | |, “Stop Guyon and Weleh” was the|Simith as his diamond appelation. and | tionals, whom Stallings conz | Jards 100 | Mgy SRR | l artmouth cry early in the second ha 1¢h Hie Wik passegl siders Wor ortu the club, & H " Prineet for Dana’s | 2 B S R e ST nea® another Smith who piiches for Jimms e LHE Children' Gry { ¢ 1“:%”' ‘(I*t‘vrv or remote A SRS e & Bent: athi ‘.iau s five ¥ FOR FLETCHER'S th: st to Only a few years ago the Jo o thein he sea-| . = S the echo of it from the Iy carried off all the honors % : i v Wallie | “Tt makes mighty little difference smeared Dart h's forward e biz t one t wnd all of | Frank Plano-Mover Smit o | turned long hurls by Ghee and Llew- | \hom plavers. . No. rela-|siShsd for, the Ahito nd r | ] ellyn into. ul gains for Carlisle : + but all were members | with - several oth ; and ran back Curtis' 50 vard punts | of the family that extend: ‘ guch fine work at | with speed that startled his oppo- | from ocean to ocean and from e majors. Minor league diamonds | y nents. | ada to the gulf. To-day not one Sk < | The ever active Guyon e from | per of the great Jones clan | ] | his mates and Dartmouth tackles with | {he select society, the rece ! such briliiant individual efforts as 1o of Davy Jor rom the i lone star, but at times White Sox e Americ e when interference helved Guyon was | tion ending the long r of Joneses. | major league snugly nestled d it. Once/away, | The American league without a Joues | A he was csourceful, picking | o icewhore. along the. clrcuit carrles a 00 his brough broken fields with nge lodk. Fielder Jones is gome| | never faltering zood judgment. {rmm the White Sox, ley Jomes | EUC | ] Dartmouth’s Line Easy. e | ; : Two more th ¥ efficient dem- | | i onstrators of the possibilities of mod- | | have been chosen to unfold the alluring | possibllities of the forward pass and | fix attendant moves in the new | 5 mouth’s line only a fotterin sturdy withsto \I saults of th and ! J The Indiar et | ard | that move nece | 3 sary. £0. N. VAIL, PRESIDENT | Hefore Dartmouth had considered all ] the points of some play that rushed | the Indlans through the { with s W ccrtainty 4 another under way i 5 | variation In the attack and close ad- herence to the speed system that made j——; ,J«f/' s - five touchdowns pessible from each of , A(\‘l/&/",_/z‘/'g’» NVivaA | which the squatty Barlow booted the j ., i ball over the bar twice after Welch &, L0 L— ; :f;fgu punted out from a tn»u\:lrmrmu; eo VNS /-a,& Cosmmh/ {y ) 1 |, With Welch, quarterback and cap- S S A ’,(}\ DON’T MEND THE END / | tain, moved over to left end, either | ARnAs e G { Guyon or Welch would be in’ motion 7% 4% A i before the snap back and from a fi ing start double and on four oceasions | triple passes were used for long gains | ‘Then -the -wily Indians weuld cluster | in solemn eonclave and hefore a signal | had been heagd the ball would go back | to Calac or Bracklin and the lineraen weuid bowl over the Green Mountain- eexs and blaze the trail far the red- nan with the ball. Braecklin was at est in runs around Partmoeuth’s right end. Tinenp and summar DARPMOUTH—10. CALISLE-—8§ Left end. Hogsett (captaip) ... Wallett Teeft tackl MeAutiffo ...; . Welmas Beer RS Denbar ... ..... Harlow Can be asLd b THE WESTERK URION TELEGRAPH COMPARY BUT END THE MEND By buying HOLEPROOFS FOR EITHER LADIES OR MEN SIX MONTHS GUARANTEE WITH SIX PAIRS J. C. MACPHERSON SOLE AGENT FOR NORWICH