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INSURANCE which takes effect Jan, 1, 1914, Applies To You. Protect Yourself with a policy in the ZETNA. Ban Francisco, Cal, Jan. 1. —Gunboat Smith, the California heavyweight, scm—ed’ a decisive victory today when | he -knocked out Arthur Pelkey, the much-heralded Canadian fighter, in the 15th round of thelr “white hope” championship battle in the Daly City open alr amphitheatre. a strong favorite in the betting at odds of 7 to 10, Smith's aggressiveness, cullminating in & clean cut right to the chin, and his superfor all around work in ail but two or three rounds, did much to pave nis way to victory, Pelkey proved a keen disappointment, being slow and neldom taking the fight to his shiftier opponent. The fight opened with the gunner forcing matters with snappy lefts to the face: but Pelkey, making his best showing, drove in several hard rights to the body and face that staggered Smith and sent him to his corner bleeding from the mouth. The crowd cheered the (anadian and even bets were made that he would win. the second round Smith scored w, and In the third his man viciously over 3 nds four and five were without feature, but in the sixth Smith forged to the front and there- never in danger. In this round he fought the Canadian to a standstill with left upperc ing him to his corner dazed a from the mouth. Smit hcontinued as the fight prog Do your realize that an anmdent'!’:l"n\;nd his bull opponent, worked s left to great advantage and forced occurs every three seconds. | Pelkey to clinch for shelter. | After 30 seconds of fentin Compensation Insurance in sc.: 5 i the Travelers’ Insurance Co. |&:: nn'm,{{i\‘::d"”“' ' will remove all your worry. B. P. LEARNED & CO. dr(pppc‘d with his eye JOHN A. MORAN Real Estate and Invesiments | McGrory Building, Main St. | Office telephone 501-2. Residence 1179-3 WILLIAM F. HILL, J. L. LATHROP & SONS Norwich, Conn. DANGER surrounds us at svery point in the complexity of modern life. Employers can protect themselves aginst legal llability, under the new State Law, for accl@ents in Factorfes, Stores and Dwellings, by Workmen’s Compensation Ineurance. ISAAC S. JONES Insurance ard Rea! Estate Agent, Richarde Building, 91 Main St to- gain confidence sed and, dancing in the left, “toppled him on his vas out when Referee awarded the fight to Smith. LEACH CROSS REPEATS. Puts Away Bud Anderien for Secend Time in Seventh. al,’ Jan. montt For the Bud Ander- today was 3 Cross of New | end came in the sevenih round, when Anderson went down for the third time under a shower of blows to the jaw and stomach and fell hel across the ropes. He was o five minutes. Cross was the m: and in the seventh s Los_Angeles second time in son of Mec ! knocked out rk The 25 Shetucket St, opp. Thames Bank | FARM AND CITY PROPERTY OF ALL KINDS FOR SALE. { Insurance Com- Ppanies. t in every round Anderson to er nt Fepresents 15 Fire the floor three times, the last for the — - count. He used the ring tactics he employed Julv 4 £ in fight ATTORNEYS AT LAW against Anderson, and achieved the same result. He stalled, in and beat his man down. The stal ing began in the sixth round. Cro staggered about with his arms hang- Brown & Perkins, Ittorneys-at-Law Over Uncas Nat. Bank Shetucket St. | Intrance stairway near to Thames |ing down and then, catching Anderson National Bank. Telephone 38-3. off guard, hammered his jaw and stomach with a suddem volley of straight arm blows. In the seventh the New Yorker repeated the ruse. | A left hook to the chin sent Ander- son down the first time. He took the count of eight. Cross next uppercut { him hard, sending him to the floor a EDWIN W. 91GGENS, ar10a | STONINGTON [s«, ond time. On arising Anderson | | to the referee to stop the fight. Cross shot a right jolt to his opponent’s chin, Year's Reception—Angus B. Ghese- | 3 l°ft swing to bro at Hospital. ex oliapsed. held on, helpless. The crowd velled Only Two Fires During 1913—New | a left swing to the stomach and An- Prof. W. O. Wolgast Gets Redmond in Fifth. Turner bas returned to Willimantic, Milwaukee, V Jan. 1—Ad Wol- Only Two Fires. gast, Cadillac, Mich, former light- The vear 1913 is & record breaker for | Welght champion pugilist, defeated Stonington with regard to fires, as only The =ailor was | lghtning- | a then darted | NORWICH Clean Right To The Jaw Puts Canadian Away In Fifteenth | 7, —“Gunboat” the Aggressor All the Way—Leach Cross Stops Bud Anderson In Seventh. Jack Redmend, Milwaukee, in five {rounds of a ten round boxing contest this afternoon. l Referee Harry Stout stopped the contest about the middle of the fifth round, when Redmend was clearly shown to be hopelessly outclassed. The first two round were rather tame. Woelgast from the beginning of ths third had matters his own way, Redmond was bleeding frem the mouth In_the fourth. In the fifth Wolgast drove several hard left jolts to the body and a right uppercut to the jaw, when the referec stopped the fight. TAFTVILLE TOO STRONG FOR BEN HUR FIVE. Home Team Scores Easy Victory Over Hartford Aggregation. The Ben Hur basketball five of Hartiord went down to defeat at the hands of the Taftville team in Parish hall, Taftville, Thursday afternoon by the ‘score of 17 to 8 1-2. The first half was even, the score being tied at the end of the period at 4 1-2 points. In the second period the visitors tired |and the speed and stamina of the Taftville five turned the contest Into a very one-slded affair. The team work of the home team was of a superior quality and all showed up well in the scoring excepting Hasler, who was kept busy on the defense. The lineups and summary: Taft tanley If, White rf, Mur- phy ¢, n lg, Hasler rg. Ben Oppelt If, Dodge rf, Lawson lg, Woif rg. Murphy 4, White 4, son 4, Stanley 4, Dodge 2, Wolf 2, Oppelt, L n. ~ Foul goals, Murphy Wolf. eferee, J. B. Benoit. Scorer and timer, H, Caron. | EDWARDS OUTPOINTS KID SncA, In Fast Ten Round Bout at Meriden— Waterbury Lad Forces Fighting. 1.—Artie Ed- d st Jan. outpointed Joe tonight in a Conn., Meriden, ards of aterbury and interestir the Lenox Athletic club. Shea it should be stated first appearance in the r f fall of 1912 Shea forc r the start, Edward; with showing a which more than ffensive tactics. In the preliminaries Dillon of Waterbury met -his erloo in the | with hddle O'Br of New Haven. of Hartford received his cond round of his bout erbu m. f Watertown defeated K O. Dixon of Meriden in the first round. | WALSH AND M'AULIFFE DRAW. Round. Bridgeport, Conn., Jan. 1.—Jimmy nd Young McAuliffe, the latter fought 10 it and furious to rounds even break hi this af- noon. Bostonfan had a slight ntage in the early rounds, but ag- ve work by McAuliffe discounted n d\\ last two. | mi-final Teddy Tubbs of b ced A. H. Chung, the ( nose NEHLer, T quit I the eatly pact of the ninth. Referce called the bout | Hubbs was outwelghed 10 pounds. Red Allen shaded Kid Palmer, and Kid| Perrone had the best of a four round | go with Young J Welsh Outpoints Johnny Dundee. | _New Orleans, Jan. | Welsh, lightwelght pugilist two of importauce have been r parted by Chief Teed of the fire department. One occurred Jan. 18 at the home of J. Pachete on Diving street, the dam- age being only $25. The other was on Feb, 18 at Mrs. Murray’s shed on Div- FINANGIAL AND COMMERCIAL ing ‘street, damage 3$50. Rallph H. Koelb, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Koelb, who has been a student at Stonington High school, will enter Cushing academy at Ashburnham, Mass., Monday. RAILROADS SHOW STRENGTH. and in New Haven Tuesday. Moderate Rise Prof. and Mrs. Clarence Sibley are Yor —The spending the week in Needham, Mass. | trading on change came Whittridge Cutler of New York is|to an end with a quiet, coloriess ses- visiting his mother, Mrs. Mary Cutler Mr. and Mrs. Everett N. Dunham have returned home to New Haven. Reception at Parsonage. Thursday being the anniversary of . and Mrs, Dwight C. Stone's mar- they on.. The d ant, speculative s news was unimport- interest at low ebb and a holiday at hand, so that traders re content to permit the market to along idly. The uncertain move ments of recently and the ab sence tions today of a defi- 2 entertained their many nite trend cu be the | friends at the parsonage by the sea |more com- | from 2 to 10 p, m. " mitments & , and in most | Married 20 Year cases price were only nom- Mr. and Mrs. George W. Haley ob- L asal S AR AT | served the 20th amniversary of their = r ¥ vedding New Year's day and were the recipients of many messages and re- | membrances in honor of the a ! Rouse B. Wilcox and Harold have returned to Brown university having spent their vacation here. Shot Removed from Arm. Angus B. Chesebro, who was shot in forearm at the trap shoot Thanks- ‘m‘ day by the accidental discharge & shotgun, has been at the Memo rial hospital since Tuesday, has had meveral shot removed, and is resting acific and developed bid up ncrease d in Norfolk strengthy over two Do in met profi the company “ompany 1 Lo the ts of $1,290.000 discl annual report, T nbed six points on a con- comfortably. gending up the price steadily in the last few and rose to the best | figure of two year NOANK Realizinz tales later levelled down = = market, and in many cases the | Wednesday evening = the . Baracca, 2ains were cancelled. Move Philathea and Altruists clasees held a ereafter were unusually nar- combined watch meeting in the vestry. | ! ept in a Amer- Supper was served at the close of an | ican Telephone interesting programme interspersed | Final prices general | with games. Josses on the year. Reading alone of Wednesday evening the members of | {he speculative favorites held its own, the Daughters of America held a watch |8nd the other nost active features meeting in the rooms of the order in | Were & to 10 points lower than at the Mechanics’ hall. The committee, Miss. | ¢lose o z ¥t The last day of the vear brought o5 Fish, Burdick and Durfee, provided a delightful Christmas tree on which gifts were displayed for each one pres- ent. A chicken pie supper closed the xession. not even the suggestion of a flurry in the money market. Call loans were renewed at six per cent. reflecting the demand in connection with year-end requirements, but the rate thereafter fell off decidedly. The bond két was s dy. States twos ad C -4 on call R The smallpox scare at the Hollow tinuation of the buying which has been | Total United | | Southern. . 100 Woolworth p(& )dl:: :g:il:g{d‘ The cases are well un- Total ealen 2950 gff:__ Great Number of Lofty Mountains. bods 2 ORI, SR Things are wonderful prineipally by B eyt L ]co}mparlson. “Thufie .é:“go ?r more fras! ?;‘se( mi ddlmg oupls.nds. 12.60; gulf, lofty mountains in ‘ornia rising Fut v = more than 18,000 feet above sea level el A A which are not considered sufficiently 1388 Octoics Phpadt Rl noteworthy among all the surrounding g A SN ‘wealth of mountain scener to have even received mames, accor to the MONEY. United Btates Geological Survey. Netw York, Dee. 31.—Call money Any one of these mountain peaks, if aitu- ated in the castern part of the United States, would of course be visited by millions of people. But California has 70 additional mountain peaks more than 13,000 feet high which have been named, or 180 in all as well 2s & | 1000 Brooxm iisid Gnndi s sTx s ¢ Cal. Petroleum ... 1w 1 dozen rising above 14,000 feet. A Do ¥ 7800 Candian Pacific 208% 200% 500 Central Leathar PILES CURED FROM 6 to 14 DAYS Druggists refund money If Fazo Ointment falls to cure itching, blind, bleeding or protruding plles. ~First application gives relief. " Gle.. TWHER you 'an. to DUt rour busi- P ad Hic, ihers 13 no me- strong 3 a 6 per cent.; ruling rate 6; last loan 3 1-2; closing 8 a 8 1-2, Time loans steady; sixty and nine- ty days 4 8-4 a 5: six months 4 1-2 il 5, CHICAGD GRAIN MARKET. WEEAT Open. High Low. Close Den, ... 15 8% o May ... Ry 0% a1 July .. 87 518 S6% 37 5-16 CORN— Deo. 71 6o% n May 8% 6814 8% - July . 8%y 6% 67 11-18 oxrs— ) 40 1538 ¢ Shea's | Hubbs Beats Chinese Pug in the Ninth | SMITH KNOGKS OUT ARTHUR PELKEY 10 round bu\lt before | last round of his fight | i | weeks ago Lynch's re-election }and the islands of Trinidad. | {in the United States since the begin- | who recentely knocked out Bombardier ning of the past yvear are as fol-| Wells, who heid the title, In one min- lows: : ! nte and thirteen seconds. April §—U. §. army aviator, Lieut.| - mfl. defeated Johnny Dundee of New York here today in a 10-ruund ht: Dundee was accredited with wving the best of the first two round:. ‘showed meriorlt, in / the elghth and tenth, and the eth- ers were even. TENER IS SEVENTH S LEAGUE PRESIDENT. Some Predecessors Have Had Hard Stedding. John K. Tener s the seventh presi- dent the Nationz. league has had since its organization late in 1875, His pred- eoessara in the office have been Mor- Bulkeley, William A. Hurlbert, £ kma N. E. Young, Harry C. Puluiu‘n and Thomas J. Lynch. url- bert died in office April 10, 1832, Mills resigned the position in 1885, and Pul- Ham - committed suicide in 1909 by | shooting himself in the head after a phsslcal and mental breakdown. ulkeley, the first president, held the | office only one year, being succeeded | in 1876 by Hurlbert, who has been ' called the founder of the National | loague. Hurlbert wielded the reins until he ‘died in 1882 His successor was_Mills, who was succeeded in 1885 by Youns, Young was also the sec retary and treasurer of the league, and | it was not until after the National went to war with the American league | that Uncle Nick stepped down and ! out. This was In 1902, A successor to Young was not chosen at once, but during 1802 the National league wa srun by a committee of which the late John T. Brush was the chairman. In 1903 Pulllam, who had been Bar- ney Dreyfuss' right bower as the sec- | retary of the Loulsville and Pittsburg | clubs, was elected president. Pulllam’s | career In the league was very Stormy. | The strain of the 1908 campalgn,when | the memorable playoff of the tie be- tween New York and Chicago occurred and other incidents, resulted in Pulli- | am’s breaking down. At the meeting | of the league in Chicago in 1909 Mr. | Puiliam’s conditlon became so serious that it was decided to put the affairs of the league in the hands of John A Heydler, who was then, as now, sec- retary-treasurer. Heydler, like every other man who | has held the position or been tne cus- { todian of the office, could not satisfy all of the magnates. He had an e cellent chance to be elected president of the league at the meeting in De- | cember, 1909, when the Philadelphia | club was sold to Charles P. Taft of Cincinnati. This transaction lost Heyd- | ler the vote of the Philadelphia club and the election. | For an entire week the two factions of the league were deadlocked. Final- ly it was agreed that President Brueh of the New York club should select the man and all of the clubs would vote for him. Brush sprang a complete surprise by naming Lynch, the former | ing of umpires, who had been out of he national game for many years. zone. Lynch's term w filled with trou- ble. He was repeatedly at odds with ub owners, but each year he to be re-elected, because opposed to him could not agree any individual. Until a few for a His upon sear appeared to be good. opponents, Herrmann, Ebbetts and | Dreyfuss, could not secure any more votes for their candidate, Bob Brown Then President Baker of the Phillie began his campaign for _GoOvernc Tener, which fet with such success that in a very short time all of the club owners were enlisted in the unan- fmous call for the governor to accept the position. fifth AVIATION’S HEAVY DEATH their own,”’ the balmy, restful evenings under the stars in Panama City and Whenever men go forth to do men’s work in the rough corners of the world, most of the luxuries of civilization they leave behind themj but one luxury, the most satisfying of all, they carry with them— BuLL [)'mll il . A “Bull”’ Durham in fresh, fragrant, hand-made cigarettes has proved a constant source of comfort and inspiration to the army of tireless workers in the Canal Keen-eyed surveyors, resourceful engineers, sturdy scctxon bosses, bronzed army officers, all “roll in the stress of work under a tropic sula orin GEN UWE hand-made from* I hw TOLL 1 NTEN YEARS.| = A Decade Has Passed Since °"""'°:Ufrllxlyu}1ysi'rnmeu; Kerns killed by Wright First Conquered the Air. | full'at Chico, Cal. - : Sept. 2—George Schmidt killed and The art of aviation, or flying in|J Dy Spellman seriously injured in jer-than-air machines was ten | 300 foot fall at Rutland, Vt. old on December th. It was on Sept. 4—Lileut. Moss L. Love, U. 8, ember 17, 1904, that Orville and qlxn?\] corps, killed in 300 foot fall at | Wilbur Wright, the famous Ohio av- San Diego, Cal. | iators, conquered the alr in a series of four short, successful flights at Simms station. Since that time the aeroplane industry has been revolu- tionized. It has been taken up by the people of all launds and some advance- | Sept. 15—Max Lillle killed by bi- plane overturning at Galesburg, Il Sept. 16-—P. C. Davls died in Chica- | g0 as result of fall from aeroplane at ! Mauston, Wis. Oct. 13—Albert J. Jewell lost at sea | a ment has been along new and more| while making a flight over Long useful lines than in the earlier years. | Island. The heavier-than-air flier has now be- | Nov. 24—Lieuts. Eric L. Ellington | and Hugh M. Kelly, first division army | aviation corps, killed in 80 foot fall at San Diego, Cal. come an important factor in warfare and war equipment and today there is not a country that does not include the aeroplane in its military and naval ) e R equipment. PENN WINS AT CHESS. Though the process of the sclence | has been remarkable, each vear has| Awarded Permanent Possession of the | | seen an increase in the number o 2 | persons killed. The first death was Ricsitei-Collsun i Eonhy. i | that of Lieutenant Selfridge, of the| Now York, Jam 1. — Pennsylvania U. S. Signal corps, who was RHL“Q N today won the 15th annual tourney of a flight at Fort Meyer, Sept. 17, 1908. | tne tri-college chess league. The ad- Four aviators met death in 1909, 32 of one point, gained last Tues- in 1910, 73 in 1911, 113 in }" 2, .n<l S Tespo. ble for the victory 137 in the past year. The total \\uh the championship goes the per- | number of aviators who have perished ion of (he third Isaac | Pennsylvania’s win- | | amounts to 437. | 1 ning total was 11 1- Of the 137 fat 2 points out of a | curred in the possible 18. | number ma Levin of Pennsylvania has four alifornia_aviator in British Colum- | gtraight victories to his credit, Per- a ard of Lieutenant Rich of the| kins of Cornell and Sze of Pennsylva United States army, in the Philip- | nia, the latier a Chinese, went through pines. the tournament without losing a game. The list shows that th Perking drew one game and Sze t i this The final records of the tourney are: | 20 differ Pennsylvania won 11 lost 4 1 ticeabl Corn 10 1-2 and Brown, 2| ance t and 14. among military fiers. The totals scored in ird serie. | to the t that more 1909-1913, i sylvania to military aviat | Cornell | while exhibition g| For the ent tournaments the ! beause it is no | Pennsylvania €1 1-2, Cornell | a novelty and faiis to attract the jrown 28 1 1 | lic attention that it did a few years e LEVINSKY BEATS DALY. ago. Many Lost in Foreign Countries. o | | | | Smash To Stomach Puts Omaha Giant | The casualty lists of Away for Five Minutes. ! France are the heaviest Germany having had 39 Germany and | in_numbers, | atalities dur. i e - 27, 1 New York, Jan. 1—Battling Levinsky military viators. ,..nthd { out Tom Daly, the Omaha giant, this| Patalicy list of 10, mage by | afterncon in the second round of ‘what | et howmg of ane nb thed was to be a ten round bout. Levinsky which have extenaivels useq | €asily outboxed his opponent in the | opening round, when he rent two lefts et list, in view of|C the stomach. In the second round | he doubled Daly up with a hard smash to the stomach and the Omaha man was out for five minutes. Daly out- weighed Levinsky by 48 pounds. the large number of licensed aviaters | in_that country, is remarkably low,| only four Italian aviators having per- | !!Shed during the e dRussia has | | 5 | suffered slx fatal accidents dur-| 5 W 2 |ing the yvear, Argentine four, Japan Blake Outpoints ie Kid. 10% | and Turkey three each, while the! TLondon, Jan 1—Bandsman Blake, the | {07 | others have been_scattered one ach | champion English middleweight pug- in Austria. Belgium, Switzerland, | ilist, tonight defeated “Dixie Kid," Scotland, Canada. Portugal, Moroco.' the Ameriean negro boxer, on Mms\ | the Philippines, China, Cochin-China!in a twenty round bout. Blake is re-| ! garded by the followers of pugilism a»' P’ . - the man most likely to regal Eng | United States Fataiitios in Past Year.| 100, T8 QR AU o o s from | The airmen who have lost their lives | the Frenchman, Georges Carpentier, Rex Chandler, killed, and Lieut. L. H. | Brereton badly injured by fall into San Diego bay. Tigers Defeat Toronto 5-1. Boston, Jan. 1.—Princeton’s hockey | April 19—Otto W. Brodie Killed in | icam defeated Toronto university in a rough game tonight § to 1. Princeton | SxBibition Mt dn Cnicaio. outskated the Canadians, the work of | Baker being. the feature. Several times Baker eluded Toronto for dashes the lenigth of the ice, but owing to the sharp goal work of Laird he scored hntl death under his machine at Akron, O. May 9—U. S. army aviator, Lieut. Joseph D. Park, killed by 15 foot fall at Olive, Cal. May 81—Jaumes Colovan, amateur fiyer, killed when biplane caught in a tree at Chicago, June 13—Andrew Drew killed at Lima, O. when biplane caught fire| and fell 200 feet. | | | May 5—Charles Carlson crushed to | | | i once. Fast Go Between Mandot and Fisher. | Cincinnatl, Jan. 1.—Joe Mandot of New Orleans and Rarl Fisher of this oity fought an interesting 10-round June 20—U. B. N. aviater, Enslgn! bout here today with no decision by William D. Billingsley, killed, and|the referes. Fisher was aggressive Lieut. John H., Towers severely in-|and clever. Both men are light- Jjured, by fall into Chesapeake bay. | welghta. June 28—Fred F. Gardiner drowned SR in Lake Keuka, near Rochester, N, O’'N: Qutpoints Harvey. Y., when aeroplane capsized. New York, Jan. 1.—“Sapper” O‘Neil, July 8—U. B. army aviater, Lieut.|the English lightwelght pugilist out- Loren H. Call, killed by fall at Texas ity. I.Tul.v $—Grover Bell died in- iuries recckeed o Rl st pointed Johnny Harvey of this city in a ten ru\md bout here today. Young Fox also proved to be too | when danger threatens. | thet the intentional pass is one of th DURHAM SMOKING TOBACCO (Enough for forty hand-made cigarettes in each 5c sack) From Panama to Klondxkc, from Broadway to Manila; lfm ripe, mellow ‘‘Bull” Durham tobacco is smoked by more millions of men than all other high-grade tobaccos combined. The rich, mellow, :atufymg % clusive to this grand old tobacco and afford lasting enjoyment and complete satisfaction Get “the makings’’ foday at the nearest dealer’s—‘‘roll your own’’ and learn what a fresh, made-to-order cigarette tastes like. olon. ,grant aroma and of cigarettes Durham are ex- weight from Pekin, Ills, in another’ bout which went the ten round limit. Jack Dillon Outfought Christie. Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 1—Jack Dil-| lon of Indianapolis, claimant of the | middlewelght championship, outfought Gus Christie of Milwaukee in a ten | round bout here this afternoon. Every | round was Dillon’s and Christie ue—[ quently saved himself by SPORT NOTES. The Oakland club of the Pacific coast league has secured Chester Roberts, & catcher, from the St. Louls Cardinals. Harry Welchonce, champion batter of the Southern association, has been appointed field captain of the Atlanta team. Anthony Marhefka, a_shortstop, has | Leen released by the Phillies to the New London club of the Eastern asso- clation. Coack (eorge Orton of the Pemn- sylvania track team has arranged for three indoor meets for the freshman | track team thig winter. Manager Griffith says he will not sell Pitcher Tom Hughes against his will. Griff has been offered $3,000 from a ;‘lpb which Hughes does not want to join. Chief Stallings says he offered Mur- phy 75,000 for Heine Zimmerman. When asked whether it was stage or onversation money, he replied: | Neither, genuine currency, only it happens to be confederate.™ i The Buffalo International club will train in Charlotte, spring. Secretary Tomm Mar- arranging a series of ex! tion s with major league clubs to be played in the North Carolina towns. league N. €, Ban J now. ica has his hands full just "chief exective of the Amer- ng his brain trring | to find some way or make some rule ! | that will prevent a pitcher from handing a free pass to a star slugger Johnson say: unpopular plays baseball. i Some say Comiskey made a mistake in not starting his world tour In New York. Had he done so he would have wound up right in the Sox training camp and saved those few members | of the Sox who are with the tourists from the east. It will be a trip across the continent for them to get to camp and they will have more than circled | the globe at the finish of it. Sl NGULARITIES. Wwhen made into cigarette and clgar holders, although it is only very rarely that are houxht home that are sufficiently large and perfect this pntpo-n. l.or Norwegian government has mmmm‘md’ammrn and discover of the south pole, per- mission to establish a board the Fram during il Do ko, most ‘mortherty £ The production the United Sta.tu during 1812 was equivalent to about 1330 short tons carrying 60 per cent of tungsten tri- oxide, valued at $502,158. The output for 1912 was larger than that for 1911, when 1139 tons, valued at $407,985 ‘were produced. The total amount of tungsten produced in the world in 1912 was 9115 short tons. ‘Tungsten finds considerable use in the manufac- ture of tungsten incandescent lamps, which have now become common even on street and railway cars, where the usuage is especially severe. An account of the tungsten industry in this and foreign countries is contained in an advance chapter from “Mineral Re- 1918 on the produmctiorn of cobalt, molybdenum, nickel, tantalum, tin, titanium, tungsten, uranium and vanadium, just issued by the United States geological survey. The uses ‘which these metals have found in the arts and in their production throughout the world, .nd advances in methods of recovery and refining are accurately described in the ter, a copy of which may be free on application t6 the director of the geological survey, Washington, D. L3 A s s g e Parcel Post Matter, “In speaking of how mail matter in han 8 postal employee recently sald: ‘Mafl is nmot handled plecs by plece as express matter is but it is handled almost entirely in bags. These bags are often stacked clear to the e‘m of the car, thus sometimes nrowing a weight of several tons on the bottom layer; consequently fragile | packages to smash d “No doubt in tume strong hampers ! will be provided in which parcei-post As & result of the recent. booin in | south polar exploration a considerabie | supply of albatross wing bones, ordin- arily excessively rare, has deen placed | on the market. These bones, when | dressed, polished and mounted in sil- ver, make ideal connecting stems for the best quality brier and meers- chaum pipes. vackages may be carried with safety no matter how high they are stacked; ‘hm untll this improvement is made farmers can secure satisfactory ser- vice by bearing in mind the trying { conditions under which this class of mall is now handled and packing their produce accardingly.“—Farm and Fire- They are greatly prized | side. FEW MOMENTS! NO INDIGESTION OR SICK STOMACH-- PAPE'S DIAPEFSIN DIGESTS ALL FOOD, ABSORBS GASES AND STOPS FER- MENTATION AT ONCE. Wonder what upset your stomach— which pertion of the food did the dam- age—do you? Well, don’t bother. If your stomach is in a revolt; if mour, gassy and upset, and what you just ate has fermented into stubborn lumps; your head dizzy and aches; belch gases and aclds and eructate undigested food; breath foul, tongue coated—just take Pnpo’l Diapepsin, lnd in five min- of men and women today know that it is needless to have a bad stomach, ‘without If your stomach doesn’t take care of