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NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1914 leURANCE WE SELL Nind Storm Insurance J. L. LATHROP & SONS, Norwich, Cenn. UITE SUDDENLY Is the way most rt. Yom ever tell when Are your prop may be destroved. You prep Taking chances is haz_ ardous. me insure yeu before It ISAAC S. JONES Insurance and Real Estate Ageni, Richards Building, 91 Main Strect. realize that an accident cccure every three seconds. Compensation Insurance in the Travelers’ Insurance Co. will remove all your worry. b. P. LEARKED & CO. JOHN A. MORAN Investment Broker Real Estate a Specialty McGrory Building, Main Street flice telephone 5.1-2. Residence 1179-3 our ATTORNEYS AT LAW lrehn & Perkms, Over Unc4 Nat. Bank Sbetucket St. i airway mear to Thames nal Bank Telephone 33-3. Mtarneys-at-Llaw EOWIN W, HIGGLS, Avwrn, Law. Sbarsen 1nil The Totol%efl Manufaduriné Company FIRST MORTGAGE FIVE PER CENT, BONDS. | | Won Fast Basketball < 3 OF XEW YORK, AMSON PRI, 23 Trustee MYSTERY IN CUB Chamce Declarss Murphy 75 er 20 Per Cent. of the Chicago Natienal's Stock. Mystery siill surreunds the transacs | ton. sithough the deal whereb: Sharies Webb Murphy and the Nation- | 1 league parted company was com- | eted more than a week ago. Irom| arions sources ficting sto- | | - certain remarks | ™ New York city at he time of the schedule meetinz of | leagus, he apparently ive the impression, with- that he owned icago ciub stock, e raie of former manager of hat Muarphy never 35 or 2 per cent.! and that this stock | 1t of the profits and| under = contract| the Teal own- states that] 5 as oo 4 par wilh | siories rela. biz deal- | td ealaries th ol per- to nto print by inference, | by aciual declarations. tion Chance is suppori- = Brown. former star | twirder of the Cubs and now conmect- | ~d wits *he Federal league CHICAGO FEDS LOSE TWO. Bt Tinker Gets Chisf Meyers study, Wilson. Under- \ Federal Jeazue ke shuf: ade by the ers. Catcher Owens, whu Washingion from ciation i the Federal eld- 1. drafed b ston als from St. Joseph, were award fralo. In excha i hica got Catohier Wil to Chief Mevers of the ante. President_Gilinore and Charies z and William Walker of the ticago VFederals will leave for New ork o greet the returning Gi- nd White Sox. time ago, zinia nome getting into shape for the season. Farvey expects the Baltimors ab w1l cail upom him to do con arabie d he will be tner will the Hls local friends sure do wish success. ® iguie | atter selling BIG LEAGUES AFTER FEDS’ PLAYERS President Gilmore Will Declare the Greaie;t War in History On Organized Ball—Feds’ Contracts as Good as Others —Collins Negotiating With Gilmore—Umpires An- nounced. Chivage, March 'he greatest war | BRITISH PUGILIST CHAMPION of baseball history was threatened by [ KNOCKED OUT BLAKE. Presiddnt Gilmore of the Federat | g league today as the result of reports | Middleweight ~Champion Took the that tha American and N | Count in the Fourth Round. leagues were p March Bombardier | Tederals’ piavers. News that Piltcher thie* former PBritish cpampion Blanding had rejoned the Clevel st pugilist, tonight knocked Americane after having sizned andsm Biake, the middie- eral contract made President C on, in_the fourth rotmd | decide to take action, Besldes B ended to be a 20-round ng. Killl na Wilflams and Bai Eaidmer: afe. players who. #lie: Fedd had aroused great in- s claimed, have violated contracts cireles. Blake pre- ot ie ateban and was regarded by | a d a player v persons as England’s white hope | et I a eluy | for winning the world's heavyweight Gilmore he At _the weishi JDlake was =3 National a an. Jeague clubs | Pounds lighter than Wells, e trying to take ou ed 1 W take theirs | from us, we 1A In Willimantic Duckpin League, Two Points to One. and 1 as hig; and backe the players a Pirates will remain in the lead Up to this have p n l“(zl\yfl.‘ufl'\h fair with our rivais. ;We gave up C Juckpin league despite his having dsigned wi f te Sox Tues- Chicago club, when we _belie two points to one. Schnei- ld have given him to gh total with 329 and fer and Blandi The White ced money bLig one, miss- | by three pins. American and : 3 ore our contrac White ‘Sox. ciate the spirit of Sian s ABTNIORNETIN ave shown, we W 101 94 1 of baseball wars. W n - 36 w 119 leagues & the game Between President Gijo Pirates, pitcher, whom Gilmore wants. DI spinwall | Mathewson SWEENEY LEAVES YANKEES. American 3 Brennan, ¢ Takes New Berth With the Federal that the | gue. cause confn eaguers wer At Eddle Sweeney, who h leaguers. 1z catcher of the New Y. omorrow's meeting. kees for several seasons, has decided pected are to dese American league for a Garnett Bush, Al | job in the Federal fon, was Cormick, Montc practicaily = confirme hen it was derson. Most r t the backstop / of Federal leagus ftermath session of It 1s thought he hay ict to play with the Buf~ and Tndianapolis teams to Wichita Tex CUBS TRIMMED THE ROVERS. CHASE FLIRTING WITH FEDS. Gamé by Score = Nioney, 26-16—Challenge Hustlers. Looking for More and Feds i Are Considering. The Norwich Cy { an Jose, Cal, S report that he if 1 margin all througn = ey 1 . 1 acore being 26-16. R ikt et ir and that he replied with a $30,000 for three years and a o sign. The Federals are ering. Gemand of 5,000 bonus Walsh season. FlNANBIAL AND COMMERCHL NEW HAVEN AT 65 1-2. Stock Reaches Lowest Figure in Com- pany’s History | i | | | { New hange ira iarger abaor Yot pertics EnterTupted dovn outside inal proportions Movements of the ant stocks e small and the underion s =ood. Noue of caders i more than a fraction above or below vesterday's close. entiment was miidly Dearish, but there wi s develo furs a unfavorably the came to naught as a market fa Of the influences immediately ‘sur- ro D market most aitention w the decidedly poor show anuary s condition of the and follewing public appe: first monik old at 65 1 o Iowes history of the compan was marked up to 65 5:8 in Di the dividend for American stoc! _ope of Tast montn o re Jower and thers selling here for I se circumstanc ! ht decline in the inter rna- | There was no large amount of stocks pressing for nowever, and_when i became apparent he decline | had been checked prices wera put | covering. The only important move- ( ments were in a few of the less ac Sbares. | Candian. Pasific: by foreigu seiling, was heavy. i out the ddy. Express stocks we n strong, Adams leading the moveme th & five point advance. | Ronds were . Total sales, par | value, $2:570,000 . ates bonds were unchanzed £ | STOCKS. ! COTTON. i March 3.—Spot cotton 1 dling uplands, 12.00; gulf, % no sales. i i Futures closed ba August, T, 11.30. ruling closing, 1 3-1 days x 2 mon NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA, GAS OR INDIGESTION Each “Pape’s Diapepsi digests 3000 grains food, ending all stomach misery in five minutes. - \ Time it! Pape's Diapepsin will di- gest anything you eat and overcome a sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach surely within five minutes. 1f your meals don't fit comfortably. or what you eat lies like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartb that is a sign of indiges- tion. Get frem your pharmacist a ffty- cen® case of Pape’s Diapepsin and take a dose just as soon as you cap. There {will be no sour risings no béiching of | undigested food mixed with secid, no |stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or |heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea, debilitating headaches, dizziness or in. | testinal griping. This will all go, and, esides there will be ne sour feod left over in the stomaeh to poisen your breath with neauseous odors. Pape’s Diapepsin is a certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, hecause ft takes hold of your food and digests it just tho same as If your atomach wasn't there. | Relief in five minutes from all stom- ach misery is waiting for you at any drug store. These large fifty-cent cases comtain enotgh “Pepe’s Diapepsin” to keep the |cntire family free from stomach dis- orders and indigestion for many. menths. 1t belongs in your home. | —_— CONNECTICUT BOY IN BiG LEAGUE. New Britain L.d Signed Up With Con- Mack. Connecticut baseball fans are fol- | lowing with keen interest the work of William Xopf of New Britain, who is |now a member of the Philadelphia Americans. He left last week to go to Jacksonville, Fla., where the Mack- men will put in their spring training. | Bill Kopf, as he is more popularly known, from his early youth 3 | shown a great aptitude for baseball, and the success he is making at the national game was predicted for him | by New Eritain sharps who had seen him perform. His first professional engagement was with Akron in the Ohio-Penn | league. He went from there to the 1 River team in the New England Jeague, whence he went to New Haven. | He was purchased from Cameron’s am by Cleveland of the American league, but was farmed out to Toledo in the American Association. He was purchased from Toledo by Mack, but as the Athletics had a number of in- son, and his work lagt season was such | that Cleveland purchased his release, and ke played a number of games with | | the Naps toward the end of the sea- son. ! About three weeks ago he was pur- chased by the Philadelphia club, It i belleved that he will be retainned by the Athletics this season as ome of the utility infielders; ATHLETICS TAKING GOOD | CARE OF PITCHING STAFF. | Connie Mack Thinks Pessibly Plank and Bender Might Go Back on Him. Connfe Mack is giving a good deal | thought to his pitching stafl. On Japer, everything looks rather rosy for the world's champions. Bender and Plank are still with him and Coombs | | promises .to come back to form this | eason. Shawkey and Bush bave the | advantage of a season’s experience. He | | has in reserve Carroll, Brown, Hauc&, Pennock and Wyclofl. But Connfe always faces the possi- | { bility that Bender and Plank mav go bagk on him. WIith the exception of a brief interval of Coombs, Bender and Plank are all Connie has had. He | won his first pennant in 1905 with | thess two mainstays. Fe took his | latest in 1913 with the same pair. Some hey will go. It may be this of ombs is a doubtful quality has been seriously il badly in- jurcd. Connie does mot intend to be | caught with only Bush and Shawkey to depend on and.so will give his best talents to bringing out his young quar- tett The main trouble with all four is a ost amazing wildness. Houck was the wildest man in the ledgue last year With 122 passes in innings. Except for Gresg, was_next. He walked 91. Wyckoff was barely He 75 3-3 Brown on the field, but the big parks will also be without the signs. This will be a 5ad blow to the hopes of many of the country's big stickers. Year after vear many ball plavers have increased their salary by the ac- quisition of two or three checks as well as the tobacco offered for the four-ply wallops Hereafter to garner the mon- ey players wiil have to do more than hit the bull signs. Jack Moakley's Views. 'he statements attributed to train- er Jack Moakley of Cornell relative to the eligibility of the Oxford Univer- sity track team which is to run at the University of Pennsylvania relay meet April 25, do not find favor at Pennsylvania. The Universiiy daily in an editorfal review of the point states: “Of course the Enslishmen have an advantage in they have no one-year rule, but the using of the Rhodes scholars—no matter how long their residence at Oxford—is a legitimate advantage, if it is one. In the case of Tabor and men in his position there we are sure, wants to see them send over their best team they can. Al the more credit to the American team that §s able {o defeat them. All the lees bitter the defeat should the Bng- lishmen carry home the title “After all’ Pennsylivania 1 to bring about the best fo \ternationul race thai can be arrang- |ed, Oxford may have an advantage 1 ene respect, but if the idea devel- ps into one England versus America, hasw' this country a decided advantage in the fact that we will have several teams represented to Bngland's one Cornell meraly. weakens ~ America's chances by Staving away ' flelders he was sent back the next sea— | is nothing which violates the spirit of the one-year rule. “Why not’let the Englishmen use | | their advantage. The sporting public RRARARRRARVVARRRARRARRARAARAARAARAARARAARR E Y, E/f Within 50 Miles Big Fire THERE ARE 47 that wear 33, 34, 35 or 36 size mornmg and Saturday night will own a $12, $13 or $18 Suit for NOW THE QUICKER YOU GET HERE, THE GREATER YOUR SELECTION One lot CAPS, 50c grade, (wet) 9¢c +4 Eight $25.00 OVERCOATS (wet) at $12.50 Three $18.00 OVERCOATS (wet) at $9.00 Twenty-four $5.00 V Neck SWEATERS at $2.98 4. 50 dozen COLLARS at 7c 2 The F. A. Wells Co. OF THIS Sale MEN Suits, between this $6.75 Three $22.00 OVERCOATS (wet) at $11.00 Seven $12.00 BLACK OVERCOATS at $5.00 65 dozen HOSE at 7c Sale Hours-9 a. m. to 9 p. m the case with Heenan and my old friend John Morrissey years when they were eputation. in their e: lookinz Morrissey nybod an was in a downiown saloon w filled with a crowd of the fou type, chief among whom was “Dut Charites,” when Morrissey entered “There was soma s between the two men, and, afiec 4 few person alities were exchanged (he men clin ed and a desperate sirugzle beza Charlie, whe was much heavier tha Morrissey, seemed fto have an advan ge in ths early siage of the fight and, ax men sicuggled {a bushel o red hot coals ral upon the foor. Making a d-s effori, Chariie threw Morrisse ing Bim on the burning < soon burned through his eloil he air was soon Slled witl sicic ening edor of burning flash. Merris sey, game as a bulldog, stili fought o: ceeping in shape all this wint: = | league. B3 Willie Keeler saye e we ject to managing the At there are other haseball me | ing_ near = the same waj e il three had a tendency to blow in = 3 S ank . o pinch 5o much 0 that Gonmie mever| Afler the Caledonisn and the other |howover uil, sceing o pail nearby | Manager ¥rank Chanco of coneidered using them in the world|professional games had ended in the |fllled with water, hehind the bar [ foc ™ ndre lho team wil ve both agreed serfes, but sent In Bush, a much less| . x 2o seized it and dashing it on the coul X, Wwhere the t will I ave both ag Sececastal. pitcher than Brown, 1o fhe| Ciumn of 1384, I spent a week in|extipgut the e e “pasl and | for & few week the bout should mound. Pennock, in addlition to lack | Newark, N. J. One day while walk- |smoke arising from the coals, nearly RO ne from the of control, ig shy of welght and is|ing down Broad street, accompanied |strangled Charlie, and Morri see- | Johmny Evers he is not start, B Very youni but mayv show enough | PY Joan Thomas, we met an old man, |ing his opportunity, siipped from his | (o, Worry m r that b SR T stamina to e Mack another gzood | Whose erect and powerful frame indi- | grasp and soon pounded fotmer lea of the Cubs feels that he v, the fellow who sai southpaw if he can learn te put the | *ated a person of remarkable strength | sensibility. Morrissey will get it from the Braves. P! n out of baseball, fal Where it betong |in nis earier years, Thomas greeted ' weeks in ——— ¢ now to wateh * |him warmly, introducing him to me which earned Murphy is in the limelizh he teum plays and he Womw't be anx- N‘, MORE~TOBACCO SIGNS | as Orville Gardner, champion mid- | Smoke' which agein. There seems to be sor vs-|lous as to wheiner the Cubs wia of - | dleweight pugilist of America, in the|ter. I went to in the hospital | tery comcerning the deal whereby he ! lose. ON BASEBALL FIELDS. | days of Morrissey and Heenan: 1 was |and we forme endship that en- i — . | delighted to meet the famous old fight- | dured until his h. 1 was with h | Tobacso Companies Are Taking Them | cr, as 1 recalied reading of him. in | when he was beaten by Bil Poola in - Down All Over the Country. my Dboyhood, as the friend and asso- | their famous rough and tumble fight = ciate of John Morressey, then heavy- |at tho Morris street dock In New York. No mors will the fans around this|Wweight champion of America. Being | Pools was soon afterward shot and e renst, or any circuit, in fact, be con- |Anxious to hear Gardner relate some |killed by a friend of Mg (ly reminded of the merits of a|Of his experfences I incited him to |ball in Stanwix hall hu ng tobaceo or of adine with us in a nearby restaurant |had no part in the murder The tobaceo com. | and we soon were seatod at a tadie| “He was as Honest a mani\as ey d to tear down all of | in & cosy corner, and, after a hearty | was born, and the luckiest 1 ever its signs in the different ball parks of | meal I asked him (o relate some of | knew. e was cut {o pleces by Yan- the country. This sction was taken|his adventures in those turbulent |kee Sullivan in their fight at Boston by the company a few days ago. The fimes. This request seemed to please | Four Corners, yet he got the de on. Jocal ball pars has never had a huge him and he said: ‘“Times have changed | Again, in his battle with John ¥. He bull sign ia the outfeld to the end that | wonderfully since I was & young man. | nan wWho was one of the greatest as hitters might be encouraged to the ac. | NOw our leading pugilists wear kid |weil as the most unfortumate Pugi- complishment of long hits and then | gloves when out of the ring and big | lists ever born, Morrissey propanly collect both money and smoking to- | gloves in it. In the old days a man | $wed his victory to the fact that Hee. bacco. had to get a reputation Dy £oing | nan mearly broke his hand on a stake Not only will th or leagues be around the sporting saloons and fight- | in the early part of the fight, | without the bull slgns which had al- inz bare handed Wwith anyome Wwho os, those were great davsi Great ways occupied a conspicuous position presumed to be a fighter. This was ‘with_hot sup and cold bot B e e New York’s Home Flour , ' T e g for More than 70 Years Children Cry C To have full flavored brea white, light and flaky, must have Heckers’ Flc milled especially for ade. 3 you zue Je read: n as baking good ¥ for e, biscuits or pastr alke cax FOR FLETCKER'S ASTORIA ng.? The proof is in the ba RUB BACKACHE RIGHT OUT trial bottle of old-time, “St. Jacobs Oil.” Get a small When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sclatien or rheumatism hes you stiffened up don't suffer! Get & small trial bottle of old, honest “St. Jacobs Oil” at any drug store, pour a little fn your hand and rub it right into the pain or ache and by the tima you count fifty, the soreness and lameness is gons elf—order Satisfy yo 1 bag today. A book of practical home-baking recip knots, horns, rusks, rolls, cakes, cookies, b es—for bread, twists, s, tar6s and penetrating puddings—sent FREE for the asking. ,ar%e and small sacks, and by the barrel.’ “ Dor't sty crippled! This soothing. . penstrating ofl Basd to e ek baly At all grocers once. It takes the ache and pain right out and ends the mieery,, It is mugi- 5o - cal yet absolutely = harmless and HECKER-JONES-JEWELL MILLING CO., NEW YORK doesn’t burn or discoler the skin. % Nothing eise gf0ps limbaffo, scipties and lame back misery so nromptly and surely. It uever disappoints!