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NORWICH BULLETIN, TUESDAY, DO IT NOW Take ‘a policy in the AETNA on your Amo with J. L. LATHROP & I ! I WILL WRITE YOU A POLICY that i will protect you from loss by fire for | such a small premium that it will be the greasest negligence on your part to be without it. Let me submit you/ figures, etc. ISAAC S. JONES Insurance and Real Estats Agent, Richards Building, 91 Main St. JOHN A. MORAN Investment Broker Real Estate a Specialty McGrory Building, Main Street SACHEMS AND ALL STARS. SERIES Jghn ' Hughes, representing the All] Stazs, and John A. Holland, repre- | serting the Sachems, met a: Tre| Biilletin office the other evening to a-- ringe a series of games between the ghove mentioned teams. Both men scussed the ability of their respective | teams and neither man did any mud- slinging of any kind. In fact, things passed off very harmoniously. They finally agreed on a serles of five games for the city championship, all to be plaved on the Falls dia- mond, for a purse of $50 a side, the winner to take 75 per cent. of the gate receipts and the loser 25 per cent. The first game is to be played early in May, the exact date to be decided on later. Luke Riley was agreed on as umpire, and several sporting men of Norwich were discussed as probable stakeholders but none was agreed upon. It was asreed that each side would give their lineup 48 %hours before the] first game. As both teams are consid- ered-very fast, it is expected that the games will draw very large crowds. Both these teams met once last season and the All Stars won, but the Sa- Office telephone 3(1-2. Residence 1178-3 ATTORNEYS AT LAW AMOS A. BROWNING tormey-at-Law, 3 Richards Bldg. "Phone 700. Brown & Perkins, Ittameys-at-Law Over Uncas Nat. Bank Shetucket St. Entrance stairway near to Thames National Bank. Telephone 38-3. EDWIN W. HIGGINS, Attorney-atLaw, mari10d Shannon Building. DRS. L. F. and A. J. LaPIERRE 287 Main St PRACTISE LIMITED ,TO EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT Hours 10 a. m. t> $ p. m, Sundaya excepted. and by appointment DR. F. W. HOLMS, Dentist Shannen Buiiding Aanex, Reom A. F. C. GEER, ronal 122 Prospect 8treet, Norwich, Ct "Phons 511 DENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Suite 46 Shannon Bldg. Take elevator Shetucket Street em« trance. Phone. STETSON & YOUNG Carpenters and Builders Best work and materials at rigt prices. by skilled labor. Teleyuone 80 WeoT MAIN ST. NOANK Barge Launching This Wesk—Agent Seoks Flat Fish Spawn. F. H. Howe of the United States Fish Hatchery of Woods Hole, Mass, has been in the village to secure if possible flat filsh spawn. There was very little of this and Mr. Howe re- turned to Massachusetts. The fishing schooner Ada Belle, Capt. Harry Christopherson, has gone with a load of cod fish to the New Yorw markets. Barge to be Launched. It is expecte that the barge bullding st the Paimer ship yard for the Phil- adelphia and Reading railroad will be ready for launching the last of the week. Work is reported as being ex- iremely scarce at this plant, Several of the lobster fishermen have put gear overboard in the racs. Oth- ers will be ready for the work of the season in a few davs. The meeting of the Mizpah class was lield Monday evening at the home of Mrs. William Rathbun of Front street. Daniel Rogers has returned to Nor- wich after a visit with relatives in the village. Miss Millicent Kelley has returned from a visit in New York. Mrs. Lavina Patterson has returned 1o her home in Stonington after a vis- ¢ here with friepds. Miss Bly Partridge of Norwich is! isiting Capt. and Mrs. James Sistare. | Mrs. C. W. Davis has returned from | a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Henry latham _in_ZPridgeport. George Lamb of Brooklyn - ha¥ been visiting relatives in the village for a few d. Mrs. (\ W. Beebe of .Elm street, who has been is impreving. Pl Rube Waddell Pitched to 13,742 Batters | Statistician -figured that during the fifteen Years he was a professional Taseball _ pitcher George Edward (.’*be; Waddell, who dled in a sani-¢ * at San Antonio, Texas, pitcned to 13,742 batters It was figured the batters made a | total of 2,299 safe,hits, an-average of oniv 210 These = hits wers spread over 100 games and netted T124 runs, about 2.74 runs per game. Soucy, sub-center of the Harvard football team, is now out for the.orew. His chances of staying in the 'varsity heat are good. 1 | Base Ball Uniforms Our uniforms will appeal to every lover and player of the Great National Game. The materials, workmanship , and finish are the very, best. mplete suits ine cluding letiering or monograms are priced from $2.00 up. On all base ball goods except uniforms we allow an exira dis- count of 10 per cent. A catalog of samples of the flanneis used in our forms is now ready nd will be matled to address upon request. T prices for such fine aiail Tevelation to you. Write. H. H. MICHAELSON $17 Breadway, Brooklyw, New York City jm | ever, chems have materially strengthened since then and last season defeated all the crack clubs in eastern Connecticut and Rhode Island. Crawford Drove Out a Homer. Louisville, Ky., April 6.—Sam Craw- ford helped the Tigers defeat Louis- ville today, 3 to 0, in the third straight spring training game won by the De- troit Americans from the local Ameri- can association team, and incidentally made the longest hit ever recorded at | Eclipse park when he drove a home | run over the center field fence in the gON'% ‘finnager Hughes and John A. Holland Hold Conference— Will Play for Side Bet of $50—Series of Five Games— Date Set for First Game Undec:ded, but Probably Mny 3—Riley Appomted Umpire. and St. Joseph was called off on ac- count of rain. Buffalo Federals Win. Lynchburg, Va. April 6—The Buf- falo team of the Federal league de- feated the Pittsburgh Federals here to- day, 5 to 3. Scor R.H.E. Pittsburgh % s Yokl Buffalo .. ks Adams, Knetzer an, erry, Roberts; Moore, Krapp and Allen; umpires, Kane and* Bush. Cornell Defeated in Soccer. Princeton, N. J, April 6—The Princeton soccer team defeated Cor- nell today, 5 to 0, in the Tigers’ first spring intercollegiate match. Prince- ton scored twice in the first and three times in the second half. BASEBALL RECORDS COMP‘LETE. John Heydler Planning Improvement in Compiling Averages. John Heydler, secretary of the Na- tional league is contemplating further improvements in the averages heo vearly compiles and issues. This im- provement is the printing of the rec- ords of the players who take part in fewer than fifteen games. There prob- ords are kept each year, but never made public, One hundred and twenty-five play- {ers were denied public records last season because Mr. Heydler followed precedent and didn’t take any cogni- zance of the men who participated in fewer than fifteen games. There prob ably were just as many men in the American league whose performances were not made public by Ban John- o s Fe T LB | son's official statisticien, Irwin M. Louisville Howe. Covelskie, Ma Y% 5al| According to the guide books, the ins and Stange, F. Ba- ker; Ellis, Loudermilk and V. Severeld. Clemons, Home Run Baker Again. Philadelphia, April 6.—The Athletics hit the ball hard and consecutively to- day and defeated the Phillles, 6 to 1, making the spring series stand 2 to 1 favor of the Americans. Baker scored the first run of the game with a circuit drive over the right-field wall of National league park. Score: R H.E. Americans 012010002611 1 Natiohals 000000100—1 4 2 Plank, Wyckoff and_Schang; Mayer and Dooin; ympires, Byron and Con- nolly. Big Six Shut Out New Orleans. New Orleans, La., April 6—With Mathewson pitching _in midseason form, the New York National regulars today defeated the New _ Orleans Southern association team, 5 to 0. Manager McGraw announced that | Snodgrass probably would not play | until the opening of the season, as he | is suffering ¥rom a torn Hgament in the leg. Scor R.H.E. New York .. creeesa b 8 1 New Orleans evee 0 4 1 Mathewson and McLean; Styles and Higgins. Watson Turned Back. St. Joseph, Mo., April 6.—1t was an- nounced after a conference here today between Fred Clarke, manager of the Pittsburgh National league cludb, and Jack Holland, owner of the St. Joseph Western league club, that George Watson, outfielder, sold by Holland to Pittsburgh last season, would be turn- ed back. Today's game between Pitisburgh FINANCIAL AND first year Christy Mathewson was in the National league was 1801, but really Big Six broke into fast com- pany in 1300, Rube Marquard gets into the guides for the first time in 1909, and is not in them at all in 1910. The fact about the holder of tha modern record for consecutive victories is that he figured in onhe victory 1908 and won four games and lost four in 1910. Al Demaree first appears iu the guide books in 1913, but his Na- | tional league debut was made in 1912 Tris Speaker, the Chalmers car win ner in 1912, is shown by the record books to have reached fast company in 1908, but as a matter of fact he w with the Red Sox in the fall of 1807, when he batted for Morgan in the eighth inning of a game in Philadel- phia, Jimmy Dygert pitching. Two days later Tris again did a pinch hit- ting trick in a game in Washington and on September 17 he played his first full game on the American league getting a hit off Tom Hughes and accepting his lone chance in the field. Speaker’s batting average that year was .282. Heydler has made a Iot of improve- ments in the National league averages in the last few years. He was the first secretary to give the number of complete games pitched by each man, the first to adopt the new earned runs system and the first to place the full names of the players in the records. PLAINFIELD DEFEATEDSTERLING In Soccer Football by Score of 3 to 2— Game Quite Fas The soccer team of Plainfleld de- feated Sterling Saturday afternoon in the first game of the soccer football league by a score of 8 to 2. The COMMERCIAL MARKET AT STANDSTILL. | Scarcity of Stocks a Noticeable Fe. ture—P; e Movements Narrow. New York, April 6—The progressive slowing down of business on the stock exchange was carrled farther today, and much of the time the mark- et was at a standstill. Speculative | conditions ‘were unchanged and initative was shown by traders no 500 Chie. & Alt. pr. 1820 Chic. M. & St 200 Chie. & N. W. 2100 Ciiino. Cen. Cop. 200 Col, Fuel & Tron . 100 Col. & So 1st pr. 200 Com *Products 200 Deere pr .. 100 Del. & Hudson 50 Dist, " pecwrtties 80 Erle z 100 Gen. Motors 409 . Motors 5100 Gondrich 1. 2600 Gt Nortn pr, ¥ on 950 @Y. N. Ore. Bub. either side. Price movements were 0 Gueren, Expl unusually narrow and in only a | 100 Oiueis Cet. I cases did they vary as much as a point | ,ia, /5% Cooper from Saturday’s close. 2050 Bt In spite of the small amount of| 800 of buying, thers was still apparent the| 100 ',gf W T scarclty of stocks which has been a&| 500 Kirgn® co f; noticable feature of the market for| 790 Lehigh Valley some time. To satisfy the scattering| 100 Lir & Myers buying orders it was necessary to raise PSR O quotations” in nearly every case,| - agp Mew. Betol .. and during the greater part of the| 1900 Miaml Cupper day & fractionally higher level prevail- | 1910 Pacifo ed. Toward the close the list eased off | o et slightly, so that last prices were | Nov. (- Copper were bargly unchanged. It was one| 1300 X. Y. Crmral of the slowest sessions of the year and total transactions were not far above | the 100,000 mark. N Ner. North North Y. N B West & | & A Almost the only evidence of publ Pean. interest lay in the sustained inquiry Fegien G & ¢ for {he high grade bomds. Accum- Eitis, Goat 36 ulation of idle money here, which is Pul Pal. Jargely the outgrowth of sluggzish bu iness conditions has progressed to - | point where a large volume of funds | is seeking employment. Money which | ordinarily at this season of the vear would be required for business is be- ing diverted into bonds of the bet- ) Rumiey ter grade, in which trading today was| 100 Seat'd A relatively’ more active than in stocks.| 200 South Pact 0 So. Pac. cn The_ unexpected loss in cash Shown | 1i0 Sy o in Saturday's bank statement check 00 Sourh Rs. pr. ed the downward course of money| 40 Studebaker 1100 Tenn. Copper rates but it is not expected that there | will be any permanent departure from | current conditions. 90 Third Avenue’ A large number of railroads operat- |~ 4% Unton Tacifo o of xall ir 190 Union Pacifc pr. ing in various sections made their 107 e February returns today, and in almost S Rubber every case severe shrinkages in earnings were shown. Bad railroad reports are such an old story, how that these statements had vir- tually no effect on the stock market. Canadian Pacific showed some heavi- ness, probably on account of a slump Ry. St & Steel Rep. Ir. & St pr. Rock Island 1800 Texas & Pacific 200 Texas G 2 100 Car 1800 Wabash 1000 Wabash pr. 400 Wost. Unin el §30 Weatinghouse . e in the London market. London was Total ssles 106108 shares ocoupied with the settlement and did i virtually nothing here. i Prices of some bonds vielded, but| COTTUN. in general the bond market was firm. ew York, April 6—Spot cotton Total sales, par value, $2,040,000, quiet; middling uplands 13.40; gulf United States twos registered 13.65. N sales. ofined 1-3 on call. Futures closed barely steady. May =% 12.57; July 12.38; August 12.08; Oo- STOCKS. tober 11.60; Deeember 11.65; Janu- Ealon. High, Low, ary 11.58, 300 Sse Gd 2 : 5 160 Am. Ax, Chem, " 4 MONEY, $00 Am. Cans New Yeork, April 6—Call meney 108 A Car & Fary. steady; 1 3-4@2 per eent.; ruling rate 13 Am. Cer & ¥am. | 3004m, Conan 1 8-4; last loan 1 7-8 closing 1 8-4 :uu-. i) n:d. @1 7-8. 60 Aca, i s Saaet Time leans weak: sixty and ninety 100 Am. 100 Am. 300 Am. Sugar 400 Am, Y. & Tl 500 Am, ‘Tobaes . 100 Cal 2 3960 Canada Pasific days 2 8-4; six menths 3@3 1-4. cHicAas Goen. CRAIN MARKET. et lew. Clem o1 0% 961318 87 88, 865 LIS £ Senators Win a Game. % | ular defense on the field to . | ed ground wu in fine condition. Sterling won. t.hs chn'- to play with the - wind them,-and soon began to bombard the home goal, testing _the backs and goal. , and after about ten minutes Sterling scored the nrst goal after some g team work. This early reverse Seemed to Trouse tne Plainfield attack, and they began to meke great efforts to equalize, but they: found the Stérling defense very strong. Smith, the Sterling goal keep- er, made some very fine stops, but Plainfield at last found an opening, and Seddon with a good shot made the score. a tle. The score at the end of the first half was 1-1. In the secend | half both teams tried hard to sedure | the lead Plainfleld took the'lead when a goal was scored by Connelly. Later, after good team .work, Vincent made the score 3. One more goal was scored | later by Buckley, making the final| score 3 to 2. The lineups: Plainfleld—McCluggage gonl, Judson rb, Palisier I Ward rhb, Walker pt.) chb, Alexander 1hb, Vincent l"o,l yle ri, Booth c, Connelly i, Seddon lo. ‘Sterling mith goal, Merriott rb, ‘Bunning b, Hawkins rhb, Buckley chb, Cardinal Ihb, French ro, Brown ¥i, Un- derwood ‘¢, McMann H. Tatro lo. Referee, James Royle; linesmen, S. Tetlow, H. Crain CREWS RACE WEDNESDAY. Yale First and Second Boats Will Go Two Mil Coach Guy Nickalls of the Yale crew says that the preliminary stage of the rowing season would close next Wed- nesday, when there will be a two mile race between the first and second | eights. He will follow tHe event close- l 1y in Harry Whitney's launch, Tarpon, watching the individual work of every oarsman, of the two shells, and, on the basis of the strength, smoothness and power shown, will select the first eight, which will form the nucleus of the Yale varsity for this season. Two crews will remain at New Haven dur- | ing the Easter vacation, the first just formed and another made up of the remaining oarsmen. Nickalls plans to gradually raise the stroke with the oarsmen who will form the first eight. The two crews who have been rowing daily aré evenly bal- anced and have been drilled for en- durance. They have been sent between 12 and 15 miles daily, nearly double the distance over which Yale crews have usually Towed at this season of the year. The stroke has been kept at about 28, occasionally being raised to 30 iR spurts. BASEBALL AT N. F. First Real Practice—Season Saturday With Dingbats. The first real baseball practice at the Academy commenced Monday aft- ernoon. Captain Stanley issued a call and about forty responded. The aft- ernoon was spent chiefly in batting practice and infield work. As it was quite chilly, the pitchers did not do much in the pitching line. The out- field candldates look very promising| and all candidates seemed to have their eye on the ball when they took a turn at the bat. The boys will have one of hardest games this coming Saturda: when they line up against the Dh\g-, bats. This team is the pick of the city and made up mostly-of former | N. F. A. Students. They expect to| give the school boys a beating that| they will remember. Manager Leahy | has not vet received their lineup but | expects to soon. He has notified the manager of the Dingbats that the field( would be ready for the game and put| in first class shape. { | Al Opens Good Stickwork Defeats Red Sox. Indianapolis, Ind., April 6—Timely hitting, combined with an error, gave | the Indianapoiis American association | club a 4 to 8 victory over the Boston Americans here today. Three singles, a base on balls and two sacrifice hits scored three runs for the locals in the third inning, while a double and an error gave them another run in the fourth. The game was called in the! seventh on account of rain. Scor R.H.E. | Boston ... P 3 4 1 Indianapolis . < . 4 5 3 Collins, Zeiser and Nunamaker; Willls, Gaskill and Vann. Cincinnati Shut Out. Cincinnati, O., April 6.—Mitchell | pitched a steady game for the Clev land Americans today and shut out the Cincinnati National team, 4 to 0. Bat-| tery errors by Yingling and Clarke in | the first inning gave Cleveland a lead | of three runs. Score R.H. Cleveland 3 410 0 Cincinnati s 0 6 3 Mitchell and O ‘unl,lm:’, Ad- ams and Clarke, Von Kolnitz. Aitchison Pitches Good Ball. Faltimore, Md., April 6.—The Brock- lyn Nationals today defeated the Bal- | timore Internationals, 3 to 2. Aitchi- | sor’s pitching was the feature. Score | by innings: H.E. | Brgoklyn 20000100 6 1 Baltlmore 00000000 2 3| Altchison, Pfeffer and Fisher; Dan- forth and Egan. | Washington, April 6.—For the first| time since the Washington Americans | returned from the Virginia training | | camp, Manager Griffith plac t the Vigilants, a local semi-profes al aggregation. The Americans won, Tto L. College Baseball Monday. i At Washington: Lehigh 7, Catholic i university 6. Cornell 5, Princeton 3, U Georgetown 4. inus 1. 1 Starts Training Table. | Cambridge, Ma: April 6.—The | | training table for the Harvard base- | ball squad was started today with 15 |men. Eight of the candidates played on the team last year. 1 Vote Against Cheering. Cambridge, Mass, April & Harvard students’ c tonight v against orga 1 cheering | hockey zames 1 practice at Dart-| two weeks, football begin in 3 wil | BEWARE OF TARRH THA as mercury Wi OINTHENTS [§ FOR CA- RCURY eomplein sense of smell ax | tie wiole system wien -« | through the mucois kuriaces. i ticles should never bo used except on | ions from putabie po { damage tney will do 18| ) you ten fold o the & n possibiy derive from lhem. Hall's Csturrh ¢ manufactured by ¥, J, Chemsy & Co.. Toledo; V., Conidins no niereury, and is the blood and mucous suriaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you getL tne genuine. it is taken intermally and made In Toledo, Olils, by ¥, J. Cheney & Co. Tesu- mamya fres, by druggists. Price boitle, Take Hall's Family pation. ! teken nternally, acing directly upon | | | 736 per Pius fer consti- Cemplexion—Romoves Skin Blemishes. Why geo theeugh life embarrassed and disfigured with pimples, eruptions, blagkheads, red rough skim, or suffer- ing the tertures of eezema, iten, tetter, salt rheum. Just ask your druggist for Dr, Hobsen's FEosema Ointment. Follow the simple suggestions and your skin worries are over. Mild, soothing, effective. Excellent for babiés- and delicate, tender skin. Steps chapping. Aiways helps. Relief or money back. 50¢, at your drugeist Cleare ANNUAL SALE OF - ROSE BUSHE Tuesday Morning, April 7th 1212¢c Each ALL STURDY, TWO-YEAR OLD STOCK These bushes have all been inspected by the State of Connecticut and have been found perfect. Boston Store Rose Bushes have won a name on account of the fine stock and sugeness of bloom which they dis- If properly planted and cared for every bush play. should produce prolifically. HERE’'S WHAT THEY ARE GENERAL JACQUEMOT—Dark red and fragrant PAUL NEYRON—Dark pink WHITE MOSS ROSE—An old fashioned favorite MADAME PLANTIER—A pure-white double rose KILLARNEY—White Killarneys—very delicate AMERICAN BEAUTY—Deep carmine and large MRS. JOHN LAING—a very rich pink rose FRAU KARL DRUSHKI—beautiful snowy white MARGARET DICKSON—white with flesh pink center PRINCE CAMILLE DE ROHAN—dark maroon CRIMSON RAMBLERS — PINK RAMBLERS— DOROTHY PERKINS — PERSIAN YELLOW CLIMBING ROSES YELLOW RAMBLERS — 212¢ Each | and mention | fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles SPORTING NOTES. Bob Unglaub, former Boston-Wash- ington first baseman has signed to manage the Fargo team in the North- | ern league. Harvard could not have much better baseball news than that Rex Hitch- cock is very likely to be eligible to pitch early this spring. Incorporation papers for the Brook- lyn Federal league baseball club were filed in Albany the other day. The cap- ital stock is given as $500,000. The Oakland club of the Pacific Coast league, has sold Buck O'Brien, | the old Red Sox flinger, to the Indian- apolis American assoclation club. Arnold Hauser is still suffering from nervous prostration and it is not likely that he will be able to join the St. Louis Cardinals until mid-summer. The Giants will meet the Baltimore Orioles in Baltimore April 13, in spite | of the fact that the Federals will start their season in that city the same aft- erncon. Jay Kirke Is performing brilliantly for the Cleveland American association | team. Few big leaguers have had any thing on the former Boston Brave out- fielder this spring. Manager Bili Carrigan of the Sox believes that in Everett Scott, St. Paul sensation of last season, has found a classy Shortstop Heine W Red the he understudy for ner. The 7 Pitcher Doc White mowed Texas Woman Says Great - Kidaey Remedy Saved Her Boy’ My boy at about thirteen years of age had a very severe attack of Swamp Fever, which left him with | hemorrhage of the kidneys. He would have from two to four attacks a year. We had several physicians attending him for three years. The Doctors told my family we would not raise him to_be twenty-one years old. I sew your advertisement in the papers. As a last resort I gave up the doctors and tried Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root. After using several bottles, was so well pleased with the result, we stuck to it and he is now twenty-one years old and a perfect and stout man. We can highly recommend Swamp- Root for kidney trouble. -Very truly yours, MRS. RITCHIE PA’ » 428 23rd Street, Paris, Texas. Sworn and subscribed to before me, this February 19th, A. D, 1912, CHAS. S, NEOTHERY, Justice of the Peace and Ex-Officio, ;otary Publie in and for Lamar Co. ex. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co. Binghamton, N. Y. Prove What Swamp-Rest Will Do For You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure the Bulletin. Regular for sale at all drug stores. “Tiz” Fixed My Sore, Tired Feet “0, GIRLS,” DON'T HAVE PUFFED- UP, BURNING, SWEATY FEET OR CORNS. Ah! what relief. No more tired feet: no. more burning feet; no more swollen, bad smelling, sweaty feet. No more pain in corns, callouses or bun- jons. No matter what ails your feet or what under thé sun you've tried without getting relief, just use *“TIZ.” “TIZ” is the only remedy that draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the feet; “TIZ” is magical; “T1Z” is grand; “TIZ" will cure your foot troubles so vou'll never lgmp or draw up your face in pain. Your shoes won’t seem tight and your feet will | down his former pals of the White Sox in Venice, Cal, the other day must | have madé Jim CallaBan wish that Doc was still on the Sox payroll. | Collins, Baker and Mclnnis of the Athletics are still there with the wason tongue. In one of the recent games against the Cubs the trio of star Mack- men made nine hits among them. Manager Herzog of the®Cincinnati Reds has had a hard outfield together this was late in rey kept home by spring. Marsans orting and Bates it still wife's serious iliness, Jake Daubert of the Brooklyn Su- perbas_who is the premier first sack- man of the National league, ventures the prediction that the Superbas will be in the race for the pennant from the start. Archie Hahn, tke old Mich | versity sprinter, who won four gold medals—three in St. Louis in 1904 and one in Athens in 1906—is coach of | the Whitman college track m in | Walla Walla, Wash. | Anyway, Bill Dahlen has i | of the former big league m | i n -Uni- on most The Brooklyn players gave tk mer boss a chest of silver, most managers are de ware when they whereas are dropped The Federal league mo; seem to be willing to go the limit to secure two jor three big league pitchers, judging | from some of the offers they are re- | ported to have made recen With good pitching material the Feds figure | they can put up a ratttling good pen- nant race. Fruit Trees Shade Trees AND A FULL LINE OF Ornamental Nursery Stock Roses and Hardy Flower- ing Plants Planting plans and estimates for laying out new or the remodeling of old estates. Hartridge’s Nursery NORWICH, CONN. Phone Nursery near Maplewood Cemetery time getting his | Jlympic | rated with tin- | never, never hurt or get sore, swollen or tired. Think of it, no more foot misery; no more burning corns, cal- | louses ‘or_bunions. | Get a 25 cent box at any drug store or department store, and get instant 1elief. Get a whole year's foot relief for only 25 cents. Think of it. | JOSEPH BRADFGRD BOOK BINDER Clark Bosts Mzde and Rufed te Ordes 188 BROADWAY Most Cigas Are Qoo THESE ARE BETTER i TOM'S 1-2-3 5c CIGAR - GOOD FELLOW 10c CIGAR Try them and see. THOS. M. SHEA, Prep. Ffrankkin St Next to the Palacs Cafe LEGAL NOTICES Special City Meeting MAYOR'S OFFICE. City of Norwich, Commecticut. City Nor- | | | directed rarm the electors of the City of Norwich to meet in the Town Hall in said City o) Thursday I 9th, 1914, at § o'clod) in the evening, for the following puf- action neces- ising voting decide to orize an the ex- Conn., Aprid & C. =L Mayor of the City ef m 1 hereby the sbove and i.’nvcgflflg is the ng directed te & for Fery t axes in the by notified ¥ and coi- ct @ Town Tax of sixteen mills 0 | the doliar on list of 1913, and aiso a warsant to levy and collect a Persona Tax o persons ors ile ue o or 1 1 owi George W. Drars Wednesday, the ! 15th 'day of April, 1914, from 10 a. m. juntil 12 m., ‘also ‘on the same day at e Rallroad Station, at M.ljslpeal. from 1 p, m, until § p. m.; Thursday, gpril 10D, 1914, ac Trading Cove, from | m, untll 12 m, on the same day at the house of Mitiim Amburn, at 1ef. | ingwelltown, from 1.30 p. m. unul 2.30 Pp. m,; April 17th, 1914, at Chl\l(crfle]d. frem 11 u, m, until 13'm. on the sameé day at the stere im Oakdale from 1.20 m. uniil 2.30 p, m.; On April 18th, $14, at my house in Falmertown, from % a. m, until 3 p, n, ATl perspns negleoting will be eharged legal 3E N, WOOD, Colectar. March Dated at Montville, CL, 1914, mar34d Bastern Eo:r.::dfie ual'te The Buis letin for businesa this notice additions and