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{ ( Frem a condifion of chaes Yale towing has Been transformed Into a witalized §ystem which is regarded as ‘en 2 petmanent basis through Yale' eyelash finish over Harvard. There is TRORIREE 2B I8 oot not hegifate a momspnm_az taking wcr: fi:-_ut -::n s‘&vzst.prml and ISAAG S. JONES e Reharas Bhiiding. $1 Mieln S JOHN A. MORAN Investment Broker .Real Estats a Specialty WeGrery Buikiing, Main Street Ofios telephione §01-2. Residence 117! EEE—— ATTORNEYS AT LAW AMOS A. BROWNING AMterney -atLaw, 3 Richard's Blds. "Phone 700. Brown & Perkins, Hunmat-lay Entrence stairway Dear to.Thames Nationsl Bank. Telephone 33-3 atlii miich doubt whe will be in charge f Yale’'s coaching the coming season, ut there is nene over the stroke that the crews will try to row. It will be the samg that Jack fAppleton passed b? l-?%n at New ‘London. he Yale crew captain and the new wing committee will not get to work ight away, but it can be stated that Quy Nickails, the English coach who ave Yale a stroke that finally won ‘om Harvard after seven years of ‘waiting, has been approached on th question of returning to Yale another Yyear, and has stated that he has al- ready taken up other plans. Whether $e can Be induced to abandon them vd tQ accept an invitation to come to ale 13 uncertain. Of course, no for- mal effer has been yet made him. al- though scores of alumni have ex- @ cordial hope that he will be mmn_ another season, and he ' frankly pointed out’ to them that’ ‘he promised to come here for one sea- son only, and has already become in- Volved in & project in England. _ The demand from Yale men that the English Coach that Brought Victory to Blue Varsity Has Made jof the programme at the mammoth Coach who has finally secured some results from Yale rowing be returned as head coach is strenuous, and it re- maing-to be seen howi the rowing com- mitiee, which will be announced in a few weeks, will meet the situation. “One of the features of the situation is & demand that the services of Jack Appleton, stroke of the crew in the in the Judgment He CLASSES FILLING UP FOR FAIR GROUNDS RACES. Motorcyclists and Hersemen Coming in Good Numbers. The motoreycle fraternity should remember that entries for their part meet on the East Great Plain track in Norwich July 4 close June 30. The horse races—=2.20 trot or pace, 2.30 trot or pace and half mile running race—close July 1. C. V. Pendleton, Jr., of 35 Broadway, Norwich, is the man that takes the entries. He reported Monday that all the classes are filling up, and the indi- cations are that some close contests will be the order of the day. Several of the best riders in the east will show up, and horses are coming from a wide territory. Indeed, there never was any expectation that it would be hard to get motoreycle entries or horse en- tries. The purses are generous; they amount to about $850 in all. In the five and seven mile open there ‘will, motorcycle- followers know, be at least a couple of battles royal between Prescott, the New York flver, who trimmed Ted Carroll, the Springfieid crack, In the November races, but who ‘was beaten May 30 by the Bay State boy. Prescott will, he says, bring four | good men with him. It is presumed they are New York riders. ‘Wild Bill Burdick, according to some of his admirers in this city and close by, may show his back tire to the man from Gotham and the man from wensational race, be utilized as one of y Springfield in the five and seven mile | the Yale coaches the coming year. Young. Appleton is the greatést hero at Yale, for an undergraduate s a eater hero than a coach here in New races. It looks now like some hot | and heavy excitement, insofar as the | motorcycle races go, on the Fourth of | July programme. EDWIN W. HIQGINS, Attorney-atiaw, mariea 8hannon Building. — STAFFORD SPRINGS Mraduation Exerclses of High Scheol . —Eight Nationalities In Holy Name Society. —_— The graduating exercises - of the Stafford high school took place the Comique theatre Frldnx evening. There was a lar attendance. The class motto was “Vine ut Vivas” the class colows green and gold and the class flower the buttercup. Seated upon the stage were the members of the class, Principal H. Miles Gordy, Clarence Seymour, Rev. Levi Rees and Rev. Pelix J. O'Nelll. The stage was prettily decorated with laurel and ferns. The music was by Lynch's or- chestra. The program was as follows: Inwocation, Rev. Levi Rees; luta- tory, Julla Rileen Simons; chorus Meadow song s0hoO] ‘The Value of Vocational Education,” Margaret Car- menr Desmond; Our High School, Te- rese. Katherine Braun; What My High Sehool Education Means to Me, An- #eline Len: The Opportunities of a Scholar, Bertha Laurina Belcher; A Few Pages of Btafford History, Wil- liam Witchen Loughheed; The Con- servation of Our Natural Resources, Allana Mix;. The Passing of the Class of 1914, Luey Moon Alden; ed quartet “How Can I Leave Thee”. Valedietory, Ruth Harriet Larued; address, Clarence W. Seymeur; awarding of diplomas, H. Miles Gordy; chorns All Through the Night, the ~chool; Benmediction, Rev. F. J. O'Neill; ausic orchestra. No Ball Geme Saturday. ® ., ere was mno ball game Saturday on_account of some of the Stafford players being bunged up. Alvin Sweet of Hartford was in town over Sunday. Eight Nationalities Represented. The Catholic Transcript says: St. Edwards church of Stafford Springs, has a very flourishing Holy Name So- city whose officers embrace eight na- tionalities. Though of many tongues the men have only one mind in pur- pose, and one body in action. A gen- eral holy communion day finds a full roll at the rail. A funeral of a de- parted member shows all in line. In any parish work needing brain and brawn the pastor throws a’ wistful smile at the Holy Name Society, and the deck is at once cleared for action, and the men piped to quarters. And they always. win. One hundred boys and girls of St. Edward's parish re- cetved their first holy communien on Trinity Sunday. The Highest Title. 1 hope I shall always posses firm- ness and virtue enough ‘- maintain ‘what I consider the most enviable of all titles, the character f an “honest man."” e Washinglon. Last Resort. “Do you think women should pro- pose?” asked the passe lady. *I dom’t know,” mused the young thing. “Have you tried everything else?” Theatrical. Guest—Anything good at the the- aters this week? You know, some- thing 1 couldn't take my wife tol-—s Lite. Bound Te. “I see where a lot of jobless actors have resorted to bootblacking.” “Stars | will shine, you know.” EsEssEam SUMMER RATES NOW IN > - VACATION CRUI TO THE - =2 PANAMA CANAL VA8 e WEST INDIES - ByPopular “PRINZ” Stasmers 5% ATLAS SERVICE T aven. It is known that it was Ap- pleton’s judgment In stroking that was -the greatest factor in Yale's victory. “I have never seen a stroke oar in my life. who used such judgment as Appleton did,” sald Nickalls Saturday in speaking of the race. “Young Ap- pleton has e rowing a life study | and should miake an ideal coach, it is felt at Yale. ‘When it is recalled that two vears ago he was completely crippled from infantile paralysis and that it was not certain whether he could ever walk again, it will be realized how remark- able his performance last Friday. For months it was believed that he would | never row sgain, but he kept up con- | sistent training,in the gymnasium and | joined the crew squad January, | finally rounding into physical condi- | tion. 5 He is the son of Robert Appléton, | the publisher and former Yale oars- | man and captain, whose crew, by the way, in 1886 set the upstream record | for ‘the Thames of 20m., 46s., which | stands today. His son Jack stroked | the eight that has since come the near- | est to cracking it. 1 Next to young Appleton, yne Denegre, the captain and captain- elect, who did not row in the race, is the chief Yale hero. former Yale captain has taken coaches’ advice and ed because of some technical de- in his watermanship, and Dene- elf sacrifice has left a Yale Yale loses four of the pres. ent eight by graduation, McHenry, Ap- | pleton, Rogers and Titus. McHenry is one of the finest oarsmen who have pulled a Yale sweep in vears and his loss will be especiaily felt. Cord Meyer, the freshman stroke, will probably win that position in the varsity next s son. Fitzpatrick and Vonder Rup; who were unable to row with the var- | Year, it is believed. John Carney 23b, Du The track gets its work ever ¥ now and the banked curves that \ <ie Tecently put in make just the t kind of going for the machines, while the grade is not so sharp as to bother the horses. The track. one of the best half miles in the United States. is 70 | feet wide on the homestretch and from the wire to the first turn; and it is 50 feet wide the rest of the way. Practically al the prominent horse- men in New London county now make no bones of saying July 4 at Norwich will see some good going. Arthur D. Lathrop. Lyman L. Chapman and Mi- chael B. Ring are Iinterested—have been from the first. Alderman Fred J. West writes from New London that there’s plenty of interest down bis way. The city by the sea will send a big delegation. ¥From up the line— Willimartic, Putnam, Danielson, Web- ster, Worcester, all that country—the | association has already received a | great batch of inquiries, and Nutmeg horses will not- be the whole entry list. Nutmens Won. Sunday afternoon on Scott’s lot the.| Nutmees defeated Thamesville by the score of 23 to 18 It was a slugging match, each team securing many Fits. Not an inning went by without a run | being scored. Bowe pitched a fine game | and should have won, but errors by i nd Dumbroski heiped greatly to lose the game. In the s inning Difflev got hit in the head I pitched ball and had to stép playing. | Clabby, who relieved Bowe in the! s wild at the beginning but was good at the last of the zame. He, however, got a home run with a man | on second and put his team in the lead. | If, Comstock cf, Diffley rf. Next Sunday the same two teams will | day the | meet and a better same is expected. | fellow c, v} ~ o Lineup for Thamesville: Goodfellow ¢, sity Friday, will be in the boat next|Bowe p, Clabby 1b, Woodmansee 2b, | roski ss, Ulrick FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL STOCK MARKET FLUCTUATED. ! Rush of Buying Orders Followed Cal- ifornia Oil Lands Decision. New York, June 22-—After the re- ceipt from Washington of the familiar announcement that po decision would be given foday in the freight rate case, the stock market settled down for another day of waiting. Speculation was dull during the morning, with a slow downward move- ment. The course of the market was changed abruptly, however, by the decree of the Unlted States supreme court favoring the claims of the Southern Pacific railroad to Califor- nia oll lands. - The ruling of the court caused a sudden rush of buy- ing orders, and the quotation of the stock mounted swiftly. There was a demand for commission houses as well as from room traders and at the close the price was 97 3-4 a gain of more | than three points. The manner in which Southern Pa- cific resporded to the decigjon a! tracted attention to the strong pos tion of the general market, causing covering of shorts and speculative | buying. Prices of nearly all of tha] leading rai!way and industrial shares joined in an upward movement and at the close small net advances were Sen- eral. 2 In the early trading chief Interest lay in the action of the Rock Island securities. The stimulating effect on the bonds of the reorganization plan, causing the upturn of Saturday, had | worn off, and quotations were lower | all around. Net 16w records were made by the common stock at 1 3-4; the preferred at 3, and the collateral fours at 28 3-4. The other bond issues also lost ground, with greatest heavi- ness in ths debentures: The de- | clining tendency of foreign exchange | was checked, the quotation for de- mend sterling advancing about 25| points. Engagements og $1,500,000 | more_gold for export was announced. | It was the opinion of banks, however, | that ‘the. outflow of gold was nearing #ts end. > i . Trading In bonds was unusuaily ! heavy, with particular actlvity in: Rock Teland and Southern Pacific is-) sues. The market was irregular. | Chicago and Indiana coal railway fives | which slumped last week from 88 to | 81 broke further today to 45. Total| sales of bonds, par value, $4,028,000. U. 8. bonds unchanged on call, sk 11 L FEEEEREREER i ?gs iéii%!figgfigsii;zzsiisz! 3 e ' | 55325 Bouth Pacifie S ":E 500 Com Product 160 Del. & Hudson 606 Deu. & Rio C. 00D. S.°S & At 1300 Erie . 500 Erde 1st pr 100 Erie 206 Gen, 300 Gen. 100 Geod 1500 Gt. 1100 Gt 0 100 Kas So. 300 Laclede Gas 3200 Lehigh Valiey 800 Lig. & Myers pr . 100 Lorrilard, 100 Touis. & 100 Mack C 100 Mer. 100 Mex Copper 1160 Mo. Pacific 0 Mont. Power . Power pr Paciflc Tel 990 Pius. Coal pr 100 Press Steel Car 700 Ray Con Cop 7700 Reading ... 400 Rep. Ir. & By 4300 Rock Island 2400 Rock Island pr 100 Bt L. & S W. 240 Seaboard A. 200 Beaboard A. 300 So. Pac. cfts 500 Southern °Ry. 100 South. Ry. pf . 170 Texas Co. 200 Third Avenue 300 Twin C. R. T. 17000 Tnlon acific .. 200 Un, Ry. Inv, pr 2100 U.°S. C. L P. & 7450 Utah Copper . 100 Va. Car Chem 500 Wells Fargo 100 West. Mady'l. 189 West Union Tel. 300 Westinghouse . 100 West. Mfg. lst Total sales 188,141 COTTON. New York, June 22.—Spot cotton quiet, middling uplands 12.35; gulf | Baltimore 13.50; no sales, 8l Futures closed steady; July 12.6: August 12.6! October 12.52; Decem- ber, 12.57; January 12.44; March 12.4 May 12.71 MONEY. steady 1 3-4@2; ruling rate 2; last loan 1 7-8; closing 1 3-4@1 7-8. Time loans steady; sixty days 2 1-4; ninety days 2 1-2; six months 3 1-4. ‘ CHICAGD “KAIN WARNET. xmaT usen. Tk iew. July ... Sept. Juls Sevt. Dec. e §th nice light cream: :nde from SERV- It is made Start Collecting Insist on them for you from The L. A. Gallup Co. ~orvicaéons. Us Brands. FLOUR Housewives: Show this Ad to your hushands. Girls: Show it to the hushand-to-be They like good things to eat—and they will your baking better if you use SERV-US F¥LOUR — “the flour that makes the bread that Mmakes you hungry.” It paysto tempt the men folk Bread, Biscuits and Pastry the , .'pedig-recd flour.”” SERV-US-made bread keeps fresh and” sweet Jonger because it is so rich in gluten. from the firm, plump grains of Minnesota and Dakota hard spring Wheat. Every kernel is care- fully washed with pure artesian water, scoured, ground with an almost endless row of steel rollers SERV-US BRAND FOODS . REDUCE THE HIGH COST OF LIVING without reducing the HIGH QUALITY of what you eat. = Serv-Us Brands save you 35 ‘and house furnishings. pickles and coffee. VALUABLE FREE GIFT COUPONS like the one shown here can be cut from every package of Serv-Us Brand ‘They are good for all sorts of beautiful premiums. If coupon is not on the label it is inside the If your grocer hasn’t them he can get and then sifted thru pure silk, all done in a sanitary mill. It is untouched by human hand until you mix the dovigh. SAVE ON YOUR BREAD BILL SERV-US four will make a more delicious loaf of bread for 2%c than you can buy anywhere for 5c. It is guarahiecd fo i;ve you entire satis- i ck and have your money refunded. Every sack is the same. Jfaction or you can take it Remember that all of the and more of your grocery bill and give you a chance to spend more on dress Serv-Us Brands cover practically everything in pure foods from flour and salt to ! rescue of the Chi up will probably be: d with his maste Bowe or Clabb Carnerglf, Ulrl d, with one run in, an out GAMES SCHMEDULED TODAY. hit off Benz ¢! the bases and another single gave ton their fourth r allowed but one hit. go two runs behind, Benz in the fifth which tied the | Blackburn's American Leamwe. No Ameriean Lea: Thereafter Benz led the rall: @ red the winning run in the | He led off with a single. was sacrificed to eecond and Blackburn’s single. Federal Leagun. Buffalo at Chicago. MONDAY'S RESULTS. International League. Rochester 6, Jerses Clty e cwnd Montreal-Newark rain. . 5 0 0 0 o 1 ssssscesess seo Blunnuneaaws Federal League. (x) Batted for Indlanapols 4. (Second game.) Kansas City - 4, Eastefn Assoetation. New London Bridgeport game postponed. New Britain 0. Three base Lit. (Second game.) National League. Chicago-Philadeiphia game postponed, American Loagus. York-Cleveland postponed, Hummel Figured Strong. Brooklyn, N. substituting for Wheat, 2.—Hummel, l day, 4 to 3 was the hero victory of the Brookiyns. He made three hits, These were made in the first and third innings, and each came with two men on the bases. ivn's five runs resuited from Pfeffer kept the hits well scattered and NEW ENGLAND LEAQGUE STANDING Four of Breok- Kelley scored their { when he scratched a hit and came all | Magee.cf the way home when Hyatt, pinch nit- | Cath doubled to center. itors used three pitchers. mon and Conzelman were hit hard, but Kantlehner held the home team down. | Styde=e TUD | yuggins. ting for Gibson, EASTERN ASSOCIATION STANDING L] [PRRRSP - A s | Dridepor: Pittsoursh (K) | Bridapor: . | Sew Britan’ INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING. srses sszsssa~- ssmussHesoNmas loummmmitensnune | soommonraionsai B e T L T Baltic Lost 11 Inning Battle. The Lebanon baseball team defeat- ed Baltic Saturday at Baltic by the| !score of 12 to 11 in a elevn inning contest. Mara and Love opposed each mound and proved tosbe 23 about evenly matched. The score: 5 = 3 - ! New ¥Fork . New York, June 21.—C: A8 g e ‘all money 308 other on the 7 £l + LEASUP STANDING. 5 Mara 8 I tauwes. Umpire Big Six Won Pit Time of game cher’s B le. New York, June —New York made three straight over Cincinnati to- winning the last game of their | series a re of 3 to Tomor- row's been postponed =0 ale and Princeton may play off that their tie on the Polo grounds. Today's game was a piicher's battle between Mathewson and Ames. The Lampions won in the ninth. Fletcher drew Ames' only pass with one out and errors by Hoblitzel and Herzog on Doyle and Merkie filled the bas Pcbertson hit the first ball to ce scoring Fletcher, er, Sensational stops by Fletcher and | Herzog featured the game. Scere: Cincinnat (N) New York (N) ab o 25 I 01 winnipz run was scored Braves Drive Robinson Off the Mound. Boston, June A\ batting ral the eighth inning, during which ouis obtained three runs on ihree sin- =.es and a double, defeated Bos By batting Robinson hard in the sec- ond and taking advan Ly Snyder in the fifth, Boston got a cne-run lead. Boston drove Robinson from the box in the eighth, but Sallee stopped the rally aft been scored The score: Louis (M) PR 0 s ‘ 1 H 0 Beck3b 4 H Robinsws.p 3 1 Salleep 1 |osommanmus . (x) Ran for Gowdy in Sth (xx) Pt for % j Clarence Walker threw the ball - Oldring sccred and Collins “Teac! | second.” Collins stole third a=d coun {ed on an out. Murphy’s home run in | the seventh inning gave the visitors) | their other run. In fielding Murphy's hit Rumler crashed into the fence and was knocked unconscious. Score: ) e nmuegoly oy spovunsl x ° o 0 H 3 1 1 5 S 1 s Gl 5 gugunnuy P8 cmunm A T II w0 n o 318 324 1000 1000 Meclnnis, 1b 10060 Btrunk.ct 1120 2010 P18 “1z1 4118 2133 517132 » p;ms made today | were for extra bases on to- e of an error one run had | | Federals and the Cincinn { eral court tonizht The inj o | stipulates that Aarsans must not | baseball until the | in the St. Louis courts. Iy suggeste Washington Defeated Tigers. Detroit, Mich. June 2: ‘Washington it two out of five with Detroit ming the final game of the serics 4 to wi Foster after Moeller had nd the squeeze play by Fos- ind Gandil gave Washington two in the first inning. The others rame in the third. Foster singled and went to third on Milan’s double. Both scored on Gandil's single to cen- ter. Moriarty's steal home in the first in- ning was the feature. All Detroit's hits Detroit used ding all of score: three pitchers, Dubus Washington's runs. Th Washington (A) Detrsit (A) = o Moeiter,ef Foster.3b ies oMLl es 1 1 1 20000004 5000 1003 Burns. Three INJUNCTION GRANTED. Stipulates That Marsans Cannot Play Ball Until His Case Has Been Tried in Court. St. Paul, Minn., June 22.—An in- junction restraining Armando Mar- sans, the Cuban baseball player, from playing with ihe St. louis Federals until the case in which the St Louis Ngtionals are at issie over Marsans' move fuo the new league has been tried on its merits was \granted by Judge Sanborn in ‘ed- ge has been t-.ed No Third League This Season. Chicago, June 22.—President i‘an Johnson of the American league said this afternoon that there would be no third major league this eeason. if at a’s. “The third league idea was mere- to the nationzl ‘ommis. and it is merely a po: No definite action was taken at meet- ing in New York.” in With Syracuse, aptain James Cross baseval ract with th ordered with the - New i there. He is l;("d Jtonkixht. when he knocked out id Jackson, a colored compatriot, in the fourth round. Domestic Economist. ‘The man who growls o most about ousehold economy is usually one whe won’t smoke anything cheaper tham a 3 10-cent cigar.