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- INSURANCE. BEFORE STARTING YOUR FALL WORK TAKE A ‘WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION POLICY WITH J. L. LATHROP & SONS 28 Shetucket Street, Norwich, Conn. *100 per cent return for every dollar 1 .vested in Fire Insurance. It is impos- {sible to invest the small amount of " money that fire insurance costs to as advantage in any other wal: A ‘Few dollars a year gives you proteotion. Yook after your insurance and if you are not insured, let us attend to the matter for you immediately. Above ell things—Do Not Delay. ISAAC S. JONES, nd Real Estate Agent 91 Main St Brown & Perkms. Attorneys-i-Law Over Uncas Nat, Bank, Shetucket St. Entrance stairway near to Thames National Bank. Telephone 38-3. JOHN A. MORAN Investment Broker REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE A SPECIALTY Office Over Capitol Lunch Office Phone 370,—~Residence 1178-8 You are about to starton your vacation For your sake and your fam- ily take out an Accident Policy in the Travelers before you go. B. P. LEARNED & CG. Insurance ATTORNBYS AT LAW EDWIN W. HIGGINS, Attorfiey-at-Law, 8ticnnon Building. BIG CLEVENS PLAVED [A1D-SEASOI! FORC1 “cated by Harvard—\Wil- liacs Kcid Pfim‘-cton to a Tie New York, Nov. 1.—The larger east- <D college football teams began to move with late season smoothness and as a result im manf_ Yaler Perwasy Permsylvanis, Cor- ncll, Dartmouth, Syracuse and the 4rmy between them rolled up a total of 23:points to their opponents’ 19. The €y did not pass, however, without tho_customary form upset, for the pow- erful Princeton eleven was held to a 7-7 tle by Williags. Gfld interest in the eastern week- end games was centered in the Har- ‘vard-Michigan contest, the most im- portant intersectional st imson team defe ‘university eleven for the fourth cor secutive time since 1881 One-touch- @Gown and the resultant goal was the margin of vicctory, which just about rnnlntd.nod the superfority shown by, teams. over the Wolverines -y prwkm. games. Neither team has yet reached its best form and from both combinations one or two star players were ‘missing, but there is Tothing to indigate ihat the result Toulld ‘have ::;" d:fl;gen( 1t played in e closing 's of jovember rath than in October. £ . ewpumota.a;’yaou‘?letm large scores was made e Univer- ity of Pittsburg team, which ran up a. tom«l of 96 points against Dickinsorn, us coming near the score of 105 mmu that Wuhlnnon and Jefferson jnade against the ssme team. on Octo- er 3. HARVARD HELD MICHIGAN SCORELESS Crimson Men Displayed Strong De- fense—Score 7 to 0 Harvard defeated Michigan by a score of 7 to 0 at Cambridee Saturday in a football game almost devoid of spectacular play and confined to con- esrvative attack and defense. Some twenty-five thousand spectators wit- neued 60 n!flmxtu immage in which ntraight football prodominated throughout. Neither ele- ven evinced any particular desire to use the much heraided forward or la- teral pass and - the general advance ‘was achieved by a series of iine plun- lfifl» spiced | with an occasional end "'Giider the etrcumstances, Harvard showed to better advan than the westerners, displaying stronger , de- fense at critical moments and striking with savege rapidity end skill in the second period of the contest when the solitary acore of the game was made. Both elevens appeared to possess a. strongear attack than defense, al- though the Crimson line and secondary defense held like a stone wail when the Wolverines twice penetrated to 's last five yard line, A disappointing featurs of the game frm the spectators’ standpoint was the absence of the thrilling open at- tack that was thought Coach Yost's pupils would uncover. Michigan at- temm-d but one forward pass and this intercepted by a Harvard back- Mma player. As if further to upset o forecasts, the Crimson uua four, of which three were suo- ly cerried through and the fourth grounded. v G. A. c. 18—Montville 0 Once again an attempt was made to take the tomh-.ll onora away from the G. A. by team composs mostly of wm md players under the a iving ll anted with ‘team game is .'tern Mfi‘" 150 ru- Mgr. J. H. Kane, North Main streef pe7and of Trinidad has o population mefln O!u:o sg,,m'wznm vicctories were}; Bulkeley. was also out in force and returned to the Whaling town directly after the game to celebrate thelr tri- umph. The Best Team Won The game, although one-sided, was very interesting and unquestionably the best team won. The Academy was outplayed“in every department of the game and except for the fact that the breaks were their way, Bulkeley's score would have been larger. lay of the Bulkeley eleven was more finished than the wearers of the red and white have seen this season, Four backs 1 up on end runs and found mo trouble in dumping the ‘Academy ends, who were mnoticeably outplayed throughout the contest. Bulkeley also had a pretty forward pass formation which worked every time it was used, to the Academy’s sorrow, and taken as a_whole, the game was another tri- umph for the system of Coach McCoy. But right here the point may be made that the Academy boys played for all they were worth and whenever an in- dividual gives the best that Is in him he is not made better by victory or worse by defeat. Donnelly’s Phenomenal work The main factor in Bulkeley’s vic- tory was the phenomenal playing of Captain Dudley Donnelly, who fully merits the distinction of being the greatest football player that ever wore the orange and black of Bulkeley. Whenever he carried the bail his pecu- liar dodging style of running was too much for the Awdemy players and as a result he always made a gain. did"the punting for Bulkeley and made an average of 550 yards with his soar- ing kick, He also kicked off and once he sent the ball over the Academy’s goal. In addition, he threw the for- ward passes and in the third quarter made a 40-yard run for a touchdown shaking off five tacklers on his way through the Academy team. At the start of the game N. F. A. hammcred the Bulkeley line, which crumbied like paper at first under «the terrific plunges of the red and white's plucky ~backfield, which ran along beautifully until the line began to bulge and finally snap wide open. The interference iormed by the Bulkeley backfield was very nouceabla and they opened holes off N .'s e gt arivean 0% team through comfortably at times and neatly boxed in O'Hearn and HHull, the ends, as Norweglan sardines. ‘Practicaily all the ground gained by the fcademy was through line plunges and strange to say not once did N. A._try the forward pass. © played a great game at tackle, m:ciny it a tough proposition for gains tiroush his side of the line and made ccveral good tackles. It was leatned Saturday night that 1l “tanley; the star of the®Academy eloven, may be out of the game for the remainder of the season. He injured his knee during the game but pluckily played to the finish. On consulting a physician it was learned that he may have water on the knee, During the half time the N. F. A, rooters in spite of possessing the small cnd of the score, showed thelr patriot- ism by parading the field by twos headéd by the cheer leaders and a modifled drum corps, singing and ex- changing cheers with the Bulkeley root- ers, whose orchestra responded with their battlehymn. The game follows: First’ Quarter Murtha won the toss and elected to roceive with the wind at his back. D. Donnelly .gave a demonstration of his kicking--oftability when he -sent the Digskin 35 yards against the wind. Me- MMillian caught the ball and ran it back elght yards. Then the Academy started to rush the bail down the field in a way that brought hope to the fol- lowers of the red and white. Quarter- back Shea used all line plunges and kept the ball away from the territory covered by Bulkeley's speedy ends. Murtha opened up by metting two yards through center. Stanley twisted through guard for six and on the net play he fumbled but Beebe recovered. Holmes ploughed, through for four yards and Murths. rushed through' left guard for five, terback runs and made six yards. Then Holmes tore through for five more. The Academy cheering section went wild and it Jooked as if it would be a touch- down but here the tide turned. On the first down Murtha made two yards and Bijj Stanley again dove through for six. Shea failed to gain and on the fourth down rushed Holmas up tho play and Holmes only made a a+ cepter. The Bulkeley backs piled yard. The ball was Bulkeley’s. Cole ma_e three yards and D, Donnelly was given the ball for his first run. made eight yards. Then Cole got six and Harry Ronnelly .five yards, Cole only made one yard. The quarterback tried to gain through Seedy Jacison. Academy’s 200-pound center, and fail- od. ‘Then Dua. Donnelly shot a for- ward to Noonan for 16 yards. The forward Went over the Academy's left line and there was no one anywhere near to intercept it. The referee blc ¥ his whistle, ending the quarter, Second Quarter The quarter opened with Bulkeley's ball on Academy’s five yard line. Cole Shea tried two quar- F.| ball and this prevented him brin~ing it He |2 touchdown. E ley ‘tried a ucxout but it falled. Seore, Bulkeley 6, N. F. A. 0. Dud Donnelly sent the Kickoff' 43 yards. Eolmes missed it owing to misjudgment, going over his head, and smfmm it up ten yards frém his He ran itb&ckuv!nymmmid fou.r yards and Holmes added five. It was line plunging as before. Stan oy failed to zain. Holmes plunged through for three yards and ley aided four vards. . Hohmes again made three yerds. ' On the third down with only three yards to go the Ac made a mistake by punting. The punt went 25 yards against the wind and or the left side of Bulkeley’s line, ule have run the ball back ¢1sily, as the Academy ends were nowhere near, but he waited for D. Donnelly, who was laying far back, to pick it up. en Donnelly picked it up he was tackled. Cole and Harry Donnelly made five yards between them. Center Meagher threw the ball over Donnelly’s head, and~as he picked it up Joe Hull tried to tackle him but Donmelly’s straight: arm sent him flylng mother earth with which ne foreibly colided. But_Henault nailed Donnelly for a 12- yard loss. Then D. Donnelly sent & punt down the fleld. It went offside after going 25 yards. E three more and Holmes 1. trying to make a vard it was decided to punt. SStanley pun- ted 30 vards to Cole who waited for D. Donne'ly to pick up the ball Donnelly picked it up and made four yards. Cole added seven. The quar- terback failed to gain through Jackson. D. Donnelly made five yards and again the quarterback did not gain. _ D. Donnelly punted 40 yards and Shea ran ‘it back five yards. Holmes got a yard on a line plusg® but Shea lost it 'on a quarterback run and the half was over. Between halves the Acad- emy students paraded the campus cheering and singing. T Quarter Beebe kicked off 40 yai\s. Cole ran it back ten yards. H. Donnelly made five yards on a line plunge but fum- bled and Joe Hull fell on the ball. Murtha opened with a gain of five vards and Holmes followed by making two, then the Academy lost the ball on a mixup in the backfifield resulting in a fumble which Ellis captured. Donnelly made two yards through cen- ter and his illustrious brother added ten around end. Cole and H. Donnelly dashed around Academy’s left end for a 40-yard run and a touchdown. He kicked the goal, Beore, Bulkeley 13, 3. A. 0. Coach McCoy sent in some to win the coveted B. nt to fullback.and H. Don- y to tackle in place of EIJ5 who went to halfback. Hill replaced dfoon at guard. Dud. Donnelly sent the kickoff over the Norwich goal. Bill Stanley jumped for the ball and miss- ed it.* However his hand-touched the out to the 20-vard line as he could have donne if he had not touch-d it. He made the Academy’s only daz.ling ploy by running it back 25 yards. Hol-| mes got two and Rill Stanley four| yards. . A%ain Academy showed poor) judgment "by punting with two downs to make four vards. The punt only went 15 yards. Ellis gained three vards and Dondero got 22 yards on an end shift. The play fooled, N. F. A. The fall was on N. F. A’S ten-vard line. Harry Donnelly made two yards and_the quarterback failed to gain. D. Donnelly hit Wilcox for no gain. It was the first time he failed to gain. He then tried a forward over the line but it failed, owing to no fault of his. It should have been easily caught, as four Bulkeley men were waiting for it, but it-was a case of “You first, Gaston.” Stanley punted 30 yards and D. Donnelly ran it back eight. He then threw a forward to Noonan for 12 yards. Harry Donnelly got seven vards and Ellis a touchdown. D. Don- nelly kicked the goal. Score, Bulke- ley 20, N. F. A. 0. Stewart went in as quarterback fors Bulkeley. D. Donnel- Iy kicked off 45 yards and Bill Stanley ran it back 220 yards. Mullen went to right halatback ‘and -Stanley to quar- terback. Murtha lost five yards try- ing to circle énd. Holmes made one yard and Stanley fafled to gain. He then punted 40 yards. Murray ran it back 12 and D. Donnelly and Eliis rushed it to.Academy’s one-yard line, where D. Donrelly fumbled and Hen- ault got the ball. Holmes blocked Stanley's attempted- punt and on this ground the referee ruled it a touchback andthe ball was brought to the 20- Stanley punted 30 yards and D. Donnelly rushed it back 13, The quarterback made five yards and Seedy Jackson got him for a five-yard loss, when the referee’s whistle ended the N, F. A, O'Hearn Elenmteth .. ook i s nr Wik Right Guard s Bpaiaslts SRt g s Hi Right Tackle et Noonan ............ Savals esinaree Hull Feeley sn ' Quarterback = S Murrna ({Capt. altback 2 D. Donnelly . .eso Stanley Rig! H. Donnelly . i Moran, Hill for Moon, H. Donnelly for, | Elis, for Cole. N. 1 lian, Millen for Stanles, Stanley. for Lopyeight, 1314, Stone & MeCerrick, Ine. - - The integrity of this piano sale is shown by “your money This whole enterprise was born ‘of bigness; of doing a big thing in a big way. It took a big man to conceive it. And, once conceived, it took a big man to carry it through. And Richard W. Lawrence, President of The Autopiano Co. of New York, is a big man. He wanted to keep their many factories running. Thirty-five hundred men had to be kept employed. Mr. Lawrence knew that two conditions were staring him in the face. First, that there were a lot of unnecessary war bugaboos flying about, which would naturally frighten the timid, and second, that the tendency would be for people to put off buying pianos, because a piano back” : was something they might be able to get along longer. But he conceived this big idea to sell pianos NOW. He reasoned that, if people could get the opportunity NOW tbh'y for less than they could ever buy before; if people were given the op- portunity to buy on easier payments NOW than they were ever given ° before; if people were given a more liberal proposition NOW than they were evergiven before, they would buy pianos, war scares or no war scares. And this advantageous sale is the result of that sound reasoning. It is a sale of the highest integrity—and in no way:is this mfiagng better shown than through making it a part of the plan to refund money to dissatisfied purchasers. 4 In this sale pianos are quoted for less than ever before. In this sale, your savings are larger than ever before. In this sale your payments are smaller than éver before. And the proof is that you can get your money back, after - giving the instruments any test you wish for 30 '.a'y;”:md we ase pledged to carry out this provision. without, for a‘ifib \-—-L‘ ok g ¢ it P $1 cash and $1 a week does MORE during this sale than $25 cash and $10 a month does USUALLY In the first place you get a thoroughly dependable piano for 84 doflars less than it customarily brings. F You can get a 350 dollar piano, for 266 doflars. And it is a dependable piano, too. In the matter of giving general, down- right satisfaction, you will get as dependable a piano as any piano made. In the second place, one dollar cash, does the work that 25 dollars cash usudlly does. One dollar—one single American dollar, pays your initial or first peyment, the same as 25 dollars usually does. These beautiful instruments are delivered during this sale to your home upon the payment of one dollar, just as readily as they are uml.ly delivered upon the payment of 25 dollars. Yourregularpaymenmafldwnmedolhrnweekiotfie&!mvmh. After the first year, your payments increase to one dollar and 25 cents a week‘forthesecondyea;andonedquwnnndmubtðirdr&,eu:..wlth- out interest. Bat, what we want to emphasize in this paragraph is, that for one whole year, the first year you are starting to atquire a piano, one single dollar a week does as much as two dollars and fifty cents a week usually does. Here are three tremendous advantages you positively cannot afford to over- look. Such an opportunity does mot come more than ance in .« lfetime, and you owe it to yourself to at least investigste it at once.. oINS MARSfi - . Corner Main and Water Streets, Norwich No. 230 State Street, New Londen, Conn. Copyright, 1914, Stome & McCarwick, Ime. o S The most astounding feature of this safc is that tlatimg 26 2 the player-piano. We were apportioned lwplmmufl-&@ Theymsfl)ddhr lnphhu'ufi.fheh hvebaenasmn-ysoldn%g‘ow -as there have been at S80- A less complicated player-piano has never been made. L‘ tzu—pmmufiuh-mummdmwhnfl ‘We have soid scores and scores of these identical upon which there has not been a 5§ emtprbceupent,htn‘l h 2 p-ln.durlngthoputfiyun. ice for these 150 instruments was placed atan almost nbmdlymfigufiwdoflanmch. e 3 Your payments are One Dollar, plano, and one dollar and 75 cents a dollars a week for the second year, etc., etc., without meking this a playes-piano opporm'ithmtpmdm- ) Substitutes: Bulkeley—Stewadrt for|of 2 to 1 in a lively contest on'the Providence street sgrounds, Taftville. Baitic started off with a rush, scoring| 7 in the first three minutes of play. Taft- ville ‘did not score until the last part of the game. The game was well played by both teams and was full of exxcitement, . Yale.’18 7. Murray for B. Donnelly, Bilis F. A—Melvin for MeMi *hdowns—D. Donneily_2, Ellis, Go:;s from touchdowns—D. Donnel- First Practice of Season Taftville basketball ‘team will their first practice of the season night at Parish hall’ Batwrae—'nalm, Springfield- Y, & i‘ Drhptre=Kese, - Bulkdles. : Head linesman—Robinson, \N. F. A. Linesmen—Stockwell and Murray, Timekeepers—Gregson’ and Benton. ¥ Tftville 2, Balt . Andover Hnrv-ni 7, Michigan 0. State U. Lehigh 33, John H o, Delaware 0, Stevens m Penn. 40, Swarthmore S Cornell 48, Holy Cross Navy 16, A. & M. of N Princeton 7, Willilams 7. Hamilton 26, St. Lawrence 6. ‘Tufts ggles 6. the game, his run of 55 yards frem. scrimmage formation being & His forward pass of 14 yards to ‘| ton on the next play resulted in ‘Williams - touchdown, Overton fifive yards after catching the. The Princetonian tackling terfererice was poor, while of KaKn. 0. ik 7, Mass. A WILLTAMS HELD THE F TIGERS FOR A TIE Princstonians Displayed Poor Tackling | and Interference - “!'flnm;mwnu—-umzda Lo fé'l