Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
, ISAAC S.JONES + ifisuranes. ind “Real Estate:-Agent: Buildin 91 Main Strest R IN MIND when placing your URANCE for "the “comingaysers FACT. that during. the last five -quit; ; THE FACT that no company can af- " Jord. to sell Geld Dollars for 90 - cents or pay:$1.20. for every Dol- . lar taken inand .- - 2 THE FACT that we sell INDEMNITY ot a :nm promise to pay. ! .B. P.LEARNED & CO. - Agenéy Established May,”1846. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Brows & Perkins, (e tim g:::.g;u: Nat. Bank, Shetucket-St. National o 353, "4 The ‘polls will be tricts today at 6 2p.o e SIS Put Up Good Score 10 to 0. Yale was humbled by Virginia Sat- ‘urday by-a 10 to 0 score. It was the third game the Elis have played in the new Yale bowl and two of. them Bave resulted in defeats, the Harvard mme last being the other one." rs_had .the breaks {n the ed | h2d run its sleven somewhat. = » ¢ numerous. Capt. Alec] ‘worst offender. . the 1ini -+ Stewara, J. Sheldon: .............“H. Coblman # Centre % Way s...ce..e..n..i.... T. Coolman R & ¥ Guernsey _ Score: SPEEDWAYS WIN, 12 TO 8; Greeneviile Boys Score Two Touch- downs—Fielding Star Performer. The Speedways of Greeneville de- feated a Westerly team 12 to 8 at We Sunday afternoon in the football .game of the season. was the- star performer of the e, making several runs through & broken fleld for large.gains. H Tlggospeedwny‘s lineup: Moluski le, c le 1t, R. Spencer Ig, B. C: ] r.. Willlams rg, B. McGinnis rt, C. Fox te, 3. Downey % A, Gauther rhb, C. r Thb, W. Fielding fb. If Joe Wood_were himself the chances st the Red Sox for the big - would -be rated much higher.- - Bue ihere beems little chance for Joey to sreak ‘into the series. neuritis irouble in ‘his pitching arm probably will rob the season of a great pitchers' vattle. Wood and Alexander. Hasvard has started the training ta- m the following 32 players: J. L. W. J. Bol 18; C. A. Lyma: B W. H S. Is: W, %"éobfi}n‘.gi S *:61 E. W. Soucy, : 16; M. Ty ;3! i BiE iy ?’gg serve seats for his rooters. » ‘This matter was taken up at th meeting and amicably adjusted in the following manner: President Baker of the Phillles gave up 100 of his allot- of '$240,000, in case the serfes title is ment of tickets. Presiddnt Lannin won in four games straight and more - FINANCIAL AND COMMERGCIAL SATURDAY’S MARKET. Fitting Close to One of the Most Acfiv-l Weeks in Its History. New - York, Oct. .2.—Today’s session of the ™mock exchange furnished a fit- tin gclose to one of the most active weeks jn the history of thaat institu- tion. At the outset there were signs that the movement in the specialties coprsé, temporarily, at | least, but before. the. end of -the first]. hour heavy trading was again in full swing. . The seeond hour was -even more active, the short session record- |+ ing a’turnover of about 750,000 shares. . Of this amount Westinghouse_ con- tributed about 25 per cent. and United lsa:ftej. _Steel .and Amd 2 1 867 % yizezsls ¥4 o] Qe ?Ezz;?:‘ s¥8astss éi!y 3 = H feals LR ATt . erican ‘%ar and undfl - per ‘cent, ‘each. Westing- house added almost 7 points to yester- hstantial at 4 i gfl.u 12, Anm:: c-:gdmm E 'greatest stride shortly before the close by, leaps and bounds record an ‘overnight advance of 11 points. Steel was back- ward at first, but came within e frac- | n of yesterday’s top,. its best price dn four years, just before the end. Some of the recent favorites like Bethlehem Steel and General Motors were conspicucus for their - records, Bethlehem attaining to 375:and Motors to 350 on''ten point advences. Willys- Overland also achieved a ne whigh at 226 1-2. Such issues as American ‘Woolen, U. 8. Cast Iron Pipe, Pressed Steel Car, Industrial Alcohol and the petroleums all figured in the rising movemerit. Raflroads again had scant consid- eration, Canadian Pacific ‘was pressed for sale, but in the final dealings bet- terment in this group was registered. The bond market was firm on mod- erate dealings. " Total sales (par value) aggregated $2,320,000. E United States bonds were unchanged on call during the week. HH EEE EHH (1 1l £ re g I % w407 ] 2 SR gg ) FHEREH FELEEELET P 3 ‘EE”F FEH &sg New York, OIEOLct 2.—Cotton futures | w: apened easy. 11.60; Dec. 11.90; Cotton ‘futures closed stehdy. . May middling, $11.85. per, 3@3$ 1-2. Sterling 60 day 3 UK 1% | March 12.37; May 12.6 3 . Oce. $11.70; Dec. $12.00; Jan. $12.4. $12.63, Spot quiet MONEY, New York, Oct 2. — Mercantile pa- bils, 4.68; demand, 4.7185; cables, 4.7235. .71 5.74. bl T 3. les, 84 1-4. dvn.nd. 6.31; cables, 2.30. Rubles demand 84; cables 34 1-4. Bar silver, 49 5-8. Mexican dollars 38 1-2. Gov- ernment bends, steady. Railroad bonds CHICAGN GRAIN WARKET. Open. Righ Low. Closa 9% 9% - W% 7% . oe% BEREREEERRERERRARERRRRRRD i 0% i i 58.11-16 53% 5% 5% *8 581118 i85 918 0 e BE LIVE STOCK MARKET, . Chicago, Oct. 1.—Hogs, 14,2 %1000 head. Market 1 lower. thlx“d and butchers, $6.70@8.30; good $7.10@8; _rough fi:i“ H el f 2! i LEENT N Al o K £, R g i | E?i;!si§§§airiisi§§§s§!i;!¥!§isEi;!istiists ] fig Horbin il i iEf : stk by B8 Eauiisanisl ! Siiflll! Il 4 Il 838 il & n ERibihEE? sekbi H enanasbeepSeabunlizaib EEaalbil 388356 " Bluvswasnnns n P i | d % Chicago, Oct. 3.—Vaughn pitched the » | Chicago Cubs to a 7 to 2 victory over ‘208 198 Aes GAMES SCHEOULE® TODAY. Wationsl Leagws. New York at Boston. d Brooklyn at Philadeiphts. Arericsn Lesgas. Philadelphis st Washirgton. Bostou st New York. YESTERDAY'S MESULTS. Natieas! League Pittsburgh 5. Cinclonatt 3. St Louis 3 Chicago 1. American League. Detrott 8. Chicage 6. Federal Leagus. Pittsbuagh 5, Chicago € (Fint game, 11 - Baltimore 9, Newark 5. (Fimt Baltimore 0, Newark (Secona “game. Chicags ttsburgh (Second game.) Kansas City 2, St Louls 6. 2 Exhibition Qames. (X} 6. N. H.Colonlals. & (4) 3, Waterbury Jnd. 6. SATURDAY'S RESULTS. 3. Plttsbargh 1.} Clevelana 5, St Louts 2, New York New York St. Louls Chicago 5, 3. (Second game, 10 - i oame) 3. Boston St Louis @ . Leuis 1 same.) Chicago 3 Chicago 6, St. =52822883 Football Results.” At Cambridge—Harvard 7, Massachusetts Agricul- tural Colege 0. At Annapol wn 13, Navy 0. oAt New Haven—Yale 0, Unirersity of Viegtals WINNING OF PENNANTS ~ VIRTUALLY CLOSES SEASON 58 35,8 b ;,‘;i‘ ing, while the visitors dropped to sixth place by virtue of Pittsburgh’s victory over Cincinnatl. # i Tigers Establish Record in Last Game Detroit, Mich., Oct. 3.—Detroit, play- ing its last game of the season, de- feated Cleveland, 6 to 5, and estab- lished an American legue record. The Tigers won 100 games this year, something no club in the league finished in second ly accomplished. stealing record. ‘| base His in the second innin, an official total of ‘97 stolen The score: T 2 .ot e 00T, sueo ! raussanansl White Sox Take Final Game. Chicago, Oct. 3.—Chicago made a clean -sweep of the series with St. Louis today when they won their final game of the season, & to 2. The locals hit Hamilton opportune- ly, Felsch and J. Collins each making home runs. The score: Sachems Lose to New Londoners. Sachems Jost the final game of the H H Which Wit Win ? MOOSUP TRIMS PUTNAM IN THE THIRD GAME. O’Neil Drove In the Winning Run— Score 1 to 0. (Special to The -Bulletl Qct. 3—Putnam ap; which apparently was capable naught, for Moosup away with a close victory of 1 to 0. dark, but the umpire, John Conway, usel very good judg- ness what everybody conceded to be the best game played on our grounds this season. - The features of this which ‘cause it to stand out pre-eminently and alone wére catches by Eayrs, Houlthan and Flynn and the hitting of O’Neil and Cram. Moosup scored the only run in the game in the fifth in- Davigneau, first-up, singled, stole nd and scored on O'Neifs two- b‘gl‘r into right fleld. me of the first etring pitchers of the New York Giants, Jeff Tesreau, took the box for Putnam and struck- out nine men and allowed five hits. Cram of the Boston Braves pitched for Moo- sup and allowed four hits amd struck out eight men. prettiest catch ever made on the Carpet grounds was made by Eayrs of Providence Internationals, who picked one off his shoetops which was labeled for a home run and doubled Mike Mike Donlin started to chew the rag the first part of the game, trying to crab, but Conway told him where he got off, and the crowd gave Donlin the laugh. The result was that Donlin came up and fanned two congecutive times, driving the bat nearly through the grandstand with a grunt upon his third strike. R - ‘el S A's, D] unday. A good game Muug’ gl.}u ‘Webster defeated Moosup in e first game and Moosup Is d both the argument are in the right But for Dave Tibbott Princeton would not wve won and Rutgers would not have lost. Instead the game would have been & score- less tie in all likelihood. Rutgers out- played Princeton in three of the four periods, but the old scoring punch was lacking and Princeton, outside of the first period /in which Tibbott scored the ten points, had no chance to 3 The line up: Princeton 10. <es. Scarr Shea Tibbote Score by periods Princeton Rutgers ... 000 0—0 HARTE RACES OVED LINE WITH A FORWARD PASS. Harvard ‘Gaine Lucky Victory Over Mass. Aggies. With three minutes of play remain- ing, Dick Harte, Harvard's lanky end, proved the right man in the right ?hcg and after intercepting e short lorward pass raced forty yards for the touchdown which gave Harvard a horseshoe victory over the Massachu- setts Agricultural Saturday et Cam- bridge. . The score was 7 to 0. Palmer’s pass had: travelled more than three yards when Harte, who is varsity baseball catcher, clutched it and made his race across the goal Robinson then kicked goal. Mass A. Co. eudadas v Su «evs Wittpenn ;| Pigelow CHICAGO TAKES FED FLAG IN TIGHT RACE. Outlaws Contend in Closest Race Ever Staged—St. Louis Second. by taking the second game of a double header from Pitteburgh, 3 to 0, after having dropped the first game by a score of 4 to &. Darkness held off just long enough to permit the Chicago team to take the title and put Pittsburgh in third place. Three runs in the sixth inning of the second game, however, settled the ownership of the emblerp. The enor- jus crowd went wild over the vic- . The first game went to 11 in- nings, while the second was called af- the visitors’ half of t he seventh inning. The league race was in doubt until PLANNING FOR SPECIAL SERIES IN THE WEST Red Sox Will Play Picked Team If They Win World’s Title. Boston, Oct. 3.—The Red- Sox- will f_g!g; g ; i | | l | FARREL Harte Watson ieeea 0 0 0 77 .0 0 0 00 U. of P. Defeats F. and M. The University of Pennsylvania's football team met strong opposition Saturday at _Philadeiphia -in the Franklin and Marshall eleven, but won by the score of 10 to 6. Columbia’ Footbal Schedule nounced. Two of Columbia’s picked elevens were put through three-quarters of an hour of scrimmaging on South fleld Saturday by Nelson Metcalf. It was the nearest the coach has come to picking a first and second gleven, and the scrimmage was watched with keea interest. = The individual work of sev- eral men featured. Simonds as fullback on the first team being easily the star of the dey. He scored a touchdown after intercepting a forward pass and running ninety yards through a broken fleld, eluding half a dozen tacklers. The official schedule, with.one date still open, was snnounced yesterday. St. Lawrence, Stevens, Connegticut “Aggles,” Trinity and Wesleyan will be played, all on South fleld. Negoti- ations- are still on:with Amherst for the open deate. The schedule follows: Oct. 23 St. Lawrence at South fleld. Nov. 2, Election day, Stevens at South fleld; Nov. .18, cgonn&cu:&t’ Amm;l': tupl College at o . Nov. Trinity at South ‘fleld; Nov. 20 open; Nov. 25, ving day, Wesleyan An- Will be -opeh in ail dis- g S T they will ‘closs b 5 po m. Most .of the New York scribes are picking the Phillles for the series. "The polis &2 MAHONEY BROS., FALLS AVENUE Boarding goarantec our service to be the at che most reasonable prices. Livery Cennection. Shetucket Street, & SANDERSON, Props.