Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 19, 1916, Page 3

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Muu‘afipflm to make this an event wfllivefilhwyoflfl. Nolllmghhewi!b- held—all must go. Owing to the volume of stock to be disposed of it f;?“;w&}{nfg,mm = :..,......,: S ine. e will be necessary to feature special lines at different 2 cnelBencee 3 4, Louislle 3. (Seeond . . . POUGHKEEPSIE CREWS “.‘um-’u "‘?w PRI B e times, and the opening sale will be on the various lines ‘ELECT CAPTAINS. : R 1 for Gi Natiosal Leasue. _— Oarsmen Leave Tralning Quarters— Freshman R-oo to Be Rowed Today. NA Y.. m. '18—The oarsmen SALE BEGINS WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21st, at 9 O’CLOCK. nsurance Richards Building, 91 Main St LeEEEENE. RNBERESSs B BE HAND EARLY, OR WILL REGRET DO YOU OWN REAL ESTATE? ] ON X YOU IT. DO YOU OCCUPY YOUR 'OWN 7 i DWELLING HOUSE? F3 You cannot’ collect rents from a | Syracuse umiversl the exception of Cornell. = burned building, and you may bave o | fhe' 5 Smuu!e, the winner of the four- Esstern Leagus. = b o T it P | mile varsity .id two-mile ajuzitn: " bufld.. Insure your remts with s po:;;:’m The freshman | ¢y, varsity eight, “n,“g § fi 3 HARVARD-YALE OARSMEN LEARNED & CO 4 ENJOY TRIPS ON SOUND. ; : s e 46 il i ivanm: e R s T s R Agency Established May, 1 X n f officer from the junior combination in e e Pitsip " Yealging: ¢ . ‘shortly E the person of A."Woll, who rowed No. B o» - ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW ‘headed. sweaping: Biin yestertaye TacA . s il New London, Conn, June 18—With ° e ik sadaot-Ll oy Ceeh o i the hardest part of their training Brown & Perkins, Mamep-at-law | "Cornety Hoyle In charge of ihe freshmen, ‘Phe| ' Detroit Defeats Athletics. R e H“R;“glo”d Yfio‘éf'mm - Over Uncas Nat. Bank, Shetucket St. freshman Tace will be rowed upstream | Detroit, Mich, June 19.—Clean hit- | Wors taken on eailing (s dove T ong Entiaios. statrwas neur . to “Themes from the usual finish line to the two- | ting, coupled with the visitors' fielding 1 . Practi uring ! mile mark about noon tomorrow. errors, gave Detroit a victory over ::fld,,?fi“fig comm%valay light :.:; —_— Phsléhodelph]& today, 8 to 2. the sweep swingers will be given just b i = Al n New York Wallops Cleveland’s Secand Detrsit (A) s o e d o NOTORIOUS BANDITS|Y e by the other contenders. Stringers. The Yale squad sailed on the yachts Good Work of Fourth American Puni-| The varsity oarsmen from Syracuse| Cleveland, June 18.—Because of a Sultana, Captiva and Savarona. The 3 : won the feature race of the day, de- | Crippled pliching staff. Morton and | Soece Crimson crews were on the Viking and | the civilian population of Sonora is|taln Eamund Russell, and Lieutenant feating Cornell by 2 little over a length | Klepfer being .unavailable, Cleveland Roxanna. The return to quarters was|arming to aid the troops in the even|Thomas F. Hea'yy, is ready to go with of open water, with Columbia ut | was forced to rely on second string made early tonight. Near Plum Gut|of an American invasion. ihe three companies. the Sultana ran into a fog and the AR anchor was dropped for a time, the!WATERBURP COMPANIES E: PREPARE EQUIPMENT tes thl- morning after cleaning out e T AR B “nest of noforious bandits” on the oarsmen jumping overboard for a swim I until the fog lifted, R romedcg e g i\ | ; Reideport & Lmn. 8 Are Ready to Go Into Active Servics | L by inning y 3 P ¥ B ol e g bl \ T : - e S e S A B Today—Number 183 Men. Fort Brown toda port nit Harrington and Tuero hard —Com- = foday. i I Waterbury, Conn, June 18. m- The expedition was aoccomplished today and defeated Lynn 9 to 8. £ s o e g8 il ge¥ Bl oonornson CONDITIONS PERFECTLY QUIET AT VERA CRUZ. Preparations Made to Resist Any At- temtp by American Forces to Land. R cnwiomuwmnd Bl wenecccuar nloorcccssss Vera Cruz. June 18.—Conditions are e R H. E. | Panies A, H and G, of the Second Con- | 1o po o™ 0t "o vor o Colonal without the loss of a single man or y a ‘er Cruz. Colone] borse though an entire cavalry squad- SATURDAY’S MARKET. Portland 5, New Haven 3. Bridgeport 30400101 +Z5 %5 ™5 | necticut Intantry prepared their field Gonzalo ‘de la Mata, the commanding o G Peha Tl Cran e ROt i ol Nl e B % 85% 86 Lynn ......000102000—3 8 2|equipment tonight and, according to T Tors; ISl a Carranza soldier was seen by the ex- | Wheat Prices Fell Virtually One Dol- | 50 Maxwal M 2 pr . New Haven, Conn, June 13.—P House, Relger and Crook; Harring- thet a el Ao ol e , . rved order an pedition. - 13 802y Dept stor 64 o4 | iand defeated New Haven today, 5 t0]ton, Tuero and Carroll. eir commanders. are 80 has permitted no manifestations by his s Petrol 3, Dy opportune hitting. i Al ;:tm;rvle;;fi&v the order should | soldiers. Preparations have beem g - H . it = | made to st any attemp! Ameri- DNE MEXICAN BANDIT Chicago, June 17—Exp: 3 O M Portiand Weaver's Wild Throw Gives Boston | e “1uct 135 men, Inciuding the cOm- | an forces to Jand and It b wadormona KILLED, TW OWOUNDED |Ure from the new crop resulted today | 100 Mo % b hpo a hpo s e Victory. pany officers and they are commanded | that such attempt would be met with £ in the wheat market falling to vir-| 100 Nat Iead .. fiw B e |Naterxr 2310 glCiemesst 4 128 8| Chicago, Jume 18.—Weavers wild|by Captain Henry B. Carter, Company | opposition. ~An excellent spirit pre- Attacked Rear Guard of American|(Sally one dollar a bushel. Prices SRy : LR i 13 ¢ ¢|wrow of Janvriws grounder gave Bos-|A, Captain Robert G. Hannegan, Com- | vails among the Mexican troops, who Soldiers at Tahuachal Ranch. |3-¢ down, with July at 100 3-8 and| SN ¥ ¢ & By B a3 0 1 e e B ey Y e D e Ot ahr s | ety S DI Sept. 102 3-4. Corn lost 1-4 to 1-29 : Y. N H 2 62% | Courtney.3b 3 1 0 41120 R. H. ®.|G has sixty-one, and Company H has — M e e e e et [t oxe L 3G TS 0 8, o pery 'R : A feidd 9 973 76 1| Arohune™ Comoeny A'lacky’s com: | Youth Drowned in Torrington River ded ‘and two ho: S 8 outcome rang e Aldworthp 8 0 1 20000 0 0—1 10 1|missioned officer, a second lieutenant| Windsor, Conn., June 18.—While e A (o phorses captured at | decline to a rise of 10c. o 38 '8 38 |Weverp 000 20000 ;| and Company G lacks a non-commis- |swimming in the Farmington river v vy morning when bandits| Bears.fuled the wheat pit through- 3 < e e e sioned_officer, & first sergeant. Other- |hers today, Dawson Lindergren, aged attacked the rear guard of the Ameri- [out the session. Holders could dis- 80 737 % 927 9 1 ioe th have the Pall 18, of Brock ; tan soldiers at Tahuachal ranch, ten a R SIERE S o se the companies hav: e TOS- , of 'ockton, Mass., was seized with milés from Matamoros, just as they cern‘t‘l& eman; ‘1'1- ssv !'oml_t m?n *E Portland H g 0 1 0—5| Reds Trim St. Louis on Muddy Field | ter of officers. The local detachment |cramps and drowned. The body has tommenced _their wmmn,wu PR it b S e Lol 2 e bt it | - Cincinnati, June 18—On a muddy|©f the medical corps officered by Cap-|not been recovered. on new wheat. According to a lead- o field Cincinnati won from St. Louis ing authority, the market seemed to R 1025 A oAy S B3 3. be waterlogged with supplies of old : 3 American League. Score: wheat and to be entirely unable to e . Gesr “Tris’ Speaker, by batting out 18|St. Louis ..200000 4 withstand hedging sales that appeared = ~ hits in his last twenty-five trips for |Cincinnati ..9 01200 2 BTATE OFFICIALS HAVE LEFT imminent on account of the northward A an average of .520, made the substan- | Meadows, Hall and Snyfler Mitchell, AGUA PRIETA AND NACO |SPread of tho 1916 harvest. One for- tial gain of 19 per cent. He also scor- | Schulz and Wingo. » ! elgn government. gaid to elther France Helea 7 runs and made hits in -~ one Johnson Pitches Winning Ball ] T or n.-ly. 'was reported to be inquiring 5 game, whicl e first time s . Have Taken Their Books and Funds wheat, but the bids were exclu- or great feat has been done this season,| Bt. Louls, June 18.—St. Louls could to Hermosillo. nvely for. shipments from Manitoba. 13 and it is the second time that “Tris” | not hit Johnson when hits meant runs. Tadiin. AV, Do 3 in Kansas, which was t0 | 1100 Ten Comper 0% | has done it in his nine years in the|while Washington hit Park and Dav- haq much_to Texas Co . 188 188 American league. He got 5 hits last | enport hard, winning 5 to 1. Two =3 1 from Nogales, Ariz., state that-all tel- | do with the prevailing fear that hedg- ¢ 183 158 183 |season in a game pitched by “Ray” |bases on balls and Pratt’s single in 3 3.3 phone Wwires between that town and|ing sales of wheat would develop un- T ~ 8i% 84% | Caldwell. the sixth saved the locals from a shut- P“re oo ogales, Sonora, have been severed by | wieldy volume. Consequent liquidation = 57 Veach got 4 hits in a game. ] exicans. All Mexican state and fed- {and- short selling received no impor-| 00 U. 9 % o5 | pral officlals have left with books | tant check until in the last hour. the mitedFrutt gm'BEsbev;ig“ut‘Gvén !?e‘l’ng ho?;:}-. and ingtc 6 THE BEST QUALITY *7 POPULAR PRICES ind funds for Hermosillo. Federal{Jjuly option barely missed touching| 40U 5 I 156 scored 5 runs. He made the bigest m@ww — By e e e A Gyl Bt i | BE HRSETT N RSO G ot o 2 5 oo, Reduce tie Ay . s, Of ‘8] n, e N ' 17 o !4 b= ._om:' .bmk &I::r{:z‘;:l m’.l‘he s a— n% = matestL weekly loss in batting, 57 |Chapman and Hartley. TR & P 300 . 8. . per_cen reached today were the lowest 79" 79" | Speaker leads in base hits, 78, and Rain Stops Play. yet this -e-lon.'uh REs . % 100 has scored the most runs, 43. The Greeneville A. C. and French Corn ‘wheat earish = 1 Csotbg and :oi?ler v‘flr:hfllesd tl:g!'I the | Canadian club played a 1 to 1 game most bases stolen, each. Saturday. Rain halted and enldrged rural 200 Wabash n% 2 The batting averages follow: 4th. % s CUT THE COUPON FROM EACH LABEL,SAVE AND SECURE PLANT FIELD, Newl.hndan"‘““’“‘ NEW LONDON Are Being Made on Both Sides of the s International Border. & A VERSUS . o g oA ey SR g 2 E Bl asd Tonk Tune 12k ppasent SERV.US FLAVORING EXTRACTS Dec. 1807; Jan. 1318; Mar. 132, . w3 BT .87 | preparations were being made on both | Flavoring Extracts—Vanilla made from the very best Mexican Vanflla Monday, June 19th PREPARATIONS FOR POSSIBLE HOSTILITIES g sides of the International border here| g taining over 10 cent. Vanilla Bean: d pen, % | January 13.13, March Cl 23 Ju garrison was reinforced by the | aithough the latter could be used and still keep within the law of the Food Chil 3 :ung;;.!. oé’:’bm:'thlll:o troops nxrn;tcm; Law. Lemon Extract, made from the best grade of Oil of Lemon and dis- e A e Hlteey (A0 E e tilled cologne spirits, no water being added; made well above the standard el 1y of b per cent ofl. AR and four 3-inch fleld guns and the = i 3:30 P. M. L ork, June: 17~ Mercanttle pa- B 237 | First Battallon of the Twentleth In- | «ar.set - THE L. A. GALLUP CO. i Games Called . in o & ¥ -203 34, ‘%t‘all;n{' 60 day b‘ll"ls & 3 3| fantry errived from Columbus, N. 3L, : ; cables to take station at Fort Bliss, Texas, Beneral Admission ..ee.eeseeweres 250 Efi": E &1 3 R Hifon the outakirts of Bl Faso. e i ‘Linsoed 34 50 ery is e first of e state organiza- hrand Stand .....ceceesimmeneese. 280 e e # % .J1|tions recently mustered into federal X %0 Am u-‘: 5 23 43 service to cross into another state for B e Lires, demand 6.39 1-2, |, now duty. LEGAL NOTICES 200°Am Tel & Tel cables 688 1-2. Rubles, demand 31 4 13 %7 General George Bell, Jr, command- 3:: “Woolen 1-8, cables 31 3-8. Bar silver 63 7-8. bl A ing the El Paso mlm.u—y district, an- 2 g R . v Mexican dollars 49 1-8. Government T ¥ 3|nounced tonight that in any eventual- 0 Ameonae 7T w e N i e o[y et vetetion 3¢ 1] i il - Lavender, wor e afforded o all law-abiding 1400 Atchison Time loans steady, 60 and 90 days m-ugm defeats, almost repeated Mexicans on the American side of the T l c tl l y R k H Et 3 1-4@4, six months 3 3-4@4. no hit game of 1915 against the | frontier. The announcement did much 00 s’ utle ’ a es’ ces’ c = Gh.n Vet letting them down wtth|fo guist ihe foars expressed by the & = T, but one Mit. It was the first shut out | larse Mexican population of the city. Quality the Best—Prices the Lowest for the Glants thls seson i games, and they b:er:hthe last. ml)or GOV. HOLCOMB HAS s e 205 ¢ e wave snnancements| - KEENKUTTER TOOLS AND CUTLERY “Chief” Heyers, of Brooklyn, had the greatest weekly loss In batting, 55 per cent. Pfetter, of Brooklyn, made the big-| Southin Conn., . % R L B S Sain retl LLAWN MOWERS our to had not received the mm otdm Jeags in| department’s orders for the mam"'f e 8-inch ‘wheels, 4 cutting blades 5 | of Cincinnatt, in runs scored, 33 each, | When first.informed of the l4-mdl$3.00 16-inch $3.25 18-inch $3.50 Cuvy of Pittsburgh, stole the most | order he expressed we v bases, 1 ; st Same, Ball Bearing 14-inch $4.00 16-inch $4.25 18-inch $4.50 i sessiis iy .. 3t azi' 1 3 had Adj eral Cole during the night and perfect- ed arrangements for issuing the nec- essary instructions as soon as the call was received. It is benteved that the S R B e o S | PAINTS DEMONSTRATION MADE %t Heath & Milligan’s and Wadsworth Howland’s IN EASTERN SONOFA Ready Mixed Paints Spesthee ““'A"\:fl"‘ Diteenontne KylmelndSnpofin Varnish Stains for Floors and Furniture - ¥ a3 VIS SRR vz qu FER TP P L L CEL sasagu 5 £Ed b ttunn::p'sa.s:::s:s:::::a:y sasdest EREESE Hana HELEEaER.REER Y,

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