Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 26, 1916, Page 3

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Vacation Season brings the need of Bur- glary Protection. Insure in the AETNA at low rat J. L. LATHROP & SONS 28 SHETUCKET STRRET bl FIRE INSURANCE costs so little compared to the protec- tion it affords, that it is a serious mistake to be without it. ISAAC S. JONES Insurance and Real Estate Agent Richards Building, 91 Main St. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Brown & Perkins, Aiomeys-ai-law Over Uncas Nat. Bank, Sbtetucket St. Entranc stairway near to <Thames Nationel Bank. Telephone 38-3. EDWIN W. HIGGINS Attorney-at-Law Corner Main and Shetucket Streets T AMOS A. BROWNING, Norwich has had as dry a sporting season as could possibly be imagined this summer, but plans were laid Fri- day by a number of prominent eastern Connecticut, men interested in baseball that ought to make it end in a blaze of glory. Congressman Freeman of New London, Mayor Dunn of Willi- mantic, Government Inspector John A. Hoiland of this city and Micky Finn and Joseph Cranka, manager and pitcher, respectively, of the New Lon- don Independents, got together in that city at 10 o'clock Friday morning and evolved a schedule of three games for the champlonship of New London county. The series will start after the end of the Eastern league season and the first game will take place on the Falls diamond on Sunday, Sept. 17. By that time the grounds are to be put in fine shape, for all the games will be played there. Congressman Freeman is taking a lot of interest In the series and he offered to the winning team a silve trophy cup, lined with gold. Whe nthe matter of the pe rsonnel Norwich the teams that will represent up, and New London came once decided that no pl eligible unless he lives in New it was at hould he London county. For Norw hers will probably be Enot State H al team. Denny Murphy of Lawrence will probably do all the receiving for Norwich, but Chase of the Hospital may work in_ an emer gency. Danny Murphy of New Haven and Eddie McKay and Bill Stanley, who are keeping in trim in the Island hotel series this summer, will 700 S b sq. | Strengthen the Norwich team, while Al 7.~ 3 RichartPs Blda.} i cer brothers; reddis of New'Ton Jon and Joe of Portland, will play £ N v Londo: bhut not as pirch Dink Holland, ) is with FEast Hampton Mliddlesex league, and Ben Houlihan of this city provide further itive material Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage provesit. 25cat all druggists. His Carser as Pilot 1894. omnie Mack,” manager of the! Athletics, is dean of the major league | managers, both in respect to age and | in service as a big league pilot. The| tall tacticlan reached this earth 18| months in advance of Wiltert Robin- | son and was a set ma a full two yearg before George lings, Mack first directed t lay of a major league team on ember 3, 1894, He succeeded * Brucken- berger as boss of the Pirates, who showed their appreciation of the choice in directors andling the Senato game under M-k’ “Jim” Me- Guire, a manager in Cleveland Boston ard a private in Detroit the catching ngton in f lonned of ti his 1 feating I the reins and they G fast . Ame ; its expansion | movement East d_ Wilbert Robinson w 6 the “seats of the mighty ext wvear after Mec- Graw, at his own re had been re leased by Baltimere and after “Jo Kelley, pres nkeoe 1t, his suc- cessor” had hurdled t innati. Un r Griffith the White Soy won the! Zame, 3 to 1d sr “Robhy” | the Orioles lost irs, 4 to 3, the re- spective opponents Chic: and Balfimore being Cleveland and St Im” Callahan forsook saded 1 hi- lating the Browns, re- | signed in June vear and Fielder Jones im as the responsible party with the Comis- | wt made I suc ¥ ng the Wh E nts, 14 Hugh Jennings became hoss of the Tigers in 1907 ang they started off by beating nd; 2 to 0. In 1913 Miller Hug: took charge of the! Cardinals, “Joe” Tinker of the Reds and, on July 16, “Bill" Carrigan took charge of the Red Sox. The rds | won from Chicago. 5 to 3, in their first game under Huggins; the Reds lost to | Pittsbu 8 to 2, in their first game under er, and the Red Sox won from Detroit, 7 to 4, In their first game under Carrizan. Charles Herzog took charge of the Reds in 1914, and they started off un- der him by heating Chicago, 10 to 1. New commanders at. the start of last| season were “Bill” Donov of “the| Yanks and Clarence Row| of the White Sox. The New Yor! t their first under Donovan to W: 3 to 0; the Chicagoans won theirs under Rowland from St. Louis, 7 to 6. Seven to 6 also was the score of the rst game the Indians played under. Fohl, on May 22, Cleveland getting the 7 and Washington the 6. Lawrence Won in Tenth. Bridgeport, Conn., Aug. 25—Law- | rence defeated Bridgeport here toda 3 to 2 in ten innings. Howard tripled in the tenth and scored when Hork- eimer fumbled Ostergren’s grounder. Scor Lawrence Bridgeport 0010000103 L 0000101000—2 5 Russell, Mulren- Fuller ana Devine; Flaherty nan and BASEBALL Plant Field, New London NEW LONDON VERSUS HARTFORD —TODAY— Games Called at 3:30 P. M. General Admission Grand Stand .. .. 280 250 THERE is no advertlaing medlum in [Eastern Connecticut equai to The Bul- letin for business results. Giants Buy Omaha Players. New York, A New Y Y Le: inced to- Kilidun of the eton veteran 4 from spended to re- club. Another Marshfie!ld Record Broken. Marshfiel FINANGIAL AND COMMERCIAL S —— MARKET WAS IRREGULAR. rcreased Consern Regarding Railway Labor Trouble the Cause. takins, h of ch of . dtreg ace lar tre were again mod cly larg but m than t 770,000 sbares limited to a dozen iited States Steel alone furnishing a total of 150,000 shares. Relative t heavy issue 1 in the morning at mid giving rise to hopes of a new maximu that were not fulfilled. Steel later led the reversal to lower quotations, clos- ing at 97, a net loss of 3-8 of a pc Reading, next in activity to Steel, was under constant pressure and rex istered an extreme decline of 2 1- points, with nére moderate losses In gran ind ¢ rn shares. e ranscontinental group was strong in the forenoon, but yielded in thc n- selling movement o maintained for the final hour. ppers 8 a nence ord 1 but these of issues also suc later Ther to 3 1 points in 1 equipments and munitions, cans and some of the latter as a gro alar depressio; ican Can, Consolidated dustrial Alcohc and m ines. The strength of was the sole feature of the dull exchange market | sterling and francs being unaitered. Trading in bonds was comparatively with total sales, par value, of $2,570,000. nited States coup ned -4 per cent. on call, t coupon threes advancing 1-2 per cént. on actual sale STOCKS. Retes. &L L pr cecd or Am A 1 500 Am Stec 0 Am Tel & Tel 300 Am Woslen 100 Am Woolen pr 41 Am W P pr 500 Amer zine ‘Atchison Al Coast AL G & AU G & W Bald Loco 1t Toco pr Balt _ &Ohlo Balt & Ohlo Ecth Steel ... Brookisn R T Brown Shoe Bums Bros Rutte & Sup Cal Perrol Prirol pr Pac or Can ot Teather pr . andler_otor Ches & Ohio Chle G. W oM & e & Cu BRI cccesL ¢ ¢ & StLipr Chile Copper €hin Con Cop e Driab 100 Cluett P pr i Cot Fucl & Tron 100 Comput Tab 4200 Consal_ Gas 100 Con Can pr 700 Com Troducts 100 Comn Prod pr ~ Py For County Baseball Championship Congressman Freeman, Mayor Dunn and John A. Holland Back of Series After Eastern League Closes—Skat Com- pany at State Hospital Today. -Another | I AT i __NURWICH BULLETIN, SATURD day’'s racing of the Bay State Short Ship Clircuit. when James W. won the special free for all trot in 2.12 1-2, re- ducing the former trotting mark to 2,14 1-4. Five heats were necessary for Silver Heels to win the 2.18 pace. Alice Afridl was forced to a like num- ber before she took the stake in the 2.22 trot. Burke brought Little Nan- cy home 1 nthe 2.20 pace In stralght heats. HARVARD TENNIS PAIR WIN IN SEMI-FINALS. Richard Harte Won His Game Prac- tically Alone. Southampton, N. Y. Aug. 25—Will- iam M. Johnson and Clarence J. Grif- fin, Pacific coast and national doubles champions, with R. Norris Williams, 2nd, and Richard Harte, the Harvard pair, won places in the sem-final round of the doubles of the Meadow Club Tennis tournament here this aft- ernoon. The California pair made a slo wstart against Watson M. Wash- burn and D. E. Mahan, who made a sweep of the first set with their drives straight through court. Griffin mis ed all his chances at the net in this set but g0t into action in the sec- ond. Johnston and Griffin made a target of Mahan in the second and third sets, of sending champions profitable He slumped Into a habit returns into the net and the pegzed sway at him with results. ~ Toward end shburn tried stepping into the allies. It was too late, however, for nston was bringing off passes and cutters for the point third set through by h he score was 1-6 liams and Harte likew! covery of form afte: irst set but defeated Theo, nd Joseph J. Armstrong at [0 Farte was side. His smashir lar feature and he iams devoted himself to his dr levs 1 ved his ank by over 1 runnin to Harte showed ind of stu that by carving out inded, Pell and team g was ne the work. W late r a the . Pell] the whole was a rarely missed team on his spectacu- Wiil- W vol- giving who s in tl the virt Kk w the Arm- work poor Woman Golf Champion. M nnati is the Women's West- | She Cincinnati Jr., the ion defeat- = { l i « 1 L 0 22800 Tns Copper s | 0 A 7y | Tt - 3 b Tt ¥ A 163 | ir Steel S pr vl I & I & L & T Steel pr 1200 T Copper 100 Ya Car Chem 100 ¥ on C & 100 3 5 1000 1600 1900 6400 Willys Ove 100 Willys O, Total sales 695.005 shares. MONEY, New York, Aus. steady; high 2 1-4; 2 1-4; 'last loan 2 1-4; offered at 2 1-4. COTTON. New York, Aug. 25.—Cotton futures closed steady. October 15.62, December closing bid 2; 15.74, January 15.78. March 15.93, May 16.08. Spot steady: middling 15.85. The cotton exchange will be closed Sept. 2 and 4. CHICAGO BRAIN MARKET. Open.. High Low. Close. .oM8% 18 18 153 ... 1523 155% 130% 1647% een 155% 158 153% ° 158 8614 8634 76 % 751510 0% 77 9-18 79 % e a7y 50% 49 1-18 503 53% 52 7-18 53% ie Kalser of Flossmoor, Chicago, 8 vp and 1 to play in the final tound of tha champion tournas- ment on the Hnks of the Kent Cotine try club bhore todmy, Playing with au acouracy she'had!| Bogrei— displayed In he olier matoh this week, | Gkl o) BalLztipnls i(A)) Mrs. Latts made u record for the firat lamucrar "3 5°3 5 Shwiee 3 170 % 1 nine holes, goltig out In 44, meven |fumerdb 5 3 3 | OfWalshret & 2 0 0 0 strokes undor per. Miss Kalser's | Bpeikeict 5 8 & 0 OlStruier 4 3 8 0 o ol TUS grosnn andiahort' ‘mp- [RoRe (88 0 0 olsmnii s 30100 0 proaches was unsteady, Wanmyss 4 2 2 4 1|Mclnnisid 4 210 0 0 HEAD candllib 5 1 0 1 ofplcksb 5 58 4 0 hapman,gb 2 1 2 1 1Plelniche 5 2 5 8 1 RANK OUTSIDER SPRINGS Bewws 2111 %km2, $080°¢ GRANDICIRCRITISURBRISE (B 31 1 U Suoliimeeiia e o — Totals 3153711 s Esoeranza Showsd Up Favorites In | Sere by tina bl | cond ) 00135 13 208 Trot, Phliadapnte "] Yo%%0'’sd 515 e T, e hite, "G, Three base hits, oveland, , Aug. 26—The clos- | Grancy, Fleinich, Ing day of the Grand CGircult race| sl el meeting at North Randall today fur-|Grancrit "5 2% & 0% b o h}i‘nhrd‘?&nc of the blggast surprises of | mbhean 5 s L s et the meeting when Biily Durfeo placed | SPetienel 5 2 1 e e Esperanza, a rank outsider, fiiac In maame gD el the summary in the 200 tref. winnin | 4110 ojmotein 31015 he third and fourth heats aftsr Jean, | ST 0 0 00 the favtrite, had taken the spening Fonad Rt P O mile and Director Todd the sscond §0 10 Omaniche 5 0 4 3 3 £1B the ofher everits the favoriios had 31044 00011 airly easy going. The pacing ai- ' e e vision of the Champion Staliion | Baser RS AL Stakes proved easy for Peter Luook. It ElE AT won first meney in straight heats and: (' Batted for Bush in never was in danger of defeat, o i fe ek o Pop” Geers rode his first winning, race of the meecting when with Na- | pol#n Direct he took the free-for-all paci feature. He headed Single G, and Hal Boy in three straight heats, but was compelledq step fast, going| the last quarter in .27 3-4. Allie Watts, slight favorite over Bin- in the first ville, ction of the 2.13] trot. disposed of her fleld in straight | heats, while in the second division ! Pittsburgh was victorious. Al thoush | Pittsburgh made bad break in the fi- | al mile which was won by Ben Mec- | Gregor, he proved himself the class of | the fleld as long as he stayed on a trot | an dwon first money by taking the two | opening heats. Ben White drove Lee Axworthy an exhibition mile, but only equalled hi record of 2.00 1-4 instead of beating it. di YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Neticnal zeagua. Chigso 0, Pittshiitgh 2. ((11 fomings) Cincinratt f2 5. (11 innings) an League. (Tir: » Tk Eastern Towell 4 mn 1. (12 E 6: New Haven 1 Dridgeport League. &5 0 o m al League ikee postponed, raln. (Two GAMES SCHEDULED TODAY. Boston at_Chic New att Philadelphia at St. Louls American League. New Yorl land at Philadelphia. crn League. 1 Worcester at Portlana At State Hospital mpany of Ha ainst Hospital Team SUNDAY GAMES. National League: at Chicago Philadelphta Am: No games - scheduled. Eastorn League. seheduled. ican Leaague. THE STANDINGS. National Leas: Ainsworth Out for Rest of Year. Washington, Aug. —Washington ook the second game of the series rom ChicaZo today, 5 to 2. With the score tide t ime was won in the sixth off Wolfgang, who had succeed- ed Williams in the box. Foster's dou- ble and singles by DMilan, anks, Judge and McEride scored three runs. An ay examination today reveal- ed that Catcher Ainsworth's nger was fr: d in the game Wedne not erpected to plain again tl 1y. He | is sea- | son. Score: Chicago (A) Washington (A) ab hoo a e 52 120 0 0 2 ) 3 0 2300 11 00 0 i1 2900 10 302 gl 13 51 0] 74 0020 2 0 900 of 00 et 00 BN Williams.p 2 2 MM 0 0 zreiedd 1 0 AFournier 1 0 Totals 34 10 (x) Batted for 6th (xx) Ran for V in sth xxx) Tatted for Willlams In 6th (2 1 for Waifgang in 9ih ) Batted MeMullln in 9 Secoro by s Chicago 10000100002 Washington 5 00002300x—3 Two base Hits, 3. Colb Foster St. Louis Made 14 Hits. New York, Aug. 25.—St. Louls made 14 hits off three Yankee pitchers to- AY, AUGUST 26, 1916 ed Miss Lnur: ) Neps Take Two from Athletios. Priladelphia, Aug 25 —Bad pitching and olding enabled Cleveland to win both games from Philadelphia today, 12 to 9, and 10 to 2. Sicore by Inulngs & Phi I who live amidst these scenes drawing thousands of visitors, those of us by whose very doors wend these magnifi- cent drives that delight our guests, sheuld not neglect this beauty and en- joyment at our finger-tips. was scored by Whitehouse, who dou- bled a sacrifice by Odell ana a smgle by Hearne. A feature of the game was the base runninz of Becker. The local lodge of Elks turend out fn force as _a tribute to Commodore Morton I. Plant, owner of the New| This does not mean for us a B0 London_club and visiting guesis in- > automobile jaunt. It means that ¢luded John K. Tener, president of the |each of us has a vacation to enja¥, Natlonal league and Captain A. C.lard it we have a motor car we cem Anson. The Elks presented boral tri- |enjoy it a-wheel, bowling around -a butes to Commodore and Mrs. Plant{four-day to a week automobile tour and a gold Ik card case to Manager | through the self-same mountaing Eugene McCann, over the self-same motor roads that Hartford Now, London attracts visitors hundreds of miles, L R SR | _ Our threc Northern New England Zeemandt 4 2 3 0 41 & 4 1|states offer a variety of tours, one 3 51311 4220 0lmay say a net-work of them, that is A N t to bewildering. Broadly speak- s 4183 e s e aed o there are three great circuits of Wison2b 5 1 0 1 plocell,sh 4 2 15 1ibeauty spots and acation points, M'Donald,e 5 1 4 3 0fRussell,c 4 0 8 0 0Ofjeach of which may be adapted and Pufitp /- 40 1 3 olhamep 88 82 1ivsvieq: to sult the whims of the ingis Totals 40 8x3218 3| Totals 38 12 33 17 4 |Vidual. One tours the beaches and (), Ono ut Vhew winning Tun scored. lakes of Maire; another the White core Ly ol £ Mountains, and a third the Green 3909301088978 | Mountains, i Jeatie, Whitchouse. Three base| A trip linking Portsmouth, Port- Bits, Brickley, Weiser. land, Bar Harbor, Bangor with a de- == tour’ to R =ives the motorist Batting Bec for Worcester. Lowell, Ma Aug. 25.—Worcester had an easy time witih Lowell h:\i[in:,'I the sum total of New England scenic beauty—the shore, the lakes, and the mountains. On the path cne travels Smith and Par or 20 hits and 12 | the picturesquo cliffs of Maine's rug- runs today. ged coast, nota Bass Head Cliff. He Score:— visits lakes without number, and is Worcester never out o fsight of mountains. o ~coasting trip is a round of o of the White Mountains. 0 mouth to Bethlchem with ° the New England = jagus 0 ve may “discover” beauties ‘of Dauss Won His Own Game. Torphy. 1, i which he does not dream. One may Boston, Aug. 25. 5 won his | Ghalgec 1lclimb to the rampart of Presidential own game today, Detre defeating | Smith.p O|range and the scenic masterpiece of Boston, 2 to 1. With two out and a 2| Crawford’s Notch along the Maine man on second in the seventh, Heil- Lake Winnepcsauke and man, batting for Spencer popped along ! the historical old towns of the foul line back of first base. It e rrimac rive went for two bases Burns scoring. 00005301 3— e Green Mountains offer a tour Dauss then hit to the flagpole for two ¥. Tiitelger, Werre no less entrancing. One in making bases, Heilman coming home with the ——— the circuit of Burlington, Ruiland, \\'ié"]in; tall Portland Wins in Twelfth. Manchestc Bennington, Brattleboro, Score: Portland, Me., Aug. 25.—Portiand Johnsbury and St. Albans with Deetole ea) . Ay won a twelve innin me from Lynn trips to 1pee Lake and Craw- e Ceiin 5" § o|today, 2 to 1. In the twelfth Loner- Notch, rounds Vermont In a ring Bushss 4115 0 0 5 ofsan was passed and scored on G of ever-varving and beauty. e o 9 0 9lton’s long drive. Brown playea a re-| The Maine and w Hampshire RS e 112 o o|markable game in left field, having}Coasts are rich with many a short Bumsiv 4 2712 1 15 o often putouts and one assist. motor drive, which may be linked to Young 4 213 ) 0 0 3 0 Score: comprise an extended vacation tour. 2D 933 1lpPortld 000100000d01—251|_ Out of Portsmouth. Portland .or A 64 oo0/Lynn 000000001000—140]|Ban the motrist may find the o0 L T ey and Gaston; Tuero, Will- | maximum a sea shore beauty with the ~ 01 0 oliams and Carroll minimum of hard road travel. A de- 2 szt g ! 1 trip may be made about the o N of Casco Bay. It may be ex- fken 15 0 o 5| FAVORITES HAD WAY ed_on to PBangor, from which MeXally 9 0 0 0 0 AT GRAND CIRCUIT OPENING, may be made to Ellsworth #al 0. 08, 0 1 Bar Harbor. Tt2: 14 1| Tommy Murphy Drove Directum | tc a| Il worth while on Spencer 1 Mevii World’a| Recacy. | tour is.a visit to Shorten === | historic points, S Cleveland, O, Au 1 Fevorites|C : Green Mountein tour the Lak # had their own way in three of the| BEEmeS05/) I8 locality = one 0000002002 four events at the second srand ot |! well exrect to find in Switzer- e it Bl e cuit race mecting at North Randall| & i it which opened today. In only one race, | kname of Northern New 5 's 4 i the trot, were the talent aumped. | tion Land.” ey Lft.d?.’,ph\ i ? g Wie Tommy Murphy, the veteran reius- | may choose to turn ricago, Aug. 2 tudolph won h! phy, | ay enth straight game today, holdin n the Jdriving e LR o & & the Soaumnol €0 e T while Boston | WinS in two starts. He piloted Peal |2 H 1 beauty. Moreover he only run of the contest on |12dY to the front in the two year old | his route is organized Tor nim regard- 19| only T the contest Fot anidls o rell Mo {Jess of whether he plans it. He trav- doubl sacrifice hit and a | trot and also shoved Jayell Ma ! ? : 2 Crfice B the 209 pace H with t 2 the roads wil play engineered by Smith. Do LA In the 2.09 trot Guy Neila, driven b; = SESREIES ) Chicago (N) Srow, was a heavy favorite, but in the be cared for, mo matter ab oo a o ap hpo a el first she broke in th turn o olsmae 3030 w}i"\gn = '1‘5“121\]' er al { The Word “Stunt.” | Ear S ‘f‘v;,\r-::‘:; “I‘ ieliads ‘_‘r‘:” :"'f]‘{ Sian ! A j‘st\mt” is a feat or performanee ety (e The Ameri iorse Breeders' Fu- | Siriking for the strength or skill re 111 ofturity, the tws old trot, the | quirea for its accomplishment; hence e i :*"‘\“\(l‘ 1!;1":{1*- big vil:m v fhy‘s;‘ it has come to mean any real feat 10000 tr Reat favosite, | The word has made Its way into both = ) hy u Mary Coburn w W er and the New Standard dic 0000100001 000000000 Gonzale’s Single Won 11th. Louis, Mo, Aug. 25.—Gonz: single the eleventh today Hornsby with the run that won a see saw game from Philadelphia, 6 to 5. Score Philadelphia (N) () i ab Rpo a hpo Paskertef 2 1 4 0 Dugey, 3b I,\u ado One out when winnlng run scored, s 28 WCHE AL T 0.0 3 Ty 00 v. Wilson. Three base Giant’s Game in Eleventh. Pittsbu \u —New York ated today, € to 2, win. | z t 1 the eleventh innin, en si Robertson and Doyl irns’ triple and Hunter's home resulted in four runs beinz scored. Score New' York (N) Reds’ Errors Were Costly. Buder wep Pittsburgh (N: ) i Cincinnati, Ohio, Aug. 25.—Two of| Cincinnati’s errors were costly and | Brooklyn took the second game _ of | the series here today, 3 to 2. The| seore: Brookiyn (M) Gincinnati_(N) ab hipo a e o Myers,cf 02 0 oNeater 0 Stengel. it 2 nlumx, b 1 $ 13 0 ofChase ol 40 4 4 olcrmi,re of 4111 olWingoc o s 2 0 3 2 ofLouden.2y 1 Getzib 4 210 0 o|tobbs, 1 Millere 4 3 2 2 ofMitchellp o Cheneyp 4 0 0 2 OfxSchuelder 0 o 0 Totals 3310271 of o ———— Totals 3 () Ran for Louden in 6th 22) Batted for Hobbs tn Oth Score by Innings Brookly 0100001018 Cincinnat i 0000002002 Two base bt d e base hit, Getz. New Haven’s Hitting No Use. Springeld, M Aug. 25—New Ha- ven Iknocked two pitchers off _the mound_today but was unable to beat Sprinefield, the home club winning, 6 to Courtney’s hitting and the field- ing of Couinard and Hammond fea- tured Score: Seringfield New Haven ab upo a e ab oo a e Booe.of 0 ofNuttercf 3 23 0 0 Hifcket ot 0 o|C'winard.2b 5 0 1 5 0 r.Smith.1r 0 o|Recd.rt 52000 Homond 2b 4 ofsilerin 5 211 0 6 Flsnn, 16 00|Dreserdt 5 1 2 0 0 Splres.3b 1 o|Whelan3b 4 0 0 8 0 Share.ss 5 2|Courtnevss 4 2 0 1 2 Oferhiolm.a 1 ojLSmithe 4 17 00 8 1lDonovanp ¢ 1 0 3 0 0 o == 1 0| Totals 28112412 2 Totals 36 11 27 14 3| Score by inntngs Springfeld . New Hasen Two base hits, Planters In Great Form. New London, Conn., Aug. 25.—New day and batted out a 5 tod4 victory over New York. Collup yielded ten hits in five innings and lost his second game of the season. Score: H St. Louls (A) New York (a) | @b hpo a el ab hoo a e ShottonJ¢ 4 1 6 0 OMageect 5 2 8 0 0 Millersf 5 1 1 0 ofmighar 5.8 3.0 ie Smiccib 4 2 8 0 0TDaughes 5 2 1 7 0 Tratt% 4 2 6 2 0 Phnb 30820 Marsansef 4 1 2 0 olOldringrt 4 1 0 0 0 Swercidc 4 1 2 1 0jMullen 2o Austinb 4 1 0 0 Olbaumanidb & 0 2 2 o Lavinss 4 8 3 3 oWatersc 4 1 § 2 0 Wellmanp 3 2 0 1 ofCullpp 1 0 1 0 0 — — = — —[Ioven 00021 Totals 861427 7 OMosrddgep 0 0 0 0 O N'makee 11 0 0 0 1000, 11000 ¢ 2 = Totels T 1327 16 1 (x) Batted for Cullep in_ 5th, (xx) Batted for Love in Tth xxx) Baited for Mogridgo in 6th Beore hy tw tnes St Louts . 0110100—5 New Yoo .1l S000001010—2 Two base hits, Shotten, Tavan, Mullen 2. Three base hit, Stslee. London defeated Hartford, 5 to 4, to- day in the eleventh inning of a well contested game. This winning run field and fir ed sec- | but neither states its origin. A in the| Webster suggests a comparison with | the old word “stint,” which means “g her supporters| task.” It is interesting to note that oo mome 2l neee | obsolete provincial English had a Roan Hal went to the front. | Ford “stunt” which meant “dvll” et A Harris M., who w the " § “stupid.” staged comeback in the 5 winring handily. Jay Ell Mack carvie ‘!! away the 2.09 pace in three straizht| Had No Belief in Balloons. !\t“n* Ma;u'r W n}fwAl dxfign‘{n:* thm Dr. Samuel Johnson heard so much heats, Cripetition in the first and Jast/ga; ghout balloons in the last year As an added attraction, Mr. Murphy | Of bis life (1784) that he became un- drove Directum I an exhibition mile| speakably bored, and cautioned his - Y"';:'?\r;flfi,({‘g;rg‘"' \1| friends about bringing up that sub- 2.20 to 216 1-4. The record. estab. | Ject of conversation when in his com- lished in 1902, w: s held by Carl Wilkes SKAT TEAM AT HOSPITAL. | Fast Game Expected With Hartford | Piayers This Afternoon at 3. kat company baseball down todav to m the pany. He was confident that the bal- loon could serve no good purpose but that of furnishing a rather foolish and decidedly dangerous amusement to the wealthy few. The comir team is Poor Guess. State Sunday School Teacher—*Children, Hospital asgrezation for the second time this summer, and the close score ‘ldo you know the house that is open to in the first game indicates that the | ali—to the poor, the rich, the sad, the clash th ternoon at 3 o'clock will be | happy, to man and to woman, to young a gcod one for the fans to have and to old—do you know the house I mean?’ Small Boy—*“Yes, miss—the station house.”—Boston Transcript. on. Enot the Hox will be on the pital and Chase v T | | First American Lace Plant. The first lace plant estabiished iy IN THE AUTO W % N RO ORD | the United States was that of the R — Jennings Lace works in Brooklyn, N. Y., about thirty years ago. Othex Our mountainous upper New | Plants bave been established from time land has no equal for summer| to time until now there are about motoring tou Search the country| twenty-six factories operating 550 lace and von will fimd o Joeatity ot % hike | Machines and employing several thow area’ that sounds such a call of the| Sand persons. road. Not only does it send forth to he motorlsts 2 spell as compelling as World’s Oldest Flower. the lure of any mountain land, but it > r o O to bring about a| The Chrysanthemum is the oldest realization 'of that spell, the finest|cCultivated flower in th> world, and, and hostelries of the United | though Japan’s national emblem, was I R e ana | first developed in China. Confucus, mountains, and woodland valleye to| Who lived approximately 500 vears thrill the soul of an artist: and many | B. C., mentioned it in his writings, an artist have they thrilled. What is|and antique Chinese pottery in the more to the polnt, our country is|pBrtigh museum is decorated With cone threaded with automobile roads and 3 drives, the equal of which are not to | Ventional designs of the same flower. he found in any highland on this side of the Atlantic Ocean. Thousands of| A new attachment made to fire motor tourists yearly come to our|plugs transforms them into sanitary lakes and mountains. Those of us|drinking fountains. W. S. HART AND ENID MARKEY IN TRIANGLE PLAY, “THE CAPTIVE GoD.” AT THE DAVIS THEATRE—MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY *

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