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INSURANCE ONLY THREE CENTS A DAY @" the cost to AETNAIZE J. L. LATHROP & SONS, Agents 28 Shetucket Strest. Insure your property against FIRE let hundreds other people help you pay your loss if and u experience one. Good companies represented by ISSAC 8. JONES, Insurance and Real Estate Agent | Richards Building 97 Main St. BURGLARY INSURANCE S The Travelers l{lsumlce Co. B. P. LEARNED & CO. Agency Established May, 1846. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Brown & Perkins, lhlmlyl-li—ll; Over Uncas Nat. Bank, Sbetucket St. Entrance stairway near to rhames National Bank. Telephone 3! RESULTS OF FOOTBALL GAMES. Yale 26, Washington and Jefferson 14. Harvard 23, Cornell 0, Princeton 7, Dartmouth 3. Brown 21, Rutgers 8. 20,” Pennsylvania 0. Pittsburgh Army ‘Williams 0. sity 13, Union 0. Catholic’ 1. Bates 3, Bowdoin 1. Vermont 13, New Hampshire 9. Dickinson 13, Franklin and Marshall Colgate 27, Springfield 14. Boston 21, Trinity 7. Geneva 7, Buffalo 0. Lafayet:e 27, Lebanon Valley 14. Delaware 5, Stevens Tech 0. Swarthmore 13, Ursinus 3. Rocnester 30, Hamilton 0. Muhlenberg 17, Bucknell 0. Middlebury 31, Rensselaer 0. Norwich 28, St. Lawrenee 6. Rhode Island 18, Conn. Asgies 6. Maine 0, Colvy 0. West. Michigan 14, Syracuse 13 Tufts 12, Initana 10. Wisconsin 3¢, Chicago 7. Notre Dame 60, Wabash 0. Iilinois 14, Purdue. 7. Carnegie Tech 59 Northwestern 40, Drake 6. Michigan Aggies 30, North Dakota Agzies 0. Minnesota 67, Towa 0. Case 27, Wooster 0, Denver 19, Creighton 12. Grinnell 16, Coe 0. North Dakota 20, South Dakota 0. Kentucky State '32, Cincinnati 0. South, Navy Georgia 2. _ George Wasnington 13, Johns Hop- kins 0. ouisville ‘anderbilt Texas 13, H 19 Battled to a Scoreless Tie. The anci, pastime of and shuttlecock, revised to comport th modern conditions, was enacted by two football teams on South Field, New York, Saturday. The teams were Columbia ‘and Willlams. They were likewise the battledores. The shuttle- cock was the ball. Thrown, kicked or carried, it travelled first in one terri- tory, then In fhe other, with an equally futile sojourn in each. Finally after ah hour of such usage it bobbed up four- teen yards oast of midfield only four yards from the point where it had gone into cction. Here the game ended, a scoreiess tie, 0 to 0. battledore — The Choice October Brew Ale has arrived Now on Draught at Hotels, Cafes, Clubs, etc. We Are Rec g Shipments Regularly Without Delay or Interference Bass & Co., Importers, 90 Warren Street, New York Louisiana Consol’d MINING CO. OF NEVADA has been joined by Th: Toacp.h sininy Go. of Nevada in the operation of its properties. This marks a new era for Lou Consolidated stock now selling around 50c. Should sell in the dollars soon. Further information on request FRANK V. SULLIVAN Mem} of N. Y. Curb Association Tol. 4324 Broad 39 Bgoad St, N. Y. Prospect Strest. Nerwich, Conn ‘Prons 511 THERE 15 no advertising medium in ot Connecticut equal to The Buls Jtin (ur business results. LAl New York, Oct. 20—Football play which swept through the gridiron ga mut from superlative to mediocre and ‘was interspersed with thrills, marked the week-end games wherever eastern elevens competed. Not in many years hes a single day developed such & re- markable series of contests. Veteran followers: of the sport cannot recall an afterncon when spectacular fea- tures were so frequent, Not all the play, however, can be classified as approaching football per- fection. without exception the competing elevens showed that an- of thousands of [other two or three weeks will be re- quired to put the teams on edge for the games which mark the climax of the season. In some cases the winning teams were victorious through the play of the combinations as a whole, while in others individual brilllancy of one or two players or a lucky break in the game was the margin between victory and defeat Still an- other development of the day’s play was the demonstration that no team, however big or powerful! can hope to win from ' a rival of reasonable strength with an attack based entire- ly upon old school methods of advanc- ing the ball. In a broad view of Sat- urday’s contests it will be seen that almost without exception the team which _showed an attack equally di- vided between line plunging and Skirt- ing, coupled with a perfected over- head defense, was the which emerged the victor: The outcome of the majority of the games was forecast with more than ordinary accuracy but in several cases competing elevens failed to play up to form expected or the reputation gained In preceding conte: This was true of Cornell, which went down before Harvard by a surprisinzly one sided score. Outclassed in individual chine play, Cornell was never sition to threaten H notwithstanding the Crimson combination and ma. in a po- serious! that the from the is far from completely Ithaca eleven. Harvard’s aggressiveness and eralship appeared to take all the and _strategy out of the visitors early in the game. The 1o the contes continued, the worse the Red and White played. The Cornell eleven did not appear to have any settled plan of campaign; was slow and ain in running off its playe and the hand- ling of the bal_was little short: of atrocious. The Crimson, on the other hand, while still crudc, - showed other Haughton gridiron machine 1 the making and a possible worthy ri- val for Princeton and Yale later in the season. Next to the Harvard-Cornell chief interest centered in Princeton and Yale. Whi came throuzh to victory of the Tigers was not by as convincing as that of Princeton managed to win from I mouth by the margin of but it was due to the prowess o individual player has frequently been the case in th the Hanover eleven The Tiger offensc and far from What must Princeton is to win from i ven and Cambridge rivs Yale showed continued gradual provement under the coachis Jones. In defeating W Jefferson decisively th marked progress, for the fan combination is a foc hard to hold in ch to be one of the most country in the use of and Harvard will n that Yale, while holdi to two touchdowns in tack, piled up more than do score with an offense t | both the running and ove ods of advancinz the The_gridiron juggernaut | the University “of Pittsbur { over Pennsylvania without being s ously threatened at any time, Qualkers were unable to cop: h th speed and all-round superiority of the anthers_although showing a fight spirit that promises much for the ture. Both the army and navy found lttle difficulty in disposing Villa Nova and Georgia, respectivel thelr opponents being hardly in th same gridiron_class with the soldiers and sallors. Brown took the strong Rutgers_eleven into camr impres- sive fashion with a whirlwind attack which swept the husky New Bruns: wick machine off its fe The tory proved to he a costly one, ever, owing to the number of D injured. Colgate’s weight and proved too much for the Spr Training school team, but azain the forward pass was brought into play v the losers and a score thus run up king the in y the showing made head meth- nuilt h up at rolled fu- teams of speed nzfield b; which lessened the sting of defzat. HARVARD WARRIORS VANQUISH CORNELL Ithacans’ Aspirations Shattered by the Crimson Attack—Score 23 to 0. The Harvard football team shatter- ed the championship aspirations of the Commell eleven Saturday afternoon when it routed the big Red combina- tion from Ithaca by a score of 23 to 0. Neither team has yet reached the height of its gridiron form, but as they faced each other in the Stadium today, Harvard was as far superior to Cornell as the score indicates. The Crimson eleven outplayed and outgeneralied the team from _tha shores of Lake Cayuga and the Itha- cans completed their own downfall by an exhibition of erratic football that stunned their adherents, who had laid many wagers at odds of five to four that Cornell would duplicate the victory of a year ago. Once the ban was in Harvard’s pos- session the Crimson sprang a sur- prise. The backfield lining up with Cornell- formations, procedeed to reel oft plays such as Cornell undoubtedly expected to launch against the Crim- son. This appeared to upset the Red and White, for they found it hard to diag- nose or check the Harvard advance. The entire play during the first per- iod was in Cornell territory and al- though the net result of the attack was three Harvard points scored through a fleld goal by Robinson, the embryo eleven from Ithaca lost con- fidence in its power and aside from occasional flashes of its potential strength, never appeared in the light of a possible victor. The game while hard fought, was remarkably free from Infractions of the rules but three five yard penal- tles being imposed during the sixty minutes of play. Captain Dadmun, the Right End Harte of the Harvard team will be out of the play for a week at least as the result of injuries, but other casualties were confined to the usual bruises. The victor's Initial score came in the first period after some minutes of play in Cornell's end of the field. From close to his own goal, Shiverick SPECTACULAR FEATURES FREQUENT Eastern Gridiron Battles Furnished Many Sensations—Har- _ vard Combination Annihilated Cornell—Yale Shattered ‘Washington and Jefferson. Although and heav- e f nd second | string men worked with individual dash and team harmony which was punted to his forty yard line where on the first line up, Casey, who prom- ises to develop into another Eddie Mahan, reached Cornell's 20 yard line in two clever dodging runs. Robinson dropped an_easy fleld goal. Later in the period Harvard recovered a punt which a Cornell player fumbled on his own 40 yard line. A triple pass fol- lowing two line plunges put the ball on Cornell's 13 yard line, just as the period ended. On the second scrim- mage of the succeeding period, Casey dashed_through the center of the Red and White line for ,a touchdown, from which Robinson failed to kick goal. There was no further scoring until the third perfod when Harvard, tak- ing a Cornell punt at midfield, seét Ca- sey and Herween battering and dodg- ing half way to the goal line. A for- ward_pass, Murray to Casey, placed the Spherold within two yards of a touchdown and Herween ploved over the line on his first charge. Then, for 500d measure, he kicked the goal. The final touchdown came in the fourth period when Sweetser recovered a Cornell fumble and ran ten yards to the goal line. This came after the Ithaca team had checked a Harvard attack by Intercepting one of a series of forward passes which the Crimson was using almost exclusively at this point of the game . Minot Kicked the goal, making the final score 2 to 0. YALE, REVENGES PREVIOUS TWO DEFEATS Blue Players Walk Over Washington and Jefferson—Score 36 to 14. Yale got revenge on_Washington and Jefferson Saturday afternoon and beat the Pennsylvanians 36 to 14, in a pectacular game in the Bowl before 18,000 persons, thereby wiping cut the memory of . two defeats and a tle e plaved with this team in the last ihree seasons. Yale played brilliant and racged football in turns, showing up to sreat advantage in the first half id as poorly in the second half as iey were great in the first. The hard, fast attack of the Yale backs and the stone wall defence of the for- wards made the game seem casy for the Blue in the first two periods, the score at the end of the second period being 30 to 7. But in the second half | Yale was outplayed by Washington {and Jefferson and was held withaut . score until the last few moments of play. Both of Washington and Jeffer- son’s scores came as the direct result of the forward passes beautifully exe- cuted by McCreight, the star of his team. The first touchdown was by McCreight after four forward p ded the ball on the 5-yard line, 1shir nd Jefferson team cover- lng fifty yards in the four passes. The score by Crawford, but a penalty of fifteen yards_ put Washington and_Jefferson on Yale's I-yard line. Crawford was shoved over on the next play. Washington and Jefferson tried fi ty-two forward passes, soelieved to be a record number, and were successful in about half of them. A total of 274 vards was made by the Pennsylvan- jans on this style of play. McCreight did all the tossing, while Rubel, Tres- sal and Nuss did_most of the playing. The passes kept Yale on the jump and revealed the fact that the Elis are not €0 strong in meeting them as was supposed. Elis Busy from Start. Yale's scores came thick & the first half. A forward to Comerford, put Yale in to score a touchdown seven after the game started. With the ball on the 25-yard line, Carey circled Washington and Jeffer- | son’s left end for a_touchdown. The first period ended with the hall a foot from Washington and Jefferson's goal ine, and two plays Smith pushed himself over for a scd Smith a few moments later caught a_punt at mid- shaking off five men, ran touchdown. It w and prettiest run of the Dosition minutes it was here that Washington and jefferson started a march down the field by means of forward passes and MicCreight made the first score for his team. Legore a few moments later kicked a pretty goal from the 38-yard line, the first fleld goal to be registered by Yale this vear. Just before the half ended Legore squirmed throuzh the opposing team from the 10-yard line, following a steady drive through the Washington and Jefferson line by the Yale backs. A fne pass, Laroche to Church, in the last homents of the game, and another, Neville to Laroche, landed the ball on Washington and Jéfferson’s 5- vard line, from which point Neville took it over on a line plunge. fore than 1,500 members of the National Guard saw the game as the guests of the Yale manazement, and the crowd was the largest that ever saw a preliminary game in the bowl DRIGGS FEATURES IN PRINCETON’S VICTORY Star Full Back Made Long Run Which Defeated Dartmonth. Although outplayed at almost every: angle of the game, Princeton defeated 4 Dartmouth Princefon Saturday aft- ernoon, 7 to 3. Fddie Driggs, the Princeton fullback, was individually responsible for the vietory of the Princston eleven. Dartmouth started a hard offensive drive toward the Princeton goal line in the third period. Driggs intercepted a long forward pass thrown by Gerrish on Princeton’s 50 yard line and raced along the margin of the side line the remaining 65 vards for a_touchdown. At times on his mad dash down the field. Driges was So close to the white chalked line that he appeared to be stepping across it. Tibbott kicked the goal after the touchdown. Dart- mouth’s score was made in the second period on a placement kick by Captein Gerrish. Indiana Rallys Too Late. Indianna University displayed sur- prising strength in the football game with Tufts at Indlanapolls, Saturday, and scored more points against the Eastern college than any other team it has met this year. The flnal score was 12 to 10 in favor of Tufts. With only a few minutes to play at the end and the score 12 to 0 against them, the In- diana men rallied, and by means of spectacalar plays ' got in position to score on a place kick. That was fol- lowed in a few minutes by a touch- down by Erehart, Indiana’s lef{ half. Bulkeley Gets Sound Trimming. New Haven High School is coming back. After being beaten in every game 50 far this season the New Ha- ven boys straightened up Saturday and So zreatly outplayed the Bulkeley High School team that the latter boys went back to New London with a 62-0 defent. The local team played excel- lent ball ali through the game. Very few fumbles were recorded against them and the line proved impenetrable for the iousely playing visitors. All the New Haven backs made touch- downs, many big gains being register- ed by lateral passes, which were used for the frst time Saturday by the lo- cal boys. The Bulkeley team made a very poor showing against their faster opponents, and the whole team seemed o need a great deal of practice. N. F. A. WALLOPS STONINGTON HIGH. Academy Combination Rolls Up Big Soore. N. F. A. handed Stonington High one of the Viggest defeats of the sea- son Saturday on the Academy campus. TThe visiting team’s defense was power- less against the smashing blows of the Academy’s back field. A large crowd of spectators were disappointed in their expectations of seeing a close game. It was evident from the start that the Stonington eleven was _ lacking in striking power. _The N. F. A, warriors clearly outclasse® them from the first. Not once was Stonington within strik- ing distance of their opponents’ goal line. The Academy played togeth- er and furnished wonderful interfer- ence for their runners. Stonington had one player worthy of notice, Cook. He was the hinge upon which’ all of their plays swung—a big, heavy man that made the other play- ers look like pigmies. He didn’t make any long gains, but he blocked all plunges through the center of the line. The Academy back-field plaved & fine game and every play was run off like clock-work. They used a variety of attack, and fooled their opponents almost every play. They made use of forward passes and all but one of them worked. Stamiey kicked every one of the five touchdowns. N. F. A, Stonington Oat ... Sullivan i McMillian .. Rose Senft Wilcex Lynch . P. Dollbaun Kozlowski ... H. Dollbaun Right guard Wilcox Powers Right tackle PATKET .eouvenis.nnssosissss Mcdowan Right ehd Keefe ..... “-osaseann i Zeller Quarterback Stanley .. R .... Lenehan Right halfback QAR o o S8 2 S E ol Cook Full back Bendett . -. Gilmore Teft halfback Referee, R. Keefe. Umpire, Morrison. 10 minute quarters. Substititions na_for Gilmorx N. F. A—Connor for Graham, Hen- ault for Oat. Head Iiesman, J. Lee. Stonington—Treve- Brown Defeats Rutgers. Brown defeated Rutgers 21 to_3 be- fore five thousand persons at Provi- dence, Saturday, George Foster ford’s’ multiple kick gave the vis their only score. Brown scored on spectacular ru Rough work of the Rutgers team was criticised freely, five of the Brown line men being removed from the gane too badly hurt to cor tinue. Weeks, Brown's right end, was taken to the Rhode Island Hospit with a fractured skull, and tonight his condition is stated to be critical. Weeks lives_in New Redford and is one of the Rrunonians’ strongest players. Navy Beats Georgia. The University ‘of Georgia football team succumbed to the Navy eleven at Annapolis Saturday, 27 to 3. The game wa: rough and was marked by many penalties and minor injurles, the over-zealovsness becoming so marked that the referec disqualified a player on each team. The visitors played a good foothall zame in the first half, hold- ing th> Middies on fairly even terms but went to rieces in the third period. The punting and line plunging of Don nelly, the Georgia halfback, featured. Army Shows Much Aggressiveness. The Army eleven, displaying plenty of aggresiveness and power in its a tack, smothered Villa Nova Saturda at West Point, the_Cadets winning by a score of 62 to 7. Oliphant, whi wonderful work on the gridiron this year is a feature of football at the Military Academy, was again the big gun in the Army’s offensive drive, the former ar rolling up a total ve points for the Cadets on of fort six touchdowns. Penn Bows to Pittsburgh. Outplaying their opponents in_ev ery period except the third, the Un versity of Pittsburgh football team defeated the University of Penna it Pittsburgh, Saturday, 20 to 0. Hast- ings was individually responsible for most of the points made by the local teams scoring a touchdown and two field goals. The attendance was near- ly 35,000 : CITY BOWLING LEAGUE ORGANIZED. Four Clubs Form Bowling Tourney— Season Opens Oct. 30. The City Bowling league will be composed of four teams, including the Aetna, Palace, Taftville and State Hos- pital teams, with $60 in prizes to be distributed at the end of the bowling season. Each team will contribute 515, Prizes to be divided as follows: First team $25, second ieam $15, first aver- zge $3, second average $2, third aver- age $1, high single $2, high three $2, team total 5, team string $5. The league schedule is for 27 weeks. opening games Monday, Oct. 20. The s=chedule follows: First_week—Monday, Oct, 30, at the State Hospital, Actna vs, State Hos- pital; Monday, Oct. 30, at the Palace, Palace vs. Tartville. Second week—Monday, Nov. 6, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. Palace; Monda: Nov. 6, at Taftville, State Hospital vs. Taftville. Third week—Monday, Nov. 13, at Taftville, Aetna vs. Taftville; at the Palace, State Hospital vs. Palace. Fourth woek—Monday, Nov. 20, at State Hospital, Aetna_vs. State Hos- pital; at the Palace, Palace vs. Taft- ville. Fifth weck—Monday, Nov. 27, at the Aectna, Aetna vs. Palace: at Taftville, State Hospital vs. Taftviile. Sixth week—Monday, Dec. Aetna, Aetna vs. Tafiville; at State Hospital, State Hospital vs, Palace. Seventh weck—dlonday, Dec. 11, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. State Hospital; at_the Palace, Palace vs. Taftville. Eighth week—Monday, Dec. 18, at the Palace, Aetna vs. Palace; at State Hospital, State Hospital ve. Taftville Ninth ' week—Friday, Dec. 25, ot Taftville, Aetna vs. Taftvile; at_the Palace, State Hospital cs. the Palace. Tenth week—Monday, Jan. 8, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. State Hospital; at Taftville. Palace vs, Taftville. Eleventh week—Monday, Jan. 15, at the Palace, Aetna vs. Palace; at State Hospital, State Hospital vs. Taftville. Twelfth week—Monday, Jan. 12, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. Taftville; at State Hospital, State Hospital vs. Palace. Thirteenth week—>Monday, Jan. 29, at State Hospital, Aetna vs. State Hospital Fourteenth week—Monday, Feb. 5, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. Palace; at Taftville, State Hospital vs, Taftville. Fifteenth week—Monday, Feb. 12, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. Taftville: at the Palace, State Hospital vs. Palace. Sixteenth week—Monday, Feb. 19, at 4, at_the e MERCIAL SATURDAY’S MARKET Stocks Were Irregular Throughout S New York, Oct. 28.—Stocks were ir- T almost from the outset of to- day’s brief but active session, of the| stock exchange. Standard or' invest- ment issues were moderately lower and comparatively neglectsd, while coppers and those specialtics which recently figured so extensively In the Qaily operations were decidedly strong. Ttah Copper was the foremost fea- | ture, with its “wide” opening of §,400 shares at an advance of almost 3 points to the new record of 108, this later being extended to 108 1-4. Chino Copper also made a new high on its gain of 2 8-4 points to 62 1-4, with gains of 1 to 2 points for Inspiratios ‘Anaconda, Kennecott and Shattuc Arizona coppers and American Smelt- ing, Central Leather repeated its almost daily performances of mounting to a new maximum, rising nearly 3 points at 98 and Cuba Cane Sugar common and preferred sold higher than ever before at 6 1-8 and 100 1-2 respect- ively. The motor group, equipments, zinc shares and pertloums were lower by 1 to over 3 points, heaviness being most marked in Studebaker and Maxwell. General Electric also yielded on mod- erate offerings with National Biscuit and Pittsburgh Coal. Atlantic, Gulf and West Indies was firm on the excellent statements of carnings for August and the eight months of the calendar vear, but Ma- rines were under slight pressure, with United States Steel, Reading and a few low-priced rails. Chief among the latter were Denver and Rio Grande preferred, Missouri, Kansas and Texas preferred, and Rock Island, the latter being sold freely on delay in the dis- charge of the receivership. Total sales aggregated 650,000 shares. The bank statement met popular ex- pectations in its actual cash gain of about $20,000,000, a loan expansion of almost $35,000,000 and an increase of over $11,000,000 in reserves. Bonds were again irregular, some reduction in offerings of nationals. _Total sales (par amounted to $2,560,000. TUnited States bonds were unchanged on ecal during the week but Active ion. with| ter- value) STOCKS. High. Sales. 100 Acme. 300 Ads. 100 300 260 200 800 1600 1100 100 1000 200 700 1300 00 100 18300 200 00 oy 200 Tea .. Rumley Ajax Rubber Alask Gold M Alaska Juneau im Am Am am Am Car & F oCtton_ 01l Am Hide & Leather Amertean Teo Am Linsced Am Linsced pe Am_ Locomo Am Malting Am Smelting Am s Woolen Woolen_ = Am WP pr Amer zine Amer zine Anseonda Atehfson Atchison_pr Al G & AU G & W Baid Loco Bald Low pe Balt & Ohlo Balt & Ohlo pr Barrett Co. 3 Brooklyn Un Gas Butte &Sup 1 Couthern 2 Pacfic it Leather Chandler odtor Ches & Ohlo Chle & Alotan e Gt & West Chie Gt W pr M & st P Sty €M & st P or CRI&PRY cccasL oChlle Copper Chino Con Cop Col Fuel & Iron ol Gas & Klectric Cotiput Tab Con G EL Col_& or &P 1t pr L & P ats Cont. Can Com Products Com Prod pr Cructble Steel Cruciblo Steel pr Cuba Cane Sugar Cuba Cane Sugar pr ... Den & Rio G Den & R G Domo Mine DetroltEdlson Dis Sccurlties Driggs S ord D SS & At pr Eife ; Ere 1st pr e 2d pr M & S or n_ Mms n Electric Gen Motors pr Goodrleh B | F nbs Min's 9 Oro Subs 8% 6% 1% % Int Agricul pr 8% Tns Copper. o am Tnterbora Con 8% 18% Inter_Con pr T Tik Int 3 M etts 0% 0% Tot 3t ot ore ot Paper Tnt Baper o7 Tt Nt It Nieke o Towa " Gonteed Towey T Tooneks "Gy 8 Kan 1ty S i3 e Kenneentt Tacn: Stoet 18200 2800 500 Lake & W ...... 400 Lake B & W pr . 400 Lehigh Valley 3% 300 Lee Rub & Tire . 0% 200 Looss Wiles . 24 100 200 100 Loose Wiles 1 pr Louls & Nash. Macksy Cos 1300 Maxwell M Co 400 Maxwell M 1 pr 100 Maxwell 2 pr 600 May Dept Stores 6ot g | 1100 Mex_Petrol 100 1300 Miami Copper 500 Min & St L new 2300 Mo Kan & T 200 Mo., M & T pr 760 Mo Pactfic . 2200 Mo Pac_cifs 2700 Mo Pacific w 1 200 Nat Biscult 100 Nat E &S Cloak & 8 100 N 6000 Nev € Copper 200 N Y_Alr Brake 600 X, Y. Cen‘ral 200 N'Y. C & N L . UON. Y. N H & Bow 00% 10N Y 0 & W ogn 3% 2500 Norf & West prigerey 400 North Pre s 1t 100 Ohlo- Gas s 8t 2400 Peons B R 8 osn 100 Peodia & Enat 15% 200 Peoples G & C . ifee 6000 Pltts Coal itts % 170 Press Steel Car 72 100 Press Steel Car pr 106 108 100 Pull_Pal Car 1mo% 170 900 Ty Steel Spr % skl 4100 Ray Con Cop 16 16 2350 Teding 108% 108% 2700 Rep I & steel R T 120080 L & S P ow iL 23 2k 400 Seaboard A L ... 1% 1 300 Seab A L pr . 8932 'y 4300 Shatomek A € L) 30% 20 M 400 Sloss 8 5 & T Lea 2 nam 1500 South Pacific 101 100% 100% 200 So P R Sugar . 21% 2204 1600 South By 100 South R¥ pr 6090 Studebakor 800 Stutz Motor 200 Tenn Copper . 5900 Texas & Pacific 1600 Texas Co 300 Third Avcnie 400 Tobaceo Prod 500 Unlon Bag & Pa 100 Union B & P pr ... 100 U. Baz & P new 101 5500 Unlon Paciie 150% 100 U. Igaf Stores ...ill 10015 100 U. Cigar Stores pf - 119 1100 Unlted Frult. 152 200 Un®ed By Tnv 100 Un By Tnv pe 1000, 8. C.1&F L 1500 U, S. T Aleobol 1 1 300 U. S, Red & Red 2 00 U, Tober. 80 800 Rub 1 pr 110% 110 300 m & Ret 1Y 71 Steel 18 200 Stoel pr 121% 101% 0 Utah Copper 1065 103% 500 Utah See Corp 18 100 Ya Car Chem 5w 500 ¥a Irn C & C 55 500 Wabash Walls Fargs 6400 Westinghouss 100W & L E 1200 White oMrors Total sales ..32.100 sharee. MONEY. New York, Oct. 28.—AMercantile pa- per 3 1-2. Sterling, 60 day bills 471 1-4; commercial 60 day bills 4.70 1- demand 475 5-8; cables 4716 3-8 Francs, demand 584 1-2; cables 5.83 |1-2. Marks, demana 70 3-8; cables 70 1-2. Kronen demand 12; cables 12 1-S. Guilders, demand 40 1 ca- cles 41 1-16. Lires demand 6.57; ca- bles 6.56. Rubles, demand 31; cables 31 1-4. Bar silver 67 5-8. Mexican dollars 53. Government bonds steady. Railroad bonds irregular. COTTON. New York, Oct. 28.—Cotton opened barely steady. December, 18.97; Jan- 18.90; March, 18. i 19.10. éw York, Oct. 28—Cotton futures closed steady; Dec. 18.86; Jan. 18.83; March 18.97; ‘May 19.13; July 19.14. Spot quief, middling 18.85. LIVE STOCK MARKET. New York, Oet. ~27.—Beeves—Re- ceipts 2,700 head, 55 cars on sale. Me- dium to choice steers were firm and 10G@ 15¢_higher, common slow and un- changed in prices, bulls steady to firm, thin cows firm but medium grades sl d no more than steady. The y were cleared. Poorest to b 1d_at 36.50@9.50 per 100 1 s $5.27@7.50, cows at $3.25@6, cows and heifers mixed at ... Dressed_beef firm at 11@15 1-2¢ for city dressed na- tive sides. Caives—Receipts 607 head, 455 on le. Veals were more active and 75¢ higher, grassers almost nominal, but feeling steady. Common to prime veals [sold_at $8@12 per 100 Ibs, culls at $6@7.50, grassers at $5.25, western calves firm to higher, city dressed veals 15@19c, country dressed 12@16c. Sheep and lambs.—Receipts 2,757 head, 11 cars on sale, sheep ruled steady, lambs were firm to higher. Common to good sheep sold at $5@1 per 100 pounds, culls at $3@4, medium to prime lambs at $10.25@11, culls and yearlings at $8. Dressed mutton steady at 10@14c, dressed lambs in fair de- mand at 15@17 cents hogs dressed 17_1-2 cents. Hogs.—Receipts 2,800 head, 1 car on sale. Market steady with light to me- dium weights selling at $9.75@10.35 per 100 Ibs., roughs at $9, a few pigs at $9.50. Country dressed hogs steady. Chicago, Oct. 27.—Cattle-—Receipts 4,875. Market steady, 2ood to choice $9@11.65, veariings Zood to choice £9.25@11.40, steckers and feeders $6.50 @7.75, good to choice heifers $7@8.5 canners $3@4.65, cutters $4.50@ good to prime calves $4.50@11, he: calves $8@9.50. Hogs—Receipts 20,431, Market 10c lower. Prime light butchers $10.10@ 10.30, fair to fancy light $9.90@10.50, prime medium weight butchers $10.25 @10.35, prime heavy weight butchers $10@10.20, heavy mixed packing $9.80@ 10.50, roughs, heavy mixed, packing $2.4099.85, pigs, fair to good $850@ 9.50. Sheep—Receipts 12.726. Market steady. Yearlings $8@9.25, fair to choice ewes $6@7.25, wethers, fair to choice $7.25@5.50, western lambs $10.28 @11, native lambs 9.40@11.19. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. WOEAT Open. Hish. Tow. Close. Dec. ... ...188 189K 187y 188% May 1 186 187 1853 1sem ; 0% %0 8% %0 El u% 0% Wk 551 s5% 55% W% 59 5% sa% State Hospital, Aetna vs. State Hospi- tal; at Taftville, Palace vs. Taftville. Seventeenth week—Monday, Feb. 26, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. Palace; at Taftville, State Hospital vs. Taftville. Eighteenth week—Monday, March 5, ot the Aetna, Aetna vs. Taftville; af the Palace, State Hospital vs. Paiace. Nineteentn _week—Monday, March 12, at State Hospital, Aetna vs. Pal- ace; at State Hoepltal, Palace vs. Taftville. Twentieth week—Monday, March 19, at the Palace, Aetna vs. Palace; at State Hospital, State Hospital vs. Tattville. ‘Twenty-first week—Monday, March 26, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. Taftville; at' State Hospital, State Hospital vs. Palace. Twenty-second week—Monday, April 2, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. State Hos- pital; at the Palace, Palace vs. Taft- ville. Twenty-third week, April 8, at the Palace, Aetna vs. Palace; at State Hospital, State Hospital vs. Taftville. Twenty-fourth week—Monday, April 16, at Tafuville, Aetna vs. Taftville; at the Palace, State Hospital vs. Pal- ace. Twenty-fifth week—Monday, April 23, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. State Hos- plial; at Taftville, Palace vs. Taft- ville. Twenty-sixth week—Monday, April 20, at the Aetna, Aetna vs. Palace; at State Hospital, State Hospital vs. Taftville. Twenty-seventh week—Monday, May 7, at_Taftville, Aetna vs. Taftville; at the Palace, State Hospital vs. Palace. BIG CROWD SEES AMERICAN ATHLETES COMPETE IN SWEDEN Americang Win First Places in Four Events. Malmo, Sweden, Oct. 29.—The visit- ing American athletes, Ted Meredith, Joe Loomis, Fred Murray, Bob Simp- son and Andy Ward, competed here this afternoon in games with Swedes and Danes. The meet was held at the Malmo Stadium and many thousands of spectators were present, including a mumber of Americans, who present ed their countrymen with large silk American flags. The greatest enthu- siasm prevailed and the Swedes cheer- ed the United States. The summaries of the event: 110 metres hurdles: won by Murray; Thorsen, Sweden, second. Time 16 1-5 seconds. High jump: Kullerstrand, Sweden, and Murray, tied at one metre, 30 cen- timetres. 200 metres run: won by Ward; Simpson second and Murray third. Time 23 .1-3, nds. 500 meires run: J. Bolin, Sweden, won. Time one minute, 57 4-5 sec- onds. Meredith was second. Time one minutes 58 7-10 seconds. Broad jump: won by Simpson with six metres, 69 centimeters; Olson, Sweden, second, with six metres, centimetres; Loomis, third with ‘metres, 51 centimetres. Relay race, 400 metres: won by the American team in 43 4-10 seconds. Sweden was second with 44 1-2 sec- onds. After the games, Joseph Westerbers, the American consular agent at Mal- mo, distributed silver cups to the win- ners. The American athletes will now go to Gothenburg, after which they will return to the United States. provesit. 25cat all Ican ewateur. George his title The Royal A. Club Ends Sunda; Kolehmainen Wins Run. the score of 6 to 0. Hannes Kolehmainen, formerly a member of the Irish-American Athletic club of New York city, but running unattached at New York Saturday, won the nationa. amateur union ten miles championship run from a field of 18 starters. His time of 50 4-5 was 42 seconds faster than be made a year ago when he won this event. Another Finn, William Kyronen, Millrose Ath- letic club of New York city, was second, ten vards behind the winner, and James Henizan, Dorchester club, Malden, Mass., finished third, 15 vards away, after leading the field up to the yards to a touchdown. The team plays New day, Nov. 5, in Groton. induced him to tear up service. Flower Bulbs arrived in a No. 1 condition. ial low prices. Cal! 868 and give your order We deliver promptly 77 CEDAR STREET Torento, Canada, who won the e lats year, in 50:40 4-5, did not deft Glenn Warner feli in soft when he. got_that job coaching the University. of Pittsburgh football players. Absolutely Rem Indigestion. Onepac H. Royals Win Second Game. {Sg football 3 won the second game from the Wesl at the fair grounds b The feature | the game was a run by Corter of 608 London Sun~ his conts which has two years more to run, and! sign_another calling for four years of finui lap. with such great siccess when Bob Richard F. Remer, New York Ath-|Folwell coached the Washington and Jetic elub, wen the National Amateur |Jefferson football cleven, will be the Union championshup seven mile | principal weapon of attack for the. walk in 53:3) 3-5, and sair to be the|Pennsylvania eleven in the gam@ ed time over made by an Amer-|against Pittsburgh today. 2 Our Dutch, French and Japanese Bulbs have We have the best the world can offer at spec- GEDULDIG'S GREENHOUSES need have no fears. crowned or extracted ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE STERILIZED INSTRUMZENTS CLEAN LINEN 1§ these appeal to you, call for examination charge for consulitation. DR. F. G. JACKSON DENTISTS (Successors to the King Dental Co.) and DR. 203 MAIN ST. PA. M to8P. M Lady Asistant REMOVAL store at 45-47 Main Street, next to Shea & Furniture Store. mings for Fall and Winter. 18 years in Norwich PHONE 708-12 All Remodeling and Repairing at reasonable prices. Norwich Fur Co. M. BRUCKNER, Proprietor Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Does the dread of the dental chair cause you to neglect them? You - By our method you can have your teeth filled, CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK timate. D. J. cOo¥YLE NORWICH, CONN« Telephone The Norwich Fur Co. are now located at their new Burke’s We are open for business now with a new line of Furs, Coats, Skins, and all kinds of Trim. if it is too early to start your heater. roem is t{a.ngerous. Buy a Gas Heater and be comfortable A full line in stock. Prices $2.25, $2.75 and $3.25. Tubing 10c per foot. THE CITY OF NORWICH 321 Main Street, Alice guflding AVOID DANGER There is no reason for having a cold room even A cold GAS & ELEGTRICAL DEPARTMENT They The baseball pass, which was used -