Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
] -M 5 ‘ INSURANCE ONLY THREE CENTS A DAY *the-cost to “ABTNAIZE L. LATHROP & SONS, Agents ATTDRNEVS-AT- “rown & Perkins, »Hiunay:-ai- Over Uncas N Entrance stairwdy near to National Bank. ‘Pelephone 38-3. ams 7, \Jesieyan 0. Playing an aggressive liams defeated Wesleyan of 7 to 0 Saturday. McLean, the Wil- ight halfpack, made the touch- down_in tie third period on a 70 yard kick bchind perfset intcrference. e i T Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage |wicox .. provesit. 26cat all druggists, |- .iowuq ... - = 83 Oketueket Ctrcet, Ee 2SR 205K own of Nérwich vrovided, at wid votinz aist DISTRICT—At the Engine West Main Street DISTRICT —At Union Hall, in reeneviile! Brick Scioolhcuse, west of the Green, EIFTH DISTRICT — At Large Hall, Taftville. SIXTH DISTRIC At _Billings’ Hall, ue, Bast Side. y In Novembe THE SEVEY OVEZRG.. A, D. 1016, at 6 o'clock Senator to repr the State of Con- netticut in the Sixty-ifth Congress of o their valiots for a trict of the State Afxty-Afth Con- t the United Sta Répresentative ond_Congress of 'Connecticut gress of the Un Aiso, to give Ligutenant Governor, urer, apd Comptrollér of said State of te hold said offices f Connecticut, in their ballots for to represent Senatorial District of the S Connecticut. until his successor 3 in tleir bal ‘Town In ‘the Conzecticu, the Wednesday onday of January, their successors following the first are duly qualified. their ballots for the District of wo years from and after Judge of Probate Norwich for | t Monday of January, thelr baliots for tices of the Peace *to hold office for two years from the ~three (23) Ju The polls will be opened in all the districts at six (6) o'clock in (he fore- open untll five (5) in the aftern Dated at Norwich, October, A, D; CHAS. Town Clerk of the To this 2§th day of HOLBROOK, of Norwich. “NOTICE The electors of the Town of Ereston hereby warned to meet e on Tuesday, Nov. 7, 1916, o'clock & m. ., for the purpose of casting thelr | perfection in defence, for Presidential Electors, G ernor, Lieulenant Governor, Secretary, Comptroller, Congress, Representative in Congress, Judge of Probate, State Sepator, Rep- G. V. SHEDD, Town Clerk. AT A COURT OF PROBATE_HELD at Lebanon, within and for the District of Lebanon, ou the 3d day of Novem- Estate of Alice Loomis Burrill late of_Lebanon, in sald Distric The Executors having applisation to sald bate Office_in i N jor- | gridiron honor . vanquished. . The W" %%J Byracuss never og- a (s n R B8 oadlh o g Failed o Bulkeley High threw a scare into the Academy In every semse of the word Saturday on the campus and held the rod and white boys to a tie, outplay- ing them in the early stages of the game which unnerved N. F\ A. but the old red and white fighting spirit was rovived in the latter part af.the game which staved Off ' defeat. Referee Crowley erred when Stanley tried to kick a goal after a totichdown had Insure your property against FIRE |peen scored which might have meant let ‘hurizeds of thousands of i other pecple help You pay your loss if [you experience one. ! Gooa companies represented by ISSAC S. JONES, Insurance and Real Estate Agent | Richards Building BURGLARY INSURANCE The Travelers Insurance Co. B. P. LEARNED & CO. Agency Established May, 1846. victory. Stanley sent to kick and he walked up to the ball to place it ‘n a better position and in so doing the referee blew the whistle for the kick, naturally the ball wént wild. The New Londoners outweighed the Academy and were strong or the de- fense, breaking up many a good play. Right from theamstart the.wisiting ag- greation ran into a bunch of luck.on 97 Main St. r;c'werl’nz flunk fumbles which resglt- 2 e in a score. Stanley and Bendett pulled off several long runs which re- vived the fighting spirit but some one would muss up things'with & fi Stanley punting for the Acidemy. wes unable to get a good chance to boot the oval as the opposing liensman sifted through quite frequently thus hurrylng the kick. At the beginning of the second quarter apparently*the Academy -had. struck their stride, they - stacted Off with a rush recovering a fumble. All three backs tore off substantial gains only to have the jig thrown up by a poor pass or fumble. Again at - tho opening of the third quarter it looked as the boys had met their o.vn and were bound to show the color. They ralliad strong, Keefe rushed the Kkickoff bock twenty yards. Stanley on the first play tore off g five yards around end but the ball was ioesed on a fumble. Both Staniley and and Ben dett reeled off big gains and before the quarter ended the ball was placed within the shadows of the Bulkeley geal posts just two yards within the chalk line ‘and at tho opening cf the quarter Stanley and Bendett on suc- cessive rushes pushed the ball ove: Bendett carrying the ball ove: In the final from Bulkeley had a ses- sion at fumbles and just as time was called Oat caught a forward which netter 35 yards. Oat put up a good ame throughout and has the markings good end. Setween the halvés the ‘Academy swormed the . field; - cheered The lineup: BULKELEY Bradshat Left End.. ..., Galnup Toviin L eft Half Back Referee—Crowley from Westerly State. Time Keepo F ecdlinesman —W. Linchmen—Hert and >iarrington. (left halfback) for Whitsomb. Oneal, (left tackle) for Gallup. (right guard) . for Birtto: Davi Substitute for N. F. A. —Ferguson for Oat. SYRACUCZE D?«R“l MOU‘TH’C GREAT BATTLE ON GRIDIRON Ecstorn Gridir Conte < Two Sharp - Saturday New York, Nov. b.—Eastern foot- ball play of ‘the week-end resolved it- self into two sharply defined groups, one composed of games which devel- oped into real contests and the other consisting of little more than practice scrimmages. A_survey of Saturdays results places Yale, Army, Pennsy! vania, Cornell, Dartmouth, Navy and Syracuse in the former classification, while Harvard Princeton, Pittsbuhgh, Brown and Penn State fafled to benefit to any extent by their games. In view of the more importar grid- iron battles to come, the coaches count each game as a stepping stone in the fivet |achievement of team play and im- 1917, and |Provement of tactics and strategy. In defeating Colgate, Yale derived both football knowedge and confi- idence. The team from Hamiltcn proved to be exceptionally strong and tested every point of the Eli’s offer.se and defence, incidentally outplaying Yale in the process. The breaks of the game and a remarkable exhibition of defensive strength by the New Haven combination, at a critical pe- riod, swnng victory to the side of the | Blue. Colgate, however, _uncovered many weaknesses in the Yale play; particularly a lack of sustained at- tack and showed that much remains to be accomplished by the coaches be- fore the full power of the eleven is developed for the Harvard ontest. The defeat of Notre-Dame by the Army, in the only intersectional game of the day, was also extremely grat- ifyings to the Soldiers, especially . as they ‘used, almost exclusively, the overhead tactics that the Indians in- troduced at West Point 'so effectively three years ago. The Cadsts showed that they were capable of both the line plunking and running game as well as the aerlal method of advancisn the bail 'Thir victory over Notre Dame, con- ceded to be one of the leading ex- ponents of the forward ‘pass play, demonstrated that the army is round- ing out one of the strongest teams of recent years at West Point. The at- tack of the westerners .proved, how- somewhat loose gsame Saturday at Gotton . Segal| .. May, Capt. mery. Spexield e feey Bmwl‘:cnnsxl .. Meehan Mclfillan, Cap"[’.v]?.l,f:,‘f’.r.d..... Lawski S Oat ... ks T“klé.... Sullivan B g Heccfe . =llon i e Stanley . Graham Bendett yirc, Fred Burlcigh of<¥2dter: head Umpire—Ebbs from Rhode Islond | Substituttes for PBulekeisy—Glenn | played as-any other period of the con- st. Gornail aud Beineyivanis. wans (s came through against €ar- negie and x.m:‘tg.' reipectlsgl';a showed by their play that they stili are in the making. The work of Quakers was the ive but the Cornell team faced a opponent then Pennsylvania. e Ithaca players exhibited the same unoertainty and weak points that were evident in the game and while the material ts avallable much work remains to be done before the full strength of the team can be thrown against opposing elevens. Little that was new or striking was uncovered by either Harvard -~ or Princeton as hoth Virginia and Buck- nell were to weak to bring out more than the routine plays of their strong- er opponents. 'l'fl‘ games were little more than practice affairs except that there was always the possibility of an unexpected form of attack whicn kept the winners on the alert. The victories of Pittsburgh and Brown are in the same category, but Rutgers found Holy Cross a foeman of her best football and it was Only a determined and sustained attacks that the New Brunswick team wrested the lead and the game from the New Eng- land collegians. 1 DARTMOUTH AND SYRACUSE HAVE HOT BATTLE. Green Eleven Scored Two Touchdowns After Hard Runs—Score 15 to 10. Dartmouth won from Syracuse 15 to 10 in an intensely interesting but Springfield, Mass. The Syracuse-team outweighed Dartmouth, but the latier was always alert and its defense tightened at critical stages: Both of Dartmouth’s touchdowns were made by long runs, Cannell racing 56 yards af- ter catching a pumt for the first score and Gerrish traveling 48 vards on a side line trick in the final quarter. Syracuse got its touchdown through a 28 yard run by M. Brown. Dartmouth blocked three kicks, getting a safety on one of them. Tho lineup and summary: Dcrtmouth 15 Syracuse 10 Dusossoit .. Ruttstein Left End. Priertootocs . Cobb White .. Gilmore Trigs Fulivac v pericd Dartmouth ...... ... Syrecuse ..i. . # Referce, Nate J. J. Hallanan of Boston; 1ute periods; scoring, Dart- rouchdowns, ~Cannell, Ed- from touchdcwn, Ger racuse: Touchdows Coal from touchdown, 21 from field, Meehan; s tmouth: Coggs wail for Burns for_Trie Merrill for Neeley. Scully for Merrill, Cunningham for Gile. Hood for Baxter, Mather for Heod, Bevan for Cotton, Austin for Emery, Husk for Austin, Saladine for Husk. S. Holbrook for Cannell, Eastman for Thielscher, Ed- wards for Eastman, Thielscher for Ed- wards, R. Holbrook for Thielscher, Ed- wards for Duhamel. Syracuse: Witner for Rutisicin, Ruttsicin for Witner, Butin for Gilmore, Dunn fo@ Trigs, Livshin for Dunn, Wright for Rafter. TIGEFS FIND BUCKNELL PRETTY EASY. Ccach Rush Used Many Subs in Latter Part of the Game—Score 42 to 0. Princeton easily defeated the Buck- nell football team at Princeten Satur- day 42 to 0. Coach Rush of Princeton sent in a long string of substitutes in the last two periods, but for this the score probably would have been much larger. Bucknell displaved the poorest brand of football trat has been wit- nessed at Princeton this fall. Despite the weak resistance of the visitors, the Princeton offense showed cvidence of the work that has been put on this department of the zame during the past week ard was encourasing to Princetonians, who have the Harvard game to look forward to next week. Fullback, Score by periods: Princeton ...... ...... 714 7 14—42 Bucknell . SEES P T Lineup and summary: Princeton Bucknell Highley .................. McDermott Left Enad. Latrobe ....................... Peale % Left Tackle! Nourse Cockill Gennert Gilbert Hogg .. White McGraw . Baker Wilson . Short Right End. Bddy .. ....... Waddell Quarterback. Brown ...................... Hendren Left Halfback. mBbate L. St o ..:o....... Baldort Right Halfback. Briggs . -+ Hopler Blue Eleven Has Close Call From De- $i2h T &7 the Yale eleven came ond half and ‘won Harry ‘Le Gore y scorea - those' seven points, but the direct s “for the erratic punti of Hul Colgate. Kioking fro period Hubbell caught the ball at a bad angle and booted it out of bounds. His anxiety to avold the two Yale ends, who were swooping through up- on him, caused him to swerve as he kicked. 3 Smith, of Yale, tore throush Col- gaic’s lett tackle for three yards. . A ouble pass and line buck netted noth- ing. Then Braden, the human batter- ing ram of the second string backs, went in to replage Hutchinson at full. He hurled himself against the Colgate centre and smashed through by main strength for three yards just as the whistle blew for the end of the third period. The fourth period opened with the ball in Yale's possession on_the Col- gate 11-yard line, and the Yale con- tingent, which had shown some signs of depression during the first half, became decidedly vociferous. Le Gore and.Braden smashed their way to the Colgate 4-yard line, where the ball re- posed for the fourth down and three yards to gain. By this time the Coigate line seem- ed. airtight, and Yale decided to un- cover a little strategy. The Blue line shifted and thc red line, prepared to resist another smash at the centre, wavered. Le Gore skirted Colgatc’s end and stood over the goal line as Neville shot him a perfect forward pass. With the ball tucked under his arm Le Gore dodged to a point dircctly-behind the goal posts. He kicked the goal a mo- ment later. Colgate scored its tures points shortly after the start of the second period through a goal from place- ment, . artistically achieved ny West from the 23-yard line. Spencer held the ball while the Colgate line repell- ed_the rush of the blue skirmishers. This data accounts in a more or less accurate fashion for the actual scoring, but it by no means indicates how the game looked to. a neutral spectator. In that first half the Col- gate players, in thelr red jerseys, looked_distressingly like the Harvard team from the observation towers of the bowl. They added to this distress- ing illusion by playing as Harvard seemed to play against Yale at their last meeting. In the first period especially did Colgate look lile a Haughtonized or- ganization. The Red Jerseys swarmed through the Blue ones. Their inter- ference was perfect. They gained nearly eighty yards in a direct suc- with mcanings and lamentations. To tne sons of Eli and their sup- sions of what had happened at Sol- diers’ Field last year. Red Jerseys swarming through the Blue in perfcct ‘mation and in irrestible attack. The time that this ominoug vision cleared w# when Yale had thc a few brief moments and Lo a kick formation, shot centre and ran for twen- y yards, brushing aside five of the ed Jerseys as he turned and twisted. T e it was a melancholy ses- Yale. It was Le Gore who in that opening period, while the Col- #he Yale gonl line with precisibn afid force. offside. continued to advance. baci and go through for a_touchdown. coaches in the middle of the season. The lineup folow: Yale Colgate 3ates ...... Left end Centre Right suard Right tackle. Fuilback Score by periods: Yale X |ever, that the Army has not reached against an eleven of the galibre of No- tre Dame. Far it The defeat of the Navy by Washing- and Lee taken in conjunction with the Tesentaiives and Justices of the Peace.|fact that the soldiers had previously won from the same team was discon- Preston, ' Oonn., Nov. 1,|certing to the Middies’ adherents. Saflors were outplayed indicated b ythe score. Had it been necessary it 1s probable Washington and Lee could have made Freseni — ALBPRT G. KNBBLAND, |additional touchdowns but the future admirals elected to play defensive foot- Dball after their early scoring. In view of the wide range of the victors' play, rd- |1t is likely that the Navy coaches not Ance with the statute, for an order of | ehretofore suspected In the Middies" the whole of the Tesl described theroin, it is {heard at ‘the o'clock In the that notice thereof be & copy of this or wich ‘Bulietin, estate | game. i For all round brilllancy the contest between Dartmouth and Syracuse was the outstanding feature of the day. in atternoon, and | eastern football. Although the Han- over eleven won, there was plenty of v both victor and and dash of ._‘Q‘ battle were as’thrf at least not The in every de- partment of the game in & manner not Referee, Cosgrove, Cornell; umpire, Bankert, ‘Dartmouth; head linesman, Schwartz, Brown; ficld judge, Plumer, Cornell; time of periods, 12 minutes each. Scoring: Princetog — Touchdowns, Eddy 32, ey, Moor® 2, Tibbot; goals {'r\?‘x‘xxk‘ touchdown, Tibbott 3, Moore 2, for McGraw, Moore Schmaiz for Gennert, Halsey for Mc- for Winn, Rayhill for Funk. Gornell Runners Win. the annual cross country run at Itha- by a score of 34 to 75. Wenz, Cornel, ‘won tHé Tun In 34 minutes, 24 seconds. Substitutions: Princeton—Halsey for for Tivpott: fu nk for Wilson, Winn for Highley, Bryan for Hoge, Latrobe for Halsey,” Foster for Latrobe, McGraw for Fauttman, - Comey - for Bddy, Graw, Kauffman for Foster, Foster fof Nourse, Haaren for Brown, Gillesple Cornell easily defeated Harvard In ca Saturday over a 5 1-2 mile course ;;';l. T8 finished ‘bahln& g:lu li!n order: Dermof rnell; Dr. Esser, Cnrnnl’fi King, Harvard; ' -GRIDIRONS SATURDAY. Yale 7, Colgate 3. Harvard 51, Virginia 0. mmm%fi%“yme“ 1o, : use 10. 4 Tatayetto 0. “Alleghany 0. - Willilams 7, Wesleyan 0. Tufts 28, Mass. Aggies 0. Lehigh 8. Mullenberg. 0. Ambherst .14, Trinity 0. Springfield 20, Worcester Poly 0. Bowdoin 7, Maine 7. Grove City 0, Buffalo 0. Union 45, Rensselaer 0. ‘Haverford 21, Franklin and Mar- Rochester 18, Hobart 0. . ‘Boston .39, Rhode Island 0. Dickinson 22, Delaware 0. Hamilton 20, St..Lawrence 0. New Hampshire 26, Conn. Aggles Army 30, Notre burgh- 46, - Trom benina s own || - Wit % goal line, toward the end of the ‘third’ ‘Washington and Lee 10, Navy 0. Swarthmore 14, Johns Hopkins 6. . Maryland State 31, St. Jokn's 6, Louisiana 17, Arkansas 7. Auburn 3, Georgia 0. Virginia Poly, 1b, North Carolina Alabama 7, Sewanee 6. Tennessee " 12, Georgia Tech 45, Tulanc 0. Vanderbilt 67, Rose Poly 0. Georgetown 41, Louisville 0. Chattanooga 7. Tilinois_ 14, ‘Minnesota 9. Western Reserve 53, Oberlin 3. Missouri 3, Texas 0. Kansas 21, Oklahoma 13 Denver 13, Coiorado Aggies 13. Nebraska 3, Ames 0. Michigan 67, Washington 7. Chicago 16, Purdue 7. South Dakota 3, Mich. Aggies 3. Northwestern 7, ‘Wooster 20, .Cincinnati 0. Wabash 55, Earlham 10. Wesleyan 16, Case 7. Boston Athletic Association. linesman—Bergin, Time of periods, i ninutes each. Trinity Loses, 14 to 0. Amherst defeated Trinity by a score of 14 to 0 Saturday at ‘Amherst. Cap- tain Goodrich ran sixty yards for one touchdown. came on a forward pass to Washburn who made 45 yards on the play. Line- Left tackie cession of rushes, and they nad the S Jackann ball so close to the goal line that the | Yale cheering section filled the bowl Right euard Rignt tackle’ porters that period was an uncanny [wiogca s M. Jackson Quarterback ht ‘halfback Referee—McGrath. Umpire—Low of made the only first down for the Bine Ilnesman_—Kelley, gate team was working the .ball o increased its chance of winning the Western con- ference football championship by de- feating ‘'Wisconsin universrty, 14 to 13, 2t Columbus, cves are. now tied ‘with Northwestern os Ohio won from Wisconsin through spectacular playing of right haifback, who made both touch- downs, the first by ap end run of 27 in the secand period and by a 80-yard run throuzh the Badgers' line in the fourth atching a punt. . Again in the second period the Red Jerseys were swarming over the Blue. They found holes in the tacklas. They shot throush the Yale guards and they ircled the Yale ends with ihe pre- ision of a squad of red hussars on . But the referee began to_pen- alize them for holding and for being In all Colgate wac penalized some- thing like 80 yards in the one per- iod. Yet the Red Jerseys continued to swarm through the Blue and Colgate | perjod, after drove through ;the. Qhic line touchdown. Simpson ¥unted out to Taylor, failed to catch the punt. were evenly matched on line playing with Wisconsin showing better organ- t was Hubbel] who brought the ball inot position where it could be kicked from placement, and he did it with the longest and most spectacular run of the day. The Colgate left halfr skirted Yale's ieft end from close to midfield for 3 vards. ‘The Red jerseved interference took care of the Blue line. It smothered it and Hubbell forged ahead until it seemed that he wou'!d clear the last barrier The teams Minnesota Bows wo Defeat. of Minnesota foot- Saturday generally beliegg ball team today generally believed to be the strongest contender for western confrence championship honors, down to defeat Saturday, The University Two line bucks advanced the ball four yards, but the Yale line seemed to be taking a brace, and the kick from placement was tried for the first score of the zame. At this stage of the proceedings it seemed as though the bulldog must be quite as sick as he was when he met Colgate last year and when Yale decided to change two touchdowns and kicked two goals in the firse period. rior Minnesota opened up and with line #-ives and forward passes rushed the ball over for a touchdown. Baston A safety, due to a netted Minnesota In the third pe- kicked the goal. ieieee..... Castellanos | two more points. Forwards Help Army to Win. which team came to West Point three vears ago for the first_time, and flashed such a wonder- ful forward passing game as to carry Notre Dame, DT A TS West Left tackle BIACE Bues oAl S S eensenss Good, Left guard Vorys . Carroll _SATURDAY’S MARKET. Short Session Wae Marked By More or Less Irregularity. New York, Nov. 4—Speculative in- terests were again inclined to pay heed to political factors today, the short period of trading being accom- panied by more or less irregularity. Important stocks, including U. S. Steel, were dufl or under moderate pres- sure, with hetals, motors, Crucible Steel, Pressed 'Steel Car, Atlantic Gulf and West Indies, Pullman and paper issues. Offsetting features were found in Sloss-Sheffield Steel which rose 3 points, Columbia Gas, up 3 5-8 t othe new record of 45 1-8; National Enameling ‘common and _ preferred Continental Can,’ Baldwin Locomotive, Mexican Petroleum and Montana Power. Rails were comparatlvely inactive the only noteworthy features being Norfolk and Western at an advance of 1 3-4, Pecria and Eastern, which rose 2 points and Seaboard Air Line preferred, Duluth, Soutn Shore and Atlantic ‘common ' and_pdeferred and Toledo, St. Louis and Western at gains of 1 to2 points. Total sales amounted to 525,000 shares. Market news of more than ordinary mium. greatest drawback of the moment. riddle of September. (par value) amounted to $2,470,000. during the week.. - STOCKS. 100 Acme Tea .. S e% 100 Adv. Bumley 1 3 400 Alax Rubber 12% 1000 Alaska Gold 200 Alaska Juneau 900 Allls Chalmers 50 Allls Chalmers pr 2)) Am Bank Note 190 Am Ag Chem Ag Ch pr Siaelting Smelt pr Steel Fdry Am Sugar Am Sugar pr Am Tel & Tel Am Am Am Amer - sinc Amer nc pr Anaconds Asoclate O Atchison Atehtron pr Ad Coast Line Ad Q& WX AL G & W Bald Loco .. Bad Loco pr Falt & Ohio Balt & Ohlo pr Darett Co pr Brookiyn R T Brown Shoe Tums Bros 1000 Butte &Sup 100 Cal Petroleum 200 Cal Petrol pr 500 Cen Pac . 7600 Cent Leather 200 Chandler Motor Ches - & ORin “460 Chic & Alton 160 Chic & Alt pr . 6300 Chic Gt West 2000 Chle Gt W _pr 120C M & St P . Me & N & CRI&UFy 00 Chile Copper 00 Chino _Con_Cop 500 Col RFuel & Iron 20700 Col Gas & Flec 300 Col & South .. 00Cn CEL & Pl 100 Consol Gas ... %00 Cont Can .. 800 o Products 200 Com Prod pr 200 orn Prod pr . 12200 Cructble _Steel 10700 Cuba Cane Sugar 500 Cuba Cane Sugar pr ..=0% 9 100 Deere pr - 2 11% Den & R G pr 400 Dome_Mines 400 Dis_Securties 100 Driegs S Odr. 30D, S 8 & At 900D 8 8 &At pr' 400 Fiect Stor Bat . 1300 Erde 300 Erie 1 100 Gaston ms 10 Gen Chem pr 300 Gen Electric 200 Gen Motors . 200 Gen Motors pr 200 Goodrich B F the soldiers off their feet, were beaten Saturday at West Point by a system of play which they themselves used to such good advantage at that time. The Army eleven, by a wonderful ex- hibition of forward passing, won by a score of 39 to 10. Galtbi R o s “e....... Barton Baldridge ....ocoe--ei-- .... Horning Overton Sets New Yale defeated Princeton *cross-country. run Saturday at New Haven, scoring 20 points to_35. Captain _John Overton of the Yale team finished first, establishing a new record of 36 minutes 26 1-5 seconds over the 6 1-2-mile course. Overton led Captain Shotwell of the Princeton team, who finished second, by nearly fifty yards. Comerford ... Neilson Right end Smith Anderson Neeville' e his okt oasi L Spencer Teft halfback o™ GOPe' &2 hucesohsshenisn s FTUDDOE 3 Right halfback Hutchinson .... ... Gillo .00 0 7—7 9 3 0 0—3 Referee—Murphy, Brown. Umpire Marshall, Harvard. Field Judge— Granby Min's 100 Gt.. North pr 600 Gt N Ore Sub 800 Greene C_Cop 400 Guif S Steel 200 Tilinols_Central 108 108 500 int Agrieal 22 22% 200 Int Agrical pr 5 8 €100 Ins Copper 67 &% 2469 Tnterboro Con 1500 Inter Con pr 1500 Tuter Con, pr. 300 Int Har of N I 3200 Tt M M ctfs 3400 Int M M stys Df . 7800 Int Paper 1200 Tnt Paper pr 3200 Int Nickel . 100 Towa Central 100 Jewel Tea . 100 Jewell ‘Tea pr 400 Kansas City So 500 Kan City o pr 800 Keily S Tire 10790 Kenneeott 1400 Lack Steel 400 Lacledo Gas 500 Lake E & W 200 Lehigh Valley 100 Leo Rub & Tire 100 Mackay Cos 110 Maxwell M Co . 100 Maxwell 3 1 pr 500 May Dept_Store 500 Mexiean_ Petrol 2400 Miami Copper . 600 Min & St L new 200 Mo, Ken & T . 100 Mol K & T pr 100 Mo Pactic ...é. 900 Mo Pac ctts 300 800 North Pacific 700 Ontario _Siivar 500 Owens B 3L 100 Pacific Mail 100'T St LW prcifs 160 Under- Typs pr .. 300 Va Tron C 300 Wabash ... . 1060 Wabash - pr A 100 Wabash pr B 800 West Mary 5300 Westinghonse significance included the announce- ment of another rise in the price of refined copper, the advance applying to deliveries running into the first quarter of the coming year and indict- tions of still higher quotations for fabricated steel and irom, industrial centers reporting pig iron at a pre- Total sales 489,700 shares. Trade conditions continue to be re- viewed in extravagant terms, demand being in nowise affeeted by the politi- cal situation. Over-produstion, ft is declared, is too remote for serlous con- sideration, lack of labor being the 3-i to 5.71;_demand 4.75 518; cables 476 7-16. Francs; demand 5.84 3-4; cables 5.83 3-8" Marks: demand 70 1-8 cables 70 3-16. Kronen: demand 11.88; cables 11.89. Guilders cables 41 1-16. Lires: demand 6.71; cables 6.70 1-2. Rubles: demand 30.70; cables 30.58. Bar silver 68 3-4. Mexican dollars 53. Government bonds steady; railroad bonds firm. Forelgn gold recelved during the week accounted in large measure for the actual cash gain of over $22,000,- 000 shown by local banss and the fur- ther substantial expgnsion of excess reserves to almost $125,000,000 against little more than half that amount the There was a lessening of offerings of international bonds, but those is- Sries weére mostly irregular. Total salesbarely steady. December 18.87. Janu- ary 18.85, March 18.92, May 19.07, July U. S. bonds were unchanged on call | 1906 closed stea March 19. Sals. High Lew. Cloce. 2.065 hea more active and 10@15c higher; bulls and thin cows full steady; medium grades slow. There was a good clear- ance of the vards. Ordinary to choice steers sold “at $7@10.50 per 100 pounds; bulls at $5.25@7.50; cows at $3.40@6.: beef steady at 11@15 1-2¢ for city dressed native sides. sale. Veals 30c higher; other calves full steady. Common eo prime veals sold at $9@13.50 per 100 pound: at $7@s; mixed calves at $10. dressed veals firm at 15@20c; country dressed at 12@16c; dresed grassers 9@10 1-2¢. head; 14'1=2 cars on sale. Sheep steady; lambs, slow" except for prime, which 'were in light supply and full steady. Common to prime sheep =old at $4.00@7.00 per 190 pounds; mixed t $7 9.80@10.90; culls at Dressed mutton quiet at dressed lambs at 15@17c. $9@11- fair to good cows § $3@4.25 prime calyes: $5.50@11.50. Receipts 21,000 head; 5@10c lower. “Prirhe ‘light butchers $9.50@ 9.80; medium weight: butchers $8.55@ 9; heavy weight butchers $3.50¢ heavy mixed packing 39.30@9.3; heav ymixed packing $9@9.65; pigs. fair to good $7.507@8.50. Blue scoreless. fought every to had the bal day. second peried when a forward pass and ran the score. Dawson kicked 100 West Mary pr 400 West Tnlon Tel 200 Woolworth 300 Worth Pump 100 Worth Pump pr 200 White Motors. 00W & LE “. 500 Wilss Ore 100 Wisconsin MONEY MARKET. New York, Nox. 4—Mercantile pa- Sterling: 60 day oills 4.71 1-4, 60 day bills on banks 4.70- demand 41, COTTON. New York, Nov. 4. — Cotton futures New York, Nov. 4—Cotton futures Dec. 18.98; Jan. 18.97; : May 19.21; July 19.25. Spot quiet; middling 18.95. LIVE STOCK MARKET. New York, Nov. 3.—Beeves, receipts 5 20 1-2 cars on sale. Steers 0; 1 cow at $6.75. Dressed Calves—Receipts 570 head; 233 on culls City Sheep and lambs—Receipts 4,750 After the strain of the long * business day, with® its ) racking and _brain-we trials and troubles,, there. be wholesome and’ refresh stimulation if you will take: glass of delicious Bass Strong Burton { We_Are Receiving Shipments: Regularly, Without Delay or Interference o e i eal Bess & Co.. Lmporters, 90 Warren 8t. VIRGINIA A JOKE FOR HAMW’ Crimson Machine Rips Southerners for Big Gains—Score 51 t&fl. ‘ $iias Harvard's football team had the ef- . fect of a British tank in action against the University of Virginia Saturday at Cambridge. Its offense tore away .OF beat down all opposition for a total of 51 points, the Crimson’s high score of the season, while an impervious de< fense held eoutherners at midfield the entire game estept for a few mo- ments. gt The contest was a Temarkable s¥bi bition of Harvard's secondary.strengti as six of the eleven men who.started the game against Cornell were not called in to piay at any time, and the Crimson still presented three almost’ complete teams. Ao a result it is evi-' dent that Harvard will go into the Princeton game well equipped in play: ers. By long end running, in which Will- cox and Minct made considerable gains; by forward passes of a simple| nature, and by line bucking with Bond! and Horne carrying the ball, the Hhr« vard attack swept down the fleld® again and again. Seven touchdowns were made, with goals from six of them, and Eond al: cked a field goal standing 32 yards away. In principle the Harvard plays were rudimentary- In execution they scemed almost-im=- possible of solution by Virginia’s team.| The southerners had little offensive variety to confuse the Cambridge col legians. Only once in the game d1‘ they encroach on Harvard territory, a second period series of forward passes. carrying the ball from Virginia's 30 to Harvard's 45 yard line, where another attempt to advance through the air failed, and Harvard gained the ball. In 25 rushes Virginia advanced only 33 vards. The toe of Thurman, who gave up ambulance driving at the front in France to return to school, proved the, most prominent factor in the game. Averaging rearly 50 yards to a kick: from the rushline, he booted Virginia out of danger many times. His tackle| was deadly, but Crimson players had/ him boxed much of the time. ‘The lineup and summary: Harvard 51 Virginia 0 Phinney . ordinary to prime Jambs a: Hogs—Receipts 2,230 head; half a car on sale. Market steady with sales at $10.00 per 100 pounds: pigs at $.36 @9.45; roughs at $8.980. Country dressed hoss steady at 12@13c per pound; roasting pigs at 16@20=. 3.—Cattle—Receipts 4,000; steady. Good to choice steers : yearlings, good to choice Chicago, Nov @11.40; stockers and feeders $6.50 75; good to choice heifers $7@8.50; 50(27.23: canneis cutters $1.50@5.25 Hogs.—Rel 10.10; good , to rough ‘Wheeler Clarke ... Left Guard. Harris ... <e-2eese0. Churchmani Center. 1 Snow .. Sweetser Right Tackle. Right End. MUTRY oo uarterback | Minot . ... Kinsolvifig| Left Halfback. = Hitchcock .. Russell Right Halfback, Bond . ... Sparr| Fullback. Score by periods: ‘Harvard . .o Virginia . L 3 }t’: Officials: Referee, W Trinity; umpire, David Fultz, head ‘inesman, Sturgis Pishon, Dart mouth; fleld judge, Groverland, An- napolis; time of periods, 15 minutes each. Sheep and lambs.—Receipts 10,000 | Scoring: Harvard — Touchdowns, | head; unchanged. Yeariings $8@9.25; fair to choice ewes $6@7.50; 11.10. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. WEEAT Open. Fign. low. Dec. ... ...183% 184 182% 182 Ma, 184" 185% 1s3% 18k s8% 5% 85 8 s 5% si 53% 3% % Gw 5% Penn Defeats Lafaystte. The University of Pennsylvania de- feated the Lafayette eleven Saturday at Philadelphia 19-10 0. full of brilhant plays by Pennsylvania although Lafayette in the first half put up & defense which held the Red and |3/G DEMAND FOR A seres of fake kicks and forward passes in the second half of the game enabled Pennsylvania to|31,000 Ap break through the defense of their op- Gr ponents, scoring three touchdowns, two of which were made in the final period. | New Haven, Conn, Nov. 5—One Light, whom Barry replaced at full-|hundred thousand persons—an un back,’ scored two of Pennsylvania's Quakers missed two opportunities at kicking goal. John Weldon® Cornell Wins After Hard Fight. Michigan Battered Washington. Michigan's powerful football eleven overwhelmed Washington university of |[mont was never dangerous. He St. Louds 68 to 7 at Ann Arvor Satur- | nearest approach to Brown's goal The llissouri team was too light | near the close of the first period when} to withetand the battering attacks of [seh reached the 32-yard line. Yost's men and in the soored almost at will. Carnegie Institute of Technoiogy inch of the game with The Car- Cor- Bond 2, Minot 2, Burnham, Horne, H. wethers | Coolidge: goals from touchdowns,| fair 1o choice $7-25@8.50; western|Bond 5, Gardner; fleld goal, Bond. lambs $9.25@11; native lambs $9.40@ Substitutions: Harvard—Brewer for| Phinney, Gaston for Brewer. Ryan for| Gaston, Hartley for Wheeler, Lancaster| for Hartley, Duncan for Clarke, Dean for Duncan, Wiggin for Harris, Flynn for Wiggin, Thorndyke for Flynn, Day, for Snow, Lovell for Sweetser, Batch- elder for Harte, H. Coolidge for Batch- elder, Likens for H. Coolidge. Willcox for Minot, Burnham for Hitchcock, Horne for Bond, Bond for Horne, Thatcher for Bond. Virginia—Stewart| for McKay, Thurman for- Stewart, Montague for Churchman, Stewart for Thurman, Calvert for Stéwart, Blakey for Ward, Hazer for Darwin, Goodwin for Hager, C. White for Carrington, The game Was[Gooch for Russell. YALE-HARVARD TICKETS" t Bowl Seats Over 69,000. erected, this means that 31,000 DE0= Yale applied for 52,000 seats ‘and the applications came from the public. These were not even considered and Washington and Lee took Navy's; measure in football at Annapolis Sat urday afternoon in such style as te though having the advantage o weight and the added benefit of & slippery fleld, the sailors were Ouft: classed more than the 10 to 0 == indicated. Brown Blanks Vermont Brown defeated Vermont 42 to 0 @ Andrews fleld at Providence Saturday. Most of the home team’s scores we made foilowing runs, Murphy dash. ing 85 yards for one touchdown. Ver- last period Soppitt Out of the Gams. ‘Washington got a touchdown in the | Pittsburgh, Pa, Nov. 5—R intercepted | Soppit, star guard on the football ti D‘hy:rdl for ltptpha U ity of Pittsbu ations ' Turned Away==" precedented number—applied for seats | touchdowns. - Out of thrse chances, the |for the Yale-Harvard football gamei here on November 25, the Yale ticket | Lafay- | office announced tonight. “As the great. ette’s star fullback, was injured in the | Bowl seats a trifie more than $9,000 first period and had to leave the game |including additional seats now while Diamond broke his collarbone in the third period and probably will be|will be disappointed. out the remainder of the season. Applications closed Saturday night.! Harvard for 24,000. The remainder of / the money was promptly returned, for ' Cornell Saturday at Ithaca and _thelihe combined university aplications| Red and White had difficalty in defeat- | sio SORPR88 U0 T Y acity. ing_the fast visitors by a score of 15 : Most of the game was played in i i 3l & drixltog Aty Dok the Cornell team || Yashington and 'Lee Ksim, MSei showed little improvement. negie backs repeatedly circied Cornell's ends for long gains. Carnegie started off viciously and on Cornell's three yard line before the Ithacans awoke. nell spilled a forward pass, regained the ball and started a drive which 3 | sent Speed over with the first score. In the third period Kesner eluded the Cornell team by an end play and ran 35 yards for a toucndown. give their confidence a severe jolt. Al-