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* INSURANCE ONLY THREE CENTS A DAY the cost to . AETNAIZE J. L. LATHROP & SONS, Agents Shetucket Street. Those Fall, Winter and Holiday | Btocks need INSURANCE PROTEC- |TION. Why not have us place the 'risks NCW in our strong companies? ISSAC 8. JONES, Insurance and Real Estate Agent Richards’ Building 91 Main St. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW AMOS A. BROWNING, 'Phone 700 Attorney-at-Law, hard’s Bidg. ‘Brown & Perkins, Klimeys-at-law Over Uncas Nat. Bank, Sbhetucket St. Entrance stairway near to Thames Nations! Bank. Telephone 38-3. SPRING TRAINING CAMP CHANGES. Major Clubs to Stage Contests on Way North Instead of Playing Mi- nars. Radicdl. changes in spring training will mark-“the major league prepara- tions for the 1917 campajgns. So much benefit was experienced from inter- league exhibition games in the South- land last spring that a new policy just naturally originated of itself. By a strange coincidence the two teams— Glants and Yankees—hit on the idea simultaneously. The apparent wisdom of the scheme has appealed to other managers, ‘80 that it Would not be at all surprising if the nmew practice be- came geperal ‘at once. he Giant management stole some of its rival's thunder by amnouncing its_training plans first. ' The Glants will go to Mariin, Tex., abofit the usual “time—March 1. It 1§ expected that within a month McGraw will have his club ready for real hostHity. Mean- while the Detroit Tigers, under Hughie Jennings, will be drilling at Waxaha- chie, Tex. The two forces will join about April 1-at Dallas, Tex., for the first of a series of exhibition games arranged along a route that will carry the clubs i company back to Kansas City. A ‘stmilar arrangement has been ef- fected between the Boston Braves, who train at Miami, Fla., and the New York Yankees, whose spring camp is located at Macon, Ga. By the time George Stallings'’ clan is ready to move north a junction will be made with Bill Donovan's ~hopefuls. - The tearh will:tour *flie most_thickly ‘pop- ulated: cemtrés “of the south and the Dest. cities of the Atlantic seaboard on the way north, Now comes_word from Philadelphia that Connie Mack was trying to ar- range with the champion Brooklyns for.a similar barnstorming junket. These two teams instituted athletic relations Jast spring in a series of five games, The tail-enders of the Amer- ican League soegan to show major league promise toward the end of last seagon. It would mot be at all sur- prising if Connie Mack came up with a, club next spring capable of giving the best a run for its mone: There are any number of virtues to recommend the new training systems adopted by the, New York- clubs, and no drawbacks discernible at this dis- tance. Most important is the expected benefit toward the perfection of play for the champlonship, seasons. It is a well known fact that major league players cannot look seriously upon the games booked with minor league opposition in the springtime. 'or one thing, down in the stick: players are not so well prepared their big major brothers before the real fights start. About the time the elect are leaving the south the bush- ers report for nr-ctice. Consequently the liztle féllov in no shape phy- sically to furnish cv-n the competition of which they camble at the end of the season. Natu 100, the minor teams are at their very worst for all the best of the year before have graduated to some faster com- pany. Even games between the first and second aggregations of the same club get better results than the so- called_exhibitions with brush talent. There is another consideration, too, and a big one, for it involves the fi- nanelal side of the proposition. Re- peated visits of major league teams to the south have taught the inhabitants not to expect much from the major clubs opposed to weaker foes. No- body, quicker than the “bug” gets onto the fact that major league players re- gard these contests as jokes, and jokes they naturally are bound to be. There was a time when the south was enthusiastic enough. Then the training trips sometimes showed some- thing of a prafit. Within the last five ears major league Clubs have been ucky indeed to make a frub stake out of the entire spring tour. In fact, lately it has cost every major league team owner an average of $5,000 to get ready each spring. That minor league citizens arc in- terested in major league baseball be- tween major league clubs in major league earnest was proven clearly in Texas last year. The Glants and Tig- ers played five games in the Lone Star state. Those five games got Mc- Graw and Jennings both back home with a profit to show instead of the customary deficit. Trrespective of the {hmediate finan- clal end, this new system can scarce- ly prove anything but economical. For years the promoters have regarded spring training trips as part of a neo- essary expense, like rent, taxes, etc. Whatever revernues came from spring games were regarded as so much vel- vet; they were entirely unexpected. The main idea was to get the club in proper_physical condition for an ad- vantagfous start in the pennant race, for the difference between a good and a bad start in the regular campaign always has been the difference be- tween financial success and financial fajlure for the year. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage provesit. 25cat all druggists. WHEN YOU WANT to put your bus- iness before the public, th'uml..l.:: um _better than thro “olumns of The as | Pitsburgh- Another Sweep. ‘When the All- teams are se- lected and the ‘championship title awarded by the experts, the Uni- versity of Pittsburgh may not be rec- ognized. The argument may be ad- vanced that Glenn Warner's proteges did not play Yale, Harvard or Prince- ton, or other teams of the Big Six. In- deed, it 18 to be regretted that m: games could not be arranged, Pittaburgh s represented by one of the strongest teams of the year, if not strongest, says Frank O'Neill Pittsburgh has not dipped her colors since 1914. Then Washington and Jefferson, coached by Bob Folwell, Who now commands the football destinies of the University of Pennsylvania, won a thrilling game by a score of 13 to 10. That, however, was before Glenn War- ner was placed in command of Pitt. Last year Pitt swept through a schedule of eight games, including the Navy, Penn, Carlisle, Washington and Jefterson and Penn State, winning them all, and scoring a total of 247 points against 26 for the opposition. The Navy scored 12 points against Pitt, more than any other team. § A Mighty Attack. Thus far this season Pitt is tearing along, sweeping all opposition before her. The vaunted line of Syracuse university was tarn to fiinders by the mighty attack of the Smoky City war- riors. 'We have never seen greater power in a football eleven, and it was the power that drives a machine along smoothly and with little apparent ef- fort. Pennsylvania, which subdued Penn State in' convincing style, was beaten with remarkable ease. Here again thel relentless force of the Pitt attack was apparent in every play, and the first line of Penn's defense was pried apart, bent backward and broken. The Navy alone has put up a fight worthy of the name against Pitt, holding heryto a 20 to_19 score. ) 3 This wonderful success is due to two perfectly good reasons: Pittsburgh has a student body- of 4,600 from which to call her material, and Glenn Warner a coach who owns no superior. Every team that Warner has ever coached has taken the fleld perfectly grounded in the rudiments of football. Every play calls for special duties on the part of every man, and Warner sees-to it-that every last ‘detail is_carried oyt Hours and hours in_the early weeks of the season are spext by his teams in tackling and taking out practice. The linemen and backs are drilled in thes all-important departments of footpall until they are letfe pertécs. A pre- mium is placed tipun speed, and it is no wonder, then, that the interference forms so quickly and works with such deadly precision. The day of the Syracuse-Pittsburgh e one_of Pennsylvania's scou went to Warner and s “Well, Gienn, here I am with a_notebook and a pair of field glasses. We're going to beat you this vear. “Gad to see you. til the game? mations, expl your team them, wh: ner. Warner's speech was not prompte by any egolsm. ‘It wad'fot 13 tne ..\f ture of a bluft éfther. .Herinsists thers are certain plays, which, if executed properly, with avery man performing his specific duties with careful att tion to dein.l cannot be stopped witl out reasonable advance, His feams ure noted fcr the wonderful peifect in detail. and so succes is won. | wonderful Carisle teams—tsam: bragged of Thorpe and . Guyon, Bt why wait un- I'll show you our for- in them to you, and if r any other team can stop go right to it said War- passed by this ‘eleven of Pi It has been whispered here there that inducements are offered to athletes entering Pittsburgh. and that this team has been gathered from the highways and byways of the country. This is not in accordance with the facts. There Is mot_a ‘man’ on_.the squad h the “exception of Séldel, Has Crack Eleven | Homors on the Gridiron—Warner’s Men. May Make who ever played college football before entering Pittsburgh. Seidel played at [ Muhlenberg for one year. He was on the scrub eleven last season, but by furious playing won his place on the varsity this year. Indeed, most of the players came from. the preparatory schools of Western Pennsylvania. _ Nothing succeeds like succes, and the remarkable advaneo of Piitsburg in the athletio fleld has caused hun- dreods at prep school lads to matric- uvlate there rather than go to some of the Bastern colleges to make their bid for athletic fame. The university is 129 years old, mately 4,000 students, and an alumni body of 5,000 On this year's eleven there are sev- eral men of All-America timber. George McLaren, the fullback, 1s one of the greatest line breakers we have ever seen. He is a sophomore, with two years more before him. Bob Max well, former star of Swarthmore ele ens, and a keen student of the game, declared McLaren to be oue of ths greatest backfied men he had ever seen. With two more years in which to develop he should rank with the great Ted Coy, or, Bezdek, or some of those other heroes of the gridirons. Bob Peck was chosen on the All- America team last year, and a careful student of the other centres on the field this fall discloses no dangerous rival to him. Red Hastings is a star of first rank, and Herron has few su- periors as an end. Few Stars Lost. Those opponents who are suffering silently and waiting for ‘“next year” to break the power of Pittsburgh have little cause for jubilation.- A few stars will be lost through graduation, but team to start with in 1917, and we have Warner will have practially a veteran his word for it that several of the scrub are about to take their places on_the *varsity eleven. Perhaps the most serious loss will be that of Bob Peck, the crack centre. Thornhill, one of the tackles and Her- Ton, the end, but there is a wealth of material with which to fill the gaps. Carlson and Herron, the two ends, are home products. The former was graduated from Beilefonte Academy and is playing his third vear on the *va Herron from one of the lecal schools, and never played football bofore entering the university. He wiil be gradunted this year. ‘“hornhill, ene of the tackles, is plav- Ing his last year of colleze football. Tie came to Pittsburgh from Hanover High School, rear Pittsburgh. He was: conepicuons in the Syracuse game by his fearless, furious plaving. Seldel carc fram Muhlenberg and last season warked alorg orn the scrub eleven. Paerhaps the greatest surprise in the Syracuse-Pitt game was the easy manner in which Seis outplaved Babe ‘White. s, a giant himself, stand- ing some 6 feet 2 inches in height and weighing some 200 pounds or | was dwarfted in compari: Syracuse captain. But physical dis- perity S He tore him look pecor. Seis was a scrub last yvear, and made the " ) afteP Soppitt wa sinjured In the Navy agne. IHis home is in Davenport, lewa, and his brother is a member “of the facuhy in Plttsburgh diniversify: Sutherland; who made Schlachter sigh for the ease of home. is from Sewickley, Penn. He prepared 4t Oberlin Academy into White and made Harvard is better fixed for ends this season than any other football team in the east. So say the crimson grid- iron experts. In addition to the reg- ular ends, Dick Harte and C. Coolidge, the Cambridge eleven has two or three men who can hold down these posi- tions in brilliant style. Harte s one of the speediest men in the cast, and many football experts say he is the best end of the season. Harte is a hard tackier fast down the field under kicks and is not easily boxed out of the play. He s exceptionally clever catching forward passes. , MARKET WAS EXCITED. Interest Centered in the Outcome of the Presidential Election. Néw York, Nov. 8.—It is no exagger- ation to declare thiat not in a genera: don has the stock market been swayed by such important and conflicting con- ditions as_attcnded today’s extraordi- nary dealings. Politics was the one engrossing topic of discussion, all other considerations und deyeiopments, being swept into the background in the in- tense excitement surrounding the out- come 0f the presidential electicn. The result of that momentous event still remained a matter of debate and conjecture at the close of the session, which witnessed a turnover of about 2,100,000 shares, of wiich United States Steel furnished over 25 per cent. Steel was all times the central figure, selling :p to 125 at the opening, advancing another point at mid-day to the new maximum of 126, falling back t0 121 7-4 In the final Houtv.and closing at 124 1-4, a net gain ‘ofy a point. Other new records.inclided Bethlehem Steel, up 15 points to 684 Utah Cop- per 1 to 114 1-2, Central Leather 7 1-4 to 110, American Beet Sugar 1 1-2 to 105 1-2, and Chino Copper 1 1-8 to 65 1-4. Among the other substantial gains, most of which were obliterated in the final hour, were Mercantile Marine, common and preferred, American Lo- comotive, American Woolen znd In- ternational Paper at gains of 2 to 4 points, while Slose-Sheffield Steel and Gulf States Steel, common and second preferred, were higher by 6 to 7 1-2 points. The more prominent industrials and equipments, ~ together _with _leading metals, made extreme gains of one to three Doints in the rise of the first hour, but this advance proved to be no more substantial than the advance in investment rails, whose early gains of one to almost two points were mostly substituted by net losses of as it ot importas stimates of the nt cereals embodied in the government crop re- port were more variable than in the preceding mon:h, further deterioration in some staples belng offset by gaing in_others. Bonds were firm, with the initial rise in stocks, but receded moderately later. Sales. par value, $4,870,000. United States bonds were unchanged on call. 8TOCKS. i i H g T FINANGIAL AND COMMERCIAL —_—— Anaconda. Atehtson. 7 Baldwin Toco Balomore & Oblo Butte &Sup Canadian Pac Central Leather Col Fuel . Corn_ Products Crucible ~ Steel Cuba, Cane Sugar CRI & Pacific Frlo Ere 13 Goodrich Great North Gt N ore General Electrie Tosplratton Ina Alcobol Int 3t M Int M M prd Kansas CUtf Kenpes ... .. Lackawanna " teel TR S0’ Lenigh ... Maxwell Motors New York, Nov. 8. — Call money steady; high 2 1-2; low 2 1-4; ruling rate 2 1-4; last loan 2 1-2; closing bid 2 1-4; offéred at 2 1-2. COTTON. New York, Nov. 8—Cotton futures closed steady. December 19.49, Janu- ary 19.46, March 19.5%, May 19.75, Juiy 19.73. Spot steady; middling 19.00. GRAIN MARKET. Hleh Low. w0~ 8% % 185% 14 1% Close. w = P 1 a 8% 0 the least of the troubles of | A medicinal ‘preparation like Dr. Kilmer'’s Swamp-Root, that has real curative value almost sells itself. Like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited to those who are in need of it. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is a phy- siclan’s prescription. It has been tested for years and has brought re- sults_to. countless numbers who have suffered. 2 The success of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root is due to the fact that it' fulfills almost every wish in overcoming kid- ney, liver and bladder diseases, cor- rects urinasy troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheuma- tism. Do not suffer. Get a - battle - of Swamp-Root from any druggist now. Start treatment today. However, if you wish first to test this_great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co. Binghamton, N. Y, for a sample bottle. - When writing be sure and mention the Nor- Daily Bulletin. CARLISLE INDIANS BOOSTED FOOTBALL Restoring of Game at In Mat With Favor. Whe nthe Department of the In- terior in Washington issued the order restoring football as a sport to the Carlisle Indian School it made a move which has won favor with all devotees of this gripping sport. Last year, when the Indian team was torn asunder by internal dissen- sion an dopen rebellion, the Indian Commission ordered the abolizion of football. Teh aborigines nave long been one of the most picturesque teams on the gridiron, and football mourned as it prepared for the loss. Stories rich in unusual incident might be told of the Carlisle teams. They played the game as they llved their lives; hard, rough and with that contempt for physical injury which is traditional of their race. Nor were trickery and cunning lacking. Under the tutelage of Glenn War- mer, who now is in charge of the University of _Pittsburgh _ football team, Carlisle School rose to its great- est heights on the gridiron. Until re- cently, when the majority of our secondary schools. Played. College Teams. But only college teams were played against by the Indians, and it was ruled that any man who had played for four vears at Carlisle was inelig- ‘|ible to represent anw of the colleged. It is true, however ,that most of the Indian players were older than the lisle represented on the gridiron. The white boys at the prep schools. it may be that the Indian authorities had a stronger motive in restoring football than the desire to see Car- sport appealed to the boys. It was hard and rough; it possessed that ele- ment of physical encounter that they iloved. It is = characteristic of the Indian to glory in physical prowess. It is more tha ncharacteristi it is ipart of their very being, in hred by centuries of life in the open. In the old days the most successful warrior was elected chief of the trible. The desire to stand forth was inculcated i nevery Indian boy. The svarriors stalked through the old villages show- ing their strings of scalps. The man with the greatest number of horses was rated the richest. At Carlisle the heroes of the gridiron were the he- roes of the school. The desire to make the football team attracted the boys to the school. While there they studied English and learned the way of the white man and ot live his life. Granting this be true, it was a wise move to restore the at. traction to the school. The uplift and advancement of the Indian race is the chief object of the Indian Department, and if football at Carlisle can be used to assist in this uplift, then the com- missioners did well to restore it. Every College Boasts Heroes. Every college boasts its heroes of e gridiron, and none more than Car- lisl The fame of Thaddeus Red Water, Metxen, Bemus, Jerry and Hawley Pierce, those mighty brothers of days long gone; Wauseka, Pete Hauser, Frank Hudson, the wizard of the drop kick; Seneca, All-America halfback of ’98; Gardner and his mate Bxencine, two of the greatest ends in the history of football, will live while Carlisle Indian School endures. There is no heart under a copper skin that will not beat high when the praise of Charley Dillon, who tricked Harvard by slipping the ball under his jers: and scoring a touchdown is sun; Nor will men of the stamp of Frank Mount Pleasant, Dr. William Johnson, Mike Balenti, * Steam Roller Powell, Joe Guyon and his_brother Charley, Lone Star Arcasa, Bergle, Newashe, Gus Welch and a host of others ever die in the tradition of the school. Who is there who will dispute the statement that a greater football play- er than Jim Thorpe never trod a grid- iron? The mighty Sac and Fox war- rior might well have won his place and even greater fame had he. attended a college of first rank. Picture Jim play- ing with men of the stomp of Wendell, of Eddie Mahan, of Ted Coy. Imagine the feeling of opposing linemen who realized that stopping a twelve-inch shell would be child’s play in compari- son to dragging down these line- smashing behemoths. The Indians have beaten Harvard, Pennsylvania, Columbia, in the old days, and other Dbig teams, but they never established their _supremacy beyond dispute through a whole season. Yet Indian teams have always been watched with interest, for they could b erelied upon to do something entirely unexpected. The story will never die of how Charley Dillon, the halfback, re- ceived the kicKoff in the Harvard game of 1903, and, tucking the leather under his jersey in back, walked leisurely past the Harvard tacklers until clear, and then, with a whoop, raced on to the goal line, traveling 105 yeards for a. touchdown. It was this stunt which led to the framing of the rule that the ball could not be hidden under the jersey or other articles of wearing apparel. It was an Indian idea to sew leather patches the size and color of the ball on the jerseys and start men running in all directions, their opponents. ed_upon. It was Carlisle, or rather, Warner, that first developed the forward pass ot its fullest extent, if that dangerous but spectacular play has been so de- veloped. The open play of the Indians struck terror to their opponents, but. it was not so much that they were more adept, but that they offered- greater protetcion to the men _recelving the ball. Warner was first to send another line man out With the ends to clear away the secondary defence, and then the back or end recelving the pass had a clear field. Later the other teams adopted this method ,ard the rules committee finally put a ban and a 10- yard penalty on taking out the de- fensive man before the pass was caught. Deception, combined with & powerful attack, in Which every man's duties were carefully outlined by Warner and executed by the men, was the secret of the success of the Indians. Warner always worked on the principle that on touchdown calls for from the opponents it 1t wi n School This idea was frown- to the confusion of |. - \An open "Bo He understood the psychology of the Indians, who were champions when winning. Let an Indian team score early in the game, and it mattered lit- tle to the men if the opponents came right back. They believed that one touchdown was only the prelude to an- other and so they played their game. Still Remember Game. Columbia men still remember the game their team played against the Indians on Manhattan Field on Thanks- gviing Day of 1899. Carlisle, with Fudson, Seneca, Red Water, Pierce and others of that type, buried Colurabia under an avalanche of touchdowns, and won by a score of 45 to 0. The red- skin ran riot around the Biue and ‘White, smashed down the line and did as they pleased. They plaved with a ferocity that knew no stoppins. That same spirit we saw in the game the Indians played against West Point in 1812, when Jim Thorpe, Arcasa, Powell, Guyon and those other great Indian players swept the Army team before them. Here was a chance to revenge their forefathers on the Long Knives, and every Indian played his part. Against Dartmouth a year later the same spirit fired the Carlisle team, and Welsh, wonder quarterback that he was, routed the Green, with Guyon, Calac and Bracklin as -his aids. Football at Carlisle reached its high watr mark in 1812. At least, Glenn Warner is credited with saying that this was his most powerful team. Surely, a, combination that could boast of men like Thorpe, Arcasa, Powell, Guyon, Calac, Bergle, Busch and other was not weak. The team of 1913 was powerful and, then the ebb began, After 1914 Warenr resigned, and in ’15 chaos reigned at the Indian school. Choctaw Kelly, Warner's suc- cessor, did not. obtain the desired re- sults. He could not inspire the team with confidence In him, and when Gus ‘Welsh stepped in to take command riot broke out. The condition became 80 chaotic that the game was abolish- ed for a while. Always One Kicker. Carlisle teams always boasted at least of one clever kicker, and the record books bear eloquent testimony of the fact that no goal was safe when the Indians were within thirty yards and the conditions were fair. The fame of Charley Brickley has been sung, Truly, he was a great drop kicker; but | Frank Hudson ;the ‘quarterback of the | Pills old ‘of 1898, will be spoken of are mentioned; Hud= letterto 5 & the People. IN view of these facts—for they are facts—and you are a Big Man—and you do believe in the comfort and happiness of the people, don’t you think that a company which produces a cigar- ette of superb purity and offers it for sale at the lowest price ever asked for a cigarette of its grade, has scored . > .. a Quality Achievement and an Economic Triumph ? son was a little man, but he was cap- able of goals from the 45-yard line. Mike Balenti was a wizard at drop and place kicking; so were Peter Hauser and Frank Mt. Pleasant, and who will deny the skill of Jim Thorpe? Thorpe has won his place among the great halfbacks. Indeed, he is per- haps that greatest and best all-around man who ever played the game. Al- bert Exendine, the end, stood out in his vear; Red Water was recognized, and ‘is named today when formidable guards are discussed. The great Jerry Pierce, who departed this life not long ago, was another remarkable line play er. SPORTING NOTES. “Pudge” Heffelfinger has reached Yale and has donned the biggest foot- 21l uniform in the Yale wardrobe and jumped into the scrub eleven rush line for the 10-minute scrimmage practice ordered. Three other ElJ veterans were also in togs—Foster Rackwell, Jack Gates and Clarence Alcott. In the opinion of Miller Huggins, | seasoned southpaw pitchers _will be considered as an invaluable adjunct to There is more catarrh th this section of the country than all-Other diseases put together, and for years it was su posed to be incurable. Doctors pr scribed local remedies, and by constant- 1y failing to cure with local treatment, Pronounced it incurable. Catarrh is a local dfsease, greatly dnfluenced by constitutional conditions, and therefore requires constitutional - treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is a constitutional remedy, is taken Inter- nally and acts through the blood on the mucous surfaces of the svstem. One Hundred Dollars reward is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Cure fails to cure. Send for circulars and testi- monials. E. 3 CHENEY & CO, Toledo, Oho. 8014 by drugsists, T8c: Hall's Family. Pills for constipation. A Clogged System Must Be Cleared. You will finé Dr. King’s New . Life Pills a gentle vet effective laxative for Accumulated waste poisons the bloo dizziness, billousness and pimply, mud- dy complexion are the distressing ef- fects. A dose of Dr. King’s New Life zonignt will assure vou a free, x . . . d . OUR distinguished activ- ities as Leader of the Old Guard, the Guiding Spirit of the Republican Organization, Chief Exponent of the Tariff and the aggressive and resourceful of the Republicins in the United States Senate, make you one of the Big Men of America and neccessarily deeply interested in.the things that closely concern rettes, isn’t the eneral In view of the factthat the people of this country an- nually expend $120,000,000 for c : American Tobacco Company entitled to great credit for making a cigarette that maintains a fine standard and g forces down the cost to the consumer? ALL this is represented in the LORD SALISBUR I am proud to inform you that the Cigarette, Senator, and Jord Salisburp is the only 100 per cent. pure all-Turkish- Tobacco Cigaretie i the world today e in that 3 -t ol sells for as low a price as 15¢ for 20. If you smoke cigarettes, Senator, try-this one on my recommendation and in doing so you * are making an experiment for the American > people. 7 Ernest J. Goulston Aido. Agency every National League club next sea- son. Huggins says the cry has gone up from every manager in the Tener circuit for more left-handers, and that some of the clubs are atready fortify- ing_themseives by preparing to carry no less than four southpaw flingers on their rolls for 1917, There will be no reduction in the price of admission to the Yale-Brown game to be played in the Yale Bowl next Saturday. This was the deci- sion made yesterday at a meeting of exccutive committee in charge of the Bow' at which the open letted of Jerry Holmes of Bridgeport, advo- cating a popular price for the game was discussed. e Tiger crews abound on Carnegle lake this fall. Dr. Spaeth has no less than 11 crcws preparing for the annual re- gatta. In the squad are five men who won their spurs in the varsity boat which conquered every team crew’ ex- 7 c TR of OuatZ ad Lo % 9:5';7: @JWMJM?% e cept Cornell last spring. They are Cochran, Paull, McCann, Delaney and Savage. Foster Rockwell, terback and nead — i Yale's former quar- coach, is expected this sweek to assist in the development of Captain Black's eleven. in business in Oregon. who has a son be here before the week! ger, class, closes. will Hutchinson most exhausted by the game. He is now. Billy Heffelfin- in the freshman was the - player He willi not play till Tuesday, when Bingham, will also return to the game. STOP LIQUOR AND DRUG USING THE KEELEY INSYITUTE - West Haven, Conn.. R —— Harold J. Cross, James H. Hurley and E. Tudor Gross, Auctioneers RECEIVER’S SALE (By Order of Gilbert 8. Raymond, Receiver of H. B. Porter & Son Company) Tuesday, November 21st, 1916 AT 11 O'CLOCK A. M., ON THE PRE MISES H. B. PORTER & SON COMPANY LAFAYETTE AND ONECO STREETS,, NORWICH, CONNECTICUT 2—Parcels of Manufacturing Property—2 TO BE SOLD SEPARATELY PARCEL No. 1—24,968 SQUARE FEET OF LAND, fronting about 120 feet on Lafayette Street, or Mill Lane, so called, 172% feet on Oneco Street—with group of Four Frame Building, designed for _woodworking. business and equipped with engine, boiler, pumps, dynamo, Sturtevant Dry Kiln System, Sturtevant Exhaust System, shafting, hangers, pulleys,: main belt, elevator, sprinkler system, steam heating plant, electric. wirs. ing and woodworking machinery, moulders, sanders, planers, saws, ten- oners, stickers, mortisers, used in a well equipped wood working establishment. PARCEL No. 2—LOT OF LAN veneer presses, and miscellaneous machinery D with buildings and improvements there- on, marked as lot B on “Map of the property of the H. B.' Porter & Son Company, by Chandler & Palmer, Engineers, October, 1916” and contain- ing an area of 7,345 square feet. LUMBTR, OFFICE Lot C—Area 390 square feet. Area 17,000 square feet.. Lots E, Fand G.—Area 2,400 square feet. _ T51—LOTS OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT—251 MOULDINGS, VENEER, HARDWARE, LEATHER BELTING, PURNITURE, SAFES, MOTOR TRUCKS, HORSES, WAGONS. ed in Lot D~ To be sold separately in-lots to suit purchasers, in the order numbered in catalogue. %) G. L. & H. J. GROSS, - 170 WESTMINSTER STREET, e 2 Apply for catalogue to MANAGERS OF PRO RI E‘TATE.L %