Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 14, 1916, Page 3

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INSURANCE ONLY THREE CENTS A DAY the cost to AETNAIZE J. L. LATHROP & SONS, Agents 28 Shetucket Street. Those Fall, Winter and Holiday Stocks need INSURANCE PROTEC- TION. Why not have us place the Irisks NCW in our strong companies? I8SAC 8. JONES, Insuratice and Real Estate Agent Richards’ Building 91 Main St. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW AMOS A. BROWNING, . *Phone 700 Attorney-at-Law, 3 Richard’s Bldg. . Brown & Perkins, itiomeys-at-law Over Uncas Nat. Bank, Shetucket St Entrance stairway near to rhames Nations! Bank. Telephone 38-3. STATE PRISON BOARD TO GET 47 APPLICATIONS FOR PARDONS Among the Number is Addie Burns of New London. Hartford, Conn., Nov. 13.—Forty- soven applications for pardons will be presented to the state board of pardons when it meets next month, it was Jearned tonight. Among the applicants are a number of persons serving life imprisonment sentences at Wethers- field. Michael Cherest, who has been In rison for 45 years for a murder at indsor Locks, will make his sixteenth aplication. Charles Gong of Hartford, snother “lifer” will make his 26th ap- plication. He has served a quarter of & century. There are three women applicants: Annie M. Rathburn of New Haven, a YALE TOUGH PROPOSITION |iiss 1907. BY SOL METZGER Coach Washington & Jefferson-Foot- ball Team. The most interesting problem of the present football season is at Yale ‘where Tad Jones is attempting a “come back.” Until 1909 Yale ranked high in football but after that season matters went from bad to worse—until the present year. Up to the time of this writing, and I am writing this article on the eve of the Yale-Colgate game, Yale has shown power, more been seen at New Haven since the days of Ted Coy, and the followers of the Blue are taking a new interest in football and look forward to a glorious ending in the games with Princeton end Harvard. 1 have followed Yale's football des- tiny since 1011 rather closely, have watched some of the finest players in the country go down to defeat after defeat because of poor coaching and this season had the additional adyan- tage of preparing a team to meet Yale and in that preparation witnessed the Yale eleven in action twice. The first was Yale's game against V. P. 1 and the second the Yale “come back” against Washington and Jefferson, my own eleven, which had won two and tied one of the last three sames play- ed at New Haven. In that contest siX of our players had played the previous year and from their judgment and that of scouts of othér teams who make a practice of lollowing the Yale elevens in every contest the opinion is unanimous that Yale this vear is a decidedly stronger eleven than it has been in half a dozen seasons. in fact since 1909. Yet Yale, in my opinion, has a most difficult task ahead to win from Harvard. Yale should defeat Princeton because Princeton lacks what the Yale men call “scenery.” “Scenery” at New Haven is material, and material there is at Yale in abund- ance, ‘The Yale team is as powerful in “scenery” as any eleven I have ever seen. From end to end it is a line of tremendous strength, one which should play o stonewall defense against any running attack. Its backfleld is as £00d as any I have seen in years when it 1s going strong, as the backs I have witnessed—Legore, Carey, Bingham and Smith—are well set up, have a drive that carries them forward when tackled and are exceedingly difficult to down in the open. On a dry fleld the attack is at its best. On a wet turf it lacks the punch and brilllancy that marks its work on firm footing, due to the principle followed in ad- vancing the ball oft tackle or around the end. The principle of the Yale attack is an old one. I saw Chadwick and Met- calf in'1903 against Harvard when they used it so successfully. From either a punt or running formation the backs sweep off tackle or around the end at top speed. As the defense rushes over to head it off the runner quickly shifts his_direction and rushes through on tackle, cutting well back to the other side of the field. The plan is to use the interferencé to sweep the oppos- ing end and backs on that side of the line well out and have the line break through and take care of the defensive backs on the short side when the run- ner cuts in. It takes an alert team to break up such a plan of offense, es- pecially as Legore and Carev when 1 saw them, were exceedingly difficult to down by hard tackling. It was this ability, rather than good interference, which ‘gave Yale its big first half ad- vantage over Washington and Jeffer- son. In the second half our players settled down to the business in hand FINANGIAL AN MARKET WAS UNSETTLED. With dle Intervals and Later Trading Was Broad, of Dullness at Mi Stages. life prisoner, and Addie Burns of New London and Clara H. Sprague of Fair- field County, serving for minor of- fences. Other applicants are Henry B. Chamberlain of New Haven,, sentenced for life in 1887, and Circacia Capabi- anca of Waterbury, sentenced for life in 1905, John Harris of Waterbury, sentenced from two to three years for assault ,is another who desires to be pardoned. AMERICANS ON COLUMBIAN HAVE ARRIVED AT CAMURINAS Brought There on Sailing Vessels With Men Rescued From Other Ships. Paries, Nov. 13, 5:30 p. m.—A wire- less despatch from Madrid says that 106 persons from the American steam- ship Columbian, which was reported to have boen torpedoed on November 8, arrived vesterday on sailing vessels at the smail port of Camurinas. Twenty- five men from the Norweglan steam- ship Balto and 25 from the Norwegian steamship Fordalen, also were taken to Camurinas on the sailing boats, of which there were four. The despatch says all three vessels are reported to have been sunk by torpedoes from a German steamship. A Paris despatch yesterday said the Columbian, Balto and Fordalen had been sunk by a German submarine. The crew of the Columbian was re- ported to have arrived at Codunna, Spain, in lifeboats. Captain Jeft Healy will be lost to the Columbia football team for the rest of the season, in all probability. Such it least, was the announcement made it the training quarters of the Blue ind White eleven. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage provesit. 25cat all druggists. ALWAYS be watchtul and particular about your skin. On the first appear- ance of pimples, blackheads, dis- figuring blotches, apply OINTMENT and note the quick and pleasing results. Even the most stub- born forms of ECZEMA yleld to treatment when E. L. M. OINT- MENT is applied. Those who have used it KNOW. 25 cents a box. All druggists. WILLIAM C. YOUNG Successor_to STETSON & YOUNG CARPENTER and BUILDER Best work and materials at right yrices by skilled labor. Yelephone 60 West Main St. THE DEL-HOFF European Plan Rates 75 cents ner day and um HAYES BROTHERS. Telephone 12Z. _ 26-28 Broadway DR. SHAHAN, Specialist or Diseases of the BLOOD AND STOMACH. Rheul.w..2m (including = Neuritis), in Troubles, Bloody Bputum, Run< own Conditions, Premature Afln(, rdeninic of the Arteries. Culturé reatment ‘only 'for Biood Diseases. imple and relfable prevention of Ty- hold, Rabies and Lockjaw. Hours: 10-11 a. m.; 3-4 and 7-8 p. m. 10 outside visits after 8 p. m. THE AERTNA BOWLING AND BILLIARDS, Beven alleys. Six tables. The best S Norwich, Comn. b .00 SERE Tt 4 New York, Nov. 13.—An undercur- rent of heaviness and uncertainty pervaded today’s market, even though man ystocks were strong at times and several new records were established. Trading was broad:but fitful, with in- tervals of dullness during the inter- mediate and later seages. Price movements were frequently so confus- ing as to indicate buying and selling of a conflicting character. ment among the professional element seemed to favor lower prices, except in coppers, which again furnished the list with most of its stability. The motors, equipmenrs and indus- triais of varied descriptions were low- er by 2 to 3 points and Central Leath- er made a further extreme decline of 8 3-8 points from its recent meteoric rise. _ Shipping shares, Atlantic Guif and West Indies excepted..aere lower with investment rails and Unfted| States_Steel losing two points on the usnal heavy offerings. Republic Iron and the several is- sues of the Gulf States Steel Company were prominent for their advances of 4 to 10 points, all at record quota- tlons, as were also Utah and Ray Coppers, Atlantic, Gulf and West In- dies and several of tne paper sroup These gains were largely or wholly forfeited in the more reactionary ten- dencles manifested in the last half hour, when fresh selling of mercurial specialties was_induced by familiar neace reports.. Unsettlement marketed the feverish Close, most leaders being then at or near minimum prices of the sesston. Total sales, with Steel and Coppers preponderant, were 1,525,000 shares. g Technical, rather than actual condi- tions, militated against the bull ac- count, fundamentals being even more favorable than at last week's close. One of the largest copper producing compantes increased its dividend dis- bursement by 100 per cent and it ls well nigh certain that rails and other fabricated steel and iron are in pro- cess of further upwara revision. Last week’s enormous expansion of Incal loans fafled of reflection in the money market, but was the occasion of much comment, even though speedy rectification is expected. Bonds were irregular, with sales (par value) $4,280,000. U. S. cuopon 4's rose 3-8 of one per cent. on call. STOCKS. High. total 700 A B S & ¥ oif pt 9000 Am Can .. 100 Am Can pr. 9000 Am Car &Foundry 00 Am Cotton_O1L 100 Am Cotton Dil pr . 500 Am Hido & Leather ... 100 Am H & L br . 1300 American Ics 5000 Am Linseed 20900 Am Linseed DF 623 17500 Am Locomo 95 10) Am Locomo pr ‘108 300 Am Malting 5% 200 Am Maltng pr L asi 17600 Am Smeiung ..., 113% 300 Am Smelt pr eoieaedls! 91500 Anconda. 8700 Atchison 700 Atehison pr. 13200 A G & W T 1900 ALl @ & W I pF 13200 Balt Loco Senti- | COMMERCIAL | 5000 Com Products 700 Corn Prod pr 20400 Cructble Steel 100 Crucible St pr 13500 Cuba Cane Sugar 1900 Cuba Cane S pr . 100 Dl & Hudson 100 Den & Rio G 3500 Den & Rio G br 400 Dome Mines 100 Det Unit B R 30) Dist Securitles 13700 Erlo : 300 Yrle 1s€ ot 200 Frie 2 pr Electric o W Helme arich B ¥ drich pr by Min'g Nort 200 Gulf § Stee 200 Tilinols C 1160 Int 00 T 100 Inter_ Con pr MM ctts AL M ett pr Jewell 1100 Kane: 1900 Kel 49800 Kenneeott 17600 Lack Steel a lede 360 Lake 0 Lee Rub & Tire Toose Wiles 200 Louls &Nash 5300 Maxwell I C My Dept St 19 Mex_Petrol ) Miami Copper Min & St L new T & 8B L. Tant g oo Paciflc Pac ctts . Pactc w ont. Power . Nat Ggoak & Sult 100 Nat € & S pr .. 2800 Nat E & 5 1000 Nat. Lead .. 16700 Nev C Copper .. N. ¥. Alr Trake Yo & W . Seotla St 7400 Ohlo 00 Ontarlo 800 Owens B A 400 Pacific Mall 800 Penn R B . 500 Pan Am Pt Dr 00 Phila Co 4400 Pitts Coal ctrs 8800 Proes Steel Car 100 Presa S Car pr 200 P. S Cor of N ¥ 2300 Ry Steel Spr 100 Ry Steel 8 pr 62200 Ray Con Cop 9200 Reading . 100 Reading 2 pr . 73700 Rep 1 & Steel 100 Rep I & Steel pr 100 Saxon Motor . 2700 St Louls & 8 W 1008 L &S W . {have never made such {ran rampant | last 000 Seaboard A L 100 Seabosrd A L pr Ll 100 Sears Rosbuck 2200 hattuck A € 4500 Sloss S S & T ... 4000 South Pactls 4100 Soutn Ry . 700 South Ry pe 6400 Studebaker 100 Stutz Motoe 8060 Tenn Copper 1700 100 1400 5100 500 200 500 2300 5300 100 16500 206 Brookiyn 1100 Bumns Brothers 3200 Butte _&Supr .. MONEY. New York, Nov. 13.—Call money; high 2 1-2; low 2 1-4; ruling rate 32 1-2; last lgan 2 1-2; closing bid 2 1-4; offered at 2 1-2. COTTON. New York, Nov. 13. — Cotton fu- tures closed firm; December 19.68 January 19.74; March 19.93; May 20.09; July 20.08. Spot steady; middling 19.60. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Open. High Lew. Close. 1004 102 188% 180% C10% des% 1:9% 1% 1015 158% 160% 5% or T 5% 6% ek Terx meet just such an attack. It is this knowledge which makes me believe that Yale will have its troubles on of- Harvard. Furthermore, Blue Has Difficult Task Ahead to Win From Harvard Says P,"‘“"'“‘ e Tt Sol Metzger—Tad Jones Has Revived New Interest in Football—Yale’s Offense is About the Same as That of enough to penetrate a line con- sistently between tackles. And I do not look for Yale to gain ground by. forward passing. They think little of this style of game at New Haven and their passing attack to date has not been sound, though it has met with success because of the element of sur- prise attached to it. Once Yale's run- ning attack is checked and it is forced to resort to passing the chances of success will be mostly luck. But Yale has a splendid card up its sleeve if the one drop kick of Legore against Washington and Jefferson is a. sample of his every day work. His goal from the fleld on that day was as quickly gotten off as anything Brickley ever did. Perhaps Jones is planning an attack such as Harvard used in the days of Kennard and Brickley and if so he is planning wisely. Yale will have much difficul- ty in crossing Harvard's goal line. Le- gore should have little troublo in scoring by the drop kick route if his sample against W. & J. was not a lucky flash. Yale is not strong in phnting. The kicker is none too well protected and although Legore can get distance when not pressed his punts have gradually lost it in the two games I saw largely because he was hurried and took too much time in getting them off. His line covers punts very well and they will not be run back. Yale is decidedly weak in a defense for a passing game but Jones has prob- ably figured that neither Princeton or Harvard will open the attack, as they have never done so. He is likely right in this for if either team does open its attack in this way it is not likely to do much damage for the good rea- son that the passing attack is not a hap-hazard affair, but the result of long practice and much experimenting. For example when we scored in four passes against Yale in a sixty yard advance the plays used were the re- sult of two vears of experiment Princeton’s sole chance against Yale is an attack of this kind. Harvard has an exceedingly difficult task ahead to score against Yale by running as the Yale defense is good for such an attack. Although I have been credited in some newspapers with savinz Yale has a stronger team than Pittsburg I a statement. team Pittsburg has a more versatile {than Yale and a far better offensive Yale, unquestionably, has better y it does not know the football Warner’s pupils posses: ther has it the repertory of pl: the keen ability to adapt itself to the unusual in attack by the opposition. Yale's offense is little different from that of 1907 when Coy and Tad Jone: Pittsburg has all that in addition Warner came very inventing the forward pass at- and near tack. (Copyrighted 1916 hy Sol Metzger) YALE ONE-MAN TEAM Tad Jones Is Trying Hard to Perfect a Smooth Working Machine. Every indication points to Yale be- coming a one-man team. A one-man team is by no means a novelty at New Haven, and notwithstanding the fact that it is only as strong as its star player the Blue has been exceedingly fortunate with its one-man aggrega- tions. Ted Coy was the star of the one-man_team at New Haven, if you will remember, he proved his _worth one memorable afternoon at Princefon, when he was swung from end to fullback, and practic- elly by his own efforts captured a game that everyone had chalked up for Princeton, says the Brooklyn Eagle. Harry Le and, Gore is the man_around whom the Ell coaches are building up an eleven. When he is on the field the Blue is 50 per cent. stronger than when he is_on the side lines. Tn this respect the New Haven aggrega- tion is_like the Harvard team of last year. When Mahan was in the line- up the Crimson had a great eleven. When he was out of the same there wae only a mediocre team on the field. Although indications point to' a one-man team in New Haven Head Coach Tad Jones is building up a fairly strong clevn along well known and definite lines. Two years ago at this time Yale was leaping into the limelight through the mysteries of “the lateral pas: which Frank All of Yale's ad- ing their hats in the air over this new game of Hinkey’s without stopping to consid- er whether it would go against a good defense. Today the Yale team is not trving anything new, but, on the contrary, plaving its game according to methods that have been tried out again and again. If, therefore, Yale Hinkey introduced. mirers were thro were primed to| RECORDS OF EASTERN o TER w COLLEGE ELEVENS somthing s € As Robinson's strategy told in the long run. It was a bitter pill for Yale to swallow. d It is difficult to imagine a Blue team with a six-point lead permitting itself to be overtaken and then out- distanced by ‘a_smaller college team,1 week before the annual game with Princeton and two before the Iarvard encounter. But that was’Yale's mis- fortune in the game with Brown. Aft- 25—Comenn 51—Virginla . Priceeton 18 oluones oo e I ter Braden had twice booted the oval 26—Camegie o|across the bar for field goals, netting 61—Virginia o|six points, the = Elis stopped short, R o|missed fire in several vital sections b W : §|and then blew up with a staccatto re- 3_Wah. & 3|port. After that Brown rallied its T—Colzate 0| forces and swept the Blue host off the . | gridiron_in disorganized retreat. =3 3| Yale was unable to present its Dartments Cornoil strongest front for the contest on ac- 33—N. H. State ... 0 25—Gettysburg .. o|count of the permanent disability of S2—Boston College . 8 Robert Bingham, left halfback, be- e s win o|cause preliminary symptoms of kid- ey 15_Puekmeli ... o|mey trouble had developed and Ping- S Prineeton o—Harrard 23 |ham left the squad 2 weeks ugo aft- 15—Syrecuse 1L 15 —Camezio 7|er diagnosis of his case had been S Zi—Michlgan ... |made by New York physicians. But o o /it was not in_this position alone that PSR Tutts Yale appeared to a disadvantage. s—west Virgiie . ¢ T—Harara ........3| The Brown game showed plainly e that regardless of the glowing ac- counts concerning the material at Yale it is not nearly so good all things considered, as it was in 1914 and 1915. Outside of Black and Galt, the Iline gives mno evidence of real strength, and showed a jack of knowledge of the fundamentals. -Af- ter Braden had twice booted the ball Brown backs wrought havoc with the Blue forward line. “Larry’ * Bank- hart ,the one-time Dartmouth star, who fs coaching Colgate, asserted re- cently that Yale had a surprisingly weak forward line, and the BErown game bore out this statement. The sole encouraging feature fro ma Yale viewpoint was the great drop kicking of Braden. He may prove a danger- ous factor against Princeton. ‘As for Brown, there is a reassur- ing grimness in the way It is performed. team was full of pep and ginger, and Individaully and collectively the charged with set faces that boded ill for the son of Ell Yale. Brown's of- fense was considerably more versatile and efficient than that of Yale ,and . 5 |its defénce, after the first half, was E 3 invulnerable. Pollard’s open fleld running also counted heavily against the Blue. Statistics of the play show that Yale made only eight first downs ,to twelve for Brown. Yale secured six in the 8| first period and two in the second. ‘e ster one. Brown failed to record 0—Princeton ST—Al Syracuse 70hlo ...... 61—F. and M. 0—Pittsburgh 13Atichigan 10—Dartmouth 42—Susquehanna. 6 Navy o—Dickenson 13—Georgetown ittsburgh V. Virginta 0 10—Lohigh .. 6 108 Pittsburgh 58— Westminster 20—Nary )—Pennsylvants $6—Allegahny .. ST—Wash. & Jefr. m 21—Urdtnus ©1—Albrizht est Virginia o—Yale i During the second half, Yale did not 3—Lebanon yea first down in the first period, made 27-Catholle 1i—Yalo only one in the second, six in the third and five in the fourth. Yale at- tempted four forward passes, all of which went incomplete. Brown es- sayed four, two of which were mnot completed. * One gained three vards and one thirty-six. Yale was penal- ized fiften yards, Brown thrity-five. Yale punted nine times, gaining an average distance of thirty-five yards. LeGore, Braden and Neville shared in the kicking. Hilhouse for Brown punted nine times, his kicks averaging forty-four yards. Yale gained a total of 198 yards and Brown 467, including punts and kickoffs which were run 9—Mublenburg 7—Penn. State 0 10 o—Pittsburgh 1z T YALE MUST BOLSTER LINE FOR TIGERS Blue Coaches Furnished With Prcb- lem After Brown Game. Brown's overwhelming victory over Yale has caused much gloom among Blue adherents. Prior to Saturday’s unsatisfactory result, the Elis were looked upon as the sgreatest team |back. moulded together since Ted Coy's City League. The Palace bowling team defeated famous edeven. Yale's stock however, has descended several points below par and. there is a distinct hunch |the State Hospital team Monday night abroad in the realm that Princeton,|at the Palace allevs in three straight in view of its good showing against |strings. The score: Harvard, will rule favorite when the Patios: Tiger and Bulldog go to grips in Pal- : 2 mer Stadium, Princeton, next Satur- [Aldl c.e.. 96 126 97— 319 day. Princeton looks like the better | C2lkins --.-o 961 88 79— 268 team for many reasons and should | Jimco: ceeeee..111 98 116— 325 win because Yale appears unable to|Malesky --101 87 81— 269 overcome its cardinal fauits—poor | Bruckner ...... 93 8§ 261 generalship, a tendency to fumble and = = — loose line work. 497 485 1437 The opinion was prevalent here State Hospital. Saturday-that Brown treated itself to |Sullivan . cees 81 86 253 the so-called Yale strategy. Srown, in | Mitchell 126 95 299 fact, beat Yale at her own zame. In |Daggett imateg 251 some of the early games this season | Hennessy ...... 99 87 270 Yale has shown an inclination to hold | Hughes ........ 97 97 273 back and not land the needed punch S PEERR until it positively had to. Thi s wait- 487 453 406 1346 ing game, so called, proved satisfac- e tory in the Colgate game. On Sat-| Store and Factory League Standing. urday, however, Brown overcame v i o Yale's slight lead and came back in |metann Clerks o8 0% Tonz L Unmn the second half with renewed VigoT. |Hopkins & Allen'7 5 383 Brown merely came forward ard |jrechanies 6 ¢ 0 threw everything it knew into her |y g qrii Ty g play. She overcame Yale's defensive | giin cinglo—Burdick, 1 tactics and conquered. There is little doubt but what Coach Robinson had| /8P three g—Bardick, Averages. Games Pinfall Ave. can continue to advance along these 608 101-2 lines she is now working her chance 1199 of ultimate s€ccess ought to be much 1188 greater_than it was two years ago, 593 when Yale's chief asset was a style 1171 of play which had not been tried out. 1168 or the last two vears the close 1159 followers of football have wondered 863 why Yale did not make use of some 1139 of the styles of play which Harvard { A 1133 has used so successfully against Yale. | Fill 1132 The plays which Harvard has used | Malesky s49 were really founded upon the prin- | Haghers 1129 ciples of the tackles-back play de- | Murrhy 557 vised by Dr. Harry Williams, a Yale | Burns 1108 man, and successfully used by Yale. |Elliott .... 1013 Flowers worth thousands of dollars were placed on public view in the American Museum of Natural History, New York, for a brief exhibition. They included chrysanthemums as big as 2 man’s head, orchids of every known variety, Toses of every hue but blue, carnations, begonies, dahlias and sim- ple pinks. With many palms, ferns and other plans, they comprised the annual exhibit of the Horticultural So- clety of New York. A private view for members of the soclety and their friends was attended by more than 7,000, including the fore- most horticulturalists in the east and wealthy persons who have inade floral culture their hobbies. “It was the largost opening night and the best show we ever had,” said F. R. Pierson, chairman of the society's board of directors. “Last year 1,400 people were here the first night and 96,000 on the Sunday the exhibit was ope: ‘The mild weather enabled us to show finer blossoms than ever befcre.” He pointed to a large bush of blos- soms sprayed up from a single pot, it was the exhibit of Adolph Lewisohn. on its spreading bushes are from 1,500 to 2,000 blossoms—white, yellow, bronze. Other exhibitors prominent in the chrysanthemum class are Frede- rick Lewis of Ridgefield, Conn., and W. B. Thompson of Yonkers. THe or- chids of Clement Moore of FHacken- sack are declared to be the finest col- P lection in this country. ford, Daniel Guggenheim and Mrs' W. Prize winners in _the rose room in- |D. Sloane, who, with, Henry Goldman, oed Richard Delafield, H. M. Til- |divided houoss 18 ssrnations. 4 8.S. “HENRY R. MALLORY" 11,700 Tons Displacement. NewYork to Galveston, Texas Ditect connections for the Southwest_and Pache Eoue St Amons e Naonal o campmects Ta Texm. Spleadd. scommo CIRCLE TOURS One way to Texas by water, retumming by ral with liberal stop-oves privileges e route. Other attractive Mallory Line tours to Florida For rates, resersa ltarata ok o Fatiread ket oFfien oy wariee A. W. Pye, Passenger Traffic Man- ager, Clyde Mallory_ Lines, Pler North River, New York, or call upon G W. Adams, Depot Tk. Agt., Norwich AT AV I TLT LR e S —_— Olson 12 1087 90-7 Mead 9 506 $9-5 Zuerner 12 1057 88-1 Gley .. 9 793 88-1 Pierce L. 12 1060 88-4 City Bowling League Standing. Won Lost Per. Pinfall Palace 4 2 686 2808 Aetna. 3 8 .500 2871 Taftvile ......3 3 500 231 State Hospital 2 4 - 333 2614 High single—McAllister 124. High three strings—McAllister 338. Team striog—Aetna 490. Team total—Aetna 1450. Averages. Games Pinfall _ Ave. McAliister - 6 639 106-3 Pardy 6 96-4 Alai . .. o @ 95-2 Simcox ceee . 6 95 Hennessey . 3 95 Maleskey “ee . 6 94-1 Bruckner ........ § 94 Hickey ~.....:.... 8 94 Zuemer .. . 6 93-3 Burns . -6 93-1 Hull L .6 92-2 Bibeault .6 89-5 Calkins o8 89-3 Sullivan o6 88-4 Hughes .6 88-3 ‘White . . 6 87-1 Dugas .38 87-1 Glieyd . TR 85 Daggett cesvecces € 84-2 Edwards . e 834 Gley ceee .3 82 Morley it Mitchell iEag Fraternal Bowling League Standing. Won Lost Per. Pinfall B.P.O.E. ....12 6 666 8587 L. O 0. Mbose.. 8 10 444 8475 L A M) 744 .. 8 10 444 8299 0.0.0wls ....8 10 444 8244 High single—Frost 134. High three strings—Frost 330. Averages. Games Pinfall Ave. Prost, i.ii..te..sa08 1819 01D Oat . .. 15 1486 99-1 Combies PP ] 1782 99 Pardy ...........18 1774 98-10 Bruckner ........18 1764 98 Mead By o gicit sl 1716 Tuttle .. 15 1428 Miller .i.........12 1138 Oney ceeseensces.1B 1418 = Follenous ........18 1683 93-9 Dongherty .......18 1681 93-7 Bibeault ceeees 18 1678 93-4 Kucher ... 18 16713 9217 Tilly .18 1659 92-3 Enos e .14 1290 92-2 Brooks ..... .12 1106 92 Goft cesenenn .12 1062 88-6 Johnson - .15 1302 86-12 Jackson . . 1296 86-6 Harvey ... 255 83-10 Will Open Season The Crescents of Taftville have scheduled the Fort Terry basketball five for the opening game on Wednes- day night. Two West Point men will play with the soldiers. R. A. C. Wins The Royal Athletic club defeated the T. A. B. eleven Sunday by the score of 24 to 0. Harddigs Victorious The Harddigs defeated Potter Street Blue Jays 12 to 0 Sunday. Southgate made a run of 60 yards for a touch- down. John McGraw has gone into train- ing for that meeting with the Na- tional league directors at which the Giants’ manager will be told to put up or shut up. It is sate McGraw will outrank the directors by turning loose | a flock of highly explosive adjectives | describing how the Giants laid down to Brooklyn. FREDERICK T. BUNCE THE PIANO TUNER 27 UNION STREET \Phone 1414-2 Norwich, Conn. $1.25 To New ; CHELSEA LI TO NEW YORK FREIGHT AND PASSENG SERVICE BETWEEN NORWICH AND NEW YO From Norwicl Tuesdays, days, Sundays a 5 p. m. New York, Brooklyn B Pler, East River, foot Roo Street, Mondays, Wednesdays, days at 5 p. m. Effective Oct. 15th, § 1916. % h §1.25—F. V. KNOUSE, Agent—$125{ <= o5 T : Bet. 5th Ave. & Broadvay. PTeMS T BATHS, i $2.00 10 3350 Peg Davl Bk T J.M. & J. P. SWAHN Tailors | Franklin Square, 237 Main Stre Telephone 551-12 Dr. Alfred Richards DENTIST Office Hours: 9-12 a. m.—1.30 to 5 p. m. Wed. and Sat. Evenings 7-8 Room 305 Thayer Building Tel. 488-2 House tel. 354-2 180 Franklin St. IS THE PLACE TO GET A NICE ROAST BEEF A8 WELL AS A NICE | PIECE OF CORNED BEEF OR ANY- THING IN THE MEAT LINE. VAL. LUPPERT DR.R. J.COLLINS DENTIST 148 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Sy Phone 1178 Dr. J. M. KING DENTIST]| Building jan1ToW® ¢ COAL AND LUMBER £ COAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehighl ALWAYS IN STOCK 3 A. D. LATHROP i Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta{ Telephone 175 ,] _— PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING 4 CALL UP 734 With or Without Gas Attach~ ments but Always EFFICIENT and ECONOMICAL~— MODEL RANGES We furnish Repairs for all makes| of Ranges A. J. Wholey & Co. 12 FERRY STREET Robert J. Cochrane i GAS FITTING, :i PLUMBING, STEAM FITTING 1 Washington Sq., Washington Building Norwich, Conn. 1 Agent for N. B. O, Sheet Packing. ‘ Phone 581 i MODERN PLUMBING essential in modern houss a: electricity is to lighting, Wa guarans teo the very best PLUMBING WORI by expert workmen at the fari prices. Ask us for plans and prices T. F. BURNS Heating and Plumbin 82 Franklin Street IRON SASTINGS FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY € No. 11 to 25 Ferry Street YOU WANT goodsess vice from your selfe starter be sure yous battery is in good shape. 5 We specialize in storage battery work. We aredis~ . tributors for the famous ““Exide’” Battery, ‘‘the 4 giant that lives in a box.” . All makes ot batteries 3 inspected free of charge. 5 American House Spex | Rates to Theatre Troupes, Traveling Men, Etc. H Livery Connection. _ Shetucket Street, | FARREL & SANDERSON, Props. JOSEPH BRADFORD, BOOK BINDER €lank Books Made and Rulsd to Order, & 108 SROADWAY E THERE s no advertising medium Brriemm Connecticur sqnal to whe B E tin for business resuits. E

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