Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. A man can make kis wife, Lig to AETNA-I1ZE ‘against sickness and acei- dent. Write or call A THROP & SONS & Tnar &8N o s Xmas tree fires are remarkably fre- 1uent—make certain that your prop- urty is PROPERLY and FULLY In- rubed by seeing US TODAY. 5 ISSAC S. JONES, fnsurance and Real Estate Agent Richards’ Building 91 Main St. _— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW AMOS A. BROWNING, "Phone 700 Attorney- Oyer Uncas Nat. Bank, Shetucket St. Estrance stairway near to Thames Nationsl Bank. Telephone 38-3. _— ¥ LEGAL NOTICES Law, 3 Richard's Bldg. Brown & Perkins, Hismeys-at-law NOTICE TO CREDITORS. AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD at Norwich, within and for the District of: Norwicli, on the 10th day of June, A, D. 1916, Present— NELSON Estate of Jane 8. McNee Norwich, in said District, deceased. Ordered, That ti the creditors of sald in their claims a within six months from end make return to this NELSON J. AYLING, Judge. est: HBELEN M. DRESCHER, 5 Assistant Clerk. FOTICE—All creditors of said de- [ are hereby notifiod to present heir olaims against said estate to the un d at 88 Linwood Ave., Whit. within the time ‘limited 1 in the above and foregoing order. FREDERICK B. SPENCER, dec19a Executor. AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD af Norwioh, within and for the District Norwich, on the 1§th day of Decem- ber, A, D, 1916, nS—NELSON J. AYLING, Judge. o of George. G, ol 1ate ot Kingsto: 1. deceased. Wnne C. Soule of Griswold, Conn., appeared in Oourt and flled a petition for the reasons therein set n'zh“ administration be granted o te of said deceased, al- Setouponiat 1a onderod, That sai Whereupon,- ered, “said petition be feard and determined at the Probate Court Room in the City of Norwich, in sald District, on the 22d day of December, A. D. 1916, at 1 o'elock in the afternoon, and that no- tice of the pendency of said petition, and of sald hearing thereon, be given by the publication of this order one time in some newspaper having a cir- culation in said District, at least three to the date of said hearing, aays oz and that Yeturn be made to this Court NELSON J, AYLING, Judge. The above and foregoing 1s a true Feont! *BLmN A DRBSCHER, est: 5 Boc19d Assistant Clerk. Redding Given Relea: Pittsburgh, Pa, Dec. 18—Manager James Callahan of the Pittsburgh Na- tional League club announced tonight that Phil Redding, a pitcher purchased last fall from the Charlotte club of the North Carolina League, has been re- leased at that time. He also announc- ed that the pitchers and catchers will report at the irates’ spring_training camp at Columbus, Ga., on March 12 and the rest of the players will follow » week later. DENTIST DR. E. ]. JONES uite 46 Shannon Building S Take evator Shetucket Sireet en- trance. Phone. American House Special Rates to Theatre Troupes, Traveling Men, Ete. Livery Connection, Shetucket Street, FARREL & SANDERSON, Prepa Agricaltural Limestone is as necessary to the soil as food is to the human race. The Peck-McWilliams Co. B. A. WIGHTMAN Experienced Piano Tuner, 40 CIff Street. Norwich, Conn. Phone 752-13. novad WILLIAM C. YOUNG Successor _to STETSON & YOUNG CARPENTER and BUILDER Best work and materfals at right prices by s labor, Telephone 50 West M 1647 ADAMS TAVERN igaei offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Burope and America: Bohemian. Pilsncr, Culmbach Bavarian Beer, Bass, Palc and Burton Muers Beotch Ale, Guinness' Dublin_Stout, C. & C. Imported Ginger Ale, Bunker il P. B. Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- i# Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anheuser, Bulweiser. Schlitz and Pabst. A. A. ADAM, Norwich Town Telepnoue 519 - st OB gecount 07 Incieane In price of tee the Whitesiome Clgar will Le Seid Trom aow on At §3G per 1,000, I. AYLING, Judge, y,' late of sxecutors cite ceased to bring nst sald estate bl Jrom this"date, by posting & notice to that effect, together With & ©Opy of this order, on'the eign- pOSt mearest o the place whiere said eceased last dweit and In the same ‘Down, and by publishing the same once in & Bewspaper having a circulation In sad Bireriod Court, S hove and foregoing is & true record. The Palace bowling team increased their lead Monday night when they trimmed the Aetna five three straight games at the Palace alleys.. ace team was in. fine-form and £o steady strikes when' nee men rolled over.. of one. 1541, Molesky .., Mead ..o femern.137 Simcox ..ew Aldi . Calkin: ‘Bibeault Palace .... = Aetna ... Taftville .... State Hospital High single—McAllister 139. High three—Hull 352, Team string—Aetna 564. Team total—Aetna 1537. Averages: Advances and Declines Occurred in a Bewildering Fashion. Am Am Am Am Am Am Am Am Am Am im Am Am Am Am Am i§ "‘Q————-. o Palace Pin Smashers Swamp Aetna Five—The High Team Total Record Smashed—Aldi and Mead Star Performers 91-22 | lar result. is_correct whi Hughes .... Harvey .... it needs a broken field runner, GUNBOAT SMITH OUTFIGHTS 0 with the exception MORAN IN SIX ROUNDS. The Aetna five was in poor form and missed spare after spare. Hull and Bibeau]t being high men on their team. High team total record was broken by the Palace team with Aldi had high total of 327 and Mead high single with 137. The scores and standings of :easuel and individual averages fol- ows OInY «pee cosas Moran Nearly Landed a Sleep Puncl Fifth Round—Smith Came Back Strong. Store and Factory League. ‘Won. Lest. Per, Pinfall [Retail Clerks ..14 The Mechanics..13 Hopkins ‘& ‘Allen11l 1,5, Mactin... § . gh single—Buyrdick 129. High three—Burdick 345. New York, Dec. 18—Gunboat Smith of this city outfought Frank Moran of Pittsburgh in six rounds of a ten- round boxing contest in Brooklyn to- night. Moran made the better show- ing in three of the rounds and in an- other, the first round, the exchanges football men don't ‘Games. Pinfall Smith was active wild, while Moran ed several opportunities. Smith forced the fighting until the when Moran cornered him and almost ended the contest with a short right arm blow on the jaw that made Smith Smith rallied, however. wnd punished Moran in the ind aggressive but s slow and miss- the average. build a good team. days prior to the Harvard found Harvard men highly ~mused. Of course,” the: In the last round Moran was ag- ights were: 186 1-2, Moran 197. Hagberg .... Anderson . ROOT-MADDEN TEAM LEADING DAY RACE. Riders Have Been at It 22 Hours and Have Covered 477 M New York, Dec. 18.—Root and Mad- den were leading at 10 o'clock tonight in the 24th annual race which began at 12.05 a. m. today in Madison Square Garden. teams which started were still in the race at the end of the 22d hour and had covered 477 miles and 3 laps. The record for that time was 493 miles and 6 laps, made in 1914 by Lawrence and City Bowling League. And, one week Per. Pinfall | (E}Xliott e ey wvoeoe fe Shevlin’s peculiar attitude. that year lacl Shevlin declari .six-day bicycle Fraternal Bowling League. Per. Pinfall. a thorough test and had far from wanting, is an entirely B. P. O. Elks. L. O. O. Moose. .19 L A M, T44....14 Games. Pinfall. McAllister Hull Aldi Emerson Simcox Bannister Calking Johnson . Bibeault Burns Dugas Molesky Bruckner .... . BASKETBALL AS PLAYED AMONG THE COLLEGES Game Invented By Dr. James A. M. smith in 1891——Game Adopted By Colleges in 1901. High single—Frost-Combies 134. High three—Combies 352. Three teams each lost a lap in the Games. Pinrall. Square Garden during the 23th hour at the end of which the other eleven teams were tied with 538 miles and The record for this hour is 558 miles and three laps made by Lawrence and Magin in 1914. The Smith-Kopsky team was legi- lapped while the E. Ohrt- Bello and Spencer-Carroll tions were penalized for faulty pick- By SOL METZGER, Coach Washington and Jefferson Football Team. The opening of the Princeton playing Corneil at once more centers attention upon this | has recovered from h is prov-|and was at work today ing more popular each season among |to address the Commons tomorrow Indeed, basket- |about 4 o'clock anq will probably speak rowing and |for an hour and & half. a strange | The prime minister's speech will not condition when its brief history is re- (be only a reply to the German peace SOUTHPAW HURLERS ARE AT THE TOP n Pitchers in Effec- tivena.u Were Left-handed. splendid indoor sport which the various colleges. ball is crowding baseball, in point of interes Seven Out of Te MARKET WAS UNSETTLED R Ch. M & St P ot Chi. R 1 & Pac Left-handers showed impressively in the National league pitching records rigat-handers stand out as the more effective brand averages of the pitchers show that seven out of the first ten flingers, in effectiveness, as measured by earned southpaws, with young Ferdie Schupp of the Giants at the top. a right-handed . pitcher, ranked .second and then came three southpaws in a row—Marquard, Rixey All of these four high- grade left-handers did a great ral ing stunt this season, comparatively ineffective almost in the joke class as It were. Ed Pfefter and Larry Cheney, both cifht-handers, enth places. Dr. James A. Naismith, now of The official New York, Dec. 18—The ebb and flow of peace rumors constittued the most vital factor of today's market, advances and declines at times occur- ring in bewildering fashion. were occasional, teminders of the tur: bulent movemerts which created suc serious unsettlement during the previous weel, Alcohol recording an extreme decline of almost ten points, with pronounced verging upon weakness, motors, metals and shipping shares. lacked breadth and away to the comparatively small to- tal of 1,250,000 shares. of the trading took place in the fore- noon, Industrials, coppers and second- ary rails being the most conspicuous features, Fayorable auguries were found the better bank statement and the easy money rates. Nevertheless, responsible financial in- terests again counselled caution and special stocks experienced a further levelling in bank loans. est was negligible, except in railroads, for which the recent inquiry was well sustained. Gross advances of one three points were scored by iow-priced rails, with free taking of Wabash pre- ferred shares, Lake Brie and Western, Wheeling and Lake Maryland and Chicago Great Western preferred. Coalers as a group shortage of that commodity threatens to curtail the immediate out- put of leading steel and Irom Southern Railway was the most active of all rails, but reacted on reallzing sales. United States Steel list, fluctuating with a range of two points and closing at a net loss of 1 Coppers were consistently heavy, a condition attributed price concessions by some of the big producers for future deliveries of the metal and by-products dropped sym- A belated_advance some of the Petroleums, Harvester is- sues and other stocks Of less definite description was offset by reversols in seasoned shares, the tone at the close being Exchange on the Teutonic countries yielded perceptibly from last week's recovery, lires also receding abrupily with rubles and a moderate shading of francs. Chile Coppers T's featured the un- even bond market at an over five points. value) aggregated $3,650,000. L U. S. bonds were unchanged on calll when he was an A. Training school This accounts for the in- |command to a successful end.”” terest taken in it by the Y. M. C. A.| Today’s news from government cir- and its adoption in many foreign lands, | cles included the announcement of the No _competitive sport—not even base following the Col Fuel & Tron Col & South 1 vt Springfield. Continental Ins Corn Prod Bel Com Pr Ret pt and_Cooper. Cuba Cane Sug Cuba Cane Sugar pf Delaware & Hudson Denver & Rlo Grande Detrolt Edison DetrottTnlted invention that the game much_recognition by the colleges. 3 1901-02 the first intelcollegiate league | Baron Hardinge, the under-secretaries, was formed in the east, with Harvard, | While the larger questions ©f general which has since dropped the game, a | policy doubtless will receive the atten- In 1905 the western confer- | tion of the war cabinet, over which the “About 1896 | prime minister presides, Lords Curzon for they were last year— pressure, More than halt The first seven men up- on the list allowed less than two runs Arthur Nehf, George Tyler and Frank Allen, thred ence organized its league. the present number of competitors, |[and Milner al five to a team, was finally agreed upon, | Wide diplomat; 20 men | It s recalled that Mr. Balfour's des- Were on a side, the number being de- |ignation as foreign minister met with termined by floor area, for the most |Severe criticism from the Northcliffe Fed M & Sm pf ning game. General Motor bt though formerly Then comes a pair of right- handers Pat Ragan and Dick Rudolph, both of the Braves. Southpaw Slim Sallee of St. Louis and New York is thirteenth and Jim Vaughn of the Cubs is another left-hander, is four- Great Northern pf continuance 2 Greene Can’nea. Public_inter- In fact, The remainder of the of the men in which they their knife at the breakfast table. is a notable fact that out of the first in the statistics, houthpaws. WILDE RETAINS TITLE BY KNOCKING OUT DI Zulu Kid Put Out For the Count in Eleventh Round of Battle. list contains who deliver with manipulate Lake B & West. Glg & Myers pf Loulsville & Nasuviile Mackas Cos ot Maxwell Motor of London, Dec. 18. Jimmy Wilde, fly- weight champion of Eng#.nd, knocked out Frankie Di Melfi of Brooklyn, N. Y., known as the Young Zulu Kid in the eleventh round of their match here By his victory Wilde reaffirm, ed his right to the title of flyweight champion of the world. The contest was to have gone for twenty rounds of three minutes each. Both men were under weight appeared to be in excellent condition. They fought fast and furiously. early rounds were about even with the Young Zulu Kid the aggressor. In the eleventh round Wilde the Kid fo the ropes with a strong Clinging to the ropes, the American fightey took a dozen body blows and then dropped on one knee. As soon as the Kid regained his feet, Wilde sent smashing right blows to the jaw, flooring the whose seconds, without waiting for the count, threw up a towel. SYSTEM IN FOOTBALL ALL A MYTH A Ten Cent Rule Book Tells All There is to System. led the entire | Merchant Marine Mer Marine ‘bt Mexican Petroleum over the country. 1-8. the rules and now that StP &S SN eve of great development. the schoolboy entering Nat Enam &st pathetically. taught at college. team work, cepting football, by both player and spectator. Basketball is an_essentially simple | “Mr. Bopp,” replied Jessen. The speed, skill, | Theodore Roche, of counsel for the alertness and team work displayed are |defence, interrupted to explain that E. quickly recognized and appreciated by [H. Von Schack, vice consul and also Intercollegiate contests |a defendant, likewise signed checks. pack every available seat and as little | “I intend to prove, financial outlay is required to main- |ed in explanation to the court “that tain a team the game is showing a |up to the time the grand jury began profit to athletic association. It will be a long time before the |case, Bopp was the only one in the league cham- |consulate who could sign checks.” pionship of last winter will be forgot- | It is the purpose of the government, ten. Pennsylvania and Princeton com- |Preston pleted the regular schedule on even |money paid by the consulate to Lduis terms and on the play off Pennsylva- |J. Smith and C. C. Crowley for alleged nia won 16-14 in a game marked by |dynamiting activities. Smith and hair-raising stunts all the way through. | Crowley are defendan In the western conference Wisconsin, |chief witness for the government. the winner, came within one game of repeating the feat of Illinois the pre- Names Is Name: vious season of winning all of its 12| A Minnesota boy is named Watesr northwest, | Melon. His parents must have been the [named Mush Melon—Salt Lake News. is more appreciated game to understand. left to the jaw. the spectator. Philadelphia Co advance of o Total sales Ry Steel Spring Eastern Intercollegiate Afax Bubber ... Beabbard Alr Line Alaska Gold M Alaska_Jun Allis Chalmers cifs Allis Am South Railway “What is a football Charles E. Parker. One year ago the late Tom Shevlin, Yale's ‘greatest end and its miracle working emergency coach, voiced this Washington State college It was just prior ‘accomplisnme One coach picks one meth. 9110 | 04 for his men, but that method may 9107 | not work well with another coach’s 9156 | men, g0 he selects a different method, et Teupon rises & gueation’as ‘winner, while in California St. Mary’s Juion en, all the While, |naq 5o difficulty in taking the title from both California and Stanford. The outlook for the present season in the Eastern Intercollegiate league to make them winners? If the team needs a punter, does system give it | i Particularly bright for another stift If a team needs a-drop-kicker, fight for the champlonship. Pennsyl- Joes it got one from the system? 1f | Vania, the title holder, will be again i . s | Sty X8 Joteist . Eidiene 10 e ‘vacan oner Desinealy mor ™ No'Sur “ng |25 Captain McNichol, guard. and Jef- coach and his scouts round up. drop- | ford, center, are the only regulars back. kickers and punters and broken fleld m, forward, may become eligible § | runners and constantly feed them in- | after the mid-year examinations. but school. That's the way it's done. 1 “No, there is something more than |the man looked upon to fill Martin's system needed to make winning foot- | Shoes, as he played the position capa- What is needed is foot- | Py against Princeton in the playoft ball men—real ones. You always can |last spring. Evans, forward wo years get average football men, but ayerage | 880 but sick last year, is another man ‘make winning | out for a place. John Clark, center; teams. Ordinarily good business men | Lavin, forward, of last year's fresh- aren’t leading the business world. You | men; Emory, guard, and Williams, Van can’t make a silk purse from a sow’s | Gingle and March, of the same five, ¢ you want to accomplish any- |and Bble and Ivory, varsity subs, are thing worth’ while you must be above | the men who will fight it out for place. It you want to make a|Penn should be in the running this silk purse, you must have the silk, | year. and if you want a winning footbali | Princeton under Coach Fred Lueh- team you must have at least a few |ring has bright prospects, as the team men who are better than the average.|will be made up from the following Give me three or four stars and Ili | candidates: Captain Hass, forward or Tl use the ave- |guard; _Paulson, forward; Rahill, rage men,. but only to fill in while I |guard; Cuneo, guard. and Foster, for- depend upon the stars.” Shervin's remarks, published a few |tv. In addition, Parmele, forward; Ed- ale game, |dy, guard; Flinn, forward or center, then the race is half run. Connelly ward or guard, all of last years and McGraw, the football tackle, who “Shev- | will try out for center, are the new lin did not mean what he said. How |[men of promise. could he in the face of the remark-| Yale looks particularly strong with able success of the Hausghton sys-|a wealth of material and Bernie Tom- 1 when | mers, a former varsity pitcher and Harvard roiled up 41 points against|basketball star, as coach. Charley the Yale team these Harvard men | Taft, captain, will be used as_guard felt all the more sure of the Haughton | this season, his rightful place; Mallon, and all the more amused at|guard, should star there this year: Few stop- | Kinney will likely go to forward as he ved to realize that the Yale eleven |led the league in scoring last season. d the few stars which | Garfield, the pitcher, will have first were necessary. They | call at center. where he showed well considered that system had been given |jast year. Olsen, the football mana- been found | ger, is likely , 4 had e iound | ger, s likely to make a forward and different one. SPEECH BY PREMIER LLOYD-GEORGE TODAY Will Reply to Peace Proposals and Outline New Government’s Policy. London, Dec. 18, 9:50 p. m.—The speech of Premier Lloyd George in the house of commons tomorrow is looked forward to by the press and public as the most important utter- ance of the kind since the memorable intercollegiate | speeches in which Viscount Grey dis basketball season Saturday night with |cussed whether Great Britain should Ithaca | come into the war. Mr. Lloyd George indisposition He will rise note but will also oufline the whole The game was invented in 1891 by |policy of the new national government the | the trend of which may be roughly an- | University of Kansas and a member |ticipated from that fact that the new of the joint committee of basketball | ministry is avowedly in power for the instructor at |definite object “of carrving on the at [ war with all the vigor the nation can departure of Mr. Palfour, the secretary war-—ever | for foreign affairs for three weeks' va- grew so rapidly in popular favor in its | cation. Although his vacation comes first few vears of life. 3 It was not until ten years after its |ation of the foreign office given | fairs to proceed uninterruptedly under at an important juncture, l¥ In |the direction of Lord Robert Cecil and being members with experience. press, and Lord Northcliffe himself So widespread has been the interest |urged Mr. Lloyd George to follow the in the game that it may be said that |Precedent of Lord Salisbury in direct- the rules governing its play have but |ing foreign affairs as well as assuming recently become standardized. the 1915-1916 code was the first un e I form one adopted and it met with suc- | Position following illness and there is ‘Provious it was a case of “first |n0_suggestion of its being prolonged half your rules, second half ours,” or | bevond three. weeks, yet it has the ef- our rules or lose your guaran- |fect of leaving the shaping of the larg- But the main effort of the rule |€r policies regarding the German note makes has been to eliminate roughness [and other foreign issues largely in the jand unclean tactics—the task of all [hands of the premier. rule makers in all competitive games where personal avoided—and the rule makers have here succeeded. There are three interests represent- T 5 €3 in basketball—the colleges, the Y.|Attempt Made to Connect Him With A. and the Amateur Athletic( Conspiracies to Interfere With Muni- On top of this there are a g00d | tion Shipments. many_ flourishing professional leagues These three inter- | San Francisco, Cal, Dec. 18.—In its ests have a joint committee on making |first attempt to connect Franz Bopp, they have [ German consul-general here, with al- Dbeen standardized the game is on the |leged conspiracies to interfere with Hitherto, | munition shipments to the entente al- had |lies, for which he and consular attaches played a game differing from the one |are on trial in the federa court, was Confusion was the |made today by the government. result. With fundamentals agreed upon | “Who_ signed consulate checks?” to a greater bound to result and no other sgort, ex- { Preston of Frederick Jessen, a clerk in the consulate, who was on the witness | the premiership. While Mr. Balfour's absence is said to be due to an indis- be | PROGRESS OF BOPP TRIAL IN SAN FRANCISCO is |asked United States District Attorney stand. ’ Preston answer- investigating the evidence in this id, to connect Bopp with the , but Smith is Princeton game of 1915, with the Yale- Harvard contest but one week away, and the Harvard coaching scheme, usually styles “the Haughton system,” was the topic under discussion. those gathered about the late Yale coach knew it was his custom to ask questions that he himself might an- swer them, they waited his further remarks with interest. “You can’t just place system, eh?” “Well, T'll tell you West Marland Willys Overland " Wisconsin Central Central Store TELEPHONE 1239 JAMES M. YOUNG & SON ‘Anaconds. Cop’ Asscts Real'n Atchison, Atantle” Coast G & W cif Shevlin continued. system is nothing bua an idea that has been forced upon a gullible pub- You can’e describe it. N Tt listens good and you dom’t The Haughton firm; high 5; 4 1-2; last loan 4; closing bid 3 3-4; offered at 4. ruling rate ey Balawin Paldwin Locomo pt Baltimore & Oblo Baltimore & Ol> 5t ‘Christmas Baskets of Fruit Christmas Trees Christmas Wreaths Christmas Candy : stop to analyze it. “System is nothing. system is one year older than it was last year, but you can't say the Har- vard team of 1915 is as good as the Harvard team of 1914. this so-called Haughton system to An- napolis, but what sort of a showing has_Annapolis made this year? “You know football is a fairly sim- School boys They play it football Tules can be secured for 10 The rules tell you what is al lowed and what is not allowed in the ais- New York, Dec. 18. closed easy; May 1821; July 1825; tton futures Spot quiet; middling 1810. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Harawick took Try This on Your Smoke-Piano. . = Take a pull on a Relu—then smoke an ordhuybmd,andnntbothefhvormd body of Relu as compared to the ordinary '( cigarette. R happy, comfortable smoke REED TOBACCO COMPANY RICEMOND, VA. will be a task ke both gridiron stars, off the ago and was barred last year because of the Quoque incident, is a candidate. Weiner is the only regular lost from Fuller, center, and Flock, guard. men whom Dr. Sharpe hopes to_round into form are Allen, Ward, Houck, |laurels. Two of the best men are hip and Crator- | Captain Wilbur, guard, and Healey, guard or center, both of the football Dartmouth is the only member of the | team. Leonard, center; Roberts, for- league to suffer from rumors of war. |ward. and Latour, forward, Red Louden, the old coach. is still on the border, him. Three good men return from last Conklin, Stalker, Wins Strudella is_a promising | make the five. candidate for forward. Yale looks for | Columbia replaces its old big things in basketball this season. Fisher, with C, J. Herner Cornell's prospects are not rosy and the situation is unique in that n the regulars ar e back. The fey year's subs, are showing wel so J. Pelletier replaces | Fererer, a forward from vear in Rau, forward: Steenrod, cen- | don, suard, all new men. Sisson, guard, the latter a| (Copyright, 1916, by Sol Metzger.) brother of a former Dartmouth star. Dartmouth is now having an interfra- Rhett, who played two vears [ ternity series to develop material and expects Aishton, sub forward last year, and Cannel, quarterback, and Young- strom, guard, of the football team, to State, 'formerly of the Springfield Y. me of | M. C. A, who coached the Kansas subs | State team the last two years and who to be coynted on are Ortner, forward: | has played both eastern and western ew | basketball. Columbia was a bad last year ago and seeks to regain its lost Y. U., Bax- ter, guard; Newman, guard, and Gor- . STARTTHE DAY OFF RIGHT Serve breakfast in a warm room and forget about the furnace until real cold weather comes. Don’t burn coal or wood when you don’t really need that kind of heat. Use a : PERFEFECTION SMOKELE HEATER/ It will keep your whole house warm and make you more comfortable for less money. No fires to build—no coal to carry—no ashes to clean up. Quick — Clean — Dependable For sale at department and hardware stores everywhere. Write for free descriptive booklet. For best results use Socony Kerosene Standard Oil Company of N. Y. Stove Dept. 56 New Street, New York 4