Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 2, 1917, Page 3

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SCIDENTS WILL HAPPEN | 3 ILLNESS WILL COME s : , 2L i"2Wise Aeina-ize|Newark International Twirler Does Not Think -Players Are Right—Signs Contract With New York Americans. - J. L. LATHROP & SONS 28, Shetucket Street New York, Feb. 1.—The New York *:- received at the office of the Bos- American League club announced, to- National League baseball = club. day that it had received the signed | Twombley was recently purchased contract of Jack Enright, a young col. | from the Baltimore club of: the Inter- lege pitcher who played with New- | national League. ark Internationals last season.’ In an- pouncing the signing of Enright the SUPERBAS GOING lub made o a lel ‘the Player ta President Davia Fuits of TO HOT SPRINGS the Players Fraternity, in which he National 1 ue Ch Will Do Spring Practice With World Cham- pion Red Sox. 3 asks the latter to accept his resigna- tion from the fraternify. Enright The Arkansas Spa will be the base- ball capital of the country during the wrote: “If I thought the players were right I would stick with them, but in this case I have viewed it from every an- gle and cannot see it as they do.’ Fmdi o o g Hot Spri; will have the opportunity of seeing same teams that battled so heroically last year for the world's championship in a series of games during the spring season, for the conditioning of of both the Brooklyn National eague club and the Boston Americans, the former CARRY ENOUGH FIRE INSURANCE The 50 per cent. insurance plan means a heavy loss in case of a bad fire— see US about the additional protec- “" ISAAC S. JONES BASKETBALL GAME AT TAFTVILLE Manager Benoit Has Slated Fast Wes- terly Five. T e /A KIDNEY REMEDY S " OF HIGH STANDARD terances- those charged with this re- sponeibiiity. ‘They have the facts; they have the duty to perform. They have the sincere, lflyflTc:-ope‘rnuon n: ooy el N gy gy i ey We are v favorably impressed no nation can fix the limite of Amerl- | y}° 5 Kilmers Swamy oot and believe it has merit in the dis for which it is intended. Our p are pleased with the results obtained and _speak ve favorably regard it. When a kidney, liver medicine is needed Swamp-Root al- ways does the trick, and enjo)y a splendid reputation. Very truly yours, WILSON BROS White River Junction, Vit rights. “My friends, in this sober hour we stand Joyal sons of Brown, realizing the privileges of cur American citizen- ship, It is an hour of test that will show_what America is made of. We are- desirous that whatever is done shall be done coolly and deliberately and in a manner that will give to ev- ery American a sense of profound sat- isfaction by reason of the wisdcta with which the honor and the rights of our country shail be maintained. Ray of Hope. - Spinach seed can no longer be im- ported By the United States from Holland because of the war—Detroit. Free Press. - Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. ¥, Prove Woat Swamp-Root Will DoFor You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Binghamton Y. for a sample s bottle. It will convince anyon. will also receive a booklet of valuabie information, tell about the kidneys and bladder. When writing be sure and mention the Norwich Daily Bulletin Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. Do the Same Neutral. Give the United States Senate time and it will talk the war to death.— New York World. The Logical Move. To prevent further leaks the Pres- ident should appoint a plumber to be On Friday evening the Taftville bas- ketball five which has just met its stride, will line up against the West- erly team in Parish hall. Manager Benoit is confident that his players will pull through with a victory. Insurance and Real Estate Agent Richards’ Building 91 Main St "~ BURGLARY INSURANCE The Travelers Insurance Co. B. P. LEARNED & CO. Store and Factory League. The J. B. Martin lost three straight strings to the Mechanics at the Aetna alleys in the Store and Factory Bowl- ing league on Thursday evening. The score: The Mechanics. Burdick .e...... 108 98 80— 281 coe «e 91 05 3 Agency Established May, 1846. i‘;‘“‘s‘l&s i 19; lgg: 306 Malesky .... 90 86 96— John: 97 108 ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW o, e 300 .- = = 463 493 Brown & Perkins, = Himeys-at-lav J. B. Martin. Over Uncas Nat. Bank, Shetucket St. | E. Zuerner . - ?1 109 Entrance stairway ne;r‘ tnh Tha’:‘nt: %3::;’;[21’ . ég N Ban lephone = National ‘el s P Oney . 93 NORWICH FAMILY MARKET e Hopkins and Allen Two-men Smith .. 88 5 79— 252 Fruits and Vegetables. Kenefick 105 10 New Turnips, Cabbage, o 5" 23|Ege piant. 1 String Beans, Peppers, Red Bananas, Head Leéttuce, 12-13/Pine, FCandan Celery, 12-13Date: L Hothouse Toma- |Pars ead . toes, 30/Chi New Cabbngav.b ¥ i Palace Bowling League Beets, Carrots— 1 ™ e A ST e S Sint, eam No. 5 won their match from chme o panish Onions, Team No..3 in the Palace bowling | Oalons— ib. league Thursday night Yellow, 30fltmes. doz. White, 20| Cranberries, _ Potatoes, 70|Garlic, 1b., 25| Griswold .. Hubbard Squash, 7|Carrots. McVeigh Yellow Bananas, 25(Figs, Kelley . Grapefruit, "52 wsx?x‘nt?f:ém’;k'!b Clarke . Apples, pk., b ek, Fogd Kendall Lo Table Apples, Turnips, pk, 30 S Meats. Pork— Cutlets, Spareribs, Chops, Southgate . houlders, Inside Round, e moked Hams. 3i[Shouider Steak, Sauit Smoked Shoul- llamb— Skl ders, Shoylders. Smoked Tongues—| LegS, Huntington Short Cut, 33 cnops, Dried Beef, SolSausage, Corned Bect, :6-32fNat. Sait Pork, PorterhouseSteak, |Chickens, Ao it Brollers, Saranac Lake, N. Y. Feb. Guineas, OlCapons, thur Staff, Chicazo, tional outdoor amateur sck teur skating championship for seniors and Charles Jekstraw of Placid won the championship for juniors here today in the closing events of the mid- Hind qtrs. Fore qt eries. Granulated, P 10 13 lbs. $1| winter carnival. Creamery, 12) Brown, 14 Ibs. $1 Chgese— | | Gutigaf 1115.31| Another Signed Contract Received. T tream, 13| Powdered: bs. $1| Boston, Feb. 1—The sisned contract Pimento, ~ ib|Molasses— of George Twombley, an outfielder, New, 3[ Porto Rico, L % Camembert, | 5 winners of the pennant in their league and the latter world’s champions, will be done in this city. Charles Ebbets, president of the Brooklyn club, has been there and has concluded negotiations that will bring the entire aeam to “The Valley of Va- pors” this spring. The Superbas will not lack for adequate guarters. S. E. Dillon, general manager of the Public Jtilities, controlling the ball grounds in Whittington Park, tendered Mr. Eb- bets the use of the diamond/where for | the facial appearance of Admiral sixteen years the Pittsburg Pirates | Dewey other than that to be gained bave walloped the horsehide during | from photographs and paintings a spring training. Furthermore, the as- | death mask of the admiral was mads. surance was given the head of the | The picturés reproduced herewith Brooklyn club that none of the play- |show the mask and Ulric S. J. Dunpar, = ers would have cause to complain and | Washington scuiptor who made i at Would when this work was completed | work on 1. ___Tve mAsk | be as fine a diamond and field as are | — to be found anywhere in the South greatest forward passer ever produced in any colleze: Gerrish of Dartmouth, and Sol Metzger, Wa ngton and land. The Boston world champions have amp in_this city for g A , and their ficld at Majestic Park [Joffei=0n coach, in interyiews greated s considered ideal in every way. The ally —News, express management of the Red Sox was de- iy “in favor lof tive sirous of having the Brooklyn team also train in this city, as it would give an opportunity to arrange a series of AT WORK ON DEWEY DERTH MASK To preserve for posterity and idea of stronger and more seasoned team and makes the game more spectacular. Opinion is more evenly divided in regard to the mulitple kick developed by Head Coach Foster Sanford of Rutgers. Only Captain Dadmun of the Harvard, 1913 team declares that the kick should not be allowed 1o count as a score. He says th: ball is kicked from a position too close to the ground to make it a good play as the chances of making the score once the kick is made are far too good. He believes it to be good strategy, put in the same class with a punt. CHARLES EVANS HUGHES MAKES PATRIOTIC ADDRESS. Captain Marion Wilson, of next year’ Princeton team, Ay it would 2mes in the spring that would be a |be a great mistake to remove or rad- drawing card. Both teams will be lically change the forward pass, He Zon s S e, b Btk e 8|2 Pl e B e 2R time when all hotels and boarding |than off S rainstorm’ forward houses are taxed to their full capacity. |passing in last periods by losing There will be thousands of persons in |teams. Hot Springs at that time who get an McCreight opportun: g league teams in | forward p: action, and there will also be an equal | of the game number of visitors from the cities and | of tne' play towns not in the big league circuits, { the old style o who will liberally patronize games be- e tween the contenders for the last | ihed football as a college sport in t r 1905, and which would absolutely world’s _championship. KAt o, 16 30 vo - Mr. Ebbets stated that Jack Coombs, I dean of the Superbas’ sitching staff, Captain Ge: h of Dartmouth says ill head a delegation of pitchers and |that a penalty for an incomplete pass te to the Spa the early.part of | Would be very little if any hindrance March, and that the remainder of the | %0 the play, as it is seldom tried on team will come a few days later. Op- |the first and second dow: and then site the grounds the Brooklyn club [Only as 2 last hope before a kick. will use is another fie¥d, which in all H. C. Carlson, captain-elect of the probability will be occupied by Jack | Pittsburgh tcam, declares that the Hendricks’ Indianapolis team. Hen- [Play’s best defense is it gives the dricks is at present corresponding with | Weaker teams a chance against the local hotels for accommodations, and the same arrangement made with the | = = = - Superbas will also hold good for the g x 2 Indians in the event Hendricks de- cides to bring them here, which, from letters recefved, it is believed he will do. COLLEGE CAPTAINS ARE IN FAVOR OF PASS Black of Yale Al and Metzger believe the to the life say the abolition ean a return to Tlay, which nearly Declares Every American Will Stand Back of President Wilson. New York, Feb. 1.—Charles Evans Hughes, who was guest of honor at the annual dinner of the New York alumni of Brown university here tonight, de- clared every loyal American would stand behind the administration “in this solemn hour” without a partisan thought. His, declaration brought the diners to their feet singing The Star Spangled Banner. ’ “We are ail Americans tonight, l ost Alone in Oppo- Captain Clinton R. Black of Yale's 1916 victorious football team seems to be almost alone in his opposition, to the forward pass as it is now being _played on _the gridiron. Cafe taing Wilson of Princeton, McCrelght of Washington and Jefferson, the New Orleans, Pickles, gal, gai., 80 Honeycomb, 2 EREs {Maple Syrup, R tive, 55} bottle, 28-59 Kerosene Oll, i2/Eng. Dairy, 1 Ear— aple Syrup, Fish. Market Cos, . 15Tilefisn, Shore Haddock, 18|Roun 3 % e o Teaer MARKET WAS FRENZIED. Ao Beraluee( S3F T T 3°5r 15| There Was an All Around Shrinkage Impt, Sardines, Lobsters— g I e of Quoted Shares. 5 oited, BlackAsh steak Ood, New York, Feb. 1—The stock mar- R. Clams, pk., Halibut, ket was put to another supreme test Mackerel, 20-25|Salmon, 25-40 | of its endurance today, Germany’s un- = '‘Long Clams, pk., 65 Live Stock. expecteq announcement of her inten- tion to renew submarinc operations on Cattle— Sheep— a broader and more unrestricted scale e e L T causing an all round shrinkage of 7-$10[Hogs, Veal Calv Bulls, quoted values. Selling was at its height in the first hour, when the trading was of a fren- zled character and lowest prices were made. Rallies of one to five points, with as much as 10 for Utah Copper, $9-s11/Cows; Hides. Wool Skins, Ib., Calves, Trimmed Green Hides— Steers, 13| “8-11) e Cows, 13| Wool, 36 | were registered before mid-day, but re- Bulls, 12| 132-i7 32.50 | current liquidation took place after .2 Hay, Grain and Feed. o'clock, driving prices back to or near No. 1 Wheat, __ 33| Cornmeal, $2.55 | initial minimums. Bran, $1.80|Hay, baled, The movement lacked the enormous Middlings, + $1.90 cwt., $1.30|individual offerings of last December’s Bread Flour, $11|Cottonseed Meal, feverish markets. Except for United S 112 s - and some of the metals, States Steel declines, while extensive in the ager- gate, were on an orderly basis after the early outburst, which probably rep- resents involuntary unloading of mar- gined speculative accounts. A large proportion of the day’s offer- ings was reported to have come from out of town points. The further sell- ing of the final hour derived impetus from rumors that severance of diplo- matic relations with Germany would be announced later in the day. 'With few exceptions every stock in the active list declined measurably under the low prices of last month, in- cluding U. S. Steel, which fell to 99 and closed at 102 3-4, a net loss of 9 1-4 points on sales approximating 60 000 shares, or about 30 per cent. of the total operatlons of 2,100,000 shares. Bethlehem Steel broke 36 points and rallied 10, shipping lost 10 to 18 mak- \g only feeble rallies, and rails at gross recessions of 3 to 7 points closed mostly at lowest levels. Little attention was paid to the fluctuations_of foreign exchange with marked concessions in rates on Berlin and Vienna and a new record for lires, or_Itallan remittances. Practically every international bond of the manny issyes resulting from the war sold at lowest prices since thelr flotation in this country, Paris 6's breaking 2 3-4 points, with Amer- ican-forelgn securities 5's down 1 3-8. Domestic bonds were heavy to weak, speculative rails falling abruptly. To. tal sales of bonds (par value) agsre- ts, ~2|Hominy, $2.30 Rye, $1.654Lin. OI1'Meal, $2.50 WRESTLERS READY FOR TONIGHT'S BATTLE Zbyszko and Orloff Meet at Pulaski Hall. Everything is in readiness for the big wrestling match which will be staged in Pulaski hall this evening. Zzyszko and Orloff will furnish the main attraction while there will be other speedy matches. Both men are in good condition and eager for the fray. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage provesit. 25cat all druggists. BASKET BALL and DANCE Parish Hall, Taftville TONIGHT gated $6,550,000. Westerly vs. Crescents United States bonds were unchang- i ed on call CUUBT OF Incseanse IR Price Of tee Whitesiome Cigar will e o o .ll rankiia Su STOCKS. High. Ants Chalmers .. .28 Beet Sugar = Agricul Chem - . THE AETNA Car & Foundry BOWLING AND BILLIARDS, N S< alleys. x tablés. The best Can . P tChE: oo Am Can pra Biiestic Blds hetucket Street, . Conn. Nocwion. Fmdiling Tel &Tel Woolen Com Am Woolen ptd Anaconfa_ Croper A T SFe Ry Co WHEN YOU WANT t> put your bus- iness before tne public, tnere is no medium better than throuzh the ad- ve:iizing columns of The Bulletin. Balowin Loco Barett Co .. Baitomore & Ohio ex div Brookiyn Rapid Transit Bethlshem Steel Butte Superior Col Petroleum Capadian_ Pacific Goodrich Rubber Great Nor pfd - Great Nor Ore cetfs Tilinols Central CUT THE cember 14.45. Spot quiet; middling 14.75. MONEY. New York, Feb. 1.—Call money firm- er; high 8; low 2: ruling rate 2; last loan 3; closing bid 2; offereq at 3. "CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. High Low. 165 56 142 136 l138% 129 % Closs. 163% 141% 132% 5 o Te6% % % L% 9% I8 0% 2% New York, Feb. 1.—Cotton futures closed unsettled. March 14.94; May 15.1: July 15.14; October 14.56; De- 2% secretary of state—Chicago News. T P URICE TOURNEUR Produced by c. PARAGeN. FILMS I 7 COUPON “Pure Food Products THE BEST 2 QUALIT ATPOPULAR PRICE Reduce the Cost of Living

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