Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 26, 1917, Page 3

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Y to - cover . those additional stocks. - . We offer STRONG \t;fi g3 =l : i ISAAC. S. JONES Insurance and Real Estate Agent Richarde’ Building $1 Main St. " BURGLARY INSURANCE -B. P: LEARNED & CO. Agency Established May, 1846, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Brown & Perkins, itmep-st-law Over Thames Nat. Bank, Shetucket St. Entrance _stairway near to Thames National Bank. “Telephone 33-3 - Giant Regulars. Hit Hard. San_Antonio, Tex., Marth 25.—The New York National regulars hit the ball hard and, taking advantage of iocal errors, defeated the San An- tonio (Texas league) club here today, 10 to 0. The score: °° New York . San Antonio . - ....0 3 8 ' Anderson, Perritt and Rariden, Mc- Carty; May, Harper and Cook, Rellly. Detrsit Outhits - Dallas. Dallas, Tex., March 25.-—The Detroit Americani regulars outhit the Dallas Texas league team here today and won, 47t0 3. The scor Detroit ........ . o Dallas .. e 3 50 Jones, Boland ~and Yelle Sewell and Coleman. Conley, ENDS CATARRH, ASTHMA, Bronchitis, Croup, Goughs and Colds, or oney back. Sqld and guaranteed by For sale by Lee & Osgood Co. e e LEGAL NOTICES -NOTICE mpliance with law, and author- the Court of Probate, will be *héster, Conn. JAMES GILFILLAN. Administrator. TAX NOTICE TO THE TAXPAYERS OF THE TOWN OF LEBANON. All persons liable to pay taxes in the Town of Lebanon are hereby notified and warned that I have a warrant to levy and collect a tax of 15 mills on the dollar on the Town list of 1915, payable April 2, 1917, and for the pur- pose of collecting the same I will be at the Town Hail Monday, April_2d, from 10.30 &..m. to 2 p. m., and on Sat. urday, April 7ih, at the residence of John Clark, from 11 & m. to 2 p, .m, ind on Monday, April Sth, at the resi- dence of W. W. Gillette, from ‘11 a. m. to 2 p. m. . Al persons neglecting this = notl will be charged lezal fees and adai- tions as.the law directs: N mar26d Dated at Lebanon, this 10th.day of March. 1917. z = WILLIAM THOMAS CURRY, Collector. mariaM ~ All petsons ljable to pay taxes in Town of . Colelieater on levy ot "1518 are hereby motifi t T have & war- ram ‘to devy coliect a tax'of ten mills on thi llar, including personal taxes, d ¥axes ire due and pavable on or befonk 1 st 1917. For the purpose of collectmg said taxes I wiil at the storg of John Condren on_ the following _gates:/Saturday, March 31st, from 1 lock p. m.; Saturday, April 21 1 to 3 o'clock p. m.. and M April 30th. from 1.to 3§ olclock gn Thursday, April 12h, at the $ in, North iVestchester from 9 o'clock noon, and at B office, Comstock Briaee 1265, trom 1 to % o'clock Interestaf 9 per cent. will bé charged on'all URPAIa taxes May 1st, 1917. All p nd refusing to pay 4 as ‘the law direct apter. 223, Section 8, Laws 10¢h, 1917. BLL, Collector. { TAX NOTICE. . TO THE TAXPAYERS OF THE TOWN Al e to_pay taxes in th Town ‘ot 8 te of Connectiout, A that T nave & wess rant to collect a tax of nine on list of 1916, dus i 4th, 1917. All per- this notice will be pro- laws shown increasing -2 10.15 0| championship in zolf. Yalds bis vear in n::u-uu geems) to, ere. - Stnce Dbeginning college in September the Yale athletes have been dealing deadly blows to their foremost rival, and at the same u;::wlnt great strength in other * E Harvard is in a veritable slump as far as athletics is concerned, and the Elis are taking fcll advantage of the low ebb of Harvahr sports. Some of Yale's vistoriés have been surprising an'dcontrary to the “dope” but victor- ies they have been until Johnnie Har- vard is now sitting disconsolately be- fore the soldering fire trying to think| practically at an end the Elis and turned the tables on the Crimson. Last vear it was all Harvard. Even up to last December Harvard had the advantage for the preceding year, but so far this ."m the Elis have got in some great work. Victories In both of the major sport games played so far this vear puts the Flis far ahead of the Crimson. Trie, hockey is not recognized at Yale as a major sport, but-it is at Harvard and the defeat of the Crimson meven goes down as a victory for Yale in a major sport. The football victory is still' in the memory of Harvard. n the minor sports this winter Yale has secured decisive victories over Harvard in the two _sports in which they clashed fencing and wrestling. During the fall Harvard managed to win its soccer Zame-from - Yale, but 'although the Crimson cross-country runners won their dpal event with the Elis, Har- vard was fourth, with Yale finishing in ‘the Intercollegiates, so that matters are equalized. But Yale's superiority is even great- er when her swimming team is con- sidered. Harvard did not consider the Crimson team strong enough to match against Yale. And, finally. Yale won the basketball championship, another title in-a major sport for the Elis. Har- vard does not have a basketball team. The only consolation which Harvard has is dated way back in the late sum- mer when her tennis and golf teams disposed of the Yale players. The in- tercollegiats tournament takes place near enough to the academic year to consider witr the 1916-17 year..Har- vard won the singles and doubles championship in tennis, and the singles Princeton won the golf team championship, beating Yale and ‘then Harvard, after the Crimson had defeated Cornell. During the fall Harvard won In soc- cer, 2 to 0, and.in cross-country. 26 to 29. -But the tide turned on the day of the Hargard-Yale classic in New Haven. In the morning of this day Corne!l won the cross-country cham- pionship, with TYale leading Harvard by many Tn the afternoon the §-to-3 was secured by the Yale eleve This wintes Yale won the wrestling championyships with 26 points, Har- [ poor inkeepers up North! .10 point wvery Hai L .in the - tourna- :lnt m-u.,»w?.‘.‘."m fencing. teams met n‘)hqr-mv- it was erally to_the excellent showing :made up. date by her swordsmen. triumphed, 7 to'2. notkey. < haying not only the Begt zed : fimnz up a 6-fo-0 lis. But the third showed ‘the Harvard Iy at loss the % tain Morgan, and Yale won 2 M'GRAW HIGMEST PAID i MAN IN' BASEBALL Giants' Manager Signe Contract for $50,000 For Five Years. San Antonio, Texas, March 26— President Hempstead of the New York Glants, announced_here today that Manager John-J. McGraw has signed a five vear contract calling for a sal- ary of $50,000 a year. Hempstead sais A 3 5 ‘MeGQrKaw is said to be the highest- priced man is baseball and he deserves to be. He has been with the Giants since 1902 and we hope to have him with the club as‘long 2s he remains in ‘baseball.” 5 Previous to signing the contract Mc- Gray’s salary was announced as $30,. 000 'a year. - Hal Chase Solves Pitcher. Memphis, _Tenn., March . 25.—Hal Chase and Cueto were the only Cin- cinnati National league batsmen who could hit Waskington's pitchers in to- day's exhibition game here and their total was ouly three singles. while the American leaguers bunched hits with bases on balls and errors and won, 5 to 1. Score: Washington' .. LB T2 Clneinnatl 5o =5 L iel R o John<on, Shaw, Dumont and Ain- smith, Henry: Toney, Schneider, San- ders and Huhn Cleveland Shut Out New Orleans. New Orléans, La., March 25—The Cleveland Amcricans defeated New. Orleans today, 4 to 0. Scor Clsyeland New Orleans . Morton. Cov ler and Higgins If what the ball players eat at southiern training camps during Lent is called fasting, heaven help the 7 2 5.0 175, Mii- SATURDAY’S MARKET Rails. Were the Absorbing Feature of the Active Session. New York, March 24—Rails were the absorbing features of today’s brief but very active session, that divis- ion, for the most part, adding to its ‘belated advance of the preceding day, presumably on the prospects of higher treight and passenger rates. Buying converged around coalers, Reading, Norfolk Ib Western, Lehigh Valley, Beltimore & Ohio, and Erie advancing 1 to 2 points. Gains in oth- er rails, notably St. Paul, Northern Puacific, Southern Pacific, New York Central, Chicago & Northwestern, 1l- linois Central, Colorado Southern and the preferred shares of the Missouri Pacific, Wabash' and .Southern roads, dttained similar proportions. U.'S. Steel was variabie, rising and talling within a point of yesterday’s final price, but Bethlehery Steels, ship- pings and motars were moderately re- actionary, with Canadian Pacific and Unian- Pacific. Coppers_weré in steady demand at gains-of 1 to almost 2 points, Utah proving the exception, falling back under -pressure, but making full re- covery . later. Baldwin Locomotive was_strongest of the equipments, ris- \ng 3 points to 60 3-4. Among the less active industrials and specialties strength was shown by Maliting common and _preferred. Hide ana Leather prd. ana Gult States Steel at ‘gains of 1 to 3 points. Realizing for profits caused a gen- shading of prices later, but the market ‘closed with a strong tone. To- tal sales amounted to 630,000 shares: Actual rese in own vaults and federal reserve banks of local bank=< ing” institutions decreased about $20,- 090,000 during the week, excess re- serves decreasing by little more than $21.000,000, just about offsetting the previous week's gain. > Bonds were generally higher today. on an expansion of dealings. Total sales (par value) aggregated $2,385,- 000. U. S. coupon 4's rose 1-2 per cent. on call during the week and coupon #'s declined 1-2 per cent. STOCKS. Tigh. B EEERREREERRARRNRARRNE !?miii!iEi!;ém!fiii;;s: { 2| g!é i i i £ nfis:z!fifii:fims; 28 3 5 2Regaee 3 Efl a0 s e General Motor Gen eral Moter pr Goeaden B ¥ Granbs Ming + Northen pr . Gt N Ore Subs . Greens € Cop . Gulf s Steel . Tiiincts Central Ins Copper . awarded third placs: - testants ald good work in'the club swinging. but Schwabacher of Prince- -ton, by_&tever tidn won - the de- cision. With the 24 to 12 at this point Yale attemp a recovery and Martin = gained. .first honors on the rings and Elwood was given third place in the same event. However Prince- ton's lead was too much to overcome and althouzh Weod won the tumbling for _the Elis, Princeton captured all the other places and so won the meet. Summary: Horlzontal - bars—Won by Phelps, Yale: second, Cooper. Princeton; third Lilovd, Princeton. Sidé horse—Won by Luippold, Yale second. Thornington,” Princeton, third, Wiss, Princeton. Parallel bars—Won by Wise. Prince- ton: second, Cooper, Princeton: third, Cook, Yale. & Club swinging — Won - by Schwa- bacher; Princeton: Thorington. Prince. ton: second: Smith, Yale, third. Rings—Won by Martin, Yale: Hum- phrex; Princeton, second: Elwood, Yale third. Tumbling—~Won by Wood, Yale: sec- ond, Wiss, Princeton; third, Dovle, Princeton. Score—Princeton” 31: Yale 23. g OMelals—Schroeder,” Carpenter and wan. Australia_seems to be getting along just as well less Darcy. TROTTING-PACING MARKS OF SEASON Trotting. Lee Axworthy, mile by 1:58 1-4. Real Lady, mare, 2:04 2-4. Mary Putney, mare, 2:04 1-4. St. Frisco-Mabel heat, 2:07 1-4. stallion, two-yead-old filly, » four-vear-old Trask, dead’ Directum T, half-mile; 0:55 3-4. Directum 1, one and one-six- tenth miles, 2309 3-4. Directum I, one cighth miles, 2:16 1-4. Peter Look. . thrce-year-old ~colt, | and one- -y ‘oung 2:0% Miss Hatris mare, 2:01 1-4. ‘Heimet Queen, 2:16 1-4. Todd,” gour-vearsold geld- AL, four-year-old yearling | filly, 18.50; 18.87; Oct. 15.40; Dec. Jan: 18.53. Cotton futures closed steady: May 1898; July :* Oci. 18.45; Dec. 18.50: Jan. spot steady; mid- dling 12.30. New York, March 24—XMercantile paper 4 1. sterling 60 day bills 4.71; comme 1 60 day bills on banks 4.71; commercial 60 day bills 4.70 3-4; de- mand 4.75: cables 4.76 7-16; Francs, demand 534 5-3: cables 5.83 5-8 marks. demand 69 1- cables 69 1-4 Kronen demand 11.30: cables 11.35; Tntes Con Inter Con pr Har N 3 pr . guilders demand 40 1-2: cables 40 9-15: lires demand 7.75: cables 7.74: rubles demand 28 5-8: cables 28.60: bar sil- ver 71 7-8; Mexican dollars 55 3-4; government bonds steady; - railroad ‘bonds firm. LIVE STOCK MARKET. Chicago, March 23. slightly higher today. was slow and sheep firm. Hozs werz Cattle trade 2adl ;ga Betk gir ) 1 i : Everett Nutter has written a letter to the club management from his home in OMio saying that he will probably land -here early next month, maybe April 10. He reports in @ne condition and eager for the opening of the season. Manager Murphy has great hopes built around’ Dave Irwin of Allentown. Pa. who will try-out Phil Chouinard:s old_job at' second or possibly go out for ‘the shortstop berth. He has writ- tén Collins that he is very much pleas- ed at the chance to come here for a tryout. Connie Mack has written the New Haven management assuring it that he will ship_any good man he has to the club and Jack Barry has written that if a place Is not mady for Catcher Devine that the favorite backstop will be sent back t6 New Haven with any other players that 100K like §00d pros- pects for the New Haven club. Exhibition games may be played at the Rock Mav 5 and 6 but nothing definite_has been settled upon. No series has been ' arranged with the Colonials as vet and Collins savs none will be until there is some agree ment made with George Weiss of the Colonials. % The two baseball promoters have split far apart on the question of fi- nancial arrangements, Collins stating that he wishes to work on'a percent- aze plan in these exhibition ~games signed by Welss ang Weiss stating that he favors the flut guarantee bas- is. Collins has stated that he would never mive in to Welss and the latter says that he does not care to give Colling a percentage. - Weiss has al- ready engaged the Lighthouse ball park for exhibition zames on Sundavs hut cannot bring major Jeague teams here unless he m; Collins' demand for the walving f territoria} rights. 1916 BALL SEASON FTZATURED BY -CHASE'S CGMEBACK. Returnéd to Orgamized Ball Fold With a Spurt. One of the “outstanding features of fhe 1918 baseball seasom was the come- back of Harol i Chase. The Prince Hal of other. days, who Fad_been cailed Qince Hal ai a latcr period in his career, returned to the O. B. fold with the humble C.ncinnati Beds {o prove that he still ‘retained mu-h of his sen- a.onal_and almost uncanny fielding saiH._ Not satisfied wth that, he fell ‘upin the delivery of . the National league twirlers with. s.ch vehemence and eclat as_to win fo - himself a place at the. head of the Terer circuit bat- tiag roll. Frince Hal _s quite 2> old man now, as_ players go. having been born 34 ars ago, Feb. 13, 18°%, in Los Gatos, al. At Santa Clara collegs he was a sa-sation, making-all sorts of sensa- tional catches, usualy spearing ’‘em with one hand. Joe C -rbett. brother of the Tlustrious Jim, was coaching at ita Clara, and he .ried to get Hal to use two hands fo- catching pur- poses, but it Gidn’t do any good. In 1903 Chase turned protessional with the Victoria, B. uv. and the fol- lowing vear was W (. Los Angeles. The New York Americins got him in 1305, and from, the first he was iue most spectacula™ playe: in the leagae, but also the most teiijcramental. In 1310 he was made pilo. of tte Yankees, but he soon got in bai with the fans, who accused Lim of wrecking the club, When Frank Chanc2 took charge of the Yanks he couldn’* set along with his fellow Native S.m and swapped hima to the White Sox. Chase leaped Hal Cattle—Receipts 3,000 head. Native butchers . $6.90@10.75; canners $>5@6: cutters $6.10@6.85; heifers $6@11.50; calves $5.50@15. Sheep and lambs — Receipts -2,200. Yearlings $3@14.35; wethers $8@12.90. lambs $14@75.35. Hogs—Receipts 24,000. Mixed butch- ers $14.55@14.95; light $1335@14.90; heavy $14.65@15. rough heavy $14.45@14.65; - pigs $10@13.50 bulk | $14.75@15.05. [o{-1-} T E;Seis?rzi Hiz siitls { Dot | § i Buffalo, March 23. — Cattle receipts 10,000 head, market _active. Prime steers $12@12.75; butcher grades $6.50@11.20. . Calves—Receipts 1,290, market ac- tive and 50c lower. Cull to choice $5.00@15.50. Sheep and lamb—Receipts 5,000, market active and 10c higher. Choice lambs $15.50@15.75; cull to fair $12.50 @15.00; vearlings $13.00@14.25; sheep $5.00@12.50. 4 Hogs—Receipts 4,900 market active with pigs lower. ' Yorkers $15.00G: 15.90: heavy $15.75%15.90; roughs $14 @14.25; stags $11.50@12.30. Pittsburgh, ‘March 23.—Cattle _sup- ply light, market steady. Prime $11.50 @12.00; zood $10.50@11.257 tidy butch- ers $10.00@10.50: fair = $9.09@9.75: common $7.5078.50: common " to, good fac bulls $6.00@10.00: common to good fat_cows $4.75@9.50: heifers. $7.00@ 10.59; fresh cows and_springers $40@ 85; veal calves $15.00@15.50; . heavy and thin calves $6.00%11.00. Sheep and lambs—Supply light, mar- ket steady. Prime wethers . $i1.75@ 12.50, good .mixed $10.50@11.50; . fair mixed $9.50@10.25, culls and common $5@7, lambs $12@15.50, spring lambs $15@19. Hogs—Receipts 10 double decks, market lower. Prime heavy hogs $15.50 @15.60, heavy mixed $15.50@15.60, me- diums $15.50@15.60, heavy yorkers $15.25@15.50, light ' yorkers $14.50@ 14.75, pigs $13@13.75. roughs $13.50@ 1425, stags $12@12.50. Kansas City; March 23.—FHog re- ceipts estimated today 2,000 head. Re- ceived officially yesterday 9,352 head shipments 994 head. The market was steady; quotations ruled from $13,95@ 14.95 per 100 pounds against $14@15 per 100 pounds on Thursday. . e e ig to the Buffalo Weds in :914. and when the Gilmore circuit w-it on tne rocks it was prediced tha: :1e big leagues hid see: the last of Prince Hal. How- ever. Garry Herrmann Gecided to take @ chance with him—a 4 row see what! MACK TO HAVE BEST HITTERS IN THE LEAGUE. s’ Masager Says He Will Not Have a Weal. Hitter. Connie Mack is the most interesting. tailend ‘manager the American league has had in all.its hisicry. The lean, 1018, intensely earnest baseball edu cator of Phfladelphia ;s always about two jumps 3head o? Lis colleagues, writes W. J. O'Connor in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. He proved that . by raalizing fully on Colics, Barry and Baker the miaute his greatest machine snowed signe of. disiniepracion. Last season, with the most irefficient team the league has- ever Known, he didn’t los» money. His pay:uli was less than Rcger Bresnanan's ex outlaw band in Toledo, a class AA club. Alréady the erudit> mahout has is- sued his 1917 prospects indicate who wiil be with his team the coming sea- son. Mcinnes on first, Grover at sec- ond, Witt at short ani Bates on third will man the inner d.fense. Strunk, B.die and Thrasher will be in the ou field. Schang will hive Meyer as his first assistant behind the bat. Joe Bush, Elmer Myers, Russeil Johnson, Jack Nabors and the pick of 11 young- sters will make up th, pitching. staff. Connie_concludes: “I will not have a weak hitter on the team, and I real’y believe it will be’ the best batting club in the league. Oz course, I am at_the mercy of my pitchers, but don’t bel:eve me extrava. gant when I tay we wili have a hard- hiiting team ‘and a tough club to beat w'th Bush or Myers hu:ung.” Baseball Results. Hot Springs, Ark., March 25.— Brooklyn Nationals . Boston Amerfeans ...... Cheney, Smith, Dell and Meyers; Miller, Ruth, 'Shore, Pennoc kand A, new, Cady. SPORTING NOTES. A lot of good people continue to confuse boxing with fighting, but the fans ‘know better. Akl There's always _something to be thankfu] for. Mexican umpire in the Texas league? ‘What if you were a| 100,000 points, lasting six months and The open ‘season ‘for -umpires and | buke to the person who anca exaiaim- made, does it? _ - Jubpy Jayaboy, ing 000vqo], YSPLIDL, dand %003 Qual grandmothers begins April 3rd in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Salt Lake. | privacy. ‘The gink who said that it takes two to make a fight wasn’t hep to modern matchmaking methods ,which require at least a dozen. Philadelphia fans will have a chance to see all the American league clubs this 'year, but the deuce of it is that they’d like to see ‘em in action. When he arrived in America Les Darcy wore a hat about the same size as Gunboat Smith’'s shoes, but it is said that he takes a emaller lid now. The fellow who shot his friend in mistake for a rabbit is now looking Ball Ever taste any “imitation” honey? Doesn’t taste like the honey the Bee ed that America 1s a country of no A Cincinnati man says golf hardens the muscles and softens the brain, but maybe living in Cincinnati caused the latter condition. Greenway, of Yale; Poe of Princeton; Wheeler and Starr, Osgood, of Pennsylvania, are some of the men football has sent to war. Judging from the Hoppe,- the number of those who rush in where angles fear to tread is on the increase. players Same with cigarettes. Helmar is made of pure Turkish to- baccos—*‘‘the kind the Bee made,” and put together right. You can’t imitate pure honey—you can’t imitate pure Turkish tobaccos—you can’t imitate Helmar. Friend,) if \you will [once, you will many -times. The Mildest tobacco for cigarettes is Turkish. The Best tobacco for cigarettes is Turkish, ity Superb Grade Turkish tles in the Werld jest s of the igh vhr: Mal and Egypiian Giga .d’/rm xgurod P & | 4 | to make mos Pug! of Harvard, and | *F of today are much disappearing, all middleweights, and in t are swelterwelghts. the club offered him, the club’s terms. ference that Magee doesn't care ney listic distinctions In A sportsman, accordin to carry him over hill have a philosophy which tent out of every situation tuck may bring him then signed aé Prompting the i m the to — doors, must have an iron const increasing num- | must keep his temper even and bers of those who would tackle Wilije | steady in winter's cold and su heat, must have a strong pair ana_dale, that and must forward to a joygus time rocking |more refined than those of 20 years|®&rumble. After readinz these and canoes. Nothing can discourage such |ago. Most of them now use forks|er requirements necessary to b simps. as food transports, whereas the oid |®POTtsman one concludesy that timers used their knives. ot We understand that Herr Heinle Zimmerman has warned umpires that Such is the growing demand in OB mcruum: ™ price of & they must wear “a coating of paint in | football for speed and strategy as op- aceo, the W > Cigas will e vertical stripes” if they don’t want to | posed to more avordupois, that coaches | 044 frem mow ou &t 55 per LO0S. be roasted. ' are falling with joy on the necks of & ¥. CONANT, all the 200 pounders they can find. ianie 23 Fraskiis St A piteher who goes to the well too — = o % often is sure to be cracked, according | There isn't as much Irish biocod in AL L to the old proverb, but at that it's|baseball as therc used to be, but e WHING: AND, BILIIARDS S better for a pitcher to go to,a well| there’s enough that the players refuse |in Norwich, Phous. than to a gin mil to let rice or other food subs pinch | Majestie Blix., 55 Shetucket Street, hit for good o.d spuds on the bill of Norwich, Conm. The fact that a cribbage gams ol fere. played 250 feet below ground, has just been finished in MMinnesota, is a ‘re- s /‘Sherwood Magee, it is said, wrote to the Boston management that he could make more mogey in Philadelphia than DR. F. W. HOLMS, Dentist Shannon Building Annex, Room A Telephone 6§23 ,

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