Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 2, 1917, Page 3

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The first direct, all-rail route through New York Gity: - -and West. his train, you can save a business day and s rest. “Bring back any Goedrich Black Safety Tread Tires you feel . CONDENSED SCHEDULE A Beston Lv. 700P. M. W BRI have not given you the right service. ,Th-m_a:rmUmeg D e o eniire season. | LOCAL ATHLETES LOST, Proviaere i - edelphis S SaEe N e i ¥ i ke 3 BUT ENJOYED SWIM New London 950 “ NewYork Duel220 If there were such tires we wanted them back and we BASTBALL STARTS . New Haven 11.05 New Haven said so as as we could say it—particularly emphatically to the owners of Ford automobiles. From the thousands of Ford Size Goodrich Tires sold we had a right to expect a certain number of tires to come back. Our tires have come back—loaded with a surprise. Read this letter from your town that came with a Ford Size Goodrich Tire sent back: but still good. Obtain real pro- ot U insuring through ISAAC S. JONES and Real Estats Agent Bullding 91 Main St Y. M. C. A. Boys Defeated by New Rl London, 121 2-3 to 90 1-3. Team This Year Will be Coached by EddieMcKay, Former Trinity Capt. Friday afternoon. P Y e T s G ORK, NEW HAVEN & R.R. Yantic, Conn., Feb. 8, 1917. GLARY INSURANCE |-=>'ec.= Faens bt oa 5 *y -—IN— acm will devote his time and at- = ‘The B. F. Goodrich Co., Boston, Mass. tention” to the candidates for the va- m]‘mhmco_mzm i ¥ Thinking you would like to see a Goodrich tire . Ihees lna nuclena_of four, of dant EETRELIR . P s T S I ) TR which I bave run over 5,000 miles (possibly 6,000 " to bulld the team that is expected to Three standing broad jumps—First,| High single, Clinton, 123. miles, as my broke at 5,000 miles), LEARNED Cco. Zozora (N. L.) 23 ft. 5 in; second, Han- | High three strings, Clinton, 332. am sending it to you. 1 used this tire on a rural B.P. & ley (N L) :mm.L) Randall (N.); | High average, Schofield, 99-17. route 223 miles long, 13% ml'le;.of ‘which are poor fourth, Green, (... L). and country roads. ve an average L o O e e e Camp. | , TWo-lap relay—Won by New Lon-|Hopkins & Allen Two Man League 65 stops. Note that this tire is not worn out and has bell. Dickson and Dyer starred in the | 390 (Hanley, Stanhope, Rose, Zozora). Averages. been used on frozen ground. ey 95-100 1> Chass. e Games Pinfan Ave. Yours very wru.lyi' - - It is planned to keep the squad hard i e Three standing broad jumps—First, | yand 2376 95-11 R W - Betwn & Perkins, Jitwmops-at-lew | ae it and have thel in frst class| Running High Jump—First, Hartley | Fleming (N. L) 22 ft. 3 1-2 in: sec’ | Siinton Iy ch ~ E condition for ir D N) 3 ft, 10 in.: second, ary (N.|ond Woodruff (N. L.); third, L. 2 2517 e CoS Thamas Nat. Bank et eies | the tlumnt April 1un, i £, third Rathbons (R), fourth, Gee | (N): fourth, Storms (X.) e oS e T IpSea TS Comfort, safety and durability you e Manager Clinton S. Jones has &, Pme N L) McMain (N. L) el Ny S Uy, New Boos Rendail | nn st = e ke Ford car if Hospital t stan broad ps—First, | Ferguson). Tims - i 9 % SSepetek 2 = 5 Simen one " ine ‘Academy ey Sth | whese (0030 B, 5 b, seaons, Fre | e o tee o Chman, Brovias Her mid demand Goodrich Black Safety Treads T N s Ao |G, Sohei O (Running blsh jump—Tirst Fiizger- | Lafienr 1838 of your dealer. ~Ch ign On — Home Two-lap_ Relay—Won by Norwich |2ld (N. L) 4 ft, 6 In.: second L. Har- | Benson 2308 M;::nm:mm for Trol.| YALE DEFEATS COLONIALS | cwilson. R. Rattone, ‘D Rathbone, Tl (N): ‘third, "Linckley (N. L3; 4th, | Desmond 2302 The B. F. Goodrich C Iy Extension to Almyville. 1 S CAIY Binder aht Win el Tom s oy el EE 10 Three standing broad jumps—First | Weidwald 1008 e b. I. Goodric. 0. —— 50-95 ™. Class. L. King (N.) 21 feet 3 in: sessnd, |Shanahan 752 members and friends of the Scors of 10 to 2. Running high jump_irirst, Zozora | Sorms (N.): third, Fitzgerald (N. L): | Thatehar 2222 AKRON, OHIO « Hob ar Painmeia Thucsdsy afornoon | Yale opened its baseball season sus- | (N. L) 4 f& 4 in: second, Atlen (N.|fORTh WAIGER (I xow Lon- |SimESM e | Tine bome of Mrs. Dutterworth. piciously Saturday by downing the|L.): ihird, Rose (N. urth, Me- | 4 e mn, Brown, Noves, Fitager— 2048 75-27 R mmearm®iOme el ‘‘Best iza Rizza’’ D= OIOT—=02 Social Meeting. e social meeting of the Thursday ciyb is to be held Thursday afterncon, 5, at the home of Mrs. W. W. Members are to represent sofae book. ald). 28 ft. 1 in; second, L. third, Charnetski (N.); ley (N. L.). 125 ™. Unlimited Time I min. § sec. = Shot put—First, Wadleigh (N. L) Harris (N.); fourth, Linds- Class. Hopkins and Allen Two Man League. Renson ....... 105 92 Weldwald ..... 83 71 Masatactured by The B. F. The L. § C.s are to meet vlf.hAllrr:i Shn; nm‘l:at. mx&u (!:‘__)L.) 3g‘nd;. 188 183 Goodrich 0 Monday afternoo: second, e (N. L): thir B ke = Graves (X L): fourth, Becbe O L)'\ penaall” ... 70 08 110 3 | your per- S e b e SATURDAY’S MARKET B T I Mead ... 100 53 w8383, lx'octl; and outwears any Akron, Ohjo This annual meeting is usually heid ond, L. Harris (N.): third, Graves () = e R leather sole you ever * some time in March, but was post- | Oealings Were Almost Featureless— L. fourth, Beebe (N. L.). =5 L I i, A ey poned this year to the later date be- Quotations Were Irregular. Chin-ups—First. Wilson (N,) 20; | yenson = -------- 29 OB st e . Deslérs + cause it was impossible for the society second. Zozora (N. L.): third, Fergu. | Malmors 7 — 25 Brerywhars _clerk and treesurer, E. E. Salisbury, to| New York, March 31.—With the ex- . e Sounth, Toarde CN = = t ‘attend in March. ception of a few specialties, such as ‘Target—First, Campbell (N.) Wilson_Packing, Ohlo Gas and Vir- ol Dantesels GF Ly: third, Neyes vs. A Go-To-Church Campaign. ginia Coal, which continued’ their re- Ry ot Sactey oy Noves | penaatl ST S A Go-To-Church cent upward movement at gains at 1 Soter_city selay. 0. men-40 lapsd |Méed ... le1 85 > Orehinta {he Baptist chareh | 1-2 to 2 1-2 points, taday's early deal- . Won by Nesw Lbadon == cently organized at th P! Battey” as“cdptain of the Toys and Macelins I ag captatn of the girls. Sunday marked the first day of the contest and the boys are < determined to keep the girls busy in the effort to be the wino: The eenior class «: the Plainfield . High school expects to_ give another ings were almost featureless. Stand- ‘ard stocks were -only ‘fractionally changed, with gains in excess of re- cessions but trading was obviously professional and included the usual week-end settlement of outstanding contracts. - Market leaders like United States Steel, Reading and Coppers moved in an extremely narrow groove Games. Pool—Dickson (N) beat Whiton (XN. L) 25-21: (N 25-20. Ping Pong—Dyer ( (N. L) 6-2, 6- len (N. L) 6-1, 6-1. Checkers—Brown (N.) Jimal (N. o) King (N.) beat Al- L.) beat Dyer beat Burgone beat J. Mec- Baseball Results. Louis, St. Louis (N) 0, St. Called end sixth inning, Aat St Louis (A) 0. rain. At New Orleans, Pittsburgh (N) 1, Cleveland (A) 4. At Dallas, Texas—New York (N) base running was Stock carried by ALLING RUBBER (0. NORWICH NEW LONDON WESTERLY entertainment in the town hall, Cen- Mann (N. L) 2-0; Spivery (N.) beat P ) T Vi with shippings. Transactions were N 2 3, Detroft (A) 6. abl fitted in most cases. At the Polo |Jennings walked to the home plate and | plaining “why John L. Sullivan Tl Viliage, Sogn after the opening of | imited to relatively small individual Jimal (N L) 2- s R grounds in New York an entire brig- | said that Herzog should be put out of | not whip Charley Miichell” étte offerings. Secondary _ quotations City Bowling Leauge Standing. Boston (A)-Brooklyn (N) rain. ade could be sent through maneuvers | the game as was Cobb, but, as.the|late thau neve: £ Joined Home Guard. showed increasingly irregularity. R, sl e wllhou; hseln,; cramped. The same is laue; Ay :,'he unelszr. IBre’{m?:‘, L R ace : 5 tru fiel laughed at Jennings and alowed. the| Ty Cobb is still sure of a place Representative Charles Willlams held Aetna . % ‘27 Bu1 $evun). i - Sleveland e on Basss. - IO O e e the oma, o N8 | aeed Glaver 1o continue, The Go-|bassball They hys foufd: el & mesting in the rooms of the I O. O. Taftvitle . 29 31 4s3 27m3| New Orleans. April 1—Splendid| ®inperts field, Brooklyn, is smaller, | cision was loudly applauded. ond Ty Cobbs in the training camp evening and explained the lome guard movement. At about 3.45 the boys who had signed retired to “the mext room and were given their. Riverview Club 12 48 High single McAllister, three string string Pardy, 372. Team string, Aetna, 564. Team total, MONEY. 200 39, 26566 High ~hiefly responsible for Cloveland's 4 to 1 Pittsburzh here today. innings: victory over The score by but already has held a brigade. Ar- mories are located near Ebbets field, Braves field ard the Polo grounds. There were many friends and ad- | but no first Ty: mirers of Cobb’s among the big crowd of spectators and partisanship ran rampant_throughout the entire £ame, bo: inceton banks on —Headline. _ If first: training under the ieadership of Aetna, 1645, Fittsburgh 0010000001 which, after the (‘obb-Herzogz-Cobb in- | banked on her Charle [T Mr. Potvin, who has served In the London, March 31_Consols for | Actna, 1645. Cleveland 10100200 x SaERECh e YERI0C cldent, ‘was replete with close decis- | would now be under the flag oo . money 53 3-8. Grand Trunk 11. De- Averages. Mansawx Grisnes: and. . Wagn B _ e P G h s aud'stn Sisarue ma- Beers, 13 1-4, Rand Mines 3 3-8. Bar Games. Pinfall. Ave| i ilX, Grimes A el Sore at Being Caught Stealing Second [ions and kickink by comtont. Rowes | Georse M. Congh was dlsnial 4 3 - silver 36 1-2 d per ounce. Money 3| McAllister 6220 103-40 . - b 2 [ od JUEITY: - SOMNRES: ‘SEOwA SR, - D W tored o Providence Sunday e atiend e e | b e Hongy A S loide : = = fhe’ most intense rivairy Letweon the | o probable purchaser of the ‘Frov <etreet Methodist church. On the re- Rud ihree monehs’, it 066 er i 3897 . 99-36 g s Pl e Ty Cobb was the insticator of a|Bi7>7, T0C (Urth inning, when Flet- | Cohan to leave Harlem for his base turn Mrs. Gallup accompanied sent. Bibeault. 99.32| Dallas, Texas, April 1.—Four hits in| fight at Garden Park, Dalias, Texas, | Qne®,in the fourth inoing, when Flet- | Cohan to or his ba them. has been staying in Provi- —— Simcox 99-10|a row, coupled with a base on balls, | Saturday, in the second game of the | [0°T Wag HUFEne LA 07 atich Was 3 PR AT Sy & denee. all last week, having charge of e Brown 335 |poce. feiding ol & donbiful decision | sxtbition. series botween . fhe OREESE to Do amothered at the piate,| Wethersleld—As & remilPof the tes o iissionary exhibit at the church, New York, March 31.—Cotton fu- | Johnson 96-7 |at the plate, netted five rums in the| York Giants and Detroit Tigers. Jomes, third baseman of the Tisers, | ignation of Principal LeRoy Harris ¢ tures opened steady. ‘May 18.75; July 94-26 [ninth _inning for the New York Na-|the third inning in an attmpt to steal| 4 jiherately tried to grab the runner.|the Wethersfield High Schos], mem Want Trolley Extended. Selectman James Gorman spent jauch time last week 'circulating a pe- tition asking to have the Shore Line 18.53; October 17.58; December January 17.67. 55 Caulkins Bruckner LIVE STOCK MARKET. SO 93-32 93-26 93-26 93-5 tionals, giving them an exhibition game s 0110010058 with the Detroit Americans today, to 6. Score by innings: New York . second, Lew McCarty, of the Giants, made a perfect throw to Herzog, whd' covered the bag and headed off Cob by fully ten feet. = Cobb, seeing he bers of the school committee at meeting recently, voted to suspend ses sions_for two weeks, thereby br the Easter vacatiol Fletcher played football methods him- self and sent Jones sprawling. There were many _other lesser incidents which kept ths game in conmstant tur- three days £ s B 4 ey 5427 11002011200 6|was a certain victim, leiped in the [ ¥ e e e etion & AlnSyvitie He Toung s Chicago, March 30.—Sixteen dollar 92°15 - i and Rariden: Dauss, |air and hurled himself and his sharp [ ™! — tion period it is hoped > of mo trouble in getting men to sign hogs were confidently expected at the | Hughes . 91-38 A%k Scer R n B T et e e services of a new princigal the petition, as nearly all realized that yards, a $15.55 top being made today.|Burdick .. 91-33 long gash Sullivan 90-37 . N. W left leg inside the thigh. Herzog “ - - - it would be a great public convenience. Speculations were active at a 20 cent | Sullivan e LIS, 2D touched out the runmer and he was Sporting Notes e advance. Cattle were active at a 20 ON_ WINNING END|called § eneral News. cnt advance. Sheep were steady. o e i S poaeili Thraar i ¢ Hivirssit 1 Lt M ol e Eo e e buichors 368001080, canners, 356 | Kobp £371 |Nationai Tennis Champion Had Good |anser of having his base stesiing abil- = : 28 it = D, E ity shown up S0 badly he tbrew him- | * oo with B peranite o Brspece §§@5{1 Suters, $380@6.T5; S o S ShawaneL N self 'on the prostrate Herzog, and| Hal Chase is still the Cincinnati|- . N street. .50; _calves, $5.50@13.50. 2 | Boston. April 1—R. Norris Will- | started to pummel him in the face.| club, Miss Maxine Card of Springfield is making e short stay with her grand- mother, Mrs. A. Shepardson. Misses Lilla and Bila Millett spent the week end in Providence. Miss Jordan spent Saturday in Put- nam. Mrs. Henry Cray and Mrs. Roswell Snell were Providence visitors Satur- ay. Denison is working at Ray- Tacible Market steady. Prime, $i1 %0: : - s a1 e Eove ke weis il { mond Riders shop o Main siveet | i kA Begse™ Bood, $1050@11.25; tidy butences, $10 Games. Pinfall. Ave. |struck his game and ran out the re- [ SCPATated Cobb and Herzos: WEp were| | Nearly all the bovs SO o Fiine | Tablets while treating patients Some of the sidewalk on Main street | 1303 Cibs Cane Sug .01 fair, $5.00@9.75; _common | Bibeault 37T IS 4083 Juining tHO Se 63,592, 2 Scspatched the mob of angry players| o Ut Daseball nave Swulis T "U% | chronic constipation and torpid has been covered with mill ashes. 100 Deere Coopr + LT common to good fat bulls, | McAllister e [ the. Tonus covin Qoubies: Willlams | o215 s nhgers. Rookies had a pleasant time ana| Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do Boys were flying kites Saturday. Edwin Maia, of Meriden, who is em- in Hartford, left his home here in oosup Sunday_afternoon to > back to his work. He has been ill at his _home for nearly two weeks. There_were no services in_the M. E. church Sunday, Conference Sunday. Moosup : troop, No. J. Boy Scouts, held. .a meetirng Saturday afterncon. 100 Col Gas & Elec 200 Col & Southern 100 Cou 1 _Callahan 5100 Com _Products 200 Corn Prod_pr 2200 Crucible Stest Hogs.—Receipts 15,000 head. Mix- ed $15@15.40: light, $14.60@15.35; heavy, $15.20@15.55: rough heavy, $14.75@15: pigs, $9.50@13.76; bulk, $15.10@15.45. o.—Receipts 3,000 head. Year- lings $9@14.35; wethers, $8@13; lambs|Oney’s Team $13.50@15.40. Aetna House League Bieult's Team ..10 2 Johnson's Team 7 & McAllister's Team 5 7 s 218 Stan. ‘Won. Lost. Per. Pintall 833 383 416 166 4102 3634 4243 37192 High single, McAllister 135. High three strings. Bibeault, 342. Pittsburgh, March 30.—Supply light. Averages. Perkins . Brown . Malesky Johnson Sellas ... Oat’ .. . Ferguson Olson Gley Oney Edwards 2z veoc--12 36.00@10.00; common to zood fat cows, $4. heifers $7.00@10.50: fresh cows and springers, $40.00@85.00: veal calves $15.00@15.25; heavy and thin calves, $6.00@10.00. Sheep and lambs—Supply light. Market steady. Prime wethers, $11.75 @12.50; good mixed, S1! mixed, '$9.50@10.75 $5.00@ 7.9 lambs, $12.00@15.50; 1199 1185 873 1154 1135 1109 541 1074 1072 501 789 99-11 98-9 97 96-2 94-7 92-5 90-1 39-6 89-4 29 iams 2nd, the national lawn tennis champion was on the winning end in the finals of singles and doubles in the invitation tennis tournament on the covereq courts of the Longwood Cricket club today. In the singles, Nat W. Niles of Boston gave Williams his hardest fight of the tournament, forcing the first set to 9-7 before the champion won. After that Williams paired with G. W. Wightman of Bos- ton, defeated Count Otto Salm, New York, and N. W. Niles, §-3, 6-2, giving the winning pair a clean sweep of their five matches in the tournament. In another doubles match H. C. Johnson and R. C. Bishop Boston, defeated C. N. Bull, Jr, New York and I C. Wright, Boston, 7-5, 6-4. | to pull Cobb off his victim. Fletcher rushed over and endeavored Then the players of both teams flocked to the scene of hostilities and there was a general jostling, pulling and howlinz by all hands. But with all the ap- pearance of a flerce free for all fight, no blows were struck by other plap- ers and local policemen, darting from all parts of the field and srandstand, Cobb* Banished by Umpire. John McGraw led Herzog back to the home plate and showed the hard cut in Herzoz's leg and uniform pants which were torn to threads, to Wil- liam Brennan, the umpire in chief, who promptly ordered Cob off the field Cobb was hissed and boohed as he walked back to the bench after he jporaala i aficted with the wrestl-| Get Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets That is_the joyful cry of thousand since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tab- lets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a_practicing physi for 17 years and calomel's old-tim emy, discovered the formula for Of Only thing that can stop trapshoot- ing is darkness. Columbia gave her wrestlers “C's instead of bread and water. an contain calomel, but a healing, sootl ing_vegetable® laxative. No griping is the “keynote” of these little sugar-coated, olive-colored tablet They cause the bowels and liver to ac normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a “dark brown mouth now and then—a bad breath—a dull three meals a day in baseball training camps, anyway. Note of the fighters:—The Thaws fight to get Harry in an asylum, and then they fight to get him out. Squirrels have overlooked a nut who has bought twenty tickeéts for the opening of the Omaha baseball sea- gnal ring lambs, $15. .00. 87 DRI o i 0 " : 3 e e Then Thopme Seein, Mr. and g pE e Lawton .. R e o T I tired feeling—sick _ headache —torpid Mrs. Howard Main and Bdwin Matn %|, Buffalo. March 30—Cattle receipts I BASERALL PARKE| e St ek, liver and are constipated, yowll find motored” to Providence Friday . in o | 250, heaa. Market active. Prime| Moose Bowling League Standing. | yoiional Grounds Woeuld Be Th Herzog, after having his wound at-| Question 1s: Why aid J. Howard |quick, sure and only pleasant results Thomas. Main's automobile and ‘at- fiX | gteers, $12.00@12.25; butcher grades, Won. Lost. Per. Pinfall Cpan for Wit P TOWR | tended to, was the second batter in | Shoemaker have to play any one to re- | from one or two little Dr. Edwards tended the Methodist conference. LI Lo Oney’s- Team ....17 10 .39 7118 Ry ry Purposes. the Glants' half of the eventful in-| tain the amateur pocket billiard cham- | Ofive Tablets at bedtime. _Dewey Seguin started Friday Calves.—Receipts 1,500 head. Market Peckham’s Team 13 14 ning, and as he steppéd to the plate pionship? ) Thousands take ome or two every % v - ¢ 481 7077 N il ioon for Boston for a Short islt wirn | 1948 Tot Mur Mar pe % |active and 75 cents’ higher. Cull to|Dorrn Feam .13 14 ol National league basebail parks may | he wag cheered voolferously. Tugh = . it Ty ot - N ¢ | choi 6@15.75. 5 - - 6592 | pe thrown to the night just to keep right. ry them. o> 10 Kaneas i % | Sheen and lambs—Receipts 5,000 | BIPSavIEs Team 11 36 408 6347 |ihe ieaining of soldiers - Gow. Somn Some rural newspapers are now ex- J0¢ 495 0 50T TR drugeists. Mrs. A, H. Withee and daughter Ida are visiting at the home of Mrs. John Wescott in_Providence, Mrs. W. F. Sheldon, Miss Doris Pot- ter and Miss Grace Sheldon were con- ference attendants in Providence Fri- day. GEORGE G. GRANT Undertaker and Embalmer Prampt attent!~n tc day or night calls, ‘Telephone 630. APrieMWFawl Brice of te 100 Kansas Clty So 100 Kelly S Tire pr 1300 Keanecots 300 Lack _Steel 2 g i 58 i head. Market slow and 30 cents lower. Choice lambs $15.50@15.85, cull to fair $12.50@15, yearlings $12@14.50, sheep $5@12.75. Hogs.—Receipts 6,500 head. Maxtiet | Babeault active and 15 cents higher. Yorkers | Brown $14.75@15.75, piss $11.50@13. mixed | Belioney $15.75@15.80. heavy _ $15.75@15.90, | Oney roughs $18.50@14, stags $11@12. e ffo Kansas City. March 30.—Hog re- | Peckham ceptis estimated today 3,000 head. Re- | Burdick ceived officially yesterday 9,443 head. | Heibel Shipments 1,745 head. The market|Gordon .. Averages. ceansce--22 21 27 o s 2 .2 27 21 was_higher. Quotations ruled from | Wundriich $14.25 'to $1525 per 100 pounds, | Shaw against $14.06@15.15 per 100 pounds on Thursday. CHICAGD GRA MARKET. High single Bibeanlt, 115. High three string, Bibeault, 318, Games. Pinfa 2576 2565 1102 1905 2413 2384 2118 1578 2285 1776 2227 919 Final Standing of the Hopkins and Al len Two Man League. ‘Won. Lost. Per. Pinfall Schofield-Benson 23 Rendall ?Mead ..20 Kucher-Desmo'd 18\ Kenefic-Shan’han 13 Brooks-Simpson 16 Curran-Welch .11 4921 5008 4771 4740 4564 4838 K. Tener, president of the league has declared he had no doubt if the need arise the National's magnates will be ready to do anything in their power to help the company wage war to a successful end. “I do not believe the magnates are contemplating just now the possibility of their grounds being needed, but if that need should arise and the gov- ernment should call our magnatesfi I am certain, would gladly give their grounds over for the purposes of training. i “It is a matter for individual club owners to decide. They own their grounds. 1 cannot speak for them. But knowing them and their feelings well I feel sure I speak what they themeelves would say. “It is hard for me to beleve the bloody struggie now going pn in Eu- rope will be partly to this side of the Atlantic, but we have no way of telling what will happen. We undoubtedly need a large army and if it is necessary I believe baseball in Seneral will throw itself in to help.” National league parks are ideally Just Try Our Goods and you will want to come The Best Coffee, Ib. .. 28c A Good Coffee, Ib. ... 23c Some even cheaper, b. 20c Ceylon Tea, Ib. ...... 35c Baking Powder, Ib.... 14c Peanut Butter, Ib..... 14c UNITED TEA IMPORTERS GO, 218 Main Street The Foundation For Perfect This Spraying Outfit covers the great majority offorchard requirements. The pump has a capacity sufficient to sup- ply four leads of hose and is mounted on a 50-galion barrel. Furnished with side handle bars or two-wheeled cart. We have Sprayers for every spray- ing need—for orchard, garden, vine- yard, etc—manpower and horsspower. Write for descriptions and prices. The C. S Mersick Co. 274-292 State Street, New Haven, Conn. Fruit Is Thorough Spraying

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