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INSURANCE ACCIDENTS WILL HAPPEN ILLNESS WILL COME BeWise @) Aetna-ze L. LATHROP & SONS 28 Shetucket Street Broke Up. | : New York, May 6—Cold and rainy weather played havoc with the major leagues this past week. Twenty-four games, eleven in the National and thirteen in the American, were post- poned to be played later mostly in double headers. Despite, however, the rain-soaked grounds, some good baseball ‘was Shown, especially on Wednesday and Yeu'rs SAFELY SHIELDED against | which brought forth probably the best e i yacy Py Chicags ana Tonéy of Clncimaati, set sured through the strong companies up a record at Chicago when they went that this SERVICE INSURANCE [nine inninss without allowing the ob- AGENCY " posing batsmen a hit or run. _ Vaughn T e SR weakened In the tenth and Cincinnati Let us serve you. won the game, 1 to.0, on two singles, the only hits of the contest. Both pitchers had brilliant speed. At the Polo Grounds, the same day, New York and Brooklyn battled through fourteen innings to a 2-2 tie, the second extra inning tie game for Brooklyn in_ two weeks. Ames, pitching for St. Louis, held Pittsburgh to_two hitts, winning by 4 to In the American there were two shutouts by scores of 2 to 0. Fischer helped New York to beat Washington, with Johnson in the box, and Dauss ISAAC S. JONES Insurance and Real Estats Agent Richards’ Building 91 Main St. BURGLARY INSURANCE The Tnvelei lflsmnce Co. RAIN UPSET WEEK'S SCHEDULE Spite of Poor Weather Conditions Good Baseball Was Played—Vaugh and Toney Set Up New Record—Giants and Robins Played a Thriller—Tie in American League xities N ina.s teams | Sucphy.rr ern teams when the western come east this week. Philadelphia ana Brooklyn did not ioss a game and improveq their positions at the ex- pense of Boston which feil to seventh place, and New York which did not win & game. The tie for first place in the Ameri- can was broken and Boston, took two games from Phiiadelphia, now has 4 commanding lead over Chi- cago, which failed to keep up its pre- vious good gait and lost three out of four games. New York held on to four game series with Washington. St. louis climbed from sixth to place and is right behind New York. The Browns won three out of of the season at the expense of Cleve- land on May. Philadelphia _fell back but Detroit showed a flash of its theorectical strength and came through the week with a clean slate. The eastern teams in the American League will begin their first western invasion on May 10, the day after the National Intersectional games begin, and on the result of these struggles st may depend. vor. 3 Plank retired for a pinch hitter in the seventh and Groom relieved him. Only eight men faced Groom in the second game. Scores: Letbotd.rt Williazia.p third place while breaking even in_a | conmszs fourth | Felsch. fOUr | Schalke games and made the first triple play | Benzp S g et R S e e FE sivit S i LS i1 e e s 3083 — Score by tnnt: Chicaz Two base Groom, Carlson Held Chicago to Two Hits. Chicago, May 6—Carison held Chi- the pennant prospects of some teams|cago to two hits today won from Pittsburgh, 3 to 3. lmrmaannssusned sssp0ummune i “Two- use i which | ™ 2. nar, Wearer. Second Game. st Lovis (A Chieage = i} Touts Sisler, Schalk, yet Chicago Zeider Evéry hour, 65,000 clocks are set by ‘Western Union Telegraph. Clocks that ring bells in schools; clocks that blow factory whistles; clocks that flash signal lights; important clocks everywhere—all owe their accuracy to “WESTERN UNION THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. fi £ er than ever. Enduring! Certin-reed is a name whi come thru thestorm of businesscompetition str It stands for quality, d satisfaction and fair dealing. On the rep this name there bas been manufacturer of roofing and building p Certain-teed Certain-teed Roofing is the most efficient type of roo or factories, office buildings arm buildings, garages, etc. It costs less to buy, less to lay and less per year of life than oiher types of roofing. It does not rust, is proof against gases, =penc uilt the world Paints and Varnishes aregood, reliabie by experienced pa know how to make g and varnishes. ‘These men e at mand all the machine ment, materials and r pitched pitched Detroit to victory over won the game in . the eighth. ' He St. Lout: i an o o SUNDAY RESULTS, .382. Benny Kauff is hitting .333, and 5 n B. P. LEARNED & CO. New York held the leadership in the Groom Starred For 'St. Louis. | donbled and olot i, e oo wnd = Helnie Zimmerman 306, = e e e e "o b National untll Sunday, when St | St Louis, Mo. May §—Groom did| iy "0 Silhieq Zeider to Score.| caicxo 4, i oo Luwme 3 Roger Peckinpaugh, the Yankee It is a non-conductor of heat paints and varnishes e Agency Established May, 1845. Louis went ahead through a 4 to 0|not allow a hit for eleven innings to-| vaughn was hit hard but tightened in| Chlcigo 0. 5t Taois 3. (Second seme) shortshtop, shows the way o his and cold, is fire retardant and ically. They also have victory over Cincinnatl. ~ St. Louis|day and st. Louis took both sames, the | jRUEDD Was Bl hate Dot Ughtened 1 cume o Bu, rovts clubmates with & fine 321.- beck is » Y e Ioet Seq o Chidiase Sud. Nen foow e 40 8 S m g‘;ma e Tert s b o il o seventh in the American League stand. weather-proof. disposal the extensive Pittsburgh during the week and wi n the fourth inning of the firs = - § Tor " thre it o o P organization and wa ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW _ D . e |5t i roste T fues (o B} P ams | Swme . - § S tews's ot [g. three poaitions and eix . polnts The cost of laying prepared OT€anization and warc! B R P ST = pace, may be troublesome for the east- ! making five runs. They added three @enonzy "3 o Olzeciderss 4 174 3 3 Interaational Leagu Pipp, champion distance slugger of the roofings is the same whether ;y ~ 2 . Brown & Perkins, Iismeys-at-law : Woed 11 oo 3833 7| A e 1 roridems 3. Amefican League has hit for an oven you use good materials or poor. "_\;T;Js]y(,omr’z; i WH e s e & e . e —— { B 11 PRimees 3 1063 Bl anme b e Follow:ng are the batting averas Therefore, it pays to get Tt ot ket - A 35-:! Ty “ jngeeis: 4 8 3080 0] AT ioing s of all players both the National and CERTAIN-TEED, which is . e S 3 2 Beids 2331 T} A Sl ST American leagues who have hit 200 or the best. Itis guaranteed for The result is that CERT — Cirens 30 fmp 30031 R better in ten or morc games up to and : 2 - Beet S Industry in the Uni- . 2 i et e e including those playved last Thursd 5, 10 or 15 years according to TEED Paints and Mg ot s __.._.__—.._.___J i a ¥ e e S i o ~ Leasue. thickness (1, 2 or 3 ply), and are high grade produc = A:rou"c:m!m ress p:x'o R Towls FH 0l uq SSmban 7. Kanss Clty 1. (8 samoegec-| it willremain efficient longafter lower prices than you worth of new beet sugar factories are SATURDAY’S MARKET. i e s Ao e (Pt sxma) Movack R thetime whena poor qualityroof expect to pay for ¢ ander construction in the beet sugar X 801816 0—3] At Todianapolls I St. Paul 0. (14 Ianiags— would have had to be relaid. and varnishes. ares of the United States, chiefly the | Weakness of Railroad Shares Featur- v el A0 8 x 8 0 1 aieccond Camed lamings. no miss, cated corvumt £ prodariy g el section lying west of the Missouri tHa' Short Seesion. Bave il Baird, Carey, . Zelder. Secifios| W stats lew. or residences, CE! ,_ A e s attention to. the Tapid ed o R Siaie Surfaced Asphals Shingle: have = imis country as iilu a road shares, Which were again in free| 60 Nomu pec’ ot sl Lona NaGoml tancines “ED Roofing, plus artistic beauty. painting or hirea profess ona sompiied by the Natlonal City Bank|supply at substantial concessions, fea- [ % §U0 Ot G . i B e e Tl B 0 Theyneedno paint,are piiable,clim- yeu will . 3¢ New York. These show that the|tureq today’s highly professional mar- Pacie M e A Tinee i the Nt Ywen inate waste and misfits, gan- quantity of beet sugar produced in the | o™ gsome of those issues recording Prc Tel & Tel SN At Hosl P ATD A I DEAN . Tents 2 e 0 1, buck] ck. L - fr 000,000 { 1550 S Pon R R League race today, when Watson shut | Boooion noteurl, buckle,rotorcrack. e el e I lower quotations than for many years. . S ety AP e Db 1. sk s Bostan Guaranteed for ten years. pounds in 1890 to 165,000,000 in 1900, [.noe UESIOTE LA 00 SNt tor the Cincinnati ont. 4 10 0. “Watson aliow- | Sas ™ 13 e en years., e 1825,000,000 in 1910, and 1.642,000,000 | (asee eS8 B0 ORS oon these stocks, ea_oniy five ‘scattered hits and was | Phiisieisnia’ L = | Investigate CERTAT 3 n 1916. Only ten vears ago, in 1906, | \oreasing Beessurs Bpo0 e minor never in trouble. Toney, who start- | Ginona 11 et 2 ictbeiy o il . ihe production was but 525,000,000 | L0850 " GHG % southwestern groups. ed for the local team, kad'one bad in- | buiey PooE | men e 2 of zoof, For salo by : R but 10 per cent of | "Industrials wers at first inclined to L N S IR R T s 1 T3 | Qe bl 1 everywhere. ‘he sugar consumption o n f their recent losses but 8 , Miller and 5 ed. » - 3 Hiaten, In 1916 it was 1,642,000,008, or | [2alie U BRIt af thelr roctnt s tor Cruise doubled and scored on Fl, . Toat” i CERTAIN-TEED PRODUCTS CORPORATION searly 20 per cent of the consumption. | (05 18K Of SREITL L ICH PTC Closing Smith's single, nefting four runs. The - H General Roofing Mfg. Co., Gregg Varnish Co. The present reports as to the MumUerlwith a heavy tone, except in metals St B 2 * Mound City Paiat & Color Co. . = e ties. e R n er. Ve Yor H ey g her increase in the percentage which | "B 4iciions regarding an adverse P e H [ mwute, e Yo z Rows o S sur domestic beet flelds will SUpply Of | ,onyc gtatement were fulfllled only in Amartuck A ¢ $130 ISERE! - » | Wiitiame, Chiceas a jive Al Gl L ihe. sugar consumption of the United|p,re, the actual cash loss of slightly Sinclair 011 i T he sy G Kompt. "ty 2 Grand Rapids Sult Lake City Do: bloines siosu Blasse. more than $40,000,000 being less than 1120 30 30 o SPEAKER AND J. SMITH e oo Duluth Sydoey Havana _The growth of the beet sugar indus- | 701 cstimated in conservative quart- 171 S i eane 5 e Bores Bl [V iry in the United States has been ex- | -0t SARIRaTeq *0 SEVC IEHTE money s wxa Toiae LEADERS IN BATTING|% Witn Wion, e === 7 remely rapid. The capital of the beet | uring the week to local federal re- A T cas el b e e oa ¥ dreds of Yale undergradunte . o HORSE » sugar factories is shown by census re- | (IU08 L VOO, SPoacctea in an in- 3 s mae ofgamen 1 o n o s 1Y Col anks Tenhth in List in the! P IV o P | ports at $20,142.000 in 1599, and $142.- | roage of -almost $23,000,000 in federal ——— American League. i military units emn Presta 131,000 in 1914, and seems likely to|Crs2f® Toans - contracted more | 200 et e Ll 3 (a3 : ’ Spesker. _ Clereian il PR i reach. the 3200,000,000 line in 1917l inan ‘333,000,000, but - the. greatest| 1§ Thid Ave St e Ty Cobb, for nine straight vears the |y, be decidedly dis \me since the number of factories operated | spange was shown in demand deposits - st T 400 ¢ 0020 0—slchampion swatter of organized base-|E. Fe thietic hoard of con 1iea 1916 was 2 th > = n s 25 per cent greater than|ypich decressed by more than $113,- u Cincinnatt SRR = | e e SR e 3 following fte n 1814, and this larger total is again | pooich, T base B € Sucrifice. it Tornshy. . stirred up a whole lot of trouble | Juis that’ at prese o plite 0 be increased by 15 n factories | XU\ ther decrease of about $1,000,- = for himself last season when he per- o~ UPiush N Y1 7 e ks R i sow Onder comstruction. The total{ege 1n actual excess reserves leaves SARES SCHEDE £01 JUOAY. mitted Tris Speaker to rob him of his|Heblell.’ Bosen 11 41 sed for the furure of S Talve Of the Deot susar outpat which|int item, at a little more than $30,000,- 5 At Eak bl i LTINS L Y e o 3 . s according to the census $7.234.000 | 0, " the smellest total thus far this L Alshol SRR o = > o At £ Feion Todirying ‘ 100, Sud FEREOSA0) ln 1318, meems|ceny.t O HeNSIIZUB00007 actual e Hin el K lladeiphia_at New York. The first taste of undisputed power {7,055, “5t!Ious it sweeping decree for y O e e mated N 00 i aes 10| serves held by the banks In their own e Pictsburgh at Chicasn seems to have invigorated Cleveland's | Wemngins, <l [ £ports for the presen il e “-0)"'2‘-)‘1‘70”‘: vaults $372,000,000 is in specie. = Amertcan iaamule st Clacinnatl |star centre fislder to such a degree : Several plans have been advanced f, nerease in proportion to the growth STOCKS. (e Chseass at Bt Lovts that the Georgian Peach is likely to Saatorts QUEs fhe ¢ n number and capacity of susar mills CKS. e Corp 4 st at Detmit have the time of his life to get back R athletic lovérs favored holding © is not improbabie that the beet fields New York st Phitadelphia into the fight for his lost laurels. Bosien I between the different co'leg v D PRGN T Ter Gt b OE ot 5 Tomon st Washingion. | Speaker is leading the American Lo’ 1 ments or military companie:. O A sumption of 1917 against 20 per cent 890 Weetinghoe Internationai Leag League batters with the fine average urged a short schedule betwee 4 n 1916, and 10 per cent in 1905, This 359 Wiltrs. Deecand Baitmore at Torenio. of 426 Cobb is tenth on the list, with T three of Yaie universtt & sstimate as to the higher percentage 500 Wor Pump : Newark at Bufale. o at Montreal | —£OT Bim—the paitry mark of .315. board of control has 0 SR Dot anear pidh T ik Total Sates 0UASD shares. ridemce at Memisl | Of course, it may be argued that the schemes by reiter G sonsumption of 1917 is based in pa = = - season still youmg. But hereto- - S e SR whte ipon the assumption that the quantity COTTON. SSYUSHAYE MEROLTS fore Speake: Franklin Baker, of the {Garincr. Tston war lasts A sonsumed will, as a resul: of high New York. Mav 5. Cotton futures Nations{ Lesaws. Yarkeas, has been a slow starter. Cobb | Mencarer, Wasl. Instructions were voted for the trass brices, show a fall when compared openod steady. May 19.88: July 19.70: | philadebla at New York wet srounds usually ot off in front and set the e urer to pay the expenees of the Va Tith Sears in which prices were ma- October 18.88: December 18.93; Janu-{ Gncusstt T 'Chicsm 4 jpace all the way. Fans are wonder- | YALE TO STAND BY hletic plant while the war tasts | erlally lower. The average per capi- ary 15.96. Tiroakisn at Bosten rain ing if he has the nerve and courage ale athletic pius fu E a con in the United States New York, May 6.—Cotton futures| St Leuls st Pittstureh rain to_make a_fight from behind IR TR BTN i n at the normal was closed barel steady- May 19.68: Amirican League. Remarkable as has been the hitting| 40 0 poo dTWill Not Modi Phillies 6, Bridgeport From the Censular 13 pounds per capita, and with the ad- Julv October 18.78M Decemiber! & Lute t Camole, = . pace of Speaker. the king of baiters mtie Bonrd W ot Modify De-| priggeport. o \ 6 4 A vance In prices, fell to 86 pounds per HE j 1861 Gpof auiet: mia- | Dol o Emiehis et pomaa. bas been forced to take a back seat| cree on Abolishing Sports During|errors, coupled witi Wood me of :apita in 1915, and 77 pounds per cap- aling Cierciind" o Deteott, wee rounde. two _ National| the War. ~|save " the Philadelphia p s n 1916 Am Taternational Loague. National League hitters, J. Smith, a Teague club a 6 to 2 viete i events of trhe" war hfl]‘-‘g ad- = MONEY. Mentoeal 12 Providenes 4. :Mbs!itu;e D;n,\'&;‘o( the (‘avdllnms. ‘whu By order of the Yale Athletic board port gl Te e a rank of the United States = ey York) Mty £ Mercantile ar s Bumals ram as made nine hits in seventcen times | e ool 0t O Mdeaiss e ad > flelding of Mart v the world's beet sugar pro| = 510 @ 5 Sterting 80 day hinle 4oar | Batmor’as Terotto rin, at bat in eleven games, leads the ma- | “Ontrol Co/myiation In e 40 catch t Prior to the war, beets pro an Eomstercialy 00 day Tie o | e == E Jor_fieid, with an average of .529. ree abolishing sports at the univer- the of the g i about one-half of the sugar| o An 471 1-2; commercial 60 day bills 471 AT Eddie Rousch, the Cincinnati gard-|sity during the way will be made. tery, the Philadelphia g supply of the world, but the rank Of | «ife nsconds 1-4; demand 475 5.8; cables 476 7-16.| . A recent report has it that the old [ener, who was with the Giants a year| This decision establishes the fact|hander. had to leave the X he United States which had but re-| 2re Awiimn Franes, demand 571 1-2: eables 570 |Readviile track may be sold to settle lago, has proven so far to be the best|that the movement to schedule a short | fifth when he was knocke become @ producer of beet su- | 100 Autan 1.3, Gujlders, demand 40 3.4: cables |Various claims against the estate of the | hitting regular player of the two ma- |baseball series this spring, especially |hit by a pitched hall Ma was remely low. With the e 40 7-8. Lires, demand 700; cables 699, |1ate Andrew Welch. The time for the | ior leugues. 1In twelve full games|with Harvard, will fail. The under on the slab. Score T mts of the war, the output of beet Rubles, demand 27 3-4: cables 27 7. |[Pg Of claims against the estate haé | Roush, despite an infury that Inca-graduate managers and captains were Iadelphia 200040000 sugar produced in Europe has fallen Bar silver T4 7-5. Mexican dollars 57 |nOL expired. but Orlando Jomes, who |pacitated him ten davs, has been able | eager for a few games to be played 50010000 n «if, the estimated output 3°4. Government bonds weal. Rai.|had been a pariner of Mr. Welch, hasfto deliver a .429 punch, three points|and one or two track meets to be ar- Mayer and Burns: Tillpoy 1916-17 ' crop vear being but| 13 Barrit Cor . t0ad bonds weak. led a claim in excess of $45.000. while | hetter than that of evcn the great|raned. and especially hoped for two|Wood, Simith and Donnell and Nazie (4764 W 814,000 tons against 3,341,000 sn the | 100 Maropiise St there is another claim for $20.000, and | Speaker. baseball games with Harvard. Coore- i soibts rop year 1912-13. The crop of Ger- i —— LIVE STOCK MARKET. Ithere are stili other claims to be filed. | The Giants have three regular play- |espondence had been opened informal-| American sweet pots many for 1916-1 estimated at 1.-| 1o hoookyn B hile R ers in the .200 class and the Yankees|Iv with the Cambridge university, but |rested as a stitute 360.000 tons, Russia 1.250.000, Austria ePirolenm Pittsburgh, 4—Cattle suj 1If what you have to say is not worth [two. George Burns, who is most|it seems desirable that no matches be |Ttaly, and it is added th |con e B Ay ics 1A Lo light, Mar S Pdue $1 saying sing it and win applause. Closely pressing Roush, has hit . for|scheduled in view of the fact that hun- | sugar content will help fill a 1a | term nd Belgit 000, ‘while the bee $12.25: good, $10.75@ 1150, tidy butch- - it Teatner 3 z , tidy butc] tagar production of fhe United States De Fasea ers, $10.50@11; fair $3.25@10: common. mated at 135,000 tons. thus giving the| 120 Cher & Ohie O e g e bulls, p - e . thus giv, e @10: common to goo at cows, —— S— Cnited Statex fourth rank at present| % G & A $500.30; heifers, $7@10.75 tresh 3 z imong the world's producers of beet [ i chic &' pr - cows and springers, $40@s veal o ik Dot catitn. corigamption of the | BEoe SaReR calven FRGTII0; neasy ana ihin 1 t calves, . en greatiy disarranged by the war. The consumption in the year immed: rtely preceding the war Is estimated 1t §5 pounds per capita in the United States, 90 pounds per capita in Enz- and. 75 pounds in Germany and 93 sounds per capita in Denmark. No 3gures are of course obtairable as to sresent per capita_consumption in the es at war, but the reduction is sresumabl uch greater than in the *ase of the United States, in which, as shown above, the consumption has iallen from 39 pounds per capita in 314 to 77 pounds per capita in 1916, his fall of nearly 14 per cent presum- 1bly due to higher prices, while pres- snt indications are that the per capl- a consumption will be still less than hat of 1916. The great reduction in beet sugar production in Furope has resulted in arge exportations of sugar from the “nited States to Europe, though this 12s been entirely in cane sugar, shiefly that jmported from Cuba, re- ined in American factories, and then sxporied to the countries at war, es- »ecially to Great Britain and France. The total exportation in the calendar ear 1816 was 1,577,000,000 pounds tgainet 963,575,000 in 1913, 390,409,000 n 1914, and 51,772,000 in 1913. The ralue of the refined sugar _exports rom the United States in 1916 was 0,676,000, in 1915 $43,762,000, in 1914 2233000, and in 1913 $1,874,000, hav- mg thus been in 1916 nearly 50 times much as In 1912, while the quantity vas approximately 30 times as much. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA 3800 Mo Pac ctra 400 Mont Power 260 Nat Bscuit Market strong. Prime wethers, $10.75 @11.25: good mixed, $10.00@10.50; fair mixed, $9.00@9.50; culls and common, $4.50@7.00; lambs, $10.00@14.25; spring lambs, $15.00@ 18.00. Hogs—Receipts 10 = double decks. Market active. Prime heavy hogs, $16.10@16. heayy mixed, $16.05: 16.10; mediums, $16.00@16.05; heavy vorkers, $15.50@16.00; light vorkers, 514.00@14.50: pigs, $13.00@13.50; roughs, 3$1400@15.00; stags, $12.00@ Buffalo, May 4.—Cattle receipts, 200 head. Market active. Prime steers, :}”30@12.50: butcher zrades, $6.50@ Calves.—Receipts 200 head. Market active. Cull to choice $5@13.75. Sheep ~and lambs.—Recelpts 4,000 head. Market active. Cholce lambs $14.25@14.50, cull to fair $10@14, year- lings $11@12, sheep $5@11.50. Hogs.—Receipts 3.200 head. Market active. Yorkers $14.75@16.15, pigs $13.75@14.25, mixed $16.15@16.35, heavy $15.25@16.35, roughs $14@14.25, $12@12.50, stags Kansas City, May 4—Hog recelpts estimated today 4,000. Received official- Iy vesterday 11,419 head; shipments 2026 head. The market was slow. Quotations ruled from $14.80 to $15.85 per 100 pounds, against $14.85 to $15.95 per 100 pounds on Thursday. READ AT AT AT AT AT AT AT AT HARTFORD | NEW LONDON | NEW HAVEN | BRIDGEPORT | SPRINGFIELD | WORCESTER LAWRENCE PORTLAND May 1037 - [May 1t 38 Mav 1631 June 7.8 June s s Aay 24, Aoy 3¢ June ¢ uly ‘une , 2! une 10, 2: July 5, uly 7, 8 Tune 14 HARTFORD . THE Auz, 3, 8 July 4, 28 July 30; Aug. 7 |July 26, 27 July 84, 25 Y Sept. (3, 3) Aug. 31; Sept. 4 Sept. 8 Aug. 16, 17 Aug. 14, 15 A ‘ M.lly 11, (39, 30) 3!-,1! lz‘z. 321! May 124. 18 5\]?.70. L .:u;m 7.8 Ma B4, July 3, 31 une June 21, 2! uly 7, 9 July §, 6 June 14, 12 W LOMDON: lase 3 NORWICH |7i &% %0 6 | 7054 July 34, 28 July 24, 27 July 14 Aug. 18, 30 X Sept. 5, 8 Aug. 4, 31; Sept. 4 | Aug. 14, 15 Aug, 10, 17 A " ?{ny 12, 29 AMI-Y 16 b JMI]Y 11, 17, 80 -)'lly ’]“‘ llfl' !’101' '—“fl‘ T J " une 20, 30 Jume 1, 2, 1 uly 2 lune y June N Ju NEW: HAVEN.. 008 & aug. 4. |Ate 2.7 BULLETIN |57 % 4 s July 14, 18 July & Yuly 84 Sept. 1, § Sept. 7 (2 Sept. 3 Aug. 27, 28 Aug, H May 15 May 12, 28 May e May 30 ey Tor une 1, 2, 22 June 20, 30 une 4; July 3, une ), I une Ju ERIDGEPORT - lave 2’ ' July 4 28 Aug. 8, 29 FOR July 17, 1% huly 3 Sept. § Sept. 1, 6 Sepi 3 Aug, 13, 34, 28 Aug, 11 Jane 1z i3 Junes ), 11 |Mavaa Yay 1821, 38 Yariom tay 1 uly 12,13 2 | July 10 une 25, une 27, une uly 4 May 14, 91 EERINCEIL D Aug. 11 July 11, 21, 28 Aug. 9 (2) July 19, 20 THE Aug, 6, 7, 20 June H 23 Aug 13, 21 Auz. 20 Aug. 10, 23 Aug. 33 Sept, 8 ) June s (2), 11 [June 12, 13 May 1o 238 | Mav i May T w0 May 13, 14 uly 10, 11 July 12 (2) ‘une g une 18 uly &, 3 Jun WORCESTER ..} 0.5 o July 13, 19,"20 Aug. 13 June 25, 36 Aug, & Sune 1. 8 Aug. 10, 20 Aug. 21 Aug. 22, 38 July 16'(3) 33 |Bept, 3, ¢ July 8, b une 23, une 27, uly uly 14, une 18, une June 28; 3 s LAWRENCE July 19, 20 (2) Aug. 9 July 18 (2) 21, 33 | Aug, 11 () Aug, 8, 4, 81 Ao P, 5 00 | SPORTING |7 Aug. 22 Auz 10,2820 |Aug. 20 Aug, 13, 31 Bept, 7, 4 Sepl. 5§ Hept. 4 une 27, une 25, iy iy 13, 1 June Juna ¥ Juiy 4 EORBLAND ... Lowes 51 Aug. 11 (2 Jaly Auve, o Aug, 1 Aug, § 4, 81 Aug, 6 8 NEWS Aug. 23, 29 Aus. 13, 22 Aug. 21 | Aus, 10, 36 Bopt, R, € BSept, 1, 7, 8 Sept. 4