Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 22, 1917, Page 3

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INSURANCE itary Unit Defeated -on Stadium Gridiron by 13 te O—Klorween and | ROOSEVELT CONDITIONING r Stars. sty S IN TRAINING CAMP Red and White Team Piled Large Score While Lighter Op- They Harvard varsity informal foot- | gioieq ball team conquered the First Maine Half-mile Track Before ponents Put Over. Lone Touchdown—Long Runs and | o, o om0 ere s o ot ine Sias | - Breakfast—Faced Battery of Cam- dium Saturday. The contest and the e Have you full coverage on your live . FIRE and LIGHTNING? If not, call or write ~ J. L. LATHROP & SONS 28 Shetucket Street Norwich, Conn. AGADEMY TRIMS STONINGTON 47 TO6| ™ s aiter rene o8 85 B 2 T it STATES RUBBER COMPANY To Holders of: 3 UNITED STATES RUBBER COMPANY Ten-Y, Trust Sinking Fund Gold Bdrds; MORGAN AND WRIGHT Five Per Cent. Gold Debenture CANADIAN CONSOLIDATED RUBBER COMPANY, r Collateral s i 2 e incidents_connected with it made one o 1d D Forward Passes Constitute N. F. A. Attack—Zeller Stars CE i fncat spastacies sverseen on | | Stameora, Comn oot 21_eThix i Five Per Cent. Gold Debenture - < . . ‘oldiers’ fiel e rtillery players|an entirely novel experience,” remark- i It ’ for Stonington—Eastwood and Oat Shining for Acade- | won the support of the majority of a|ed Colonel "Theodore Roosevelt this (|| The United S DR iCompnny Hensby aferstespanohs ten thousand crowd for their last ditch | afternoon as he taced a battery of " urns my. o wotk, but the Harvard offense was too | cameras at a rest camp, where he has N ST AL (NUNDER COMPANY, Ven Year_ Colintera) ” ¥ crafty for them. been conditioning for some time past, Trust 8inking Fund Gold Bonds, due December 1, at ES ;g 3 The work of Frazier, the Maine back, | The Rooseveltizn smile appeared a. 102.35 and accrued inter and Horween, Harvard's new captain, | he made this remark and he insiste MORGAN AND WRIGHT Five Per Cent. Gold Debentures, due In the gameé between N: F. A.'and[runs N. F..A. scored a touchdown.|outshone everything else dome on the|that Mayor Mitchel of New York, December 1,1918, at 101.25 and accrued interest; l,? t Stonington_on_the campus Saturday|The goal wag missed. N. F. A. kick- | gridiron. s Mayor Treat of Stamfcrd, Police Chief CANADIAN CONSOLIDATED RUBBER COMPANY, Limited, afternoon, N. F. A. piled up 47 points|ed off, Stonington failed to gain and ‘The powerful Harvard offensive, with | firennan, Jack - Cooper, Trainer Gus 4 g r 1918, at % e Five Per Cent. Gold Debsntures due December 1, 5 ‘while Stonington got one touch-|N. F. A. got the ‘ball. After eever-|Captain Horween as the keystone, | Nowkee, William Zeigler, the starch 10428 sandd seontied: interest: down. 'N. F. A. outwelghed the Ston-|al rushes Bennet: made s {5 vard|twice crashed through the opposition |manufacturer. and others “get into ington team considerably but Ston-|run for a toucl Oat kicked | o e Artillery boys until they. were |the picture” with™ him. 1 . " o ington made four or five fine forwardlgoal. N. F.hA. cked off. Stoning- thhlnBalx inches of. the Maine ‘(:i:i The colonel has been here for two T 'f'r":lie:,:‘:l;";,:"’:’:f ‘l’h‘(’.“‘;‘”:‘:““""’:l‘ffl”’é‘f" ';'r“il':f":: "':;;V;l' passe: d ller, he Stonington | ton down on her 30 yard I " line. ut in both instances the sturdy | weeks ut re: k: v that he v ich offer: 8 omes AN 2 o e k& - Ty t ’ b Sa 2 At Loeb & Company, 52 William Street, New York City, and up surrender IMONEY quarterback made a couple of long|no gain Stonington kicked. N. F. A,|defense of the Artilles¢ men had its re- |around as the local police took pains Besides attentive, expert service, you| eng runs. ball in middle of fleld. A forward ; ward, and half a foot from their own |to see that he was not disturbed. He thereof, will receive payment in cash. Such bonds, with all unmatured secure INSURANCE here that means Eastwood and Bennett made a|pass to Oat netted 25 yards. Ben-|scal line they twice won the ballihas seen but a few visitors, mest of coupons attached and in the case of registered bonds, duly, endorsed in number of fine long end runs whilo| nett made touchdown and Oat kicKed |away from th> Crimson on downs: The (!IQSG political friends. Among those blank transfer, must be presented at such office before npon on any second ‘time disaster followed immedi- | there today was John T. King of business day, except Saturdays, on or befdre Oct. 27th, 1917( the last day REAL MONEY PROMPTLY after the| J. Wilcox at fullback did excellent|goal. v e work in line plunging. Captain N. F. A kicked off to Stonington.|ately, (for from behind his own goal|l - ‘Who was there to secure for subscriptions to the Second Liberty Loan), on which date this offer fire. Rest sasy by insuring through us.| FOC0 G o ough injured in last | Quarter ended. Score $3-6, line Lee tried tc punt. Rudman of|the ces of the colonel in the cam- will expire Saturday’'s game, played all of the Fo < - Harvard broke through and blocked paigr; of Schuyler Merritt, republican ISAAC S. JONES game with “the exception of a few| i "t::;’i:"“" the kick and then fell on the loose |candidate for congress to succeed th The above offer Is on about a 3.85 per cent. interest basis for the minutes 'hen Markoff took his place. n gain and kick- | ball as it roiled out of bounds back |late Fbenezey .J Hill. The . colone! e : o a " ok nsurance and Real Estate Agent |, T, 5 B rter N. F. A. put in a :)a, ?nnwood m%e“l 40 dyuv run.|of the soal line. It counted as a|bromised to speak in Pridgeport st a above bonds and obiigations and is_made at this time with the hope ildis $1 Main 8t | rumber of ond team men. Houri-| QN & forward pass =cored a touch- | touchdown and brought Harvard's|date to be arranged later. Gutzon hat i i . Richards’ Building o Ceveuo',”B?nsh. Campbell and | d0Wn and kicked goal. Hourlgan and |ecore to 13 points, wita only 30 sec-|Borglum, sculptor, and prominent in that it may facilitate subscriptions to the Second Liberty Loan. Sevin, all of whom played an excel-|COVello went in the N. F. A. lineup |onds left to play. progressive party circles, and Oliver UNITED STATES RUBBER COMPANY Y MRANCE Tosb! e here. ~N. F. A. kicked off to Ston-| The first Crimson score came short- |G. Fessenden, of Stamford. were s dilg First Quarter. ington. Stonington fumbled on & bad |ly after Maine Fad held the Cambridge | guests. by SAMUEL P. COLT, President. pass from the center. N. F. A. fum- | team for downs six inches from the[ “Not a word.” was Roosevelt's re- New York, October 8 1917. K —IN— N. F. A. kicked off. Stonington car- | bled but recovered. After a series|just white line. pPly to a reguest that he sav some- ried the ball up to middle field. After |of rushes Fastwood carried the ball| On this océasion Frazier punted suc- | {thing about the story that ha was to The vaelers hme cfi- trying a few rushes Stonington work- [over for a touchdown. Oat kicked | cessfully from behind the goal line |command a division -f Now Enzland ed a forward pass whnich gained 20| &pal. and Coolidge ran back seven yards.|Volunteer: Asked about the New il S yards. Stonington kicked after fail-| Final score, N. F. A, 47, Stonington | Plunges through center-by Blanchard | Vork mayoralty situation he siated SR is such that only | in speeding up a fast c: on the turn- . ing to gain by rushing. N. F. A’s|6. and Horween brought the ball to the |that his views would be exnressed la- |The grain situation t B. P. LEARNED & CO. ball on her 20 yard line. Bennett made| N. F. A. STONINGTON |20 yard line, where a forward pass |te: Neither would he discuds the |liope, not certainty, could be express- | pike when it ran into another c - EL twe first downs, Eastwood took the Counihan, Houfl{lnn Fairbarton | froth Coolidge to Whitney caught the ! world war. e, that the bread bupply will last the | sverved into a fence mnd tossed 1 for 20 yards then J. Wilcox car- L 3 Maine defense off its guard and per-| A Jarze number of newspapermen |entire year, und in any case the pres-|the occupants into a ditch. Scaife Agency Established May, 1846, 364 It over. - THe. 1 was missed. N.| Kozlowski, Brush Fish | mitted the Crimson end to score a|were there and these he led to a half [ent bread ration can be maintaiped [ was sitting on the floor of the ma- F. A. kicked off. Stonington made 10( ~ R T. S touchdown. mile track 'upon which he had been |only by the use of substitutes fur- hinel i hisheniol L iwag iittragtured -AT- {ards on ard pass then lost the|R. cox Leonard | Frazier was the very life of the|exercising. He would not say how | ther affecting the quality of the bread.|when he siruck the ground and death ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW all on a ble. Bennett made 20 R. G. - Maine team. He punted on even terms|many times he had covered it but|for which flour is now milled to 94 came soon. 3 e s e T yards. Quarter ended. Score 6-0. Phillips Rose | with Horween for most of the game, |rdmitted that he had ran it five times |ber cent. of the grain. — Conditions| The parents of Scaife, whose father Brown & Perkins, Atitmeys-at-law 5 c. bhut in the waning minutes his kicks | Defore breakfast. The track Jeads|have nof permitted improvement of |Ix James . Scaife, prexident of > 'y Second Quarter. Suplicki, Brend Shippee | lacked distanze. He also engineered | through a potate patch. a rye field, |the flour by less exhausiive milling Pittshurgh water filter company, ar Over Thames Nat. Bank, Shetucket St.| N ¥ A's ball on Stonington’s 30 L. T. 3 all the forward passes and. cimeared | skirts the cdre of lake a stp of | Pread and potatoes will he the biik [ on their way here. The parents of Entrance stairway near to -Thames|vard line. After a number of rushes | Tirrell, Covello . Frammpna | many of the (arsned btacks woods and ovar steep hills. He ajd |of the ration, as the meat allowance | }air and . Carson ‘are ‘already here. National Bank. Telephone 38-3 | Eastwood carried the ball over. Oat L. T. Horween gaired from three to eight |the half, walkinz at a pace that had |Will almost certainly be reduced. Milic | Plair is also of Pittsburgh, being the kicked goal. N. F. A. kicked off.| Oat Adamsoy | yards on almost every plunge, and it |his guests puffing. and butter will be availa even infson of a prominent physician, " and YALE FRESHIES DEFEAT Stonington lost ball on downs. N L. E. was only when the opposing line was — Sre fer Amonnie TR Bew. wian i Cagpon COMBBIEIIE tHs tame (oity. A enal < 3 . - i 3 = fants' milk allowance has had to be e exeren Team EasiLy |5 SUIRSASTLI L ORGP (Caty Zeller | mppend seginst him (T he s woD” | FIRE IN BASE HOSPITAL ged " TWELVE ARTIGLES OF . ) head then kicked and recovered the| Bennett Granesley | at the centec of the line. On off AT CAMP DEVENS| The socialists, who demanded an RUSSIAN PEACE PROGRAM Officers’ Training Corps|ball. N, F. A. fumbled and Stoning- R H. B tackle plays Hcrween also ran up a - open discussion,” announce that they TR AL to Bowl to See Youngsters|ton got the ball thstonzlzgtcn work- J. Wilcox T Sutcliffc | worthy total of vards gained. Caused by Explosion of Oil Stove— il ig*’g"},df")‘;‘“'}.'n“";“ R A oa | As Drawn Up by Executive Commit- a forward pass then er on a . B. sIncipient scraps were twice prevent- Patients Hurriedly R ed. i il g BERRIONS S 7 iers’ 2 o yard run, skirting right end. scored.| Eastwood, (Capt.) Sullivan|ed by restraining hands. and . once ST e Dlet s e panieand Soldisrer Del <Yale and New Haven were given tho | Missed goal. Stonington kicked off TSR e Maine was penzlized half the distance| Aver, M. Patients in R emEy e el e first morsel of football Saturdas |#nd the half ended. Score 13-6. o Score TS, alunrters 1001010l it e play. While the [some of the wards in the base hospi- | KERENSKY OPENED e N e O S8 ol Pt a4 Exeter & 2efe . Head Linesman Walke-~. | y n met its superior in|tal at ‘Camp Devens were removed 4 zanee when the le freshmen an Third Quarter. Umpire, Alofsin. Timekeeper, Fletch- | Harvard, it was not heaten o much | hurriedly early today when fire de RUSSIAN PARLIAMENT | peace program as drawn up by the S central executive committee of the met in the bowl. The Yale youngsters wan 20 to 0, In a game in which some| Stoninston kicked off. In her long'er. by aggressive footh 2 2 { 3 Y aggT ve football as by breaks in|stroyed a ore story wooden building In Ringing Speech He Declared “We lnck. containing the receiving ward and council! of (workmen's and soldiers’ sharp Yale forward passing and a fine v S run by French, the Eli full back, fea- i the sick and wounded office. The ex-| Never Will Bow Our Heads tof, * A " UL GRSl bkl wers wirohe - NAVY WINS FROM INDIANS. |plosion of an oil stove started the fire.| Fore Shskaresiinn e Sorm, of dnsthuoliona B i (B et e S A i to M. Skobeleff, ex-minisaer of labor, ShL: That thiey Coukl not besorapi ol Score of 61 Points to 0 Is Rolled Up|buiiding were slightly burned. Petrograd, Saturday. Oct, 20.— |its delesate to the Parls conference, comsistena attack. The nearest the Against Carlisle in One Sided Foot-| There were mno patienis in the | Premied Kerensky. on opening the|consists of tweive articles, The pro- r boys came to scoring was ad- | | il e turned structure. As soon as the | Russian parliament today in the Ma- follow \'"’. g to the 25-yarg line. i | s ;Am"mf ‘;Mnxi\dm,“llfljlm' ;‘\ L. 4;m=}s- rinsky palace. made a ringing speech s acuation by the Germans e first period endéd scoreless, bu: Showin stery ns of Portland, Me., in charge of the | iy which he said: onomy of Poland e déa s 3 Showing mastery of practically ev- Y ; . 1 cond the Elis piled up four . 2 2 5 two surgical warlis nearest the blaze,| “Russia wants pence by right. but|Lithuania Lettish provinces, = '-\[’ "m;‘ A SATURDAY'S MARKET. ery department of the wame and man-|naq nearly fifty of his natients ca T e o e e e B ooty ob e optned Xale got.the ball at miafield on T ifesting a decided dezree of !mprove- |ried out on mattresses as a measure | ;oreer menia 3 By exchange of punts-and there fol.| Was Dominated by Professional Inter- Poat oven their showing against West|of precaution. Many- other of the 2 e Taraiion s warmbyiap. | i THird—Solitlon of thesAlkace-Tior. lowed a series of penalties that cost ts and Pools. & Wesi ks AR R Y 7| patients in the thirteen hospital build- | ianded by the members of all po-|raine question by a plebiscite, the Exeter heavily. - Baker ran ten yards R e v afternoon swamptd the red-|ings ‘went to the verandas oie their|}itiial factions, . The premier, who|voting being arranged by local civil 1 il Ontarie s Sucee” T e S0 o TRe L0 s : iust has recovered from his recent|suthorities after the removal of all Professional in- 0 of buth belligerents. Y v 2 S to the 20-yard line. French, Baker| New, York, Oct. 20 Slirer 1al would undoubtedly have been from|' Meanwhile Serzeant Joseph vas slightlyipale, stood on |the troops iillness and and Lay between them cerrfed _the|terests and pools dominated today's 0 Pacific Mail i 2 = 7 21 points more had not Coach!cons, of Clinton, and Private B 9e| “Fourth—Restorati o Bel Dot Lo e 1t re o T Al | Gekin concentiaTIng Areely pen war Doble taken his first team out at the | Tivans of Boston, who were o (uis | hant e rie rarmse e ol vonc | her ancient. frontiory. and onmmme beginning of the final period. Durinz|in the receiving ward when the stove ined to an explanation of the military | tion for her losses from an interr touchdown. French kicked the goal. |issues. g - et et arat three quarters thelexploded, had summoned aid TMun-| fiiation and a declaration as to the tional rund. Exeter then tried the forward pass-| Shippings responded to cvernight 3 3 t a ing game, but failed, and on an at-|advices with gains of 1 1-2 to 5 i-2 F n T alrSistered three (tourhdowns.|dreds of ‘soldiers turned out fo assist | |ocaseity of saving, the country. He| “Fifth—Hestoration of Serbla and tempted pass, French leaped in the|points, Atlantic, Gulf & Wes: Indies B s ":,‘d d° = "|‘1“° °h; ese ihere Wasithe cantonment fire department hut | oig 1 Montenegro with similar compensa- air, caught the ball on Excter’s 22- | being the strongest feature. Steels and Reading ey s fom the toe -of young|they found on their arrival that the We mmust fight only to. save the|tion. Serbia to have access to the vard line and went over for a touch- | kindred equipments increased recent ,l‘,h ”"’_‘m- { . | firemen, under ‘command of Lieuten- | ouniry 2 Adriatic. Bosnia and Herzegovina to down. It was the best individual ef- |advances by 2 to 4 points and metals o, ‘npians sbowed 9 Startiing lack|.nt John W. MoAree. formerly of the | “Tp™ 5 ichoviki Teft only occaston-|be autonomous. fort of the day. He kicked another|Overcame their depression, Utah Cop- :‘hfc';‘”:zr;hfh:“f“:”,:;fl ;’,‘gn;”{v'.‘:'r’::, oW york Ove departmant, - had. the{ oy ‘wpplauded; Many members, in-| “Sixth—Disputed Balkan states to 1 . Ry es. con: 1€ 0 - receiving ild- = e X gty sti- | receivi ‘ovisiona E v ollc e ffi:’ucf.‘;l'e"fl"io‘o mh'::d:r‘.m'nrm: hin]zr E:;;‘tstor example, rising almost N Wan. ihel . neeh el it 'rhnh.,";"' confined- to_the. SET L e (h)fflnz| :‘ome’?!‘Q\“t”}:ag;’l.:"trofl.ot‘(l_ re :‘:Ie’l’:is:‘:li‘, nal autonomy followed ended. The last tonehdown was made| The more extreme galns also in- only man in their line-up who was af| The base hospital bulldings are lo- | L1tjonal demorrats, wers SURrn. (OF1| “.Seventh—Rumanla to be restored e¥iaed: The last touchiown wak imanef, dHe move fexteme galns aleo i all dangerous was Lassa, a veteran of | cated in the far southwestern corner | °5 f0F the Ameyican ard S.0er CRER Y 1er"o1a fronts an condition that she Exeter's 10-yard Hne. Here Exeter|vanced 5 points to 61 3-4, on reports last season. Lassa gave the middy|of the cantonment and are fsolated | %/Med AmbRasator ik grant Dobrudja autonomy and grant held for two dowps, and then Weld|of an approaching “stock” dividend, | 2it Zouthem By . e ing e puple they wanted|from other structures. Tire wind war "Rl 0 TR0 Jliee in the course or|edual rights to Jews Shot & Dretty forward pass. directly|Texas company 4 3-4 Cuban-Americ| iy souier By e when carrying the ball. He could not.|not high and at no stage of the fi- e poid an enthusiastic tribute| “Iighth—Autonomy for the‘ Italian A T N e I | s N Ts Amertn Totaces 4| Tetaoseee lLiowever, play the game alone and got|was there anv danger of its spresa | I% Speech paid an enthustastic WbUSE !, o vinces of Austria to be followed - erieks. who caught the Ball on ths|and Republic fron 3 1-2. | 160 Temn ¢ & iittle or no support from his team- |ine to the resimental barracks. I o o T e "muche 'fo=| by & plebiscite, £oal line and -fell over for a touch- S. Steel, the Bethlehem, Lacka-| o acxts € e _Captain L. H. Spooner and Sergear | \C NS FOVE "0 2T nth—Restitution of all colonies down. French failed at goal. wanna and Crucible steels kept pace! FOUR Ei Nathan L. Bery, both of Boston, wiq | 5085 TOONS, OF AR remier of- |to Germany There was 2 military touch to the|With the gains in allied shares, and aton P LEVENS IN RACE were asleep In rooms adioining th | GV, Drteidential chair fo Madame | “Tenth-—Re-establishment of Greeca -ame. Yale’ Jeading srails averaged 1 to 2 points fnlon, Eac FOR BIG TEN el | SICE &S oumded aiee uen: the: fir . s s . |and Persia. game. Yale's big body of men in the g L DI JNE TR sioneag. PO sSud wonnénd offbe when the v atherine Breshicovekaya. tze grand. | WU o on or e o Reserve Officébs’ Training, camp|UPon comparatively small trading marching to the bowl from the cam- | ing. Closing pri were from frac- pus. When the men, all in uniform, |tlons to 1 1-2 points below the top. entered the bowl they were cheered.|Sales amounted to 440,000 shares. They were in command of Captain e Winfleld S, Overton and Admiral Grslis Sl Chester. The line up: 00 Aladks Gold 3¢ Wisconsin, Purdue and Indiana Elim-|Captain Spooner was slixhtly burned | 056" member of the parliament. She | S{raits leading to inner seas and a S rv chairman and, after a speech, in- SN REPA Chicage. Oct. 21—Four teams—Ohio | 1%, {oa whan 1t exproded and he mico | titod the assembl: to elect its presi- | Lolition of the riebl to torpedo mer- State, Mlinols, Ifinnesota and Chicago | Syered. sHent burne. . Many medieal | fent. M, Avskentieff, chairman of [CM4Rt ships in war time. =~ =~ Tpomain in the race tonight for the |jngtruments were lost In the fire and | the executive committee of the coun- |, .., o™ Contributions or indemni- g Ten" football championship a8 & |some hospital uniforms were destroy- |/l Of peasants’ delegates, was elected |\ Ni® JTi"¢Grm "hut the money spent Yale. Exeter. 800 Alaske Juneau 3 200 Allls _Chalmers result of games played Saturday. The president by a majority of 288. 5 Seully Keen| et pormes, - ed. T 3 3 cn the maintenance of prisoners and m 5% dofeat of Wisccmsin Purdue and In-|““Tny ia the second fire caused by ar _— all contributions levied during the Left Ena 4400 Am Can Acosta Peters| 1200 Am Car & Teft Tackle A o :;a“n:oerll;r‘;:l:l; f‘l;:‘l:l‘,dfl:\;;ltil;a:hl:fig:- r\ul stove explosion at the camp. Last | A YALE FRESHMAN war to be returned. 3 - | Friday. a_stove in_the office of Mafor = N ning. Michigan has only one confer- | general Harrs F3, Hodges exploded WELD) BN, FHK. POLIOR Can’t Cover Minor Details. West TUnion Tel Welsh Jones| 500 Am ® & L pr Wilson Com Left Guard 400 Am Tnt Com Westinghonse ence game this season. and Iowa.|wnen it was picked up too quickly by 5 Morrison Lipscomb | 1400 Am Linwed Wilzs“rerian ;g;fi:yfl;‘:‘;‘&gg‘;w” psets, has not | apn orderly. The orderiy *rapped the | Was Driving Car When a Sheff. Jun-| In giving the German people an ac- Center 100 Am Maiting Worth Pump Pivosites: caine thrcanh. Sutie general's coat about the blazing heat-| ior Was Killed—Had No State Li-[count of the fight at Zonnebeke, Gen- Tripp Fidder 300 Am Malt pr S o i ‘_‘;m . fl . 'h“' a: er and extinguished the flames. cense. eral Ludendoroff was too busy to note W EIDES Suned 00 Am Stee “Fary COTTON. Flinols "outpiayed Wisconsin {n srrry R R Eei By s S S e L ‘alker ‘alloway Buear - o e v New Haven, Conn., Oct. 21.—A cor- | hel e position.—Wall Street Jour- Right Tackle: ¥ e New York. Oct. 20——Cotton fistures | o nprss b Eame, winning 7 to | FOOD CONDITION DISCUSSED oner's investigation was begun here | nal. Dilworth Baker Tel & Tel ovenbed u;mfly‘;, October, 28.25: De-| g o 'urdue, BY THE JRUSSIAN DIET |;oday over the death last night of e Right Ena acco cember, 27.60; January, 27.22; March, ¢ Frederic. Magee Scaife. a junior. in Knew When to Stop. Baker Lowry e 26.90; May, 26.70. evon SreBiaYing Minnesota aimost on | Not So Rosy as the Government Has | ihe Shefield Sclentific School at Yale, | pom Watson is one man who kno Quarter Back Zino b New York, Oct. 20:—Cotton futures|cuie way before a serles of bamine| Been Trying to Make It Appear. [as the result of an automoblle acci-| ey to get off. He has announced Lay Sturm | 14800 Anaconda closed steady. October 28.15, Decem-|Jlave and lost 28 to 0 - ang — dent, after which Willlam W. Blair, | 5 .%C spension of his publications for ; Left Half Back | S0 A S Tine ber 2531, January 2694, March 26.68.| " Noire Dame gave the Nebraska| Copenhagen. Oct. 21.—A strongly | Jr, a Yale freshman was held by the | . quration of the war. — New Or- Dines Watson| 610 A 6 & W T e eleven one of the closest contests in | censored official report of the discus- | police. Blair wad driving the = car|jcang State. Right Half Back 100 AL G & W I Spot quiet; middling 28.65. vears and succeeded in holdin; m“ slon of the food conditions by the[when the accident occurred on_the N French Hartley | 2508 B Lo Cornhuskers tc a singl etouch “,,: budget committee of the Prussian [ Milford turnpike a few miles from e n i Full Back 300 Batopllas Min. MONEY. Towa suffered another setbeck ioetas | dlet. the session of which was heid | New Haven. It developed that Blair| Hamden-od vecord haf heen hune Score by period: 200 Beth Steel New York, Oct. 20.—Mi 10 to 0 to Grinmell. Michigan E | behind closed doors, shows that, ex- | held no Connecticut automobile driv- !r; b S ER S teall ool it are i o e D M S L T per § 1-2; sterling, 60 aay Bills 470 1- | Elven only a mild Aght by the Micni: | cept for the potato ¢rop, which prom- |er's license. ~Bail in $300 has been | aleve, Wwith Steve (ot S Eaten: - 0 0 0 0—0] "0 Brookyn R T 2; commercial 60 day bills on banks|Ean Ageies, who Dlayéd a defensive |ises to be serious, the food situation | furnished for his appearancs. == . | Giowiey also held a hizh score record 100 Brooklyn Un 4.71; commercial 60 day bills 5.70 7-|Zame, losing 27 to 0. is by no means as rosy as the gov- Scaife, . ok . last season at the big pins. Football Results. 300 Bums Bros demand 4.75 1-4; cables 476 1.16. ernment has been trying to paint it.|son 3rd, it is said, were taking turns | last sea: s. 400 Buste &Su francs, demand 5.79 1-2; cables 5.77 3- Syracuse an Easy Victim. S Al e el P e e e At New Haven—Yale Fresamen 20, Exeter 0. At Tanover—Dartmouth 6, West Virginia 2. At Meadrille. Pa—Allegheny 39, Geneva 0. At Geneva—St. Lawrence 26, Hobart 0. At Alientown, Ps—Franklin and Marshall 0, At Heverford. Pa.—Urstous 23, Haverford 0. 4; gutlders, demand, 43: cables, 43 1-4. ratt lires, demand 7.78; ‘cables 7.17: rubles, | team: enaily" defoated Brrare football gemand 14; cables 13 3-4. Bar Silver |asity at Pittsburg Saturday, 28 to 0. §2 L2 Mexican dollars €3 Government ) Glenn Warner's cleven acored a touch- ady. Iroad bonds easy. |down and goal in each of the four 0 At Swathmore, Pa—Swarthmore 17, Gettysburg periods. - At the start of the game lv“ S 100 LIVE STOCK MARKET. Syracuse threatened the Gold and Blue i Wr— gold, but after the first period never At Waterville, Chicago, - Oct. 19.—Hogs—Receipts | proved dangerous. The Pitt line held 2000 C. 100 13,000. Markets dull and 30c lower. | well and open playing wi revented 1‘;: Mixed and butchers $15.50@17,00; good | by _a muddy fleld. ¥ 100 and heavy, $15.7017.00; rough heavy,| By line plunging in the first period £ $15.40@15.65; light, $15.20@16.30; pigs. | Pittsburg scored a touchdown and 110 $11.00@14.90; bulk, $16.75@16.75. kicked the goal. In the second period 306 Col Fuei & Cattle. — Receipts 5000. Markets|McLaren obtained the ball on Pitts- 8 s Ges & Wieo weak to 10c lower. Beeves, $6.50@17; | burg’s eight yard line and ran 92 yards by 2000 Com Products cows and helifers, $4.75@12.25; stock- |through almost the entire Syracuse % 2108 Com Jm pr ers and feeders, $6.00@12.30; _texans, |team for a touchdown. Gougler kicked | = - L SR e T $7.15@12.40; calves, $9.00@15. goal. The third touchdown was made b A P ek 299 % oone e B rae gl O ol TR L R A 5 b 3 Caba Cane S D v ative and west- | the per sch * recovered a 154 At rsr;::;:;—_l;{r‘m:"'r,c.nos‘tfn Collegs. ‘2!1 e ma & H\ldrn ern, $19.30@12.90; lambs $12.75@18.00. | fumble and un“ for lcwu':r‘:down from }4 Berst 7. — the 20 yary e. 'a C; At Cambriase Mumm —Harvasd Tnformal 15, Matos .}g%-fl‘.&; jeiabureh, Oct. 15.—Cattle supply Wokea goms ™ P B ooy S Acrtill . 100 Eik Hom ght. Marke! eady. ‘hoice, $12.50 e g2 . epatintn, Th—Wutingun mna e | 308 e . @13.50; prime, $1250@13.20; :good, BAN JOHNSON TO OFFER T b & i 00s ot $8.50G 0 0, hors, - $16.0008 SERVICES TO GOVERNMENT. . -00; ", - .00: com 7. . A Wt oot Ay 38, Turw 5. 100 Sonrecirts @#.50; common to good fat buils, 36.00 | , - B A% Tniversty of Pittoourghy 38, Syraciss. 0. %000 S0 Newtwen o ©00; ComEhon o goen fac cows: 5.50)| Anxitus e Nel of Seewies ) Either in At New York—Fordham 13, Holy Crom 1200 GE. N Ore. Subs @9.25; - heifers, BB.50@10.50: fresh This Country or in France. At New York—Wesleyan 7.’ New York University | 200 Green C-Cop cows and_ springers, $6.06@90.00; veal At Easton, P1.—Rutgers 33, Lafayette 7. At Tthaca—Colgate 20, Cornell 0. At Baltimore. —Dickinson 14, Johns Hopkine . At FHoboken. N. J.—Stevens 22, Naval Avia- ton. o, At Newark. Del.—Western Maryland 10, Delaware —Nebrasks 7, Notre Dame 0. Devens Sheep and lambs—Supply _light.| tonight for Washington, where tomor- Market steady. Prime wethers $11.50, | row he will formally offer his services good mixed $10.26@11. fair mixed $5.50 | to the government in connection with @10. culls and ccmmon §5@7.50, spAng | the war. The American league execu- lambs $16.75. tive hopes to be accepted for duty Hogs.—Receipts 20 "double decks. | either in this country or France. . He Market lower. Prime heavy hogs $16.80 | proposes to serve without compensa- @17, mediums $16.60@16.80, heavy | tion. yorkers $16@16.50, light yorkers $15@ el 15.50,, pigs $14.50@14.75, roughs Harddigs Wen. O e e The Harddigs defeated the Greene- - ville Tigers Sunday by the score of 200 Kelly § Tire .. 3300 Kenneco ... 20 9000 Lack Steel , 300 Lehigh Valley 100 Lee Rub Tire 200 1. & Nash. 2200 Mex 'Petrol 400 Miami Copper 1100 Midvale Btoel 1160 Midvale Stesi At Rochester. N. Y.—Rochester 0, Duffalo 28. _At Providence, R. L—Rhode Island State 0, New Hampshire 0. Tierney Cadets Defeated. Troop 7 of the Boy Scouts of Amer- | 1003 & st L new 100M St P8 S & CHICAGO GRAIN - MARKET. 6.to 0. Although the Tigers put up the ica defeated the Tierney Cadets by thé | leo Mo, Kam % T . Open. High Low. Close strongest garwn that the Harddigs have | fhis photograph is a graphic illus- | the low country have combined to con- | tinuing their steady pounding of _the German lines. This British official score of 24 to 6 in a hard fousght Mo " Pacif . 11 2 5] 2000 acinc Mo e uLuenek [plaved in some time, the West Side|uation of the almost insurmountable|vert the whole battlefield into a great same Sunday afternoon. 100 Pac pr 10 110 109% 100% b i 2 L oye managed to put over the winnir shows ; The Scouts would like to challenge| 00 Mont Power % M6 X 109% | Gichdown. Shea. the Harddig rignt|dificulties that are confronting the|sea of mud. Though the swappy con- | PRCIOFIAPh shows a heavy load drawn Soy amateur team weighing on mm av-| i ¥ i &€ 530 % 58916584 sy | end, plaved a spectacular gEme, catch-| British forces in the seady drive on |dition along the front is a serious ob- | despite the wooden road built to pre- g Sl 009 Xat Emam & 8§ - e0% % . %0 .80 |ing. four long passes far biz mains. !the Flanders front Rainstorms and|stacle, the Eritish are neverthless con- | vent just such contingencieg. , Ve

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