Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 27, 1918, Page 3

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month, about'700 thousand day, about 29 thousand an hour. read this advertisement. Is your property ingured? B. P. LEARNED & CO. Agency Established May, 1846. INSURANCE FOR EVERYTHING ™. INSURABLE 4. L. LATHROP & SONS 28 Bhstucket Street N:ryich, Conm. P UL AFTER the fire you will ‘appre- ciate being insured in a GOOD COM- PANY that will settie the ' loss PROMPTLY and FAIRLY. You're sure of strong A-1 Com- panies when you insure through us. ISAAC S. JCNES insurgnce and Real Estats Agent Richards’ Building 91 Mair St ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW ; Brown & Perkins, Ifitmeys-at-law {Over Uncas Nat. Bank, Shetucket St Entrance stairway near to Thames jNational Bank. Telephone 38-3 EDWIN W. HIGGINS Attorney-at-Law N. L. Co. Mut. Fire Ins. Co. Bldg. 59 Broadawy. The War Behind The Front. Germany’s hope of victory lies in the jwar behind the front. A war which /in its secrecy and cunnifg is as deadly |and difficult to deal with as the sub-sea | piracy of the German U-boats. It was after Germany realized that she could never win on sea and in the open, that she struck below the sea and in the dark. So, realizing she can never win say nothing of the deliberate . lie, \craftily concessed. cunningly camou- flaged. and dispersed by a thousand {trusted spies into ten thousand lis- ’tening ears. It is a Fact that the ma- l jority of people in the world never j&row up,. and only a small minority 3 :d':\"elop that mental growth, that sense lof proportion, which' enables them to take a broad view of such far-reach- ing 'vuestions as are involved in this world war. Most people are intelli- gently concerned with the thinge at hand. They look as it were through (& knothole instead of using the sixty i@degree angle of vision, which every in- itelligent man ought to have and ‘consequently such people, and it is a. |great majority, are peculiarly sensitive 1o suggestions of a propaganda, which \is ‘as subtle to detect as it is al-per- ,vading and pernicious. The large ma- Jority of the rumors of disaster to our |troops: of discomforts, sickress, and deaths in the cantonments; of delays, disorganization, and even of graft in the great war industries, are of enemy origin, and the pity of it all is {hat unconsciously there are thousands of keil-meaning citizens who, because they have an ili-regulated appetite for ithie enemy rumors,, too often with em- bellishments of their own. Therefore it is the duty of every true patriot among us, whenever he stumbles upon one of these calamity howlers. to ask him at once for his authority, and bring it shdrply to his mind that whether he intends to or not he is actively aiding the enemy in his at- tempt to shatter the morale of the jcivillan population back of the fighting line. entific American. If you contemplate purchas- ing any of the following makes of Automobiles— LOCOMOBILE PACKARD . WHITE PIERCE-ARROW CADILLAC insist on KELLY-SPRING- FIELD CORD TIRES for your equipment. /. They are adjusted at 10,000 miles and are regular equip-| ment at no lddilionfl cost to you. it 4 s 00 ; C. E. LANE *THE TIRE MAN | 2. ENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Suite 46 Shannon Building Take elevator Shetucket Streey ®ho: entrance. . THE PALACE 78 Franklin Street P. SHEA Bowling- THE AETNA - Billiards 7 ALLEYS Phone Conn. 6 TABLES Majestic Building, Shetucket St. Norwich, Conn. Bow! and play Billiards for exercise and rocreation 3 million dollars mru-_‘or,;w . : -~ Al lnd burnad in this country; abast 21| - e 7Ty Etorium Athletic Club Anxious to Sk BeNenthsToneavywughb-:F Meet the Champion—Fight Must be dollars worth is burning while you |’ New Orleans. La Louisiana ‘Auditorium Athletic Club, betore which Fred Fulton of Roches- President He signed a contract -after .a two MoGraw ‘leave New York: Nortolk, Vi hour'| Frank Moran of Pittsburgh, tonight to make visits to tdlegraphed Jess Willard, heavywt veport, La., endeavor personally. to P! Fletcher and Perritt, all of had returned unsigned = con- Pitcher Sallee. also a hol out, is expected to sign tomorrow af- ter talegraphic negotiatio; BRAVES PURCHASE INFIELDER: FROM EASTERN LEAGUE i Corway Shortstop of Woreester ‘WMl Join the Braves on Their Southern 1 Pla., .an ofter of & purse of £100 401 | must be for twenty able to the prinsipzls. Fuiton amnounced was' “ready and waiting STEERS SMABHES BOWLING RECORD ‘AT CINGINNATI Rolls in First Place With a Score of 26.—Infielder .Richard Conway of the Worcester club of the Ilastern League leader ofi the leagme in hitting last year, was purchased to- gay b'by the Boa(t‘on National aseball club. * Conway plays stop and second base. He will the Braves on their spring trip at:Mjami, Fla, on March TED LEWIS TO BOX FORMER CHAMPION Proceeds Will Go Toward Camp Gor- don Athletic Fund. Atlanta, Ga, Feb. 2&—Ted Tewls, ‘welterweight champion of the werld, and Jack Britton, fo¥mer title holder, have signed articies to box ten rounds here Wednesday, March 6, it was an- Proceeds of the Cincinnati, O., Feb ican Bowling Congress record smashed, ' while” ‘new leaders two men and all eyents appeared at the American Rowling Congress hére Steers and Fred Thoma, team of Chicago as- sumed ti~st_plice in the doubles with 1336. just ten pins behind an_Bowling Congress rec- by Satorius and Holzschuh, of Peoria, while Steers went into. the lead in the all évents vins ahead of the former American Bowling Congress record made by H. Miller.of Detroif, at Grand Rapids last of the Rubiai Cincinnati, 0. Feb. 26.—The sensa- tions of last night were lacking to- night, only fair bowling marking the result of the first shiftof five men teams. The Cleveland Standard Tires, of Cleveland, O. were high on the early shift and rolled into eighth place in the standing with 2822. The Cincinnati Gym. team of Cin- cinnati were second on the shift with 2785, while the Clair Doans of Cleve- land were third with 2784. “Larry” Sutton’s Loyal Moose team of Rochester were fourth on the shift with 2739. A re-tabulation of the Steers and Thoma games in the . doubles today showed, that Thoma had rolled 202 in his third .game, and that the teams total was 1335 instead of 1336. GIANTS TRYING TO BRING ke HOLDOUTS INTO LINE Robertson, Schupp, Fletcher, Perritt and Sallee Are Among the Strong- est: Objectors. New York, Feb. 26.—The New York National League club strong effort to get holdout players to sign comtracts before the start of the training season. George Barns .out- fielder, came to New York today at|tional nounced here match will go to the Camp Gordon Athletic equipment fund. Detroit, Feb. 26.—Charles White, of Brooklyn, defeated Alex Elmslie of Milwaukee, 300 to 238 this afternoon in the second match in the Class A national amateur billlard tournamgnt With both men playing billiards, the game went 42 innings. White had high runs of 38, 36. 25. ave- _high runs were 1, average 5. Lobert Comch at West Point. ‘West Point, N. Y., Feb. 26. Lobert, the Army’s new baseball coach, arrived here today from Cuba and im- mediately went tc work in the cage with a big squad of cadets. all-round athlete, will captain the nine Heddon Wins From Clarkson. Detroit, Feb. 26.—Charles Heddon of Dowagiac, Mich., Henry Clarkson of Boston, 300 to 184, in tonight’s game in the Class A na- jwith the sword,she seeks to win out ;against the non-combatan't popula- ition by means of subtle suggestion of ‘faflure. The secret whisperings of |disaffection, the littie spark of rumor !which runs through dry stubble, to won from T. MARKET WAS UNSETTLED. [ 120.Com Prod or 3806 Cuba Cane Bugar 70 Detreit Edison ipping: d Industri: Made Gai Shippings and Industrials Made ains 1500 Deteeit ifeom. in the Last Heur. 200 Ere 1st_pr | time and none to play before. 200 Gaston Wms. inahility to draw any very defin e et s clusions from the latest utterances of the German chancellor probably the uncgrtain stocks during the early part of to day’s trading. This feeling was thrown off however, representative pings and industrials making substan- tial gains in the last hour and impart- ing additional strength to various spe- 200 Goodrich B F 109 Granby Mining 100 Gulf S Steel . 406 Haskell & Bark. 16806 Int M Mar pr Pools entivenel sporadic activity Baldwin Locomotive made up the greater pawt of its recent abrunt decliné, gaining over six points Amer- ican Sumatra Tobacco also ad almost five points, with another rou: the scandalows and shocking, assist this enemy propaganda by repeating 260 e Rub Tire four point gains were Texas pany, Marime preferred. Atlan Industrial Alcohol, American Locomo- tive, Westinghouse, Pacific Mail, Hide and Leather preferred and Wiles common and preferred. United States Steel guided the sea- woned - industrials, advancing points and Pacifics were strongest of three points, with one to two points for prominent coalers. ed to 485,000 shares. Call money opened at 4 per cent bat soon rose to six on a broad d mand. Time money was quoted at si per cent. for all dates. but the supply was altogether negligible. Trench bonds were strong, but the general list, including Liberty Sales amount- par value, aggregated $3,465,000. TU. S. old issues were unchanged on 3§ =3 TEEEREAEA AR IEERENEY g338:8dessdit £ H g83 3 » ] 3100 Westinghouse 3300 Wallys Overland 100 Worth Pump. 200 W. Pump pe A Pump pr B. Tolal saies 479,019+ st New -York, Feb. steady;” middkn 32.25. Cotton futures opened steadv: July 30.50; October 29.28; cember 29.08. = - 26—Cotton spst New York, Feb. strong; high 6: Jow _4: ruling rate 4: . offered at {; last 26—Call money closing bid 3 1-2 CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. 560 Chile Crppor 107 Cluett_Peatody 0 Col. Fuel & Tron 160 Col Gas & Flée e rom Peduchs Palace. League. < Team No. 1 4 ;;____;;: machine gun . emplacements and THE FIRING SQUAD. 91— 279 CHAPTER XXIT—Continued. tied o the wheel of a limber, the be- | _ section ginnipg of his sentence of twenty-one O omches | days, Field ¢ No. 1. Never before hawe I seen such a woebegone on a man's face. Several days, Atwell and I made uniform | OUrselves scarce around Brigade-Head-, of a British Staff Officer. Several | JUrters. We did not want to meet stories had been told about an officer | ‘8%, General. wearing a red band around his cap, © Spy Was never caught. who patrolled the front line and com- munication trenches asking suspicious ° CHAPTHR XXIV. questions as to locations of batteries, trench motars, ‘If a shell dropped in A few days later I had orders to a battery, on a mmchine gun, or even |report back to Divisional Headgaurt- 1617 2% | mear a dusout, this spy was blamed. | ers, about thirty Kilos behind the line. Te—tas 110 118— 325 108— 303 | the spy. The rumor: gained .such ' strength | I reported to the A. P. M. (Assistant that an order was issued for all troops | Provost Marshal). He told me to-re- to immediately place under arrest any- . Port to Billet No. 78 for quarters and one answering to the description of | rations. i i It was about 8 o'clock at might and Atwell and I were on the qui vive. |l was tired and soon feli asleep in 92— 286 | We. constantly patrplled the tremch- | the straw of the billet. It was a mis- 52— 290 487 531 - 498—3516 106— 293 101— 297 87— 284 87— 204 88— 273 9 497 4sd—11q1 84 - 91— 274 7 92— 267 533 465 4871465 BASEBALL ODDITIES Frekish Fact in Comnection With the National Game. & The shortest baseball game on re- cord was played in Tokio in 1909. It was contested between the Reach All- Americans and the Waseda College nine. Precisely forty minutes were consumed in playing. The score itself is somewhat of a surprise, not beceuse the collegians scored nothing. but that the professionals made only three runs. Tt is possible they had to make a| train. It is almost too good to be true.’ Our Cerberus of Records says naively: “Even so, it was reported that about five minutes were lost by the Japs kicking on Flaherty's rapid delivery, they claiming he did not give themy| time’ to get into position to bat.” Patrick Filaherty should be ashamed of himself. The little sons of Nippon were all set for an afternoon of pleas- ant pastiming, only to face a pitcher who wouldn't give them time to get into position to bat. It is small won- der they got meither a hit nor a run off the unfair Patrick Flaherty. Speaking of peculiar reasons why ball games have been postponed, did you ever head of the scheduled contest between the Allentown and Lancas- ter clubs that didn’t come off? It was back in the good old days of 1885, on | May 25, to be exact. According to the club secretary the game was to be started that afternoon promptly at 3:3)0 oclock. = Three o'clock came and not a solitary spi tor w23 in the grandstand. 'At # |p. m. the park still was deserted as & graverard at midnight. At 0 { o'clock it was the game. Imagine the mortification of the Allentown and Lancester clubs! Here it was playing ‘No Spectator, No Game. In those days baseball was played i s > | more 'informally than it is now. So the ball players, still in their uni- fodms. when down the street to see was holding the crowd back. found a circus parade. The ball players made it unanimous by, watch- ing the proeession themseives. f In 1593 Washington and St. Louis became involved in a peculiar record. The teams played twelve innings ithout scoring. Bven in those early days St. Louis and Washington show- ed reluctance in crossing the home plate. At the end of twelve in- nings the al captains gave up hope of sighting land, and they decided to call it off for the day with the hope that on the morrow one or the other of the clubs might accidentally score 2 run. So the two teams crossed bats as they used to say then, the following day and began blasting for a run. It was a difficult job. There didn't seem to be a run anywhere on the prop- erty. They drilled deeper and deeper, and had all but abandoned hope when, in the fourteenth inning, Washington scored. The run was later stuffed by a taxidermist and may now be seen in a St. Louis museum. The teams went twenty-six innings before a tally was made. This was all very well, in a way, but it had a sinister influence on the teams ever afterward. The St. Louis Browns along about 1915 got so they could go fifty innings without scoring a run, and do it easily, at that. Three Games in One Afternoon. On September 27, 1908, in the beautiful iittle city of Tacoma a league record was set when the Tacoma and Spokane teams played three games in a row. Up to that time and gen- erally since it has been held by base- ball servants 'that the Nmit of human endurance is reached at the conclu- sion of two games. lating great punishment, and it is but reasonable to suppose that sooner or later some records will go West. So far as this particular record is con- % | cerned, it is to be hoped they will keep it there. Tacoma won all three games by the scores of 4 to 1, 7 to 0 and T to 3. We suppose Spokane promptly claimed that if another game had been played that day the result would have been different. here that these records that have been cited are authentic. - ‘We should not have bothered to in- duct this testimony were it not for the fact that the record which we are about to spring almost passes the weéll- known Mr. B. Leaf. Here it is: “The Athletics of Philadelphia, in a game against an amateur team in New Castle, Del, on May 9, 1866, made no less than 19 home ryns and scored no less than 131 runs.” ‘We should say this is no less than enough! = Back in 1862—yon remember what a warm summer we had back in1862 —the general price of admission to all ball games was 10 cents. Most of it was worth that. -A few years later some of the boys got together in the annual league meeting down at the Waldorf and over the second bottle they decided that . in the future'it would be permissible to charge 25 eents for admission. It was feared at first that the public would not meet this stupendous advance, but even in those days the public was getting the old advance tagged on ’em and the price went through. It wae in 1869 that Cincinnati be- came the aristocrat of -the ‘baseball world by charging 50 cemts admission 7— 279, 94 104— 302 105 93— 343 A baseball game in forty minutes! | es at night, and even in the .day, but | erable night outside—cold, and a driz- 88— 312 | the spy -always eluded us. zly rain-was One day, while in a enmguniedjnn ~ About 2 in the morning 1 was trench, we were horrified see our | awakened by someone shaking me by Brigadier-General. Old Pepper, be- | the shoulder. Opening. my eyes 1! ing brought down it by a big private of | 38w a regimental sergeant major bend- the Royal Irish Rifies. The General |ing over me. He had a lighted lant- was walking in front’ and the pri- (e in his right hand. I started to him in the rear. he putihis finger to his lips for silence We saluted as the General-passed | and whispered: b his face and we could starcely believe | 0ut any noise, come with me.” our eyes—the Genmeral was under ar- | TRhis greatly mystified me, but 1! rest. ' After passing a few feet beyond | obeyed his order. i us, the General turned, and said in| Outside of the billet I asked him arrested me as a spy.” orders. I dom’t know myself.” Atwell was speechless. The sentry “Non o’ that gassin’ out ¢ you |for about fifteen minutes, finally stop- Back to Headquarters you goes, Mr.|ping at the entrance of what must; Fritz. Open that face o' yours again, | have been an old barn. In the dark- an’ Tll dent in your napper with the | ness I could hear pigs grunting, as if butt o' me rifle.” they had just been disturbed. In! behold. He was fairly boiling over |3 mack (mackintosh). The R. S. M. with rage. but he shut up. went up to was the General he had under arrest, I regiment, at the same time, but the sentry threatened to run his|in the light of 2 lantern he was hold- bayonet through him, and would have ! ing, making a notation in a Iittle beok. : and remained silent. I .was nearly | Whispered: bursting with suppressed laughter. i One word, and 1 would have exploded. It is not exactly.diplomatic to laugh Tt might be parenthetically stated The sentry and his prisoner arrived | see no one, but could hear :men at Brigade Headquarters with disas- 2 5 they seemed trous results to -the sentry. . I imow I was.; The joke was that the General had During my wait three otl personally issued the order for the | entered.. Then the officer po! spy’s arrest. It was a habit of the | head in the door and asGerad: Genmeral to walk through the trenches | ' “Fall in, outside the bilies, in single! on rounds of inspection. unattended |rank.” 3 i being new in®the regiment, had never ; he commanded. $ seen the General before, so when he “Squad—'Shun! came across him alone in a communi- There were twelve of us. cation trench, he promptly put him | “Right—Turn! under arrest. Brigadier-generals wear | —March!” And away we went. a red band around their caps. rain was trickling down my back and Next day we passed the Irishman'Il was shivering from the cold. ETQP!» ARTHUR GuY EveEY ‘Wwhich contains a blank,cartidge, the other eleven . containing _ball ridges. Every man is expected to do vate with fixed bayonet was following | @sk him. what was the matter, when !his duty and fire to Kkill. i orders from me.. Squaé—'Shun! We came to attention. Then he us. The Irishman had 4 broad grin on | ‘‘Get on your equipment, and, with- }left. My heart was of lead and my After standing at “Attention” hat seemed a week, though in reai- ty it could not have been over five a wrathful voice to Atwel! what was up, but he shut me up with: ; minutes, we heard a jow whispering “Tell this d—n fool who I am. He's | “Dor't ask any questions i's against | in our rear 2nd footsteps on the stone flagging of the courtyard. < Our officer reappearad, and in a low butted in with. ‘We splashed along a muddy road;but firm voice, ord i We turned aboat. In the gray Hght i of dawn, a few yards in front of ma. {1 conld make out-a brick wall. Against this wall was a.dark form with i Square pimned”on its breast. :We were supposed to aim at him, whispered - some- | squere. To. the right of tie form I Atwell tried to.get in front of the | thing and then left. - This omwg:?:uoed & -mii'é':z on sentry to explain to him that it reaily | called to me, asked my name, num- | This wwzld be my targe. { “Ready! Aim k 2 “form.sank into.a hudfled spot ‘on the ~wal; The General's face was a sight to |front of the door stood an officer in ! whis dane it too,. So Atwell stépped asids,| When he had fimished, writing ho| e it the biank cartridge, but my mind was at ease, there' was no blood of & Tom- at your General in such a predicament. | on the. floor in the darknees. I eowld | my on my hands. “Order—Avins Abowt—Tarn! Btaud—Clear!” The stacks were reformed. Right — Wheelt” laft ihe scene of execution was uow. daylight. . After march- b abont five minutes we were dis- by any of his stafl. The Irishman,| We fell in, standing at ease. Then'inised with rho folowing Insteartions {from ihe officer in comman { “Zetarn, alone, 1o your respective 4alking & . | companies, and remember, no Left—Wheel! Quick | about this affar, or ‘else it will go The { hard with the guilty ones.” To Bo Continued Tomorrow. to ball games. While it is true that|ducts and oats increased during the Cincinnati never has had a team it [same period. : was worth that much to see, far be it | Exports of wheat fell fram 90,166, from us to take any credit away from | 662 to- 29,533,826 bushels; pork ship- her. Anyhow. it is a matter of record. | ments decreased from - 871,078,192 Lost Six Games in One Day. °|Dounds to 551,384,576 pounds, and corn Manchester and Portland once play- AT Onte fooen DL T oL ed six games in one day, of the : X games being Won by Manchester. That ”:1"'" wm@hsjmh was on September 4, 1899. A band heef"me o2 7 e :d ffl-fl did not meet the Portland . team at|? products exports dncres oo the station when it arrived home. In|1481857€2 to 191,551,866 pounds. Oats| fact. there is some doubt. whether the |52l Portland team went home at all. } | In 1887 Tip O'Neill of the St. Louis |Stuffs exported for the seven montlis American Association team biffed the | Was $3TL797,743 as asainst $291.480.- and made 277 hi To- make the | $Z18607,573. average even it is assumed the other Exports of cotton and not hit the bal permitted to overrun first base. That|before to 3,072,449 bales, but higher |ing of overrunning it, and the rule|Pared with $388,302.548. home plate if he finds it feasible. and decreased 'in value from $3.991.- ‘Speaking of home runs, it exists as |®89 to $5937732. Shipments of min- of Cincinnati made seven of them in |to_1,472,969,212 gallons. June 12 1867, Harry virtually wreck- |gasoline from 243,857,335 to 238,008 ed all the buildings along Main street. | 318 gallons. | MORE TESTIMONY AGAINST ANCIENT RELATIVES OF THE i BIG CHICAGO PACKERS CHAMBERED NAUTILUS. Heney Alleges They Ran “Independ- | Group of Extinct Mollusks that Com- ent” Firms to Crowd Out Small prised Over 7/000 Species. Dealers. Chicago, Feb. Chicago packers eliminated - small | three kinds of shelMfish represent the {dealers in poultry and eggs by un Rt ] e et Ghvisione/of, the anbual tactics, that their agents lobbied | yingdom, which has existed since the against certain labor legislation.:n the |advent of %fe upon. the globe, many state’ capitels and that they sought |millions of years before the age of man. to increase negro help in their plants,|The cephalopods, the class which in- was_introduced today at the inquiry |cludes the chambered nautilus, are the of the packing industry before Sam-|most highly organized.of the mollusks. gel W. Ttator, sxaminer for the Fed-|They breathe by gills andlive inthe-sea. eral Trade Commission. Francis J. Heney of the rederal trade | living to-day, but the remains of more commission, aitempted to show that|than 7,000 species have been found the packers, Ry setting up “dummy” | embedded in frocks. One group of firms and by underselling the .small | cephalopods, the ammonoids, is now concerns had crowded many from the|extinct, yet the fossil remains of.no feld. 5 less than 5,000 specfes of ind Company, while serving on |very abundant and in an' anclent the federal food administration for $1|geologic period may for a long time a v with being especially active of the en. in the campaign against smail con- the scientist . these fossfl corns. e declared thar the W. F.|cephalopod, are of speciai value- as Priebe and Company, Chicago, repated {to be the Jargest "independent” but- tar and egg dealer in the country. and which he alleged is owned by Swift and Company, controlled a score of and poultryfand butter ege MWissowri, Mimois. and Town, operatiny them ‘mder “dummy” Gumes to make them appear as “independent” firtes. > “This was dome to fool the farmers’ and the public,” Attorney Hemey said. “In_ realitv all the concerns are own- ed by Swift and Company.” He then introduced a state of W..F. Priebe and Compauy, giving a list ot their plants and buying stations in JTowa, which he said was seized by agents of the Federal Trade Commis- sion from the files of the cympany aft- er the management had denied any connection with the concerns, previ- ously mentioned in testimony, except that.the Pricbe company mrerely acted as selling agent. s SR LA IR MARKED DECREASE IN EXPORTS OF FOODSTUFFS For Seven Months Endinmg Jan. 31— Includes Wheat, Corn and Pork. ‘Washington, Feb 26.—Exports-of im- portant foodstuffs, including wheat. corn"and pork, showed a marked de- crease for the seven months’ ending on January 31, 1918, over the period of the vear before, figures isswed by the bu- reau of foreign and domestic com- merce show- Rxnorts Af beaf meq. Special Rates to Theatre Troupea Traveling Mon, Eto. - Livery Conmection Shetucket Street FARREL & SANDERSON, Propa Phome markers of the geologic age of the beds in which they are found; they-are exceilent “stop watches” They were so highly organizsd they were .very changes in the cenditions of the seas 60 that thay were continually varying one set:lv;}c epoch to Fach ammonoid 1ived In a éhell that it made from its own as it grew it moved forward from time to time in its growing shell and ‘built * {a shelly partition behind itself. this way the shell became cha: An _interesting feature of the am-! ; i ids is the complete record of the ' ball for the modest little average of | 773 the year before. Meat and dairy jmonol S p 4952 He took part in 123 games |Products increased from $130,035,557 to|tace mmh ;fwmcrwggh in &e :?::r sensitive to! in form, from cottonseed | TouDs has shown that animels in their St. Louis team did|0il decreased during the seven months | individual deve nt go'through Chie the ball-at i Iu‘x);?yé;fn 191 the former falling from 4,340,810 bales e cossliaehe Prior to 1870 a baserunner was fot | In*the corresponding period the yeas |Uelopment of .‘hn::’nm‘m i h : ized animals with which | it W cided) that. & prices received sent the total vatue |bighly organize Jear it Was declded that o man WasS|0r cotton up fo $431704218 as com- |We are familiar, such-as the cat, the ucky to reach first base, to say series of changes that thus recapitulate 5 ancestral conditions and lines.of de- was changed. A baserunner now| Shipmemts of cottonseed ofi drop- ¢ ST . | verrins frat base, often as far as|ped from 77,362,718 to 29,485,309 pounds |Scent takes place.in minature in the Truns 3 : leaves no permanent record that can be ea;:g‘rt;»gmzed in the animal after birth. the am- a matter of record that Harry Wright |eral ofls decreased- from' 1,781,278,330 | A SRAme. SUS0 BiRn. 208 G400 in the shell which can one game against the Holt club of | - Exports of crude ofl decreased from h Newport. Ky. The historic date was 100,877,999 to 97.460,078 gallons and | fhroue! embryo " and all stages from the aduit back to embryo by carefully cutting zway the outer monoids reached the climax of their developfment * in - the Triassic period hough 'the group-was well J ic and A Vienma telegram .says that Count Czernin received the-women presidents Everyone has seen clams and smils, | of the Impertal Organization of House- imions i the sheilsof the |wives of Austria, who, on behaif of —Testimony intend- and ;’“fly have eeon T bty oty e o tE ed to substantiate, charges - that big|Dearly or chambeced These | - o tatming notes. from 100,000 ook ‘women expressing complete three main classes of the Molluca, one |in the Minister’s “peace GEORGE G. GRANT Undertaker and Embalmer 32 Providence ,St., Taftville Very few species of cephalopods are | Prompt attention to day or night: calls Telephone §30 apridMWFawl PLUMBING AND . GASFITTING T. F. BURNS HEATING AND PLUMBING 92 Franklin Street ROBERT J. COCHRANE GAS FITTING, PLUMBING, STEAM FITTING Washington §q, Washington Building Norwich, Agent for N. B. O. Sheet Packing fRON CASTIRGS FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY THE VAUGN FOUNDRY CO MODERN PLUMBING is as ‘essential in modern houses as electricity is to ‘lighting. Vle guaran- tee the very best PLUMBING. WORK by expert workmen atiChe fairest Ask us for plans.and-prices. J. F. TOMPKINS 67 West Main Street

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