Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 2, 1918, Page 3

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= e INSURANCE = INSURANCE WORLD'S BASEBALL RECORD SMASHED =<~ .- =™ St. Louis (N) Philadelphia (N) W npo a e an hoo P A, 2 Anc . 3 0 0 0 0 Fitzgeraldrt 2 0 1 FOR EVERYTHING Hosthetect 4 9.0 olbmentia 4 1 3 Paulette.1b 4 13 tock,3b 40 INSURABLE When Boston and Pittsburgh Battled For Twenty Innings|fomims s 1% 2 proieraw 5 1 Fiaher, 2 1 Meuselif 3 3 we & . v . . McHerylf 3 0 3 0 1|Wiliamscf § 3 il o Without a Run Being Scored — Pittsburgh Wins the |smsr & o 1 2 tmoniit ¢ o 28 Shetucket Street Neorwich, Conn, K Mcadowsp 3 0 0 G 0Jacoosp 4 1 2 Game With Two Runs in the Twenty-First — Nehf| | =~ 55573 nwe 5 . Rcore by inninza: 3 2 it 1 Louls .. ..........0 0.0 00000 | Pitched Entire Game For Losers—Grand Circuit Results. | 5,2, 20i00a0s i H PRES E Two base hits, Hornsby and Williams, HIG SUR S (Second Game,) . St. Louis (N) Philadeiphia (N) ! Boston, Aug. 1—A world's record for |of the Brooklyn Nationals today de- | \nsermonrt™s 04 1 0|Fitzgeratdrt & 20 8 o ‘ big league baseball of 20 innings with- | clared in a statement that he favored | Heathwow.t § 0 1 0 o|Bancrotse 4 1 & & 1 il out a run being scored by either team |2 joint meeting of National and Amer- | Paulette,lb 5 210 0 0}Stock.3h 40 20 was made today by Pittsburgh and |ican club owners to decide when the | Homsoyss ° 2 5 g g;“c"‘;\fi(“’ A HE sl ¢ Boston, Plttsburgh making two runs|season should end. = He advocated |pmer® | 2 0 8 Otmetl {0 28 0 1 in the 2lst and winning, 2 to 0. The | 3ames among the clubs of each section | Bronkte.sb 3 0 0 1 0|H'ingway,2b 4 0 2 6 0 previous no score record was 15 in- |of the country after the present east-‘g:n:lleu: 3 3 H f g.,&lfl:nr\:(c E‘ 3 ; ; : nings. Today's was the longest Na- |ern trips of the National western clubs | Posk» 2 0 . SIS S 2H ] tional league game played in this city. | and the western trips of the American| roms 3 11 e - it x Schmidt opened the 21st by singling | eastern clubs. —oa ; fi BE FULLY toleft Cooper. who ¥t relieved T e Scers by tonine ol i e i : Maver in the 16th as pitcher for Pitts- Leading the League. s LS ; 7 Pr COVERED burgh, forced Schmidt at second. Ellam | Two Smiths who were prominent in | Philaceiphia .. 00100000 e 5 . .| was thrown out, Cooper taking second | the major leagues last season are now Don’ be satisfied with only partial|on the play and reaching third on|in the army. Sherrod Smith of the insurance — carry a complete line — | Leach’s single to deep short. Carey’s | Robins is “over there” and Elmer METZGER'S COLUMN have us quote you rates. single to left scored Cooper and |Smith, with Washington and Cleve- = % Two base hits, Mclents, Pau'eite. it ISAAC S. JONES Southworth's single to center scored Leach. Nehf pitched the full distance for land, is in a camp in the middle west. However, the Smith family still leads all others in number of representatives “No Man’s Land,” New Army Game No Recreation For a Mollycoddle—A Insurance and Real Estate Agent Boston and until the 21st held Pitts- | in the major leagues. The Boston|{ TP 0 Messrs“_WiHard and Fulton. Richards Building, . burgh to eight hits. In the 12th Pitts- | Braves have J. Carlisle Smith and 3 P 3 3 91 Main Street | o failed to work the squeeze play, | Jimmy Smith. The Reds include|, L don't know who inv ented it. We Southworth being tagged out at the | Pitcher George Smith and _Catcher | Aeard about it one day in New York plate on Mollwitz's bunt, Nehf to Wil- | Harry Smith. The St. Lguis Cardinals | 224 as _we “f’e.l = RS 1"“ e tor | LAST YEAR son. In the second half of that infing | have Jack Smith and the St. Louis | Something to build up fighting spirit. 7. C. Smith bunted fair on the third | Browns Earl Smith. Jimmy Smyth | Which the Yank scarcely needs at that, 250 million dollars worth of pregerty | strike and Massey, who had been on |js with the Cardinals, but the fam- |We staged it one night at a big can-| was burned in this country; about 21| third. crosséd the plate, but Umpire does not need a ringer with a “y" | tonment If"{?““”if s o s Quigley ruled that Smith had inter- | to maintain its lead. No other family | Ptates, Fact of the matter is, George } million » month, about 700 thousand a | ;L & €T THTEC 0L o ; | by (ho Houre ast by fihy | Bryant, doing athletic work at Camp day, about 29 thousand an hour. 500t field the bunt. & h was declared | Sm * 4 = { Upton, may be the father of it. Any- dollars worth is burning while you |out and Massey was ordered back to| how, we put it on one night. d oy S The equipment needed is one stout read this advertisement. e e e R Cubs increase Lead. atTo: aDINTtub Toet (RIch aug abogt Is your property insured? played errorless ball, while bril New York, Aug. 1. — Chicago in- | four feet square, s of boxing B. P. LEARNED & CO. Norwalk quality does not start, nor does it terminate, with one cutstand- ing feature. It is built through and through se that if one man demands appearance, another safety, another speed and still another economy, each one gets exactly what he wants. That is because every good quality has been de- veloped, every inferior quality removed, by the science and skill of men long trained in tire-making. support saved Mayer in several in- | Ore: sed its {ead over New York here | gloves and twelve Yan! 5 nings. Southworth, Ellam and Herzog today, winning the first of its five- |from two different compani contributed choice fielding pla The | 8ame series with the Giants 5 to 0. |though, you advertise th score: | Vaughn permitted only one hi a|which goes by the moniker of Pittsburgh (N) single by Zimmerman’ in the second|Man’s Land” better than a * Agency Established May, 1846. tle | Brasieviini T inning. Only two other local players | Royal.” And if vou stage it befor FRISBIE-McCORMICK COMPANY B 3 27T reached first base, both on ba on | several thousand soldiers, as we did, A (- 3 3 balls. Score: you make good on your ad. - = . . . L h 1 B4l 10 0 H Brown&Perkins, Attorneys-at-Law | G 32 i o am ) Now York () We put six men, wearing each a pai Norwich, Connecticut P ; ? Shworthrt 9 2 6 0 ol L b a 4i0f boxing gloves, at one side of the | grer Uncas Nav Bank. Shotacket 8t | cuan 1 1 2 > ek L ; { | ring against the ropes facing the audi- | Nationa!l Ban 1 | Teeleohons 38.3 ofence on that side. The other 0|the other company, stood x, from | ey © o 0| looking out over their part of th. BASEBALL. SR ! t|ence. In the middle of the . 0 0| sitting on a wrestling mat, YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Totals 0 0|table.” We instructed the twe [testants that they could either 16 0)or box and that when the National Leasue. Chicagn 5, New York 0 2! Batted for Hen e 5, 3 |ea at the en Brookim 4. (3 i, ganes Ran for Mil o 0 o 5_;|minutes of mi Mg e et AT ? 8 8 & lhold his pos » e s E have more men on the table than American League. e other side. That is, when the 2 5.0/0:0106,0.0990 80 007050000 Superbas, | song rin Two base hit. Southw | " B | N Y. Aug J1-Jack| oW ed brilliant support from | Pattle ro n Nationais today and shut | the treat GRAND CIRCUIT. new | see [ the T ationals today an ARttt of i2 oo a \\nrll( and atrmav vou l:et a[not to go ahead with it. 2‘1:!.1‘" won a heat rter Oak TR b e ) Reid et ipei s Ll BAMC | ted 1o develop 1 spirit and mo~|gets primied and Atand has had aiiis|. ~(CoPyrisht 1918, Sol Met | s Dyie Card WitisBaxtar Lou and Un.if. - Chisssd (e S ermbl) B0l 2 T i i e uaon | e L A TROTTING GOSSIP { o b e Columbus, 0., | ¢ 070 0 0dbnstonst 47140 | continues nad rushing and of itself. No use worry e \ GAMES SCHEDULED TODAY. e s teh | Ll R e L oA o is goiLg to win. Watch B S (i s G Circuit card th g H wild ang B aesee it t 2 | acing stake, p 2 1 0|good bo. »w the nerve they have |2:03%. | r It owned by Yxn_rr, 3} 1 §|table, has an e b " PRI \ s 3t Philadelphta 0., won and toc o o o|DPopent who ing the goods. Nome of | SYPil Jay, 2:11%. one of the n r' himself of 2.03 1-4 ually gets about the war. Wars |3t Younsstown, Ohio, is a | 2.04 pace. three heats el 2 e : thing. But they are | vuth McGrefor, 2 | ; McMahon €. acting ¢ foFmovesnip ol the|| 2oo Ene issessac in STANDINGS OF cLues. Snow : ed Y job and they | half mile track at Wa = and Auto know it, b d that has to g Natioral Leagoe g 00 onn the best|be done. The sooner completed, the| John Dot Lo Lo 5t time, /2108 1°4: g g o x| fightinz game thit ll.around is the feeling, Quite | SMort to get Lizzle Brown, 2 e 1 2 ¢ 111, 54heats, purse Mg U | vet mun(u;‘]ul. No one of that grim sort of de- | TH! Box L 4 = Ja 2 phy 4 any more than in a boxin are going c rough | F2Ce s s 3 Tr:ddlrdf;nm:;dh’ Bexton 2/Stidumi. | fact, everyone is too b MG e e s b e T i " b Grove D ouis, Aug. 1—Severeid’s wild | hard wallop such as is s and it does. Don't | , The Hal B. pacer Hal Regent ' 0 | fhis Bincen MoCos in the eighth permit-|up a boxing match at a aimy " Get Baisep {2104 over the f-mile traci s | act and Sil score from that base | This game also has more 1d he will, believe me, | Kearney, Neb. He is rated as a ML T PSR R { started. run that gave Boston a 2 to|and tumble element of tren ort is of this rough | Class pacer. S <o P Bust’ iikie Louis today and a |than boxing and it beats a m There is play of mm— ; . | Oipara atin ] four-game series. |a battle roval in that there i ¢ for sheer amusement | . Tommy Berry is busy gathering i | purse_$3 000 | Score object in the contest than kind of play that keeps | the money on the 2w e e T = Boston (A) St. Louis (A) |hammer and tongs of 1 worrying. About every | Vania h i & 84 | 6o Pl \iter ot . 1 B 5 gt 2 2 ) +Iblows. 1t's a zame and a team work- has been busy working | Sam Hurst. 18 | Tee: OFana i Sturgeon =i ; £50 0ling together soon develops team work me to invent and perfect games| . S Lmis ‘ s 436 | Windsor Todd, Stou 10 o{in plaving it. Try it some nisht in the soldiers happy. In fact,| Guy Lee had S 4 a e 404} Abbe Bond and Mattic : 3 «‘.\Oulr own army camp jority of them are having | ‘Vilkes Brewer ; ml.\:!m won 3 st 2 0| will enjoy it, even the thei res My | amazoo and reduced her Mackmen Blank Cleveland. "ar:;:,dg,m@ 203 1-4 L Y| Ceneon 2y 0! finish With 'a smile them, | own be m\\‘;wlrx;‘e:h:l_x:f\ ‘:S‘\do}-}é\,b Murphp forcing her Cleve iladelphia | 21 trot, 3 in 5 heats, purse 0 3 0lSmerdae 1| mingled with a little blood here and ' most of the boys after getting home, | Chilcoot. won of the vear in |Chilcoot, Murphy 8 2 o|Leifeldp 0| there, the result of nose in 1 be camp- Camp-sick is aj ost eight | Heir Reaper, Geers b —isome other fellow’s sickness that is going to be pretty| ut of t Perry was in- | Glenwood B. E 34 i 2] Some folks m ver when readi read in America after this war. ROp T ses. striking | Miss Isabell M gor. M 10000001 ¢ these lines, claiming that such sport K Camp-si 1 that the boys will { P L 1 ear-old trot at | 6 ning “The | ¢ Donald 3 o it Tomioy) ©© 00080 1ilis too roush. But as far a mere ing for the good old days|Kalamazoo in seore Lucky Clover and Walnut i civilian ta;\ malxelm,z of it e the barracks, the days that On —H—‘f th o Philadelphia (A) o ( started. e Y is strong for rough spo: ire trying to make the hap- n the opening day o e meeting o L e | Phillies and Cards Split Double Bl | dotes on them. One fellow fold » That the onlisted men ever lved, [at Northampton~ Mass W. e Eopo 17 10 H e | Philadelphia, Auz. 1.—Jacobs blank- | recently that,he ran a sort of recre remember that, reader, and see |Won with Rosa Watts and fi 2 ol Ebbets Wants Interleague 'Series. :li\ J ‘lfl);'ou h‘fll :hei f}:st game of to- |tion cv"h‘n:,l at a camp where he taught don't turn out that way when they 'hmd with Bobby C. and Lord Locka- > . ' 8| B ok Aty Aent Rbbotelly auble I anc h{ladelphxa won | officers all sorts of games to teach the home ] v : ar. b4 g t Fibbets | 7 to 0, but the visitors won the second | men in turn. zames that w calcu- ill be comparing everything $ 2 4 4 i - = cptoee et ol L O o lateq to afford the men recreation the line of entertainment Fred Hyde won ree races last of 0"Nei i o when things were not going just right. | a to what he saw in the army. | Thursday at Northampton, Mass., with 0 0 1 0|\quilinp " He put a lot of games that he tho ts back home before the Wil- |Oscar Watts, Pati Dulut i ° 0 were a ittle rough. Af on bout, and it looks as |three-year-old fi . 0 over and the games h this were certain—he’ll run b . g effect in camp, he b s guys of the ring or jump in| The Michisan driver Sturgeon. ! -nine = |around to see what was doing. Met £ and lick the pair of them. It's [tWo good racers in South Bend G 0 of a lieutenant with a D he has seen two hundred |and Le Grand. The r won a heat | | games he had given, r fo- nothing back |from Oro Fino at Kalamazoo in nd “How are they work out?” he | And he comes acr 12:04%. o | MARKET-\rNiAV_S‘ERRATICA ‘lg.:”i:mu&n_m:g:e xs;: 8% | naturally inquired. ke in a mpionship : 002 0 i Bethichen Steel B “Fine, sir! thank yo came the | batt to demand his mon-| The three Huse | T t e 55 5 0| Leaders Fluctuated ldly Within One to 1 = # but haven't you got some rough S if Messrs, Wil-|by Caduceus Wich - il = 4 Two Point Limits. [ CAE & . 12152 | ones rd don't get their side Kan,, in | 1 ullin’s Homer Wins for White Sox % & = . | Chicag & Northwestorn' L1110 045 s ai%| When you rub elbows day and |show over with before the big fizht is er the Grea of the Wilt n's home | oW York. Aug. l—Lacking guid- ‘ 59% 0% |night with the American army and|wound up in Furope, I'd advise them |Rubber, 2:10, with which John Shill- ahead pg | 2nce or impulse from any responsible | con Gas (X. Y.j %0 @ | b ictors over | quarter, today’s stock market resum- | Com Prodict 8% 4% e The zame was a |0 its lethargic and inconclusive course | cueitle Steel - sex ey S % 305 | —— ween Russell | and | leaders fluctuating idly within one ware & Hudson 4 S Score two points, while specialties displaved | Distil Sccurities Wasiston oA = general heaviness. oy i 6w 2 e A | Prices opemed with an uncertain | gl ¥, Shotenit 4 0 401 0 oftrend, but the list immediately be- |Gt No 0 Subs - 113 £ 009 0lcame reactionary on moderate selling | Int Peper H 2 515 & 3| of rails. Offerings of that group were | it Paper 2 %7 g g|ascribed to disappointment at the 123 30 4 4 0|failure of the federal authorities to| Ls 14 faaak t‘r;nsumate contracts covering rental, M«;fi«r“! Motor " 1" Such issues as Union Pacific, Cana- e 2 527113 0| dian Pacific, Reading Baltimore and 2 | Ohio, Norfolk and Western, Wabash | | preferred “A” and “B” and Missouri| 000051 0o o|Eacifc preferred fell back one to al- : 500005 g o s|mosttwo points. [ New York Centrai”"" MM U. S. Steel remained unresponsive Y. Y. N. A & H. | New York oni & W . = . to the remarkable quarterly financial| Nomh' Bactor 2 statement, making a gross reversal of | Ohio Gas Yankees Shut Out Tigers. isli;:hrl:t]?" Biees When ons aoint and | Beserauie B H Detroit could get|closing at a loss of a substantial frac- | peobies G2s - aldwell today and | fr b | Pressed” sieel Car - 3 | tion on its usual large turnover . | Bs Steet 85 | game of the| Shippings, moters, oils and an odd | Reading assortment of unclassified shares re- |l I & S A) acted one 10 three points and tobac- | foes Isiand > 3 3| cos reflected thé absence of profession- ero Pacific o 2 5 o|al interest, although Sumatra made a m Ry 0 4 0 0lnet gain of 1 1-2 points. Sales were| 0 P . 3020 0|050600 syares. | Sentebaken 4 $901h & e i 3 9 0'5 » 8| The day's most noteworthy develop- | 30 0 0 1|ment was a sudden decline during the | 202 % tlafternoon in rates for call money 2 550 from 6 to 4 per cent, on offerings of | 20 5 a glarge amounts by a prominent finan- | U. &. ; ¢ 0 0 0 ofcial institution. The breax was without |.U: & Stesl 5t 1838 8|influence in time funds, rates holding | \etn o8 007 S — — | firms. Western Union Tel Totals 38 220 15 Domestic bonds, including Liberty | Westinzhouse 12 () Batted for Bedey i Tuh issues, were irregular, but the interna- | Wils Overland 19% Seors by funlcgas tional sroup, notzbly Anglo-French COTTON. Sew Yo 1410100608 07|and Paris 6's ed large fractions. . - o : ) R R AR R = Trar Vi, asfresaied 5| New Tork Aug i—Cotion utures Sguth Shore Country Club, Chicago, IIl,, As It Looks When the Shooters Hold Forth o S . - Bonds wers tinchanged on Mho s et T e L e b L B PRITER PG SN {of Chicago sportsmen purchased five |of ground, and the ground and club r hing Connecticut Entries in Grand Ameri- S A ] Editer National Sports Syndicate | acres of sandy beach on Lake Michi- | houses are el 1 among the show L ri fact, facili- can Handicap. e MONEY. The South Shore Cou gan adjoining Jackson Park on_the |places of America. The main club |ties for every ou At the present time Connécticut has STOCKE. New York, Aug. 1, — Call money | Chicago, IIl. south, and built a clubhouse. That |housq which was opened New Year's| The o ok o entrants in the Grand Ameri- o weaker; high 8; low 4; ruling rate 6; | Grand Americ was the beginning of the South Shore | night, three vears ago, is 530 feet long. | the end of t an Handicap—the premier hardicap | Anis Chamers closing bid 3 1-2; offered at 4; last loan | ing Tournament. | Country Club. It was indeed a happy | covering a s a of 90,000 square | Boule 1 svent of the Grand American Handi- | Am Hidt & L 4 | August 5. 6. 7, ¢ hought. The club was a Success from | feet, and cost $450 000. It is built on |Jackson Parks. sap Trapshooting tournament. The| fo oref T 1t i he start. -Prosperity made it possible | the style of the Italian Renaissance. It | in the world t he club tournament takes place in Chicago on CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. tan town and cou o purchase more ground and with ad- |is the I word in club houses. The Aug. 5 to 9, and the handicap takes CORN— Opn 1p. m Clos |worid. : 1 land came more beautiful club | dining an, rooms are beyond de- > men 2300, and place on the k tAugust R e The story of the South Shore Coun- | houses. seription by mere man. | the dues )30 The present entranes are W. E.|Am T4 £ L% try Club reads like a tale from Ara-| Today the South Shore Country Club | The vast acreage is dotted with oth- | yearly. The oper: Beers, New Britain; C. O, Hedstraw, | Amseans i e wE 6% % esy | bian Nights. extends for three-quarters of a mile|er fine club houses for the shooters,|club are about $240 Rortland. N Atchison A i 8% aeee 68 8% 8% About a dozen years ago a numberlu.long Lake Michigan, covers 67 arces|golfers and bathers, for there are!amount about $170,000

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