Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 29, 1918, Page 3

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INSURANCE .-INSURANCE FOR EVERYTHING INSURABLE # L. LATHROP & BONS 28 Shetucket Street . Norwich, Conn, Don’t be caught INSURANCE ' after - the R victory of the season Saturday by de- feating the Norwich Y. M. C. A. by the 'score .of 7 to 6, It was a close, ¢lean, hard fought game. It must be taken under oonsideration that the Y. M. C. A. boys did not have the prac- tice that the Stomington boys: had. However, the Norwich players knew how to take refeat, and one would think after looking at them that they were the winning. team: Stonington played a good game. Sheehan’s all ‘around playing ‘was the feature of the game, while Wheeler, ‘Brown and Rosen played a good game for S. H. S- Leonard, Stonington's star fullback, spoiled the P. M, C. A. chances for winning when he kicked a difficult goal. If he failed the score without | would have been 6 to 6. Crimens, Norwich's left ‘guard, fur- nished the amusement throughout the See us TODAY. and: have|®ime, 2nd Coptain Williams aud Kear: your property protected. The lineup: Dependable Insurance —| S H- & Yane Expert Service. ISAAC S. JONES Insurance and Real Estate “Agent Richards Buiiding, 91 Main Street —_—_—— NORWICH TOWN Rev. William Crawford ‘of thé First Methodist church conducted the Sun- day afternoon service at the Sheitering § Arms and delivered an eloguent ad- Bight Lad. dress. He was ably assieted by the choir of the church, with Miss Edith Dodge at the piano. The duet His love and Care Mrs. B v Mrs. Bushnell and | gy Miss Martha Brown was finely ren- red. Eve Hath Not Seen, also solo shnell, and My Wonderful Dream, soprano solo by Miss Brown, were given with fine expression. ‘Sev- Walter Fish . S. Hussey e Miller .... ves.. Sevin Referee—Zellar. Umpire—Gilmore. Ik Ve g o the plegh Timekeeper—Fairbrother. : of all TNUhat a Feiend Wé Hace in| Substitutes for S. S. S—Miller, Jesus was sung inspiringly, Rev. Mr. Garrity and Wheeler. Crawford requesting the members of | ‘Substitutes for ¥. M. C. A—B. Wil- the houschold to join in the chorus. liams and Hildetbrand. The subjeet of the afternoon was The ATOE TEG Tree of Life, Revelations 22 2-14. Rev. Mr, Crawford eaid 1n substance: e vision of these verses is one that nts to us the giories of the C BRIDGEPORT HIGH DEFEATS BULKELEY 64-0 At DBridgeport Saturday the Bridge- It is one that we love:port High school eleven defeated the to lock uncn and think over. It is a | Bulkeley High school team by a score <icn that does the soul good and|of 64-0. The contest was one-sided Prinzs peace to 1t when the sorrow | from kickoff to final down. n. the yme Th water of God t of the sun, th t redu®s the beaut! keloton by eritical e or improbable his Tree of Li sfving provi Ationa may he the la Lord's prayer. Miss Elinor May Greens of 161 Town after vis- Herbert urned homn ndmother, M 9 Fountain strent. Japan-American War Trade, sures £how teen article: United Stat imported in whicn is larze enough io cla d of the free | g the harae of the brave. The meet- ng closed with all uniting in the T the Japanese for- eign trade for the first four monrchs of 1015, issued by the Japanese de- rartment of finance, Tokio, ‘throws sceme interesting light on the trend of |result of the furthe: that country’s trade. Of the seven- pain and the cares of | The Bridgeport team was minus two beauti- with its river|ter, Hayward and Hawes made a g down from The fruit-bearing | The features which stood out most of the river, the ! prominently in the game were the line of healing, the | plunging of Baxter, Hammil, Hay- from sin the city 1 where night is un-|some flving tackles. no need of light! The lineup: 1 dark ¢ of iits best players, but Hammil, Bax- strong backfield combination. ward. Hammil also came through with Bulkeley. Bridgeport. Stewart . . Galbeite Betan .. iivioais Marnsfield ........ . Cremens Manning Brown .. ... Billings .. Mitchell ... O*Connell Capt. Grembley «.. Brewer Adamson .... Dingivan .. Kearney Leonard .... Capt. Williame €. A LOSES T0 STONNGTON, 76| Stoningten High won her second|’ Left End. . cienen Mumhy Left Tackle. aeet Wlters sasess Miller «... Kimball Howard Lett Guard. Noyer . Slutsky .... MeKeon. .. Right Guard Fitch . Sullivan. ... ]<‘ullback Summary! Touchdowns., Hammil 4, Baxter 2, Hawes 2, Hayward, McCar- thy; goals from touchdowns, Murphy 4; .referee, Reilly; umpire, O'Connell; time of periods, 12 minutes. ETERNAL WINS RACE" BY A HEAD Laurel, Md, Oct. 28—Eternal won the six furlong race for a purse of $20,000 and the John R. McLean me- morial cup at Laurel today, beating Billy Kelly by a head. The time was 1 minute, 12 seconds. Eternal took the lead almost imme- diately after the start and kept it for a few seconds, when Sande on Kelly closed the gap. Schuttinger on Eter- i nal nursed his horse into great speed and: nosed ahead at fhe barrier. The winner paid $4.40 to win. SPORTS BECOMING MORE POPULAR N FRANCE Sport and war were strangely min- gled in the recent Seine swim. the big sport event of the ‘vear in Paris. The hero of the race down the Seine through Faris, a distance of about 7 1-3 miles was not the winner but the man who flnished last of the male competitors. He was Charles Nunges- ser. the champion aviator, who though still hampered by wounds not yet com- pletely healed, his left lez in fact be- came useless early in the race, pedsev- ered to the end and finished in: 3 hours and 42 minutes, receiving a greater weicome from the thousands liring the banks than even the win- ner. The French are not usually regard- ed as an athletic nation but this race, organized every year atiracted thir- ty-one entries, of whom twenty-six started and twenty-two (15 men and 9 women) finished; without counting the veteran George Paulus, aged 58 the winner of this event in 1903, who gave an exhibition swim cominy in sixth. The winner was George Michel, a gun- ner in the heavy artillery. whose time was 3 hours 3 minutes. The first wo- man to arrive, Suzanne Wurtz, came in sixth in 3 hours 19 minutes, fol- con- fusing tendencies manif>stel by to- 2 active stock market lacked plausible explanation on aay sround other than existing uncertaintles at home and abroad. War news again was almost wholly favorable to the peace groul. but do- pessimism ' which found its outlet in irtermittent selling for the short ac- { count, A general demonstration of strengrh marked the broad openinz but much of this was dissipated before the ex- riration of the first hour, largely as a speciaciular course of certain specialties. Chiefl among these was Mexican Petroleum, which advaneed 11 1-2 potnts, reacted sify, over 50 per cent. of the toral im- | twenty points and closed at a gain of rorts in nine came from the [United|1 1-2 points. States. Of the remainder, two show | The course of U. S. Steel continued over 20 per cent. from America, one|to puzzie traders who expected an over 20 per cent, and two over 19|upward movement of thar stock pre- cent While the condition is|liminary to tomorrow's _quarterly rgely due fo war conditions and war | statement. Steel regist: a frac- conditions and war needs .th> value|tioral zain at the outset, daclined al- of this t ade In its possible after-war | most three points and ended «ffects cannot be lightlv estemed. The at a loss of two points, war shares making vir- war hae created a market for a great|tvally no recovery from their rever- many of our products which will be most urgently in need of new outlets wkhen the wars demands cease.—-Com- merce Reports, Early Decline: If the truth could be discovered, £3ls of one to 2 1-2 points, and coppers, the latter denoti ficent accumulation, though Sales were 975,000 shares. Returns submitted by railroads op- probably it would be found that one |erating in western and southwestern reason why a woman lives longer than attention to statisties.—Dallas News. thankful were of an optimistic character. eign issues steadying. Total =a'c par_value, aggregated $7.950,000. . S. bonds were unchanged on c.xll 'STOCKS. Sales. 100 Adams Px .. | 100 Arr Rumely I 400 Ad Rumsix pr 3200 Alaska Gold M 1000 Alaska Juneau 200 Allis Chalmer . 100 Alls Chatmers pr gi C ... FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS Orders Delivered TREES AND SHRUBS Maplewood: Nursery Co. T. H. PEABODY Phone 986 200 All G & W 1 pr 36600 Bald Locomo THE DIME' SAVINGS BANK OF NORWICH, The regular Semi-Annual Dividend | 24800 RBeth Stesl B has been deciared at the rate of 4 per| 500 Deth Steel 5 pr . cent. a year from the earnings of the| 1000 Brookyn R T past £ix months, and will be payable i e on and after Nov. 15, 1918, FRANK L. WOODAR:D Treasurer. oct22daw ARE YOU OBLIGED to clear your throat often and do you wish you didn’t have to. Just try some of our BRONCHIAL LOZENGES and see how they clear away that thick feeling in your throat. 15¢ a box at DUNN'S : PHARMACY 60 MAIN STREET Del-Hoff Hotel EUROPEAN PLAN HAYES.BROS., Props Talephone 1227~ 28-28 Broadway 500 Balt & Ohio 200 Barrett Cy. 709 Ratopilas M 1000 Bums Bros 200 Bute Cop & £ 13% Butte & Sup 500 Cal Petrol 2200 Can. Pacific 800 Cent Leather .. 3160 Cruefble Stoel 100 Crucible * Steel 2000 Cuba C Sugar 300 Cube C S pr 10Del L & W 200 Den. & Rio G 11100 Dome Mines .. 3600 Dis Securitles 8100 Erie FINANCIAL AND COMMERGIAL wor'd is in a turmoil, the MARKET WAS CONFUSED. = when we are zoing t0| New York, Oct. 28.—The very unity¥. "God grant that mestic politics imparted a tinge of More stability was displayed by rais some of their gains at the h=avy close. sections were highly encouraginz and a man is because she doesn’t pay any | lrade reports from those territories Bonds were irregular, Liberiy 3 1-2's hardening after early recessicns, for- 200 Gen “Motor pr . 200 Goodrich B F .. 4100 Gt N 200 Gulf 50 Haskel Bark 200 Tilinols Cent 899 Ins Comper 200 Tnterh Con . 100 Tnter Con pr 500 Int Har uew 4500 Tnt Mer Mar 30100 Tnt M Mar pr 130 Int Paper 200 Kans City So 39100 Keuneeot. 500 Lack Steel . 2400 Tehigh Valley Silver 500 Owens B M . 20300 Pan A Pet 7400 Pan & Pet pr 3400 Pern R R 2100 Pecples G & € 200 P Mamquette Phila Co. Pierce Arow Pierce 0il Seaborrd A L 200 Sears Roeb ... 200 Shattuck A C 4200 Sinclair Ofl . 100 Sloss Sh S & T . 54500 South' Pacific 5100 Southem Ry . 300 South Ry pr . 17800 Studebaker Superior Steel Union Pac . Tn Pae pr Un ‘g Steres or’ 5100 Ttah Gopper .. 0 Vs s "Corp 1400 Wabash pr. 300 Wabash pr 800 Willys Ovor . 100 Willss 0 pr 200 Woolworth .. 300 Worth Pump .. Total sales 967,150 shates. COTTON. New York, Oct. 28.—Cotton futures opened firm. December 2040: January 3000 March 2957; May 2040; .July Sp'nt cotton quiet; middling 3170. MONEY. New York, Oct. 28—Call - money strong; high 6; low 6; ruling rate 6; closing bid 5 344: offered at 6; last lcan 6; bank acceptances 4 1-4. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Righ Low. Close. 1813% 15% 139y 125% 1% 1233% 1% sk — 0% Lk R3% Th istseen 9% T e R ‘,\ v / o N e e L i i i ter of regular habit. This i tration. i 2 you havel g = taste there is to a well- i = baked baby pike, for in- stance. i R it’s toasted. HH FH 2t r_"t‘b 2 It's + i i i i i : : lowed by Juli 21 mintes. Women took t horses had come together 3 the leading shows, | but the decision of the judges had al- ways before f and but one bein; Gardelle, only thirteen ye: a handicap of half McGibbon, three T in ]msl known professiorial riders| Johnny Loftus, the premier Jockey, were among those who [will ride next year for the Glen Rid- hand on Radiant , for he is as eccentric as he is[Riddle of Philadelphia. For the hardest | past ring to manage at|contract of A. K. Macomber, the Cal- Miss Sears in the count had tried their ENGLISH FLYWEIGHT PAID IN DIAMONDS and | When the British horse in the show her- v a|of the present camp: and |race until the war i “pic- perfect per- and forbade pound flyweight, xcept a trophy for his Jimmy . Wilde, to put up a which awon the blue. TIPS ON SNIPEisHOOTING | If You Are i Will Pay to Read This Article. London, on 2 cated situation D purse of $20,000 for winning in twelve ! which did not know what to do wtth The, authorities reward of any part in a professional boxing should be a trophy a limit on rvice man who took but mllml to Dut‘ nd the locks, c the it win copceivable | fiavor, ch.a grain ammerless gun is the best “Sl weight, has been selected definitely o moters solved monds to the his end of | in snipe the ch any kind can | Ritchie Mitchell, Pal Moore, Den- have doubtles skimmock | sibly Leo Schneider will be the other while' on the he price at which he would in order for the second buy e A than nothing. whole Iot better ourself with the be- than no stool at all, {haps better | 3 formed tin or wooden stool. The Reason Why. but well- VERSATILE MISS SEARS TO RIDE AT HORSE SHOW | Not content S lawn tennis, golf, polo, y: There are many be placed to R. Sears of Boston, is distinction for a rider and driver at She is one of the women work -for the succes Horse Show at he horse shows of the National | Square Gar- to | from influenza. to | endeavor to make the one-hundred-|leeward every Red Cross realize even more than the | $63 000 gift of the Horse Show them up in water if possible; great war relief the water will than those on land. organization In the string sh at the Garden M superb chestnut s two marvelously lightweight hunters is_going to show 3 spread them out thirty stool are surprised at and if twenty-five or vou will be owing they wi the er little trick in set- ting Oul stool that ofttimes gives the | contract to Jimmy Dougherty in stool | Philadelphia, are becoming restive -Up, and a pair of natty harness ponies, better shot. ht of the blind; aftew you have shot vour first barrel{may accept Curle: the rest of the bir s fr ¢ the top of fash-|well to the William H. v odd entries. the versa- tile Boston sportswoman will be one of the largest exhibitors at th): \edr< Horse Show, she has entered has been pmrhawdl or imported from England since will which is much | Britton in training for a bout in Bos- handier than turning to the left for|ton with Ted Kid Lewis. Jack is the next shot. SPORTING NOTES. Derrill Pratt, the New York High- is another |King’s trophy to be.held in London bail player who has announced his in- tention of quitting the game for good. ended Pratt went to Lebanon to work for a|has been announced. He took his degree into- a flock, be to the right of you, who has six and nearly r horses never show i Sears is in so well as the saddle or demonstration Newport last summer, defeated Twilight, last National Horse Show. when Radiant steel plant. mechanical engineering in “J he went into baseball several years ago, and when hg arrived at Lebanon he merely was taking up the same work for which he was_, educated. Pratt v |sees a future in this line that base- { ball did not hold for. him. dle Stable, owned by Samuel D. season Loftus has been under ifornia, who sgates that after the end en he will not over. Mr. Mac- onber’s contract with the jockey ex- pires on Nov. 1, and Mr. Riddle t no time in arranging terms to the rider. Among the most promising men It {out for the Fordham football eleven is ‘Ryan, a Maine youngster. who played halfback on last yea lege. s Boston Col- no | There is one big annual sporting taken of get on the bolts, , between the hammers im the holes event that you can’t seem to down in | and if | this country, war or no war. It is {the New York six-day race. As usual e a decidedly international | the allied nations being 1 represented. %Cal” Delaney, Cleveland light- as one of the boxers to represent the Great Lakes Naval Training Station in King's trophy bouts at London next month. nie O'Keefe, Jack Heinen and pos- members of the Great Lakes team to make the trip. Baseball magnates are already considering the next world's series, | evidently thinking that the war will | be concluded before the opening of excellent reasons | another season. lee- According to a report from Van- a rule and ing to stool always come in lenu\ was anpomted a camp boxing 3 vs are to windward of your blind you will have g your neck i while with stool snipe will be in plain | instruétors who went to Camp Gor- { couver, Tommy Burns, former heavy- weight world’s champion, who re- the hospital in a { He is suffering It is hinted that some of the boxing don to take a course of instruction in tick | bayonet work, were remarkably apt stool in |pupils and are now qualified to go show up much better [over the top and show the Hun the Do not make the |latest wrinkle in that style of war- in one |fare. Jack Curley i reported to have’ of- a 00 guarantee 5 per cent. to box in Newark, the club not being named. The boxers, who are under over the delay in the Quaker City and s offer. ew York have Jack evidently intent on having that 19th scrap, even though'the Englishman is a cripple. A boving tournament for the cham- pionships of the allied fleets and the on Dec. 11 and 12 will be participated in by picked teams from the Great Lakes and other training stations, it Mulvihill, who has figured promiscuously as a fight pr~moter, AT more fish and "~ less meat—as a mat- helps the Food Adminis- Think what a variety And think what a delicious, savory : Cooking performs mir- ST acles for raw foods—and HHHE for raw tobacco. “Cooked” tobacco is better. s Lucky Strike Cigarette— RIK oaste without producig much aside has been asked to aid in the war work sports campaign, as the promotion, How any one is going to promote a fight in New Haven i Connecticut for charities or otherwise is an interest- The state has put lid on the fighting game and y can consistently {ing question. Billy Miske of St. other boxing instructor who will re- de of the water that he may show our bo\s who go acress Paul will be an- w called l)atrlotlc modes[\ Xale is reponed agam to be “hen we really will believe that there is a chnace for sport among the Eli S. is moticed that | very careful not to mention fight tin his telegram accepting the request-lo tile big war charities campaign. However the big ¥ be cornered on this and if so his only way out may beto see something “Willard 1is | propositipn ‘Washington infielder, and says he intends to stick to at the Gre:it Lakes Training school the baseball team. The Penns; vania eleven is certafh- ces this fall. themselves were now it is the head coach's turn. Folwell is down with pneumonia, even it he recovers will have to Jim” Coffroth of Califorg u\acll\e several months. is trying to inject in the east a up against himself into s He is using started by former Holy Cross athlete for his Naval Unit eleven at Harvard put through a signal drill i the ends ran under punts. Georgia Tech, which has three years, 'Y another era. And that was.in the days when Leonard Wood, general in the United States fought under i of a century standard a quarfer THERE 1s no advertising medium;in Eastern Counecticut equal io The Bale letin for business results.

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