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INSURANC INSURANCE FOP EVERYTHING INSURABLE J. L. LATHROP & SONS 28 Shstucket St, Norwich, Conn. IT:S SOUND BUSINESSQ S INSURANCE AGENCY fike you do your physician—it's the ONE WAY to secure adequate, ec: nomical, DEPENDABLE protection. You cant go wrong in selecting THIS AGENCY. ISAAC S. JONES Insurance and Real Estate Agent Richards Building, 91 Main Street CHARLES D. FOSTER FIRE INSURANCE Tel. 78 161 Main St.| SMITH-WINCHESTER MFG. Select your co. DEFEATS STATE HOSPITAL baseball team ay afternoon Hospital baseball on there own ! 9 to 4. The ed defeat for visitors getting and two in the| and three er- »nsiderable. The | did not score getting one two in the The hospital a Dbatting | and ninth was_two inning. Fish- Smith Win- i airtight m ating tune hits Godfrey man | B a close | three oubl: indham jams and honers, eac two 1th N Columbia ndh v W m. Hospital s Mase e "hits, Dono- Adams and BOARD OF BOXING CONTROL ANNOUNCES LATEST DOPE York, July The board of | statement that but| hird rest Dempsey seconds ¥ as a s0 de- Toledo on rd round. These result of nu- | ived from all TURNER LEAVES INDIANS ! TO PLAY 2ND WITH ATHLETICS| s s. Mo., July 14 ¥ Tur-| ne the Cleve Americans has| - o nd base for e ¥ t w er will | Cleve- | ] at | TENNIS PLAY ENTERS FIFTH ROUND Chicago, July 14.—wsmim T. Tild-| was with St. Louis last season and en, Jr., of.Philadeiphia and Samuel | came .to the Phillies'in .a trade last CUBS WIN 5 TO 3 VICTORY 4 OVER BOSTON BRAVES oston, July!'Ti—Chie: Hardy of Chicago, today won their | winter. Score: s e way into the fifth round of play in the | * Ginciaati (W) B SR T A SR R national clay court tennis champion- Cab h'po s e ab ‘hpo a e mhi"‘ by - Vahgbfiia Heor ships at the South Side Tennis club, |Bathab =4 0z 2 ¢ LB S L DY ) 5“",!‘__.“ ik and will clash tomorrow in what is|Gmncs ’ 3 3 3 8§ o et s o expected to be the feature match Of | Rousehet 4 4 1 0 0 1:1 00 P mppekpee s 5 o 1 50 play to date. 41200 214 8 0 | Holiocher.ss 4 531°%10 Fifty-nine matches were played to- ety B 553 b o | e 2 . s day. 90000 2720 0 yerkledb 4 1 10 Tilden defeaged C. L. Johnston, Jr., 50200 T o | o 4 s e of Chicago, the former New York fllenc e . < | Dea I 00 z que. 10010 1| Mt 4 3003370 player, in the fourth round, 6-2, 6-2. I %Atha®, 1 o o o o ilierc” 3 Pooowo Hardy'in the fourth round eliminated | Fiberp” 1 06 1 0 aghnp 4 Chaers” 0 0 oa e ‘Alfredo_Marasigan, the last of the === . = Keathia 200 three Filipino players who started, iy Towls 34 3 i Tageiser 11 070 0 6-1, 6-2. 00010000 0—1 | Totass PNty ® &8¢ 0500 x—8 {z) Ran_for Gowdy in. 2th. GOODYEAR WALLOPED BY HARD HITTING ASHLAND A. A. A. severe blizzard struck the little town of Goodyear Sunday afternoon gained the lead in the National league defeating Pittsburgh 5 to The Giants won in the third in- | ning, knocking, Miller out of the box. Callaban, Whitted. ROBINS CONTINUE TO WIN BEAT CARDINALS 3 TO 1 hits, ‘Three base bit, Packard. double in the ecightk accounted for the Tun that gave St. Louis a 1 to 0 vic- - over Philadelphia téday. a_pitching battle between Naylor and ,, . Daubert, Luderus,” Clarke, Itewas (7z) Batted for Chenes in th. Soore Ly Innings Chicago ¥ Boston ... .. Two_ bese , Lits Pick. 011 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 Three base hii. hi hland A. A." snowed the s Gooa: e‘ahre L‘::m under by the score of | __Brooklyn, July 14—Four hits and 130 1 Iiberty pitching for Ashiand | Konetchy's fly gave Brooklyn . three|INDIANS GET 7, SENATORS 1; pitched his usual good game, allow- | runs today off Ames in the first in- EVEN UP THEIR SERIES ing but two hits, one of which was a|ning and defeated St. Louis, 3 to 1. Cleveland. July 14.—Cleveland scratch and struck out nine men. He |Score: evened up the series with Washingion was at no time in danger, Goodyear’s st Louis (N) Brookiyn (N) today, winning 1 to 1. Harper = was lone run coming in the ninth on anin-j, .. 42 & o § 5| wild and ineffective, while Jasper kept field error. -~ . ) 3MMieriv 5 013 0 1|jebasion.26 ) o|'Washington's seven hits _scattered. Ashland’ pounded Page at will, and |Siock3s 4 1 4 1 o0fGamtn.er o 9 [His own -error _saved . Washington fast base running coupled with- loose|Homsyse 3 1 1 2 0Wheatic % 0| from a shutout. Score: fielding enabled "Ashland to lead at|M&ienii’ i o 36 olkonmch I3 washington (&) .. Cleveland A3 all_stages of e game. Tavarias 4 0 1 4 o|Kitdur: ab b afel b The Ashland outfield, Jarvis, Ben- [Dheeferc { 1 : 1 ofo.Mliers 1o 115 0 glemeni 3 4T 0 0 jamin and Cyr are cach attributed [ARGE ' 2 0 0 1 1 2 akes 0 0. 0.0|Spenkeret i With at least one sensational runming|sCemone. § 0 0 6 6| Totals 13 2 0 ofWood.rt Kl catch. ; TxScmultz. 1 0 0 0 0 411 1 ‘elcardner B Suliivan, playing ' centernéf foe| - —— ool 5 a5 o0 Goodyear, made several _difficult b . ()" Batted for Ames in Tth. 41138, 20 Gatches which prevented a much! (xx) Batied for Goodwin n 9th B3 3 E larger score. The tabulated-score fol- | | Seore by innises. L T T lows: v z : : Sohngen 1 0 0 0 Ashtand 3 Goseyear SxPicinich 1 0 0 0 Jarsisr 172 0 oSttt 2 o 5. 7. E TeCaire s T 1lGagnen.® s 6 21 8| WHITE SOX BUNCH HITS x) fox Pnmer i Tt Raney 56 303 pliateicw Soesi) OFF JONES; BEAT CHAMPS | Craft i ean, 110 (fFacheec 3 12 2 0l Chicago, July 15—Chicago bunched! Washnx 000 353 HEanrr, 2 977 0 1 |hits offt Jones today and defeated | "o "Gese hits. Menorky. 010 0 ofBeuandr £ 1.0 0 o|Boston, 9 to 3. E. Collins’ home run| Threc bare hit. Sneaker. 212 |casinglt 1 0 1 0 »|in the fourth inning which scored two e — B runners ahead of him, clinched the BASEBALL. e e game. Score: YESTERDAY'S RESULTA 0 1 5:3 0 1=n g S . g e 00 000 11 [jamaret 4 51 of ‘Basmmn 4, Yo 3o Struck out, by Liberty 0: by Larkin 0. Bases | 1ttt b 123 o | S Lo T Tl = on balls off Libens 2: off Pasc 3. Two base hits, 2.1.3 o ‘L‘s!"n“d “phia Janis, Banes =nd Fal irs 0 i = Chatlenge For All Hallows. 108 : e The Colonial baseball team. has an O e 24 9| Bosten Chicago - 9. epen date Sunday, July 20, and would| "= 3 0 @ ¢ ojWilimsp 2| Phiseiphia o. Louts 1 like to play the All Hallows’ -team of | ‘iois 23 52410 1) Totals o1 ol Moosup. If they wish to play they| Scere by innuig i can call- Manager Woodmansee ati &oor .. - A e 1 345-5 between 7.30 .and 8 Tuesday or| ' Tws base Felsen (2), Buth (2], Shan: | New Baven 2, Watorburs | Wednesday evening and make ar-| non. Home run. Colin: internatienal veague. rangements. == Reading 2. Biogbamion 4. — ATHLETICS SHUT oUT S s GIANTS AGAIN TAKE LEAD BY ST. LOUIS BROWNS| Newark o, Toronto = IN LEAGUE; DEFEAT PIRATES| St Louis, July 14.—A bace on balls American Astociation. New York, July 14—New York re-|to Weilman followed by Bronkie's| Mimuke 1 Columbus GAMES TOD Y Naticnal Lea:ce. Pittsburgh at New York. g Four runs were scored on four hits, | We:lman. i o pu & . : A Cincinnati = Pilladelphia including a triple by Chase, a base on| The score S Cuicego at' Boston N balls and an error by Miller. Score: Phiia St Louis (A) St. Louis at Brookiya. Pittsburgh (N) New Yok (N) = - A ican Leagus. o el 5 n %o ofronie s : st Cleselapd. Bigreect 5 10 0 O[bumsiwe 4 = H s . Philadeluhia 2t St. Lou: 42 1.6 ofVoungrt 4 0 0 [Wiliams et o Now Yok at Detrott. 1210 0fFietchers 3 1 oy : Toston ar Chicagn 3 0 5 0 ofpaims & 1 S (; - 41 1.4 ofaumer 3 1 H e . B Mollwitz1b S 114 © oZermin3b 3 0 o 0| Piustela =t Warcester . Catom3h 4 1 0 1 ofChasedb = 3 2 e X H Haricrd - Springfiel 209 0 IlMcCartze 3 0 i New Haven 3: Waterburs. 13 0 ofCauses 1o % idgeport at Providence. 013 ofwinienn g 8 0 10 ofpucs” 20 e 3 - LEAcuE STanDINGS. t 13 T Tofals 30 1 e National Le: . Tated arison in oo 5 3 00300000 B szeh, 005 80,008 8 TIGERS HAND YANKEES Circinnat To base "hits, Caion. Schmidt. Three THIRD STRAIGHT DEFEAT! /i Siiade - e N | Detroit, Mich., July 14.—Detroit" won | Ir its third straight victo: from New| ] CINCINNAT!I REDS DROP | York ‘this afternoon, taking the first 3 TO SECOND PLACE IN LEAGUE! Philadelphia, July 14. — Cincinnati lost first place today as the result of an 8 to 1 defeat at the hands of Phil- adelphia. The locals launched batting! ., , 3 1% & onslaughts in the third and sixth in-!ppsushs & 0 1 1 nings against Luque and Mitchell, re- |Bakersh 3 0 2 1 spectively, dri both from the box.|Ledslt 4 0 4 o Manager Cravath announced that| R he had traded Pitchers Jacobs and 200 Woodward and Infielder Baird to St. 31 ° Louis in exchange for Pitcher Mea- | %3337 o dows and Infielder Paulette. Baird! Totas 50 & of a scheduled double header, game in Rain first inning. halted the second Score: New York () HEAVY BUYING MONDAY. New York, July 14—The week on the stock exchange opened with a continuation of last week's buoyant and varied dealings, further heavy ving resulting from the large ac- cumulation of orders over the recess. Agzain the movement appeared to be NS ESTION ] G TASTY TIES Nothing so definitely reflects a man’s good taste and groom- ing as the appropriateness of; his tie in color -harmony and style with the balance of his | attire. Selection from this extensive and refined variety guided by the expert advice of our sales- men is a service that assures! correctness the careful dresser. One Dollar to Three-Fifty. J. C. MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank. DK.A.J.SINAY DENTIST Rooms 18-19 Alice Building, Nerwieh Phons 1177-3 THERE 18 20 ed i Comnecticut causitto The Bul jatin for busimess results. (] | industrials rose to 10 per cent. just be- Brio Erie Erie dicated on easy financial conditions the numerous optimistic surveys and opinions from various sections of the country, these being tempered in measure, however, by indications of crop deterioration. week’s bank statement proba- an added factor with its in- se of excess reserves. Call mon- eld for most of the session at 6 6 1-2 per cent., but the rate for all Gt Int Int Int Int fore the close, even 12 being paid for small loans. Western and southwestern scepula- tive interests were credited with much of the new buying, which concentrated to an unwonted extent in equipmetns comprehending the steels and iron shares and motors and their special- ties. N Leaders of the movement, whica lost little of its vigor despite extensive realizing for profits, included Crucikle Steel at a net gain of 17 poiats and Baldwin Locomotive and Stutz Mo- tors, each zaining 10 noints, with the Max Crucible Steel Delaware Dome Fisher General Gt o North Tospiration Interboro Con Interboro € Az Az C¥p o Harvester Inter Paper pt Kennecott Lenigh Valiey Maxwell Motor . Mazwell Mer Marine Merchant ew York Central People’s Gra bt vt Cip s Paver sta Motor Mo, N H & H latter at a new maximum. Pjcrce - OiL Bethlehem Steel, American ~ Car, | Ray Con . American Locomotive, Central 'Leath- | Readine: ... # er. leading coppers and allied metals and several of the motor subsidiaries participated in the movement at two to six points gain, but rails were rala- tively backward and shipping failed to retain their early . gains. Sales amounted to 1,850,000 shares. Greater weakness was displayed by sterling exchange. Francs also yielded and the general trend of foreign remit- tances was favorable to:this country. Liberty bonds were steady, but - bond list as a whole was without ma- terial change. Total sales. oar vzlue, aggregated $11,175.000. Old U. S. bonds unchanged on call. sTocke. ATl Chaimers ctrs w A T o i ars Am Am in Am = 3%, st Butte “Co Canadisn Pacifie Central South Pacific New. York, July stead, New .York. . Ju) steady; middling 36.60. 20 4s. $%s, MONEY. (14— Can 7 1 ciose of the market. COTTON. NEW YORK ez 1Mz 1847 3 to 0. e money. ; high 6 1-2; low:6;' ruling rate 6; closing bid 6; offered at 6.1 loan 6;' bank acceptances 4 Ten per cant. was bid for allindus- alsat ta 14.—Spot - eotton American Leag W the [ 3 £ Wooden Boxes. / At a recent convention of box-mak- ers it was urged that people use more wooden boxes, that a demand for them would help up odds and ends of lumber, and fhus prevent much of the wastage now going on in that indus- try. Today there are So many easy jand popular ways to decorate such convenient receptacles for one’s be- longings. that even the woman who | thinks that she has no artistic ability whatever may, with little trouble, make the boxes in which she keeps many of her belongings as attractive and good-looking as her more impor- tant furnishing. Mrs. Bondfield Assails Peace Terms ast COPYRIGHT CLINEDINST, WASK.. Mrs. Margaret Bondfield,of the - British Labor Party, now in thi country as fraternal delegate, has séw.‘.wn o to- |- o poor work : tested the brether, Bowels, ‘alds the " What is Cast (CASTORIA is & harmless substitate for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing, Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphins nor othet Nar-" cotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For.more than thirty years it has beeam 4n’ constant use for tie relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrheeay - allaying Feverishness™ arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and. assimilation . of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. " The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Frieund. . : 3 : The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been.in use for over 30 - years, has borne the Signature of Chas. H: Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. - Allow no-one to deceive you in this, All - CGounterfeits, Irnitations and “Just-as-Good” are but Experiments that trifle with -and endanger the bealth of Infants and Children—Ezperience against Experiment. ¢ Have You or CASTORIA ia Tried It? ) 4 Everybody has read the above headline ; how many believe it ? 3 . Have you a little-one in the hom e, and has that dear little mite . when its stomach was not just right felt the comforts that come with the use.of Fletcher’s Castoria? You have heard the cry of pain. Have you heard them cry for Fletcher’s Castoria ? Try it. Just help baby out of its trouble tomorrow with a taste of Case toria. Watch the difference in the tone of the cry, the look in the eye, the wiggle in the tiny fingers. from pain to pleasure. Try it. You’ll find a wonderful lot of The transfermation is complete— information about Baby in the booklet that is wrapped around every bottle of Fletcher’s Castoria. ceNnuinNe CASTORIA Awwars Bears the o veie CunTABR S EARY MY YRR B s Signature of Water Stored in Piants. A birch tree stunding in the open s heen found to give off more than 00 pounds of witer per day. A man | auipped with two ordinary water iils would have to make 32 trips in | arder to carry this amount of water. If he had steps up to the top of the| tree and could make a round tep every ten minutes he would work more than five hours per day to carry ti§s amount of water. This evaporation is @ large factor in raising water to the tops of plants. Recent investigation indicates that this molecular diffusfoh, which’ we call transpiration, exerts suction throughout the whole vascular system of the plant—leaves, branches, stem and roots. The contained water Seems to be.under tension even to the tips of the roots.—George B. Riggs in Science. and Blame. People of good sense allow liberal discounts ‘on all they hear. Both praise and blame should be put un- der the same ‘culling p'ocess. More | people are rendered useless to society . by praise than by blame. It's so easy ' to turn the head of those who have little in them to hold them steady. eople of stamina are fully aroused | by injustice. It's as much a challenge ! to- their ability as it is an insult to cheir intelligence. They won't suffer much by being falsely reported. Un- truth is not any more pleasant to them { than it is to thousands of others, but | | it reacts differently. Criticism puts| them on their mettle and they sift the report for the facts. Then they are ready for business. ' Camoufiage. An Indianapolis lawyer had occasion to reprove ome of his small sons the other night. After giving him a lec- ture he made him take a chair and sit | quietly for half an hour. It was very | hard for the little fellow—especially | i 8o since his clder brother was watch- | ing him, rather amused at the whole | performance. Finally the littlé boy | could stand it no longer. “Papa,” he| called out, “make Jolin quit laughing | at nie.” ““T'm not Jaughin’ at all,” pr “Indeed I'm not. The younger boy stared indignftly at | him. “Well, you may not be laughing,” | he finally admitted, “but you've got a | mighty pleasant expression on ,your| face.” ' n - First. American Bishop. The firét American bishop was Sam uel Seabury. He graduated from Yale in 1748, - studied medicine at Edin- burgh and:was ordained a deacon and priest in England in 1753. For.many years he was in charge of a “living” at Jamaijca, N. Y., and later removed to New 'York city, where he practiced medicine to eke out his slender income as a clergyman. He was elected bishop in 1783 and consecrated the fol- lowing , year... His first jurisdictjon voiced a vigerous opposition to the - treaty of peace. She said thai rhe working people would ultimately control the Government of England would revise the document comprised -Connecticus and ' “Rhode Island, and’ he also was rfector of a church in. New London, Conu. Bishop Seabury died in 1796. Strange Inventions. In enumerating some of the strange patents sanctioned by the patent: of- fice, a writer mentions a_tornado- proof house, the invention of a Brook- Iyn man. It is built on a pivot, so that every Ureeze turns it with its | head to the wind. Among other inven- tions is a “pedal calorificator,” with which one can blow tpon one's toes to warm them. It is'a tube worn under i the clothes," with a branch leading to each foot and a mouthpiece at the top. Then there are a polisher for false teeth—merely the end of a corn- cob stuck on a stick—a sanitary pock- et for carrying chewing gum, a wood- en bit for preventing snoring, a noise- less alarm clock that yanks the sleep- ér's arm instead of ringing, enother that starts a mechanism that.throws | him out of bed, and a machine for counting eggs as they are laid.—Sci- entific American. Patron Saint of Football. In November is the festival of St Brice, who may be called the patrom saint of football players, not alone be- cause his feast-day comes during the season for the gridiron game, but for quite another reason. St. Brice's day was long generally ohserved in Eng- land, and in the year 1002 the celebra- tion took the form of a general mas- sacre of the Danes. It was on that day, according to tradition, that the Eng- lish game- of ‘football was invented/ with the, head of a Dane as the bal St. Brice, of course, was not responsi- ble for either the massacre or .the football game, having died some six | centuries before. He was a bishop of | Tours and lived in the fifth century. Ancient Helgoland. | Centuries ago Helgoland was at | feast five times its present size and-a | place of no little importance. Like so. many islands, it had a peculiar attrac- tion for-the.peoples of. the surrounding mainlands. They stood in awe of It, and mythology claimed it for its own. It was here that Forsett, the god of justice, had a temple, as had also, ac- cording to another tradition, the god- dess Hetha, a special object of ven- | eration among the Angles of the main- land. Later on It was the realm of the Pagan and Radbod.—Acadian Record- | er. ! Water-Saving Plant. In the desert of Sonora, Mexico, there is a plant, the guarequi, Which | husbands :ts water sypply. The guare- qui is ‘@ relative "of the squash and | inhabits “a pumpkin, and locality in | whicl' practically all’" the ' rain’ ‘falls within a period of six-weeks. ' The | base of the stem’ is 'swollen to form a | hard, woody structuré, which in time attains the size-of n large squash. Tt | is really nothing more than a végefa: ble reservoig designed to.hoard up the. scanty molsture And dole out the pre- clous, fluid in time of need. . - £ * Altar vs; Haltes Sald the facetions felle body expects a wedding ceremony to go through without a hitch.” | invitation to ease and coolness, they, | be well advertised as y The Apple. The apple'is the commonest ana yet the most varied and beautiful of fruits. A dish of them is as becoming to the center table in the winter as the vase of flowers was in the summer—a bou= quet of Spitzenberghs and Greening# and Northern Spies. A rose when 1t blooms, an apple is a rose when It ripens. It pleases every sense to which it can be addressed, the touch, the smell, the sight, the taste; and when it falls in the still October days it pleases the ear. It is a call to a banquet, it'is a signal that the feast {¥ ready. ' The bough would fain ‘hold it, but it can now assert its independ- ence; it can now have a ¢areer of its own.—Burroughs. A Retain “Perspective.” We say of a painting that the “pew spective” is gqod—meaning that we can see far ahead, beyend the appar- ent backgromnd to imagined beauties still further in the distance. Many pee~ ple have not this perspective; they see only the pebbles and shallow wa- ter in the’ fereground and, stepping te dabble their feet in the first pleasant s losé the call and lure of the deep™ pools and forests farther on, content to stay at the half-way.house, even, forgetting that they once held a faint vision of castles of accomplishment tnvention. of, Monacle. One Interesting, thing about the mo- ocle |5 that the feshion +f wearing it was introduced: at the covgress of Vi- enna, that eongress which remade the map of Europe. Sir Horace Rumbold, In ‘writing on the ‘subject of the origin- of odd fashions and customs, says that n Dutch exquigite, Johnkheer Brcele, was the first min to wedr a mgpnocle, and that he then sbowed the then new fad (o' the diplomats and others assem bled at the congress. . After that in troduction the fad spread to-all parte of Eurape, but it took its deepest hold oun the English w -to-do élasses. Cosmetic Art. From the looks of some of the wom: en when it turns cold, it Wwould he # good proposition to' sell ~ differert shades of powder for hof, warp. coof | and eold weather. They say tha the sell different shades for day anc nfght™ —white for the davtime ‘and blue for . use under artificial Jight, =0, why' not’ tor different degrees of temperature a¥ well? However, probably some bright genius has already thought this up and patented his compound and it may ngf , —Grit, Eyeless Oysters. . The oyster has a good-sized stomachps which is connected with the:mouth by short guilet; two pairs of gills fo? breathing, -an intestine, a dark’ green liver, o two-chambered heart and’ an elementary ' nervous syStem,’ but® 18 minus_ears, nose and eyes, It, also lacks the footlike appendage that many mellusks: posseéss fon the reason that it has no need of an organ of locomotion.