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Syracase, N. Y. Sopte10—a> weridfs-pecord for four—year~chd geld- smsewas swriten into wotting histery | | tofiny - atithe New TYork state fair | gramdcirenit +meeting, wien, =in - the 2-47 srot, Echo Directsthe. sturdy son o»f Wrho Todd and Victeria Direct, iirotted the third heat 4n 205%. In the fourth heat-Ben White*p ~4 the big roan, Heston, around the scourse 206%, thus bettering the mark which had stood*wntil Echo Di- rect's performance today. Chief interest in the day’s events ap- seareq to center in the three cornered pacing duel in.the§2:10 pace for the Syracuse stake of $3,000 in which Soldie Todd vanquished Senardo and rank-Dewey:> The Ka-Noo-No-three-year-old trot or a purse of*$2.012.50 went to Broth- r Peter while@rish Voter won the 2:12 straight heats. Summaries 287 trot. purse, $1.000,;three heat aton (WHIET .-t d ¥ % 1 ho Direct (Brusie) ... 31 2 (Jones) emeeoo.. B je (COxX)* oeee — 4 3710 Penn also-siarted i3 = irse §$1,000, three heat ¥ Noble’ r <¥ ¢ Pepper (Hyae) 23 McPherson) 3 2 s - Thomas) SARLAND OF YALE TO MEET REID OF CORNELL IN FINALS hes victory R to work ton sp eat J. W. Dudley of - he other semi-final of ropping the ETICS RALLY IN NINTH: BEAT TIGERS. SCORE 6 TO 5 g Sent. 10— Pimdh Rilling iphia_to in the five ruit 6 BELLANS Hot water '\/‘“,‘L W% => Sure Relief ELL-A NDIGESTION FOR NEWWORED:SRECORRMADE AT SYRACUSE -wile Dauss held the- Ath- leties 0 a single hit until the ninth iamdng. In this inning Wingo singled ‘and-scered op Grifin’s triple.’ Welsh's grotnder was fumbled by Bush. Gal- Joway forced Welsh.. Griffin _scorins. Strunk: walked, Burrus tripled. Gallo- way and:Strunk scoring. Walker hit a home rum into: the left field bleachers, scoeing Burrus ahead of him and win- ming the game. Score: Detrott ... 0031000105 Philadelphia .. ..0:0 00000066 ‘Two base hits, Veach, Young: three base hits. Cobb, Griffin, Burrus; home rum, Walker. INDIANS TAKE DOUBLE HEADER FROM YANKEES ‘Newe¥ork, Sept. 10.—Cleveland de- featediNew York in both sections of a double header here today, the scores being 3.to 0 and 3 to 2.. After Cald- well shut out his former mates without a hit in the first game, Uhle, a former Cleveland sandlot pitcher, defeated the Yankees in the second game. Scores: Cleveland 20000100 0—3 New York . ...000000000—0 Two base hits. Harris, Caldwell; home hun, Harris. New York ....10000000 1—2 Two base hits. Peckinpaugh, Baker; * home runs, Gardner, Pratt. GIANTS HIT HENDRIX; BEAT CHICAGO 7 TO 2 Chicago, Sept. 10.—New York hit Hendrix hard today. driving him out SERVICE THE B. B. STORAGE BATTERY t the bepx in :the first inning. and Sasily defeated Chicago, 7 fo 2. The AND WELDING CO. visitors accumulated 18 hits, Burns . and Kauff making three each. Score: Pl ne 143 92 Fl‘l llil'l Street New York 300001111 0170000002 % : base hits. - Young, Norwich, Conn. Barnes: three base hits, Ka CARDS WIN LOOSELY PLAYED ! 2 4 I | | GAME FROM DODGERS = § S Pl Mo., Sept. 10- “: 1-0‘\;!»\ three game series. We won the first, BASEBALL. pounded Mamaux for six runs.in the | 3100 5N SHies Ve mo” Yent 1o i \ rd today and won a loosely plaved | Sierling 61 TSR e i American League. \ game from Brookivn. 11 to 8. Score: | Moosup team.that has yet to meet de-| Detroit 5, Philadelphia - | Brookion 10010002 4— 820 e four straight out of four | Cleveland 3, New York 0. (First < St. Louis 008 0200 11 i h game.)) . % A 5 2 5 games played. This is the Moosup B. B. | §ame.) iy 4 Z et | | mwe base mits Tavan MeHenry, | S Reline never has even plaved | Cleveland 3, New York 2. (Second “no?"’ Hornsby: three base hits, Myers 2 the iMoosup club, but have plaved All[#ame) o oo o g Hallow's K. of C. and v for thu e o , s. REDS BREAK EVEN IN third and deciding game Sterling plays, St. Louis-BBoston. rain 7 = S 1 : 1 SERIES WITH PHILLIES | (he K. of C. bovs. They will make you National League. f Cincibuatl, 0. Sept 10 as fast as you can step. If! Chicago 2. New York - | in excellent form today and outpitched t arrange for the third and de-{ Cincinnati PPhiladelphia 0. | Hog®. enabling the league leaders to | ciding game of the series with the K.| Roston-Pittsburgh, wet grounds. win their la game with Philadelphia, club of Moosup, why don't send a A . A . , 0 Score @ the Norwich Bulletin sport merican Association. Philadelp 0000000000 page and say that I refuse to pl Columbus 3, Kansas City 2. (First or Cincinnati 00020000%-2 you the third game. But, oh, thatline [game.) % : v| Two base hits, Roush, Duncan Sterling! * Is Moosup Afraid of Sterl-| Columbus 1, Kansas City 7. (Second B —_ — ing 30 out and get a reputation first, S&A‘me.n 2 S : % MOOSUP DEFEATS x Sierting. Couisville 2, Milwaukee 8. Kizh: off the bat from Moosup base-| Toledo 1, Minneapolis 4 cents 3 N L INDEPENDENTS | banl headquarters. Indianapolis 8, St. Paul 6. / Moos defeated the fa ew ‘”,: HENRY LONGHRAN International League. don TIndependents on g - Large Manager Moosup B. B. Club Bingt R | ground, Moosup, last Sunday afterneon pci, { F\-mgn kmion]-r\ocx.v. ter, rain. three sebles. —Mopsup won the irmst|T1o GAME AT EAIR | No other games scheduied game. 7 to 6 and last Sunday Moo GROUNDS SUNDAY | = won the second, 7 to The Worc s the baseball season is coming io! GAMES TODDAY. . Prof's were to have played, but the |a close Norwich fans will no doubt be | Nationa! League. | Moosup manager went to Danielson | glad to see the final game of the sea-! p .. ¢t Pitisbursk play ng displeased with the Sunday, when Crowley's Colts will | Aly ene stme acheduled ng they made cancelled their ¢ play Jack Clabby Norwich Stars. American League. o Moosup of Sunday. They For the past season Crowley's Colts| Chicago at Washington wn In o track as T read in |have had things their own way with! St. Lewis at Boston Shornins's nifetin They | local teams and appear (o be the fast- etroit at Philadelphia ik the catioae They | team in this section, not being de-| Cieveland at New York. {aid send one baek, but don't think tha ted s season. But this Sunday | R they had to stay in Danielson all S the Colt's lineups will appear such s aient, Tor the dviver at the sar | men as Kiien, Patten, Smith and, Alli- | LEAGUE STANDINGS. Bt taal 036 WOIG Daveltttinhs n. The I 0 being members ! American League. em back and as there was only | Of the first ba team o introduce | W t ther the other four and my- | the national game in foreign countries.| Cincinnati . 6 sel brought down from the Con- | Both men we members of Clark|New York nect Mills ball grounds to the hotel | Griffith’s all 1 ieam which| Chicago |and had ample time to back i played in Py Stadium, Paris, | pittsburgh to cester Saturday night. We Seven weeks ag won the cham- | Brooklyn ! \ play baseball here in Moosup and | Pionship of the Patten and i 3oston t d [ R bt I ¢ don't think for a minute we pai on|Klien are and have|sSt Louis B { Ak bigg! | 2 anything but real stuff. Now can vou yed with bro teams; phijadelphia | . get the drift for me sending the W ,,,._J:nv'uufi::.u\lx: Ne This quar- | i ‘ 3¢ I.S a t. | e ihat nad that article put in Alonday | Should make a_wonderful lineup and omestic 10baccos ended mornng’s Bulletin under the Connec- |0 doubt will make this game an m- | Chicago .. i) T HE S 9 | v they think th Connecticut Mills has { Detroit ‘ by b 7 e any chance or even a lookin with the | DENNIS MURPHY HAS ! York | ‘.\hmru» club, why, just speak up, any FRACTURED SKULL | St Louis i — = time Murphy. son of Postmaster| Boston | ; T | Respectfully your sports. Ay iacton ! tit Ivania last|into the inner workings of the Jap-|you know, the Japanese language ir| T I HENRY LONGHRAN Toledo American association | adelphia 3 etk Figee buind phonetic, whereas 1t Chinese 18| yore 15, In s . " Manager M B. B. Clul in a hospital with fractured | ‘ . M. Crothers Philadelphia, was About 1,500 vears ago, when we in- | hieroglyphie, her: s, in ne 3 a oo | = Sunday he was hit by al pg | high man on the victorious squad. He/|troduced the Chinese civilization into| “Buddhism was first introduced in- Sciousness, a t th € 3 | moosup AnswERs itchea and knocked down, wut, PENN TEAM BREAKS | broke 99 out of 100 blue rocks. J. G.lour country, we copied everything|to Japan through Korea in the vear 552 | pendent, lifted i 2 | Stose Guliidly nodtwsleen B whe feig | 484 OUT OF 500 TARGETS| Martin, Harrisburs, cracked 95 and Ed | after Chinese fashion. At that time|A. D. At first Buddhism was embrac- | |l Ihe sturs, €hinir rr T i STERLING'S QUESTION | | not discovered until yesterday| Atlantic City, N. J.. Sept. 10— Penn. | Do Scl, Pennsylvania state champion, | we had no national alphabet. There|ed by the higher ciasses, pa ¥ |'i& the thought of fd | Sporting Editor Bulletin: | that his skull was fractured. He was|svlvania won ihe State champicreiny| Was third hih in the squad with 97. | were some sorts of signs to express|among scholarly circies, but the lower e thought of ide 1 | In answer to the write-up of the| chaseq recently by the New York|today at the annual shooting touoral Frank Troch acific coast cham-|ideas in writing, and even these signs|classes or common people still clung| Fou, whoever ire, ne for me | Sterling team I wish to say that while | American. ment of the Westy Hogans. ~its teamn | D topped both his own amateur|differed in different parts of the coun-| to their old faith of Shintoism. | —Walt Whitman. I managed All Hallow's K. of C. F. B.| SR 3 3 gans | field” and ‘professional as well He|iry. The Chinese had a highly devel-| Those who believed in Buddhism went | 1b of Moosup, Manager Kelly of the| A humorist savs the joke that ism't| broke 139 e e M.lope type of hieroglyphics to express|so far as to copy the ceremonies and sk d private is no ghing matter others 9= ST, S UTS, | yheir ideas: therefore at one time the|ritualisms. The doctrine of Buddhism|™ d for second high gun honors among| Chinese hierogiyphics took such a|was written in the Chinese language LEGAL NOTICES Maon pures” with : hold on the mind of the Japanese|and the believers offered t prayers | e———o | ‘D»()“:dr-: R A Soers| that we adopted them as our national|in that tongue. J z jof ] a, and J. Morr - S: | language. t 3 . s eth racoias, of i At one time Buddhlsm mad, cha D s C B o |~ “Tuis period might be called the era | stride “as to. become amost a state| DeMmocratic aucu 66 2” i 5 i fon. Fortunately there came | religion, but the common people Still| .. e { the most famous scholar|opposed it, with a determination t ’ | CLARK HAS BEST GROSS we r had—by the name of Mabie, | yphold the own Shintoism. Consge ¥ | ©*"Scone AT arawamis Links] Who telumi fom ShATn 35 K7D IDANIA, el v Shinenm, S ’ ot in'ca Rve N. Y. Sapt. 10 flliam Clar! € ina many years for his n betwee: wo religior Rudd ARE A VERY IMPORTANT EVENT AT OUR STORE score n {he cenlors" towmament over| 12 58" n his mative. countra, and. ho| o7, And-Shintolsm in the hearts of the | Officers the Apawamis links at end of 36| gty ountry, and hef common people. Such a contest a l T = amiale = e 5 i s 57 ot s el invented out of the Chinese hiero- || EeR lawtr dtentii tn" ) Tex —IT’'S A PARTICULAR TIME IN WHICH WE AR- o Sy e | gispaics the forty-seven character but finally the statesmen | | n tha ou phahet, founded upon the prin- | br b 1 = RANGE A SPECIAL DISPLAY OF | the -3t e cipie e’ phonctic language. As| ther Tno lonper eouid ah CAUCUS | LT MeCov of Glen N. 3 i i people a blind imitation of Bud N | won in cla: A with 19 M. M hism, and they changed their e | Sheedy of Altoona, Pa.. was low in - e land tried to find out some mea | | class © with 177-24- an wil Ttalian Duke To Visit [ meet the requirements of the a | liam Jarvie of s Rock: oldest | N Here again we reach. the s man in the tournament. had 198-52-147. | United States | adaptation | Dr. Jarvie is 78 vears old | “They Invented an ingenlous theo | e second half of the field will tee of explaining and Interpreting | up tomorrow. while the international | T | religious principle of Buddhism. Thev S - | match between teams from Canada - adapted the theory of Monotheism as 't 1 { and this copntry will be plaved in the i Py well as Polythelsm by saying at =17 SV IN 7 S E- 1 af v 15 en o i T 5 ar ona Supreme *owe ) AND ‘DEVOTE EXTRA WINDOW SPACE AND et R bee inlbe - Thimen fon o B Bl I e T g ) Town & . i nich s personifie he form ot T : INTERIOR DISPLAY TO THE SHOWING OF THE S ol o : The Willimantic Rovers are without BENLURCERS S Taus hep vdoonofls th e ¢ a same for Sunday. the 1ith. and Bidaniam with the Polyiheletlo theory g THEY ARE DESERVING OF EVERY EFFORT AND PROMINENCE WE GIVE THEM, FOR THEY ARE TH | NEW FALL STYLES. { | | ARISTOCRATS OF THE HAT WORLD. YOU CAN SEE HERE EVERY STYLE AND SHADE OF HAT THAT IS CORRECT FOR THIS SEASON’S WEAR. YOU WILL APPRECIATE THE FINE QUALITY, THE SMART STYLES AND THE ATTRACTIVE NEW SHADES. ' J. C. MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank suitable | Conn.. | evening at [ letin from | by would like to play any team offering a guarantee. Address D. P. 2§ Center St. Willimantic, call Willimantic 945 any 7.30. Haggerty. or inner Workings of the Japanese Mind. “What manner of folk are the Jap- anese? What sort of Gods do they wor- ship? . What kind of Jaws do they have? “These are a few of the questions the western world is asking in view of the universal interest aroused in Japan’s controversy with China about the Shantung concession.” savs a bul- the National Geographic Society. My way of renly the bulletin quotes from a communication to The Society written rise to as fol- Baron Kentaro Kaneko, before the world war gave these controversial questions, low: “The Japanese ~ have a character. When they come in con- tact with a foreign civilization they always go through three stages of evolution. First, they pass through the stage of imitation. At this period they " imitaté evervthing that comes from a foreign source, and T might sav that they blindly copy.” But after some years of imitation thev arrive at the stage of adaptation: then at last pculiar COPYRIGHT PRGSS ILLUSTRATING SERVICE, N. Y. Duke D'Aosta, commander of the Italian Third Army during the war, and eldest cousin of 'King Victor Emmanuel, will soon make a visit to the United States, accord- they reach the stage of origination. These three stages are clearly shown by our history, if we only examine ing to report. He will then go to China and Japan. Shinteism “in erder af te onny the popular Registrars of Voterd mind wlth this theory njeror Shom large bronze wsiatue of Dal!buts e o L R Notice years in easting and construction AR She “In the beginning of the hirt th e Votin century thers was one priest by the PHURSDAY, 11th DAY OF religious histery as ane ™ & Martin Luther, He revolutio ed the of Buddhism | up to that time upheld a mo- fundamental prineiple by a new dooctrine, for Buddhism strenuously nastic 1ife, and the priesis were com pelled to live In cellbacy and abstain from eating any animal food. But t this famous priest, seeinz the popula i mind “already turned toward Budd t hisn{ started a doctrine that a ¢ priest, belng human, is just as much b suscep laymen, and abstinence > from human wants Is against the laws ¥ of human nature, moreover a priest must live among the people so as ia otl Af understand the real na of man and woman; therefora a mo- nastic life should be given up and priests should eat antmal food and cey ure nnd feeling married, if they desire so to do, Fr this period tho progress of Budd J.' DOWNE with this now doctrine was woader irars ters and took compiate hold of the popt - — mind.” e e WHEN YOU WANT (o put your bus Some men have penny wisdom and [ ialum hétier han (hiougl (he adt ¥ poung foolivhusks: vertising columns cf The Bulletin