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KIND! Flowe FOR MAPLEWUGD NURSERY CO. ! PEAE Nickel Plating UNITED METAL MFG. a purse of $2,500, -the feature of the . Lakewood. track here todn,v race went to Grace lx).u-ect‘m The popalartevent ‘of ‘the -day .was the battle between “Pop” Geers Murphy for the first horiors in' by - Geers., won' ‘by .making . two. Murplfl ‘took " second phco in | pacing: Homefast (Geers) ... Wood Patch (Murphy) °.; Colonel -Bidwell :(Cax) " 7.: Bessie Dusin (Tracy) ....:. Patchen Heart also started, Best, time 2.04 1-47 2.09 'closs trot, purse $1,000— Tou Todd. (V.:Fleming) Gentry C. (Geers) Ed H. (Young) Best time 2.11. DANIELSON BOYS EVEN 2 ikt Casino and aften Central Village won the match by 16 pins. match is scheduled for Tuesday, 14 for the deciding story. The boys will be ready and their backers. McKenzie, Ce: Village's star bowler showed un started things. Capt. Pelierin some very good bowlere on the the Central Village team money or marbies. Central Village. Schoeld 98 M. Burke 88 7 McKenzie 103 Reed L. 100 E. Burke ... 122 511 | Totais | Pellerin's Bang Up's | Marthay . 107 109 107 Pellerin . f8— Bacon e a5 aad Rounds S0 gy Barber 121 FINISHES otale .. 500 408 491 1 at AT THE PALACE ALLEYS Palace League. Rookies CO,, Inc. s oA * Norwich, Conn. Barry 92 and Satisfactory Work \\';r“‘h‘ }r‘): | - Totais . st d T Gas Burners IS and 1Y€eS oo ... %" u.u» ALL OCCASIONS s Delivered v Phone 986 ERIEF STATE NEWS AT THE BALTIC ALLEVS Baltic Fontaine 10: & A M.|Garrett ting | keon { Rood | Totals . e locat| | Plaineld w 5 107 106 e, 8 essy BE. Towe e In his jured 10: 101 508 465 115 | THREE AMATEUR BOXERS FOR ariford.| New York, Oct. 13.—Three am 1 boxers earned the right to repr the United States in inernaional S naments in Denmark, Norway sut his “work,” ‘= congre- | the finals of competition held here to- “a “snap.” night by the Metropolitan Association of the Amateur Athleic Union. Franklin Machine Company seph Burke, Pitsburg; 135, Frank winners were: 175 pound clas: sidy, New York, and 115, A New Orieans. NNY DUNDEE GETS Telephones: Providence, R. 1. Union 963 Ugion 1857 Lawrence, Mass., Oct. Engineers Founders Machinists | | referee’s decision o lu A meive Manufacturers of HARRIS- - re — o 28 - Manufacturers £3f HARRIS-COR- | (707 The men are lightwelgnts. Gear applied to all makes of Cor- \LE .. Engines, Engine Repairs, NO REST FOR. VALE Shafting, Hangers, Pulleys, Bear- FOOTBALL SQUAD MONDAY ngs, Counlings, Clutches. New Haven, Conn., Oct. 13.—There Large stock always on hand. was no rest for the Yale football General Mill Repairs. squad today, although " the coaches Special machinery of all kinds. were declared to be satisfied with the HAND AND BREAST DRILLS REAMS AND SOCKET WRENCHES KEEN KUTTER Don’t Fail to See Our Lime of Pure Alumimwm Ware THE HOUSEHOLD S .. ‘Atlanta, Ga. Oct. 13—Grace Direct, "ariven by Beck, won the 2.05 pace for opening of the Grand Circuit races at heats, th best time being 2.0211- e the 2.12 pacin ‘gevent which ‘Homefast, driven 8| YANKEES TAKING THIRD MONEY . Navin, president of . the Jeague has filed with the: National Commiis- slon ‘a.:protest against allowing the to diyide series spoils assigned to the team finishing Johnson - _organization | at $100 but did not find a purchaser. Navin bases his protest on a point,of | He was broken to harness in March the ~ground | and made his first start that those games which were won.by !when he won over a half-mile track pitcher Carl Mays should be thrown| Mays had been suspended by President Ban and a ‘third. Wood+® Pau:h,..nflctsd UP WITH CENTRAL VILLAGE A delegation of Central Village bowl- ers motored to’ Danielson Friday night to bowl the second leg of a match with Capt. Pellerin’'s Bang Ups at the ning the first two games the Bang Ups came back strong in the last and Another for the bowlers ness when Danieison’s heavy artillery and would like to match onme of his men with any man that has bowled on for INTERNATIONAL SOUTS Swede next month by coming through 1 DECISION OVER KLOBY 13.—Johnny Du.idee of New York was awarded the showing of the Blue eleven against CIRCUT OPENS IN THE SOUTH)| North Carolina, last Saturday. Heville, halfback,-who has been of the game because of injuries, turned to practice. 'Df. Al Sharpe the regulak cosching . staff. wers sisted former Fli stars, Suding Prane. £ the The Jacqu and o NAvm PROTESTS AGAINST ok | Frank I 4N Detroit club’ of -the members of -the . Yankees that -portion * of _ the., ‘world third.in’ the baseball law; he takes out: because of. the fact that Johnson, of the American league. In this attitude Ruppert, following statement recently. “Mr. Navin's protest was filed win- ther |action on same.” local County, Mich, an action ntral easi- d president troit basebali has club, from doing team suspension of Mays. On the date Judge Webster issued an ,which still remains in full ‘effort, which order. the Detroit baseball company, ficers, agents, (1) from interferring with formances of the contract ‘the New York club and Mays; 3| from York. club, fun, the | haa been {ing to pla: according le unless lteam: (4 {iwise ‘than in accordance | established _schedule ot 345 | ciuding those with the {which are a part schedule. “The Detroit club order of the court scason’s games to be pla ordance, with the schedule, {withstanding the that Mays had pitched in many lafter the date of th der. When the orde: troit was in second place, and | until it had been dislodged from 1496 | josition and the New York club | won third place, did the Detroit its_attitude of e in ended ; h the New York to the established Mays was omited and from with games, 1402 | ired in aHowed el acqy and sam TROTTING JOTTINGS. By W. H. Gocher. & e sihree héai system of proving a fareg: when used purses.or slow. classes af the of the season. where ihere When “one of , the starters wins. lfirst iwo heats, a fastes.one shows in front inces the majority o at it could have won Iso when there are | ners and a fourth m | determine the winner. 0s | rule busy trying to in and by so doing avoid a instead of giving the public In one race ai racing usuall other race. contest S| first heat was won in 2:07 fourth in 2:19 3-4 In another 1489 | 2% Poughkeepsie the first }in 2:0% 3-4 and the fourth | Othe | could be cited. in ateur | esent our- and the purse is as Geers remarked clever source of cheating. Joe out .re: nd as- in- utterworth, John Ows- ey, Clinton (Cupid) Black and Emil Navin flouts the civil courts, in the opinion. of Jacob president -of, the New York American league chb, who issued the|for over a vear, Karly Dreams staged the commission on September 29, and after reciting the fact that the New York club had been. pitching Mays after his alleged suspension by Presi- dent Johnson, concluded as follows: “If the New York club finishes third in the race for the American pen- nant I desire to protest the games in which the player has been used and would like to have the commission take “On August 14 the New York club instituted in the circuit court Wayne to restrain Mr. Johnson, both individually and as of the league and the De- cer- tain things, dased upon the purported same order | force and in brief enjoined its of- players and employes, per- hetween @) refusing to play with the New according to the establish- | ed scheduie, on the ground that Mays (3) from refus- club sched- from the playing other- the in- ew York club, of the established the | H the | force Early ough | Lexingion and Drescribed | to Murphy's stable. injunction or- | will was issued De-|he b not | sylv had club complete ac- the situation created by na enter its pro- for small ail end is ‘betting. th. 1 the third and egn- the spectators driven out three heat win- le is required to | the drivers are shoo each win Syracuse the 1-4 and race heat was won i1 that are even more flagarant It also shows that any system under which the winner of the The three heat system of racing has had a thorough test for two years and is now near the discard. As a substitute, Ed A. Tipton suggests that the two in tHree rule be amended so that if the race is mot terminaled. in two heats, all of the starters shall remain in un- il after the third heat, after which only heat winners can start if an- other mile is necessary. This would limit a race under any conditions to four heats uniess there was a dead heat. Peter Manning is one of the marveis of the trotting world. Very few peo- ple heard of him until he frotted in 2.06 1-2 at Lexington and by so doing equalled the three year old record for geldings which was made by Easton last year. This new star was bred b: W. M. Wright, of Chicago and is b: Azoff, a son of Peter the Great, out of Glendora by Emmet Grattan. His dam was sold 0 a Wisconsin farmer at one of the Chicago sales for $75 and last P Peter Manning was priced in August Last month during. the Wis- in ilwaukee, Peter consin State Fair at Manning made a timé record of 2:10. This was reduced at Lexington to 2:06 1-2, the last half of the mile being trotted in 1:00 1-2. After being on the complaining list come back at Lexingion When he a the fastest won in 2:03 3-4, 2:08 3-4, race trotted this year and also the fastest thres heat race ever won by a gelding. In this race Early Dreams cut one second off the eleven vear old record of 2:04 1-4, which Sonoma Guri made in 1910 and which Royal Mack equalied at Toledo in July. The time in the second heat is also the fastest ever trotted by a gelding in a race, it being onme quarter of a secomnd fast- er than Uhian’s mile in 2:08 1-2 when he defeated Hamburg Belie at Read- ville, Mass.. in 190 Barton Pardee, Princeton, 2 2.01 3-4, horses the owner of Tu and Mabel Trask| enjoys sesing everybody's | in %o0d form as well as his | own. At the same time. he adds many | » bright spot to a wei day by his| Suble wit, One day last week when | 2 few of the ultra wise were weaving | furt honors for 1920, he said “1 would | Eive 4 few dollars for % peek into next Season's Year Book about the first of June. This is a shade better than| Tombstone” Kelley's come back and | Abe Dysher when the latier said that | the Irish wera no good and Kelley re- | plied. 1 admit it i they are noi de- | Veloped.” | Eal Mahone looks like the best 2:06 pacer in Sight for 1920, After he won a third hea: from D: Lexington in 2:01 dered him ho the winter and refused to put & price on him i Chauncey Sears of Fall River, Mass. | has set his cap o win the Transyl- | o e van s s i eas o | Belding Charley Rex. Ho paid G A | fatch his price after he saw Charley | Dreams out in £:03 1.4 at transterred the meid Haten sass hariey his owner or- will drive C but no ome knows what he ith Roval Mack with which | finished second i 14 and may bid again if Ti 5. winter his stable of Pinehurst, N. C. He wil on before go | Murphy at ondsman pacer Captain Mack ow in Murphy’s stabel. He the handsomest horses tha | was ever seen on a race track. IFred Estabrook’s trotter B. Colorado wopked.a:raile at Lexington in 2:06 1-4. | [#e Took=" ke the best stake horse for| 1920, During the past season he won cleven outwof iwelve races over the half-mile tracks The Pastime Stable has passed H.“Gane of New York purchased M Cobarn wh R. McCune of P burgh gave $6.000 for Abbie Putnes he day before Geers defeated her in: the Kentucky Stake at Lexington. She | now in sta Frank Eilis | id $14.000 at auction for Vi w Vol Solve the Problem. We have faith that within a or two some Luther Burbank, a shrewd eve to the general demand, will be growing a cluster of grapes and a veast cake on the same bough.! —Grand Rapids Press. ‘When a fool offers to baek up his arguments with a bet a wise man shuts up. e The | | | believable with | 7 General von Hindenburg is seen | frequently these days in Berlin, and they say he has aged considerabie within the last few months. EXPEDITION SHOW WHAT EARTH IS MADE OF | ¢ in October a scientific expedi- | tion will arrive in Seattle, Washingtos, | from Alaska, which will bring back, information (ending to throw additions al light on dark spot of modern | science,—what composes the, inside of Katmai_expedition of The. preparing {0 sail from ik island@ after many months spent in fruitful scientific study of the uni- que and spectacular natural phenome- non known as The Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, at the fool of the zantic Mr. Katmal volcano. | Not only has the expedition, headed hy Dr. Rehe riggs, accumulated an amount of scientific data bevond happiest anticipation. but according to a telegraphic report to The Society fine harbor. not previously known, Fas heen found which affords a feasible oute to this region of the innumer- anle venis of various kinds . which spirt steams and vapors of almost un- temneratures. The discovery of this harbor is con- cidered of marked interest because President Wilson has proclaimed the rezion of Ten Thousand Smokes a na- tional monument, and it will not be % hefore this new federal reserva- wi visited. by tourists who wish snectacle no less awe insoir the spouting geysers 1 wonders of our own be tnterest ed world. anportunity scme of “the hidden “ho face of the says a bul- Georgraphic of this will be affords = National child who says green cheese: but t v if he would 1 made of nenetrated to & of the Invisible “hed to other n the universe ars from which | ars to travel | nenetration of the < no decper, comnarative- on the cover and it 1 ~ mammoth balloon “The ancients thought the way:to learn the mysteries of what lies under onr feet was to dig deeper, and deep- er. but we know now that even modern engineering which can pierce . the mountain and burrow under rivers can mot penetrate deeplv enough to tell AMEL Cigarettes meet your taste in many new and unusual ways. You quickly become fond of them—they are so refreshing and cool and fragrant. You see, Camels are an expert biend of choice Turk- ish and cheoice Domestic tobaccos which guarantees the mest delightful cigarette qualities that have ever been put into a cigarette. Your test will prove that you prefer the expert Camel blend to either kind of tobacco smoked straight. Cameis blend not only frees the cigarettes from any unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste or any unpleas- mellow-mild-body! And, you'll be interested to - know that no matter how liberally you smoke Cameis they will not tire your taste! Camels are a cigarette revelation! yourseif! We suggest right here that you compare Camels with any cigarettes in the world at any Prove that Camels are sold everywhere in scientificaliv sealea packages of 20 cigarmttes or (an,_pack- ades (700 cigarmras) in o Wisstes-Salem. M. C. 'J. C. MACPHERSON ftion which not lf you need A:furnbhin": ‘you{ need o\.lr;urrvice_n e)‘(‘prel.ad= in large complete stocks, smart styles'and dependable -quality. For'instance, you wfllyhfidw lfi[grYVt?'veh‘F ine Sllkl’oce at $1.00, - quite the best hosiery value in town—one pair will; prove it & QUALITY CORNER Opposite Chelsea Savings . Bank. much of Mother Earth. “If such phenomena . as ;volcanic ernptions, earthquakes, and-gevs the key to the hitherto hidde; of the globe. 1t has heen est: that the hissing, streaming, ex secrets depot yard of mogul engines ern example of whai the gev Yellowstoné National Park onc “The vastness and intensit molten,mass which spits the thia terrifying valiey is indicated by the discovery of new high tempera- tures among the fumaroles. Farly parties were not equipped to measure the unexepcted heat of some of the | fumaroles. Dr. Griggs wires that the hottest ones have just been found, where the highest temperature was 1 191.2 degrees, fahrenheit. and that many of the escaping vapors kindle wood into a blaze as readily as a match burns when struck. “BReside chemists. petrographers, | zoologists, and botanists. the expedi- | tion this summer marked a departure | in scientific explorations of this kind | by having along motion picture photo- | graphers. Ten thousand filmed feet of the spectacle which words cannot picture are being brought back to be shown to members of The Society “Another finding of popular interest was_the discovery of a region north of the National Monument reserva- only is one of great natural beauty, but abounds infish anad game. “The study of the economic side | ofg this of this hitherto unknown | region was not neglected. Dr. Grizgs | is shippine to Washington botanfcal and roological material as well as speciments of Dplants and animals | found about Mt. Katmai™ the mother alwave has an ex- for the juvenile terror. But cuse ~ MEXICAN PANUCO OIL Stock sell at per share with the bringing in of additional wells now being drilled on its proven acreage? brought in Me 4 A 70,000 barrel well has been an adjacent lease 300 feet from the Panuco Pufino Gusher. on car “Price Monday, October 6th, was 17. Market closed Saturday, Oct. 11th, at 25. bid.” Send for Booklet C-10 A. E. Fitkin & Co. 141 BROADWAY NEW YORK Pittsburg c Boston France an Inventor Nation. basic disc a Now that the world W has| sim ina p prompted a careful weighing Ger tain it is U £ | processes reared or < many’s flamboyant m- inence in wes c feld, Juilt by Pasteu | and found her wanting many re- | rom beds of sickne a spects. it is well to inquire more Gl graves than the g ” 1y ievemer into the origin of the ac s ; been f human ingenuity which have o send there hoons to mankind.' says a b |y et from Washington headquarters of the | rdium com: S National Geographic Society | French labora France, always accounted a literary| ding Wh nation. and now acelaimed more gal-|can s iant than the world realized also has| Franc refc 10 her credit a notable record of sci-|who know mos entific achievement, according 10 a|we siand with communication to The Society, whic er from th ‘France has given no more tion to the literary aspirations mankind than she has to the sc endeavors of humanity. Go back to| the beginnings of science and you will| sa know = of times see her astronomers pointing the way | up in radio that astronomy has pursued. 1t was|in coal, thank her Pasteur who established the germ | French laboratories 3 theory of disease and through whom |learn how to harness tha the wonderful miracles of saving hu-|have harnessed t rc man life have characterized the past|coal. hy_ promoting the p third of a century have been wrought. | decax. who can adequate The normal death rate of civilized [ possihilitics that wor countries before the days of Pasteur| wand while we think of raeP was about 30 per thousand of POPUML- | pi1 1emr cotemee who. ranch tion. Today it is about 15 per thous-|yae ovened to the w y and in the more progressive nations. | pon,. £ 7Rest A “Think what the saving of 15 lives| or=0f 1o <10 L 3 every thousand of popula-| pot IOl W when_applied o half the| daatidiflioniines f - = earih. 1t means the averiing of 12,-{'mvehtors had £ ‘ - 000,000 untimely deaths annually. n;,", By g e means that more than 25,000,000 cases | 5S¢0 men as Coul e ang [ Ampere.” Nor League of Natio avoided. Tt means health in 20.000.000 homes | Who | of iliness a and” happiness rather than disease and distress can estimate the benefits to hunmnit peace tri of the wonderful discovery of Pasteu When one tries to comprehend and esimate those that may yvet flow What is Castoria CA.STOR]'_A is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nar- - cotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in%constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and \Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep: {The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. 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 Counterfeits, Imitations and’‘“Just-as-Good” are but Experiments that trifie with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. Children Cry For Have You Tried lt? Bverybody has read the abov headlin2 ; how many believe it ? Bave you a little-one in. the home, and has that dear little miite when its stomsach was Dot just right felt the comiorts 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 Cass toria. Watch the difference in the tone of the cry, the look in the - - eye, the wiggle in the tiny fingers. The transformation is complete— from pain to pleasure Try it. Y Youwll find a wonderful lot of information about Baby in the booklet that is wrapped around every bottle of Fletcher’s Castoria. GENVINE CASTORIA aLwavs Beax:s the Signature of