Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 25, 1919, Page 3

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|"Two weeks ago -thesé HE dissatisfaction you feel with many of your shirts may result from impromptu buying. Some men wait till the laundry fails them and then purchase their shirts at the first store they find open. Make a leisurely selection of EAGLE SHIRTS now-—here. The style shown in their ex- clusive patterns, the beauty of their colors, the fineness of the weave, will make every shirt an active mem- der of your wardrobe. E SHIR The Porteous & Mitchell Co. “Our Men’s Store” cester Poly and Hamilton College, has' been working unusually hard tms week in preparation for its game with New York University on the Metro- politan gridiron Saturday. In spite of |t fact that Hamilton defeated oW York University, and the Engineers took the measure of the up-state col- lege men entireiy through superior skill in the game, the Institute piayer expect a hard game tomorrow agains the heavier New York eleven because of piaying on the opposing team's field. _ Coach “Jack” Reed is still count- ing, apparently upon the speed men of his squad, and Jerry Shea, of Springfield, Mass., the New England | interscholastic sprinting champion Dick” Sparrow, of Holycke, Mass. kiy Wright, a losal High wschool runner, and “Babe” Lawes of Utica, who made a record gridiron run of Championship Team Westerly Sunday. The sporting fans of Westerly will surely get a treat this Sfinday for tie management of the Westeriy basebail ciub has booked an all s.ar team which was formerly the St. Mary's champonship tegm of Jewedt ty 1o play the Westeriy club at Ruiverside park Sunday. This team nceis no introduction to the spor.ing fans of Connecticut and Rhode Island for they all remember early in the season when they were playing togetner they were without a doubt the champion amateur team of both states. This All Star will be c:ptained by the clever Lttle back- the Ashland A. A. In an in- terview with the Westeriy manager last Friday Bil stateq that his mea were in the pink of condition and a: sireng al stop of ;;;d“‘f:;;rand:}‘* e':v::’l‘:{; ninety yards in 19 are likely to ~ The Ail Sturs’ lineun wiil includs Eet places in Saturday's, game. Paulf Bl Liberty, eatch Spike Liberty,| onghi of Torrington, Conn., a_soph- | g ; omore, had his first opportunity in who was to have signed up w Three River club of the Ca league, pitch; Red Melady, 1s Buddy Jodoin, ss; Faber 2b; Whitney, 3b. This combination wil composc ihe fastest amateur infield seen here | this season Lee Jarvis .1l cover| left garden; Ralll center and Cyr wil play riga Westerly will also team in_the fizid Southern League w son, 2 local lad, the varsity line-up last Saturday and {made an excellent showing at end. HOPPE TAKES GAME FROM PLAYER SLOSSON New York, Oct. 24.—By a score of; 400 to 356, Koji Yamada defeated George B. Sutton in twenty innings. Yamada's average was 20 and _his | best runs were 115, 105 and 44. Sut-| ton hag an average of 18 14-19 with | runs of 67, 58 and 41. Willie Hoppe defeated George Slo: son in lheoolale afternoon game by a score of 4 to 138. NEW YORK UNIVERSITY | *°310, 00" vetage was 44 4-9, Troy, N. Y., Oct. 24—The Rens-|his three high runs were 108, 97 selaer Polytechnic Institute football|78. Slosson average was 17 3-8, team, although it has won three suc- cessive vietories over Hobart, Wor-lhigh runs of 76, 27 and 14. MACPHERSON’S “FOR QUALITY” Real “Quality” Furs You will always be proud to wear Mac- ’s Furs. Our style originality ‘em- hleelullthoun:btledlfierem:uoflme have a sirong Sherman of the 1 pitch and John- 1l catch. RENSSELAER TO PLAY and and with nofimnotwh-tweny,butvdntwe don’t say that counts most—so in furs not mlywhl we have added, but what we bave eliminated makes them distinctive n.nd&'mfiedmdnmandwne. Noth- ing bizarre, nothing vulgar—every line e of subdued refinement, every fold an ear-mark of exclunve J. C. MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER ?Ei; | speculative issues controlled by At the -Academy co; ernoon the ivenated A ball teamt will -meet the High school team in one of the mout hotly contested games of tho scason; o teamys me and Stonington came o vlgm 113-0 game. The idc t thatd this was a ‘bad set ;u 'to clean up the deefh by runni ng up a big score. The vic.cry over West- erly on Tuesday kas put new life and confidence in the. logal. eleven and they have'spent the réma'nder of the week in the hardest practice of the season. Big Bl Ccnnors; formerly of English High eleven of Eoston and guard of one of the teams that played Cupid Black’s navy team bas ‘been assisting_Coach McKay in bolsterinz up the l'ne. This has been the weak spot in the team but the hard work that they have been through this week ought to show up when ‘theyzline: up for the first scrimimage. " McNawara, captain of the famous Academy clev en of 19 9 has been putting the tackles and ends through the fine points of playing their positions. . ° Captain Suplicki will got be able to get into the scrimmage. today, In the last few seconds of the Hartford game last Saturday Suplicki sastained an_injury to his left _wrist _while making a tackle. An X-ray showed that the bone was broken and thifs will mean_that he will be out of to- day’s game and possibly for the Bulk- eley game at New London next Satur- day. Coach McKay is having a hard time filling Suplicki’s place = at left guard but has three good men to“fiil in. Crowell looks promising for the pos tion and may be alternated with Co- meau between gu‘rd and center. Both men have been tossng the ball very well at the center .position. Croker. another husky, has been shaping up well in the guard posi- tion, but an injury has kept him on the 'side lines the latter part of the week. Sayles has been putting.up a fine game at tackle and has shown steady improvement. since his initial contest at Storrs. The other tackle.1s. covered by the veteran Ray Wilcox most of the plays started around h side of the line have_ been counted.for losses to the other feams. Wilcox is one of the heavyweights of the team and misses very few tackles. Morgan the big guard has been aworking hard in using his weight anq strength on the defense. Both -Young and: O. Chase will start the game at the end positions and their work in games and practice warrants their value in stopping any of the long end runs that Stonington launched in the first game between the two schools. Young's | star work in last Saturday’'s game has made him a fixture on the team. Coach Mc Kay has beén drilling thHe backifield in carrying' the: ball and’de- veloping a driving torce to’ go . with their natural speed. Wilcox the hero of the Westerly game has been given a few new plays in which to use his rushing ability. Ringland is due for some spectacular open field work while Read, his run- ning mate at half back is a fast man on skirting the ends. Both Whitnoy ang O'Neil ‘have been . doing gaod work at quarter, but the choice for starting the game may fall to Whit- ney. He has been picking his play: very well in practice and is quick to pick the weak points of the opposing ngton's team s rather lizht s makes up for that handicap in the set of fast backfield men and a pair of good ends. Shee- han_ at quarterback has done very good work this year in running the team and carrying theball. The Academy eleven is determined ‘o win this game end is going to battle from the first whistle. The team has Atself and nothing short of .| "0’:.’ -ifll satisfy the players. | “time ‘has besn 100 saort 10 de- velop any new plays and they have been busy perfecting the old plays. Jéss Wilcox will lead the team on tne - will .keep the team goinz evuy mihute. The kickoK w'll be made at three "oclock sharp. ~The fleld has been put in excellent condition with ropes along the side lines to hold the crowd Lack. DEFEATS TO ‘BIG ELEVENS LOOKED FOR TODAYI New York, Oct. 24—Deleats for some of the. larger college football 'teams of the east are among tI< .wi- siblities that loom large durng ..e games of the last Saturday of Oc- tober. - Coigate will face Princeton with shutouf ‘victories to her credit over both Lrown and Corncll and backed by the knowledge that, with a stad- ent body of a trifle over five hundred, she has met but one of the best eust- | ern teams of 1919. Harvard appears’ to have ‘little to_ fear from the Un. i versity of Virginia. Yale should ho.d Tufts, but her garin of safety is not so great as to permit much experi- menting. The University of Pittsburgh, which had its dreams of eastern supremacy shattered by Syracuse a week ago, will face another strong opponent in Georgia_Tech. The Navy also will face a Teal test in meeting Bucknell. A clearer insight of the real abili- ity of the University of Pennsylvania téam’ will be galmed in tomorrow’s contest with Lafayette. The Qauke-s lead the east in the number of points scored, over 200 in four games, but if Lafayette’s showing against Princeton can be taken as a criterion, Pennsyl- vania is not likely to run up 50 points, ‘which is the Red and Blue average to date. The principal games In the east fol- low. Colgate at Princton; Georgia Tech at Pittsburgh; Virginia at Har- vard; Boston College at Army: Tufts at Yale; Bucknell at Lafayette; Cornell vs Dartmouth (at New York);: Amherst at Columbia; Washington and_Jefferson at Syracuse, Norwici at Brown; Johns Hopkins at Swarth- more; Union at Wesleyan; Hamilton at- Williams; New York State Aggies at Rutgers. 1 “BABE” RUTH HAS AMBITIONS p % TO BE A “CROESUS” Boston, Oct. 24—George (Babe) Ruth, champion home run hitter, be- fore leaving tonight said that he would demand $20,000 salary next year. I will not play with the Red Sox,” he declared, “unless I get $20,000. I feel that I made a bad move last year when I signed a three years' contract to play for $30,000. The Boston club realized much on my value and I think that I am entitled to twice as much as my contract calls for. * Ruth, who plans to make an indefi- nite stay on the Pacific coast, said that -he-did-npt expect to hear from Pres- ident Harry H. Frazee of the club un- ‘til"the club was ready to move south. ! Mr .Frazee, who was here today. did/ not see Ruth and had nothing to_say about baseball before leaving for New | York tonight. COCHRAN SETS NEW WORLD’S RECORD IN BILLIARDS New York, Oct. 24—This was high core day at the national 18.2 balk line championship billiard _tournament. Walker Cochran of Detroit won two games today, in the first of which he defeated the veteran George Slosson of Boston, finishing the game in the tenth inning with a new world's rec- MARKET WAS sTEAQV New York, Oct. 24—The most reas- suring feature of today’s lesk active but far more orderly stock market was the greater ease of money and the steady accumulation at substantial advances of high and low grade rail- road shares. Call money opened at 5 per cent., the lowest initial rate in several weeks and the more noteworthy, since all loans hold over till next Monday. Time money was in better supply. a - few loans being reported at slightly under 7 per cent. Buying of the rails afforded a sharp contrast to the erratic movements of the two preceding _sessions. when pools and cliques completely overshadowed the more representative stock The demand for transportations was so general as to give rise to the impression that developments of the highest importance affecting those properties may soon issue from the office of Director General Hines. Outstanding features of the railroad | list inciuded Reading, Southern Pa- cific, Atlantic Coast and Louisville and Nashville at gains of 3 to 5 points. Among secondary shares Texas and Pacific, St. Paul, Baltimore and Ohio, Pere Marquette, Missouri Pacific, Wesern Pacific and Missouri, Kansas and Texas were prominent, scoring extreme gains of one to 2 1-2 points. Prices in the general list ‘were ir- regular at the opening, pressure being FINANCIAL AND BGMMERBIAI. 6700 Anaconda §700 Atchison 1300 1300 100 6700 23100 600 2600 Bait Beth Beth Stcel 3 Dr Brookm R T Lrooklyn R T _eft 115 Ceusol “Gas Crucible Lehigh Valley * Max Motor . exerted by the short interest. proba- bly as a result of the dissolution of the industrial conference with its at- tendant complications. Oils, motors and their specialties, steels and equipments were hesitant in the first half of the session, but im- proveq visibly later. They were join- ed by food and tobacco issues at ma- terial gains, coppers being the only backward issues at the strong close. Sales amounted to 1,550,000 shares. The bond market was again irreg- ular, moderate reactions in several of the rails and industrials contributing to that end. Liberty issues were steady, foreign issues easing. Total sales, par_value, $15,575.000. Old U. S. bonds unchanged on call. STOCKS Sales. f808 AttsChaimer Bee: South Pacifie Southern Ry 45300 Unton Pacifie 800 Unlon Pac pr . 700 U S Rub fod | 1700 U S Rub 1 pr 875000 U S Steel 00 U S Steel pr, 00 Wiilss Over /. 200 Willys Over nr 490 Worth Pump .. 300 Worth Pump B MONEY. New York. Oct. 24—Cotton spot steady; middling 3750. COTTON. New York. # Oct. 24—Call money easy: high low 4 1-2; ruling rate 5; closing bid 4 1-2; offered at 5; last loan 4 1-2; bank acceptances 4 1-8. NEW YORK BOND MARKET. Hien. Yo Open. ileh. Close. 1953 128% 123% 1m% -T% Ti% 1% % Tew TN % | ous balik line records where the cham- Iyionship title was involved. PERFECTO—12¢ PANETELA—12¢ CORONA —15¢ BANQUET—15¢ hat’s Schuyler. "Some sigh for this and My wishes don’t go far; The world may wag at will, So I have my cigar.” the way I feel about my old friend—DPeter He'’s mild with a delightful flavor. His filler is all clear selected Havana. ; His quality never varies. 34 years of honest quality—a cigar-friend to rely on. Made for 14 3~ ©7 —. W. VAN SLYKE & HORTON, Albany, N. Y. that; —Hoo ord run of 265. This beats all previ- this part of Bastern action for the laurels In tonight's game, Cochran defeated collection of nothing young Jake Schacfer by 400 to 257. In doing so he left the championship ti- tle safe for Willie Hoppe. Had Schae- fer won tonight's game, he would have a chance to tie in the finla match to- morrow night. Incidentally Cochran made another high run tonight, his 168 beating by three points the high mark be set for the tournament vesterday. Earlier in the day. Hoppe won his fifth consecutive victory when he de- feated Slosson. Score of tonight's game: Cochran, total 400. average 26 10- 15; high runs 168, 99, 28. Schaefer, total 257; average 18 5-14; high runs 95, 50, 30. The standing of the players follow: in action on both th Putnam club. Both confident of a win. Moosup. Moosup has lost one game this LONG DISTANCE R Syracuse, N. Y., Oc five picked try stars in America, in the Syracuse Uni tomorrow afternoon. cisionsMoosup and Putnam will two of the fastest teams ever seen in put Connecticut into of each city. A but the very best of big league starts will be seen and are e Moosup managers The odds are on wone seven and season and are out for this big game Sunday. UNNERS TO COMPETE TODAY t. 24 —Seventy- long distance runners of the eastern college world, numbering in their midst the fleetest cross coun- will participate versity intercol- legiate invitation race at two o'clock ‘Won. Lost. P.C.| The institutions represented _are Hoppe . . 0. 1.000| Cornell, Colgate, Harvard, Yale, Cochran 2 667 | Princeton, Pennsyuvania, Columbia, Schaefer 2 -600 | Massachusetts Institute of Technolo- Morningstar . 2 -600| gy, Dartmouth, Lafayette, Williams Yamada 3 -400|and Syracuse. The course over which Sutton 4 -333 | the contestants will race is four and Slosson . 6 <000 | one half miles and the meet marks the | most important early fall track event BALTIC RIVALS TO PLAY in the American college world. 3EARCATS AT BALTIC difficulties between _the| Taftville Rearcats and the Baltic Riv- als havi® veen settled and the two ! teams will meet on Sunday after- noon in Baltic. Both teams are ag- gregations of snappy ball players and | with good weather conditions this last game of the season should well | be worth the seeing. As there has been more or less feeling between the | two teams both clubs are out to put it onto the other. STATE TROOPERS MEETING OF ST Pittsburgh, Pa., one thousand steel port. Port Vue and tempted to hold a me on a hill near Glassp the state police, who to disband. ceived n report would be held, 1,000 men had | when they arrived. ! " Many shots were without effect crowd, the two tro They sent a call for inforcements arrived port, the men At Tast MOOSUP AND PUTNAM IN FINAL GAME OF SERIES Moosup ang Putnam each have won | a game in the three game series, the rnal mame of the Moosup-Putnam se- | ries will be staged on Ashland park |persed. Frank Marti wunus Sunda; Oct. 26th. Game | member of the crows “aVed 3t 2:30 sharp. Jack Finnell aland is being held on league umpire will hand out the de- citing to riot. Oct. strike Two state tha by members oper: on the BROKE UP EEL STRIKERS 24—More than of G McKeesport ceting late tod ort, accordin torced th tréopers the mee said on t sout hill the fired them of the reported. d when r- from McKees- hill at na, d. a d’m. e HAND AND BREAST DRILLS A NEW LINE OF ASK FOR TRADING STAMPS ASK 1O TRADI STAMPS REAMS AND SOCKET WRENCHES | KEEN KUTTER SHEARS POCKET KNIVES SAWS, AXES, HATCHETS QUALITY AND OTHER TOOLS Don’t Fail to See Our Line of Pure Aluminum Ware THE HOUSEHOLD Bulletin Building i i A R B s AN St ASK _FOR TRADING STAMPS s s it S BASEBALL Baltic Rivals vs Taftville Bearcats SAYLES FIELD, Baltic SUNDAY AFTERNOON Game Called at 3 O'Clock BASEBALL PUTNAM VS MOOSUP : SUNDAY AT JEWETT CITY .. DECIDING GAME OF SERIES FOOTBALL TODAY —AT— ACADEMY CAMPUS ACADEMY VS STONINGTON KICKOFF AT 3 O'CLOCK DANCE FORESTERS' HALL PLAINFIELD: MUSIC BY FELTCORN'S JAZX 3AND Tickets, Gentlemcn 55c; Ladies 356 DANCING 8 TO 12 CENTRAL Q] WAY SPECIAL SALE | SHOULDER HAMS 174 Small, tender and lcan, just out cf the smoke FRESH .WESTERN CALF'S LIVER Ib. 15c. H J. M. YOUNG AND SON 1238 OFFICE PHONE

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