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ACADEMY TO PLAY “DEVIL DOGS” Tigers is. well founded it appears that the Independents did not win the game a 0 to 0 score. The Tigsrs, however, feel that they, with a picked up team are still as good | if not the better team and are any for a game with the crowd in Norwich at an early date. BALTIC BASKETBALL TEAMS OPEN SEASON MONDAV“ Baltic| ot for the big game today on ne Academy campus between the Nor- h Free Academy and Covle’s “Devil » The game is to prepare the swich men for their big game with x oy High of New London, Satur- v New Londen. Captain Covle has scoured the city > best material contained there- succeeded beyond he following list of the “Devil be moticed several names tion-wide fame in football cir- basketball opened on Monday evening with a fast| game between the Baltic Aces and the Baltic Eagles in which the former won | by the score of 23 to 20. ing center for the Aces, was the stellar light of the game, caging five difficult goals from the field. Eagles was a close four baskets. Aces—Allison rf, Ridgeway ¢, T Swanson rg, Cote Ig. Cagles—Rabiteau, Erickson ¢, 3 S . pla; tanley, Bill Connors, Smich, p (former Bon Aventure R. Bennett, A. Holmes, Swanson of the getting The lineup follows f, Smith Eastwood. Sam aggregation that lion-htarted team in To see them in aétion worth sacrificing an so we ‘advise every ask eafrly today Tehe's an dismay the most the country. woutd be well afternoon’s pay. working man the afternoon off. Coyle’s men recei R. Swanson rg. X goals—Smith 5, - 3 Ridgeway 3. Cote 1, R. Swanson 4, Ra- SWEATERS biteau 2. Hines ick: Referee —A. Miller; .timekeeper—JFoster: scor- er, Heibel; time, two 20-minute halves. Erickson 1. e no pay for their of heiping N. F. ir stupor before Saturdgy. confined his efforts to! YALE ANNOUNCES ITS WRESTLING SCHEDULE | New Haven. Conn., 7. | Coach McKay iné work vesterday some success and that is one thi rale's ; coming was announged tonight. schedule foliows, meets to be New Haven unless . lacks pep a winning team y is anxious to see how they will meet the extraordinary “Devil Dogs” o measure up will start a reign N the rest of the week. Today’s game will start p: o'clock, rain or shine. if they fail expectations he 14, New York University; Springfield Massachusetts Tech March 5, Prinée Harvard at Cambridge: intercollegiates TENDLER HAS SHADE ON IN 10-ROUND BOUT Tend- was giv- % Annapolis; TIGERS CLAIM THEY WERE ROBBED OF GAME SUNDAY The Greeneville London on Sunday Independents of that their opinion the made an erroneo ler, Philade the game by their The Tigers claim Kansas Cil horpe re- the third blood They are newspaper opinion tonight Independents and was handicapped through the | the remainde Independent tackled on referee blew his whistle. g FOUR YALE VARSITV MEN he Norwict RETL‘:‘\J FROM HOSP!TAL s ew Haven, Yale gridiron men a touchdown. wd...z: to Rule dead when var - MACPHERSON Captain Callahan w been brought back and play he five-yard ! FINANCIAL ANI] EOMMERBIAL MARKET WAS STRONG. m of the!Joe Neville money market, eral Motors Petroleums steels comprehenc issmes with misceilaneous Graphophone Sales amounted Typewriter. i and Germa exchange marke incloding Liberty lower on cail. strong: high closing bid i, offered at bank acceptances 4 1-2 per cent was paid at stock market NEW YORK BOND MARKET. ‘Guoted n doilars and conts ver $100 bond CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. 08 Beth Stoel 500 Breoklsn R T oifs 6200 Butte Cop & Z 4808 Can Pacific .. 12269 Cent Leatber 200 Ceat Leather pr 74 816 74 5.1 ST =™ A POINTER PRODUCT E PROVIDENCE BREWING COo. PROVIDENCE ous | tO\\n‘ A | The at varch [smooth and flat. 20- of colorings. the | BEAR CATS WIN FINAL by the Manager M the eighth inni ). on bases. The up expe m his cod hitting. | Swanson ana Sllison. MACPHERSON’S «FOR QUALITY”’ Almquist 1f, = Hines Ig. | OF QUALITY | A style for every use. {Made of selected yarns, knit-in Heavy ribbed elastic cuffs. ‘ Fashioned collar which lays Made in Shaker collar, no col- |lar and f-ul.i-over V’styles, in various weights, in navy, seal, 't | green, maroon and heather. Slip-Ons and Sweaters. Vests in popular styles and QUALITY CORNER Opposite Chelsea Savings the street core won his own 1g with a two base hit game com- | in the rain and on account of s were short their third n ad left fielder, who did not put up a good game for the ‘What you pay out your good .'xfioney for is cigarette satisfaction—and, my, how .you do get it in every puff of Camels! XPERTLY blended choice low-mildness of the tobaccos yet re- Turkish and choice Domestic taining the desirable “body.” Camels tobaccos in Camel cigarettes elimi- are simply a revelation! You may nate bite and free them from any smokethemwithout tiring yourtaste! unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste or unpleasant cigaretty odor. o For your own satisfaction you must compare Camels with any cigarette Camels win instant and permanent in the world at any price. Then, success with smokers because the you’ll best realize their superior blend brings out to the limit the quality and the rare enjoyment refreshing flavor and delightful mel- they provide. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N. C. over Bank. | public press” game in{d 1C - bad for was cz his qu ings Ic manager of the Rivals went to oty se for the Bear Cats to] up a good team and the Jewett|name in 4‘ was right when he Dlease eversbody. The o game was Mossey, who nd scored two runs ahead the playing of + man about ten feet off throw from the pitch- jumpeqg Couland Armour ht away | COLLAPSE OF TEMPORARY i reer wo BLEACHERS AT BOXING BOUT | Rex Leach, what as Montreal, Oct. 27.—Collapse of tem- | { | porary Dbleachers on the stage of a;orS IS il theatre here brought a boxing bout | Man Who “ | betwe Iugene Brosseau. former | ithletes anad amateur welterweight | 1 immpion, and johnny Howard of New | ] a o a sudden close in The was left in darkness. as the | clectric wires supplying it were car- | r * [ried away in the collapse. No one was! Rain SR i circuit { duced the | 475 469 White Sox. | W. Jomes ......75 88 Lacro Siiiie ROY ... cesossdld k3 Higham .... ... 94 Cadorette .... .. 80 100 467 466 ! White Sax. W. Jones ...... 83 98 Lacroix .. ...s.. 93 125 Roy i 805 T8 Higham .. ..... 87 100 Cadorette .. .... 88 125 441 560 Red Sox. James . 93 90 Cardin .. 75 9% Ridgeway 78 102 Wood ... .84 -93 Garrett 93 98 423 467 the eighth ten round match and prob- Howard from a knockout. Acme Club Looking for Games. The Acme A. C. of Stafford Springs would like to arrange basketball games wit hteams in Connecticut, setts or Rhode Isiand averaging 160 pounds of over. Address Paul Sto. ner, Box 52, Stafford Springs, Conn. “LEFTY” FLYNN FORMER YALE STAR IN THE MOVIES Maurice Bemmett Flynn, _better known to followers of Yale's football baseball and track teams of seven or eight vears ago as “Lefty” “Bronx Express,” is going to rival | Frencis X, FElmo the Mighty, “Wild I Bill” and others equally as dear to the heart of the movie fannette. The araat formar Rnlldos atar wha whan Massachu- AT THE WILLIMANTIC ALLEYS. |races from 455 1429 | with Royal Mack, Dire R., Sanardo and Molly Knight, which the three vear other starter being Lightning Bugs. A - : e B 114 95— i S ]';5 | ngton, 537 483 e Rossie Velvet Mills 2d. pame 74 86 continued aron g2 08— snow flies Redma 86 Murph Aubor 86 | races at e A his t - vear to 444 Bt AT THE BALTIC ALLEYS. e drove 5 (BALTIC LEAGUE. |old trot. L 0 Rockio Wiki Wiki James ... .....101 el o | Cote Ak e 95 548 | A, Jomes .. ..... 86 Lt e 87 252 Malloy ... 106 101 94— 257 94— 292 91— 297 86— 272 92— 272 1390 309 319 195 1516 85— 268 102— 268 94— 274 92— 269 110— 295 184 1374 k- and the performing for the Blue on the | iron, ripped ang nobody GAME FROM BALTIE |play the " It same full of excitement and the dark with he Bear Cats defeated the s of 9 to 6. scope coming Frank De pearance .at production | appearance @ “terriffic himsell to any gre: something muscle and commercial X heats ever This year he and his traveiling companion Mabel Trask with Murphy arted an Lu Princeton New York tite soldier States de Germany's em behind her that he had endigh of R ington on returned not “Bronx Jess Y ang Daystar were the.other winners in the New Hampshire stable. old 'engagements. also be for an a ame route ear old stake: The Canad producer of Tounie Gra*l secured first hon and the Brockton pacer Maurice bmnev 103 3-4 during the Lexing- as a movie hero and His stable also received hired ? | secong money June, Betty Blacklock, Wiki Wiki and The Atlanta Meeting. o and acte ax i Ber et prominent part in the three year old races next year. On account of so few of the lead- {ing stables maling the trip to At- clipped one day off the Atlanta and light harness twenty-two ‘it at Lakeéwood Park since it the fields were meeting in_ 1916 conspic- trotting in 1:59 3-4 while Captain Shaw also drove Peter Mav a the opening he horses were move v thirty-two 3 loaded for Atlanta The balance of the @ i rather light as there were tickets or whiskeq awa the overcoat meetings which in a few i sewnteen of there was a marked im- while the week was made memorable by Miss Bertha Dillon eut- ting the world’s race record for three year old trotters to 2:03 1-4 and Miss pacing in two minutes in- a with Hal Boy. That year there were sixty-four horses at the seventeen of thm being in two events. Influenza placed atlanta on the doubtful list last vear but the man- agement went on with its fair and gave a race meeting with forty-two 3 starters, seventeen of which were| (Ome of the women representatt double starters. This vear but fifty horees took the word at Atlanta. Of| &t the Labor Industrial Peace Con- that number nineteen were southern! feren - R each won the former boosting of winning mounts for finishing_in front tum J., Esther provement the great was Cox’s first winner, his only other competitor be- ing Marion@ale who defeated him at Cleveland and Hartford, Lock was distances in the first heat. It was also the twelfth vietory placed = to'the credit o the gallant four year 477 14210514 who now stands at the top of the list of money winning horses for the BEVERAGES OF ‘OTHER NATIONS. 'AND PERIODS 0. 2—Japanese Ladies at Tea. with $24.947 to his credit, Peri-|horses and appeared in events | econd with $28,507.02. |grammed for them. The balance of ey made his second ap-|the racing material was in five stables, Atlanta memorable by | Murphy having nine, Cox eight, Geers cutting his record to $201 1-2 and also | seven, Beck three, Vic Fleming two, by landing the first race placed to his|ang White two credit singe he took all of the leaders Toledo On the same|on account of ail oi- i s hor: Princeton made his|off and McDonald .was abs fourth staf pver Lakewood Park. In|cause he did not consider his horses 1916 he won i in 1.093-4. The following year | ciosed as they.showeq at Lexington | being in 2.04 114, while| where he won with s two heats from Early Dreams,| Baron_Cegantle, Timmy Direct lin 1918 he gefeated St. Frisco in 2:02,|Zomidoite. The death of Mr. 3 the three fastes\|put the Brook Farm out of the run- trotted by a stallion in a|ning while the Laurel Hall farm hors- es and the horses controlied by Fred Hyde were either stale or sick. Devitt, Dodge, Egan and Childs did 2:03 after making a break |not have any. engagements while Mc- white faced horse is now in a| Mahon's stable was shot,to pieces s by himself. At Boston he equall-|early in the. season. race of 2.02, while at Lex- his only trip against time| In the desert of Atacama he recied off a mile in 2:01. built by the Incas for their armies is still in use, and another in the Prov- ince of Tarapaca is the principal high- . way of Chile north and south and prepared fory his three|Cart roads from Chiloe to Valdivia and Vearling | from Valparaise to Santiago were Tee Tide by ILee Ax|built in the sixteenth century by the heat from Azora Ax-|as good when. the Atlanta y 1-4 will “be wintered in oY oser “ihe|Svanish governors, Valentine did not go south as usual i e ng in the two. « — - in® 1920. « i n reinsman, Vic Flem- a M. Tarbell both Lou Todd and .t Atlanta while Geers s with Homefast | heat encounter with which Cox drove to a with Gentry C., Peter The last named is by a doubt as to whether in the Grand Circuit Lee Axworthy made The fields were, horses programmed, them starting in two in three during the terence. C-H-mu lmanl lemons, maclnm: pra:d al lk ;nocs. ar:v’-. u.:;af 11.95& bat one-of My focton that Wc .Ginger Ale of character HARVARD CO..LOWELL. MASS Boston Branch. 45 Commercial Whari POETRY URBS IN NOCTE. To pace alone the dim and sile streets Enrapt ih murmuring. solitudes ° of night In spirit a phantom riding astride t winds at in wild gambois of autumm sprite Whirl ihrough _the city's eanyons grown of homes As though to purge them with the cleansng ureath— To feel the mad expansive surge o might That $lis the living thing in view o death A city dead in slumber with stars And ghastly beams from ecach lamp upholding poie ] And mine own eves to watch it as sleeps— To be thus in communion with the sou! Of a dull giant, so poweriess in the deeps Of lethargy to suffer the free step Born of exultance with which you malke your goal— To know the sacredness of a moectur nal pro Upon the chill, deserted city streat When the myriad things have donne the Sandman’s cowl Can strengthen me the dawn anon, to meet, When then the somnolent giant wil be woke By the heat of sun and the daylight ' its rays, And 1 again will fall beneath the yoke One slave in millions thronging eit —Mort Sur HUMORS OF THE DAY What did they lynch that fell le Ridge for?" asked a Sandy Mush, Ark er J. Adler, in the New York his initials,” was his reply his—p'tu! —which His initials. They happened to be I. W, W."—Kansas City Star If [ sell you a lot in this subnrb vor |agree to build a house costing not than $20,000.” Yes, if that rule.” “And 1 might s that brother is an architect see that vou observe the rule rlhrl.ur.gnn Bulletin. Her Soldier Husband—One of the first things 1 learned in the army was how o carry a 70-pound pack on a 20-mile hike. Mrs. Sububs—Howy lovely! Now I must insist on your going shopping with me this = afternoon.—Houstor Iriendly Constable—Come ,come sir: pull yourself together; your wife's calling you Convivial _Gent—Wha' she call calling me or William? Constable—WMliam, sir Convivial Gent—Then I'm not going home —London Blighty “What's the maiter with you and your gir! “We had a tiff. T told her T was go ing away forever, and she told me to Well, Bobbie. how are the guinea you'll stay away at least two even ings."—Louisville Courier-Journal “Are you a lawyer asked the wrathy visitor “I am, sir. What can I do for you™ 'm in the grocery business. A wo man called me a profiteer. Is word actienable?” “It certainly is—if she can it.”— Birmingham Age-Herald " A boy was presented with so young guinea pigs by his fathers friend. Meeting the boy soon after. the friend inquired about the pets “Weil, Robbie, how are the guinea ting on; are they in good are just the same shape, emly Osteopathic Magazine. KALEIDOSCOPE Over 90 per cent. of all the Chinese are illitesate. Not one woman in a thousand can read or write The use of springs is done away with in 4 new cord-operated device for opening and closing transoms, win- dows or shutters A Chinese child has only one chance + hundred of being able to go te shool. Sixty million children are waiting for schools. Portable arc Jamp appaftus for mo- tion-picture work has been put in such compact form by an inventer thal two outfits can be carried by one man bigger. The whole of Denmark has a popu- lation of slightly more than 5,000,000 of which over 600.000 live in Copen hagen; but it should also be borne in mind that the purchasing power o the average citizen is very high In co-eperation with the bureau of lighthouses, experiments are being carried on by the bureau of standard to establish a radio fog signaling svs tem. Such a system, when perfected will give to the navigator a reliable signal under any conditions of fog and make him independent of the light- house lamp The tax rate of unswick, Me. which was $3 a thousand last year, is $25.50 a thousand now, but complaints are said to be few because it had been ate would rease in generally expected that the be $27 A considerable inc valuation, due largely to the opera tion of thle Texas Company, at Hard ings, was the cause of the unexpect edly low rale. When Charles M. Schwab was re turning from France he was on a boat carrying many negro soidiers anc learned thut many of them were with- out money. ~Mr. Schwab loaned $1 each to 154 of the negro soldiers and told them they need noi pay it ba unless they wanted to. He supposed very few of them would return t loan and is agreeably surprised be cause 133 of the 154 soldiers have sent him a dollar each The natural resources of Persia are almost inestimable, ang up to the present the great wealth of this an- cient country has scarcely been touch- ed. The now famous Anglo-FPersian oil fields are a vivid example of what can be done when the necessary en terprise and capital are forthcoming The large area over which this com- pany possesses the rights of working contains an almost inexhaustible sup ply of eil A hearing to determine the advisa bility of limiting or prohibiting fi ing operations in all waters of Alaska flowng into the Pacific Ocean be- tween Cape Spencer and Cape Sar! chef, also in all waters tributary te Bering Sea between Cape Sariche and Cape Newenham, will be held at the Seattle (Wash.) office of the United Statts Bureau of Fisheries on November 20, 1919, at which time all persons interested will be heard Cluett, P nl:odyf.v‘Cn.lnc. Troy.N.Y Thie wame *“Argonne’” 15 used by of the Arzonus Sire Ca.. AL TeRI. 15 no advertising medinm .o Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bul letin for business results.