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to his | companied by Lou Edwards, ' lignt- “Ruth, adding nis wuy s haft millfon dollar gamage suit were| we ght champion of Australia, and x"-l::mnvfl .‘;groeoloeng‘ lf!l; h:l;:fi— ryed today by lhe New York Amer-| Chet Wiggius, the Australian heavy- k s early anbtodl Ay s st Byron Ban- | weight champion, arrived here today | kee ece“ m?‘fln‘m 0;3 “y awm :m i «ruit Joamson, president of the from fi;;] A‘ntlpo::s‘re bk e Feeth ‘th::b?‘alI wa.ga Ameri Leagu 0 WS, Ach:lnm Started against Johnson | bouts nchfiulea with Johnny Dundee, 3“8;!& f:; g:?:ld it:efiixmx_!{u:el:fit:; at the time the American League met | Ritchie Mitchell and Johnnie Noye in 4 i ry thaeeufire Rt December 1 for its’ annual | Milwaukde, and will go to London in memm ;fl:e. it e mem “when notices of suits«were ! March to fight before the National would be e “;Ao mt R P it o S R T L s g “plavers Tigainst accident h nnie - Ma - —_— :::<°m Griffith, Washington; | ENGLISH HENLEY REGATTA is nosnéw thing. Practically every 4 ding_sta; Frank Navin, Detroit; Philip Ball, St HAS NOT BEEN POSTPONED |SIi® that ’;”:&:eflt;zmn Gne dar o Louis, and James Dunn, Clevelan: London, Feb. 2—The rumor current|and, although the premium is high, it Compilaints also were served today on here that a postponement had been |is worth paying when the amount of these five club owners in one of three| ; jered of the English' Henley regat- [ money involved is considered.: Sulfs Lrought hgsinet Johnsen, ta, which is to begin June 3, is with- * In the first of the three suits, the 7 out foundation, according to a state- New York club demends damages of e Jop e $500,000 personally from Johnson on| WLet made toddy by the Amateur p the ground that he conceived u;g Fopie SN Ui idea of driving the New York clu I et SR PR o4t e BRwiAll und. (o tis ‘end.: did m::thmtfi'mt the e;“len‘ey regatta dates yarious acts injurious to .the NeW| . set back a week so that Harvard | York club, including the - suspension |t ;versite holder of the grand chal- | Mmf New York, Feb. 2.—Complaiits in a| tro o m All rumbpp—hud cnm But hwm u‘i ’» S A 'S ‘chal me ) How do%x shé’ m-ue; 2 That mamic mazé-of fril AT .xn;\il,’ png{&éflfi; Toa silken And scorp. the I rnf € scart or Ml “Th e a‘?‘p}émyflchmu 3 Hush! Let-us fiy the how and vrny Of sacred ‘ritegrand 'se # ot half efface hercharm 4’ grace With ‘doubts thit vex and weary The ‘magiciway wé husbands pay, - 1s vas(ly IORS MESATIVHE. ndon Chronicle HUMOR OF THE DAY Driggs—You - séem meditative. Griggs—Yes, I was thinKing. “Two cents for your thoug ts. Judge. - “That was & lively xong Miss Hawl- es sang, wasn't is?” The flavor gf this frue . ginger product — North American Moose. Tho -best ‘moose hunting in east- ern North America i§ found in the Canadian’ province of New Brunswick, The best in the United States is in Maine. Moose are believed to be hold- aged and mellowed — is so distinctive and delicious that one can rondily understand why Harvard Gmger Alz is kndwn as per- fection of Mays, and by erroneous statements influenced the Giants to write refus- ing to continue permission to the Yankees to use the Polo Grounds af- ter the year 1920, and by making pub- li¢ the plans which the New York club had for the acquis.tion of a new site, prevented its acquisition on ad- vantageous terms.” In the second suit the New' York club prays for a judgment restraining Johnson ,from paying to himself or receiving out of the funds of the American League any salary or com- pensation either as president, secre- tary or treasurer of the American League, and requiring him to account for and restore with interest all sums ch he may have taken as salary since the annual! meeting of the league in December, 1919, 2 The third suit which is agmnst’ Johnson and his five so-called “loyal” club owners asks that they be re- strained from “doing any further acts in aid of what is said to be the pur- pose and plan of the defendant John- son to infure the New York club and to grive it out of baseball.” This complaint also asks for appointment of a receiver for the funds of the league and for an in- junction during the pendency of this action. the GENE TUNNEY, A. E. F. CHAMP,, KNOCKS OUT AL. ROBERTS| Newark, N. J. Feb. 2—Gene Tun- ney, light heavyweight champion of the American expeditionary force, knocked out Al Roberts of Staten Isi-| and in the final round of an eight round bout at the First Reg'ment ar- mory here tonight. Tunney weighed pounds, one.more than his 0ppo- The soldier champion showed improvement and exhibited some clever work. He scored one knock- dewn in the first round, thrve in the seversh and ended the bout with a right smash to the jaw. Roberts put up a game battle. nent. Eddie zsimmons, New York lightweight, outfought Jimmy Dufiy of New York in an s’'ght round con- test. Duffy weighed 147 pounds and Flzsim'nona 135 3 4. G. CARPENTIER AND MANAGER SOCN TO SAIL FOR THE STATES Paris, Feb. ,2.—Georges Carpentier,| ace ;mv««n‘otl hy s manager, M. Descamps, wi ve France shortly for the Unted States, according to an anncuncement made today by Des- t time Carpen- | curing the proyinces. AUSTRALIAN CHAMPION TO FIGHT IN MILWAUKEE San Francisco, Feb. 2.—-Tom An- , Milw: ee fght promoter, ac- lenge cup, might send a crew of oars- men to defend the trophy and so that cup. SPORTING NOTES. It is hinted in soccer circles that the Bethlehem team has imported sev- eral star players from across the water, i Harry Greb, who seems to have out- grown the middleweight division, will take a hand in' the mingling of the heavyweight scrappers. The New York Giants and Boston Red Sox have completed their sched- ule of 20 exhibition games to be play- ed ‘during the spring training trip. It is predicted that the 25-cent seats at major league ball games will! be abolished zltogether when the big {leagues meet at Chicago in February, | A great deal is being said nowa- days about Ty Cobb slowing up. As the Detroit star proved last year that {he was still the greatest batter in baseball, he must have “slowed up” after‘'the close of the year, A Dbarrel of money in the way of vaudeville, movie, or boxing exhibi- tion coptracts awaits Georges Carpen-| | tier in American. « There is no deny- the greatest drawing. card in pugilism | today. Ing their own if not increasing. Er- Yale possibly cnuld challenge for the | nest Thompson Seton, the ‘naturalist, estimates that there are about a it ' Uon moose in North . merica. Mystery Solvey. Her eyes were red. and she explain- ed that she had been to a wedding. “I always cry more at a wedding than T do at a funeral—it's so much more un- certain,”—Boston Transeript. Img the fact that the Frenchman is, - | ‘Terry Turner, veteran infielder of| Ithe Cleveland Indians, will return to' the Columbus team of the American ‘a.esociauon next season. “Cotton Top” graduated into fast company from the Columbus team 18 years ago. -4 Aecord.ng to the program for the! seventh Olympiad to be held at Ant-| werp this year boxing championships' will be decided on points, while com- | petition in hockey will be on the! knockout system. - Pniladelph’a boxing gossip has n[ that Lew Tendler will soon cast his lot with Manager Billy Gibson and thereby beccome a stablemate ot, Champipn Benny Leonard. . Te H was supposed to bejthe arch-ene Leonard and hot on the champion's|’ trail for a fight, Frank Morgan, who probably is mI England by this time, will do no. box-| {ing there, and the heavyweight crop. "of that country is safe for the time be-! ing. The chief object of Moran s visit| !is to collect moneys he claims are due from promoters of the match between the Pittsburgher and Johnson. Moran jin sailing bound himself to the pass- port_officials to do no boxing abroad. {as the puglist did not have time to g0 through all the details incident to Ilhe labor questions involved. Champwon Jack Dempsey is a mem- Iber of the American Legion and also an honorary commander in the organ- ization. These honors were given to FINARCIAL AND MARKET WAS LISTLESS. New York, Feb. 2.—Fresh demoral- ization in foreign exchange, call loans to 16 per cent. and time money unobtainable at an advance of the bid to and even 10 per cent. ac- | counted mainly for today!s very list- less stock market, There was a'show of activity and strength at the outset, apparently pre- dicdted on the belief that debate on the peace treaty might be hastened by Viscount Grey’s statement. This was &con dispelled, the market reacting at the first sign of pressure and lapsing into a state of apathy for the bal- arnce of the session. Last week's 16cal bank’ statements were regarded as fairly encouraging but a survey of conditions at other leading centers disclosed mixed gains and losses Western ard southwestern eections mostly strengthening their re serves. In banking circles there was furth- er conjecture dealing with the unset- tiement of international credits, but tock the form largely of discus- as to the ultimate effect of the on adverse movement on this country's foreign trade. HE Rails were the only important stocks to manifest a degree of firmness and better sentiment on the part of investors and speculative interests Their moderate strength was derived from the nrogresa of federal legisla- tion. A few leaders, Incluflmg U. S. Steel and other standarg industrials, were at minimum quota®¥ions in the final dealings -that period coinciding with the highest rate for call money and the lowest quotation_for foreign exchange. Sales amounted 1o 475.000 shares. There was steady liquidation throughout the session of Liberty bonds and Victory notes, as well as speculative rails and industrials. For- eign bonds, including Japanese 4's, were reactionary at slight changes. Franklin Telephone: Machine Providence r. 1. Union 963 Company Union 1857 Engineers Founders Machinists Manufacturers of HARRIS-COR- LISS ENGINES. Brown Valve Gear applied to all makes’of Co liss Engines, Engine Repairs, Shafting, Hangers, Pulleys, Bear- ings, Couplings, Clutches. Large stock always on hand. General Mill Repair: Special machinery of all kinds. ARROW ?m%rCO[LARS Koot e COMMERCAL Total sales, par value, aggregated $19,750,000. Old U. S. bonds were un- altered on call. STOCKS. Yesterday's transactious cu Stock F.xrhlnle to- 3 Ps.lu. High. Low. Close. L Allly Sisluer ctfs Am e Am Am Am im Am. s Am Am Anzconda Coj Atch, T & S Balt & Ollo Baltimore & Beth Motor Beth Sta Brooklyn Rutte & Super - Igiration Cop. L aper Int Paper pr Kennecott ... Tehigh V: Marlin Rockwell Mexican Pet .. . Miami 3 Missourl. K & T . Ken & Misseuri Pac gx { ¥at Enam & st New_York Lentral Ualon Pacific pr U. S. Rubber . U. & Rubber w Steel New York, Feb. 2—Call money strong; high 16; low 14; ruling rate 14; closing bid 15. oflered at 16; last loan 16; bank acceptances 5 1-4. COTTON. ' - New York, Feb. 2—Spot cotton steady; middling 39.15. CHICAGO GRAIN: MARKET Another Presidential Possibility PRESS ILLUSTRATING SERVICE, N, . Nicholas Murray Butler, Presi- dent of Columbia University,_ the Institute, with the largest number ot enrolled students in the world, who has been ‘urged to run for gomination as Presidential. candi= date-on the Republican platform. Tee Kneght Norwich Distributors for Harvard Ginger Al=—James E. Moore, 7?-81 Water Street.’ S»ae Old Arithmetic. Some waiversity 'professors are tali- 2 about geiting out a new arithmetic. However. our guess is that it will bother the boys just as much to dis- cover how long it will take one man to build a wall 18 fqct long and six feet high and 12 I"(nJ\ thick, if eight men can build a wall three times that size in four days. Arithmetic has al- ways been the castor oil of school | tife; they.may fool with it as much as they will but they’ll never find a way to, make it pleasant to take. Fruits of OId. Many of the fruits and vegetables now eaten in England were almost un- known to our forefathers. Not until Henry VIII's time were raspberries or strawberries or cherries grown in Eng- land, and we do not read of thé turnip, cauliflower and quince being cultivated before the sixteenth century. Floor 160 years Old Still Good. When 2n old house in Pike county Pennsylyania, was torn down it was found® the floors of pitch pine, 166 years old, were still good, says the American Forestry Magazine of Wash- ington. The size amazed the carpen- ters, for the planks were two feet wide and an inch l\!‘d a quarter thicl 2 Jazzerizing the Buzzer. A newly designed triple tone elee- tric' bell yields a clear ring from one push button, a buzz from the second and a combined ring and buzz from the third. The buttons may be placed on three different doors of a house. or in office or shop the signals may be used for calliig three different per- sons.—Popular Science Monthly. Eeverages ¢ Othr Natiohs and Periods —Women cz Demmark Drinking The Almighty Dollar. Bribery has been the cownfail many public men during the course of history. Francis Bacon, the greatest thinker of his age, was ruined by his 'cupn.lity Lord Chancelloy Macclesfield and Waterbury were destroyed by the same vice: Benedict Arnold soic a fort fn New York to the enemy for $31575. For this same sin Gorgei betrayed Austria, Ahithopel forsook David and Judas delivered up Christ. Deadly Foe of Tarantula. The tarantula killer is a species of wasp whose female is the most effec- tive foe of the tarantula. Tt alights on the spider’s back and penetrates its body with a sting. In a few seconds the tarantula Is dead. The wasp then deposits an egg in the body and buries it in the ground. The egg changes-into a grub which nourishes itself upon the earcass of the tarantula. Disease Caused by Tree Tapping. A Dutch scientist has found that the disastrous brown bast disease of the rubber tree is caused by the present method of tapping; and not by a mold infection, . as has previously been thought. Old Stuff, New York Evening Post Headline— “Traces Baseball to Greek Sports.” Why, we've known all along that Greece produced the first IIomer.—l Boston Transeript. Carndlestick for Campers. -The bracket of -a . candlestick de- signed for'® campefs “terminates ‘in barbed points to grip a tree trunk or other upright support. in Ginger Ale. HARVARD CO., LOWELL, MASS. Boston Branch, 45 Commercial Wharf 1+ have caused a lot of trouble for Books an”. Ships.” If the.inventica of the ship was thought ' so ' noble, which carrieth riches and commodities from place to place. and consociateth-the most re- mote regions in participation of their fruits, how much more are letters to b~ magnified, which, as ships, pass chrough the vast seas of time, and make ages so distant' participate of the wisdom, illuminations, and inven- tions, the one of the other.—Sir Wal- ter Raleigh. Have Eye for the Future. Do for yourself what--you admire secing the other man do. He'takes time to get ahead. His mind is his most precious treasure. No pains are too much to bestow upen. it. You watch hint grow and admire his pluck. You even speak the word that boosts him. Why not apply his principles to your own life? Make the hours count. Take detours now that you may ride an easy road later—Exchange. The Whale*as an Eater. The whale raiely, if ever, swallows | anything larger than a herrinz. Al- though the head is of enormeus size, from one-quarter to one-third length of the body, and the mouth. fifteen to twenty feet long and six to eight feet wide, the opening-of the gullet is net larger than a man's fis Big Man in His Day. Goliath, the Philistine giant, must the army quartermasters of his day. How did they get a regulation uniform to fit him, for:he stood eleven: feet thres;| Inches in- his stocking feét; if,"indeed, Philistines of those times wore stock- 1 “It was—before ‘she killed - it.”—] ton Transcript. Doctér—It is a little difficult to di- agnose your case. Perhaps you have been eating too much. Patient—Impessible. This “hotel is run on the European plan—Hotel Ga- zZette. Maud*—Miss Oldun thinks that hotel clerk just lovely. Ethel—Why so0? g Maud—He wrote opposite her name on the hotel 'register “Suite 16.< Pittsburgh - Post. - Maud—Can you run a flivver? Beatrice—No, indeed. Maud—Why, I thought you grag! ated at an autpmobile school! Beatrice—So I did, but I only took the classical course~foe KALI'_IDOSCOPE What is believed to be the largest motorbus has beén built for.a South- ern oil company a six-wheeled affair carrying 80 passengers. The rider of a French inventor's bi- lcycle pedals-it ‘Wwhile -seated in a com- { fortable chair and steers small automobile wheel. Cars designed for an electric rail- road in-Ireland can be run by gaso- line-electric generators they carry or by the overhead trolley system. An Alabama inventor has patented {a blacksmith’s hammer which is op- erated by foot power, striking the same place on an anvil each time, Why Druggists Recommend . Swamp-Root it with a For many . years dmgg-nsts have watched -with-much interest the re- markable -record, maintained by Dr. Kilmer's' Swamp-Roqt, the great kid- ney, liver and bladder medicine. ¥t ‘is a physician's prescription. Swamp-Root is ‘a strengthening medicine. . It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do the work nature in- tended they should do, Swamp Root has stood the test of vears. It {s sold by all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine: has so. many friends. Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start tréatment at once. chever i “you wish first to test this ‘great’ preparauon send ten cents.to Dr. Kilmer &'Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure Ings,—Boston Post. and mention The Norwich Daily Bul- letin. ' CASH ONLY "'WE ARE DISCONTINUING CARRYING A LINE OF GENERAL ACCESSORIFS AND WILL OFFER OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF —AT— "ACTUAL COST - HERE IS A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU TO PROVIDE FOR YOUR PRE- SENT AND FUTURE NEEDS AT A GREAT SAVING. FORD OWNERS! AWe are including in this sale our entire stock of Parts - and Accessories for Ford cars. NO RETURNS and Vulcamzmg AN EXCLUSIVE TIRE STORE WITH REAL SERVICE BAIRD TIRE AND SUPPLY CO. OPPOSITE POST OFFICE NORWICH, CONN In the future we will concentrate our efforts on Tires, Tubes, les, Tlre Accessorles, MoanoiIs