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A real basketball game, full of pep and science, is promised the fans in Olympic haill tonight, when the Al Eastern Collegians clash with the lo- cal Crescents, The . Collegians will have “Hap” Harman, formerly captain Wesleyan, and lately of the Wyan- okas of the Intey-State league. “Hap” needs no introduction to the fans in this section as he wpe s big factor in downing the Milford, Mass., aggrega- tion two years ago for the New Eng- land championship. “BIil" Dwyer, of Colgate, and “Yump” Johnsgn of War- anka, two of Harman's running mates On the Wyanokas, will also be . here, "Okie” O'Connor of Doston- College, Tim Cronin,and George Noble, who played here with the Len Hurs y in the eeason, Casey of the fast Trav- elers, and possibly Joe Smith and “Steffy” Stephanian, both of Grove City college, Penn. That combinatien Wwill surely be on hand, as Munager Eenoit has made the manager of the All Collegians promise the appearance of these men or no guarantee. The local management wants no such farce last Saturday and in the future will insure himself against such teams. The Crescents will present a new line~ up, a little lighter, but not lacking in skill and power. The Marks brothers will not be oh hand and Manager Ben- oit will present “Cyclone Joe" Lelair, a Norwich boy, and “Mondy” Normandin, both of the Bmeralds of Willimantic. These men, with “Capt.” D. Murphy, Mills and ‘“Jack” Murphy, can give any team all the action they want and furnish the lovers of the game some- thing to talk about. The change in the Crescents’ lineup is a step towards eutting down expense, as the team up to the present time is not a paying proposition, and the effort of the nan- n keeping up the strongest ny part of New Engiand to Norwich tannot be done at a loss. There will be an inieresting pre- | Umirary game at 8 p. m., whicn will 111 out a good programme for the lov- ers of the game. A treat is promised tonight sure, i LONDON POLICE PUGILISTS TO COMPETE WITH NEW YORKERS Ne® York, Doec. 20—Two pugilistic vhampions of tie London police force arrived here today on the steamer Im- perator from Southamptbn to compete against New York police boxers in a to@rnament here mext month, The two men, in charge of Inspector Aethur Spriggs of Scotland Yard, are Con- stables Jack Stanley, hea\ yweigot, and Harry Mallin, middieweight, .o the metropoiitan police, who tvon their. ti- tles i an _ elimination tournament. Stanley weighs 186 pounds and Mal- lin 185 Tle visitors are guesis of the New York stay. COLGATE PLAYS TEN GAMES ON GRICIAON NEXT SEASON Utica, N. Y., Dec. 20—Colgite §s to Police club during their ALL EASTERN COLLEGIANS HERE TN | 'NORWICH BULLETIN, TUESDAY ilton;" Oct. 22, Cornell at Ithaca; Oct. 29, New Yor] unsvauity,-?mbably at Utica; November 5, Rochester at Ham ilton; Nov. 12, Syracuse at Syracuse; Nov. 19, Brown at Boston; Nov. 24, Columbia at New York. - DISSENTERS FROM LANDIS /REGIME, STATES HUSTON New York, Dec. 20—Failure of the Ameriean league to elect New York, Boston and Chicago representatives to its board of directors at the.annual meeting last Friday “indicated clearly” that ‘President Ban Johnson and the clubs which supported him in the league- war “are dissenters from the new Landis regime in baseball,” Col- onel T. L. .Huston, part. owner of the Yankees, announced in a statement here tonight. |“During the.past year Johnson has fought the appointment of Judge Lan- dis as chairman of the National Com- mission,” Colonel Husten sad, “and successfully resisted the Judges ad- vent into baseball ‘until compelled to consent at the recent Chicago meet. ings: His show of acquiescence is the veriest hypocracy. He had to swWrren- der at the recent Chicago meeting be- cause his ‘wilful five’ desested him .in the fear that the proposed twelve club league would injure their yroperty in- vestments.” Charging that the recent move is aimed *“to disgust and. discourage Judge Landis at the start,” Colonel Huston expressed the opinion “that Judge Landis will quickly find means to curb Johnson and his puppets.” ‘Johnson and his . five clubs,” he added, “are bandéd together by ties other than true sportsmanpshin. The strength of 'this unholy alliance has made Johnson exceedingly’ arrogant and has been the cause of all the re- cent trouble in the American league and in baseball, and unti it is broken there can be no peace, The elimina- tion of Johnson' would automatically restore tranquility. $38,000,000 PASSED THROUGH ¥ PARI MUTUEL MACHINES for three yes Baltimore, Dec. 20—At the fall meet- ings of ‘the four one-flle‘mce tracks of Maryland, $38,000,000 passed through the pari mutuel machines during tne sixty-nine days of racing, according to figures disclosed by the state racing commission today. The commission did got begin operations Ungil after the spring season was over, bdt conserya- tive “estimates for the entire racing year (110 days), place the amount al $600,000,000. Besides a tax of $6,000 a day fox every racing day the state co.lects 13 per cent. of the net:earnings of the| race tracks. FINK DEFEATS COBURN IN ko SQUASH TENNIS FINAL New York, De: 20—FEarl Fink, of the Crescent Athletic cii:h, Brook'yn, Py ten games on gridiron next sea- | defeated Ralph G- Cohurn, Harvard | Patrick . 104 69 son. New teams to ha'encounterel~are | club, in the final of the annual handi- | Kennedy $3 195 Princeton, New York university and | ¢#b tournament of the National Squash { Osten 108% 95 C bhy, the last named on Thanks- | Tennis association here today. The|Enos 91 99 siving jn New York. The sched- | score was 15-12, 13-1, 15-8.. Coburn, |Gee .. 115 - 92 ule-foilow s who received a’ threesace handicap, — Ve— e— —— September 24, St. Bonaventure at|Was out-classed after the first set.. 3 498 450 462 1410 Hamilton; October 1, Allegheny at SR T e Team No. 1, Capt. Combies. Hamilton; Oct. 8, Princeon at Prince- Cornell Won. Cotey 101 §3 ton; October 15, Susquehanna at Ham- | Ithaca, N. Y. Dec. 20—Cornell de- | Rin: 89 90 g BT T 2 7 84 FI Ril a; ~ H Combies 82 .86 ")}‘L tRclAl 441 430 438 1309 MARKET UNSETTLED New Yurk, Dec. 20.—Entering upon final fortnight of the year, the stock rket today presented no material anc - of tone fram the very ujisettied and reactionary ‘trend of the past few months. i The general tenor of advices ovr seem- e4 in no wise eonducive to a resufmption of operations for the long = account: Cables from London and Buenos Ayrs told of the suspension of financial insti- thilons at those centres and. foriegn ex- change was unsteady, especially to cen- teal Guropean points. Domestic industrial and commercial conditions oontinued to be clondd a further failirg off of tonnage at Jeading raftway terminn additionu dividend suspengiohs and more cut'ing of wage schedules in the textile trad Prices were low:r In a majority of in- stances at the aetive opening of the stock market, recessions making irre before noon ¢ fatermvdiste sesrion fafled to hold, lative fssues succumbing to increas- vd nressure at the Leavy close Net losses of 1 to 4 poln coppers. caquipments, sprcialties as International were made pirss and Paper 34 much angd Famous Play.rs, hut Tionston Ofl *as the most en 170, hreak- ing 11 1-4 points on o >-5 oXerings. Sales amounted (o 875,000 sharex, Another heavy inflow of gold from Landon renorted. but the movement had Nttle offcet on rimittapees of ster- ing bills. which ralied only s'in¥t'y, Call money ruled at 7 ver cent. all day. but time money showed incresging scareity. Hervy » of Liberty issues. nre<- pecially the 2nd. 3rd and 4th 4 1-4's. fratured the hond market. The offerinzs heing atfributeg to enforeed ligoidati-n. Tatal sales (por velne) ageregnted $24 - 0,060, O!d U. 8. bonds were unchanged STOCKS. 0800 4%6 Atchisan 00 Atchisen pe ™ 2 1y b} e Y X S ok o %o CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET $4 % | Chicago, Dec. 20.—Annouricement of a 3% 3% | bank failure in Lopdon had a depressing C 1% :fii effect today on the wheat market but Bu oy |scders over-reached themselves . und. a| EP @ik @i | rally ok plage in the last half hour. oo o8 clos L, 1-2 to 2 1-2¢ met i o T g% o' | higher with March 1.64 1-¢ a 1.64 1-2 and 10908 € % 2% | May 161 a 161 1-4. Corn gained 3-4 a 00 C 3 - 3% |1 1-4 and oats 1-4 a 7-8c. In provisions 000 C & %o e outcome varied from 15 decline to X 1% % 154 | 200 advance, ; = lle % 8% | Misgiving zroused by the Briitsh bank F :‘Mm a F-5 ;:‘é zk failure wena made the most of by the 1490 Cract Seel 81 7e, 8% | Wheat bars, and during the greater part W00 Crucl Steel pr 6% %% 53 |of the day the’ 6t showed less power £ bel & Hd W% ¥ WK |to recover from' sinking. spells than has Rtes 1% i ix|been the rule of late. A’ comparative lull z Dome Mine . 19 10 |In export buying was of some weight, al- Ede .. . 1% 12 12 {so as a handicap on the bulls. The fact EEEs i !l% 1% |that. country offerings were light failed xgfl‘n Ke . 118% 128% |to ‘make much impression as an offset =90 Gen E) s 3 4% | but - dévelopments at Washington ind re- RS et 28" 13% | gard o rellef legislation for farmers 730 Gen Mot T 7o .70 |were carefully noted and with a decrease 70 "(u "u 0' L}a ” b In the visible supply total were hh:lprul in 1108 Gy Ner v =i Tlifting prices at the finish whn shorts e 3% sia | had: to bid up prices sharply in order to 39 Int &5 Tr . 2 39 | cover. g il e 1390 Int Proer 43 8% Corn displayed Independent strength as 37 g Wy |n result of persistent buving on the part 590 Int Mer Mar sy an d& of an clevaior interest, nnd'::bu; to ex- @00 ' 17 0% 16 nquiries at_the seabo: oats fol- , L N e ” ong ave: Jower: i sympa- M i S e ri: é i ie X Variable rallies dur- | §fpod=ciiienee 23800 Mex Petrol .. 200 Mami ¢ €, 3800 Mo K & T . North P Penn Pierce € ¢ Piurse ¢ Ray Cew Beeding Reading 3 ‘pr Redding 3 pr Rep I'& § . Sort & W pr). 1 or 00 %609 Wil'ys 1300 Worth P val balloon A-5598 have centered their % ? for the missing craft in the wdi- New Yark, Dec. 20.—Call money’. ks, within a radius of 80 miles teady ; high 7;: low. 7; ruling rate 7:° Le theyMitehis closing bid 6; offered at 7 ; last loan 7 bang.acceptanc s 6 3-8. x COTTON New York, Dec. 20.—Spot cotton quic middling 15:50. LIBERTY BOND MARKET. Vie 1 9 I FOREIGN "EXCHANGE RATES. ;) Week Yesterday Axc sovercign) > 350% 344K | 5.55% 33 3.9 " ER2) Damand - G iy g Taly_(var 183 cents per iri) Demand 3.85% Cables 4 3.46. Belgium par 19.3 cents Demand 3 .. i Public Safe RICHTER & CO. | Springfield letforc_r New Bfitai n We Recommend the purchase A of, : Billings & Spencer Common VANDHET e Common * These two companies are' among the leaders of Connecticut industries and the stocks purchased at this time pre- sent in our opinion a most attractive invi ent opportunity. PRICE- AND FULL PARTICULARS UPON REQUEST Harold N. Christianson Local Representative New London, 2211 BASKETBALL OLYMPIC HALL TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21 i ALL EASTERN COLLEGIAN; VS. '} CRESCENT A. &. ‘Fast Preliminary Game feated Princeton, 24 to 20, in an inter- collegiate league basketball game here |tomight. The contest, the first of the league season, was decided in the last: minute’s play. = NORWICH UNIVERSITY SQUAD ELECTS SMITH CAPTAIN Northfield, Vt; Dec. 20—C. C. Smith, ck of the N wich unite football team, was elected captain of the 1921 team at a | meelingt of the squad today The schedule for next season,+ including : eight games, was also discussed. The scason will open on Sept. 24 and close on Nov. 12. CAPT. GEE’S 'ROLLERS HIT WINNING GAIT Capt. Henry Gee's five hit a winning gait Monday night in the duckpin tournament at the EIks’ alleys, sweep- ting the boardsj three straight with Capt. John Combies’ rollers. ¥The los- ers never had u chance. Capt Gee ghowed the way with a single of 115 in the first game, but Osten of the winning team got the high three string total with 302. The scores: Team No. 4, Capt. Gea. The game for Friday night this week between Team No. 6 and Team No. 7 has been moved’ forward to Thursday night this week. The tournament standing is now as follows: Won - Lost Team 4, 9 Team Team Team Team Gee ot 7, Campbell 6, Madden . 5, 3, Fitzgerald D. Youn, Team 1, Combie: Team 8, Haye: Team 2, Stevens 0o e s e 0o Lift Ean on Colored Boxers. Philadelphia, 20—Director of y James T. Cortelyou' to- day announced he had lifted the ban on | Harry Wills and Sam McVey, boxers, who had been ing. G ADIRONDACKS FOR MISSING NAVAL BALLOON SEAR New York, Dec. 20.—Army officials | direcg'ng the search for the The two will be- | scrutinize | ROBEER GRABBED LETTERS, BUT MISSED $2,700 IN CASH Derby, Conn., Dec. 20.—A of a; hold-up which did. not nced police in- and was not reported to the police tale Mystery Surrounds Major Churchill’s Visit To Geneva ipvndcnz upon . volunteers, and men from sing na- | ° }found in excavations it must have been and we-will repl /s PATIONAI :0PTiC S CORP ¥ ORATION: No N.eegilyto' Your Eyeglasses Break Let us insure them for you and protect ycu against loss in case of breakage. For a small fraction of the value of your lenses we will issue to you a N. O. S. C. Lens Insurance Card good for one year. If your glasses break present the card to us out charge, delay or inconvenience. It will take but a moment to issue your policy — | the protection is absolute. Insure Your Glasses NOW— €. ) Worry When || ace the broken lenses with- Before They Break A.SPEAR OPTOMETRIST Franklin Square Norwich, Conn. was told by Miss Catherine Sullivan, em- ployed at the freight ofice of the New York, New Haven and Hartford rail- road today. She was leaving tne offices at 5.30 Saturday afternoon with $2706 in cash and checks in cne hand and a batch of mail in the other. Just as she was at the freight house door & man grabbed at the packages but got only the let.ers with which he fled. REPORTS FROM ELECTIONS BECEIVED IN MADRID} Madrid, Dec. 20.—Late reports on the Cortes election recenved at official head- quarters state ' the approximate number of candidites supporting Premier Data who were elected, including those unop- posed, is 205; while 150 candidates sup- porting other leaders were elected. Although itewill be impossible to give the definite result for the house of rep- resentatives before next Sunday, the government felt such conviction it had secured a working majority that the premier today sent a message to the king expressipg satisfaction over-the re-. sults. > An outstanding feature of the elections was the rout of the socialists, who, with the republicans form the extreme left instead of returning to the house with “an increased number of deputies, as expected, the socialists find their ranks reduced to only four, while the republicans also are inferior in force. THE EVOLUTION OF FIRE FIGHTING “The passing of the fire nuicce irom Manhattan Island and the installation cf a high pressure water system i ooston to eliminate even the fire engine are fur- ther steps in the stuge of progress from the romantic days of the picturesque old hand tubs,” says a bulletin from the Washington, D. C., headquarters of the National GeogTaphic society. “Some remember wpen citizens iricked themselves out in red shirts and glazed caps and carried torches in the front of a procession or formed part of the body- guard of the gallant 0ld tub as it puraded the streets on a_gala occasion. Then pas- ston for fire fighting ran to a high pitch and arguments were waged about the merits of particular engines. Today the throbs of a motor-driven engine are tak- ing the place of those heart throbs. The horses that might have clattered from their stalls. glided beneath their harness, and raced gloriously through the drizzly, night-darkened streets beforc - the fire- spitting demon are drawing farm wagons or plowing the fields. 5 “In those days communities wefe de- | 1 | all social ranks gave valuable time to qualify themselves for the service. “Fire fighting in some sort of organea form is ancient. Machines f@r throwing water from a distance were known, ac- cording to our first clear evidence, in the | second century before Christ. Heron of Alexander, 200 years before the Christion era, in an old manuscript which has es- caped destruction, described an hydraulic machine used in Egypt during the-time of thé Ptolemies. It was composed of twu brass cylinders resting on a wooden base with pistons fitfed into them—in its prm- ciples vractically like our present engine. e most other knowledge, this wax lost in the dark ages wkich followed. ans had scuads of men te the scene projeeted on to tite fire by of the -‘siphones’ or han precise nature of this inst been determined, but rument has not from specimens much like the old-faehioned syringe used by gardeners. These large organizalions of men gave the Roman-authorities trou- ble by thelr turbulence. Trajan, the Ro- man emperor, and Pliny, at that tiiee one of his governors, had ’ong and serious YRIGHT_CLINGDINGY, WAGHINGTON Major Marlborough Churchill, for- mer chief of the United States Mili- tary Intelligence Bureau, who sud- denly appeared at Geneva, Switzers land, is reputed to be the ablest mill- | tary diplomat in-the serviceiof the Government. It is thought in Wash- Ington that he will rcport on all matters of interest to America dur- ing the league of nations conference. | These reparts will evenzually” regch ‘ithe Staty Department l correspondence over the advisability of organizing fire departments in the cities under Pliny’s jurisdiction, leading to the conclusion that such groups would attain sufficient strength to be a menace to the government. “Mention is made of the medieval use of forcing pumps as fire engines at Augs- burg in 1518. England and the countries of the continents were using hand squirts and syringes at this time. America took her ideas from the Fnglish, adapting them to her peculiar needs. At first the col- onists were content with preventive meas- ures, but these scarcely had any effect upon the chimneys, built of wood, gener- ally used by the early inhabitants. “Before the: English flag flew oved Manhattdh an old Dutch ordinance direct- ed the burgomasters to demand from ev- ery house money for the purpose of or- dering from the mother country leather fire buckets, fire ladders and fire hooks, ‘and once a year, to demand for every chimney one guilder for the support and maintenance of the same.” This ordinance states in its preamble that ‘in all well regulated cities and corporations it is customary that fire buckets. ladders and hooks are in readiness at the corners of the streets and in nublic houses for the time of need.’ Imarine th:'modern Man- hattan so_equipped! Buckets hung out on Broadway corners would in number run a close second to the bulbs on its electric signs. g “Boston had the first regular fire com- pany under municipil control in this country in 1678. Tefore this date. Low- ever, the sturdy Dostonians had buckets and ladders in their meeting’ house and imposed a penalty for thejr use except in case of fire. “George Braithwaite, an Englishman, first conceived the steam fire engine, which so definitelr marked the next stage of progress in fire fighting. Scoffers jeer- ingly called his invention 2 ‘steam squire’ lana ‘kitchen stove, but it came to stay, unless such steps. as Poston’s innovation in installing a high pressure waier ays- tem drives it into a romantic past.” Gold valued at $4,000,000 arrived in New York on the steamship Imperator for the account of the British government with Kuhn Loeb & Co. U. 8. Manufacturers’ High Record Year. More than $7,000,000,000 worth of the foreign commerce of the United States in 1920 is by or on behalf of the manuiagt- urers of the United States as against $2,- 000,000,000 worth in the year preceding the war. The persisient af.er-the-war growth of our manuficturing indust says a statement by The National City Bany of New York, is evidenced by a close study of the record of our foreign commerce in the current vear. During the eight months of the year for which statistics are now available they have imported $2,000,000,000 worth of manufacturing material, while their ex- ports in the same period have aggresated 2 3-4 billlon doliars. This indicates that the imports of manufacturing material, including both raw and partly manufac- tured, will aggregate $3,000,000,000 in the full calendar year 1920 and that their exports of manufacture will aggrez-ta | and probably exceed - $4000,000{" @& making the total for the calendar veu. | 1920 fully $7,000,000,000 azainst less than $6,000,000,000 in 1817, the high re- cord year of the war period, and s'ight'y more than $2,000,000,000 in the year im- mediately preceding’ the war. In both fmports of manufacturing ma- terial and exports of manufactures, the total for 1920, a year of peace, will ex- ceed that of the busiest year of the war, and the aggregate value of the foreign commerce conducted by or on behaif of the manufacturers of the country will ex- ceed that of the high record war year by over 20 per cent. The exports of manu- factures in the full calendar year 1920 will probably exceed $4.000;000,000 as against slightly less than $1.000,000,000 in the calerdar year 1914, while the im- portation of manufacturing material, in- cluding crude and partly manufactured, will ageregate $3,000,000,000 2s against $875,000,000 in 1914. The imports of manufacturing material will be three and one-haif times as much as fn 1914 and the exports of manufactures more than four times as much 2s in that year. This trebling of the value of the im- ports of manufacturing material and quadrupling of the value of manufac- tures exported in the msix year period, 1914-1920, suggests that the total Value of the manufactures turned out by our factories has enormously increased during that period. The latest official record of the value of manufactures produced in the United States is that of 1914, and stood at slightly less than $25,000,000,- 000, exclusive.of the “hand trades and neighborhood industries,’ 'which probaby added a couple of billion dollars, bring- ing the grand total of the manufactures produced in the United States in 1914 up to. fully $26.000.000,000, while the fact that our manufacturers are now demand- ing three times as much In value of for- elzn material and sending abroad four | times as much in value of their output suggests lnat the recent unofficial esti- mates of $50,000,000.000 as the present annual output of our factorizs js probab’y not excassive. This estimate i, however, absolutely unofficial as the officlal cen- sus of the manufactures of fthe United States in the calendar year 1919 has not yet been tabulated ‘in sufficient detail to enable the census officials to state the total value of the factory output of 1919 and they, quite naturally, decline to es- timate the total. hould this estimate of approximately $50.000,000,000 as the value of our manu® factures in 191% be sustained by the of- ficial flzures, fv would indicate that we arc probably producing over 40 per eent. of the manufactures of the world, which are at, present estimated at about $120 £00,000. ively few of the n: 1ions of the world .other than the United States, take complete, official records of their manufactures, though in many cas- Frank B. Wiuts IMMEDIATE WOOD AND CENTRAL WHARF - Xmas BOYS and MEN TOOLS OF ALL KINDS POCKET KNIVES RAZORS RAZOGR STROPS AND BRUSHES GAME TRAPS FLASHLIGHTS SKATES SLEDS * KIDDIE CARS FISHING TACKLE RIFLES ETC, ETC,, ETC. Bulletin Bldg. We Have a Supply of ANTHRA_CINI_TE COAL EGG, STOVE AND NUT SIZES FOR "BITUMINOUS FOR STEAM PURPOSES For Your Range, Heater, or Fireplac TELEPHONE ORDERS THE EDWARD CHAPPELL (0. Practical and Useful —FOR — The Household Telephone 531-4 DELIVERY KINDLINGS NORWICH, CONN Gifts WOMEN SHEARS AND SCISSORS SKATES SLEDS KIDDIE CARS CARVING SETE KNIVES AND FORKS ALUMINUM WARE POTS, PANS, KETTLES PERCOLATORS UNIVERSAL SET ROASTERS CRUMB TRAYS ETC, ETC,, ETC. 74 Franklin Street es records are made of the output manufactures fn all Europe in”the year preceding the war was about $38,000,000,- 000, and that the total for all Europe at the present time will scarcely reach the 1-$50,000,000,000 point, in view of the fact that the activity of the manufacturing industries of interior Europe is and has been in recent years far below normal. As nearly as can be cstimated, the world's factol record in the current year would stand: TUnited States, $50.- 000,000,000 ; Europe as a whole, approxi- matly $50,000,000,000, and other manu- facturing countries (chiefly Canada, Ja- pan and India) $20,000,000,000, making the grand total of world factory output, at present prices, approximately $120,- 000,000 per annum. e Foax Ruined a Sclentist What is belicved to be the ln'v‘ntfs ax in the history of science was plaj ::er a century ago by students of Pro- fessor Johann Bartholomaeus Adac Beringer, holder of the chair of natural philoshphy at the University of Wurzbers. He was keenly Interested in fossil re- mains, and was the leader in the great group that held the fossils to be & sort of divine joke, placed in the earth by God to test human faith. Students designed a score or more 1( fossils from clay representing the most absurd beasts their imacinations cnu}1 onceive, and hid them in the ground a spot where the old paleontologist was { 4 them and accepted them i later the st i sing stars and dents hid other desizns p 3 Cins and even inseriptions in Hebre Syrfan and Babvlonian, the old man was Qeitehted and was sure he had proved his grounds. He began a book of immen q Size, written in Latin in which he grave Franklin Machine Preveoes®* CO-'T!DZ.HY Union 1857 Engineers Founders Machin'sts Manufacturers of HARRIS-COR- LISS ENGINES. Brown Valve Gear applied to all' makes of Cor- liss Engines, Engine Rep Skafting, Hangers, Pulleys, B ings, Couplings, Clutches. as re Telephone: COPYRGHT CLINEDINST, WASNINGTOR Frank B. Willis, a former Gov- ernor of Ohio, who has been elected to’ succeed President-elect Warren G. Harding, to his séat in the Senate [t is stated that President-elect Harding will resign from the Senate Tanuary 10th, provided Gov. Harry L. Davis, who on that day becomes chief executive of Ohlo, will appoint Frank B. Willls to the vacancy, Large stock always on hand. General Mill Repairs. Special machinery of all kinds. s T0 KEW YORK New London (Norwich) Line Enjoy this delightful - over night down the Sound and reach your destinatiin happy, retreshed and satisfied. Excel- lent service throughout. Leave New Ubndon daily ex- cept Sunday, 11:00 p. m. Stata rooms ready at 7:00 p. m. THE NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP COMPANY | Wb /| Call and ses samples at The Builetin s of | set forth his proofs of the divine origim The shout of laughter when the book was ed broke the old man’s heart, and he died after spending every cent he had In an effort to recall the book. What madis the joke all the mor§ serious was the faith with which manv learned men accepted the thing at firsty Berlinger’s reputation up to this time bes ing high in the world of science.—Detroif News that went up No Niggardly Economy. The posf department reports & deficit of over §17,000,000, the second largest in its history. This would seent to deny idea that the service was the result of niggardly economy.— Pittsburgh Dispatch. s Ladies, Attention BUY YOUR CLOTH FOR CLOAKING AND MEN'S SUITINGS DIRECT FROM THE MILL AT MILL PRICES, AND SAVE MONEY. THE BEAU- TIFUL SEASON'S SHADES IN SUEDE, VELOUR, AND MEN'S FANCY SUITINGS. CARFARE PAID. GLEN WOOLEN MILLS," WIGHTMAN'S SWITCH. NORWICH TOWN, eada A SPZlIAL LINE OF ngraved Private @i¢ .ing Qards bristinas au.' the ew Year