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NORWICH BULLETIN, MONDA JANUARY 24, 1921 %X E!B WINS: LIVEI.Y GAME A, splaying) team, with the well known player “Yumy" ohnson, for the weekly game, next Sat- urday night. = In the preliminary the Daredevils of Taftville won by a wide margin from the . A ‘hall, | re baffled by | Bmploved Bovs. the gua : 6t the visitors, | Lincup and summary: kesping them on X5 . Crescents. s : Harman W Belair | Cronin ... Normandin Clarkin Teeiesss.. Mills Leonard . D. Murphy i Dwyer . J. Murphy b7 3, Crescents , Tarman 6, Cronin 3, Clarkin Score, X. Y. goals from flo 25; 2, Leopard 4, Dwyer, Belair,» Normandin 3 s 2, J. Murpt: ; oals from fouis, | Harman, s, D. Murphy. Referee v. Time of halves 20 minutes, | “RARBIT” MARANVILLE TRADED TO PITTSBURG CLUB =3 7 club for three players, was announced i Cpnnecticut Mills | aay vitis on banks 3.7 by 'Manager Fred Mitchell of the Braves tonight. Outfielders ‘Willlam Southworth and Fred Nichokan and Infielder Walter Bar- bare will 4 me from the Pittsburgh club | to Boston. Mitchell said there was no cash consideration. He said he intended to keep all three players and declared they would add materially to the Brayes' race for the pennant this year. ' CONN. MILLS LOSE TO s NAVAL RESERVES Danielson, Conn.. Jan. 23.=The Conn. Mills basketball team were defeated, 34 to 26, .by the Newport Naval Reserves. in a game.here Saturday, before a big crowd. The home team was outclassed but did exceptionally well in holding the tor down to 34 to 26 score. Reserves showed good guarding, each covpring his man. lozan, McCaarthy and Sullivan feat- ured for Reserves. Reddy and Knowles starred for the home team. & Rabbit Maranville's team vul‘ appear here in a benefit game next Saturday. Lineup and summaries: Naval Reserves .............. Carroll Left Forward T A R Williams i Right Forward Knowles Sullivan Hjegins McCartny Marland Horgan Left Guard Goals from floor: Reddy 4, McCarthy 5, Horgan 4, Elliott 3, Carroll 4, Knokles 2 Williams 1, Higgins 1; Goals . from fouls: Knowles 4, McCaréhy 4. 23 1-2; commercial 60 day Dills 3.4, Franes, demand 6.84, Belgian franes, demand T Guilders, demand 33.1 "i)re. demand 357, cables .59. Marks, demand 1.65, cables 1.66. Greece, demand 7.50. Argentinc, demand 35. Brazilian, demand -4.50. Montreal 12 per cent. discount. Bar silver, domestic 99 149, foreign 66 3-8, Mexican dollars 50 34 demand 3.77; cables cables 6.86. LIBERTY BOND MARKET. S I rd ats s b v \h‘mq "3 Victodty 5 FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATES. WILLARD TC COMPLETE TRAINING JN EAST Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 23.—Jess Wil- lard, former heavyweight champion, who is scheduled to meet Jack Dempsey, the champion 'at New Yosk, March 17 in a bout to regain the titje, left here last night for the east whefe he will com- plete his training for the match. Wiliard was accompanied by ®4dy Arch- er, his manager. The former champion Iras been training for several months at his farm near Lawrence, Kansas. According to Archer they expect to go to New York city first, stter which they would make a business irip to Boston. Late this month, he said, Willard ex- pects to establish training headquarters somewhere in New Yorh. Discussing the coming fight with Demp- hey, Willard said: “If I didn't think I could win back the title I lost inToledo, I wouldn't en- ter the ring agaln. I would rather let the fight tell the story. I shall have the best corbs of sparring partners that mone ey can buy and I shall be ready.” ROSEBUDS DEFEAT ALL STARS IN HOCKEY MATCH In a great game of hockey played on the Baltic pond, the Baltic Rosebuds defeated the Taftville All Stars, 1 to 0. The only score of the game was scored in the last balf of the game with ohly five minutes to play, when Jimmie Buff, from the side, score the winnine~ = The features - combination on the part of the Stars and the s.... Rosebuds. The first ten minfites ywas played under Canadian rules but on account of so many offisides being called, the offside rules were dome away with. The jee was in poor cn - der the circumstances both teams put up Al .25 ; pigs, $9.25@9.60. Cattle—=Receipts, 7,000 head. slow and mostly 25c lower. malium and heavyweight, Market Beef sgteers: celves (Jight and handyweight 12.50; feeder steers, $6.50@8.7 stears, 3G8.00; stocker cows keifers, 34 25@6.00. Sheep . ana Lambs—Receipts, 9,000 head. Market steady to_strong. Lambs (84 Ibs. down), $9.25@ 11" lambs (85 Ibs. @10.50; lambs, culls and com- vearling wethers, $7.50 ewes, $3.75@6; feeder lambs, @1o. Pittsburgh, light. 11 Jan. 21.—Cattle—Supply Market steady. Choice, $11@ prime, $11@11.50: good, $10.25@ idy butchers, $10.50@11; fair, $5.25 @9.75; common, $8.25@9.75; common to good fat bulls. $3@6; common to good fat cows. $6@8; heifers, $3@9.50; fresh cows and springers. -$60 @ 130. Veal calves 100 head: market steady; to $15.50, Sheep ‘and* lambs—Supply. Mari€t steady. 600 head. Prime wethers, $6.40: good mixed, $5.00@6.00; fair’ mixed. $4.00@5.00; culls and common, $2.00@ : Yesterda Aac Sierilng (par $4.95% per soverclzn) e . £z 3.3 3 (X 3 3. [ 608 545 84 Belginm Demand 6.3 Cabics €0 Germany (par 208 cents B . D 15 15 a8 » THE LIVESTOCK MARKET. ~—Prime mercantile irregular [4.06: Lamhs. steady to $11.00. Hogs—Receints, 7.500 head. Market 75c lower. . Prime heavy hogs, $9.50@ 9.75/ mediums, $10.00@10.25; heavy yorkers, $10.00@10.35; light yorkers, $10,00@10.25; pigs, $10.00 @10, roughs, $5.00@8.00; stags, $5.00@8.0 heavy mixed, $9.75@10.00. CHICAGO GRAIN MARRET. | Chicago, Jan. 21.—Hogs—Receipts, 56.- Pra. | Hieh Lew. Clesa Market 35 to 40c lower. Bulk, o top, 9.60; heavyweight. 4 medium weight, $9.00@9.30; ced mm ey ey $9.20@9.00; light lights, Seh wn . ek ek heavy packing sows, smooth, | L E% u% 6% MY packing sows, rough, $.00@ % 4% % AT THE DAVIS THEATRE, TODAY AND TOMORROW 1 good game. The individual star of the cqame was James Burr, with his great rushes for the Rosebuds and St, Armour for the All Stdrs. Lineup, Rosebuds {E. Erickson ... { Goal H. Harmon Al Stars Sigrist {A. Cullen A. Erickson .... 3. Burr .. Robideau A9, Miller . A st. Armour - Center Raferce, H, Collin: ter Charon; two twe timekeeper, W -minute halv The Rosebuds play ,in Tafiville ne Saturday If weather conditions are fav- orable. NUTMEGS DOWN CAGERS ON THE LATTERS FLOOR The Cagers, a basketball team chosen from the Intermediate boys's division of the Y. M. C. A., played the well known Taftville Nutmegs in the “Y" gym on Saturday, the latier winning by the score of 37 to 8. The locals some weight and expe game, although gr vigitors who at a team work and freguently exctllonz in- dividual sbility. The lineup and peints scored, lows Nutmegs- | at handicapped In played a_snappy y the as fol- —Lemieux 7, Gladue 24, Cor- coran, Pgpin 6, Paquette. Cagérs—Budnick, Goldstein 4, MoNa- mara 4, Wazniak, Hollender, ~Fellows, Vollenvitz. TS Resigns as Manager The fast Baltic Aces have lost their most popular manage- in Albert Taylor who has resigned. The fans in E have hopes that he will change his mind and come back. While the Aceg hav been under his management, th have always proved to be a good drawing card. Challenge Hardigs The Bantams 2nd team would like to hear from.the Hardigs of Norwich for a game to be played Wednesday night. in Baltic. Call 1943-2. B ARMY POLO TEAM TAKE Point, N, won from day 1 and 4 to 0. two today by scores of & Grand Circuit Dates. 6. 11, 12, 13. hkeepsle—August 22, —August er 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 9, 20, October 1 45 97,8 . 18, 19,20, 3 Y. M. C. A, Junior 10, Basketball League | 193d DIVIDEND Office of the Norwich Savings Society Norwich, Conn., December 11, 1920 THE DIRECTORS OF THIS SOCIETY HAVE DECLARED OUT OF THE EARNINGS OF THE CURRENT SIX MONTHS, A SEMI-ANNUAL DIVI- DEND AT THE RATE OF FOUR PER CENT. PER ANNUM, PAYABLE TO DEPOSITORS ENTITLED THERETO ON AND AFTER JANUARY 15th, 1921, COSTELLO LIPPITT, Treasurer. Decemter 13th, 1920, 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 .MENS FANCY SUITINGS. SAMPLES ON REQUEST. CAREFARE PAID. GLEN WCOLEN MILLS, WIGHTMAN'S SWITCH, NORWICH TOWN. Lehigh and Wilkesbarre COAL EGG, STOVE AND NUT $17.50 CARRIED IN LESS 50c SHOVELED OFF -|JJOHN A. MORGAN & SON Telephone 884 | e————————— “You Can Do No Better Than Buy Our Wurst.” No. Salad Complete Withou? b Standing, Thumm’s Lost P o . ome-iviace Clippers 4 250 . Tobtera R Mayonnaise Employed Boys' Basketball Y. M. C. *} MM’ League Standing, THU S Won Lo :‘;'"I DEL]CATBSEN STORE : et 40 Franklin Street Thistles .. 3 000 | Elet Bantams vs Independents THE LA Viba & ‘(;'l'lu(i VivkAalvae The Baltic “f‘n':‘m" - lay the _ln‘ Guaranteed In every respect. Let ug dependents of Central Village next Wed- | demonstrate this vibrator and prove te nesday and on, Friday they will play the All ians of Je W« City. In the first played between thege two Ly club e All Colleglans beat the Dan- ""“l‘l"l""“m‘ ce. tams 28 to 18. o oW © The Bantams would like to hear from | THE MYSTIC FOwER COMPANT. Putnam High, Plainfield and Coichester in regards to ganigs. — e — Haven; Feb, 15 Peans Yale's Fenclng Sehedule delphia; Peb, 19, ek New Haven, C(Bhn., Jan. 23.—The vate |20l DLt ot L New Yor fencing team's sehedule, announced to- ' i N ot | night, includes the following matches: |March 5, Harvar at New Haven; : Feb, 5.—Oassachusetts Tech at New |12 Dartmouth at New Haven. The Magic 40.f a Woman’s Love the cak trees by the road. He was Fo'ng back against his will bot ter judgment. Five years be- had built the little white lodge furnished it out of his store of res, picked up on his travels all over the world. They had planned to spmd their honeymoon there—he and rolyn Maynard. But fate, in the of another man, had interposed d Carolyn had jilted him and mar- ung ambassador who had “en her abroad immediately. Dave had p open the old'iwound every year by going back and living over 1in his old love affair. Now he was going back to pack. up a few of his gs, for he had planned to sell the ace to Edmee Boynton, a young girl 0 was beginning to sell short sto- to the magazines. He had met Lier at a little studié tea and had come to like her well enough to sell her his little house of dreams, the dreams that had never come true for him. She was coming up the mext day to and ’lhnm" n as from the whit climb Roa tle stone rod ripplgd in of grain repdy f whistle of a by end elear, fn the s spilled its s ‘When Dave was half a mile away, be looked up and saw the lodge like a little white flower opening out of a green calyx. Smoke curled lazily from the chimney. Evidently the old caretaker was ready for him. As he stepped on the rustic perch he saw a merry little fire of Black Jack logs crackling on the:old brass andirons that had been his mother’s. A rough basket of wild flowers hung outside the door. 'Within gay plllows gave a festive air to his worn old leather couch and he saw a ukelele dropped carelessly in the corner. A Chinese tea set that he had picked up in Canton was on a2 wagonetts and a little blue flame burned under the ket- tle. He stood in the doorway, a little amazed, wondering i his eyes did not @eceive him. Many times he had pic- tured the little house like that, warm ‘and intimate and cozy. . “Possession,” said Edmee Boynton, dressed in & dull blue smock that half kid, half revealed the curves of her young body as she came to meet him, “is nine points of the law. Mother and T have moved in. Truthtully, ave are stopping at the hotel on top of the mountain, but I could not resist run- ning down here and getting things all homelike for you. Like it?” she ask- ed, smiling at his expression. “So much that I can’t think of sell- ing the place now.” . Suddenly a little pulse in his throat began to hammer with painful insist- ence. He wanted to take - her in his arms 2nd kiss her where her shining black hair waved back from her high ‘white forehead. = He had always felt that she attracted him powerfully, but a burned child dreads the fire, and having been fooled by one woman had made him wary of the sex. Seeing Edmee Boynton against the back- ground of his little house of dreams that had flowered into a real home un- der the magic touch of her deft fingers made him realize that he had fallen in love again, hopelessly, happy in love with the little story writer. He had believed that romance had died out of the world for him, hq\ love can be born in the moon of falling blos- soms as well as in the springtime of life. “Are¢ you going to flnke me sorTy that I came? It will be such a dis- appointment, not to stay here—" She turned away, her lips quivering. “Do you think tRat you can write stories—love storfes—up here?” She smiled then and. looked uwp at Mm. “There is one disease that peo- ple never acknowledge,” she told him. “Writers never admit that they can't write anything they attempt to pro- duce. The disease is fatal . One mever recovers. Won't you have some tea,” she asked, hospitably, “Im your own ‘Rouse?” He turned and took both her flut- tering little hands in his . “Ifyou | will promise to be partners and own half the house a%d—:nd—all of me!" answered. He drew her into his , and &t the touch of her yielding young body all the old doubt and mis- givings disappeared like magic and a happiness greater than he had ever known flooded his heart. She had taken his cold, empty little house and opened the windo#s to the sunshine of love, filling ft with dreams, rosy dreams, the dreams’ that must inev- itably come true, “I love you,” he whispered passionately, I love you, I Outside & bird called a tender little mating note, and the answer came soft and sweet from a contented heart. There were steps on the porch and tbrough the *door came a vision that Dave thought could not be real. Car- olyn Maynard, in the pale gray of wid- owhood, was smiling at him. He went forward to-meet her, his arm still around the little story writer. Even as he greeted her, this woman who had once thrilled him, he wondered how fer eoming would affect him, but his pulse, save when he looked at the wondering Edmee, was just as steady as usunal. He might have been greet- ing any chance acquaintance. He was conscious that Carolyn looked rather old, a trifie blase, and her complexion was made up oo much for beauty. He been fortunate to escape her. He found himself critically comparing her to the sincere naturally beautiful lt- tle creature who held*his heart. How could he ever have loved Carolyn! The falr visitor did not tarry long She realized, all too well that a wom- an of thirty can not successfully com- pete with youth, at twenty. “The eternal triangle!” exclaimed Edmee, when they were alone. “1 think that I will write a love story now—about you,” she told him. “And how will you end it, little sweetheart?” he whispered, his lips on her eyes and her mouth. “The hero and the lady who took his house right away from him—" “Were married in the moon of fall- ing blossoms,” he supplemented, “And lived happ!ly ever after,” she prophesied. Then in true housewifely alarm she ran to the wagonette. “The kettle,” she gald dramatically, “has boiled dry.” JHEN A they say.” Still Harriet could not be- lieve it. But she had to when she heard the news confirmed. Jessamy the telephone (* Qead, Harr ing some chin " “Dead!” Harri gripping ker ho up, her fac st was really dead ‘ud her home was made desolate, It was nearly a2 month later that Harriet met Norman walking with his two children. He looked pale and for- lorn. She stopped to talk to him. littte ruffled apron. “It was a fearful blow, Harriet,” he Through her mind seid. “Seems like I should never re- of lovely Je cover. But I have my boy and girl omed, 1 had been “Dead!” Mrs. Barry is keep- house for us. It was the best T cculd do. My business is in bad shape, end it takes all my time to attend to b o Harrlet thought as. they parted. “That fat, slow, mussy old woman. Those poor babies! And poor Nor- man.” She walked on with her head down and never saw' the Rev, Thomas Brocke, rector of fashionable Christ Church, 'who gazed at her from the other side of the street. It was known left, thapk God! “Oh Jessup told her ys goes hard But she he's dead ) st crazy. The children, however, are getting- better, to every body in Canton that Harriet- Hall could have the Rev. Thomas Brooke for the lifting of a finger.. It ‘was not known why she did not have him. That was Harriet'’s secret and she kept it as religiously as she kept Sunday. Even Miss/Jessup, who knew everything, dflfl. Know that, Harriet loved Norman West. It had begun in their school days. She never bad any reasom for. leving him, but she did, so atnudy‘-‘lgm-m,ue women made. Three different men she refused because of him, and mow she was about to.refwse another. She never expected to marry Norman, dut she could not marry anybody else. And she was all of thirty years old. The strange,*sad ocgurrence kept Canton talking for a long time. Miss Jessup had a great deal to say about it to Harriet. “The best thing Norman can do is to get married again quick as ever he cam, Of course, I know he’s poor and in debt, but seems like some woman ought to take pity on bim. He's a fine man, Norman West is. I've been trying to get Allie Hitt to go after him, but she says she was not cut out to be a second wife. I dGunno. I hope when he does marry ho.wen’t get some little snippy young plece, that’ll misuse the children. They are darlings, both of.'em.” “Yes, they are Harrlet replied. “Margaret is just like her father and Francis is the image of Jessamy.” She chamged the subject, but it did mot leave her mind. And so months went by. Mrs, Bar- ry stayed on and Miss Jessup said that the house was becoming a pigpen. But ‘what better could Norman de? . Spring came, and summer, and then fall again. Jessamy had been dead a year, Norman looked like despair it- self and the children began to show their neglect. The misfortunes of the Wests were on every tongue. One day at sunset Harriet picked Norman up in the car as he was re- turning from work. He looked shab- by, thin, pitesus. I'm really not fit to get in beside _ you, Harrlet!” he said wistfully. “Nonsense!” Harrlet retorted. She looked fresh and brilllant in her ‘brown, fur-trimmed coat and velvet hat.” It was snappy weather and her cheeks glowed. Norman West dare not look at her and she knew it There was satisfaction in the knowl- edge. “Norman,” she said, laughing- 1y, “what would you think of a woman who proposed to a man? *I.would think he was a pretty poor stick of a man-who'd put her in the corner where she’d have to do it. He ‘wouldn’t be worth proposing to, Har- riet, now, would he?” Harriet langhed again. “Oh, I don’t know. ‘That depends. Maybe he was timid or—something, and maybe she saw her happiness going and felt bound to save it if she could.” “I wouldn't-let & woman propose to me, Harriet,” Norman sighed. K “Wouldn't you?” retorted Harriet. “Then please propose to me quick and ~spiritual change. . accounted a business success, but sud- save me the trouble, Norman.” “Harriet!” he cried. “You wouldn't —you couldn't—Oh, Harrgt, you'd not stoop to marry me “It wouldnt be stooping to marry you, Norman,” she answered quietly. 8o they were engaged. And two weeks later they went to the Methodist parsonage and were married. Har- riet’s friends would have made her a ‘wedding, but she declined. As for the Rev. Thomas Brooke, the day he heard she was going to marry Norman West he demanded a vacation on account of his health and went awy and stay- ed until it was all over. Harriet took the Wests to her own home, where her housekeeper’s cook- ing soon restored the roses to the neglected children’s cheels. In mo time also people began to look at Nor- man West with amazement. He seem- ed to have undergone a mental and He never had been denly ghe was nn’.lnl his townsmen take notice of him. “Harriet didnt do #0 badly, after all,” they said. Harriet had done far from badly. She made Norman the man he always should have been. He grew stout, rosy, light hearted. He paid off his debts without help from her, and be- came such a prodigious money makes that folks gasped at his success, “I wonder if you're as happy as you've made me, Harriet,” he said to her one day. Harriet smiled. “You do act happy, Norman. I'm flattered, I must be & success as a second wife. Not many women are,” He took her in his arms. “Dear, ot you hadn't been so rich you'd have been my first wife. I wanted you afl* the time, but I didn't dare ask you.” “Oh!” commented Harriet. She ' rubbed her cheek against his and laughed a little. “Do you know, honey, I knew that all the time,” she sald softly. i