Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 18, 1921, Page 3

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NORWICH ‘BULLETIN, PANTS STORE , NUVEMBER 18, 1921 BASKETBALL LEAGUE OPENS IN TAFTVILLE | Tired Out? e — | i e pgiziniet || L POLLOCK, Prop. 325 Main St., Opp. Postoffice h e s juscles, : . . \t Lo e e sesens oo oves | ol imsie v bz || Special Sale of Suits and Overcoats || X indizate kidney trouble Jaley idney PAlls sct promptly and effectively to restore weak overworked of disesred Kidaeye Fleld goals, Tl { van 2, Cardy. Fouls, Paradis . At $19.56 and $27.50 Has been arranged for the holiday season. We would like you to get acquainted witfl our Clothing, as we carry some of the best makes of New York and Rochester. 3 We are happily complying with the great demand for lower prices and o higher quality, which means smaller profits. and bladder to @ healthy condition. SRS Don’t Forget Our Pants Stock — 3,000 to Pick From. o B T | PANTS—Good to work in. $1.25 to $2.45 EraTermeerntinky | $4.00 PANTS ............... At 3295 FLANNELS—AII colors . . $2.75 to $2.95 16 woucks before my eyes. 1saw Foley Kid- AND MANY OTHERS TO MATCH COATS all mervice, 1 Taste is a matter of tobacco quality ACADEMY STUDENTS TO HAVE EALLY TODAY Much enthusiasm is being shown by members of the schoo! towards the se: son's bix game, namely the Norwich- Bulkeley game, Which will be piayed thls Saturéay om the local campus. % Today will start the drive for the showing of school spirit. _Tags will be used taronghout the day. Those who are tagged, pedwa themselves to root and heer for th# team throughout the game. | The feature of the day will be the biz raily after echool. Demonstrations of ol ol splrit wili pour forth from s of members of the alumni and embers, bosides the call by the ., captain and manager. Seiool songs and veile wiil be rehears- which the oppanent guarding of the Coleman latter ran defeating away them nners and the shoot and Murphy, each se: d goals aplece, was the fca- #20 played a good gam The score the end of the 19 to ¢, In the Army- ney Pills advertised and made up my mind te U7 them, Aftertaking them & fow weeks | found my trouble disoelled, The backache stopped and my kidoeys were ristored to healthy. pormal action. T amalso free of thase tired spells fasdaites and my vision o no lontee lutieds My rocovery is entirely duo to Fol Pilts, which | gladly vecommend.” LEE & 0SGOOD CO. We state it as our honest belief that the tobaccos used in Chester- ed an ' 11 be selected. for y d cl e - field are of finer quality (and the schools ¥ells, | tackles will be McNamara and Sage. hence of better taste) than in any ithough he ls mighty able. Theso two lads are demons on the de- | The epirlt the studemts are showing |fense. Many of the lads have been They | thrown for o large loss by these two.! Welllngton and Mousley will form the | guard position. They have the beef to! back up agatnst any high school team | and with tho attentlod that has been | given them this week, they ought to! do good work. Rl Ty Bl BULKELEY vs ACADEMY ' With badkfield substitutes, Kick Off at3 O’c]ack other cigarette at the price. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Chesterfield FOOTBALL Academy Campus, Saturday want thelr team to win olng to sive them support & £ with® the excention Iy Captaln Reed will start at quarterback, Througout the Academy been at a great Covey, fout & heady plaver, Capeain |Dall, Connors and Mtleskl, and linesmen | { efter been showine real class this |Such as Voilwitz, Schiefifer, Abbott and | | leking his plays the second Learned, the Academy wiil be able to| . . 1 C!GARETTE s = e O Y omaniae, | nave £o0d reserve” sirength, dmission 25¢ : ams and Chase will »nlav left and The achool regrets the loss of Boynton of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos—blended Thess two boys | IS line plunginz and tackling will be greatly missed. i# resnectively. . “latter's end runs, Nor-| This week Coach McKay has been = not a few first downs. | driliing the men on new plays and per- | many years, Head Coach Tad Jones Defeated Baltic Wanderérs . s on 6 |7 be fullback. Much |fecting the oid ones. Early this week | 5pq Capt. Aldrich, from the top of the| The Army-Navy basketball team de- . . Gl w n the game. | the team had a fast, scrimmage. Yester- | j,5p5g0 truck, told the boys that thel feated the Baltic Wanderers in a re- . ir ince the |4V dummy tackiing and practioe in put- | foam would make good bn Saturday|cent game at Tatlville, 53 to 16, Fenemah Wheel Clab. Tatayett Club [iast B (e et nd Dlie o S Sl Teead e e e . Today practice will consist light WHAT BECOMES OF THE GOLD. o Kicking. H : | e = '182 BALK LINE BILLIARD One of the curiosities of the golden 1 ! T CHAMPIONSHIP TOURNAMENT | flood which has pourcd in upon the! T 2 T 3 3 Yorwes G Chicago, Nov. ii—Jake Schaefer, Jr.,| people of the United States since the|the value of exports of gold manufac- | the United State Dureau regard- | A Wonderful Young Men's Christian Asd | " FEastorn Connectient League. of Chicago tonight defeated Edouard| keginning of the w is addition | tures is comparatively small seldom |ing gold monetary stoci v all the | sociation. s Tlainfield. | Horemans, the Belgian and champiox | Of over $300,000,000 worth of gold man- | reaching a million doliars-a year. of the world have never disclosed the | B et o et fon areusd 18, wre ae 104 108 of Europe in the world’s 18.2 balk|ufactures to their already large stock| In other parts of the world the nor-| existance of more thar and § st spring the f» e s line billiard championship tournament | 0f personal effects of this character. |mMmal consumption of gold for industri- | dollars as the 1 C A st F China, Sns - B AR = SR £ 400 to 257, The additions made to the already | al Purposes Is also large. Studies of this | monetary stoc: Sitrous o Tafpees el | 103 88 h went 12 Innings and|existing stocks of material manufact-|subject made by the United States|the world recor campalgn in its his t n hundred | 1 17 chacfer had a high run of 186. wred trom the precious metal have; Mint Bureau In the years immediately | had. Wi a0 of ove, T et %o boen SAME SN i The game was closely played|been, says the Trade Record of the|Dbreceding the war indicated that the 000,000 of gold produced and less than Foochow had. | throughout, the players see-sawingNational City Bank of New York, world's industrial consumption of goid | $9,050,000,000 known 10 exisi In mone- ory” against | back and forth for the lead. Horemans | ceptionally large during and since thejhad aggregated about two billion doi- tary form or as a basis 1o influence L foyrmatte s war, In pre-war years, says the Bank's | 1ars in the short period 18%0-1910. of|it is quite apparent that because iti RS T sl The end of tonight’s play found Wil- | statement, we were accustomed to ut- | Whicls about 20 per cent. was ueed in | world rold 1 for othe ting the! MAPKET WAS IRREGULAR 135 14% | 9 111 a5 3oi|lie Hoppe, the world's champion, the | ilize from 25 to 30 mill SN S S D ! (i et Tk e & Hovah aar 2 25 A . 112 121 116— 250 | only undefeated man left in the tour-|a year of “new gold’ el Sl Sl e s e e o ve ¢ stab 1 1 | p. Barber 98 115 113 3¢ | nament. Hoppe, however, has only ap- | factures and arts”. j manufacturing purposes was about 1} for manufa how Associae were ok ] K. 35 |F o -8 26 | ored In two matches. He 4id not|£old” represent 1-2 billion dollars in the twenty year| period, 1890-1810, were boys enrolled g2 s W 565 e Tens. Teid| piav. today. €d to the exisiing stock of gold man-| Period and an estimate for the Orlent, | than $2,000,000,006 w This Dume . 2 ans_an chran meets S | quantities of terial turned in at n the twenty year per! ws slightly less tha he Stade o iko : Moomn: 4o e in. he. evening Hoppe will play | the assay of 4 here transiorm. | UP to fully $2,000,000,000. While much | suggesting that perhaps as e who are S —— o B, ] Areiss King ...........153 108 Y @3 ints conai in which the metall ©f the gold entering India disappears)one-third of the world's goid pecial Sunday school classes or atrolied NYNHE&H Potvin . 122 103 Ao | could be re-utilized for similar lines|#nd i8 reported as “buried”, the Indi- now veing used for industr ses of the free day and night L e AL o COCHRAN AND CONTI WINNERS | of work. an Government states officially that poscs. the < 7 McKenzie 118 101 IN BILLIARD T‘OURNAMENT% ru\i: ;l.zv'u““;hf"lt“';‘::.fl - ll‘l‘?u:;:{fi' Inay e conaittradl s f0: Be meed fuc| | Trobubly theoe) fonrths foritho Women la Public Place — Chicago, D Morningstar,; [T L% direct from the. assay of.| Ofnaments and manufactures, and the|used in the United States for | Finty thousand e engaged ini : 612 of San Diego, Californio, today” Iost] ficcs ‘and the mints, and the reports| Statesman's year book of 1921 in re- |factures and arts” s utilized for jewel- | public administraiive affairs Uiroughos % # HE R SR of the Mint show that|COrding the heavy gold imports of Inda | ry watches, etc. Experts estimate that|the United States as officials of the gov 14 [Lecta G line billiards tournament to Welker| ), prior to the war av-| Femarks that “gold is used chiefly tn| e "0 © R SO IO T ntc of states, countics, cities and 713 | Thombson Cochran of San Francisco, 400 to 317 in| o 5,000,000 2 year of “new | the form of ornaments.’ sy S At b ation, according to date of federal | Bt ¢ 132 while| M2terial” and 38,600,000 a year of “old| These tigures which indicate a world | Fade averages about $4,000,000 a g as mayors, Boucher .... 5 29 "““,““}‘1“ BEh wnn ok b "}",m:lurl.tl'. In 1916, when our imports|consumption -of fuily $2,000,600,000 of sehool 805 o h’;{:i\:;vi‘:g :rh;gsllcf‘“{')‘ }‘i:pp. -.\lg.-xa\-i“'i gold jumped to practically $509,-; worth of gold for industrial purposes| centage is returped by them in on boards and com~ empion She only nndetentod man in| (00000 and the earnings of the peopie |in the short period 1890-1910—an av-| form of gold cbtained from “old worl issions d high administras Champlon. el u also greatly increased, the salesi crage of about $100,000,000 per annum| while recently published estimat ve offices. Thousands are Glling elective . Roser | Conti, the young French! oL TeW E0ld” by the assay offices and| through, add the Bank's statement,{the yellow metal use din the manufa. offices. A y positions of trust and champion, ovened up his stending of | TINtS jumped (o $41,000,000 and of an interesting side light upon that|ture of gold leaf puts the average|responsibi which thay exsrcius o e s i e g 97| “old_material practically’ $10,000,000; | much discussed question of “what be-|at about $1,000,000 a year. The mere|mand over at Jcast 10,000 other persons, i second match, defeating George Sut- in 1919 $56,000,600 of the “new materi-: comes of the gold”. World statisticians | remelting of old, unused, and some-|it is estimated—New York Herald o e o e e 400 o 21> and the “old material” $20,000,- | estimate the total outturn of gold {n| times forgotten Jewelry ' during _the| . pax and 1 = ton, ago, by a s 0505 and in 1920 the “new gold” sold|the world since the discovery of Am-|war added more than $100,000,500 of| It keeps some men so busy being tme knees. 1o & 4 @ tep, | €Xceeded $60,000,000 in value, while the | erica at siightly more than $18,000,- | gold to the world's stock available for|portant that they haven't time left %o 8o e s L ie conlest,was & Son-eaw mateh | ygq) for 1521 wiil approximate $40,000,- | 000,000, while the annual studies of|monetary purposes. complish thingm. & Mg throughout and was settled in the fif- | ot ppc oo, W0 avprosimate FO00" (l T nosrta 0'land teenth inning. Conti would have fin-| 0 Sa¢ 2CC/LoRs of hew 8ol ace, = = | 1 5 : fin- ! the beginning of the war have aggre- | s, . %t the O'land pr i ished in the feurteenth but he m N e g WAk Bave g } % piss Pump Norwich. ed an easy draw shot when he had Sated over $300,000,000 and brought the e Pump B | simeox LT 319 | four to go. The best run made by the ‘;’é&d g"z‘l‘(;‘l “’ér”"i‘l:"‘mi’:‘“,’f‘l‘“ Dalenso . - - |Barry .........0101 418 | Frenchman was 93 while Sutton count-| o0 BG/0 O FERSEE P g‘f‘ < = MONEY. | spencer "Ll 242l ed a 98 in his twelfth inning. el L : ot et Tants 29 | | lien dollars. Most of this was trans-| - e e |ty 273 | LOST PRINTERS' COPY OF | formed into manufactures for use of | - bid 4; offered at 4 e s%1| - ANNUALLRERORT. OF A, A, Uj| T Poonie ab the ‘Unlied Sties, s 3 call loans agatnst 22 New York, Nov. 17—The printers’ | CRIMSCN AND BLUE SQUADS copy of the annual report of the ama- - | teur athletic union has been lost on % = e COTTOXN. RESTING BEFORE BIG GAME | a subway train and the loss may | Member British Disarma- — )N ey cotton | Cambridge, Mass, Nov. 17—Thel serfously interfere with acceptances of t i : * Harvard and Yale football squads|last season’s track and field records| mant. Delegation . camped tonight in nearby rival quar- | at the union's meeting in Chicago next g . | ters for the last rest before the big|Wweek. A reward has been offered for ) Y Close | game Saturday. return of the copy. - 95.10 | The Crimson banner floated above| Delegates in ail parts of the countrs 9440 | Bssex Country Club while Coach Eob | have been telegraphed to bring to Chi | 94.70 | Fisher’s men lolled about inside, with | cago duplicate applications for new P . | cares abandoned until they march on | records, with proofs of performance eo 7 the stadium field to meet the Bull-|in order that the records may be dog. The men are {it and ready for| | the game. | The Blue forces arrived late today at the Belmont Springs Country Club, | 40 players strong and with a strong, !rear guard of managers, coaches and | acted upon without the (elay of an- other twelve months MCNAMARA AND MCBEATH WON 24 HR. BIKE RACE]| New York, Nov. 17—Reggle McNa- REGISTERED U. S. PAT. OFF. GEARED-TO-THE-ROAD in dollars and cents per $100 9y = ners. rainer “Johnny” Mack re-|mara and Alex McBeath won first e H Forolgn Exchange, = 'r»e 1_«1.1 n.sd smmlar‘:]s in top form phy ]y»"we in the 24 hour bicycle race which N % ear |sically and mentally. ht in a wild series of . . . . oo ¢ N Yesterday. Aso. | This aiternoon Harvard under gad- | Sprints in- Madison Square Garden. Our policy has always been to pass on to to the user of automobile tires immediately & $3.46% |vates swarmed into the stadium to| Lawrence and Thomas finished second; S = s 3 - - b i 241 ch tneir team run throush it is- | Grenda and Ciaric. third any reduction in cost. We will not deviate in the slightest from the high standard of o 39 6.00 sed by @ brass band, hey sang| The winning team covered 466 miles, i : intai . 3 - i 9% |ind’ chored encouragement. for e 6 ips nd ng oam coteren 466 wiles, workmanship and material so necessary to maintain the remarkable service given by 0 ‘ 0 even. | and Thomas lapped the field twice in il i > pr.. 4 T4 | Coach Fisher sald he had not fin-| the last hour and ran even with the Miller Tires. o 1 1% \:Hyds(éecznaq thcl« l:m:pé;md‘ wé; un-| winners but were placed second with a 56% |Eesetas ... . ecided whether to put, Chapin, Churc- | 288 points. Clark and Grenda were a . : . P . ‘ L 3 oii | medan fanes roo | il or Coburn at right balt back. o‘«;.‘ Jap behind with 387 points, and Lans Due to the readjustments in costs of materials, it is now possible to make a reduction, 25 % Sweden .... o+ 8843 ens and itts will probably start in d Lai Vs - H 1 3 H 1 - i | Denmari 563 | e Backriela, ST ;‘86’;05“"“:‘“ also a 1ap be |} which unquestionably makes Miller the best buy in automobile tires. b 3 ac Cor b el I 450 - Three other teams finished with 466 . i -1 | Groscs P it . |LEWIS DEFEATED MCCORMICK; m’I‘;SvJ 1;11}!1 2 follows: 44 | P REFEREE|:STOPS [FIGHT;) . Drcbach-Fenley,iRutt-Cobu:l, 7Hog \ & : 11 2 | €HICAGO GRAIN MARKET. London, Nov. 11—Ted “Kid” Lewis,| "= & o ron % | Chicago, Nov. the Bnglish middleweight champion, K ; 0 E pla~e in the wheat r toda; "lcnlght defeated Boy McCormick in the RESULTS BOOFU:(SJX:NNGPROVI‘D H 0 early advance. Reports of rain in L4thronnd of & scheduled twenty roundf E ENCE i - A % southwest and lack of European demand | bout. The referee stopped the fight in ovidence, R. I, Nov. 17—Pete . , v notwithstanding strength in forolm ex- | order to save McCormick from further | Hartley, of New York, was glven the w . sl ? - i & change were leading bearish factors Tir{pxmishmom. A decision over Joe Tiplitz og Philadel- N E PR[C ES i - Pt { Supe 1 market ciosed weal, 1 1-8 MoCormick bled profusely from a cut | Phia at the end of their 12 round bout ERPYNGNT. XEYSTORS ViEw co. mew YoRx { 5 lower with December 1.05 over one of his eyes during the final| &t Marleville tonight. The men are| Rt Hon. H. A. L. Fisher, President Geared-to-the-Road | Vs Geared-to-the-Road Y Geared-to-the-Rofid { 3 3-8 a 4 May 108 le o rounds and was greatly hampered in i[{zhtwdghts. In the semi-final bout|of the British Board of Education Cords Sizes Fabrics B S Truck Tires r 65% 5 ished a shade to 1- EN"AS_ his work. In the 14th round, Lewis| Tommy McQuire of Providefce won; since 1916, one of England’s four del- . - { g~ 7% 46 46 |of 1 to 3.3 cents, and provie |drove & hard blow to McCormick's| over Spider Murphy of Manchester, X. | ogates to the Disarmament Conference|l . 30x3 - $9.80 34x4Y, $49.05 i " y i 10§ conts dowr { mouth, knocking out one of his teeth | H. These men are also lghtweights, At the close of this round the referce made an examination of McCormick’s Won Interclass Championship injured eye and then declared Lewis New Haven, Nov. 17—The first ju- the winner of _the bout. Lewis con-| nior class crew won the interclass eded McCormick seventegn pounds rowing championship of Yale today which was expected to compensate Mc- | by defeating the first freshman class Cormick for his inferiority in science, $18.00 29.40 32.40 30x3%; 31x4 32x4 § - 12.50 21.75 2535 34x5 35x5 36x6 56.05 61.00 78.05 ng stocks the current 1d heap should apparent Improvement Middle States & S - anditions, O rmiele for g lntetiority in sclence, cfew over a course of one and five- 011 33.40 33x4 26.50 38x7 :* 113.85 B e s 0 ‘Lewis was 2ggressor from the | sixteenths miles on the Quinnipiac P : S0 | mirs Sl s e S| St IE the sixth round thet L. | BV The Suniors finisiied o thira - 43.90 34x4Y, 35.65 40x8 146.65 s Hudeo 035 - interests and from a houss with | o Lot 2S 10 the sixth round that Lew-|of a length ahead, their time being This company is one of the i e Mnds eign connections. Tt was the ol eihand s eI e G e leaders in the oil industry, 52.15 33x5 4120 42x9 236.25 i Er which put a surplus on the Bt oo DEEIng the dbloA) s B : peia : xhieh put o eurnlus'on ¢ In streams. In the cleventlr round Mc- Plainfield Soccer at Taftville We will gladly send without 54.75 35x5 43.65 44x10 330.00 Erle 1 3 sl Cormicl: drove home two siraight lofis| The Taftville soccer team fs sched- obligation on request a report : er Body (O the ending S u“;\““‘}_’;“‘;hflnoll"r left leadiuled to play the Plainfield team at showing the activities, earn= -t » Slowness of export c: as in urn met with a couple of lefty Taftville, this The Plain- Saturday. 3 ings and Listory of & field ageregation has a strong team ss 5 he:con pany. This stock at present prices Yields 8149 FRIEDMAN- LOWER IN PRICE THAN EVER BEFORE to the chin. In the tweifth round Lew- | il "{\L "-\‘C(:')';‘nl | With ancther | this season and are confident of win- right to the head, which re-opened|ning but will have a hard tussle with the damaged eve, and in the thirteenth | their opponents. tanded two hard lefts to the damaged ! i spot on McCormick's face, | YALE TEAM jRE(;EIVVED BIG ! SEND OFF ON DEPARTURE somo degros with narvesting had started a e Argentina. nt demand from the east for cash corn hers gave firmness to the corn markst. Oats appearsd to be governed In tha main by the action of wheat. Crovisions were casler, reflecting a downturn in the hog market. Big New Yerk Crovid Going to Bosten New York, Nov. 17—New York ap- peared tonight to be preparing to move en masse on Boston for the Harvard- THE MILLER RUBBER COMPANY OF N. Y. - = New Haven, Conn. Nov. 17—Every| Yale football game Saturday. All sleep- MARKELS : . g Chlemgo Grain Market, Yale song that had “pep” in it and|ing accomodations on boats and trains ON &_CO' ( 4 | Whe iNze vow, s fitted to the time was lustily sung|leaving tomorrow night were reported; Investment Securities L (3 o Iot Mer Mar S Do e tux 1y y a thousand Yale men or more at|=old. H 742 Main St., Hartford, Ot 1at Mot Trock ... 28 | May ..o 110% % the railroad station this afternoon = P No. 2 23 ams lre u o R (A e 3 en the football squad left,Tor New- Want Game With Pioneers L et ) b gt Mapooy My b4+ i oAk % 48 tonville, Mass. Capt. Langhorne Gib-| Baltic Wanderers-Montville game Main Office Branch Office S - e g Sile May wow B3% 5% 5314 son of the crew led the cheering,|has been called off and the Baltic team 45 Beaver St. 1823 Broadway 315 MAIN STREET ;:m}h Veils: 4 H - =’:'- 5 2% c‘o‘lilecfi)"ely for the tcam, and indi-|wants to get a game with the Ploneers New York New York e i o ety vidually for the players. Tt was thofof Jewett City. Call $72-2, : biggest serd off of 2 Yale team had Inbmorning

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