Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 17, 1922, Page 3

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NURWIGH BULLETIN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1922 pended until September 1922 by the Na- lional Boxing Associaticn at its second snnual meeting here today. The suspen- sion also applies to Wilson's manag \nd is effective in sixteen states, Austral- a and Canada. The fighter and his manager were tourd “guilty” by the associatfon of “con- @ucting unbecoming a fighter and mana- " The charges were prefented by L. Lighteap, representative of the Ohlo bexing commission and concerned son's bout with Bryan Downey in Ohio last year. Minrasota, Conmectfout and Nebraska Iboxing offictals were elected today to Jmembershi> in the association. | The question of importing jfrom cne state to another w: learned that in the a referees discussed een states ation prohibit ICHARLEY WHITE GIVEN DECISION OVER DUNDEE 16—Charley White, Chi- was awarded the de- n over Johnny Dundee, rated as ju- r lightweight chamgdon of the world, round bout here tonight. White 7 pounds, Dundee 128. in the first threc rounds. e back strong in the fourth A to have a shade the better sopponent in several of the remain- PENN COURT TEAM TIED WITH TIGERS he best showing Intercollegiate last week with Dart- ia had th games a game er the toss-up it was at th. N before the rest will be able to catch up to the Quakers style of play. In Fogerty they have the best tutor in the college ranks. The only chance in other cclleges wil lhame To beat Penn will be to plaster personal offenses against all the players and gradually eliminate them from the ame, Young brother Zahn beat the older bro- ther Zahn in their first clash, and it i0ok- ed as if the older brother must have given tco many points to the younger ‘brother. Much was expected of Dartmouth this seasor., but a defeat &0 early in the seasin has taken ail the interest out of the League, On Wednesday Colmbia plays at Princeton, and as the other flve teames appear to be more evenly matched this contest should be a clcse one. Saturday Penn plays Columbia at New York, and Dartmouth is at' Cornell, EIGHT MEETS LISTED FOR PENN. WRESTLING TEAM The University of Pennsylvania has announced the wrestling schedule for this season with eight meets listed for the varsity matmen and six for the fresh- men team. The complete list fcllows: January 28, Princeton at Princet February 4, West Point at We: February 13, Columbia at N February 18, University of Virginia at Weightman Hall; March 10, University ©of West Virginia at Morgantown 18, Lehigh at Weightman Hal ' 24 and 25, intercolleglate champions:os at Lehigh. The sechedule for the freshman team is virtually completed reads as f:liows: January 3% Aglentown at , open; Februa New York; at Weigh! i March 4, y htman Hall; March 1%, Marcha 18 Lehigh freshmen at Le- high. SIX CLUBS REMAIN IN EASTERN LEAGUE indications the League will with six clut Tom present Basketball the season being p the I est continued domt Paper. rices were uotatlons; oked by rates cent before the ates were at- leral depos- or ols Central Central LL Inspiration Cop Int Harvester Int Mer Mar Int Mer Mar pr Int Mot Truck Intern Paper nt Paper pr sta ennecott ... high Valley ell Mot R can| but rose! . | Sterling— | bond Tobaceo Prod pr Tnion Paci T Pac p 7 U S Rubber .55% & Rubber 1003 100 cel .. 84% gay 7 8 Stel pr <118 1% West Un Tel 92 Iiberty High 97.00 Quoted Foreizn Ex-hange, Yesterday. STOCKS. Demand $4.22 Cables Francs Guilders Kronen Sweden Denmark Norway Greeee Argentina CHICAGO WHEAT MARKET. Jan. 16 Wheat had a ten- to sag e today owing more less ion from the south- ern hemisphere and to failure of a brokerage house in New York. The close, however, was steady .at the same as Saturday's finish to l-ic lower with May 1.11 3-8 to 1.11 1-2 and July 1.00 t0 1.00 1-8. Corn gained a shade to 1-8a oats lost 1-8 to 1-8@1-4¢ and provisions finished unchanged to 22c higher. ‘With reports current of enlarged of- ferings of the new crop in Australia and Argentina, the wheat market here show- ed an absence of any aggressive buying at the outset. This condition was soon made more pronounced by word of the New York brokerage failure, although the fact was quickly ascertained that no important amount of grain was in- volved. After mid-day, however, buy- ers displayed a little more confidence and the market rallied somewhat. Rus- sian rellef purchases were helpful as a stimulus at this juncture, and so, too, vas announcement of decrease in the United States visible supply total, not- withstanding that the decrease proved to be less than had been looked for in some | Hovt, | Manhattan fold, there can be no doubt there are n bids the players will be re leased outright. Reading, Wilkes-Barre and Coatesvill will be given first ehoice cn the men With the teams more evenly matched i the second half ‘the racs should be mor interesting. The. minor leagues will have it all t themseives in Philadelphia, and with the high-priced stars should go alone nice ly. There is no question that Phil phia would have su:perted a ey w1 if there had been a club of any strensti, but the postponement of games So often had the fans guessing, and they never did@ know when a game would be played with the exception of the opening. 1t is aleo hard to pick up enoush play- ers cf the strength of the Eastern Lea- gue, as the players in this city are fast for local mino; but not league games. It takes time to develop men and then the proper coaching is always need- ed, an dthat is what the Philadelphia Club d#d not have . BOWLING Mill League Calendar Carrall . 7 76 108 Donahue Ty 2img s ea Stagenski AL EgR ey Germaine . 8834 R8¢ L 05 McCarthy 30 96 91 423 441 452 1316 Dye House Smeed ' . 73 - 56 198 Meleskd .. 39 269 Cloutier 79 Noyes 81 Gallagh . 69 381 368 On Jewett City Alleys Aspinook 91 1110 " 08 SoaET e1e e 108’ “795% 188 113 108 117 137 1584 93 301 101 302 89 251 79 101 463 1372 Comers 9 113 85 4116 96 95 102 sz 101 111 103 499 CHANEY WOULD LIKE BOUT me, e he wanis it d up to 135 e ZBYSZKO TED STANISLAUS JOHN OLIN TO CAPTURE result of the ession of in the box in the deal with the Red Sox, the ady somewhat in some quarters me champion of the Ameri- le enough, it merry crew the pen- nant which will be at stake in 192 However rumbling voices from Cleve- land introduce the unpleasant element of protest. ith Bush and Jones sdded to Mays Harper and Shawkey in the that the far-famed of club swingers is now an equally murderou arm_swingers. The two the Hub were credited last season with 39 victorics between them as :gainst 25 defeats and this. with a club he hind them that was always an also ran and that stood next to the bot- tom of the list in team batting. Mays and Hoyt stacked up 45 victori i derers’ row’ yvoked up with egation of cruits from quarters. Absence of moisture in the southwest counted as an additional strengthening factor at the last, Renewal of export inquiry _ together with a visible supply decrease gave firm- ness to the corn market, Oat prices de- clined in the absence of any special de- mand. Increased shipments of lard helped to lift provislon values despite idwer auo- tations on hogs. Chicago Grain Market, Wheat— High. Low. Close. May MY 110y 111y 100% 9% 100 52 b2y 52% 54% 543 543 38% 38 38y 38% 38% % cene from At the ing the 1921 campaigns. And there you are—or, at least, you see to be. As against these four stars—with the added .possibility that both Har- ver and Skawkey wiil turn in some of the high grade work of which they are known to be capable—the Indians ndve at present lined up Morton, So- ‘horon, Uhle, and Mails, all erratic ast summer: Bagby, whose hurling ving failed him in:the course of the close tussle with the Yankees, and, last but by no means least, the emi- nent Pole, Stanley €oveleske. Looking over the pitchers on other teams, Urban Shocker is the high light of the St. Louis Browns twirling staff. Dixie Davis, while rather a tartar for Huggin's troupe, was not so formidable against other teams., Dave Danforth, for whora the Browns just sent a host of players to Columbus, and for whom they will keep on turning men over to Manager Rowland for a couple of years yet has been tried out in the big lea- gues before and found wanting. Both the White Sox and Athletics returned him to the bushes. HELD ON SUSPICION OF SHOOTING TWO TROOPERS Charleston, W. V., Jan. 16.—Four of five fugitives sought by state police in connection with the shooting bf two troopers on Cabin Creek yesterday were captured by Constable J. W. Amick. at Seth, "in the Coal River district tonight, according to reports reaching state po- lice headquarters here. Those captured were “Pat” Jeffries and Leo Allison, the two charged with shoot- ing the troopers; Henry “Skinny” Al- ford and Elmer Smith. Troopers are 1 searching for A. H. Highland, al- leged to have been implicated in = the shooting. The state policemen wounded vester- day on Dry Branch, when they attempt- ed to arrest Alford on a capias issusd by the Lozan county ‘court folowing their indictment in connection with the march of armed miners frem Kanawha county to Logan county last summer, were reported to be improving tonight, and hope was held out for their ra. covery. CONDA HAVE RESUMED Jan. 16—Four mines of FOUR OF THE I Butte. Mont., the Anaconéa Copper Mining Company. resumed operations today, with full shift ing two thous: men, and oth- s in this district increased The Butte and Superlor mines and the Clark vroperties will con- tinue to add workmen, it was announc- ed Wor at the Anaconia Smelters was resumed today with a force of 700 . It was statid that eventually 1,800 nen will be emvloved there. Increase of employment at the Great Falls Smelter pected to begin at the end of the have been closd of unfavorable from superior re appeared ready A. Flynn inform- urt when her was not eligi- under ruling of court ed Mrs. name w iple to ture has en gal for the newly do” so. LEGISLATOR FEARED HE SN'T EARNING SALARY Boston 16.—Representative Guy Jan h, the state e Le feaved he was not 1 told Speaker Young that treasurer of the town of so muck time that o gi e of rep- in con- salary of | GOLD BEARING SAND IN BUFFALO 16.—Gold bear- d in a down town ort received rs that n laying a on street showed d silver 26.25 to the ton ounces té the ton. It nable whether the 1ind was a pocket not. Rancher’s Lucky Find Some years ago a French-Canadian rancher was rambling about a distant i part of his land when he noticed a piece of rock which glistened in the sun. Out of curiosity he picked it up and took it home with him. Its weight convinced him that it was mineralized rock and he took it to a speciallst, who - found it to be almost pure silver. Since then that ranch has yielded between 50,000,000 and 60,000,000 ounces of sil- ver. Sun Engine Does Good Work. The most remarkable sun engine ouilt up to date is operated at Mead, near Cairo, in Egypt. It consists of | five 205-foot boilers placed on edge and In the focus of five channel-shaped mirrors. Its best run for an hour vielded 1,442 pounds of steam at a pressure of nearly 16 pounds to the square inch—equivalent to 63 horses DOUGMS:VA!DMNK€‘M,WE power an acre of land occupied by the plant. not readily de- | IMARKET e s A weekly analysis of leading securities. This week's issue deals with the Stock Market and the Bond Market— 34 SH ETKCKET ST. All listed New York and Boston Stocks bought for cash or carried on reason- able margin. SUGGESTIONS| U. S. Steel Natl. Enamel Middle States Pierce Oil Ray Hercules Mobile Oil Gen. Motors East Butte \ United Fruit Chand. Motor Am, Can Allis-Chal. Am. lce Great North. Send your name and letter ‘will be mailed regularly. FIELD BROS. Members Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York Tel. 2080 ORWICH, CONN. JAMES WALLEY Manager MAIN OFFICE i 50 Broad St., New York BRANCHES Brockton, Mass. Northampton, Mass. ! Worcester, Mass. Southbridge, Mass. New Haven, Conn. Stamford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Woonsocket, R. I. DIRECT PRIVATE WIRES OUR TOY TRADE OVER 100,000,000 PER ANNTM} Over a hundred million dollars has been expended for toys by the people of the United States even in this year of economies, 1921. The factory value of toys manufactured in the United States, says the Trade Record of The National City Bank of New York, more than treb- led when the w cut us off from that former chief source of our toy i Germany, and the value of the * games” turned out by our factories in 1919, the latest census year, is officially stated at $46.000,000 against $14,000,000 in the preceding census y 1914, Mcantime the imports of toys which fell from $8,000,000 in the year prior to the war to a Httle more than $1,000,000 in the year of its close, quickly advanced to $6.000,000 in 1920 and $10,000,000 in 1921, so that the immorts of toys in the fiscal year 1921 were actually greater in than value in any year- preceding the unexpectedly prompt’ In- zn countries has outturn of the somewhat reduced the factories of the United States in the current year, the fact that the capital Keep Steam Up. n he indusiry advanced from| jrojvg who steam up ,and stay 000 to probably 4 5.000.000 in 1919 in which yvear the| SteAmed win the confidence of thelr r of employes exceeded 10,000, | fellows. There's enough to do in life = out turn of our own | €0 ke=p the average fellow on the go. s ot °F, o7 | But unless it makes a special appeal ovs and =ames” phme 0 his ideals it will be little better 1921 of $10.000.000 toys from abroad, e factory valuation of r $50.000.000, must have cost the purchaser” fully £100.000.000 1 . desnite the tenden- ey toward economies which has charac- terized trada conditions during the year. In one particular line of the toy indus- try and trade the holiday season finds a distinctushortage. namely that of dolls. The number of doll factories in the Unit-| e States greatly increased following the opening of the w upon the assumption that the absence of the sumly formerly drawn from Germany would greatly In- tensify the demands of the home mar- ket, but with the close of the war and | the prospect of big imports from Ger- | many and other countries of Europe as! well as from Japan which had develop- ed a considerable toy trade during the - e doll factories in the ates closed down, W' the ex- in immortation of dolls did as rapidly as had been ., and as a consequence the holiday trade finds an extreme short- this particular class of goods, ing an actual “fam in dolls ite the fact thet the children of the nited States are “crying for them.” The hapmenines of the war period above referred to, the shortage in toy supplies turned out in Europe and the hig increase in these from our own fac- torles. has resulted In a large growth In our toy exvorts meantime. wh vanced from three-o dollars in the vear fately preced- Ing the war to over $4.000.000 in the| calendar vear 1920, and today the chil- dren of over fifty countries and colonfes of the world are hug=ing American dolls. while the exports of other classes of American toys In 1920 distributed to nearly one hundrel countries and colonies as azainst approximately half that number in the year preceding tha war. not Tahiti Peak Unscaled. Tahiti’s highest peak, Mount Oro- Lena, 7,321 feet in height, still remains unclimbed by ‘any of the present gen- eration, a party recently having failed to reach the summit. Natives declare their ancestors knew the way to the top and claim that there is a lake and a pyramid temple there, Thé alé route to the summit, if there was one, has been lost, Overhanging precipices made unscalable by clinging vegeta- tion, slippery with water from scores of ' springs, prevent white men from - getting more than half way up. Picturesque New Zealand. New Zealand is a land of mountains, gorges, ivers and fjords. The higher peaks of the south island are eternal- Iy snow capped and the glaciers of its southern Alps rival those of Switz- {TUDEE MUSKCTEERS ‘erland. The surrounding seas are too cold for corals. Among the mountalns of the north’island volcanic fires are still active and the geysers and hcvtl rings are little less impressive than { ose of the Yellowstone park. Fine for Neuralgia BRrReeD THEATRE RENT “THE VAGRANT”—Mermaid Comedy—PATHE NEWS —TODAY— WALLACE REID IN HIS LATEST PARAMOUNT STAR FEATURE FREE THE WORLD'S BEST LEW KEENE ECCENTRIC DANCER BERT LEIGHTON Comedian of “Hitchy Koo Ce.” in “A BIC SURPRISE” PLAYING EXCLUSIVELY B. F. KEITH'S VAUDEVILLE Today—Wed.—4 Acts De Luxe STONE & IOLEEN COMEDY, SINGING, TALKING BARONESS DE HULLUB & CO. Comedy Variety_;n tainers NAZIMOVA in “BILLIONS” Slater Hall Concert Academy Musical Course Wednesday Evening January 18th, at 8 P. M. Florence Macbeth | Prima Donna Soprano of the| ~ Chicago Opera Company ASSISTED BY George Roberts, Pianist Single Tickets $2.00 On sale at Cranston’s NET PROCEEDS GIVEN TO BACKUS HOSPITAL. DANCE WEDNESDAY, JAN. 18TH, PULASKI HALL, GIVEN BY FORESTE! SMITH'S ORCHESTRA. OLD AND NEW DANCES. than drudgery. His challenge must come from the unsealed heights .of promising possibilities, He must see the reward of effort in rich returns Then he will give himself unstinted to the call and by doing so kindle in oth- ers the desire to work with him. Be- sides this they will learn to trust him for the thing he does. ' So the call is to steam up.—Grit. Literally Stumbled on Riches. About a quarter of a century ago two prospectors .in the bushland of Western Australia had put up their tent for the night and determined to trek back to Perth mext morning, as their quest had proved fruitless. One of them was aroused from sleap by the restlessnese of his horse, picketed just outside the tent and, going out to see what was the matter, he tripped in the darkness over a boulder, which proved on examination to be almost pure gold. That was the beginning of Cool- gardle. America’s First World’s Fair. "The first great “world’s fair” in America, the Centennial Exhibition of Arts and Industries at Philadelphia. was opened May 10, 1876, with 33 na- ident Grant, Emperor Dom Pedro II of Brazil and many other distinguished men were present. The exhibition was open for paid admissions 159 days and the total cash receipts from admis glons was $3,818,725.50. Proverb Analyzed. A proverb hopes nothing, fears noth- ing ‘that the eyes do not see, the ears do not bear. It is the deuhting Thom- as of life, of liter~{nre. “A wan ot the world =™ as Mr. Balfour once neat'- ggmomized him, “one who does not believe anything good of the world.” Well, so is a proverb.—V. H. Friedlaender, in Country Life, Hardly Likely to Occur Again. The unique distinction of a former President of the United States wit- nessing the inauguration of his son was enjoyed by John Adams when John Quincy Adams was sworn in on MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS GIVEN| PROMPT ATTENTION—PHONE 183 tlons represented by exhibitions. Pres- | DOUGCLAS presents THE. THREE MUSKETEERS THE ONLY AND ORIGINAL ADDED ATTRACTION " Harold Lloyd IN HIS LATEST COMEDY ‘(I DO’, THE FUNNIEST COMEDY EVER MADE. PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE 2 SHOWS DAILY, AT 2:15 and 8:00 PRICES : MATINEE, 30c—40c EVENINGS, 30c TO 58¢ These Prices Include All Taxes o s e e) The Real Bun, A bungalow, a long, low, en building ds a rest house ers, in India, ¥ prope er accommodations. Winter Sports sometime: alt in jints, cou; grippe. When such occur, use Minard’s Liniment—pleaant ta Inhale, easy to Rub In. For more March 4, 1825. This event is not like- Iy be repeated in American history. ‘Musterole insures quick relief from meuralgia. When those sharp pains go shooting through your head, justruba tittle of this clean, white ointment on your temples and neck., Musterole is made with oil of mus- tard, but will not burn and blister like the old-fashioned mustard plaster. Get Musterole at your drug store, . 35&65cin jars& tubes; hospitalsize, $3. positors entitled thereto on a BETTER THAN A MUSTARD PLASTER The Norwich Savings So (A Purely Mutual Savings Bank) 195th DIVIDERD Norwich, Conn., December 10, 1921. The Directors of this Society have declared out of the earnings of the current six months, a semi-annual dividend at the rate of Four Per Cent. per annum, payab : to de- nd after January 15th, 1922. ° 708 (3 =1 C, Deposits Dec. 31, 1921 $19,527,380.64

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