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THREADMAKERS SHUT OUT KACEYS IN'LAST GAME OF THE 1922 SEASON e With wintery winds blowing across the diamond chilling players and fans to the very marrow of their bones the last game of the sea- son to the American Thread team of afternoon at the The weather was for football but was a trifle cool for pastime of baseball and; tha players who The spectators sat} vercoats which who came clad in Palm the misery and{ suffering of the fans has nothing to| ed that Sportsmen's Park, St. Louis, the grounds of the Browns, had the “biggest diamond in the world”, nat- urally expected his boys to take the ‘Wolverines into camp in easy fash- Kaceys lost the Fairgrounds. Mike Kelly of the Chicagos, who had played asainst the Browns and had a good opinion of them, express- ed the opinion that the St. Louis boys would “make monkeys of them stiff- legged jays from Detroit.” ‘When the question of the number of games to be played came up, Fred Stearns, the president of the Detroit club, and Willlam H. Watkins, 'the manager of the National League cham- pions, suggested fifteen games believ- ing that if victory hinged on endur- ance the Detroits would outlast Browns. Von der Ahe and Comiskey readily assented, being under the im- pression that the Detroits would be lucky if they won ome or two games out of the fifteen. was a good game de his attention be- and trying to keep weather put more ne and gave the wise- to spring o few its going to flooding the diamond game out of it, ecracks that) Well, anyway, | A good time especially 1na Gorry Fortone who! OLYMPIC ASSOCIATION MEETING CALLED FOR NOV. 22ND Oct. 22—A call for the { quadrennial meeting of the American | Olympic association to _be ! Washington, November 22, was issued | todya by its president, Colomel Rob- { ert M. Thompson. Four proposed amendments to the constitution, three of which have been approved by the legislative committes of the association and the fourth sub- mitted without recommendation, will be passed on at the meeting. Such amendments provide for bring- into the organization nearly national sport governing bodies. forms of amateur sport, recreation and gemi-recreation welfare work are in- cluded and are distribution of the vot- ing power arranged in such a way as the desire of athletic union for closer co-operation preparing for the Olympics of 1924 Upder the original plan of formation 1 'deal of enjoy the local team allowed only in the third inn- threaten and touched for six ng four men one of them and walked one. nning started Fortune being sent in before he had up properly and Frankie Mc- man up drew a pass. field and Clabby Eae ama as it bounced to him ng McGowan about thrée feet awarded three votes for each of the five Olympic program competitions ov- er which the A. A. diction in the United States, and, in addition, one | each district sub-division of the A. A total of 35 votes. In or- the objections raised to sheer went to| Kane then hit a wielded juris- tirst instead of try- accorded “to that the A, A | shall have three votes, 7., major organization and an addi- each of its sub-divi- 1 Scheer was safe. ng for this inning, president of the U. 8. be empowered to appoint one repre. sentative from each of the twelve fed- districts with ed States army and the McGowan for the znals and hit | each. The Un three votes each as service sport rep- resentatives in the A. O, A. Other three organizations would be: can Remount association, Intercollegi- ate Association of Amateur Athletics, tle enough bu Trapshooting Association, Internation- 1 8] ational Association en, National Amateur Hockey Associa- United States Golf, Ten< nis and Revolver Association. of organizations credited with one vote are: Boy Scouts, Young Men's Welfare Board, federation, Play- Recreation Association, A., physical education asso- intercollegiate American Thread Co. MacGowan, of C. A. and the National | Collegiate A. A.. do not appear list of organizations entitled to vote under the proposed amendment to preious resignation or withdrawal from the A. tions to thé membership w upon proper application and they he elected to membership at th: The second amendment calls for in- executive committee to third provides 4 minor change in the honorary of- 3 | ficers. The fourth, which is submitted recommendation, from the present article which relates to the system of the clause which permits the i delegate present { cast all of the votes his organization |45 entitled to the coming conference the per- I sonnel of the American Olympic com- « mittee will be announced LONGEST WORLD'S SERIES TOOK PLACE 35 YEARS AGO | e been run since Tt will take pation of th | renewal of the O held in Paris in 19: red machine the meeting say “Please say to the American people that the committee that will be chos-/] en at that meeting to control the rep- resentation of the United States at the Olympic games to be held at Paris in 1924 will be national in spirit and | representative of organized and The team will be selected from the Amateur Athletes of America by per- it will be the aim of | the committee (o 30 inspire the mea that it will be the aspiration of every man to win honor his country for himself, and that, | Rose's great ph lose like a Zentieman'. “We ask the world's cham- emorable contest for the blue 3 unorganized. was then that the City of formance, and Louis Brown ten out of fif- [ With patriotism, mpionship of than credit to use Halph ‘He will win or ontaining the big four Deacon White, co-operation of all jtured the Na-|800d Americans to insure the selec- | tion of the best possible team; a team ‘that will represent not only the ath- lete, but the good citizen of the Unit- ed States, and a team that will so con- duce itseif as to keep all our old and Parisian Beb Carruthers| Mmake new friends for America, FOOTBALL Williams 0. Harvard 24, Centre 1 v York University, Princeton 26, Maryland 0. Georgetown 28, Fordham 13, ew Hampshire State 0. Drexel Institute 15, C. C. N. Y. 0. Boston University Penn State 33, Middlebury 0. Pittsburgh_21, Brown 6, Lehigh 2. Vermont §, Dartmouth 3. Pennsylvania 14, Swarthmore &, Bethany 14, Rutgers 7. Springfield 23, Stevens 2. Navy 13, Georgia Tech 0. Carnegie Tech 59, Thiel 0. Gettysburg 28, Muhlenberg 7. Lebanon Valley 40, St. Joseph's 0. Cornell 14, Colgate 0. Lafayette 28, Bucknell 7. W. & J., 7, West Virginia. Wesleyan Anson’s Colts H the management and contained such retiring from_base- a dentist in Brool veral years ago. 11 Bushong was Columbia 6. yer ani manager played | he versatile Yank with Jack Glea- the comedian, Arlie identally, Latham n those days was a great infielder. In the outfieid who batted son at shorf Holy Cross 1, Tip O'Neill, 1585 and .332 in in the American Association race. Syracuse 14. Walch in centre, regarded as the fast- sst outfilder in the country This team under the gemeralship of won three consecutive penmants in the American Assoeiation | had beaten Anson's Colts four out of ! six games for the world's title in 1886} and beld the Chicagos to a 2 to 3 draw | for the world's honors in 1885, It can be readily understood that t were looked upon as a very danges-| bus team at that time and while the Detroits had made a record as terrif- was the consensus of opinion that the Browns' sharp fisid. fleetness, pitching and superior would prevail over the veteran Wolverines, who were not | ware 0. famed for base runming fielding. Therefors the Browns held 1o be 6 to 10 favorites over the | Les 12, Detroits. In fact the admirers of the Browns offered as much as 8 1-2 to 1 that the Mound City boys weuld bring | land 0. Some the bacon. on der ‘Ahe, owner of the Comiskey had Bowdoin 8 Colby 6. Tufts 7, Norwich 0. Wesleyan 14, Hobart §. Connecticult Aggies 18, Trinity 7. Maine 19, Bates 6. Alfred 6, Buffalo 0. Massachusetts Aggies 10, Amherst 6. Rhode Island State College 7, Dela- Grove City 20, Allegheny 13. West Virginia 12, Washington and Rochester 7, Union 7. Mount St. Mary’'s 0, » Western M{.ry. Clarkson Tech., 7. Niagara 0. Hopkins TODAY'S SPORTS Meeting of Empire City Racing Association, at Yonkers. Meeting' of “Kentucky * Jockey Club, at Latonia. . Meeting of Maryland. Fair Asso- ciation, at Lagrel. . S Meeting of Savanmah Fair Asso- clatiog opens: at :Savannah. 3 Annual meet of Central Beagle'| Club opens at Bnon, Pa. Annual meet of New-Jersey- Bea- gle Club opens at Gladstone; N. J. Annual ' raeet of Southern ' Ohio eld Trials Association, . opens at Madison, Ind. 5 POLO Opening of intersectional tourna- ment at Grenada, Miss. BILLIARDS Opening of the national profes- sional three-cushion championship season. BOXING Young Montreal vi Eddie Dowd, 10 rounds, at Providence. INTERNATIONAL SCHOONER RACES MAY BE CALLED OFF Gloucester, Mass, Oct. 22—(By the A. P)—It was still an open gquestion tonight whether there would be any further racing between the fishing schooners Bluenose of Lunenberg, N. S. and Henry Ford, crack Glouces- terman. A host of tisher folk and sport enthusiasts, continuing the heated re- view of yesterday's race, hoped that the big schooners would head out to see_tomorrow morning to race it out. With the international committee standing by its race committee's rul- ing that there was mo official sanc- tion for the contest in which the Glou- cesterman beat his Canadian rival, de- fender of the championship of the international fisheries, Captain Clay- ton Morrissey and the men of the Henry Ford continued an aggrieved discussion of the question to race or not to race. Captain Morrisey felt he had been robbed of a victory rightly won, he sald, and explained that he was only preparing to meet the committee’s de- mand for a further reduction of his sail area. The fact that Captain Angus Wal- ters and the men of the Bluenose said they considered yesterday's race a vic- try for the Henty Ford to his mind was warrent enough-for disregarding the technical considerations that the race did not have an official start. There were indications, too, of a ful- tillment of the belief expressed by Sec- retary of the Navy Edwin Denby when he came ashore. from the Henry Ford last night that half the schooner's crew would not race again it the Ford was denied victory. As an offset to the ruling that took victory from the Henry Ford after it was thought she was crippled be- yond hope of success by sail reduc- tion to meet official specifications was the fact learned today that she sail- ed yesterday with canvas 135 square feet more than the official interpret- ation of her sail plan would allow her. She went out to the start, it was learn- ed, with the statement from H. R. Silver, chairman of the trustees of the Halifax Herald cup that carries with it the championship that she was subject to confirmation of the meas- ures. The excess it was explained to- day, was due to a misunderstanding of the application of certain rules on_the part of the official measurer. W. W. Lufkin, collector of the port of Boston, who is chairman of the in- ternational committee, in announcing today that it must support the stand of its race committee that the contest was unsanctioned, added that with the development that the Ford's sail had not been reduced enough, a protest from the Bluenose would have been in order had the Henry Ford been declared the sinner. The international committee held no meeting on the matter. Captain Cparles H. Hardy, one member, w: oltspoken in his belief that the ruling of the race committee should be re- versed, but the other members ap- parently were not of that mind. Gloucester, recovering somewhat from the excitement caused by the decision last night, learned for the first time of several things that had happened yesterday. The Ford's sail- ing with too much canvas was onme The fact that Secretary of the N: Denby who had sailed with the Glou= cestermen all day, held the wheel over the last part of-the race, was an- other. There was some discussion over the unexpected sailing qualities of the Henry Ford as compared with the Bluenose, but to the American boast of the beating administered all ,the way on a 40-mile course, Canadian adherents pointed to the fact that there was no real windward work yesterday and that the Bluenose was still their favorite against the Henry Ford for a race with normal condi- tions of wind. AT MOOSUP Lebeaw’s High Rollers 4109 85 . 96 148 104— . 100 117 115 96 98— 52 .. 89 93 102 114 138— 536 Lepack Lebeau . Duprey . Totals ... 298 295 313 358 345 1609 Lussier's Gone Bys Boisse . 107 112 106 Lussier .... 98 145 100 ‘Wukus .... 112 126 99 Totals ... 317 383 ?&‘S 306 299 1610 FIBST FATALITY OF FOOTBALL SEASON AT SPRINGFIELD Springfield, Mass., Oet. 22.—The first tatality of the football season here was recorded this afternoon when Simon Bis- sonmette, 21 vears oid, died of heart fail- ure as he was about to plinge into the |line during 2 game between the Sham- rocks and Acorns, amateur teams at Em- ily Bill playground. Bissonnette was playing with the Shamrocks, and was apparently over-excited by close plays in the game. Willlam Heckler, 22 years old, was rushed to a hospital following injuries sustained in the game. His con- dition was said to be not serious, al- though be was badly bruised. The finish made by the Cincinnati Reds assured Pat Moran of his berth again next season. His game came through in fine style. THE RANKING OF WOMEN TENNIS STARS 1—Mrs. Franklin T Mallory, New York. 2—Miss Helen Wills, San Fran- 3—Miss Mary K..Browne, Los Angeles. 4—Miss Leslie Bancroft, Boston. 5—Mrs. May Sutton Bundy, Los Angeles. 6—Mrs. Marion Z.. Jessup, Wi mington, 7—-Miss Martha Bayard, Short Hills, N. J. 8—Miss Helen Gilleaudeau, New 9—Miss Florence Bailin, New| | urday twhy they are the “Big Three™ of | took the first two heats and gave good eastern football and through their trio | promise of winning the ‘three out of | that the annual group of contests among | heat Mr. Rood was slow in getting ‘intensity. drove his horse a slow mile but in RIS VCTRY OVR K | T . ELDREDGE, OUTSTANDING FODTBALL FEATIRE| ~* " somwcn com - . Paint Headquarters New York, Oct. 32 ——Harvard, Yale and | interesting ~nature. Chessie Chimes 1/ unt Princeton convincingly demonatrated Sat- | owned ‘by Horace Rood of Windham 2 : : PR i 0 of - victories gave cause for the'prediction | five for a $25°purse but in the third them late in the season will be of sizzling | off and was finally left behind. Rood " Overshadowing . in. popular interest al: | the fourth heat the horse broke and the other contests staged i the eastern | came in fourth as whil as in the fifth arena last wesk-end was the Harvard- | heat, leaving the title to Peter Daw. Centre game. at Cambridge, which, while | The summaries: % not fought as closely to form as it had | Peter . Daw, Thread City been ‘“doped,” ended approximately in | Driving Club. what critics had expected a victory for | Chessie Chimes, H. Harvard. Darling May, Edwar Brown In the second halt the Kentuckians|Charlie C. George Brown showed that they were more than a pic- | Bioonshine Kid, Tuey Brown turesque collection of gladiators and that | Time: 2:30; 2:30; 2:35; they really had football stuff. Their |and 2:40. fumhles in the fisst onarter, and ‘he! e ability to collect themselves against the | YOUNGSTERS ARE STRONG I Crimzoa e@sPaught was a. poor picture of FOR OLD 1Y cOBB what the Colonels really are capable of. £ ou' chi ndtits Managir Tvna Harvard proved that It has strength. | copp of Detroit talking to a_ rookie Yale and Princeton showed that they. | rival? The first thought is that Tyrus too, have power, the former by van- is giving the boy a razzing with the quishing Williams, 33 to 0, and the Tiger | inient of getting his merve. by clawing up Maryland, 26 to 0. Tha | One. recently was asked if Ty w. act that both the Blue asd’ the Black | giving him a ride. 1 shonld say not and Orange kept their goals from beins | was the retort. “He was giving me crossed gave both teams the Drestige |some sound advice,” Ty always is will- that they had not enjoyed this season. |ing to help a newcomer. Cobb may The touchdown that Quarterback CoOV-!show him up in a game, but later he ington made in the last period for Cen- ! will explain where he was at fault tre, was the first that has been made | And‘find a voung player who is mot against the Crimson this year. strong. for ‘Cobbs The upsets of the day included Ver- e LA mont’s amazing victory over Dartmouth, | NUMBER 13 PROVES HOODOO € to 3;; New York university's defeat FOR FOOTBALL STAR of Columbla, 7 to 6; and Washington et bocaE 6 ey and Lees e gamo with West Virginia, | \ilnt 1o vouns Elant ond ot the Mas 12 to 12. In three games preceding | yietta Coilege Ohio, football team, yesterday, Dartmouth had score 60 points | on the hummer and put him there and had prevented its opponents from |right. Here's how it all happened: scoring one point. When the new Jerseys were issued Cornell's victory over Colgate was. | Jack asked for No. 13, claiming it was perhags ane of the most. esudr’|his lucky number. He got,it and then games of the day. It was a cléan, stub- he got his. In the Salem game he was| - bornly fought contest devoid of flukes in | knocked out for fifteen’ minutes but| yational league elub announced to- which the better team won on its merits | went back in for the last quarter, only | 927 Penn’s victory over Swarthmore, 14 to|to be brought out again with a sprain- 6, by a sensational last period, rally, was | ed knee. - i s e gy, 1 enationsl cevelopments *f] quesTionasLe miT mAY keee || SPORT WORLD BRIEFS * All accounts of the warfare at Bethle- COBB OUT OF .400 CLASS . hem, Pa, are that Lehigh outplayed | Chicago, Oct. 27—(By the A. P)— Brown, even though the Pennsylvania in- | One questioned hit, separate Cobb,| Neither Bobby Walthour, Jr., nor stitution lost, 6 to 2. The losers had the | manager of the Detroit Tigers, from | Charlie Jaeger will appear in the six- kmack of getting the ball down tho field | the charmed circle of 400 hitters for | day race in Chicago. x but lacked the punch to drive across the | 1922, it was discovered today, in com- i i goal The game was a resumption of | pilation of the official batting records | 480k Ogden, pitcher for Baltiiere: friendly hostilities between the clevens | of Irvin M. Howe, official statisti- {1y a¢ Series when he held the Saints after a laps of 26 vears. clan of the American League. With-| ¢y o hits and struck out 11 of Pop Warner's Pltteburgh Panthers, hu- | 0ut the hit Cobb's total is .398, but g, millated by previous defeats by Lafayette | With 1t he enters the 400 ranks for| ™ ", -l | | toen given by Com- and West Virgimia, won a rough and | 106 third time in bis carcer as leasue| 1 oCnon T38 beon ST ent that tumble game from Syracuse, 21 to 14, | pattin “i“de‘-!.‘ poaition he: has held | T 5 Inizx Antecon onat-Selub muih scoring the deciding touchdown and | [°F_the last fifteen years, with but ~ 2y the Washington club for Pitcher | emmm————— point in the last quarter. Frequent | TFe exceptions. T i BOXIN Willow Point Casino, West Mystic, Conn. Monday, October 23rd, at 8. P. M. MAIN BOUT—12 ROUNDS—152 POUNDS BILLY CARNEY, New Bedford vs. BILLY WOODS, of Manchester, N. H. SEMI-FINAL—10 ROUNDS—130 POUNDS YOUNG WILLARD, of Fall River vs. TOMMY DUNN, of Holveks PRELIMINARY—§ ROUNDS—138 POUNDS SMILER McCORMICK, of Stonington v. KID LEWIS, of Stoningtes CURTAIN RAISER—6 ROUNDS—118 POUNDS YOUNG LEDUCE, of Holyoke vs. YOUNG CARNEY, of New Bedford REFEREE, TERRY LEE, of Bridseport PRICES: $220 AND $8.30 e £ _ |spring, it was asserted by bascball] No decision has yet e e heTing of he PIAYSTS | AGEN AND KIRKWOOD LOSE There is a youngster in Philadeiphia | men. on the disteibution b chasity o sg Navy's clean cut victory over Georgia TO FARREL AND REED |Damed Tim Callahan who is said to . proximately $120,000, the proceeds of > i A be a great performer. If he boxes as| An eight round contest for October | FOT ety $120.000. g Tech was not an upset, even though it had | Washington, Oct. 22—Walter Hag- | well as the first Tim Callahan, he will| 30 between Patsy Wallace, flyweight,| game between the }:‘:nkeumn'fl Gi-| the clement of surprise. The much-her- | en, British open golf champion and|pe a star. and Pancho Villa, flyweight champion. | ants, Colonel T. L. Huston, part own-! alded “Jump-shift- of ‘the ‘Galden Toe-} Jo Kirkwood, Australlan fitieholder, | “Cylleges ‘may, loatc Rukuiios st pre=] heg jhooa’ srareed by Jach Hanlon | er of the Yankees sai 1ade held o derrars for Che A dles e e e s roday, by Jonur Faswsll| fesslonal :feotball, * huts whers . WouMl| stk ion miker for the Glymipia Athictic| Teinitylaiscalp went £ the Catkil scored in each of the m’m two perlo«:{s fi\;kfia}‘lafcihznflvxfl?‘«dd iRee«:!s- ];;n‘ }he pro teams get their material were | Lasociation 7 cut Aggies Saturday for the first Smel by a consistent, persistent attack. . A ndlan Spring| it not for the institutions of higher 2 3 i 4 idiron rela- Though both teams went scoreless in the | Club, in a_special match formally op: | guobi ch 2 Ewald O. (Jumbo) Stishm, who was | i, (0 Bistory of the er 5, Secon half ‘the | Navie was an top|eninBcthat.course. Farrell and Reed | ore o ining ‘of ‘Walter W th e B s, Collt SO Navy g ] pitching of Walter Warmouth| forced to give up his work as foot- | the Storrs aggregation vanquished most of the time and deserved to win, | WOR DY three up and two to play. | was so good in the closing days of ¥ ) - — s sivesity local eleven 10 to 7 at Trinit 13 to 0. the Senators compaign, that the fans|Dall coach at Indiana Uuiversity last : y Fieldl . before nearly 1,000 Revenge for last year's defeat, 10 to | OFIOLES LOSE TO STAR expect great things of this youns man | September and undergo a serious op-| ) pend e 7, was obtained by the Army in the bat- IN POST-SEASON GAME | next season. He. was obtained from |eration in’a Rochester, Minn., hospi- n the first cross country meet in tle at West Point with New Hampshire | Baltimore, Oct. 22—The Orioles, win- | Little Rock, Ark. . | tal is now able to sit up in a wheel :fld;mc:;my team has ever compet-, in which the final score was 33 to 0.|nefs of the junior world ehampionship, A large number of prominent riders| chair for short daily periods. . the ets were beaten by N ] £ . s Hampshire State, 35 to 21. The figh Though without the services of two stars [Closed the season by losing to a team | are now in Italy. Nat Butler has heard| = The Detroit team defeated the Bos- : i > the Army stowed a well balanced team |COmPosed of major leagut players by u | from Bob Spears Bill Bailey, Walter |ton College eleven by the score of 10| foF £irst hioncrs between Calboun at the start and later rang in a string |5°0r® of 11 to 3. Rommel, of the Ath- | Rutt and . Caesar Moretti. Spears|to.$ in a battle royal at Detroit Sat- BN, Snow o et letics, held the locals in check. writes he won the Grand Prize of Mi- |urday. The Boston College team for|SPir® Was a feature of the case. The! sl o e BT lan. the greater part of the game was in|ATHY man won out. BATTERY B REFUSES TO PLAY ENGLSH WOMEN SOCCERISTS Major league players now on their|front and it looked as if the Eastern| Yale's cross country runnmers easily, T W TR DEFEATED BALTIMORE MEY | Way to-the Orient for an exhibition|team would win, but the home aggre- | romped away from club athletes - bt ; "} Baltimore, Oct. 22—The Newecastis | {0UF, Will not receive 1923 ‘contracts|gation pulled the iron out of the fire [the junior cross country champio: (Bpecislifo; Thes Bulletin.) Wrheiteihsiis tear o T until ‘they bave ‘been 'in ’ training|near the close and finished victori-|held over the Yale course Saturday.! Westerly, Oct, 22.—Saturday evening | goteated by the Baltmore "“:‘:mb“;s camps for at least two weeks next|ous. The Yal> varsity squad entered three, the basketball team of the 343th Com- Dooee ¥ 1 : teams aad the Yale freshman squad pany defeated Battery B. of Norwich, | MaTEin of one goal. The score was 4 had two teams. The varsity first team, by a score of 21 to 18~ The game was |.0 3. The irls put up a good game ) was the winner and Mead Treadwell, played at the armory and was a most | 252inst the men A b b ;‘he df‘lm man home, in 17m 4-5s, e i V1 i or the s R i xciting one. When Norwich had & foul | Loy o T stance, which is a fraction calied on them the captain called the over three miles. team off the floorand refused to play and TITLE IN SOUTH AMERICA ay the end of 5 minutes the game was| Rio Janero, Oct. 22—Brazil today won _—_—mmm—m décided in favor of the local 343th team. |the South Ameritan football championship SATUBDAY'S MARKET. Cent Leather ..... quotations are in cents per unit of for At the first half of the gaime the score |py defeating Parzguay 3 to 0 in the fi- | New TYork, Oct. 21. — Stock prices | Cent- Leather pr 7 sign currencys was Westerly 12 and Norwich 9, but nal game of the season. The positions i sigth t of the teams at the end o the series [OPRSd today With a show of strengt lead in the second half, but soon the AlCwrst il, first: - | but later speculative selling and profit 349th caught up and passed Battery B, | ma . 104oWws: Brazil first; Paraguay e brisk bid. 348 AL st e e e and a brisk bid- and they walked off the floor. Sten- nd; Uroguay, third; Argentna, |taking in some issues Chandler - Motor Ches & Ohio .. Chi M &SP . Chi M % St P pr . soon the visitors picked up and held the Sterliog— : ile, fi hers market a de- | Chi & N'west . house for the locals rang up five | [°Urth: and Chile, fifth ::;‘:d“;" :;:um :;;;;‘::e,_ ChiRI&P ... Lediels Rl e e To Go to Johnsen The price movement refiected the [Chl R I & P pr summary is given as follows: ; : Shortman 1, Stenhouse 5, Plimpton 1, | between Detroit and the Yankees, Ty |weekly "MG\: £ busirions | Cosden. .o McCloy 2. Goals from fouls: Shortman | Cobb was credited in unofficial news. |painted an optimistic picturs of b Crucible _Steel 2 paper box scores with two hits and |conditions, but they had little, effect on } rNCRE pitt Battery B: Milis 4, Linnery 1, Slader | Dy the official scorer with only one |market prices. 2 tinued to set |Dome Min 1, Coleman 1. Goals from fouls: Mills 4. | safe smash. Investigation of the dis-| High priced stocks continued to Sef| 20 TURER Referec, Erickson. Scorer Pierce. Timer, | crepancy has begun and the contro- |the pace on the “mu. mmdsf—}nml ing e A €raiz. versy will be laid before President|of New Jersey being. the in Mexican, | Fisher ‘Body Ban Johnson of the American League.|ture with a gain of 13 boints, MECE |6 on s "opetial YOUNG TIGERS OUT AFTER It the hit is won for Cobb, it will | Petroloum crossed B4 to8 FETES PhS1 [Gen Motor THE 120-LB. TEAMsS | make him the only slugger in base- | Since " ain of 1-2 on the day. Mary- | Great .- e ball history to pass the 400 mark e der pressure | Great s THE LIVESTOCK MARKETS. | Manager Ray Higgins of the Young | three times. George Sisler of St. Lou- |!2nd and Pacifis Olls were uhder Bremue | g o (007 T i £ ! Tigers of Groenevillo says that he has | is has (wo 400 marks. This year and m";‘l“l'og"o"-"‘“;‘:;’:‘;““ et Iiinois Cent pr A . ('";{"(—::*—lw_.fl&l me to the , conclusion that there 2|2 ne es - : marke o g come o the el (R ehere| 1920, both times the league high rec- |* BSLI0 Groonea "hack sharply below |Inmpiration Cop . 3 3 $8.25@8.60; top, $9.65; heavyweight ¥ football players that is not afraid of last night's closing figure after estab. |Tnt Harvester pr. $8.85@9.60; medium weight, $9.25@9.657 his agsregation of pigskin chasers.| French Woman Sels Net Mark ~|lshing a new high for the year =t B{.00 307 (S0 Hakt twaisst. $21001.40; 0 it U, He has challenged all the teams in| paris, Oct.-22—Mile. Bracquemond,|otner standard rails, trading in which |Inter Paper 5 b s T mecx’fi: o this pacinity and not ome Of fhem|ine star of the women athletes, to-|was less active. Equipments moved up in (Kennecott .. . = Pt A B has had the nefli'e l!;o sxgn[huv ‘f‘m’thfl day established a world record for|response to a fairly good demand for khifl-" \;‘Hu . MCH-‘ Rt 1005 et > By wonii B0 heough ha Zn.soe | the mile run of & minutes, 9 2-5 sec- | Baldwin and Pullman, cach of which [Maxwell Mot A . 3 g el B S without games wnless meme team mets| °P2% e 1! polats o Gkt b $12.50@13.50; mediom and good, $9.00 up courage enough to take a chance. certificat accompanied %|e Manager Higgins hurls a deti at all Dacodere Boss. Tamfelt, i B st the . vegalar common and medium, §7 teams in this part of the state ay.| The Daredevils of Taftville travelled | unconfirmed reports s i - Bt mat, craging 120 pounds. Write fo Man. |i0 Plainfcld Sunday and defeated the |semi-annual dividend might not be maii ¢ el R T e aEer Higains at 416 North Main street, | Flainfield Giants in_a ten-inning game | tained, Tecent payments having beenolit 3 ; - Lnto il *Iby the score of 6 to 5. In the tenth with [of surplus ‘funds. Atlas Powder, PETEH DA WINS WINDHAN the score 4 to 5 in favor of the Plainfield | Pont and_the shipping shares also were Giants and the Daredevils at bat, Du- |heavy. NationalBiscuit, National Lead, MATINEE RACING TITLE|gas singled after two were out and a | Bethlehem Steel A and Allis Chalmers : afer Ehue Corn Products, (Special to the Bulletin) Home run by Lemieux brought in two | preferred strong but : roers, $5 Willimantic. Oct. 22— large crowd | Tuns, winning the game 6 o 5. This |after an early display of strength slipped - - Ay A attended the town championship mat.|§ame ives the Daredevils of Taftville |back for a net loss of more than 2 points. er calves 33306750 fnee horse races held at Recreation|the Bastern Connecticut championship, | Total sales were 436,000 shares. : cattle: Boef rcers. $5 P Sty Rt | dnterest in the foreign exchange sit- 5 204 Detters, sL00GTO J. Barney Davis was starter and Nicholson Released to Toledo [uation centered on he furtier S & v p e and Lambe — s 1,000 ‘Wallace Hills and Bli Blanchette were| Boston, Oct. 22—Fred Nicholon, vet- | of G'“l‘,‘,’;,’;f'—m, and Ttalian” re- . 54% 1313.50@ 140 the judges. eran outfielder of the Boston Braves, | dr*d. lso receded while -sterling . 55 mon), $5.00@12.00; 3 All of the competitors were in tojhas released outright to the Toledo (Tmittances 216 0SS e, T ere . 12.00; wethers, $7.00@3.00 win and the races were of a most club of the American association, the|2Pd the firm. » % |7.25; ewes (culls and corimon), $LM@® qu‘;?e’de.rlng house statement showed 4.00; breeding ewes, $4.50@11.00; foeder | * an increase of $1126,765,000 in loans, lambs, $13.00@14.40. scounts and investments and increases . 61% - Pittsburgh, Oct. 20 . 33577000 in the Teserve. of member % |light ; market steady. Cholce, $3.35@ * $ y banks in the Federal Reserve bank, | U -9 10.00; prime, $5.40@9.00: good, $7.85i i J LXK $54,376,000 in net demand deposits and ¥ tidy butchers, $5.50@9. fair, $13.781,000 in time deposits. The ex-|U . ks $6.75@17.50; common, $5.0006. $ cess reserve totalled $23,953,000, as com- }j : Sm-itm: . 2 mon to good fat bul :1};%:5,?’ coms with 1 eek’s deficit of §2,33 PEN I, = % mon to good fat cows, §1. ; heifs i T - U g T AL ers, $5.00G7.50; fresh cows and springs - 3 v ers, $30.00@90.00: w-n, %:v:’..:lm: € : 2 heavy and thin calyes, 35. .00. sToCKS. A 4 Lambs—Supply 300 head The following is a summary ef the B and. Tans - . market steady. Prime wethers, $7.000 150 good mixed, $6.00@6.75; falr mix<' & ed, $5.00@5.75; culls and common, $1.00 3 . 3 @3.00; lambs, $15.00. ) 23.48; March 23, Tty | Hogs—Receipts, 4000 head: markat 18 23.33. Spot steady, middMng 23.95. |0 20c higher, Prime heavy hogs, : & : 2 heavy mixed, mediums and heavy york- ers, $10.30@10.40: light . yorkers and pigs, $10.40G10.50; roughs, $5.5095.26; stags, $5.0095.25. Chleago Grain Market. Wheat— High. Low. Closa Dec. ... 115% 1104 110% May ... 112% Itk g July ... 2065% 104% bt Dec. w.u 61% ;! 5