Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 11, 1922, Page 3

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NORWICH BULLETIN, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1922 DE COUBERTIN SAYS EUROPE SHOULD NOT MONOPOLIZE THE OLYMPIC GAMES nne, Dec. 10—(By the A. P.) B e Do Coubertin, founder of the Olympic games and president of the International Olympic commit- tee, at a reception he gave in honor of the delegates to the Near East peace conference said he did not be- lleve Europe had the right any long- er to thonopolize the Olympic games. wThere is something aftounding in the way we on this side constantly ask the Americans to come to us, without facing the possibility ‘nl ever. going to them,” he declared. “It will be the international Olympic commit- tee's duty to male the Olympics henceforth a much more American affalr than ever before. Then we must think of our numerous friends and followers in far eastern lands. South American and African interests also have to be taken into consider- “"'osnuch a movement cannot be gov- erned on a single centered plan. As to the Paris games of 1924, it is not our business to criticise the way they were prepared. Each city, when once it is chosen as the seat of coming games, should be allowed to act free- ly in accordance with its methods and spirit. 'We feel confident that Paris finally will do its best and prove worthy of the occasion. “The right of Germank to compete st Olympic games stands above dis- cussion. Olympics are based on the rule that all the games are for all the nations. The international Olympic committee, in my opinion, cannot.fail to elect very soon new German mem- bers to it.” 8T. PETERSBURG WINTER MECCA OF THE SPORTING WORLD (Special to the Bulletin) St. Petersburg, Florida, Dec. 10— Throughout the nerthern statds, Dame Nature has placed her ban on prac- tidally all forms of outdbor sports popular in the summer months, In the form of heavy white snow blankets and sheets of ice. But that. condition does not exist here where every branch of outdoor recreation is indulg- ed In the winter sealson by thousands of visitors gathered frem all sections of the United States. St. Petersburg’s even climate annu- ally atfracts hundreds of golfers, the biggest majority hailing from such centers as' Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Phil- adelphia, Boston, Detroit and Chicago. [t attracts horse shoe pitchers, devot- tees of the grand old game from the four points fof the compass, one sport that has more than 1500 followers in the “Sunshine City”. For the golfers there are three ex-: cellent greens, two_ 18 holes and one of nine_hole: Perhaps no where else in the na- tion there as many lawn bowl- ers devotees of an old Scotch game, as those who gather here at the fag end of every year. The game is much like American bowls and played on alleys just as long. The bowling ball beveld off flat on two sides and is curved at an object 114 feet away oy a lane that is 14 feet wide. There ard 600 members in the Mirror Lake 'lub, most of them coming from Can- ada and England. Roque is an abbreviated form of croquet played on marle and clay courts with sawed off mallets and en- larged balls.' The wickets are barely wide enough for the spheres to course through. Annual tournaments in which America’s best compete are held in February about the same time, the “barnyard golfers” swing into their midwinter competition. 8t. Petersburgh has thirty munici- pal tennis courts for it's winter guests and they are constantly in use. The city is almost entirely surround- ed by bathing beaches where hundreds take advantage of the warm climate to bathe in the gulf and bay waters.| Swimming contests are held every week and regattas featuring yachting | and power boat events are held every month. Checker, chess and domino tables wre provided,in Willlams Park where scores of older visitors delight to play In a game not so ktrenuous as others. | HORSES STILL HAVE PLACE IN THIS AGE Harses used/ in business are still a vital factor An American commercial life. This was proved by the surpris- ing fact that horses in commercial classes were one of the outstanding features of all the national horse shows this fall. They were a great success in the National Horse Show in New York City, as well as at the International Live Stock Exposition and the International Horse Show held recently in Chicago. Their numbers at- tracted much attention at the Ameri- can Royal Live Stock Exposition in Kansas City, held in the Union Stock Yards. More than 80 teams that have been in regular.use on the streets of Chi- cago and other western cities, were shown In the classes provided for such entries at the International Show in Chicago. Cartage companiew, dairy ATEST styles tointrigue old gulgbles! Choice rom short-haired, long- haired, red, yellow, blaci and white-haired monkeys! Line forms this way! BUT IN THE MEANTIME — Sensible people never for- get that the vigorous h&l?t’l olflouth may be retained L solong as bodily health maintained When the stomach fails to digest iggd, the liver slows up, and constipation- men and women heed inative disorders with § Beecham’s Pills — for 80 e reliable family companies, bakeries, laundries, large newspapers and news companies, and one of the largest express companies were prominently represented, either in the wagon or heavy draft classes. Such entries have mot been so_def- inite a part of the fall shows for a number of years. In New York the crowded entries only served to empha- size the fact that this city has still more than 65,000 horsas in actual use on its city streets every day of the year and that their number is stead- ily increasing in short haul or_ house to house delivery work withih the twenty mile zone. The Herse Association of America dods not anticipate that the horse will, return to its former numbers on streets but it does prophesy that the proportion of horses used in business in cities and towns will continue to steadily increase and that their use will keep step with the return of bet- ter businessg The stock yards at At- lagta, Ga., Fort Worth, San Antonio, Texas, Memphis, Tenn., and Montgom- ery, Ala,, all show a decided recent | increase in horse and mule business. DETROIT FANDOM SET ON 1923 PENNANT Detroit, Dec. 10—(By the A. P.)-— Detroit 'baseball fandom, which loya Iy has supported the Detroit Tigerie) whether they were “ its “heart on & nnant for 1922. | The Tigers coming from tte cellar position to third place In the 1 race, are expected by the fans to be stronger in 1923 than they were this year. Frank Navin, president of the club, believe: that such should be the case. Poor pitching has been the down- fall of the Tigers for several years, in the opinion of observers. Next sea- son, Detroit will start with the best string of hurlers of which the local outfit has boasted in a number of years. In speaking of his team’s pros- pects Mr. Navin said: “We should have the best pitching staff in the history of the club. ‘Rip’ Collins, whom we obtained from Bos- ton for Howard Ehmke and other players will give us help where we need it most. nearly the entire juries, undoubtedly will deliver, Her man Plllette, one of the leading pitc] ers In 1922, and who with Johnson w obtained trom the Pacific Coast Lea- gue, will, with Collins head our hurl- ing staff. It is possible that we will make one or two deals this winter that will give us even greater strength i the box. “The team will be second base by the addition of Del Pratt, Blue is one of best first basemen in the game and Rigney. r in the majors i considered one of the best shor At third, we have Haney and Jorn excellent fielders, Jones a left handed alternate with Haney, ¢ an American strengthened at we have a great catch- er, and Woodall is close behind him. The ability of the Detroit outfield is too well known to need comment. “The club, with an even break, should do better next season than in 1922,. when we finished third.” EVENING OF SPORTS AT STATE ARMORY TONIGHT Battery B will put on an evening of sports at the state armory this Monday evening, to which the public is invited and no admission will be charged. Early in the evening there will be an exhibition of handball dem- onstrated by an expert from New Lon- don who will give the battery boys instruction in this game. Following the handball exhibition there will be a basketball game be- tween the Battery B five and the team from Battery A of New London. There is knee rivalry between these two ser- vice team!s and the game should be well worth seeing., The Battery has a snappy little quintet that should be able to clean up anything that the Whalers can produce. After the basketball game the Bat- tery indoor baseball team will clash with the Nuggets team in the second game of the series. The Nuggets have one game to their credit’and are con- fident of bringing hame the bacon in this game. The Nuggets have a ktrong- er team than the ,one that trimmed the battery before and Chief Madden is in the best of condition to do the hurling for his squad. He will be op- posed by “Stew” Wilson who has made quite a name for himself during the past .few weeks. SUPPORT FOR MENDEL VIEWS ON COACHING Clarence W. Mendel, chairman of the Yale Athletic \Board of Control, is not alone in believing that coach- ing from the sidelines must be further curtailed, to the end that football be a test of what one team can do against another team and not what one coach can do against another’ coach. Dr. H. A. Garfield, president of Wil- llamds college, said in reply to an inquiry as to his-views on this ques- tion, that he was in full sympathy with the sentiments attributed to Mr. Mendel and emphasized the soundness of his views in Baying i “From the sportsmanship point of view and from- the undergraduate points of view, training in keenness and self-reliance, the intervention of a coach In a game in any form is bad” Dr. Alexander Meiklejohn, presidént of Amherst College, said: “I would go much further than Mr. Mendel on the question of coaching from the sidelinels, but so far as he iqes I am heartily in sympathy with Dean La Baron R. Briggs of Har- vard, in reply to an inquiry on his views, said that he did not care to discuss the question at the present time. . : RIVERVIEW TAKES CLOSE GAME FROM CO C On Friday cvening the Riverview club played a clos& game with the | Company C team of Willimantic and won out by a score of 38 to 33. The Riverview club is fast picking up the game- under the direction of Harry Mills and on Friday evening put up a real fast gdme. Sank and Sullivan play good games at the guard posi- tions while Dowd, Mills and Coady played well. Arthur Belair was the star of the Company C five. The line- up: Riverview—Dowd and Coady for- wards; Mills, center; .Sullivan, Sank and Coulllard, guard: Company: C—Couchoun and Bruso, forwards; Healy, center; Belair, Shea and Sullivan guards. Field | goals— Dowd 4, Coady 5, Mills 5, SanK 1, Cou- illard 1, Couchoun 8, Bruso 3, Belair 9. Foul goals—Mills 5, Coady 1, Cou- choun 2, Healy 1. SEGAL AND CURREN ARE SUSPENDED IN NEW YORK New York, Dec. 10—The /state ath- letic commission today suspended Harry Segal, manager of Danny Lee, of New “York, and Mickey “Curran, ~ manager! of Phil O'Dowd of Colums irregular practices in', TODAY’S SPORTS RACING Meeting of Business Men's Rac- ing Association, at New Orleans. Meeting of Cuba-American Joc- key Club, at Havana. ‘Meeting of Tijuana Jockey Club, at Tijuana. BASEBALL Annual meeting of International league, at New York. FIELD TRIALS Continental Field Trial Club, at Guerrytown, Ala. BILLIARDS H Iilinois amateur championship tournament, at Rockford. WRESTLING Billy Wolfe vs. Ray Zimmer, at Kansas City. BOXING Charley Beecher vs. Frankie Gar- cia, 10 rounds, at New York. Harvey Bright vs. Sammy Man- dell, 10 rounds, at New York. Jack Bernstein vs. Kid Wagner, 10 rounds, at New York. Johnny Curtin vs. Pee Wee Kai- ser, 10 rounds, at New York. Lou Bogash vs. Tommy Lough- ran, 8 rounds, at Philadelphia. Sailor Friedman vs. Pete Latzo, 8 rounds, at Philadelphia. ‘Willie Jackkon vs. Chubby Brown 10 rounds at Rochester. George Shade vs. Bob Sage, 10 rounds, at Detroit. e the recent bout here between the two bantamweights. The commission stated in its find- ing on the bout, in which O'Dowd was knocked out in the 5th round, that al- though no positive evidence had been brought to light, they were convinced that the Columbus boxer had been drugged. NELSON AND MADDEN IN STAR BOUT HERE FRIDAY Owing to Johnny Darcy’® inability to fight Johnny Clinton of Boston here on next Friday night, Matchmaker Jackie Wilson of the National A. C. has secured “Fighting Joe” Nelson of ¥ Philadelphia, one of Leo P. Flynn’ boys to fight Freddy Madden in the star bout. This bout is at 122 pounds. Madden has been going strong around the Boston rings and ®on is rated well in the Quaker city For the semi-final Murray Soren of New York, another boy from the Flynn Rable, has been picked to meet Young Martin Flaherty of Lowell. Flaherty is well known to local fans and is a favorite in this section of the state. Soren is a fast boy at the 146 pound| weight and comes to Norwich well recommended. The preliminary will bring togeth- er Jock Douglass of Lowell and Din- ny Murphy of New London at 142 pount Both boys swing a wicked pair of mitts and should start the show off well. Hugh Rorty will be the an- nouncer. CONN. MILLS SWAMPS HOLISTON B. B. TEAM| ecial to the Bulletin) Danielson, Dec. 10—The Connecti- cut Mills basketball five took an easy victory from the Holiston Five of Hol- iston, Mass., here fleet-footed hoopsters of the local team had the visitors bewildered by their fast pass work and accurate shooting. The lineup Mills Left Forward Conn. Holiston Cassidy ............ .. Swift Left Guard als—M , . Reddy 2, J. Murphy 1, Wil- liams 3, Cassidy 1, Healy 2, Doran 1. Foul goals—DMills 2 i B0 Murphy 3, 2, D. Murphy ‘Williams 3 ENGLISH MAY ABANDON CLAIM TO TENNIS MEET New York, Dec. 10—Possibility that the English tennis association may eventually abandon claim to the world individual championships granted to Wimbledon by the International Ten- nis federation, is seen by Americans as the English body plans to hold its annual meeting the coming week. A reform committee is now in control of British tennis policies and plans to change methods and regulations, it has been learned. Decision to give up the Wimble- don would allow the championship matches to be played by rotation in America, France, Australia or other countries. Henry W. Slocum will rep- rasent the U. S. at the English meet- ing although he will not vote. SUB BASE WINS GAME FROM BRIDGEPORT TEAM The Submarine base won its final game of the football season.on Satur- day when they slipped and slid their way through the Bridgeport team for two touchdowns and the game. Bridge- port scored one touchdown and the final score was 12 to 6. The field was in terrible condition b&ing muddy and slippery and it was with difficulty that the runners were able to get a foothtold in the mnow and mud. LONG SCHEDULE PROPOSED FOR INTERNATIONAL ew York, Dec, 10—A proposal that the International Baseball league's season be extended to 168 games will be made at the annual meeting of the league tomorrow. President John Conway Toole said tonight that the lengthening of the schedule would mean that the International-league Would wind up its season at the same time as the American association. Wanderers at State P'o:pih.l The Baltic -Wanderers will play at the State Hospital on next Wednes- day evening in the second game be- tween the Baltic five and the Riv- erview club. SPORT WORLD BRIEFS Waite High school of Toledo, O., de- feated the Malden High school foot- ball team by a score of 18 to 0. —— Pittsburgh had eight and New York seven players who hit in the .300 class of the National league last season. The Harrison, N. J., soccer team is putting up a fine game for the cham- pionship of the American league. Both George Owen of Harvard and Charlie O'Hearn of Yale are stars in football, baseball and hockey. Charles Welland of Brooklyn has sold Peter Pfaff 2:08 1-4 to Walter Cox at a fancy price. > In_the game with Boston College, Holy Cross produced a new football star in the person of Billy Glennon. 5 New Haven. Dec. 10:—The Yale pol- icy of “athletics for all” s arousing unésual_interest in minor sports this vear. While none of the teams will get into action before the holidays, preliminary work is in full swing. In- terest Is especially keen and more of it is being played at the university this vear than ever before. Other teams that have more candi- dates than ever before are: the box ing team with 150 candidates. the swimming team with more than 100, the track team with 75 and the fenc- ing team with 50. As a wpecial inducement to under- graduates to attend the various events this winter. the athletic association will issue a season book for all hoc- key, basketball, wrestling, fencing, boxing and freshman contestk” except- ing the prom games and the Harvard and Princeton hdckey games This book will sell for $5 although its ac- tual ticket value will be $21. even of Toledo has defeated the cham- pion school elevens of six. states. National League batting averages phow that Hornsby, the champion hit- ter, led Russell, the runner-up, by thirty-three points. Freddy Madden who bhoxes here in the star bout next Friday is no re lation of Chief Madden, the local ath- lete. Kid Williams will box in his home town, Baitimore, on December 18, squar- ing off with Young Montreal, the Prov- idence battler. John Clark of Brooklyn was elected Captain of the 1923 De Pauw Univer. sity football team, it was announced. He is a sophomore and plays guard. Memphis has lost is pennant win- ning manager, Spencer Abbot, who has signed with the Reading club ot the International League. The Western conference will have another” immense field for its foot- all warriors next year, when the University of Illinois dedicates its new $2,000,000 stadium. The Louisville Club of the American Association plans to build a- fine up- to-date baseball plant to take the place of the ome which was recently destroyed by tire Princeton ho players now have a rink of their own will no longer have to travel elsewhere for prac- tice. Gene Tunney will most likely meet Tom Gibhons before he gets a return match with Harry Greb for the light heavyweight title. Boxing experts— declare that Jess Willard should try himself out in a bout with some good heavyweight be- fore he tackles Jack Dempsey in an- last night by a|other championship fight. score of 34 to 16. The local team had| __ ) everything their own way and was| New York boxing fans were deep never in danger of being headed. The|ly disappointed in the Mike O'Dowd- Dave Rosenberg bout. in which O'Dowd was declared to have won the middleweight championship. Tommy Murphy is gathering the stars of the half-mile tracks. Circuit pilot has purchased Iskander 2:07 1-4, Dixie Direct 2:14 1-4 and Lambert Todd 2:09 1-4. The Princeton soccer eleven defeat- ed the University of Pennsylvania by 2 to 1 and tied the Red and Blue team for the intércollegiate championship. Thx[s will necessitate a play-off for the title. i In a well-played polo game Satur- day afternoon the Yale team defeated ‘the Second City Troop Polo Associa- tion of Philadelphia 11 to 7. The visi. tors came to New Haven from a 9 to 1 win over Princeton, but were com- pletely outplayed by the Yale team. John Scott, Giant pitcher and one of the heroes of the world’s series, wants his friends to- know that the story anent the injury to his leg was grossly exaggerated. First reports had if that John severely injured a leg while pitching an exhibition game af- ter the season closed. “Battling” Siki refused to appear before the International Committee appointed by the French Boxing Fed- eration, which held its first session at Paris Saturday according to an A. P-dispatch in an attempt to clean up the Carpentier-Siki frame-up charges. Billy Mathews, who put up such a game fight against Eugené Crigui, bantam and featherweight champion of Europe, In thelr meeting a week ago, has been awarded a “medal for conr‘age'i bs;]gze French Boxing Fed- eration for “especially gallant - tle against the d:la.mpio);\." s “Battling” Siki has accepted the challenge for a return match with Georges Carpentier, conditional upon his reinstatement by the French box- ing federation according to the A. P. He says he ‘is willing - to fight - for glory only, waiving all = -5 : money de. Four eight ronnd bouts have beem ar- ranged for the show at the Arena A..C., in Philadelphia, Monday night. The card is Tommy Loughran vs. Lou Bogash: Pete Latzo ys. Sailor Friedman; Joe Collett! ve. Patéy Wallace and Johnny Brown vs. Lew McFarland. . ' . Jeff Smith, New Jersey’s best middle- weight, earned $3,000 by outclassing hea- vyweight Martin Bunke In their fifteen- round match in New Orleans last week. Press dispatches from the Crescéent City Zay that Smith did everything but knock Burke out of the ring. ~ Charley (Kid) Kohler, Brooklyn ban- tam, is in great shape for his 12 round scrap with Johnny Gray, which will take place at the Ridgewood Grove Sporting club, Boston, Saturday night Kohler a short time ago returned from the Phil- ippine Islands, where he met with sue- qess in all his bouts. | | i i The Grand! MUCH INTEREST IN YALE'S PROGRAM OF “SPORTS FORALL" IS BEING SHOWN. Smith and Billy Carney and Pickles Mar- tin and Wildman Gould will hook up. Charley Harvey, who for the past twenty years has been importing the best of the European boxers, is eag:: to sign his clever English ltzht, T Merchant, with any of the topnotchers Harvey claims that Marchant has de- feated Sid Barbarian and Pete Hart since his arrival here. Wi e sake 1y Covert, former metropolitan, middleweight champlon. will for the simon pures for the profes- [ ELIZA | 1 GOT \ NOTHING ON ME l J ed | A slonal ring this week, and has placed | himself under the management of Jim- my Lowe. Covert will make his debut as a professional at the Commonwealth club in two weaks. Forty rounds of boxing. consisting three tens, a six and a four round pre- liminacy have been arranged for show at the Broadway Exhibition of Brookiyn, Monday night. The star ev ents will bring together Wolf Larsen and Yussel Pearlstein. Willie Kohler and Sam- my Stone and Mickey Brown and Jack Hausner. U. 8. S. Delaware tonight was claim- ant of the gridiron supremacy of the Atlantic Fleet after defeating U. 8. S Relief at Boston Saturday by a score of 27 to 2. the Delaware team, scored two of his team's four touchdowns and threw forward Dassds which resulted in the other two. The Southern Intercollegiate Con- ference delegates in session re-elected the present officers for another yi They art Dr. S. B. Sanford of University of Georgia, presiden! . B. Crenshaw of Georgi: president and M. W. Daugherty of the University of Tennessee, secretary treasurer. Cardinal O’Connell of Boston has donated a cup, through the Knights of Columbus, for the champion relay team of the Catholic colleges of the country. It 3s said to be the first time | that a- Cardinal has given a trophy for an athletic event, although Arch- bishop Hayes of New York gave one for the indoor championship meet two years ago. Frankie Fasano, fast rising West Si bantam, who in his last few starts stoo- ped Jimmy Proto and defeated Mick Delmont and Teddy Smacka. has been signed to meet Charley Triano in the stellar twelve-round comtest at the Ham- of Passaje. N. J, Fasano will also meet the best opponent obtainable at the Picneer ciub in threz weels. West Virginia for the East and Gon- zaga for the West. will be the con- testants in San Dieg nnual in- West C mas day the San Diego Sta- dium, it appeared certain after a meet- ing of the San Diego Athletic and | Reception Association, a non-profit or- ganization which schedules the con- tests. The interscholastic 200-yard relay swimming record was broken Satur- day by the Mercersburg Academy swimmers in a dual meeting with Baltimore City college, when the home natators swam the distance in 1.42 2-5. This lowers the former mark es- | tablished last year by Lawrenceville Academy by 2 1-5 seconds. Mercers- burg won the meet by 46 to 7. Goullet-Belloni won the 6-day bicy- cle race at Madison Square Garden. Brocco and Coburn finished second, and the Egg-Baton combination third. The final score was 2,457 miles, 8 laps at the end of the 143rd hour. A few moments before the finish Gast- man took a bad fall on “Deadman's Curve” when his front tire worked loose as he tried to mount the rim of the-saucer. Eddie “Kid” Wagner, the tall Phila- delphian, who has divided honors with “Kid” Kaplan in his two boutg with the Meriden idol, winning the first tilt and dropping the verdict in the second, is training industriously to get in the best shape of his career for his bout next Monday night in the Garden. Wagner 18 to meet Jack Bernstein in a ten-round tilt. Bernstein is a New .York youth who has been forging to the front rapid- ly and Wagner must be in perfect fet- tle to make & winning fight. EXCERPTS FROM HOOVER'S BOOE, > “AMERICAN INDIVIDUALISM” New York, Dec. 10.—Americans can make . sure. of progress along the road to human perfection by preserving and stimulating their initiative and glorify- ing service as a part of the uatema: character, says Herbert Hoover, secre- tary of commerce; in his book summar- izing “Ametican “individualism,” just off the press. Experience in the back wash misery of the war, he says, strengthened hi sfaith in American in- dividualism, for. America has been steadily developing the ideals that con- stitute. progressive ~ individualism. “Americans,” he writes, ‘are not foo! ed - into the pretense that all men ars equal n ability, character, injustice and ambition. That was part of the clap- trap of the French revolution. “If demcoracy is to secure its au- thorities fn morals, religion and states- manship, it must stimulate leadership for its own masses.” Leadership, .Mr. Hoover avers, “can- mot, no matter how brilliant, carry progress far ahead of the average ot the mass. of individual units.” Asserting that the economic develop- ment of the last half century has lifted the general standard of comfort war ‘| higher than the loftiest dreams of dur forefathers, -he says,. “the only road to further advancement is greater inven- tion, greater elimination of waste. Rawlings, quarterback for | the | ) D~ (and participation THOSE SAILORS DO el g greater production and ition of commod'tics a by increas'n | bers and di {each have m “The tra; fof the ‘mpuls ductio { ues mand for equality z a ‘The vast numbers formed during the las: advancement of id nity for mutual c and R to the in the ideas, a field for trainng ping stones to leaderthip, PREMIER MUSSOLINI 1S OPTIMISTIC ON REPARATIONS London, Dec. 10—(By the A. P.)— Iy optimist W ex |nito Mussol ian premler with i entatives. | "He admitted that the | having “serious and diffic jbut was hopeful that a sett! added it would render the ference almost ncedl. be necess: to work Signor Muss submitied the e had cussed today. s reduction of th | suarantees would be {many but there would | penalties. Speculating generally Maussolini {clared that the question of reparati iand inter-allled debts were dafinite {linked in his plan. Asked concerning the jattitude of the United on lquestion, he replied: States is out of it.” He confirmed that the allies were |united in rejecting the German note, and emphasized the need of haste in arrive 1ing at declsions owing to the expiration of the moratorium in mld-January. be no TO SEND INDIAN RU RS IN SEARCH FOR MISSING OFFICERS San Antonlo, Tex. General Ed M. Lewis, commander, has requested the governor {of Arizona to send out Indian rum from the reservations, a detail of N tional Guard, and have the civilian population fn Pima and Maricopa co ties co-operate in the search for Colo- nel F. I Marshall and Lieutenant C. 1 Webber, whose airplane en route rom San Diego, to Fort Huachuca, Ari disappeared after having been seen ov: Esthella, Aris., last Thursday. Five airplanes left Kelly fleld, Texas today and will join the squadron of nine planes already scouting out of Tucson, Ariz., in search of the lost avi- ators. NOBEL PRIZE PRESENTED TO DE. FRIDTJOF NANSEN Christianta, Norway, Dec, 10 (By the T. P.)—The Nobel peace prize today was presented to Dr. Fridtjof Nansen. ‘The ceremony took place in the Nobel United | | prim he The awa n of his endeavor: f nations . meney award- in fomering his in- EGIL GOLD WERAL AWAKDED FPEOF. BERGONFE Carnegie gol operat ary by n of ampu- the withering | WIRELESS EQUIPMENT THAT | FINDS DEPTH OF THE SEA ratus for 4e sca or the d of any ob- L'Intransig v Protessor weral and ex College s given by the mews. t without details, It ess operator has only n to ascertain instantly an apparatus connegted he customary wireless equipment h of the =ea. t a w a but | CONNECTICUT CONGRESSMAN IN WASHINGTON AUTO CRASD (Special to The Bulletin.) ngton. Dec. 10.—Congressmar of Connecticut had a narrow es- om serious injury late yesterday e car he was driving was run into another machine and turned turtle, mg under the wreckage Mr. Merritt {and Congressman Treadway, who was !riding with him. Passersby tore opem | the top of the Mgrritt car and pulled the two congressmen out. They were unin- jured and immediately continued on their capitol, taking their accus- laces there without comment on t, and it was not generally known till today that any accident had ocurred. The Merritt machine had the right of way at the corner where the ae- cident occurred. The other car ran inta a lamp post after wrecking tne Merrits | car, but its occupants were not injured. { = Testimony from Walter C. Tagle, pres« jident and other officials of the Standard |0il company of New Jersey, will be sought by the senate manufacturers com- |mittee in resuming Thursday in Wash- jington its inquiry into oil and gasoline | prices. Was] Merritt cape f |w hen t! by It gives a terrific jolt every time we hear our friends praise pur enemdies. Harold J. Gross, James H. Hurley and E. Tudor Gross, Augtioneers 960TH AUCTION SALE Group of frame buildings; about 41 own wharf. Trustee’s Sale By Public Auction By order of E. Arthur Tutein, Trustee of Allen Spool & Wood Turning Ce. The REAL ESTATE, MACHINERY and EQUIPMENT of the ALLEN SPOOL and WOOD TURNING CO. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15th, 1922 Commencing at 12:30 O'Clock, P. M., on the Premises MYSTIC RIVER, AT FOOT OF WILLOW STREET MYSTIC, CONNECTICUT 1—PARCEL OF REAL ESTATE—1 - . .000 sq. ft. floor space; about ‘1 acres land, bordering 650 ft. on Mjmtic River, with 16 ft.. depth off - 320—LOTS of MACHINERY and EQUIPMENT- THE COMPLETE EQUIPMENT OF AN EFFICIENT AND PHOFlTM% PLANT FOR SPOOL MAKING AND PRINTING. To be sold separately, in lots to suit purchasers, to the highest biddesy, without limit or reserve. For Descriptive Catalogue, Apply to G.L.&H. (Established 1888) i e and Insurance, 170 Westminster Street, H - b4 s i Providence, R. d J. GROSS alouraine \ THE 1 B Y BEAN

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