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. \ IN-12 ROUND Meriden, Dec. 18—Babe Herman, of California, - won a 12-round decision | over Louis “Kid" Kaplan, of Meriden, at the Natfonal A. C., here tonight, af- ter one of the most furiously fought contests seen here in ytars. After an even first ronnd Herman got away/to @ clear -lead in the second by a se ries of left hookls which had Kaplan wobbly until just before the bell. Her- man won five ofpthe 12-rounds with #Ahree even. Kaplan weighed 129 and Herman 129 1-2. THE “JOKE” HOME RUN A THING OF THE PAST The ‘day of the “joke” home run in baseball is passing, if the recommen- fation of the American League at its meeting last week is followed out by the Rules Committee. It is proposed to establidh zones in each major lea- gue park where the fences and stands \re 80 close that ordinary pop-fHes on wnother field become a regulation home run—the kind of home run that has been responsible for ghe avalanche of cireuit hitting by even .m cre bat- ters. In certain of the zomes a hit will be only a two-bagger;-in certain: oth- s three-bagger. Only when the ball us‘mve]ed a specified distance will K be called a genuine homer. . It is hard to ‘say what thé man in the bleachers will think 'of this rec- smmendation, but the big majority of baseball men will welcome it as the first offieial recognition of the fact that the home run is being overdone. The epidemic.of the last few Vears, started first by Babe Ruth and taken up by infetior rivals, has reached the point of the highly undesirable. Cer- tainly, it has disgusted many follow~ ers who can recall the days when ‘base ball was not only a game of brawn but of science, smartness and strai- egy, those attractive elements which have been subnierged by the lively ball and the minfature-sized parks. A home run inside the grounds and some of the mendous and magnifi- cent drives which Ruth has made are a real part of baseball. So are sharp clean’ fielding and fast base rumning, ‘but they are not possible when the outfielders ‘stand with their backs to the fence and when ordinary batters, by lifting a pop-fly into a bleacher, are able to circle-the bases at a do; trot.—New York Times. A. A. U. TO PROBZ ALLEGED ABUSE OF SUNDAY LAW n, Dec. 18—Alleged abuses of the Sunday law dealing with amateur sport will be investigated by a spec- fal committee. of the New England Amateur Athletic umien, appointed at . meeting of that body tonight at the suggestion of President Willlam - C. Prout, of the National organization. President Frank H. Briggs, of the New England Associatigh nmamed Mr. Prout a member 'of the committee, with power.to appointythe remaining two members. i yAn ‘urging the necessity for action Bosto: ihe national president Said that ama- teurism was being hindered by the manner in which Sabbeth sports were conducted in various sections ‘of the state last summer, und announged that #n, _amendment 10 the laWw.‘would be sented at the meeting of the gen- wral court, at which, he said, it was Important that New England should be represented. ; 1 PHIL KRUG OUTPOINTED : BY MICKEY WALKER Newark, Dec. -18—Mickey . Walker, welterweight | champion; outpointed Phil Krug, in a twelve-round -bout here toright. Sporting Mritérs gaye the decision to Walker) #= v The champion found Krug a tough opponent and the latter had the best of about four rounds. Walker punch- ed continually with both hands to the tace and body, concentrating his at- tack on Krug's stomach. < Early in the fight Walker cut\a gash under Krug’s left eye and in the fi. nal round almost closed Krug's right ,eye with & golid smash, During a mix< up in the tenth round Krug went down. There was a difference of opinion as to whether he was knocked: down or |,5€! slipped. Krug weighed 154 pound: d Wal- ter 148 1-2. o e n il TRADED PLAYERS HAV ‘ San Francisco, December 18—¥igh, batting percentages were made in 1922 .by three Pacific coast baseball lea- gue stars, Willie Kamm, Jimmy (’Con- nell and Sam Hale, who go to the ma- Socording 1. the iessne Tests Lok a league records | Public bere by, President W. H. Mo- Carthy. g : A ¥ . Kanm, Francisco third base- man, led Kis club with Inut:.vmge of -342. He was geventh among the lea- “gue anys was Sold to. the Chicago Sox for $100,000 cash and players. worth "$20,000, the :highest pflalflcr paid’ for a:minor leaguer. 7 e, Portland .third sacker, who ‘ml to the Philadelphia Athletics for #475,000 in cash and players, was. third among the league hitters with a per- centage of .358. O'Connell, San Fran- — * . Don’t Neglect Your Wood' Pile—All Sizes CORD WOOD SAWS _T. H. ELDREDGE 85 WATER STREET A sensible gift tor one ¥ HIGH BATTING RECORDS | NORWICH BULLETIN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1922 BABE HERMAN BEATS KAPLAN BOUT AT MERIDEN £ . cisco, outfielder, who*was Bold to ‘the New. York Giants for $75,000, was tenth on’ the list with an average of Jakie May, Vernon'pitcher, who may be sold to the New York Yankees, led the league hurlers with a percent- age of .795 and with an earned run average of 1.84 per game against him. Two . Salt Lake. sluggers, ' Paul Strand and Manager Duffy Lewis, led the league in hitting, Strand with an average of'384, and Lewis with .362. ROMMEL, REAL PITCHER, IS McGRAW DISCARD Baseball rookies who have been turned adrift by major league mana- gers should not feel discouraged. The judginent of onme is not official Johu J. McGraw, regarded .as base- ball's Napoleon, discardéd Ed Rom- i MOBILE TEAM .ANNOUNGCES ; EARLY SCHEDULE Mobile, Ala. Dec. 18—The sched- ule of exhibition games of the Mo- bile Southern ‘Association team as'an- nounced by President R. M. Weinack- er, are: 9 At Mobile, with St. Louis Ameri- cans, March <10, 11, 14,17, 18y 21, At Mobile, with Philadelphia Ath- letics, “March 24, :25. At Troy Alay Mobile with Milwau- kee, March '26. . At Montgomery, Ala., Mobile with pPhiladelphia Athletics, March 27, 28. At Mobile, with Cincinnati Nation- als; March-30.: O ; .. At;Mobile with Milwaukée, March 31, Aprit Adigri- mel as a pitehing prospect. Finishing |. his first professional year in 1918 with ‘Newark club of the International lea- Zue, Rommel was purchased by the Guants in an optional deal. 4 Before the 1919 series opened Mc- Graw cancelled the claim and Rom- mel remained Newark. + Barl Mack, ‘son of Connie 'Mack, managing Newark that season,..con- fided to his dad that Rommel was thé most jromising kid in the circuit and Connie, ‘on the recommiendation of his son, baught Rommel oy v Rommel won 7 games and lost 7 for. the Athletics in 1920, in 1921 he won 16 and lost 23, but as the Macks fin- ished last, with 53 victories and 100 defeats, they did not have a pitcher who was above the .500 mark. Rommel was born at Baltimore, Md., Oct. 13, 1897, stands 6 feet, 2 inchels, and weighs 180 pounds. COFFEY WILL MANAGE * ,CHARLESTON CLUB IN 1923 Jack Coffey, the genial pilot of the 1922 Hartford Senators, has' signed a contract.to steer the Charleston, §. C., club of the South Atlantic league in 1923. Coffey is spending the winter at His home in New York city, and jumped down to Louisvyille for the minor®lea- Bue meeting, ere he ‘affixed. his name to the paper that makes him pilot of the:Charleston team for the coming season. Many things militated against making a better showing with Hartford team, among them the Thorpe pust, which came just as the local club’ was hitting into a winning stride and was menacing the league leading teams. v No cleaner sportsman and better fel- low than Jack ever held the reins over the Hartford baseball team. 3 his the 1. At: Mobile with Cleveland fi‘nl, April 18. LOS ANGELES CLUB GETS - L D PLAYERS FOR PITCHER Los Angeles, December - 18—The trade of Nick Dumovich, star pitcher for the Los Angeles club of the Pacific Coast Baseball-league to the Thicagd National’ league clob for ‘five players and $15,000-in cash is the first step in the rebuilding of the Los Angeles club, according to Charles Lockhard, busi- ness manager. 3 ¥ The five pldyers to come here in the de are: Golvin, first’baseman; Mai- outfielder; Krug, second baseman; Jones. left-handed-pitcher, and another outfielder, These men are ‘$aid l.:gopa'sebgll experts to ‘he worth 65, | 1 BROWN AND HERMAN - . ,.BOUT STOPPED IN 4TH Rochester, 'N. Y., :Deg. 18—=The ycheduled - ten-round bOUL between . Chubby Brown, of Rochester, -and Willie Herman, of Elizabeth, N. J., w@s stopped in the fourth round here toaight because of a severed artery) in ‘Brown's head. Both were covered ‘with crimson as the result of Brown's injury which he sustgined® in traiming yesterday. The men are lightweights. BASKETBALL GAME AT > ARMORY CALLED OFF The| basketball game scheduled for ‘Wednesday -night attle state armory has been called off according to ad- Vices from Bat B Monday evening. The reason for ‘calling off of the game is stated as being because or- ders from .headquarters in Hartford, State, that as the armory fs being repainted and decorated, it is impos- sible to usé it.on that evening. Wheth-, er future. games .| 2 matter to be decided later. 1 Aw Challenge The ‘Ba of twenty-five fine cigars| dollar and sevent, cents iy-five will be held there is| TODAY’S SPORTS RACING - Meeting of Jefferson Parish Fair Association, at New Orleans. Meeting of Cuba-American Joc- key Club, at Havana. Meeting of Tijuana Jockey Club, at Tijuana. B TROTTING Annual meeting of Harness Horse Association, at Chicago. BOWLING James Blouin vs. James Smith. for world’s classic championship, at Chicago. New York, Dec. 18— Manager Miller Huggins and Busi- ness Manager Bdward G. Barrow, of the Yankees, will spend a busy day or two together cutting loose from driftwood, excess baggage and the like. In all probability a batch of releases will be mailed out, a Christias cheer to divers and sundiy rookies who hoped to have a few major league meals at the club’s expense at the Grunewald Hotel, New Orleans, next spring. * Despite the fact that the Yankees won the 1922 pennant drive after be- ing in the fight all of the way, the management kept after its staff of scouts tq recruit liberally. The result was an unusually heavy batch of green material from the sticks that must be planted -or sacrificed before the time of 'spring training rolls around. This matter might have been some- what simplified had it been possible last week to effect the three-corner- ed deal among the New York, Chica- go and Washington clubs, which had for its object the acquisition of Eddie Collins. Bib Falk and possibly Dick Kerr from the White Sox and out- fielder Sammy Rice from Washington The transaction with Chicago struck a snag when Kid Gleason and Louis Comiskey demanded that Waite Hoyt and no one else should figure as the sacrifice of a New York pitcher. Miller Huggins, who is beginning' to despair that anything will come of the proposed three-cornered swap, kept his ear to the ground all yesterday afternoon, but in vain. He had a faint that some new overture might ev tuate when Louis Comiskey got ha with the Old Roman in Chicago. Bat not a chirp cume out of the West. Huggins has to get busy with the! pruning hook instanter. His craft was; filled to the gunwales with war ord-; nance of the ivory kind because his| s took for granted that the son roster limit of players would be raised from fsrty to fifty players, leaving a leeway for ten additional| hardy sod-busters. But this *was al dream that failed to eventuate. -OCommisgsioner Landis himseif prick- ed the bubble at the recent joint meet- ing of the two mafor leagues in this city. He used his prerogative to cast the deciding vote in the interests of | economy and, as Charlie Ebbets would say, again “financial hysteria.” ' BOXING Batthing Leonard vs. Johnny »-12 rounds, at Portland, Me. —es . - TAFTVILLE VILLAGE LEAGUE K. of C. Gladue 142 90 114— 369 Pepin 104— 320 138— 339 104— 347 113— 320 573 1703 97 \ 147 108 584 106— 123— 103— 87 343 353 321 318 331 518 1666 Ys Totals . [ON MOOSUP ALLE Sky's Best .. 83 87 93 112 3 35 89 126 102 Teddy Jack Sky 5 106— 533 304 286 305 303 296 Ratty’s Best - 82.76 93 81 .. 99 102 85 87 .. 112-113 93 90 93 292271 258 274 1388 NOT TO patioodl COACHI AT Bany Philadelphia,” Dec. 18—John W. He- isman, whose contract as head coach of the TUniversity of Pennsylvania squad expired this fall, is not a can- didate,for re-appointment. He will not huwever, sever his connection with the university, having been engaged as as- sistant to the chairman,of the coun cil on athletics. Sydney E. Hutchinson, chairman of the athletic council, said that the foot- /ball committee was entirely satisticd with Mr. Heisman’'s awork. and what | 'he had done to “regain for Pennsyl- vania its position 1in . the - foothall ‘world.” v He added :'that Mr, JHeisman, who had been head coach for the last three' years, had informed the committee, at the close of the present football sea- son that he did not desire to be con- sidered a candidate again. Totals .. 1494} 83— 416 86— 460 105— 513 HEISMAN { Polo a Minor Sport | Princeton, N. J., Dec. 18—Princeton university will regard polo as a minor sport in the future, the under-grad- uate committee announced tonight. SPORT WORLD BRIEFS George Ward and Johnny Tillmgn box at St. Paul New Year's Day. Willie Jackson is matched.to meet Frankie Rice at Baltimore, Jan. 8. I. STATE CAPTAIN VERSATILE ATHLETE| George A. Chandler of Providence, | R. L, who has been elected captain of the Rhode Island State College bas- ketball team, has been one of the out- standing athletes at the Kingston in- stitution for the past three years. In | his freshman year he cleaned. up .in both track and® créss-country and made ‘the varsity football squad in! his second year. He took up basket- balliin his, sophomore ¥ear, although he ‘Had never previously participated ingthat sport. Last year he was one of ‘the-stars-of the quintet. He ranks high as a student, gaining honors dur- ing’ his - first two years and. barely missing them last year. He is président of thessenior elass. Diring- the'war he served as Lielitenant. wi Battery A of the -108rd Field Artillefy, -and is fow First Lieutenant of Battery B of ‘the samg-organization. " = ! . EUROPEAN NATIONS FAVOR | AMERICAN ATHLETIC PROGRAM New York, Dec. 18—(By- the A. P.)— Participation of American athletes in sporting events abroad has aroused mreqt in America's athletic metheds; “Kid” Gleason is 57 years-old, but he has caused a widespread move-{can still hit for .300 with his hands. ment in Burope for the popularization | Johnny Evers hffirms it after a lit- of competitive sports, forther Adjutant | tle playful rough-house with the White Geneéral Charles H. Sherrill, N. Y. N.! Sox manager. G., American member of the Intern: \ tional Olympic committee, ‘who re-| College football -coaches come and cently returned from a tour of Eu<|go, but Foster Sanford keeps on the rope. declared today. _ = | job ‘at Rutgers. He. has just finished ‘General Sherrill said .that America’s {his 10th vear at the New Brunswick highly developed athletic, system and | college, and he has promised to ¢coach its . icial effect on ‘the building | again next.fall | of the character of the natiof’s youth 5 has heen, brought forcibly to the at-| Tom Thorp of New York,and C. J. ention of European statesmen and edu- { McCarty of Philadelphia will probably cators by American athletes who have | work with Walter Eckersall and Brick competed in- European sporting events.| Mueller as officials in West Virginia’s Christmas Da‘x“game with Gonzaga at GIANTS SELECT DIAMOND Calif. San Diego, RINGS AS EMBLEMS| iaget. Smith, Harlem ® . S s bantam- New . York, Dec. 18~The New York | weight, who is under suspension until today. selected diamond rings | February jn-New Jersey, will not have as emblems of their 19 balseball | the opportunity to engage Joe Lynch, championship, and forwarded the ap- 1d’s bantamweight in Madison proved design to Commissioner Lan- | Square Garden Friday night, with the 4}1 g SR & ' |approval of the State Athletic com- “Last year the .Giants received dia- | mission. mdnd7lnfl|;:d d?‘t:h fobs from Com- =3 s missioner -Landjs, for their victory in e name of Mrs. Anna Paton, Har- the world’s series. = 4 |lem worker for the development of i women'’s athletics, will be offered for LYNCH-SMITH BOUT 4 consivdenuon to the: Metropolitan A. 57 48 CALLED OFF A. U. boagd -of managers’ quarterly New York, Dec. 13—Promoters to- ¥eetlnx in ;he Park Avenue Hotel -Tnesda: ight, hand: day cancelled arrangements for a ban Mo AT <, e i championship contest tween Joe Lynch, tifle-holder, and for. local wo track and field ev- ents is appoin Midget Smith;. at’ Madison Sqn?: Garden, next Friday night after be- ing notified that the New: <sta commission had Frankie Schoell and Billy,Ryan are billed for a bout gn Canton New Year's Day. Of the 105 pitchers who figured in the American 1€ague averages last sea- #>n only 28 pitched ten or more com- plete games. The Charlie White-Richie Mitchell bout in New York last Friday night drew $40,883.70. White got $8,950 and Mitchell $6,765. Expenses must run high in’ college baseball when -this sport does not. pay tits freight at ‘some of -the colleges. Penn. for instance, shows a deficit of $7,000 on last season’s baseball. 4 The Southern Intercollegiate con- ference. in session, defeated a motign | to split the conference in two sec-| tions, winners in each to play for the! championship. Despite the deluge o invitations lo- | 3]3] promqtm have hurled in the ge:»: PENN STATE HAS FINAL is quite frank in | to -the- [ ST ce 3 versity of: California at prac: Uni- W I.WI‘N-& 7 14, goes 10 . ® pacer m‘ &ma,-.&q15 yzonZan'xnum e this year. HUGGINS STARTS WORK OF WEEDING - OUT EXCESS MATERIAL IN YANKS Coast in a dozen years. Weed Chains and Cross Links _ IN ALL SIZES Also ADJUSTERS and CHAIN PLIERS Telephone 1299 'HENSCHEL TIRE & RUBBER CO. 331 Main Street Opp. Post Office. Norwich, Conn. i stud the property of a former owner, John C. Heyman of Sandusky, O. 1 Henry Potter of Providence bought| 17 head at the New York sale and in- side of a week disposed of a dozen. Henry L. Bowles of - Springfield owns Worthy Son, 2:11 1-4, lately sold into the Murphy Stable for $15,000 by Fred Tobey. 3 Harry Devereux lost oné of his Lee] Axworthy trotters, Tom Bo Lee, in shipping from Cleveland to Thomas- ville, Ga. The ice race.meet at Mt. Clemens, Mich, will be held Jan. 15-20. Thers - will be six purses for pacers and five|2:07 1-2, Hanks Stqut 2:08 1-4, Mae for trotters. Watts 3, 2:08 3-4,. Miss Barly Donna |their life and liberty the same rights Iz:w 1-4,"Lloyd George 2:09 1-4, Black | and the same protections, as are enjoved Peter Kiyo, 2:06 1-4, a grandson of ! Falcon 2:09 1-2, Lyndon C., 2:09 1-4, |By the Turkish population with the fres Miss Logan, 2:06 1-2, is counted the!The Object 2:90 1-2, Bingen Bold 2:10. | exercise of their rekigion and the right Dbest pacer developed on the Pacific! Lawyer Swift 2.05 1-4, Petrovsky 2:08 :to establish educational, charitabie ans | () ¥ religious ‘nstitutions, agreement provides that non-Moslem the minorities shal ~ #:3ff for mu- Christian_minorities n all that eoncerns George Kay, 2:14 1-4, and lou R.| 2.15 1-4, were among the 20 horses| syx. 3 destroyed in a fire at Schonley Ovali o nOU% DISCUSSION OF 1be a track,” Pittsburgh, a few da:s ago. | T w BILL AN SENATE | nicipa) bndzets, . | It is stipulated that as the Honeysuckle, 2:09 3-4, wili be bred| Washington, Dec. 18.—Supporters of{of all the minorilies are regarded ar to Arion Guy, 1:59 1-2. She is 2 sister the administration shipping bill . and | Turkish subjects there can be no ex- 0 the dam of Guardian Trust, 2:03 3-4, members of an alliance between oppo- | emption from military service and Bunter, 2:04 3-4. | nents of the measure and proponent= -7| Rza Nur Bey presentsd a serles of ! the Norris agricultural financing = ' clausas which he said, would hence A. B. Coxe has decided not to repeat | stru n the sonaie| siand as the fundamental laws his experiment of the past two winters | today rovides tha of sending some of his Dillon Axwor. e sam thy youngsters sout as Moslem - inhabitanis of Turke: tioh. shall t© ted funds from members [ {ate throughout a six-hou |'embodied in the motion of endants of Peter the|ris. of Nebraska, chairm Axworthy, 2:15 1-2,] ricalture committee and a and Bingen, 1-2, won 160 races' mew progressve bloc. fo lay 3 > on the Grand Circuit this year. ismiz bill and to take up the senator:s|<ame obligations as OWn measure tbo create a govérnment- Reaffirming that the clauses touch™z Clarance Hobarth of South Wey-|CaPitalized agency to buy amd sell farm|on the minorities would he placed un- mouth has bought Mack ., 2:16 1.2, Products. the’ Seasuh and The Great Buffalo, a son of Pet-| The Question was tge swbject of m conferences and o i Gt charasd ottt E O merene 5 cat, charged with a mile i, o c¥es including the maiden addr 2:16. S {of Semator Brookhart, republican. Iowa | An attemnt” failed _to mous coosent. 05 (e vt | but efforts a 7 rosp favo * | Sournment tomofrow “night. S Demand that the shipping Gam, 2:09 1-4, the chestnut pacer | o oc, W45, Made by Senator owned by Fred C. Tobey of Plymx:)utl | Senator Borah, repudlican, N. H, was one of the year's b ?“"m" Elstcher, . of pacers. He starteds in 17 races, win. | g democratic oppo ning cight firsts and five seconds. ... and of ot A ars by affected other countries Pat Hurvester is, the nume given the yearling by The Harvester, 2.01. ou of Miss Harris M., 1:58 1-1. Traine; Will Canton considers him of ur timber. urged prompt pas 1~ while “Senator Jones. The Michigan State Fair mana neton s islat; n ) ge- | wasn: characterized as ment 4 T i - £ ' ent tried rin S as its horse-racing ¥ the accusation that b were being foreibly tp " Islamism and thrown in charge of it attraction this Year, but results were | parons e errir oy evidently not satisfactory as.the trot- ters and pacers will be back again next fall. K currency Chai Me- Lean of this committee anndWmced dur! y o |1g the day tmat such action might be| BARGE LADEN WiTH 1RON The Delaware reinsman. Herman |experted early Tyson. says that it cost him a lot of | One semator—John imoneyv to race on the Bay State Cir- | democrat, Mississi cuit this year, but that it was only a!would not vete ei war because d‘l temporary sort of a loan s he is|said. he would consider himself “dl con;’iln: back next year with a strong ) zraced either He sald. he haaj, i stable. not thought within _the reatm e iy z 5 {of ‘human . ins ame a biN ::f :If";‘tb",;“f a 'r-'"‘ Ed Sunderlin is open for an engage- | worse than th idy il bat| 0 n"“,‘“' il "‘;o;pd o ment now that John A. McGregor has | that Senator is measure | LT 00 T T e sold Iskander and Dan Hedgewood. A | “had accomplished ! B e conntalih @0d guess if that the capable reins-| Senator ‘Borah’ urged casting: aside o & oo v = man will find his- way to Aroostock ; the ship .bill in favor of agscrwaral County where the pacer is king.. Ed|lief as a matter, of justlee. qe is surely a king with pacers. that “ship subsidy can.wait” un announced The barge was qwned By the Dmugh- |erty Eme of New .York and its curme Was consigned to the Eastern Malleaje Iren ecombanr. this eciiy. The ~args was valued at § imext session of eongress, .bat that the Walter Cox visited his, old stamp- ) American farmer with _ another.. crop ing ground, Granite State Park, Do'lmw" approaching cowld .not. wait ver, N. J., last week, and while he is He warned his. republidan colleagues very happily located at Goshen, there|that fhey ‘had trified lomg enough with was a touch of wistfulnéss in his re- | that: seven million majority” and- as- mark as he passed through the gate,|serted that if rural® credit- legislation “The best training sport in the coun- | and measures to_relieve the agricuitural try” [ situagion were slighted at the present [sessidn. of congress, .the republican.par-|go on the departure of Christians from The Kennebunt, Me., Driving Clubjty in the next election would . ‘“not|Anatolia, which became offective after is looking forward to a great winter.|have enough_ votes to count.” 3 the. expiration of .the time I'mit, Chris- Among the fast horses owned in the| Semator Brookhart declared advoeact |tians are-mow free to leave when they organization are Ben Earl, Baxter Lou, |y the ‘admigistration of “the passaze|desire. Dr. Harvey. Péter McKaig.-Sam Hurst, | of -the shipping biFl to the prastical ex-|"*"The detidn “of. sovernment was Brongze Bells, Friday the Thirteenth, | lusion of ~agricukturd].’legisiation was|&ue -to pressure by the alliss at Lam- Veima Ollicita. Buster H., The Great |2 fillbuster against: the soversign. volce|sanne; they convinced Ismet Pasha that Miss Fowler; Patricia and Major C. of the American people, as expressed. ia| the embargo had cause da bad impres- the. recent election’ sion -against the Turks throughout the ‘whole Christian - world. Hopi Indians of New Mexico. in thelr TO ALLOW CHRISTIANS TO | DEPART FROM ANATOLIA | Angora.’ Dec. 18 —The Kemalist gove ernment has decided to lift®the embare Among the record horses to be sold in Chicago this week are Senator Wil- kes 2:02 1-4, Jane the Great 2:03 1-4, c May Mack 2:04 1-2, Drift Patch 2:03 —_—— Smake Dance each August, believe they 3-4, Bingen Direct .2:05 3-4, Lotto| Lausanne, Dé¢. ‘13 (By the A. P.)—|fill the serpents with prayer for rain, ‘Watts 23:06 1-4, Captain Mosby 2:06 [Turkey formally ‘engaged today befire then release them %o carry the messags 3-2, Billy Bond 2.07 3-4, Roger Boy' the Near !.’lfi,auggrenee temard the to fhe gods below the earth. TURKEY To AGCORD RiGHTS : TO CHEISTIAN MINORITIES | ‘ S§TANDAGRU Never Lofore was Type 61 quality 5o high and its value so commanding as: - - now at the new low prices. - sorg AWy i’ ‘LER'S N AME AND. ADDRESS) (To be et in My O_Id S(yfc}'.pah: eaps) e Lord of the Nursery, 3:16/1-4 15 now | mw;mmasfi.‘tfifirfli “| brilliant 3