New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 24, 1916, Page 11

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1916. MIX FlNI]lN[i PUINTS | STEAMER WESTBUR WEXLER TESTIFIES DEATHS AND FUNERALS | # a o & f IS SENT TO BOTTOM e = f)h's. 1;,1-14(: \}[I )h;l]&ird,\;[ - 2 TFORD OV FRICE (1°m i RICHTER & COO e L g Concluded Charge That International i e ‘ungm‘ :s Mrs, m 49!:11.1\g- 0 e BENE MW YORE PTG Tt T[] EN[IINEER EURTIS Prisoners Landed at Santn Cruz and ) Harvester Company Combined to Con- :x‘l; l:‘o‘ (I:;I,dd "tm:]f«-r]rll\\ :JL:“'_)’!“ ,IT{‘ ..i-‘l'(i.cfi AR 114116 AsyLum Srt. @ i Represented by E. W. Eddy. New Britaiz Nat. Bank Bidg. Tel §40 from her late home. Interment will HARTFORD. i Germans Sail Ship Out trol Output of Sisal. be in TFairview cemetery. Suits For Stout Women a Speciaity. and Sink Her Washington, Feb. 24.—Sol Wexler, % 25 Shs American Hal'dwal'e =3 of New York, president of the Pan- Wil 9. Grace. i London, Feb. 24, 11:30 a. m.— After 7 ; tuneral services for William J. o TR L A < American commission corporation, S " eihe ensine of No. 57" ask- | having landed theiz 206 prissners, the | grocFCan Commisson SOrBOmation: | ¢, ce were held at St. Josepl's church 100 ShS Stanley WOI ks S bl Gerinan prize crew swvhich took the this morning at 9 o'clock. Inter- & | 100 shs Landers, Frary & Cla (Continued From First Page.) “I did not.” which markets the sisal crop of Yu- “Did you notice any of the en. | FYIISh steamer Westburn into Santa | catan in this country, appeared to | Ment took place in the new Catholic ginemen as the trains passed?” Cruz, Teneriffe (Canary Islands). 35 |4ay pefore the senate agricultural | Cemetery. enies troktal a? relatcd in last might's Gmpatehes, | committen to conmuge. hie oneracs | M. Grace died suddenly at the town “Was train 5 going at full siifed the boat outw'de the harhor and | that “the International Harvester | 10me Tuesday morning. He is sur- “Was tre g ’ S iha de i e e £ AIVester | iived by a wife and three children when it passed the signs eyond | i\, s Pl oy company and the Plyr ) 1 . passed the “niznall beyond | [.\lq hire toacsstrsis. Satte Chus. Pany and the Plymouth Cordage |y, s tpyr Fourette of South Farms, ou. ? company in = y Rany combined to control the Qut- | yeiysiciowm; Joseph of Maw York, and “I could not tell; it as 6 put of sisal. % s gbitellitiwast 600 rect ,Divices recelyai yesterday from | The committee has not vet set a | R2ymond R. & student at the Middle- Saata Cruz stated wat the British | dato for hearing (he tostimony of | 0WR High school He also leaves lS HERE Signals in Good Owder. stamer Westhurn from Liverpool | ¢ two sisters, Mrs. E. Mulrane and Miss g 2 i yrus H. McCormick, presi f the & The investigators went at consider- | Jan. 21, for Buenos Aires had put in | International Har\'o’ste‘;rz:r‘:lepr:n)o' :ror CethsrineRainss o owooriaand able length into the condition of the! there for repairs, flying the German |the oficials of the Contt il o a brother, James, of Hartford. ] ¢ signals on the day of the wreck, bring- [ lag and with a German prize erew | Commercial Nationa: benll?en; Chi- ¢ ¢ ing out from other witnesses testi-|of one officer and seven | cago, who have beem ashed te testity S L st uliban, 06 TGRS 0 Serominery oo g | mony to the effect that they were in | men aboard, besides 206 prisoners | as to charges that the Harvester Con. | . s, Bridget Sullivan died vester- | i eq. New styles in | g00d working order, and that after the | taken from various captured vessels. | cern s i day afternoon at the home of her R tal " ssels. | ce B = < | das 3 ¢ of her collision they were found set at dan-| The crew was believed to be from the o 7 sonine The banl daughter, Mrs. Patrick Delaney of 12 8 officials to prevent them giving finan- zer. German raider Moewe, which cap- | cial aj Hartford avenue. Besides her daugh- W 2 C < Thae there was vory Lriot - | tured the Bt mussen sy seesiramy | ©7) *10 19 8 planters ten! G el e ian” it | Women’s Coats, Suits| TH { though appreciible interval between | Appam, and sent her with a prize T a son James, and a step-son, John T 5 the time the emergency brakes were | crew and under the Germ: C t The ral will be held at 9 o’clock d W e - applied on No. 5 and its running into [ Newport News. SeEmaRcRloE GZAR THANKS DUMA tnninr‘:::' from St on:n.-sd‘fh“,.:}: l:,‘,d an alStS X ST Brandt, condustor of the former train: | tom bulk 1o Thor oo e S0 : SeCaslbr e o Prices Have Downward Tendency | Richter & Company Believes ndt, conductor of the former train. tons, built in 1903 and owned by J. | Sees EXploit of Army in Caucacus—In- | tery. FERNTA IR R I T said he felt the brakes applied. | Westall of Sunderland. i Rge i ey e Torwards” he” mid t Sunderland. dication of Ultimate Victory of tho Mrs. Mary MoConrt. en's department, Second floor. —Dealings on Big Scale tom Reached in Depressiof catise s thing tor severnt mmen | 200 PEOPLE HOMELESS IR e el i, e And for Men e __.p l FM\’]‘“"“_ :“ ’”; l’)‘"‘;'m‘:k;»\ f,,:lmlhfi:n fil‘]e Petrograd, Feb. 23, via London, Feb, | held this morning at 9 o'clock at St. ew York, Feb. 24, Wall Street, (Furnislial by Richter & Co.) lision came stmultaneously but later [Tenement District of Passiac Swept | pume. auin sasle, President of the | Mary's Shureh, Intorment took ~place 0 a. m.—Latest phases in the ln- | There has bosn 8. =asSeiy qualified that by saying that there was assiae Swept | Duma, during yesterday’s session, read | in St. Mary's cemetery in East Hart- The new Spring Suits are coming | ternational situation were reflected in | in all of the local securities during an appreciable interval, by Fire Following Quarrel and | (M following telegram addressed by | ford. A T IR e the irregular tone of today's early | past week and it looks as thoug D. F. Dorwood a signal supcrvisor Grsota A BEmperor Nicholas to the Duma: e X ¢atly. Zlenty to choose from Now, | ading on the stock exchang Price | bottom of the recent decline on the line between New Haven and R EloC Oan “‘C!Tffi;?,ialf" ‘h"a"" the “‘e‘z“'] 5 of y.une?.q', er':.'i':,"“"' FOL;“"- - if you're an early buyer. Come in and | changes were mainly downward and | been reached and that from now Stamford, after reac ‘reck assiac, N. o Sy i > Duma for the' congratulations e Lol g ¥ S alings were on a larger and breader | we will see. an advancing ma danger. P i e fanacioe o1 the scaDbuCel o) Mirserum s Tibelieve [istNeel, WoLos te LaBafternooh sure, American Zinc and Chino Cop- | more strict investment buying am John C. O'Brien, another signal su- Qé’fiui‘lg}"? gf:ux:'l;\'ichhzr? (osaias o |lvint you AL RHTSRe Ry e Tote ot 2.0 olclock al the S enian T iRz an oo x:\l;;“a Hoint each. American | some of the stocks the market Bervisbr) of nalShore Tme division || the|ensiment distuict astinisht and)| ety of e Cancasts willl e focjichusert |Egst H 11G s Ofiman faons Can eased a trifle at the outset, but [ advanced substantially on these H§ i G T e ey t la ight ar importtance ‘in leading to the final ducted the services. The pall Dbearers became firm later on the recent court | chases. Scovill Manufacturing ) g y today. According to tQe police | triumph of our arms, & token of which | were Louls Johi.on, Nels Nelsom, : ny for lnstance had sdvisiil over the boxes governing the signals | the fire started through s r e 4 gh a quarrel be- i agernel z chi hn Adamson, Henry Abrahamson 7 N z ay and the boxes were still under guard. | tWween two men chopping wood in a T see in the eagerness of all the chil-| Jo , y Abrahamson, the war group with a rise of over two | 470 to 487, the closing today < e dren of our great co to use mi and August Lorensou. Interment was : - i [l 7 anked. Colet failures . frequently occurred, signalsflight. In the quarrel the candle was | g12q to observe this vesterday on the KRy cluding United States Steel, New York | advanced from 843 to §53, thel were set at danger automatically. Ubsct, & ramss of yubblah emusht flvei} ooolion or ey it bo s Dama, For Matthew Keeley Central and Reading were lower. | B8 TR0 SO0 o de S . Trains Off at Two-minute Intervals, |and in a few minutes the flames had stk M = & i = Anglo-French bonds made a further | Standard Screw Common seems ’ S oo - the fruitfulness of whose labors I| The funeral of Matthew Keeley, 1n- : : 2 have shown, a firmer- Sendssu Jokh &, Kiunedy aad Sharies Eaats, _upon the highly inflammabie | joinoq Cou'in Sl Ll e e R i g fractional decline on free offerings. |have shownh a frmer ten ¥ = 5t : bridaoy ; | material in the store and were beyond | 3 3 in prayer with intense s ant son of Mr. and Mr 5 NOHC Adwsed BGfOI‘Gh&I]d to Get Wall St., Closing—Short covering | 245 is freely bid for stock now engincer and firemen respectively of | T fOH istaction ™ Keoloy Of 1568 Stauléy strest war L WEN St [ Closing - Bhott Sovering | one fni thia markes mask the wrecked train were called to fden- | “®p2h G The emperor’s message was received | held this afternoon and interment e o oy D omditions 1n Wash. | ican Brass is quoted a broken air hose, which they | 010, G (RSO0 D - | with cheers by the entire Duma. took place in the new Catholic cem- Under Cover ington, contributed to the moderate | €d and Bristol Brz decision. Lackawanna Steel featured |7 sald had caused the stopping of their i R etery 1-2 asked. 61 1-2 is bid for ¥ one end, and the investigators devot- ARIAN SAD. Boston, Teb. 24—-Phe claim that Peter Himilla, £ s LBt quoted 173 bid, 176 asked ed considerable attention in trying to H. : i Py o, The Iron Age says toda . he g o) 5 5 I ¥ < : 5 g and M T ad was 3 sery: * the late Peter & A 3 § ¢ 5 5 he rest of the local stocks i sdetermine just how it came to be cut| JAFFiSOn Bristoll Passes Away a¢ | the Boston aine Tailroad Funeral serv for the late Pefer The Pittsburgh advance of $5 a ton| New York Stock Exchange quota N e e ol seeking an advance of 100 per cent. in| Himilla, former janitor at the post n contrac : b i % . furnish, b; Richter & Co.. |the same. i “‘\{;“‘5;"?% fCEe vl osnes Scortld ”an:;"':’;::t}fi"‘ Df““‘fl““'j ; its rates on cream was made today at| office, were held this morning at the j:;,‘m,‘,“;;'d"‘[,g’,l;?,‘;-* JPhabes q“('l“:mb“’:j v e Now York Stock Ex. | Union Manufacturing are both quel J. C. Kelley, train despatct ¢ | of Short Beach dleq toia ok resident | the investigation by the interstate| Russcian Orthodox church. Interment | cxpected even by the selling organiza. | change. Represented by E. W. Eady |the same at 79 Did, 81 asked, _J. C. Kelley, train despatcher a each, dled this morning at | commerce commission in milk rates|was in Fairview cemetery. lonalobier e i SagaE A Eanas Feb. 24, 1916 | American Hardware is 123 1.2 New Haven, told of starting the two|the home of his daughter, Mrs. Wal- | 1o ew Tnsland Rl g s e e MooTIDAT IR e 124 1-2 asked. Stanley Works is trains. Number five started two min- | ter P. Steele, at 260 Chestnut street. F Y Mrs. Antoinette A. Moorc. bid, -4 asked and Landd utes behind the express. Both trains | He was 93 years old. For more than MARKING WIRE POLES 3 2 . is quoted 61 bid, were running on the same track. 30 years: Mr.. Bristoll spent his win- e ‘ ales of American. Hosl Asked if it was customary to send |!ers at Ormond, Florida, returning have taken place in the neighborh trains out two minutes apart the wit-| North in the spring. A year ago on and Stanley Rule & Level mess said it was some tithes done, and | his return to New Britain, he suffer- there was not much worry because of { €d a shock from which he never fully the signal system in use. recovered. Engineer Kennedy testified that he| He was a man of genial disposition s thirty-one minutes late in leaving [ and had a host of warm friend New Haven and was running between | He leaves one son, Truman H. Bris- making it re was thus none of the “protec— Hign SSLow SCloss to large users that has some- | Allis Chalmers 39 28 % Mrs. Antoinotte Augusta Moors, | ¢ preceded important advances, | Am Beet Sugar ... 69% 67% Hartford, TFeb. 24-—The public|widow of the late Gilbert Franklin | Nothing in the remarkable price move. | Alaska Gold ..... 22% untilities commission issued an order | Moore, died at her home in Newing- | ment of the past four months has so| Am Car & Fdy Co. 70 today, based on the report of a com- |ton last night. She was 65 vears, S| gistuyrhed buvers or impressed them |Am Ice ... 5 30 2 mittee of public service corporations | months and 13 days old. The body | with tho chanmces of surprise in. the|Am Can ......... 64% 613 in the state, on the subject of the | will be taken to Danbury where the | (io1e situation. i S caniprdi R LU L0 marking of poles for wires for the | funeral will be held. The considerable amount of capacity | Am Loco . ... 693 66 purpose of identification. The only Lo in the last half of the vear not taken | Am Smelting .....100% marking that will be required in the Baby Dics Suddenly. up by contracts at definite prices andj Am Sugar .......1123% 112 forty-five and fifty miles an hour, | toll of Walnut street, and a daugh. | future are the stenciled initials or | TLawrence Gavin, two months old. | the way in which steel companics are | Am Tobacco .....194% 19 hoping to make up time to Bridgeport, | ter, Mrs. Walter P. Steele of Chest- | designating mark of the owner or|died last night of convulsions fonclis asuings talinm onsbisiness Sonlpm el & Tele. i dar fforts were made by Mr. Belnap to | Dut street. Funeral services will he | Custodian of the pole together with | home of his parents at 341 Ilm . | such delivery are a little bewildering | Anaconda Copper . 88 S4GnBr G ‘man supposed to have|leld from ith house on Chestnut tphc(‘ s\en;‘llm: serial num.h\t;l(: ..rl”nn: As |1hr \Hf:n]hl ‘x‘\’.‘.'!“: :;1 x‘\n‘xl:xlui»;‘lcl\(".ul“uxl; (;» buyer: .\'n:iv:u(«rw is )‘vo (L;;luh(l (l»f ’\{ ]’r‘ S J“Ie Ry (‘o.lozss ] 1 h O o n nut - Tioh conpant i iniereseniis | tonnas: i At 5 as | the increasing tightness of mfll sched- [ Baldwin Loco .. 8% Deen on the extra engine With the dead ;trrgerb:;i:ll RS o T | e e e . i || o e T o o e | ‘;’5,; engineer and fireman, but none of & J for the approval of the commission | prepare the body for burial. and yet get some advantage of the|B R T .. A 86 the witnesses could throw light on that HANCE WILL APPROVED its method of complying with the or- high prices made by war demand is| Beth Steel ... 470 St - 2 BRASS CO. RAT WAGES. the despair of producers. | Butte & Superi The will of Charlotte W. Hance has o EEs e —_ H ‘Dencand] in (“x.x: :rl'jz llum'l;lflr. 1l == . o = " cavy Deman On, anadian Pacific Victim Was Prominent Armenian. ziiu-nagm‘éfi?u:frz ’:’rl‘);;;,e.at ét‘m?t?j NN HEtties l"‘," Ler (cf"' Advancelin The tide is still v both in prices | Central Leather Tilford, Feb. 24.—Mousheth Sha- |Island, N. Y., her residence at that Boston, Feb. 24.—Petitions from Waterbury Shops. and demand. Railroad and shipyard fj:‘f‘c“ -*’f””m- and fhe rights 318 12 -4i& hino opper . s Chi Mil & St Paul. hinia, aged forty-five, has been identi- | time. By its terms she bequeaths all | boards of trade, manufacturing and Waterbury, Feb. 24.—The American | buying, particularly the latter, is e ol F & 1 There has been quite a little lo buying of Billings & Spencer stod This compan capitalized 3 000 and last year their earning aged approximately 50 per cent this capital. This compapy iy digi a fine business and ‘it is bellevod 't earnings will be better this larger dividend on ‘the first A is expected, although the present ©4 is 8 per cent. The stock is conside ed a good purchase at 85, the pri | at which it is now selling. Travelers Insurance company, M been somewhat closing price belng 700 bid 99 sied at the morgue here as one of the | her estate, real and personal, to her | mercantile organizations favoring or | “o "1 i¢ arternoon posted a no- | Strong. A new pig-iron movement too, We look to sce a more active @ victims of the New Haven road wreck. | sisters, C. Augusta Hance and Susan | OPPosing the application of the New | 17 " " 1) of jts factories, stating that | is under wa Lol 14 12% ! yroader market from now on h Shahinia is said to have been the | E. Hance, share and share alike. | York, New Haven and Hartford Rail- | ;"™ 545400 to the rate of wages ef- Steel companies are puzzled over the | C0RS ]f'-"»“ spmeseotikl | AR has been the rule for the past oM most prominent Armenian in Amer- | Charles F. Chase is named executor | road for the retention of its Long Is- | o o "yoep 14 1916, a further ad- | probable French buying of shell stecl clbleR s cee 4 months. ca. He was noted in literary circles | without bonds, he succeeding her | land steamboat lines will be accepted [ (CCFVE fre J5n D0 & IFEIEE SO o (e romaincer of the vear. One liers Sec .. ... 4 5 ind was a graduate of Roberts col- | brother-in-law, J. Eugene Parker, de- | by the interstate commerce commis- | Lo oo For oo “pop 9, advise is that the ¥rench government | 1411 < 363 351 SCHOONER ABANDONED. ege. an American institution in Con- | ceased, who was named in the will. | Sion on a basis of sentiment and mot | =" L 75 0 a0 T olee working | and the Schneider interests will not | Pfd ..... & 5 BLeme - s stantinople. | The will was witnessed in Shelter | a basis of fact, according to a ruling | ., "o\" ) upy rate or on piece work, | need the several hundred thousand ("""gr_‘;”h"‘g":”” L O o e A. H. Keolian, a wealthy dealer in |Island by Carrie A. Ryder, Jesse §.|today by J. H. Howell, svcm«:l €XaM- | 114 includes day and night shifts, | tons they were expected to take in ad- | Goo !; L TN 4 ‘\_‘.‘ ik Bridgeport oriental russ, with a shop in Sixth | Preston and Benjamin H. Reed. iner for the commission. The hear- | myi¢ inerease will be figured along | dition to 100,000 tons or more recent- (:t f\}”~ f('; pfd ...120% 1 i ]::)"‘" N. B. to Bridgeport. :\'Pnue;),\e\\ York, identified the body § — ing was Co_ntmf\mf‘ !m;a,\h\\lth x]mole with the ten per cent, increase offec. | 1V placed. It is added that because of ]:m‘irr‘_( re Cet 443 43 | Bt Jonn N. B. to Bridssiertiy : mtry, BRls Lafayette, Ind., Feb. 24.—The three | taining the boats. increase 15 per cent. viding more steel capacity and is buy- | Kansas City <o lay by the fishing schoom have come in the interests of the At- |jnoh fielq gun of Battery B, of Purdae — E ! ing more steel from England. But| Lack Steel ... : BOEt SORR SRy e e menians who charge that. they are |yniversity, twelve hundred Krag rifles HANED ADMITS MURDER. ey neither of these moves is new. Lehigh Valley ... 763 / 1 | Siivia suffering at the hands of the Turks. e Reren BiDo e i e New York, Feb. 24—Joseph E. Han- _,“‘f‘“ i, . It is not clear how far implement| Max Mo com 5 64 7 The body was first identified as that | 1\ nition of the Purdue Cadet corps | l, arrested in Baltimore for the mur- | Andrew Pietro, 3 vears old, died | /yang covered their wants before the | Mex Pet AR 214 CANCELLATIONS NOT UPHELD: >f Mardiros Der Hovhanessian, a | .. et : odoe | der and robbery on April 25 last, of | 2L the New Britain General hospital | (" giance in bars, but i known | Natl T.eaq .. : 3 o Feb. "9 Yo i S Because of the new | Were destroyed when the. Purdue e v on Aprh <o 'ast, oL | this morning of meningitis following Lons 5 A = . gl R Vashington, =~ Feb. 24.—Cancel lealer in pearls. cause of the New | armory was burned here today. The | Mrs. Julla Heilner, a wealthy Brook- |18 WOrnnE oF MELTELS I 0T 08 | that a good deal of this business is vet} T ¥ £ , | tion of proportional and transhipmen fi]’;]‘;y‘;_‘“;’i_"eO"!t]:B’t" t‘h“ls Tl;;;“%‘“‘fl"’:)‘}]“:i total loss is estimated at $20,000. | lyn widow, made a full confession of ; il Ry " | to be placed and that at all events lit-} 2 ? E class and commodity rates betwel The cadet equipment was the prop- | his guilt today, according to a state- e 4 tle has been covered beyond January 1. ‘ans ........ 16 oints in southeasters Nt N : . S e , | 4 SEEKS POSSESSION OF FARM. N Y 2 3 s R asterr ew I oneous. erty of the United States. ment issued Dby the district attor- £ Ore Vessels Building, TN H&HRR nd New York which are applied 0l —_— ney's office. Hanel is declared to | Attorney J. G. Woods today brought e N Y Ont & West .. 271 traffic moving ‘thionii et $30,000 GOES UP IN FLAME SEA RAIDER AT LARGE. have signed a confession that he |Zull on behalf of Ida A “Pa"" i n B e e ARERE o sou Rl | in connection with stgamships ope — S . | killed Mrs. Heilner by striking her | Manchester for $5,000 again| her | cO Sl el o S| NOLE S EWORE 1 -116% ating betwe ew York and the Pag Employes of Dry Goods Store Forced | | New York, Teb. 24—The possibil- | | o "o nead with a bottle and then | husband, Harvey R. Pierce of Had- | last week, making five in.all, and an-| pac Mail § S Co .. 13~ [ 2ting betwean T Buy e % that a German sea raider is at 5 “" lda oh ho alleges is in wrong- | other is pending. It is now a question| penn p R ific coast through the Panama Coani to Flee for Lives. ™ i A % strangling her with a rope. dam, whom she alleges is in wrong: . SEri W L AT S o 1 not justified today: by ti8 large in the north Atlantic was sug- ful possesston of a farm in Haddam, | of Setting further deliveries of 8uch| pooiios Gag was found not justifie & Newburyport, Mass., Feb. 24—The | gested when the Italian liner Guiseppe T ” : SN e B . Ao sy, ats pefore mid-season of 1917. Two el car interstate commerce commission dry goods store of Fisher & Co. was | Verdi, from Italian ports, on her ar- RUBBER IN MAILS. paying $1,050 down and subsequentl s have just been placed with the festroyed today a fire which |rival today, reported that she had re- | London, Feb. 24, 4:16 p. m.—From |, the form of improvements invested | New York Shipbuilding company Y| Reaqing spread so rapidly that emplo) and | celved a wireless warning from Hali- | the first class ma§1 on the Dutch $2,000 more. The deed, it is alleged, | the Coastwise Transportation com- Rep I & & customers had to flee for safety. | faX to be on the outlook for such a |steamship Hollandia, detained at Fal- | wisiccuad to Pierce and although she | pany and two with the Cramp vard by | peb 1 ¢ s pra Starting in @ motor which was used [ vessel. On her last outward trip the | mouth recently while bound to Am- |paq prequently demanded that it be | W. R, Grace & Co. More than 250 | g p, & 5 : to operate a cash-carrier system, the | Giuseppe Verdi received a similar |sterdam, 1,265 parcels of raw rubber |rangrerrod to her, he has always re. | merchant vessels are now under con-| go po e grounded yesterday in Vine: blaze quickly spread to all parts of | warning as she approached Gibraltar. | were taken. From tl}e mail of the |fuseq Besides restoration of the | tract in the country. The steel for| g, po YR 21 r was still hard and f sarly todads the building and gained headway as e — Dutch steamship Gelria, also detained, | yroperty, Mrs, Pierce asks damages of | four Lake boats, 13,500 tons, went on | g qcfqel =" " Ko % | pPlans were made to lighter part of il t reached inflammable materials on ERBIAN HERO DEAD. 1,300 parcels of rubber were taken. |s4509. The suit is returnable before | the hooks last week. Tenn Cop .... % 56 vessel's cargo. counters and shelves. seilles ,via Paris, Feb. 24, 4:30 e the superior court in Hartford the | Late rail contracts inelude 7,000 non ™oy " 77" " agya E —- - =3 Everything in the store was de- |a. m.—The Serbian colonel Yosan CALL FOR MARRIED MEN. first Tuesday in March. As a Tesult | tons for the Monon and 10,000 tons! oy 5 b NICHOLAS OFF TO FRONT. stroyed. Miss Jessie Judkins, the cash- | Ougrinovitch has died in the military { London, Feb. 24,'8:46 p. m.—All [of the quarrel over the farm the | for the Central of Georgia. The New (- cop ... i1 Petrograd, Fel via London, Feby eri was directly over the motor when | hospital here after a month’s illn, the groups of married men who at- | couple arc living apart. York Municipal railways will buy 13.- | - ' Rup Co o 107 513 24, 8:54 a. m.—Emperor Nicholas, whol t shot out the first flame, but she | 1n 1913 he was the first to enter |tested for service in the army under G 7 000 tons and the Interborough 3,500 | v 'q ‘Steel ...... 3 82 % | visited the Duma at its opening sess sscaped. Adrianople at the head of his regi- |the Lord Derby scheme will be called LATHERS MAY STRIK tons. Car orders include 1,500 for| v ’cree) pea ..o % 11614 | sion vesterday and delivered a brief] The loss was estims at $30,000. | ment, and it was he who captured |for service in batches, beginning | Ag g result of the action of the | Cuba and the Tlinois Central isabout Cioicrem ) bk s~ | aadress to the members, has left fo@ i - : the Turkish commander. During the | April 29, according to tho Central | master masons last night in refusing | ¢10sing. TLocomotive buving g0es O | yyegtinghouse .... 6 15 iin | in bieus HELD Up BY BRITISH. advance of the Teutonic allies, he (Ncws. to grant lathers an increase of from | @ total of 160 having been taken injyregtern Union ... 883% 88 — MR e 8 umfertaukttys Sdefonse ok NIsnSwith ——— twenty-five to twenty.seven cents per | the past two weeks, with 400 under| ywiiig Overland . 208 T 1 SIXTY ON STRIKE. utch Liner Reports Four Germans | 3200 men and retreated only after WILLARD STARTS EAST, Bilcn it hialexy ot L atE ol e | Induby _ e Norwich, ‘Feb. 24.—Sixty employes - Being Taken Off. his force had been reduced to 200. Chicago, Feb. 24.—Jess Willard, his | Will call a strike in this city on Few ,,1;,!(:“11‘;\#"\1\"1\1 ::Ur\l\o‘;il:':::i):("l(:; NICKALLS IN AMERICA. ) of ths . a5 Oross. cormpaity, SENESENE New York, Feb, 24— The Holland- e S manager and two traine departed | March 1. % SONTE s Ll New York, Feb. 24.—Guy Nickalls, | /o "0 hiovaq here on building oper GUNS @il ON VERDI. teday for New York to begin train- irat haltlon e voor A e coach, arrived here today or tions, struck today, because two nomn= sived here today from Rotterdam and New York, Feb. 24.—The Giuseppe |ing for hisfight with Frank Moran DENY Ble fron, “"“‘ ,“““","“". hs of COM- | gteamship Nieuw Amsterdam from | Feoh S0 verd given work Falmouth and reported having been | Verdi, the Itahan liner whose arrival | on March 25 Newl okl vap ot , .| parative quiet, it really active again, ) pg)mqutt iti here on Feb, 1 wita two naval guns SEWIXorS, SS eas of not | notably on the steel side At St held up in The Downs by a British | he _Feb. 4 aya . ol S guilty to the indictment charging | r,ouis 15,000 tons of Southern basic patrol ship. Four German stowaways | Mounted on her deck opened the qu SKI JUMPERS MEFTING, murder brought against them recent- | was hought: in southern Ohio con- were taken off the liner and later, | Hon with the state department of | Mempers of the New Britain Skifly in connection with the killing of | ol : tons . wl she reack . armed merchantmen, arrived here to- A o e . = 8 o tracts for 30,000 and 40,000 tons of . hen she reached Falmouth, she was | armed merchantmen, arrived here to-{ club and those inlerested in the sport | Barnet Baff, an independent poultry | Naptnern hacie wers cloved, {he for- | § Connecticut Trust and Saie eposit L. again boarded by British naval ofii- | day on her return trip from Genoa. ] will meet on the west slope of Rack-| dealer, allesed to have been insti- [ nol \Ui'h a central Ohlo maker and sersjwho removed 255 bags of mail. H\"'R"Pj“‘»”\?‘ |‘x” consplcuous on the | jife Helghts near Doerr’s pond to- | gated by agents of the so-called poul- | {pe latter with Ohio river furnaces » STRONG, RELIABLE CORPORATION Only the mail destined for Canada | deck of the Verdi. morrow morning at 9 c'clock. With | try trust, were entered today by Frank | 4nq at Youngstown 20,000 tons of Bes and Japan was not disturbed. = ST z weather favorng it is expected that| Ferrara, . Giuseppe Arichiello and | samer Sl e organized and qualified through years of efficient, Among the ‘passengers on board RIOTERS IN COURT, there will be a big crowd on hand, W. | Joseph and Antonio Zafarone = : 750 1 i i g ™ ¢ J « ¢ fiides Gl % z . furnace or 7ic helow 8 . were several members of the Ford | New London, Feb. 24.—John Cher- | A. Hagen one of the most proficlent ]’,:'J:v,m <. There has also been trustworthy service, to act as Conservator, Guardian peace expedition. rik, one of the strikers who recently | 1 art will be on hand at the meet- | o6y, TOR CLASSIE 'ION. | heavy aggregate buying in foundry Executor or Administrator. i e participated in the riot on the Central | ing. and malleable pig iron. CAPITAL $750,000. SURPLUS $750,000 CoL: HOU COMING HOME. Vermont wharf was held today under ——————— | WANTED—Woman for general house- Falmouth, Eng, Feb. 24—The |$2,000 bonds for the superior court | Harold Andrews, 14, of 24 Webster | work. Apply W. C. French, 176 " A . steamship Rotterdam, sailing for New |on a charge of assault with intent to { Hill and Michael Washkin, another Maple St. Tel. 365 4-3d i connccncut Irust and Safc Deposlt CO. York tomorrow, will ca among |kill. Four other rioters were bound |boy. who lives at 113 Arch street, ran | — . S A woman on Rockwell avenue com- i i stWer passengers Col. . M. House, [cver on breach of the peace charges | from home today. They said [TO RIENT—Attractive furnished |jjained to the police today that one M. H. WHAPLES, Pre HARTFORD, CONN. gpecial representative of President |in bonds of $1,000 and three were dis- oy intended to hop freight to rooms, running water and heat. 2 of her neighbors pounds the piano so Wilgon. jebarsed from custody. Hartford. The police were notified. Court street, incessantly that she cannot stand it. | i VESSEL STILL F! com ... ¢ 507% 51 Vineyard Haven, Mass., Feb. 244 The Merchants and Miners steames Juniata, Baltimore to Boston, which ard sound America liner Nieuw Amsterdam and Safe Deposit 0. §

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