New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 13, 1916, Page 11

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 191 6. “T0 NAME MARSHALL BY ACCLAMATION (Continued from First Page.) resolutions committee, and others be- fore the platform is prepared for the eonvention. With the comir ulation increastd to whether he will appear resolutions committee and advocate a preparedness plank along the lines of his often-expressed views and wheth- €t he will urge the committee to adopt some sort of declaration on the liguor question. Whether the reso- lutions committee will hold a public hearing to receive suggestions for planks to be inserted in the platform has not vet been determined. The suffragists desire such a hearing. La- bor leaders representing the Amer- %n Federation of Labor, who are here with fourteen planks similar to those presented to the republicans last week, also want a hearing as do c tain societies interested in immigr tion and associations favoring the e temsion of civil service among govern- ment employes. Navy League Desires Hearing, Among others to appear before the committee are Rear Admirals Hugo Osterhaus and Richard Wainwright, refired, with a delegation from the Mavy League. They will present the views of the league as to the enlarge- ment of the navy. Senator Stone, former representa- tive A. Mitchell Palmer of Penns) vanla who will also be a member of the resolutions committee and several leaders continued the consideration of platform matters today. The com- Aittee will be named tomorrow. It will immediately organize and, accord- ing to present indications, the plat- form will be completed Wednesday night. No report will be made to the convention until Friday morning, hewever. Demands for tickets to the Coliseum gontinued to grow today but there Wgre'none to be had by the late com- efs as the apportionment of seats has already been made. The manage- ment of the Coliseum last night locked out 120 workmen and all representa- tives of the national committee for hree hours and re-admitted the work- men only after the national commit- committee had agreed to give the Co- Jiseum managers four boxes contain- ing twenty-two seats for all sessions of the convention. @The lockout caused the members of the national committee considerable anxiety, inasmuch as the Coliseum is dply partly decorated and without chairs for delegates, alternates and newspaper men. By working day and night shifts it will be possible to put fhie building in proper shape in time for the opening of the convention Wednesday noon, geveral days ago the attention of nembers of the national committee was-ecalled to a clause in the contract with the Coliseum Company which the comittee had nat noticed at the time of the signing of the agreement. This clause, the Coliseum managers said, requires that any one renting twe building must give to the man- agers the use of four boxes. Those who are interested in the make-up of the national committee have found that the membership which ceases with the close of the convention contains five men who hate served together for twenty years. They are: Josephus Daniels, secretary of the navy, representing North Carolina; Clark Howell, Georgia: John T. McGraw, West Vir- ginia; Senator Tillman, South Caro- lina, and Urey Woodson, Kentucky. M. Howell will remain a member of the committee and possibly Mr. McGraw. The other three will retire. Bryans Plan To Snare Moose. William J. newspaper porter from Nebraska, arrived today to tional convention. He asserted most emphatically that his reportorial role §vill be his first interest. But the former secretary of state, chief build- er of many democratic platforms, in- Icludipg the one on which the party npw stands, and author of numerous ace treaties, has a new treaty to propose to other democratic leaders— & pact bringing progressives to the support of the democratic ticket next fan Now is the opportune time for the democratic party to get most of the progressives,” said Mr. Bryan in a hasty across-the-corridor interview, as he reached his hotel today. ‘The progressives ‘were not at all satisfied with the results of their con- vention at Chicago,’ Mr, Bryan con- | tinued. “T believe the time is ripe for the democrats to secure a large part of the progressive vote. “They are closest to us in sym- Pathy, anyway, you know,” Mr. Bryan added. He indicated that the end in view ‘might be largely accomplished by the writing into the democratic platform of progressive planks. “I have no plans except to report this convention,” was Mr. Bryan's cryptic answer, when asked if he wguld address the convention or ap- pear before the resolutions committee In behalf of peace and anti-militarist planks. When Mr. democratic but he d In the hotel made of Mr. among Bryan spec- delegates as Bryan, re- here ““cover” the democratic na- Bryan arrived few of the leaders were out of bed an impromptu reception lobby. Later Mr. Bryan the following statement: *I have come to the convention as a newspaper correspondent and do not exsect to take any official part in the convention Having been defeated for delegate in my own state, I will not accept a seat on the floor of the con- vention as an alternate from Nebrs ka nor accept a proxy from any other Mr. Bryan had several callers dur- tng the day. TGO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION. cammode, Call 68 Bassett 6-13-1d FOR SALE—Dresser, couch and chairs street. before the | WILSON DELIVERS STIRRING SPEECH ON' AMERICANISM (Continued from First Page.) | gentlemen, no man can certainly tell you what the immediate future is go- {ing to be, either in the history of this {country or in the history of the world. It is not by accident that the present great war came in Europe. Every element was there and the con- i test had to come sooner or later, and it is not going to be by accident that the results are worked out, but by purpose—by the purpose of the men who are strong enough to have guid- | ing minds and indomitable wills when | the time for decision and settlement comes. “And the part that the United States is to play_has this distinction in i that it is to be in any event a di interested part. There is nothing that the United States wants that it has to get by w but there are a great many things that the United States has to do. It has to see that its life is not interfered with by anybody else who wants something. “There are few days when we are making preparation, when the thing mo. commonly discussed around every sort of table, in every sort of circle, in the shops and in the streets is preparedness, and undoubtedly, gentlemen, that is the present im- perative duty of America, to be pre- | pared. “But we ought to know what we are preparing for. I remember hear- ing a wise man say once that the old maxim that ‘everything comes to the man who waits’ is all very well provided he knows what he is wait- ing for, and preparedness might be a very hazardous thing if we did not know what we wanted to do with the force that we mean to accumu- late and to get into fighting shape. America Knows Use for Army. “America, fortunately, does know what she wants to do with her force. America came into existence for a particular reason. ‘When you look about upon these beautiful hills and up this stately stream, and then let your imagination run over the whole body of this great county from which vou youngsters are drawn, far and wide, you remember that while it had aboriginal inhabitants, while there were people living here, there was no civilization which we displaced. It was as if in the providence of God a continent had been kept unused and waiting ‘ for a peaceful people, who loved liberty and the rights of more than they loved anything else to come and set up an unselfish common- wealth, Tt is very extraordinary thing. There is none other like it in the whole annals of mankind—of men gathering out of every civilized nation of the world on an unused continent and building up a polity exactly to suit themselves, not under the domination of any ruling dynasty or of the ambitions of any royal fam- ily, doing what they pleased with their own life on a free space of land which God had made rich with every resource which was necessary for the civilization they meant to build up. Now, what we are preparing to do is to see that nobody mars that, and that, being safe itself against inter- ference from the outside, all of its force is going to be behind its moral idea, and mankind is going to know that when America speaks she means what she says. We are not in for anything selfish and we want the whole mighty power of America thrown in that scale and not into any other. “You know that the chief thing that is holding many people back from en- thusiasm for what is called prepared- ness is the fear of militarism. Militarism. “T want to say a word to you young gentlemen about militarism. You are not a militarist because you are mili- tary. Militarism does not consist In the existence of an army not even in the existence of a very great army. Militarism is a spirit. Tt is a point of view. Tt is a system. It is a purpose. The purpose of militarism is to use armies for aggression. The spirit of militarism is the opposite of the civilian spirit—the citizen spirit. ‘In a country where militarism prevails the military man looks down upon the civilian, regards him as inferior, thinks of him as intended for his, the military man’s support and use; and just so long as America Is America that spirit and point of view is im- ble with us. There.is as yet in this country, so far as I can discover, no taint of the spirit of militarism. “You young gentlemen are not pre- ferred in promotion because of the families you belong to. You are not drawn into the academy because you belong to certain influential circles. You do not come here with a long tradition of miiitary pride back of vou. You are picked out from the citizens of the United States, to be that part. of the force of the United States which makes its policy safe against interference. You are the part of American citizens who say to those who would interfere. ‘“You must not’ and ‘vou shall not’ But vou are American citizens, and the idea I want to leave with you boys today is this: No matter what comes always remember that first of all you are citizens of the United States be- fore you are officers, and that you are officers because you represent in vour particular profession what the citizenship of the United States stands There is no danger of militarism ou are genuine Americans and I one, do not doubt that you are. When you begin to have the mili- taristic spirit—not the military spirit —_that is all right—then begin to doubt whether you are Americans or not. u Civil vs. Military Power “ You know that one thing in which our forefathers took pride was this, that the civil power is superior to the military power in the United States Once and again the people of the United States have so admired great military man as to make him president of the United States, when he became commander-in-chief of all the forces of the United States, but he was commander-in-chief because he was president, not because he had been trained to arms, and his author- ity was civil, not military. I can teach you nothing of military power, but I am instructed by the constitution to use you for constitutional and patriotic purposes. And that is the only use you care to be put to. That is only use you ought to care to be to, because after all, what is the in being an American if you do know what it is. “You have read a great deal books about the pride of the old Roman citizen, who always felt like drawing himself to his full height when he said ‘I am a Roman’ but as compared with the pride that must have arisen to his heart, our pride has a new distinction, the distinction of carrying certain lights for the world that the world has never so distinctly seen before, certain guiding lights of liberty and principle and justice. “We have drawn our people, as you know. from all parts of the world, and we have been somewhat disturbed re- cently, gentlement, because some of those—though I believe a very small number—whom we have drawn into our citizenship have not taken into their hearts the spirit of America and have loved other countries more than they loved the country of their adop- tion. put not in ‘What Americanism Is. “We have talked a great deal about Americanism. It ought to be a mat- ter of pride with us to know what Americanism really consists in. Amer- icanism consists in utterly believing in the principles of America and put- ting them fizst. I believe that the American test is a spiritual test. If a man has to make excuses for what he has done as an American, I doubt his Americanism. He ought to know at every step of his action that the motive that lies behind what he does is a motive which no American need be ashamed of for a moment. We ought to let it be known that nobody who does not put America first can consort with us. But we ought to set them the example, by thinking Amer- ican thoughts, by entertaining Amer- ican purposes, and those thoughts and purposes will stand the test of example everywhere in the world, for they are intended for the betterment of man- kind. The Monroe Doctrine. “You have heard of the Doctrine, gentlemen. You know that we are already spiritual partners Monroe with both continents of this hemis- phere and that America means some- thing which is bigger even than the United States and that we stand here with the glorious power of this coun- try to swing into the field of action whenever liberty and independence and political integrity are threatened anywhere in the western hemisphere. “'And we are ready—nobody has au- thorized me to say this, but I am sure of it—we are ready to join with th other nations of the world in seeing that the kind of justice prevails that we believe in. “So that you are graduating today, gentlemen, into a new distinction, Glory attaches to all those men whose nzmes we love to recount, who have made the annals of the American army distinguished. They played the part they were called upon to play with honor and with extraordinary character and success. I am congrat- ulating you, not because you will be better than they but because you will have a wider world of thought and conception to play your part in. I am an American but I do not helieve that any of us loves a blustering na- tionality, and a nationality with a chip on its shoulder, a nationality with its elbows out and its swagger on. We love that quiet, self-respect- ing, unconquerable spirit which does not strike until it is necessary to rike and then strikes to conquer ever since I was a youngster have T been afraid of the noisy man. I have always been afraid of the still man. I have always been afraid of the quiet man. I had a classmate at college who was most dangerous when he was most affable. When he was mad- dest, he seemed to have the sweetest temper in the world. He would ap- proach you. with a most ingratiating smile, and then you knew that every red corpuscle in his red blood was up and shouting. If you work things in your elbows, you do not work them off in your mind; you do not work them off in your purposer So my conception of America is a conce.- tion of infinite dignity, along with quiet, ‘unquestionable power, I ask You, young gentlemen to join with me in that oonception, and let all in ou-~ several spheres be soldiers together and realize it” President Wilson arrived here at 9:30 a. m., to attend the graduation exercises at the Military Academy. ‘When the naval yacht Mayflower ca rying the president and Mrs. Wilson anchored in the Hudson off the acad- emy grounds a national salute of 21 guns was fired and answered from the yacht. A troop of artillerymen escorted Mr. and Mrs. Wilson to the varade grounds. Great Applause For The president with M Wilson, Major Gen. Hugh L. Scott, chief of staff of the army, were enthusiasti- cally applauded as they rode to their seats past the corps of cadets. The weather was perfect. General George W. Goethals, gov- ernor of the Panama Canal, was one of the visitors here and he expected to confer with the president during the day regarding the general’s de- sire to retire from the canal zone. He considers the canal finished. Following the parade the president walked to the battle monument where a canopy of American flags had been erected over the seat. As the presi- dent spoke he faced the historic Hud- son river. With him on the stand were Gen. Scott, Major General T. A. Bli; assistant chief of staff; Col, C. P. Townsley, superintendent of the academy, and Col. Harts, the pr President. dent’s aide. Mrs. Wilson sat facing some | the | use | The graduates, in full upied the front rows the president. | dress uniform, oc of seats arranged on the lawn. Following his address the president | | ate luncheon with a group of officers at the superintendent’s residence and | | then motored around the grounds. He | planned to leave at 3 o'clock by train | for Washington. City Items Thursday take your supper at the | attractive Y. W. C. A. hall. All Kinds | | of good things at reasonable charges. | —advt. Miss Catherine Volz street was awarded the | contest at the Working | last evening. A. E. Monsees today took out a building permit for a dwelling to be }erected by E. O. Kilbourne at Stanley | street and Commonwealth —avenue. ! 11 will cost $5,000, of Bassett quilt in the | yirls’ club a NEW TYPHOID CASES. Health Board Still Vigorously Secking | Source of Disease. Two new cases of typhoid fever were reported to the health board to- day. One is on Smith street and the other on Hartford avenue. Health Superintendent Recks was engaged all | morning in laboratory work testing well water for traces of disease. The department is also following up every possible clue with the hope of isolat- ing the trouble but thus far has had little success. The history of every case is invi tigated, the officials probing into liv- ing conditions and learning as nearly possible the actions of the patients for the past few weeks. Realizing that milk is a frequent carrier of typhoid germs, the department is go- ing to the source of supply in each case. The drinking water furnished attle and the wells and cisterns from which it comes are being examined with the hope of locating the source of the disease. REPORT ON SLAUGHTER HOUSE. Health Board Will Probably Defer- mine Location of Structure Tonight. At its meeting this evening the board of heaith will receive a report from the municipal slaughter house committee. The question of locafion will probably be determined and this will no doubt he on some part of the town farm property as it is planned to have Superintendent Kibbe act as inspector. The board will also act on the rec- ommendation of Superintendent Reeks regarding the issuing of licenses to circuses at Rentschler's park. Ow- ing to the proximity of Rhodes’ ice pond. and the danger of pollution an attempt will he made to prevent rir- cuses from showing at the park and such a recommendation will go to the common council. VOCATIONAL SCHOOL INSPECTION TONIGHT »spective Pupils and Parents to Have Opportunity to Sce Trade Training in Actual Operation. Under the supervision of Everett D. Packard, director in the state Trade Shop, which is now housed in the Vo- cational High school building on Bas- | sett street, a public inspection of the | work will be offered this evening to prospective, pupils, parents and others who are interested. All departments will be in actual operation between and 10 o’clock. These include plumbing, printing, pat- tern making, draughting, machine shop work and sewing. It is planned to show the nature of the work and the equipment in use to enable pros- spective pupils and parents to decide upon the best course to follow. ‘At the close of the inspection ad- journment will be taken to the hall on the top floor where a talk on t 1de training will be given by Mr. Packard JOINS NAVY, MURPHY Viewed Preparedness Pa ford and Immediately Shipped. Although 17,000 people toak part in the big preparedness parade in; Hartford a week aturday it was authoritatively reported a week later that not one recruit ~had resulted This statement is now contraverted | today by a New Britain young man. Donald Murphy, son of Mr. and M James Murphy of Beaver street, has joined the United States navy as a direct result of the parade. That day after witnessing the splendid division of bluejackets from the battleship Utah as they swung By twelve abreast, Murphy decided that life on the rolling deep Wwas really worth while. . A few questions seltled any lingening doubts he may have had and then he journeved to the recruiting office. At the present | time Murphy is at the receiving | station in Newport. BRIDES-EL ade in Hart- T HONORED. The young s employed in the office of the Trumbull Electric Co., in Plainville were guests at a banquet tendered by the officers at the Hotel Bond in Hartford last evening. The Misses Ruth Daniels, Florence Bart- lett and Edna Andrews, members of the clerical force who are to wed on June 24, were given the positions of honor. Miss Sadie L. Wheeler served las toastmistress and remarks made several of her office a ciate Officers of the concern nished autos to convey the young dies to the Capital city. by fur- la- | Har: | be graduated from the medica | high | chusetts School of | cour | many, ND CONVENTION. st presidents and many ew Britain Aerie, No. E., are planning to attend convention of the order, be held in Eagle's hall, tomorrow. The past presi- T. Mes 1, E. A. Parker, J. M. Brady, M. Irving Jester, C. F. Dehm, W. C. Kramer, M. T. Kerwin, Louis W. Fodt, James I&. O’Brien and Fred H. Jergen. President H. L. | Walthers will attend the convention as a_delegate from the lo TO ATTE All the pa members of 2 722, F. O. the annual which will Hartord, dents are J | the Ti TFORD ONEPRICE C[® £ ‘\ AR IFH 116 ASYLUM ST. L i . HARTFORD. Suits For Stout Women a Speclaity. Paim Beach Suits (Everyone Bears the Genuine Palm Beach Label) $7.45 to $16.50 In many different styles—you will like them if you see them—and in the new gray as well the natural shade. Big bargains on Cloth Suits. e e — ~ STRONG BULL MARKET sStandard Screw Advances Twenty-five Points to 350-355—Scovill Gains Six Points. There was a wild bull movement on the Hartford Stock Exchange today which sent the Standard Screw com- pany stock soaring to a hitherto un- precedented figure. During the morn- ing’s scramble for the stock a gain of | twenty-five points was recorded and this afternoon the quotation was 350- with the stock still going strong. Scovill Manufacturing was also a strong issue today and gained points, selling at 586-590 this after- noon. Billings & Spencer was another stock affected by the bull movement and although but two points were add- ed, it was in good demand. Other stocks held firm, some of them record- ing slight advances. The complete list of market quotations is included in Richter & company's printed above. is list, DFATHS AND FUNERALS. Miss Miss Annie \nnu‘ .:u-dur-r, Lardn aged 24 last evening her home on Oak street. - She had been ili for some time. She is surviveq by her parents Mr. and Mrs. John Lardner; a broth- er, Edward Lardner, and two siste: The funeral will be held tomorrow morning at 9 o’clock from St. Mary’s church. died Antonas Yonkubaitis. The funeral of Antonas Yonkub: s of 328 Park street was held from St .Andrew$' church this morning gt 8 o'clock. Rev. Edward Grikis of- ficiated and interment was in the rcred Heart cemetery. Quinte Luzetti, Quinte, the two month old Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Luzetti \Woodruff court, died last night. The funeral was held this afternoon at 3 o'clock, interment being in the new Catholic cemeter: of 8 son of Miss Eliza Coughlin, a well known resident of F , died this after- noon at her home on Bank street in that town after a long illness. She | had lived in Plainville for many | rears and was well known in this She is suvived by her mother, Ellen Coughlin; a brother, Wil- J. Coughlin of Bristol and two E Miss Nellie of Plainville and | Mi. Marcella of hester. The funeral arra have not yet been compiete TO RECEIVE DFE Reynolds Mrs. liam ter: O: Manc ts as War Keeps John from | Studying . in Heidelbe 31 West Main St., City Hall Building RICHTER & CO. MEMBEKS NEW YORK STOCK EX CHANGHE, Represented by E. W. Eddy. Telephone 18 Bristol Brass Rights Buught, Sold and Quoted FINANCIAL NEWS ver and u. ing, Am Ala Am Am Am Am Am Am Am B B ICen Chi Col Del Gt Pac Per Rep Rep Among those who will ta the Fordham university will be John of Mrs. Ellen street. Mr. ce part in | celebration of | York to- | of this of | will | Diamond Jubilee in New MOorrow Reyno Reynolds city, son ison Reynolds school | degree of M. D. | from the local and the following at the Ma ry, Boston. receive the graduated chool in 1910 tudied chemistry Chemi he enrolled in the and will He ws year | In the fall of 1911 | medical course at Fordham. | Mr. Reynolds has stood high in his | studies and W contemplating a | in Heidelberg university, Ge but the war made this seem in- able and in April he took up al work in St. Mary’s hospital, Brooklyn. At the close of the war it probable Mr. Reynolds will study at the German school. While in high school, Mr. Reynolds was very prom- inent, especially along athletic lines, having peer raptatin sf he 1310 baseball team s well as a member of | three preceding years. Hig mother and brothers, George H., ana Charles, will attend the commence- ment exercises in New York tomor- advi pract b v o v s s MARKET SETTLES T0 NORMAL CONDITIONS Majority of Stocks Have Fraction- New York, June 12, a. m.—The market more normal conditions opening, of yesterday’s early altogether lacking. were fractionally higher for-the most part, Texas company, Long Island and Den- point or more. among the specialties, vancing to the new record of 87 3-i. S. Steel, barely iness in Mexican Petroleum. Close- somewhat unsettled dealings. New York Stock Exchange tions furnished by Richter 5 members of the New York Stock Ex- § Stand ¢ change. Am / Anaconda ¥ i Baldwin Loco & 2T Butte Superior Canadian Ches & Chino Cop Crucible Steel Distillers Sec Brie . Erle 1st pfd General Elec Goodrich Great Nor pfd Nor Ore Cetfs. Illinois Central Tnspiration Kansas Cit Lack Steel T.ehigh Louis & Max Motor: Mex Petroleum National NYC | Nev i YNH&HRR N Y Ont & West. Corthern Norfolk nRR Peoples Gas Pressed Steel Ray Reading Southern Southern Southern Studebaker Tenn Copper Texas Oil Third | Tnion Pacific United Fruit | Utah Conper S Rubber Car Chem Westinghouse Western Willvs Overland HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE REPCH Hartford Stock tions, furnished by Richter & ¢ members of the New York Stock change. Represented by E. W. Ed City building. Exchange quq 191 As June 13, Bid Manufacturing Companie: Adams Express Aetna Nut Co Am ss Co Am Hosiery Co ... Am Hardware Co Am silver Co : Am Thread Co pfd Billings & Spencer Co Bristol Brass Co Broad Brook Co ;s { The Eawara Balf Co Cs Lekwd & Brnd Co Collins Co Colts Arms Co Eagle Lock Co Gfn-Nbgr Tob Co pfd Hly Wtr Pwr Co Internatl Silver pfd Internatl Silver Johns-Pratt Co Landers Frary & J R Montgomery C | N B Machine Co N D Mfg Co pfad North & Juda Mfg C with partial recoveries in the final [ Peck Stow & Wilcox The closing was irregular. | Plimpton Mfg Co | Pratt & Whitney pfd quota- | Smyth Mfg Co & Co., | Stand Screw Co pfd A ew Co pfd B al Gains, at Least 10:30 down to today’s excitement breadth operations being Wall St., settled at the and Initial quotations although some issues, including & Rio Grande preferred rose a American Beet Sugar Air Brake were again conspicuous the former ad- Som Clk o vesterday's leader, was steady, with pronounced heav- Mexicans and coalers were in the later trad- { Stand Screw Co com gamn Rule & Level Co | Stanley Works Co Eddy. 1916 Close 893 Represented by E. W. June 13 High Low Beet Sugar 4 : L Gold | Taylor & Fenn Co .. A Chem .... 9 { Torrington pfd Fdy Co. | Torrington Co com Ice | Traut & Hine Can | Union Mfg LocCo, - - . % 4 4 | U s Envelope Co Smelting ..... 8 9 96 U S Envelope Sugar Biglow Hfd Cpt Co pfd 108 Tel & Biglow Hfd Cpt Co com. 863 Russell Mfg Co .240 Bristol Brass Rights covill Mfg Co | Niles Bement- Pond R. R, and Street R. Hfd & Conn West R NYNH&HRR Banks and Trust Companies. | city Bank ST Conn Rvr Banking Co ..145 | Conn Trust Co .. 500 | Fidelity co .... 335 i First Natl Bank 200 | Hfd-Aetna Nat) 201 | Hfd Trust Co Natl Exchange Bank Phoenix Natl Bank Riverside Trust Co | security Co ... | State Bank | U S Bar | N B Trust | Hfd Morris % | P | Aetna Fire .. | Hfd Fire .... | National Fire | Phoenix Fire 139 | Standara Fire 107% 107% | 18 Co Car & Co ptd com 143 Tel Cop Ry .1303% 851% Co.107 % L 90% 921 1% 841 106 % 8914 91% 871 9414 Pacific . 761 Leather 5 Ohio s 59 17| R. Stocks, R 28 63 [8) 6| 54 Mil & St Paul.101% nm F&I & Hudson Bank Rub Co Plan 11 Valley Ins, Companies. Nashville. com. . 41 85 40 40 Life and Indemnity Tns. Companid Aetna Life R 73 | Aetna Acc and Liabil ... 440 464 | Conn Gen Life .625 | Hfa Steam Boiler | Travelers Tead Air Brake. & Husdon. 1413 1081 181 641 281, .116 .134% 251 Cons Pacific & West. Mail 8 8 Co.. .410 .o 810 Public Utilities. Fmgtn Rvr Pwr Co ..., 9 Hfd City Gas Lgt Co pfd 5 | Hfd City Gas Lgt Co com 6414 | Hfd City Gas Lgt Co 305 » | So New Eng Tel .148 BATTLE UF VERDIN (Continued from 424 .1021 48% . 23% S S LS S com... 49% 4% S pfd....111% 1111 i Pacific 99 99 3% | RY ... 23% 23% | Ry pfd.. 6814 1401 43 Car Cons 2 105 I& T & 142 . 43Y I Miios 2 1 i Ave ...... 663 5 5 | | Italians they attacked.’ Adige the were repul 1643 | wherever 331 | 861 117% 42 | 6o 9414 Germans Berlin, Ju {p. m.—A fu d dun front near Fort announced today by British troops have movement against southeast of Ypres, Report Advance. via London, 4: vance on the Vi Douaumont w the war = offid been under German positiol Co Steel Steel pfd Union P Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co, A STRONG, RELIAELE CORPORATION organized and qualified through years of effcient, trustworthy service, to act as Conservator, Guardian Executor or Administrator. CAPITAL $750,000. SURPLUS $750,000 Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co. M. H. WHAPLES, Pres't. HARTFORD, CONN.

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