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That blanket gown is all right for the home (we have ’em at $8), how about a double breasted over for the street? The cold wave is coming . Get in your selection while the selecting is at its best. Lon: warm double breasted over- ingle breasted soat, $15 to : Double breasted short overcoat, with velvet collar, $22.00. Chesterficld oxford, silk lined, $28. Raincoats, $5 to $18. CLINTON J. HYDE. TAKE INVENTORY No matter how poor, no matter how rich you are—your health is your principal asset. It is more valuable than all the money you can ever earn br accumulate. A well known man sai “I would rather be a well pau- per than a sick millionaire. There was a time when your body wassequipped with rich, healthy blood, sparkling vitality and energy, plenty £ ambition and nerve power. And | ending these precious h there were no end to The supply seemed inexhaust- DR. them. Ible. And today? At your age you should | be in your prime. Are you still the | same in health and strength? Take inventory and let us see how you stand. How is less, you your say ambtion? Growing And your strength is leaving Your vigor is declining? Your memory is getting poor? Back s wealk? Legs give out? Heart pal- pitates on the least exertion? Gloomy hts have replaced your former heerful disposition? Courage and ince all gone? Not very favorable, this inventory, you with your natural resources s gone or crippled, do you :xpect to fight your battle of life as well as your competitor, who is arnation of robust health and Just as a merchant will plenish his ave to re- tock of goods, if he wants nd his income, so ns in per constantly with nerve force, th, and help you to ret: your working pow Call at my office and T will show you what must be done to regain what you have Io I will help you to help yourself, .Clinton J. Hyde Nery and Chronic Discases. TRUMBCLL STREET, Hartford, Conn, 1:30 to 7 to 8. 10 to 1. Fee As Low As $2.00. 9 to 12, Sundays "A. B. JOHNSON, D. D). S. DENTIST Mational Bank Bldg Open Evenlues. NOTICE The New Eritaln Wet Wash having maged into equipped puilding are prepared to do first class We solicit your patronage. ion guaranteed. 30 Union their newly over- | | effort of a crowd of several hundred | rersons to find Thomas E. Leyden of the | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1916 DEATHS AND FUNERALS. Mrs. Ruth Marsh. The funeral of Mrs. Ruth Marsh was held this morning at 11 o’clock from the Stanley Memorial church. Rev. J. Rees officiated and the body was taken to Goshen, N. Y., for interment. William G. Mayer. William George, the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Mayer of 41 Hurl- burt street, died last night. The fun- eral was held this afternoon. Inter- ment took place in St. Mary’s ceme- ters: William H. Burns. News was received here of the death of William H., Burns at Great Falls, Mont. He was the son of Mrs. and the late Michael Burns of Spring- field, Ma Besides his mother he is survived by one brother, John Burns of Springfield, and two sters, Mrs. Henry F. Ladbury and Mrs. Francis T. McDonough of this ci The funeral will be held Thursday morning at Springfield. EDUCATOR DIES. ‘hool in Rockville, This State. Monclair, N. J., Oct. 24.—Randall Spaulding, educator, died today at his home here after a long illness. He was formerly president of the New Jersey state council of education and treasurer of the State Teachers’ as- sociation of New Jersey. Mr. Spaulding was born in Town- send, Mass., in 1845, was graduated Lawrence academy, Groton, ., and from Yale in 1870. He ght school ir”Rockville, Conn., and after studying one year abroad he became superintendent of Montclair's public schools, a position he held un- til his retirement in 1912, He is sur- vived by his wife and a son, Ray- mond, of Yorktown Heights, N. ¥. Once Taught CITY OFFICIALS ON TRIAL Mayor Bartlett and ¥our Others Charged With Failure to Suppress Riots Duc to Anti-Catholic Lecture, Lawrence, Mass., Oct. 24.—The jury lected at Salem yesterday to try Albert L., Bartlett and four other members of the Haverhill city government, indicted for failure to ots in that city on the night 3, heard the first testimony the case here today. District Attorney Louis S. Cox in his cpening address, described the distur- bances which raged about the City hall and extended to other sections of the city, where residences were stoned. The occasion for the outbreak was the Mayor Somerville, who had gone into hiding after he had opened a meeting in the City hall. Leyden had announced that he would discuss religious ques- tions from an anti-Catholic stand- point. He escaped from the city by automobile in the early morning hours, when militia and police had succeeded in dispersing the mobs, The district attorney said the violence was made possible by lax policing. Rev. Robert Atkinson, a member of the Ministerial association of Haver- Lill which urged the investigation of tke riots and which had assisted in an effort to obtain indictments, testified City ltems 1 The second in the series of lectures on Memory Training will be given to- X MICIAL on “Current Events,” by Colonel Bur- evening at 8 o’clock at the Y M. T- A. & B. soclety. GOODNO SUIT DISMISSED. Hotchkiss and Yale Were Defendants. Hartford, Oct. 24.—Judge Thomas or the United States district court has ordered a decree dismissing the complaint in the suit of Louise T. Goodno und her husband of Pasa- dena, Calif., against Marie C. Hotch- kiss and Yale university. Mrs. Good- [no was executor of the will of Marie OC. of Henry C. Hotchkiss who died in New Haven, Dec. 4, 1883, leaving an estate of $250,000 and an unsigned will. Mborie C. Hotchkiss is executrix of the will of Henry’'s widow, Mary A. F. Hotchkiss, and administrator of the estate of her own father, William H. Hotchkiss, a son of Henry. The heirs of Henry C. Hotchkiss ¢ivided his estate by agreement in accordance with his unsigned will and tle widow Mary A. F. later willed Ter proverty to heirs and to Yale. Tt was the claim of Mrs. Goodno that the agreement between the heirs was 1ot carried out and that Mrs. Hotch- kiss the widow, willed away property to which she did not have a right. Judge Thomas finds the matter has leen settled by decree of the New Haven probats court, Oct. 23, 1913, in distributing the estate of Henry C. Hotchkiss and in judgments in the state courts on appeal, sustaining the will of Mary A. F. Hotchkiss, and also that the complainants are barred by the statute of limitations. COPELAND JURY COMPLETED. Galveston, Tex., Oct. 24.—The jury in the case of John Copeland, bank cashier, of Marshall, Texas, charged with murder in connection with the killing of William Black, an anti- Catholjc lecturer in that city on Feb- ruary 8, 1915, was completed today. All the jurors are Protestants save two, who are Jews. Shortly after a jury had been obtained, Judge Clay Stone Briggs issued an order that the court would not permit the testimony in the case to be published. FAMILY DOPED; JEWELS STOLE New York, Oct. 24.—A robbery by “chloroform thiev of jewelry valued at about $100,000 from the Roslyn, L. I., home of Frank Gray Griswold, sportsman and race horse owner was reported to the police here today. Handkerchiefs saturated with chloroform were found, Mr. Griswald said, in the sleeping Tooms of the house this morning when the family awoke and strong boxes, jewel cases and drawers had been ransacked. SOUGHT WORK: FOUND DEAD. Hartford, Oct. 24.—Michael Strig of 34 South Prospect street was killed by a train in Parkville today. His wife identified the body at the police station. He was looking for work. RUBBER GRAY FABRIC SUIT IS FOR YOUTH that the ministers had done so “Only in the interests of free speech.” CHARGES WITHDRAWN. Chief of Police and Others Were Un- der Indictment. Chicago, Oct. 24.—Application in the municipal court for warrants for the arrest of Chief of Police Charles H. Healey and others on charges of malfeasance in office through failure to enforce vice ang liguor laws was withdrawn by State’s Attorney Hoyne today. Chicf Healey, Willlam Luthardt, his secretery, and Charles T. Essig, sec- retary of the Sportsman’s club of America, were indicted by the grand jury yesterday on similar charges. TO EXCHANGE PRISONERS. London, Oct. 24, 6:30 p. m.—Baron Newton, under secretary for for- cign affairs, announced in the house of s today that the British and German governments had agreed to exchange all interned prisoners over the age of 45. PAPER SITUATION, Forest Service Believes It Has Sub- stitute for Valuable Spruce. Washington, Oct. 24.—Relief from ! the critical newsprint paper situation | scems prabable from studies made in the forest service laboratories. | Tt has been found that good grades | of paper can be made from a number of western woods which experts esti- mate can be cut into chips, dried, baled and delivered to mills in Wis- | consin at a very small advance over the cost of chips made there from iccal timber, The only factor blocking the way to be freight r:tcs and the Wis- n mills are endeavoring to nego- ¢ with the railroads for shipment experimental trainloads of chips from the west. TIf favorable freight ates can he obtained, forest service experts say, the great quantity of puu | wood on the National Forests should { prove a considerable factor in suppiy- ing favorably located mills with the necessary raw materinl In Wisconsin alone, it is stated, there is an annual market for more than 300,000 cords of pulpwood. THE DEMURE ONE, Broadcloth in a dark tone of gray peplum is the base of this suit. It is trimmed with black jet buttons and a deep napped velvet which stimu- lates moleskin. Silk braid gives a | sirdle emect. morrow afternoon and evening at the | The second of a series of lectures | ree of Hartford will be delivered this | her father Nathaniel S. Hotchkiss, a son | and cut with a full skirt and pointed | ! Opportunities and How to Use Them Many opportunities to save money come to almost everyone. ‘Do not let them slip by unim- proved—make good use of them by placing them to your credit in the Bank. Start an account with Commercial Trust Company. the 4% Interest Paid on Savings Accounts HARTFORD STO(E‘K EXCHANGE REPQRT Hartford Stock Exchange quota- tions, furnished by Richter & Co., members of the New York Stock Ex- change. Represented by E. W. Eddy. City Hall building. Manufacturing Companies. Bid ..140 27 344 Adams Express Co Aetna Nut Co .... Amer Brass Co ... Amer Hosiery Co 5 Amer Hardware Co .... Amer Silver Co Amer Thread Co pfd Big-Hfd Carpet Co pfd.108 Big-Hfd Carpet Co com 83 Billings & Spencer Co..121 Bristol Brass Co 81 Broad Brook Co 14 The Edward Balf Co...105 Case, Lkwd & Brd Co.200 Collins Co ..190 Colt’s Arms Co . ..865 Eagle Lock CO ....... 93 Gfn-Nbgr Thco Co pfd.100 Holyoke Water Pwr Co.415 Inter Silver pfd Inter Silver com Johns-Pratt Co Landers, Frary & Clark. 81 J R Montgomery Co...108 New Brit Machine Co. 88 New Depar Mfg Co pfd.113 New Depar Mfg Co com. 27 North & Judd Mfg Co.. Peck, Stow & Wilcox.. 33 Plimpton Mfg Co 115 Pratt & Whitney Co pfd.105 Russell Mfg Co 290 Smyth Mfg Co ..215 Stand Screw Co pfd A.109 Stand Screw Co pfd B..109 and Screw Co com...417 Stanley Rule & Level. . Stanley Works Swift & Co . Taylor & Fenn Co. ... Terry Steam Turbine. .. Torrington Co pfd Torrington Co com Traute & Hine Union Mfg Co U S Envelope U S Envelope Thompsonville Wtr pfd. Thompsonville Wtr com . Nor Conn Lt & Pwr pfd.100 Nor Conn Lt & Pwr cm. 60 Railroad and Street Railroad Stocks. Hfd & Conn West R R 28 NY¥NH&HR R.. 61 Banks and Trust Companies, City Bank & Trust Co.. Conn River Banking Co Conn Tst & Safe Dpt Co Fidelity Trust Co First National Bank Hfd-Aetna Natl Bank . Hrf Morris Plan Co. Hartford Trust Co Phoenix National Bank Riverside Trust Co Security Trust Co State Bank and Trst United States Bank New Brit Trust Co Land, Mort & Title Fire Insurance Aetna Fire Hartford Fire National Fire Phoenix Fire Standard Fire .... Life and Todemnity Ins. Companics. Aetna Life .825 830 Aetna Acc and Liabiltiy.490 Aetna Acc & Liblty war.490 Conn General Life ..650 Hartford Steam Boiler. Travelers Swift & Co rights. . Billings & Spencer r Public Utilities, Farm River Power Co. Hfd City Gas Lt Co pfd. | Hfd City Gas Lt Co cm. 93 N Co pfa.. Co com. . 62 Co. STOCK CHANGES TODAY Since the board mecting this morn- ing there have been several changes In local stocks and some of them reflecting the gemeral activity went to higher figures but eased off at the close to former rates. Marlin, how- cver, was very active and sold during ‘h(? day a high as 88, clc ing 78-82. | Bristol Brass wa Ve tive all day and the figur were closing £2-83. SUSPENDS R. R. RATE Washington, Oct. 24.—The inter- state commerce commission today re- suspended until April 29 Pennsylvani and Baltimore and Ohio railroad t ifs increasing the rates on wood puip |In carloads from Elkton, Md., Wil- | mington, Del, and other points to Tiolyoke, Mass., and other New Eng- land points. G (- ifimli!gl{?fi AsyLuM ST, \9 ) THE NEW FALI, MODELS of the famous H. O. P. CLOTHES are now being shown We specially invite Financial BETHLEHEM LFADS IN STRONG MARKET Jumps 44 Points to 629; General Motors at 837 speclalties to higher levels at today orening of the stock market with a gain of 8 points to 593 which soon increased to 610 that was quotation previous 102 ad- being ten points above high its record. Utah Copper at also scored a record, new to 3 with vances of 1 points in American Central Leather, Iron, Industrial Alcohol United State: a slight adv forfeited on re son was strongest a good inquir Sugar, Republic and Texas | Steel opened which Compan at nce, was soon lizing sales. Atchin- of for the rails, with Union Pacific, Keading and New York Central. Re- versals ranging from fractions to a point occurred in the first half hour. Trading lacked the breadth of the rrecedin on, but was scarcely | less active. Teactions of the first hour extended ta over a point in the leaders, but was again partly off the greater strength of specu stocks and high priced specialties. 629, with new Motors at 837 issues. Rock records for General | and the several sugar ind featured the noh- dividenad and Union Pacific the high shares. Pric: broke n before midday. Bonds were ir- regular on heavy offerings of interna- tional issu Closing—Greater the increasing apathy of dealings, prominent sacks losses of 1 to 2 points with rallies at he end. marked the later showing partial caution New York Stock Exchange quota- tlons furnished by Richter & Co., members of the New York Stock Ex- change. Represented by E. W. Eddy. Oct. 24, 1916 High Low 103 101 Close | Am 102 Am Am Am Am Am Am Beet Su Ag Chem Car & Can Loco Smeltin Am Sugar Am Tel & Anaconda ATS Fe Baldwin B & O Beth Steel Butte Superior Canadian Pacific Central Leather Ches & Ohio Chino Copper Chi Mil & St Paul, Col F & I Crucible Ste: Distillers Sec Erie T ie 1st Tel Cop Ry Co.. Loco Nor pfad r Ore Cetfs. Central tion City Copper Kansas Kenn { Lack Lehig Louis Na Max Motor com.. Mex Petroleum National Lead S0 Wall St.—Bethlehem Steel led the | tigating exper: | sible for the explos | street | B | Bethlehem Steel increased its gain to | i lN Y Air Brake.. ichter&Co. MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Rebresented by E. W. 31 West Main Street, Telephone 1840 EDDY City Hall Building 100 shs Bristol Brass 50 shs Traut & Hine 100 shs Billings & Spencer 50 shs American Brass 10 shs Scovill Mig., Co. 20 shs Colts Arms 100 shs Landers, Frary & Clark 100 shs Stanley Works N Y C & Hudson..109% Nev Cons NYNH&HRR 61% Northern Pacific .112% Norfolk & West...145 Penn R R. 58% Pressed Steel Car. 74 Ray Cons 2614 Reading ex-div...111% Rep I & S com... 80% Southern Pacific .101% Southern Ry : Studebalker Texas Oil Third Ave Union Pacific United Fruit : Utah Copper .....102 U S Rubber Co... 62 U S Steel ..120% U S Steel pfd .121% Va Car Chem 47% Westinghouse 641 estern Union ...103% Overland 467 164y 'ERS THROUGH FT Marvel, entered carth fi Ala., Oct. 24 ure caused carthquake felt in and Tennessee, is killed eighteen the death of a damage has men not heen by 46 -Gas 1083 22% 603, 1123 1421, | 581 717% | 25% 109% | 781 1013 28% 133% 23014 5214 1521 1623 101% 6134 | 119 12114 47 63% 1033 N which the Roden mine through an the recent 2 sulted Extent of estimated. Alabama, Georgia believed by inves- | s to have been respon- | n Sunc and rescuer. in CHILD KILLED BY AUTO. Harthford, ler, Oct. years old, Andrew Miller fatally automobile upon reaching the E skull was Lapierre, on the ch nine Mrs. of by an fractured. driver of the auto, ge of manslaughter. NEW BRITAIN NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. REPRESENTED BY L. S, JONES. 24.—Andrew 272 Mil- son of Mr. and | Market | injured when hit | today. Hartford hospital. died Floyd H. is held HISTORIC NAMES FOR CRUISERS, Congress, United States, Alliance and Ranger Are Selected. ‘Washington, Oct. 24.—The historia names, Congress, United States, Al- liance and Ranger probably will ap= pear again in American navy lifts with the christening of the four glant battle cruisers, bids for which will be opened at the navy department in December. No final decision had been reached, but it was learned to- | day that favorable consideration is | being glven to these four names, tak- en from famous frigates of earlier days. The navy department is disinclined to use the names Constitution and Constellation, since the original frig- ates that made those names famous are still afloat. SUPREME COURT CONVENES, Bridgeport, Oct. 24.—The supreme | court of errors convened in this city today for the October term. New Haven County cases were assigned to {be heard first. The first arguments | heard were those of the plaintiffs ap- i peal from the city court of New Ha- {ven in the suit of Jacob Weinstein against the Montowese Brick Co-, and cothers. DESTROYS GERMAN PLANE. London, Oct. 24, 1:66 p. m. | British naval aeroplane on Oct attacked four German seaplanes o the Belgian coast and succecded | dcstroying one of the machir | chasing the others away, accordi |to announcement made by the B sh admiralty today in CASES. Hartford, e new cases of infantile par: were reported today to the office of the state board of health. Twn were from New Brit- 2in and one from Stamford making io total of 853. | ysis ROOM 410 TEL. 2120 WE CAN OFFER FOR SALE:— 100 Bristol Brass 100 Landers, Frary & Clark 50 North & Judd 10 Colts Arms 10 Scoville Manufacturing 25 Stanley Rule & Level Company 25 American Brass 10 Travelers Insurance Company 10 Atna Life 50 Marlin Arms 50 American Silver Company Direct private wires to Hornblower & Weeks, New York, Boston, Chicago. e e e A A e e, Connecticut Trust and Safe beposit Co. 3 STRONG, REL ABLE CORPORATION organized and qualified through years of efficient, trustworthy service, to act as Conservator, Guardian Executor or Administrator. CAPITAJ, 8750,000. Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co. A, L WUHAPLES, Pres't. SURPLUS $750,000 TFORD, CONN, S e T