New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 6, 1918, Page 9

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————T1 MEN GOING TO WAR STEIN-BLOCH CLOTHES Are honestly through. Every detail seen ! - or unseen is finished as carefully and as skillfully as /it can be done by master- eraftsmen with the knowl- edge of long expericnces, Sults $20 to $35. made, clear HEW BRITAIN, CONR. - =] _CITY ITEMS ichael McCrann has purchased the ocery store formerly owned by n Conlin on Beaver street. he democratic town committee | 1 meet tomorrow evening in Judge ngan's office to name the caucus es for the selection of delegates to state convention. 6stmaster W. F. Delaney has re- ed a postcard from Sergeant John Curtin of the Headquarters' com- of the 102d reziment, now in nck, in which the soldier states is well and expects to be home assist in the Christmas rush at the . office. he postal authorities have noti- f the postmaster of the change of Gress of the Shipping Board Emer- ey Fleet from Washington, D. C. Philadelphia. oe Scoilnick of Berlin has brought fon against Maria and Giussepina nei to recover $1,000. The writ s issued by Judge B. F. Gaffney 1 ¢ returnable in the city court on s third Monday in June. Deputy Jeriff M. D. Stockwell hag attached 1 estate at the corner of Church Stanley streets and at Russwin k. Votice window t. prices. M, Secibert.— Sunshine Society. Mave you had & kindness shown? Fass it on. *Twas not mecant for you alons. Pasg it on. Let 11 travel down the vears, Let it wipe other’s tears, 1 #n Heaven the deed appears. Pass it on. ane Htito—Good cheer, Flower—Coreopsis. folors—Gold and white. and three at the wheel-chairs are idle our crutches [re, pairs present The attendance at the Red pms on Wednesday has been all of late, leaving all the very few. Will you not nnot spare time to help brk, so much needed Cross very work for e you in this There will be but one more meeting r this season, June 16th, and it bsired to have this as large a one as ssible since at this time arrange- ents will be made for the hite convention to be held here in ptember. It will greatly aid those €harge if the various committees n “be appointed at this meeting. easp bear this in mind. RAZOR WIELDER CAUGHT Lorrington, June Angelo jiénicio, who slashed Dr. . J. Ho- on the face “with a razor late Jrday afternoon on Main strect, was rested shortly before noon today in e attic of a house in pefe®he was hiding. He will be ar- gned in borough court tomorrow a gharge of assault with intent i1. - The condition of Dr. vorable today. De POVER O. K COVILLE'S \(T @rtford, June 6—A telegram from exbert Hoover, national food admin- trator to Robert Scoville, the feder- fo8d administrator, today e revocation the wholesaler nse held by Genaro Franco & & 127 Columbus avenue, for ion of the war, beginning Junc of li- n, the dur- BERVIC Various FLAG D Jewish IDICATION, socleties met ements to br the Hebrew e synagogue, secure school Already service flags there are | is annual | ves- | Hogan was | GHOSEN IN SECOND (Continued from First Fage) Harvvard street. 18 Willow street. Harold Nyborg, 51 Morris Finkelstein, Clarence Howard Banner, street. Albert Malcom Kallgren, stree George William 51 Dwight 2 Main street. Mullen, Bayer, Joseph Lawrence Cronin, 134 Hart- i ford avenue. | | Harwirton, | | to | approved | last | h&n Talmud Torah hall and made | buflding and | ry 56 | Albert 16 Hulbert street. George street Clarence reet. Norm: street l(moph street. Ernest C. street. Armour street. Daniel BE. Tgoe, 207 Philip J. McKeon, Carl Edward street. Albert Edwin street. Howard Bennett, 387 tussell Bllsworth Olive street. Otto Seba street. Meyer Welinsk: William Jer John Recor, Jr., Albert Krsch, 107 Dwight Harold IKeeley, 697 n Hart Bertini, 668 Stanley Patrick Donlan, 158 North Johnson, 178 Jubilee Gaudette, 115 Smalley Maple street. 46 Whiting street. Bergindahl, 61 Main Johnson, 506 Church Main street. Wininger, 43 tion Miller, 12 43 Oak street. y Driscoll, stree Michael Thor Main street. Harold Rollins, Erwin Bigley, 1 T.eon Toozko, 61 Odishoo Sargis, Butler, 99 79 Pleasant street, Wilson street. Main street. 155 North street, Jeseph Haran, 12 Maple street. Rachae] Jacoh, Chestnut street. John Joseph, 54 Union street. Armando Galan, 271 Clark street. James Farrara, 532 E. Main street. Andrew Fascendini, 271 Clark | street. Panfilo Forgione, Pietro G. Tognalli, street. Livio Campanelli, Lucinsono Guiseppe, street. Victorio Suloe, 11 Peter Monteno, 62 Albert Perondini, street. John Varillo, 310 Park street. Frank Zerlino. 67 Oak street. Silviro Grande, 17 Spring street. Jimmie Pagliarnlo, Franklin sticet Aldo Beltrami, 271 Tony Rossi, 298 B. Salvatore Waithe, cet. Harry Poulas, 40 Church street. Feter Sarganins, 310 1-2 Main street Isidore street. Joseph Cook, 232 Hartford avenue. Victor A. Kajaskas, 10 Yale street. Fdward Litke, 318 Bast street. Anthony Barrell, 85 West street. Walter Wojak, 4 Union street. Jeseph Starzeneerky, 1 North street. Michael street. Simon- Epstein, 100 Rhodes street. Martin Berkowitz, 250 North street. Alexander Siefel, 77 Walcott street. Henr Kusznitzke, 217 North street. Joseph T street John Eskil Eric sireet. Frank Baier, Jr. 363 Anthony Zahacewski, street. Steven avenue. Max Feigenbaum, 61 Oak St. Joseph Webher, Hartford Av Frederick George Moore, 79 Lin- den St Harry H. Milkowitz. 119 Willow Abraham Lipman, 39 Willow Patsy Quintavalle, 216 Oak St. Gustave Unterspan, 365 East St. George Peter Dilbus, 109 Jubilee St. Nathan Freedman, 135 North St. Fred Hilding Johnson, 64 Church St. Claus T, 177 454 Ellis street. So. Main West street. 99 Franklin 57 Dwight street. Jubilee street. 454 So. Main C'lark street. Main street. 31 Franklin st Feigenbhaum, 114 West Gedratis, 463 Stanley Sakalanskas, 60 Smalley A 25 H. Ericson, 369 Main street. Johmson, 61 Main street. Backlund, 343 Church Main street. 386 Flm 16 Bazylewicz, Richmond St t Carlson, 466 Chur James Jonatan, 39 Union St. Iphraim J. Careb, 155 North St. Stratds Leon K is, 98 Commer- cial St. Fred Spring Frank t. William St. Holgar Isadore Ar Henry D Lawrence Herbert B St. Ferdinando Bernardi, 83 Charles Bradlaw, 402 Allen IEmanuel Kirlew, 148 Parl Ash St. H. Johnson, 51 hur May, 3 ; 99 Rhodes St A. Mackay, 93 West St. Johnson, 593 East St. Theodore F. Landgren, 328 Maple St. ume De Bay, 21 Olive St. 'ge Anderson, 738 Iast St. Earle Hazen, 69 Church St Sidney E. Gilpatrick, 53 E. Main Frank Dunigan, 194 North St. Harold Rahm, 463 Stanley St. Leonard J. Sanders, 193 Cherry St Frank J. O'Neil, 132 Oak St. Merle Herbert Benson, 159 nt St ' John Joseph Roger: Sheflield Ernest R. Hanson Church St. Imil Frank Malmgren, 62 Belden St William J. Lofgren, S11 Bast St. Julius B. Peterson. 125 Fairview St. Leon A. Tinty, 29 Pearl St. Charles D. Street, 157 Smallex St Tmanuel Solomon, 42 Francis St. William Henry Lugli, 129 3t. Pleas- [ 10. | st. Harold Potter Robbins, 705 303 Naple St el T.eon Groman, 513 East S fdward Reinholdt, 49 Belden William Sidney Carlson, 126 St Juliug Che: érdinand Anderson, 11 8 in the flag, with more to be add- | Dwight St. vening o ne 16 The exercises will take place onl 166 Park | 63 Wilson | East | 1 { Woodland | 1088 Stanley | symour St. | | | | ‘ I's | | | Lawlor Albert Joseph Blanchard, East Main St. Joseph William Pleasant St. Irving Albert st Harold Newell Steed, 127 Cherry St. John Stefnick, 112 Jubilee St. Carl Holmberg, 70 Ash St John L. Mason, 88 John st. Plummer Jacobs, 214 Park Edward Harold Campbe Dv\ls{ht St. Peter Patrus, 225 Elm St. Edward Helm, 545 Stanley Thomas Charles Martin, st. Richard Reginald st. Leon Lehrer, 69 Hartford Thomas Joseph Botticelli, lor St. Gustave st. John Francis Coughlin, st Frank Hennig, Hilding Valentine Johnson, st August st Bernard Howard st. Antoine Contols, Arvid Bruno Carlson, st Thomas Donlan, eral Delivery). Carlyle Henry Main St. Henry st. Whitney Pleasant St George Bernard Union St James Francis Moore, 580 Main St. Tony Matulis, §9 Oak St. Hubert Vincent McHale, 395 Radzunas, 49 Church, 65 Seymour St. Naples, Ave. 80 Law- Stanley Adolf Matsen, 7 150 Jubilee 70 Talcott St. 78 John 142 Joan Valentine, Henry Dixon, 17 Spring 152 Hartford Av 467 Stanley Torane St. Perkins, 605 Tast Fred Fischer, 51 Woodland Addison Pierce, 101 Fitzsimmons, 39 387 George Leonard Zis 48 Woodland William B. Webber, 17 Main St. T.eon C. Lambert, 6 Jubilec St. Ralph H. Young, 359 Main Ferdinand T. Kotzbach, Main St. Louis Luffel LaRose, 325 Paul Krawl, 4 Short St. Joseph Alloysius Cosgrove, Main St. Frank Carl Glabau, First District Men. John Joseph Swingle, 406 Louis Siering, Osgood Ave. John Stanley Achenback, 80 Grove St, Joseph Somers, 45 Overlook Ave. Anthony Usas, 66 Orange St. David Louis Nair, 475 Arch St Frank Murzin, 216 Hizh St. Ernest Earl Redman, John Silkowski, 39 Beaver St. Andrew Ruvka, 178 Broad St. Metto Ciccololla, Myrtle St. Rernardo Panella, 407 Myrtle St. George F. Sarisky, 145 Tremont St. Arthur Taylor Elton, 21 Winthrop St. Floyd Smith, Kenneth Edgar throp St. Howard Gwynne Mitchell, son St. John Matthew Boleslaw Smokta, Harold Louis O'Meara, Irving John Fletcher, Main St. Pau| Siekewiz, 157 Broad St. Antonj Bialobziski, 140 Grove St. Howard Brown Stotts, 15 Pear] St. Boleslaus S. Kania, 11 Orange St. Roy Emil August Fabian, 406 Main st. Herman Steltner, 294 No. Alexander FEugene Bcaver t. Stanislaw Daniam, Harold Rudolph Winthrop St. Joscph Regan, 128 Glen St. Thomas Joseph Crowe, 46 Lincoln St Chester Butler, 164 Grove St. Péter Roman, 61 Grove St. Paul Bolk, 104 Grove St. Thure Bengston, 40 Main St. Henry Schupack, 75 Hawking St. Andrew Dahlberg, 113 Hart St. William Dawson Roche, 24 Crown Main St. 560 E. 96 Smalley St. 120 Commercial St. Relyea, 38 Win- Madi- mith, 152 High St. 59 Broad St. 258 High St 165 West Burritt. Fanion, 78 71 Grove St. Brumbaum, Concetto Catonzaro, 98 Washington 70 Frederick Kampl, Ava_ Joseph Samojedny, Salvatore Banasaro, Cesare Conti, 162 Wolcott St. Julian F. Locke, 29 South High St. Herman Ewald Schwarm, 66 Pros- pect St. 0 Francis Jozeiak, 130 Salvatore Coppola, t. T.eo Matthew Forsyth, 17 Crown James Novelle, 487 South Main Henry Bretschneider. 362 Arch Walter Swider, 517 No. Burritt Raymond Trotta, 90 Bassett St Sebastian Giliberto, 54 Beaver St. Adolf Yuknot, 33 Tinwood St Levie Bessoni, 118 La Salle St. Vincenzo (James) Plotino, ter St. Mariano Buccheri, Jr., Rockwe!l 196 High St 54 Beaver St Beaver St. 183 Washington s St. St 74 West Main Patrick Naple: Albin Sagan, 86 Silver St. Germano Bernardi, 202 Curtis St. Robert R. Merza, 76 Beaver St. Clarence Wellman, 430 No. Burritt 120 Beaver St. st. Andrew Tefft, 435 Jacob Borzedlo, Cosmo D'Avirro, Salvatore Gallo, Hjalmar P. L. St. Milton Allen Rollins Stanley A. Karpins Albin Makarewi Nick Paul, 450 Main St Hjalmar Nelson, 51 Prospect St Shavarsh J. Yessian, 242 Ave. Stanley Wojtusik, 115 John Griffin Heslin, Farminston Ave. 71 Grove St. 28 Booth St Washington Pl Paulson, 14 Smiti 33 Arch St. 62 Silver St. Beaver St. Silver 385 So. Main Francis A. Mulvihill, 54 So. High St. Clifford Amandus Odin, 2583 Kens- | ington Ave. 5! Gustave Herman Kosswig, 18 Fair- | yrtle St. 15 Ellis Edward Aplegren, 48 3M: Edwin Willlam Mitchell, st. Glusseppe Lauria, 53 Beaver St. Frank Prosperi, 411 Myrtle St. George Lawrence -Day, 60 Prospect Main | 364 Elm | (Gen- | Main | Main St. | Myrtle St. | West | 139 | st. | 518 96 Win- | Hartford | | sr. Joseph E. Richardson, 24 Monroe Fred Martin Hollfelder, 170 Arch | st. Arthur Heppenstall, Ferdinand Joseph 38 Main St. William Leary, 152 Main St. Paul J. Bartlewski, 110 North St. Paul Amenta, 178 Washington St. Frederick A. Firnhaber, land St. Stanley Hart, 324 Hart St Frank Moraley, 53 Beaver St. John Arute, 499 South Main St. Harold L. Ave, James A. Walsh, 46 Sexton St. John Kozlowsky, 115 Beaver Stephen Joseph Bugicl, 117 6 T.ake court. Boissonnault, St. Broad /st John F. Keevers, 193 North St. Frank Dzicek, 98 Grove Alexander Zumos, v st. John Mosciotra, $8 Cleveland St. Santo Fassina, 161 Washington Joseph P. Tynan, 27 Broad St. Joseph John Cronin, 676 North Main St. William J. Gothard wealth Ave. Irving McKinley shington 313 St. 114 Cleveland St. 25 Common- Schultz. Peterson, Williams, 130 | Hart St. John Joseph Kelly, 51 George Philip Ioot, Meadow Ave, Wilbur Howard Beaver St. Joseph kins St. Stanislaw Zyla, Bugene LEdward nut St. a Main St. Francis Gustave Larson, st. Thomas F. McCue, 246 Beaver St. Burt Oliver Jacobson, 27 W Court, Otto J. Kahl, 470 North John Vincent Moore, 1 Bernard O. Connelly ton St. Dayis more St. Waclaw ton St. Herbert F. Walnut St. 101 Shuttle 49 Goodison, Pillarsky, l.evy, 32 Haw- 17 Sullivan, Miller St. 70 Wal- Julius Elliason, South 60 Orange Burritt St. High St. Washing- Brewer Pittsinger, § Park- Smigrodzki, 192 Washing- 163 Bassett St. Armond Oliver Olson, §9 Brook St. John Czop, 167 Beaver Yousha Elisha, 355 Arch St. Alfred Gran, 296 Arch St. John Pyzow, 72 Grove St. Vincent Zaharzewski, 104 Johnson, Grove Jesse Moses Adams, 1 Sebastiano Cianei, 2 Main St. Washington Salvatore Carpintier, 417 Broad St. Bernard Donald Gaffney, 47 Vine Milton Berkowitz, 45 AIf Olson, 43 Black Rock Ave. Gustave Johning, 15 Locust St. Axel Waldemar Turnrose, 31 Lyon Hawkins St. Lauphere nett St. Ernest Rudolph Carlson, Acker Lawyer, Bar- 55 Curtis John Roda, Charles st John Gladyez 113 Orange St. ‘William Stephen Dudack, 133 F ver St Gabriel Kaminski, Frank W. Ave. Fred William Juengst, 182 Curtis St. Albert Larson, 15 Trinity 245 Shimbion, High St. 89 Rockwell Linwood | st Edwin John Ahlgren, 450 Main Joachim Jancewicz, &7 Gold St. Webster John Hansel, West Main St. Albert Dana Seeds, Iiobert TFranklin irook § Frederic Omer Rackliffe, 118 Lyons St 51 For: Prospect St. ythe, ' 201 Francis Morrisscy, Ave. Bertram Tlton. 58 Winthrop St. Glenn Ratcliffe, 165 West Main St. Howard Alfred Sievers, 61 Brook St. Lawrence Vincent Cremin, 41 Bas- sett St. in Har liam pect St. Ossian Sanford Bennett, st. tobert McCue, 16 Prospect St. Rudolph P. J. Lundell, 196 Steele St. Carl Theodore Anderson, 25 Wake- field Court. James Pizzuto. 161 Washington St. Salvatore Damico, 29 Locust St. Perley Arthur Hall, 70 Lake St. George Bernard Fournier, 270 High st. John Bredl, 519 Arch St Paul Lechovich, 40 Gold St Herbert George Bierlein, 623 St. Frank Main St. Giuseppe DiPietro Salvatore Calvo, Richard Harold R. Main St. Eimer Eustice Rock Ave. Frank L. ritt St. Leo Pold Paquette, Jr., land St. Clifton throp St. Roy Kilbourne, Joseph Milton Rock Ave. Anthony Herbert 65 Black Rock - Goodri McKinley Raymond St. 48 Pros. h, isher, 154 Lincoln Arch Devillo Clark, 267 South 126 High St. Myrtle St Birmingham, 40 Thomas, 172 Black Lawrence, 94 South Bur- 21 Emerson Strong, 15 Win- 239 Arch St. Marley, 7 Black Bosco, 5 Adolph Lafayette "Hofer, St. 766 Howard bia St. Adolph Gustave Olson, George Wesche, 60 Colum- 242 | St. Arthur Kingsley 1and St. Philip David Ross, 355 Arch St. Robhert Steven Chalmers, 223 Glen Mecker, 21 High- Wiadislaw Ave. Harold Raymond Houck 45 Bislewicz, 106 Rockwell Thomas James Meskill, lund St Raymond Morrls Frook St, Stanley Rock St, Frederick Joseph Abetz, coln Bt, old 145 Patterson, 239 Rodertek Dixon, 338 Lin- 'LAFOLLETTE CHARGE! 20 High- | Deming, Shuttle Meadow | | Senate Asked to Drop Complaint ' | the ' beginning to , hortation ! popular akefleld | | ‘unjust to the partment | other inspection of the steeple of the | necessa High- | | an { hundred members have gone Arch | | according Bassett | | remitted and Grand | Cleve- | 88 Rlack Peter Baba, 172 High St. John Abraham, 355 Arch St. Angelo Donofrio, 352 Arch St. Stanley Witar, 223 Beaver St. John Otfinowski, ¢ LaSalle Lane. Paul J. Richter, 27 Market St. CALLED FRIVOLOUS of Alleged Disloyalty Washington, June 6.—In a supple- mentary brief filed today with the senate privileges and elections com- mittee, counsel for Senator LaFollette brands charges growing out of the| senator's St, Paul speech as “frivol- | ous” and “much ado about nothing.” | The committee which is investigating | lovalty of statements credited to | the senator is asked to dismiss the | charge R Senator LaFollette's speech, from | an carnest ex- to his hearers to maintain | defend at all costs our constitu- tion and our institutions,” says the| brief. - “The speech asserts that we | are in the war lawfully and constitu- | tionally from which it follows that the war brings to all of us duties we must discharge. ‘The entire charge against Senator | I Follette is a case of ‘much ado ebout nothing.’ False press reports of what he said coupled with the misconception prevalent during the early days of the war as to what he or any other senator had right to say, has led to a hue and vy throughout the South, not more | senator than it has heen | irjurious to our cause in this war. end, is and RICHTER & CO. MEMBERS NEW 31" WEST MAIN STREET YORK STOCK EXCHANGE NEW BRITAIN, ; CONN. New Britain Machine Rights Bought and Sold GOODWIN BEACH & CO. Room 410 National Bank Building, E. F. Telephone £120. MCENROE, Manager, SCOVILLE MFG. CO. BOUGHT AND SOLD — (UOTATIONS FALL Thic clamor has convinced no man | that Senator IA Follette was a traitor. 1 I# has, however, aroused in the minds of millions, a suspicion that the ’\(~ tacks upon him originated in other | than patriotic motives. Fortunately, The Associated Press, perhaps the | worst offender so far as disseminating | false reports of this speech is con- | cerned, has, since the oral argument | of this case, made a retraction and | an apolo, | The message recently sent to Sen- | ator Pomere of Ohio, chairman of | thc¢ committee, by Frederick Roy Martin, assistant general manager of the Associated Pr admitting an error had been made in transmitting the speech is printed in the brief to | which the following comment is | mede: “I shall not stop to comment in this forum, although I expect to in an- other, upon this statcment of The As- sociated Press further than to say, like every other helated retraction, it can | never undo the harm that the original false publication has done, and, fur-| ther, that the claim that it first learned of this matter from my argu- ment before the committee is a mis- taken omne. Months ago, in action which, in connection with other at- torney 1 brought for Senator LaFol- lette for libel and conspiracy, this false report of The Associated Press was involved, and it must have kno\\’n; the facts fully at that time. More- | over, the next issue of Senator LaFol- | lette's magazine after his speech of | September asserted the falsity of the report of his speech. “The statement has, however, some | importance, T think, for the present| purposes of this committee in the lan- guage italicized in the statement. The substance of what Senator LaFollette said is approximately what The Asso- | ciated Press representative now says he understood him to say, to wit: “*We had a grievance hut it was nat sufficient to justify a declaration of war’ That was his opinion. Whether it was right or wrong, he was entitled to hold it and entitled to cxpress it."” SEDITIOUS REMAR ALLEGED Bristol, June 6.-—Federal today arrvested Theodore I.. Thomas, of 35 Burlington avenue, a dealer in second hand furniture, charging him with making remarks of a seditious nature in violation of the espionage law. While here the me officers took John Wagner, aged 55, who has a family and is a cigar maker, on the charge of failing to register as an enemy alien. He is a German. Roth men were taken by machine to Har ford for arraignment hefore Commis- sloner Car MAY REBUILD STEEPLE. Chief R. M. Dame of the fire de- and Building Tnspector Arthur N. Rutherford today made an- church, recently par- tially destroyved by fire resulting from a bolt of lightning. It is found that the inside structure of the steeple is materially weakened and it may be | to raze the entire section and erect a new one. The cost in such event would be between $12,000 $14,000, it is said. Sacred Heart and S IN SERVICE. More than six | into mil- | from the Connectcut aternal Order of Eazles, to the report of }‘Y‘E"lld(‘nl‘ Daniel J. O'Connor, of Bridgeport, made to the state convention today. The dues of these members have been each is insured for | $1,000. | i 600 EAGLES Stamford, June 6.- itary service Aeries of e ——————————————————— FOR CLASSIFICATION TOO LATE somewhere be- & Clark’s Reward if 6-6 "rlx\ LOST—A cameo pin, tween Landeys, Frary office and 45 Francis St. returned. Phone 74 WANTED—C ompetent girl for gener- al housework, Mrs. W. 8, Ro\vlnnd 291 Lincoln § Apply evenings Grove Hill 6-8- WANTED-—Roadster, first class con- dition, will pay cash. Address Her- ' Drop Begms Early and Gathers | Momentum During Dull Noon Wi E nominal changes, mainly upward, at | the opening of but tendencies. | point izers, gulf of marines, the preferred losing~2 1-2 points. lected but secondary New tions equi Motors, pin | uncertain feature, |ing directors later T som divi in Sug: tobacco operations rails led the general improvement noon. 99.7 ond 95. P stagnant ing and one on den & {o four points in marines, and sclling of the officers | 6 and Sales approximated 500,000 shares. N | tion members of the New York Stock Ex- change. Am Am Am Am | Am Am Am An- AT Baldwin I.oco & R Beth Butte Sup B B Cen Ches & Chino | Cni Col Con Cru | Dist Srie Gen Goo Gt Illin 94 to 96.16. Nor ~— o~ Financial La, Le N N N THROUGHOUT DAY, Pe So So all street—Leader made only { Un today stock market, v the list soon developed irregular Gains of fractions to a in equipments, tobaccos, fertil- industrial alcohol and Atlanti were balanced by the heavine: = U Va Investment rails were issues, including ! reflected a continuance pressure. Liberty bonds heBs Haven, ions from early high quota- ran from 1 to 11-2 points in pments, Mexican Petroleum, Gen. Tobacco products and ship- | Marine preferred was the most its irregularity g no hint of expected action by the in the day. | he strength of metaly offered | ('a o assurance respecting copper | the dends but the substational zains | A leather, Studebaker, American |I& ar, American Can and Sumatra were evidently due to pool U. §. Steel and low priced at 's sold at 99.66 to | 93.60 to 93.66, sec- 93.54 and 4%'s at in 19 Libert; 2 first 4's 4's 93.42 3 at to rice fell hack again during the noon hour, leaders, includ- U. s. Steel, Baldwin Locomotive | marine preferred reacting about point each. Coppers also dropped | announcement of reduced divi- ds, chino losing 1% points, LOSE.—Extreme reversals of one industrials | more active The close marked a last hour. heavy. Liberty 3 1-2's sold at to 99.72, first 4's at 93.60 to 6; second 4's at 93.42 to 93.60 the 4 1-4's at 95.94 to 96.20. tobacco: ew York Stock Exchange quota- s furnished by Richter & Co., Nev Nor } Norf | Ray Reading Rep I & § Utah The who 30 undertakin ck high (e % v N F ont Pac & nn R Cor Pac Ry 1s ion ited S Ste Car fu a mo o'c rlson. e Erw hiian rview a® was killed toreycle Interborough Interboro Kansas City Kennecott Cop Steel pfd s0 Val { Mex Petrol Natl T.ead & Hud Cons 1&HR & West W R Peoples Gas Pressed Steel ns Car. I studebaker Oil Pac IFruit Cop Rub Co el pfa Chm Westinghouse Willys Overland Vi aneral m K of Vi in ace this r rooms Services in chapel of Boston. cemeter: lock ombogian. aagan Kombo Hartford ident, was held norning from t of Erickson were conductad by Rev. Yel Interment w Stal n, Monday at he & at 1 in Have straight rows in the gardem vegetables tional on War Garden shelves. June 6, 1918. High Low Close 67% 6 79 441 Beet Suga:x Y Cr & Fa Co Can Loco & Smelting . Sugar - Tel & Tel Cop ...... S Fe Ry Co o Steel B Lea Ohio Cop Mil & & 1 Gas teel illers st Pl 1st pfd Elec " drich Rub Ore Cetfs ois Cen Inspiration { Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co. A STRONG, RELIABLE CORFORATION organized and qualified through years of efficient, trustworthy service, to act as Conservator, Guardian, Executor or Administrator. Capital $750,000. Surplus and Profits $1,000,000 Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co. M. H. WHAPLLS, Prés't; HARTFORD, CONN. and have long, straight rows of canned the pantry Send a two-cent stamp to the Na- Commission, Washington, for a tree canning and drying book. N

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