New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 13, 1919, Page 9

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD PENROSE ASSAILS HIGH WAR COSTS Hall of 0111171y Jlist Thrown Away, Pennsylvanian Says ernment was going to meet this and | other largely increased expenditures. “I cannot answer the question,” re- | plied Senator Penrose. ‘‘The whole situation is so chaotic and so charac- terized by lack of system that T am un- able to answer the senator's query un- less the majority party and those in control of the lend a helpir wasteful extravagance.” Extra Ofiices Created. The multiplication of government | offices and increase in the federal per- | sonnel to a degree hitherto unknown or undreamed of in the affairs of the United States government furnished tor Penrose h another topic criticism. New extra offices | have been crcated,” he said “I suppose they were nece 3 during the war, but we have only to g0 through and along the sides Ot i these great temporary buildings or g0 through the departments and see the number of employes crowding the corridors and encumbering the rooms | and in many cases actually hunting ] for something to do to realize the | present w This political congress | in the first session created 82,719 new offices $47 231RtoBnny | L:::” i requiring | $110.9 expenses, interposed | offices of Senator ard to the ag- | nt | o hand to check 135=Ch expendit a ation and s by Senator He charged of the v war had less appropriations His speech was a scorching excoria- tion of the business policy of the ad- ministration and was accepted in the senate as voicing the kevnote of the republicans on economies which will be urged and the closer scrutiny of government expenditures which mniust be practiced if the republican con- ress soon to come into being runs 1e to form Smoot in the Penrose's address in re; gregate appropriations by the pres ss Washi mec gton, Feb wastetul res d ainst the Wil- the democrat- Penrose (Pa that approx- sum appro- thrown ere laid n st been ste requiring and new to def a grand total requiring $159, of bills embodying the ap- by Senator Pen- Gore's bill for the oflice the of new 16, (Utah) course snator suggestions list propriations recited rose included Senator | $1.000,000 to suppr catt tick; | Senator Kenyén's $100,000,000 bill for public works to provide against | unemployment during the demobiliz bill appropriating abilize wheat control of in the Senator reviewed the the calen- senate. He devotin had now and the list, to each, whern sted there wer ens Y Penrose tor ordi list of ex on 1hrs had run caustic tor Smoot &t ng in addition which when pz $10,000,000,000 ATy the t comme: ouse rough Sena- pend- ctments ed would add another | to the expenditure of 'the government in the ensuing fis- cal year. Debt tion period and the 0,000,000 to s through government which is pending Of the Kenyon bill annual pric markets, house. Penrvose said: “This bill rts off with $100,000,- 000, and there is further provision for $800,000,000 more to provide for ad- vances, making $400,000,000 in all that under a plausible argument separated froga the public treasury. Calls Expense Needless. May Be $20,000,000,000. become law,'” he nation instead $10,000,000,000 in will have of having expendi- to meet to mest tures next year $20,000,000,000 “The country cannot do it. appropriates money bills which have been the Pennsylvania senator the will rise in its might and irive from public life every man who would approve of such propositions; ind I hope they will.” snator Smoot will heard in greater detail today the same lines as his interpretations of yester- It Con- | for all referred AR this opinion, is tent of unemployment is greatly exa | gerated. T understand from the report of the Department of Labor this week that there are some 0,000 or 300,- 000 men unemployed. That is a very small number in a count with nearly 11,000,000 wage earners.’ Senator Pen id the bills pend- ing in the Senate aggregate over $2,- 000,000,000 “I really think,” said ‘nator Penro “now that the war t is over, some auditing and accounting 1 e lump sums ought to be ob- { of the D tained hd that hereafter expendi- gress is $400,000,000 for what, in my neae \ needless purpose. The ex- to I country be along la Sc his review of the treasury government and economy in roundup. He paid pa to the deficiencies ates railroad admin- asserting there had been waste in that special war Ho referred to a pending ; esolution calling for $10,000,000 to le the Iroads to handle food products and the coal supply and said hat the preamble set forth that the ro had been unable to accomplish nator Pc profectc spared no b 3o school neral ttention the United & entless L gency nrose raid anch legislative in on of he ot d not under the whim of the auto- t of a bureau or of a Cabinet offi- ¢ or even of the President.” Senator Penrose spoke of aboiit $18,- 000,000,000 appropriations that The <aid he had not yet touched on and which had been asked for by ‘“some- body.” He spoke of bills in the House : for education of negro illiterates with i _ia $15,000,000 appropriation; a joint “A rather treasonable statement.” §eqolution asking $100,000,000 “to re- spmmentod Semator Penrose, “dn [Tt gl Ol ong wage entpera.” view of the many statements of self- | ypstner with an appropriation of $200- lorification and protestation uttered 000,000 to improve roads, and still an- Walker D. Hines and others, but | ceno " (" §100,000,000 to reclaim am ono of those who believe tho | S-ioh P s atiroads have reached a deplorable, | "~ ‘pemocratic Representative from andalous and inexpressible condl- | pepngylvania, he said, had offered a Hen Gf e o [ il in the Fouse for $,1000,000 Wors Glan Eolshovienl | with which to distibute war trophies. did not suppose, however, that | one was bold enough to state it in a joint resolution asking for $10,- 000,000. I say in all candor I think | Bolshevist government in Petro- | grad hove run the railroads | Letter than the representatives of the American people have run them in | { ‘I any Deep River, Feb. 13.—Ezra J. B. outhworth, a member of the general ssembly from Saybrook, two vears ago, died at his home here today, aged the last fourteen month i He was vice-president of Short- “If we undertook to estimate the | land Bros. Harbor Transportation Co. reason of this ineffective ad- | of New York and had spent the great: thinistration of the railroa 1d | er part of his life in New York other activities it would, in my opin- | fon, approximate a sum nearly equal to the whole cost of the war. *1 say that deliberately and ad- visedly. When we consider the pro- perty that has been destroyed or the lue that has been greatly curtailed reduced—I am not going to argue effects of it— 2,000,000,000 or $3 000,000,000, wiped off the ledger by | & prohibifon, millions of dollars wiped | off the by the destruction of stéamboat s and short line rail- roads that have been withdrawn from the transportation we see to. what extent ency’ has gone.” Senator Penrose deplored the de- yreclation of railway securities, which, 1id, had, by reason of inefficiency wastefulness of the administra- become hard fe inve ment for savings banks, with the re- sult that they had depreciated to an enormous extent in their et value, | and there had been unloading of them. the could Josses by GOVERNOR DISCLAIM! INTEREST IN SCHOOL BILL Hartford, Feb. 13. *ov. Marcus H. Holcomb disclaims any interest in the so-called “Morrison School Bill,” against which petitions have been re- ceived in the legislature bearing the signatures of hundreds of Waterbury "hool te | | | T books i 13.—Approxi- mately one-tenth of the population of the United States is composed of un- naturalized al according to Ra mond F. Crist, deputy comm of Naturallzation, who declared today that such a condition would not be permitted by any other country and appealed to American citizens to help in making citizens of alien residents. this LE? Two well dressed strangers arrived in this city today and carefully look- ed over the Stanley building on Main stree Although the object of their visit was not made known, it is the belief in real estate circles that an- other big operty deal may be made in the nea Three Billions Wasted, Then 8enat Penrose summed v the general schedule of wastefulness, saying the agg appropriations in asures whict named in 1 were approximately $3,000,000,000, | 1d to this there must be added the ss in the operation of the roads and nsportation systems, which meant £800,000,000 more, and the expense zat which would total extravs than ha rexenues of the ensuing fiscal ve: der the z revenue Of unnecessary, ill-ad up egat o he T GUILTY OF MURDER. New Haven, Feb 13.—Guilty ot der in the second degree was tho ict returned by a jury in superior this afternoon in the case of Annie F. Monahan, charged with the murder of her third husband, Joha P. Monahan Judge Webb im- mediately ntenced her ta life im- m ver demobili 500,000,000 n, The more cour Mr: were un- pendir b prisonment. tion, there are appropriation up ,049,000,000," Added around here total § Senator to nounts \ere in the senate this 0,000,000,000 actualls senators and representa- solemn countenance and frequently it CORN PRICES JUMP. Feb. 13 —Big upw: in the price of corn today the market than 8 bushel some ¢ above 1 Uneasiness over Uneasiness ov lopments together with domestic crop h to do with the advaace. Penrose oat would asked tives the more 15 seale. with Tues carnest deme n support- large matic favorable had mu scale, s for $10- most tion enormous expen : re 000,000,000 th casual r by lo g around the endars of the house and Every departm report contemp squandering money somewhere. | Senatc Jones (Wash.) suggested tha, the “bluff” navy program involves ' ment. The party, Including seve the expenditure of almost $1,000,000- | majors, 19 captains and 26 leute 000. He wanted to know how the gov- . ants will sail from San Francisco. is pic up in SENT TO SER shington, Feb signing 52 medical officers for with the American forces in Siber Wwere issued today by the war depa BIA. St 13.—Orders ntal tes ecutive departments this is | egards the lack of employment tures be made under authority of law | cents a diplo- dipli- un- conditions as- duty |FIND DEAD BDY OF FORMER LOCAL WA John Brennan Drowned in Conn. River—Well Known Here for was the 10 The of John Brenn of Hartford many yearsa resident of this city found in the Connecticut r foot of State street Hartford o'clock yesterday afternoon discovery was made by employves the Hartford & New York Transpor- tation company and the body was lo- cated under a two-inch coating of It was necessary to break the ice b fore the body could be brought to the sh Just when the drowning oc- curred is not known. Brennan seen alive Sunday, and there is a lief that the accident may have cutred that evening. Brennan was a native of Ireland, coming to this country over 30 vears ago. He w: a b worker by trade, d at intervals was employed at the Landers, Frary & Clark com- pany and the P. J. Flannery com- pany in this city, the Pratt & Whit- ney company and the Pratt & Cady company. In the last concern he was an employe over twenty years at dif- ferent times. He was a member of the Pratt & Cady Mutual Benefit as- sociation. About a week ago, plained to friends of poor heaith and the symptoms indicated influenza. He had been living with friends in West Hartford, but recently he moved to Hartford where he resided on Put- nam street. It is believed that he was sltting on a pile of timber near the docks, as he had often done be- fore and in some manner he slipped and fell into the water. His only surviving rvelatives are two neplhews and a niece who reside in New York. Edward Walsh of Kensington avenue is a cousin of the deccased. J. M. Curtin company were notified of the death and when John Curtin of the concern went to Hart- ford to get the body, he was informed that it was to remain at the under- taking establishment of J. J. & F Ahearn pending the arrival of the relatives from New York. at oo Brennan com- LABOR COMMISSION REAGHES AGREEMENT (Co 0) maxi- in fac- always regulat- of the night work by, women, and a mum eight hour working day tories where the furnaces are lighted, together with law ing hygiene and the safety workers. 26TH DIVISION HAS MANY WESTERNERS Replacements in Famous Fighting Unit Are Very Numecrous Because of Casualties. The Twenty-sixth (Yankee) divi- sion, which was one of the four pic neer American divisions to stem tho Hun tide in France, will no longer be recognized as a New England div sion when it returns, Captain Gearge W. Hosmer of Company K of the 104th regiment states. He said that the Twenty been thinned out by the decimating fire of the campaigns that it went through just as the tide of battie v turning and that it had been filled with soldiers from all parts of tho country He said that the paradec planned for the Yankee division will entertain far more western men tha w Englanders. He of the general war department the New England division placed with troops from the other sections of the country in preference to those from the Seventy-sixth divi- sion, as the boys had expected. The government did not wish to build up units representing specific lacaiitie and thanks to that policy and the de- structive fights the men went through he said t Twenty-sixth was no longer a Yankee outfi MONROEil;fRSfiS "HOME Local Boy Started as an Enlisted Man th had polic was re- and Worked Way to Commission— May Return to France. Lieutenant Monroe Parsons of West Main street returned to his home last evening after having served 19 months overseas. He was chosen by the peace commission as an envoy to carry official dispatches from the other side to the authorities in this country and having complected work is now mustered out. Licut. Parsons went over with the first U. Army Hospital corps from this coun' try. It was organized from the sta of the Roosevelt hospital in New York and was known as Base Hospl- tal No. He was commissioned some time ago, though he saw much service In the role of an enlisted man Ho speaks of meeting and chum- ming with Lieutenant Rodman Cham- berlain of this clty and with Gardner Weld, also from New Britain, Both of these have been wounded but neither permanently injured. Ho met other New Britain boys and spoke of the enviable . peputation which Companies 13 and I from this city had bullt up in the fighting over there, Lieutenant Parsons hns under con- sideration a plan to roturn to Parls for work at the pence table but has taken no definite actlon as yet In common with the rest of those have seen wervica he expresses | pleasure at returning to this oity. his said that as part I | Dr. 8. G. Ohman AIM FOR 1 [ BY WAY ( Prof. Ralph Dennis Gives‘, Yiews on Bolsheviki centra sseribed Dennis, of Members 1 today cab! by net in Ruse Prof. Northwestern uni=: testifving at the senate com- into as mittee’s inqui in -this country, who truly believed best way bring earth. “But their to way to ‘Wolcott of Delaware. Mr. Dennis, who v worker and consular from the tember, pathy sian ir Reds, but to use the other. The Bolsheviki he added, believed tified the means 1id, might be “If you are out. If you work kill you.” Mr. Dennis said he expre not a “each throughout lawles “fairly theirs about heaven G4 ey ol agent group hat the Their 2d: >lshevik 1 vinst us, Wwas img that men in positions of power the Bolsheviki were Russian Jews whe America for a few y “These men,” he most bitter an bourgeoise class. Chairman Overman asked: know of any effort to bring that pro- into this country paganda “I could prove it,” after going to there is no question to bring about ernment in America.’ He described a Chicago Coliseum wt cheered the names Trotzky for five mi comment by speake; that America would nation to adopt the government. The wi he saw no difference W. W. and the Bol not go rpelied the meetings that scheme meeting a great had liv, to ears. aid, into court witness, in the of about ir here of nutes rs to be an Lenine and the the Soviet syst tne 1ddec between sheviki in end they seek to achieve.” —_— DEATHS AND Mrs. The funer was held yes late home, Rev Rev, Steinho was in the Fairview c offerings were numer ful, among them and narcissus, Mr. a son, Mrs. Holbrook brook; carnations an and Mrs. Boyington: and Mr ‘Tuttle; Marcia J 1 of Mr cia be daffod Mr sweet peas, Mr. and drew roges, Morto family, Bridgeport; ville r tives; and Mrs. A, G. “Grandma Meriden. ez Judd, Miss Joseph H The funera as killed at of w the Monday night, was he = pillow Joseph end theory, i3 ore: ed “were dimplacable Bolshe- viki in their desire to exterminate the agitation hle men was heaven the on cems to be through hell,”” commented Senator C. A, in Russia fall of 1917 until last Sep- said there was no real between Germans and the Rus- was try sym- Russia, jus- he get we will >d mong ctent in the Do you and but Chicago desire g 1 n em i the ov- the audience | and | every | effect | ext of | that 1 the FUNERALS J. Baker. Marcia J. ting. Inte semetery. rous and ing nd Mrs, and Miss a nareis Mr: n F. arna : g o Juda Merlden; Florence uck. Huck, ailvoad st 1d us, carnations, Arthur Tuttle and Kenneth | Ra Luke Tuttle; | Reading An= and | tions, Terr: “Mother,” Ba m H ros; Jug w er erday afternoon from her | Lyman S. Johnson rd t Floral beauti- | N Y C & Hudson Carnations Thomp- | ol- | Mr. Mr. | Mr. o8, ad, ho tion sterday aft- ernoon from St. Matthew's German Lutheran church were conducted at 2: Steege. The church se 30 by Rev ic ces T pastor of the church, and in- terment was in the Fairview cemetery and T bearers n, Jul liam Miller pall red Hoff Litke, W Neubauer. were Fdmund s Pfieffer, Gustave Michael and ¥ The body brought for burial morning in former resident George A. of Geo be to this ci Holliston, of this Smith. | Smith will | fternoon | Mr. Smith died Wednesday v this He anc Mas: city i i will | today be buried in the plot with other mem- of cemetery. bers his family Ruth services conducte: Br Funeral Brink were fternoon fram her late home on Mi Brink di ifternoc cit pastc treet. city Tue was sent to this chu in Lutheran b ish interment The Philip Kallgren, Theodore Landgren and Malcolm Fe Bengston. F Ju Julins Re Rev. Dr. G. Ohr at Maurice the T ink. for d M ed in on and vester New her ay Bt officiatec R Ya irview 1th 30 this A 1 ork body R 1 of the Swed-| s and irview cemecter 1dde Harry nd. The Kronholn rdin. man officiat n s were Willard Oquist Landgrea Robert flo; on at . the funeral of Julius Rodin this after- this | | | i 1 was who | noon in Stanle: interment tery vices were Quarter followed it held at his il 1 o'cloc Fairview Antoinette Lanza, The funeral held this was in the new SHOVEL DOLLARS Antoinette 1d INTO a me na ceme- Lar bur hza rial FURNACE LIKE COAL. Philadelphia, Pa., F ng men shove to a fire with shovel ordir a furnace and piles o and bullion $400,000,000 w g the coin than silver 'eb. 13.—Pe dolls same kind f gold ere D TS of ir- in- a v used to put coal into | * and silver amounting to more i some of the | unusual things seen at the Philadel- phia Mint by the government's Assay Commission, which today began to test the coins made at t last year The to bullion, he veral mi nts specimens of 538,160,486 coins made in 1918, rate rary res in the strong. shares. New Yo tions furnisl members of change. | Am Beet Sugar ., Alaska Gold .. 3 Am- Agri Chem ..101 ' Am Car & Fdy Co 891 Am Ice 41% Am Can 45% Am Loco 61 Am Smelt ... 65% Am Sugar ekl AmBITOR I NS 20040 Am Tel & Tel ...101% Anaconda Cop 5814 AT S Fe Ry Co.. 91 Baldwin Loco 72% B & O 4615 BERET E | Beth Steel Can Pac Cen Leather Ches & Ohio | Chino Cop S Y Chi Mil & St Paul 37 Col FF & I Cons Gas Crucible Distillers Erio | | | | 91 23% 611, 59% 55 i i 1st pfd Gen Elec . odrich Rub | Great Nor ptd | Gt Nor Ore Cet | Inspiration | Interboro | Interboro pfd | Kennec Copper | Lack Steel Lehigh Valley Max Motor com Mex Petrolenm National L. Nev Cons YNH&HRR Northern Pac Penn R R Pressed Steel Car Cons 285 90 14 783 739 914 67% 533 .191% L1283 165 69 7614 913 521 41% 2534 Rep I & S com outhern Pac . Southern Ry ..... outhern Ry pfd .. Studebaker ... Texas Oil | Tnion Pac ... TUnited Fruit Utah Copper | U S Rubber | 17 8 Steel | va car Chem Westinghouse Willys Overland NH STO~CK DECLINES | | Railrond Securities Drop Three Points On Report That FLimited Receiver Ias Been Asked. New York, Feb. 13.—Stock of the | New Haven railroad broke three points | Wall application had been made receivership for the road before Federal Judge Knox in cénnec- tion with a long pending suit to re- cover $150,000,000 in behalf of certain stockholders. The petition for a receivership was filed in the fedcral district court here by Harold Norris and others, with the support and approval of a pro | tective committee Tepresenting 1,738 ockholders in said defendant com- ] holding 51,519 of stocks. Hearing on the application was set for February 21 upon announcement in ra li LOCATE SOLDIER SONS The Se Red has just of the hall, . regarding the Home vice section Cross, with offices in City received not | best way to secure information con- oldiers of the Forces who in some cerning the welfare of American Expeditionary have not heen heard from time. Families who have not heard soldlers for three months or the office in City hall > ill be provided with forms to be filled out for making these welfare inquiries. Assistance will be given in filling out such forms b members of the Home Service depart- ment. Information concerning and casual annot also be by this new form, but shall be heretofore secured VRMY OF 500,000. Paris, Feb. 13—The United States under the society of nations plan as it now has been amended will main- | tain an men which, | such action b; fter authorization of the United States sen- according to a Havas Agency aft- nouncement today regarding newly | adopted features of the plan. | | | | . |§ American Hardware ders, ry -&=Clark Stanley American Chain Co. i { Lai Fra M. C. A, NOTES, Stanley Works Foremen Will Get-Together Meeting. e Have Youths' $2.25 Gun Metal Bluchers | $1.75. Damon’s Shoe Sale.—advt. A “get-togethe Miss Marjorie Ogden, John Ogden ! @ssistant foreme; and George Braithwalte of New Lon- | the Stanley Works will be held in th4 don, were the guests Tuesday and ' Y. M. C. A. this evening. The affaif Wednesday of Miss Gertrude Hine of | will be conducted along the same lines Hillside place. | as the factory nights of the past, bu A son was bhorn at the New Britain| Will be for the department heads only. General hospital today to Mr. ang There are about 200 who come unde: Mrs. Joha Barbour of Southington. |the three headings mentioned, and Mr. and Mrs. Otto Froeoich of these have been supplied with invita. Plainville are rejaicing over the birth tions for the social. B. J. Lewis and of a son today at the New Britain John Fellowes are the committee o General hospital. | arrangements, Spring pumps at| A reception will be held in the Y Long's.—Advt. | M. C. A from 6 to 6:30 and at tha Mrs. W. Marcinzyk of 59 Broaa time supper will be served. Following street has complained to the police the Supper, the foremen will adjaur that her byear-old san was knocked 'O the gymnasium and athletic games down today by a boy named Koloday Will be played. The foremen will who was riding a bicycle on the side- Siven the use .of all the rooms walk. When she spoke to the Ko-|the “Y” for the evening. lodny boy he became impertinent, she | el says. The police will Investigate the, UNIVERSAL case, | The first enter Card tournament at Moose rooms, by the Univ tonight.—adv Landers, Frary A warrantee deed filed in the office be presented tomorrow night of the city clerk shows the sale of land ~Y. W. C on Hungerford on Lawlor street by John O'Brien to The members of the club w Thoqualolcaiiise! the entertainment have Dpe A meeting of the City Guard will be tising faithfully for the p held this evealng and several appli- 204 suroliol e good PTOSTIUE cants will be voted into the ranks. A Lhe Program also promises to be a basketball game hetween the guards SUrPrise to all and the members of and a picked team will be played the club are anxiously waiting to see WA,N,TNEW ST]\XTE | what the big surprise of the eveaing ! will be. TFhere are eight numbers oni New York of the foremen, and office heads o and oxfords CLUB PROGRAM. ainment to 1l club, a soc & Clark's f in cour 10 a st w | the program, including a small play- let. The talent for the show has beem chosen from members only. The even is not for the public but merely fo the members of the Universal club Request for Split Since State Voted . and their immediate friends. { for Prohibition | i MAY Albany, N, Y., Feb. 13.—The third | = bill to create a new state to be intro- | Society of Nations Expected to Reach | duced in the New York legislature | Final Adjustment. since the state ratified the federal pro- | hibition amendment made its appear- | ance today. It would comprise 33 counties of New York and the states of New Jersey and Connecticut, neither of which has ratified. The new state would be named New York. The counties would include Greater New York and those from a line formed by Rockland, Orange, Sullivan, Delaware, Otsego, Herkimer and St. Lawrenc counties eastward to the state line. The measure was intro- duced by mblyman John Fairfax | McLoughlin, of the Bronx, a democrat. | The first new state bill sought 10" make a new state out of Greater Now York only. The second would include the proposed new commonwealth, the counties in the New York watershed, besides those comprising the greater city. Legislature Gets Third Amendment. ND WORK TODAY. Paris, Feb. 13.—The commission on the society of nations resumed its ses- | sions at 10:30 o’clock this morning with a full attendance of the members to receive the report of the drafting committee. It was hoped to reach a final adjustment at today’s sitting. If this hope is realized it may be ble to submit the plan to a ple on of the peace conference po! nary ses on F “Spot Cash For Paid or Partly Paid | | i { i | | | | | | wounds | secured | my of not less than 500,000 | stiver dollars are being reduced | ate could be used wherever necessary | The commission is testing | ahe | | NO SALE YET. | It was learned today from authen- tic source that the proposed sale of the Kecney theater on Main has not taken place as vet, LIBERTY 15 HURT IN WRECK. coaches of the Pittsburgh-Buffalo ex- \ miles south of here. The cause of tho STAMPS serious hurt. 166 MAIN STREET BONDS anklin, Pa., Feb. 13.—Forty-five| persons were injured when four! WAR gAVI NGS press, north-bound on the Penasylva-! nia, were derailed at St. George, 20 accident was undetermined. Railroad SECURITY INVESTMENT officials said none of the injured was - COMPANY Room 9 Over Modern Boot street. Shop, Open Evenings Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co. A STRONG, RELIABLE CORFORATION organized and qualified through years of efficient, trustworthy service, to act as Conservator, Guardian, Lxecutor or Administrator. Capital $750,000. Surplus and Profits $1,000,000 Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co. HARTFORD, CON M. H. WHAPL | 1 Pres't. { {

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