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IR MIDWINTER SALE WHAT 15 || YHER A \ | PERsON GETS FoR NOTHING THAT 1s A In your effort to make your money supply you with all of the comforts and some of the luxuries of life never make the mistake of thinking that any merchant is going to make you a present of any of the clothes you wear. He will make a profit on his sales or close up shop. We make small profits on every salec—but we make a lot of ’em. All Our Overcoats marked down. | | | The Farrell | Clothing Co. 271 MAIN ST. AM ELECTS Court Friendly Group Will Install Thursday—Prof. Wells to Exhibit DEGREE | The degree team of Court Friendly, F. of A, has chosen the 1ollowing offic President, K. H. Holleran; vice president, Willam Beckman; re- apording secretary, Joseph A. Claffey; | Iinancial secretary and treasurer, John F. Burns. The officers will I'e‘ installed Thursday evening under the | direction of Captain Jack Kiley. | Daniel Sullivan, J. W. Manning, | James Sheridan and Jack Kiley will entertain with vocal solos. Prof. Charles Wells will repeat the enter- tainment which he so ably presented Tuesday evening's smoker. Prof. | Yells is a local magician and sleight- of-hand artist. Following the en- tertainment a Dutch ypper will be served. The committee in charge is: Jack Kile: H. Beckman, Thomas Gorman, Joseph Bennis, H. Ellsworth, J. W. Manning and Georg Glossup. » SENTENCED 10 DEATH Who | | | | | | Murdered Be Brooklyn Negro Housemaid Last Month Will Executed in February. New York, Jan. 9.—When Frank J. Kelly, convicted mnegro murderer of Catherine Dunn, who was slain in ooklyn on December 20, was called Defore the bar today to be sentenced to “death, his council asked for one day’s delay. He explained to the court that Kelly was superstitious and | was convinced that if he was sen- ténced on Friday there would be no hope for him in an appeal. The plea denied, however, and the week of° February 16 was set for his| | # execution. “Kelly did not give the Dunn gi a ¢hance as td when she should die,’ declared District Attorney Lewis in opposing 2 postponement. Emma Robinson, the negress who was indicted with Kelly for first de- gree murder as an accomplice, will| p§ placed on trial next Monday. NO STING INDEATH | The Says He's Been obbed So i)l'lcn": | Shooting Doesn't Matter: He Loses | ~sAgain, Though. | Chicago, Jan. 9.—When six bandits. | with revolvers drawn, rushed into ths | jewelry store of Otto Nerad today and | commanded him to open the Nerad refused, saying: i “Go ahead and shoot. l've be robbed so often and lost mucl money that I had just as soon you would.” ! ®$Whereupon Nerad was felled with a blow and, with two clerks, w herded into a rear room. The ba dits crammed jewelry valued at $10,000 into canvas bags and fled. A= Nerad raced into the shouting an alarm one of the bandits leaned out of the fleeing automobile and shot hjm in the shoulder. Fearing that fie would be shot a second time, he feigned death until the was out | of sight. afe. so street car | HERE. ; PRIZE COMES ew Britain Camcra Club Takes | Second Place in National Contest. | In March, 1919, the Newark (N. J.) | ~gpera Club, 1 announced o com- | al | ‘ftition on lantern between | camera clubs of Ame and offered | ag prizes a sterling silver and a bronz medallion. A minimum of slides was necessary to constitute a set and | slides had to be submitted for judging nat later than November 1, 191 The New Britain Camera club enfer- this competition and has been arded the second prize, a bronze medallion. Slides were judged by three capable men on three factors, tion, int ind technique st Tel. 1625-2 Any Hour, Day or Night. TARRANT & HAFFEY UNDERTAKERS A8 MYRTLE St., East End Office, ) Jubilee St., Tel. 1451-2, i Lady Attendant—Free Orders Taken for se of Chapel. | Upbholstering. | FUNERAL DIRECTORS Andrews & Doolittle, Inc. | 5 THE FUNERAL HOME gicc and Parlors 15 Walnut Street. | Telephone. _‘ is that xtent. | an the pope in Rome after adhere to the Anglo-French solution of the Turkish qu examined at Rome by the council of ministers. tion the Italians are said that Jugo-Slavs. be arranged coming confererice at Paris. 15 YEAR OLD GIRL Parents Kept Her Shut were no and was rescued yesterday by agents | of the society for the | cruelty servation in the p | the | youngster s [ appeared | volvead | WA SEARCH FOR PLAN T0 EXPEL TURKS Supreme Council Abandons Hope for U. S. Mandate e Having United Washington, Jan. hope that induced Turkqy, abandoned the accept a Allied ites could be 1o mandate the powers are in correspondence with a view to finding some solution of the problem of expelling the Turks from over Kurope without causing such an up- rising among the Mohammedan peo- ples as would endanger the control of the European nations over them. Information reaching Washington these efforts are in DProgress outside of Paris where the supreme council is sitting, though it is e pected thai the ratification of that body will be required to give effect to any plans adopted. Reports from India, Egypt and oth- er cauntries where the Mohammedans are numerous of a general objection to expulsion of the Turk from Europe and insistence upon the retention of the head of their church in Constanti- under threats of boycotts of Christian business and trade and even actual warfare have stimulated en- deavors of the Entente foreign offices to find some plan which will satisfy the Mohammedans and at the same time free Censtantinople from Turk maladministration. One such project which it is learned has been brought into di ion as promising to afford a basis for action, contemplates the assumption of the control of Constantinople by the lea- zue of nations: the declaration of the city as a free port and the actual ad- “Thine Is the Glory” Tribute to Red Cross = e e e ) p FINANCIAL \WALL STREET STOCK The portraits of more than one thousand Red workers were fused into one “mother” face, F. Luis Mora, York artist, he painted “Thine Is the Glory,” the $22,- 000 canvas “Idealized Ameri- Cross Wall Street. 10:30 a. m.—The ir- regular range of prices at the listless opening of today’s stock market con- tinued to express the mixed views of traders. Several of the high priced oils were strong, while those of less prominence recorded moderate reac- tons. The same uncertain course was | followed by motors and accessories. "L}; S. Rubber was slightly lower at N o “‘2 allljtsletqhut sooen tstr‘en?‘th:ned on < cent sto ivi . here reproduced. ; ldeclar\:d vesterday Steel: .;nd“a)t;i:xz;fi 7This painting is!ments moved within a limited range to be presented by | and rails were only occasionally quot- war depart- | ©% o e nr.\t%un?l‘he few unimportant gains L R e | O BT half hur were forfleited O vasnington, as | WHen pressure against leaders be- recogmition. amd (3me more insistent. TU. S. Rubber T omaltion of °acted 2 points, motors and related the Service given L5295 1 to 5, oils 1 to 4 and steels, by Red Cross Cduipments, tobaccos and leathers 1 | e s Bod Aside from tentative buying or | O mersin the \1.):] specialties anl} utilities, notably | World war. . Industrial Alcohol, Columbia Gas and Luis Mora is an 1hiladelphia Co. the market drifted artist of Soutn 1l¥ and mostly downward for the e ance of the forenoon. The 6 per Stenn f-u;i:‘npcnl)nn rate for call money AL s !1!!”:‘4 to effect more than feeble | lustrator as well as 5% e Wall Street Close for almost ten Sl¢¢ls made further improvement in venrs has taught the final hour regardless of the 9 per T the New TYork ©C¢nt call money rate, but other issucs i Bt were not changed. The closing was irrcgular. Sales approximated 750,- 000 shares. i New when the Equipments and New York Stock fixchange quota- ministration of the place by a com- mission nominated by the Mohammed- an populations ef countries and ctlo- nies, such as India, Egypt, Tunish, Morocco and possibly the Malays of the Philippines if the United States can be induced {o participate to that It proposed to clothe this committee with full powers to control Constantinople politically and to ad- minister the local government. But to satisfy the Mohammedans the sultan and his suite would be permitted to reside there and to exercise from there the functions of the head of his church. His position would therefore in some measure correspond to that of he had been divested of his temparal powers. Turin, Jan. 9 . (Havas)—Ttaly Bolsheviks Capture City of Novocher Kassk London. Jan. 8.—Bokhara, capital of the important Khanate of Bokhara | in central Asia, and less than 200 | miles from the Afghanistan frontier. | has been entered by Bolshevik forces according to war office reports. Iur ther west Soviet troops have occupied ! Krasnovodsk, on the eastern shore of the Caspian sea. it is claimed in rc ports from Moscow. Direct railway communication tween Trans-Caspia und eastern Iius sia has been secured in Turkestan with a view to carrying out possibly far-reaching plans westward toward | the Caucasus region and southward toward Persia and Afghanistan, it is said. Bolshevik authorities have an- nounced their intention to penetrate Persia by way of Khorassan as soon as they could secure control of the Caspian sea and recent reports have indicated that Soviet garrisons along the Khorassan frontier had been heavily reinforced. The Bolshevik have as their ul- terior purpose attacks against the British and plan movements in the di- rection of India in conjunction with the Afghans and other people who might be influenced by pan-Islamic as- piration it is asserteg. 3+ § i i be- will ion, according to received here. that reports of the con- in London by Premiers have been | said ference held tti and Lloyvd George ' In a settlment of the Adriatic que: to desire negotiations with. the through the direet A CHARGE U. S. CUSTOMS IS DEMORALIZED WITH MIND OF CHILD Up in Her _Room Since Birth: Protest Her for Employes Responsible | on Removal. Loy : : for Fallir n Efficiency of _New York. Jan. 9.—Rural more astounded at the won lers of New York today than Harriet a 15 year old girl who has lived tourists ervice, Is Report. Xew Yo Jan. 9.—Demoralization the heart of the city since birth. | ©f the TUnited States Custom service child had been kept a prisoner | through inadequate compensation for | all her life by her parents in an up- | many of its émployes is charged in room of a Brooklyn tenement, | @ resolution adopted by the board ot | directors of the Merchants’ associa- tion which was sent to members congress today. Congressmen urged to take action immediately increase the salaries of custom offi- | cials. The compensation now paid to these officials is based on a W andard established 30 or ago, it was declared. UP TO CONGRESS Air Mail Service in er ot of | ot“ prevention to ,children, with the aid the police. Her mother was placed under ol vcehopathie elinic of Bellevue hospital. The father said that their first child died, be- fore Harriet was born, the mother had “acted queerl After Harriet was born her mother would never permit her out of sight, he said. He w heartbroken at having the child taken away. telatives of the child’'s parents a| few days ago carried to police author- | | | | | | Development of | i 3 2 This Country Depends on Attitude ities news that the little girl was being Kkept prisoner and that all ad- mittance to the one room in which the family lived was refused. Police women were sent to investigate. Two attempts to admission to the one room apartment- failed. Then Thomas A. Burns of society for pre- vention of crueity to children forced an entrance and found the frightened huddled in the corner. The three “R’s” are complete m teries to the little girl. She had no knowledge of simple addition and subtraction; was unable to repeat the alphabet, and took childish pride in ability to spell two words, dog and cat. | of Lawmakers. Omaha, Jan. 9.—Development of the air mail service depends on the atti- tude of congre Otto Praeger, assist- ant postmaster general, said in an ad- dress at Chamber of .Commerce field upon the arrival of the first plane in the new Chicago-Omaha service terday. e “Unless Congress changes its atti- tude this is likely to be not only the end of the planned transcontinental air mail route but the finish of the air mail service itself,” Mr. Praeger said. ; ADVOCATES KINDNESS Krupp Workers Resent | , = Politics in Bulletins | Korean Leader Says Japan Should His nd sain ves- Berlin, Jan. S.-—Because recent K rupp bulletin - contained political matter 600 workers at tire Krupp plant | Treat 1t Essen held a demonstration be- fore the headquarters of the directo- ’ rate yesterds To a committee the directors promised that in future po- litical oponions would not appear in the bulletins but declared that what was not o the a Understand People Treat Them Benevolently. diree- of Tokio. Jan. 9.—Dr. Aizuno, tor of administrative affairs Korean government-general. told the kai party the other day that regard the Koreans as uncivilized and 1l people and merely brinx ! pressure upon them such tor | ministrative purposes was by imely policy adapted to th: of affai It importance. he to treat thc Koreans with kindness and lence and suide them (o progr development. But as to the independence ment advocited and section of Ioreans, such intrigue must decisive measures. the adverse ignor: ws a no workmen While the discussion was going on crowd waiting outside became in- in melee with guards, the dting in the disarming of i 10 the destruction the means existing vital o a state was fight aid. uardsmen i he | — e — == TCO LATE re z benevo- t to s and FOR CLASSIFICATION NTED—Gir] for general house- work. Apply 26 Hamilton street, to AMirs, 8. Jones. 1-9-3dx move- carried by a he declared that be suppressed by, on i L. BIDDING FOR FIGHT Seven Cities Ask for Leonard-Dundc Match New Haven. New made hav Yo e hetween lightweight Dundee, was to have been held at week Joh Conn. ing to an announcement at headquarters Promoters in New Orleans, dence, Boston, Canton, O., Milwaukee, Jer in offers for chief of police cided it Connecticut sch nny a Cit, W eduled cision. Get New SOCIALISTS PREPARE RReady Defense, New ment.in the plans indicated toda, the par Alb; ishi made committee at the capitol next Wednes. day throughout the city was planned to ap= support instatement. At the pea tair for the socialist ed cva Uni Yo seats ty susp any. ¥ to I befo Al 1 for I s New that t1 | the suspended ied to the supreme court of the States if nece CITY ITEMS = ted Barrow open Monday in Holyoke playing with the stock company ther na. Cogan stock company at Lowell Oper: Special Sale Boy at Besse-Leland’s—advt. English Pastor Belicves Men “Think” A come Anarchists, Syracuse, likely to follow bition, according Campbell Mors ster chapel. Sy with trouble by the End if England ever enacts it, he de- | “Whenever a great country banishe: tro revolution. he begins to thinlk. ing pened line abo her Commenting Cnited will be wonderful when the country is ent wil T b the arr nnounced. o in | Fairy Euge ope PREDICTS REVOLUTION Vhen acuse, red fro ong dri; in - has lished - East ¥ St Iy d 1 be 1 down."” I)ea{h: d;ld /F;urnheral; "he fun held 11:26 ival of Trinity charge W York Work occurred tlons furnished by Richter & Co., members of the New York stock Exchange: Jun. 9. Low 1920 Allis-Chalmers . . Am Beet Sugar Am Can s Am Car & Fdy Am Loco ... Am Smelt & Ref Am Sug Ref com Am Sumat Tob Am Tel & Am Woolen} Cancelled by Police in rk. Jan. Y.--Seven cities bids for the titular bout Benny Leonard, world’'s boxing champion. and challenger, which EXCHANGE REPORTS New Haven, tonight, accord- Leonard’s Anacon Copper Ateh Top &S 1 At Gulf & West 1 Baldwin Loco Beth Steel B sent ] B RT A the contest when the | Canadian Pac of New Haven de- ji’ent Leath ould be in violation of the | Ghi Mil & St P ... state law because it w Chi Rock 1sl & P for rounds to de- | Chile Copper Chino Copper Col F & I Cons Gas Corn Prod Ref Crucible Steel Cuba Cane Sngar ndicott-Johnson Gaston W & W Gen Motor: > Goodrich (13 I7) Gt Nor pfd Ins Copper Interboro prd Int Mer Mar Int Mer Mar pfd Int Nickel Int Paper S Kelly Springfield Kennec Copper lack Stecl 5 Lehigh Valley ... Mex Petroleum Midvale Steel Missouri Nat Lead N Y Air Brake ...110 NYNH&HRR 365% Norfolk & West Northern Pac Ohio Cities 3 Pan AmMP & T ... Penn R R Pressed Steel « Ray Cons Reading Rep [ & § from here today Provi- y and Newark, N. J, 20 o Fight Deposition by Legislature by Strom; Rapid develop- of social leaders was ! in the fight to regain of the five members of the ended from the assembly at was carried on fever- repare the defense to bel bre the sasembly judiciary rk, Jan. . 4Ty J110% ruse to house in obtaining re People’s house which con- Pac York county headquarters party it was reiterat- 1e fight to save the seats of emblymen would he Saioust ay Car .100% LePaige and Hazel Stone Cl11s% PIG IRON AND Royal D, Sinclair Oil Rer .. Sloss-S Steel & 1 outhern Pac outhern Ry Studebaker fTexas Goltle N Tobacco Prod Union Pac .......122% United Fruit 19813 United Retail St .. 9: U S Indus Alco ..116% T 8 Rubber Co ...1 T S Steel S asin U S Steel pfd ....11 Ttah Copper 0 Va Car Chem Willys X L1053 in “Pollyan- ene Shalkespe: ind Marion en a week Mkter with the house. * Mackinaws $8.45 hey Are Thirsty, and Be- TTY 693 3014 Jan. 9.—Revol the wake of prohi- 1o the Rev. Dr. G. 1, pastor of Westmin- London, now visiting in London will be confronted. | arising of her East fon_is] Overland LOCAL STOCK MARKET QUOTED m the pulpit here. : ) nk it must pre; e for aj When a man stops drink- All that hap- the revolutionary { <ince vodka was Whenever London goes dry, Znd will arise.” on prohibition tes Dr. Morgan Stanley K. Eddy, Mgr. market has been active, very few in price. Judd has sold prices ranging from 84 1-2 to and New Britain Machine from 60 to 61 1 There has been a good investment demand American Hardware with very stock in ihe market below 154, F J.ock has heen active with sales 110 and 111. Union Mfg. Ce. | strong v s at 111 and 112 Bid 197 The with North ! Russin in H S, f o the STy in said: ry and adjusted me time be 0 it but it ore you gzet sct- sales at 7 Elec Lizht B T Brass Hartrord outhern D American \m Ame Americin Billings & Rights AT IeE Gy | vican 1losiery of Mrs. Tyler Guy will | morrow upon the arrival of | train, rather than upon the | the 1:26, as was previously | Rev. H. A. Cook, | Methodist church and burial will be cemetery. « eral m Hiardwa Silver Spencer Rrass .. Arms Co Lock Co pastor | Hristol will be | Colt in the ! St. Louis. RICHTER & C Members New York Stock Exchange 31 WEST MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN, CONN STANLEY R. EDDY, Mgr. Telcphone 2040 We Own and Offer 100 Shares West India Sugar Finance Corporation 8% Preferred Stock Price 100 and Accrued Dividend JUDD & CO. Rooms 300-310 National Bank Bldg. Tel 1815 W. T. SLOPER. Mgr. WE OWN AND OFFER FOR JANUARY INVESTMENT: 50 American Hard ware, 50 North & Judd. 50 Landers, Frary & Clark. 20 Stanley Rule and Level. 50 Union Mfg. Co. 25 Scovill 50 Traut & Hine. Colts Pat. Fire Arms. 50 American Brass. GOODWIN BEACH & CO. CONNECTICUT MUTUAL BUILDING, HARTFORD T. FRANK LEE, Local Mgr.~-~Room 410, Natl. Bk. Bldg., Tel. 2128 Landers, Frary & Clark Stocks and Rights HT AND SOLD effects of the coal strike, in a md often marked by holiday bankil Output for the 31 days was 2,633] tons, or 84,944 tons a day, agains 392,350 tons in the 30 days of Nov ber, or 79,745 tons a day. Twenty furnaces blew in last month and blew out, so that on January 1 estimated capacity of the 262 furn in blast was 37,945 tons a day, aga 84,550 tons a day for 251 furnaceg December 1. Istimating charcoal iron at 360,000 tons, total -pig Production in 1919 was close to 000.000 tons, which compares with ,000 tons in 1915 Aore is heard of reduced operat at automobile plants for lack of s Stocks that were drawn upon du the steel strike cannot now be placed. An inquiry for alloy stecl d ering a Detroit maker's requirem: for 1920 is large beyond all preced| In the face provisional set} ment of the molders’ strike, pig prices in Great Britain have been en a horizontal advance of 15s., i ting foundry iron, at today’s ratg ~hange, at $34.70 far home cons! s and 95¢ per ton higher for expo The rise in British steel prices o tinues. Billets are $2 to $4 per higher: galvanized shcets $35.50 $9.50 higher, and tin plate now c mands more than $10 per box. Life is Nearly Ended By Drinking Carbelic A Joseph Brizgel aged vears, improving today at the New Brif General hospital, after drinking contents of a bottle containing sa carbolic acid last night at his hol He was rushed to the institution night. It is believed that the acf the man mistake, due to condition. Rights National Mar, N B Machine S Niles-Be-Pond com ... North & Judd Mfz Co Peck, Stow & Wilcox Russell Mfg Co Scovill Standard Screw com Stanley Rule & Level Co 430 Stanley Works 120 Traut & Hine 60 TUnion Mfg Co 109 Lamp | | STEEL MARKETS The Iron Age says: ! That the railroads are need of rails appears from the definite closing of about 250,000 tons in the Chicago district on which rolling will begin at once. These sales were made possible by verbal agreements of the railroad administration to honor rail- road corporation purchases in these closing weeks of government control. In addition to the rails closed, order for between 100,000 and 130,000 tor have been tentatively placed at Chi- cago. The Illinois Steel Co. will roll 40,000 tons each week for the Rock Island and Union Pacific, 30,000 tans for the Great Northern, 12,000 tons for the Soo-line, 10,000 tons for the Chi- cago & Alten, 600 tons for the Monon and 5000 tons for the Minneapolis & The Lackawanna Steel Co. 15,000 tons for the Great Northern and 10,000 tons for the Northernt Pacific. The Santa Fe will Close shortly for 70,000 tons, of which two-thirds will be rolled by the Colo- rado mill and one-third at South Chi- cago, and the St. Paul has reserved space for 20,000 tons. The Clov Leaf has bought 5000: tons and for the Nickel Plate a 7500-ton contract is pending. The Rock Island has bought 15,000 tons of tie plates and the Santa Fe program includes heavy tonnages of spikes, track bolts and tie plates. In ca and locomotives there been no such activits in While advance estimates of loc yequirements are araund 2090, only two or three roads have definite inqui The Union Pacitic’s inc igerator cars stans These will require plates, shapes and bi nd 4000 tons G Le The New York Central is | ticipated. Miss Rose Wilson asking for 15,000 tons of stecl for re-j NiTHEIPAed: e ook rine Wils) building Srsiengich _ ! the bride: Miss Margaret Wilson Tl sumount oL pduless DUt IDEfotel crentea) the i bridesmaid; Mims S "‘,‘,“:'h‘”'('l”j‘t“’f’;" Bever was best man and Miss Gil and domestic buyers e first week z and oS o e fiest week cicd _as the clergyman. principal but an much of it the mills unable to quote. In particular Dipe. sheets, rods. wire products and semi-finished steel ave scarce, in some cases to the p of limiting operations | {213 of a in urgent er will supply was a SHOWER TO MISS WILSON. Young Woman, Soon to Marry, Guest of Friends Young women friends of M Agnes Wilson attended a shower in her honor at the home of Matthew McGrath of Stanley st last night. Miss Willson is to beco the bride of Charles J. Gugel performed one W © An enjoyable evi passed in wishing Miss W son many yvears of happiness and given many remembrances cut glass and other articles. of the features of the even| was a mock marriage in which gug has rail motive as vet put out s ing w tiry for 3000 Imost alone. 21,000 tons of has Unmiversat Barber Shop 1 First Class Artists to Serve You, Main St. Tel."1 year maurkets, have been ars. of consumers The pig iron returns for December show further good recovery from the