New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 22, 1922, Page 10

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N EW BRITAIN Mustache Gone DISABLED CONTROL ON“ROMA’ BLAMED Such Is Finding of Army Air e 22.—Major Gen. Ma Patrick head the army air made this statement at the today regarding the Roma Norfolk, Febh, 80 of mervice army base disuster “From the testimony T have 80 far it is indicated that the was due to accident to trols regulating the alfitude Roma The high caused sion and in the heard disaster the con- the an W striking vires which was no explo- the ship was ship came down tension the fire no fire air.” Cause Unknown idea what caused the Captain Walter J ill-fated airship electric There while “1 have no accident,” said Tieed, chief Roma, in a statement given out at the P'ublic Health hospital here today “I doubt if it will ever be Of course we have our own theories, but we are not certain which is cor- rect.” “1 had known that there ble with the control of the ship ar it was impossible to it it was discovered ‘The Airst intimation there was tronble was when we the nose the ship down., We back to see what caused it and found the control was not working. “Every effort to get the an even keel failed and over on her side, Describes Escape. When the ship hit I was thrown into the upper part of the cabin. | was shut in and got out only when a hole was burned into the cabin. Licut. Welch crawled out with me. Both of us had to go through flames to get to safety. “My hazy recollection is of being thrown from one side of the cabin to the other and of looking up the keel where I saw men forward.” Captain Reed said that it was plausible theory to believe, as been suggested, that the kite hung down at the tail of the s0 heavily as to displace the balance and point the ship into the nose dive. pilot of Known was trou- 1 correct after had that W went we ma turned or she The latest photo of the former Crown Prince of Germany, taken at his exile at Weiringen, shows him without his mustache. o City Items DeVito's Orch, Elks' fair tonight.— advt. box | Several hundred members of Aziz toma | Grotto, journeyed to Norwich this af- ternoon to witness the “monial |work put by the Grotto team of ‘llml place. Meet me af Schmarr's for dinner. . ——advt. The social committee of the Kenil- REORGANIZE N. J. GUARDS State Senate Overrides Veto of Gov-|lridge whist tourneys, the first which will be held tomorrow night, and 13 | continuing on the five sncceeding Thursday nights. Former membe of the club are extended an invita- tion to participate in the tourne B 7 e | srectir cards at Ohrnstedt of the New Jersey National Guard.|y “ypin St —advt, subject to approval by President Har- | Plans are being made for a char- ding, was practically accomplished 1ty Whist and dance to be held at the yestérday afternoon when the senate |[/Ik8’ home Tuesday evening, Febru- lary 28, by the Ladies’ Aid society of by a vote of 13 to 4 passed the bill |y s church. by Mr. Powell of Burlington over the| ceto of Gov. Edwards. The bill be- . T S vomes effentive immediately, but is| Thieves Pay Visit to Lafayette Street Store not to be operative until the president | has sanctioned its chief provisions, | a,t50i0 Amento, proprictor of a which include the disbanding of the | o ee ™y oo, present Fifty-seventh infantry bri- | " e gade and the reorganization of a new | ente by thicves during brigade. | A 1dy machine was stolen register was taken DEATHS AND FUNERA S i - $10 was taken. vard and smashed and about The proprietor found Mrs. Thomas Hanley. {the rear door unlocked on his The funeral of Mrs. Thomas Han- | rival at the store this morning. ley will be held at % o'clock tomor-| ~ = =4 row morning at St. Mary's church. | A | e al v The burial will be held in St. .\‘LIr)"S;Alb“(‘kle‘T‘l ]?|§ Ha € new cemetery. ! Cost "I Feh Arbuckle on a man- —_— San Miss Catherine Smith. | trials of arising from the Rappe film actress, The funeral of Miss Catherine |slaughter Smith of Cedar street will be held at |death of Virginia 10 o'clock tomorrow morning at St. | have cost the city of fan Francisco Mary's church. The burial will be in [nearly $13,000, it was disclosed today S'-{inry's new cemetery. | with the filing of ~expense sheets. Il members of Court Columba, Both trial resulted disagreements. Catholic Daughters of America, will attend in a body the funeral of Miss Catherine Smith of 23 Cedar street. They will gather at 8t. Mary's church at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning, be cause the funeral at the home is to be private. a had e on of FEdwards By Vote ernor to 4. ; Trenton, Feb. Reorganization | b 7 street, police that the place 5 1 night. and the into the Francisco, 1toscl c in Congressman’s Daughter Candidate for Congress Springfield, Ill., Feb. 22.—Winifred Mason Huck, daughter of the late Congressman William . Mason today filed her petition as a candidafe for congi at large in the republican primary April 11. Tt was said that Ishe also may file as a candidate to complete her late father's unexpired term. Joseph Soltiska. The funeral of Joseph Soltiska was held at 7:30 o'clock this morning at the church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, The burial was in the Sacred Heart cemetery. | Charles A. Blair. | The funeral of the late Charles A Rlair will take place tomorrow after noon. Services will be held in the Erwin Memorial chapel by Rev. Wil-| 1jam Martin, of the Newington Con- gregational church Burial will be| in Fairview ceemtery. | Henry M. Brown Henry M. Brown, 20 years old, died yesterday after a lingering illness. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Brown of 240 Smalley street and| was employed at Rackliffe Brothers, Pesides his parents, he leaves brother, Frank E. Brown and misters, Mrs. Willlam O'Dell and Mrs George McGuiness. The funeral! will be he Friday afternoon from Mgemorial chapel and be in Fairview cemetery. W. Maier will officiate at 2 o'clock the Erwin | interment will | Rev. H.| RRAR PLE Opera Singer Asks For Divor From Paris Feb, and HEARD Date New 22.—Counsel for Geraldine Lou Tellegen, fore Supreme application of pointment of a testimony in Parls to suit for divoree The guments York, Iarrar husband, bhe- her argued yesterday J Bijur, an | for to Court stice Mme. 17 commission be used rrar ap- take her 11 il Telleger papers were and the ar conducted doors at the request of lawyers. Information as tion of the application was wit| closed digposi M ING POSTPONLD. The meeting of the board of tors of the New Britain M company, which was called for today, was postponed on of it being a lholiday. P'resuaent H. H atated this afternoon e did pot know when it wonld be held, but probubly witliin a few days. direc- She hitches an Washington, the snow. riding the tail Ifield, 088 o surf toboggan to ple Bolling D. and glides |The plane is on skids, too. surf her Pease of air- at reported | the | 3415 DEATH TOLL IN ROMA DISASTER 1 | * f (Continue I'rom First Page) aboard the Roma Numes of those positively {dentified | Captain Dale Mabry, Major |John Thornell, Master Sergeant 1, D, | MeNally, Tech, Sergeant L. M, Harris, | Staff Rerge Hilllard, Sta‘f Sorgeant M Sergeant IWilllam Ryan, Sergeant Virgil Hoff- man, Corporal Irby 1. Hevron, Pri-| vate Gus Kinston, DPrivate Vernon Blakeley, Private John Thompson, | Private Marion Hill, Mr. .\‘Vrgkv‘r,! McCook field, O, (civillan), Robert J. | Hanson, sMcCook field, O. (civilian), | Willlam O'Laughlin, McCook field, O, | teivilian) Harriman, follow nt Lewls alle McCook field, O, | (etvilian), Major Vautsmeir, Captain Dursschmidt, Captain Watts, Lieut | W. €. Burnes, Lieut, W. B. Cummings | Lieut, Rile (killed in fall), Lieut. Smythe, Captain Mckarland, Master | Sergeant Lidut | Lieut. H. , Sergeant J. M. Holm . Schulenburg, Dayton, O. (civilian). There were four bodies which the officers and men from | Langley field were unable positively to identify, but close friends will be (called in this morning. They are: nt Yarborough, Liecut. nt Gorby, Sergeant Schumaker, Addresses of the dead are now being compiled from the records at Langley field, The Survivors Majer John D. Reardon, wife, Mrs. Reardon, 300 Elm street, Washing- ton, D. C, Captain Walter William J. Reed, Lieutenant father, W, V., Reed, Scarsdale, Y Clarence H., Welch, Welch, Papillon, Neb. Licutenant Broyn H. Burt Jr. Sergeant Virdon T. Jeek, father Howard Jeek, 2304 Lafayette avenue, Terre Haute, Tnd, | ant Harry A. Chapman, moth- er, J. H. Ward, 1626 Frederick lavenue, St. Joseph, Mo. Sergeant Joseph M. |father, John Biedenbach, | Market street, Akron, Ohio. Corporal Albert Flores. | Civilian Walter A, Mc |of Standatds, Washington, Civilian Charles Dworack, field, Ohio. Civilian Ray Hurley, National Ad- visory Committee on Aeronautics. Horribly Mutilated, Newport News, V ¥ stream of las poured into this city with that had been taken 'from the fated airship Roman, queen of the air fleet. It was apparent at once that identification of the bodies | would be virtually impossible for | many of them fere so mangled and | disfigured as to make them wunrec-| ognizable. Many were Jacking arm | ang legs, some were headlc | others torn and burned so terribly | that extreme care had to be taken in handling them. Scene of Great Horror. persons went from here fo base during ghe afternoon | the ruins and witness of many bodies. Describ- | |ing their experience, some declared | the scene to have been one of the greatest horrors. Soldiers and offi- | cers at the army basc who witness- | | ed the disaster saw several mem- | bers of the crew leap from the | doomed machine while she was still high in the air. One of these who | jumped had parachute, but 4t tailed to open. He landed on a concrete pavement Seek Their Comrades. In the local morgue bodies cheeted | on the tables attracted many, among whom were army officers and men seeking vainly to identify their com- rades. | In almost every case the features | | retained a strange calm. One body | | lay on its cot with the trappings of | a parachute hanging in threads of burned rags to the shoulders. father, S N. Biedenbach, 411 last air, Bureau D..C, McCook Al night bodies ill- ambulances Many the army to view recovery a HAVE MURDER SUSPECT | Detroit Officials Arrest Man Who Profess Knowledge Of Slaying Of William D. Taylor. 22.—Sheriff Trving J. | Detroit, Feb. | Coffin today maintained secrecy con- cerning a prisoner who yesterday told county authorities he could supply the name of the slayer of William Des- mond Taylor, Los Angeles motion picture director. vame of the prisoner, his story or| his connection with the Taylor case, | [is withheld pending a reply to a tele- | gram sent last night to authorities at | Los Angeles. The prisoner is said to Le held on a forgery charge. | Anti-Vaccinationists Force Schools to Close New lLondon, Feb, 22.—~Because the parents of some 160 or 170 students in Bulkeley High school (Boys) are opposed to vaccination that school's vacation is to extended until March which will be the end of the quar- {antine period required of the unvac- lcinated who were in contact with a DATLY HERALD Clinton, | Hall, | | istration. the |several poison table 029 &by 29 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19 Art Judge | PLANS FOR MASONIC MEMORIAL ADOPTED | | Association 0, K's Two Million Dollar Edifice at Arlington a0 Washington, Feb, -Approval of final plans for a magnificent | | building to George Washington to be |erectéd by the Masons of the United | | States at Arlington, Virginia, seven | [miles from here, on a ridge com- | manding a view of the capitol, was | glven last night at the twelfth annual | | meeting of the George Washington National Memorial association. | The structure and surrounding |grounds will cost approximately $2,- | 1 000,000, Rising 200 feet above lhn‘ ground, the memorial building will be in,plain view of the national capi- | |tol and will be passcd by all who make the pilgrimage from Wash- | lington to the Mount Vernon home of | | “the father of his country." | The proposed memorial with ite | collection of Washington heirlooms |and memorabilia, is to be the result (of a movement begun more than 12 |ycars ago by the Masonic lodge at | | Alexandria, of which Washington at | one time was master, The lodge, | | now known as Alexandria-Washing ton lodge, No. A. . and A. M., | | was lodge 89 in Washington's day. | Among its souvenirs of the first | | president is a letter in his own hand, | written at Mount Vernon, To Contain Prized Relics. Primarily, the building is to be a memorial to George Washington, | the man and the Mason. The plan of its form was inspired by the | great memorial monuments built in | ancient days of Greece und Rome | at harbor entrances and from whose | summits burning flares pointed the way to incoming mariners. The dimensions over all 160 feet in width by 230 feet depth, exclusive of steps, terraces and approaches. The height to the | summit of the covered observatica | | platform, from which visitors ma l\\'if‘wx for miles around the country | where ' Washington passed the | | greater part of his life, will be 200 | Knight will represent England on the jury of the Interna- tional Art Exhibition to be held at Pittsburg, Pa., in March. She Is the first woman selected for the commit- tee. Her associates will be a French- |man and two Americans. Mrs. Laura | be | in will N ROUTE TO U. S, GOLD E | Cargo Sent From Russia May Be Used to Pay for Food. (fect. Ieb, A new cargo| In the center is to be an atrium, of gold, valued at $17,-| 70 by 100 feet, to form a memorial | ed at Stockholm yester- | hall in which will be set a statue of | day on the steamer Gladiator from | Washington. This hall, 64 feet in Russia by way of Reval for trans- | height, will rise, by a clear story, | shipment to America. Another big|above the surrounding portion of gold shipment is expected soon. | the building. Invironing it will be el a number of rooms dedicated to the | Masonic interests, wherein every | Masonic organization {n the country | may have space. Rising above the -memor will be a museum room, the second story of the tower. Stockholm, 2 of 529 case: | 500,000, arri Presumably this shipment of gold is part of the money allocated by the Russian Soviet government for pur- | chase of grain fn the United States | throngh the American Relief Admin- | hall | forming To possessions of | of the treasured Masonic [the Alexandria-Washington | lodge. FAILS TWICE TO KILL SELF Steel Agent Takes Poison And Pre- ‘o Jump From Window pares —After swallowing | s, A. W. L. Patro- | uel, fifty-two years old, of Wilming- ton, Del., climbed to the ledge outside a window of his fifth-floor room in th| Quiney House today. A chambermaid | entered the room, ran to the window and pulled him back. Patrouel was taken to a hospital. He will recover. ent for the Pittsburg | Steel Company, has been in ill health | for some time, friends said. He left a | note saying: Do something for Louise | and Mabel"—his daughter and wife. Boston, Ieh Delegates From Various Branches of | Service Holding Sessfons About State, New Haven, Feb. Just what is new and worth while knowing was ex- | pected to be brought out today when employes of Uncle Sam in the postal service held the annual meetings of | organizations among which they are | affiliated. In New Haven the state federation of post office clerks was to be given | a launching as a part of the national federation of post office clerks. The | present officers are temporary ones | with Charles Ryan of Hartford presi- MOVIE ACTRESS SUED Modiste Claims Mildred Harris Has Not Taid For Wearing Apparel Mildred Har. New York, Feh. 22.- ris, the movie star, was served by mail [dent. yesterday with a summons addressed At Danbury to her home at Los Angeles, in a su-|postal clerks met, t preme court suit brought by Joseph,|the state body of letter carriers re- A Fifth avenue modiste, for $3,441, |ceived entertainment. In Bridge- which is alleged to be the unpaid bal- |POrt two bodis of rural letter u?rm(rs ance on $9,000 worth of wearing ap-|Mél and the postmasters also were to | i av dinner. arel purchased hy Miss Harris two|have a @ k s T ats ’ 1 ™In each instance the conventions did The smsg clue i g not get down to business until after- The items Included on the blll are:| o "4 in each there were to be a green velvet jewelled bodice, $62 3 b *hi ceni ¥ speakers, and the finale would be a a chiffon evening gown, $400; Pink | o per iy the evening hours ohitfon negligee. $265) andia Bussian | yohn.Burhs o the local force, I at- | FRtg nonns S ltending the carriers’ meeting at | |Stamford. Mr. Burns is a member of the state executive committee, M. T. Murphy, Harry Phalon and C. H. M. Hulberg, are attending the meeting of clerks, at Danberg. the ['nited States | and at Stamford ‘GAS POCKE AUTO HIT! Texas Man, Wife and Child, Fatally Burned in Explosion. Worth, Tex., Feb. -W. H. nd wife, and their six-year-old near | their | 41 STUDENT Fort 22 Kelly daughter, were fatally burned Desdemona last night when automohile struck a gas pocket. An | explosion and fire enveloping the automobile followed. Two other chil- dren though burned, will re- cover. Kelly was a lease foreman for an oil company and came to Texas {from Illinois. The automobile plunging into the |hole where the gas had accumulated aused an explosion, igniting the car, |the occupants and the surrounding |woods which burned fiercely all night. The accident occurred in the heart of an oil field. 31 Freshmen At Dartmouth Among Those Who Fail To Pass Tests Hapover, N. H., Feb. — Kifty- one students were separated from Dartmouth college at the end of the first semester through failure to pass their tests, according to figures given out here today. hirty-one of those wha “flunked” were freshmen, as against 36 for the corresponding sem- ester last year. £ The men who failed to pass will not be readmitted on conditions. A new rule adopted by the college adminis- tration last fall and now applied for the first time, forbids such re-admis- sion, | JOHN WANAMAKER ILL. student whose mother developed the | only smalipox case now ~existing in New London. ‘Pope Pius Appoints His First American Bishop Rome, Ieb. Press).—Pope |the Very Rev, general of St bishop of the St. {This is the first | be appointed b Associated ppointed vicar as (By Pius today Patrick 1 Augustine, Augustine American bishop to the new Pope. Mon- signor John J. Swint of Weston, W. Va., was named auxiliary bishop of | the diocese of Wheeling, W. Va. F I'la, HELD AS WIFE MURDERER pittshurg, FPeb The coroner's jury investigating the death of Mrs. J. I"lanngry, who was shot and killed in her home by her husband February 13, vesterday returned a verdict that her death was due to gunshot woun inflicted by Flannery and recommend- Migs Lois Huggins docsn't need a|that he be held for the grand jury on i‘\"’""" on charges char of murder, IMlannery, who summoned a phy | cian and the police to his house after the shooting declared he had shot his wife in Lhe balel abe wis & Ruwrglar. L o | a diocese. | FIND GOLD MINI IN ALPS. 22— om Severe Cold And Is On His Yacht. Petershurg, KFla., Feb, John Wanamaker is confined to his bed on |board his yacht, the Conewago.I'riends of the merchant are not permitted to |call on him as the result of orders is- |sued by Mr. Wanamakers's physician, | Dr. Quicksall. | The yacht arrived here Sunday end docked at Pasagrile Island. Mr. | Wanamaker is suffering from a severe cold | Suffers | | | Geneva, Switzerland, [eb. Charles Imhoff, Swiss engineer, has discovered af gold mine in the Aus- trian Alps near Grossglockner, it was reported here yesterday. The mine is said to have a daily yield of 100 grammes (about $70) of gold. CAPTAIN DAVIS DIES, Fall River, Peb. Captain Elijah (. Davis, retired captain of the New ingland Navigation company steam- lers, died at his home in Swansea to- day at the age of 90 years. He was a native of Somerset and had seen 40 Stamford, Feb. -Richard T.|years service on the Fall River line | Jader, son of Mrs. Richard T. Jader | hoats when retired on a pension for of Tokeneke and brother-in-law of | faithful service in 1904, Gypsy Smith, the evangelist, and John | e B. Hanford of 271 Grand street, New-| Trcland possesses the largest lake burg, N. Y. who were found with[in the British Isles—Lough Neagh, loaded automatic pistols in their pos- |with an arca of 153 square miles. session last night after a short auto- mobile chase, cach’paid a Ane of $5b of carrying conceal- 8|t 22 | (Y“TOTING GUNS" TO GUARD | GIRLS COST THEM $100 | Heaviest growth of timber in the United States is on the Olympie pen- yashington. Ilirst watches were made in the sixteenth century by a Nuremburg ed weapons. | They declared they were carrying the guns to protect girl friends. The girls were not with them when they the museum will be transferred some | R 'hopn of | of her friends. PUTNAM & CO. Member New Yo »uccessor to 31 WEST MAIN STREET STANLEY R. EDDY, Mgr. rlk Stock Dxchange Richter & ©o, » NEW BRITAIN, CO TE We Offer: 50 SHARES OF STANLEY WORKS PFD. 50 SHARES LANDERS, FRARY & CLARK 50 SHARES NORTH & JUDD H, L. JUDD I, G. JUDD W. T. SLOPER JUDD & CO. 23 WEST MAIN STRELT, NE Investments, Local Stocl We Offer: 50 SHARES UN W BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT Teicphone 1815—1816 ION MFG. CO. Price on application NEW BRITAIN New Britain National Bank Bldg. Telephone 2580 DONALD R. HART, Munager Member N. Y. Stock Exchango HARTFORD 10 Central Row Telephone Charter 000 Mcraber Hartford Siock Exchange. We Offer: PECK, STOW & WILCOX ORTH & JUDD STANLEY WORKS Price on A ) TETRY JOHN P. Member Con olidated Stoc Waterbury Danbury Middletown Direct Private Wire to sROFF, Mgr.—Room 509, EARCH FOR LANDRU VICTIM. Canadian Detectives Face Task of Ex- amining 30,000 Burial Permits, Montreal, 1%eb. 22.—Montreal de- tectives are making an investigation | of the reports that one of the sup-| posedly murdered wives of Landru, | awaiting the guillotine in Paris, is buried in: Montreal. Unless her maiden name is forthcoming, it means that a list of over 30,000 registrations of burial in Cote des Neiges cemefery will have to be examined in an effort | to prove or disprove the story. At Fabrique Notre IMime vesterday morning it was stated that detectiv, had called in the afternoon in the clearing up the rumors| through the cemetery vecords. As in | earlier searches, they found that the woman sought was known as Mme. Heon. The system of registration provides that the maiden name of a | deceased matron is used in indexing, | so that the entire records may have | to be gone over in the hope of find- ing a qualifying clause to an indexed item which will read ‘wife” or “widow" of one Heon. Thus far this extensive system of identification has not been under- taken, as the oflicials are hopeful that someone will come forward with de- tails which will clear up the matter. TWO JUMP TO DE Passenger and Waiter Dive From Steamer on Pacific Coast. San Francisco, Ieb. 22.—Mrs. Alice M. Sills of Amherst, Mass passen- ger, and Harold Holloway of San | Francisco, a waiter, jumped from the | liner Buckeye State yesterday and| were drowned when the vessel w 300 miles south of l.os Angeles, ac- cording to a radio message received by the Matson Navigation company. The vessel left San Franc o0 Sat- urday for Baltimore@ to be turned back to the Shipping Board. Both Mrs. Sills and Holloway joined the vessel here. Mrs. Sills jumped ove board one hour before Hollowa Their bodies were not recovered. Mrs. Sills was booked by a tourist agency and came to San ancisco from Riverside. The company an- nounced Holloway was a negro, shipped at Baltimore. a BUT NO WEDDING. Disappointed Bride Re point Guests, Waltham, Mass, Feb. R. Anteliffe, thirty, whose mar Miss Helen M. Boates, eighteen, stopped at the altar hy a police spector yesterday, was arrested making a false statement in his plication for a marriage licen cliffe, admitting that he was married, was sentenced to thirty day His bride, prevented from marrying the man of her choice, disappoint the wedding guests at her home, went through the wedding din- and received the congratulations Several hours later DINNER, 1ses to Disap- 29 in- for an- ner —PAL Entire Week Star ‘THE FOUR HORSEMEN STOCKS BONDS rather than | pplication. e Do Not Accept Margin Accounts KEOGH 'k Exchange of New York Bridgeport w Haven Springfield New York and Boston N. B. Nat'l Bank Bldg.—Tel. 1012 they learned that the wedding had not occurred. SHIP PROJECT FOR (COXEY. Gahn Offers Bill to Spend $10,000,000 in Providing Jobs. Iaby /8 Washington, . ~Congress s asked yesterday to give Jacob §. Coxey, who once led his “army of the | unemployed” to Washington, another | chance to help the jobless. In a bill introduced by Representa- tive Gahn, republican of Ohio, the See of the Treasury would be authorized to issue $40,000,000 in new currency for use in buying 112 Ship- ping Board vessels. ~ When bought they would be sold to Coxey and Theodore D. Wells, who in turn would give the government a mortgage lien on the fleet. Coxey and his partner would then operate the ships and provide many jobs for the idle. . NOT FUEL Minesota Merchants Accept Tt From FFarmers Above P Madelia, Minn, Feb. -Corn is money in this town. Merchants accept corn as cash for merchandise or the settlement of accounts by farmers. When corn, dropping in price, was being burned for fuel a local merchant offered to accept corn as money from the farmers at the rate of 10 cents a bushel more than the local market price The limit is 100 bushels at a time, The merchants, although they lose 6.7 per cent. in the marketing of the corn re wel satisfied with the im- petus they have given to buying and selling. t STOCKS & BONDS Bought and Sold Our Investment Keview, pub- lished fortnightly, treats the most active stocks in a con- cise, interosting and depend- able manner, und gives our expert opinion on thelr mar- ket prospects. Copy. sent free upon request. Our Statistical Department in- vites inquiries on security you may own or be interested in. any No Obligation To You. FRIEDMAY, MARKELSON & C0. 742 Main St., Hartford 2-2281, Phone: Direct Private Wire to New York e R ] ACE — rting Next Sunday OF THE APOCALYPSE’ Reserved Seats Evenings—On Sale Now were apprehended. clockmaker. l

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