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Financial News Wall Street, 10:30 a. m.—~Vanadium was the only exception to the further advance of prices at the opening of today's stock market, Other steels as well as equipments, cogpers, motors and olls, notabyy the foreign group were higher. Among the less con- splcuous issues, Iron products at a grain of 2% points and Electric Stor- age Battery's rise of 33 points were the chief features. New high records for the year included several of the minor rails but that group seemed to be hesitant as a result developments in the coal strike sits uation. Mackey Companies and Mar- ket street railway pfd, issues repre- sented the higher utilities, Wall street, noon—=Studebaker, Cen- tral Leather, American Can and Stromberg at gains of one to four points were added to the many high records for the year during the morn- ing. Their strength followed an early reaction in which such stocks as Mex- fcan and Pan-American Petroleums, Famous Players, common and pfd., ‘Westinghouse, Corn Products, Sears and Roebuck and Davison Chemical were carried down one to two points. The more obscure steels, notably Nova Scotla, Otis, common and pfd.,, and British Empire, first pfd., were in de- mand. Further strength was shown by Market Street Rallway, pfd., is- sues, United Railways investments, Mackay companies, Columbia Gas and People’s Gas. Call money opened at 4% per cent. Wall street, 1:30 p. m.—With tHe completjion of the early profit taking in oils, pressure was removed and the group climbed quite generally to new prices for the year on an active de- mand. Mexican Pet, Pan-American, General Asphalt and Standard Ofl of | N. J. gained 2 to 3% points. Up- ward tendencies continued elsewhere with seme striking advances in ordi- narily inactive shares. Stromberg ex- tended its rise to 5 polnts, computing tabulating recording gained 3%, Resch Magneto 3% and Loose-Wiles Biscuit 214. High Bt Sug .... 41% Can .. . B0 Cr & Fdy.. Cot Oil T.oco ...... Sm & Re... Sg Rf em.. Sum Tob .. Tel & Tel Am Tob ... Am Wool Ana Cop Atch Tp & 8 At Gulf & W Bald Loco Baltimore & O . | Beth Steel B ... | Canada Pacific Cen Leath Co .. 401 Ches & Ohio .. 65% Chi Mil & St P . 24% Cht Rock Isl & P 46 Chino Cop 7 Con Gas Crucible Steel .. 651 Cnuba Can Sugar 16 Endicot: Riie s Erie 1st pfd ... Gen Electric . Gen Motors . Goodrick BF ... Gt North pfd . Insp Copper Int Con Int Mer Marine . 19% Int Mer Mar pfd 79\ Allis-Chalmers . 491% | Pacific O11 ..... 57% [ Int Nickel 17Y% | Int Paper 478, ;Kelly Spring .T'r 477 | Kennecott Cop B Lacka Steel Lehigh Val . | Mex Petrol Midvale Steel | Mis Pac .. | N ¥ Cen . INYNH&H.. 2 | Nort & West .. North Pac . Pure Oil e Pan Am P & T Penn R R Pierce Arrow .. Pittsburgh Coal Ray Con Cop | Reading . ...... § [Rep I & S ... & Low Close 41 41 48% 49% 160 26% Am Am Am Am Am Am Am Am Am . 33% 117 47 8014 141% “Do you accept presents from other men and hide them from your husband ?"” “FOOLISH WIVES” Dahlias, Sweet Peas, wears, offerings under heading, * Circulation is Audited.” of overnight; Royal D, N Y Sinclalr Ofl Ref South Pacifie Bouth Raillway . Studebaker Co , Texas Co Texas & Pacific Tobacco Prod Transcon Ol ,, 0% Union Pacific , 137% United Fruit ,, 144 United Re St .. 48% U 8 Food Prod 5% U 8 Indus Alco 46% U 8 Rubber Co 63% U 8 Steel 09 % U § Steel ptd ., 117% Utah Copper .. 66% 65% Willys Overland 8% B 26 o d‘:( % (Judd & Co.) Bid Asked 5 800 650 Aetna Life ... Travelers ... Hfd Elee Light 165 Am Hardware 160 Billings & Spencer pfd 22% 25 Billings & Spencer com 24 Bristol Brass .., 18 Colt's Pat Fire Arms . 26 Kagle Lock h6 Landers, Frary & hdly Niles-Be-Pond com L2} Niles-Be-Pond pfd . North and Judd Peck, Stow and Wilcox Russell Mfg Co Stanley Works com . Stanley Works pfd Torrington ... Union Mfg Co . 48 30 98 47 29 6514 " 42 NEW YORK CLEARING HOUSE REPORT Exchanges .. 834,700,000 Balances .. I 608,500 Happy Homes Are Surrounded With Gardens Gladiolus, Forget-Me-Nots, Beautiful Roses and other fragrant flow- ers that adorn the exterior of a home. Tt is said that a man is known Is it not true also, that the occupants of a home are known by the éxterior appearance of their yard? ) A well kept lawn, with a mixture of any of the above plants beautify what would otherwise be a dreary place to come to after the day's work. Choose your flowers, seeds and plants from the many ERTILIZERS, PLANTS'" (60) on our Classified Page. THE HERALD'S CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SERVICE Read Herald Want Ads For Profit “The Only Paper in New Britain Whosa YUSSUF BEY DENIES TURKISH CHARGES Says Armenians Are Not Bgig_g Persecuted in Anatolia Constantinople, April 11.-—Allega- tions that Armenians in Anatolia are being persecuted by Turkish national- ists were denied in an interview given by TYusguf Kemal Bey, nationalist minister of fereign affairs, to a num- ber of Armenian press representa- tives here before he left for Paris to attend the conference on the revision of the treaty of Sevres. “The sitnation of Armenians in Anatolia is quite satisfactory,” Yus- suf told his hearers. “There have never been any deportations of Ar- menians like those carried out by the unionists, when deportees were mas- sacred enroute, The Christian popu- lation in the military zone was simply removed to the interior to prevent them from going over to the Greek army. Now the deportees are all back in their homes wherever there is no further danger of an enemy in- vasion."” Yussuf further said that there had been no boycott of Armenian prod- ucts, in proof of which he pointed out that he was wearing a suit of clothes made by an Armenian tailor He also denied that any property or lands belonging to Armenians had been divided among Turl or Kurds. He added that the Angora govern- ment had just promulgated a law whereby Armenian officials would in future be appointed in localities in- habited chiefly by Armenians. He concluded by saying that the ex- odus of Armeniahs from Cilicia was “unreasonable’” and that the Kemal- ist government would hold the pro- perty belonging to emigrants in trust for one year, Massacres by Turks in Pontus, Asia Minor, were reported in a telegram received by the Greek legation in ‘Washington several weeks ago which stated that 300 Greeks of Samsun were killed by Turkish authorities, acting under the direction of Kemal Pasha. A committee of the American Friends of the Persecuted Christian Peoples of Asia Minor, presented to President Harding on March 23, reso- lutions protesting against the massa- cre of Christians in Armenia and other parts of the Turkish empire and asking the United States to use its influence to put an end to it. The Near East relief announced that some 120,000 Armenians Wwho were in Cilicia evacuated that prov- ince when they learned that the French troops were to be withdrawn and the country turned over to the Turks and have now crowded into other districts not under Turkish jur- isdiction. Maidenhair Fern, by the clothes he SEEDS AND NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1922 Bl e S, ————T Edward Royton on the way o jail immediately alter his ¢ ture following a daring attempt’to hold up the Merchants Bank and Trust Co., Washington, D. C. DEATHS AND FUNERALS Margaret Yitzell. Funeral services for Margaret Fit- zell will be held Wednesday at 11 o'clock from the Church of $t. Ed- ward the Martyr, 100th street and 60th avenue, New York city. Burial will be in Greenwood cemetery, Brooklyn. Mrs. Thomas McAloaon, The funzral of Mrs. Thomas Me- Aloon was held at 9 o'clock this morning at St. Mary’s cHurch. A solemn requiem high mass was cele- brated by Rev. Raymond J. Clab| Rev. William A. Krause was the con; Rev. John T. Winters was the sub-deacon, and Rev. Walter McCrann was the master-of-ceremonies. The pall bearers were John Fagan of Meride James W. Manning, Philip O'Reilly, Michaei ¢ Fred Ander- son and James Brown of Kensing The flower bearers were [eo | Meriden; James Malloy, of New Ha- ven; Edward Q'Reilly and John A Fusari. The commitfal service at the grave was conducted by Rev, John T. Winters and Rev. Walter McCrann. The burial was in St. Mary's new cemetery. George White, The funeral ot George White will be held at 7:45 o'clock tomorrow The Blazed Trail ORKERS in the woods frequently find the trail blazed by the axes of those who have gone before. Guided by these marks, Advertisements perform a similar duty for you in the important business of spending your money. They point the way to values of which you would never know if they morning at the J. M. Curtin company | undertaking rooms. The body will he taken to Meriden, where a requiem high mass will be cel o'clock in St. Lauren Card of Thanks We wish to thank all our kind friends who sympathized with 1 during our recent bereavement, oc sioned by the death of our beloved husband and father, Mr. Fred Wheeler We wish especially thank his r , the trolleymen, and the Red Men of this city. (Signed) MRS. FRED WHE AND FAMIL to LER An electric invalid chair has been invented. § The Hartford-Connecticut. Trust Company Corner Main and Pearl Streets, Hartford, Conn. Surplus Funds $2,000,000.00 Safe Deposit Boxes, $5.00 and upwards. Settlement of Estates. Foreign Exchange to all parts of the world. LETTERS OF CREDIT — GENERAL BANKING It is safe and saves time. Capital $2,000,000.00, Bank by rail were not there to guide you. Do you’read them? Wise shoppers do. They are the economical buyers—the ones who keep themselves strictly up-to-date on the hest opportunities for saving money, or spending it judiciously, which is one and the same thing. Read the advertisements in this paper. know what’s what in the shopping district. Read them because they place before your eyes a moving panorama Read them to save money—to Read them be- of business progress. save steps—to save disappointments. cause they blaze your trail to satisfaction in your every- day buying. Read them regularly. ot W ANGIENT WRECKAGE FOUND Parts of Ship Believed To Have lh*nj in the Dutch-Spanish War of 1641, | Discovered. | London, April 11.-—~Remnants of a wreck believed to date back to a Dutch-8panish battle in 1641 have | been brought to the surface by bulri vage workers in Lerwick harbor. Four ancient cannon, each seven | feet long with a three-inch bore, have been salved and these have been Sup- | plemented by massive oak timbers, which are in a good state of preserva- | tion. It is believed that the wreck Is| that of a Dutch warship which, with three t Indiamen, was attacked by | 16 armed warships of Dunkirk (then Spanish), in Bressay Sound, on June | 13, 1641, After a firece epgagmucnl.l two of the Indiamen weré sunk and the third escaped, while the Dutch warship was compelled to surrender. THE EXPERIENCE OF A FAMOUS - PAYYY M1 Gea B, Takins, of 621 ) \ e, Macs, weo fe vae than e f FRidel nurse, seadz 0 were sufferers of ons or more Mr., Jenkins has been in % unon & number of very prom- of the .mtrf'. Hehas travelled 1 and their physicians from coast therefore a man who hag ly wide experience with doctors and medicines, He has for years been acuainted with the reputation of the Winsol line, and says:— “In spite of 1y broad experience, I had not found remedies that suited my own il il 1 became acquainted with the line, I have for years been a chronic sufierer from Bronchial Catarth | and 'Torpid Liver. For all my Liver illy 1 bad found no relief until I commenced { heip. 0l in a general way, and 1 can say that | | allica ! thorough course of treatment wit {0 take Sanalt. Cathartics merely aggra- ted the trouble, giving but temporary Sansli put me in first-class shapa pid Liver, Digestive Troubles and all ilis have practically passed away from me, and 1 believe forever, after a | Sanali, | sible Tonic,” | nhiticus druggists sell Sanalt, | PALACE ! 4 Days Starting Sunday JACKIE COOGAN in the season’s greatest “MY BOY” they easily find their way. Follow their guidance. Read them to 12080 L ) o s s y PUTNAM & CO. Member New York Stock Exchange Successor to Richter & Co, 31 WEST MAIN STREET, NEW BRITAIN, CONN, STANLEY R. EDDY, Mgr. TEL. 2040 We Offer: Bristol Brass Preferred to Yield Over 8149 JUDD & CO. MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE HARTFORD: Hartford-Conn. Trust Bldg, Tel. Charter 6330 NEW BRITAIN: 23 West Main Street, Telephone 1815, We Offer 100 Shares of North & Judd at the Market Price | DR @Ehumznn,‘ 1fienn & o NEW BRITAIN HARTFORD New Britain National Bank Bldg. 10 Central Row Telephone 2580 Telephone Charter 000 DONALD R. HART, Manager Mecruber Hartford Stock Member N. Y. Stock Exchange Exchange. We shall be glad to assist stockholders in adjusting their HARTFORD FIRE RIGHTS We Do Not Accept Margin Accounts JOHN P. KEOGH Member Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York STOCKS Bridgeport Danbury New Haven Middletown BONDS Springfield Direct Private Wire to New York and Boston G. F. GROFF, Mgr.—Room 509, N. B. 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