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| Wellat Stamlond A. A. U, Meet " ATHLETES AWARDED RACETRACK HEDALS Landino and Peplau Stiow Up Armand Landino, captain of the New Britain High school track team for next year, captured a gold medal at the Connecticut Junipr A. A, U, championship meet held at Stamford | yesterday. Landino covered 100 yards | in 10 1.6 seconds. Robert Peplau, a former High school star, now a stu- dent at Choaté school, was awarded a gold medal for the running broad jump. Peplau made 20 feet, two and three-quarter inches in that event. Postmaster Willlam/* F. Delaney acted as starter. The meet was held at Hallowe'en park. 'The Connecticut Senfor A, A, U. championship meet| will be held on August 26 at the Yale fleld. It is expected fhat the above athletes and other New Britain men| will enter these events. Other Events Due. Mr. Delaney also has entry blanks for the big track meet at the Yale fleld on July 15 under the auspices of the Connecticut department of the, American Legion, ‘At this meet, an opportunity will be given all sports lovers when they can enter the 100 and 200 yard Nowfce race. Other events which will ‘be held are as fol- lows: 100, 220, 440, 880 yard and one mile race; running broad jump; running high jump; 12 pound shot put; 16 pound hammer; pole vault; 100 yard dash, closed to New Haven; 100 yard dash, closed to military; one-half mile club relay, open to state; girls events, 100 yard dash and 440 yard relay. Silver cups will be awarded to first, second and third places and there will | be four cups for the relays. The en- tries close on July 8. Applications may be had by applying to P. V. Gahan of the board of recreation, lib- erty building, Bridgeport. PLANS DANCE PAVILION Tuskowski Will Start New Enterprise On Farmington Avenue With Plat- form 48x48. Thomas Tuskowski applied today for a permit to construct an open =ir dance pavilion at 308 IFarmington| avenue, 'near the intersection of Blake road, some distance from the end of the Farmington avenue trol- ley line. Mr. Tuskowski plans a platform 48x48 of substantial construction. He will erect refreshment stands around the pavilion and provide tables and chairs for his patrons. ARRESE HOLDUP MEN Three Men Identified By Truck Driver As the Ones Who Robbed Him of $2.000,000 in Securities. New York, July 5-—Identified Frank Havernack as the men who held up the postal truck he was driv- ing in lower Broadway last October and robbed it of $2,000,000 in se- curities the three men arrested by de- tectives Monday were taken to the federal building today for arraign- ment It was said detectives would prob- | ably arrest another a man connected with the case before nightfall. The| suspect was said to be a post ofiu:cf employe. by LOOTING IN DUBLIN London, July —Central News dis- | patches from Dublin reporting looun: in small towns in County Wick low says a number of girls in one lomh(\' armed with revolvers entered stores and commandeered goods, especially | in the drapery line. Rey of the Condition of THE NEW BRITAIN TRUST COMPANY At the close of business on the 30th day of June, 1922: Bills Discounted Demand (without teral) Collateral (time mand) Mortgage Loans .. Overdrafts Poatal Deposits United States bon Stocks and Secur ties Furniture and tures and equip- ment Due from Federal Reserve bank ... Due from Reserve Agents Due from Ba and Bankers United States and National Bank Notes .. 5 Gold Coln Silver Coin Minor Coin G Checks, Cash Ttems and Exchanges .. Uncollected Int. earned Savings 4,850.00 917,059.41—1,475,762.18 62,776.41 | 204,084.04 189,166.73 0 ks 50,778.5 48,832.00 1,585.00 6,788,035 1,015.73 59,420,758 Total Assets LIABLLITIES Capital Stoek .... $ 400,000 90 . 200,000.00 Undivided' less expenses an, taxes Due to Bank Bankers . Dividends Unpaid . General Deposits .. 2 Special _ Deposits, Postal Savings ‘.. Certificates of De- posit, time certificates of Dosit, demand Treasurer's Certified chock Christmas Savings on Thift Funds . Bill able Re-discounts . Resorve for Unearned cic and interest 193,786.23 40,577.49 §,162.,50 880,608.25 De 5,000,00 17,285.23 11,012.80 35.25 3,417,753.98 400,000.00 §8.000.00 | 7,369.05 | 17,865.43 84,77 July 5, taxes Liabilities New Britain, Btate of Connecticut, County of Hartford. omber, Treasurer 3ritain Trust com, swear that the foregoing truo to the best of my knowled and ballet, Total Conn,, 1922, | of the| do ¢ atate. | MACOMBER Treasurer, | F. W. Subscribed and swora to beforc me, this Sth day of July, 1903, C. J. LAW, |teams will { Winger of the Savings Bank of New | dental EIGHT NEW MEMBERS FOR ROTARY CLUB Father of Famous Bascball Star Will | “All Rotary" Gathering Tomorrow, Eatertain at Add Hoyt, father of Walte Hoyt of the Yankees, will speak and enter- tain at the "All Rotary” gathering of the New Britain Rotary club to be held tomorrow at 12:15 o'clock at the Elks' club on Washington street, The committee in charge of the meeting is making an effort to have a 100 per cent attendance and all Rotes are |urged to be present, The attendance record for the month of June was below the aver- age of the district and the attend- ance committee is endeavoring to make a much better showing for the month of July.! Effective at the meeting tomorrow the attendance be discontinued. Plans for a new method to increase attend- ance will be announced later, Twelve Rotarians have already an- swered the appeal to give money to the Fresh Afr camp and $65 has been received to date. Those desiring to contribute are asked to send their money to the secretary of the club. New Rotarians admitted into the club are: Lambert Lord, James Rob-| |inson, Edward Bennett, Herbert Mills, Roy Sharp, Raymond Leach, William Morrissey, Heath Bartow. RSONALS Miss Elizabeth Roby, who is sta- tioned in New York in the govern- ment department of vocational train- | ing for soldiers, visited friends in Berlin over the week-end. The Misses Mildred Dolan and Dorothy Clark are spending two weeks at Indian Neck. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Youknot have returned from their wedding trip. Mrs. Youknot was formerly Miss Ber- tha Beyer of this city. Mr. and Mrs. C. Armond Joley of New York city, Miss Elizabeth Em- mett of New Haven, Edward Foley of White Suiphur Springs, West Vir- ginia, Mr. Miss Margaret O'l.eary of Hartford, spent the past week at the home of Mrs Mary McLaughlin of 620 East Main street. The party left for their |respective homes today. Last evening |a social was held at the home and {an excellent musical program was rendered. Mrs. Joley was formerly Miss Margaret McLaughlin of this city. Miss Irene Gaffney of Glen street has returned from'a two weeks' stay at-Sunset Beach. Chairman David' . Dunn of the police commission has returned from New Haven, where he spent the week- end. Miss Catherine A~TLynch and Miss| Ruby returned from Norwalk, where they spent the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. James McBride. Mrs. Gerald P. Crean of Southing- ton spent the Fourth with Captain and Mrs. T. W. Grace of Vine street. 8. P. Strople of Brack Rock| and Mrs. Ray T.| and Gustave | Mr. and Mrs. and daughter, Glady: avenue, and Mr. Leach of Pine street, Britain, have returned from a week- end stay at Pine Grove, Niantic. Mrs, I'rancis M. Cone of the Com- mercial Trust company, former vice- president of*the New Britain chapter of the American Institute of Bank- |ing, will leave on July 8, for Portland, | {Oregon. Se will act as a delegate from the local chapter at the con- vention of Banking Chapters being held there on July 14 to the 17. DEATHS AND FUNERALS |been open to the public approximate- |ly 10,000 young men and boys have and Mrs. Walter Blair and | Lynch of 11 Lawlor street have | Cltv ltems The grocery nlnrl‘n of T. Bandolik of Plainville and Bristol, have been sold to Jack Goldberg of this city. The sale was made through James Palmieri, trustee, Judge ¥, B, Hun- gerford, attorney for Palmieri, Judge Bernard ¥, Gaffney, representing| Goldberg, and Attorney David 1., Nair, counsel “for Bandolik, Bandolik s now in New York, His Plainville place of business was on East street, Mr. and Mrs, Raymond Irost of Washington street are the proud par- ents of a baby boy, born to them on Monday, Rev, M, W, Gaudian, pastor of St John's Evangelical Lutheran church, is celebrating his 36th nnnlxersur) @3 |ing to the post office inspectors, This a minister today. | was in addition to the $100,000 |n The Boys' Club News issued Mon-|ponds found there on Monday night day contains, as a novelty feature, after the arrest of Anderson, ,,,..xx a three-color cut of an American flag | Chapman and Charles Lambert, as a Fourth of July picture on fits Chapman, known to the inspectors | front page. The News also states ,q “the Count” and “the Professor,” that C. B. Cleveland, an instructor at|,) pyt escaped custody yesterday. ';w club, {s the new editor-in-chiet of (7 post office men, having looked the paper, over the retrieved securities, decided Buy Chautauqua. Season Tickets|(, gubject the three prisoners to a now.—advt. |few more questions and thus round A daughter was born today at the |y jnformation that, it is predicted, New Britain General hospital to Mr. 'Mll result in the capture of others :{;_Zel“”' Sven Lindberg of 63 Brook g)jeged to be implicated in the holdup It is estimated that since the n’w‘anrl in the recovery of more ¥ missing securities, north end park swignming pool has| while the prisoners were being plied with questions Chapman took a wild chance, The inquisition was un- der way on the third floor of the post Mf:“z)‘;’\f‘:; ;’;‘]’:fi:’lz’;';flbyfllh; g';{‘ office building \J\_‘;‘st of the P : i \x " & \J RO | ia . ere was a v C who are members at the Maple Hill| saen: Chasman mad s mentecred g:’:clf:;a golf tourney at the Sequin a5 to have nobody between him and the window. He made a short dash 'In the three business days that have anq g leap. The inspectors thought p.,f;swl this month, Cn!lvctoz Berna- | he had a clean dive and would land {dotte gopmis has tiken in $70,000 inloy the street. Instead he stopped on {’:i’f;'fginifi;:“ “,‘r‘_‘l’w‘r’);”r’:‘;n‘:] "’::‘;:;1 the broad coping outside the window. direct result of second notices sent io 08| lowa gt rai out this week to delinquents. These 5p°°t°’s‘+h',a’[‘é:,’.,‘.’,‘,’n Lo e notices are the last that’are to be| ps seemed to plunge off the cop- e R ing. The agents tried to locate him Bonds a’n‘d 3100 M‘D 'm or his body from the window. They that was expected to arrive in the|53W Rothing O city Saturday has not been received | 144 scooted aiohg LHC S o yet, Prosident . 8 Chamberlain ot |COrner arising from ighth avenue the board of finance and taxation|2nd Thirty-fourth strect. By hanging stated .this afternoon. on with his fingers in the open spac i Jack Meshkin of Hart street suf-! between the granite blocks he sidled taredl injn\r\' to his right hand|around the corner. A window of a ¢ b S /s v h a when a firecracker exploded yester.|Vacant oftice was open. Chapman H. Swentuskus of 95 Henry|Jumped into the building. |street shot himselt in the left hana| More than a dozen persons 1110 Blanks pistol Dr. Nathan: Jafs jsoined (o chase iuslds the bullding, fee attended the injured persons It was certain that Chapman had not SR ha R leaped. They searched office 4;\;\\ Izntv.\m Chautauqua July S8th- office, and presently came upon the ! Jo};fln‘ e man hiding behind a row of large ¢ : shelf, e eA an ) A BT (nes s Ul 48 iR oS ARSTAROX ek eTeathiva SuEl rehd : The arrest of three men, at least K’;l;:::‘ ;:,:}?;(Q‘sf]"(f"fi‘ hi"v‘im"" of whom the inspectors believe *“|actually participated in the holdup of transferred a six family hou_se on “"'.thp mail truck, came after several ver street to Waclaw Galicki, through‘momh” of work by the staff under the Cox & Dunn agency. Inspectors Doran, Murphy and Vick, A daughter has been born to Mr. 8 sted by Gordon McCarthy, a spe- and Mrs. Monroe Parsons, of NeW .y agent of the American Express London. H company. Buy Chautauqua Season Tickets| o police believe the prisoners are now.—advt. also implicated in the robbery at Ni- There will be a regular meeting of aga ¥alls, of $60,000 from an the A, G. Hammond Camp, at the opjcan Express company wagon, in- State Armory this evening at asmuch as $3,000 of the loot recover- o'clock. The first supper of the and Profesional Women's club to be|palls loot. held in the new home in the Booth| ‘The men under Inspector house, will be held tomorrow eve-|found the American Express company ning at 6 o'clock and will form part|inyestigators on the same trail that of the regular meeting. Plans will be|they were on and the arrest lannounced for the lawn party to be made Monday night at Broadway and held July 19 and 20. 11024 street, The Connecticut company today put Find Forgery Apparatus. closed cars in operation on the Meri-| Tn Chapman's apartment den line, due to the continuous in-|qay, in addition to recovering clement weather of the past worzl\‘m.n $400,000 securities, the po- | which caused complaints from many‘lw found automatic pistols patrons. | American and German make, severa Joseph Fischl, local grocer, brought suit against James Valley Ofir“;n.\n;fls for altering and erasing fig- Plainville for $35 to recover money|ures on bonds and securities and for aleged due him for rent. Valley has|washing off cancellation stamps. Many also been sued for $30 by Willis J.|of the bonds which the authorities Hemingway also of Plainville for have recovered in other arrests have money alleged due on groceries. The been found to have been cleverly al- writs were issued by Attorney David tersd and the serial numbers erased FAKES SUIGIDE Tl] FOIL RIS PURSUERS $400,000 More Loot Is Dlscovered 88 Suspect Leaps thousand dollars worth of the $2,600,- 000 in securities stolen from a mail truck October 24 were found )rwr. day In the apartment of George An-| derson at 12 Gramesey Park, accord avalled themselves of it. in school | park bonds| day. have trans- of the bonds taken off very Meritt O. Ryder|many Several of these altered bonds in Plainville on July 15 at 9 o'clock in | neatly. will be heard in the city court here|other jobs have been passed through on the third Monday of July. | the treasury department. Miss Thora Thorstenson was pleas- About six weeks ago the arrest of Patrick Corbett. Patrick Corbett, aged 29 years, of 137 Pleasant street, died last night, after a long illness. He leaves his mother, Mrs. Ellen Corbett, roum brothers and two sisters. The ar- rangeménts for the funeral are in-| complete. | i* William hearer. | The funeral of William E. Shearer was held at 9 o'clock yesterday morn ing at/St. Peter's church. Rev. Eq 1win | Shearer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., a son of | the deceased, was the cclebrant of a | tolemn high mass of requiem; Rev . X. Schneider, of Meriden, was the | draoo ; Rev. Charles Coppens, of this| city, was the sub-deacon, and Rev.| Danie! Massey, of Hartford, was the| master-of-ceremonies. The obsequies | were largely attended, aid there was a | wealth of floral contributions. The| pall bearers were John J. King, Gmrgn Sleath, Max Noe, Patrick King, | Simon Wolter and Peter Miller. The | burial was in St. Mary's new ceme-‘ tery. John L. Floss, | John L. Floss, of Hartford, a former | resident of this city, died Monday night at St. I'rancis’ hospital. He was 80 years old, and belonged to Har- ‘mony lodge, A. F. & A. M, of this city since 1874. The funeral will be held at 1 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at his late home on Lenox Place Hartford. The body will be taken to Torrington for burial MAY SELECT DENTIST | | Health Department Clinic Can Oprn: Next Week If Board Sclects Succes- | sor to Dr. Harry Protass, Thursday. | At a meeting of the board of health commissioners” Thursday afternoon, a set of rules and regulations for the| clinic will be adopted and it| is expected that a part-time dentist| will be engaged, ding Dr. Harry | Protass, Dr. Henry T. Bray, chair-| man of the board, said this after-| noon. [ Arrangements for the opening of | the clinic have been in the hands of a special commitfee, Dr. 'ored P. Lee, superintendent of tha board, states that everything is in readiness for opening the bureau next week, | a suece Notary Public, provided the board selects a dentist.| |reproach.” antly surprised Monday evening at a|four men from the post office depart- given in her ment resulted in the recovery of $6¢ honor at the home of Miss Edith|000 worth of stolen bonds which the Stohl of 55 Harvard street. Miss | men were alleged to have been trying Thorstenson is to become the bride of to sell. The post office agents be- [¥Fred Rittner on July 1tth. She re-|lieve that with the arrest of those elved many useful gifts. Luncheon men and the capture of the three was served beneath the grape arbor|men now under examination the which was decorated with Japanese whole case will be cle n"! up. lanterns. | The job at \1|g: Falls when REPROACHES AMBASSADOR . | erican Fxpress wagon, took ‘place. 1n Communist Member of French Cham- miscellaneous shower ‘l~rn.|d daylight. The police believe ‘r\ut a large portion of the §60,000 ‘hds been lost, as the cliecks were ne- gotiable. The majority of the bonds were recovered among the $3,000 ber of Deputies Provokes Lively De- worth found in Anderson’s apartment yesterday. CAR C Al’rl RE \ml\r'r\ Accused and Merchandise, 5 ree young themselves bate Because Herrick Smiled. THEFT. \H"\\\ Paris, July 5, (By Associated Press) —Myron T. Herrick, American ambas- sador to YFrance, characterized as “much ado about nothing” the inci- dent in the ghamber of deputies last night when a communist member pro- | voked a lively debate over a photo- graph of Mr. Herrick and Premier Poincare designed to show that the| two statesmen were smiling while walking through the cemetery at Verdun. “l have no recollection whatsoever of the matter in question,” Mr. Her- rick said, “Even supposing that in alking from point to point during Three New of Stealing Tt July ribed | Stamford, | men, who desc Lawrnce Jone: Mills Hotel; Joseph Lyo West 67th street, and Johr of 195 Third avenue, New are under arrest here for the alleged theft of a motor car and $5,000 in \mvrr handise. fhe merchandise was stolen from a New Haven railroad it train near Rowayton, early yesterday. The men were arreste ere for vielation the day I should have said something |of a traffic regulation, and the stolen to cause Premier Poincare to smile, | goods were found in the car. there could be no possible ground for | R . DIES (\l' l\ 118 hll\ Dudley l"nln(!‘r I- Trightfully Tnjur- ed by Being Whirled Around Shafting Lions Are Invited to Attend District Outing | pudiey, Mass. An invitation was extended the|velle, 47 years o members of the New Britain Lions'| Steven line mills, was so frightfully -luh at the meeting held this noon, injured by being whirled around a to attend the district outing to be|side wall shafting today that he died held in New Haven on Saturday, July|a few seconds after the power had 15. There was a good attendance at| been shut off His clothing was the luncheon today at which several | caught as he reached across a moving of the members of the club gave shaft and in a moment he was short talks A drive is being con-| whirled around. ducted among the various members | to secure applicants for the club from | the factori Corliss La- painter in the July 5 age, PLEADS NOT Mineola, N. Y., July & Hazel Hirsh pleaded not guilty ay to s f indictment charging her with shoot- BROKER A SUICIDE. ng and wounding her hushand, Osc New York, July 5—Leaving a no(tllluxh near their home at Ireeport, asking that his wife be “gently noti- | recently, following a party at the resi fied” Henry Ettinger, a broker shot|dence of Miss Rene Davies, actress. and killed himself this afternoon in|Her counsel said Hirsh was recover- his private office. (Lng‘ ST — of the | _|culated that salt water had had | after | Cen Leath Am- | ed at the Gramercy Park apartment | Pacific Oil Business|\as jdentified as part of the Niagara | Doran | Kelly were | the | has| Maxim silencers, ammunition and the | l.. Nair. The Hemingway suit will be 'or changed and the cancellation on| | heard before Judge the morning. The other case of Fischl|from the Leonard street robbery and | 1WALL smm STOCK EACAANGE REPOTS Wall Btreet 10:80 a. m.~—Heaviness |of Mexican Pet, which soon declined i1 points was the only ‘Hu: higher trend of prices at |opening of today's stock market, the holiday evidently velopments over were favorably construed judging exception 1o New York, July b,—Four hundred fyom the tirmer tone of the list, Stude- | baker, Coca Cola and among the stronger featur: age gains of one point petroleums were only pressed by the reaction in Farly exchange rates were but higher in the main, marks steadying. Wall Street Noon—High \\firl‘ established during the dull morning by a few select issues. These (included Coca Cola, Mallinson and |Dupont, the latter extending its gain to 8 points. Crucible led the inde- ‘urnrlrnl str gaing 2 and the |motors were featured by Studebaker and Mack Trucks at 2 point gains, Rails were conditions. Call money opened at 43 per cent, Wall Street, 1:30 p. m.—Lack of |support and a weak speculative fol- lowing in the Mexican oil shares enabled the bears to offer these is- sues down steadily. when rumors cir- invaded the Toteco-Cerro Azul pool. Mexi- can Pet. slumped 9 1-4 points to 168 11-4 and Pan-American A and B shares [lml 6 1-4 points each. The resisting |power of the general list was under- |mined by pressure against the high |priced oils and earlier strong features like Studebaker, Crucible Steel and Coca Cola, fell away sharply. | Quotations furnished by | & Company. Am Beet Sugar. Am Am Am |Am Am lAm Dupont wi s at ave Mexiean i German g Ref com 79 Sumatra Tb 3914 Am Tel & Tel. m Wool Anaconda Cop Atch Top & § I At Guif & W1 |Baldwin Loco . 114 Baltimore & O . 49 Beth Steel B |Canada Pacific Co Ches & Ohio ... Chi Mil & St P . {Chi R Isl & P . |Chile Copper ... Chino Copper Con Gas .... Corn Prod Ref Crucible Steel Endicott-John — Erie Erie 1st pfd ‘Grn Electric Gen Motors Coodrick BF Gt North pfd |Insp Copper Int Mer Mar pfd PG Int Nickel |Int Paper. ... Spring T' Kennecott Cop.. 3 | Lacka Steel .. Mex Petrol [ Midvale Steel D150 3 -1 03 kO 1 Corth }"ac SEREFSS - ses s |ierce Arrow Ray Con Cop P D 1310 D o D e o9 E s 89 Sinclair Oil Ref South Pacific | South Railway | Studebaker Co Texas Co Tobacco Prod.. Transcon Oil | Union Pacific ‘l_ ted Re St . |U S Food Prod . S Indus Ale 8 Rubber C k] a3 121y U s |Utah C Willys Tverland (Judd & Co.) Aetna Life Travelers S Hfd Elec Light . Hardware Billings & Spencer Bige-Htd Carpet Bristol B . Colt's Arms | Eagle Lock |Lander: and Wil Co orks com . Works pid com Stow 1M ley Torrington Union Mt arort.el6 York city | C. \[l IS ISSUED, Chairman Norris Asks for Recommen- dations on Offers for Muscle Shoals. July Chairman | Norris of the senate agriculture com- | mittee issued a call today for the committee tomorrow to announce what recommendations it will submit to the senate with reference to the of- velopment of the govern- ments projects at Muscle Shoals, Ala The Norris report, it was under- stood, will urge governmental devel- opment in preference to the sort pro- posed by Henry Ford and others. Sen- ator Heflin, democrat, Alabama, will recommend the acceptance of ‘the Ford proposal There appears to be another tion of the committee—a group com- | posed of republican members, who are d to disagree with the govern- and operation idea as zesting acceptance of Washington, fers for de incli | ment controll well as that sug | the Ford tender. MERIDEN MAN BANKRUPT. New Haven, July Alexander Johnson of Meriden, filed a bankrupt cy petition today with debts of $§7, §03 angd assets of $5,351. L the | De- | gular | not influenced by strike | Putnam | PUTNAM & CO. Members New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange (Successors to Richter & Co.) 81 West Main &t Tel. 2040 Stanley R. Eddy Manager WE OFFER: Torrington Mfg. Co. Common Bigelow Hartford Carpet Common records | R G P |8 JUDD & CO. MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE HARTFORD: Hartford-Conn. Trust Bldg., Tel. Charter 6330 NEW ERITAIN: 23 West Main St.. Telephone 1813, We Offer and Recommend SHELL UNION OIL CORPORATIO 6% Preferred Stock to Yield 6.25. Thomson, Tenn & Co. NEW BRITAIN Hartford New Britain National Bank Bldg. 10 Central Row Telephone 2580 Telephone 2-4141 Members Members Hartford Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange STANLEY WORKS COMMON LANDERS, FRARY & CLARK JOHN P. KEOGH Member Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York Waterbury STOCKS Bridgeport Danbury New Haven Middletown BONDS Springfield Direct Private Wire to New York and Boston G. F. GROFF, Mgr.—Room 509, N. B. Nat'l Bank Bldg.—Tel. 1013 - Savings Bank of New Britain Organized 1862 Assets—8$13,000,000 Surplus—$700,000 A MUTUAL SAVINGS BANK It is the duty of every person to save, regularly and continuously. This bank offers a safe and convenient place for the deposnt of these savings, where 4!59, interest is being paid. START AN ACCOUNT NOW Open 8 A, M. to 3 P. M. Saturdays—8 to 11 Monday Evenings—6:30 to 8. (“tandard Time) 178 MAIN STREET fnme years. She will be assisted by isses Mabel Barrett and Doris Brad- Mrs. Edward Clarey and Mrs. ‘\\ illiam Retz, are the only two of last ! CATCHES | BIG LOBSTER Monster Fish on Display in Window year's teaching force, which have vol- ar. Other volunteers pected by Mrs. Hale. Mrs. L. J. Whorley, Miss Gladys \hnmvler. Miss Dorothy Hale and !n'gb.\' Warren Hale are among the new on [teachers. Tomorrow morning Dr. sh|Fred T. Lee, superintendent of health, will speak on the city's health laws. IFriday, Rev. John L. Davis will spéak. 18 PLUMBING PERMITS ‘1‘ and three-fifths pounds. He stated | Inspector P. J. Tormay Prepares Re- | that he has been fishing lobsters for | |the past 35 years, and has never the of the one on di sh marke He to the age from the old. The arance 1 the |3 of Moore's Fish Market on Church | ''® Street—Taken by Captain Hurd. What is thought to he the | lobster ever in this city, | display in the c | market on Church | ish was caught off . | Noank, Conn., by Captain | Hurd, one of the best known lobster | | fishermen along the sound Captain Hurd weighed |and found that the s ig Charles port to Be Submitted to Board of of size Building Commissioners. In the month of June, Plumbing In- spector P J. Tormay issued 48 permite of which 16 were for work in new buildings and 32 for work in old buildings. A total of 105 inspections were made and 334 fixtures were in- stalled, pot Tt were special inspections in which five defects were found and remedied. Nine sewer connections were inspected. Thirteen tests of plumbing were made with water. Local Boy Pitching Great Ball Out West Tommy Blanchard is pitching great ball out west, for the Oldsmobile com- iny baseball team of Wisconsin, Last Sunday against the St. Johns-Maple Rapids team, he twirled airtight ball, winning his game by the score of 3 | to 1, The game went 12 innings. Be- sides twirling a good brand of ball, Tommy broke up the game in the twelfth inning with a sizzling three- | bagger. He scored later on a sacri- fice fly and crossed the plate with the winning run. The team he is playing on is rated as one of the best semi- pro teams in Wisconsin, and the local hoy the premier twirler of the team. New Bridge in Elm City Will Cost Fully $710,825 New Haven, July 5.—The award to- flay for building a new Tomlinson bridge on the harbor front close by the Yale boat house, totalling $710,826 is said to be the largest single con- struction contract ever given out by this city. of the looks of was claws on give it ad a long carance of the very the life a monster is one of app of old lobster Hurd here and when he went out 1o get the one on display, found that had a catch of @5 He was en | thusiastic about the catch, beca he said, tt G | being told about the one that { where the man who is telli show what he is talking lobster in question will be on display number of day ENROLLED §0 PUPILS Daily Vacation Bible School Opens— Captain has oft Noank, he IRs the coun but ieved the e g 1L can about. The is be or for a Dr. Lee Speaks Tomorrow and Rey John L. Davis Friday. New Britain Daily Vacation school opened up this morning under the Airection of Mrs. ¥. Ches ter Hale. Despite the rain, more than pupils appeared at the Methodist [chureh to for the first day's session. Handwork classes will be tomorrow and it is expected the school settle down into work before the end of the week. Miss Agneta Drude, of Deep River, has |been secured to have charge of ali |children between the ages of four and The Bible is enroll organized to have routine