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| | SI0.000 LAWSUIT IS THREATENED (Continued I'rom First Page) lueal poliza'nen wera churged Ly a former prisencr with abusing him on Lyons street aiid with stealing & fur 2oat and revne, frora the houre, The polico ware found not gulity and e charge waa diyntixed, Wolf Mentions Ellinger, When interview this afternoon Mr, Wolf, who is employei by the Corbin Metor corporation, tol) his story, He eald: “When I got off the car, Ber- geant Ellinger grabhed me by the sheulder and told me I was under arrsat. I snid, ‘All right, yvou don't need to tear my clothes off, I'll go olong with you.! They shoved me into the autemobile and when we went past the police station without stopping I asked him where we were going. He said, 'Never mind, you'll find out soon enough.' Choked By Husband. ‘“They took me to the house on Russell street and when they asked the woman if I was the man she said, 'Yes, that's him.' Then her husband jumped up and began chok- ing me.” “Did the husband hit you?"" he was asked, ‘“No, he didn't hit me, he made a swing at me but T ducked, but he started chpking me and the police were holding me and I couldn't do anything. I wanted to explain to the woman that I was not the man byt the cops pulled me out and one policeman said, ‘Get out of here or you'll get killed.! They pulled me around like a do#. “In the police station they pulled and shoved me around again and threw me into a cell so hard I had to catch myself to keep from falling. If 1 hadn't saved myself I would have gone on my face.” Trouble With Ears “1 have been doctoring for trouble with my ears for the past five or six years and after I spent the night in the ‘‘cooler” they were worse. 1 asked Lieutenant Bamforth and the other cops to let me telephone to Harry Elms, manager at the Corbin garage, but he paid no attention to me. After they threw me in the cell 1 asked Policeman Hellberg to tele- phope Mr. Eims. He asked me what his number was and I told him twice but he never telephoned. 1 asked them if they wouldn't let me try to get bail, but they said "Get in there,” and shoved me into the cell. They would not even notify my folks and my mother was worried all night when I didn't come home. Spends Night Killing Bugs ““The cell they put me in was so full of bugs I hollered and kept on hol- lering for some one to change me Finally they put me in another cell, which was not quite so bad.” “Did you sleep,” was the inquiry, “No, 1 was too busy killing bugs.” Didn't Know Cause of Arrest “Why I didn't even know what 1 was arrested for until Sergeant Kelly told me the next morning about 3 o'¢lock. Kelley came in and said: ‘What are you in for?' I sald I did'nt know. He looked it up and said it < was for insulting that woman. | | | men, wading out waist deep in “Who was in the party that ar- rested you?" he was asked. "Ellinger, Hellberg and two other cops,” was the reply. COMBINED STRIKES ~ AFFEGT INDUSTRY (Continued from First Page). kidnapped and beaten by strikers at Howell, Ind. In Peoria, Ill, a clash was averted when Sheriff Whitmore disarméd a non-union worker whom 200 men had started out to find and disarm. In Danville, Ill, twenty-one non- union, men who had left Wabash trains in protest against food condi- tions were fed by strikers and sent on their way to Decatur. Non-union workers on their way to Denison, Texas, to flll the places of striking shopmen of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas rallroad, were halted en route because troops were not there on guard. Seventeen state rangers were sent to Denison by Gov- ernor Neff last night, but an officlal of the railroad sald that no less than four or five hundred men could pro- vide protection there. Three companies of fleld artillery of the Missouri National Guard arrived at Moberly, Mo., last night for duty in the railroad shops. A Santa Fe passenger train carry- ing twenty-nine non-union workers was fired on at San Bernardino, Calif., and a crowd of three hundred strikers and sympathizers attempted to storm the train on its arrival. One man was arrested. IPéderal deputy marshals replaced deputy sheriffs as guards at the rail- read shops in Cedar Rapids, lowa, where an outbreak was feared. FIVE BOYS RESCUED. Firemen Halt Boat About to Plunge Overn Genesee TFalls. Rochester, N. Y. July —Fire- the j swift current of the Genesee river, last j pants of the skiff. night saved five boys, the oldest 7 years old, from being carried to their deaths over the upper falls here. The boys, in a battered skiff and too weak to battle for their lives, would have been dropped in another minute to the rocks below the falls, a distance of 60 feet The firemen, hearing cries for as- sigtance, saw the boat eddying down- stream, the lads clinging to one an- other, Two firemen were immediately loweréd down the steep banks of the river with ropes. Those above held on as the men waded into the cur-| rent and threw a line to the occu- WANT FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, | The ways and means committee of | the council, named to determine methods for keeping departmental ex- | penditures within appropriations, met | last night and voted to ask each hoard for a statemént of finances to be sub- mitted At a meeting in the iatter pact of next month Elephants séldom sléep moye than @ve lhours a day. | | | | community is a gen | of streets and houses FLAPPERS OF ANNAN ENJOY THEIR PIPES The Boys Take Care of Babies in Little Known Country Washington, D, C,, July 26.~The world s getting small, you say, yet a monarch whose red pencil scratch makes laws for six milllon people in o state twice the size of Austrin visits Paris an1 many well-informed, inquire “Who {s the Emperor of Annam ?" “To the occldental mind the Em- peror of Annam may seem a bit be. luted In visiting Parls, since Annam Las been a fleld of French influence siuce 1879," says a bulletin from the ‘Washington, ., headquarters of the National Geographical society, “From the Annamite point of view the presant ruler is exercising a rea- sonable deliberation, for how is he to know whether these juvenile nations are going to last untll they are a few centurles ol1? Take the Roman and Pussian empires, for example. Mere flurries In history to one who sits on the jeweled throne of Annam, be- reath the grinning Great Dragon of the Tlive Imperial Claws which hag heen biting his sixty-four sacred teeth {nto the royal emblem several centur- ies before the time of Christ. Amid the Balkans of the East. “If you do not carry the analogy tco far Annam may be called the Al-| bania of the East, located on the Bal-/ ken Peninsula of Asia. As you con- sider this comparison note that pend- ant from Asia, as from Europe, are | three peninsulas, and that Arabia and | India, just as Spain and Ttaly in Europs, comprise ancient clvilizations and distinctive peoples. However in Asia’'s eastern peninsula, as in the Talkans, one finds a racial medley| with alien powers long contending for footholds among them. India tapers off down the western side, Slam holds the center with a kite-tall sort of an extension south to the Federated Ma- lay states, while on the west coast Trench Tndo-China hulks one-fourth larger than Continental France her- self. And along the South China sea- coast of French Indo-China li”s the mountain barrier which {s Annam, less than a hundred miies wide but nearly 800 miles long. The jagged Lills of this range, sparsely peopled by oriental mountaineers, accent the like- ness to Albania, Towards the rising sun thess mountains look down upon the sea, which they cut off from easy access to the fertilé valley of the Mighty Mekong to the west. Phys- fcally they bind two plenteous deltas, that of the Red River in Tonkin, on the north, and that of Mekong's many mouths, in Cochin China, to the south. A “Flapper" of the Orient. “A mountain maid of Annam is far diffarent from her more rugged sister of Albania. ‘She wears a ‘one-piece gown' caught loosely about the waist. FHer hody is bare save for two long strings of beads, one harging beneath cach breast. She wears as many necklaces as her neck will permit, and her forearms is covered by a spiral metal bracelet. Earrings have enlarged the lobes of her— ears, bnt her most striking feature at first glance is the huge hand-carved pipe she is apt to be smoking. In her ex- otic appearance one factor alone stands out with uncanny familiarity to western eyves, and that is the way her hair is parted and done up in the demure fashion of an American girl of the Civil War period. The girls of Annam have far more freedom than those of China and have one advant- age over their occidental sisters—for in Annam the boys take care of the babies. “Coming down from the mountains, away from the wilder peoples of An- ram, known as Mois, the similiture to Albania fades. For you encounter an ancient civilization, comparable to and largely patterned after, that of China. Hue, Annam's capital and port, situated half way along its lengthy coast line, discloses a sertes of red roofed abodes, where live the n:andarins, and one magnificent es- teblishment, roofed in yellow, where the emperor dwells. True, the French protectorate has curtailed his abso- lute sway in some important partic- ulars, but to his millions of subjccts he still is the sole and supreme ruler. Eunuchs His Secret Scrvice Men. “The present young monarch of an- cient Annam is democratic. When he goes abroad for diversion he rides in an open carriage but the palaquin still is employed in his official travels. He fs not inaccessible when he moves about the vast courts of the Imperial Falace, usually surrounded by secre- taries, stewards and eunuchs, who are the secret service men of this oriental executive, ‘But when he sits in state the golden door that leads to his throne room f{s closed to all but the extraordinary ambassadors who must kneel and touch their venerable foreheads three times to the ground before they may enter the royal presence. The young king follows the customs of many fm- perial generations by anointing himself with oil and welghing himself down with jewels. Has Luxury of Versailles, “In luxvry and extent the palaces of Hue are comparable with those of Versailles. The monumental gate, broad terraces with their glgantic urns, perfume burners, rooms of gold and silver in rarest pattern, and chil- dren’s ballet, betoken a high degree of * its influence upon the tradi- tions and habits and slow changing customs of Annam there is a silent city near Hue—the City of the Dead on the Plain of the Tombs—which deserves to rank with the capital. This ine city—a city | of gardens and palaces and pagodas—it lacks only| living beings. Here are sculptured | likenesses of relatives of departed | Kings, and even of their household servants. It casts a strange spell | over the visitors with its every ar-| rangement for living, and no sign of life. It communicates, as nothin, clse in Annam, a sem®e of the Anna mite reverence for the past and fs| a symbol for that orlental mindful-| ness of ties with all that has gone be- | tore."” ' INJURED IN CRASH Milford, July 25.—Fred 8. Trumbull Beach. At the Mllford | | hospital he was found to have an In-| ternal hémorrhage which may provol serious. i NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, Is Uric Acid Making You IlI? .Have you wondered what is caus- ing you to feel so weak and tired—so “blue” and nervous? It may be uric acid. You have probably eaten too much meat which has fllled your| blood with urle acid, weakened your kidneys and caused that wearing backache, the headaches, dizziness and other bad feelings. Don't walit for serlous trouble, Lighten your dlet and use Doan's Klidney Pills, Thousands recommend them, Ask your neighbor! A New Britain Case, Mrs. R. Malyneux, 80 Whiting St., says T had a very bad form of kidney trouble. Headaches, dizzy spells and constant sharp pains across | my back had me weak and worn out. My kidneys didn't act right, I doc- tored but didn't get much help. Doan's Kidney Pills were recommend- ed to me and two boxes cured me, after other medicines had failed.” DO AN 'Q KIDNEY PILLS 60¢ at all Dru, Stores Foster-Milburn Co. MigChemButfalo,NY. City Items No summer home, yacht, or camp- | ing is complete without Saltesea Clam Chowder.—advt. ! The operators’ license of Charles G. Connors of 113 Hartford avenue, has Leen suspended by the state automo- bile commissioner. A car operated by Mr. Connors, struck and killed a boy named Arthur Carpentier Xastl Thursday on Stanley street. Order of Owls will meet tonight at Electric hall. Business very import- ant.—advt, The regular meeting of the Junior Branch, Catholic Daughters of Amer- ica, will he held in O. U, A. M. hall at 7:30 this evening. All members are urged to be present. Bungalow Aprons assorted patterns and styles 59c. Besse-Leland's.— advt. An inventory in the estate of the late Thomas R. Brophy, filed today in probate court, shows an estate valued at $4,000, this amount being repre- sented in an undivided one-half in- terest in property on Lawlor street, Small lot of Men's Pants $1.00. Besse-Leland's.—advt, ‘The following births were reported at the New Britain general hoepital today: a daughter to Mr, and Mrs. Henry Bryant of Farmington and a son to Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth Diters of Plainville. Women's Sport Tan and Black and White Oxfords $1.00 Wednesday only. Besse-leland's—advt. Assorted Crystallized Bonbens 37c at Besse-lLeland's.—advt. Men's Silk Knit Ties Besse Leland's.—advt, Soft Collar Attached Shirts $2.00 and 82.50 values, White Oxford $1.50. Besse-l.eland’s advt. Women's White Canvas $1.90 at Resse-l.eland's.—advt. Women's Sport Oxfords $4.40 values up to $6.90 at Besse-Leland's.| —advt, | B Wash Suits 98c' at Besse-Le- land's.—advt. 50c off price on all Boys' Worsted Bathing Suits, Wednesday only, at Besse-Leland's.—advt. ) for $1.00. Pumps| REGANO INVOLVED T0 ABOUT §8,000 (Continued from First Page), s csiad o he sald, t He was fined $3, Similarly charged, P. Garston pleaded not gullty. He was also charged with allowing his dog to roam collarless. Sunday afternoon he folowed the ), dog from the extreme south end of |, the city to the north end. He had no g collar or llcense, Warden Reynolds| sald, v The accused sald he was confined at work and’ had no time to go and get a license. A §3 fine was imposed on the | first count and he was discharged on| the second. /In the charges of violations of the pure food laws, brought against Wil- liam Lanske, a Tremont street butch- er, a $15 fine was imposed Mrs. Margaret Pianis, arrested fol- lowing a neighborhoed row on Chap- man street last Friday night, pleaded not guilty to breach of the peace and assaulting 15 year old Agnes Am- brose. The Ambrose girl was sitting under the grape arbor in the rear of her home, when the accused came up and struck her with a carpet heater, she told the court. The Pianis family has a dog that howls at night, disturbing the neigh- | bors. A complaint was made a short time ago and the Ambrose girl was blamed. Since that time there has been trouble, witnesses say. Friday night's fracas attracted a large erowd and Patrolman Raymond Gunning was called in , Mrs. Pearl Gradek went to the res- cue of the complainant, who {s her sister. She denied the charges of Mrs, Pianis that she, too, had heen an ag- gressor. The accused sald she was beating carpet and was attacked by the two girls. She denied striking either. Judge Alling found the accused gullty and fined her $5 for assault. PERSONALS o B C A A 1 1 1 1 Thomas Leonard of Clark street {is spending his vacation in the Catskills, B. Stein, of 27 Winthrop street, who was operated upon at the Mount Sinal hospital {n New York city, has re- covered and has returned home. 1 I Miss Mollie Egan, bookkeeper at the Farrell Clothing company is spend- ing her vacation at Ocean beach. Mrs. 8. H. Nordenson and son Roberts street, are sojourning Block Island. 1 L of at Miss Alice McMahon of Stamford, is spending hér vacation with her aunt Mrs. Edward Brown of Lincoln court, Mr. and Mrs. James Webb of Rob- erts street, are spending their vaca- tion at Block Island. Louls R. Cranley, of the Hart and Hutchinson company, has gone on i business trip to Saratoga Springs, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Anderson and family of Arch street, will leave naxt week for a vacation at Block Island. Dr. and Mrs. James Faulkner and Rev. Father Martin Drury, professor of history at Cathedral college, New York city, have returned from an au- tomobile trip through Maine and New Hampshire. Rev. Father Martin Drury is a brother of Mrs, Faulkner, | y 1 DEATHS AND FUNERALS u U 1 If 10 V Mrs. Angelina Coppola, *Mrs. Angelina Coppola of 30 Beaver BLAMES@R__OKER_S-ISUIGIDE New Yorker Leaves Note Asking That ! | His Ashes Be Sent to Fertilize Lawn | | | New York, July 25.—After writing | several notes to newspapers requesting that some one be sent “to see a real sulcide” and another to a relative to | have his body cremated and the “ashes sent to the head of the brok- | of Man Who Sold Him Stocks. to fertilize his lawn” a middle aged, | well dressed man jumped from a ferryboat in the Hudson river early today and was drowned. Other mes- sages which he left in his hat, care-| fully placed on the dack before he! climbed to the rail to jump overboard, | stated that he had lost all his savings | speculating in stocks. ’Round the World Flier Crashes, Wrecks His Plane | London, July 2b.—(By Associated Press)—The airplane in which Major W. T. Blake, British aviator it at- tempting a round the worid flight from England, crashed at Sibi, Brit- ish Baluchistan, near Quette, Satur- day, says an Exchange Telegraph despatch from Karachi today. The aviator himself, received no in- | jury, but the under carriage of his machine was smashed. | NOT BONUS. { Senators Are Told That Such Is Pref- street, died at the New Britain Gen- cral hospital last night. Besides her husband she is survived by two | children and her parents, The funeral will be held from her home at | 30 Beaver straet tomorrow morning at | 8:30 and at 9 o'clock from St. Mary's churgh. Burial will be In St. Mary's | new cemetery. | b F 3 | E Compara, |1 Saturday | Battista Compara. The funeral of Battista who was killed in Berlin night, was held from the Laraia and North and A Pec erage firm where he did his trading |'€7n00n at 2 o'clock from St. Mary's| Russ E Burial was gian) Sagarino undertaking parlors this af-| church at 2:30 o'clock. in St. Mary's new cemetery. 2 It Gustave Berndt. 1 Gustave Berndt, aged 56 years, died | gyanqard at the home of his sister, Mrs. John| H. Bastian of 9 Meadow street this morning. He 4 brass moulder by trade and belonged to the Austrian| Singing society and the Schwabin- | Verein, The funeral will be held at| 2:30 o'cloek tomorrow afternoon from | he Mortuary Chapel. Rev. Samuel | Sutcliffe will officiate and burial will be in Fairview cemetery. Mrs. Frances Elizabeth Foster, Mrs. Frances Elizabeth TFoster, widow of the late Frank Ioster, of|T West Hartford, died last night at the | E home of her aunt, Mrs. Michael Mar- T tin of 118 Tremont street. She been {ll only a short time her aunt she leaves a grandson, I'ran- cis Ringrose; three nephews, George, Cornelius and Francis McAloon; a|b niece, Miss Catherine McAloon, and a ¢ cousin, Miss Mary Smith of Hartford. ¢ | e | T erence of Service Men, | Washington, D. C., July 25.—Sen- | ators Phipps and Nicholson of Cel- orado receitly got this gentle hint| concerning the pending bonus bill | from the editor of a leading news- paper published in that state | The funeral will be held at 8:45|e o'clock tomorrow morning from Trémont street The se conducted at 9:30 o'cloek Bridget's church, at ElImwood. in St Miss Elizabeth Cox. The funeral of Miss Ilizabeth \‘nl‘s “The best way to show apprecia-!ywas held at 9 o'clock this morning| tion of the services rendere tion by our boys in the world war| is to enc will be jobs open and, therefore, pay envelop “ide for the boys means to order goods from the factories and farms. | That program means prosperity.” | BRITISH RACING. Goodwood, Eng., July 25. (By As- Crosby | 8oclated DPress)—Tetrameter, by theé | ment of state constabular: of this town, was injured today when | Tetrarch, out of Mandola, today won | teday for Hornell, where one man was oftered to present her dance in court his automebile struck a tree at Fort, the Stewards cup, a handicap of one | killed and another wounded Sunday | The detail was graphs would do but Miss Young in- thousand sovereigns for three year olds and upward, six furlongs. Night Patrol was second, and Morning Light third. I the na-|at st ourage business so that there | mags of requiem. Rev ters and Rev In other words, to pro-|pjeqd seats in the sanctuary. The burial terddy before [\\ns in St. Mary's new cemetery. State Constabulr;i-§ to Guard Hornell R. R. Yard piace, rank C. Lemmon said Miss Young's| left early |lack of attire shocked him. The dancer or Miiler. Mary's church. Rev. Peter Cof- fey, of Hartford ofiiciated at a high John T. Win- Walter McCrann occu- a h | P! P IC Buffalo, N. Y., July 25.—A detach- |F in the raliroad yards. sent in response to an appeal from | sl tures, strengthened, Baltimore & Ohio, Ohlo and New York Central, but At- lantic | money opened at 4 per cent. Am Am Am Am Am Am Am Am Ana Cop 0 |Atch Tp & S T, At Gulf & W T 36 Baldwin Loco Balt & Ohio Beth Can Pacific Cen Leather Co Ches & Ohlo ... Chi, Mil & St P 28 o c Chino Copper C Corn Prod .Crucible Steel Cuba Cane Sug. Endicott-John. Erie 1st pfd Gen Goodrick (BF) Gt North pfd Allis-Chal Kelly Spring T'r Kennecott Cop.. Mex Petrol Midvale Steel Mis Pac NY North Pac Pure Oil Pan Penn R R Plerce Arrow Pittsburgh Coal Ray Con Cop .. Reading . Rep I & 8§ Royal D, N Y Sinclair Of1 South Pacific South Studebaker Co Texas Co Texas & Pacific Tobacco Prod.. Transcon Oil v v |Aetna Life Travelers Billings & Spencer pfd Bristeol |NEW YORK (L pendent Besides | work, Wy 118, Washington, vice will be|Penberthy, Washington; marshal, Wilmer King, Delav {an TUESDAY, JULY 25, 1922, WALL STREET STOCK EXGHANGE REPORTS Noon—The market turned upward n short covering hefore the end of he first hour. Steels, equipments, motors, coppers and food and chemi- als speclalties were the active fea- Republie, Crucible and Gult teel rose 2 to 2 1.2, Baltimore & dhio gained 1 1-2 points and Stude- aker and Chandler recovered much f vesterday's losses. American melting, American Sugar, Allled hemical and Industrial Alcohol ad- anced 1 to 2 points, Rails also especially Atchison, Chesapeake and Coast Line was heavy, Call Quotations furnished by Putnam & Company, High 47 501 Low 4TY 50% 26 114% 80 80 37 Close 47 5% 28 115 807% 81 7% m Bt Sug can ... Cot 01l Loco ... Sm & Re. . 8g Rf cm.,. Sum Tob. .. Tel & Tel, . Toh Wool m 143 80 141,090 52% A3 10014 35% 115% 83 5% 138 391 67% 27y 42 $1% 21 119% 105 521 16% 1178 .. 54 e rag L1303 397% 687 Steel *hi Rock Isl & P 43% hile Copper .. 221 28% L1215 Ref 106% 85% 17 8214 1614 24 14 ‘onsol Gas irie 1634 Motors nspir Cop .... nterboro Con nterboro Con pf nt Mer Mar pt. Pacific Ol nt Nickel nt Paper .acka Steel , Lehigh Val R S 13 1200 & O ~1 63 e v = o 3 ca QU I Qoaiips B pa-Aba dhdo] e Cen- .. MONGH & H orf & West & 30y L1091 . 16% Am P & T - Hei Rallway . 283 KERTY 14 1417% 144 63 7% 7% 63y 601, 10114 1201, 64% 8% 'nion Pacific .. ‘nited Fruit .. 'nited Re St .. 1 8 Food Prod S Indus Alco 8 Rubber Co . S Steel S Steel pfd .. ‘tah Copper .. Wiliys Overiand % 63 80 100 % 120y 64y (Judd & Co.) Bid Asked 645 1fd iec Light Am Hardware Bige-Hfd Carpet Billlngs & Spencer com 1 Brass v olt's Arms ;agle lLock jart and Coole: anders, F. iles-Be-Pond com Stow and Wilcox 3 Mfg Co v Works com | Stanley Works pfd forrington com “nion Mfg Co Screw T HOUSE REPORT 796,400,000 57,800,000 Exchanges Balances Good Templars Elect Washington Man Head Butte, Mont, July 25.—Officers | were elected yesterday at the annual, onvention of the grand lodge, Inde- Order of Good Templars ‘hey include: Chief Templar, Rev Cdwin C Dinwiddie, Washington, ). C.; Counsellor, Harry E. Wellman, had [ New York; superintendent of juvenile Mrs J Chandler, fampshire; secretary, Willard Massachusetts; tréasurer, Sutcliffe, Massachusetts; templar, Dr. C A Carlson, superintendent temperance Miss Laura R. D. C.; chaplain, New 0. Al- E. e hief Yhio; ducation, Harvey re WILL DANCE IN COURT. ovel Defense to Charges to Be Of- fered by Young Performer, New York, July Clara Young, dancer living in the Richmond otel, Manhattan, was arraigned yes- Magistrate Liota in latbush court charged with glving immoral dance in the Parkway alace, 51 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn. harles C. Rich, proprietor of the also appeared. Policeman Magistrate Liota thought photo- sted they would not, so the magis- Mayor Robbins of Hornell to Govern- |trate set August 1 as the date for |the exhibition. past | Church, | PUTNAM & CO Members New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange (Buccessors to Richter & Co.) 81 West Matn 8. Btanley R, Eddy Tel. 2040 Manager We Offeri— 25 Shares of AMERICAN HARDWARE 25 Shares of HART & COOLEY UDD & CO. MIEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCUANGE BARTFORD: Hartford-Conn. Trust Bldg., Tel. Charter $330 NEW BRITAIN: 23 West Main 5t., Telephone 1815, WE OFFER: 50 BIGELOW-HARTFORD, Common. 50 HART & COOLEY 50 TORRINGTON At the Market. Thomson, Tfenn & Q. 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 Donald R. Hart, Mgr. W We Offer:— LANDERS, FRARY & CLARK Price On Application We Do Not Accept Margin Accounts. JOHN P. KEOGH Member Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York }?)Vatle,rbury STOCKS NBrldlll,e‘port W 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 The Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company Corner Main and Pearl Streets, Hartford, Conn. Capital $2,000,000.60. 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 | Bank by mail. It is safe and saves time. | | | THE GREAT MONEY- LENDER WITH A HEART ‘We lend money to honest persons having steady employment. Loans for sums nceded up to $300, repayable in six to fifteen monthly installments, as< arranged (o suit convenience of each borrower; legal rates charged on sum still due for time used; no charge unless loan is made; deals confidential and none will know you are borrowing; private offices: glad to explain Beneficial Plan; courteous treatment; convenient and safe place to borrow; quick scgice; new borrowers welcomed; hours, 9 to 5:30; Saturdays 9 to 1. Call, write or phone. New Britain 1-8-4-8. Beneficial Loan Society New Britain | "l Room 104-5 W. Main st | Licensed by State Bank Commissioner. Members Legal Reform Bureau to Eliminate the Loan Shark Evil, N, ¥, e ——— e — ODESSA SMILES AGA[N | feared to resume activity, thinking that desperate people would loot their i IV T places, have reopened their doors and Qdessa's shopping zone is functioning well. Government emploves are bet. of | t¥1 able now to do their work; hence | the lighting plants and water pump- ing sttions operate more regularly, { American Relicf Proves God Send to People Who Were on Verge Starvation .Until Saved. July has done much for Odessa, ’A‘I"“"““ [‘”“”(’ Students Feature in gt Ripe O Berlin Revolver Duel July 25.—A revolver duel occurred between communists and students at Klausthal, according to the Vorwaerts. One communist was shot dead by a student, who wa# at- tacked by a crowd and taken to the hospital in a dying céendition. Further disorders, occurring later, resulted in two students beng injured. Odessa | Four months ago their condition | was heart rending. In March and { April the city streets were unlighted I'starvation «illed faster than the au- | thorities could remove the bodies of its victims; the hospitals were in un- | speakable distress and from them and | the Children’s Homes the death carts made constant trips day and it to the city.cemeteries, Workers of the American Reliet | \dministration see today wonderful Rockford, Til, July 25. — Acting { improvement. The prople who walk Gov. ¥red E. Sterling today offéred | ed dejectedly through the streets three | 9118 services as mediator in the mine { months ngo now smile, and the chil.|Strke in a telegram sent to Frank R dren nave begun sgain to laugh and | | @rrington, president of the IiXnois g and enjoy themselves. I'hey are United Mine Workers, nothing like the careworn and nun- | ger-pinched yeuvugsters who slunk or crawled about in the spring. Berlin, OFFERS TO AID STRIKE LIBERTIES ARE HIGH New York, July —Liberty bonds Hospitils now conduct visitors | eontinued to establish new high ree- | th¥Bugh their wards with pride, for ords on the stock exchange today. The they have clean linen and ample med- | 3 1-2s rose to 101.16, the first 4 1- icine to care for their patients. to 101.68 and the fourth 4 1-4s to Storekeepers who in the trying days ,‘ 101.71 .