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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1922 HEADS OF ROADS |BIG BUILDING BOOM [WALL STREET STOCK NAME COMMITTEE| STARTS INCHICAGO| EXCHANGE REPORTS omonues o i v Dygpity BNOrtS 10 FIght COnget- . s et e tion in Center of City which soared to new high prices for Npp—te—— City Jtems A meeting of the Hardware City Democratic club, will he held tonight |, at the headquarters on Main street. A son was born today at the New Britaln General hospital to Mr, and Mrs. Harold Malone of 126 Colum- bla street. Thd condition of Henry Bazlewicz, the five years old son of Mrs, Sophia Bazlewicz of 6 Washington Place, who was hit by an automobile driven by C. J. Heinzman of 169 Greenwood street, yesterday afternoon, remains in a critical condition, The clerks at the local post office are smoking clgars on their former fellow worker, Harold Coogan, who was recently married In Chicago: Mr. Coogan Is at present connected with the post office In I.os Angeles, Cal. Thomas Curtin of 408 Farmington avenue suffered injuries to his back vesterday afternoon at b o'clock when he slipped from a load of hay near | his home. He was taken to the local hospital in the police ambulance, PERSONALS. Rev. R. N. terday after a 10 days' trip to Bedford, Mass. DEATHS AND FUNERALS John D. Hannon, | RURAL SCHOOLS T0 HAVE NEW SYSTEM Educators Would Reform O0ld Method of Teaching New York, Aug. 11.—Add to the| list of idols smashed to smithereens by the efficiency of 1odern sclence that quaint institution of American| rural life—the “little red 'school- house’—now denounced by educa-| tional experts of Columbla university as ''a danger to national progress.' Experiments conducted for the past year in a tiny school in Warren County, N, J., have proved to Dr. Fannle Dunn of Teachers' college, Columbla, that the problems attend- ing the evils of the “cult of the Iit- tle red schoolhouse,” as Dr. Dunnf calls it, can be solved by the same| methods that have brought progress in teaching the young of the cities ‘“how to shoot.” New School Plan. Forty-four puplis attended the typ- ical schoolhouse in Warren County, which ‘'was seven miles from a trunk line raliroad, two miles from a post office, and out in the open country. A single teacher was forced to in- -tr'::ct eight grades. There are still 200,000 S J iy J‘J:’;“';;;Z‘O‘x”‘:m:" n‘]’;;y‘ n(“ofl:\ John Donald Hannon, aged 13 PUTNAM & CO. Mempbers New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange (Succassors to Richter & Co.) Stanley It. rddy, Manager 31 West Main St,, Tel. 2040 promises to non-strikers and employes that senlority rights would be based i on loyalty, It also would spell vic- tory for the unions by again giving them recognition before the labor board, which last July 8 outlawed all #trikers and shut the door on the shop crafts unlons, As a third ground for refusing the president’s offer to let the labor board act as mediator, the belligerents de- clared they already were in sight of an open victory over the strikers and urged that they be permitted to con- vithout interference a ‘“finish the year, offset any uneasiness that may have been entertalned in specu- lative circles regarding the result of the overnight developments in the rallrord labor situation, Prices of ralls were mixed, 8t, Paul pfd,, Ches- apeake and Ohlo and 8t. Louls Bouth- weatern rising substantially, while heaviness appeared in Tolgdo, St. Louls and Western, Unlon Pacific and Chicago and Northwestern {ssues, Atchison opened unchanged. Olls and the recently strong speclalties made the best showing of strength, hut motors and rubbers tended to lose ground, Mexican Pet, advanced 2% and Pan-Am'n, Atlantic Gulf, In- ternational Paper, General Electrie, Bears Roebuck, 17, 8, Aleohel and In- ternational Harvester and Otis Elev, 1 to 1%, Studebaker fell 1%, Noon—Low priced rails worked steadily higher toward noon.and there was some inquiry' for the dividend paying {ssues, with St. Louls South- western common and preferred, Mis- sourl Pacific common and preferred, Texas and Pacific, Omaha and New York, Chicago and St. Louis moving up 1 to 2 points, Marked strength was also exhibited by the indepen- dent steels, shippings, farm imple- ment, merchandise equipment, gas and We Offer— 50 Shares NORTH & JUDD 50 Shares AMERICAN HARDWARE 50 Shares TORRINGTON CO. 50 Shares FULLER BRUSH, 1st 7% Preferred. Chicago, August 11 (By the Asso- clated Press).—Desplte efforts of commercial and clvic organizations fighting the congestion within the fron circle of the union loop, that his- toric center of Chicago {s enjoying an unprecedented bullding hoom The boom, however, {8 not at the expense of the outling sections and it {s most noticedble on the fringe of the ele- vated railroad circle, Three great “schemes’ are held re- sponsible for the most noteworthy bullding ventures near the heart of the city. ey are the Bouth Water street plan, which will change the famed fruit and vegetable market into a double decked thoroughfare with the upper level devoted exclu- sively to motor traffic; the TUnion Station plan, and the Grant Park plan. Favors Acceptance, President Felton of the Chicago and Great Western, acknowledged spokes- man for western and southwestern {lines was looked upon as a leader in the movement to ratify the peace pro- posal, His group stands for ratification, not because they have any more waith in the decision of the labor board, hut because they want the strike settled and thelr shops restored to normal. In addition, they want the good will of the publie, which they belleve would swing to the strikers it the as- sociation of raflway executives should again turn a deaf ear to President Harding. MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE HARTFORD: Hartford-Conn. Trust Bldg., Tel. Charter 6380 NEW BRITAIN: 28 West Main St., Telephone 1815, Gilman returned yes- ey Traffic Control. These schemes which primarily are traffic control and congestion relief {deas have received the co-operation of the realty owners in the neighbor- hood and they are promising to co- operate by the erection of architec- Have Been Hard Hit, These western and southern roads have been hard hit by the strike and their managers express none of the desire for a ‘finish ight" apparent in 7 .- i years, son of John D, Hannon of this :\:’:"‘5‘:":‘;;“‘)’: ‘::Y-m':)’n‘:” "‘fi’}"‘:“;’;wny. died yesterday at the home of | his aunt, Miss Julla H. Doyle, of that seem appallingly revolutionary ¥ o e to Americans who remember the rig.| 1 1omPsOnville. He leaves besides his 1d, plaster-cast demeanor that was| nner: R sister. Miss Julla P..Han exacted of every country schoolboy who was forced to attend the ommended for those one-teacher in- stitutions that will remain. Unre- ericted movement about the the installation of pupil helpers for the teacher, a more ‘‘clubby" spirit among the youngsters, and the appli- cation of the ‘“automat” i{dea in teaching the children to gain a large part of the education from the school library, are part of the new plan evolved from the War- ren County tests. Children Unhealthy. Despite Whittier's legend famous schoolboy of the building,”” whose ‘feet of tan" be- token splendid health Professor Thomas W. Wood of the Eye Sight Conservation council of America, wh is interested in the experiments, says that 87 per cent of the rural schools in New York state have | health defects, as opposed to 72 cent of unhealthy city children. the whole United States, Dr. Wood says 15,000,000 of the school children have bodily defects. 80 oppressing are the faults of country schools, the experts say, that of L Tn much of the congestion of the cities| exchange of goods, results from the inability of the schools to make country life attrac- tive. Efforts are now being made through meetings at Columbia of such educators as Miss Charl C. Wil- lams, recent president of the Na- tional Educatlon association; Mrs. Katherine Cook, of the Federal Bur- eau of Education and Dr. Kenyon L. Butterfleld, president of Massachu- setts Agricultural college, to bring about the changes in rural education| that will end the plaint of the mml- ern schoolby: “I'm getting oh so sick, Of reading’ and arithmetic That's why, we gave the the sack, we're back, If she doesn't on a tack, We've got the schoolhouse blues."” STEVENSON BOOKS SOLD Letters teacher And, never gonna come like it she can sit TUnpublished Autograph of Famous Writer Get Returns $3,500 From American Firm. London, Aug. 11.—Fifteen unpub- lished autograph letters of Robert Leuis Stevenson to his cousin, R. M. Stevenson, have been sold to a American buyer for $3,500. The man- uscript of Stevenson's unpublished play, “Monmouth,” consisting of 59/ pages, sold for $1,200. Accompan ing the manuscript was a letter writ- ten by the famous author when he was 23. "I recognize, it says, “that 1 shall never be a great man. set myself peacefully on journey, not without hope of coming to the inn before nightfall.” A letter written by Stevenson the day before he left for America to be married brought $150, and an unpub- lished poem went to an American collector for $65 Pragluski to Be Brought Back for Theft of Auto ® Detective Sergeant W. P. McCue will present extradition papers to Gov. Miller of New York state today, which if honored, will permit of his bringing back Charies Pragluski to this city on charges of automobile theft. The accused {s being held at Brooklyn on a technical charge transporting stolen goods into York. Pragluski, it is alleged, a "Bay State” car owned by Brown of Dwight street New Anton DIPLOMATS ARRIVE New York, Aug. 11—Sir Geddes, British ambassador, and Alfred See, Chinese minister, were passengers with their families on the incoming Mauretania today. SEERING WORKERS. Aug. 11.—An- Springfield, Mass, by f nouncement was made here toda an agent of the Northern Pacific road that men were being sent from this city, Hartford and Providence to fill vacancies in the ranks of shop| workers on that road Tt that 75 men have been sent from here In the last two days. west E—m—W2 | house ___——__—:—-—___———————_—" “THE TRUTH ABOUT HUSBANDS"” Fiancees, You Ought to Know it! Be at the PALACE Monday a nm:\HPr} of | mnu red schoolhouse of years ago, are rec- | room, | 'hemw]\ns‘ the\ rodw puplls in| per | ) 24,000,000 of | ‘A, | standing near n | roundhouse last T may | stole | Aukland | from England | was said | | work | terarr non and a brother, Paul E. Hannon, The funeral will be held at 9 o'clock | tomorrow morning at St. Joseph's church, The burial will be in St. Mary's new cemetery. James E. Hoshanna. James Edward Hoshanna, aged elght months, son_of Mr, and Mrs. | Jacob Hoshanna, of 2814 Lafayette street, died last night. The funeral was held this afternoon, and burlal was in Falrview cemetery. John Gedraitis. John Gedraitis, infant son of Mr. and Mrs, Simon Gedraitis of 189 Hartford avenue, died yesterday. T funeral will be held tomorrow after- \nnon at 2 o'clock from his home and | burial will be in St. Mary's new ceme- tery. COUNTRY CHANGES G0ODS Rumania Wanted Loan of Switzerland | and Officials Barter So That En- gines Were Traded for Cereals. London, 11.—Barter, or the as against the transfer of actual cash has figured | in recent international loans, accord- ing to the Geneva correspondent of the Obseryer. In this way the diffi- culties of exchange have been over- come. Rumania wanted a loan of 45,000,- | 000 gold francs from Switzerland. | The Swiss said it was impossible un- less they knew [ to be spent. Rumania replied: | need to replenish railroad stock, -particularly engines.” ' said the Swiss bankers, '‘we have these for sale. Take them, and | pay for them in cercals and pe-| troleum, hoth of which you produce | {and we need.” Thus were the ar- | rangements concluded. Similar borrowing and paying barter also has taken place | Czechoslovakia. Here, again, Czech- | osiovakia is receiving Swiss manufac- tured goods and is to pay for them with truckloads of sugar. Therefore the question of exchange and the comparative values of the Czech- oslovakian krone and the Swiss franc does not ari Aug. how the money was | “We | rolling | by with | | Runa\\ay Locomome Jumps Over Embankment | 11.—A locomotive left | the Central Vermont night, started to| | move during the night and ran off | [the end of a side track and down an | embankment. There was no great, damage, but considerable labor was involved in rescuing the runaway.| Traffic was not interfered with, (.l)\l RNOR TO ATTE Camp Forbes, Njantie, Conn., Aug. |13 Assurance was received this| morning by executives of the Hartford | ‘rhsahlnr‘] veterans camp here, from | Governor Lake that he would be at| amp Forbes on Sunday, accompanied y several members of his staff. The day has been designated Governor's day, and preparations are being made | to take care of a large number of| visitors from all parts of the state Saturday will be “trustees day." Palmer, Aug. D ¥ TO BI: DRY WORKER Bridgeport, Aug. 11.—Rev. R, H. White who recently resigned the pas- torate of the West Fnd Congregation- al church here to take effect Septem- ber 1, will on that date, commence | for the Nationali Anti-Saloon | He will be in Chicago and | New Haven and Fairfleld | it was announced here to-| league, work in countles, day FEAR FEVER EPID South Norwalk, Aug. 11.—With two cases of typhoid fever reported over- night, heaith officials here are taking ! precautions against a general out- | break, as information has been recefv- | ed which causes them to believe that | the disease comes from ‘“typhoid car-! who have heerr handling food- stuffs sold to the families in which | the omhreaks have occurred | 200 OUSTED BY FIRE Greenport, N. Y., Aug. 11.—Fire to.| day drove more than 200 guests from | | the Hotel Pogatticut on Sheiter Is-| land and it was helieved the structure | would be destroyed. The hotel was| | formerly knewn as the Prospect The blaze started on the | tourth floor and the guests had op- portunity to escape. NAMED DEAN AT TUFTS. Medford, Mass., Aug. 11.—The elec- | tion of Dr. Stephen Rushmore of | Boston as dean of the Tufts medical | Jschool was announced today by the| I!rustees of Tufts college. | other. |be made for the fall but the camp of the bigger eastern systems. Thelr reserves of locomo- tives are small, they have few sur- plus cars and their schedules have been badly disrupted. Numerous passenger and freight trains have been discontinued, they point out—a condition not vet true of the east to any alarming extent. The imminence of another bumper harvest, which, with a strike on would find them almost paralyzed, was an- other of thair ttrongest arguments. BRITISH T0 BAN AMERIGAN RADIO Would Not Use That Make for Two Years, Prefer Home Made London, Aug. 11.—American and other foreign wireless apparatus will be excluded from use by British broadcasting firms if a recommenda- tion of Postmaster General Kellaway | is adopted by the cabinet. Mr. Kel- laway urges that for a period of two vears licenses for broadcasting should contain a provision that only British |nst‘umenlq be used. Following the example of American journals, the British newspapers and magazines are devoting columns and | But broad- al- pages to wireless topics. casting in this country is in an |most nebulous stage, and wireless re- icelving by the masses has not at- |tained anything like the popularity it enjoys in the United States. The gov- ernment is slow in inaugurating a sen | ernment {s slow in inaugurating o general broadcasting scheme, Amateur Warned. Some newspapers are warning ama- teurs to be careful about cheap re- |ceiving sets—some of them of Am- erican and KFrench origin—which are {being widely offered. “If broadcasting were officially es- tahlished in England the whole pos- ition would become clearer, “W. W. Drury, managing director of the Mar- coni company, sald recently. “How- ever, the Marconi company antici- pates a large demand in the future for recelving sets and it s turning out many thousands of them. When the winter evenings come and people want to sit at home and listen to the outside world, there will be a great increase in the demand.” REGIS The registrars of voters will be in| their office at City Hall tonight until 9 o'clock to receive applications for transfers from one party list to an- After tonight no changes will elections. LEAVES ALL TO WIFE. By the will of the late Valentine B. Chamberlain, the entire estate is left to the widow, Mrs. Christine N, Cham- | berlain, and the New Britain Nation- a! bank is named executor. The will was drawn January 28, 1920, Many a family have nothing to say words of praise for the New Britain Herald classified ads. Princess Works Princ Andrew of HRussia 18 now dress designer in London. Here she is fitting one of her drésses on a pa- tron. turally harmonious structires. The Union station which {s to be erected just across the river from the loop will cost about ten million dol- lars but the bufldings which belong to the scheme will total as much gain. They include two giant freight term- inals and a U. 8. Mall terminal, the latter nearing completion. New Buildings. Work {is expected to start shortly on the new Illinois Central station at Roosevelt road, just south of the loop. The Field museum has just been com- pleted to the east of the station. The city is planning to build, just south of the museum, a titanic stadium which will be big enough to house the Olympic games, and a syndicate has drawn up plans for a great hotel to be called the Stevens, to the west of this group. All these buildings will be of Ionic architecture. The Chicago Tribune has an- nounced a contest for architects for the plans for a building to be erected by the newspaper, fust north of the Chicago river whicn is to be ‘the most beautiful building in the world.” Within the loop proper the streets are filled with materfals and side walks are occupied by wrecking ma- chinery. Old land such as the Strat- ford hotel, the Grand Pacific hotel, the First Methodist church building and McVickers theater have been de- molished to make room for modern structures, most of them skykcrapers, which rapidly are swinging their way skyward. On the last named spot a $20,000,- 000 theater is being erected, while two other downtown theaters are ‘nPnring completion. The Methodist church is building a magnificent sky scraper church in the very heart of the loop. * On the site of the Stratford hotel a huge office building is to be constructed, while in the financial ‘quar(nr the federal reserve bank building is about ready for occupancy, while the steel framework is up for the 88,000,000 TIllinois Merchants Bank building, a block away. The London Guarante and Accident building, another towering structure, s under construction at the south- west corner of the Michigan avenue line brdge, just across the Chicago river from the White shaft of the Wrigley building. RUSSIA DEATH RATE HIGH People Dying at the Rate of 40,000 a Month in That Country as Reports Show. Geneva, Ang. 11.—Reports to the health section of the League of Na- tions show that in the Kharkov dis- trict of Russia early this yaer people were dying at the rate of 40,000 a | month, or a mortality of 500 in every 1,000, Between March 1 and 20, 125,000 persons died of hunger. Of the 3,125,277 Inhabitants of the Tartar Republic, 2,500,000 had died of starvation by March. From Janu- ary 1 to March 15 there were 302,300 cases of infectious disease. In the Ukraine cholera was spread- ing and the deathrate was 60 percent There was a grave lack of medical supplies, and hospital accommodation had decreased by &0 percent, Up to May 2 the number of typhus in Soviet Russia, the Cau- casus and Central Asia was 613, 319 compared to 826,665, during the co responding period last year. There were 467,078 cases of relapsing fever. Bull Star\ es as Owner Fears to Attempt Rescue Wellsville, N. Y. Aug. 11.—Three hundred and fifty quarts of nitrogly- cerin in a magazine in the eastern Wyoming county oil district was the indirect cause of the death yesterday of a bull. | The bull fell into the magazine two | weeks ago, and farmers and workmen | were afraid to attempt escue e cause of the explosive. The bull died | of starvation ¢ ( of cases Believe Murderer of Woman Planned Killing | Springfield, Ma Aug. 11.—Alleg- ed evidence of emeditation in the killing of Mrs beth Pasusky Daniel Nahornie, a former bhoarder in her home last night, was found today ! by the police in the discovery that | Nahornle purchased vesterday after noon the weapon with which t shooting was done. State police were | called in today to assist in Nahornie, who was reported to have | left the city by wal he | CH \IH-‘IZD WITH ARSON Bridgeport, Aug. 1l1.—Rev. Stanis- law Glimos, pastor of the Polish na-| tional chureh in Johnstown, Pa., own- er of the house at 356 Pequonnoc street, where a fire occurred Wednes day was today charged with arson in connection with the fire. When ar- raigned {n city court today, his case was centinued until August 16, under bond of $500. ! | | Lehigh Val North tracking ! 1. 8. Alcohol shares, which ruled 1 to 3 points higher, Mexican Pet. ex- tended its rise to over three points and the motors and rubbers recovered their earlier losses. Dealings in rails contracted pend- ind news regarding the outcome of the raflroad executives' conference. Revival of bullish interests in the in- Austrials and specialties caused fur- ther advances in that quarter, Wil- son Pkg. bounded up 51-4 and the shippings, American Steel Foundry, National Cloak and Suit, Harvester and the Advance Rumely shares also incurred large gains. Quotations furnished & Company. by Putnam Close 463 578 26 118% 607 808 12215 148 Low 46% 573 26 1187% 6015 8054 12214 148% 90 6g High Bt Sug .... Can i Cot OIl Loco Sm & Sz Rf Tel & Toh Am Wool Ana Cop . Ate Tp & § F At Guif & W I. Bald L.oco Balti & Ohio Beth Steel B Can Pacific Cen Leather Ches & Ohio Chi Mil & St P Chi Rock Is & P Chile Copper Chino' Copper Consol Gas Corn Prod Ref Crucible Steel Cuba Cane Sugar 16 Erfe i Erle 1st pfd Gen Electric Gen Motors . oGodrick BF . Gt North pfd Insp Copper Inter Con Inter Con pfd .. Int Mer Marine Allie-Chalmers Pacific Oil Int Nickel Int Paper Kelly Spring T'r -nu Kennecott Cop lLack Steel Am Am Am Am Am Am Am Am 10214 3115 124% 584 1% 1421 35855 T 291 JA217% 1143, §97% 41 114 4l | 657 | 533 523 18 Mex Petrol .. 75 §1% 5% | Midvale Steel Mis Pac N Y Cen 9 g 5% | NYNHG&H Norf & West North Pac Pure Oil Pan Am P Penn R R Pierce Arrow Pittshurgh Coal Ray (Con Cop Reading Rep I & Royal D, N Sinclair Oil South Pacific South Rail Studebaker Texas Co Texas & Tohaceo Trans. Ofl Union Pacific .. United Re St 8§ TFood Prod 8 Indus Alco 7 8 Rubber 8 steel 1 pfa & T b Ref Pacific Prod. . Utah C Willys flp Westinghouse 618, Middle State Oil 12% Con. Textile 10% A58 Over. (Putnam & Co.) Bid Ins Co .....635 Asked 645 121 80 119 Aetna Life Am Hdw Am Hosiery Bige-Hfd Cpt com 3illings Billings 3ristol & & Brass Arms ‘onn, Lt & Fagle Lock ‘olt's Pow {Fafnir Bearing Hart and Cooley Hfd Flec Light Landers, F J R Montgomery com |7 R Montgomery pfd N B Gas N B, Machine com N B Machine pfd Nlles-Be-FPond and Juda Stov \|'E Co Peck | Russell ovill i' Beuthery Standard Serew Stanley Works com Stanley Works pfd ITorrington Co com Traut and Hine { Travelers Ins Co Unton Mfg Co NEW YORK CLEARING Exchanges Balances NORTH & JUDD To Yield Approximately 69, Reports That Many | Telegraph dispatch from Dublin | day |were in flames including the offices of the Cork Examiner and the con- stitution. progress said the dispatch, most to have evacuated the city towns of Clonmel, garvan, ecticut ate | tnis morning over Florida and North | Dakota are causing unsettled showery | weather in the southern and western | districts lawrence ant | in the Lake region and New England @h’ ] SO0 ‘fi & omson, 1enn NEW BRITAIN Hartford New Britaln National Bank Bldg. 10 Central Row Telephone 2580 Telephone 3-4141 Members Members Hartford Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange Donald R. Hart, Mgr. WE OFFER: BILLINGS & SPENCER Common and Preferred Price on Application JOHN P. KEOGH Member Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York Waterbury STOCKS Bridgeport Danbury e 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 fair weather followed by cloudy with slowly rising temperature. CORK IS IN FLAMES Big Buildings Including the| ELECTION TODAY San Francisco, Aug. 11.—Delegates to the American Bar association cen- vention were to elect officers today. ERCHARES:| Charles Thaddeus Terry, of New York to- | Was reported to be the choice of the said many big buildings in Cork |general council of the organization for president of the assoclation. Tt is stated that a faction of the as- | sociation came to San Francisco with (the firm intention of choosing Secre- tary of State Hughes to direct its af- tairs for the next 12 months. But opposition developed—not to Mr. Hughes, the eminent jurist, but to him as president, while secretary of state. Reports say that the test of strength between the Hughes propo- nents and the opposition came at the election of the general counsel when former Governor Whitman of New York defeated Henry W. Taft, broth- er of the chief justice. |European Exports Have Dropped Considerably Washington, Aug. 11.—Exports to ! Europe during the fiscal year ended June 30, were more than $1,000,000,~ 000 below the previous year and ship- ments to South America showed a de- cline of more than $300,000,000, the commerce department announced to- day Haven Been Fired Cork Examiner. London, Aug. 11.—An Heavy fighting was still in | although of the irregulars were helieved proper. National troops have occupied the Cahair and Dun- CLOUDY WEATHER Prediction For Tomorrow Showers Are Likely. Aug. 11.—For Conn- Cloudy weather with moder- temperature tonight and Satur-| ; fresh northeast winds. Conditions. Disturbances Is That | New Haven, central High pressure over the St. valley is producing pleas- weather with low temperatures Conditions favor for this vicinity, —— Q U A L S E R v ] v OPP. EAST MAIN STREET. evieanves LT vinauvess 100206 vo... b 3le Ib. 25¢ . Ib. 14¢ Ib. 10c 1b. 5¢ Y 424 MAIN STREET FRESH SHOULDERS FANCY FOWLS (3 and 4 lbs.) LEGS OF GENUINE SPRING I,A‘VIB RIB ROAST Frankforts All Kinds Salamie Ib. I\c Swift's Sliced Bacon Ib. 35¢ FRESH GROUND HAMBURG . .... 3 Ibs. 25¢ 3 cans | E\apoxated Milk 25¢ | La Touraine Coffee 1b. 43¢ lalge can Marshmallow 25¢ 5 1b. bag Pastry Flour 33c 7.2 cans §had 2 cans Pink Salmon. .. 29¢ " We carlv a full line of Best Tub Butter 21} ‘b"’gl Roasted Vleal% Olives, Jel- Fresh Eggs . doz. lies, Pickles, Preserves, Peanut Butter ... Ib. 39¢ Peanut Butter, etc. Brick Cheese ..... Ib. Z5¢ GOLDEN BANTAM CORN - doz. 17¢ LARGE POTATOES ..... . pk. 23¢ LARGE RIPE BANANAS . doz. 15¢ Native Tomatoes 3 Ibs. 10c 10¢ Pie and Eating Apples 3 ats. 25¢ . qt. 5¢ Lean Pot Roast Boston Rolls .. Lean Plate Beef Eal. Cantaloupes 5 for 25¢ Large Plums ... 3 doz. Freestone Peaches 2 qt 19¢ Large Cal. Pears 8 for 25¢ NATIVE TOMATOES . 25¢ Green Peppers Vi Large Native Onions ... 5 Ibs. 25¢ 14 qt. basket 39¢