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$09% of People Woyld Be With Us, Says Montagne New York, Feb, 17 Montagne brothers Omits His Ofier Washington, Web. 17--A legisla. tive program for the remainder of their second day in Essox county jall. | this session of Congress which does They mixeft freply with the other four| not contemplate aetion on Henry federal mlnm‘u» in the Jall durink| Kord's offer for Musele Shoals is being the exercise period in the corvider| worked out by republican leaders of and continued to laugh and jest about | (he house, " their incarceration, However, during| Chairman Campbell of the rules the afternoon, when reporters were | committee sald today that Musele’ permitted to interview them, st least| gnoals was not ineluded in the pro. one Montagne, the eldest, appeared| gram because it was not in a parlia- st0_bo_somowhat depressed., mentary situation to be considercd, When reporters asked the hrothers| yie addedgthat in any event house ae- :;’l‘:«u‘h;{n\l:n "'";:"'l""p'"’“” ] tfon wouldl be a loss of time beeause 3 i e W 1 “You know, if every one was t jail :::; mr;‘,:‘, :;m:::‘::? of & sonate Who iu gullty of vielating the prohibi-| "'y, yine with the majority program :.'::'IM“:-' :P“r"l:: “h‘so,‘:,:,.l::..""pu House consideration of the Cape Cod e pleaded gulity on thedadvice Canal, bill, seheduld for today, was of our counsel,” he added, hut would not admit that he and his brothers were guilty of any offense, Asked regardgg the reports that steps would be taken to obtain exeen. tive clemency, Montalgn sald that the matter was in the “hands ,of ' our counsel," In reply to a question as to how the brothers are being treated in the prison, he said: “Oh, In general, we are being treat. od as well as could be expected, We don't want anything specigl, any pri- vileges, youn understand.” T “We haven'tyhad such a group of good fellows Mére for a long time,” sald Warden . Richard McGuinne: “They are good-natu; d have nol |,,.,."y kln: ;‘"n:nyrcdhl:,l;"' 2 They| Acting Chairman McKenzie of the have taken the attitude that they are|military committee, which reported going to take. their medicine.” 4 out the Muscle 8hoals bill, said foday \ BUSINESS MAN FINED §50 [sucie 1 meswore e e FOR RISSING 6IRL CLER fer as to what bills are to be/brought out betwedn now and March, The change in the order of House procedure was made alMer it had been indicated that advocates of early ae. tlon on the IFord offer’ were planning fo atteppt to amend the rule giving the Cape Cod bill right of way on the floor so as to give similar status to the Muscle Shoals bill, In summoning committee chairmen to a conference with the rules com- mittee on Monday, Chairman Camp- bell was. understood to have advised them to present only such legislative matters from their committees as would be the least controversial in character, K| H. &C. C0. ELECTS BOARD Younz Women Who Answer “Want”|pirsctors Are . Named At~ Annual Ads., Must, Be Protected, Judge Mocting Today—Will Select Offi- Tells Offender cers At Later Date New York, Feb. 17.—Caesar Bonis Members of the hoasd of directors of 497 Sixth-avenue, who was found for the Hart & Cooley Manufacturing Jgulity Feb, 10 of disorderly conduet |ivg'\were reclected at the annual “on complaint of a young wnman‘hc meéting of stockholders this atder- had employed in his office, was fined | ;500 and the board postponed until a ,/$50 yesterday by Magistrate Renaud. |)ater date the election of officers, It The girl told the court she dbtained |\ ,q qecided to postpone because of the position by answering & help |ye ‘fact that only ' small number of wanted advertisement and that Bonis|ih. girectors were present, ; attempted to kiss her and take other| “nhs members reelected to the board (diberties nfter sh# had been With him |4re; Howard 8. Hart, Dr. Norman P. sonly a few hours. .. Cooley, Gedfge I'. Hart, E. N. Stan- The case against Bonis was , pre- ley; 1. H. Coopér, M. S. Hart, 1. C, -sented by Agent Bafberger of the 80- {qogdwin, James H, Robinson and R. cley for the Suppression of Vice and|o, 'mwitchell, 4 Detective McGlynn of the Special . STRIKE IS SETTLED Service Division of the police depart- — ment., 2,600 Workers of British Empire Steel “New York girls who answer ad- svertisements in search of honest em- (‘o'mp-ny Reach Agreement and’ De- 2 ‘ ployment have got to be protected yide to Retuin to Work, against men like you,” said Magistrate Renaud, in.imposing sentence. “If it were not fér your past good reéord and the fact that you' have w'wité| J : s Sydney, :N. 8., I'eb, 7.—Représgiita- /600 strikers and; of, . the British Empife Steel company today yeached a' basis of agreement for the And family; 1 $hould imposésa prikon "ntnncol (he worlchotipe. " " ‘Seltiement of ~difficulties ' which- had ftied ‘up the plant. ¥ . N. L & o | 5 EMPLOYES TO HOLD BONDS ! The company agreed to’rfopen the e ement, of New Generpls Himstrie Crpoiion. " ¢ case of Sid MeNeill, whose discharge Schenectady, N. Y., Feb, 17.—Enmg|on"a charge ‘of insvhordipation pre- cipitated the strike. The strikers now, wiil be asked to vote -on a proposal ployes of the General Electiic com- ‘pany are to'share in the managément to abide by the decision xeached at McNelll's rehearing, : of the newly organized G. E. Em- ?‘plnyl‘s' Secitrities Corppration, Gerard | Three Police Sergeants Sick and Off Duty -/8wope, president, announced today.| + The new corporation will issue 6 per cent bonds to employes on the install- ‘Sergeant Patrick A. McAvay of the police department is 11l at his home on Main street, Three sergeants in ment plan, paying.an additional 2 per - embers” of the|the department are now on the sick | cent on tfiem as long as the holder remains in the employ of the com- be representa-1list, the other two being Matthias Rival and Michael J. lynn, status. pany. Seven of the %15 boardof directors w tives of the employes, elected by the tbondholders. Each $10 par value of such bonds of the new corporation ‘will have one vote for these direc- tors. - Fight' direstor wifl be named by the,.company. The new corporation will issue $5,~ 000,000 of 6 per cont 50 year bonds and 10,000 shareg of “no par value capital stock. The General Electric company will subscribe for the entire issue of bonds and stock. The stock will ‘be retained but the bonds will . be sold to employes. BODY IS IDENTIFIED. ! Meriden, Feb, 17.—George FE. Brosnan, 25 years old, son of Mrs. Mary Brosnan of 375 North Cherry street, Wallingford, was the man who was found dead in a hallway of 57% Weést Main &treet, in this city last evening. Besides his mother, he leaves three brothers, Frank, John and Farl, and one sister, Mary. TWO BANKRUPTCIES 1 New Haven, I'eb. 17—A bankruptey petition toddy wag that of Barnet Bernstein, doing businegs under the name of The Grand Leader, at Dan- La Marr, a motion picture actress, has | bury, with debts of $9,406, and as- adopted an infant from Hope Cot-[sets of $2,655. Feliz Tolisana of tage, a baby hospital here, according|Winsted filed a petition with debts of to an instrument recorded with the|$4,856 and assets of $1,615. oounty clerk. RO » MOVIE ACTRESS ADOPTS A BA}IY Dallas, Texas, [eb. 17.—Barbara ILLEGAL TO CHAIN DOG Chicago, Feb. 17.—The Jocal divi- sion of the National Canine Defense league is rejoicing in the decision of | a polioe court magistrate in Londone | .that it is illegal to chain a dog for an excessive length of time, The league brought a charge against the owner of a dog of chaining only. No attempt . was made to prove that he ill treated | tthe animal in any other way. In the opinion of the ILondon court, it is just as much cruelty to keep a dog on a chain’ for an excessive length of | time as to beat it or work it un-| merciful. BULL IN.RAID, TREES WOMEN Newport, Ky., I'eb. 17.—A wild bull threw this town of 30,000 persons int® panic and turned the police depart- ment into volunteer matadors yester- day. A score of men and a dozen women were frightened. Two women who came upon the bull and elimbed a tree, had to be rescuell by the po- lice. 12 ARE ARRELSTED. Minneapolis, Feb, 1 wolve ar- reits in confiection with disposal of currency stolen in the Denver fed- eral reserve bank truck rebbery in DPenver in December | impend here. It was indicated by postal inspectors| today. They declined, however to make any official statement, For promot and maintaining beauty of 'llnh'lml hair Cuticura Sosp and Ointment are unexcelled. Cuticuta Talcum is an ideal powder, refreshing and m‘n‘ to the most delicate skins. * put over to permit the leaders to con- | ‘| Waterman Lyon of 27 Walnut street. | being constructed . The"nbove is the first pieture pub-|ing tube or megaphone from attend. lished of the new ambulanee bought|ant's seat to driver; two one quart by the New Britain General hospital, |thermos bottles, each in special hold. ‘The vehicle is the last word in auto-|ers; two ambulance type foldipg seats ambulan: Its interior equipment ' with lazybacks, seats upholstered same Includes exhaust type heater with as driver's cab; tawo electric fans with bright nicke! plated floor register and | self-containing switches; two nickel controlled at the driver's seat) speak-| plated dome lights; full set of strong- DEATHS AND FUNERALS BANDITS SHOOT GOUPLE | T B, Do OF BAKK MESSENGERS was recelved here today of the death of Patrick H, Donahue in ——— Bridgeport. Mr. Donahue was well| . ' 2 known in New Britain as he formerly | Elderly Pair Held Up in New York lived here with his daughter, Mrs, e Willlam Frey of Chestnut street. and Robbed of Pay He was born in County Claré, Ire- roll. land, in 1840, and came to this coun- . | try when six years of age. He was New York, Ieb, 17.—Two elderly the son of Daniel I Donahue and|bank messengoers, Robert Johnson, 52, Mary Hatchford Donahue. He lived |and Willlam Buck, 68, were wounded most of his life in Rockville and a|yesterday in a pistol duel with three few years in New Britain and Bridge- | bandits who held them up and ess port. caped with a valise containing a He is ‘survived by the following|$9,400 payroll. More than 20 shots children: William F. Donahue of Low- | were exchanged. The messengers re- ell, Mass.; Thomas H. Donahue of |leased their hold on the valise only, Rockyille, Mrs. E. L. Lurvey of Bos-|after they had been weakened from ton, Mass, Mrs. D. W. Delgney of [loss of blood. Bridgeport, Mrs. Willlam Frey of this The pair, employed by the Hud- city, Susan A. Dénahue of Hartford, n street branch of the Pacifie| and Mrs. William Sullivan of Rock- | bank, were carrying the money zo“ ville, Fourteen grandchildren afid |the offices of Seeman Brothers, gro- ten great grandchildren also survive, | cers, a short distance away, when The funeral will be held Monday |they were confronted by the bandits, | morning at 8i30 o'clock from the|who dashed from a hallway and home of his daughter at 974 Iranstan|opened fire. avenue and later at St. Augustine’s Johnson, a former policeman, | church in Bridgeport. Burial will be | passed the vallse to his companion in Rockville, and returned the fire peppering the| bandits with bullets until he fell| with* a wound in the neck. Buck held the ground until a bullet prerced his right shoulder and forced him to drop the bag. 2 | The hold-up men” snatched the| bag, jumped into a waiting nulomm‘ bile and flad. The wounded men| were :aken to the Bréad street hos- | pital where it was said their wounda: were not serfous. Word Mrs. Lydia A. Simmons. The funeral of Mrs. Lydia A. Sim- mons will be held Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock from the B. C. 'Porter undertaking parlors on Court street. Rev. Dr. George W. C. Hill, pastor of the South' Congregational church will officiate and interment will hc‘n Stowe; Vt. City Jtems . . H. I. Stearns left this morning for & trip to Berngda. Mrs. Chames J.aLeroux, returned. yesterday from a trip to Bermuda, and William Raph- a¢) is ‘at present’ on. the island. L All passages were sécured through the agency of George A. Quigley, A Mrs. Anna. Wgrner and her daugh- ter, - Miss Catherine’ Werner of - Sey- maur, are the guests of Dr. and Mrs. { DISEASE CLOSES HOSPITAL, Nine Cases of Scarlet Fever Forces Transfer of Glen Ridge Patients. Montclaif, N. J, ¥Fel 17.—The | Mountainside hospital at Glen Ridge was closed yesterday for two weeks because of scarlet fever in the town and the development of nine cases of the fever within the hospital itself, The medical authorities at the hos- pital announced that the institution | would be thoroughly fumigated. be- fore reopening. ‘“There is no cause. for alarm in this measure,” the announcement said. “It is for the purpose of Safcguarding the public health and stamping out| the disease as rapidly as possible.” | Patients at the hospital were re- moved in ambulances to the Essex! County hospital at Soho, Mrs. Marie Tevleit of Seymour is the week-end guest of her‘filslcr, Mrs. Lyon. lant Employes Get 80 Per Cent Advaice, Pittsburgh, Feb., 17.—Henry TFord has increased the wages of the em- ployes of the Allegheny Plate Glass company, of Glassmere, 80 per cent. The announcement was made yester- day by D J<. Albright, general man- | ager of the plant. According to the new scale, common laborers -will be paid 621 cents an hour at the start, and skilled men will | receive 80 per cent over their present wages. lLaborers hired at 621 cents an hour will be employed on 60 days probation.# If their work proves sat- isfactory their pay 'will be increased | to 7 cents an hour. { 000,000, . The standard working day at the| President Benjamin Harrison dedl- big plant wil¥ be eight hours. No per- cated the auditorium on St. Patrick’'s son*under 20 years old will be em-|Day, 1890. Adelina Patti sang at the Bléyed; ceremony and the stage of the huge F) theater was filled with notables. The theator nd opera for more than 3§ egrs, saw the birth of the Progressive ' party, when Theodore Roosevélt made his famoug “Arma- geddon” speech, and has housed the greatest mass meetings in the city's history. TORD RAT Allegheny T RAZED. AUDITORIUM TO BE Once Chicago's Pride, It Will Give| Place to $15,000,000 Struciure. | Feb, 17-—The Auditorium theater—show place . of | pride of Chicagoans in the World's Fair days, will be torn down as obsolete and as a financial failure. Its piace on Michigan ave-| nue will be taken by a towering structure for similar purposes, to cost between $10,000,000 and $15,- Chicago, —hotel and Chicago and GIVEN SUN DIAL/ Doctor Will Be Able to Tell Time in Wilderness Hospital. Toronto, Ieb. 17 A sun dial, now | will ~ furnish Dr. Grenfell’ shospital in the wilds of Newfoundland ,with means of deter- | mining the eorrect time. | Recently, Professor Louis B. Stew- | [ SRS — BENJAMIN VERNON DIES Hartford, Feb. 17.—Benjamin Ver- |at Nepaug. | before Referee Harold W. Coffin, that {he saw Spiegel in Hartford, Conn., on [who has just returned from an em- | pire tour, referred to the big trade in WEDDING TODAY Mist Agnes Duncanson 10 Become Bride of Haymond Piper of Boston At 380 o'Clock, ‘. | The marriage of Miss Agnes Dun- canson, Mr, and Mre Chaths Duncanson of HBlack Roek avenue, and Raymond Piper of' Bos- 11(.1.,. Mass., will take place this eve. o'clock in the Bouth Congregational ehureh ey De, George W, C. Hill, pastor of the chureh, will perform the ceremony The hride will he given in marriage by her father and will be attended hy her sister, Miss Grace Dunecanson, as maid of honor. Her bridesmaids include Miss Helen Cadwell, Mrs, Wil- | liam Peace, Miss Sally Smith, Miss Myrtle Porter and Mrs, Charles Law Mr, Piper's best man will be Karl Fmith of Doston, and tRe ushers are Clayton Erwin and Frederick Clark of lioston, Harold Johnwon, Harry Sicheuy | and Charlesslaw of this city, The bride will wear a gown of white v vet trimmed, with pearls and a tulle| vell caught with pearls and real orange blossomsg She will carry a bridal bouquet of whitp roses, Her maid of | honor will be dressed in rose pink clvet and carry,Columbia roses, The bridesmaids will' wear lovely old- fashioned hoop skirt dresses of light | blue taffeta, trimmed with siiver lace fissues, They will carry old-fashioned bouquets of pink roses and forget- me-nots pinned to muffs made of taf- feta and silver lace, The bride's gift to her maid of honor will be a white gold bar pin set with an aqua marine stoney To her bridesmaids she will glve white gold ‘cuff pins. Mr. Piper's| #ifts to his best man and us| be god cuff links, The bri¢ to the]gmom will be a tuxedo stud set and the groom's gift to t Constantinople, Feb. 17, (By Thefwiil be a silver muhh:k. An ."..’ro'ii'.f.'l Assoclated Press).—Neville Hender-Treception will be held at the home of | son, acting British high commissioner|tpe bride's parents following th. .me (l, here, saw Ismet Pasha the nationalist|jing ceremony after whlr!“ M( wmr; forelgn minister, today 3n board thel|yrrg Piner will Jeave u 4 "1 e steamer Gul-Djemala, which arrived|announced wedding tri po"-r;::' u:’l‘l at midnight, bringing Ismet here on|pe at home afterdMa n',,,l i yNw his way from Lausanne to Angora. tonville, Mass. )/ Rk Mr. Henderson communicated to ¢ ' L4 Ismet a message from Lord Curzon, 3 the British foreign secretary, saying the British were still willing to sign the peace treaty as submitted to the Turks at Lausanne and urged the Turks to aecept the offer before it was too late. Ismet replied, giving a friendly message for Lord Curzon and declar- ing would work at Angora in the interests of peace. FINDS HUSBAND'S BODY New Hartford Woman Comes Upon daughter of |ning at 6:30 est angd most casily operated curtains; streteher Bomgardner chair cot, bright nickel finish and complete with latest style wall fasteners, . The machine is a Cadillae, with special body manufactured by the E A, Miller Co, of Quiney, Ill, It was ordered through the Lash Motor Co, of this eity, ISMET WANTS PEACE Sends Word to Lord Curzon That He Will Do All in His Power to Ob- tain Settlement, WOULD TESTIFY FOR (‘A‘(‘HIN Russion Leaders Seck to Aid French | Communist in Coming Trial Moscow, Feb. 17.—Zinovieff, ‘chair- man of the executive commjttee of the third internationale, and ‘M. Bu- charin, head of the left wing of the soviet central committee, have tele- graphed the French minister of jus- tice mequesting that they be called as witnesses at the trials of Marcel Ga- chin and other communists in Paris. M. Cachin, a member of the French chamber of deputies, is accused of ac- tion hostile to Frange on the occasion of his recent confergnce with German and other communists at Essen, in the occupied territory of the Ruhr, Remains—He Had Killed Himself | With Gun. New Hartford, Feb. 17.—The body of John H. Collen was found by his wife late last night when she descend- ed from the second floor of their home The man had committed suicide by shooting himself in the head using a handkerchief fastened to his foot to pull the trigger of the gun, He was 54 years old and had been in ill health, Mrs. Collen and three children survive. DOUBTS SPIEGEL'S INSANITY Theater Manager Testifies At Re- || sumption of Bankruptcy Hearing New York, I'eb, 17.—Hearings were resumed yesterday in the bankruptcy proceedings against Max Spiegel, theatrical producer, who failed for more than $1,000,000. Spiegel is now || confined in a Connecticut sanitarium, | i a victim of insanity, according.to his family. Maurice Fleischmann , of 160 West 170th street, who acter as general manager for several of the theaters in which Spicgel was interested, testified that the theatrical pro- ducer “did not act crazy.,” He saw him again the next day at the Spiegel home, 525 West Iind avenue, he said. He recalled that Spiegel signed four checls and that the man seemed de- spondent. Dee. 4 and all this week! v ““DPRIED GRAPES 17.—Speaking to British Belcher, London, Iebh, members of the staff of the Empire Jixhibition, Major dried friut in South Africa. He aid |8 a large trade was being done in died | grapes withe United States. Inside ([ every packet were instructions for the crection of a private distillery, which probably accounted for the growing| demand by the Americans for dried |§ grapes. VETERAN SKATER. Welland, Ont., TFeb. 17.-~Wilson Chambers, 72 years old, is as fond of skating as he was a half century ago and he still has the pair of Dutch [ skates used by his father. Every win- ter for v s, when ice formed to non, former head of the Wernon | Brothers' Japer bill in Rainbow, died today at his home in the towy of, Windsor, after an illness of several | months. He started the mill in 1886 and retired in 1918, He was born in| Roanoke, Genesee County, N. Y., in 1857. Besides his wife, who was Miss Helen B. Kaay of Rainbow, to whom he was married in 1588 he is survived | by one-son, and one_daughter, and a | sister Miss Elizabeth Vernon of Cleve- | land, Ohio. art of the University of Toronto, ted the hospital site, with other scientists, to observe a lunar eclipse, Cbserving the exact longitude’ and latitude and hearing that the person- nel’of the hospital had no mcans of | being sure of the exact time, Profes- sor stewart .began the construction of the sun dial. When completed, the diai will be | placed on the hospital grounds, lo- | cated on the true meridian, and will keep accurate time, according to the professor. 5 —— | BETTER REGULATIONS | WON ON RACE, LOST ON DICE 1 Boston, Feb. 17.—~To make $17,000 on a horse race, and then lose it all in a dice game, was one of the ex peric@ees of Paul Downey, youthful | clerk of the Federal Trust company, during the time he was stealing from the bank to “play the horses,” he tes- tified at the frial of Robert 1. Finn and Humphrey Lane, hookmakers, who are alleged to have conspired with Downey in the larceny of $127,- | London Secking to Avold Street Ac- cidents in City } i London, Feb. 17.—During the year 1922 the’ Londor mbulances received and answered 23,966 calls to street ac- | cidents, as comparcd with 20,879 the | previous year. Phis large increase ih casualties | has caused the Council to study the | causes of such accidents with the jdea of formulating better traffic regula- AT SA LITTLE PRICES PICKED CHORU THAT PL foot SEE THIS CAR O afe thickness on the Chippawa river Mr. CRambers 1®: skated from his home at River Bend to Welland, a distance of about ten miles. The ice was fine and clear of snow this win- ter and Mr, Chambers made the |] round trip of twenty miles in an hour and a ha¥, NINE MORE BOATS New Supply of Ships for Great Lakes Being Built in Cleveland Plt“\i'lnnll. 0., Feb. 17.—Nine 600- steame for the Great Lakes trade are now being built here. Two of the boats ha already been launched and a third will go into the water within a short time Most of the boats will be ready to go into commissioh hy*the opening of navigation this spring. The trip ca- pacity of the nine boats will be 108« r00 tons and figuring twenty trips for steamer they will have more | million tons of freight a kepresentatives in ach than two season. ME SUNDAY NIGHT The Picture The Broadway Madonna| ., Big pictures EASE | | mained on the job, however. | feminine monocle KENNETH HARLAN REGOVER STOLEN BONDS s1adbe Worh of 9205000 Feot Taken From Clnciansti Bank Last Seplember 15 Located. Cincinsati, Feh 1T-~Recovery of $75,000 worth of bonds, part of §266,« 000 stolen frgm the Hamiiton County bank here last September and $80,+ 000 in unused federal reserve hank eurreney stolen in the held-up of the Denver mint revealed today by federal - officers and private detees tives. Abandon Idea of M Up Substitute Bu get Pleased with what they consider “a good Jjob" on the part of the “prun- ing committee” of the board of finanee and taxation, the ‘parties who had planned the introduction of & substitute budget at the next eity meeling have abandoned the fdea. They explain that the proposed budget is one which gives the eity | the greatest possible amount of bene« fit for an amount of money that it is within the power of the taxpayers [™] conveniently pay, Two Waterbury Firemen Are Partly Overcome Waterbury, Feb, 17.—Deputy Fire Chlef Thomas J, Lynch and Private John Lawlor of truck company No. 3 were paftially overcome by a hot blast from the interlor of a burning store here this morning. Both re. The fire, in a store in the Steele bullding occupled by the Atlantic and Paeifio Tea company was of undetermined origin and caused $1,000 da age. WOMEN INSISTENT Female Monocle Wearers in ‘England Want Perfect Fitg London, Feb, 17.—The I’onoc:le is being worn among professional and fashionable women of London this winter to such an extent that it threatens to supercede the lorgnette and horn-rimmed spectacles, The n is rimmed with thin tortoisé-shell, white gold or pla- tinum, One optician sald women who need glasses prefer the monocle for “its becoming effect.” : In order that the effect may_be be-_ coming, and not that of a face screw- up to keep the glass from falling out, the feminine monocles are made to fit with faultiess p ion. - Thus wrinkles are avoided. "he monocles when at ease are suspsnded on black cords or bands of ribbon in rainbow hues, 1898 DEED IS FILED, A quit claim deed from the New Britain Co-operative Savings and Loan association, to the late Adam Smith, drawn in April, 1898, was filed for record at the office of the town clerk this morning. All Week! Special exhibition! Closed cars of the New QOakland 1923 series! *Bodies by Fisher! Six cylinder engine guaranteed 15,000 miles! -See them without fail! Prices amazingly low! Our salesroom— - A. G. HAWKER EXHIBITION AT Hartford Auto Show All Next Week Attendance Daily ‘A. G. HAWKER Distributor 52-56 ELM STREET Thurs.--Johnnie Walker in“Capt. Fly-By-Night”