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DREAM CONES TRUE ¥ FOR CHIN GEE HEE ¢ President of Sun Ning Railroad Aotive at Age of 78 Beattle, Wash, May 23-—Marches ind clashings of the opposing armies @ China have not disturbed the serenity of Chin Gee Hee, one time track laborer, laundryman and mer- | ehant in Beattle and now president of the Bun Ning Railway, t in fouth China say Seattls fr who kept In toueh with the “Chinese Jim WL Despite his 78 years Chin Gee Hee temaine actively at the head of the various enterprises which have earned lor him the sobriquet "King of South Thina'* since his return to his native tountry from the Pacific Coast In 1905, The Sun Ning Rallway, first in Shina to we constructed by Chin mpital indepandent of ald from any government, Is the fruit of a dream that eame to Chin Gee Heo 60 years g0 when, as a common laborer, ha tided in the construction of a branch ine of the Southern Pacific in Call- | Two years hefore he had be. | ‘ornia, fun life as a laborer in the Californla fold flelds, Worked On Construction Chin Gee Hee held to his vision, In he seventies he went north and work- d on the construction of the old Ool- imbla and Puget Sound rallway, now + part of the Chica Milwaukee and § it. Paul system. It was not long be- ore he hecame a contractor in a amall vay, using Chinese labor, and by the ime the rond was completed he had | wquired some capital, In the early 80's Chin Gee Hee es- ablished a small laundry here, wanching out as a merchant in part- wrship with Chin Ching Hock. Fol- owing this venture he founded the Yong Tuck company, a mercantile es- | ahlishment still in business under the | Urection of his nephew, Chin Ke; The fire of 1889 which destroyed the wsiness iee Hee's store along with the H rest | wit before the ruins were cold he had | tarted the construction of the first| iwick bullding erected in Seattle after | he fire. Tt still standa. Orderal From City During the anti-Chinese riots of 1886, Chin Gee Hee was ordered from he city by a mob, but remained un- | fifth annual meeting of the Assoclat- | ed Harvard clubs, May 24-28, Is ex- | pected to attract several hundred | alumni from widely scattersd regions ler the protection of a small group of | 5¢ the United States to Kansas City| 19,052 | for the revival of college fellowship ! esidents, The erstwhile track worker kept 0 his mind the project of an inde-| sendent rallroad for China, and| firough the influence of Seattle| riends attracted the notice of James f, Hill, president of the Great North-| wn railroad. Mr. Hill advised him| yom his own experience and |n\nad‘ uUm to make u trip as nis guest over he principal lines of the United jtates. In 1805 Chin Gee Hee e construetion of the Sun Ning| wilway was begun. Railwaymen have praised construc- fon of the road--built without the ud of a single foreigner—as one of he finest pieces of engineering work | n the Orjent. Decorated by the late Chinese em- seror, Chin Cee Hee retained the| onfidence of his country's leaders | \fter the change in government. The| road is protected by a speclal guard | f soldiers from the Canton army. | | Bullets Removed From Girl and Her Admirer Dr. Frank Zwick has removed n duilet from the breast of Miss Rozalle Harasick, who was shot three times| funday night by her lover, Adolph | Joolack. Both were removed to the | New Britain General hospital follow- | ng the fracas. Three bullets took ef- | lect. ‘The two bullets which Coolack jred into his own head have been | '*emoved. They flattend out without | loing serfous injury. At the hospital Qis afternoon the condition of both patients was reported as good. Parenté Inspect Work At Monroe St. School An evening session was held at the donroe school last evening to give the purents a chance to visit the various trades and see how the work is car- ved on. Regular work and some spe- tal exerciges were held In the kinder- | rarten through the fifth grade. Thorn‘ was a large crowd present and those | n charge are well satisfied with the’ nterest taken in the school by the rarents. Schenectady Strike will Probably End Tomorrow Schenectady, N. Y., May 23.—With e tentative acceptance of arbitra-| Yon agreement hy striking l~mpln_\'rn: » the Schenectady Railway Co., after 1 long conference with the mayor's wdvigory committee this afternoon, prospects were bright that Schenec- ady's trolley strike would be called Mf and cars would he moving on the tompany lines by tomorrow. UPPORTED DPR. Michigan Governor Rallies to Defense of State Agricutural College Head T.ansing, Mich, May 28.—Dr. David | Friday, president of the Michigan Agricultural college, appeared today 5 be the winner of the first round in his battle with the state board of ag- ticulture which at a secret meeting recently, was reported to have decided to ask his resignation. Tn a conference Groesbeck, Dr. Friday received a pledge of aid from the executive. There were well founded reports that the governor will investigate the rea. sons for the board's slleged i1l feel- ing toward the college head, following the latter's statement that some mem- bers had shown enmity toward him because he refused to use state funds tor a ceoperative project in Detroft. Special Notice with Governor The annual May dance of the L.| ¥. & C. Girls club will be held Fri- day eve, Mayg 25. tra will play. O'Brien’s orches- NORFOLK BIDS $4,000,000 FOR WHOLE ARMY BASE! | Rids were opened In the office of the quarter | inaster corps for the sale of the army |base at Norfolk, Va. The | v |eity of Norfolk, Va., was the only bid der for the entira projeet Charles E. Ashberner, elty manager, the ety of Norfolk bid 8, all land, bulldings and improvements. with eertain delayed reservations, On proposal N property with out |with certain dellveries, the Norfolk hid §4,000,000 for elty everything In No, 2 excopt the Bar rett tract, the elty | 32,950,000, certain bulld. Doyle of Nor. dential property with Ings upon 1t Millard I |of Norfolk hid $10,800; I"rank ¢ |Lewls of Norfolk bid $11,850, and 1°, 1, Barrett of Norfolk hid $7,250, The eity of Norfolk also made an alternative flat bid of $5,000,000 for the entire property with, certain im. iprovements, 16 per cent to be pald on |acceptance of the bld, and the re- mainder over a period of 30 years, at 4 per cent interest, tarms to he mu- tually agreed upon, the first interest due January 1, 1928, The city of Norfolk also stipulated for ita other bid for the payment over a perfod of 25 years. These figures will be con- sidered by the quartermaster genoral and turned over to the assistant sec. | retary of war for final action, ' HARVARD CLUBS GATHER FOR ANNUAL CONVENTION ction of the city took Chin | Will Be Held in Kansas City May 24- 26—Purpose Is to Discuss Prob- lems of the University. Kansas City, May 23.-—The twenty- ‘ MacCoul was before | and the discussion of problems con- ected with the university. the 110 clubs, constituents of assoctation, are expected to have rep- | resentation. The organization was primarily to enable western men to participate in university affalrs, ac- cording to Leighton Miles of this city, vice president of the south- the college and graduate schools and secondary schools; the relation of the university and alumni bodies; the duty of Harvard as a national uni- versity, the Harvard war memorial and the Theodore Roosevelt memo- rial. The program includes an informal meeting of the council of the asso- ciated clubs the afternoon of May 24| and a dinner of the Harvard Bchool assoclation that night; ness meetings, luncheon, radio and a dinner, May 25, and a fleld day at the Kansas City Country club, a bar- | becue, baseball, golf, tennis and swimming May 26. It Is expected that President Lowell will be present. WOMEN DISCUSS PROBLEMS Salvation Army Officials Say That Extravagance in Footwear Among Female is Fact, By The Assoclated Press. Chicago, May 23.—Extravagance in footwear among women is more than a tradition, it's a fact, says the Sal- vation Army . A glance at the piles of shoes at the Salvation Army indus- | trial home for men here will prove it, army officials say, Adjutant Arthur | Fynn says that for cvery palr of men's shoes donated to the army, twenty-five femininc pairs are re- ceived. “'But slightly worn, of novelty cut, and most of them small, women's shoes are a drag on our ‘used clothing market,” he declares. “Many of them were too small for thelr first | purchasers; that's why we getthem. “But we can't get enough men's shoes to go around. The men wear theirs out before we get a chance at them. 8o do the children. It's the women who kcep us supplied.” PERFUME FOR PLANTS Transferred by Grafting Process; Scentless Flowers | Scent of Flowers Get Sweet Odors. Paris, May 23.-~Professor Daniel of Kennes appears to have discovered a process which will ca to come true Shakespeare’'s verse: A rose hy any other name would smell as sweet.” By taking two plants of the same species and grafting one on the other, notably wormwood on a chrysan-| themum, he found that not only the grafted wormwood developed remark- ably, but its flowers gave off a per- fume much more powerful than that of the original plant. Moreover, the chrysanthemum had given to the wormwood flower something of its own scent. Professor Daniel collect- ed the meeds of the grafted worm- wood and the following year obtained from them some very fine plants. Some perfumed flowers were graft €d on plants that heretofore had no seent at all and the result has been that the product of the grafting smelt ke the original. butter, 5le. TRussell Best —advt. “DRIVEN” | folk bid $18,000; Viatthews and Rutler Bros. | bids were 1ded Into four proposals and the Throngh 15,000 for deliveries and the same reservationa and of On proposal No, 3, which ineluded | of Norfolk bid On propomsal No, 4 which is for the Barrett tract alone, a plece of resl. Most of | the | instituted | re- | Western district of the Harvard clubs. | wurned to China and shortly thereafter! Among the subjects on the program | By The Asociated Pri for discusslon are relations between | Law | busi- | CITY ITEMS Don't wit for & rday Get your Straw tonight. Open! Conn. Hat Co., Arcade.~advt W. C. Baker of 75 Bouth Burritt street, reported to the police today that & man has heen in that section of the eity selling a game of ehance Musie week at John A. Andrews' Big Purniture Btore. - advt A daughter was born yesterday to Mr, and Mrs, Willlam €. Degnan of §& Heymour street, at the New Hritaln general hospliial, Bix records and souvenir given away | with each phonograph sold this week A Andrew’ dvt, 0 Palmierl has brought sult John Co, Blg Furniture Btor Genn ! deaths | WALL STREET STOCK Mrs, Thomas Haugh, ——— | Mrs, Margaret Haugh, wifs of . Thomas Haugh of 54 Pleasant street, || 14 3%=The vaily which set in dur died last night at her home at the|"¥ 'k“‘ ‘\’:";' l'“l" of "' ""'“ ® atock age of B8 yeara Hhe was a lang /"4l WAS continued at the epening time resident of New Britain but was 218 '“:"“‘ sains ranging from hara . Y 1e o8 heeldes mall fractions to a pol Kteels vors b Treland. Bhe 10aves heolden|yyioh had been hammared incessant er husband, three daughters, Mrs. - i Mrs, Joseph Ken. '¥ 1UrIng the recent reaction made a nedy and Mrw Mary Collins. and a 000 comehaek, Repubile and Cruct o8 Michast Gaust Bl each opening a point higher and The funeral will be held at o \nited Btates Steel common rising o'clock Priday morning at 6, Jo.| % (1000 buying also was voted In the | equipment group, American and ! 1dwin lacomotives each ¢ # point higher The brisk manner in whieh stocks seph's chureh, Interment will be | 81, Mary's cemetery, ening % PUTNAM & CO. Members New York Stock Pxchange Members Hartford Stock Fxchange (Sucoessors o Richter & Co.) Stanley £, Vddy, Manager 81 West Main St, Tel, 3040 WE OFFER: 100 Stanley Works Preferred | for 8800 against Mr, and Mrs, Fas.| Mrs, Mary Stanley Voster [#ina, for commisslon owed. ¥, W[ Mrs Mary Stanley Foster who way|'@!!'ed during the farenoon confirmed Hungerford Is counsel for the plain- | well known in New Britain and who [)Mh"%lons that the recent ~decline Ut and Constable Fred Winkle served | resided at 80 Russell street dled fn | "™ been over-done. While meveral | the writ, attaching property of the| Plainfield, N, J, yesterday, She was outside "j'flu"nru including the fed | detendants on Fpring street 80 years age and leaves ono son, eral reserve statement, had a favorahle Musle week at John A. Andrews'| Jamea of Cleveland, O., a nicce, Mrs, |“TCCt N sentiment, the chief factor Big Furniture Store.—advt [#H. M. Bates of New Britain and an- |00 & corvection of —the weakened r.and Mra. A. H, Chagnon of | other nelea Mra, Yates at whose home :‘!;'4 .1"": i ”'"":‘,”:;"‘ ¥y l'”""l“‘ e | Clarke street, have returned from an|she was visiting at the time of h"‘m-rr: M‘l‘ "I alifornia olie ""”|' ne z witomabile trip to Boston and Lowell, | denth, Burial will be fn Now Tritain |1 rohandise shares werved to stiffen Ma Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock, Rarv- | he\"h ! the remalndor of the liat | Reld lves In pleture, Lyceum, | fces will be private and will Lo n ] l‘-" pmm:"r"::-’y'.“ “i"‘(‘u\lpnndnlnvml:i";r'y‘l . [—advt, charge of Rev, Tlenry W. Maier, They | ag'at 4 8.4 por cont et \ . 8 | Guatave Retdrich of 253 Main street | will ba held in the First Congregation. | ** %! el Siainlahen Members New York Stock Eschange is seriously 11l at his home following | 8l church, Burial will be In Fairvlew | ¢, ""r'lw_“ and ypufi". "‘I‘Inm_m”‘[ ‘).m:.\nm HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE | shoek sustained some time ago. T | cemetery, M by HARTFORD: Hartford - Conn, Trust Bldg, Tel, 3-0320 {18 under the care of Dr. Frank Zwick ~ Cltl e IaR S EURC B0, SFpeEAL Y NEW BRITAIN: st Maln St., Tel, 1815, lx records and souven!r given away | | Products and DuPont. Many of the B e e e with each phonograpii sold this week, les active issues were marked up two John A, Andrew's Co. Big Furniture [to five points, Montana Power re- ICAN MARDWARFE Store—advt, + | y“nerala | sponding to the higher dividend, | S PATENT FIRE ARMS A meeting of the committee in- High Tow Close | 50 NDERS, FRARY & CLARK vestigating school and playground Am Bt Bug 26 28 86 | 50 NORTH AND JUDD needs In the eastern section of the James A, Bodwell |Am Can .. 5% 03 01y 50 STANLEY WORKS clty will be held thin evening at 8| The funeral of the late James A, Am Cr & Fdy,.16715 167 167 50 TORRINGTON o'clock In City hall, Bodwell, who died yesterday fn the|Am Cot Ol 9% 8% (1 Prices on Application Wally Reld, Lyceum, Thurs.--advt. | New Britain General hospital, was|Am Toco ......136% 134 134 Runpin® Wild—Fox trot No. 10063, [ held this afternono. Services were|AMm Sm & RNe.. 57 BAAy BhAg | €, L. Plerca & Co.—advt. | held at the B, €. Portera’ funeral par.|Am Sug Rt cm Pride Circle, Tady Toresters, will|jors, Rev, Willlam Ross officlating, [A™ Sum Tob hold & regular meeting at 7:30 o'clock | Rurfal was tn Stmsbury, Am Tel & Te tomorrow evening. After the meet. Al Am Toh ing a whist will be held for members Adolph J, Bradlau Am Wool el [y and their friends.~ Refroshments Wlll 1y, tuneral” of the Tate Adoiph 7, AT €0 nmsnn enn ] e served, Mrs. Agnes Martin s 3 |Ate Tp & B F.. ShAlkn SILECHATNS {O0 HIeRBTERNRSS ?':fi:fié'k.“"Eaf\'i.'f..'"v'v'.m'f:f'c"fi?:n of | At Gl & W1, ! NEW BRITAIN HARTFORD ments, | e 4 ald Toco 5 o S ' Belbct your Straw tonight: open 11, M, W Gmudln nd wore bld | lhimare s o . 474 Th Rl ibb g bt Telephone 2.4141 [every ovening this weck. Conn. Hat|p GV (08 SOMD B0 herry street.| oo Tieel B .. B4% 52 521 | phiue 41 € '; one 3. Co., Arcade.—advt. [ b Fairview cemetery. 1oy mex 104 10 10| Marasa Ll A son, Donald Eaton, has been born —— — | & 6 57 3y | Harttord Stock Exchango New York Stosk Hsohange 4 | Can Pacific .... 153 151 163 % | Donald R. Hart, Manager [to Mr. and Mrs. BEdward H. MacCoul | en Leath Co . 27% 26% 261% | . i of Thomaston, Conn.,, at the -"'""}DEFENSE IN MORSE GASE | Ches & Onto ... 64 63 6314 e e | street sanitarium, Hartford, Mrs. | P |ChiMil & t8 P . 208 204 20% ‘Ve Ofi'e] R her marrlage RIPPING DOWN EV ENCE|cri R 1si & [ 2zs 27~ 21w > - - Miss Velma Faton Kent of Plainville. m N Chile Copper ... 27 26% 26% LANDERS, FRARY & CLARK Reld's farewell film, Lyceum, Thurs. ezl Chino oCpper .. 22% 21% 21% Price On Application advt, Star Witness, on Cross Examination, | Con Gas ...... 62% 61% 61% 2 “Who's Sorry Now?" fox-trot, No. | i 3 | Cru Steel ..... 67% 65 651, We Do Not Accept Margin Accounts C. L. Plerce & Co~—advt. | Admits That He Had No Definite | Cuba Cane Bugar 141 14% 14% S A S G e s , Endicott-John .. €3Y 681; 60Y Knowledge of Some Things. a [ | & Lo 108 100 10K | e e ey——— STORMS BREED AT SEA : Washington, May 23.—Counsel for Frle 1st ptd 161, 156% 16% | the defense in the Morse trial today, Gen Blectrio ...1761 172 1761 | . — . SOUTH OF CAPE VERDE | uncertook to" tear down the ssruer | Gon Motars 15 145 145 & JOHN P. KEOGH | ture of evidence bullt up yesterday | Goodrick BF ... 3113 30% 5 5 | P h: the :o‘,emmcm and purporting to| Gt North pfd I 7014 Member Consolldated Stock Exchange of New York , v es o show that only $11,043 of the first| Insp Copper ... 33% 33} 1 [Latr of Wila West Jndian Hurricance | $how, that only $LL04S of the srat | Insp Couper ... 384 314 Waterbury STOCKS Bridgeport Has Been Tracked Down in Groton Iron Works by the emergency | Allls-Chalmers . 42 Danbury s | fleet corporation for the construction | Pacific Of R61, AR '@ Middletown BONDS New' Haven Atlantic of wooden hulls at Noank, Conn.,|Int Nickel 137 138 { i 5 s - 5 actually went into the work. | Kel Spring Tire 45% 431 Direct Private Wire to New York. Washington, May 24.—The lair ot|{ Norman C. Finninger, an employe| Kenn Copper .. 367 36Y | G. F. GROFF, dgr.—~Room 509, N. B. Nat'l Bank Bldg.—Tel. 1018 the wild West Indian hurricane at last | ©f the shipping board who made an| Lehigh Valley . 61 61 k- ' " . has been tracked down. C. L. Mitch- | @naivsis of the books of the Groton| Mid States Ol 10 9% . B TR R RS A 1 55 50 . ell, meteorologist of the United States “‘OnCan. conceded on cross examina-| Midvale Bteel 274 27 B __ 1] Weather Bureau, after a year's work, :;';lhi"“ I_E:‘{ hfl"lt I;DI knowledge .\fln‘s (‘:fl,(‘iflv 131 18% | has announoed that the Atlantic Ocean r certain materlals which he| N ¥ Central ... 04% 044 just south of the Cape Verde Isiands | N8d charged to ‘“private work” and|N Y N H & H. 171 17 WOMEN LIKED WORK ',‘. il Yap Aoicd by ISR UL S EvE is the breeding place of cyclones in | Which were capable of entering into| Norf & West ..1073% 1974 ’\ ‘11‘:’2“”4‘1‘(1’”\ c k oy £ | August and September, while the west [ “NiP_construction had been used in|North Pacific .. 70% 7014 o bt P '\\c"um"wr;"l\;/ mlum section of the Caribbean Sea has that bu]l}dimr private or government craft.| Pure Oil ...... 22% 21% Delegates to Tnternational Conference | g0 b "“‘3‘ a ;m' ek ong honor during the rest of the storm e sald he knew that the con-|Pan Am P & T 70% 6944 | R s i D L oo tracts for two schooners for private|Penn R R ..... 44 437% of Women Engincers Meet in Bir-|{h® city aldermen had done an lllegal In a study of 235 storms of hurri.| 20°0UNt had been cancelled by the Pierce Arrow .. 108 10 bR R AL | cane intensity during the last 36 years| por'oony ““(" :‘ gbisinet the gov. | Fitlaburglc Conl 034 63 IgHATE--{ncrest n bt BB TR b it was tound that ail occurred between | ' op lh:"l‘;];fp“rln';l"“')“ic‘:"‘l’:;fi;’ s :‘{:gldf"':‘ S 1 By The Assoclated Press, | bl AL, May and December. : gl Lia bl & ’ Birmingham, lngland, May 25, - | Reports of the origin of hurricance| ;’,:f:r:#e 2’;‘.:::,(;:‘2":“,? envE et }225,,:1:‘.“ N Y 22:’ :q | Women in silk stockings, charming| WOULD PRESERYE REGORDS [In the eastern two-thirds of the Carlb-| "Referring to the grading at the|Sinclalr ON Ret 295 2 tallor-made gowns, and fascinating | bean were disproved ,and the effect of | prany, “the building of quarters for|South acific 887 §8% hats met recently n Birmingham and | T ey ‘m\“n:(:i'r.‘:":l? R cyclonie disturb-| \orkmen and the moving and cnlar:.‘:-'nmn Rall .... 81% 30% discussed learneilly engineering prob- | Swodish Folk Qultiire:Conimitice Iabs ances w sclosed. ing of shops, Iinni | Studebak | 9 018 lems of stresses and strains, buttres- Northeasterly and southwesterly | chargd h"f’,';pr;;"'.'.’:f;,,;*,‘“m)“:rg“:f e m”;::; 1;:,: sen, trusses, bridge-bullding, engincer-| ©MMends Appropriation For Carrys trade winds skirting the cdges of the | ments” although on the books of the |Texas & Paclfic 22 21y Ing contracts and varfous matters of | ing on This Work doldrum section near the Cape Verdes| company they had been charged to| Tobacco Prod .. 80 708 that sort. % 3 st up circular motions which, With| government work. He insisted ‘haz!Trunscm\ oil 7% 7% They were delegates to the interna-| Stockholm, NMay 23.-—The govern. ;other meteorological conditions, Are| his interpretation was a fair one Unijon Pacific .. 135% 1344 tional conference of women engineers.|ment committee on the study of an- ;nmpn-gd to start the \"nru‘xr‘a ‘which | 7 8 Food Prod 3% 3% but although engaged in work and[cient Swedish folk culture and the result in hurricanes. These moves| S Indus Alco 6533% 18y studies that, acording to masculine[preservation of historic materials has | westward with the regular wind drifts. | HEAVY EXPORTS U7 8 Rubber Co B0 ideas, arc seldom associated with |Submitted a report to the department The fact that the doldrums do not| U § Steel 96% feminine tastes and predilections,|0f Public worship and education, in :m\x‘cl: In:o :flna m.mmlvlc sou:l:oo(“(}):n‘ — U 8 Steel pfd .. n;;-. 1;:3 they did not look a bit like blue-|Which it recommends government ap- quator is given as the reason why i Utah Copper 631 63 s, sropriations for the work, and a fed- hurricanes are never reported from | Canada Ranks Second Aniong the Na- | wiliya Overiand Hr e bbb e ,_ngsj.‘v-mmu under dircetion of the state of that arca, tions of the World in Amount of | Westinghouse by sa’,s. land other alds to feminine adorn-|8!! the institutions now active in this S e mae i : National Lead . 118% 118% 1183 | none™ piagse don't be too fifppant | e of research. ASK GOVERNMENT AID | Trade Done With Other Countries, | Gulf States Steel 81% 8% 78% |1, what you write about us” sain OMJ Among the subjects now being in- : o e i, et of them appealingly to the newspaper. | Vestigated by various schools, univer. Competition of Danish and German| (P¢ World in the per capita value of |peth H.Aetna Life Ins Co 155 170 ]"}'"‘1 YO '"-"‘ P that we look charms | o0 g, aisappearing, popuinr - tatey | eXports with §100.63 for every unit of | om Hardware »..... 53 b4 |Ins—it you really think we do—but} . ol naiatitions; the orgin ahd slgs Fishermen Bring Ruin to Many ;’fl’;"b‘;f’“éh:fi:';fl"'{ ': & report s- | \m Hosiery ... 40 50 :,mdh‘;‘ want the public to take US| ia.ance of Swedish place names, ans g e > federal department of [pige Hfd Cu Co cm.... 147 152 | 3 {clent trades and handicrafts, etc. The Companies in Fngland. trade and commerce based on figures | pjiiings Spencer. .. .. Ll ] IR SRR | committee stresses the importance of By She. Asewiaisd Trom, ‘Wzv?nr“!/':;cl:n?:lig et [Billings & Spencer ptd.. 12 20 [ INJUNCTION DENIED |coming generations of preserving acs London, May 24.—"Unless ge\'ern-:‘n]m' 0r4’|“ U B ;’: exp“"\;flrlntnl Brass ‘ . 13 14 New Haven, May 23.-—An injunc- |curate and vivid records, together ment help comes quickly many of the | o @ "/ 'flm"‘.nl;:] hein d"""""mon F o T e 26 27% | tion asked for by opponents to annex- |with authentie fllustrative material, of fishing companies of Bngland Wil be|yying wien 363 36 Mo p"\m: D?h:mmm L&P pfd.. 110 118 [ation of the 33rd ward or Morris (the earlfest developments in Swedish ruined,” is the opinion of the Presi-| (nitel Srates V‘ forPth withias 4u bit Kagle lLock 0y 71 74 [Cove section to the city of New Ha | ctvilization dent of a big steam trawler COMPany |ajue per caplta of $38.95 PO | katnir Bearing Co . 5 0 | who is clamoring for protection. He Tl Hart & Cooley ........ 170 &0 says it no longer pays to run British |Htd Elev Light ....... 157 trawlers because of the competition ot CURZON STILL ON JOB, Landers I [{German and Danish trawlers. German fishermen, he says, have re- cefved such a hot reception In various British ports that they no longer try | to dispose of their North Sea catches| in them. They now transfer the fish to Danish trawlers, and the Danish trawlers take them to British ports. The whole industry has been losing | money, he declares, for two years, and unless something is done very soon every British trawler will have to be laid up. NORWAY'S PREMIER DIES By The Associated Vress. Christiania, May 23.—Otto B. Hal- vorsen, premier of Norway diéd here today. He was leader of the con- servative party. SOUTHERN PRESBYTERIANS Montreal, N. C. May 23.— The Southern Presbyterfan church gen- eral assembly ‘“does not feel that there is occasion for reopening the question of organization,” it advised the Northern Presbyterian church general assembly today in response to overtures from that hody now in ses- sion at Indianapolis. LEAY FOR MEXICO Signor Eduardo D'Empaire, a sales- man in the employ of Landers, Frary & Clark, left New Britain today for a tour of Mexico. Signor D'Empaire is a native of Venezueln. Pure lard, 2 1bs, 25¢. Ruesell Bros, Y com.. prd . J. . Montgome J. R. Montgomery N B Gas N B Machine N B Machine pfd Niles-Be-Pond com North and Judd .. Peck, Stow & Wil . Russell Mfg Co Scoville Mfg Co South N E Tel . Standard Screw . Stanley Works Btanley Works pfd Torington Co com .. Traut & Hine Travelers Ins Co Union Mfg Co By The Assoviated Pross. London, May 23.—lLord Curzon will | continue to act as secretary for for- eign affairs in the cabinet of Premier Baldwin, according to predictions In government circles today., 'The FEarl of Derby announced at a luncheon to- day that he had received an offer from | Premier Baldwin to continue to serve as secrotary of state for war and that| he had agreed to do so. { TO GIVIZ AWAY STOCK. New York, May 23.—One hundred thousand shares of U Steel com- mon stock will be ibuted to the corporation’s employes next year, ac- cording to announcement today which stated the company will buy this num. ber of shares in the open market. TODAY'S TREASURY REPORT. U. 8. Treasury—-Balance, §650,431,029. FRESH AR CAMP COMMITTEE. A meeting of the New Britain Fresh Afr Camp committee will he held to- morrow at 1:30 o'clock at the health department clinic rooms in Booth's block. The camp at Burlington is to be opened next month and will be in operation for 10 weeks. Final plans will be discussed at tomorrow's meet. HOPE TO PREVENT WAR. By The Associated Press Parls, May 23.~The French for- eign office today confirmed reports | that the allied governments were ac- tively occupied In an effort to prevent the outbreak anew of hostilitics be- | tween Greece and Turkey . | MORE SHOEMEN STR | 7 > 5 | Brockton, Mass, May ~With sli'n“o"r';d:~:‘|:.'n'"m“anrcr“' butter for| er 1,000 additional shoe operatives N by added 1o the ranks of the strikers to- day. the shoe industry here was t’d‘ | up tighter than ever. About 10,000 persons are now out of work and the secession of local unions from the boot and shoe workers union has left that organization with only a small| Notice is hereby given that Paole U"ceallo hae gold his barber shop bus- iness loeated at 331 Park street, to Antenio Sidoti, New Britain, Conn., —advt. May 22, 1923.—advi. group of adherents.