New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 8, 1923, Page 11

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whose desk had been near his in the Senate Chamber in the years when Warren Harding was happy in the lesser responsibilities of public life and before the nation called him to the burdensome dutles that crushed out his lite," It was a wait of only a few min- utes. The troops in front of the capi- tol presented arms as the calsson reached the east front of the rotunda, and Pershing joined in the salute. The long line of automoblles came to a stop and a non-commissioned officer | stepped up and loosened the wide beside the bier. At the end, and just|black straps that had bound the cas- before the casket was taken outside|ket to its funeral car. Then it was; they had repeated the Lord's prayer.;lifted down, and with the band play- Before the little woman, fighting t0 | ing “Lead Kindly Light” the Presi- remain calm In the shadow of her{dent was carried tenderly and with grief, had entered her car, all the|the loving benediction of a nation other members of the funeral party|upon him, up the steps and across the had taken their places. She Wasigpot where two and @ half years ago, handed up into the big automobile by ['he stood to take his oath of duty. Mr.! Christian and as he started to| mhen the plaza was filled with roll away behind the calsson the cars| cheering humanity. Today it was once beéaring President Coolidge, Chlef| more a picture of reverence and high “Justiee Taft, and former President| sgpect, but stilled this time by the ‘Wiison followed in turn. hush “ tragedy. The military escort which had been Soldiers Oarry Casket placed in the fine of march ahead,of[ genator Lodge walked up the steps the' funeral calsson, had taken sta-|yegiqe the casket and the empty cais- tion on the aveflue, winding around |, ' 1 ceq away. The dignitaries and as far as the south entrance of the|ine ministers followed along, step by treasury. It moved off at the word(geep for the progress up the steps was * ALL WASHINGTON " HOURNS HARIN (Continued from First Page) and on the other Brig. Gen. Charles E. Sawyer. Just before, she had stood with these same friends and with the new president at a brief prayer service ) of command, an army band ahead| o very slow. Fourteen soldiers, with-1ta . erepe miffled drums play-|gajiors and Marines helped lift the ing “Onward Christian Sokllerl.y load of sorrew up the step and long Gen. P:fl“;};‘;’.f e‘r‘ec?en.:x're on his ascent to the ‘cbambeir wherl;’ Llncol: Y and McKinley rested in grandeur an Apitndid monnt ccmn!nnde;l lthncli:t- where now Harding was to receive th.e love and gratitude. ayenus, mo.x:l dt::zl::; nl: ooy z:s::: President Coolldge, Chlet J:it;ucet i Vice-Presiden! obs leglon and receiving the plaudits ;fg:'sha;l?dwh;a:mrmd been allotg>d ;-h:: or:y the vic'.o.reidn l:.:n:uo?h;;se' a place In thé procession, reached the a:d ";'ur:ulv::‘o:n;‘e:'“ The 'cheers | FOtunda Just behlgddu‘me ca:keL Mrs. " g ¥ " |Harding's car had driven-to an en- :e;?n::uflfn{}‘:h;e:?:] .::r::kew:;e trance below the big steps so that she mournin, oot the thousanda who saw | COUId be faken to the floor above by him m: elevator. el ;. ces Almost before the four black| ... b;‘:‘;‘ Mot S horses that drew the black wheeled e draraaof. aviet,\ Asthe: hady calsson with. its preclous cargo'had L ieg O Ahdoat ine s taltla e aret been given their word of command |28 Plac / 5 A at the White House, the head of |bullt for Lincoln, even a deeper Bus escort * had reached the capitol, |seemed to fall upon those within the where the plaza had been cleared |Sacred precincts. At exactly 11:40 a. of all but troops. m., Dr. Andersen began the invoca- Gen. Pershing dropped out of line |tion, and with his “Amen" a quar- i e i tet of the Calvary Baptist church, on the plaza to take charge of the - final disposition of the tro8ps. Mean-|Mr. Harding's place of worship, took up softly the plaintive, beseeching time the' many civic and fraternal h e orders that had been given places in [sirains of “Lead, Kindly Light,” the favorite hymn of McKinley. the rear were just forming into line beside the White House. Over the broken body of the leader Pall Bearers Next. were intoned the solemn words of as- As Mrs. Harding's car passed along|surance of David in the 23rd psalm, a selectlon of revelations, and the Pennsylvania avenue, ‘only Dr. Sawyer could be seen within, for the curtains|verse from Micah to which Mr. Hard- ing had pressed his lips when he were closely drawn. Between her and the cagket, with its single great|Kissed the Bible of George Washing- wreath, rode the pall-bearers, mem-|ton on inauguration day two years bers of the cabinet, representatives|ago. of the judiciary and senators. A simple prayer by Dr. Montgom- Next behind her followed Calvin{ery, the singing of “Neater, My God Coolidge, suddenly called to take up|to Thee” by the quartet and a Lene- diction by Dr. Anderson, and the na- the mantle which had slipped from his chief's shoulders. He had ap-|tional government had concluded its last rites for its president. peared on that avenue before in the From that moment he was to be- subordinate role which the country assigns to its vice president. Today(|ong to the people and to history in he traveled the same route a presi-|his majesty on the hallowed bier, un- dent, with a burden ahead and, genu-|qer the great dome he was to lie in ine personal sorrow beside him. His|sate for his fellow men to pass by inscrutable face none the less showed |14 do him reverence in théir own way, until the shadows of evening a grief and a realization of the grave moment ln- which he Was|.ou1q jengthen to announce the hour when he would take up once more his standing. Wiltlany' Howard Taft, long trail to final rest in his home town of Marion. There followed them another esident—: president—another son of Ohlo, Benediction at N The benediction at the funeral whom death had spared in the presi- dency to permit him to take up a great duty as chief justice ofy the services in the rotunda was pro- United States, Willlam Howard Fart, | 0unced precisely at noon. loved by all who knew him, was in Then with slow steps and in silence the little funeral ‘ party separated. Mrs. Harding walked from the ro- his place in the solemn cortege as a mourner who knew what Wargen Harding had passed through in the tunda on the arm of Secretary Chris- Tatt tian, with Dr. Sawyer walking beside her. She reached the private ele- chief magistracy of the natlon. lived through the gruelll & o ag ordeal of vator of the supreme court near the north door and in it was taken to the presidency perhaps because he the street level. 3 spared l;hm;el! more than Harding did. Friends of years 1nimahs Skl tge&chl:rm;u:tollnl::i‘:? Immediately the widow entered her boliged the grief and respect which |Ca™ and agaiw accompanied by her was personally his as well as the husband's secretary and physician, great branch of the government both old friends from Marion, she was which he rapresented. taken immediately to the White House Woodrow Wilson At 12:1b she once more passed inside the tall doors that nevermore were to receive the man she had loved, con- Then came a figure who was a re- minder too of a gayer and happler soled, encouraged and nursed finally to the very end of his last sickness. day. Woodrow Wilson had come from A few minutes later President the seclusion and qulet of the home ‘where he bravely and patiently waits heighd y Coolidge departed for his suite in the Willard and Chief Justice Taft and for his summons from the Creator, to show his respect and ease a genuine others lingered but a short while about the stone structure within sorrow. Only a little while ago he rode over the same way with Warren which a soldier guard was taking its place to watch beside ‘the dead while Harding beside him, in the full bloom of vigorous life, about to take up the burden he was laying down. Harding’s tens of thousands of his people walked consideration for the sick man beside | PY With solemn step and bowed heads. him touched every heart and dimmeq | Former President Wilson whose ill- many eyes that day—it touched | PSS prevented his attendance at the ‘Woodrow Wilson’s heart as few things | funeral ceremony in the rotunda had left the cortege at the Capitol plaza and had reached his home on § street had, and today he came to pay it back and put his heart upon his sleeve. Lit- again while the service was in pro- gresse tle did anybody dream that Woodrow Even after the funeral was Wilson would be helping lay Warren Harding under the sod, but death had &iven a respite to.the one and abruptly | however, and all of its central figures summoneéd the other. had departed, the last of the long Marine Band Plays procession still was passing through If there be an American who does| {he plaza. The end did not come until not feel'a catch in his throat or whose | 12:20 p. m. heart does not beat faster when the Marine Band plays “Onward Christian Soldlers,” he did not stand on Penn- sylvania avenue today as the cortege passed on its sorrowing way. As if in exemplification of the Christian kind- liness of Warren Harding's heart, the magnificent band just ahead of him played the majestic strains of the old hymn all the way to the capitol, in- terspersed with “How Firm a Founda- tion Ye Saints of the Lord" the favor- ite hymn -of Theodore Roosevelt. And as the silver tones mounted up , and echoed back in the canyon of hu- manity that packed the great thor- oughfare, tears stole dewn many cheeks anl many éyes were dimmed. But as they entered the sweeping ex- panse of the plaza, the band fell silent. Amid a hush-like the quiet of the tomb, the infantry of the escort form- | _— ed its line across the entire front, the | HAD PREMONITION OF DEATH. Marinés took up thelr station to the!ny The Aesoclated Press. ; north of the steps of the rotunda, and Marion, O., Aug. 8—The late Presi- the bluejackets deflied into a line op+; dent Harding when he left Washing- posite them to the south. Only .the:h\n for his Aiaskan trip confided to sharp eommands cut into the oppres-;somé of his close personal friends sive silence. that he believed he would néver live Await Body's Arrival to return to Washington, Brig. Gen. As the troops came Into position, |C. E. 3awyer, his personal physician, Gen. Pershing remained on horseback | todl Marfion friends &f the late chief in the front of the center of the ro- | eexcutive when they met the funeral tunda, awaiting the coming of the train at Willard yesterday, it was dead to this new scene of tearful,|learnéd here today. splendid glory. Senator Henry Cabot | it Lodge, designated as marshal of the | PROSTRATIONS IN WASHINGTON | parade by virtue of his many years of | Washington, Aug. S.—Numerous public service under many presidents, heat prostrations eecurred among the alighted from his car beside the ro-|great crowd which saw the Harding tunda steps and likewiee stood wait- | funeral cortege and among the uni- L4 » over Coolidge Comes Into “Bequeathed” Burial Lot Lancaster, O,, Aug. 8.—By the death of Warren G. Harding, Calvin Cool- idge comes into possession of an acre in this vicinity which he may use as a burial place for himself if he so de- sires. An acre of land owned by Na- thaniel Wilson was bequeathed by Wilson 100 years ago to President An- drew Jackson as a burial place and to his successors in the presidency. No chief executive has ever availed him- self of the privilege, however. Wilson died in 1836. The place is known as “President’s Acre.” Lightning Kills Caddy And Stuns Four Golfers Chicago, Aug. 8.—Four prominent Chicago manufacturers were stunned and a 10-year-old caddy was killed by lightning yesterday near the twelfth hole on the links of the Westmore- land Country club. The boy who was killed was Nils Lindell, Jr,, son of a blacksmith of Evanston. J. F. Carroll ,assistant manager of the Sanitary Manufacturing company, was so seriously shocked that it took rearly two hours to revive him. C. B. Fulton, western district man- ager for the Sanitary Manufacturing company; Willlam Byrd Jr., and C. Little, assistant secretary of the Crane company, were the others affected. The four had been driven to shelter from the rain in a caddy house near the twelfth hole and were just emerg- ing ‘when the lightning struck among the group. WARD HEARING T WEEK Mount Vernon, N. Y, Aug. §.—A motion for dismissal of the first de- gree murder indictment against ‘Wal- ter 8. Ward, slayer of Clarence E. Peters, ex-marine, will he probahly made next week before Supreme Court Justice Wagner, Isaac N. Mills, coun- sel for Ward declared today. The mo- tion will be filed, he said, only if Justice Seeger on Monday grants a motion for permission to inspect the minutes of the extraordinary grand jury which indicted Ward. e WOULD CANCEL CITIZENSHIP. Hartford, Aug. 8.-—United States District Attorney Allan K. Smith is drawing up a petition to cancel the American citizenship of Samuel Wil- son, formerly a resident of Hartford but now living in Jerusalem, the pe- | tition to be filed today with the clerk of the United States court in New Haven. It is a somewhat rare proceeding. He was born in Russia and became naturalized in 1908 at 38 years of age. A year after his natu- ralization he left America and has lived in Jerusalem a dozen years. ANDERSON—WEBER. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A, Weber of New York have announced the marriage of their daughter, Mrs. Helen Weber Howe, to Willlam Anderson, former- ly of Dwight street, this city. The marriage was solemnized yesterday at the Reformed Episcopal church in New York. PLANS IN NEW HAVEN New Haven, Aug. 8~—A proclama- tion was issued by Mayor FitzGerald today asking all business to cease here during the hours of the funeral of Mr. Harding at Marion on Friday, and closing all city offices at that period. The proclamation was followed by many announcenfents that factories would shut down early and stores close. It is expected that the observ- ance of a period of quiet will be gen- eral. . HOPES FOR WORLD PEACE Boise, Idaho, Aug. 8.—Senator Wil- liam E. Borah, in a statement today, pointed out that it is at least as rea- sonable for the human race to engage now in search of a plan leading to- ward world peace, the object aimed at in the American peace award created by Edward W. Bock, as it has been to seek new and more effective meth- ods of warfare. BRISTOL'S TRIBUTE Bristol, Aug. 8.—Banks, stores and city offices here are to close either for half or all day as a mark of respect to the late President Harding, Friday, BABE RUTH FINED $50 New York, Aug. 8.—Babe Ruth to- day was fined $25 in traffic court after he pleaded guilty to driving his motor car 50 miles an hour on the Harlem Speedway. DIES ON VACATION Callas, Maine, Aug. 8.—W. W. Hen- shaw of New Yonk, insurance man, died suddenly of heart disease at Med- dybemps Lake where he was on a va- cation with his wife and daughter. D. | Mary Olesak. | wealth avenue to Mary A. Klett. Ber- | also property on Pratt street to Chri- REALTY TRANSFERS AS FILED TODAY Number of Transactions Filed With Gity Clerk Mike Kosiol has transferred proper- ty on Union street to Jozefa Roman. Joseph Salce has transferred proper- ty on Carlton street to Joseph and Edward D. Kilbourne has transferred property on Common- nard Mille has transferred property on Hartford Avenue to Sam Doctor- man. property on Wilbur street to Mrs, Henrletta Beloin, and property on the same street to Mrs. Henry Arbour, tine Moran. Linus L. Deming has transferred property on Newington road to Jesse E. and Violet Norton, Joseph Gwaezada has leased prop- erty At 115 North street to John Cdsa- rina to be used as a general grocery store. Alva A. Simpson has leased a store at 282 Main street, in the Stev- ens block to Vincent Klicinskas, for a term of three years, the rent to be $900 for the first year, $1,000 for the second year, and $1,200 for the third year. This store is to be used as a jewelry store. Warantee deed, H. A. Traver to John W. Smth lot number 5 on Summerset Drive. Warantee deed, Lincoln Realty Co. to Grace E. Turner five lots on Seneca street, Park Re- serve, PERSONALS Mrs. Charles Myers, Mrs. Ben Brieland, Mrs. Louils Dubowy will re- turn home tomorrow after spending ‘four week’s at Yake Wontsunkmunk. TWO SHOT IN STREET CAR. Discharged Garment Worker in Chi- cago Seriously Wounds Dept. Heads | Chicago, Aug. 8.—Two department | managers employed by Hart, Schaff- | ner & Marx, clothing manufacturers, | were shot and probably fatally wounded by a discharged garment worker on a crowded street car at Montrose avenue last night. The man then held the passengers at bay with an automatic pistol while he ran to the rear door and leaped off. He was caught at the end of a chase of several blocks when cor- nered in a passageway, where he fired two shots at his captor, Patrol- man Michael Carolan. The wounded men, who were taken to the Swedish Covenant hospital, are: Thomas Vaniderstein of 2,444 Sunnyside avenue, who was shot in the abdomen, and Michael 1. Louen of 4508 North Oakley avenue, who was shot in the head and back. The prisoner gave the name of Al- bert Marks and his address as 220 North Albany avenue. e T MARRIAGE LICENSES Marriage license was taken out to- day by Clarence J. Callahan of 443 ‘West Main street, son of Mr. and Mrs, Joseph E. Callahan of 443 West Main street, and Miss Madeline L. Bardeck of 170 Arch street, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Bardeck. FISHER DEFEATS KINSE Southington, N. Y., Aug. 8.—Carl Fischer, of Philadelphia, defeated Howard Kinsey of San Francisco, eighth ranking national player, 6-—4, 6—3 in the fourth round of the Mea- dow Club’s tennis tournament today. BUILDING PERMITS Building permits were issued at city hall today as follows: Andrews Swift and Co., 29 Commercial street, altera- tions to cost $1,000; K. Rackliffe Jr., Franklin square, brick store and gar- age to cost $4,000; A. D. Lipman, Main and Winter streets, new front for store to cost $8,000; S. Kulas, Burritt and Brown street, brick dwelling to cost $15.860. N\ Ing, waiting, solemnly and with bow- | formed troops which took part. A few a4 head for the coming of the friend were taken to hospitals. In The Heart of a Child “Rest _in Peace” read the card on this floral offering which Ambrose J. W. Higgins Jr., five, of New York city, hands to John Trice, White House staff officer. scrawl. It is just one of those little things that shows that War- \ | | | It was written in the lad’s own August Morse has transferred | WALL STREET STOCK EXCHANGE REPORTY ‘Wall Street 10:30—Prices displayed a firm tone at the opening of today’'s stock market. Baldwin, Studebaker, Bethlehem Steel and a number of other leaders improved fractionally. Rails were again in fair demand, Delaware & Hudson rising 1 1-4 points and the North Western carriers mak- ing nominal gains, Some of the minor oils were again heavy. The main trend continued upward in the early dealings with tobacco ghares in good demand. Active leath- er issues dropped to new lows, ‘Wall Street, 11 a. m.—Stock prices continued their *move to higher | ground during the morfing session. | Central Leather common and pre- ferred, American Hide and Leather preferred, Allied Chemical and Ma- rine preferred all established new low records for the year. The mar- ket suspended trading from 11 to 12:30 out of respect for President Harding. Call money opened at 4% per cent. 12:45—The resumption of trading cn the Stock Exchange was followed by a slight shading from the earlier high figures, weakness of the leather and chemical shares causing profit- taking in other quarters. 1:30 p. m.—Prices fell away in the mid-afternoon with an ease which at- tested to the slenderness of the sup- ’port when persistent pressure was ap- plied. Marine preferred dropped 3%, General Asphalt 2 and American In- ternational, U. 8. Steel, Baldwin, Am- erican Can, Studebaker, Mack Truck, Famous Players and Davison Chem- fcal 1 to 1% below yesterday's final figures. Low Close 87% 878 160 160 5% 5% 1% % 656 1%65% 122% 122% 145% 145% 83% 837% 38% 957 High 84% 161% Am Can ....... Am Cr & Fdy.. Am Cot Oil .. 5% Am Loco ...... T4 Am Sm & Re.. 57% Am Tel & Tel..122% Am Tob . $145% Aw Wool . 8 Ana Cop . 40% Atc Tp & S F.. 96% At Gulf & WI . 13 Bald Loco ... 114% Baltimore & O . 48% Beth Steel B ... 48% Con Textile T% Can Pacific . 146 Cen Leath Co . 16% Ches &Ohlo ... 9% Chi Mil & St P . 16% Chi RIl & P .. 21% Chile Copper .... 26 Chino Cop ..... 17% Con Gas ....... 61% Crucible Steel . 62 Cuba Cane Sugar 10 Endicott-John .. 66 Erie .. .13 Erie 1st j cee 1% Gen Electric ...174% Gen Motors « 14 Goodrick BF ... 22% Gt North pfd .. 651 Insp Copper ... 20% Int Mer Marine 6% Int Mer Mar pfd 21% Allis-Chalmers . 41% Pacific Oifl 337% Int Nickel 12% Int Paper .. 32% Kel Spring Tire. 32% Kenn Copper .. 34% Lehigh Valley . 61° Mid States Oil . 6% Miss Pacific ... 10% N Y Central .. 98 NYNHG&H. 12 North Pacific .. 58 Pure Ofl' ...... 18 Pan Am P & T 59 Penn R R ..... 43% Reading . 75 Rep I & 8 .... 44% loyal D, N Y .. 42% Sinclair Oil Ref 221 South Pacific .. 85% South Rail 32% Studebaker Co 104% Texas Co 42% Texas & Pacific 155% Tobacco Prod .. 81% Transcon Oil .. 5% Union Pacific .. 128 United Re St .. 73% U S Food Prod 3% Indus Alco 4613 Rubber Co 39 Steel 881 U 8 Steel pfd .. 117 Utah Copper .. 60 Willys Overland 73 Westinghouse 5814 Gulf States Steel 711 5% 127 73 3% 46 3314 87% 116% 60 7% 57% 70 U s Us U s (Putnam & Co.) Bid LT75 . 56 Asked 785 | 58 50 148 12 15 12 25% 115 Aetna Life Ins Co . Am Hardware . Am Hosiery ... . . Bige-Hfd Cpt Co com ..143 Bills & Spencer com ... Bills & Spencer pfd . Bristol Brass Colt's Arms . Conn Lt & Pow pfd . Eagle Lock Fafnir Bearing Co Hart and Cooley . Hfd Elec light . Landers, I J R Montgomer: J R Montgomery pfd B Machine . N B Machine pfd . Niles-Be-Pond com . North and Judd . Peck, Stow Russell Mfg Scovill Mfg SN E Tel . Standard Screw | stanley Works . *Stanley Works pfd . Torrington Co com .... Traut and Hine Travelers Ins Co . Union Mfg Co Travelers Rights *Ex-div. —_— BUY YOUR FURS NOW | A small deposit will store them | until you need them | HUDSON FUR SHOP 13 Franklin Square 5 NG T T ERRET THE HERALD § The A-B-C Paper with the ren G. Harding lives in the hearts of children. | which has tied up Stanley R. Eddy, Manager We Offer— 2 JUDD We Offer: To Yield 6! %. Telephone 2580 Members Hartford Stock Exchange We Offer:— Price on Waterbury Danbury Middletown Direct Private — READY your own terms. Professional Building TWO COUPLES WILL WED A marriage license was issued by City Clerk A. L. Thompson last eve- ning to Emmett R. Wheeler of Au- burn, N. Y., and Orda M. Larkin of 23 Hungerford court this city. They will be married August 17 by Rev. William Ross. A license was issued this morning to Ernest P. Chapman, who recently came to New Britain from England and has made his home for the past month in Bridgeport, and Miss Sarah Hughes of 135 Wells street. The bride to be also came here some time ago from England. HOPE TO END STRIKE Newark, N. J, tions toward ending the strike of 6,300 Public Service Railway trolley men trolleys serving 1,500,000 people throughout the state, were begun today at a conference be- tween Chairman Harry V. Osborn of the Public Service Utility Commission and William Wepner, president of the trolleymen's union. VARIETY AND Splendid Shore Haddock ........12¢ I Boston Blue Whole Fish .... 14c Ib Fancy Large Flounders ...... 15¢ b Bluefish Steak .... 16c b Rockport Cod Steak 18¢ Ib Long Island Porgies 18¢ b Secrod Stezk ....... 20c 30 COMMERCIAL ST. A-B-C Want Ads G. F. GROFF, Mgr.—Room 509, N. B. Aug. 8.—Negotia- | PUTNAM & CO. Members New York Stock Exchange 5! Members Hartford Stock Exchange P r 81 West Main St., Tel. 2040 180 Stanley Works Preferred LT & CO. MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE Members New York Stock Exchange Hartford: Hartford-Conn. Trust Bldg., Tel. 3-6320 New Britain: 23 West Main Street, Tel. 1815. NORTH & JUDD MFG. CO. STOCK New Britain National Bank Bldg. Telephone 2-4141 Members New York Stock Exchange Donald R. Hart, Manager K 50 Shares NORTH & JUDD Application WE DO NOT ACCLPT MARGIN AOCOUNTS JOHN P. KEOGH Member Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York STOCKS BONDS Bridgeport New Haven ‘Wire to New York Nat'l Bank Bldg~Tel. 1012 MONEY — If you have bills to meet there is no better or checaper way of obtaining the ready money than the Beneficial Way. You can borrow up to $300 at legal interest rates repayable on BENEFICIAL LOAN SOCIETY Room 104 Tel. 1948 NO CONCERT TONIGHT. There will be no band concert at | Walnut Hili park this evening, the | one scheduled being postponed for | one week in view of the period of nas | tional mourning. T pe—— | LIMITATION OF CLAIMS. | At a Court of Probate holeen at New Britaln within and for the District of Ber- Iin, in the County of Hartford and State of Connecticut, on the 6th day of August, A. D, 1933, ° | “'Present, Bernard F. Gaftney, Esq. Judge. | On motion of The New Britaln Trust | company of said New Britain, as Executor of the last will and testament of William Bulkeley, late of Berlin, within sald dis- | trict deceased. This Court doth decree that six months be allowed and limited for the creditors of said estate to exhibit their claims against the same to the Executor and directs that public notice be given of this order by ad- vertising in a newspaper published in said New Britain, and having a circulation in said district, and by posting a copy thereof on the public sign post in said town of Ber- lin, nearest the place where the deceased last dwelt and return make, BERNARD F, GAFFNEY, Munre rtE Sanitary Fish Market IS THE PLACE TO SELECT YOUR FRESH FISH—A BIG FINE QUALITY Fancy Block Island Swordfish .................... 35¢c b Long Island Sea Cod Cheeks ....... 25¢ b Fillet Haddock .... 25¢ I Penobscot Salmon .. 32¢ I Large Bloater Fancy Cape Butter Fancy White Halibut ........ 35 b Fillet Flounders, Genuine Bluefish, Eels, Live and Boiled Shrimp, Live and Boiled Lobster, Soft Shell Crabs, Steaming Clams, Round and Little Neck Clams, Boneless Salt Cod 18¢ pound, 3 pounds 50¢. We are open till 9 o’clock Thursday evening. Moore Bros. Fish Markett

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