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SECRET SERVICE Was 0. K. : " HEN GALLED IN But Find That Gilpatric Deal Hartford, Oct, 31, — Among the financlal transactions of G. Harold Glipatric was one involving $500,- 000 of e funds and which sorbed the interest of foderal service agents, state officlals, in. cluding the newly appointed state | rer, Anson T. McCook, the | ficers of a Hartford bank until it was proved that the money had been handled in a perfectly legal manner, The transaction was one with Liberty bonds and was being put through at the time Glipatric at-j tempted suicide on August 7. The state treasury was selling five of its $100,000 Liberty bonds and was go- cret attorney's effice, and the of. | ing to buy city of Bridgeport bonds which paid a higher rate of interest. ' The Hartford-Aetna hank sent the | five Liberty bonds to its correspon- dent bank In New York clty and that bank, turned them over to the federal reserve bank of New York for payment, These bonds reached the federal reserve bank on the very day that the news of Glipatric's at- tempted sulclde was'in the news- papers. August 8. bank cailed the attention of his su- perior officers to the account of the attempted suicide. The federal re- serve hank at once communicated with the secret service in Washing- ton and an officer was sent on. B Death is beautiful. Harry Wright ot Chicago says so, He and death got acquainted the other day when Wright pitched from the fitth floor of a skyscraper, In a fall of 100 feet all he suffered was a bad casc of fallen arches. 'The fall was iike going to a show,” said Wright. “I saw my whole life from the time 1 was a kid." A check in the - (asale Pledges Aid to New Southwest Road A war-time administration with General Forbes as commander in. fchiet of the A, E. F, with Harry Tnvestigation by the secret serv- M, Daugherty as chief of the de- fce man soon satisfled him that the [ partment of justice, with ex-Secre- honds transaction was regular and |iary Denby at the head of the navy not a part of Glipatrie's defalca- tions and the deal finally went carled outr by Deputy State Treas- urer Judd. ) | Deputy Treasurer Judd sald to- day everything about it was perfect- 1y legal. Tt was a routine transac- tion. The difficulty arose because Gil- patric had signed the bonds without swearing to his signature, intending to fulfill that duty at the time of the transfer ag had been his cus- tom. But before that time came he had decided that he was at the end of his financial career and decided to take his life as well. 00TH ANNIVERSARY Charles W. Dr. and Mrs, Tee of South Burriit Strect Married Quar- ter Century Ago in Middletown. Dr. Charles W. of §9 Lee and Mrs. Lee wedding today. Dr. Lee is a well krown dentist, having been practic- ing fer about 28 years, Dr. Mrs, Lee will leave Tuesday on a trip to Atlantic City and Washington | in observance of the ovent. They were married In Middletown, Getober 31, 1539, Mrs. Lee being e former Miss Lina D. Wilcox, hter of the late Mr. and M vy T. Wilcox of Middietown. was for several years a teacher the New Britain Normal school. ceremony was performed by Iliam M. Newton of Mont- 1 #er, Vermont. Dr. and Mrs. Lee have no children. 860 Taken From Woman’s Coat Hanging in Closet | James A. Coffey of 204 Washing- ton street reported to the police this afternoon that $60 had been stolen from a pockct of his wife's coat which had been hanging in a closet in thelr home. He said the money was taken betwecn yesterday morn- ing and today. The money was in three $20 bills. JR. Y. W. H. A, HAULOWE'EN. The Junior Y. W. H. A. held a meeting Thursday evening which took the form of a Hallowe'en party. Many members attended, all appropriately dressed in costumes. The judges, Misses Ruth Prushon- sky, Ida Krammer and Carol Pru- shonsky, gave prizes for the pret- tiost costumes. They werd awarded to Misses Bessoff, Stein and Cantor. The most original costume was worn by Miss M. Welinsky and the funniest by Miss M. Koplowitz. After a ghost tale told by Miss Helen Kelmowitz, dancing and re- freshments were enjoyed. KENILWORTH CLUB DANCE The Kenilworth club of this eity will hold the first dance of the sea- son at the Burritt hotel this evening, begining at 8 o'clock and continuing until 12 o'clock. The dance will be in the form of a Halloween part The Trinity Bacchanalian orchestra will furnish the music. The com- mittee In charge of ararngements includes Harry O'Conor, Frank Mc- Guire, Clarence Anderson, Lindsay Muir, Rudolph Anderson and Gles- son Parker. through its regular channels, being and | | Jepartinent and with ex-Secretary l'all in charge of the department of | the interior, was pictured by At- torney 8. Gerard Casals, Democratic | nominee for state senator, at & rally |at Landers, Frary & Clark's factory gate this noon. The candidate de- iclared that under Republican rule unprecedented corruption was found on all sides and he declared that thad the Democrats not been in | power during the World war the country’s disgrace might have be¢n even greater than during the past | administration. Attorney Casale told his audience ,that, if he is clected, he will work | for establishment of a new trunk .line highway from the southern extremity of the city, through Cor- Ibin, Jerome and Hunter avenues out to Blake road. This, he said, would greatly increasc the _city's (revenues without increasing taxes on the section of the city now de- veloped, -and in addition would d yvelop at least one-third of the city now taxed as acreage. South Burritt street are oh-; serving the 25th anniversary of their | TRANQUIL IN SPAIN +Spanish Envoy at Washington Takes mf'suu to Deny Reports Washington, Oct. 31—The Spanish |embassy, in a slatement issued herc itoday declared tranquility prevailed | in Spain. “In Spain everything is quiet,” eaid the statement, “and therc is no | *'toundation to the news regarding ithe banquet at which a professor of the University of Madrid was euter- tained.” News from Africa, the !statement said, is “Improving every day."” “The withdrawal towards Xalen,” it continued, *is being carried out with regularity and practically with- {out any losses.” Dispatches last night from the Spanish border quoted travelers as laving told of a digner in Madrid at which speeches Vb&'e made by prominent Spaniard protesting against the military directorate con- tinuing in power, | | Steamer Reports Feeling RUSSIA WORRIED OVER ELEGTION Fear British Trnover May Afiect Their Treaty By The Assoclated Pross, Moscow, Oct. 31.—~The defeat of ghe Jabor government in England has I produced divergent opinlons in sovict Russia. In some quarters It {s fear- |ed that it means thgmdeath of the |present Anglo-Russiaf treaty and | projected loan, while In others it is insisted that the conservatives will |be forced to come to-terms with the | soviet because of England's econom- fe need of Russla. It is generally admitted that the cuuse of abor and soclalism in Eng- land has received a distinct setback which indirectly affects the com- munistic cause. M, chk«'lol( in the | newspaper Izvestia, organ of the | federal central executive committee, says that no political party in his- tory ever deserved defcat more than Premier MacDonald's. In his opin- ion the publication of the “spurious Zinovieft letter” had a great effect on the result, as by this move “Mdc- | Donald signed his own death war- rant in fayor of Baldwin and Cur- zon. | 1t Is now evident,” he adds, “that |in England as {n all other countries the latior party can capture power {only by a definite and open class struggle.” matic complications between the | British government and Russia as a |result of the labor defeat, but says |it would be a mistake to assume that the elections were the work of the British people against the Anglo- Soviet treaty. “The treaty will in one way or another be ratified even with the conservatives in power,” he con- tinues. “England has the alterna- tive either to annihilate us or to (come to an agreement with us; | therefore it will come to an agree- ment with us. It is quite possible |that such an agreement was easy to ‘reach while MacDonald was in pow- ,er, but the necessity for it remains |while the conservatives are in pow- fer.” SOLDIERS FIGHT FIRE | Winthrop, Mass, Oct. 31.—The | hospital of the First Corps Area | icre was threatened early | when a.stable across the street from | the hospital caught fire from an un- | determined cause. A force of 300 soldiers from Fort Banks assisted the Winthrop fire department. Four | horses were: burned tp death. ELLMS NOT A CANDIDATE | Harold Ellms announced today ythat he is not & candidate for the fcommon council from the first ward | where 2 vacancy now exists. | WOULD ABOLISH POST | By The Associated Press. | |sion of the post of Argentine Minis- ter to the Vatican was recommended | today by the budget committee of the Chamber of Deputies which is | considering next year's estimates. | | | { { | i | Quakes Out in Mid-Ocean New York, Oct. 31.—Officers of « steamship Providence, which ar. | vived from Mediterranean ports to- day, reported that three distinct | carth shocks were folt October 24 | when the steamer was off Terceira Azores Islands. | During the disturbances the ship | was shaken violently and the pas- | sengers were greatly alarmed. The first vibration was of four seconds iration and the others lasted two | nds each, The first occurred at | 5 e 9:30 a. m, i The Providence had 233 passen- | gers, Mus. Sweetin Not to Have Separate Murder Trial Mount Vernon, IlL, Oct. 31.—Cir- | cuit Judge J, C:. Kerr today over- ruled a motion of Mrs. Elsie Sweeten for a separate trial on the indict- ments which charge her jointly with Lawrence M. Hight with the murder by poison of their mates. The dalc of trial was set Nov. 17, but defensc attorneys announced they would file motions asking that the case go over ' until the January term. Farther north it's apple orchards nd watermelon patches. At St Petersburg, Fla., it is the banana plantations that suffer from hyngry schodlboys. But the planters have plenty of bananas 22 Rescued When She Went Down T — This is a remarkable picture of a ship going down at sea, It was the. motorship James Timpson, caught in a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico between New Oileans and Geiba, Honduras. Twenty-two officers and men of its crew were rescued by the liner Atlantida. today | Buenos Alres, Oct. 31.—Suppres- | - City Items —— a. ree riers R 8 g James F. Wilson, saxophonist, of Sl 5 a 76 Commonwealth a , left toda; - 3] ow Close for New York city “:‘r'.'m‘fi. wll}; suftl;ug::é‘l mcl:. °lm:.': ""Il::l:l;d Allls Chal ..., 60% 68% 60% e y { e rporal = |Am Can ..., 136% 181% 186% ?.'.'.' sz h‘:{tglu:el.n:h: reReStra A% | laries are operating this week an|Am H & L BN e e Menibers New York Stock Exchange | Thomas T Cnn’x superintendent 2YOrase of 06 per cent of capacity.| Am Lovo . 0% 0% 79% Members Hartford Stock Exchange . , Aup Stocks of semi-finlshed steel and | Am Smelt 0% T9% 80% " A of Adkins Printing Co., returned yes- A “ 81 West Malp St. Tel 2040 2 tord th P plg fron are being drawn upon and (Am Sug 30% 30% 88 Iardunynml;| ree day trip to Port- operations In these lines are some- |Am Sum .... 7% 7 8% ( by T genlifgh he was the gUeSt ¢ jower. Steel ingot production |Am Tel & Tel 121% 127% 1217 o Ge’ ""5' manufacturers. 1s' between 62 and 63 per cent of | Am Wool 66% B4l B5Y% We Offer & orge l""' and Isracl Nalr have ., 0.0ty and pig fron furnaces are | Anaconda 36% 36% 36% ;t:'l;“‘;"t‘:e"';‘:"';z;‘;:’;a‘;'o;:‘k‘: ‘e Funning about 60 per cént. Afchison .... 1074 106% 106% | n - At GIf & W I 18 16 183 o |Probate Judge B. F. Gaffney. Mrs. | mp, giaposition in Wall street to | Bald Loco ... 117% 119 % 100 shares UNlON MFG. C Y Dorothy okolskl, his widow, has|..qit the current movement of |Balti & Ohio .. 61% 613 618 been appointed administratrix. stock prices to pre-election influ- |Beth Bteel ... 41% 40% " ences has aroused interest in what Boseh Mag ... 27 261 7 Puts Up $883 in Cash, trend the market will take the day |Cen Leath ... 15 147 TO net over 1 0 ' | “Fri ” it. Flee »ftcr clection. A survey ot past |Can Pac .... 150 145% / “Friends” Take it, Flee [, (), Cotering the inst six 'ma- |Ches & Oho .. 85% 528 i New Haven, Oct. 31.—By offering tjona) elections, however, has fafled (Ch MI & § P.. 125 123 | him & joh as sweeper fn & 8¢h0ol- 14 it much light on the market's |Ch Ml & 8 P pf 22 21% house, near where they met him,two strangers induced Tony Dennis to put up $833 cash, his savings, in an | envelope, today, fleeced him of the | amount by an exchange of envel- | police his story when he found he had been fleeced. Mistakes Man But Finds | Another With Contraband New Haven, Oct. 31.—A motor- | cycle_ofticer stopped a machine in | the Westville section early today, | captured 200 gallons of high proot alcohol, and arrested the driver, Jo- seph Simeoll. A weeck ago Tony | Dellcamore, driver of the same car, had been arrested by the same officer at the same place for failing to | 8how a registration card. The ear | M, Stekloff foresees some dlplo-;\vu stopped because the omceri thought the driver was Dellcamore. A checkup showed the car belonged to a third man. J ARMY TEAM ARRIVES., Derby, Conn., Oct. 31.—The Army footbali squad arrived her this noon on a special traln from Bridgeport. Later, the eleverr went into New Ha- | ven to prdctice in the Yale bowl. NEW LOAN RATIFIED By The Assoclated Press Paris, Oct. 31.—The French cabi- net today ratified the decree au- thorlzing the minister of finance to issue the new finternal loan in the {form of treasury bonds maturing in 10 years, the issue to be begun Nov. 12. Detalls would be made known later, it was announced. DUN'S REPORT New York, Oct. 31.—Dun's weekly compilation of bank clearings shows an aggregate of $7,421,848 an in- creaes of 4.7 per cent over last year. Outside of New York there was an increase of 3.6 per cent. TREED BY JURY | New Haven, Oct. 31.—After a Jury trial Wm. F. Richards of West Ha- |cen was freed.foday of responsibility |for the Killing of Andrea Pisini, |through alleged negligent operatfon {of a motor vehicle. The deputy cor- joncr had held him responsible, —_— Beaths e — Anthony Drogus Anthony Drogus, age 71 years, died at the town home this morn- ing. He was a native of Lithuania and had been a resident of this country for many years. He leaves no known relatiyes. The body was removed to the undertaking parlors of Larala & Co. on Spring street from where burial wiil be held. Ar- rangements are incomplete, Alexander Yuskis Alexander Yuskis of 201 Fast street, died this morning at his home. He was employed for about 15 years at the P. & F. Corhin plant. | Surviving are his wife and three | children, Misses Antoinette, Jose- phine and Anna Yuskis, Funeral services will be held Monday morn- ing at St. Andrew’'s church and in- terment will be in St Mary's cemetery. | Joseph A. Haffey Funeral Di Phone_1625-2. opposite St. Mary's Charch, Residence, 17 Summer §t.—1625-3. rector, AR N SRR EXPRESS YOUR SYMPATHY ;"- FLOWERS # from F. H. BOLLERER'S LOSY SHOP 72 CHURCH §T. TEL. 886. TN RITT - L NEW BRITAIN 'DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 81, 1924, normal response to the news, T 1900, 1908 and 1916 stocks generall. jopenel at moderate advances considerable irregularity prevaile years, Banfers anticipate that one resu of the conservative victory in thi British elections will be the retur to London of capital which tool flight when the labor swept into power. it 1s believed, will be accelerate: by the heavy majority which th | measured to some extent by th | course of sterling exchange. Tide Water Qil company in mg‘h’hlflh Valihie ods ek 4% Inine montha of 1924 earned net in- | Marine pfd ... 37% 363 37y Mid States Oil. 1% 15 1% come of $3,848,023 equal to $7.69 Mis P ‘8 e - y a share on the capital stock against | 3 La‘f“;‘ '-!5-.‘/‘ 1"_34 59 183,454,748 or $6.95 a share in the | (T LR oo wz i same period last year. | Nort & Weat . 1221 ];”9 New York, Oct. 81.—Consolida- ;\'nm\ Fas e o4 () E;‘: tion of the Southern Pacific Cam_‘i’fl?lflc O’ll & 1% 5'“/— i pany and the W Paso & Southwest- ‘),a" Am"rlNu;. 5'”’6 ‘s‘ 4 orn system will be effected by pay- | ool ACECAR B S ment today and tomorrow by the | o' Tt BT AT L Southern Pacific of $29,400,000 of its ‘Fi(‘rce Arrow A 9 . 9 5 |5 per cent 20-year collateral trust|p EGTOTe g B bonds and $28,000,000 of its capital | o, ® 7 oot gl S R | stock, thus creating a $2,000.000,- | o o per o0 18 127% 13 {000 rail system covering 12,370 | pi¥, PP B e i imiles. The transaction is under- ‘noynl Dute 8% 4% 43y stood to be the forerunner of a Sinclair OIl 173 1:“",( 173 | greater Southern Pacific system, to | 0 "p e ' a0 03% 037 |include eventually the Chicago, Rock | (2o R0 e+ (08 Cogd (o Island & Pacific. Acquisition of the | (Pt nol et g, T gl | El Paso & Southwestern gives the |, "oS80 B8 L Goor oo o Southern Pacific 1,139 additional | #X8% ER <08 22B ge oon miles of transportation and increases | p.o oo Fon® S, T T its assets more than $53,000,000. mion Pacme 139 138% 13714 e United Fruit . 205 205 205 The Westinghouse Electric and § Indus Alco 72% Yy Y Manufacturing Co. announces that |y g pupber . 333, 328 83% |1ts stockholders have quadrupled in ;g ey .0 1003 - 10814 |the last ten years. While the com- | tan Copper . 81 8054 | pany’s capital rose from $40,695,897 | ywostinghouse 63% 62% in April 1914 to $118.503.150 in|\yiijys Overland 7% 7% small yellow spots, and rumors of a black-clad woman who climbed down a robe from another room in the hotel on the night of the shoot- | ing have helghtened interest in the mystery. SALE | |r d| CLASSIFIED PAGE J in l Today’s Herald on the streets of St Paul quis de Fournier, she married a Huguenot, girl, thrown on her own resources, * 1 first {n | coss. s oenelia™ From “rags to riches” was re- | versed in the case of “Mrs. Adele th | McMasters, whom fate has led from Tum to the BIITo” Teneict e e | Bordeaux, her birthplace, to the le of a crippled pencil saleswoman Minn. Her mother, daughter of the Mar- was exiled when and the came to America and opened a (Vv\ok.-h'r- on Staten Island Her husband died and her second | atrimonial attempt was not a suc- “I will not go to a he says determinedly, poorhouse so I'll sell te tions In other opes and disappeared. Tony told the | O the days after clec y { Chile Cop 32% 3 but | Colo Tuel P 4 |Con Textile .73 Corn Prod Ref 37% 3 31 Cru Steel .... 58 08% 573 party was This November, | Gén Motors .. 56 { conservatives rolled up, and will be August, 1924, the stockholders’ list | n|Ch Rk 1 & P.. 34% | Cuba Can Sugar 12 1t | Cosden OIl ... 27 o (Dav Chem & | Erle 1st pfd Gen Electric d | Gt North pfd . 62% e |Tnsp Copper .. 24% | Int Nickel ... 137% e | Int Paper .... 461} | Kelly Spring ..16 | Kennecott Cop. 46% | was swelled {ro:y; 9.4;»0 u‘: s's‘.'firflg LOCAL STOCKS. | names, representing a four to ¢ | ratio of increase of stockholders| (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) to capital. i Bid Asked —_— | Aetna, Casualty eees.595 610 Calumet & Hecla Consolidated | Aetna Life Ins 740 745 Copper Co. reports loss of $484,359 Aetna Fire ...... 578 590 in the quarter ended September 30 Automobile Ins . 530 after depreciation and depletion, Hartford Fire . . 615 against loss of $104,799 in the pre- National Fire . 600 ceding quarter and loss of $150,505 | Phoenix Fire . 500 510 in the first quarter of the year. Travelers Ins . 940 945 el fa us Am Hardware sz 3 COTTH Am Hoslery 40 O | Beaton & Cadwell..... §0 90 Brussels, Oct. 31.—A gorporation | Bige-Hfd Carpet com..110 112 capitalized at 500,000 francs has|Billings & Spencer com 4 3 been founded with the object of en- | Rillings & Spencer pfd. 8 11 couraging the growing of cotton in|Rristol Brass ......y.. 8 10 Ethiopia. The first experiments are | Colts Arms ... 25 already under way and if the hopes | Eagle Lock . ! they glve prove justified, a company | Fafnir Bearing Co 70 with a capital of 6,000,000 francs Hart & Cooley e will be formed to extend the acre- |[anders, F ... 7 age. IN' B Machine . 10 |N B Machine pfd 80 STAMP OUT RINGWORM Niles-Be-Pond com we... — 30 Paris Oct. 31—The ringworm once | North & Judd .... 43 prevalent among French children of | Peck, Stowe & Wil u.¢ 28 school age has been almost stamped |Russell Mfg Co .... — out by the use of X-ray, the meth- | Scovill Mfg Co 260 od having been advised by Dr. Sa- Standard Screw u 130 bouraud and his assistants in the Stanley Works .. 129 St. Louis hospital. | stanley Works ptd 37 Neag Torrington Co. com 39 40 |Traut & Hine . 10 Spotted Hands Unlon Mfg Co . o London—The “spotted hand” case Yale & Towne 63 is the newest murder mystery to Conn Tt & Pow pfd -.104 107 baffle London police. The hands of 'FHfd Elec Light .. 5 193 a man found murdered in & hotel N B Gas ........... s here were completely dotted with |Bouthern N E Tol - 140 . She P;;'s! Here is a woman who has to pay her husband alimony. She is Mrs. Hortense Meiser of Cedar Rapids, Ta. The court, in granting Meiser a ivorce, ordered his wife to pay hin alimony and defray attorney fec t costs, hospital and doctor | their three childres c | and support 0! CLEARINGS AND BALANCES New York—Excha 29 000; 93,000,000, F 74,000,000; balar balanc st Exchan H0W OFTEN HAVE YOU SAID “The opens the! some,” A new serics is now open and shares arc only $1.00 per share— per month. They pay 5% compound interest if left to maturity. Full Particulars Roam 201 At time the Loan Ass'n| shares, 1 want to secure : National Bank Building JUD Membpers New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange New Britain—Burritt Hotel Bldg., Tel. 1815 - Hartford—Conn, Trust Co. Bldg., Tel. 2-6281 American Hardware Corporation Landers, Frary & aa.rk Stanley Works Stocks We Recommend and Offer: Prices on application. @Ihumznn, Tfenn & o Burritt Hotel Bldg., New Britain Tel. 2580 MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGES Donald R. Hart, Mgr. WE OFF 50 shares Stanley Works common We Dq Not Accept Margin Accounts EDDY BROTHERS &@ HARTFORD NEW,BRITAIN Hartford Conn. Trust Bidg, Burritt, Hotel Bldg. Tel.2-7186 " Tel. 3420 WE OFFER:— 100 shares Landers, Frary & Clark 100 shares American Hardware JOHN P. KEOGH Members Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York Watebuwy STOCKS Bridgeport ew Mi;«;‘letown BONDS Z“ Direct Private Wire to New York G. F. GROFF, Mgr~Room 509, N. B, Nat’l Bank Bldg.~~Tel. 1018 Fulen chtelf Aldrichs @ 94 Pearl St., Hartford. Conn. Tel. 2-5261 122 Main Street. Tel. 2080 JOS. M. HALLORAN H. P, SPAFARD . T. BRAINARD, M JESSE MOORE We Own and Offer: AETNA LIFE TRAVELERS CONNECT®CUT GENERAL HARTFORD STEAM BOILER At the Market e factory in Chi stockyards collapsed when a fire wall gave wiy. Tons of macginery, masonry and meat were hurled into a twisted mass of debris.