New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 15, 1924, Page 15

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publication, is alleged to have caused the eviction of th@ man, McCame mon 18 belng held., Arthur Bard, 23, was taken to a hospital with wounds in the head, Fighting was stopped only after four policemen had herded the ceowd Into the streot UNION OWNED MINE INSTRIKE TROUBLE One Hundred and Twenty Men Qut of Coal Works Cleveland, Nov, 15.—One hundred ftind twenty non-union miners em- ployed in the Brotherhood and Pren- ter mines of the Coal River Colli fes company, which iy owned by members of the Brotherhood ot Lo- comotive Engineers, are on strike, according to Samuel Pascoe, Ash- land, Ky. district officlal of the United Mine Workers of America. At the office of Warren 8. Stone, president of the brotherhood, and chairman of the board of directors of the Coal River company, it was said no sfatement would be made. Stone recently asserted that min- (LENENGEAU TELS STORY OF IGHT ALl Members of Conference Had Heated Talks Bt No More —_— Paris, Nov, 16,~Georges Clemen- eau made his bit of comment to- ay on 'ha Parls peace conference | ircident ' between the “Tiger" and lloyd George which H. Wickham Steed In his recent book described as culminating In personal contact ctween the two statesmen and a Nhllenge to the Britlsh premier from his I"rench colleague, Clemencean de- “is that all the members of ce conference had heated, nimated discusslons frequently, but hings never got to that point, Tam urprised and astonished that Steed hould have written it. T have known iim for many years, you know,"” added the ehuckling. “His state of nind s vather agitated. T hear he was In Geneva Yor the, last Jeague { Nations The world's (atesmen, you know, can promen- de themselves in all the other cit- o8 of the world and come to a per- ect mgreement, but at Geneva— |ors at the pits had accomplished a here they at once begin to disagree, |co-operative method of payment “No” Clemencenn refterated, 1 |whereby they became stockholders | o not know how such ‘a story cver |in place of payment of the miners’ ot started. nnion wage scale, YLANSHEN CLASH S | Work Monday after a meeting held assembly. | by Perey Tetlow, special representa- tive of President John T. Lewls, of the International Mina Workers' or- | zanization. They are now being | matntained by the unfon in“the vi- Took | cinity of the mines, Pascoe sald. Pascon and three other miners union officlals are here to interest | the Cleveland 1ahor movenient in the controversy between Stone and the niiners. 'wa Men Are Weld After Affair in Columbus ~ Where Fight P'lace—One Seriously Stahbed, 4'~mmhun Nov, 15, — Two men held In jall today for investi- tion fn connection with a dis- [urbance hotween Klan and anti- 1 forces i & dance hall last ight. which resulted in twe men | eing stablied, one probably serious- DOLAN RULED OUT Oshkosh, Wis, Nov. 15, — Alvin (Cozy) Dolan, former coach of the New York Giantsgwho ‘was ruled out f organized baseball following dis |closures in connection with a Phila- delphta-New Tork game has arrived in Oshkosh, his former home, it was lcarned today. He declined to make any statement. Harry I'rance, one of the two held or investigation, was stabbed in the hbdomen fighting hroke out fter eviction of an unknown man the hall. Clarence McCam- salesman for a Ku Klux Klan when rom Every minute of the day— every day in the year— _Yyour Red Cross is doing some heneficent work that deserves your help and support join Your. Red C(voss is chartered by Congress to relieve suffering in peace and in war, at home and abroad: Relief in Disasters Service to Disabled Veterans Aid to Men in Army and Navy Public Health Nursing First Aild to the Injured Life Saving Instruction Home Hyglene and Care of Sick Nutrition Service American Junfor Red Cross Can you think of any hetter way to use a dollar? RedCross AnnualRoll Call November 11 to 27 Compliments of New. Britain Trust Co. BURRITT MUTUAL SAVINGS BANK grow. Your Children’s School Savings Are Here—Are Yours? ALUMINUM, 17S VARIOUS USES |Is Great Help 10 the Everyday Housewife Washington, Nov, 15.—Helium has had wide publicity from the Shenan- doah's fligl aluminum which | makes possible the performance of both the SBhenandoah and the ZR-3 seems scarcely to have its just due. “Aluminum is the foundation of duralumin, the metal bones of mo- | dern lighter-than-air sky cruisers,” says a bulletin of the National Geo- | graphic soclety from headquarters at Washington, D. C. "“The metal usually hides the light of its powers, such as the blowing up of Vimy Ridge, under bushels of other names and it is a ‘rookic’ among the old- time major league metals “Irom, copper, tin, zinc did service to man carjier than the birth of Chelst. Aluminum will be only 100 years old in, 1927 Seventy years ago aluminum old for 87 an ounce and was advertised as ‘silver | trom clay." Even the 7,300 tons pr | duced in 1900 must be multiplied times to approach last year's total, while the ‘silver’ of the sixties solls now for two cents an ounce. Most Prolific of Metals “To play a joke on a jeweler ask him for ‘some nice stona in alnmi- num, ahout two or three carats | Probably he will look puzzied, but [it he knows the chemistry of his trade he will lay befoe you gems fit for a king's crown. The ruby, phire, garnet and furquolse have a normal base of aluminum. Greater quantities of it are found than any other true metal; only half as much of its nearest rival, iron, occurs in igneous rocks, which include all rocks hardened ont of the original boiling mass of which the carth once and Jead was composed “An element of such frequency Is not confined to one country or con- tinent. 1t is a partner in nearly all 8 eg and clays, the latter a neces- sity of man from civilization's dawn. The evening potatoes which are boiled in an aluminium pan are placed before the family on china plates partly aluminum. alts of aluminum play a part in the abra- sive father uses to sharpen the carv- ing knife, the dyes in his suit, the tanning of his shoes and even his | evening newspaper. Kaolin, the foundation of chinaware, has a large content of aluminum and the man | who develops & method of getting it | out cheaper than pulling it away from the mineral now used, bauxite, | will receive honors and riches, The Gceography of Bauxite auxite takes its name from the | French hamlet of Baux, ten miles cast of Arles, on the lower Rhone. | Best hauxite still comes from south- | ern France, particularly among the | hills back from the Riviera coast. | But minable quantities of bauxite, which is an earthy, soft, weatliered | mineral, are found in Antrim county, Treland, in many parts of iormany, in British and French Guiana, and in_TIndla and Ttaly More discoveriea are being reparted from time to time. In the United States Important workings are near Little Rock, Arkansas, Steam shovels also scoop it up in nortfern Georgia and Alabama “American aluminum eompanies have hought control of large bauxite | deposits i British and French | Guiana. | Process Discovered by Minister's Son “To Charles M. Hall, whose rise to | fame and fortune reads itke an Alger romance, the housewife owes eredit I,Huunmnu in comblnation with oxy- (tion unit as well as administration | lof the for her shiniug pots and pans. Hall, Congregational minister's son, ong day discovered an old chemistry texthook without cover or title page in his father's reading room; It d. clded his iife ambition, At the age of while attending Oberlin Col- \‘Lu in Ohlo he invented the el lnrl(‘m process by which practically all @uminum s made today, Elec~ | trolysis is called electric loosening.' Wa'! Street Briefs New York, Nov, 15, == A further reluxation In trading took® place in today's stock market with “price movements disclosing considerable Lirregularity. A jump of 18 0.8 points in Fisher Body revived specu- !lutive Interest in the motor shares, the Maxwell and Jordan {ssues mounting to new 1924 high levels, Marked strength also was displayed h)’ & number of the foods and pub. |lle utilities. Persistent profit-taking took place, however, in some of the | recent industrial favorites such as | American Cam, Baldwin, U, & In- dustrial Alcohol, Cuba Cane Sugar preferred and the American Tobacco issues, U, B. Cast Iron Pipe hroke |5 points to 137, or 10 under its re- cent high, Ralls were quite outside {of Atchison, which was bid up over a point, Brisk buyiig lifted General Asphalt just before the close more than 2 points to a new high for the year, The closing s irregu gen, to which it it Is attracted like | to a magnet, Hall subjected under certain conditions to a power- ful eclectric curfent and split the particles to form pure aluminum. “Duralumin's production is & trade secret. Aluminum is its chief content and there is also copper, It is 50 light that a girder 16 feet long an be balanced on one's little filger, but so strong that i its ends are supported by blocks it will support cight men, “The qualities of aluminum win it more friends constantly. Weight for welght it ofters twice as smooth a road for transporting electricity as copper. For its virtue of radiating heat more rapldly than iron or most (54108 approximated 750,000 shary other metals, and for ‘ts lightness, | Following the upward revision in automobile makers welcome it. Be- | COMmission rates by the New York cause it absorhs heat quickly, is light | tock exchange, governors of the and doeg not rust, it is used for|NeW York curb market have approv- utensils. — On western alkali plains, [©d & readjustment of its rate seale however, it turns black and comes|on stock The new off In flakes. charges, into ‘“I'nder cortain circumstances Inminum has a violent affection for oxygen. 'This quality workmen: em- ploy in making molten metal on the spot. When you see a hooded man working in a brilllant light on the strect car track he Is employing the thermite process, A mixture of | aluminim powder and fron oxide transactions. which will go a majority vote of numbers, range from $17.50 to $25 and upwards per 100 shares on stock selling above $50, compared with a previous scale of $15 to $20. Rates on stocks sell- ing under $10 a share remain un- changed and the fee for those sell- ing between $10 and $25 a share is (rust) is ignited with magnesium, | reduced from $12.50 to $10 per hun- In a violent effort aluminum | dred, robs the iron of the fron | - lquifies in the terrific temperature| The Sharon Eteel Hoop company attained, 6,000 degrees Lahrenheit, | ias advanced all rolled steel within 30 seconds, and the | ducts $2 a tor raile. This temperature approach the heat of the steel-carrying oxy- the highest temperature common to industry.” the oxide; welds The General Cigar Co. earned net income of $1,873,820 in the first nine | months this vear, equal fo $7.74 a share on the common stock. acetylene blow-torch, Mrs. Moifé;h-l)v111g. | Is Belief of Doctms Highland Falls, N. Y. ov Moator Wheel corporation had net carnings of $1,496,000 after taxes in the nine months ended September The condition of Mrs. Frances F.|50, an inereass of $300,000 over the Morgan, Sr., widow of J. Pierpont|cume period last year Morgan, who is seriously 11l at her|qjon retired $400,000 of its bends country home } was unchanged | quring the 1924 period and reduced today, Dr. Frederick Dillney of New | tj,e preferred stock to $1,700,000. York announced. He she rest- | fair e X ed comfortably during the night. | PACIF]STS S el e o st aENPRRRE Morgan was unconscious with little hope held ont for recovery, Mrs. | Herbert I, Satterlee, Mrs. Juliet| Forty-Nine Members of University Pierpont Hamilton and Miss Anne : - Morgan, daughters of Mrs Morgan,| ©f Wisconsin Body Agree Not to | | L Fight For Their Country. Columnbla, Mo, Nov. 15.—Forty- nine students of the University of | Missouri subscribed to a stal'm-m Taxi Driver's Body Found, Bootlegger’s Feud Victim Hamilton, Ont, Nov. 15.—The mutilated body of Kred Genesece, taxicab driver, wlo las been miss- ing for two weeks, was found today on a mountainside near Stony Creek. | He had been strangled with a tow- ¢l While searching for Genesce Boy Scouts last Saturday found in the Albion Mills range the body of Roy Batolze, another murder vic- tim. Authorities helicve the crimes in- dicate a resumption of boot- | iz leggers' feud in Western Ontario | two vears ago during which the hod- ies of a score of men, mostly recent immigrants who had been murdered, were found in various placess TO PROBE PROHIBITION = ) Washington, Nov. 15.—The special senate committee investigating the internal revenue bureau is expected to begin an inquiry into th prohihi- the fighting of any future war, it was revealed when a tabulation of responses to a questionnaire circu- ated on Armistice Day was made public by the Students’ Religlous union. Twenty-three of the students were men and 26 women. They were not required to sign their names, it was announced the statement read: “I am unalterably opposed to war the of any future conflict.” ne hundred and forty-three sti- " to the proposi- tenty answered “no fion And B9 were non-committal, was a1 The question Alstribued nts' relfgions meetings and porthon of the ounced fre wasx 1 only-a small fire student bedy Wamburgh and Cooke Resign From Faculty Cambridge, Mass, Nov. 15 resignation from the faculty of Har- vard Fn- tax laws, when the hearings are resumed November 19, orsity of Professors Collapsible Airplane iy This is the can be wheeled into a garage. You want a safe and secure place to put away your weekly Savings, a place that is i convenient, a place that returns to you the highest possible interest on your savings and, last, a Bank which will be glad to start Your Account with a sum as small as $1.00. “Burritt” will do all these for you. this start next week and prove for yourself how easy it is to get the habit, and how quickly your Savings, at 41%% interest, will We suggest that “Cranwell,” a collapsible airplane recently exhibited at Lympne, England. | gene Wambaugh, for 21 v Lang- 1011 professor of law and an author- widely known in this country, | and William Parker Cooke, has at the dental achool for 3 ¢ announced by the Harvard once and Professor Wambaugh next September. Milk Drivers Strike; Want $38 a W cel\ Nov. 1 More thar vers emploved by three milk com- e Charlestown district refused to take out their w ns 1y today. The men faid they in. 1 to enforce a demand for a guarantee of $38 a week, whicl wage, they said, had been guaran- teed to employes of other milk com- panies in The present wagn, g to the drivers, is $24 Boston panies in ! the eity. BRITISH OFFICIAL who was sec for Jndia in the Lloyd Geo inet from 1917 to 192 He was 45 years old. DIES | Montag: Its wings fold up so that 11‘ 22, die \OII\H\\ CRISIS By The Assaclatec P Rome, Nov. 15.—Of enied today most SHclen v what rist i Italy publis papers abroad. Although a re fs a was ch news regar tenseness in the ust now no special eny sort or kind are bean fakes, or are forese ared T N Foreign Exchange The you just make New York, changes cents): G 3-4, cables 443, banks 460; Fra cables 5.28 1-2 and, dema 1 14.70 Denmark 17.60; Switzerland, demand Spaln, demand 13.61; Gree mand 1.§0; Poland, demand 18 Czecho-Slovakia, demand 2.98; slavia, demand 1:45 Austria mand 4 1-.§8; Rumania = h: Arg 1 mand 11 | Montreal 100, ieman Swe deman effect | November 24 unless disapproved by | pro- |1 The corpora- | declaring they would not take part in | and will never take part in the fight- | yWALL ST. REPORTS —_——— { Allly Chalmers Am DBeet Sugar American Can Am Locomo .. Am Bmelt .. Am Bugar . AMT&T ., Am Woolen ... Anaconda Atchison Haldwin Loco B&0 Beth Steel .. Bosch Mag . ten Leath .. Can Pac ..., Ches & Ohlo . Chi M & 8t P Ch M &SP pt Chi R 1 & Pac ('hile Cop Col Iuel Con Textile . Corn Pro Refin Crucible Stecl Cuba Can Sug . Cosden Ofl Davison Chem Erie .. Erie 18tp fd .. Gen Elce Gen Motors . Tdspir Cop Int Nickel .. Int Paper . Kelly Spgfd Kenn Cop . Lehigh Val ... Marine pfd Mis Pacp fd . Natl Lead . New Haven . Norf & West North Pac .. ac Of! enn R R hil & R € 9 ure Oil ... Rep I & ~m1 Ray Cop ..... Reading . Sinelair Oil 8o Pac . | %0 Ry udebaker Texas Co Texas & Pac .. Transcon Oll .. Union Pac U 8 Indus Alco U 8 Rub U 8 Steel Willys Overiand (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) Asked 630 | LOCAL STOCKS | Aetna C High 89 L 1 14 24 a5 [ 418 4285 149 83 sS4 . 89 i . 4813 15% 18 cees 633¢ 10215 non 40 2% 4014 43 38 L1457 114% LA ualty ... Aetna Life Ins Co |Actna Fire ..... Automobile Ins Hartfo ‘ire . National Fire . tAm dware Am Hosier Beaton & Cadw hoenix Fire ... rs InS Co seeue ell Bid Big-Hfd Cpt Co com ..120 Billings & Spencer com | Bristol Brass Colt's Arms . | Eagle Lock . Billings & Spencer pfd IFafnir Bearing Co . Landers, F N B Mac N B Machine p Niles-Be North & Judd B Stowe Mfg Co Mfg Co dard Sere v Works Russell Hart & Cooley .. fd Stanley Works pf ng & Hir Tra Union Mfg Co . Yala & Towne .. & Pow Conn 1.t td Elec Light N B Gas SN E Tel TREASURY treasury CLEARINGS AND BALANC balanc - -Pond com ... & Wit ... 2 P STATEMENT. 0,422,947, o, $2 hange Low (Close PUTNAM & CO. MEMBERS NEW YORK & HARTTORD STOCK EXCHANGES JIWEST MAIN ST NEW BRITAIN= Tel. 2040 ! HARTFORD OFFICE € CENTRAL Row TEL. 2 nd WE OFFER AND RECOMMEND Bank of New York and Trust Company Stock " JUDD & COMPANY Members New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange New Britain—Burritt Hotel Bldg., Tel. 1815 Hartford—Conn, Trust Co. Bldg, Tel. 2-6281 What Will Be the Effect of the Republican Victory on Security Values and Prices? May we send you our opinion on this question? @homson, Tfenn & Co. Burritt Hotel Bldg., New Britain Tel. 2580 MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGES Donald R. Hart, Mgr. WE OFFER YALE & TOWNE MFG. CO. TORRINGTON STANLEY WORKS LANDERS, FRARY & CEARK FAFNIR BEARING Prices on Application We Do Not Accept Margin Accounts IEDDY BROTHERS & & HARTFORD NEW BRITAIN Hartford Conn. Trust Bldg. Burritt Hotel Bldg. Tel.2-7186 Tel. 3420 We offer 50 shares Eagle Lock The Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company Old State House Square, Hartford, Conn. Safe Deposit Boxes, $5.00 and upwards. Foreign Exchange to all parts of the world. LETTERS OF CREDIT—GENERAL BANKING Bank by mail. It is safe and saves time. | ——— For Quick Results Use Herald Classified Ads JUDD & COMPANY THE REMOVAL OF ON MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17th, 1 TAKE PLEASURE IN ANNOUNCING OF THEIR MAIN OFFICE ) FROM 750 MAIN STREET TO THE NEW JUDD BUILDING PEARL STREET, CORNER I LEWIS HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT YOU EW “F‘..TH\ OFFI RITT AND INSPECT THE NEW ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO CALL FFICE EMRERS K EXCHANGR K EXCHANGE

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