New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 12, 1925, Page 13

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MY E. GURTIN CALLED BY DEATH PROFITS LARGE IN HENTUCKY RACING \Purses and Stakes Distribut Total More Than $1,500,000 (Continued From First Page) | somewhat in the nature of an exper- fment. When the annual meeting came in October, 1923, the chamber ced its stamp of appfoval on her ing her to office. e o ol suille iRy BTan 3 More [points in suspense are mostly of Cr ; ‘v,‘,, m“ ‘(Fn ;n":.'c‘ I Oetobor, | 31:800,000 was distributed in purses | minor importance, but the secrecy ST R epm oty |and stakes during the 160 days of |still maintained lcaves so much to the services of Miss Curtin in his racing on Kentucky tracks last sea- annnal report in which he 1 Western turfmen, for the first (e 3 M i Mar \vim: in several yedrs, won the ma- sumed the duties, the chamber !m»‘ JOT: Y0 AN e LS taken on a new lease of life. A long| The total amount distribut b experience and special training and CIWAIUE fairs, was $1,675,525, or ally hdb loyalty and intclligent $130,000 more than in 1923. Open- .sm make her one of the|iN8 & new track at Ashland was the t efficient and capable eecretar- | TCASON Lonethsaiet the chamber has ever had.” Gallaher brothers led all the win- | i ning stables in Kentucky, good showing of crack three-year-old reported sum of ings were due to the Chilhowee, the just sold for a 000. Their net 8§74, of In another portion of his report, the retiring president spoke of M Curtin as “a loyal, capable, enthu- stastic and well tralned sectary.” g President of B. & P. W. Club ‘:‘1“’;‘ SR s ‘}“’:"‘y” AltHouglisHeldsvotedimueliiof hor =T 0N LS a ) QUOANONE S HI LA 100 L i son N. Camden, president of the time and energy to making a suc- cess of one of the most important positions held by a woman in (h»;‘ Miss Curtin found time for | tivities along other lines. She was Kentucky Jockey club, who raced an extengive stable, won 43 races and carned $67,435. 1. R. Bradley, mas- r of Idle Hour JFarm, Lexington, , colleated 567 on his runners. I one of the organizers and the first | %Y cost payments until the Belgian | trensurer of the Business and Pro- | 1W0 women fisurcd conspicuously | priority payments from reparation fessional Women's club, She later |8 OWNers of the winners ot the tWo receipts have been completed and served that club in tho office of | hishest price races of sogson.fthe Delgian percentage reduced, president and cnjoyed a successful [MrS: R.. M. Hoots of OKla., | which would make it possible to pay o e ent the winner of the Golden Jubi- |that part of the sum due the United Iuring the eampaign for funds to |1ee Kentucky derby to the post in|States without aftelting the Allled erect a new hotel, Miss Curtin was Biack Gold, who won 325 for|percentages, ] one of the moving figures since the |NCr: An il ! Svaman. -‘"fi ldca was sporisored by the chamber | LA S BEREETRCL C0 BeLel vl othier ‘civic organizations. BeEh s il Rt ARRIVES AT MOSCOW | Was Nationally Known tory ‘\n]! ! |‘m<“ "’t‘ mnationaliSuss | Miss Curtin's ability as an execn- ““]‘ ak Aot Mol 11, e e e e | tive was recognized not only in this| Jockey Harry DALRS # MOStLJean Herbette Is First French Am. | Win chapel. city and state, but also nationally, | Winners. followed in order by sl | At the recent national convention of | H11ICE l"";" mee ‘1‘ ol ke sadosiTondintSatUiR epubic| chamber secretaries at Washington | 1ie Pool and Ivan Park R she took a leading part in the dis- ! cission of problems confronting CONN VOTE CAST | Moscow, Jan. 12.—ican Herhette, such organizations. Business execu- L & first Irench ambassador to soviet tives from all parts of the United | e Russia, arrlved here yesterday, ac- | States were in attendance and ex- | Nuuueg Edcctors Mect And Declave |companied by his wite and staf, and pressed astonishment at the thor- eetablisbed himself in the house for- oughness of her knowledge of af-| Their Ballots Cast 1or Calvin |merly occupied by the Nansen Re. fairs in which women executives arc - | lief mission. rarely acquainted | Coollge, | The ambassador said a great task Besides her parents, Miss Curtin | rurord, Jan. 12.—The vote of |faced the two natlons In the re- is survived by three 5, MrS. L0 stato of Connecticut was for- |establishment of. normal relations Vrancis Annear and Miss Katherine | e doclared today by fhe seven |but that hie belleved every question Curtin of this city and Mrs, Helen | progidential electors elected on No- | could be solved if good will obtained Doran of New York, and fhree broth- | \cmber 4 to have been cast for Cal- |on both sides, ers, Thomas J. Curtin, Jr. Bernard |vin Coolidge for president of the| “If 1 said anything' beyond my Curtin and Electrical Inspector Cy- |United States and for Charles G, jprerogatives, M. Tehitcherin would ril J. Curtin, all of this city, Dawes for vice-president. Theodore |regret that a journalist had been €. Wallen, Hartford paperman |appointed ambassador to Russia,” he ¢ chosen to take to the authorities |continued, “but I may say broadly | |at Washington the offici |that the question of' R rtificate SQUARES ACCOUNTS of the vot signed by the presidenti Tuench Poilu Soundly Thrashes For- | The clecfors met in oftice of the secretary of state this forenoon. mer German Officer For I Treat- Miss Finette 1 10ls of Fairfield b was appointed to ta rt»wrcof ment in a Prison Camp. | Miss Annie B. Jennings who was un- Dreat, Jan, 12—Tn Giomailway |S0Iglo be. present, Charles £ station of & small village of Mowi- | >r° """\ R e “:‘i‘. “’f; Ban, Brittany, a number of carts full | PRSI B 00 E i reind otiswestiLircton antlosdcatined S L Teniins) GbNo: c the German manket, were = beink|pegoylor Chestor: 1 Avigahd loaded on rallway tricks, while . & |poayyjjle; Louis R. Cheney of Hart- German tfruit merchant stood eom- | po" e e At placently watching the work. Sud- |\ i ¢ a Breton peasant, dark cyed R T and stockily built, left his horses and i fhe Mtate Gt strode up ta the German. ¥ appointed ol “Are you Ober-Lieutenant X who ynch was also by a unanime in command of camp X during chosen teller. The oath of o was the answer. te Elmer iier X.” shouted the a strange light in we'll settle it right “And I'm so Breton peasant, Lis eyes, “and here now.” Mus. I)rah(‘ R'*r‘omc\ Defore the German had time to| Member of Fascist Party run the Breton was on him, punch- | me. Jan, 12.—Mrs. J A ing him right and left and knock- | Frake of New Yo y wa ing the German all over the village |ceived yesterday hy er Mus- square. So sound was the beating |solipl, Mrs. Drake e oed| soch he gave the German that onlookers enthusiasm ‘fc ¢ fascist cause that had to drag him away, but none was olini orized he au r ap- in sympathy with loser when nt as the Americar ther realized that the French ex-|woman fascist. prisoner of war was paying back | = months of hardship and 11l treat-| Mrs. Drake is president of the ment. American F Milk and Rellef for o T Italy socie r her work both in 80 great has become the demand [this country and In Ttaly she i the Ttalian government by whom she ate audience. for meat in London the ( entral ‘]'« nor Markets are breaking sales records [and Pope Plus, received in phiv by disposing of 90,000 tons a month. " | who speak as badly as we do. CONGRESSHAN 1§ AGAINT ISQUIRY limap, bemocrat, Would Not Dignily Drinking Charges Vashington, Jan, 12.—~Aroused by ulished charges of liquor drinking members of congress, Representa- ve Tillman, democrat, Arkansas 'ged the house today not te dignify iem by authorizing an investigation + determine the truth, M. Tillman referred to the divorce it of Representative Scott, republi. an, Michigan, durlng which Mrs, cott declared she had seen consid- rable drinking in congressional cir- les and that the prohibition law had ween violated on a congressional trip 0 Panama in 1921, Tiilman sald he and his wife were assengers on the steamer on which Ar. and Mrs Scott made the trip. ‘“We considered ourselves in the xcellent company of respectable nen and women, no hetter and no vorse than the average bent on a woper mission and carrying on se- nectably,” he said. Calls It Unfair Attack. “Is It not time to abandon unfair tacks on public men, Newspapers em to find thrilling entertainment n an endless spread of printer's ink erellessly ridiculing and pitflessly ttacking members of the senate and ouse, “Don't allow the house to descend o the low level of an up-country wurt hearing a divorce suit.” Scott was at his office today but vas not on the floor when Tillman poke, WASHINGTON HAS | GIVEN AGREEMENT (Continued From First Page) hopes of Saturday night, coming |after the apprehensive feeling of ’the morning, had again given way m some uncertainty on account of \”H“ hard time the experts appeared to be having in getting ready thelr |final report for the delegates to act upon w leaks that have occurred as to lhe negotiations indicate that the | room for speculation that pessimism is casily engendercd by delays. The opposition ¥rench press is showing i”"’ greatest anxiety, assuming that the secrecy is intended in large part to camouflage French concessions, The surest thing that has emerged from the mystery-shrouded negotia- tion quarters seems to be that the | Americans will get 2 1-4 per cent of the Dawes plan receipts for theh‘ ‘\\ur damage- claims, in addition ln |payment for the costs of the occu-* pation of the Coblenz bridgehead o the lines of the Wadsworth Accord | but probably running o\er a greater | number of years. It remains to be decided whether the army cost payments will begin with the first Dawes annuity, The Allies are insisting that the United States ought to wait for its army e Wall Street Brie A meeting of stockholders of the Natlonal Sugar Refining company in Jersey City today, called to authorize sale of Its property and assets to the American Sugar Reflning company for $10,600,000 cash, was adjourned until January 26 to give the Ameri- can Sugar Refining company an op- portunity to apply for modification of the U, 8. district court's decree of declded to go through with the fn. 1922 restraining it from controlling augural exerclses and would dellver the National. American Sugar's op- an addre; |tion on the Natlonal's stock expires Friends of the Davis family were | March 31. Incensed at the speed with which the warrants were Issued and served, declaring they belleved that the service could have been postponed until after the lpaugural, as a | courtesy to the retirlng executive, NEW GOV. TAKES HOLD | Ben, ANSAS GOVERNOR IS UNDER ARREST (Fontinued From First Page) ceedings as an “outrage” designed to humiliate the governor on the last | day of his administration, Will Deliver Address Later the governor sald he had Stockholders of the Dubilier Con- denser & Radlo® corporation today authorized an {nmrease in the no par value common stock from 160,000 shares to 500,000 shares. The com- pany proposes to give stockholders the right to subscribe to an addi- tional share of common stock at $50 a share for each 10 shares now held. The proceeds of the sala will be used to retire the outstanding preferred | stock at 105, 8. Paulen is Inaugurated as Chlet Exccutive of Kansas This Afternoon, Btock market statisticians take the view that the present heavy buying y > | of rail issues is more for prospects of Topeka, Jan. 12.—Ben. 8. Paulen, | appreciation than for current in- inaugurated as governor of Kansas|come returning higher dividend today, pledged that he would €on-|yates, Unipn Pacific and Canadian duct ‘a careful business administra- | pacific, two old dividend payers, tlon; that he would bulld for a|were cited as selling to yield more greater Kansas with the best educa- | hay pajtimore & Ohlo and South- tional opportunity for all, and that|... Rallway, neither of which has he would be “governor of all the |),,0 ang unbroken dividend records. people.” He asserted that “g00d|ayuntic Const Line, which paid only days are coming again to Kansas. 88 last year, is selling abreast of The new governor, a republican, |0, pacific because 1t has been sald that the state should do "all"(‘m_mng more per share for several that can be done through carefully | ... [t01s inatd hilal Newi York considered legislation to lighten thelr (‘ "I ]‘. Y b i A] hi burdens and to make farming a call. | C¢1tra! 18 selling above Atchison on ing which will continue to attract 'jr"’:‘:“'m‘" I";‘“"'!""sd?‘h"llfrl;':m::; many of our ablest young men." crease, St, Louls, ) s i 4 5 i earned $12 a share last year, South- ern Railway about $11.50 or more and Baltimore & Ohlo between $9 and $10. These three roads showed improvement in the closing months of 1924 and better earnings are ex- pected for 1925, The street talks of $15 a share for Southern Railway and Frisco this year, Grosg earnings of American Water Works & Electrlc Co. in the year cnded Nov. 30 increased $2,122,317 over the previous 12 months to $38,- Beaths Mrs. Gertrude Thoma Mrs. Gertrude Thoma, aged 23 years, died last night at her homg 828 North Burritt sireet, after a long illness. She was born in Wrenshal, Minnesota, but had lived In this city about 14 years. She was a member | 071,265 but net earnings after re- of St. John's German Lutheran |serves for renewals and replace- church and a member of the choir {ments showed a drop of $2,558,333 of that church. from $3,279,275. This Is equal after 8Surviving her are her first preferred dividends to 9.6 per Arthur Thoma; cent a share on bhoth participating Adolph Bradlau; one sister, Mra |preferred and common stocks com- William Doucette; three brothers, [ pared with 13.53 per cent the year Rudolph Bradlau of Porfland, and |before. The decrease in net earn- Frank and Albert Bradlau of thia |ings, the company stated, was due to city. increases in interest, amortization The funeral will be held tomor- husband, her mother, Mrs. row afternoon at 2 o'clock from the |gubsidiarics, reflecting the large late home. Rev. M. W. Guadian|outlay for additions and betterments will officiate and burial will be in|in 1024, Tairview cemetery. —_ | with $304,199,746. Clark's but was forced to sever* his connection with that company last July because of poor health. On Oc- tober 16 he was removed to the New | Britaln general hospital from B | tol, where he had lived since July, and last Thursday was trans- as recelved by the company of New York, reveal a sur- last | accounted for by increased export of luxuries, father, Joseph Oquist; his stepmoth- er; one daughter, Mrs. Stewart Rod- man of this city; three children, his ‘abt to | I'rance is the greate ™ con- | fronting us. 'If that is solved, it will turn all the sympathies of thousands of small French bondholders toward soviet Russia.” When M. Herbette was reminded |that Russia could not pay her debts unless credits were advanced to her, | he replied: “The recognition of debts ;z,v sqviet Russia would of itself be {a means of reestablishing credit. i CHARACTERISTICS TOLD "\vll-.\nul_\»l: "By Dritisher, Revéals : Why Englishmen Are Tongue-tied Loudon, Jan. 12.—A sclentist has made the discovery that the “mo; silent and inarticulate animals l’ nature are asses, owls, oysters and ishmen,” according to Sir St. “lalr Thompson, president val Society of Mcdicine, | cent dinner. “It is curious, ared, ould at a re- " the speaker “that after-dinner speaking be a custom with a people None the four more clafm he fof lour or less United Kingdom great clarity of expres- continued.. “The Welsh- man talks a language of his own, which no one else understands, and {he therefore does not count; the Irishman suffers from confusion of thought; the Knglishman Is afflicted with confusien of speech, and the Scotsman, when he goes to a public dinner, especially if wine is included, altvays hopes to leave the table speechless.” can sion,"” of the | de- | nations which compose | | i | died at her home yesterd One of the potential factors which will aid the return of sterling to y, according to financial author- s, is the present differential be- n the London bank rate and the Federal Reserve bank rec rate here, With the money rate in FEngland highing up to offset charges incidental to the traysfer of funds, a wife and two brothers, Hans and James Oquist. | The funeral will be held tomor- row afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Er- Rev. J. Emerson IFord, acting pastor of Trinity Methodist | | church, will officlate and interment | will be i Fairview cemetery. Stella Bukowski |flow of capital to London for in- Stella Bukowski, the one year old ;\r‘slmvnt at the higher rate is con- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Bu- 1“"“ red in \|:,:| ”vy.nm:‘yt\m“ nt Kowski of 34 Beach ftrect, Tcyry- |has% and proba ] ; strengthen steriing and accelerate its restoration to a gold basis, ville, died Saturday night home of her parents. The funeral was held this morn- at the Last week's exports of gold from Ing at 8 o'clock at St. Casimer's church, Terryville, and finterment |the United Stat “‘“”’l"“‘\“‘]‘l"‘li‘\no: Be was In §t. Mary's cemctery in that |$22:000,00, brought unmistaks town. precious metal from this country was just heginning. International bank- ers express the opinion that the| movement would continue unabated until approximately one-third of thi enormous stocks now in Ameorica vaults have been distributed to other countries All authorities agreed that the shipments were eco- Mrs. Anna Domurat Mrs, Anna Domurat, wife of V entine Domurat of 164 Grove stres She ) as | 39 years of age and besides her hus- band s survived by four children, Bertha, W n, Frank and Leo, The funeral will be held tomor- row morning at o'clock from the Sacred Heart church. Burial| will be In Sacred Heart cemeter 7:30 ade as well as to world ficlal to American t the (‘on'nn\rrn Il An index of the r nt expansion in industrial operations is supplied by the electrical output figures of the Eleanor Herre The funeral of FEleanor Herre, who died Friday as the result of ac- cldentally drinking polson, was held this afternoon at 2:30 from the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Herre, 102 Vine street. Rev Em- erson Tord, acting pastor of Trinity Methodist chureh, offfciated and bu- 1ial was in Fairview ceretery. ——————— — Joseph A. Haffey Funeral Director. Phone_1625-2. opposite St. Mary’s Church. cent over 1923 was maintained 1 year to November the increase {jumped to 12.68 per cc | week after election md incre late in December to per ¢ | The output for the week ended De- | cember 18 to 52,590,000 kilowatt hours, was twice that of the low point of July, and established high record for the company. |Cler, 1, ed v Protests Burning Of Newspaper Premises London, Jan. 12.—Burning of the | | premises of a Catholic newspaper |and other alleged fascist excesses at | Pisa, Ttaly, have drawn a violent | protest from the clergy, according Residence, 17 Summer 8t.—~1625-3 [to a Rome dispatch l(: the Dally —————————————— | T¢|¢gTam, A manifesto signed by Cardinal Matsi has been issued, according to Largest and most complete line of the dispatch, deploring the.violence, GOLD FISH especially the fact of its being di- |rected against a Catholic paper A adomotivg tin U ety LBt which has always held aloof from ’ | partisan strife. The manifesto ex- Bo“erel’s Posy Shop presses hope that the distressing disturbances will cease and that = cm;n:l(.'n'”r‘mzu peace will return to the nation. and preferred dividend charges of i a new | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HPRALD, MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1925, WALL ST. REPORTS Stiffening of the renewal rate for call money to § per cent later led to considerable profit-taking, a number | of lasues selling a point or more be- low Saturday's closing. Mack Truck, Amerlcan Car & FFoundry and Radio Corporation yiclded 2 points, 8 8. Kresge and West Penn Power 8 points each, United Fruit 7% polntas. Bullish operations, however, were re- newed In a varlety of speclal fssucs, IMisher Body soared 20 points to 250 in respouse to the doubling of the dividend returns under the recapital« lzation plan, while General Motors moved up to 78 and Dupont to 145 | 1-4. General Electric, Phillips Jones and American Agricultura) Chemical preferred advanced 2 to 4 points, | Missour| ific preferred, jumping | 3 1-4 to above 82, led the rails into higher ground and at noon the whole list scemed to be swinglng upwards. Low 4 High Close Allls Chal Am Bt Bug ... | Am Can ., M) Am Loco fl Am Smelt Am Sug .. Am Tel & i Am Wool Angconda ] Atchison n At GIf & W T 23% ¢ Bald Loco 1351 b Balti & Ohio . 80 o Beth Steel 63 Bosch Mag 461% Cen Leath ..., 201§ Can Pacific ... 151} Ches & Ohfo . 93% CM&SP.1 CM&EtPpfd?2 CRIsI& P . 49 Chile Copper . 36% Col Fuel ..... 5% Con Textlle ... 4% Corn Prod Ref 401§ Cru Steel .... 76% Cuba Cane Sug 121 Cosden OM ... 30% Dav Cehm ... 443 Erie .. 323 Erle 1st pfd . 45% Gen Electric .30814 Gen Motors Gt North pfd . Insp Copper . Int Nickel .. Int Paper .... Kelly Spring Kennecott Cop. Lehigh Val Marine ....... Marine pfd Mid States Oil. Mis Pao pfd .. Nat Lead rw Haven Norf & West North Pac . Pacitic Oil ... Pan American 31” 1303 Ponn Railro: PRRC&I. Plerce Arrow.. 14% FPure Oil . 30% 27 Rep I & 8§ . Ray Copper .. Phillips Petroleum company ac- 15% John T. Oquist cording to Wall street estimates, en- | g ding ..... 807 1% John T. Oquist, age 49 years, died |joyed a prosperous year in _l!':A. net ‘!‘.o_\'al Duteh .. 525 52% Saturday night at Cedarcrest sana- |earnings before depreciation and i ginelair Oil .. 18% 18 | torium, Newington. Mr. Oquist was depletion being calculated at be-lgouty pacific 107% 107% 107% a native of Germany but had been a |tween $14,000,000 and $15,000,000 in | oy Rajlway 813 EA 81% resident of this city since 1889, com- | comparison with $12,452,000 in 1923. | gtndebaker .. 461; 56% - 45% ing here from Manchester, where he = Texas Co %% d4% 44 44 rst sottled afterh s immigration to| Orders received by the General |Tex & Pacific 47 ] 461 this country. He was for many |Electric company in 1924 were 7 |rranscon Oil . 4 vears employed in the solid handle |per cent less than the r before, | 'njon Pacific . 152 department of Landers, Frary & the total of $283,107,697 comparing t’nited Fruit . 210 Official figures of France's forelgn | T trade in the first 11 months of 1924, | Utah Copper . Bankers Trust | Westingho I plus of exports over fmports of 1,-| | Aetna Ca ferred to the state sanatorium in |397,050,000 francs. For the same} Newington. He was a member of |period of 1923 there was an fmport the Landers Mutual Aid sdciety. | surplus of 1,463,047,000, The fav- Mr, Oquist 18 survived by his|orable balance for 1824 was partly lAetna Fire { Automobile Beaton & 0 e Bige-Hfd Cpt Co. com .112 118 | Billings & Spencer com 4 8 Billings & Spencer pfd 8§ 10 | Bristol Drass 1 s Al Colt's Arms .. % Eagle Toc : 112 Fafnir Learing Co. evidence that a huge outflow of the jp, ) "oy (o e "ywif" ! nomically logical and would be bene- | flunprala |North American company, which | | |through its subsidiaries turnished | |power to many large in s. | e | WhileRawerklyignin ot r | the first | {U 8 Indus Alco U S Rubber ] 8 Steel LOCAL STOCK QUOTATIONS (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) Asked Aetna Life Ins, C Ins, tford ¥ fonal Fire Am Hardware ..... Am Hosicry ... . Cadwell .. Hart & Cooley . Landers, T IN B Machine . N B Mach -Pond com . North Judd .. Russell Mfz Co. Standard Stanley W % Stanley Works pfd . Torrington Co. com . 'EDDY BROTHERS & & Hartford Conn. Trust. Bldg. — | ONMUSELE St S0 {Senate Avéues Issue Before Vote = PUTNAM & CO MEMBERS NEW YORK & HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGES I WEST MAIN ST NEW BRITAIN~- Tel. 2040 HARTFORD OFFICE € CENTRAL ROW TEL. -1y We Offer: '100 Colts and 100 Torrington JUDD & COMPANY Members New York Stogk Exchange Members Hartford Stoc. Exchange New Britain—Burritt Hotel Blew,, Tel. 1815 Judd Building, Pearl St., corner of Lews, Hartford, Conm, We recommend and offer: American Hardware Corporation Bigelow-Hartford Carpet Company The Stanley Works Stocks Prices on App}iwtinn @hom=on, Tem & @u # Burritt Hotel Bldg., New Britain . 2580 MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD STOUK Exuum:m Donald R. Hart, Mgr. WE OFFER FAFNIR BEARING LANDERS, FRARY & CLARK Prices on Application ‘We Do Not Accept Margin Accounts HARTFORD NEW BRITAIN Burritt Hotel Bldg. Tel.2-7186 Tel. 3420 We Offer 50 shares of Korth & Judd Co. JOHN P. KEOGH Members Consolidated § k Exchange, New York. NEW BRITAIN NAT. BANK BLDG. Telephone 1013 Stocks, Bounds, Curb Sccurities bought find sold on commission. Listed Stocks carricd on conservative margin, Direct private telegraph anu Ticker Service, Branch Offic Danb NOTHER DEBATE - Bridgeport, New Haven vas favorable nittee visit India N to the idea of and opium Bishop i)\ international 1 narcotie vew Hartford House Built In 1734 I)Mm‘ed by Fire 2.—Fife early unoccupied Hartford Tomorrow LA i 5 : iping out an old landmark, Tnion Mfg Co. ... st aving been crected in | Yale & Towen 7 e iles Kelioge a Conn Lt & Pow pfd L v R amily 1 Hfd Flee Light 200 |that has block : ¢ : ] s N B Gas — Nl oressing legislatl 4 HEcugant : Southern N T Tel 144 | Although f in every att R Hfd Elee Lt Rts. . 2 1s far tc ¥ en g ! B MONKREY ON R TREASURY STATEMENT i Cons T Statement for Jan, ... §305,43 i ! CLEARANCES AND BALANCES New York Exchar 78 ) 3 Balances $8,000.000. 2 1 ¢ Boston cos: ) Sl sctops Balances - £ By New York, ex- changes stea (in cents): Great T 478 11-16, cables 47§ 15 on banks 475 9-1 | 419 1-2, cables 4.20; Belgium, de mand 5.01 1-2, cab! : Germany |€d demand 23.80; Hol demand | M ema Swe- 't 26.93 Switzerla m‘“\\ ; Spain, demand 14 demand 1.81; Poland, ~irmmd ni 1-4 achoslovakia, demand 3.00 3-4; Jugoslavia tria, deman he demand .51 3-4; Argentina, demand Te 40.12; Brazil, demand 12.00; Toklo, ; Chamber £ demand 38 3-8; Montreal 99 11-16. |[tary, In wm‘x the latter said that Wads ants *lud\ \Idde of The Oplum ln" 1 '1 y

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