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FRENCH AWARD T0 NURMI LKLY Finnish $tar Probably Will Get 10,000 Franc Prize Paris, Jan, $0.—Paavo Nurm! may et the 10,000 frane prize awarded annually by the Fiench "Academy of | Sporta" for “the sporiing exploit ac- complished in France or by a I'renchman abroad likely to result in materlal, scigntific or moral pro- greas for hpmanity,” uniess the Parle-to-Tokid filer, Captain Georges Pellétler Dolsy noses him out, ac- cording to Excelsior. Among the previous prize winners have been the aviators Beaumont, Guynemeyer and Fonck, the fighter *“~pentier, the fencer Luclen Gau. a and the singldhanded trans-At- lantle mariner, Alain Gerbault, Excelsior pays a glowing tribute g Nurmi's “pulverizing ot ' warld cords.” Captain Pelletier Doisy now s engaged in a flight to Lake Tehad, in the central Sudan. Excelsior's forecast of the prize for Nurmli is apparently based on the famous Finnleh runner's exploite at the Olympic games in Parls last summer, at which he was probably the outstanding individual perform- er. He set new Olympic records for the 1,500 and 5,000 metre runs, and also captured the 10,000 metro | event, DEFEN! Longworth Uphoids Ruling to Ex-| clude LaFollette Men from Caucus Washington, Jan. 30.—During an- other round of debate in the house | tday over the activities of the Ln- IPolletté insurgents, nepresen(au\w Longworth, the republican leader, DECISION. defended his party's decision to ex-| | clude the dozen LaFollette followers (os(ume of Queen of Jugoslavia |and Zamboanga, from which points from party councils. Mr., Longworth sald he had re- liable information that the {insur-| gents who were not invited to the republican caucus to be held Febru- ary 27 had not only openly opposed 1924 campaign but had campaigned | in various states against republican senatorial and congressional candi- | dates. He made this statement despite a denlal in the house yeater- | day by Representative*I'rear of Wis- | consin that the campaign activities of the insurgent housc members.had ' gene that far. Shadows Make Targets For Crissy Field Flyers San Francisco, Jan. 30—Army avi- Field, at the P 8 ancisco, ar in combat practice by firing at shad- ows of planes in the bay. Two planes are used in the in- struction. They fly\at varying aiti- tudes, and the aerial machine gun- ner in one fires at the gpoving shad- 0w of the other. The splash of the huliets shows plainly how well the gunners are shootin Lewis chine guns, firing bu of from five to 100 shots at a rate of 400 to 500 a minute, are use Gireenwich \ppmpuates $60,000 for Town Hall Greenwich, Jan, 30.—Resolutions | appropriating $60,000 for alterations and improvements in the town hall and appointing town meeting herq last night. A resolution for improvement of the town hall had been voted down at & previous meeting. Loevs ’Thea‘er Leases Greenwich Property | Greenwich, Jan, 30.—licase for a poriod of 60 years of property on Bast Putnam avenuc owned by Wal- ter Guzzardi, owner' of ind in New York to Low Inc, theatrical produccrs, as ewffected here today, It was said {o be one )f the largest real estate transac- tions ever recorded here. Mr. Gz rdi announced that a theate building with several stores fronting on Fast Putnam avenue, would be d at once at a cost Bridgenort's Grand List Has Been Cut § %‘]l ,220, 108 Igeport, J 3ridgeport’ 11 list for 1925 has been cut $4, 0,708 from last yea I valuationa on | that have suf- following th chief reason for BUpGLET wuter board estim for the next fisc: WATER BOARD Th and its incomie at $190,000. | including pipe, etc., make | largest ftem, the cost being £100,000, Interest charges 50,000 and $36,000 is included 2 sinking fund payment. Gen- 11 gavernm estimated at § " than was required this | VOICES FRANCE'S STAND e Amsociated Press. shington, Jan. 20. — sciner told Prasident Coolidge today upon the sentation of his crodentinls as ¥rench ambassador that the scopera of the two rountriow duriog the war ‘aad exciusiveiy to payment of their ateriai dabts well as their dehta nile ¢ gratit e eey——— #IRE ONX MAIN STREET Fire broke oul this afternoon in L Bros. store at 301 1 respanded to a otiil SQUEFZED AT WORK August Johasor *19 Faat street hea enaght be- | al the B. & K Prary & Clark He war taken to the erul- hospita! where + hanes were broken s were not serl- I was fourd and that X ° engaging | ma- | a zoning commission ! and advisory board were adopted by | hotels here | estimated | end | { expenses have been | approximately | should | City Items Colleglate Dance Frl. Newington. —advt, Local visiting nurses attended the convention of the Gradupte Nurees' assoclation at the Bond hotel, Hart- ford, today. Miss Cora M. Beale, oxecutive secretary of the Welfare Assoclation of New Britain, was prosent at yesterday's session. Charles Miller, a member of the firm of Miller & Olkon, wa' stricken yesterday in the store on Arch street and was removed to the New Britain General hospital. At the hospital lthlu moraing he was reported to be resting comfortably, Mrs, Foster K. Packard of Trinity street has returned homn | trouT~the New Britain General Los | pital where she has been undeigo ing treatment. A son was born at the New 'Brl(nln General hospital last night | to Mr. and Mrs. Heber Jester of 118 Columbia street. A daughter was born last night to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Webster ot Bristol, A daughter was born to Mr, and :\lxa, Harold Swift of 99 Winthrop |street at the New Britain gengral | hospital this morning, | Mrs. Louls Webster of 22 Main street, Bristol, at the Britain general hospital last ning. | The Sophomore Gin Reserves of {the Y. W. C. A, will give an enter- | tainment in the Y. W. C. A, audi- torium tonight at 8 o'clock. The annual meeting of the Gnsa- De Leeuw Manufacturing Co,, Berlip will be held at the office o( Hlmt'voncern I‘ebruary 6. | The action of Stanley Douglas | | against Edward Booth of Plainville | has been withdrawn from city qourt. lHnrry Ginsburg represented the | Dlaintiff and Charles F. Conlin, the | defengant, DIPLOMACY EASY VICTOR North | ‘ Arouses Warm Controversy Be- | | : " tween Ethnologists. Belgrade, Jan. 30.—Queen Marie of Jugoslavia, & Rumanian by birth | the republican national ticket in the yng 4 Serbian by marriage, who fs | {accompanying King Alexander on his | itour through southern Serbia has | aroused a warm controversy between {Buxgamn and Serbla ethnologists by |the costume she has been wearing | ion her travels. Sbe appeared at Skopie in a local | costume of bright colors on n white | |woolen ground., When the ethnolo- gists in Sofia heard of thls, they | made the charge that she wis wear- ! ing a Bulgarian costume in order to |appeal to the sentiments of a Bul-| |garian population. The Belgrade Queen Marfe was wearing a Serbian costumt, So mueh Jgeal interest was mani- fi nally the question was | the Queen herself, To the \inquiring - mewspaper reporter made ‘answer: costume of my people and the reason is that 1 find it becoming.” Mrs. Newton G. Curtis Succumbs to Illness Mrs. Edith Curtls, wife of Newton Curtis of 21 Hamilton street, died t cvening after several months' | iliness. Mrs. Curtls, who was about |65 years of age, wus born in Middle addam, Conn,, but came to Brituin with her husband in G 1880 herc. She was a member of Iirst Congregational church [had been active in its afta ides her husband, Mr BV e W. Curtis, of Hampton; a ughter, Mrs. Koenneth M. Hurt- an of t and a son, Clifford B. Curtis of New York city. She also leaves a sister, Mrs. Frank Dis- brow of Meriden, and eight grand- the and . Curtis e funeral will be held tomorrow noon at 3 o'clock at the late 21 Hamilton strect, Rev. W. Maier will officiat aftel hone, | Henry Young Woman’ Detectlve Sergeant Willilam Me- Cue is condu an investigation into the death of Alice Cecelia As- m.-_ which occurred Wednesday "night at the New Brit General hospital,~to which Institution she was removed Wedngsday afternoon, Medical Examiner John L. Purney | was summoned to the hospital and { pronounced death due to peritonitis. The police, however, were dissatise «l with the information they hal ceived In connection with the death and conscquently an investi- gation was ordercd, Miss Astor re- fu. to give out any information after her removal to the hospital, The funeral was held this after- noon at 2:30 o'clock at the | home of B, C. Porter Sons Court street. Rev. M. W. Gaudian, pastor of St. John's German Luther an wurch, officiated and interment was in Fairview cemetery. Accused Husband Denies That He Killed Wife Bcssemer, Ala., Jan, 30.— Adher- ing closely to his original version of the slaying of his wife, Dr. George T. Edwards, testifying today in his own behalf, denied every allegation f the state and concluded his direct atement with an avowal of love for Mrs, Edwards, TIN } UNION MFG. CO. ME! At the annyal meeting {Union Manufacturing Co. this aft- | ernopn, the following officials were | re-elected: President, A. F. Corbin: | treasurer, H. H. Wheeler: secrctary, arl 8. Neumann: directors. ¥ “orbin, A. J. Sloper, F {H. H. Wheeier, C S Ncwr H. Corbin, J. B. Minor and H. Wheele Port . W, IFrank fiD BANKRU I'I\ New Haven, Jan. R0, piey petitio ccived up to foday at oftice of U. & district court clerk ;l)w largest number ever received: in |one mouth, officla's sald, Sixty-nine have been re- here, | A daughter was born to Mr. and j: New | eve-4| | lands flag has continued to fly over | cthnologists retorted spiritedly that | she | “T am wearlng the | New | nd since that time made her home | ce children, & son, | I)eath | funeral | 3 v NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1925. TWOMEN TO MEET 10 DECIDE FATE 0l Remote Little Island o! Las Palmas Mantila, Jan, 80,—~Governor Gener- al Leonard Wood has made a report ! | to Washington regarding the dispute begween the United States ang the | Netherlands governments over the the Phlllppine group about 15 miles south of Davao province in the Cel- ‘ | ebes Sen, General Wood and Gover- | nor General D. Fock, of the Dutch ! East Indies, were authorized by their | respectivev governments to reach an understanding in the matter severa) months ago and during an exchange | of visits between the two an ment was reached. General agree- Wood | | said his report was on its way to the | | war department at Washington, but on account of its confidential nature | he cquld not discuss it, Although Las Palmas 1s 40 miles | within the defined boundary of lhu Philippine group as declared by the | treaty of Paris in 1899, the Nether- { the island and the Dutch government | of Java has continued to administer the affairs of the small colony of Filipinos, The custom authorities are anxious | for the Phillppine government to ob- tain control of the island in order to | stop opium smuggling into the Phil- | ippines through that route. Las Pal- mas s only one of several {slands | south ‘ot Mindanao which are serv- | ‘lng as hiding places for smugglers, | | the customs officials declare. A num- <bwr of small islands near the coast | of British North Borneo also furnish | protection for the smugglers who, in thelr fast salling vintas, take the con- |traband from Sandakan, British | North Borneo, by easy stages to Jolo | they aispose of their goods. BACHELOR KIN LONDON THINKS {Doubt Prince of Wales Will, > Take a Wife London, Jan, 30, — Even those | people who spoke with forebearance of the matrimonial shyness of the | Prince of Wales are now getting un- easy with the announcement that | the royal heir will prolong his visit to South Africa next year to in- | clude a trip to the Argentine. This {can only mean to these English- | men that another year will be added | to the interval until the prince an- | nounces he has picked out a girl to be the future queen. And Englishmen have listened to the same tale of postponement for the last five years, Whenever the Prince of Wales remains in London for a long period, the busybodies, ing mostly through the, new: , get up a series of stories fne timating that a certain interesting | announcément on royal notepaper | will be forthcoming from Bucking- ham Palace, who the girl is. Such great expee- tations have never been given a chance to materialize, 15 stepped out of the country on a trip to his future domains just in time and the ladies in question have, in most ca married before his | return home, Now there are not so many eligi- | bles for speculation. The Ladies and Rachel Cavendish, lady Mary Gordon-Lennox and La | dary Cambridge, who were all free- Iy di ed as prospective mat for the, Piince of Wales, have mar- ried. In fact the list of English Y girls of suitable age is becoming distressingly narrowed, and as most Bnglishmen have made up their minds that David Edward is not going outside his father's realm for a bride, the prince will probably ave to choose his bride from a younger generation, So interested have Ythe public be- come in this chapter of his life, His Royal Highness can hardly a tend house partics or dances with- out a resounding echo connecting his name with some debutante being immediately Mayfair, then and Clapham. his last trip prince has success- fully counteracted this gossip by not appearing at dances and house parties. At the present time there is no girl being honored prospective Drincess of Wales. i There are ma in don now who whisper that the an- nouneement the engagement of | the Prince of Walcs will nover come “mvl that he is going to be that ange complex, a bacueidr King. | Some who profess to know even & | the prince has often stated ke dos 1“0[ want to marry. [ outward circumstanc ! betting is on (W oman Leglalator 8 ny people of . the Pay | Wenatchee, Wash.,, Jan. There's nthing in it but Frank Reeves of this ¢ity declared as she left here recently to serve her second term in the Washington state legislature. She is one of the three women members of the house, lected, and one of the five tic members, She sits in the as did her husband be- eded him, pay will be $5 a day n*of two months held at Olympia. She ay just about that for L room, explained, and what with entertainments, dress and food, must expend as much more daily. Six formal dances require as many formal gowns, explained Mr Reeves, She had learned of one Jegislator who saved some of his v, she confided, but: “He lived somewhen ooked own meals and contributed to IHIHV Ing. He didn’t do anything for his | client either.” fun, Mrs, for the sessi will have to sa. out b4 :conlrol of Las Palmas Island, one of | and even speculating | for the prince ! throughout , down to Southwark | o returning from | as the | Lon- | | Deesn’t Cover Expenses | | PRISONERS TAUGHT BY OTHER CONVICTS \lll Quentin l'l'filll‘llllll‘y Now (llh-n Complete Four-Year High School | Course With Diploma, | San rancisco, Jan. 80,~A high school with a complete four-year | ['course lending to a diploma and ac- credited to the state university will be established in San Quentin state penitentiary, according to plans ap- proved by the state prison board Ifrank J. 8mith, the new warden, 1t is intended to maintain the schol astle standards and curriculum of | outside high schools. Modern school | equipment will be installed, Manual training and practigal shop courses will be included and a laboratory fitted out for rescarch In the scienti- fic classes, The faculty is expected to be ob- |tained from the ranks of convicts. |A recent check of S8an Quentin rec- jords indicated that 19 prisoners had degrees in arts, sciences, law and | | medicine from leading colleges and universities in this country and Bu- | yope. ’ Automatic Phones Best | Secattle, Wash,, Jan, 30.—Because languages are spoken in the Far | | Kast, automatic telephoness are |solving a business probfem that has | |handicapped the Orient for many | |voars, Harry Janes, automatic tele- | of New York safd | i {Mixed Populations Populations Find phone expert |while a visitor In Seattle early this |year. | Of 94,000 telephones in Yokohama 27,000 are automatie, Mr. Janes re- ported. Shanghal, Hongkong, Harbin, | Kobe and Tokio also have automatic | |instruments. | DUTCH INTEREST STINNES. Amsterdam, Jan. 80.—The Hugo Stinnes concern of Germany is go- ing into the soap business fn Hol- land. Tt has acquired the plant of the former Zwarte Rutter brewery !at Maastricht as yell as the plant | of a soap factory there. The two | are to be combined into a larger | chemieal plant which is to manufac- | ture soap, soda and castor ofl, PLAY IN HARD LUCK Berlin, Jan, 30, — The Berlin | phitharmonic orchestra is having a | hard winter. ~ The publlc is not patronizing it. If a singer desires the support of the orchestra in a concert he has to pay the organiza- | tion $1,000, and in addition meet | the expenses of hail rent and ad- Famous Author to peak At Zionist Meeting | Maurice Samuels well known jour- nalist, critic and writer and author of the famous book, “You Gentiles,” will be the speaker at a mass-mect- | ing arranged by the local Zionist dis- \triet, Bunday evening, February 1st, at Central junior high school. Mr. Samules ranks among the leading orators of the Jewish people and is | one of thie acknowledged leaders in Jewish life. In spite of the fact that |Mr. Samuels s a comparatively young man he has held many im- portant positions and was ane of the representatives on the Interallied Reparations Commission. During the making of the Versailles treat® Mr. Samuels was associated. with Dr. Weizman and Naham Sokolow in {thelr efforts to have included in the | treaty the establishment of the Jew- ish homeland In Palestine unider the English mandate, During the year 1924 Mr. Samuels traveled exten- sively through Europe studying the Joewish problems. He has recently rcturned from Palestine and at the | meeting he will give his impressions of the work done in the rebuilding the Jewish state, ~The meeting will be open to the public. The coyi- in charge consists of Dr. . Dunn, Aaron Winn, George Gans and Attorney Irving T. Rachlin. Attorney Rachlin will pre- side. of Funerals Mrs, Mary Hughes The funcral of Mrs, Mary Hughes s held this morning at 8:30 o'clock at the undertaking parlors of Larala and Sagarino on Spring street and at 9 o'clock there was a the Church of St. John | list, conducted by Rtev, T. During the scrvice, sp Ly James | W | service | the Evange J. Laden cial music was rendered O'Brien, anist of the ch as the was borne Some ar from the ot Day.” Earl Hom- Philip and ar- Acker- Mary's bhody | churen he sang, Swe The pall heargrs were er, Leo Morin, James Cujlun, Burkart Peter Skaparas Thomas 1 k. T r ol ers were G and Henry m Interment was in St new cemetery, 1 ard \Ir~ (hlllnl(l \null'l Wr The ral of M\rs () Amelia Wright will be held afternoon 4 ¥ late home, 128 G Rev. William Ross, First Baptist church, nd interment will 1 cemetery 1owW pastor wil Besides her husband t, and (wo daug! leaves her parents, of Gr ght Thomas Wri Mrs. street, lor nwood Joseh A. Haifey Punera Dircctor Thone 1! opposite St Ma Residence, 17 8 Chureh, | c—— | FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS SEE OUR LINE OF POTTUERY F. H. Bollerer's Posy Shop 32 CHURCH STREET Florists' Telegraph Service. | mangane | them today MANGANESE VERY INPORTANT ORE Used in Mulmude of Everyday Needs Washington, D, C, Jan, States firm has won the concession for the Tchiature manganese mines, biggest in the world, so America can shave in the morning with a steady, untroubled hand. Ay is a very Intimate connec- tion bet n Tehiature, deep in an arld ravine .peaks, daily N b and the cutting edge of th or," says a bulletin of the lonal Geographic Soclety from its dquarters at Washington, D! C. “Razors are steel, Ste] is ra and sulphur and phosphorus manganese; for steel 1s an alloy just as surely as bronze or aluminum age alloys, Gary and Bethlehem and Pittsburgh can get iron from Minne. sota and most of the ‘seasoning’ for their steel in the United States, but th must go abroad for much of thelr manganese. Comes From Georgia, Russia, “Georgla, not the United States Commonweaith, but the Soviet Re- public which is federated with Rus- sla, lles along the south:ra siopes of the giant Caucasus Motintains which cut it oft from Nussia like the Pyrences cut oft Spain from France, | Oil is Georgla's chief mineral re- source and manganese is second, Oil at Baku, on the Caspian Sea, did much to build the Transcaucasian Iroad from Baku to Batum, on {he ack Sea, back in the eighties, but mangaanese found use for it first, “A few miles west of TfMs, which | is the capital of Georgia, a narrow mauge hranch railroad now winds \.through the deep cut of the Kvirila River. Tts terminal £5 miles from the main line s Tchiature, which s about 130 miles from the Batum or Poti. Round zhout Tehia- turl are next to the largest known rich deposits of the rara earth cnlled manganese ore. Although tinis re is supposed to have 200,000,000 tone | awaiting the pick, Bra have a mountain of it, hat <his par- ticular Brazillan deposit is 80 inland that its exploitation is im. practicable at present, > “Before scientists discovered that manganese would facilitate the pro- cess of making steel and before they found that a certain per cent made steel wonderfully hard, the Tchiaturi il is sail t 30.~I'rom | Paris it is announced that a United | under the Caucasus .now | ren. | But steel also is carbon and silicon | and | o, WALL ST. REPORTS High Low Close Mm% 10% 166% 116 99% 608 Allis Chal ... Am Bt Sug ., [Am Can ’ Am Loco . Am Smelt Am Sug .. Am Sum ...... Am Tel & Tel | Am Wool Anaconda Atchison At GIf & Bald Loco Baltl & Ohio., Beth Stcel Bosch Mag Ches & Olio {ch M & s p Ch Ml & § P pf Chi RK T & F |cntte cop . Col Con Corn Prod |Cru Steel 6 0% 164% 16 98 % 6095 % TN 166 3% "1 w | Cosden 0l Dav Chem irie Erie 1st pfd Gen FElectric Gen Motors .. 4% Gt North pfd . 693 Insp Copper .. 30 Int Nickel Int Paper .... | Kelly Spring .. | Kennecott Cop. | Lenigh Va1 . Marine | Marine p! "nq: 1614 oo 48 Mid States Oil. 1% Mis Pac pfd .. 18% Nat Lead ....156% oL 156% 30% 129 0% 129 6814 6344 70 481, 481 .69 D 64T 7014 483 Pacific Oil Pan American Penn Railroad |IP&ERC&I.. Pierce Arrow.. Pure Oil Ray Copper . Reading .... Royal Dutch .. Sinelair Oil . South Pacific 1) South Rallway 445 StudeBaker .. 4‘ | s Co %13 481 | Tex & Pacific . 44% Tganscon Oil . 514 | Union Pacific . 14914 United Frult . 213 8 Indus Alco 81% U S Rubber . U S Steel .... Westinghouse Mountain district was inhabited by a | | few scattered herders. In prosperous | times 4,000 miners now work hills, ers were imported to work the stata. But the mining is ea tively safe 60 the Georgians soon caught on and now the great major- ty of workmen are natives. Brought Theater and Hot Baths, “Before the World War much was | (one to maintain good living condi- Hémes werce | tions for the miners. Luilt for them together with an in-| dear to stitutions for hot baths, eo the Georgian heart tricity came | into the mountains for the mines and e villages. Manganesc even brought 'theater to Tchiaturl “When the branch rallroad reac! cd the deposits there was great re- | oicing because previously all ore Jad to be taken over perilous moun- tain paths 25 miles to the main line. lom more than a ton could be ied by bullock cart at one Ihe old R n government buil the branch line but freight ges were s0 high, it is said, that they paid the d's cost in two years. India Passes Georgia. “p to the time of the World War, Georgia led the world in production of manganese ¢ for the periods of depression in 1907 and 1908, Then its rival, India, passed it, Closing of the Bosporus in 1014 pracitcally led the Georgian mines. United 8 has always im- mang heavily from where the mines are in Minas about 300 miles nortwest de Janeiro. During the ica own at time 108, from Rio war Amer se resoure to som producing cow past cach drawn thel principal steel have in the chief mangancse su ent ource; Germany and from India, 1 in t P lenc and in central India, s from B Blue R Mou Arakansas, Geo within the 1 “Many mang: chiefly f are impo dry cell ¢ wi si y and th Monta ains of state o RESULTS DLSPITE BAR Writes Banking Prisoner Pour Books Harbin, Manchuria For the last two y shekoff, Eastern he bauking a lucra! making woodcuts copper, and altog at ke se from confine ates fer of Table Football Takes Place of Mah Jom:z rlin, Jan. $0.—Mah. way to th g a oty a posi Be onstration was recently csence of nun fitm liter itici; Americ via Vie game er nately 40 rous s ry stars, spi the | A herder of sheep knows little | about mining so at first Italian min- | y and compara- | | LOCAL (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) Bid Aske Actna Casualty Actna, Li; Actna Lire | Automobile Ins ., \ Hartford Fire | National Fire Phoenix Vire Travelers lns |Am Hosicry .. Am Hardware .. Beaton & Cadwell. . | Bige-Hfd Carpet con | Billings & Spen; | Billings & Spen Bristol Bra Colt's Arms | Bagle Lock ... tnir Bearing .... Hart & Cooley ... Landers Frary & Clark. N B Machine .. N B Machine pfd ... Niles-Bemt-Pond com. . North & Judd . ¢ Peck, Stowe & Wiilcox 2 Russell Mfg Co Scovill Mfg Co ndard Screw nicy Works Stanley Wor ‘orrington Co com Traut & Hing W Co Towne Pow Light Ins . 111 4 69 Conn Lt & Hrd B SN Hed lephone Elec It Ris S, TREASURY STATEMENT, balance, $285,064,162 CLEARINGS AND BALANCES. New York—Ixchanges, $46,¢ 000: balances, 84,000,004 Boston — Exchanges, 67 \\'mn'lfi Shoplit'ic;' Is Given 60 I)du in Jail w York, Jan - Mr 1rner Mc or resident of | on/ UP AGAIN 1 0it Co. PRED FULTON FINED Los Ang Ja reapoli violat 1ys in waR ox DRUG TRAFTIC Haven, Ja 1 tr K port in Springfic ciassified ads | ! PUTNAM & CO. MEMBERS NEW YORN & HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANCES I WEST MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN~- Tel. 2040 HARTIORD OFFICE € CENTRAL Row TEL 2+ uM STANLEY WORKS Stocks and Fractions JUDD & COMPANY Members New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange New Britain—Burritt Hotel Bldg., Tel, 1815 Judd Building, Pearl St., corner of Lewis, Hartford, Conn. OILS A decided change has come about in the OLL situation, Eixceptionally fine opportunities are now available for the pur« chase of the Stocks in selected Ol Companies, We may offer suggestions. Stocks carried on conservative margin, @homson, Thenn & Q]Iu Burritt Hotel Bldg., New Britain . 2580 MEMBERS NEW YORE AND HARTFORD STOCK ExcflANGll Donald R. Hart, digr. WE OFFER— 100 AMERICAN HARDWARE Price on Application We do not accept margin accounts EDDY BROTHERS &G HARTFORD NEW BRITAIN" Hartford Conn. Trust. Bldg. Burritt Hotel Bldg. Tel. 27186 Tel. 3420 JOHN P. KEOGH Members Consolidated Stock Exchange, New York. NEW BRITAIN NAT. BANK BLDG. Telephone 1012 Bouds, Curb Sccurities hought and s0ld on commission. Listed Stocks carried on conservative margi Direct private telegroph ana Ticker €. Branch Offices: Stamford, Danbury, Bridgeporf, New Haven Waterbu t of international beauties : ess well entitles her of beauty. S — of her five year old today. According child’s head and ed with a mass of apparently re beating. Northampton Woman Is Held for Child’s Death s which > a sove