New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 8, 1925, Page 13

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i "'Ii""'l i \, x‘. SEVEN ACTS AT CAPITOL. The Capltol is celebrating its third anniversary with a program of sev- en Kelth Albes supreme vaudeville| .. acts, Wilbur and Girlie, opening the show, offer a fas(, snappy routine n” Juggling, comedy and novelty work | that set the show off at a fast pac Unless otherwise Indleated, theatrical notices and reviews In this column are #ritten by the press mgencles for the respective amusement company, 4 \\xm\\mv;xwxm»&x“\x\mmmfl Bow White is the name of a bird, | and happens to be the name of ar entertainer that uses bird whistles Bo- hemian Flappers comprise five clever girl musicians who play well togeth- for entertainment. The Five or and also dance well. Lewls and Ames capture the comedy hit of the show and were the real laugh pro-| dy Two." is a singing | vokors yesterday with their com skit, “We Know a Thing or The Four Volunteera novelty and incidentally offers vau- deville's greatest quartet, Closing this great bill 1s one of the cleverest gym- LYCEUM TONIGHT & WEDNESDAY TWO BIG PICTURES THE LOST LADY With TRENE RICH Lionel Barrymore TN “THE SIA;' OF 1IROXN" ADIES' This Coupon and 10c W m Admit Any Lady to Best Seats, PALACE GALA OPENING NEXT SUNDAY SEPT. 13th Offering The Photoplay That Succeeded in Spite of the Devil THE FOOL JITH VAUDEVILLE ON ALL BILLS CAPITOL Today and Wed. 83rd ANNIVERSARY WEER KEITH - ALBEE VAUDEVILLE ACTS WILBUR & GIRLIE 5 Bohemian Flappers Lewis & Ames DA & CO. The Volunteers Reck and Recktor Jamea Cruze Presents “The Goose Hangs High” All-Star (‘n\t Continuous Shows DM]\' 0 -,mi DAYS NEW NlGHTSi CONNECTICUT| STATE | FAIR | . HARTFORD SEPT. 7-12 EXHIBITS Implements Livestock Boys' and State Depts. Girls’ Clubs SHOWS Agricultural Flower Industrial Auto i RACES '4 Days of iHnlnesq i e e 5 - Autos Saturday § | HORSE SHOW FRIDAY Special R. R. Excursions Free Parking {For Autos o e - N | bound buttonholes. | yesterday Imlllll AT ) - -"si‘f_ || |i g" nastic acts seen here in many a day, who are known es “Society Entertainers,” because their feats are executed in a soclal man- The photoplay with this pro- l(m‘k and Rector, | gram s the Paramount production by James Cruze, see it, PATACE OPENS NEXT WEEK. The Palace wil open on Sunday ev ing. attraction which will sent as the photoplay feature Fool,” taken from the the title role, be a feature Keith vaudevillo wil on all programs. AT THE v The & R, O, LYCEUM, formances at and come to see showing of Lady"” and “Man of Iron," able to obtain admission. the Tyceum “A Los were un afternoon to a capa will be repea 1 evening. ity house anc the coast of Japan, Practical O e = TN Gr A O ORS¢, Cuey, e The newest colls effect that fashion demands. Lemons Tighten Wrinkled Skin Squeeze the juice o two lemons in a hot est anti-wrinkle tion to tighten cate crows- Massage thiz sweetly fragrant | By morning most of the tell-tale | gepaedier of 39 Walnut street, took wrinkles, tired lines and crows-feet | Jiaco Saturday afternoon at 3 are smoothud out, ghving a more | g'elock in the parlors of the First |vouthful contour to eheeks, chin, | Congregational church. Rev. W. throat. It leaves the skin velvety | Biodgett, assistant pastor, officlated, |soft, clear and fresh. ) Mrs, Millie Gallagher was matron of Beauty experts use this astringent | 1000 ang Henry R, Prelfter, broth- | lotion for enlarged pores, also to of | er of the bride, best man. : s {bleach and whiten, sallow, tanned | rooowing a trip to New York and | - L ER FROM JAMES CONDON | skin |since Mix this harmless lotion yourself it acts best immediately after |prepared JEVER WIHAT looka Tike a valuable OR something like that on PIN STREET and be afraid to use it OR SELL It and then wateh the HE Classified Page under the AND FOUND column in the Herald TO SEE when the owner advertises THAT THE valuable has been lost DAYS GO by and you don't wes the ad > AND JUST becauss you are honest T TO get the thing off of NIND YOU fntert & “found" ad i COLUMNS of the Werald stating THAT YOU have the thing that LOST and then have about a dazen PEOPLE come to you saying that theira ARTICLE was and then BEEN returned to the right WONDER why ft is that peepls nave 80 LITTLE common sense as to MANY THINGS lost and not, take “The Goose Hangs High" It is a good photoplay and one that will be well liked by all who its doors again to tho public for the season A Dig program has been arranged for the opening pre- “The Channing Pollock play of the same title, There is a big all star cast In the leading roles featured by ISdmund Lowe in sign was hung out | at hoth afternoon and evening per- theater hundreds who had The double feature program was presented this| ted tomorrow afternoon 1e show for the firet half of fhi.fl“ Greatest ocean depth s found oft | where soundings show the water to be six miles deep. s fit very closely 1t gives the neat tle containing three | have the very mild- lo- re- laxed ekin, erase fine lines and eradi- lemon lotion into the skin at night. j 3 REGISTRATION DAY AT TALMUD TORAH Youth Needs Religious Educa- {ion, New Principal Says —— The Talmud Torah 18 beginning a campaign for registration in its He- brew classes. At a meeting tonight in the synagogue, to which the Jewlsh community is invited, Miss Freda Regenbogen, the new principal, will start the campalgn by presenting the )| plans for the coming year. Rabbi Aronson and Rabbl Hadas will also be there to address the gathering. In an interview with Miss Regen- hogen, who has recent]y coms from New York, this question was put: “Do you think there is a real need of religious training?" The answer was: I do. The child's life is incomplete without a religlous education, It is an essentfal factor in a \\ 1l-rounded life, ication is the armor a man dons to help him withstand the on- slaughts of life. Education is the weapon a man arms himselt with to altack the problems that confront 1| him, These problems are all the more difficult when they come from within, They cannot be grasped by the horns and dealt with, wisely and with knowledge. And only the strong are capable with them. Even then, there are times when all knowledge and all ed- ucation faifl. There are times when a man feels powerless, when t 1 with the angel, only 1n strife, as Jacob did. Not week is unusually well balanced. “A | qoos a religious education afd him. Lost Lady” deals with an unhapdy| His soul is open to inAuences that marrlags and of a man In whose | j5aden and develop him, influences heart the fires of love had been|pat anpich him. kindled only to he quenched by the| “wpho public schools cannot give unfalthfulngss ot & woman this religious training for obvious D reasons, Not every home can furnish it, So we go to the relfgious school. source of insphration, than that. ture. Here is an outlet for the child's epiritual tendencies as well as and identity of the Jewish people.” the congregation for adults. nature of Americanization work. Registration is open now. the school activitie Levine-Cunard Wedding Sunday in Hartford about the throat and give a very | street and Hyman E. Levine ot Hol- tailored appearance. The opening | Yoke, Mass, were married Sunday sketched huttons neatly and has |afternoon at 2 o'clock at Silverberg's Hartford. Rev. vitz of er of the groom, hest man. of white georgette trimmed gown with bouquet was of roses. f] A reception followed - | mony. from Holyoke, the ounces of Orchard | 4in and ofther cities. to have no attention paid you when White, which any Mr. and Mras. Levine left on a wed- | You are doing your best to attract druggist Will SupplY | ging {rip to New York and Atlantic|attentién, Chatterer grew so angry for a few €ents | iy, and tipon their return will re- [that he danced up and down. Yes, shake well and you | giqo'at 54 Camp sirect. sir, he did so. He even tried to Miss Pfeiffer Is Bride of 303 Maple street, vicinity Mr. and Mrs. Schaedler will make their home at 21 after October 1. Mras. Schaedler has been employed at the office of the P. & F. Corbin division and Mr. Schaedler at the B. C. Porter Company. Former School Teacher Now Mrs. Benj. Marholin Rev. E. Rosenberg of this eity, of- ficiated yesterday In Hartford at the marriage of Sarah Marholin Clines, daughter of Benjamin Marholin of 31 Dwight street, and Sam Hirschman of Baltimore, Md. The ceremony took place at the home of the bride’'s brother, David Marholin, formerly of this eity. The wedding was followed by a reception at which a large number of guests were in attendance. Mr. and Mrs, Hirschman aré now on a wedding trip to the Paclfic coast and upon their return will make their home in Baltimore, where the bridegroom is engaged in the ¢lothing business. The bride was for a number of years a teacher in the East street school. APPETIZING TONIC GUARANTEED TO RE- LIEVE INDIGESTION TIME TO recover them which can St Every bottle of ABSO-DIGEST is By dome through the Classl- | 14513 with a money-back guarantee A of the Herald instead fo give absolute and immediate re- 00w AITING for the finder to do lief from Indigestion, dyspepsia, s e =l heartburn, flatulencs, gas and other ATEVER O or them stomach disorders. Sold by the Miller-Hanson Drug Co. e SR R R T R AR are intangible—they They must bs handled of dealing his sonl is challenged to combat, What- ever spiritual training he has had will stand him in good stead then. He will feel his strength, and cope but, in peace as well, for the parents may lack falth, or possess 1t in an insufticlent quantity. “The Jewish religious school gives the ¢hild this fortifying strength and It does more 1t unites the child with the Jewlsh people who have a his- tory and a purpose—a past and fu- a source of growth, The Hehrew school | fortable stomach to make one feel in serves the double purpose of devel- oping the personallty of its children | preserving and furthering the | Extension courses will be offered | under the direction of the school and These courses will cover a wide range of subjects, part of which will be in the There will be no tuition charges in any of lasses. Those seeking to register may do 8o at the office of the Tal- mud Torah from 4 to 7. Enrollment will cloge in about a week, and wt shall concentrate all our energles on Miss Leah Cunard of b4 Camp Gershon Hadas of this city officiated. Miss Mildred She- Hartford was maid of honor, and Myer Levine of Holyoke, broth- The bride was attired in a gown with pearls and carried a bouquet ‘of bri- dal roses and lilles of the valley. The maid of honor wore a coral georgette hat to match and her cere- About 30 guests were present Hartford, New Brit- Of George D. Schaedler The marriage of Miss Lilllan C. Pfeiffer, daughter of John Pfeiffer and George D. Winthrop atreet, and will be at home to friends | MARJORIE JUDD RESCUES WOMAN FROM DROWNING Street Giel Saves Bather Who Vine Goes Beyond Her Depth At Ocean Beach Bathers and strollers at Ocean | Beach were given a thrill Sunday when Marjorle Lee Judd, aged 14, | daughter of Mortimer N. Judd of 92 Vine street, this city, rescued a woman from drowning. Miss Judd, a powerful swvimmer in | spite of her youth, was enjoying | dash through the waler when she heard a woman scream, Looking around, she saw a bather, who had gone beyond her depth, struggling. She rushed to her side and kept her | afloat untll other came to her as- slstance and the woman was brought to shore, Had it not heen for the timely arrival of the New Britain girl, spectators enid she might have drowned, Miss Judd will enter Hamilton Heights, an academy for «irly, In Hartford tomorrow. MARRIAGE LICENSES Marrlage licenses have been fssuod | as follows: Mleczyslaw Gonsko, a widower, of Plainville, and Margaret | Wolk, a widow, of 44 Grove street; | Homer Sorel of Ken street, Plain- ville, and Reatrice Bolssonveault, 15, of 107 Jerome street; Sebastian Zim- | Buster Bear Becomes Interested By THORNTON W. BURGESS Some teongues thers ars that wag too much, 'Tls well to keep away from such. ~O0ld Mother Nature. Buster Bear was feeling in fine spirits. Al summer long he had had the best of good llving, and you know there is nothing like a com- high spirits. Buster nad feasted on berrles, and now wild grapes would soon be ready. And after the wild | grapes would come beechnuis and acorns. Do you wonder that Bus- ter feit in high spirits? And because he was in such high spirits he was good natured. Noth- He was just in time to sce Chatterer ing bothered him. Not even Chat- terer the Red Squirrel could teare him into a show of anger. You know, there {s no one in all the Green Forest quite so impudent as Chatterer the Red Squirrel, :und Chatterer is never more {impudent than when he chances to meet Bus- | ter Bear, Probably that is because Buster {s so big and he is so small that he thinks it is very smart of| him to be impudent. Anyway, he always 8. Just as soon as those bright eyes of his apy Buster Bear, ! Chatterer’s tongue begins to wag, | and it is one of those tongues that wags at both ends, as the saying is. It really is very annoying to Bus- ter sometimes. AllL the Green For- jest within hearing of Chatterer’ sharp volee knows just where Bus- ter is, and this isn't always con- venient. But on this particular aft- ernoon Buster didn't mind at all » | how Chatterer shrieked at him or what he sald. He just aldn't pay any attention to Chatterer. Chat- terer might have been a stick or a stone for all tha attention Buster paid him. Now, there is nothing in all the Great World so provoking as drop pine cones on Buster's head. And all the time Buster didn’t even so much as glance at him, At last CNatterer actually tired himself out. There wasn't any &atis- faction in scolding &ome one or in calling some ene bad names when [ dlsappearing day ‘nnnl down the streets with his wagon |spend a great deal of time idling, mittl of 163 Beaver street and Amelia Adorno of the same address; Donald MacKay Bell of Norwieh, N Y., and Mary O, Rice of 188 Win- throp street; Jacob Black, of Berlin, and Elsle Walker of Berlin; Ans thony Ceyrulik street and Ellver strect, of Boleslawa Tuch of §9 [Aged Horse lo Be Given Rest of Life at Ease One of the last vistages of a fast will soon be for- over effaced from the strects of New Britaln when “Old Kaiser,” 28 yeur old equine, after a lifetime of faith- ful service between the shafts of a Unfon Laundry delivery wagon, will | for the past time he taken from the | traces to spend the remainder of his | days in the cool and sweet of some far away pasture, “'01d4 Kalser” has for a long time been a familiar figure clattering up full of freshly washed clothes, and | many there are who will miss the beat of hls aged hoofs on the clty's | pavements, Automobiles have been NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER & 1925, : . e ——— Wmm“‘\\‘\\\”““*\m* @x 800 Washlngton -, infter the boarding house supper of meat balls and hoiled potatoes, May | wat down to write to Ulysses. substituted for wagons by the laun- Ary company and but a few of the' vounger horses are all that will he | necessary. But “Ol1d Kaiser" will go to Hw pasture land and the contentment of & peaceful old age with the “well done thou good and faithful ser- vant" M(‘&Ilng of his owners, \ READ Tfl ALD CLASKIFIED hat some one didn't even 8o much glance at him. So after a while | Chatterer stopped. Then for a long | fime he watched Buster Bear. But| Buster didn’t appear to have any- thing to do, and presently he laid down for a nap. You see, Buster sleeps whenever he feels sleepy. It makes no difference to RBuster whether 1t be night or day. But it | makes all the difference fn the world to Chatterer, Chatterer {s indoors at night. Yes, indeed, just as soon as the Black Shadows begin to creep through the Green Forest Chatterer retires, You see, he has no desire to make the Intimate acquaintance of Hooty the Owl. §n because he | sleeps all night, he 18 very wide | awake through the day, and he can-| not understand how anybody else can sleep when he himself is so wide awake, So after watching Buster a | while, he whisked away to see what | other mischief he could get Into. Now presently he ran across some good mushrooms, M ou should have seen his eyes sparkle when he saw those mushrooms. Chatterer is very fond of mushrooms. IFurther- more, Chatterer knows how to take care of mushrooms so he can have them all winter. As soon as he saw the mushrooms Chatterer forgot all | about mischief, He hegan gather- | ing mushrooms and putting them up in a tree where they would dry and 80 keep, He forgot all about Bus- ter Bear and everything else, Chat- terer may be mischevous and may but when he works he works. There isn't a lazy bone in that small body of his when there is work really to be done. Never had he found nicer mush- rooms. He licked his lips after leaving each one to dry, He licked his lips and thought of the feasts he wonld have when the Green Forest was wrapped In snow. By and by Buster Bear awoke, He heard the rustling of small feet, Ha heard them going back and forth, back and forth. Quietly and with- out making a sound he got to his own feet and peeked around a tree, He was just in time to see Chat- terer scamper up a tree with a mushroom in his mouth. Right away Buster Bear became Intorested. He becams very much iInterested {in- deed. (Copyright, 1025, hy T. W, Burgess) The next story: ‘Buster Bear Gets An Idea.” TO SALLY ATHERTON Well, Sally you alled the turn, as the enclosed ellppings wiil tell you. | Mr. Prescott had the greatest trouble to keep our three names out of the paper, for all of them were in Mabel's letter. She had it in for you all right ——said one of the reasons she came back Was to get even with you, The | police have not been able to find | Mabel, and the boss thinks that Downey sént her money enough to £o back to South America. I thought maybe Downey mn.ight have gone with her, but Police Commissioner Laldlaw says that if Downey is the man he thinks he is, he will never give up those pearls. I wish you would come home the moment you get this letter, Mr., Preacott certainly needs you. The boss has been making some bonehead playx lately—so much so that he had put up forty thousand doliars of his own money to pay his | mother-in-law’s annuity from the property. You wouldn't know Mr. Prescott, {I think he has lost twenty-five !rmmdn aince the robbery, ten of which have dropped oft of him in the few days that have passed since the last time the house was broken into. He's cross and surly, and I think he's drinking too much, He really needs you, my dear, to act as a buffer between him and the rest Of the staff. He snaps every- | body up and will listen to sugges- | tions from no one. 1 tell you, I keep | out of his way. MacSorley, Dayton, and Simpson all say they are going to leave if he doesn't geét wise to himself. The othér day when Dayton took him the last heavy meltingg serap waybill, thought that Dayton himself was to you would have blame for the loss. You ses Mr. Prescott, against Dayton's advice, bought scrap at twenty-one dollars, and it is now down to seventeen. Dayton told him at the time that scrap was due for a slump, and was well cussed out for his pains. Today Mrs. Hamilton's monthly check was due, and Mr. Prescott drew his own check for fitteen thou- sand dollars to make it up. That dumbbell you put in your place told me she had made out the check for Mr. Prescott and if she told me she told others in the offic The worst of it all is that the boss is telling her things about his bad Iuck lately. You know he can't keep things to himself, and he don't trust me any more, although I am more trustworthy than the girl in his of- fice, as far as goesip I8 concerncd at least. She's gettihg that Ritzy there’s no living with her. I he: her tell one of the other stenogs ti other day that she expected to keep her position as private sec to the boss after you came home, us he hud fold her that the very sight of her around made the day pass pleasantly. You ought to see her, Sally. She's evidently apent all her money for lothes, and she can't sit down to her typewriter without showing at least six inches of her bare knee Oh, you'll make short work of her |when you get home, and you're need- ed now it you ever were in your life, especially if you care particular- Iy for Mrs, Prescott. JIM (Copyright, 1925, NEA Bervies, Inc.) TOMORROW—Letter fram Ruth Burke tat Leslis Pramesthy She thanked him for the money| “Maybe it's just hatting l\mnnfl.] « B0 sure she was that he would |doing nothing, thit makes me feel! REPORTS RECOKLESS DRIVING scnd it at once . .. and told him |this way" ehe declded wearily at| ayhile turning his automob! h o out that she was in nced of work, last. That must be it .. having » obli# < 1"I'm sure that, with a little practice, I could be a very good one, again. [own . ., . a child or a husband! |street had a narrow escape from A (B0 it you're in need of such a per-|Someone, somewhere, who helonged | serious accident as another autome- |son as myself . u to me! going north on the (Continued From Preceding l'age) n Unlon offiee, and wire Ulysaes ||t for some money! “After all, #ho thought, friends?" After she - 5 RALe oxce +| TInally sho tore up the letter, and |there she remembered a night not §0 In Ume of LrAYe except to our [threw the scarps fnto the waste |50 1ong ago, when she had laid htl“ At basket. Then, with her pad on her |head on the rough shoulder ol had sent her wire and Y D . \ 4 was on her way bick 1o the board- |Knee, she wrote to Gloria Gregory |Ulysses Forgan's overcoat and eried, i Ing house, it suddenly occurred to May that she mis*t have asked the " " touch of his coat .., the sense of o gorys to send her the moncy.| “I'm s desperately tired” she | (0UCh d AW a matter of fact, they were the Mnlehed tho letter, *T didn't know | Peice that had come to her with hls : oldets friends she tad . . . “1 should have asked them for the {money,” she told herself. | And yet, somchoi, she wae glad d The tears brought her rell Ao had asked Ulysses for It. Why, | In ten years, sne had worked very | (oars do. The Gesoar that heg been she didn't know {little, The few days she had spent | g, \ dammed up In her s Vi Wl Alone tn her room that night, |in Harker and Harker's real cstate | o e gl “Once upon n time, kept to fill i now and then When |gaoq private secretary Then she ralsed her pen from fhie cheap fablet paper and looked ont iinto the darkness beyond her win. dow lask a man for a foh, when she had |refused to he bis wife, ‘un her breast . . . 4 of his home, and She stood at the window and yet, why not! looked down into the street. - All May could Imagine nothing more |these little homes with their ting |interesting than to te Ulysses' see- |lighted windows , , . there wers |retary , . . that is, s0 long as she uu-nplu in them who cared for each had to work for someone! When it [other! People who could face pove uum_ to that, no work was Interest. }crly and sordidness because they carcd for each other! May lald her head against the | window frame, and as she stood the mistress his heart! And fflfl_T_ngfif > up. Bhe would go to a West. | "l hate the thought of it!" May l he's my good frlend," | gyq ¢pythrully to herselt, “To whomn should we and asked her if she might come to vigit her for a few weeks. She remembered the sente of coms fort that had stolen over her at the that anyone could be ed as St AL *0 tired as 1) " wigh I could #es him now . s {tonight , , . for just a second!"” she | And yet she had done hing i h;_r‘m_'m had done nothing 10 y5hed aloud, “For just & secondl” |am like water, {office represented the anly real lahor | oy «he had known &ince her wed H'I\n‘ day back in 1915, Presently she went to and slept dreamlessly, (To Be Continued) from the curb in front of the Dick~ |inson Drug store on Main street last | night, Claude J. Leroux of 651 Arch T was a very | she wrote, no real purpose fn living, no fncen- tive, no reacon for being alive! “If only 1 had something of my sho cried silently into the [bile, darkness, Rraz For the firat time In her life ho |ca longed for motherhood . . , for the feel of a warm liftle head against her shoulder, a tiny hand fluttering The Hart Studio Season 1925-26 THERON WOLCOTT HART, Pianist, Organist, Composer and Coach, has resumed teaching at the Hart Studlo. 259 Main street, Room 217. Enroll- ; ment may be made at the Studio Wednesday aftemoons and Saturday mornings, or by phone. Telephone 2531. SUBJECTS Only cerione Students admitted, Thorough instruction in the Classoal. Romantic and Modern schools, along technical and interpretive lines. General Musicianship and higher training in Musical Art, for advanced Students and Preparatory course for those planning for Conservatory. Beginners instruction by competent assistants, street, d the left front fender of his L Had he been a few feet far- ther out in the road, it would have heen struck, Mr, Teroux reported the matter to the police. . Goodness! she couldn't Piano Having been accompanist for two years in the studios of Mr, Sergei Kli- bansky, eminent Russfan vocal teacher in New York, Mr, Hart will spe- cialize this season in Interpretation in Vocal Art for Advanced Singers. Coaching in Vocal Interpretation Theory and Harmony A comprehensive course in practical and analytical harmong and theory of composition for general music students, It is not necessary to play a keyboard instrument to take up this subject, A class will be formed in this subject for music lovers and students. The conrse will include General Music History, Far-training and Musioal Appreciation. Musical Appreciation Organ Students fn this subject must secure available instruments for practice and Instruction. THERON WOLCOTT HART Graduate Institute of Musical Art, '13 Organist First Church of Christ, Congregational WEDNESDAY | With the opening of our doors Wednesday morning you will have the opportunity for which you have heen waiting =—world’s finest electric cleaner, combining carpet beater, carpet sweeper and vacuum cleaner all in one, can be yours on the easiest of easy terms during our * These unusually easy terms bnng you The Hoover complete, in- cluding a remarkable set of dust. ing tools. You can end housgclean. ings forever, if you accept our For a limitedtime only! Only a certain number of Hoovers will be sold on these terms. Be sure to get yours! Don't de disappointed! Phome us now, while it’s on your mind, and.let us reserve your Hoover while our stock is complete., THE SPRING & BUCKLEY ELECTRIC CO. 75-81 CHURCH ST. Telephone 2240—2241

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