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A i K ” i " N | |4 i v : ~ VIETS PASSED OVER BLEACHERS DEFECT William H. Allen Co. Not Sum- moned {0 Hearing The Waillam U. Allen Construction Co. will not bs surmmoned to appear before the outiding cominission to anawer a4 chuige of buildiug bleach- ere &t Wilow Brouk park without flowt obiaininy @ yermit, in spite ot a raport Lo the commission by Chiet Building Inepcctor Edward J, Hen- nesay ae the Aret s'¢p in o movement to bring wbout that company's ar- reignminent. Chatrman Richard Viets is in- clined to view the matter lightly and evon goes 10 the oxtc ing liis duspector's right to take any on whataoever on that section of | the bleachers located in the town of Berlin, Chalrman Viets, whose name ap- yeared &t the end of a lengthy com« munication submitted to the com- mon council last night in support of a request for three deputies in the department, supplemented the report today with a few remarks. The sub- stance of his comment {8 that pri- vate cltize citizens in public life, newapapers anc bullding contractors e wnited Jn an organized move- nt to discredit his department. To this organized movement he attrib- | utes much of the building wrangle. In his comment he lald no portion of the hlame {o the huilding d(»p:n’(- ment or the commission. PHYSICIANS DISAGREE OVER ENGLISH DEATH, (Continued From First Page) harness and that he had told the | chief executive that if he forced to retire he would dle. That w the substance of ‘the testimony given by the mayor; He explained to the copmmissioner that after his inaugur- ation he discussed with members ot he police hoard the advisabilit etiring: certain gyder members of the departmaent. Hearing of the plans, Officer Tnglish went to t of question- | WITNESS LIVENS UP PROCEEDINGS (Continued from First Page) was the answaer. my own money. “l can show you a dozen sald he had been the guest of tl state at a Torrington Tuesday. gone over “his story” officials, After hotel a brief argument | counsel over some points, Judge Hinman said: “Well, if you gentlemen are through we g0 on with something of moment." Barrettl wa court was recessed for luncheon. He Finally I'aid 'ber could give asked the | eharge it to the Mate. The |refused and Barretti pald. {Henry P. Clark, head of the Captain Clark said he lon Feb, 26, shots. !body from the sldewalk and place it lin a machine. Two officers |the police station. There was a woman in the ear |In which the body was placed, but, | upon request of one of the three men |the woman got out. The captain gave the driver of the | (car directions. He followed to the ihflfih“fll in another ear. At the hospital he ordercd Puleo and Barrettl and Bagnano's two {brothers to accompany him to police | headquarters. ' CHURCH SPIRE DAMAGE " INCREASED 70 $4,500 mayor’s office and vleaded to be lett | forced to stay home and be in- Similar tesf of the police board for the r tirement of Officer ®lish given by Chairman David L. and Commissioner Thomas son, who stated that theghoard de- layed the retirement of the officer use they feared hls disappoint ment might be so great as to hasten his death. Others who vant Michael T Was Dunn testified were Ser- yson, Probation Of- cor Connolly, Sergeant John King and Officer James McCabe, who told of the finding of the unconscious offiecr and the g his death, Sees No Evidence of Exertion Expert testimony for the city wa ervice because of fear he would | ony as to the | conditions surround- | | (Continued from First Page) istant, declar | When pieces of falling ston |drew the attention of neighbors to |the weakened condition of the tower it was believed the would amount to $1,500, one-third of what today's estimate fs. On the day the damage was dls covered, this city experienced an earthquake, which, it was believed, had an eftect on the w-.mo 348,000 REAL ESTATE DEAL | | Five Story Brick Block and .\mu-md Factory Building on Arch Qll‘ml iven hy Dr. Starr of Hartford, a it specialist, who expressed the | Change Hands Today. opinion that from the testimony piven he s unable ta see where Isadore Horwitz and Albert Sher- cat exhaustion or exertion in any | man today sold to M Levino iy contributed to the cause of | and Byer, owncrs of the Victory vath Patients suffering from | Mattress Co., a five story brick disenscs of the character of which | block located south of the Vega Oifieer Bnglish showed symptoms, | building, A he stated, many times died in bed, iiting In a chair or reading the ewspaper and at times after no ex- crifon on their part. At the end of the hearing Com- niseloner Noonan re rved decision. SUES CHURCH TRUSTEES smelia Feaski age Caused Chureh of the Asks $500 for Dam- by Water Holy From Trinity. Amelin Fenski ) r $500 against ndrew Sejerman wvar, issian of the the 1 chureh yard, injuring W gutters and Bestdes kg, an in defendants roperty in it. which reiurnable in ourt of common pleas the fuesday of December. was Ly Hungerford & Saxe. crved by Constable Tred I<a1h01 Ignorant of Son’s Death in War Hearing will be given November 8 in probate court on the proposed (ppointment of the Polish consul as administrator of the estate of Walter brov heodore it suit Dud- An- Hun- tholic She H. and trustees of the « Trinity, tlows into her sidewalk, entering h the training nging fashion Gree 1oty rain W gutters her Church s from front curhs damages, unetion from such a the their re arri the tirst issued It was Winkle. Eeewich of 181 Rhodes street, Killed soven years ago in the war. The purpo ¢ move is to bring out the payment of war insuranc the consul so he may in turn pay | it to the aged taiher of the deceased in far-off city in awa return of his h he knows noth- who A stil of whose de \l ¥O KILL ) East Main exdquarters had a re- » Rill him ey inves- o was COAL COMMITTEE NAMED | The Chamber of Commerce com- | ‘(e 1o make a survey of the coal | situmtien in th nd to make cartaty ded cndations if 1 ¢ inced. The ‘ s of Carlisle Bald A. Mills. Thomas e B. W Alling and Spe( |.|l otlce Durritt Orange. No. 39, will nald & benefit whist M. hall Saturday 21 at §:30 sharp. P. of H in Jr. O evening Twelv Nov. | prizes ch street and a building | in the rear which is used as a mat- trees facto he Dlock contains photograph shop on the street floor | with rooming houses on the other| floors, The price pald is sald to he about $48,000, Messrs, Levine conducted the and Byer mattress factory They plan to alterations in t have for bout eight years. model gnd make block, was made through the WS H"'nnnnr & Son. AT MACRI TRIAL bought them With silk | shirts," he continued as Mr. Kolet- | sky appeared skeptical, The witness since Only once, however, had he | with any state between | unimportant dismissed just before It was learned during the recess that Barretti had gone to a barber shop In Torrington, gnd after enjoy- |ing about all the treatment the bar- latter to | barber | The courtroom was again filled for | the afternoon session when Caplain New Haven traffic department, was called. was on a street corner near the Palace theater | when he heard several | He saw three men carry a were taking a girl down the street toward | damage | EXPECT LIVELY SESSION Newington Voters May Oppose Ac- ceptance of New Streets In Un. | orthodox Manner An interesting session of the vot- ors of the town of Newington s ex- | pected at a speclal meeting to be held at the Grange hall this evening when opposition to the acceptance of certain atreets is expected to de- velop, . The meeting has heen called for | 8 o'clock for the purpose of uc- cepting streets in the “Piper Brook" | section, the “Little Farms" tract, | nd the “Seymour Park" section, The matter of accepting these | streets has been discussed at pre- vious town meetings and also before | |the public meeting of the board of | finance held recently, At these meetings it was agreed that the la out of all streets for acceptance hy “H\- town should be approved previ- + [ously by the town plan commission. | Inasmuch as it is understood that a majority of the strects which the town is to be asked to accept have |not heen approved by the town plan (commission, it is expeeted there wil | be opposition to their acceptance to- night, A discussion of prospective im- provements in the town fire depart- |ment s included in the call for a {meeting also. TELLS OF MIRACLE “Master” of Mission of the Divine | Spirit Colony Held Out His Arm | and Rain Stopped. Fall River, Mass., |A defense witness at |Adelard Glasson, one of the lead- \ers of the Mission of the Divine Splrit colony on Goat Island, Who |is charged with conspiracy to |steal, testified In superior court to- !day that he saw the late Eugene | Richard LaFleche, 8o called “mas- |ter"” of the misslon, perform a | | miracle in the summer of 1922, | | Merely by holding out his right larm Francis X. Gosselln, the wit- ness said, LaFleche caused the rain to stop. Witnesses earlier in the trial attributed miraculous qualitics |to LaFleche, one testifying that was reputed to have raised a man |from the dead, Witnesses heard today |that the colony had amp! |In the custody of Giasson ed as assistant 1o the L ster.” | George H. and Edward D. Theoret, | brothers, and members of the col- d Eugene Martel and other Nov. 19 (P— | the trial of | asserted fund who act alnants who charged that Giasson defrauded them had sign- d an agreement to work for the colony without pay. | WANT T0 ATTEND HEARING Clergymen Anxious to &et Seats at Ruinclander Case and Ex- plain Reasons Why. White Plains, N, Y., Nov. 19 (® “ - The Rev. Lavinta Verrlll Howe, | daughter of Professor Emeritus A. | E. Verrill of Yale uni ty, today sent to Lee Parsons Davis, for Mrs, Leonard coun: Kip Rhinciander, in the annuiment suit in progress here, this letter “As a minister T am writing some mu»n on this case for religious | ma ines and would appreciate it can secure places in the courtroom for my companions, a| clergyman and myself, My work is |such that I am obliged to learn all \I can about the mental reactions of {humanity and this absorbing case - DEBI IS REDUGED [that on ‘Went |1and on the |Ha INQUIRY ENDS IN SHENANDOAH CASE| (Continued from First Page) and it was decided to summon Cap- tain Moses, who had charge of ar- rangements for the PN-9, No. 1, flight, to testify on this point. Rickenbacker Testifies Too. Fdward Rickenbacker of Detrolt, another World war aviator, testi- fied that in his opinion anti-aircraft | guns do not protect against alr at- tacks. Asked 1f it was dangerous to send men into the air without parachutes, ' Rickenbacker said: *‘Suicide.” “Is It dangerous to use war-time rials he graveyards about the coun- try show it."" Rickenbacker sald that the United States ranked elghth fn air powe ma |behind France, Great Britain, Italy, | Germany ia, Japan and Poland Licuter H. W. Sheridan of Kelly F a8, who obscrved the lan maneuvers from the ai craft ezrrier Langley, told the court April 28, two scout planes up from the Langley, and a short time ip, and four alrplanes {were crashed “Then a flight of two planes caus- ed a smash of four?” | objections | heen overruled, Licutenant Sheridan |also declared [twelve knots an hour. seventeen her | carried |slonary to his native country, [to the mem fat the Burritt hotel toda of the h i China for to the nounced the auspice Three of the four, the witness said were “fotal wrecks.” Near Collision. Allowed {o testify only after three by the prosecution had that fn leaving San Francisco harbor, the Langley came |within five feet of a collision with the battleship West Virginia, After |that, he sald, “the fleet stayed back lof the Langl which went ahout The Langley planes, but n from Aprll 15 to | planes Teft April 26, SPEAKS TO ll”l‘:\Rl‘\\ . King Lee, of China, a native graduate of Yale and mis- spoke club He told and political situation hundreds of years up present date. It was an- that the musicale under of the New Britain Mu- been postponed from December 10, Re Chin ers of the Rota tory to ST $25,000 9 (P-—Thomas ars at the clty's poor and long lost brother of MAY NOT G New N Haven vard Clancy, may not get the lat- ter's § 100 estate as next of kin, It is now sald a new bill will be The will off drawn by Edward has been found ed for probate would have left the estate to a cousin, i Deaths | widow her Mre, Mary McBriarty Mary McBriarty, aged of John home at 544 Stanley street thout 10:15 o'clock last night after Mrs. (i an illness of about three days dura- t fou ot William €, t 1 d ion. M MeBriarty sons, John J., drug store in thi New Haven, of this cit ers, Anna and Bertha is survived by who conducts a city; Edward J. ederick C. and hree daugh- MecBriarty, ‘and Mrs. J. A. Hart of this cify. She caves two sisters, Mrs lon of Flushing, L. 1., ret Field of Walling Anna Cree- Ind. She is one touching.on many phases |also leaves seven grandehildren, of religious work.” I'he funeral will be held from the “| Mr. Davis gave the letter to Jus- 'late home at o'clock and from tice Morschauser who dirccted that Joseph's church at 9 o'clock Sat- seats be set aside for the party. surday, morning. TInterment will be in St. Mary's church. wiltics. Miss Margaret McBrayne r “they attempted to | McBriarty, died at | at | weeting of Troop 15 in St. ) kG | school hall, Acting e master Harry Iancher return ; duty after an absence of some | g pihn fl weeks, Fifteen minutes was devoted 1. ¢ o to patrol meetings, numerous tests were passed, and the meeting closed with games. Walter McKinney has | been appointed troop reporter and Mrs. Mar- | |r teams captained by “Red Gra Bid Asked rison and G Brown was won 300 920 { by the forme [ {1tved up to his name. { hold inter-p NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1923 e S e—— e e e 't Wall Streel Briefs ST"EK PR!GES IN i Amerlean uummmh!l(! V\NIMU; from reports of several American companies, more thun 15 per cent of the country's current production, it is sald, being for export, The strength of this increased demand is carrying the Spicer Manufactur- Railroad Shares Are Leaders | in Advance \ ing Co. to the European field, e | plans being under way to begin New York, Nov. 19 (P—Stock | |manufacturing motor supplics in [prices made brisk recovery from re- |England, The Commerclal Invest- [cent weikness under th dership | ment Trust corporation also i8 ex-|of the railroad shares in today's |pected to enter Europe to finance |market |the marketing of Amcrican cars| While uncasiness over money while another is the Industrial Ac- |rates was ted in the reduced ceptance corporation which fl- [volume of trading, the failure of the | |nances purchases and sales of K of Lngland to ralse its rate Studebaker gotor products. | Northern Texas Electric Co., a Stone and Webster property, las declared a quarterly dividend of $1 on the common stock, i cember 1, to holders of vember 21, The was generally construed as an ation that York the expected increase ral reserve | this weck. ttack, early gaing points ia that group 1into the New rate would Motors vigorous sciling of one to three being con payable record previous quaterly losses of similar dividend has been | magnitu s lu\\w\\( | — | failed to ¢ the Selinvdilar | Third quarter surplus of sections of the list. Rutland railvoad was A after taxes and charges, equal to| High Yow Close | [$2.68 a share on the preferred |18 € - stock, agalust $148,507 or $1.66 a AN pote Ishare on the prefer in the third -‘\:" '““‘”' uarter last year. Surplus for the h:: ;‘:" t 9 months of 1926 fell to $302 Sl ey {706, equal to $3.37 a share on the A T¢l & Tel with $357,13¢ [Am Wool i e Anaconda 2 Atchison ... e At GIf & W I Bald Loco |Bal & O . Beth Steel , Bos Mag . FINED AND JAILED |New Haven Man, Just Out of Cell| Con Teath | Can Pac | and Broke, Agaln Assessed and | cy ' | el & | sentenced. ICM &St P.. | ICM & St P pfd New Haven, Nov, 19 (® — "“It's |[C R Isl & P . dent that the higher ups don't | Chile Cop {want to pay his fine,” remarke ‘l(\l Fuel {Judge Edwin 8. Thomas in U. 8. |Con Textlle |district court today s he passed |Corn Prod Ref 3 sentence on Nicholas Longelli, who ' Cru Steel had just pleaded guilty to a sec- |Cosden Ol ond offense charge of making and | Dav Chem selling llquor and keeping an un- ! Erie vegistered still. The man had | Erie 1st pfd served three months in jail in de- Gen Biectric fault of fine on the first of Motors and had then taken the poor Gt North pfd debtor's oath, [ Thep Copper Federal ofticers had found Ton- y gelti in charge of a 100 gallon still in o cowshed on Silver Sands road | Much Nquor and equipment was on |the premises. ! The man's attorney |court his client was not the mind of the cnterprise. for six months, ADVANCED told the master ) and sen- | New Norf North Longelll was fined jail e tenced to BOY SCOU 597% Five Boy Scouts had their ad- 1% vancement approved at the ses Penn Railroad 511 of the board of review held P&ERC&IL. 42% night. Sam Black of Troop 9 Picree Arrow.. 84 urch; Pt Be Pure Oil 1 outh church; and Howard [Tep T & 8 .. 3 rd Carroll Drysdale, both Ray Copper .. 13 of Troop 1 of Plainville, were judged |Reading .. 881 363 fit to become first class scouts, while |0V _M[')-l oo D3N ¢ the second class rank of Irank :\‘:\‘;vh’rrzu‘w;‘ %5 4 S el of Troop 8, German Laptist One boy fail- cond meet South Railway Studebaker exas (o Tex & Pacific Transcon Oil church, was approved. ed {o make the grade class, The court of honor | next Wednesday evening. “Troop 4 of the Center church.went | on a hike to Ozone Helghts Sunday ternoon, and the numerous new uits passed many of their out- A foothall game between Insurance Stocks foor tests. rol contests in str \uto over 52 | er-making, p , - and th Automg 1 Some Imprmement in | Miss Marorot MeBrayne. aged 52 | Sromak L L Col. Coolidge’s Condition |waierbury's tndchteaness fo state [361 Arch street, She was born i | nIEht. Scout LSRRI bl e 1 : Plymouth, Vermont, Nov, 19 (P— | New Bri the daughter of the |SPoke on scouting at the : i 38 3 fome jmprovement in the condition! Cut Down to 000 by This |5te John n Campbell Mc: Junior High school this a I Jn OfstolonclEgolin Coolidge, father | . N Brayne. Surviving her are four sis- 5 7 e HEANCIsTE it g of the pre ..|,;,,I as noted today m.! Year's Sehool Enrollment. tars, Jlizabeth, of this city; Mrs. | Radio Statlons to Give : o S HESphyRIclan EDI A st EMSC o, ¢ y ] ‘illlam Walker, of Plamnville; Mrs. PPN R TR soht Am Har [ A visit 4t his pationts bedsida | Jortford. Nov. 10 4P — water- | Witham Walkir, ot FROWILCE 0| Coolidge’s Talk Tonight {10 1ot \sting movc than an hour and g |PUTY has ma to the state comp- et Shiiips. of Kidgeniotd | Washington, Nov. 19 UP—Presi- LSRG Caanen 1 troller its enumeration of the chil- ; rk‘ gt also one brother, An-|dent Coolidge left Washi on early 5 Htd Opt Coleor 5 Dr. Cram found that heart attacks dren of Sl‘VYv.‘lr\ age in the city, for .Vn»\\v.\Ah“‘r_\ ‘\" New ”‘“‘:;. | today for York, ; ; 2 s 2 19 uffered during the night had been |this year. The enumerators found | T8- 0 i Gl b Gty hela Sat- | he will address the i 14 ag 1o peveretilen un the piet ione 00 children from four to 16 . " tarnoon at 2 o'clock at B. C. [ Chamber of Commeree ir 6 8 LU g LLELRE L that ‘\ iR hin e dle e g g I"ml r Sons undertaling parlors The following bre ( 8 ATINS c.secvennss 114 complete rest which he had ordered | four hund moresthant insl i Rev. Theodore A. Greene officiating. | tions will broadcast ; k ' ) ould result in a materfal change |The enumeration grant at §2.25 |0 RO LR e | speech at 9 o'l C sd e for the better. The patlent’s condi. Per child amounts to $30400, but | 0 WEAF, New v & o i however, remains serious, he | Waterbury will not receive any |"°7° York; WRC, Washingtor i aid part of the grant. The full amount | | Providence, R. L; WTIC, i o s e will be credited to Waterbury to |e—m————————————————d— | o\, = WFI, Philadciphia : ey NC\\' Fced “‘ll'eS Spml lr‘m\\nu.v ‘nn:. \r.vv“‘ :nr. vh_.» i\m: ‘1‘ Bufialo, ‘\-' Y. \\LU;_ v‘-.‘ t P, L . paid on account of crrors in for F ' ] WWJ, Detroit; WSAIL Reception on Radio |mer enumerations. The claim of | unerals I WOC, Davenport; WeC0, Minneay e Radio enthusiasts living in the |the state against Waterbury was lis and St, Paul; KSD, St 1 =1 ; irea through which feed wires run|compromised — for $170,000, the WG Y, Schenectady 2 from the nley Works dam at jmunicipality agrecing to allow the | . Burns - — w Rainbow to the main factories he amount of its annual grant to be | 'l').\L funeral of Patrick I‘]'_ I:H]rv.rl T“.O BIQ“ Ki"ed' Thl‘(‘(‘ & report an almost absolute cessation |applied on the state's claim. By |well known sportsman, who diec s v 5 . e e e G .\-"\f».«m,. payments the claim | suddenly Tues sing, was hetd | Entombed in Coal Mine = fce was put into operation, Sat- against Waterbury s Dbeen re- home of Mr. and Mrs !‘. Madisonville, Ky., [0 ¥ 0o aq duced to about $67.000, The grants hue this morning at $:30 Two men were kille ee | o Tith 8 Mo 1 ma cture of electricity |are enumeration grants and o'clock, and from St. Mary'’s church were entombed in a of | Tieht 298 . in the sun® fashion (paid in March. When the town is at @ o'clock. the Finley Coal company by an €X- \x 11 Gre 3 nerative reception set |given credit for this year The paltbearers were: Daniel J - plosion in the mine carly lay. | g AN T 195 148 marring their reception. With the lation the city will owe Sullivan, James Crowe, Jw.‘“ I Mine officials said th ¥ ion w Hfd Gas . 5 57 cxception of Hartford and Spring-|a little over $16,000 Doherty, Philip Hannon, Thomas d by & “windy shot”. Two mer SR fleld, they find it impossible to The Bristol enumeration shows [Crowley, and Philip Burns. Edward TREASURY STATEMENT ten in since the new feed wires be- | 6,099 children of school age in that Donohus and James Bowen were a \ ) Tr 1 T $152,005 gan t{ransmitting current, they com- lcity, or four hundred more than floral bearers. 3 2 plain. o last year. Bristol will receive §13,- | Rev. Walter W. \‘;‘ 1% o EXCHANGES & BALANCES A request may be forwarded to the 722 Farmington } 075 chil- |celebrant of a :‘nr\“m\xh 1\Lv mass of New Yorl Exchanges, 938 climinating this regeneration at| - . Wl“tnl:" b ?;“ -‘:’;“ x‘x\y?: )."“\m; '\1\;'” \\ ar in ]ndm I(mm'm: RESAT o inbow 80 they y continue to New York Furrier Is Gom {he churehs e ARk L 3 ke = cnjoy varled program | e PrE R e 0 — | Robbed of Big Supply | - e b has forbidden all mectings | Hears Girl in Auto | New York, Nov. 19 (#—Forcing blic places for {wo months ow v o City Items | urrier known to Max Cohen, H ] ing to the alarming : wing Scream Tells Police fur shop proprietor, to act as || tension among the Mo 1 Nidate: ofiertiionont e Daughters were born today rmed robbers last night galned ad- ause of the king of Hed o MeGra b btk een New Britain General hospita mission to Cohen's store after it had | | ONDESTANES other that of his enemy bn '§ and , that an auto- and Mrs. Michael Ormsby ¢ been closed for the day and escaped Phone 16253 » Saoud, leader of the Wahabi tribes- | mobile t 1 a \‘ rth Burritt sington and Mr. and Mrs. John J.|With $100,000 worth of furs. Unposite St Mary's Chared men. reet )y RN (i airen it ‘m;. Vn .:‘r“dln ‘r ]n‘x“lm |.x ki ‘”:1 J\' The men escaped in an automo. Rewdence 13 Sammer St = 1620-3 fot o Yy The ST e daughter was born last night to Mr. | bile griven by an accomplice o S (N | <omu TT STIL) nnn S some girl was being taken away ind Mrs. Axel Dahlgren of Berlin = — | = Utica, N. Y., Nov. 19 (®—Jar ¢ Melville Barrows of &1 Talcott MRS, \|l LLE SEE THE DISPLAY OF H. Corbett, father of commandeered an street reported to the police this| Washington, Nov | Corbett, Smith college junior e and made a thorough morning that his bicycle had been [thur Mullen of Omaha | ORCHIDS has disappeared, ret 4 h of the western section of th stolen from the rear of his house president of the ional Council of | Northampton, Mass, to his home city. He then went to the part of Arthur W. Bachman of Eim Hill, | Catholic Women, which concluded - in this city today. He has North Burritt street where the a chauffeur for the New Britain Wet |its sessions here yesterday IGREETING CARDS] abandoned hope that his zmul p s reported to )m-(e h[r‘*n; | Wash, reported to the police that he One of 1 rectors elected o ) 5 J will be found, althonugh to date run! an o was unable to find | had hrok:n a gate’at the Washing- |Miss Agnes Bacon, of Providence, | mli‘?llfl‘:';f h?,o:l‘d ‘1‘:3&» there has been no worthwhile clue one who had heard the -cmmu‘l ton street rallroad crossing. IR. L { The Telegraph Fiorist of New Britain, 'to her whereabouts. {or seen the machine. " |[EDDY BROTHERS & & | $1.49 17 PUTNAM & CO NEW YORK & HARTFORD STOCR P WEST MAIN ST NEW BRITAIN= Tel 2040 PARTTORD OFFICK 6. CENTRAL ROV 7B 1~ WE OFFER: v 100 COLTS MEMBER W YORK MEMBERS HAR JUDD BUILDING, PEARL ST, O Ur IA wis St HARTI'ORD, CON TELEPHONE New Britai Burritt Hotel Bullding. Tel, 1815 Meriden: 83 Colony St. Tel, 1310 2-0281 WE INVITE ORDERS FOR EXECUTION ON COMMISSION IN THE NEW YORK MARKET STOCKS CARRIED ON MARGIN Thomson, THenn & Lo, Burritt Hotel Bldg., New Britain Tel. 2580 MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGES Donald R. Hart, Mgr. We Offer: 50 Shares LANDERS, FRARY & CLARK ¢ Price on Application We do not accept rargin accounts HARTFORD Hartford Conn. Trust Bldg. Tel 27186 NEW BRITAIN Burritt Hotel Bldg. Tel. 3420 We Offer:— 100 Shares N. B. MACHINE Common 55 Shares UNION MFG. 50 Shares TORRINGTON MORE DAYS LEFT TO BUY SOROSIS SHOES FOR WOMEN $8, §9 and $10 Values Marked down to very low price. Most all leathers and heels and most all sizes. These shoes were taken from our regular lines, also including discontinued numbers. ALL AT ONE PRICE 5.95 EXTRA SPECIAL K Pure Wool Hose, regular $3.00 Sale Price while they last— Women quality. VOGUE SHOE SHOP 236 MAIN ST. In the Heart of the City Rabbi Morris Silverman WILL SPEAK ON “Religion and Happiness’ THIS FRIDAY EVENING AT 8:15 Congregation Sons of Israel, Cor. Elm and Chestnut Streets ALL WELCOME