New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 15, 1926, Page 29

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MASS. OFFICIAL 15 T0 BE PROBED Hultman's Comnections With Gorporations Questioned Boston, Jan, 15 M—An order for the appointment of a joint legisla- | tive committee to Investigate the “business affiliations and conne tions” of Eugene C. Hultman, chair. man of the commission on the neces- saries of life, with certain publie service corporations, was filed in the legislature toda Representatives Frank X. Coyne of Dorchester and Thomas F. Dono- van of Boston, who filed the order, later issued a statement {n which they said Mr. salary of $5,000 a year from the Boston Elevated and a salary of 83,000 from John Hays Hammond ' as secretary of the New governors' fuel committee. SIX GOING AR AROUND WORLD 'New Britain Residents To Visit For- | England elgn Climes, Leaving New York On January 20, Bix New Britainites will sail with the 8, 8, Laconia when that ship sets 8ail from New York on January 20, for an around the world cruise. | Bix hundred and fifty passengers, representing 38 states in the Unlon, Canada, Cuba and Honolulu will be aboard the 20,000 ton liner. Among the countries which the tourists will visit are: Cuba, the Panama Canal, the Tawaiian Ts- | inds, Japan, China, Hu Philippines, . Burma, India, Ceylon, Egypt, and points in southern The ship will pick up west- ngers at Los Angeles on y 6. ‘The tour is arranged by Frank C. Clark, of Clark's Cruise: The following Is a list Britainites: Charles H lain, 19 Forest street: C. H. Norris, Mrs, C. H. Norris, and Miss N jorfe Norris, of §1 Grove Hill, and Mrs, A, H. Abbe, DEATH OF E. 5. BROWNE Veteran Employe of of New Chamber ‘“New Haven' Road, Expert in Traffic Field, Vie- tim of Pncumonia, Ernest Stanley Browne, age 52 years, of 325 Chestnut street, died this morning at his home. He had heen {11 since January 6 with pneu- monfa. He was born in Jersey City, N. T, and lved in this city ahout 35 years, He was a veteran employe of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Tallroad Co., having been employed in the office of the New Britain treight station for about 25 years. He had held every position except the agency In the office, chief clerk, accountant, cashier, car glerk, and claim agent. He was an expert accountant, an | expert in traffic, a biller of excep- tional note and he was well versed Hultman recoived a! Mr. | including | d on the road. He was employed as foreman of the house at the time of his death, He was a member of the Brotherhood of Rallroad Clerks and had held several offices in the Hartford local. He leaves his wite, Mrs. Lycy Irey Browne, of this eity and his mother, Mrs, Loulse Browne of New York city, Funeral arrangements, fn charge of B, C, Porter Bons, are incomplete, HARDY HERMIT HIKES 14 MILES T0 COURT | Florida Mountain Recluse l;lndg No Fault After Morning Jaunt Through Woods North Adams, Jan. 15—After hik- (ing seven miles in zero weather from his cabin in the woods off the Mo- hawk Trall, Irving K. Blackstone, |aged Florida Mountaln recluse, turn- ed around and hiked back when told that his services would not be |required in Superior Court in Pitts- lhl\l yesterday, ' Two youths are to be tried on mh.nqu of assaulting him with in- wnz to rob. Yesterday the local noll(‘e were notified to have him lin court this riorning. They noti- {fied his nearest nelghbor, who trekked two miles on snowshoes into the woods to tell Blackstone |about it. The aged man started |down the trail for this city at 5:30 o'clock, arriving here at 8 o'clock. Then he was told that he would not bhe wanted. | He has lived alone in the woods | for 22 years. | Wives \\'hp Refuse to Take Hubby’s Name Cause Grief London, Jan. 15 (#—Modern wives |who refuse to take their husbands’ |names have set soclal sceretaries by _n.- 5. Engravers have profited, h\ wever, and pasepert burcaus are » winners, | 1t 1s not sufe now to send an in- vitation to Mr. and Mrs, James Bat- !tle Royal without looking into the soclal regwter. Mrs. Jumes H:mh- Royal may not be Mrs, James Batil ! Royal at all. She may be Miss G. Alone. And that i8 a tragedy whero engraved invitations have been care- fully counted on the old-fashloned | theory that married couples are real- Iy married style. | Wives who are willing to travel lon a family passport issued in the [name of tha head of the family are rapldly going out of fashion. Even in good old Victorian it the do” wear their husband's Inm\os. they want a separate pass- port, and that means extra fees for visas, Eva Fontain, Dancer, Not to Be Extradited Chicage, Jan, 15 (A—E: rows Fontaine, dancer, today won her fight against removal to Cali- fornia on a citation for contempt of court in connection with her breach of promise suit against Cor- | nelius Vanderbilt Whitney, Taderal Judge Wilkerson ren- ered an opinion refusing her re- moval. which was ordered by Fed- eral Commiesioner J. R, Glass. The dancer, after losing one action | against young Whitney, who since an, Bur- | has married, was forbidden by the | California courts from starting any legal action against Whitney. §he later filed a sult in the New York |courts. As a rosult the contempt | cltation was issued {n California. SEN. BLEASE HITS FOREIGN ENVOYS \Says They Are Feeding Liquor to U. §. Women shington, Jan. 15 (A—Renew- {ng his complaint against the diplo- matie immunities granted foreign embassy and legation staff in Wash- |ington, Senator RBlease, democrat, | South Carolina, declared in the gen- | ate today that members of the dip. lomatie corps were “fecding lquor | to women™ and “debauching” them It was unfair, he said, to prosccute American women found violating the law in company with forcign diplomatic agents, and then let the agents themselves go free, SCHWAB HAS WRITTEN SPEECH, RELATES JOKES “Fellow Down at New York” Pre- pared Text but Magnate Spurns It for Humor, ¥resh Made Orange County But. ter 55¢ 1b, National Tea Importers, 123 Main St.—advt, that evening. Nicholas Arnica, 208 Arch strect, reported to police at 12:40 o'clock this afternoon that his brother-in- | law was assaulting his sister at his home. Sergeant George Ellinger visited the home and managed to make peace in the family A son was born this afternoon to [ tnere Mrs, Willlam Sternberg of Maple | jnvestors concerning bank and in street entortained at @ufew tables of | yuranco stocks, espocially o since | bridge at her home yesterday, | the recent publication: of enorimous | Grand Master Alfred L. Lilley of | oarnings and profits by sovoral of Hartford will make an officlal Visit | tha loading baking . institutions to Gerstaecker lodge,{Y. O. O. F.|Large amounts of money already next Monday evening at Odd Fel-|Nava heen put Into these securities lows' hall on Arch street. Middio: |yt iy gaja, much of it on profits ac. town ‘end Hactford lodges Wil erying from the “bull® market of unite with Gersteacker lodge on |y Mr. and Mrs. James Hughes, Main strect, at the New Britain Gen. | eral hospital. Wall Street Briefs Brokerage houses report sed volume of an ine inquiries from last two years. Some brokerage | firms have had to establish depart. ! me to handle this new rush of bus S The 1026 budget of the f‘MMV” and Northwestorn railway, aggre gates $20,000,000, of wh $3,000,. 15 for yard improvements, §? 0,000 for equipment, $5,000,000 for | rail and track material, $2,000,000 | for extens new balla expendi on of lines, $1,000,000 for d $7, 00 for other INDIAN GUIDE LOSES POINT T0 RS STILLAN, Judge Grants Postponement fn Suit of ¥red Beauvais, Who Sceks Payment as Witnesg. Three Rivers, Quebee, Jan. 15 (A —A motion to pc 10 the case of ' Fred Beanvais against Mrs. An Potter Stillman was granted in su- |perior court yesterday by Justice | Duplessis, Chicago, Jan, 15 (A—A “fellow down at New York" writes Charles , | M. Schwab's specches. for delivery here spoke his own, The prepared text dealt with world topies, and the “64 year old ! young Pittsburg mill man" publicly acknowledged it. But what he actu- was another thing. w there's a fellow down who writes my speecl He wrote on last night, Schwab wab told those o Ameri- ation. He's tten one it for me to deliver to you It has been given to all the {morrow morning “Now I guess we need mot be bothered with it any more.” He ewept into a joke, kept his hearers langhing and applauding A half hour and finishcd with a burst |of humor. Once he nearly pared text when he told the roadl builders of his r d for their work and the necessity of it, but he d1d not say it in the language of the prepared speech. (It was the re- {colleetion of many of his hearers Ithat Mr. Schwab has previonsly done this stunt on at least one other {occasion.) WINNIPEG l'n\sl( TA: Winnipeg, “{un, Jan, Harry Wateon, inspecting physiclan lof the United States Immigra Department here, was found dead SUICIDE |wound through the chest. According | to the police, flieted. Dr. Watsen had been in [health for a consider war abilities. the wound was self-in- Many Peruvian planters are turn- ing from sugar to cotton. all the time. Read the advertisements. Guides Few people would care to rigk their lives in unknown country without a guide. Yet every day your pockethook venturves into the un- known—to the market where products new to you are sold—where worthy and unworthy goods beckon to you alike—where it is even easier to waste your income than to protect it. Cveryone should read advertisements as guides to buy- ing. They point the way to safe purchases. They tell vou of the mer its of worthy produets. a picture map of where to go to get what you want. They save your time, just as they guard your money. Advertising removes all doubt from the buyer’s path "_W BRITAIN HERALD OVER 12,060 DISTRIBUTED DAILY With An Audited Circulatio! Put them to work for you. Buy advertised products and you are on familiar ground They give you The Herald is the Only Newspaper in New Britain | n | got into his pre- | 15 (P—Dr | last night in his office from a bullet | lile time due to | | | i | g | | Signed, Beauvals, an 1(\\.;11 guide, w h/\ was cited in liman's un- sU ssful div is secoking $7.000 for all A services in connee- | tlon with the collection of evidence to rebut the claims made in that | suit by Stillman. Counsel for Mrs, 8¢ that he wanted to ¢ nad ig a eom- sont York for this son for postponement negotin- way for a settle- Veauvais object Iman's veply to Beanvais' 8 thnt s owes Beauvais any money. She assirts that the | Indian, instead of hely r de- fense In the dlvoree sult, was dis- red her for interests by loyal and dam als Deaths L Mes. Mary R. Skelskey Mrs. Mary . Skelskey of 446 | West Main street, wife of Joseph M Skelskey, agent Insurance Co., died today at Britain Gene hospital afte; s of two weelis. I'neumonia w e of thoe d s her hushs for the Prug | i 10 she fs surviy- |ed by two children, Joseph Jr., & years old, and John, two years old She Is also survived by her mother, Mrs. Lilen Cavanaugh of New lon: don, seven brothers, Detective S | geant John J. Cavanaugh o s Dennis W, naugh and Thomas of the New London police | force, and Edward, Michael, Jam [and cn all of N Mrs., Walter Bogoe, Donohue, Mrs. Joseph Fitzpatrick ]and Mrs. James J. Lynch of Dor | chester, Mass., are sisters. Funeral services will ba held at the home of Mr. Skelskey's parents, { | 176 Stearns street, Bristol, at § | o'clock and at St. Joseph's churc lat 9 o'clock Monday morning § | Burial will be in St. Joscoh's ceme- tery, Bristol. Mrs. Patrick Dimico Mrs. Mary Dimico, wife of Patrick ! Dimico of 135 Chapman strect, died at the New Britain hospital late yes- terday old. She 1s survived by two son vadore and Albert Dimico, daughters, Minnie and Marga {mico. IFour brothers and a this elty and her parents and thr sisters in Italy al afternoon, She was rs Sal. two 50 survive he | Funeral services will be held the home, 5 Chapman street morrow morning at $:30 St. John the Evangeli; 9 o'clock. Burial will Mary's cemetery acl be in Bt Funerals The Loufslana Oll Refining corpo- ration has notifled the New York tock exchange of a proposed o {crease n authorized common sto from 1,200,000 sharcs to 1,360,000, Yfl!lTHS INMOVIES Gives Young Thesplans Chance i {0 Show Stull { Now York, Jan, 15 (P-—A d matic story, revolvir unid clor and an even more first Ii amous actor, wood &1 »d its shoulders an wondercd. Then Webh deelded on Dolores Costello, & girl who had on the maovie lots only three mont t B eme ymore. play eppost more nid W mo she met s0. Ioreign exchanges opened firm, ° 5 . being the daughter of | dcmand G ot We do not accept margin accounts {M it was thought sho 9-16 and French francs ad- | s for the youthful di- fyancing 8% points to 3 cents. | a veferan of the| An jneessant flow of selling orde fn a production new to LOth [xehich drove prices of various ra 1. Webb gald ro rom 1 10 41, points down | arrymore is one of the eastest | numerous ind and specis ra T have ever directed. For | 2 to 6, ated from bear no superior; in t bt us into trou » {op of one o rve he 1 nerve 1 ; John wae at t masts and the seenario ealled to slide down a long cable to o deck. T yelled to ask if he wns dy, mercly jokingly, for ¥ planned to send a sallor ‘dov ® to come down ¢ ha wae serio rned, > badly bu cut and bleed- John and for much reality into it 1, breaking three ril and g a delay of as many weelk < us more than seven month the giants would not for the completion S0 an enormous “prop” whale was constructed and operatpd through mechanical devices from shore, 1t was at one of the higgest mo- nts of the picture that the young Miss Costello eame to test. The girl was to cry and the director war they cnough scenes. real te but she could not get ) into a rying mood” throughont the day. The next morning 1 sa 1ing to her about my re ty for her opportunity ar her she was going to my expectations,” W d began er; | s ey | Mrs, Mary Ankuda | | Funeral services for Mrs i Ankuda were held at the late 42 FFarmington avenue, this morning at £:30 o'clock and at Russian Or- thodox church at & clock Inter- ment was in Fairview cemet CARD OF THANKS We wish to than friend neighbors for the kindness s in our berecavement in death of our heloved daughter and sister Martha Ziegler. We wish to ly thank the Forem sering Dept., and Dept. 25 of the P. & 1. Corbin Co { MR. and MRS. JACOR 7! # LER AND 1FAMILY | CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our kind friends and neighhors for their kindness and sympathy shown us during the be- reavement in d of our beloved father. LAWRENCE MARTIN | AND FAMILY UNDERT AR Phone 1623 ite St Man + Chareh 3 Summer Sto- 16253 | BOLLERER'S TOSY SHOT POTTED PLANTS e Wyacinthe, Jonquils, Cyelamen. lr(-dl Cut Vlowers Baily, Tropical Cactus. %9 WEST MAIN ST, TEL. 886 The Telegraph Florist of New Britain. | | Miss Palungwa, an Eskimo malden living in Baifin land, didn't spend much for her winter costume—but it wonld cost if she boucht it own her wearing a genu- ine sealskin jack trousers of blue and white fox, and boots lined with polar bear skin. how | trading beir tion, on a heavil ed turn- — S — lover. Americe th Porto r e Hud Motors, 1, In- ';;\ fonal Comby ering AMERICAN HARDWARE CORP. s of the | demand | | | { for | BEARS AHEAD IN DAY'S ACTIVITY Public Participation However, On Small Scale PUTNAM & CQ MEMBERS NEW WORA & MARTIORD STOCK EXCHAMGEY P WEST MAIN ST NEW BRITAIN= Tel. 2040 PARTFORD OFFICY 6 CENTRAL ROW T L8 speculative forces struggled today to reak prices out of the narrow trad ing area which they have been uctuating for the last fort nlght, with the day's advant the bear side. Except for a growing ndeney to take profits o ral- ies, illed public participation was on & small seale, the bulk of the the account of pro Speculutors for ceded in foreing nd 4 points fn mor Intc ttent York, Jan, 15 (A—Opposing WE OFFER 100 TORRINGTON tessionul operators, the lining s of 2 ora {ssued JUDD & COMPANY rallies stuged by bull pools in suc d sucs as American International, ok Taland, - \Wibaah andl Nash. Moo BERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGH IMBERS HARTIORD §TOCK EXCHANGE JUDD BUILDING, PEARL ST., Cor, Lewis St. HARTI'ORD, CONN, TELEPHONE 2-9121 New Dritain: Burrltt Hotel Building, Tel, 1818 Meride; 3% Colony St. Tel, 1340 Hristol: 124 Main St. Tel. 2105 tors falled to hold, The gencral was Inclined to follow the common, ich by ed with the of 12 as compar t subscripti ree to employes of the corpora- BIGELOW-HARTFORD CARPET CO. COLT’'S PATENT FIRE ARMS MFG. CO. LANDERS, FRARY & CLARK STANLEY WORKS THE TORRINGTON CO. | @homson, Tfienn & Co. Burritt Hotel Bldz., New Britain Telephone 2580 MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGES Donald R. Hart, Mgr. to 4 points be- quotations. | ly heavier antia m-x thefr previous Trading was in su volume than yesierda W their was after ison points rators on th R pendent of ope a vorites, (e e R WE OFFER A FEW SHARES s to S0, a new town Shee J. B. WILLIAMS COMPANY PRICE ON APPLICATION mington f Snlphur and sas advaneed a point or Freeport Te om 2 rvous holders of IEDDY BROTHERS &G re lquidating he of aack of support for the , e HARTFORD NEW BRITAIN o s o and Atiantie Coast @Hartford Conn. Trust Bldg. Burritt Hotel Bldg. Ll e Tel.2:7186 Tel. 34207 ad bheen and the Toss We Offer:— ind G were uncha ns [ Well Steeet Opening | Selling 71 was resumed at {the opening of today's market. Mo win the principal targets tacks of bear traders, Wil- Overland and Hudson each ing a point lower. Iounda potnts and lo: ore were recorded 50 shares Landers, Frary & Clark 50 shares Colt’s Pat. Fire Arms tors were or the Iys Company droppe of a point or n by Chesapeal Ohio, General | Aetna Lifo Ins Co. !ZRE | Asphalt, ¢ teel, U, §. Real- | Actna Fire ..... Temp]e of Sacrifice ty and May depariment stores Automobile Tns ... Providence Memorial High Low Close | Hartford Iire . Providence, R. I, Jan. 15 (®—A Allfs ChialSsisees: 9113 911 | National Fire §00 | “Temple of Sacrifice” in monumen- Am Bt Sug . 31% 31% {Phoenix Fire 585 tal form, unlike any other World Am 280% 2813% (Travelers Ins Co. 1390 | War memorial {n the east, will be Am Loc 116% 117 Conn. General . 1750 | erected by the Providence memorial Am 137 1879 | Manufacturing § committes on a design presented by Am T 75 |Am Hardware % 06 Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney. | Am Sur 2 AT HOSIETY «.voves e Rising from a circular base 70 feet, Am Te Beaton & Cadwell 3 < In diameter to a height of 270 feet {Am Wool Bige-Hfd Cpt Co com.. 87 9 will be a huge round fortress towee, | Anaconda | Bl l,,“ & g‘,m comav.. T g |of brick and terra cotta on a stesl Atch s fame, surmounted by a sculptured At G W 164 a temple of sacrifice. Within will be & Flideee 1005 1 O T e , | powerful beacon light which at night & d 91 | Tiagle Lock .. can be seen for 30 miles across Nar- 1S5 48 I'afnir Bearing Co ragansett Bay. Lighted torches on ) 80% Hart & Cooley ... the outside of the temple will add 18% AR R S to its effectiveness. N B Machina N B Machina pfd . 13 | The interior will have stone flsors and plastered walls. In the base onalcomis will be commodious rooms for w CM&SPDy 4 North & Judd . trophies, records and other purposes. CRIG& Inc 60% Peck, Stowe & Wil . : = = Chile Cop % TRussell Mfg Co .. YALE ENDOWMENT COMPLETE Colo Fuel scovill Mfg Co 237 | Con Textite .. 14 tandard Serew . 115 Mrs. Knight's Gift Brings Medical | corn Prod Ref 413 tanley Works . Fund to $1,000,000. lscry Steol - Stanley Works p a7 o Hartford, Conn., Jan. 15 (M~ A Cosden Ofl 1114 I'orrington Co co! 6714 63 |recent gift to Yale University made I Dav Vhem 1% . 331 86 |bY Mre Knight, widow of Dr, George e s 5 pid ..110 112 |H. Knight completed the amount | Erie 1st pfd . 4 288 203 |necessary for meeting tha terms and e Bltie : N B Gas . 39 .- | conditions of the General Education | Gen Motors ..118% 1 nern N B Tel 148 151 "“,‘" contingent pledge of $1.000.. et 1 : Y R 0 endowment for the Sehos! of ‘”w ety A aq1y PR s :"“WW‘ it wr3 announced yester. | Int \»v 448 | SASURY A day. | Kelly Spring T New York—Exchanges, Eaisnis Bidrowsy Memosialths Dt | xe i . A e George H. Knight,” Yale '77, was be. | . anges, §0,0 gun two years ago, when Mrs I iterine T . A Knight conveyed to the Yale Cor- “l]‘.\.,“ c 1% 3 * poration a farm of 217 acres in Takeville, with fres right of sale, |Since then Mrs. Knight has provided |the university with sufficient funds to endow a fellowship for “research in nervous and mental diseases, es. pecially that form éf these result. Mis I RADIO SETS ASKED FOR LITEHOUSE KEEPERS THoover In Appeal Says Gifts Would | 1% 1 feehle-minced and - eplieptia Brighten Life For Many . | JOAN GLYNN DIES Secluded Keepers Bristol, Jan. 15 —John Glynn, 83, Washington, Jan. 15—The sugges- | brother of Congressman James on that much happin would be ' Glvnn of tha fifth district, and of Winsted, dicd suddenly at his home ed to the dreary lives of those in this afternoon. \arge of the 720 lighthouses, in se. ded parts of the nation, if the e o contributed radlo receiving FEDERAL “SWEAT SHOP. New York, Jan. 15 (®~The worst sweat shop in New York city is the federal bench, United States District Attorney Buckner told the Women's to be sent to them, was made esterday by Secretary Hoover. Mr. Hoover described the light. Fouse keepers as the “shut-ins of the first water,” many of whom were | Forum today. He sald the judges are out of all communication with the | obliged to work three to five nightq rest of the world for extended pe- |a week after working all day, in ore riods. Very few, he said, even had | der to keep up their work. radio recoiving sets as they were not | paid very much by the government. | QUESTIONABLE Powerful sets would be necessary | Lady (at Times Square): WMoy, — | tor some of t lighthouse: how do T get to Washington square TOCAL STOC ’Hnr\\cr sald, because Urchin: Aw, get the L" downe i |tance from sending stations. He | town. | (Furnishcd by Putnam & Co.) |mentioned as an example the light- | Lady (hastily retreating): Brat!— T | house service in the Aleutian Is- | Princeton Tiger. y Insurance Stocks lands, off the Alaskan coast. It sets | Bid Asked [are sent to the lighthouse service at | Auts sales at London's shew iy | Actna Casualty .950 — | Washington they will be distributed. | October totaled $100,000,000, )

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