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VALUABLE LOOT FOUND ~ Bags of Silverware and Jewelry Discovered in Gully by Road- side in West Haven 30 MILLIONS IN LOANS ARE GALLED { Despite This, the Market Con- LEGATEE. WINNER IN TAX LAWSUIT Mrs. Warner Will Get Refund MUST USE FUND OR 1T WILL GO BACK State’s $125,000 Appropriation ( p L Wall Street Briefs ———— | Northern Paocific'’s October mn. | Ings were smaller than a year ago, | net operating income declining to, $3,713,665 from $4,094,711 and gross | revenues to $10,291,216 from $10,- ! 685,622, PUTNAM & CO/° Members New York & Hartford Stock Exchanges 31 WEST MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN TEL. 2040 West Haven, Nov. 26—The police From Government New Haven, Nov. 26 (P—The Unfted States circuit court of ap- Deals has reversed the decision of Judge Edwin S. Thomas of the United States district court and | granted repayment of income tax on §50,000 with interest and costs to Mrs. Eva F. Warner of Bridgeport, according to reports flled here to- day. The defendant in the action | was James J. Walsh, former col- lector of internal revenue who was represented by John Buckley, United States attorney in Hartford. Mrs. Warner asked the sum of $9,656.91, the total interest on $2,517.93 (the income tax paid) from June 3, 1918, and the interest on $7,038.98 from the dates of payment of the four installments to the date of payment of judgment. Denied this last Jan- uary, before Judge Thomas she has now been awarded the sum, in addi- tion to the costs. It was maintained that the sum of . $50,000 pald annually to the plain- tiff through a trustee, from the e tate of her late husband, I De Ver Warner, constituted a gift and was not subject to normal income taxa- tlon. EASILY SATISFIED New Haven, Nov. 26 (A — A youthful bandit who held up Har- ry Bellin, proprietor of a grocery store, with a revolver and demand- ed his money, was easily satisfled. Given entree to the cash register, he accepted the few dollars in| change he found there and the word of the proprietor that he had no bills, and went his way. He has not yet been found. Stamford Autoist Is Placed Under Arrest Stamford, Nov. 26 (P) — Paul O. Harth, of this town, was placed un- der arrest late last night on com- plaint of the father of 3-year-old Eleanor McPhee that an automobile driven by Harth hit the child about 4 o'clock In the afternoon, causing a serious fracture of the skull. The child was walking ahead of her mother as the two were crossing a corner when the accident happened. Harth stopped after the accldent and gave his name and address, but had not reported the accident to the po- lice. The father did not tell them of it until after the child had been taken to the hospital. OVER HALF OF ALL OWNERS INSURED Majoriy of Gonn. Au 0 Dmers; Responsible ‘ Probably more than half the mo- | tor vehicle owners of Connecticut | are prepared to pay for damage {tarium at Niantic will be lost by the | state tuberculosis commission if it is | trom bone tuberculosis. Consequent- | An appeal was taken and numerous | month when Good Until July 1 Bridgeport, Conn., Nov. 26 (P— The appropriation of $125,000 made by the 1923 general assembly for the acquisition of land and the erec- tion of an addition to Beaside Sani- not used by July 1 next, Dr. Stephen J. Maher, of New Haven, commis- sion chairman, said last night. | For nearly four years efforts to se- cure a part of the McCook estate, adjoining the present sanitarium for | children afflicted with bone tubercu- | losis, have been unavailing and for more than a year the court proceed- | ings to bring about acquisition of | the land through condemnation have been nonproductive. The law pro- vides; as Dr. Maher interprets that it an appropriation is not used for| four years, the opportunity of using it is lost. Seaside Sanitartum a converted old wooden hotel building on the sound | shore at Niantic was admittedly & “firetrap” in 1923 when the appro- priation was eought and secured from the legisiature, It was over-| crowded and had a large waiting list then. Now, it is filled to capacity with 59 children and there are more than that number on the waliting list. The reason why the waiting list has not assumed larger proportions is that parents and physiclans through- out the state have grown weary of the apparently fruitless efforts to have children admitted and do not apply any longer for places on the list, according to authorities. The sand at Niantic, along the shore in front of the present cani- torium and the McCook estate to the east 1is claimed to have peculiar healing qualities for those suffering ly, the commission has always wish- ed to take over a portion of the Mc- Cook property for extension of the sanitarium facilities. After the appropriation had been authorized by the 1923 legislature difficulties were encountered. Cap- tain Anson T. McCook, executive secretary to the then Governor Charles /A. Templeton, objected to the sale of part of the estate. The matter was turned over to Attorney General I'rank E. Healy, who de- layed acting to bring condsmnation proceedings for months. The 1925 session of the legislature authorized appropriation of $3,000 and instruct- ed Governor John H. Trumbull to engage special counsel to handle the case. Governer Trumbull named State’s Attorney Arthur M. Brown, of New London county, where the sanitarfum is located. State's” Attorney Brown instituted | faction in*the superior court and the | McCook estate was and is represent- ed by State's Attorney Hugh M. Al- corn, of Hartford county. A de- murrer was entered by counsel for| the McCooks, which was overruled. postponcments secured until last| the appeal was heard before Judge Newell Jennings. Attor- |ney Brown moved the appeal be thrown out on the ground that it was of quantities of silverware discover- ed in the “old copper mine,” a gully just off the Milford turnpike. Four week-: end, bags, three suit- cases and an ovefcoat, all crammed with silverware and rings, were found. Whether some store was robbed or whether the silverware was taken frbm some private home, the police have been unable to de- termine, Inquiries in West Haven, New Haven, Bridgeport and Milford have falled to bring forth any claimants. In the loot are silver candlesticks of various sizes and description, a number of cheap rings, brushes and | many pleces of toilet sets. The prize of the collection is a set of flat sil- ver table ware, carefully preserved | in a case. MADGE KENDAL IS AGTIVE AT 70 Veteran Actress Keeps Contact With Stage London, Nov. 26 (P—Dame Madge Kendal, at the age of 77, still heeds the call of the stage. She has agreed to play the juvenile role in a per- formance E. J. Odell, patriarch of British theaterdom, is preparing to produce, Mr. Odell, who is “Old Odell” to members of the Savage Club and his friends in London art circles, goesn’t belleve actors should retire. On his ninety-second birthday an- niversary he visited the Savage Club, gathered some of his gray-haired confreres about him and fnaugur- ated preparations for an entertain- ment to be glven hy the theatrical stars of long ago. Seldom Misses Big Event Dame Kendal was one of first stars approached, “Of course, I will take the part, she replied. “We have been friends my dear Odell, for more than N years.” Mr. Odell has decided that he will do a scene from Guilbert's “Daniel Druce.” It {s a Cromwellian y in which Mr. Odell in 1876 played the part of a royalist officer who fled the country. Mrs. Kendal only recently the became Dame Madge and the public scarcely | | has become accustomed to her title, | Hannah and Miss Ginger Waskowitz ct, she needed no title. Tike lllen Terry, stantly {n public prints. She is even more robust than Dame Ellen and seldom misses & notable first night | or any great gathering where repre- sentatives of the arts are assembled. Dame Madge was the twenty-sec- ond child ot William and Margar- etta Robertson, Her mother wag of Danish blood. o British* theatrical family which was well known in the amusement world foF gencrations. * Retired Fiftcen Years Ago Mrs. Kendal was only five years her stage name {s con- | Her father came of | here are trying to locate the owners | | | T —ivkz, Clhcu0 Burvau Richard Wilson, University of Wis- consin student, caused a sma!l riot when he took eight “pet” snakes to his dormitory. But now the snakes and Wilson's fellow students get along beautifully. Here i8 Wilson with “Mark Antony,” “Cleopatra” and “Julius Caesar.” | City Items | The police are investigating a re- | |port by Jacob Abraham of 52 La-| salle street that his home was en-| tered and $1.75, a ring and a v.a(ch‘ stolen. E. F. Whaples of Newington re- ported at 2 o'clock this afternoon | that as he was driving south on Main | street, his car skidded and struck another car and damaged the fender slightly. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Burdick 618 Stanley street, entertained Burdick's brother, S. E. Burdick of Washington, D. C., over Thanks |ing along with a number of New Britain guests. The show given by the Universal |and Landers’ Girls' clubs at the Y. | |W. C. A. & week ago will be repeat- this evening in order to accom- nodate those who were unable to gain admission last week. . Miss Margaret French of Bay Ter- race, Staten Island, s visiting Mr. | |and Mrs. Alfred Hick and son of | |34 Wooster street. Miss Sally Waskowitz is home for‘ |the holidays and has as her guests, | |Miss Ruth Rosoff, Gerald Laskin | land Harry Simon of Boston. M 58 | of | re spending the holidays in New | York. | SUED FOR $11,000. | Waterbury, Nov. 24 (P—Dr. A.| . O’'Leary, defeated democratic can- ite for congress, was made de- today in four suils aggre- ng $11,000, They are filed in r court. The plaintiffs are | A Blondin, John Cronin, Mrs. Mary Cronin and Raymond Cronin, | passengers in his car in New Haven | Decoration Day, when the doctor’s | | car collided with another car. The | | plaintifis charge Dr. O'Leary was | operating his car at excessive speed nt a gain of $185,765 while surplus for | up of the call money rate from 4 1-2 LITTLE HUMOR IN {Gomic Strip and “Dioture ‘h’!\e settled for the time being at|over the Thanksgiving | play | he nad among its clevereSt | The Chicago Northwestern had a | tinugs stmflg | more prosperous October than 1in | 1925, gross revenues of- $14,722,076 | New York, Nov. 26 (P—The up- being an increase of $123,418 and | ward movement of stock prices was net operating income of $2,908,533, | renewed today, despite the marking | the ten months of 1926 exceeded |to 5 per cent. The higher rate fol- | dividend requirements by $4,489,941. | lowed the calling of about $30,000,- | 000 in loans, which, in turn, re- Vulcan Detinning Co. declared s | fected the heavy withdrawals of | dack dividend of 2 per cent on the | funds in connection with month end preferred and regular quarterly | disbursements. ‘ | aividends of 1 3-4 per cent on the| Baldwin contfued to respond to | preferred and preferred “A” stocks, Teports of large locomotive orders | all payable January 20 to holders of | ahd persistent rumors, despite fre- record January 8. quent denials, of an early sale of the | company’s Philadelphia real estate. | T) > stock rallied from an early low of 151 1-4 to 156 1-4 thereby dupli- | cating the record high price estab- |lished in 1919. Texas Land Trust, | which appears on the tape infre- quently in ten share lots, jumped 120 | points to 1080. A sudden spurt in Ward Baking A, wmch carried that stock up 18 | points Infused new life into the bak- | |ing shares. New York City Trac- 1y ol | tions also were marked up briskly Papel‘ Are Mlss][]g under the leadership of Brooklyn | Manhattan Transit which touched a | new top figure. Shipping, farm im- | Dallas, Texas, Nov. 26 (P—The |plement and food shares also pre- | “rough West” hungered for good | | sented several points of strength. plays. It was far removed from the | Domestic oils were sluggish in re- | main traveled roads of the hcst}fl?ctlon of record breaking crude\ dramatic companfes. The so- cfllompmducuon GERMAN PAPERS International Harvester spoken drama was only a whisper | touched a new 1926 maximum at out here where the wido open spaccs | 139 1-2 and U. 8. Steel cross 149 for are reputed to begin. a gain of 2 points. Rails were rath- Then came the Dallas Little Thea- | er backward, except for a few an- |ter. Tt was born in the house of the | thracite carriers. |dead and fostered in a restaurant, | Bear traders succeeded in uncov- but despite this humble nativity, | ering several weak spots in the au- within six years of its birth it had | tomotive group, Peerless Motor, Kel- three times captured the East’s most | st ‘Wheel and Motor Wheel, all| | coveted Littls Theater prize, the Be- | breaking through to new low records | {1asco cup. for the year. | Hungered for Drama Stock prices displayed a firm | Now the capital of the Little|tone at the opening of today’s mar- | | Theater movement may be sald to|ket. With no new developments Day holl- | |the edge of the great cow country |day to influence the price movement, | of Texas, and persons dramatically |operators for the rise resumed inclined are wondering why it is so. | their campaign by bidding up spe- Director Oliver Hinsdell is one of | cial stocks. Gains of a point or 8o the reasons. He attributes the suc- |were recorded by Commercial | cess to hunger for good drama and |Solvent B, United Drug and Amerl-\ the character-building work nece can ln!onmuonal Corporation, while | sary to overcome many obstacles | General Motors, Allied Chemical | here, and other industrial favorites im- | Six years ago a group of Dallas | proved fractionally. | | people, not satisfied with the scraps| While there was some specula- of drama they had been getting, de- | tive disappointment over the failure cided to manufacture their own. to decrease the new federal reserve They held their first meeting in an | rediscount rate, no fears were en- | undertaker’s chapel, and thers the | tertained over the credit situation | movement was organized. The first (which continues relatively easy. | was given in a high school, | Buying, however, was again of a their Second In a restaurant, where, | selective character, centering large- | after the evening meal, the propri- |1y In issues in which special develop- | otor permitted them to push back jments are belicved to be pending the chalrs and tables and present [All Ch & D .138% 135% thefr play. Am 52% ° 513 To Build Own Home | Am v .102% 102 After the movement had gone |Am 107 along for three Sm & R Sug . vears, Oliver Hins-|Am 182 dell came from New Orleans, where | Am 8 built a $65000 Little|Am T & Tel .. Theater. He had been a successful | Am Tob ... . professional stage actor and lectur- |Am Woolen . « er. The Dallas Theater had ns;An ond Cop . troubles. In the beginning the mvn“ tchison stayed away. Now the men are Eald Loco | .15 actors. Tt had [Balt & Ohio 106% HARTFORD OFFICE, 6 CENTRAL ROW TELEPHONE 2-1141 —_— We offes 100 Shares NEW BRITAIN MACHINE COMPA Common Stock Price on Application @humfiun, fenn & (o Burritt Hotel Bldg.. New Britain Telephone 3880 MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGES Donald R. Hart, bigr. INVESTMENTS We do not accept Margin Accounts. HARTFORD Martford Conn, Trust Bidg. Tel.2-T186 We Offer: 10 AETNA LIFE INSURANCE 50 STANLEY WORKS 50 LANDERS, FRARY & CLARK “Join the Red Cross” We Offer 100 Shares American Hardware no theater building and no money, |Beth Steel but these obstacles, too, have been | Calif Pet | overcome. {Cer De Pasco The theater now is housed In 2 |Ches & Ohio 1603 | frame building on a side street. A|C M & S P.. 17% campalign to raise $65,000 for a new I & Pac 70% building is under way. Anyone Is|C er Corp 36% considered a member who buys a ol P season ticket. | Fuel it All walks of life are represented |Consol Gas ..11° fn the casts. A soclety woman may |Corn Prod . 445 309, . 30% old when she made her first appear- | and in a reckless manner. ance on the stage and played a | repertoire of roles that included Radlo ‘VlO\le Selmons everything from “Little Tva” in acle Tom's Cabin” to sShake-| Possible, Says Director Hollywood, Cal,, Nov. 26 UV)——- speare. 1 In 1865 Mrs. Kendal appeared at ‘ Radig sermons illustrated by motion | the Maymarket in London, as| p!cl\x\r‘= are a possibility, says Fred | Ophelia in a production of “Ham- , film director. |let” with Walter Montgomery in the | “Advance prints of proposed ser |role of the Danish prince. Kromgmons, with a choice of ction, . 493 {then on she played most of the could be sent to church sub-[play in the same cast With her Cry steel w6 | Shakespearean heroines and in |scribing to the service,” he sald.|gardener. In a season a hundred | Dogge Bros A 63 every sort of classical and popular | “The wave length would be printed |or more actors are used. {Du Pont De drama until 1911 when she retired. |on each film and, by tuning in on| Judge Lynch,” by Willlam Rog- |~ xop She made several tours of the United [the specificd Sunday, the picture |ars, Jr, a member of the Littlc RR . :Sl;\t(‘s with her husband in the Sfl"!‘(nnhl be projected to tha ‘accom-|Theater and a former Dallas news- Ist prd land 90's and was popular in R\xch)pmhmn' of radio subtitles and|paperman, was the first play taken o procore plays as ‘Marriage,” “Prince Kara- | oratory of nationally-known puldit|to New York. It won the Belasco pgc Rubber toff,” and “A Scrap of Paper | tigure cup. In 1925 they won With “The oy yonyo) e | No *Count Boy” by Paul Green. Last | o =0 © Pretty Co-ed Prize Pep-Producer e el UL | Kan with “El Cristo.” {Gulf Sta Steel 5714 Hudson Motors 471 Faulty Chimney Causes |1 "0t Bad Fire in Westport ' mt Nickel Westport, Conn., Nov. 26, (P—A Int Paper faulty chimnby yesterday resulted |Ken Cop in Westport's largest fire in some | Lehi time, the damage being estimated | at around $10,000. The roof and | Mac the entire second story of the old | Marland Oil | mill tea house of Old Mill, Compo | Mo Kan Beach were destroyed by the flames, Mont Wa | despite the efforts of four > com-' N Y Cent that might be done by their cars, ac- | trivial. He took the stand that it o : | should not be regarded seriously and | he | cording to information which the | JR O Oy matters fur- department h“s‘thor Judge Jendnings, however, ‘xulod that some of the points raised nerce of Oroville, Cal, and allied | by the McCook estate counsel ought i The sescontage of |10 De heard and decreed that the he percentage Of{ yrocook claims should have thelr day responsible motor {in court. country at large Con- | ADDED T0 HUSEUN Fuller, Richter, Aldrich & Co. 81 W. MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN state motor vehicle furnished to the Chamber of Com- MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE Hartford Tel. 2-9161 New Britain Office Tel. 1353 New London Office Tel. 3786 communittes. such financially car owners m the is considerably less than the necticut percentage. Before the financial responsibility law was adopted in Connecticut, a check-up in this respeet showed that ahout 42 per cent of Connecticut | yegistrants were able to meet possi- ble danmge judgments, within lim s.l In 1923, only about 18 per cent Of’ the registrants throughout the United States were thus protected The Connecticut percentage has been considerably incr the fnancial responsibilit went into effect last Januar moral effect in itself was sufficient | to move many previously unprotect-| excavation at Venice, Fla., and in ed_registrants to make the Neces-|tno opinion of sclentists of tha in- sary arrangements and, by the end | gtitution, had been washed up on the of the ninth month of the admin-|old shores of the Gulf of Mexico, istratlon of the law, the half-Way|now four miles Inland from the point had been left well behind. | present coast. The specimen is a Connectlcut’s law on this subject | Columbian mammoth, they said, | has been under ob fon by | types of which have been found in | many other states, and John Dillon, | territories north of Florida. | manager of the California organiza-| Discovery of dinosaur eggs Is be- | i e tion, has Informed the Connecticut| coming a popular p e th Al fReniaE o] ”‘,:',’";'“‘.“" Hao ]’.‘r_‘ L i-m\. & Vst department that there is a plan parts of the continent. | 8 ‘(\m.hz;mf “\w;; ”. (“c-"; wm'»:\' [ \'cx-fl} \v;{rr. in that state to use this partial| Mineral concretions, formed N N o compulsory insurance Jaw ns the | freakish shapes, resembling the cggs | o o | Pack Mot Car basts of a similar law in California. | of the glant reptiles which lived | Ll O e et - | twelve to fifteen million years ago | DR it BOY HIT BY AUTO | in the swamps of North ~America, | Pennaylvanta. . Waterbury, Conn.,, Nov. 26 (/— | have led to reports from nearly | Radio Corp William Sullivan, 8, suffered a frac- | every section of the country of the R enathi o ture of the skull when struck this | finding of these ‘“eggs” which, Senrs Rbabck morning by an automobile driven by | paleontologists of the institution Sinc l.uir 0it Daniel Bulakitas of Union City. | concede, would fool anybody but an Southern T'ac fhe driver I3 under arrest. The ac- | expert. The unsettled weather i making | cf /it i - cident occurred in Exchange place. a poor market for regular ODeri-|gengupg of) The boy’s condition is critleal. IStewart Warner ST se Bones of Mammoth, Washed Up On Shores of Florida Centuries Ago, s rie Associated Gas and Electric System Founded in 1852 Taken to Institution, Washington, Nov. 26 (P—The | skeleton of a mammoth, washed up | on the shores of Florida. half a mil- | lion years ago, was added today to | the Smithsonian Institution collee- ! tion. The bones of the prehistoric ani- mal were discovered recently in an . From a small begining in 1852 when there were 28 customers, the Associated System has grown until now it serves 360,000 customers in 1,000 com- munities located in 12 states. Facts of Growth 101 % in electric kilowatt-hour sales 4 70% increase since 1920. During the same period the gross revemme llv creased 50%. The number of customers increased 75%. The net revenue increased over 100%. lsgzosoo new customers added since Janwary 1, 85% of the net earnings are from the sle of : electricity. $17,000,000 expended for new construction duwr- ing 1925; $14,557,000 to be expended during 1938, From 1919 to 1926 the number of Associated investors increased from less than 1,000 to 35,008, Of this number 23,000 are customers. $10,000,000 of Associated securities purchased by customers and employees during 1935. The large number of customer investors in the Associated Gas and Electric Company refiects the high regard for the company on the part of those being served. Tex 1h$ DISCREDIT TICKET STORIES Chicago, Nov. 26 () — Resgular theater ticket brokers discredit re- ports of big profits heing made on resale of tickets for the Army- Navy game, 561 58 9014 b4y 1T% 10. |tors and one even worse for scalp- |ers with visions of fabulous pric |brokers said today. Some scats along the sidelines are r ed selling at $30, a substantial re | duction over recent quotations, and price low as $20 each r quoted on tickets for less des AWARDED MERIT BADGES Seven hoys appeared before the Boy Scout court of honor at its meeting Wednesday evening in the John Elander wish to extend their| Chamber of Commerce rooms. The sincere thanks to all who ghowed | following were awarded merit sympathy and rendered service dur-| badges: Harold Keeling of Troop United Fruit . ing his iliness and at the time of| 1 of Plalnville, clvics, cyoling, paint- ¢ USCtIr DL, 2 his death. We especially thank the | ing and scholarship; David Keplan 2 - seats. U S Ind Al .. Now Britaln Machine Company, of Troop 10, firemanship, interpret- | $ ; : N | TS T S Rubber .. 60% Britain Finance Corp., Tegner Lodg®, [ ing and musle. Albert Loomis of \ 0. V., and individuals for the beau-|Troop 2, handieraft; August Peplau 3 : | tirul floral pleces contributed. lof Troop 8, ploneering and public MIL LARSON. | health; Phillp Bergstrom of Troop 2, scholarship; Richard Hovhanes- ian of Troop 4, swimming. Alden B | Keeling of Troop 1 of Plainville was OCLLERER’S |iunced to the rank oot sccond POSY SHOP Whe time to cover graves is mow, before | the ground freezes. We cover them “‘lh‘ class scout. Ty hemlock, pine, ruscus, imwor- | telio and box wood. 83 West Maln St.. Prof. BId The Telegrph Florist of N CARD OF THANKS. The relatives of the late Sven | 5014 L108% 163 Tobacco Prod Union cen Associated Gas and Electric Company Incerperated in 1906 “Interesting Focts™ Associated Gas and Electric Secerition Company 61 Broadway New York FIGHT IN N New Haven, Conn,, Nov. 26 (P— |Covered with blood but only slight- ly injured, two neighbors were ar- rested last night in the latest- out- cropping of a family foud. When the children of Albert La I |invaded the lawn of Americano | Popolizo, they were told to go home |and a little girl ran to tell he ather she had heen beaten. L France went over to expostul with Popolizo and a fight ensued. | The police, unable to decide Who | Aetna Casualty - was at fault, took both to jail. | Aetna Life Ins. Co, . | Aetna Fire | Automobile Ins . | Hartford Fire .. | National Fire ... $05,000,000; | Phoenix Fire ex rts | Travelers Ins Co | Conn. General 1150 \(-nuracturtng Stocks. Am Hardware .. 873 Am Hoslery w.massasen. 23 W HAVEN Write for owr boolet, West Elec White Motor . Willys Over Woolworth | Furnished by Eddy Brothers Insurance Stocks. Bin LOIE FULLER ANGRY Cherbourg, Nov. 26 () — Lole | Fuller was angry when she disem- barked here today from the steamer Majestic with her troupe of dancers over American newspaper comment regarding her friendship with Queen % 60 9 11 13 k¢l » | Peck Stowe & Wil ... 23 | Russell Mfg Co. .....u b5 Scovill Mfg Co. - BT | Standard Screw . 110 Stanley Works . s 4 2914 | Stanley Works ptd Torrington Co. com w.. 70 |Unlon Mfg CO .evoonn 27 Public Utilities Stocks. | Conn Elec Service . 87 Conn Lt & Pow pfd ex 110 Hfd Elec Light “i..828 IN B Gas ..... vees B | Southern N E Tel w.a.181 Beaton & Caldwell | Bige-Hfd Cpt Co. com | Billings & Spencer cora | Billings & Spencer pfd 3ristol Brass . Colgs Arms l'dxle Lock ... afnir Bearing Co. Hm & Cooley Landers, ¥ s |N B Machine ' B Machine . | Niles-Be-Pond com ... 19 ! North & Judd .2 Asked 540 515 Tel. Britain 480 510 1150 1590 TREASURY BALANCE Treasury balance .. $141,391,129. Angelina Reynolds has launched a thousand cheers—and what cheers {Marie of Rumania ] | Miss Fuller insisted that there| they are, too. She leads her brother and sister collegians of Syracuse, | 1 et | were mot any froubles between the | N. Y., University in rooting for the Orange eleven as it romps up and | Boston—Exchanges a3 17 108 21 27 |queen and herself while she was in | down the gridiron. So well has it romped, spurred on by Angelina's | balances $46,000,000. UNDERTAKER |the United States and said that she | cheer leading. that orly three of its opponents have scored on Syracuse | u...mm:.':i"'u':“".'vnmn was happy to have witnessed tho| this year. Angelina works up more enthuslasm, they say, than West| New York—Clearing House, ex- Bl et i St Lo LY |warm welcome the people of the! Point's somersaulting cadets. “It's just another field,” she says, “where | changes $960,000,000; balances, 'United States gave Queen Maris. | 'y\'omen can make good.” “125,000 000, L)