Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e Week’s Activities in Catholic Churches St. Mary’s Charch. Announcement was made in St. Mary’s church yesterday morning at the masses that until further no- tice, confessions and week-day services will be held in the lower part. Work of the renovation was started in the main part of the church today. The children of .the parish will make their first holy communion on Saturday, May 21. Confirmation will be conferred on Saturday, May 28. May devotions will be held every ‘evening at 7:30 p. m. with benediction on Wednesday and Fri- day evenings. - Requiem masses this week are as follows: sTuesday gorning at 7 o'clock, requiem for Min Kennes Wednesday morning at 7 o'clock Mrs. Margaret and John Price; Thursday morning at 7 o'clock, requiem for Mrs. Ma Staubly and Friday morning at o'clock for Thomas M. Heslin. St. Joseph's Church The Forty Hours' devotion will open at St. Joseph's church next Sunday morning at the 10:30 o’clock mass. meph’s parish soclety will be held Thursday evening at 8 o’'clock in the parish hall. A joint meeting of the June circus committee will be held Tuesday evening. The Children of Mary soclety will meet Wednesday evening after devotions, The men of the parish will re- erive the Blessed Sacrament in a body next Sunday at the 7 o'clock mass. A third anniversary mass for John T. Meehan will be celebrated at tho church Saturday morning at 7 o'clock. St. John's Church The building association of the church of St. John tha Evangelist will meet tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the parish hall. Reports m the -arions committees appointed will e heard. OO 29 Law Professors Join In Plea to Gov. Fuller New York, May 9 (P—Twenty- nine law professors, representing the | faculties of Columbia, Yale and the University of Kansas, have written Governor Alvan T. Fuller, of | Massachusetts, ‘asking that he take gome actioft in the Rfacco-Vanzetti se, it was announced today at the chool of Law of Columbla univer- In addition to the professors who signed the letter, 33 others, members of the law faculties of Cornell, INinois, Minnesota, Missouri, Okla- homa, Indiana, Towa, Ohio and Texas have voiced their approval of it purpose. Garage-Dwelling Case Due in Court Wednesday A warrant will be served on L.| Williams tomorrow summoning him into court to answer a charge of violating the building laws by using for dwelling house purposes a garage built by him on Commonwealth avenue. The action 1s brought at the complaint of owners of other properties in the neighborhood. In- spector A, N. Rutherford of the Luilding department will be sum- monad as a witness. COMPOSERS’ CONCERT Checks continued to be reccived today from active, associate and sustaining members of the New Britain Musical club in payment of complimentary tickets sent out for the local composers’ concert at the Camp school auditorium tonight. This has resulted in & special an- nouncement being made that the concert is free to all active, asso. ciate and sustaining members; it is part of their regular concerts for the season. The admission fee ap- plies only to the general public. Checks which have been received from active, associate and sustain- ing members of the club will be re- turned, it was announced. For Feet That Burn, Ache, Sting or Perspire Here's Rellef in Five Minutes. Also Great for Painful Bunions and Callouses Nothing in all the world like Ezo, & refreshing and antiseptic ointment for tired, aching, swollen, dry or tender feet. Rub in Ezo and rub out agony. It's so casy to use—just rub it on, that's all, and make your poor, sore, feet feel fine and dandy in five minutes—no fussing around to get ready. Ezo will give a whole season’s gladness to your poor, tired, over- worked feet, and quickly banish all painful foot misery. Ezo is the one sure and speedy maker of happy feet. Never mind about the other things you have tried—FEz0 is sensible and different. Get a package today from Fair Dept. Store or your favorite drug storc and end all foot misery. No Excuse for DAN lzl_{U FF You Can Get Rid Of It Quickly If you have dandruft you must get rid of it quick—it's positively dan- gerous. You will surely lose your hair if you don’t. The sure way to abolish dandruff for good i3 to destroy it. 'To do this quickly, safely and most” eftectively | get from your druggist a bottle of l'arisian Sage. Thip is guarantecd to banish all dandruff, stop itching sglp and stimulate new hair to grow. Parisian Sage is a scientiflc prepa- ration that supplles all hair needs. Don't delay—begin tonight—a lit- tle attention now means no more dandruff and abundant bair for years to come. Any drugglst will supply you and guarantee money refunded”if Pari- A special meeting of 8t. Jo-| jointly | OPPOSING LAWYERS VOICE ARGUMENTS (Continued From First Page) announced that Mrs. Snyder's sum- | mation would be first. | “I am going to plead to you,” Mil- | lard told the jury, “just as though| Gray was my som, because 1 belicve | in him.” He then outlined Gray's”home | background during his youth, the care his mother gave him, his| church affiliations. | Millard pictured the bright future | which loomed before Gray as he be- | came a success In business, married | and had a daughter. *Then, suddenly,” he said, “ji 1925 a sinister, fasclnating, unscru- pulous woman came across his path. | What a catastrophe that those two| should have met. | “I would not blacken any wom- an’s name if I could help, but you must have the truth. Like Poisonous Serpent. “That woman, ltke a polsonous | {serpent, drew Judd Gray into her| glistening colls and there was no escape.” | Millard said that Gray turned to the stimulation of whiskey because | he was exhausted by tho violence of her passion. “And while he was uader the in- fluence of drink,” he said, she in-| serted into his weakenad mind her desire, her determination, to kil her husband.” As Millard spoke. Gray sat be- hind him in alert pose, listening at- tentively, and Mrs. Snyder lounged back in her chair with twisted lsmile on her thin lips. | “This woman,” ha continued, ! “hard as it is for me to say, herselt tried to kill her husband at least four times. By poison, by gas and by asphyxiation from the tumes of an automobile engine she sought and| failed to end his life. Had Gray In Her Power. “She had in tow this poor fallow Gray, gradually warping his min and when she failed and rai jagain, she put him to her use. Sh knew that she had him where he must submit, he must obey. He | struggled, gentlemen. When first she broached her plan he shrank b in horror and told her she was ter- ! rible. But sho knew that she cou bend him to her desire “She kept at her vietim until sh had him. It was exactly as fhough he was under hypnotic influence. His mind was slave to her mind, He (in helple thrall to the strange { power she had for him. | "He did what he did hegause she | told him to; he could not help him- selt.” Millard stressed the fact that Gray and Snyder had never met and “therefore Judd Gay could not have thad any reason of his own for get- ting Snyder out of the way." As the lawyer spoke of Gray's go- ing to the Snyder home on March T he turned on his client with an e pression of pitying contempt Called Him “Poor Fool “This poor fool,” he said, “this poor goop, this poor helpless thing, went there because he hal been told 'to go. Butseven then, even in his |maudlin state of fear and drunken- ness, he could not do what she asked him. “And she saw this, knew that not quite yet was the clay shaped to her {hand and for that night she let him 0. “She kept constantly in touch with him until March 19, waen she said | ‘Come again’.” | Millard then took up Gray's Syra- | | .l' cuse alibl. He likened it to a cheolboy looking down at his book after throwing a putty bai “It was instinctive, he said. ‘Even animals cover their tracks.” | Then the lawyer described how {Gray went to the Snyder home on March 19. He sald that Gray s in a drunken haze but that Mrs. Sny- der went to a party with the hus- band she intended to kill and she was sober. “Ien’t that the mind ¢f a fiel he asked. “A diabolical fiend? 1t hardly a human mind at all. Millard stressed that Mrs. Snyder had left a four ounce hottle and a quart for Gray. “Why the four ounce bottle?” he asked “when the quart was there Why indeed, it the little bottle had wh he meant him to drink from the quart until he was almost paralyzed and then she was going to glve him | the little bottle, i “But he found the little bottle and | drank it first. It made him sick. { 4 The Mysterious Botde, ! “Gentlemen, what was in that bot- | tle? We would give mush to know, but what I think is that his imme- diate drink from the big bottle saved him from dying of the poison in the little bottle.” Mrs. Snyder's counsel at this point and Justice warned Millard. Millard said that immediately | a‘ter the murder, Mrs. nyler told Gray he ought to take a crink. “She did not know then,” he said, “that he had already drunk from the four ounce hottlo and survived t was to have been saved until Gray's usefulness had passed.” The lawyer then outlined Gray’ story of the murder, how Mrs. Sny- der led Gray into the room. “Ho struck,” Millard faid, “and Snyder grappled with him. Snyder wag getting the better of it when Gray called for help and Mrs. Sny-| der finished the job. “Gentlemen, do you remember that a doctor testified here that any blow that Snyder suffered would have caused unconsciousness? { | “Do you remember that the room | was almost dark? Do yo1 remember that Gray had his glasses oft? Never Hit Suydor, | “Gentlemen, Judd Gray mnover| struck Albert Snyder at all, hel missed him and Snydec was mnot| struck at all until Mrs. Snyder took | the weight.” | Millard then reminded the jur that the wire with which Suyder wau strangled was tightened with | Gray's gold pencll and tha pencil lett | there. | “Why was it left thero?" he asked. | “What good was the alibt with that | pencil sticking in Albert Snyder's| neck? “I will tall you. Ruth Snyder had torrowed that penefl from Gray protested Scudder | ! whereas Mrs, Sayder, | who arranged the alibi nd she did. | ey in it at all? | | citement in front of him. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MAY 9, 1927. after killing Gray was 3 drink the| four-ounce bottle. “She had no intention of a wit- first degree murder there are, sides th nocent as alternatives of guilty or ness to the murder being alive. She | possible outcomes, thought Judd would die ot the poi-| In such a cas be- in- harged, numerous other it Is in the power son and she put the pencil in,the of the jury to bring in a verdict, 1f vire to implicate him. “That was her plan. Hazelton Overruled. Edgar F. Hazelton, counsel for Mrs. Snyder, then objected and moved for a mistrial, but was over- | ruled. “But Judd Gray did not die,” Mil- lard continued. “What db1 she think then? Did she believe that the poi- son was mercly slow to work? “You remember she gave some poison to take away? “Then this poor blundering fool, the living victim 67 this tragedy, ted up Mrs. Snyder at her iustructions and goes away. “Was he expected to die shortly him | 50 that he might be blamed for mur- | der and attack on a woman, with the pencil as the evidence?” 1 ask you to consfilor this.” Millard told the jury that Gray had no motive for the murder, it her plan went through, got $98,000 insurance. Gray Subservicut. servience, Millard cited Gray's t mon Mrs. Snyder had out’ ng powders on him and he had permitted such use of him- self. Of Haddon Gray of § for Judd Gray, Millard said: “God grant that we may all have friends like that.” | Millard concluded by asking that| those who h never known the temptations of life cast the stone of contempt.” “But you and I” said to the “will go down into the mire Wwiiere this poor fool had been drag- ged by a wicked woman who was herself a slave to her buening sion, and save him. “The estreme culpability of this poor defendant is manslavghter. I would like to ask for a verdict of in- | nocence but I can see that you may | feel he must bear some, share punishment because he fell sl this woman. “His mother will your word. guide you Millard then sat down «fter s ing for one hour and 38 minut Argues for Mrs. Snyder. Dana Wallas or Mrs, X toid the jury that “this is a ca the people of New York and Henry Judd Gray against Ruth Snyde “And Henry Judd Gray.”" ho s is the most despicable creatu I have ever scen. And Ruth has been put in a position by double prosecution that ! unfuir. allace read from th: eopening statentent for Gray in which I sald his confession was untrue and was obtained under dur “Why then, as what they ve ave to he walting for | May God help you and | ake ted, “if that ant to do. did Gray t on the stand and say the conft sion was voluntary and tiue? Wa Gray lying to us or had he lied to is own lawyer? Which is the more likely? Wallace used the first part of his address in an attempt to pick to picees the opening statemsn® made wo weeks ago by counsel for ay Wallace would quote cach asser tion of what was to be proved and then cite eviden in an effort to show that no such proot had been forthcoming. Scofts at Domination. ticular vre about the “Was he dominated when went on that honeymoon tri he shouted. “Did she ask s he taken on a hone No. He urged her to go. and 1 bel that Haddon Gray met them along the road.” A8 to the four ounce boftle, Wal- | lace d Gray was not that } lost his memor: told us in detail of all he did in next hours. Wallace charged that Gray's whole ase was based on a desire to “hide ind a woman’s o We have neve a4 Mrs, Suyder guilty and we do not belie 0 he sald. cas Judd Gray who took off his glasses and armed himselt with a sash weight for combat with a | sleeping man.” Through both defense summa- tions, Gray and Mrs. 8nyder sat with wooden faces listening to almost the Jast words the jury woull hear fore taking their fatss into | hands. they the he- ity Snyder and had struck probably th Ll it was Mrs, Snyder who rushed to her husband’s aid and grabbed Gray at the tie “I loave it to Providence to make yon gentlemen sce that it was not | the helpless Snyder who grabbed | Gray's tie, but the woman of whom | even then he was making a widow.” | “He struck her and she swooned,” | as Gray himself has testiied she did | easily, and so he was able o com- plete what he was doing. “He had his alibt prepared in | acuse and he left her to take the | blame if the burglary story fell| through | “He was so sure of heirg able to | show his own innocence that he was | almost flippant. He joked with : liceman not ma blocks from | where his victim lay in a pool of | blood.” | Mrs. Snyder Weeps. | Suddenly Mrs, Snyder an to cry and the crowd in the court| rcom laughed, craning necks as if to | enjoy her predicament. | Wallace turned upon the crowd, and shouted that the persons who had laughed were fitter subjects for contempt than the defendant. Mrs. Snyder quickly recovered her| composure and sat with her chin titled up and propped on a clenched hand, y " Gray remained perfectly calm and watched Wallace intently as the lawyer fairly danced around in e “He said in his testimony that he called to Mrs. Snyder to help him with the murder,” Wallace screamed, “but he did not say so in his confession. Why not? Why not? W it becuuse he had not thought of that dr: ¢ lie at that time?” In conclusion he said Mrs. Bnyder should be acquitted according to law &nd not from mercy or weakness on the part of the pury, | Possible Verdicts. | The trial o 1 three weeks ago | today., One w was :opsumed in! getting a jury and two in the presen- | tation of evidence. Whilc the de- aan Sage I8 not entirely satisfactory. | previously. She had plenned that fendants, were placed ou trial for| to find one | they see fit, or guilty of Lrst or sec- |ond degree mirder | degree manslaughter, homicide. It of a jury first or second or justifiable S0 lies In the power defendant guilty of one of these anl the other innocent. Or f{t against one, or disagree on both, Firsy degree murder has but one penalty, death in the electric chair. Second degree murder s punishal of another, or one guilty of any one and the other disagree on one and can nder a verdict ble solely by an indeterminat: sentence of from second is unpremeditated. ishab |20 yea First degrec manslaughter is pu by a and second ¢ a sentence 15 years, or a fin degree rot to ot to ceed $1,000 or by both. One who kills in the heat of p: 0 years to lite, The differ- ence between the two is that first; | aegree is premeditated murder and an- entence not to exceed man- | e: a sion by means of a dangerous we: pon or by eruel : red | te passion without design to nd unusial mean: effect death, degree Toanslaugl Second s of killing in without intent degree mauslaugh the heat to ter effec death and without use >¢ a dange Cil el and usual m cise i s no pen J {8 Stific defense and b ide consists or def its very dosignation e ¥ DARING AVIATORS (Continued From First Fage) ation since. Coli st three years preparing spent for rans-Atlantie flight. The “White B ible for the plana to float un- of nse ¢f someons ar- WORLD WAR HEROES Ofithe fnfantry. He has heen a stude of ol is a single-mo- | tored Levasseur marine plane, It has |a water-tight fuselage which makes [t pos on the water, but not take oft from it. It | had ts motor is power but is capable of powef. Jts average is 1 ed o ximum sp miles an hour. the daring an airplanes a to Nungesse: 34 Gerr horse- 225 horse eed who his credit in the war, and Coii. who lost an eve in the war, were lighthearted as they waved goodbye from their 1 by nes ohol r refreshe nd an down. £ an anti-sles carricd enov trated nourd two hot a distilling s of coft i two In the ood distilled watd aratus; vacuum bott t cubes; biscuits p potion. Sells-Floto Circus Seeking Local Date part well, clrcus, I June 1 n Chief W. C. Hart of the police rent said today that B. 1% M; representing the Sells-F1 has applied for a permit ave th Application has alsq b ade by arly ub- gh | sh- tles ap- tl de- ax- oto to | o circus in this city Monday, | een Joseph's parish com- mittee for a pefrait to condnucet a eir- cus on the church grounds. By applications will be acted on at itiec on license: night. Englan;i g;t to Ac{ Now In Chinese Outrages Chamberlain, the foreign Tondon, May 9 (® — Sir Au oth a meeting of the common council com- [church at 10 o'cloc at 7:30 o'clock to- | ma: retar: told the bouse of common today the Briti the for the king and th | nationalists to observe the conditions of the Hankow a h government psent application of penal nti-foreign outrages at N failure of t D! pedient, however fully justif with 548.48 of 1 Coach Lact WOMAN ADMITS Bridg diverting to her own use 1 as book! gan, 30, was today arraig the an- @ Chine: Inex- | Michael port, May 9 B — Charged | $1.- & funds of the Bridgeport company where she w per, Mrs. Lillian as ned in city court and granted a contin- uanc When Judd Gray was astride of {000, b Police have a statement sig Mrs. T n in which she ¢ the company and altering shortage, . For Elaborate Monument or Simple Head-Stone Choose ROCKOFAGES GRANITE THF unblemished purity of its texture and its rich color give a distinctive beauty to the simplest of memorials. And its beauty when carved has led to its choice by sculp- tors for some of their most distinguished work. Its beauty, 100, is permanent. Years of ex- posure will not mar it in any way. As authorized represent- atives of Rock of Ages Granite, wegiveyoua complete service, from the selection of & ceme- tery lot to the erection of your memorial. The Rock of Ages Cartificate of Per- Yection, when reguested, assures you of ourgersonalinipecsion through the van- ous stages of completion and is your perperual guarantee agamnss dg/f?::v workmanship and materil. TAL WORKS and Clark Streets\ Tel. 2066-2 and W66-3 to June 2 under bonds of $1,- med on- ! fesses to misappropriating the funds lof {records to conceal th the IL Deaths | Telestor Daczek Tclestor Daczek, 54 years old, a and an employe of the concern since it was first founded in 1912 | this morning at his home, 121 Tre mont street aiter a short illness, He| was a resident of this city for the past 32 years. Born in Poland he came to this v when he was about 24 years | : celebrated his birthday on April 15. He was active in the Sacred Heart parish and was a member of the St. Petor and Paul | society and the T. A. & B. soclety of | the church. Surviving him are Mary Daczek; a son, Raymon: sister, Mrs, Blanche Mulachow and three nieces, all of this city. | Funeral services will be held| Wednesday morning at 7 o'clock at| Sacred Heart church with a solemn high mass of requiem. Interment| {will be in Sacred Heart cemetery. | Mrs. | a his wife, Paul Anderson Anderson, 49 years old, of street, died at midnight night after a short | a sister, { Mrs, Carl Bengston of this city and | | two brothers. Oscar and ard { Anderson of Sweden. The funeral will be held from Er- win chapel on Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, Rev. C. J. Fredsen fating. Burial will be in Fair- Paul 2 Kel at hi illne Arthur Robinson, colored, 2 years |.\m! four months old, son of Mr. and | Mrs. James Robinson of 223 North | street, died this morning at the New i Bri n neral hospital following I brief illness with pneumonia. i He loaves six hrothors and sisters. | The funeral will be held tomorrow !afternoon at 3 o'clock from the un- dertaking establishment of John J. |Tarrant. 283 East Main strect, Burial will take place in Fairviow cemetery. Oscar August Neuman Oscar August Neuman, 37 old, of 63 Noble street, die afternoon at the New i day ation which he underwent last Tues- day. He lsaves his wife, Mrs. May, and two sisters, Mrs. Thomas Ellicker and Mrs. Patrick Harle of Boston, Mass. He was born |in Cambridge, Mass, the son of {John and Elizabeth Peterson Neu- i man. He came to this city several ears ago and was cmplo; at the | North & Judd Mfg. Co. The funeral will 1 1d on Tues- afternoon at 2 o° i R his mother, d will officiate. in Fairview cemet —_— l Funerals J Mre, Charles McCarthy Funeral services for Mrs. Charles rthy of New Haven, a former ent of this city, were held home of Mrs. MeCarthy’s par- s-at-law, Policeman and Mrs. | les McCarthy, at 9:15 o'clock | morning and at £t Mary's A solemn high | 1 by this of requiem ¥ !ev. Walter J. Lyddy, thew J. Tray . sub deacon, and Rev. Walter |A. MeCrann, master of ceremonies. | John O'Brien sang “Sanctus’ at |the offertory, and Mrs. Mary T Crean sang “Some Sweet Day’ as ad decided that |the body was being borne from the |Tuxas & Pac .. chureh, The were Frank Rubino, ttornay Dera New H and pall bearers James Noonan and no Ginnetti, all of John McCarthy, annan and James of this city. T uneral was largh- at ded and the of floral tributes. thers Lyddy and C ) 1 the committal s rave, Interment was in St Mary's cemetery. | Arthur Roy Funeral services for Arthur Roy T3 Beaver stre held this morning at 9 o'clock at St. Peter's chureh with a requiem mass cele- brated by Rev. Charles Coppens. . M. J. Rival sang “Pie J L the offertory and “Some Sweet [Day” as the body heing borne -om the church. The pall beare [ were Arthur Arbour, Agelard Ar- hour, Joscph Roy, Roland Aubin, David Marlorus and Peter Dube. Father Coppens assisted by Rev. v conducted the com- ;5. Interment was in V'8 cemetery. CARD OF THANKS We desi to express our heartielt thanks to neighbors friends for their sympathy extc + time of the death of Pat | Kennedy. We are particularly gr: s of the Electric Cord 3 Daughters 1 nd T. D. Penfield Camp, and those who contributed most nd rded ck e- ans 8 of V. flowers. Kennedy The Family WOMAN MAY BE J on, May & (P —- There tions tos that Mrs alker Willehrandt, st attorney general, is among those under consideration of President Coolidge for appointment as the federal ojudge in the northern dis- trict of California. Phone 1423-3, Opposite 8t. Mury' Residence 17 Sommer St. T y——— BOLLERER’S POSY SHOP Visit our Greenhouses on Johnson Ntreet, Maple Hill. See the beautiful surround: Ings where we gruw our own flowers. Cadle Address “BOLFLORER" Tel. 886 Prot. Bld; The Telegraph Florist of New Drital Charen, | Mellon in | outsta | presaging | High . fAmerican Can hospital following an oper-| at | | Radio Corp as a wealth | Joseph A. Haffey | UNDERTAKER i 'MARKET TODAY 1§ SHOWING STRENGTH stockholder of the Prentice Mrg. Co. | E‘elvy[hmg swms Favomble [0! (ood Business 2 9 (A—Continited | sy money. satigfactory trade vorable dividend expectations | heavy investm buyving all tributed to a pronounced demonstra- tion of strength in today's stock market. Gratification in banking | {circles over the action of Secretary | alling for redemption the ng second Liberty 4 and| 4 1-4 bonds, and prospects of fu | gold imports from France, continued easy were outstandi aping more che conditions, ences in s timent. THE MARKET AT 2 (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) Low Close | 1385 1391 49 104 | 1505 | 91 i rel & Tel 16 165 3% Al Che & Dye 139 49 Woolen Anaconda Cop Atchison Bald Loco Balt & Ohio .. Beth el . hes & Ohio DM & St Ped. “hie R 1 & Paclit *hile Copper . 37 Shrysler Corp . Coca, Co Colo I'nel ons Gas Corn Prod Cru Steel Dodge Bres Du Pont De Nem .. {elRR . 2 1st pfd Pla Rubber Asphalt Elee 993 |Genl Motors ..1971; |Gt North Tron | ore cts Gt North ptd |Guie o1 THudson Motors Il Central . Int 0 & G Int Nickel Int Paper Ken Cop 5 | Kelly Spring .. 23 |Lehigh Val ...124 Mack Truck ..116 Marland Ol .. 33 1 Mid Cont 3% Mo Kan & Tex 4 Mo Pac pfd .. 05 Mont Ward 6 National Lead 1953 ! Fisk Genl Genl 89 Nor & West .. North Amer.. North Dacific. . Pack Mot ( Pan Am Pet B 59 ylvania 61 Arrow.. 15 475 115° | Penns | Pier i Reading R B Scars Roebuck Sinclair Oil Southern Pac Southern Ry Standard Oil .. Stewart Warner 6 Studebaker 543 Texas Co 4 015 15 L1133 1263 Tohacco Prod .10 Union Pac United Fruit . (U S Ind Al U S Rubber . Wabash Ry Ward Buk B . West Elee . White Motor Willys Over .. 207y | Woolworth 1435 143 STOCK® Putnam & Co.) Insurance Stocks, Bid Asked Actna Casvalty %55 175 Aetua Life Ing Co Aetna Fire Automobile Ing Hartford Fir fonal Fir Phoenix Fi Travelers Ins Co Conn, Gen 545 1170 1540 1150 1500 Stocks. Am Hardware . S0 $2 Am Hc v e Deaton & Cadwell . Bige-H{d Cpt Co com Billin neer com Eillings & Spencer pfd | Bristol Brass Colt, Hart & Lander: N B Ma ne . " N B Machine pfd , Ni 3o-Pond North & Judd . Peck, Stowe & Wil Mg O Mig Co a4 Sera v Works ! Stanley Works pfd { Torrington Co com . Unien Mfg Co . .24y Public Utllities Stocks. | Conn. Elec Service . 70 {Conn Lt & Pow ptd ..115 | Htd Elec Light 340 Southern N B Tel ....160 Scoville Stand: w TREASURY BA casury Balance [t {l Street Briefs Talk is heard In Wall street that American Tobacco Company i8 next in line for a substantial stock divi- dend, some estima | Useless Auto Laundered, means other per cent. Foreign shipments of Dodge Bros last Thursday touched a new daily high of units. Production on the new 6-cylinder car has been ad- vanced to 100 daily. PUTNAM & CO. Members New York & Hartford Stock Exchanges 31 WEST MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN TEL. 2040 HARTFORD OFFICE, 6 CENTRALROW TELEPHONE 2-1141 We offer Automobile Insurance Co. Price on Application. Thomson, 1fenn & To. Bugritt Hotel Bldg.. New Britatn Telephone 3580 MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD STOCE EXCHANGES Donald R. Hart, Mgr. Hartford Electric Light Co. Stock and Rights We do not accept Margin-Accounts. HARTFORD rd Conn. Trust Bidg. Tel.2-7186 Tel. 3420 We Offer: 100 Shares of Colts 100 Shares of Bristol Brass Common We recommend: Lincoln National Life Ins. Co. “An Investment That Will Grow” Fuller, Richter, Aldrch & Co. 81 W. MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE Hartford Tel. 2-9161 New Britain Office Tel. 1238 New London Office Tel. 3786 Gor Santo 12 Stella y at 2 p. m. Hungerford & lant. John Zuvelli May 16 at p. m. in for plaintiff, Nair & Nair Raymond Murtha, vs lley et al, May 17 at 10 McDonough for plain- or d ant. Thomas McDonough vs. W. H. Hall Con- ruction h 19 at 10 a. m Mag plaintift, Schaefer for de- Not B Bill Ma e Paid 7. partment re o oo 1uni s 2 voi 2 pal gar- paym d on t and for e muni- ot : com- $20.000 FIRE LOSS Y P—The Oak- 10use in Watertown 1o ground in a fire ave been of incendiary igin shortly after 6:30 o'clock this Damage is unofficially es. at § jon has : u thar on, and The t to s nant 1iss) Lecanse tion, the usual required condi had notifi of this services wonl Special Notice blic whist to be held in the Y A. & B. society hall tomorrow t 8 o'clock under the of the Ladies’ Auxiliary, A. everal good prizes are of- ickets which are selling for s may be bought at the door. A\ cvenin auspices 05 5L red, 1ses W down city court by Judge Wil rford this afternoon. 1 EVERY HOME SHOULD HAVE ONE Mirror can be in- stalled in your present loor—a new door is not necessary Tell us the size of your door and we'll be zlad to quote the price, The Rogers Sash & Door Co. 180 CHESTNUT § IW BRITAIN, ( PHONE 920. N